THE WARRIOR’S CODE OF HONOR

(at www.militarycodeofhonor.com)



As a combat veteran wounded in one of America’s wars, I offer to speak for those who cannot.

Were the mouths of my fallen front-line friends not stopped with dust, they would testify that life revolves around honor.



In war, it is understood that you give your word of honor to do your duty -- that is -- stand and fight instead of running away and deserting your friends.

When you keep your word despite desperately desiring to flee the screaming hell all around, you earn honor.



Earning honor under fire changes who you are.

The blast furnace of battle burns away impurities encrusting your soul.

The white-hot forge of combat hammers you into a hardened, purified warrior willing to die rather than break your word to friends -- your honor.



Combat is scary but exciting.

You never feel so alive as when being shot at without result.

You never feel so triumphant as when shooting back -- with result.

You never feel love so pure as that burned into your heart by friends willing to die to keep their word to you. And they do.



The biggest sadness of your life is to see friends falling.

The biggest surprise of your life is to survive the war.

Although still alive on the outside, you are dead inside -- shot thru the heart with nonsensical guilt for living while friends died.

The biggest lie of your life torments you that you could have done something more, different, to save them.

Their faces are the tombstones in your weeping eyes, their souls shine the true camaraderie you search for the rest of your life but never find.



You live a different world now. You always will.

Your world is about waking up night after night silently screaming, back in battle.

Your world is about your best friend bleeding to death in your arms, howling in pain for you to kill him.

Your world is about shooting so many enemies the gun turns red and jams, letting the enemy grab you.

Your world is about struggling hand-to-hand for one more breath of life.



You never speak of your world.

Those who have seen combat do not talk about it.

Those who talk about it have not seen combat.



You come home but a grim ghost of he who so lightheartedly went off to war.

But home no longer exists.

That world shattered like a mirror the first time you were shot at.

The hurricane winds of war have hurled you far away to a different world -- the Warrior’s World -- where your whole life is about keeping your word or die trying.

But people in the civilian world have no idea that life is about keeping your word -- they think life is about babies and business.



The distance between the two worlds is as far as Mars from Earth.

This is why, when you come home, you feel like an outsider -- a visitor from another planet.

You are.



People you knew before the war try to make contact.

It is useless.

Words fall like bricks between you.



Serving with warriors who died proving their word has made prewar friends seem too untested to be trusted – thus they are now mere acquaintances.

And they often stay that way because, like most battle-hardened Warriors, you prefer not to risk fully trusting anyone whose life is not devoted to keeping their word, their honor.



The hard truth is that doing your duty under fire makes you alone, a stranger in your own home town.



The only time you are not alone is when with another combat veteran.

Only he understands that keeping your word, your honor, whilst standing face to face with death gives meaning and purpose to life.

Only he understands that spending a mere 24 hours in the broad, sunlit uplands of battle-proven honor is more deeply satisfying to a man than spending a whole lifetime in safe, comfortably numb civilian life with DNA compelling him to anguish endlessly over whether he is a brave man or a coward.

Only he understands that your terrifying – but thrilling – dance with death has made your old world of babies, backyards and ballgames seem deadly dull.

Only he understands that your way of being due to combat damaged emotions is not the un-usual, but the usual, and you are OK.



Although you walk thru life alone, you are not lonely.

You have a constant companion from combat -- Death.

It stands close behind, a little to the left.

Death whispers in your ear: “Nothing matters outside my touch, and I have not touched you...YET!”



Death never leaves you -- it is your best friend, your most trusted advisor, your wisest teacher.

Death teaches you that every day above ground is a fine day.

Death teaches you to feel fortunate on good days, and bad days...well, they do not exist.

Death teaches you that merely seeing one more sunrise is enough to fill your cup of life to the brim -- pressed down and running over!

Death teaches you that you can postpone its touch by earning serenity.



Serenity is earned by a lot of prayer and acceptance.

Acceptance is taking one step out of denial and accepting/allowing your repressed, painful combat memories to be re-lived/suffered thru/shared with other combat vets -- and thus de-fused.

Each time you accomplish this act of courage/desperation:

the pain gets less;

more tormenting combat demons hiding in the darkness of your gut are thrown out into the sunlight of awareness, where they disappear in a puff of smoke;

the less bedeviling combat demons, the more serenity earned;

serenity is, regretfully, rather an indistinct quality, but it manifests as a sense of honor, a sense of calm, and gratitude to your creator – which lengthens life span.



Down thru the dusty centuries it has always been thus.

It always will be, for what is seared into a man’s soul who stands face to face with death never changes.





Writer’s Note (1):

This work attempts to describe the world as seen thru the eyes of a combat veteran.

It is a world virtually unknown to the public because few veterans talk about it.

This is unfortunate since people who are trying to understand, and make meaningful contact with combat veterans, are kept in the dark.



Those who wonder why they cannot connect with combat veterans need look no further than these few lines to understand why this is so.



How do you establish a rapport with a combat veteran?

It is very simple:

Demonstrate to him out in the open in front of God and everybody that you too have a Code of Honor --that is, you also keep your word -- no matter what!



Do it and you will forge a bond.

Do it not and you will not.

End of story. Case closed.



I offer these poor, inadequate words – bought not taught – in the hope that they may shed some small light on why combat veterans are like they are, and how they can fix it.



