General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMy high school class in 1964 had 57 people.
One of those was kind, gentle guy from a farm family west of the city. He was a very talented artist, but obviously his family didnt have the funds for Art School. He went to Nam instead. He didnt return. I think about Paul often. He was a special human being.
senseandsensibility
(25,570 posts)And there are thousands and thousands more. Each life was important. That's what the holiday is all about. Thanks for sharing.
PJMcK
(25,134 posts)This year marks our 50th reunion.
More than 100 of my classmates have died. Many different causes.
I feel fortunate to still be alive. I grieve for those service people who never came home.
niyad
(134,102 posts)and for their loved ones. I spent many years trying to help heal the wounded minds.
Joinfortmill
(21,719 posts)It was college or Nam.
anciano
(2,321 posts)BeneteauBum
(797 posts)Friends I knew in high school. I remember the first death of someone I knew
..I was a sophomore. Also, many of us lost relatives in WW2 and Korea. I had an uncle die on the Bataan death march. The horrors of war should never be trivialized and the sacrifices of people defending us should always be memorialized.
Peace ☮️
IbogaProject
(6,088 posts)He was the very first causalty in Desert Storm the first Gulf War.
tavernier
(14,522 posts)Several died in Nam, but the one I especially remember told me once that I was the first girl he ever kissed.
littlemissmartypants
(34,474 posts)Festivito
(13,923 posts)His friend, Jesus, did not make it back from Vietnam alive. His eyes welled up after all these years as I listened.
My close neighbor told another neighbor friend that he should go to Vietnam. She carried the memory of his death until her own.
As I work as a civilian on a military base, the memory of Vietnam is not with the young people there. My condolence to all those with memory.
surfered
(14,379 posts)MineralMan
(151,607 posts)6 died in Vietnam. Just under 6%. Shocking!
ShazzieB
(22,916 posts)75 in my graduating class. I didn't stay in touch with any of those people, but I wouldn't be surprised if some of the guys got drafted. Now I'm wondering if they did and if they all made it back.
One of my cousins got drafted but never left the states. He ended up in the quartermaster corps after basic training and spent the rest of his hitch in Ft. Dix, NJ.
I'm sorry to hear about your friend Paul. There were too many like him.
MustLoveBeagles
(17,373 posts)KitFox
(599 posts)two of our classmates in Vietnam and another committed suicide 3 months after coming home. We had all been in school together since first grade and it hit us so hard. I lost two of my former students: one in Afghanistan and one in Iraq. I cry every time I look through my school yearbooks and see their sweet little 7 year old faces smiling back at me. My moms brother was killed in World War II so I sadly never knew him. I choke up every Memorial Day and Veterans Day when I put out my flag.