Posted on Jan 12, 2016
CPT Jack Durish
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I suppose this question raises a question: What the hell is he talking about? Allow me to explain. I feel as though I had fallen off the planet for five years. A year in Infantry School (BCT, AIT, Infantry OCS). A year in Vietnam. Five years in Hawaii (we didn't have satellite TV in those days and who would've watched it if we had?). Star Trek and Laugh In were produced, aired, and discontinued during those years. I've only ever seen them in reruns. There were other events. The Orioles never rose from the depths of the cellar in all the years I lived in Baltimore. Then, during my first year in the Army, secluded in Infantry OCS, they won the World Series. I've been left feeling like I was the albatross around their neck and couldn't win until I was gone.

These were trivial things. There were the Race Riots that left Baltimore an alien place to me when I returned to visit. And the law I had studied had changed. Let the buyer beware was replaced by Let the seller beware, no fault divorce came into existence, among other major changes.

One of the most striking changes was in finding stores open 24/7 and TV broadcasting 24/7. Where had the "Test Pattern" gone?

There were other events but that should be enough to give you an idea of what I mean.

So, you may ask, do I regret missing them? Hell no. I was too busy participating in the greatest adventure of my life. At least, that's how I feel about my service.

How about you
Edited >1 y ago
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SGT Infantryman (Airborne)
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My grandfather lived in Springfield, Mo. We were going fly fishing when I got home from Vietnam, but he passed away two weeks before I came home. He taught me to fly fish when I was a kid and I caught my first black bass fly fishing with him, in a small lake called Town Lake. I think about him often, and every time I go fishing.
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CPT Jack Durish
CPT Jack Durish
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There's nothing like cherished memories to keep you company in later years.
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SGT Infantryman (Airborne)
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That's for sure. My parents sent me a letter and told me about it. I was bummed out the rest of my tour. I wish they would have waited until I came home. I got to ride a train to Springfield every summer, when school was out? Me and my PaPa did everything together.
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SN Greg Wright
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CPT Jack Durish I was stationed at Yokota AFB (I know, join the Navy, go to the AF, wierd.) when Tienanmen Square went down. I was one of hundreds of lower enlisted conscripted into setting up thousands of cots in aircraft hangars, in anticipation of receiving American refugees. They never materialized, of course.
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Sgt Field Radio Operator
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Sir, on TV, I missed Star Trek along with all the other shows. While I was in Vietnam, I missed the Moon landing of Apollo 11. At the time, I regretted not being able to see Neal Armstrong walk on the Moon, but this event did lead me in a new career direction after I was discharged. When I came back from Vietnam, America was not the same, and neither was I.
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CPT Jack Durish
CPT Jack Durish
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I was stationed at Tripler Army Medical Center. The night Armstrong made his famous walk, I was duty officer. I had a TV in my room next to the Emergency Room and was settled in to watch the event when a call came for me. When I returned from the opposite side of the hospital (where I discovered there was no need for me) I found my TV in the center of the ER with a crowd of doctors, nurses, corpsmen, and patients surround it. Thus I had to watch the moon landing from the fringes of that crowd. Funny thing is I preferred it, sharing the event with others. It wouldn't have been as significant sitting alone in the duty room...
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