-
We left home as teenagers or in our early twenties for an unknown adventure.
-
We loved our country enough to defend it and protect it with our own lives.
-
We said goodbye to friends and family and everything we knew.
-
We learned the basics and then we scattered in the wind to the far corners of the Earth.
-
We found new friends and new family.
-
We became brothers and sisters regardless of colour, race or creed.
-
We had plenty of good times, and plenty of bad times.
-
We didn’t get enough sleep.
-
We smoked and drank too much.
-
We picked up both good and bad habits.
-
We worked hard and played harder.
-
We didn’t earn a great wage.
-
We experienced the happiness of mail call and the sadness of missing important events.
-
We didn’t know when, or even if, we were ever going to see home again.
-
We grew up fast, and yet somehow, we never grew up at all.
-
We fought for our freedom, as well as the freedom of others.
-
Some of us saw actual combat, and some of us didn’t.
-
Some of us saw the world, and some of us didn’t.
-
Some of us dealt with physical warfare, most of us dealt with psychological warfare.
-
We have seen and experienced and dealt with things that we can’t fully describe or explain, as not all of our sacrifices were physical.
-
We participated in time honored ceremonies and rituals with each other, strengthening our bonds and camaraderie.
-
We counted on each other to get our job done and sometimes to survive it at all.
-
We have dealt with victory and tragedy.
-
We have celebrated and mourned.
-
We lost a few along the way.
-
When our adventure was over, some of us went back home, some of us started somewhere new and some of us never came home at all.
-
We have told amazing and hilarious stories of our exploits and adventures.
-
We share an unspoken bond with each other, that most people don’t experience, and few will understand.
-
We speak highly of our own branch of service, and poke fun at the other branches.
-
We know however, that, if needed, we will be there for our brothers and sisters and stand together as one, in a heartbeat.
-
Being a Veteran is something that had to be earned, and it can never be taken away.
-
It has no monetary value, but at the same time it is a priceless gift.
With eternal love for my brothers: To understand a Military Veteran you must know:
🕊️ THANK YOU VETERANS 🕊️
Wow. Pretty harsh. I'd say they voluntarily sign up to serve a cause greater than themselves. Sure, freedom isn't free and they have to get their hands dirty sometimes by killing people, but there are some pretty awful ppl in the world unfortunately. A country cannot exist without a military to protect it from those awful ppl. Reality.
Please explain how anyone protected anything in the US, besides bankster/cartel/deep state interests by invading Iraq in 2003, and subsequently killing lots and lots of people.
Repeat with Libya in 2009, and Syria in 2013 (ongoing). And for that matter Serbia in 1999, which was in fact a Christian country (unlike the other 3 above).
Vietnam & Korea get a pass due to the draft. The rest don't. The great awakening is about the truth IN ALL THINGS, including sacred cows such as the mil.
That's why we pray. We enlisted with pure hearts. We came out different. Pray for our military, who suffer pretty high suicide rates as it is.
Not different, better. It was a required lesson.
No need for self-judgment. However, it's important to see the MIL for what it really is, not what people want it to be.