FRESH
YARN presents:
All
Politics Aside
By Elisabeth
R. Finch
Dear
Sgt. Joseph Callahan -- I don't know you, you don't know me. But, man,
everyone knows Bob Dylan. Here are a couple photos of him. Get home safe.
Hi,
Sgt. Callahan. I really don't know what a 16-year-old teenager could say
that would interest a soldier fighting for our country...
Dear
Joe - Rumor has it you look like my husband Steve, so I know you must
be a hunkasaurus. Here's a Minnesota moose to make you smile.
Joe,
I don't know you. But come home
------------------------
I was sitting
in Film Analysis at USC, watching Bridge on the River Kwaii for
the second time in a row, when I missed Joe's phone call. During a class
break, the flat screen TV in the lobby blared CNN images of fatigue-clad
troops marching in one direction. Off to Kuwait tomorrow, Joe said
into my voice mail, and Iraq a few days after that. Goodbye, Elisabeth.
Everything went silent.
The first
words Joe had ever said to me were in a dimly lit hole-in-the-wall bar
in Wichita, Kansas, after he had starred in the first play I ever wrote:
"So, Elisabeth, what did you think?" I answered as all Jews
from the East Coast do -- even when they're stuck in Kansas -- with another
question. "What did you think?" Joe laughed. We ordered
another drink. From that moment on, it was as if we'd lived next door
to each other our whole lives -- one steady stream of questions hanging
between us for too many hours, over too many pitchers of Hefeweizen.
Neither of
us knew if we'd see each other again. But that first conversation never
stopped.
This wasn't
the beginning of a romance. There is nothing romantic about getting to
know someone over five years through time zones and weekly instant messages.
No romance in that day he told me he craved structure, purpose. And the
Army was going to help him find it in Ft. Campbell, KY, where he trained
in 100-degree heat and talked about grenades and the Mucus Chamber. And
there was certainly nothing romantic about the day before he left for
Iraq.
By then,
writing letters wasn't new to us. Yet the moment the voice mail went dead,
I went blank. I ran to the computer lab and printed a dozen stories from
the Internet -- excerpts from The Onion, gossip blogs, Entertainment
Weekly movie reviews, and TV Guide listings of shows he wouldn't
be watching anytime soon. I threw them in an envelope with just my signature.
I overnighted them to Callahan, Joe D., 101st Airborne Division. I was
left to imagine they arrived before he left.
A month went
by. For the first time in five years, there was a lull in the conversation.
But every
time I sat down to write, I panicked. Everything I said sounded insipid
and small. I flashed back to Mail Day at camp, and that pathetic loneliness
when they called everyone else's name but mine, and I had stared at my
plaid Chuck Taylors, kicking dirt, pretending I'd rather be doing just
that than open a stupid letter from someone -- anyone. And, hell, if that
stunk, imagine being in the Iraqi desert. I became consumed, obsessed
with Joe getting something every single Mail Day.
An idea came
to me. There were an infinite number of people my age just like me, working
assistant jobs in Los Angeles, feeling utterly and completely ineffectual.
And I knew a helluva lot of 'em. Joe was as lowly a grunt as we were.
But in his world, that meant on any given day he was halfway around the
world, armed with a fighting knife, throwing knife, bayonet, three hand
grenades, a 17-pound anti-tank rocket launcher, and a rifle with 300 rounds
of ammunition. Surely, if I could dream up a project that my friends could
master while answering phones for malcontent industry moguls, they'd be
game.
Friends...
Turkey Day is over. ChristmaHanuKwanzaa is around the corner. And one
of my closest friends, Joe, got on a plane last month to Iraq. This isn't
a chain letter hoax. Write him. Tell him you know me, or pretend you know
him. Get as creative as you want. All politics aside, it's a small thing
that would make a BIG difference to a 22-year-old soldier as he spends
the next year in a lonely/scary place. Here's his address. One stamp will
do the trick
I crossed
my fingers that some friends would write or pass it on. I just hoped something
would come of it for him.
And then
the replies started flooding in.
Cool!
Will do! And I'm sending it off to everyone I know!
My
students need practice for Monday's vocab quiz, so I'll have them write,
using their words. It'll be a great warm-up for today -- thanks!
Done.
Yes,
absolutely, but can I flirt with him?
Three months
went by: one phone call from his mother relaying he was still alive, a
pencil-scrawled letter from a far corner in Tikrit, but mostly, still,
silence for me. Joe's world, on the other hand, was getting pretty damn
noisy.
Dear
Joe, You don't know me at all, but I think that's what makes this letter
extremely special...
Government
aside, I decided to write you. I'm 16, from Colorado
Sometimes
I feel I can relate to a person based on their favorite part in Monty
Python and the Holy Grail.
What's yours?
I always wanted to just write to a soldier saying thank you, but I never
knew how or where to send my letters to...
