Beyond Medals of Valor: Vietnam Combat Veteran’S Life Struggle with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (Ptsd) and His Adventurous Life Experiences
By Bill Roberts
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About this ebook
Influenced by patriotic war movies, joining the army and fighting for his country seemed to be a purposeful and honorable endeavor. Bill had been a delinquent kid and a high school dropout and later became a brokenhearted drunk whose girlfriend left him for a responsible insurance salesman. This is his true story and his perceived reality written from his paratrooper/infantrymans perspective in explicit detail. The reader will be outraged by the immorality, the lies from the top, and the insanity of the Vietnam War. The gripping detail of jungle warfare is riveting, touching, and raw. The author describes his intense search for meaning and his long battle with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after the war. He details his college experiences during the turbulent counterculture movement of the sixties which deeply affected the country and was instrumental in stopping the war. He recounts his efforts through the years to find himself; he explains the darkest period of his life in the war and its paradoxical connection to his epiphany: a spiritual discovery of service, compassion, and love toward others as a means of preventing his own suicide. He describes his long journey toward healing as he seeks self-forgiveness and forgiveness of others and of God for his stupidity and perverse taking of life. He looks at the sociology of class struggle, both in the military and at a college in California, as a professor and counselor and as a director of a large disabled student services program. He finds peace, purpose, and healing through his work with disabled students and later with those living in his RV park who are among the lowest socioeconomic groups in our society.
This book will make the reader cry, laugh, and become angry at the arrogance of authority and how history continues to repeat itself. The author realized years ago that surviving PTSD meant facing the whole truth. If he can help combat veterans cope with their problems and find truth and meaning in their lives as a result of this book, he will be deeply gratified.
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Beyond Medals of Valor - Bill Roberts
BEYOND
MEDALS OF VALOR
Vietnam Combat Veteran’s Life Struggle with Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder (PTSD) and His Adventurous Life Experiences
coverimage.jpgBILL ROBERTS
BalboaLogoBCDARKBW.aiCopyright © 2013 Bill Roberts.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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Balboa Press
A Division of Hay House
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Bloomington, IN 47403
www.balboapress.com
1-(877) 407-4847
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
The author of this book does not dispense medical advice or prescribe the use of any technique as a form of treatment for physical, emotional, or medical problems without the advice of a physician, either directly or indirectly. The intent of the author is only to offer information of a general nature to help you in your quest for emotional and spiritual well-being. In the event you use any of the information in this book for yourself, which is your constitutional right, the author and the publisher assume no responsibility for your actions.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
ISBN: 978-1-4525-7534-6 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4525-7536-0 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4525-7535-3 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2013910359
Balboa Press rev. date: 06/18/2013
CONTENTS
Description
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Foreword
1 . Really Dumb Kids
2 . Canoga Park and Sputnik
3 . Seeing God
4 . American Culture and the Vietnam War
5 . Vietnam
6 . Bitch Vines and Beauty in the Jungle
7 . Deadly Booby Trap
8 . Tet Offensive
9 . Crazy Paratroopers
10 . Unusual Encounters
11 . Atrocities
12 . Standards
13 . Bizarre Body Count
14 . Drugs in the Field
15 . Big Mistake
16 . Village Idiot
17 . The Squad
18 . The Ambush
19 . Back to Work
20 . Going Home
21 . The Boys’ Home
22 . Cultural Revolution
23 . Extended Family
24 . Graduate School
25 . Student Stories
26 . Hobo John
27 . The RV Park
28 . Building the RV Park
29 . Grand Opening
30 . Socialization
31 . The Big Wedding
32 . Obesity in the RV Park
33 . The Showerhead Mystery
34 . The Horse Story
35 . Whiskey Jack and the Dogs
36 . The Three-Man Slingshot
37 . Electrical Problems and Other Dangers
38 . Guns in the Park
39 . Being Shot at from the Highway
40 . Cockroach Gary
41 . Bill’s Perceived Arrest
42 . The Mushroom People
43 . Clans
44 . The Big Fight
45 . Marie’s Death
46 . Insects and Other Living Things
47 . The Fly Epidemic
48 . Gay Rick
49 . Pearl and Bert
50. Selling the Park
51. President Johnson, Secretary of Defense McNamara, General Westmoreland, and Me
memo-2.jpgDescription
Through this book the author, in a very personal way, takes the reader on an amazing feeling-level journey as he stumbles through his life. He talks about his raw gut-wrenching combat experiences as a paratrooper infantryman in Vietnam and what he learned about life along the way.
