The Homecoming Of Military Soldiers In David Finkel's The Good Soldiers

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All throughout this semester we have learned a great deal about the homecoming of our military veterans. From the wounds they live with, to the battles they face at home, and these men and women’s reintegration into society. Today I would live to focus somewhere else. Not on the soldiers who risk their lives and return home scarred and different, but on the families who missed them and welcomed them back home and back into society. These mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, sons, daughters, siblings, are tasked with the tremendous task of helping and loving a loved one who has been changed by war. It is clear how the stress of dealing with an injury can put a strain on a wounded veteran’s marriage. In the documentary Hell and Back Again we …show more content…

There becomes a large disconnect in what each party considers important, and resentment when the other party doesn’t have the same priorities. In David Finkel’s The Good Soldiers we see this a few times. We see Ralph Kauzlarich’s parents writing him to tell him about the fall weather and Ralph just responding shortly that it is still over 100 degrees and the leaves don’t change color. There is also a part in which Ralph’s wife is trying to have him help make decisions on an upcoming vacation they are planning for his leave and he doesn’t give an opinion. His wife, Stephanie responds, “…I know you’re making lots of decisions over there & I shouldn’t bother you with this. I’ve been making all the decisions here for 10 months by myself” (374). Ralph clearly has bigger things on his mind then his next vacation, but you can tell that Stephanie really wants his input and is disappointed that he has again ignored …show more content…

These children often miss their deployed parent dearly. In The New York Times article Military Wife During Deployment Is Asked, ‘Is It Worth It?’ The wife and 5-year-old daughter of a navy helicopter pilot are at a wedding when the daughter started crying uncontrollably “‘Daddy,’ she said, sobbing. ‘I miss my daddy.’ … ‘I don’t want YOUR daddy,’ she cried to me. ‘Not Finley’s daddy, or Addie’s daddy, I want MY daddy.’” She saw a picture of him and broke into tears because he wasn’t there to share in the happy memories. Situations like these are

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