Perry Walker served in the Marine Corps from 1966 to 67 in Vietnam. He wrote a short story (poem) about his first experience with a PTSD counselor. I’m sure many of us can relate. Check it out!
by Perry Walker
The outer office was small, the white door melded into the woodwork almost unnoticeably. The walls are almost bare except for a large clock, it’s ticking loudly, reminding one of tapping at the door. The hands long, stretching out, seeking the black numerals to no avail. Beside the quiet door, a fish tank, its inhabitants lazily moving to and fro, constantly moving, yet going nowhere. Their large eyes unblinking, staring forward almost as in a trance. To my right, the entry door. Large, unyielding.
I felt my palms, wet with perspiration. My mind, racing with fear, anxiety, and questions. The clock on the wall, the ticking louder now. The door, my only escape, seems larger, more opposing, more intimidating. What question will he ask, what memories will he stir, what pain will he bring.
I gently rock, my padded chair squeaking in protest. My eyes darting around the room, yet always back to the door. The clock pounding now, yet yielding no time. The fish, hanging there, frozen in time. The dark door, my only egress to safety. That damn door, larger now, mocking me, that damn door.
The silhouette of a man, “beckons me”. The room is larger, darker, warmer. The silhouette sat back, a dark bookcase framing his body. My eyes flicked left to his accomplishments hanging dryly on the wall. Then to the right is a clock quietly staring back at me. And now to my rear, dark, foreboding almost hanging above me, looking down as a predator might, was the door. I felt my body begin to “buzz”, my hands wet as I wring them together and the ringing in my ears almost deafening.
I stared at the floor waiting for the silhouette to speak. I lost focus as my eyes began to well with tears. What memories, what visions so long buried would he evoke.
I felt my lips start to quake, my eyes darting around the room trying vainly to seek escape. “I understand you served in Viet Nam?”
My eyes stopped searching. My hands stopped wrenching. I froze. The silhouette asked again “I understand you served in Ve” A disembodied voice, soft at first, unsolicited,
“Yes, yes I did”
“What brings you here today?”
I’m staring at the floor, my eyes begin to water and my mouth is dry and quivering. I hear the voice again. Even softer than before. “I didn’t do enough”
The silhouette, “you didn’t do enough of what?”
The quiet voice, “I didn’t do enough, they died anyway.” Then I felt the first tear as it fell upon my hand.
*****
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I served with 5th Marines, Charlie 1/5 out of An Hoa in 1969. We were always getting our backsides kicked and never had enough Marines. What a nightmare I still live with today. I survived or did I? Thanks Perry for your terrific prose!
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Perry, you described this first visit so vividly. I was with you and felt this viscerally. Your beautifully detailed writing highlighted the intensity many combat Vets feel stepping into the room as they begin to uncover and heal the wounds still carried. Thank you for reminding us, who counsel Vets, the courage required and felt vulnerability our Vets experience as they step through that doorway. I wish you joy and continued healing.
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Praying for God’s grace in all your lives! – Semper Fi!
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I too served in the Marine Corps in Vietnam in 1967-68. I never knew I had PTSD until I was at the VA early one morning and while waiting I dosed off. When the nurse awakened me, I jump up and almost hit her. She highly recommended I get analysised, which I eventually did, The doc put me at 100% immediately.
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My experiences as a slick driver for SF left me with alot of stuff I couldnt speak about due to the classified nature of the ops.
The counselor wrote scripts for pretty serious drugs that rendered me nonfunctional
I endured that stupud shit for three years until a new Doc was assigned to me.
He was a godsend, taking me off those brain killing drugs, then kindly told me to start exercising and running. He decided ut was the best method for me to work it through.
He was right.
He was a retired colonel from SF in medical.
He knew the solution and cure.
I avoid the mental health psuedoscience quacks like the plague.
Got PTSD?
Stop drinking, drugging, and dont go to the head fuckers- whatever you do.
Workout, run, swim, make your body a warrior fortress, and push yourself to the limit. Over time one finds those mind munchkins you once were being haunted by have lost their voices.
You all are soldiers, warriors if a different metal than your own countrymen that avoided the draft, didnt sign up and swear that sacred oath, man up, embrace the suck, and continue to persevere as Lincoln once stated.
Dont let the system beat you.
M Anderson A18 O
12th SFG
Lightning and Thunder
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very moving. A painful time to remember. A painful time for our country.
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I sat silent as I read this, then silent for what seemed like hours. I am not sure what I would have answered, ‘I did not do enough’ or did we do far too much, far beyond what we should have ever done. If you have read “The Pentagon Papers” the questions would be quite different. My first visit with my psychologist was a flood of emotions as it was 52 years after the day so many souls died, but just weeks after a Veteran friend hung himself.
I will never heal from those many months so many years ago, just finding a path forward to find internal peace is all that I seek. We just past the 58th Anniversary of the “Battle of Suoi Tre”, it is just as raw today as it was March 21, 1967
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I think anyone who’s been in PTSD counseling would agree that you can go from feeling, and looking to the outside world, “just fine” to tears in a microsecond. The dam has to break sometimes. Thank you for sharing your first time Cpl. Walker.
Jamie Thompson, Sgt. C Co, 5/7, 1st Cav, 1970-71
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If they only knew what went on over there…NEVER
NEVER
NEVER
NEVER
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Powerful- it seems everyone who I know including myself, had that exact reaction…stand tall, lean forward and know you’re not alone.
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The descriptive narrative didn’t relate. But, the question & response, verbally & physically, was dead on! Bless you brother. 🙏😩
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A beautifully written gut wrench
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My visit didn’t go well at all, I began talking and he said to be hedon’t open “Pendoea’s Box.” I end up walking out and driving across the street into a parking lot and cried. I went several years latter after two visit I stop, went back again about 3 years later over 6 weeks saw 3 different people and ended when I walked out telling the last person that I was nothing but a pay check to them and I was better off by not coming.I go back every night to Nam,
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Heart wrenching, John. I have a tear of my own falling. So much horror humans have to endure.
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I dread that moment so I’ve avoided it, the pain is right below the surface. Survivors guilt, that felling I didn’t do enough but my life and service were beyond my control.
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