Monday, May 30, 2011

Doctors and Nurses Keep Listening for the Sounds of Cease Fire

By Mary MacElveen

May 30, 2011

On this Memorial Day I chose to watch the last M*A*S*H episode, “Goodbye, Farewell and Amen”. It was three hours long, but well worth it.


In one scene, while the doctors and nurses of the fictional 4077th were operating, one could hear the last guns fired in the Korean War. Which led me to ask, when will we hear the last guns fired in the wars we are fighting overseas in Iraq, Afghanistan and now Libya? These wars seem to me that they will go on with no end in sight.


Normally, it disturbs me at how retail establishments use this somber day for sale events. Soldier’s blood for a must have item is what this day has turned out to be.


While the sales disturb me, what fully angered me this past weekend was Sarah Palin pushing her way into an event which she was not invited to. Rolling Thunders purpose is to remember our soldiers and veterans. Sarah Palin selfishly co-opted this event for her own self serving wants and that is notoriety and money as she starts her ‘One Nation’ tour. In my opinion, she is the queen of narcissism. Michelle Bachmann another narcissist must be tearing her hair out at the amount of coverage Palin received this past weekend.


When we now see coffins coming home or wounded vets, we do not often think of the doctors or nurses who patch them up so they may return to us. Day in and day out, these medics are knee deep in blood trying to save the life of one who was trying to save ours. I often think we need a Medic Day to honor them.


As they repair limbs as best they can, remove guts from a gaping hole, try to rebuild a burnt face, I rest assure you, these medics keep listening for the sounds of cease fire.


Imagine, you are a young doctor or nurse with your life ahead of you and you dream of healing patients from natural diseases and injuries; then in one fell swoop you find yourself in the military hospital. Here you are fully trained and you are treating patients whose injuries could have been prevented had we not gone to war.


When we often misuse the term hero, these medics are true heroes for stepping up to the plate where wars wage on. They are the ones who see first hand what the politicians refuse to see. Men and women dying or coming home badly wounded.


On this Memorial Day besides bestowing honor to our war dead, our wounded soldiers and veterans, I also wish to bestow honor to these doctors and nurses. They did not dream they would be healing and patching up soldiers. They do so round the clock and with little fan fare or notoriety. Do you hear me, Palin?


You may reach the author at this address, xmjmac@optonline.net