“Damage – All Kinds (L.A. Times Photos)
Damage – All Kinds (On Reading About L.A. Times Photos of GIs Posed with Body Parts)
I started to write this morning about good guys–that if you want to be the good guy, you have to be the good guy. (Which in my garbled piece meant not being the puerile guy or the vicious guy or the depraved guy. Also that even if you have, at times, to make corpses–and a part of me hated to give even that concession–you could not play with the corpses.)
As I wrote, I pictured the faces of soldiers–the roundness of youth framed by no-hair smiling sheepishly over camo’ed shoulders and too much gear. Faces whose trained stocky bodies carried children, fed stray animals, tried to comprehend old men in headdress. Sometimes, down cheeks hollowed, sometimes smeared with strain. Soldiers so young each separate eyelash showed up dark and individual.
I saw smirks too on some of those faces. (Smirks from other hateful photos came to mind. Abu Graib.) Smirks that turned faces into baboon bottoms as they sat over the double folded limbs of prisoners, stripped.
More photos came in to the picture–faces marked with worry , loss; photos of metal shins, plastic knees; recent one of a vet, looking used up, lying on a rug beside his dog. (Did I say loss?)
And though I myself still had a pretty clear idea about some of the parameters of good guys – i.e.that they cannot play with corpses, that they absolutely cannot play with corpses–all my words began to jumble in a kind of rubble, smoke, and all I really could picture were ricocheting pathways through the brain, ricochets maybe of bullets, but maybe only of power, loss, fear, rage. Resulting in great damage, both direct and collateral.
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Having a very hard time today writing my 18th draft poem for National Poetry Month. I am also posting this for Imperfect Prose.
What’s prompted this is today’s news about the 2010 photos (just coming out now in the L.A. Times) of U.S. soldiers posed with body parts of Afghan suicide bombers. (I haven’t seen the photos.)
What I’ve come up with is not in any way intended to be disrespectful of our troops overseas. I know that the soldiers in the photos are not typical, nor is their conduct. But I’m first very worried about whether that conduct (i.e. the photos) will put other soldiers in further danger. And also I’m just concerned, sickened. It’s a terrible situation, gone on too long, and for some deployed again and again–especially too long.
Explore posts in the same categories: poetry, UncategorizedTags: Afghanistan, damage to soldiers, manicddaily, poem about soldiers in Afghan war, thinking of pictures of GIs with body parts
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April 19, 2012 at 6:48 am
I had not heard about the photos, much less seen them, but as you describe them they sound sickening. I read your (not)imperfect prose again after reading the footnote. The second time through I found myself saying silent AMENs all the way through.
April 19, 2012 at 6:50 am
Thanks so much, Dave. This somehow a very hard piece, aside from the content. I have been quite busy–a lot of work i’m late on–and the daily poem a bit much! Oh well–I should really start thinking in terms of short things! K.
April 19, 2012 at 8:33 am
ugh k….i dont know what to say…this kind of turns my stomach…the posing with the body…even when it was saddam, it got me…and it is heart breaking to revel in the death of anyone…
April 19, 2012 at 8:59 am
Agreed. K.
April 19, 2012 at 9:46 am
oh my goodness..that makes me even feel more sick than i already am.. dunno what happens to some people in wars, they seem to lose their personality, maybe because of all the horrible things they see..really don’t wanna judge them…but that’s pretty tough
April 19, 2012 at 9:58 am
this dancing on the grave, yes. so sad. – – yet, you really speak my torn heart here as well. there is always more too it then just that isn’t there? how did these men come to this? Did we not in some way participate in their creation. ugh, just so hard. and i am with you in the muddy. in the thick. heavy hearted.
April 19, 2012 at 10:32 am
Yes, it’s terrible on all levels and from every side.
April 19, 2012 at 10:01 pm
oh man. this makes my heart ache. thank you for writing about the hard, friend. bless you.
April 19, 2012 at 10:04 pm
Thanks, Emily. Hope all is well with you. K.
April 25, 2012 at 7:51 pm
violence begets violence, and we are numb. such a difficult story.