It is my life desire that this tortured work, despite its many defects, may yet still provide some tiny sliver of understanding which may blossom into tolerance – nay, acceptance – of a Warrior’s perhaps unconventional way of being due to combat-damaged emotions from doing his duty under fire.



Signed, a Purple Heart Medal recipient who wishes to remain an unknown soldier.

Life Member of the Military Order of the Purple Heart (MOPH), member number L63550.

Life Member of the Disabled American Veterans (DAV)







Dedicated to absent friends in unmarked graves.







THE PURPOSE OF THIS EMAIL:

The writer respectfully requests your help in spreading the word about The Warrior’s Code of Honor website at www.militarycodeofhonor.com



WHY HELP SPREAD THE WORD?

Because PTSD experts testify that the Warrior’s Code not only helps/cures combat veterans, but also helps/cures warriors currently serving:

(3) “Everyone from a General to a Private who has experienced combat has commented that the Warrior’s Code is right on target, and has helped them understand their own PTSD…thereby opening up the possibility for a cure.”

(6)”It gives them (warriors currently serving) the vitally important message that they are not alone, their new feelings from combat are the same as countless other warriors before them, their new feelings are justified, and they are OK!” (to verify these quotes, see the feedback from a Wounded Warrior Care Project PTSD professional, which is located immediately following writer’s note number three near the end of the feedback section of the website).

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Comment by fireguy on June 23, 2011 at 8:24pm

Too many brothers and sisters with the same story and more every day, sadly. 

I know this is a year old but if you see this Chuck.  God Bless and thanks for the reminder.

 

Comment by CHUCK W. on June 30, 2010 at 10:41am
Byron, a blast from the past!
http://www.countryjoe.com/col9.ram
Comment by CHUCK W. on June 29, 2010 at 3:46pm
SOEMTHING I POSTED ON ANOTHER SITE AWHILE BACK....
He grew up in the woods and rivers of the county, fishing and swimming and hunting under sprawling blue skies and driving his rattletrap car insanely and lying on the moss with his girl and watching the branches above groping the sky and marveling as the young do at the strangeness of life, and the war came in a far country. It doesn’t matter which. It was just a country.

His father, an angry man emitting the foul stench of patriotism, said his duty was to become a soldier and kill whoever it was in the far country, wherever it was. His father didn’t know or much care. It didn’t matter. Somebody would know. A man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do. It would be a grand adventure, an uncle said.

He enlisted. In the aching humid heat of a hot state he drew toothpaste and seven-eighty-two gear and green clothes from supply and learned to march in squares while a sergeant said Lef-rye-lef-rye-lef. He felt the sense of power and invincibility that comes of rhythmic camaraderie with thudding boots. He learned to use grenades and flamethrowers and the proper placement of a bayonet in a kidney. He learned obedience and various forms of likely suicide, but it was for his country, dulce et decorum est, and he sang fierce cadences on the march. If I die on the Russian front, bury me with a Russian cunt, lef-rye-lef-rye-lef-rye-lef. It was a grand adventure, calling to a young male’s desperation to defy existence, to cross the mountains, to see the dragon, to overcome. The colonels at Training Command had calculated this nicely............................................................................................

It was a grand adventure, though..

On the ward where they removed a length of his intestines, he saw many things. He saw the soldier with his jaw shot away who fed through a tube in his nose. He watched a high-school girl of seventeen from Tennessee as she saw her betrothed, stone blind, his face a hideous porridge that would gag a maggot.

Johnny…Johnny..oh Johnny.

He left the hospital with a colostomy bag and instructions never to eat anything he liked. Women do not like colostomy bags, so he had time on his hands. He read. He thought. He came to hate, to hate with a shuddering intensity that unnerved his friends, who learned not to talk about the war. Like soldiers since before time existed, he learned that the war was not about the noble things it was supposed to be about, God and country and democracy, but about money, power, contracts, and the egos of the men who, on the principle that shit floats, always rise to the top. For the rest of his life, he would really, truly, want to kill.

He had come a long way from the county. It had been a grand adventure.
http://fredoneverything.net/AGrandAdventure.shtml
cjw
Comment by CHUCK W. on June 29, 2010 at 1:18am
lol!
Comment by Sweettina2 on June 29, 2010 at 1:07am
The pictures just went poof! Had to delete it. sorry. : (
Comment by CHUCK W. on June 29, 2010 at 12:57am
No pictures, just the outline
Comment by Sweettina2 on June 29, 2010 at 12:54am
Go see my blog, "I think I'm in trouble", you will definitely laugh!
Comment by CHUCK W. on June 29, 2010 at 12:43am
Oh well, however you recieved the name, it fits!
You always make me laugh, chucle, smile. right now
i could use all I can get.
Love you too girl
Comment by Sweettina2 on June 29, 2010 at 12:37am
AMEN! I have a lot of vets and soldiers that friend me, they feel as we do. I posted this everywhere last night! It is my deepest prayer that people hear these words, I've already had a great response. Glad to hear it was appreciated on your end.
LOL, I was given the name sweettina a long time ago by bikers, you know those crazy dudes, they name fat guys "Tiny"...not sure what that says about me! LOL!
Love you brother.
Comment by CHUCK W. on June 28, 2010 at 11:44pm
sweettina, the warrior code of honor made it to the
spokane va ptsd groups today. i met the group leader
while the two of were waiting to be seen. he emailed just
a minute ago. it was well recieved.

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