|
We're Back From the War. We Can't Sleep. We're Getting Divorced. If
Marijuana Is Good for Post-Traumatic Stress, Who Are We to Deny Its
Medicinal Properties?
Can medical marijuana help returning soldiers from the Iraq and
Afghanistan war deal with post-traumatic stress disorder?
This question -- that it might, that it might not, or that it might
even make it worse -- hadn't even occurred to me until recently, when
I was on the phone with the receptionist at a local medical-marijuana
clinic trying to line up an appointment with a doctor in high hopes
of obtaining a California medical-marijuana ID card so that I could
purchase some cannabis as "medication."
I'm what you might call a recreational drug user, as well as an
Operation Iraqi Freedom combat veteran and a card-carrying member of
the VFW. To be honest, the real reason I was looking to score a
coveted medical-marijuana card was because I had plans that night to
go and watch Zodiac at the Los Feliz theater here in Los Angeles. I
read the book years ago, thoroughly enjoyed it, and wanted to see the
movie adaptation while under the influence of a narcotic, which at
that moment I didn't have.
The idea to obtain a medical-marijuana card came after I clicked on a
link that was posted on the Drudge Report that morning, "Calif. high
school students 'openly smoking medical marijuana in class'..."
The article essentially said that some high school students down in
San Diego armed with medical-marijuana cards were coming to class
baked, thinking that these cards might help them get away with it.
Hysterically brilliant yet insanely retarded way of thinking. But
this got me thinking that if high school kids can easily obtain these
cards, then I could, too. Right?
After skimming over the article, I went and did some research online.
It seems that thanks to the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 (Prop.
215), I, being a California resident, now had "the right to obtain
and use marijuana for medical purposes where that medical use is
deemed appropriate and has been recommended by a physician who has
determined that the person's health would benefit from the use of marijuana."
The girl on the phone told me I needed three, actually four, things
to get started. Most importantly, I needed an ailment. I told her I
was back from the war and had PTSD. While I was researching medical
marijuana online I came to discover that a lot of the things people
say medical MJ can cure are disorders associated with PTSD. Some
doctors are saying that pot is the best treatment for PTSD, because
it provides for the restoration of the sleep cycle, unlike other
drugs that disrupt sleep. I even heard that some soldiers at Walter
Reed were smoking dope. I asked if I could see somebody today, and
she said sure, but I needed to have a California ID card, money to
cover the consultation fee ($150), and a copy of my medical records.
I didn't have my medical records -- the VA hospital currently
possessed them. She told me that by law they have to give me a copy
of my medical records and that obtaining them from the VA hospital is
easy. Really?! How the hell did she know this? "Do a lot of veterans
seek medical marijuana?" I asked.
"All the time," she told me. I told her I'd call her right back.
I immediately called the VA hospital to see if I could possibly
obtain my medical records that day because I needed the weed that
night. Of course I was immediately placed on hold. While patiently
waiting, I listened to the Muzak and various voice-over messages:
"The VA can provide free medical care for two years from your
discharge from active duty for conditions possibly related to your
service, regardless of your income status. Please contact the
enrollment-and-eligibility office at a VA health-care facility near
you or call...The VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care System is here
to serve you....A VA representative will be with you
momentarily....We're proud to serve our country's veterans, because
we know that the price of freedom is not free. Thank you for making
the VA your provider of choice."
After waiting on hold for what seemed like forever, I finally hung
up. My watch told me that I was on hold for twenty minutes. I debated
for a split second whether or not to physically go down there. I've
found that you can die just from the waiting that they make you do
there, and all kidding aside, you can get terrifying PTSD just by
walking into a VA facility trying to get tested and/or treatment for
PTSD: depression, flashbacks, nightmares, rapid heart rate,
irritability, outbursts of anger, emotional numbness, thoughts of
suicide -- all symptoms I feel whenever I go there. So instead of
reliving that traumatic experience, I went back to sifting through
the multiple medical-marijuana ads printed in the LA Weekly. I
figured that maybe there was another doctor in this damned town who
could help me out without having my medical records, right?
It didn't take me long to find one.
The first thing I noticed about his office was the skateboard, which
struck me as being out of place for Beverly Hills -- old-school
pool-model deck, Indy trucks, and Powell Bomber wheels -- pretty much
the exact same setup that I skate on, or used to.
