| 
			
				
					| 
						
							
								| My Thousand Yard Stare |  |  |  
					| I sit at a table in the middle of the day Looking out my window, not a lot to say.
 TV blaring, newspaper in front of me unread,
 People see me think I must be dead.
 Talk to me,
 Walk by me,
 I'm totally unaware.
 I'm back there!
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Carried out my back yard,
 Again sweating hard,
 Up over the mountains,
 Across the deep blue sea,
 Where again Nam waits every day for me.
 Again loaded for bear, I'm back there,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Every day, every night,
 Reliving deepest fright;
 With my very soul eternally fight
 The eternal fight,
 Time after time,
 In exhausting combat rhyme.
 Doesn't anybody for me care
 Here... or there,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Hand me a bottle to drink away my sorrow,
 �Cause I don't want to go back there tomorrow,
 But I will, oh I will,
 Tho' dread does my heart fill.
 I go there every day;
 Tho' God knows I try not to in every way.
 For sometimes life is hard to bear
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Listen, did you hear something?
 Something is rustling!
 Something is moving!
 What's that in the tree line?
 Pass that Thunderbird wine.
 Did something behind that bush move there?
 Please Lord, I don't want to go back there,
 Back to the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Were we wrong, or were we right?
 I still don't know!
 Either way, I still had to go.
 Doesn't matter, we still had to fight,
 Giving our all in heart pumping might?
 We had no choice but walking the park
 From dawn to dark,
 Humping, sweating, grunting,
 Thinking of dying.
 I couldn't then, but now I can
 Cry...
 With the eternal question why?
 Did I Vietnam's fragrant fabric of life tear,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 I'm once again on combat patrol,
 Going crazy In this jungle hell hole,
 Again fearing my old friend death
 Afraid to take a deep breath
 Less someone hear me that's trying to kill,
 This infantryman once again primed to kill...
 Don't touch me unless you too wish to die
 Out in the killing zone,
 Again far from home,
 Lost and so all alone
 Watching friends bleed and die there,
 Wondering why is it not me back there,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Then I see him
 Hovering In jungled light dim,
 Grinning grotesquely,
 Hideously,
 At me.
 My Vietcong brother,
 Causes an involuntarily shudder,
 For death once again rides sweet and sour air,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 My heart floods with anguish
 That years cannot extinguish.
 My sanity I again relinquish
 Seeing again the man I killed so long ago,
 Grinning so,
 My erstwhile foe,
 Waiting for me back there
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare!
 
 Did I really kill him?
 Or did he kill me?
 In my PTSD it's so hard to see.
 Will he finally set me free,
 From my daily tour back there,
 To the end of my Thousand Yard Stare?
 
 Is that old Vietcong haunting me
 Or am I haunting him?
 Will Charley this time my blood spill on the ground?
 Will I fall without a sound,
 Again in suffering despair,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare?
 
 Suddenly again there's smoke
 A deafening roar that the dead awoke.
 Comes a pungent smell,
 That acrid smell of death, reminiscent of hell
 That old Vietcong's lying on the ground
 Without a sound,
 Without a face,
 No more his family to grace.
 Again there's a tear in my eye
 As I silently wonder why this man had to die?
 Forlornly, Horribly
 Moldering in his grave back there,
 Why is it not me back there,
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare?
 
 Hours later I'm back at my table,
 Back from a world grisly unstable,
 Back from my thousand Yard Stare.
 But I know he's still waiting back there,
 Of this I'm certain, for I'll see him tomorrow,
 When fevered winds blow.
 Again I'll cry.
 Maybe this time I'll die!
 
 Why Lord, can't I contented be
 In the arms of my lofty mountain safety,
 The purple plains majesty,
 Home again in the land of the free,
 In the loving arms of my family?
 Why do stresses of Nam yet bind,
 Imbedded in my fevered mind?
 Why can't I give it a rest?
 Didn't I pass the test?
 Why God, do I have to go back where
 Men hate me there,
 Intently try to kill me there
 At the end of my Thousand Yard Stare?
 
 When you see my thousand Yard Stare,
 You'll know I'm back there,
 To face another dawn,
 Again searching for the Vietcong!
 Will you miss me when I'm gone?
 |  
					| By 
					Gary Jacobson Copyright 1999
 Listed August 
					30, 2010
 |  | 
								About 
								Author... 
								In 1966-67, Gary Jacobson served with B Co 
								2nd/7th 1st Air Cavalry in Vietnam as a combat infantryman and is the recipient of the Purple 
								Heart.
 Gary, who resides in Idaho writes stories he 
								hopes are never forgotten, perhaps compelled by 
								a Vietnamese legend that says, "All poets are 
								full of silver threads that rise inside them as 
								the moon grows large." So Gary says he 
								writes because "It is that these silver 
								threads are words poking at me � I must let them 
								out. I must! I write for my brothers who cannot 
								bear to talk of what they've seen and to educate 
								those who haven't the foggiest idea about the 
								effect that the horrors of war have on 
								boys-next-door."
 
					
					Visit Gary Jacobson's site for more information It is illegal to 
					use this poem without the author's permission.~~ Send your comments and/or use permission request to 
				
					Gary Jacobson. ~~
 |  | 
	| 
		
			
				| Poem Use Permission Request USA Patriotism! cannot 
				provide use permission for a poem or an author's email address 
				if not listed below the poem. Only the author or a legal 
				representative can grant permission. Try a search engine to find the 
				author's contact information for a use permission request or if 
				it is available for public use.
 Note: Poems authored in the 
				1700s and 1800s can be used with reference to the author.
 |  
		
		Comment on this poem |  
			|  |  |  | 
 |  
								| War and Tragedy Poems | Poem Categories | 
 |