The Weight of It All

My daughter asked me to read Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried a “sequence of award-winning stories about a platoon of young foot soldiers caught up in the madness of the Vietnam War.” If it had been anyone other than my daughter, or perhaps my son, I would have politely refused and gone on with my life, more than willing to ignore this part of my life once again.

I’ve written this blog for so many years I’m unsure exactly what I’ve said about Vietnam, but I go out of my way to avoid looking back at that war, not because I’m ashamed of my actions there but because I have no real way of integrating what I discovered there with my vision of the kind of world I want to live in.

Even when I returned home from Vietnam and spent the next three months unemployed for the only time in my life and with very little desire to start working, I avoided facing any truths I might have uncovered there. Hell, I slept most of the day and stayed awake most of the night, even avoiding those I loved as much as possible.

Later, when students asked about the war, I avoided talking about it except to say that I really didn’t like talking about it, though I readily admitted I was against the war to students as long as we were still fighting there. In later years, I just avoided talking about it altogether, perfectly willing to let it fade into that distant, unexplained phenomena we call “history.” Luckily, most high school history teachers, eager to glorify America’s past, chose not to get that far in history class, so there were few direct questions to face.

I’m about half way through O’Brien’s book, and I’ve been disturbed enough by it to realize that it is a chilling reminder of what it was like to be there. The first story, “The Things They Carried” is almost poetic in its portrayal of the kind of “baggage” that Vietnam veterans carried then, and now.

I appreciate the way O’Brien distinguishes between what various soldiers had to carry, both physically because of rank or position in the platoon, and psychologically because they are, after all, individuals with individual histories and individual responsibilities that all determine to some extent how they react to the same events. Far too many books and movies have intentionally or unintentionally stereotyped the war and those who fought in it.

A better poet than me could probably string together quotes from this story and create a moving, effective portrayal of the burden Vietnam veterans have had to carry, beginning with “The things they carried were largely determined by necessity.”

One of the more moving examples of what they carried can be found in the description of Ted Lavender, whose death is central to this first story:

But Ted Lavender, who was scared, carried 34 rounds when he was shot and killed outside Than Khe, and he went down under an exceptional burden, more than 20 pounds of ammunition, plus the flak jacket and helmet and rations and water and toilet paper and tranquilizers and all the rest, plus the unweighed fear.

With a few notable exceptions we all shared that “unweighed fear,” and the ones who didn’t share it were the ones who frightened me the most because they seemed to put the rest of us in the greatest danger. The question, of course, is how much that fear weighed, whether it was more than you could bear, and whether it crippled you to the extent that you, like those on the other end of the scale, were a danger to yourself and to those around you.

An even more important thing we all shared, still share to this day:

They shared the weight of memory. They took up what others could no longer bear. Often they carried each other, the wounded or weak. They carried infections. They carried chess sets, basketballs, Vietnamese-English dictionaries, insignia of rank, Bronze Stars and Purple Hearts, plastic cards imprinted with the Code of Conduct. They carried diseases, among them malaria and dysentery. They carried lice and ringworm and leeches and paddy algae and various rots and molds. They carried the land itself –Vietnam, the place, the soil — a powdery orange-red dust that covered their boots and fatigues and faces.

Little wonder, then, that

They carried all the emotional baggage of men who might die. Grief, terror, love, longing — these were intangibles had their own mass and specific gravity, they had tangible weight. …

By and large they carried these things inside, maintaining the mask of composure. They sneered at sick call. They spoke bitterly about guys who had found release by shooting off their toes or fingers. … with only a trace of envy or awe…

Some became stronger from having to carry all that weight, many were simply crushed by the sheer weight of it all, but it’s hard to imagine that there are any Vietnam vets whose lives weren’t burdened by the weight of that war.

Fishing With My Father

I just finished reading Fishing With My Father, a book that includes a blog entry I sold a while ago, and I’ll have to admit that I’m relieved to say that I like the book, not just my story, but most of the book.

I was a little apprehensive when I was first approached about being included in the book since I had little idea what the collection would be like other than what was suggested by the title.

Now that I’ve read the book, I’m a little amazed that I was included at all since all but one or two of the writers are professional writers and most of the stories come from published works. In retrospect, perhaps they should have been worried that I was included.

While all the stories feature fishing, to me the “father” motif was the most rewarding. Reading the stories evoked old memories about fishing with my father, and even some of the reasons why I enjoyed hiking with my own children so much.

In the opening essay, Peter Kaminsky says, “One of my favorite things about fishing with my children is that you can go a long time without talking but still feel that you are communicating.” Precisely. For someone who likes to write, I find it remarkably difficult to tell my kids directly how I feel about them.

While many of the entries are, as you would suspect from the title, sentimental, the sentimentality is often cloaked in humor, and rightfully so since these are stories of men, and women, communicating with their fathers, not their mothers. W. Bruce Cameron’s:

As my father has proven to me time and time again, there is a big difference between fishing and catching fish. “Fishing is the soul-numbing act of sitting for hours and watching a thin cobweb of nylon trail out of sight into the black depths of the lake behind the boat while nothing happens. This is best accomplished in a light rain, the boat yawing back and forth in tsunamis, your breakfast hearing voices telling it to “come on back up.”

“Catching fish,” is what the other boats do.

was one of my daughter’s favorite entries.

I suspect any father of a young child could learn much about parenting from this book whether they have ever fished or not.

Update: Here’s another, perhaps more objective review of this book.