My mind keeps awake the sounds of war -- the cries of pain -- the gasps of letting go. And of faces that haunt me in the middle of night -- trying to say their last goodbye --- and trying unsuccessfully to explain why . . .

A PAUSE BEFORE THE LAST GOODBYE

By A. Garcia-Wiltse

How vivid still the memories.  How powerful the visions of chaos and commotion.  How potent the smell of war – of death – of fear.  How intense the sensation of exhausted courage and lost boldness.  And how unnerving to feel the frailty of human vulnerability and defenselessness.  All forever etched into a mind that once thought, felt, saw and bled -- like a solider in war.

For a soldier – any soldier – the mind is the ultimate weapon – the ultimate defense – the ultimate armor.  It is a soldier’s mind that is the ultimate sentinel -- the watchman – the spotter – the scout.  That innate mental ability to sense, to perceive and to discern the security and safety of the place, the moment, the circumstance. 

For many of us – the place, the moment, the circumstance – was Vietnam.  The Mekong Delta to be precise.  Burned into the very essence of who we were – and who we are.  Vietnam -- once a piece of tropical exotic paradise -- turned into a burning inferno of human dreams.  And for American soldiers – a playground of cowboys and Indians – of gladiators and fire-breathing dragons – of good versus evil.  But unlike the childish make-believe games once played in backyards, neighborhood streets and city parks – this time – there were no “do-overs” – no retakes or replays.  And sadly – in this paradise of deceit and deception – the losers never got up – never stood up -- dusted off their pants and their hats and walked away.  And the winners – scurried into the shadows of the night.  Drenched in sweat and fear – and maybe even traces of blood and tears.

Vietnam remains today a legacy of distrust – mistrust – cynicism and contempt.  And the Veterans of Vietnam remain still – the boy soldiers – lost in the abyss of war – of gamesmanship – of manipulation – of exploitation -- of subterfuge.  Their minds forever wounded, maimed and scarred.  Boys and young men and women – used and abused – battered and tattered.  And the reason so simple – so self-evident – so loathsome:  not knowing who we were supposed to be -- the good guys or the bad guys.

And in the end – Vietnam – militarily a cruel study of how not to fight, expand or broaden a war. But for the survivors who served – and for the 58,318 goodbyes never said – and goodbyes never explained – it’s personal.  Too painful to forget.  Too sorrowful to let go.  Too tragic to ignore. 

I remember the yellow ribbons around the old oak tree.  The peace rallies – the peace marches.  The vocal protests and the sit-ins.  But most of all – I feel the guilt within -- at not having said goodbye to so many friends and comrades who walked into the night – and never came back.  A pause before the last goodbye that my mind will not forget.  But then – I tell myself – we were soldiers – trained to fight – and taught to die and fade away – not to say goodbye. 


Submitted: February 10, 2025

© Copyright 2025 A. Garcia-Wiltse. All rights reserved.

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Thomaswcase8'.

Powerful.

Wed, February 12th, 2025 9:47am

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Thank you Tom! Appreciate it.

Wed, February 12th, 2025 4:58am

CathrinStuart

I like the emotion potrayed in this essay. Not sure if you have read my poen "The Lost Boys" it is about war. The tribute was written for my godmothers son Lance, he once encountered an American in a bar in South Africa who was loudly broadcasting that he was in "nam - Vietnam", to which Lance responded "I was in nam - Namibia", he was a parabat dropped behind enemy lines, he suffered the torment of kill or die until he committed suicide.

Sun, February 16th, 2025 4:18pm

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