Argumentative Essay On The Things They Carried

763 Words2 Pages

Imagine walking through a rainy, humid tropical rain forest with forty to fifty pounds of precious luggage strapped to your back wondering where and when the next shot will be fired. Wondering whether or not you will live to see another day of combat with your brothers. American soldiers carried this burden with them every day while in combat during the Vietnam War. In the short story, “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien, he explains the positive and negative effects of the things that soldiers carried with them during the Vietnam War. “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien is a brutal fiction story that tells about the treacherous adversity a group of men went through during the Vietnam War. The story talks about the brave soldiers …show more content…

When you think of what a medic in the Vietnam War would carry, a comic book defiantly wouldn’t be the first thing that comes to mind. As a medic, comic books and brandy can actually come in handy while trying to cure a wounded soldier. When Kiley has an operation that needs to be done to a soldier, anesthesia normally isn’t an option while in combat. He would use the brandy as an alternative to anesthesia to help ease the pain. It would also help get the injured soldier’s mind away from what’s happening on the operating table, or the ground depending on how fatal the wound is. Also, the comic books could be an escape from reality. The burden of the Vietnam War was too much to handle for some soldiers. The comic books would have also been used for those soldiers. This would help them from going …show more content…

“As a medic, 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 for especially bad wounds, for a total weight of nearly 20 pounds” (The Things They Carried, 5). When O’Brien lists the things that Kiley carries, it appears to be standard equipment issued to a medic until he gets to the M&M’s candy. O’Brien separates the phrase where he mentions the M&M’s candy from the rest of the sentence. He sets this apart for a reason, which is to emphasize the importance of the candy among the rest. O’Brien is making it obvious that it’s not a standard issued item. The M&M’s are defiantly more than standard issued items. They are for the “especially bad wounds” (The Things They Carried, 5). The M&M’s can do more for a fatally injured soldier than any malaria tablets or surgical tape could ever do. O’Brien’s very brief mention of the candy leaves you wondering when and how the candy is used. Ultimately the M&M’s candy symbolizes what the soldiers have left behind during combat. In Vietnam, when one has a fatal wound, likely that person is going to die. The candy gives you a better last taste than your own blood. Physically, the chocolate will do absolutely nothing for a dying soldier. It is a type of comfort for the one who is fatally wounded. It’s completely unnecessary for Kiley to carry the candy with

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