Bill uniquely contrasts cruelty and death during the war with post-war acts of love and humanitarianism in an effort to save his own life. In this entertaining true story, he deeply explores and unravels his struggle with the insanity of PTSD and his search for truth and meaning. He explains the importance of service to others and, as a college counselor, captures in depth the humorous and serious nature of human behavior and why people behave the way they do. These stories, in all likelihood, have never before been told in this context.
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my wife, Joanne, daughter, Melissa Sanchez, and son, William, who lived with my PTSD problems and took a lot of crap.
It is also dedicated to all those combat veterans and families who are struggling with grief and PTSD—may it help them to find peace.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
My wife, Joanne: Key loving advisor and clerical assistant.
Melissa Sanchez: Loving support and assistance.
Janie Tate: A sister’s feedback at the end of her life.
Mary Snyder: Literary consultant and friend.
Art Ortiz: Inside Photographs.
Rene Sanchez and Chris Apperson: Cover Photo
(www.tgavc.com)
Foreword
This is my true story as I alone perceive it. My battle experiences are outrageous, with explicit details from a paratrooper infantryman’s perspective of the immorality, lies from the top, and insanity of the Vietnam War. The gripping detail of jungle warfare is riveting, touching and raw. I describe my intense search for meaning and my long battle with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after the war. I detail my college experiences during the turbulent counterculture movement of the sixties, which deeply affected the country and was instrumental in stopping the war.
Recounting my efforts through the years to find myself, I explain the darkest period of my life in the war and its paradoxical connection to my epiphany, a spiritual discovery of service, compassion, and love toward others as a means of preventing my own suicide. I also describe my long journey toward healing. In this book I seek self-forgiveness, forgiveness of others and of God for my stupidity and for my perverse taking of life. I detail my observations of class struggle, both in the military and at my job at a college in California as a professor and counselor and as a director of a large disabled student services program.
I also take the reader through the building and managing of a recreational vehicle (RV) trailer park and the hilarious and tragic adventures of a unique sub-culture that is probably one of the lowest socioeconomic groups in our society. I believe my stories will make the reader, cry, laugh, and become angry at the arrogance of authority and how history continues to repeat itself.
I realized years ago that surviving PTSD meant facing the whole truth. If I can help combat veterans cope with their problems and find truth and meaning in their lives as a result of this book, I will be deeply gratified.
Some names and places have been changed to protect the privacy of the men who fought and of the families of the dead.
Bill Roberts
- 1 -
Really Dumb Kids
In 1956, when I was sixteen, I dropped out of high school and worked as a box boy at a small market in the town of Canoga Park, where I grew up. The town, located at the west end of the San Fernando Valley, had not much more than two thousand people. The people took pride in their pristine town with their well-groomed lawns, handsome homes, and fenceless yards, which failed to separate one property from another.
It was a friendly town. As far back as I can remember, the big yearly event was the Christmas parade on Sherman Way Boulevard, which ran about eight blocks through the length of the downtown area. Decorations strung across the boulevard gave off a festive glow. Everyone felt the Christmas spirit, exchanging pleasantries and warm gestures. The townspeople were kind, peaceful, and watched out for each other’s children. In fact, whenever I’d get into some sort of mischief, my mother would know about it before I even got home.
Everyone seemed to know each other except for Handsome Harry,
a shell-shocked World War I veteran who kept to himself. He lived in a house surrounded by thick bamboo and rode a bicycle as his main form of transportation. For thrills we kids used to teasingly holler, Handsome Harry!
, and he would chase us on his bicycle with fire in his eyes. We could ride faster and always outran him, but we were still pretty scared.
In elementary school I had my share of troubles. One time I got caught smoking in the top of a high pine tree on the school grounds. My kindergarten teacher spanked me in front of the class. She was a gentle person so it really didn’t hurt, but it certainly hurt my pride.
I don’t remember much about first grade except that I lived in fear of my teacher, Mrs. Crumb. She was actually a sweet woman, but she probably weighed about three hundred pounds. We sat in tiny chairs in very narrow rows. When she’d walk down the aisles she would almost knock over kids on either side with her big butt as she tried to waddle through.