He was wearing a floaty white linen tunic shirt with subtle
embroidery around the neck, designer jeans, and wavy So-Cal blond
hair. Supermellow, talking to me the entire time in a voice just
above a whisper, which made me wonder if he spoke that way all the
time, or if he did that because he didn't want people next door
hearing what he was saying.
After I took a seat on the leather chair, I asked him if he skated.
He told me he did, but with a smile said mostly he loved to surf. He
asked if I skated and I told him that I did, but not nearly as much
as I used to. I skate mostly as transportation now, liquor store and
back, reason being the prolonged bending of the knees now sometimes
creates a large amount of stress and pain afterward, sometimes so
great that I have a hard time falling asleep at night. I've been
skating off and on since the fifth grade, and in high school I
participated in sports, which over time probably added a lot more
wear and tear to my knees. Sometimes they'd go out on me. I had these
issues when I enlisted in the Army, but I kept them hush-hush because
I didn't want to be kicked out. In the Army, it was easy to obtain
Vicodin, codeine, Percocet, you name it, from others in the barracks
and wash them down with a beer or two for the pain whenever the issue
came up no problem. But since being discharged, I have no way of
obtaining pills. So I told the doctor I was interested in turning to
alternative medicines.
The whole time I was yapping about all this, he was taking scribble
notes with a black pen on a plain white piece of paper. I then told
him about the time I went down to the VA to get my head checked out for PTSD.
It wasn't till my wife and I moved back to the 213 that I came to
find out that I was possibly wired differently now. One of the
reasons why I wanted to move back to Los Angeles was because of an
article I came across on the protesting that was going on all across
the country on the anniversary of the war. The article listed
estimates of how many people showed up to each protest in each major
city. L. A. was somewhere near the bottom, and when I saw that, I
thought to myself, That's where I want to live. Not because the
antiwar crowd bothers me, but because I wanted to distance myself
from the war as much as possible, and what better way to do that than
to live in a city full of narcissists?
I didn't want to see any yellow ribbons, shake hands with strangers
thanking me for my service, and I didn't want to view any antiwar
slogans like "No More Racist War for Oil!" or sit in a restaurant
next to a table of rich NYU kids hearing them regurgitate to each
other whatever antiwar rhetoric their draft-dodging professors told
them that day.
While apartment hunting, I was living by myself at a month-to-month
cold-water efficiency near the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and
Western. I was having difficulty landing a place because most
landlords could give two shits if you were in the Army. All they
cared about was what job you presently had, how much you made now,
and if you could pay the rent. (Saying "Aspiring writer" also didn't
help my situation too much since all they would hear instead was "Unemployed.")
While on a business trip, my friend Gabe came down to visit me, and
as we were leaving the building so I could give him a ride back to
his hotel in Irvine, he asked if the neighborhood I lived in now was
bad. I looked at him and said, "After Iraq, what's a bad neighborhood?"
Immediately after I told him this, fireworks went off a close
distance from where we were both standing. They were sporadic, as was
the screaming that came from that same direction.
"Are those gunshots?" Gabe asked curiously, as I thought to myself,
No way, that's geographically impossible, we're here in the United
States, that shit only happens in the movies, like for example Boyz N
the Hood. Just then I heard a ricochet bullet whir close by, and my
brain registered that yes, holy shit, those were gunshots being
fired, probably a 9mm.
Instinctively, I took a knee behind a car for cover and scanned over
to the location where they were coming from as my friend ran down the
street totally wide open like an open target as the shooting continued.
"Get down!" I yelled. "Get the fuck down!"
An image ran through my head of Sergeant Horrocks tackling a private
who didn't take cover when we were under assault in Mosul.
When the shooting subsided, I got up, ran to the car, told Gabe to
get in, and we drove in the direction the shooting was coming from.
"Are you nuts?!"
"No. I just want to see what happened."
When we drove to the location the shots were fired from, a low-rent
apartment complex, we saw several youths standing around in a panic,
and in the middle of all that a half-lifeless individual wearing a
Hanes wifebeater completely soaked in red blood sprawled out on the
front lawn faceup, and a young girl standing next to him with tears
running down her face hysterically screaming, "Why?!"
On the freeway down to Irvine, I explained to my friend that whenever
you hear shooting, not to run, but instead get down and seek cover.
He then asked me why I didn't get out of the car to help when we
drove past the scene.
"I don't know," I told him as the car radio was softly playing some
song I'd never heard before. "I was never really trained to do that."
