CLEVELAND SKYLINE

CLEVELAND SKYLINE
BORN HERE RAISED HERE AND MOST LIKELY WILL PASS AWAY AND BE BURIED HERE AS WELL.

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San Francisco Skyline
I've been in my own boat sitting out in this water looking at this view. Awesome!-Sandee. This is a Tip of The Hat to Sandee, my Co-Author and blog wizard.

The Blogger's Prayer

Lord help me to learn to spell without spellcheck, manage to visit all that visit me, and post regularly - all in 5 minutes a day, so that I can clean house and take care of my family. Help me to not look at every occurrence in my life as a blog post, and to quit taking pictures of weird things to share as well. Please Lord, help me to stop talking about my blog friends as though they are next door neighbors or someone I have known all of my life. And help me dear Lord, to think of something witty and wise to post tomorrow.


Tuesday, June 02, 2009

IT HAS BEEN A WHILE SINCE I WAS ON MY SOAPBOX.

as the title suggests I have not done a Soapbox rant in a while. So here goes nothing:
I read an article in my newspaper that made me think. I will post the article here as well.
We do not pay enought attention to the real heroes. so here is the article that I saw.
He which hath no stomach to this fight, let him depart . . .

From this day to the ending of the world,
But we in it shall be remembered;
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers. -- Shakespeare.
The Memorial Day holiday is over, the cookouts, the parades, the sales. But the memories remain.
There's still time to listen to them.
My friend Dave, who served in Vietnam, passed along an e-mail his son wrote. Chief Warrant Officer 3 Dana Dennis, whose job title is 1st Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division Targeting Officer, wrote it after watching LeBron James' game-winning three-pointer in Game 2.
Dana has served in the military for 21 years, more than half his life. Dana is 39. He's spent nearly 40 months in Iraq and Afghanistan. He ships out in August for another 12 months.
LeBron's shot made him think about the true heroes he has met, friends he lost and how they blessed his life. In today's world of fast fame, of American idols and sports figures we call kings, people forget the small folks who make great sacrifices for strangers they will never meet.
Dana wrote about the time he went to a celebration of paratroopers past and present with the 82nd Airborne Division in Fort Bragg, N.C. He was a younger paratrooper then and had some equipment on display for the old-timers to look at. A World War II vet came by and tried to tell his story to anyone who would listen.
Dana watched the man stop by every display and leave as uninterested young men ignored him. Why not give a veteran 10 minutes of my attention, he thought.
After some small talk, the man started to tell Dana about the young rifleman he used to be. How he made that combat jump in the Normandy invasion, how he lost his best friend, how he saw his buddies drown in the flooded fields.
Then the man started to cry. "He said he didn't understand why he was spared and his friends were taken. He hugged me and moved along to the next display.
"As I wiped the tears away, I thought to myself, 'I just met a real hero.' Not someone who shoots a basketball, or someone who makes millions acting in a movie, but someone who put our future ahead of his life."
That line stopped me cold. Who put our future ahead of his life.
And all that guy wanted was for someone to listen.
It made me wonder how many vets we walk past daily. The old greeter at Wal-Mart who liberated a death camp. The hard-of-hearing uncle who spent the war as a POW. The frail man with the walker slowing us down in the grocery aisle whose shrapnel still slows him down.
All Dana asked was that we hear them.
"My children have friends who have lost a parent in Iraq and Afghanistan. I'm sure many of you know someone who is serving or who has made this ultimate sacrifice," he wrote.
"I have seen what this old-timer spoke to me about. I feel responsible, almost as a Soldier Ambassador to the average wonderful American," Dana wrote. "It's something you all should hear from time to time. I owe it to my friends who are not here to tell their story."
And we owe it to them to listen, more than one day in May.

8 comments:

  1. Great post Mike! So true - they are the real heroes!

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  2. Excellent rant Mike, excellent. I so agree.

    Have a terrific day. Big hug. :)

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  3. So very, very true, Mike. Thanks for passing this along and for climbing up on your soapbox for this very worthy purpose. We shouldn't have to have special days designated to remember the people who fight to keep us free - we should thank them every chance we get.

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  4. Mari and Sandee and Linda,I mainly posted this as a protest the the crybabies that call themselves athletes,when they are only highly paid "businessmen".Spotrs is not played for the same reason as they were years ago,for the love of the game!

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  5. This is a great post, Mike. In some ways, it feels like history is repeating itself in my lifetime. But with a different sense of what it means to be a citizen. During Vietnam there were many who reviled the military and went out of their way to insult servicemen. Today, although one might not agree with the foreign policy of our government at least there seems to be a sense of appreciation for those in the military. I prefer the attitude today.

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  6. Lee,I know all too well how we are service members were looked down apon during The Viet Nam war.We were just serving our country,we did not make the policy of our government,but were tasked to carry it out.
    A person has the right to disagree with the governments policies,just don't take it out on the service men and women.
    I prefer the atitude that is being shown to the military today as well.

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  7. Wonderful post Mike. Thank you for sharing. Hugs sent your way.

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  8. Tracy,thanks for stopping by,I'm glad that you enjoyed this posting.

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