Almost four
months into Joe's tour in Iraq, an email finally arrived:
Elisabeth
-- I've received a postcard from Holland boasting "Hookers for Weed,"
Mardi Gras cards, movie ticket stubs with reviews written on the back,
does Santorini really look like that? Did I spell Santorini right? Damn,
I need a dictionary! Our library here is made of discarded Michael Crichton
and John Grisham novels. Then there was the Lascivious Andrea Stone and
her headshot. People were always asking me in Hillah, "Hey, Callahan
show me that chick licking her lips again." I have the sneaking suspicion
you had something to do with this... I think the generator is going to
go out so I'll send this quickly. But I'm okay. I wanted you to know that.
Take Care. Joe.
By the time
I emailed back, he was offline.
Weeks later
I was shocked to find Joe on an ancient version of Instant Messenger.
His computer kept freezing. After two hours of false starts, I asked him
one question: "Can you tell me something that would shock me?"
He wrote back: "They want us here."
November,
2003, President Bush announced a serious "step back" in the
number of troops deployed. Conflicts and serious combat quieted down on
the news. Like most people I knew, I took my denial wherever I could get
it, turned off CSPAN, tuned back into The West Wing and pretended
Martin Sheen really did have everything under control. (If nothing else,
at least we knew he was watching soldiers' caskets flown home in
the middle of the night.) It seemed -- almost -- like there may be an
end in sight. I kept sending postcards but secretly planned on Joe being
home by Fall.
November
19, 2003 -- Elisabeth, I am back at the airfield because I am trying to
pass a kidney stone. Aren't you proud? It's bad enough I'm in the desert....
If there is a God he/she is a sadist with a great sense of humor.
They
got Saddam's two sons. That is progress. My brigade lost three soldiers
a couple of days ago to an ambush on a road not too far from where I'm
at right now. They did not catch the Iraqis that did it. I have not been
able to find out the casualties' names. Whether I know them or not they
are still members of 327th getting killed. We are up on our guard right
now. I don't know what the repercussions will be for the death of Saddam's
Sons but the Iraqis are growing some balls. They attacked another one
of 327's installations with mortar fire a few days ago as well. It is
still war, that is for sure. I don't tell you these things to scare you.
It's stuff I can't tell most people with a clear conscience, but I can
tell you. Elisabeth, take care of yourself, Joe
My Jewish
Mother instinct was to hop on a plane with cheesy '80s movies and chocolate-coated
anything to make it better. But I couldn't. Instead, I gathered my own
troops.
Since the
day the War in Iraq began, my five-foot tall TV production coordinator
friend, Sara Weir, forwarded information about anti-war rallies, and diligently
created snarky poster slogans for protests she attended, proudly wearing
her "Bush or Chimp" t-shirt. But after learning how thrilled
Joe was to hear from everyone, she rallied in a different way:
It
looks like Elisabeth's friend, Joe Callahan, will be in Iraq until at
least next February, so keep them coming if you can -- show fliers, headshot
postcards (very popular -- our dear friend Andrea Stone now has several
fans in the 327th), cereal box cutouts, recipe cards -- whatever. In a
world gone mad, sometimes I feel like human connections are all we have.
Sara.
Sara was
certainly not the only person who objected to the war. But no one let
that stand in the way of reaching out to Joe, offering to send just about
anything: girlie magazines, footballs, themselves...
I would
mail you a cake but I haven't the means to do so. Also, I don't know if
you like chocolate or vanilla
I heard
soldiers can give out kids' clothes to Iraqi children, so I'm sending
you some boxes. Had the van packed to take them to Goodwill, but am so
happy to send them to Balad instead!
Hello
from Moorestown, New Jersey! My sophomores just finished reading To
Kill A Mockingbird
where Atticus Finch advises his daughter Scout to practice empathy by
climbing into another person's skin and seeing things from his/her point
of view. I asked my students to put themselves into your shoes for a few
minutes
No one ever
heard back from Joe. No one expected to. And most of them didn't need
to. They didn't know him or miss him the way I did; they didn't mind the
one-sided conversation. But it didn't stop them from feeling connected
to Joe in some way.
After a
while, politics and emotions crept to the surface.
People
say they don't want war, but they support the troops. I support the war
and most of all, I support the troops. Come home ASAP.
I think,
perhaps somewhat naively, that this war is only about oil, and I'd switch
to a fucking bicycle if I thought it'd bring you guys home. Compared to
you, I'm sure my head is just way up my own ass. I hope you guys are safe
and warm and not too fucking bored.
I'm
feeling woefully inadequate to affect the change I know is possible, so
I'm writing local politicians, the Red Cross...
Dear Sgt. Callahan, three of my friends' dads went to Iraq and I don't
see the purpose of why we are over there...
For
the next eight months, every single day, someone had something for Joe
on Mail Day. Postcards of Don Shula. Newspapers from the Dean of Stephens
College. Twelve boxes of children's clothing. And over 20 DVD box sets
sent from an HBO executive. Anything we could give to remind Joe of home
-- until he was home.
