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Reality of the Vietnam War

Essay by   •  February 12, 2011  •  Essay  •  829 Words (4 Pages)  •  1,383 Views

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Reality of the Vietnam War

During the Vietnam War the reality of warfare brought many soldiers back to a home that didn't want them. Their feelings torn by atrocities, the loss of friends, and the condition of loneliness only made the experience worse. Did the issues on the home front affect the issues on the frontline? The novel Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers is a perfect example of the conflict and diversity among other soldiers during the Vietnam War. It shows the reality many soldiers faced and how they dealt with conflicts back home while they were alone and afraid of death creeping up on them. With the reality of war taking its toll, soldiers coming home to a world they didn't know, a world that had changed and left them in Vietnam to fend for themselves. They slept with wives who didn't know even the smallest of their problems. From nightmares to remembering bad memories, Vietnam veterans suffered it all from extreme depression to the worst, suicide. The real world didn't know how to deal with them and just left them alone.

The reality of war changed many soldiers' lives because of nightmares from firefights and small skirmishes to bombings and atrocities. Many places from Saigon to Khe Sanh are filled with stories from many veterans. A letter from a marine fighting in Khe Sanh said to his Parents "Since we began, we have lost 14 KIA and 44 men WIA. Our company is cut down to half strength, and I think we will be going to Okinawa to regroup. I hope so anyway because I have seen enough of war and its destruction." From the death of close friends any person's emotions would crumble. A normal everyday business person in the shoes of this soldier wouldn't last a day. The experience a soldier goes through will change his view on life forever. This is just showing how it affects people. Seeing death and killing on a daily basis. The random occurrence of death would truly disturb any person. Seeing the death of friends and mangled bodies of South Vietnamese villagers left by Vietcong guerillas, the soldiers were left with the vivid visions of the bodies. The death of one close friend can upset you but the death of many will drive you mad. Many physiological problems can derive from military war service. Vietnam is infamous for this. Soldiers getting shell shock, combat stress, war neurosis, and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder stay with them for life affecting everyday issues. "In the years after the Vietnam War veterans suffered many ongoing stress symptoms including, flashbacks, nightmares, anxiety and difficulty integrating back into civilian life." Stated Megan Wood in her essay "Shell-shocked: The trauma of war". In the novel Fallen Angels Perry and his platoon were in a South Vietnamese village and his experience was horrifying. Perry said "The VC had already struck. There were bodies all around.

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