When a soldier joins the military, he isn’t just joining to fight for his country, he’s joining a brotherhood that lasts forever.Throughout the course of history, soldiers have encountered inexplicable experiences. These experiences are so traumatic that they cause a life full of hardship.Fortunately, they are not alone.Soldiers in the armed forces share common similarities such as: adapting to civilian life, going through failed marriages, and forming a bond with one another. After World War I had ended the government allowed the remaining troops to be released back into society. Allowing them back into society without being checked lead to many consequences .Too many troops were coming home with a disorder called PTSD, this caused them to live a stressful life.Current day, the military views this as a high priority. Beth Wegner says “For soldiers currently returning home from deployment there are many resources available to them to make the reintegration process easier. …show more content…
"Any man in combat who lacks comrades who will die for him, or for whom he is willing to die," William Manchester wrote of his time as a Marine in World War II, "is not a man at all. He is truly damned." (Matthew Bogdanos) The relationships that soldiers create during their service is one of the strongest connections ever made. They share an involvement with each other during desperate periods of life or death These bonds will last them a lifetime. These bonds that soldiers share are so important to their time that they serve. Going into battle with a comrade that will do anything for you gives the confidence and will continue to do so throughout their entire lives.The bond between two soldiers is an unbreakable bond. Soldiers share many commonalities with one another. Experiences from war have proven to cause traumatizing memories, yet it has brought about lifetime friendships. One could speak with a soldier and try to understand, but to truly understand one would have to experience
“I sit by Kemmerich’s bed. He is sinking steadily. Around us is great commotion”(Remarque, 27). Even in a time of life and death the soldiers are still displaying a strong sense of comradeship. They are all showing their affection by surrounding
A sense of belonging from the Service members can be shown not only in their formal paperwork, but also on an informal emotional level through an unwritten bond of relatability, pain and mateship formed from their shared experiences on the battlefield. Belongingness also develops in affiliate members through a shared, intense emotional pain of their loved one or family member dying, participating or injured in the ADF. Social members also share the desire to support the purpose of the RSL to develop a sense of belonging. The RSL as a whole has a strong sense of belongingness since they all formally are a member and informally share a common experience and
When everyone thinks about war they cannot picture in their mind what it would be like out on a battlefield with a bunch of good friends, fighting side by side. They cannot picture the horrible and nasty sights you will see on a battlefield of men dying, their bodies being shot everywhere or being blown to pieces. Maybe from a movie they might have seen a battle or war, but it’s not even close to the same. They are people that you care for and love that have just been killed, live and in front of your face. You cannot do anything but watch them suffer and try to keep fighting.
Most of the young adults returning from war were drafted and were just taking
One of the main themes that linked the enlisted men together was religion. All soldiers in all wars believe that God is on their side, and the enlisted men in the United States military felt that way, too (Chadwick, 51). Another theme that linked the men together was the idea of liberty. They fought for the independence of their nation and with it the salvation of their souls (Chadwick, 52). It did not matter how different the soldiers were, they were fighting for the same cause.
Veterans upon returning to their homes are met with pain and heartbreak. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) affects an estimated one in ten Afghanistan veterans and as many as one in five Iraq War veterans. Psychological trauma faced by soldiers returning home can be just as bad or even worse than the physical trauma of war. Studies have found that less than half of returning soldiers with problems sought help, mostly out of fear of being stigmatized or hurting their careers. Dr. Charles W. Hoge, a researcher at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, has said “The most important thing we can do for service members who have been in combat is to help them understand that the earlier that they get help when they need it, the better off
Learning about World War II veterans, it is important to consider how veterans deal differently with their grief, the job of combat medics, and how those medics have a higher chance of experiencing PTSD after the war. Many lives were lost during the war and people were affected differently by these deaths. When people in general lose a close friend or a loved one, they experience grief in different ways. Losing a friend in battle could be a whole different situation, resulting in more
Vietnam was as an unnecessary war. American soldiers risked their lives for a war that made no impact on Vietnam besides taking countless innocent lives. South Vietnam was taken over by communists on April 30, 1975. This was also the day that America ended the war with Vietnam and left. Vietnam had the same problems before America interfered and after America left.
Being in the military there is a similarity to the comradery of brother and sister hood that you see in the police department. Starting at police officer training, an individual is stripped of their own identity and made to think and become what the “ideal” police officer is. You are trained that you have a strong bond with all police officers and you become one big family and are encouraged to keep other officers safe from any harm or any punishment known as the blue wall of silence, blue code and blue shield. The code of silence begins at their police academy training, this is where the trainees rely on each other to complete the training by becoming one team, one fight, one family due to being immersed with each other in order to complete
When they return home they have to spend 350 days in the Wounded Warrior Regiment, and they also spend 18 months to two years on a Disability Evaluation System. During that time they could contact future employers but they cannot accept the job or even an internship. So these veterans get tossed into the churning millions-strong mass of unemployed
The chapter “Friends,” is a very good chapter showing friendship. There are many details of how good of friends people can become during a war. Dave Jensen and Lee Strunk weren 't good buddies for a while but they eventually started to trust each other. “In late August they made a pact that if one of them should ever get totally fucked up- a wheelchair wound- the other guy would automatically find a way to end it,” (O’Brien, 62).
Comradeship “We are brothers and press on one another the choicest pieces.” (Remarque 96) All Quiet on The Western Front introduces the major themes of comradeship, because the soldiers depend on one another when in danger, they have love for one another, and they have the common goal to survive with one another.
The True Weight of War “The Things They Carried,” by Tim O’Brien, brings to light the psychological impact of what soldiers go through during times of war. We learn that the effects of traumatic events weigh heavier on the minds of men than all of the provisions and equipment they shouldered. Wartime truly tests the human body and and mind, to the point where some men return home completely destroyed. Some soldiers have been driven to the point of mentally altering reality in order to survive day to day. An indefinite number of men became numb to the deaths of their comrades, and yet secretly desired to die and bring a conclusion to their misery.
In Tim O'Brien's “Enemies” and “Friends”, O'Brien shows the effect the nature of war has on individuals and how war destroys and creates friendships. These two stories describe the relationship between two soldiers, Lee Strunk and Dave Jensen. In “Enemies”, friendship is broken over a fist fight about a stolen jackknife, which leaves Strunk with a broken nose and Jensen paranoid of whether or not Strunk’s revenge is coming. While in “Friends”, you see how the nature of war creates a bond of trust, even between people who first saw each other as enemies.
Throughout history, war has been the cause of the death of millions of brave men and women who fought for their countries. Innocent people instantaneously erased from their lives. This feeling of loss is one that no one with a friend or loved one in the military would ever wish to experience. Unfortunately, this is the reality of living with a service member. If only there were an alternative to sending soldiers into combat…