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				 Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2005 2:30 pm    Post subject: I KNOW THIS IS A REPEAT | 
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				BUT IT'S WORTH READING AGAIN,
 
AND 3 OR 4 TIMES FOR THE ANTI'S.
 
 
 
Why I do what I do. 
 
 
I've often thought what on earth had possessed me to get me into the 
 
jungle boots I now fill.  What gave me the idea to pursue this type of 
 
life.  I have never been able to put it into words.  I have my personal 
 
reasons, the glory and the title.  I sometimes think that if we all had 
 
a sound track to our lives like they have in the movies, mine would be 
 
the coolest.  I get an occasional handshake and a thank you for what I 
 
do.  It's nice but I find no solace in that at 3 in the morning as I lay 
 
in the mud and under 2 and a half inches of rain.  Weeks let alone years 
 
of that kind of thing make it a bit easier to endure but it still none 
 
the less sucks.  I get paid close to nothing and after 2 combat tours 
 
living under the worst conditions possible I still haven't had enough, 
 
so why do I do it.  I'm under the privilege of competing in the Best 
 
Ranger competition this year and one should be in the best shape of his 
 
life to finish let alone win.  As I hit mile 19 of my 21-mile ruck run 
 
the other night I pondered on this.  Why would I do this to myself? 
 
I've got friends in college and friends who have jobs and are making 
 
good money.  Why am I here with 60 pounds on my back at an 
 
excruciatingly painful jog, in the pouring rain?  I found the answer in 
 
a the eyes of a subordinate on my first tour to Afghanistan.  A man went 
 
down and with his gear and all probably weighed in excess of 270 
 
pounds.  We were pinned down behind two small birms and there was about 
 
20 feet of open ground between me, the senior guy, and one of my hooah's 
 
(a lower enlisted guy that has not yet been to Ranger school is called a 
 
hooah.)  Ladened with his own gear and the stress of the situation he 
 
grimaced for only a second.  Without missing a beat that 135-pound kid 
 
dragged his buddy back far enough to get some cover and hoisted all 270+ 
 
pounds onto his back and took off at a dead sprint as if his friend's 
 
life depended on it (it did).  That kid was 18 years old. 
 
 
I knew then why I do what I do.  The nation will always have a call, 
 
someone must answer it.  That 18-year-old kid did.  He could have been 
 
making more money flipping burgers; instead he was in Northern 
 
Afghanistan saving his friend's life.  The honor in that is 
 
unfathomable.  It's more satisfying than anything I have ever 
 
experienced.  I love what I do simply for that reason; it's a 
 
bittersweet feeling. 
 
 
There's no pain like saying goodbye before you step on the plane, unsure 
 
of what will happen but hoping and praying that you'll come back 
 
eventually.  The entire process of emotions is unexplainable but the 
 
feeling that I get when I see my flag billowing in the wind is worth the 
 
sacrifice, even the ultimate one.  I and those like me are warriors in 
 
the name of the United States of America.  We don't do it for money, or 
 
glory, or girls.  We do it for you, your family and each other.  Some of 
 
us are gone and won't ever come back but it's worth it to protect our 
 
freedoms and liberty's.  I love my country.  I may not love everything 
 
about it but I love it none the less.  This country is protected by our 
 
blood and sweat, don't take that for granted.  Never, never, forget.  I 
 
won't... 
 
 
Cpl John C.  Buckley IV USA 
 
Army Ranger 3rd Ranger Battalion 
 
75th Ranger Regiment | 
			 
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