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F.
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Apr 25, 2014 06:04PM

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I didn't this year, and I think last year I was working I do try to get to them when I can though. There is something almost magical about a dawn service.
One of my most cherished memories is of hearing The Last Post played at Ieper (Ypres), in Belgium, close to where Douglas died. They still play it every night at the Menin Gate.
On that trip my sister and I also visited Douglas's grave, which was a strangely emotional experience. Strange, because I didn't expect it to affect me the way that it did. I mean, I never knew him, and there is nothing more special about him than any other person who died in the war, but it felt important, somehow, to visit and tell him we were there. That someone from the family had made it all that way at last.

Beautiful post."
Emma Sea wrote: "God, you made me cry in Starbucks, Lisa.
Beautiful post."
Sorry, Ems!

Thank you for sharing that with us.
That's so wonderful that you and your sister were able to go and experience all of that.
My grandpa, my dad's dad, also served in WWI. I never heard any of his stories myself - he had a stroke when I was about 5, so most of my memories are of him reading to me - but my dad has told me more than once that grandpa was a rare one in that he shared some of his experiences with his kids. It sort of set a precedent for the next generation when they were sent to Viet Nam and Korea, as they have also shared some of their experiences over the years.

On the other side of my family, my grandfather did serve in WWII. As my aunt says, what happened to him would these days be called PTSD, but in those days a man was expected to just pick up where he'd left off. To say he had issues would be an understatement.
I think what fascinates me most about war is the shadow that it can cast down generations.

My mom's dad served in WWII, mostly in Japan and China, if memory serves. He didn't talk about it at all, really, at least not that I remember hearing. He was also a very quiet man but always quick with a smile and so good with us grandkids. Makes you wonder how he was able to do that knowing the things he probably witnessed and had to do.


It is incredible that people were able to come back and pick up their lives, and were expected to deal with the psychological fallout on their own.

Thanks, Sofia.
I think it's a generational thing. People were expected to come back to civilian life and put their war experiences behind them. Like Smurfette says, it's only very recently that there's been any acknowledgement that talking through things can help resolve them emotionally, and be a good thing.
I always wish there were more questions I'd asked my grandparents as well though. My grandmother was great for answering anything and everything I threw at her, but my grandfather wasn't much of a talker. Not unless it was about living out west. Which, sadly, I wasn't interested in as a kid.