After dropping him off and parking my car near where I lived, I
walked back to my building; the whole block was taped off with a
dozen-plus black-and-white police cars parked all around it. Instead
of going straight up to my room, I stopped by the liquor store on the
corner first to pick up a twelve-pack. I do this every night. Then I
walked up to a police officer and asked him about casualties.
One dead, two in critical condition.
For the amount of shots fired at that close range, I analyzed that
the gunman had pathetic aim. After thanking the po-po for the intel,
I carried my twelve-pack silently up to my room, cracked the window
open, lit up a smoke, and drank while listening to the police
helicopter flying up above.
Many nights in L. A., I would wake up when I heard the ghetto bird
circle up above the building, with its spotlight sometimes beaming
down through the lone window in my room. In Iraq, Kiowa attack
helicopters would fly above us constantly on combat missions, and I
loved that sound.
For a year straight after I came back, I hardly ever left my room,
and the only walking that I did was to the liquor store and back to
numb myself in my room. I found that I was no longer interested in
going out. Nothing interested me, not even butterfly collecting, and
I found myself not interested in meeting or talking to new people,
either. Why should I? I had already met a lot of the best people you
will ever meet, in the military.
When a friend of mine from the Army who I still keep in touch with
told me that the days now went on and on and every day felt like
being placed on QRF and waiting for something to happen, I told him I
felt the exact same way.
Quick Reaction Force means you sit around all day, sometimes for
several days, and wait for an attack and/or a mission to happen.
After some encouragement from this friend, I decided to go to the VA.
He told me that you have to go through a lot of bullshit, but once
you do, it's worth it, especially if the Army called you back up to
active duty. Rumor is PTSD can get you out of redeployment.
At the VA, the physician who does the initial screening for PTSD
asked: "In your life, have you ever had any experience that was so
frightening, horrible, or upsetting that in the past month, you..."
Followed by four questions:
1. Have had nightmares about it or thought about it when you did not want to?
2. Tried hard not to think about it or went out of your way to avoid
situations that reminded you of it?
3. Were constantly on guard, watchful, or easily startled?
4. Felt numb or detached from others, activities, or your surroundings?
After I truthfully answered yes to all four questions, the doctor at
the VA told me that if I answered yes to just three out of the four,
I would screen positive for PTSD.
What is PTSD? The VA Web site defines it:
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder that can
occur following the experience or witnessing of a traumatic event. A
traumatic event is a life-threatening event such as military combat,
natural disasters, terrorist incidents, serious accidents, or
physical or sexual assault in adult or childhood. Most survivors of
trauma return to normal given a little time. However, some people
will have stress reactions that do not go away on their own, or may
even get worse over time. These individuals may develop PTSD.
People with PTSD experience three different kinds of symptoms. The
first set of symptoms involves reliving the trauma in some way such
as becoming upset when confronted with a traumatic reminder or
thinking about the trauma when you are trying to do something else.
The second set of symptoms involves either staying away from places
or people that remind you of the trauma, isolating from other people,
or feeling numb. The third set of symptoms includes things such as
feeling on guard, irritable, or startling easily.
In addition to the symptoms described above, we now know that there
are clear biological changes that are associated with PTSD. PTSD is
complicated by the fact that people with PTSD often may develop
additional disorders such as depression, substance abuse, problems of
memory and cognition, and other problems of physical and mental
health. These problems may lead to impairment of the person's ability
to function in social or family life, including occupational
instability, marital problems, and family problems.
When I clicked on the link on their Web site for more information on
treatment, it of course, no surprise, directed me to a page that read
"Page Not Found."
I told this doctor in Beverly Hills all about the initial screening
at the VA, as well as why I never followed up on it. Weeks after
visiting the VA, I finally received a phone call back to set up an
appointment with a counselor there, but by then I'd lost all interest
in the matter, and never called them back. I had had a realization
while I was seated in the waiting room, which looked like a casting
call for Born on the Fourth of July, with dozens of sullen veterans,
a lot of whom were missing limbs and confined to wheelchairs, several
proudly wearing ball caps that read WWII VETERAN or VIETNAM VETERAN.
I sat there with all my limbs intact, looked around, and realized in
comparison I had absolutely nothing to bitch about. I thought no
matter what horrific things I did or saw, it probably paled in
comparison to these guys, you could see it in their eyes. I was
lucky. My platoon wasn't wiped out. I wasn't living under a bridge in
Santa Monica. Once I realized this, I walked out the door.
