Guest guest Posted December 29, 2000 Report Share Posted December 29, 2000 Peace is Personal I have gotten about 29 emails inviting me to participate in one or another peace meditation this year. This New Year's Eve is our tenth wedding anniversary. This year I even bought a new dress and we are planning to have fun with one another! The best thing I ever did for world peace is marry my husband Dan. That includes 1969, when I made 5000 black arm bands and helped plan the Moratorium March in the northern part of San Diego County. I was working so hard for that, I still don't remember getting my college homework done, and this may have something to do with my waiting until a few years later to pursue college in earnest. I have been something of a pacifist, since, as a teenager I realized they were going to load up my male friends and create cannon fodder out of them. I grew up in San Diego County, California. There was the Marine Corp Recruiting Depot, a huge Naval Base with a gigantic fleet of Naval Ships, Camp Pendleton, the Naval Air Station at Miramar and lots more. San Diego was " the military. " My high school " donated " 27 boys lives to the Viet Nam war and countless others lives were forever changed by their participation there. There are 58,220 names on the Viet Nam Memorial wall, 5579 of them from my home state. Here is one that I know. WILLIAM LEROY FIX WILLIAM LEROY FIX was born on May 19, 1949 and joined the Armed Forces while in SAN DIEGO, CA. He served as a 0356 in the Marines. In 1 year of service, he attained the rank of PFC/E2. He began a tour of duty on February 24, 1968. On April 26, 1968, at the age of 18, WILLIAM LEROY FIX perished in the service of our country in South Vietnam, Quang Tri. Courtesy of The Virtual Wall at http://www1.thevirtualwall.org/index.asp I don't know what a " 0356 " is. Bill was a guy I met at the Methodist Church I attended who took me, in 1967, to see the movie Georgie Girl. He was the boy I invited to the only formal dance I attended in high school. I can still see him dancing in the decorated gym at Clairemont High School. He was tall, blond gracious, funny, sharp as a tack, witty, sweet and wonderful. I was completely Ga-Ga over him. He beat me in an election for President of our Methodist Youth Fellowship and I thereby became his Vice President. God I am glad he won now! We caroled together at a convalescent home. In the midst of a difficult childhood Bill made me feel special, pretty, smart. He laughed at my jokes and was playful with me. When he held my hand in the movie that was my first experience of intense sexual electricity. I was absolutely magnetically drawn to him. He died the next year--before I was to graduate from high school. This is how I remember the Viet Nam War, in terms of personal loss. I don't want to think of war in any other way, because it is in separating ourselves from the true cost of war that we come to accept it as a necessity. If we can allow ourselves to sit with sorrow rather than avoid its experience, we would not unnecessarily cause it. I cannot imagine still how his mother and father must have felt, having loved him all his life. I cry today just to imagine it. I cannot think of them and fail to cry. Peace is an interior job, and my gratitude for my marital partner brings me more peace than anything I did ABOUT peace. So, whenever people ask me to participate in a peace meditation on New Year's Eve, I tell them one, I pray for peace daily, and two, I have a permanent party date that I committed to with my husband Dan a long time ago, so I don't feel inclined to participate in any other " special " events. It is my spiritual practice to persistently recognize that we are all connected. Of course, I believe that celebrating ones blessings does affect the existence of peace. As do persistent, unending prayers for peace. I have been praying for peace for all of these years. I believe my prayers have become more powerful, but it is clear to me that it is far too soon to stop. I have not allowed the persistence of war to make me cynical or complacent. I still pray, I still have faith. I expect to be persistent about this until it is time for me to go. It is my belief that in being happy and celebrating with Dan, I honor Bill's short but precious life, the possibilities held out in the youthful experience of love we shared so many years ago, as innocent teenagers not knowing what sorrow lay so close ahead of us. I cannot and will not forget. May this New Year find you peaceful and experiencing a new vigor and enthusiasm for life. May you not flinch in the face of any difficulty life presents to you, for within each experience there truly is the heart of Peace. With great love, Susanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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