Friday, August 24, 2012

The World As It Is - Never Forget

All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
- Edmund Burke

I'm constantly amazed at the ignorance of man, not just in those situations which can get one killed, through acts of mental complacency generally fueled by alcohol or gasoline, but the seemingly willful ignorance of events that are occurring around them. I know people who have never left their home town, but what is more incomprehensible to me, is people who have never thought outside their home town.  I've heard as I keep tabs on the world on my days off, "Why do you CARE what's going on in the China Sea, in Iran?  The new Twilight movie is almost out!

I've come to the conclusion that there are simply some people who won't grasp the truth of the world until they see the truth of themselves.  Knowing yourself is a lifelong and sometimes acutely painful process, with your biggest lessons often emerging from your biggest mistakes. Truth about the nature of man and the world isn't always pleasant, some things we don't want to know  - what's really in a hot dog, how many calories there are in a piece of pie, and anything at all about anyone named Kardashian. Some things we cannot bear to know. But that knowledge of some things, no matter how hurtful to ones' spirit, is absolutely essential to our well being, for only with truth do we have the resilience, the capacity to continue on, alive in the moment, unbound by regret and willing to fight.

In disaster, in threat, to we as individuals, to we as a nation, the nature of truth, and how we face it, asserts itself.



Those who take charge do, those who choose to hide from things do, be it disaster, heartbreak, the economy, crime or a terrorist attack. After 9-11, I had one acquaintance who refused to watch the news, heading out on a planned vacation and pretending it never happened. Another watched sitcom TV non stop, staying home from work with a bowl of popcorn. Both of these individuals were in denial, afraid to accept the truth.

On the shelf, packed from the trip to my Dad's, is a stone, full of fossilized seashells.  When I was home last, Big Bro told me about it.  It came from the quarry we did our target shooting at as kids. He squirreled it away when it was unearthed, knowing what a find it was, so many miles from the sea.  He told me he wanted me to have it.  He then quietly took me to Dad's garage and opened a drawer where he had hidden it as a child, picked it up carefully and gave it to me.  We've both seen a lot in our careers, that we can't discuss, even with one another. We don't discuss it now, we won't discuss it after we retire, we won't write a book about it.  There's an oath we took and we honor that. The rock was his way of acknowledging that what I do is important, that no matter how many years pass, he is still there.

It sits now in my office..

On another shelf, behind a desk, is another stone, one that many don't look it, it's just another rock to be collected to most observers,  displayed along with other artifacts of memory. 


It's been a very long couple of weeks, with time on the road, and fitful sleep. This is not quite the life I expected when I hung up my wings for another four years of education on top of two previous degrees and a return to service. But it's the life that fits what strengths I have. I've come home with brain matter on my shoes. I've come home with images a person should never see, playing in my head like a bad film, until sleep comes fitfully. Yet I come home with purpose. With resolution.  I've collected those moments of lives, of loved ones, in the minutes before they leave us. I collect what is left, carefully, gently and with reverence, cataloging the bare bones of all that is truly important, so that we can learn from it, so that it doesn't happen again. Then I usually go back to an empty room.

After 9/11 while flags waved on cars, and taps played,  I thought, now people have to see, finally see that truth is  fierce and unrelenting. But soon, most forgot. Truth  We cannot ignore it or change it, but we can change the way we live with it. The truth of 9-11 is that the world IS a dangerous place and being politically correct to the point of ignoring the facts of who hates us and who is quietly amassing nuclear readiness while we make nice and look good for the cameras, isn't going to end well.


I finished at the Academy in 2001 and September 11 occurred when I was still wet behind the ears, assigned some mundane tasks until "something happened".  It did. Looking at the images on TV of Ground Zero, we sat, stunned, waiting travel orders while I tried to not let it out that I had a brother who spent a lot of time at the Pentagon, there smoking on TV. There was no talk, just a breathing that bordered on keening, looking at one another, our team leader, with an alert, profound justice as though we had already seen through the flames to where we would be, the shape of the disaster of which we could not speak. That day was trial by fire.