He then asked if I was suicidal, I told him no, though at times I do
find myself thinking about how life feels a bit pointless now, and he
asked how often I drank and how much, and after I told him, he
suggested that it'd be a good idea for me to cut back a little bit on
my nightly consumption. Mentioned something about permanent liver
damage. After taking more notes, he handed me a piece of paper with
my full name printed on the first line.
The above-named patient and I have discussed the use of medical
cannabis during the course of a medical history and physical
examination following guidelines of the Medical Board of California.
I believe cannabis is a medically appropriate treatment for this
patient. I am a consulting physician for the patient, who has
demonstrated a legitimate medical need for cannabis. My patient
understands the risks and benefits associated with this treatment and
that alternative treatments may be available.
The patient has been advised that California Proposition 215
notwithstanding, the cultivation, possession, and use of cannabis,
even for medical purposes, is still illegal under Federal law at this time.
Approval Period: 12 (twelve) months
Other Instructions: Recommended va-porizer/edibles
At the bottom, he signed and dated it. Awesome. I didn't even have my
meds yet, and I was already beginning to feel a whole heck of a lot
better. Using his Mac laptop Web cam, the doctor took a quick
snapshot of me sitting in his office and printed out the card and
handed it to me. He said something about how the medical-marijuana
card now allowed me to legally purchase cannabis, but to use
discretion and also keep in mind that it was not a "Get Out of Jail
Free" card, which meant I could still get busted if I was not
careful. For example, don't smoke weed in your car, especially around
the locations where they sell medical MJ, because the cops will bust
you immediately.
When I told him that I was more interested in consuming the
medication orally via edibles, like brownies, he told me to be
extremely careful. He had a client who ate a whole brownie in one
sitting, and she was out of it for three whole days, had
hallucinations and everything. He suggested I only eat a small bit at a time.
With my new card and letter of recommendation in hand from the
doctor, I thanked him for his help with a personal check paid to the
amount of $175. As I was leaving his office, he tensed up and
requested that I be a bit incognito on the way out with that piece of
paper with his signature on it. He asked for it back, and then folded
it up for me like a burrito and covered it with a blank piece of
paper, handed it back, and kindly said to call him whenever I had any
questions.
I walked past two menacing security guards, both looking a bit bored
standing by the main entrance of the "Farmacy," which, once inside,
felt nothing like any pharmacy I'd ever been in before, not even in
Amsterdam. It was more like a head shop on Telegraph Avenue, with a
dash of a festive co-op nonprofit-dot-org vibe.
I took a seat inside by the front desk and told the earthy girl
sitting behind it that it was my first time. I had to be registered
in their system. I handed her my medical card, driver's license, and
doctor's note. She was kinda hot, in that Charlie Manson Girl kind of
way, and while filling out and signing a waiver that pretty much
requested I don't medicate in or around their facility, she typed
some info into the computer and said all that was left was a phone
call to the doctor to confirm. She called, gave his office my name,
and just like that I was in their system, ready to go.
Once in the back, which of course, was papered with various portraits
and photographs of Bob Marley, I was greeted by my own personal
salesperson, a thirty-something with round Lennon glasses and hair
down to his shoulders. Advertised up on a chalkboard was today's
staff pick and the special of the day. Behind glass display counters
was a buffet of various glass medical cookie jars filled with nuggets
of green bud of various breeds, as well as a wide array of pot
brownies, pot cookies, pot cupcakes, pot soda, pot butter, pot ice
cream, pot lasagna, pot potpie, and pot chocolate bars in all sorts
of shapes, sizes, and potency.
It was hard for me to concentrate as I eyed the inventory, partly due
to the two mariachis in the corner playing live music, one playing an
acoustic guitar, the other sitting down on a stool playing an accordion.
I purchased a bunch of edibles, which my salesperson placed in a
white paper bag and stapled shut for me. I shoved them into my
backpack. Since it was my first time, I received a free sample -- a
red lollipop that came equipped with a sticker on the packaging that
read, "This product contains medical cannabis for 215 patients only.
Not for resale." And "Keep out of reach of small children. Caution
while driving or operating machinery."
