“Jai Yen Yen” and “Thank you for your service”

Thank You for your Service

Well intentioned, but for me they become empty platitudes.  “Jai Yen”—a cool heart—is a Thai value that can bring out some of the best in Thai culture.  Staying calm under duress, maintaining a flow on a busy day in a bustling town.  But when my electric is out for the second time in a week, I have a language class to get to in a few minutes, and I not only don’t have hot water for a shower, I have no water at all, a cool heart will not get the power back on.  It will not give me a way to contact an electrician.  And it will not get my absentee landlord in the hipster town of Pye (in the sky?) to get off his butt and do anything for me.  I suspect he has interpreted Jai Yen as not getting too excited as you count your money.  And calmly ignoring an entreaty to spend any of it on maintenance.

“Thank You for Your Service” was equally irritating for me when it turned up in American vernacular.  A Pentagon PR-man’s bright idea?  Or did a Boy Scout Troop think it up?  It could be so irritating that in a New Yorker short story a few years back a combat veteran fresh home from the Mideast goes postal when he hears it from his mindless family one time too many.  A family of what a Marine would call Mall Rats.   Mall Rats, who had grown up in suburban America and never left, thanking someone who had been on active duty in wartime for sacrifices they could never imagine.  Having your head shaved and giving up your identity is just the beginning.  It might be as simple as giving up the most productive years of your life, bored to death with a stateside assignment.  It might mean the desperate loneliness of living thousands of miles from home dropped into another culture, unable to speak the language, to engage in any meaningful way, which means living like a Mall Rat, confined to a little patch of American suburbia on a foreign military installation.  But for the men and women at the “point of the spear” and the medics, morgue techs and others just a step behind, it means the potential of having your new best friend die in your arms in Vietnam—and just picking up the body parts in modern wars on terror….

I finally heard “thank you for your service” mean something when I really needed it.  I had lost a job after moving across the country to be closer to my ailing father.  My wife could not understand at all this sudden loss of income and health benefits.  I swore I would never set foot in a VA facility again after seeing the zoo that passed for a hospital in Westwood, CA, in 1973, just after I had started grad school and still had some free dental benefits left from four years of active duty.  But now it was 2009.  The VA had changed.  So when I had to eat humble pie and go to the clinic in Brick, NJ, to get treatment for depression that had dogged me for years, the first words I heard from the woman at the reception counter, a fellow Vietnam veteran it turned out, were “Thank you for your service.”  And she meant it.  (6/9/15)

2 comments

  1. Lauren Perreault's avatar
    Lauren Perreault · June 13, 2015

    Terry — I do thank you for your service, and I know from our conversations that your service was Hell. In many ways, the job you had, to photographically document the horror, had to be one of the worst ways to serve there was. My famiily and I honor you. PS I’d be happy to help you move your blog off of WordPress.com and to a self hosted site –I’ve done it for others many times and it only takes a little bit of time.

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    • taharkin's avatar
      taharkin · June 14, 2015

      Thanks Lauren. You are one of the few people who gets it as far as my surreal tour. Coming from a family of WW II-vintage pilots, I had nothing but awe for the American pilots over there, especially the crusty characters fying modified C-130 cargo planes over the Ho Chi Minh Trail at night. (And a door-gunner/bluesman like Larry T below became a lifelong friend.) The video footage the AC-130’s was in synch sound, a first for combat footage, and I witnessed the AAA getting ever more accurate in the year I was there, especiallly with the introduction of SAM missiles that Intell insisted were only being used to defend Hanoi and could not possibly be trucked down the Ho Chi Minh Trail. They must not have read up on Dien Bien Phu. They certainly didn’t understand the determination of the NVA. As I dreaded, four AC-130’s (each with crew of 15) were shot down during the Easter Offensive of 1972, shortly after I returned to Scott AFB, IL. But I was also torn up with pity for the Asians we were killing literally by the truckload (and over 3 million in all, we now know). I estimate I saw 5,000 of the 10,000 trucks destroyed by Spectre in the dry season of 1971. Shot up with 40 mm rounds and Howitzers from the gunships and then napalmed with F-4 Phantoms. I spent the six months before I was assigned to Pave Pronto watching villages and sampans being machine gunned and napalmed by F-4s and F-105s. The daytime stuff was more haunting in a way, because no one shot back, no enemy troops were ever in sight. Just villages and boats that meant the homes and livelihoods of Vietnamese civilians going up in flames. Maybe you alone among my friends and family gets it because working for Northrup taught you that our air power is truly awesome and deadly. But unlike in the movies, the targets in the fog of war are not as clear as we would like. The smartest smart bombs can miss, or be mistargeted… Not glorious. But sadly, it seems to be a necessary part of the human condition for the Good Guys to have to rope in the Bad Guys. Alas, in Southeast Asia and in the Mideast today, not easy to know who is who. Or to know when today’s Good Guy ally will turn into tomorrow’s Bad Guy…. Thanks for being a great friend for many years.

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