A Navy surgeons view in Iraq

H

Hunt4lyf

Guest
Greetings all from hot, hot, hot Iraq,
We are short indeed...although not quite as short as we had originally thought...our flight home has been posted and is showing up 3 days later than planned. The good news is that we leave in the middle of the night and arrive (all admin complete, including turning our weapons into the armory) ! around dinnertime at Pendleton on the same day we leave (11 hrs time difference). The other good news is it appears we've got commercial contract air carriers taking us home...so we don't have to worry about sleeping on the cold steel deck of an Air Force C-17.

So...we turned over authority of the surgical company last week to our replacements, who had a serious trial by fire here in multiple ways, including multiple traumas, surgeries, increased risk to their personal safety, power outages, water outages, and camel spiders in the hospital...all in their first 4 days. But a few days ago, we heard the helicopters coming and knew they were dealing with multiple traumas, several of which were going to the OR...and we sat in our barracks and waited for them to call us if they needed us. They never did. Last week was the ceremony to mark the official end of our role here. Now we just wait.

As the days move very slowly by, just! waiting, I decided that one of the things I should work on for my own closure and therapeutic healing...is a list. The list would be a comparison: "Things That Were Good" about Iraq and being deployed with the Marines as one of the providers in a surgical company, and "Things That Were Not Good." Of course, it's quite obvious that this list will be very lopsided. But I thought I would do it anyway, hoping that somehow the trauma, the fear, the grief, the laughter, the pride and the patriotism that have marked this long seven months for me will begin to make sense, through my writing. Interestingly, it sort of turned into a poem. To be expected, I guess.

Most of all it's just therapy, and by now I should be relatively good at that. Hard to do for yourself, though.

So here goes...in reverse order of importance...

Things That Were Good

Sunset ov! er the desert...almost always orange
Sunrise over the desert...almost always red
The childlike excitement of having fresh fruit at dinner after going weeks without it

Being allowed to be the kind of clinician I know I can be, and want to be, with no limits placed and no doubts expressed

But most of all,
The United States Marines, our patients...
Walking, every day, and having literally every single person who passes by say "Hoorah, Ma'am..."
Having them tell us, one after the other, through blinding pain or morphine-induced euphoria..."When can I get out of here? I just want to get back to my unit..."
Meeting a young Sergeant, who had lost an eye in an explosion...he asked his surgeon if he could open the other one...when he did, he sat up and looked at the young Marines from his fire team who were being treated for superficial shrapnel wounds in the next room...he smiled, laid back down, and said, "I only have one good eye, Doc! , but I can see that my Marines are OK."
And of course, meeting th e one who threw himself on a grenade to save the men at his side...who will likely be the first Medal of Honor recipient in over 11 years...

My friends...some of them will be lifelong in a way that is indescribable
My patients...some of them had courage unlike anything I've ever experienced before
My comrades, Alpha Surgical Company...some of the things witnessed will traumatize them forever, but still they provided outstanding care to these Marines, day in and day out, sometimes for days at a time with no break, for 7 endless months

And last, but not least...
Holding the hand of that dying Marine

Things That Were Not Good

Terrifying camel spiders, poisonous scorpions, flapping bats in the darkness, howling, territorial wild dogs, flies that insisted on landing on our faces, giant, looming mosquitoes, invisible sand flies that carry leischmaniasis

132 degrees
Wearing long sl! eeves, full pants and combat boots in 132 degrees
Random and totally predictable power outages that led to sweating throughout the night
Sweating in places I didn't know I could sweat...like wrists, and ears

The roar of helicopters overhead
The resounding thud of exploding artillery in the distance
The popping of gunfire...
Not knowing if any of the above sounds is a good thing, or bad thing
The siren, and the inevitable "big voice" yelling at us to take cover...
Not knowing if that siren was on someone's DVD or if the big voice would soon follow

The cracking sound of giant artillery rounds splitting open against rock and dirt
The rumble of the ground...
The shattering of the windows...
Hiding under flak jackets and kevlar helmets, away from the broken windows, waiting to be told we can come to the hospital...to treat the ones who were not so lucky...

Watching the helicopter with the big red cross on the side l! anding at our pad
Worse...watching Marine helicopters filled with patients landing at our pad...because we usually did not realize they were coming...

Ushering a sobbing Marine Colonel away from the trauma bay while several of his Marines bled and cried out in pain inside
Meeting that 21-year-old Marine with three Purple Hearts...and listening to him weep because he felt ashamed of being afraid to go back
Telling a room full of stunned Marines in blood-soaked uniforms that their comrade, that they had tried to save, had just died of his wounds
Trying, as if in total futility, to do anything I could, to ease the trauma of group after group...that suffered loss after loss, grief after inconsolable grief...

Washing blood off the boots of one of our young nurses while she told me about the one who bled out in the trauma bay...and then the one who she had to tell, when he pleaded for the truth, that his best friend didn't make it...
Listening to another of our nurses tell of the Marine who came in talking, tellin! g her his name...about how she pleaded with him not to give up, told him that she was there for him...about how she could see his eyes go dull when he couldn't fight any longer...

And last, but not least...
Holding the hand of that dying Marine
 
HUNT4LYF, I'M NUM, AND SORRY YOU HAD TO BE THERE. BUT IT SOUNDS LIKE ALOT OF OUR MEN, ARE GLAD YOU WERE THERE. THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR EFFORTS, AND GOD BLESS PEOPLE LIKE YOU. YD.
 
Thats incredible!!. I watched band of brothers this past weekend I can't even begin to imagine the hell our troops in combat go through. I just would want to tell each and every one of them that died, (and survived) THANK YOU!!. It's the ultimate sacrifice.. God bless.
 
Thank you for your service, I don't have the words.
>>>------>Sixgunn<------<<<
 
Howdy,

I wept like a baby when I read this post. Nothing in this wonderful Monstermuleys site has ever moved me so much. The good things (at least in my mind) of this site now include this wonderful prose! I would like to read this to my classes if you don't mind. Contact me either by PM or [email protected]

GOD BLESS YOU and each of your fellow GIs.

Coach
 
As I wipe away a tear , I give a solem thank you for your service and am glad you made it through "relatively ok " I am sure you have your own scars that have developed and for that I am sorry , thank you again .
 
I am usually far from speechless......

Sir, Thank you for your time and service to our country! You and all fellow soldiers will never be forgotten and never thanked enough.

Jeff
 
Guys, I wish it were me who wrote this but it wasn't, I should have posted that first. My friend who I go 4 wheeling with is a surgeon serving in Iraq and he was the one in the letter that releived the surgeon that wrote this awe inspiring letter. The first time I read this I had chills the whole time and for a long time after, whenever I'm feeling selfish or I know that I'm being self centered I read this and it puts everything into perspective for me. I truly wish I were over there, a week after 9/11 I was down at the Marines signing on the dotted line but when they pulled my medical record and saw 2 knee surgeries I was DQ'd. It hurts me everytime I see our men and women (kids mostly) on the news that are serving because I'm not able to do my part. Sometimes it hurts so bad I want to cry, literally. I'm going to pass these responses along to my buddy over there to let him know that what he and everyone else are doing are appreciated. Oh and Coach I don't think that he would mind if you read this to your class.
 
Having lost 2 friends to the war, I have nothing but the simple 'thank you' to those who tried then and try every day to comfort our wounded, our dying, our walking dead.

God Bless them all.
 
Hey Pred, thankfully none of my friends have been killed over there and I cringe whenever I hear of more of our men and women being killed. I honestly don't have the words to express my heartfelt gratitude I feel towards them and I truly wish I could be there doing my part.
 

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