On leaving the Farmacy, I stuck the lollipop in my mouth and rode my
Vespa all the way back to the pad, paranoid the entire time that a
suspecting black-and-white LAPD cab might pull me over for whatever
reason. I can just see the link right now on Drudge:
"Iraq-war veteran arrested in Hollywood with several pounds of
medical-marijuana brownies...tells judge marijuana was to treat his PTSD...."
There's a reason why I no longer drive a car and now own a Vespa
scooter, and it's not because I've watched Quadrophenia one too many
times. I tell people that it's because I save money on gas, sixty to
eighty miles per gallon, which, in a way, is my middle finger to the
oil industry. The other reason, which I don't tell anybody, is that
I'd probably be in jail right now if I continued to drive a car in Los Angeles.
Twice I exited my vehicle to engage in violence on some busy street
because of some idiot driving like shit here in L. A. Would I have
done this before experiencing a year in Iraq? Hard to say, but
thoughts of violence only went through my head when these individuals
decided to give me the finger.
When that happens, what I'm seeing is some guy who could give two
shits. While I was over there, he was here, and not only that, he's
in a polished luxury sedan, making over $100K, no cares in the world,
hair styled, cell phone to the ear, doesn't have to worry about the
Army calling him back up to active duty, or a phone call from a
friend from the old platoon saying, "Hey, did you hear? Such and such
just got killed." And now this douchebag is going to flip me off?
When he's the one driving like the complete asshole?
With a scooter, I don't get anxiety when stuck in traffic, I can just
maneuver and weave my way in and out of it no problem and park my
shit wherever I want. It's a lot less stressful. I made it home
without incident and spent the entire weekend heavily medicated.
Since nobody told me how much or how little to use when medicating, I
had to just figure it out myself.
At the time, I was married and living in a loft apartment in downtown
L. A. The reason why we moved into a loft apartment was mainly
because there are only four walls in a warehouse loft -- so I
couldn't close the door and hole myself up in my room like I did all
day and all night at the last place we lived. I'd be forced to be in
the same room with my wife. But what happened instead was I just put
up invisible walls all around me.
When she got home from work, after dropping her purse off on the
counter and some small talk about how the day was, she opened up the
fridge, saw the meds in there, and asked, "What's all this?"
I had changed my mind about going out and seeing Zodiac, so my ass
was on the sofa and Apocalypse Now was on the flat screen, and I
said, "Oh yeah, I went out today and got a medical-marijuana card."
She was confused. "How the hell did you get one of those?"
"I have PTSD," I said, taking another bite from a brownie.
"What?! Are you serious?!"
"Totally."
"But you don't have PTSD?"
I liked the marijuana a lot because it helped me sleep, and if I
could sleep all night and all day I would, and I slept all that
weekend, probably the best sleep I'd had since the war, and on Monday
I felt like a new person.
"I'd wake up and there'd be nothing. I hardly said a word to my wife,
until I said 'yes' to a divorce. When I was here, I wanted to be
there...." -- Apocalypse Now
My wife was the love of my life, the girl I wanted to spend the rest
of my life with, but when I came back from Iraq, she was now a
complete stranger to me, as I was to her. I couldn't relate to her,
and she couldn't to me. So I don't blame her at all for not wanting
anything to do with me anymore. Hell, at times I don't want anything
to do with myself either.
But whatever, I left L. A. for San Francisco, and a couple months
later, when Todd Vance, a friend of mine from my old platoon, called
me up to see how I was doing, I told him about the divorce. In shock
he exclaimed, "No way!" Not because he was surprised that I was
divorced now but because this meant that almost every single one of
us who was married now wasn't.
When I told Vance about the new line of medication that I was on, at
first he chuckled at me, but later on he called me back to tell me
that he's been thinking about MJ, as well as about an advertisement
he saw in the back of the weekly paper that was targeting veterans.
I got in contact with the marketing director for MediCann, who came
up with the ad campaign, and in an e-mail exchange she told me that
"a high percentage of our veteran patients have the diagnosis of
PTSD. The most popular effect is that marijuana stops the night
terrors or flashbacks associated with PTSD. Patients with this
diagnosis typically use marijuana at night to help get to sleep and
stay asleep without being woken up by their nightmares."