When I look at that stone behind the desk, I can't help but connected to the event from which it came, vowing never to forget.  There is something about a physical remnant of such places, those hallowed spots in which the innocent died, that bears with it the same quality of  perspective as those who stood in its shadow, as though the object itself is speaking to us. It speaks to us in silent and profound significance, whispering its own truths.

When I'm out in the field I remember as well.  Around me there is only musing sound, as shadows hang aloft, as if from invisible wire, hovering above what remains for eyes to see. A place severed from the living, spectral shadow among that place of circumscribed desolation, filled with the voice of wasted lives and murmuring regret. There, only those left here, who remember history, who will gather what remains, cataloging it for infinity.

As I turn off the lights, the last to leave, I take one last look at a chunk of stone.


It sits in a small office, on a flat surface in bitten shadow. It sits near a place where work is done to keep many safe. Most don't see it. It simply sits, in dense stillness, filling the room, the dawn, the dusk, with silent voices. I don't hear the voices but I know they exist. Each morning to start the day in its shadow, warm and safe, we remember that no matter what heartache comes our way, it is nothing compared to what this piece of stone bears witness to.

Those that see it don't look at it closely. But it speaks of so much that our generation, and most of our leaders, will never, ever fathom.

In  the quiet of a shadowed facility where honor stands watch and oaths are kept, a small stone weeps.

Never forget.

- Brigid

22 comments:

Old NFO said...

Well said, and this statement- "I've come to the conclusion that there are simply some people who won't grasp the truth of the world until they see the truth of themselves."

IS the truth, closely followed by those who don't WANT to know the truth, because it will upset their preconceptions... sigh

Monkeywrangler said...

Brigid, how did you get the Berkinau piece? Have you read Eugen Kogon's Theory and Practice of Hell? I actually have a complete copy of the Berkinau Report, if you ever want to borrow it, you can get ahold of me thru my blog.

And I know what you mean, how pieces of history can speak to you, if you only listen.

You don't need to publish this one. I was just wondering how you got the piece, and if you had read Kogon or the full report.
Vicky
Vic303

AussieAlaskan said...

Always a positive in my day to read your blog, Brigid. I agree about truth, but sometimes I don't think there is much that can be done about human ignorance - perhaps I'm getting too old...

Matt said...

I don't normally post here just to say, "awesome post", but I felt moved enough with this one that l had to.

Awesome post.

Thank you.

Keads said...

I know where that rock came from. We must never forget. Evil is out there. I lament the lack of knowledge of what evil is and what we as a Nation have done to stop it. Now as you say everyone is more concerned about what is on American Idol, or Twilight, or whatever tripe is passed off for entertainment now. Bread and Circuses for the masses. The Visigoths are here. Many don't even know that.

Auschwitz-Berkinau embodies evil. I hope and pray we as a Nation still have the resolve to stand up to it.

Rev. Paul said...

Thank you for what YOU do, as well. But your point is well-taken.

I will NOT forget, nor will anyone in my immediate vicinity ... for I will not allow them to hide from reality. It must be faced head-on.

Don said...

I fear too many have already forgotten what the regime which built that place stood for and did. And how a seemingly rational people let it come to be.

I fear that too many don't realize what some of us know; there is evil out there. It doesn't always appear so, but there are clues.

Peter said...

I've stood in the gas chambers at Auschwitz - or where the originals used to be.

If you listen carefully, with your soul rather than just your ears . . . you can still hear the screams.

I never want to go back there.

trapper 54 said...

never

Duke said...

Brigid, I fully understand where you are coming from. I am afraid this generation was raised too different. Some care but most don't. The liberal thinking has taught them they are number one as long as they feel good all is well.

Brian Miller said...

A truly stunning post.

john bord said...

