Monday, November 18, 2013

Homecoming





Although I am lauded as an accomplished cook, I rarely cook for myself; being content to dine haphazardly, in disparate moments.  Just as one hurries to be rid of a headache by whatever means at hand, so I prepare food to sate my hunger in a count of minutes-- the microwave a saving grace--come in the nick of time.  A baked potato in six minutes, while a steak grilles itself in the oven.  A small can o' peas to follow the spud with a momentary zapping; and the devilish business is done.

I sit alone trying not to despoil yet another keyboard with slopped food, the dorks hovering close to lick the finished plate.  People who live alone should identify with this repast of haste.  One can attend a restaurant only so many times without seeking the succor of a home cooked meal.  And one is never at liberty to dine out in their underwear or to pull through a drive-in so adorned.

After cups and cups of coffee no longer dull the pangs, I surrender to this inevitable routine—which comes usually in early afternoon.  A feeding at 3:00 PM is no one’s idea of lunch or dinner; yet this has become the mean time for me. 

To recount my eating habits to my primary physician always causes her a bout of eye-rolling and silent tsk-tsking.  She views the rising numbers of my diabetes labwork and cannot comprehend why I would ignore them with such a cavalier air.  I sometimes wish I could assuage her fears for the train wreck so clearly looming: from bad culinary habits, a three-pack-a day habit and caffeine at all hours of the day and night; but I can offer her no hope.  None at all.

People in recovery (there are no ex-drunks or ex-addicts) soon learn of this inexplicable inability to explain their behavior to others. Friends and family, doctors and therapists, wives and lovers observe this phenomenon of self-destruction with frustration and, eventually, despair.  Knowledge is one thing; explanation is as distant as the outer planets: out there, somewhere beyond vision or rational thought.

This is all presage to a ditty about PTSD, my own, to be precise.  So, let me tell you where I think it all began:

If you have heard me tell the prelude of this in meetings or elsewhere, please bear a little patience as it now becomes integral to a larger view.  About ten days after arriving in California from Viet Nam, following the final indignity of a digital examination with fifteen other guys, all of us naked and bent over, I was separated from active duty, given a military stand-by airfare, and sent on my merry.

At LAX, I went directly to the men’s room, removed my Donald Duck whites and mirror-shined black shoes, stuffing them all into a trash can, then putting on the clothes that had been tailor-made for me in Hong Kong.

Even in 1970, the outfit was over the top. Starting with the shoes: square-toed alligator black patent leather, with a garish brass buckle and stacked heels; gray wool slacks with a subtle gray pinstripe; then the piece de resistance—A pink pima cotton shirt with Tom Jones sleeves, cut to fit me like a second skin.

My flight was the red-eye from Los Angeles to DC Dulles, non-stop.  I stepped up to the ticket counter and had the standby ticket upgraded to coach.  I believe, at this precise moment in time, somewhere in the middle of June 1970, the PTSD began to gel.  I was tanned like a beitel nut, close shorn of beard and hair, wearing an outlandish costume and travelling not as a returning sailor, but as some ordinary schlub in coach.  Who the fuck was I kidding?

I think I was one of about four passengers on board that night.  In 1970, the airlines had not yet begun packing passengers on board like kosher pickles in a jar.  As often as not, these late-night flights were practically empty.  So, paying more for a seat that would have been mine anyway was ludicrous.  In my delusion of denial, and the shroud of shame just now descending upon me--for the rest of my life--I was fooling everyone that I was NOT coming home from Viet Nam; that I was NOT to be made an object of derisive jeers; that I was NOT to be held responsible for a war I hated as much as the rest of the world hated it.

As this uneventful flight approached the east coast, it was announced that fog had Dulles socked in, that the aircraft was being diverted to Baltimore.  At 4:00 AM, the news would not reach my parents, who had dutifully set out to retrieve their son. Upon landing, we debarked for a charter bus which would take us all back to Dulles.

On the Beltway coming up to the Montgomery Road exit, I had the driver pull over and let me out.  The fog in my brain was equal to the morning fog of the DC Metroplex. I clambered up a steep embankment through tall weeds, thoroughly soaking the bottom half of my classy gray slacks.  I do not remember how I got from that point to the stoop of my parents’ red brick Georgian in Rockville.  I just remember that that is where they found me, waiting for this last minute confusion to unravel.

They had met the shuttle at Dulles, and then drove to Baltimore when I wasn’t on board the bus.  After a futile search there, they finally headed back to the house.  We greeted in the somber half-light of dawn, my folks delirious at having their boy returned without mark or blemish; their boy quite a bit less enthusiastic at being home and safe at last.

That’s what they thought.  That was what everyone thought.  They mistook the silence as evidence of no-harm-done.  The very few who spoke out, like Secretary of State Kerry and such, ended up making a political career for themselves.  To borrow a phrase from writers more gifted than I, the silence was deafening.

For the remainder of that summer, I lived on the side porch, mostly drunk and stoned, to give credence to the quiet numb quiescence in which I found myself.  No one came to ask me questions about the war.  No one ever did from that time to this.  Because my existence was totally devoted to the business of denial and distraction—from that vague summer all those years ago, for the next forty-two years—it never occurred to me that my way out of the miasma was to finally tell my own story.

This is the last of my Viet Nam monographs.  Of all of them, this was the most painful to write; because after this came…the rest of my life—of those distractions and denials that demonstrate the unseen marks and blemishes that riddled me through and through.  So, you see, the essence of PTSD for many many of us is not the act that created it; it is the act that followed.  In one sense, I am still waiting on the redstone Georgian stoop, waiting for something to happen.

To amuse myself, and perhaps a few of you, I will press forward with tales of the blond headed yeoman after his war was done.  It may well be nothing more than something to catapult my sorry sad consciousness onto another track; on the way to that last whistle stop, the one that nobody expects will ever arrive for them…