Posted on Jul 13, 2018
SPC Kyle De Wolf
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Not because you approve of it or think it’s a good idea, but just because you feel so deeply estranged from society, and the front lines were the last place that you remember feeling alive and connected? Or maybe for some other reason?
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Responses: 10
CAPT Kevin B.
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Noun. a wistful desire to return in thought or in fact to a former time in one's life, to one's home or homeland, or to one's family and friends; a sentimental yearning for the happiness of a former place or time.

I think it stumbles on "happiness". That's why you'll get a pile of no votes. Now if the question was about nostalgia for former MIL brothers/sisters, etc., you'll get a different answer set. So for most, nostalgia for war; NO. Nostalgia for what war did to you; HELL NO. However, if you had the chance to do it all over again to bring more people out alive; probably a lot of HELL YESes.
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SGT Christopher Hayden
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I never felt "alive" on the battlefield. And being in a place in which my brothers or myself could die at any moment is not a place I romanticize.
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SSG Robert Perrotto
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Honestly - absolutely not. If I could erase some of the stuff in my mind I would. There is nothing, and I mean nothing glorious, romantic, or exhilarating about combat, You pray that your training and reflexive reactions are good enough, and hope that you make the right decisions, all at the same time while some on is actively trying to kill you or your buddies. And no matter how terrible it is to see one of your buddies get hurt, there is a part of you thanking God that it wasn't you.
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Does anyone ever feel nostalgia for war?
SGT Philip Roncari
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Short answer- No —longer explanation my experience in combat was like a description I read here on RP ,combat is like a car crash everything is fine and then Wham! Your whole world turns to shit,I felt alive and connected when my ten months and fourteen days in Vietnam were over!
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Never had the displeasure of combat, trained for it though.
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MSG Dan Castaneda
MSG Dan Castaneda
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you are a lucky man.
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Thank you, a few of my old classmates weren't as lucky.
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Sgt Field Radio Operator
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SPC Kyle De Wolf War is hell and is with you forever. Watching fellow brothers die is not something that I am nostalgic about.
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LT Alex Corsi
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I understand the sentiment, very well, but that is not to be confused with personal feelings of contentment or nostalgia. It is selfish in extremes and fortunately wars do not, and should not, last forever. War is very dirty business and always sucks to those on the receiving end.
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SPC Michael Corrothers
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No never.
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SGT Robert Martin
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Everyday then I look at my wife and kids and realize just how lucky I am. I still have my struggles but my wife and kids never complain and are always there to help.
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SGT Matthew S.
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War and combat itself, no.

The adrenaline rush that accompanied some aspects of it... somewhat. Part of what I liked about being a firefighter was going full-bore down the road in the dead of night alongside trusted comrades you wouldn't find anywhere else; everyone of us ready to hit the ground running and get things DONE with much at stake as soon as the vehicle came to a rapid halt - but in a (typically) far less horrific environment.

Nostalgia for the camaraderie I had with my fellow Soldiers, certainly.
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