It was my luck that the boy next to me needed a lot of assistance. Mrs. Crumb would often squeeze through the row, turn to him and bend over his tiny desk to assist him. When she did, more than half the light in the classroom would go dark, and I would feel claustrophobic, consumed by her immense rear end hanging over me. I knew nothing about physics, but I was aware that if she ever lost her balance and fell backwards I was going to be in serious trouble. I dreaded her helping this student, but I didn’t complain about it because even at that young age I sensed the mention of my fear would be disrespectful. This would be my cross to bear for that year.
In the fifth grade my teacher was a strict authoritarian. Mr. Foster was mean; he taught by fear and fear alone. One time he took me to the cloak room to hit me with a paddle. He got me in the bent-over position, and I was watching him carefully with my peripheral vision, waiting and scared to death because his punishment was painful. When he reared back to maximize his swing, I got the idea that I would jump in the air just at the perfect time and turn half of a back flip to lessen the impact.
The paddle connected with my butt, my back, and the back of my head at the same time, landing me unhurt on my back on the floor. I played it up by pretending I was unconscious for a few moments. The poor teacher almost had a heart attack thinking I was seriously injured and wondering if his teaching career was over. All he wanted to know was if I was all right. He was badly shaken up. I found out later that he never paddled anyone again. Who knows, maybe that one incident was the beginning of a nation-wide policy to end corporal punishment in public schools. Perhaps I had started a revolution.
There was so little crime that for years we only had one cop on a bicycle who enforced the law. If there was anything serious happening, which I can’t recall, the main police in Van Nuys, ten miles away, would respond. Our cop’s name was Sam. I remember him as being in his fifties or sixties. He never bothered anyone and mostly just rode around the town. At night he would make sure the doors of the businesses were locked. I can’t remember him doing anything else. He didn’t seem to be very friendly as I seldom, if ever, saw him stop and talk to people, but I never saw him write a citation, warn, or correct anyone, and I never heard of him arresting anyone. Despite his standoffishness, the townspeople liked him, and everyone felt secure knowing Sam was the law and was on the job.
Not one black person lived in town, and there were only a couple hundred Hispanic people, who confined themselves to two or three square blocks on the other side of town. Canoga Park was surrounded by agricultural areas, which drew the Mexican population there to do the manual work. The Mexican kids went to the public grammar school but were mostly taught in a couple of small bungalows located away from the main school building.
I never saw it as segregation because I never knew what that meant. That was just the way it was, and everybody believed it was right. We were friends with the Mexican kids and played with them during recess. I would often trade my dried-up peanut butter sandwiches for fresh burritos with eggs and beans wrapped in homemade fresh tortillas. They were delicious, and I wondered why they would trade me for my sandwiches. Looking back on it, they were probably just as bored with the same old thing for lunch every day as I was and were eager to have variety.
There was a boy who lived at the end of town whose father was a police officer working in Van Nuys about ten miles away. His uncle was a merchant marine, who in his travels went to China, which was occupied by the Japanese during World War II. Apparently the Japanese considered him to be neutral, as he was free to take photographs.
My friend showed me pictures of soldiers beheading prisoners. He also showed me pictures of people in stocks; they looked like small towers with a hole in the top that held most of a man’s weight by his chin and the back of his head, with just his toes on the ground. It took some real evil to think up that contraption of torture. I also saw a picture of a women tied to a post. A soldier was carving off her breasts while looking in her eyes with great interest as he watched her agony.
I remember having bad dreams and thinking, How could anyone do something that horrible to another person?
I carried that memory along with the fear of something like that happening to me. I carried the realization that there could possibly be some people in my own town who might be capable of doing something like that—maybe someone like Handsome Harry. I still think about those people who were horribly tortured, and I realize the importance of protecting children from pulling up these kinds of horrors on the internet. Those pictures tainted my childhood with fears that a child should never know, but time went on until I turned sixteen.
I came from a family of six kids, with an older brother and sister and three younger siblings. My father, while a good provider, was too busy at work to spend any time with me. My mother gave most of her attention to the oldest and youngest. Being a middle child, I wasn’t supervised enough and could do just about anything I wanted without being noticed. Turnig sixteen years old proved to be a major transition point for me because I could buy my own car, have a better job, and be independent and free.
