Thursday, September 19, 2013

How does war effect a soldier's life?



Logan Blain
How does war effect a soldier's life?

       War effects a soldier's life in many different ways, some are more obvious than others. Of these ways 
that a soldier is effected I will be exploring in depth a select few of them. Probably the first thing that comes to mind when you think about how war effects a soldier is something along the lines of PTSD. Although 
PTSD greatly effects soldiers, there are many more outcomes of war that people tend to over-look. When a soldier leaves for war, not only does he struggle with leaving his home but his family deals with this issue too. Probably the most obvious effect on a soldier among all is the physical impairments that result from combat. These negative effects caused by war are relational, mental, and physical struggles.

       In an article by Smithsonian.com (http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/laos.html?c=y&story=fullstory), the author describes several different aspects of a young man named Michael Masterson's life in Vietnam. One of the topics emphasized in the article is not only how Masterson himself was effected by the war, but his family too. Michael Masterson's plane crashed into a mountain side on October 13, 1968. A nearby plane circled the crash site for hours looking for signs of Masterson but recovered nothing. Masterson was labeled as MIA. Michael Masterson had a wife and two daughters. I believe the author used Masterson as his main character in this story because he was effected directly by the war but the war also effected his family too. Masterson's family clung to the hope that Michael was still alive, they received engraved bracelets with his name and a label of “MIA” . Masterson's wife, Fran, recalled that the last time she talked to her husband, ironically, he claimed that he dreaded night missions over Laos. Fran Masterson says that she replayed the tape of his last phone call for years after his death but eventually put it away. She never remarried. This aspect of the story shows how war doesn't only affect the soldier but also his loved ones.


        The next burden that a soldier carries after a war is the mental torture that he/she undergoes. This aspect will come from my own account with a family member of mine who served in Vietnam. My Uncle served in combative Vietnam, when he returned home loud noises that resembled gunfire or bombs frightened him. Since my Uncle experienced first-hand combat, fireworks on holidays made him involuntarily recall upon war memories and he could not bear the sound. Something as simple as fireworks can trigger a memory in the brain that becomes so vivid that he almost felt as if he was experiencing it again, which put him in a state of panic and terror. This example is PTSD in essence and is the most common way that a soldier is effected mentally by a war.


        The most obvious way that a soldier is negatively altered by war is through physical change. According to Vietnam War Statistics (http://www.mrfa.org/vnstats.htm ) there was nearly a total of 60,000 deaths, 60,000 MIA's, and 75,000 physically disabled. This statistic proves that the Vietnam war, along with many other wars, had a huge physical impact on soldiers' lives who served. Being physically disabled is most commonly in the form amputations, from my personal experiences I have encountered numerous Veterans who are amputees. When a soldier is physically disabled the result is not only a physical struggle but it's a family struggle too. A physically disabled soldier effects the family because in many cases the family has to take care of the soldier and the soldier now has a dependency on family and friends.
All of the ways that soldiers are effe
cted, whether it be directly or indirectly, are a burden to the soldier and in many cases their loved ones too. In most situations, family is almost always effected whether it be through mental or physical means. Most of the time soldiers are effected mentally in some way or another, PTSD being the worst scenario but there are milder forms of it that many soldiers will experience due to the terrors of war. And finally, a large portion of troops that served in Vietnam ended up physically disabled. Despite their differences, all forms of terrors that a soldier endures as an outcome of war are a burden and take part in all soldiers' lives.




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2 comments:

  1. Pointing out the three effects that the soldiers go through due to war is very eye opening. People who have not participated in war will never know what these men went through. The part of this post that stands out to me the most is the mental aspect of war which will cause Post-traumatic Stress Disorder in many veterans. It is awful to know that many soldiers undergo great stress and anxiety in a war then return home and can not escape it still. It is very heartbreaking also. Not only for the veteran but for the family. They also dealt with anxiety while their husband or dad was gone to war and then they tend to bring it back home with them when they return. So with that being pointed out I believe it is necessary to have free counseling for veterans once they return home to help them cope and return to normalcy. And it kinda makes you wonder does war have just as great of an effect on a soldier's family as it does on the soldier himself?

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  2. I appreciate how you took the time out to explain each struggle of soldier. Its not just physically or mentally how a soldier can be effected but it could effect many relationships in that soldiers life. I wrote about Masterson in my blog post and totally agree that it does effect the family. His wife waited 40 years for answers that she already knew but just didn't want to believe and it proves that her love for her husband was unreal because she never remarried and hoped that one day her husband would return.

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