Forever in the Mind of a Soldier

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The boom is what starts them in, and for some, is what takes them right out. The men that fight in the Vietnam war are some of the bravest people that will ever live and they are beautifully betrayed in Tim O’Brien’s Book The Things They Carried. Tim O’Brien’s story is metafiction about his time that he spent in the war and about what it was truly like to spend time as a foot soldier in such a gruesome war. Whether they enlist or are drafted, they fight valiantly for whatever cause they are there for. These men carry their sanity and lives, and unfortunately, many of them will lose those things. O’Brien’s ultimate message about the things the men carried is that the tangible pleasures, the memories of home, and the ultimate trauma they endure will never leave them.
The men of the Vietnam War carry whatever they can, especially the things that make them feel safe. “Rat Kiley carried a canvas satchel filled with morphine and plasma and malaria tablets and surgical tape and comic books and all the things a medic must carry, including M&M’s ror especially bad wounds, for a total of nearly 18 pounds.” (5). Rat Kiley feels that one of the best ways to achieve safety is through comfort as displayed by his most important too for the worst wounds, M&M’s. Also, drugs are very prominent in making the men happy, especially Mr. Lavender who carries “dope” around with him. Marijuana, when used as a drug, is a depressant which means that it calms the men down and forget their past. Of all things, marijuana quite literally makes the men happy. Perhaps the strangest of all tangible things carried is by, “Norman Bowker, otherwise a very gentle person, carried a thumb that had been presented to him as a gift by Mitchell Sanders.”(72). Norman Bo...

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... explained how Lavender died, Lieutenant Cross found himself trembling. He tried not to cry. With his entrenching tool, which weighed 5 pounds, he began digging a hole in the earth. He felt shame. He hated himself.” (15-16). At this point, Lieutenant Cross has been so traumatized that he will suffer from nightmares for the rest of his life.
All of these things, tangible happiness, the thoughts of home, and the ultimate trauma they endure, are part of Tim O’Brien’s ultimate message that the things the men of Vietnam carry will never leave them. Tim O’Brien writes this book because all of the things will not leave him, but writing helps him put them down for just a moment. When someone reads The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien they may view his ultimate message as something different, but his true ultimate message is that the things the men carry never leaves them.

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