We focus a lots on what transpired in Germany so much I believe the truth you search for is lost. For what happened in Russia is just as bad. Lenin and Stalin can rival Hitler.

This lack of concern for life rides the streets 24/7 in the form of gangs. It is amazing how many are killed. Yet nothing is heard about the deaths unless it is in Mexico. Just recently it was the guy in Norway.

The Yin and Yang of life is there and always will be. So many gloss it over, as you note, out of fear. It is this fear that the bullies thrive on and they sometimes gain awesome power.

Ajdshootist said...

I remember in the 60s we drove from the UK down to Italy through Germany
on the way to Munich my father took us by Dachau and i still remember the fact that you could not hear any
birdsong there.

armedlaughing said...

Never forget.
Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, Mao, Ho Chi Minh, Castro, all of them.
On a personal note, I like people watching.
People are funny!
BUT, I watch their hands!

Thank you.
gfa

OldAFSarge said...

Amen sister, amen. Keads is correct, the Visigoths are HERE. Not at the gate but in our midst. Never forget.

Michael W. said...

Well thought out and written lady.

I don't get too worried about the nature of my fellow man's insistence on closing their eyes or ignoring what is going on. After all that kind of behavior is as old as history it's self. As just ONE example, you can go back to the history of ancient Rome. The people were happy with free food (Bread) and entertainment (Circuses) With those distractions, who cares who is in charge, or where the country is headed?

As a Urologist told a friend of mine who had kidney stones, "This too shall pass"

Alan von Altendorf said...

"on a flat surface in bitten shadow"

Peerless prose.

God, Gals, Guns, Grub said...

I am greatly afraid that too many have already forgotten...

Dann in Ohio

RL said...

FWIW. Here is a draft of a poem I scribbled on another blog [post] which had a similar theme

----------------

The End of [an] History

That Pharaohs so great worked their magical slates to build upon shifting dead sands,
Immortal time serves up the lash and the grime of a billion invisible hands.

Bold god-kings have shewn how their soaring bright tombs might resist millenia and Moor,
But their smooth pyramid stones were stripped clean an’ fed whole, for the homes of new holy lords – ‘midst the hovels of Cairo’s sad whores.

Though the glare of a Sphinx watches o’er and winks, at the works of those turned to dust,
A cannon shot blew out its snot by a crew, of some artilleryman emperor’s lust.

Those proud ancient tombs, in whose shadows and gloom, had shaded both great and the small,
Face a brotherhood of hate who in rancor debate, Pharaoh’s most pious and final of falls.

From Bamiyan’s ghosts and Timbuktu toasts, to the shores whence Dutch spicers sailed,
From even the city renamed once anew on the Byzantine bones of empires that failed.

As our epoc awakes, Sauron's Mordor remakes steel Nazgul and legions of trolls,
Fresh worm-tongues rise forth, and spew up their discourse, to the howls of wargs who relish their roles.

So what will arise from the rubble heaped high should the hot-headed wolves seize the day?
No one can tell but for the ‘orrible smell, as the stories of Egypt go to hell and away.

…And everywhere else the moon god is hailed, for a lack of men who’ll stand tall,
Our women will weep as the darkness doth creep, ‘cross a world transfixed in its thrall.

There may yet be a thing, o’er Kipling gods crack a grin, with wide “I told ya so” smiles,
…It's that “souls who submit to what moon gods permit, are surely forever reviled”.

At the junction of de-Nile and the sharks of red seas – where injustice meets up with man’s sin in its glee,
A bound Englishman sits still on his cloud with his chips – intent upon drowning in gin that is free.

Andie said...

This post made me recall life changing, world events I have experienced myself, and through recollections shared by family and friends. History repeats itself, or so I was taught; I remember.

Brigid said...

Thank you again, finally home and catching up with comments and emails.

RL - your poem was beautiful. Thank you for sharing that.

RL said...

Thank you Brigid.
You've generously given us/me so much free food for thought that I figured I'd return the favor.