----[Please read http://ercoupers.com/disclaimer.htm before following any
advice in this forum.]----

I wasn't the original one to post this, but her you go Mel.


May I Salute You?
By Patricia Salwei


I approached the entrance to Ft Belvoir's medical facility last year as an
old veteran puttered towards me. Easily over 80 years old, stooped and
slow, I barely gave him a second glance because on his heels was a full
bird colonel.

As they approached, I rendered a sharp salute and barked, "Good morning,
Sir!" Because they were heel to toe, I began my salute as the old veteran
was about two paces from me. He immediately came to life!

Transformed by my greeting, he rose to his full height, returned my salute
with pride, and exclaimed, "Good morning captain!"

I was startled, but the full bird behind him was flabbergasted. The
colonel stopped mid-salute, smiled at me and quietly moved on.

As I entered the clinic, the utter beauty of the encounter reoccupied me.
What prompted the old man to assume that I was saluting him? Perhaps he
just thought, "It's about time!"  After all, doesn't a WWII vet outrank us
all?

I turned my attention to the waiting room, taking a moment to survey the
veterans there. Service people rushed around, loudspeakers blared, and the
bell for the prescription window kept ringing. It was a whirl of activity
and the older veterans sat quietly on the outside seemingly out of step,
patiently waiting to be seen.

My old friend stayed on my mind. I began to pay attention to the
military's attitude towards its veterans. Predominately, I witnessed
indifference: Impatient soldiers and airmen plowing over little old ladies
at the commissary. I noticed my own agitation as an older couple cornered
me at the Officer's Club and began reminiscing about their tour in
Germany.

To our disgrace, I have also witnessed disdain. At Ramstein AB terminal an
airman was condescending, and borderline cruel, with a deaf veteran flying
Space A. An ancient woman wearing a WACS button was shoved aside by a
cadet at the Women's Memorial dedication in Washington DC. A member of the
Color Guard turned away in disgust from a drunk Vietnam vet trying to talk
to him before the Veterans' Day Ceremony at the Vietnam Wall.

Have you been to a ceremony at the Wall lately? How about a Veteran's Day
Parade in a small town?  The crowds are growing faint.

Why do we expect the general public to care if we don't? We are getting
comfortable again. Not many of us around have been forced to consider
making the ultimate sacrifice. Roughly 60% of today's active Duty Air
Force did not even participate in Desert Storm.

I always lament about the public's disregard for the military. I do not
count all the days I stayed in bed instead of going to a ceremony or
parade. It was my day to be honored and I deserved to sleep in. It's just
like a 28-year-old, whose weapon was "Microsoft PowerPoint Slide
Presentation" during the last conflict, to complain about recognition.

Sometimes I wonder who is going to come to our parades in 20 years. Will
anybody look me up in the Women's Memorial Registry? The answer lies in
the present. We will be honored as we honor those who have gone before us.
The next generation is watching.

It is not my intention to minimize the selfless service of our modern
military; my comrades are the greatest people I know (and frankly should
be treated better.) But, lately I'm wondering if the public's attitude
towards the military isn't just a reflection of the active duty military's
attitude towards its own veterans. It's time to ask - do we regard them,
do we consider them at all? How does our attitude change when the hero is
no longer wearing a uniform?

I was proud to wear my uniform. Can I admit that I thought I was cool?
There is no denying that there is something about our profession that,
combined with youth, feeds the ego a little.

We have all seen the young pilot strut into the Officer's Club with his
flight suit on. He matters. He takes on the room. He knows he can take on
the world. But, one day he will leave his jet for a desk, and eventually
he will have to hang up that flight suit. A superior hanging up his cape.

How will we measure his value then? He will no longer look like a pilot,
an officer, a colonel. He'll just look like an old man coming out of the
clinic with his prescription. But, is he less of a hero?  

Will anybody remember or care about all the months he spent away from his
newborn daughter, while making peace a possibility in the Balkans?
Probably not. Our society has a short memory. Maybe it is not for the
protected to understand.

Rather, it is my hope that when a young lieutenant walks by him they will
each see themselves, reflected in the other. Ones future, the other's
past.

In that moment, perhaps, the lieutenant will also see the hero, now
disguised as an old man, and thank him. The truth is there are heroes in
disguise everywhere.

I used to wonder why people would want to chat with me when I was in
uniform - telling me about their four years as a radio operator in Korea.
So what? I wasn't impressed, relative to my own experiences.

Now I understand. They were telling me because nobody else cared. Proud of
their service, no matter how limited, and still in love with our country.
They were trying to stay connected.

Their stories were code for: "I understand and appreciate you, can you
appreciate me?"  The answer is, yes.


I separated from the Air Force in February. I'm out of the club. Still, I
want you to know that I'll attend the parades, visit the memorials, and
honor you. All this while my kids and your kids are watching.  

Then, maybe, someday when I'm an old woman riding the metro, a young
airman will take a moment of her time to listen to one of my war stories.
I, in turn, will soak in her beauty and strength, and remember.

Today as I reflect on my adventures in the Air Force, I'm thinking of that
ancient warrior I collided with at Ft. Belvoir. I'm wondering where he is.
Is he still alive? Is it too late to thank him?

I want to start a campaign in his honor - Salute A Veteran. What a great
world this would be if all our elderly veterans wore recognition pins, and
we would salute them even if we were out of uniform and saw them coming
out of a Seven Eleven. Yes, this started out as a misunderstanding on my
part. But, now I get it.

That day was the first time in my life that I really understood what it
meant to salute someone. Dear Veteran, I recognize and hail you! I do
understand what I have and what you have given to make it possible. So I'm
wondering if we meet on the street again - may I salute you?


__________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from this list please send
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

____________________________________________________________
T O P I C A  -- Learn More. Surf Less. 
Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Topics You Choose.
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag01

<<attachment: winmail.dat>>

Reply via email to