Christmas morning, while everyone else I knew was surrounded by family,
opening elaborate presents under a tree, I was glued to my computer, hoping
to hear something from Joe. Just as I was ready to give up, an email popped
up in my inbox.
December
25th, 2003 -- Elisabeth, Your mom sent me two books from Amazon, tell
her thank you. And you got me a dictionary! My favorite book in the world!
Your friend Nancy sent me boxes of clothing and supplies for families
in desperate need. I've come up with at least three different manners
of transfer without the remote possibility we'd be doing anything wrong.
Code name to date: "Operation Osh Kosh Begosh"
Some of
my guys got hit today. No word on casualties. But we got fragmented and
they went further north into Bagdhad without me. We're crossing our fingers,
but it'll be a few hours or maybe a day before we get news. If we get
sent on a recovery mission, I can't promise I'll write for a while
Joe.
After a year
of near-silences and near-misses, on January 6th, 2004, Joe picked up
the phone and dialed my number from the well-lit kitchen of his parents'
Kansas City home. I was stuck in a clustered Los Angeles mini-mall, buying
another pair of shoes I didn't need, when his voice stopped me in my tracks.
I put the shoes down, walked outside, and sat cross-legged on the ground
amidst a dozen harried shoppers. I couldn't say a word. Three times he
checked if I was still on the other end of the line, his accent thicker
than I remembered it. A year's worth of questions were in my head, but
I just wanted to hear his voice. Something wasn't quite right.
The VA. The
strain on his parents and friends who couldn't wait for him to come home,
but assumed when he came back, everything would be the same. But it wasn't.
I felt foolish for ever thinking it could be. Joe started taking sedatives
at night to stop him from recalling intimate details of firefights. I
would wake up to my inbox filled with five-page emails from him, often
incoherent, written under a Trazadone-induced fog
February
14th, 2004: You fight every day to survive because you're convinced that
happiness has something to do with geography. You tell yourself, "if
I can live through this hell and get home to America I'll never be unhappy
again." Well, I'm home. And not only is that not the case, it's the
opposite. I'm used to being around guys who you might not even like but
you know would run into gunfire to drag you to safety. Now I work with
people I wouldn't trust to walk my grandmother's dog. Joe.
March
1st, 2004: I read today that over a hundred Iraqi vets as of January reported
to homeless shelters. That's inside twelve months of the first shots fired
in this war. A soldier I knew disappeared a few weeks ago. Had problems
with drinking and drugs after he got out. One day he was talking to his
mom about getting a job. And the next, he wasn't there anymore. No one
knows where this kid is. He was 21.
The postcards
to Joe stopped. All conversation stopped. Once he was home, no one seemed
to have anything left to say.
Joe couldn't
sleep through the night, or hold his niece, or steer clear of the drugs
that kept his balance. He got a job he went to from time to time. He booked
two flights to visit friends. He couldn't get himself on either one. It
would be months before he could tolerate anti-war sentiments in any form.
July
6th, 2004: It is impossible to be against the war but for the soldier.
The war is in the soldiers who fight it. Joe.
Joe still
had several months of service left, but his tour in Iraq was complete.
He wouldn't ever have to go back.
July
8th 2004: I'm pro this war, but against almost everything else Bush stands
for: his position on stem cell research, gay marriage, the list goes on.
Kansas City is now setting records for mercury-related birth defects and
brain damage. We can't fish in our streams. I'm not a Republican. But
every time I see marines or soldiers on patrol on television, I feel as
though I need to be there. I can do that job. I could make a difference
in combat.
A year to
the day that he returned home, on a Tuesday afternoon, I received an email
from Joe telling me he'd been transferred to a California base for the
week. I asked for his address, begged my boss for the day off work, and
drove 130 miles deep in the nowhere desert.
After six
years apart, we sat face to face again, an endless stream of questions
and answers over one shared Hefeweizen. He showed me Blackhawks and tanks
and joked about how the desolate army base was just like Disneyland, only
cheaper.
It was only
at the end of the day, when he took me back to his barracks, that I saw
a line of duffel bags packed to leave in the morning. It's only a year,
he told me. When I'm back from Iraq
He didn't finish the
sentence.
I watched
him reach into his uniform pocket and hand me the worn pages of The
Onion excerpts and TV Guide listings I'd sent him years ago,
barely legible. He saved everything, he said, and seemed relieved I didn't
draw attention to his hands that shook when he said the "Postcard
Campaign" was one of the coolest things that ever happened to him.
He asked me, for the first time since the day we met, what I was thinking.
I didn't
tell him I wanted him to stay. I didn't tell him I was terrified that
the one thing I did to give him a reason to come home just might be a
reason he was going back. Instead, I looked at him and asked, "What
are you thinking?" He handed me his army jacket, hugged me
twice, and said goodbye.
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