The last week has been a challenging one for me. Mom and I have made it to Port Clinton,
PA. We got off trail for a couple of
days so that I could meet with Dr. Matthew Bowen in Charlottesville, VA and
record my combat experiences to be used as part of his Combat Veterans Oral History
Project.
While having my combat experiences recorded for history was
a great experience, it has also stirred up a lot of different emotions and
thoughts about myself.
The morning of my interview with Dr Bowen I stumbled upon
the following video of Gayle Lemmon,
http://www.ted.com/talks/gayle_tzemach_lemmon_meet_the_first_women_to_fight_on_the_front_lines_of_an_american_war#t-57630
In her presentation, Gayle talks about how in 2011 the CST
females were the first females to serve in combat. I was outraged, are you serious. I did what the CSTs did and more way back in
2003 in Afghanistan, long before the "Good Idea Fairy" came up with
the great idea. And while I know my
experiences are not that common amongst female combat veterans, I am certain
that I am not the only female to have successfully served alongside men in
combat prior to the CSTs in 2011. I was
and still am utterly insulted, especially since I have not been able to receive
my CAB for Afghanistan, as a result of bureaucratic bullshit. And so began my downward turn to feeling
shitty for the last few days.
I have loved the last 21 years I have spent in the
Army. And up until I was MEDEVACd back
from Iraq, I was very successful and confident, as a soldier in the Army. However, since being MEDEVACd, I have
struggled to make height/weight and pass my PT test and as a result, in the
eyes of the Army, am a failure, loser, POG, UNSAT, NOGO, etc.
When it comes to being a woman I have always been very
self-conscious, a failure, lacking in confidence. I have never been skinny, have never been
able to wear a bikini, I haven't had a boyfriend in years, I am not married, I
don't have a career, I don't own a home, I don't have a college degree, I don't
have kids, I am overweight and out of shape and am 41 years old. So in both major aspects of my life, being a
soldier and being a woman, I have completely struck out.
I have been repeatedly asked why I am hiking and how has it
changed me. Most books you read about
individuals hiking the trail talk about how the hikers had such amazing
epiphanies, figured out the meaning of life, solved the world's problems,
etc. Well, just like not everyone who
claims to have thru-hiked the AT has actually hiked the whole trail, I don't
believe all these hikers had these amazing epiphanies while hiking. I think more often than not that they may have
just made up something to placate the questioners and sell books. You want to know what I have been thinking
about for the last 1500 miles...how my feet hurt, where is the next water
source, how much further until we are done for the day, what a pretty plant
animal tree bug flower etc, when are these rocks going to stop, shit another
uphill, oh god my feet and knees are killing me on this downhill, what a great
water source, what a shitty water source, great another day in the rain, oh my
god I am hungry, I would love a shower, etc.
That is what I think about each day.
What am I going to do when I get done, I have no idea, I have to get
done first. How has this hike changed
me, my feet hurt, I have lost weight, I can successfully hike long
distances. That's it, so I guess as an
AT hiker I am a failure as well, because I haven't been able to complete the
trail in 6-8 months, I haven't had an epiphany and I don't know what I want to
do when I finish. So why am I hiking,
well that isn't a big fancy answer....why, because I want to. I want to do something hard to show/prove
that I can...that is what we paratroopers do...hard shit, just because.
My time in the Army may be coming to an end and my last
deployment was 8 years ago, but no matter how much time goes by I will never
just let it go, forget about it and move on.
Having been in the Army 21 years, having been a paratrooper and being a
combat veteran is something that I will never move on from, it is who I am to
my core. Asking or expecting me to just
move on is like telling a writer to never put words to paper again, or a nurse
to never nurture again, or a mechanic to never fix anything again. And besides, time and time again those
attributes and skills I have as a result of my time in the army or deployed
have come in handy time and time again here in the crazy civilian world. When Dr. Bowen's video camera broke during my
interview I was able to Improvise, Adapt and Overcome by figuring out how to
record my interview using his laptop; when our trail angel's lawn mower wouldn't
run today I was able to take it apart, trouble shoot it, clean it, put it back
together and get it running, just like my weapons in the Army; when I have been hurting, tired, cold, wet or
sore I have trudged onward, because we paratroopers don't quit.
I am who I am, a damaged female combat veteran paratrooper
long distance hiker, who is hiking from Georgia to Maine and won't quit until I
have hiked the entire trail, and I encourage and challenge any and all to get
out here and do the same. I probably
won't ever be a squared away soldier again and I don't know if I will ever be
what society expects me to be as a woman, but so far I am doing ok with this
hiker thing, so I will stick to this at the moment and decide what to do next
once this 50 meter target is neutralized.
There you go, my great words oh wisdom. Tuesday 14 July we will be back on trail at
Port Clinton, PA heading north to finish the AT.
I don't know you but I want to say something profound after reading that post but I can't find the words to top what all you just said! You both are amazing and inspiring and whatever your reasons are for doing the trail they are the right reasons for you! Don't stop, don't ever stop doing what YOU want to do!
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