cgrab
Pattern Altitude
Title says it all
Yes I agree..but...Title says it all
Yes I agree..but...
I recently found an article that suggests thanking a veteran, while it may seem appropriate, actually causes some anxiety.
Article here.
Maybe, instead of thanking a veteran, the alternative course would be to "attend" a veteran today. Listen to their stories, show them you care by being there. Maybe that is what you implied in your post and if so, awesome. I just find the phrase "Thank you for your service" to be hollow and almost automatic to almost remove all the benefit it was meant to convey.
The veterans of this country (and others) put themselves before everyone else to ensure the safety of their nation and deserve respect and recognition for their actions. By no means was this post meant to be argumentative or contrary to your original intention, as I quite agree with it, I just would go one step further.
No check for me, either, and I don't even get VA care. The only veterans benefit I ever got was ~35 years ago, when mortgage rates were in the double-digits, and I got a VA loan a few points below that for our first house. Didn't even use the pilot training provisions of the GI Bill.I wasn't in long enough to get a check, all I qualify for is VA care, and that would only be used as a very last resort.
I agree, but it’s also laughable to ask me to thank someone who I’m forced to pay and who does work most Americans don’t agree with. It’s also odd vets don’t thank taxpayers for their all the money, I mean you made the choice to work for the mil, I didn’t get the choice in giving them sooooo much money.
When in doubt just offer to give them a hug. That generally makes them more uncomfortable than the whole vet appreciation topic.I'm never sure whether or not to say thank you in person any more. I know quite a few vets, and more than one has told me that it makes them uncomfortable at best; two of them genuinely hate being thanked and have their reasons. That doesn't stop me from being extremely grateful... just not sure how to express it respectfully in a manner that will always be taken in the sincere manner it's meant.
To all of the vets on this board, know that my family and I appreciate what you've sacrificed, whether it be some of your personal freedoms in return for protecting some of mine, or much, MUCH more. May you have a measure more happiness on this Veterans Day.
Thank a combat vet. The rest of us poges need to thank those guys and gals, and thank our families for sticking around at home while we went out on deployment to support the ones doing the actual fighting.
Thank a combat vet. The rest of us poges need to thank those guys and gals, and thank our families for sticking around at home while we went out on deployment to support the ones doing the actual fighting.
I want to know where this "thank a vet" stuff was 20 years ago,
I was a cadet in Civil Air Patrol from '68 to '76, and in college ROTC during the later portion of that. Definitely these kinds of problems, though not as bad in the Dakotas where I grew up.1973, Friday afternoon. I was all of 14 years old and walking home from the military school in uniform. A green VW bug with flowers painted on it pulled up next to me. Someone threw a beer can at me as a hippie chick leaned out the window....''baby killer, baby killer'', and sped off.