
My first visit to the Wall was in the spring of 1984. At that time I was teaching high school English, raising my son, and struggling pretty much alone. My principal sent me to DC with a group of students on a Close-Up trip. These very well-organized sojourns allow the teachers some time to themselves, and I knew my day would be spent at The Wall–sans high school kids. I didn’t want to be with anyone that day.
I took the Metro down to the Mall and slowly, slowly wound my way toward that monolith, what one of my friends in a poem calls ‘wet, black wings.’ As its long, black V appeared and grew larger, my heart was pounding, my feet so heavy I had to force them in front of one another. Everything in my body and being was cringing and pulling back. I was--simply--scared to death. Terrified. And it kept getting closer. When I finally arrived, and it loomed before me, I didn’t know what to do: just stood there, not wanting to look at it, looking anywhere else, eyes filled with tears.
At that time, the vigil was in effect year ’round, and a Vet walked up to me, asked if he could help. I was numb and brusque and unsure. Undaunted, he led me to the book of names, asked me who I wanted to find, showed me Michael’s name in the book, what the numbers meant, how to find him. Then he volunteered to go down into that waiting memorial with me. I refused–I wanted to be alone. Still undaunted, he said he’d just follow behind, make sure I could find the name if I needed him. I moved down, down, down that sidewalk, the wings of the V pulling me in, the names increasing, my reflection unnerving me, and the tears flowing. As I arrived at the apex and panel 18W, I again just stood there–in complete shock I realize now.
The Vet appeared at my side again, gently guided my eyes up to the 2nd line and over to the right. Michael A. McAninch. He was there. It was true. He wasn’t coming home. He had been memorialized and immortalized along with all these names around him. My fiancĂ©, my Michael. I collapsed. Just shot down to the ground. But my fall was broken by the Vet who had known I must not be alone. He caught me and held me while I sobbed my grief, wracked with pain, shaking uncontrollably in the arms of this kind stranger.
After I quieted a bit, he said, “See all these names around Michael’s? They are his brothers, and they are with him; he is not alone.” And he calmly stayed by my side, talking with me, listening to me, nodding, being quiet when he needed to be. It was the first time anyone had ever talked with me about Michael and the War. Fifteen years, and someone finally cared. His name was Terry.
I have been to The Wall three times since that first painful trip. I like the statues and understand why they have been added to the site. But it is The Wall that I come for. I don’t see it as a black gash or a tombstone, though I understand those feelings as well. It is, of course, a chevron in memoriam--polished granite in which we see ourselves mirrored in the names of the Fallen. It is OURS, and it is THEIRS. We insisted on it; we paid for it both in tributes and in blood; and we experience it in our own ways, some of us choosing not to–and that is a response to it also.
For me, it is a memorial to our loved ones, a reminder of the cost, and a site for pilgrimage and gathering and sharing. And it is where a Vet named Terry gave a damn when almost everyone else had ignored our Vietnam Veterans and their families--refusing to let us talk; treating us and them as if the whole thing was an embarrassment--a disgrace.
So for all those years, I had been silent and isolated in my agony until that day when this veteran, Terry, volunteered to help a grieving lady through her first experience of the Wall–still serving his country and his brothers.