| Bob, that was a tough scene after a tough battle. We need to remember. |
Comment History | great movie Max, I've seen it several times...........when my dad was a squadron commander during Vietnam they would come and get my mom when someone was shot down or killed, she would go with them to the family's house to tell the wife and family, I never understood how she could get through something like that.......if you've never seen the Mel Gibbson movie "they were soldiers once" there is a great scene in that movie about this kind of thing too... |
| I'm sorry, I know we have to keep seeing these things, help our country to remember... Sometimes they seem too weak and willing to forget, but these moments of the ultimate price include all the moments along the spectrum of death that bring us up to the edge of this moment and yet they forever change our lives, scarring us, leaving some cold and homeless on our city streets and others violent and angry in the quiet of our homes, and still others one part broken family (the little pieces falling off) year after year. The price... on some days... is just too high when I see our leaders willing to rush to throw the bodies of our fathers and brothers and sisters and children to plug some imaginary hole or some lonely hill's bloody soils, only to turn it over to the people who would have taken it anyway at some point of political gain that we could hardly understand. Some issue of thought that we could barely hold within us it's details, clawing in our brain.... some point our counterpoint that, like the bodies of those we love... floats away in that river of life and time as we pause to comprehend or gasps at understanding in the tonal deafening of the loss we as families endure for the rest of our lives. It is then we, mere mortals shake in the night at the passing of our brave brothers and sisters to immortality's cold grasp. Then and for nights ever after feeling the hollow drum's echo within our bowels. It's beat giving way to deafening pause and silence only to be regained in a moment by another heart rendering explosion of loss. Entire families die in such well wished violence. Death is terminal in so many ways and all of them drowning, suffocating and silent. |
| It's like life is this big fast river and something you don't even understand reaches down and plucks your love one right out of the stream. Suddenly for an entire family everything stops and there is confusion and then it seem like everything swirls on beyond the family and slowly, ever so slowly for some, one by one the family moves back into the current of the river pausing now and again to look back at the violence and some how moving on they begin to join the speed of the river, pausing even to years later contemplating the violence and the moment somehow lives within them stopped for all time. Like a coldness deep within, frozen, with your own life warm all around it... with it's own deafening silence feeding the crystalline, hurtful craziness of the inner and outer tension. The American Patriot Poet, Steven Vincent Benet' in his book, John Browns Body, wrote, "War is a hungry mouth, that just keeps eatin and eatin and eatin." |
| Such a quiet movie. I balled my eyes out! |
Original Post | I watched this movie titled "Taking Chance" on HBO this afternoon. Words can not describe how deep it will impact you especially on this day of remembrance of the fallen. It's a true story about a young soldier killed in Iraq and the sacrifice service man and women and their families have endured for out freedom... Not a dry eye in the house. Thank you is not enough. |
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