This Veterans Day is an important time to remember the nearly 1˝ million
women veterans in America. Chicken
Soup for the Nurse’s Soul
offers this story to honor those who serve our profession and our country so
gallantly. For their service then, now, and forever, we thank all those who
sustain and defend our freedom.
LeAnn Thieman, co-author, Chicken Soup for the Nurse’s Soul
The first military women to arrive in Vietnam were
nurses, in 1956. As the American presence in Southeast Asia grew, so too
did the number of young women who served. In all, nearly eight thousand
military women were there, along with thousands more who served in the civilian
sector.
Eighty-three
percent of us were nurses, the rest held positions in special services, supply,
air traffic control, cartography, the USO, American Red Cross, and many other
jobs in support of our combat troops. We were all fairly young when we
volunteered to serve our country. And many of us were woefully naive in
believing our recruiters' promises; mainly that we could be stationed anywhere
in the world that we wanted, and that Vietnam was "strictly
voluntary."
Still,
when our orders arrived sending us to war, most of us believed in our hearts
that we were needed, that what we were doing was important, and that it was our
duty to go. We did our jobs, facing the perils of enemy fire, horrific
heat and humidity, disease, insects, isolation, long work hours and sleepless
nights. Then we managed to pull ourselves together, dab some perfume behind our
ears, and do it all again the next day.
We
learned a lot about ourselves. We discovered our strengths, and tried to
survive our weaknesses. We were ordinary young women trying to function
in the most extraordinary of circumstances; dealing in life and death and
seeking not just to survive, but to understand.
We
did the best we could with who we were and what we had. And daily we
collected our memories, and stored them away someplace safe, out of our
conscious minds where we thought, "I'll deal with this later."
And
after a year, we came home, back to "The World." In one plane
ride we went from war to peace. In one year we had gone from childhood to
irrevocable adulthood. We knew we had changed, that our lives would never be
the same, and that we could never explain any of it to the folks back
home. We couldn't, and we didn't. For as unacceptable as it was for
the guys to talk about the war when they came home, no one wanted to acknowledge
that young women had been there. Even as the Women's Movement was making
its voice heard, the underlying message was clear: "nice girls wouldn't
have gone to war."
So
we came home quietly, went back to our homes, our families, our jobs and
never spoke about the war to anybody. Many of us quit nursing, and never knew
why. Some of us had recurring nightmares, flashbacks, unexplained
illnesses, depression, or abused drugs or alcohol. Many women applied
themselves with a fury to school, attaining one degree after another, to work,
rising to the top leadership positions in their companies, to their church,
their social organizations, their families--anything to avoid the memories they
had stored away "to think about later." The memories had created
a deep impenetrable wound that needed to be healed.
In
1982 the initial healing ground was laid, in the form of the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial-The Wall. The women, just like men who had served, were drawn to
it. The healing power of that sacred place is evident to all who have
been there. We could go to The Wall, and mourn, and cry, and reach out
for comfort if we chose, and yet it was so easy to be invisible there.
Women
simply weren't recognized as veterans.
Then,
on Veterans Day 1993 the Vietnam Women's Memorial is dedicated in Washington
D.C. Thousands of women vets attend and we are overwhelmed. We lead
the parade; the nurses, Red Cross workers, entertainers, women who worked in
administration, logistics, and intelligence. The streets are lined with
people applauding and crying. A vet sits high up in a tree yelling
"Thank You! Thank You!" A man in a flight suit stands for over
two hours at attention, saluting as the women pass by. People hand us
flowers and hug us. One GI has a picture of his nurse taken "July
1964." He is trying to find her.
We
find each other. We know, at last, that we are not alone; that we are not
crazy or paranoid, but that we have a lot of work to do in order to heal. We talk to each other and find comfort as well as pain in our words and our tears. Words and tears, that now, finally we share. Now, after so many years, the process has finally begun, and we hold each other close, and say "Welcome Home!"
Janis Nark, Lt. Col., U.S.A.R. (Ret.)
Chicken Soup for the Nurse’s Soul co-author, LeAnn Thieman, is a nationally acclaimed professional speaker, author and nurse. To learn more about this book or her speaking presentations see her website at www.LeAnnThieman.com.
Janis Nark delivers presentations about
change and stress from the heart and soul of experience.
# # #