Friday, November 12, 2010

Commonality of pain

Commonality of pain
November 12, 2010 posted by Chaplain Kathie ·
If you hear someone say they have an abscess tooth, you understand how much pain they are in even if you’ve never had one, you have had a tooth ache.
If you hear someone say they have a sinus infection, you understand how much pain they are in with the pressure building in their head and their body is drained of energy.
Even if you have managed to escape these problems you can understand because we talk about them making them so common, the level of pain is associated with our own common experiences. Yet if someone says they are suffering because they were in the military, we tend to not connect to their experiences, avoid conversations and feel as if there is no way we can ever understand what it is like for them. The truth is, we can all understand it once we think of what we have in common with them.


Vietnam War Fallen
Look at this picture and you see a grunt gently holding a fellow warrior’s head in his arms. There are many moments of gentleness in combat. Love and compassion do live on even in the atmosphere of brutality. People don’t just die in war. They are shot. They are blown up. Even in the midst of this there are still moments when the human spirit rises above it all.
read more here
Commonality of pain

If you think we can't change the way they come home, just think that we can reach around the world and here's some proof of that.

This is from Google stats on this blog for Oct 12 to Nov 12


Pageviews by Countries
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9,814
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545
Canada
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405
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Russia
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Ukraine
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Australia
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Indonesia
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