We March At Midnight Quotes

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We March At Midnight: A War Memoir We March At Midnight: A War Memoir by Ray McPadden
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We March At Midnight Quotes Showing 1-9 of 9
“Energy and optimism are crucial, I remind myself.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“No one does push-ups, weights, or jujitsu. Calories are stored for fighting.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“When under extreme stress, it is normal to crave physical contact, and after all, there are deep bonds between us.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“Patrol after patrol, I learn to stop staring at decisions. Be cool and make a call. The worst thing is being indecisive.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“All these decisions must be framed with a combat lens. Any of these decisions can get us killed.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“What makes this all so hard is that anything can happen at any moment.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“And that gets me thinking we can be many things in a single fight, brave and cowardly and bold and bumbling, especially if the shooting drags on for a bit. And if you like a guy, you remember the good he did in a fight, and if you don’t like him, you remember the bad, and none of it is fair and that’s beyond me.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“The hard, right thing is best. Good infantrymen should not sit still. I examine the risk and decide to stay put, on account of energy. It dominates infantry operations. Marching, digging, shivering, and bounding all take energy. Energy is precious, and I am tired.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir
“Balancing sustenance and firepower makes for hard choices. It is better to lick dew off the grass than to yell, “Bang,” at the enemy.”
Ray McPadden, We March at Midnight: A War Memoir