I wore a Mini Combat Infantry Badge lapel pin the day I decided to go
back to the VA to go through with my testing. At the VA hospital in
Los Angeles, I asked to see somebody for help with PTSD. The lady
wrote down a name and phone number for me to call, and I politely
told her that I wasn't going to go through that hell again, and that
I wanted to see somebody that day. An individual then walked me to an
office that had a paper note taped on its door that read, OUT TILL
MONDAY, then he walked me over to another door that read OUT TO A
MEETING. He then handed me a map of the hospital and told me to go to
a separate building across the way. Once at the building, I was told
to go to yet another building, and at that building, after signing in
and taking an elevator up to the second floor, a guy there then told
me to go back down and go to yet another building next door. I was
getting PTSD all over again, and right about the time I was about to
say fuck this and head down to the nearest medical-marijuana facility
so I could restock and medicate myself into a coma, I decided to keep
on going, and I walked into the cuckoo's nest of the mental-health
ward. I told the lady behind the counter that I was told to come here
to see somebody for PTSD, and she asked for my name and some basic
info, and then she asked where I slept last night, and I told her the
truth: "Believe it or not, I slept in my rental car."
I had driven down the previous night from San Francisco, leaving late
at night down the Highway 5, and whenever I got tired I pulled off
the freeway into the rest stops, and I'd sleep for a couple hours
until I awoke, then I'd drive again until I couldn't. She gestured
for me to take a seat. I thanked her and glanced at my Swatch to see
what time it was, and with a smile she warned me not to do that, and
that I was going to be waiting for a while.
There were about a dozen of us in the waiting-room lobby. One guy was
mumbling to himself about something and all the others looked totally
homeless and defeated. Above the television set was a
red-white-and-blue sign WELCOMING VETERANS FROM OIF/OEF. I was the
only one there who looked like he participated in that conflict,
everybody else looked considerably older.
A guy came around with sack lunches and started handing them out to
everybody. When he came to me, I told him I wasn't hungry, and he
said that I should take one anyway, if I wasn't hungry now, I would
be. Inside the brown bags were sandwiches, chips, an apple, a drink.
What people couldn't eat they handed to somebody else, the same exact
way soldiers do when sitting around eating MREs. A soldier will eat
what he wants and hand out what he can't, so nothing is wasted.
Across a range of combat and life experience, it was quite
heartwarming to see that go on here in the mental ward.
Finally a lady came out and called my name.
After looking at my records on her computer, it showed that the VA
tried several times to contact me ever since I came in almost a year
ago. I told her that my patience was thin and I'd given up, but this
time I was going to go through with the counseling no matter what.
She asked me what my Military Occupational Specialty was in the Army.
I told her 11 Bravo. Her eyes widened up a bit, and she said, "You
must of saw a lot." I didn't say anything, and she told me about how
she gets a lot of infantry guys now.
"There are two things I tell every OIF/OEF veteran not to do when
they return home," she said. "Don't drink any alcohol or take any
drugs whatsoever. Number two is to not watch the news or any movies
that might remind you of the war."
An example she gave was Black Hawk Down.
I gave the nice woman a smile.
Beside the drugs and alcohol, I was a-okay. I don't pay attention to
the news, and I actually don't care too much for Black Hawk Down.
Personally I think the flick's a bit overrated and essentially just a
stylish two-and-a-half-hour ad for the military. I knew of so many
guys at basic training who enlisted because of that movie and had
pipe dreams of being a Ranger or D-Boy. I'm more of a fan of the
Vietnam-era Hollywood movies. Their war was a bit more rock 'n' roll
and the soundtrack a bit cooler as well. I also pick up on the
antiwar messages in those films, something unfortunately I didn't
quite register prior to enlistment.
After scheduling an appointment to see somebody about PTSD, I thanked
her, and on the way out I put on my sunglasses and lit up a smoke.
The sun was out, the grass looked freshly mowed, a veteran was
playing his acoustic guitar on a bench, and I was now feeling a
little hungry, so I decided to walk on over to the PX for a bite to
eat. On my way there a vet from a previous war walked by. He had a
hat on that advertised that he was a Vietnam veteran, and I could see
that his eyes viewed the combat pin on my lapel and he gave me a
subtle head nod and said, "Welcome home."
Esquire Note: This story is part of our second annual register of
emerging ideas, trends, discoveries, products, people, and obscene
gestures you should know about before everyone else does.
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1106/a07.html
Pubdate: Mon, 01 Oct 2007
Source: Esquire (US)
Page: 158
Copyright: 2007 Hearst Communications, Inc.
Contact: editor@esquire.com
Website: http://www.esquire.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4563
Author: Colby Buzzell |