The car was truly my emancipation. Because of my grocery job I had money in my pocket to make an offer of twenty dollars to an old lady who had in her back yard a 1940 Chevy that barely ran. She accepted my offer, making me the proud owner of my very first automobile. All I had to do was replace the spark plugs, and it ran like a new car.
About half a dozen of the kids I grew up with also worked and acquired cars. We all became free spirits, wild and adventurous. We discovered places where we could take our girlfriends; we could party without being bothered by anybody and without bothering anybody else.
We started consuming huge amounts of alcohol bought for us by a couple of people who were over twenty-one. We drank a lot of Thunderbird wine and Country Club malt liquor, and many nights I found myself on somebody’s lawn with the dry heaves, thinking I would surely die and even hoping I would. I’d pray and make deals with God that if I could just survive I would never touch alcohol again. That promise was short-lived as the next night I would once again be drinking with my friends. We would vomit out the windows of each other’s cars. In fact my car had streaks along the side where stomach acid had eaten away the paint.
We would drive for speed, skidding sideways around corners and racing each other. We knew Sam the cop wouldn’t be out that late on his bicycle and would not be able to identify us anyway. A friend and I stole a couple of cars for joyrides just to see if we could get away with it. We also got drunk and went into restaurants wanting to start fights.
One time three of us started a fight that turned into a brawl. I started it by sticking out my foot and tripping a man who was walking by. During the fight we climbed onto the serving counter, where people were eating, using it to jump on people. I was doing very well until I turned around to see a huge fist coming at me about two inches from my face. I proudly wore a black eye for three weeks, considering it a badge of honor.
After one of our adventures we would drink beer and relive the whole thing, laughing and complimenting each other. We did the wildest and craziest things we could think of because it was a kick in the ass, with alcohol always at the center of what we were doing wrong.
One of our gang was desperately poor. His dad supported seven kids on a janitor’s salary, working at the local school. He had one older sister, and the rest were years younger. The little ones, I remember, always had green snotty upper lips. The mother, who was a huge, nonverbal Native American, never wiped their noses. The father was a very nice, hardworking, gentle man who loved his family and who played the harmonica in the evenings.
There was no room for Todd in the tiny house, so he made a room in the old broken-down barn next to the house. On one end of the barn was a small enclosed room with a slab floor, which was once used to keep chickens. Todd used it as his bedroom. It had been cleaned up and furnished with a bed and an old dresser. We used it as a clubhouse where we would meet late at night or when his dad was working. Besides using horrifically foul language and saying terrible things about each other, we smoked cigarettes and involved ourselves in rough play, punching each other in the arms and giving each other charley horses.
Sometimes we would all masturbate with pages of women’s underwear torn out of the Sears catalogue. This had nothing to do with homosexuality, as we were all crazy about girls. Instead it was a kind of male bonding experience. Forty years later when I talked to one of the old neighborhood girls on the phone I learned that the girls would sneak over there and watch us through the cracks in the wood. I think the girls told everybody about it. I am still embarrassed. No wonder we weren’t very popular or welcome in other people’s houses.
My friend Ed used to have us drive him around so he could hang out the window and demolish mailboxes with a baseball bat as we drove by. One time at a party where parents weren’t home, the police showed up after one of the neighbors complained. The police accused two of the girls of being prostitutes. I defended their honor and ended up being beaten up by them and spending the night in the drunk tank in Van Nuys—which I deserved. In fact, I was so bad they should have shot me. I was the first one of our group to get arrested, which earned me social status with the other guys.
Shortly afterwards, Ed was drunk and driving recklessly at night when he saw from a distance that a police car was after him. He turned off his lights and started driving through alleys. They caught him and poured out his beer, which is what they usually did. Ed wanted to go to jail. Not only did he resist, he kicked the police car door and begged them to arrest him. They did not arrest him but instead asked him to go home. If you wanted something, the police would never cooperate.
Thank God there were no drugs around at that time in our lives, or I’m sure we would have been heavily involved. We had heard of drugs, but they were far from being accessible to us. We weren’t exposed to marijuana until age twenty-one, and by then we were established juicers.
I dropped out of high school in the eleventh grade so I could work more hours and make more money to support all the fun I was having. My expenses were minimal since I was living at home. After a late night I would sneak in through my bedroom window without making any noise. My parents were too busy trying to take care of the other kids, and