"Buffalo Bob"
Casale's Corner

 

 


YOU CAN LEAVE THE MILITARY BUT
IT NEVER REALLY LEAVES YOU!


At times, I venture back to some military base , where I'm greeted by an imposing Security Guard who looks carefully at my identification card, hands it back and says,....

"Have a good day, Sir"!

Every time I go back to any post it feels good to be called by my previous rank, but odd to be in civilian clothes, walking among the servicemen and women going about their duties as I once did, many years ago.

But you know I have no trouble with a sign in the commissary or PX that says Men and Women in Uniform have head of the line privileges between 1100 and 1300.

The military is a comfort zone for anyone who has ever worn the uniform. It's a place where you know the rules and know they are enforced, a place where everybody is busy, but not too busy to take care of business.

Because there exists behind the gates of every military facility an institutional understanding of respect, order, uniformity, accountability and dedication that becomes part of your marrow and never, ever leaves you.

Personally, I miss the fact that you always knew where you stood in the military, and who you were dealing with. That's because you could read somebody's uniform from 20 feet away and know the score.

Service personnel wear their careers on their sleeves, so to speak. When you approach each other, you can read their name tag, examine their rank and, if they are in dress uniform, read their ribbons and know where they've served.

I miss all those little things you take for granted when you are in the ranks, like breaking starch on a set of khakis fresh from the laundry and standing in a perfectly straight line in formation that looks like a mirror as it stretches to the endless horizon.

To romanticize military service is to be far removed from its reality, because it's very serious business especially in times of war.

I miss the salutes I would throw at a senior officer and the ones that were returned.

I even miss the hurry-up-and-wait mentality that was griped about constantly, a masterful invention that bonded people more than they'll ever know or admit.

I miss people taking off their hats when they enter a building, speaking directly and clearly to others and never showing disrespect for rank, race, religion or gender.

I miss being a small cog in a machine so complex it constantly circumnavigates the Earth and so simple it feeds everyone on time, three times a day, on the ground, in the air or at sea.

Finally, I miss Taps and the Star spangled Banner, both bring tears to my eyes even now.

Mostly, I don't know anyone personally who has served who regrets it, and doesn't feel a sense of pride when they pass through those gates and re-enter the world they left behind with their youth.