A coworker and I recently were discussing
the threat of suicide as a manipulative tactic. A person in her circle recently
went on a three day bender in the mountains after leaving a suicide note. After
his vehicle became disabled, he started calling people for a ride.
This post is not making light of suicide.
It is cruel and hateful toward the survivors and the meanest act I can think of
under most circumstances. Those faced with incurable and debilitating health
issues, to me, get a free pass. It is the fakers that get my scorn.
Basic Training, Ft Leonard Wood, MO,
circa 1963 wasn’t a pleasant experience. My squad had the top floor of a
dilapidated WWII “temporary” barracks with exposed studs and rafters. Two
private rooms at the head of the stairs were occupied by Sergeants. One was
from Cuba, and his command of English was marginal.
One of the trainees was desperate to get
out of the Army. In that era of the draft, the institution wasn’t keen on
letting anyone go. Wearing panties might have worked. His solution was to fake
a suicide. He stacked footlockers, tied his tent rope to the rafter, fashioned
a noose, and slipped it over his head. My buddy, Tom, had the bottom bunk and
this joker the top bunk. Tom loathed the little pansy. Once the noose was in
place, Tom kicked the footlockers from under the pansy who now was desperately
trying to climb a small wax covered cotton rope. Enter the Cuban Sergeant. As
he topped the stairs, he saw an entire two squads going about their business of
shining shoes and writing letters as the pansy tried to climb the rope.
Shouting orders in Spanish, which no one obeyed, he finally got the fool down.
Fast forward a few days. It is a Saturday
night and the Sergeant was, as all good Sergeants of the day, getting buzzed at
the NCO Club. The pansy cut one of his wrists (disregarding the, “It’s down the
tracks, not across the tracks) and carefully hung his arm outside his bunk. Tom,
sees this fool dribbling blood on Tom’s dust cover, jerks him from his bunk,
and starts beating him. Poor Sergeant. Reaching the head of the stairs, he sees
one soldier bleeding while getting his ass kicked. Of course, his arm was
flailing, splattering blood all over. More excited orders, in Spanish, which we
all ignored.
The pansy got hauled off never to be seen
in our unit again. Tom was ordered to clean up the mess but we all pitched in.
As a side note, after leaving the Army, Tom used the GI Bill to finish his
education as a psychiatrist. Probably needed the “professional courtesy” as he
wouldn’t have afforded regular care. Yeah, bat shit crazy. Since we were tight
buddies, what did that make me?
With no disrespect intended to the
sufferers of PTSD, saw a lot of fucked up people in the Army. The majority were
fucked up before they joined. Some, the Army helped. Other didn’t change. One
that comes to mind hung by his finger tips off the stern of the troopship
taking us to Germany. Thought he was being funny. We all went through Combat
Engineer training together and about nine of us ended up in the same company in
Germany.
Is there any way to spot the manipulative
fakers from the real risks? I don’t know how.
The officers and senior NCOs that dealt
with these jokers had my profound respect and sympathy. Once I became a squad
leader, my solution was kicking their asses until they changed. Of course, some
of them could kick back real well. My tactic, while officially frowned on, was
often ignored by the powers that were. Fuck up my plans for the evening? No,
maggot, fuck you. Per my youngest son, such
behavior` isn’t tolerated in today’s Army.
Their loss. I believe today’s soldier is
much better than in my day (hey, it is a much smaller and select service today)
but some of the toughness has been lost.
Sorry to ramble on. Where this post
started, and where it ended up, surprises me. Hope you weren’t bored. Offended?
Oh, well.
13 comments:
First, thanks for stickin' with me at "Pitchpull".
I DO appreciate it.
VN Vets got a bad rep for bein' "ticking time bombs". I said at the time, "How many of these bad apples were rotten before the ARMY picked 'em?"
True then.
True today.
The mentally ill just make it hard for the rest of us.
Agree completely.
Speaking of fake suicide attempts, in some cases it's tempting to just let them go ahead.
I've been tempted!
Those are truly sad... And people trying to get out of taking responsibility...
What is this responsibility you talk about? Quaint notion, that.
(And I agree)
Reminds me of a dude on my ship. Three months left on a 4 year cruse and, because we were about to leave for the WestPac, decided he was gay. He wanted out early, instead he got six months in the brig and extensive psych treatment.
I like stories with a happy ending.
Great post, WSF. You talk about some hard issues. I agree with your perspective.
I'm sure you dealt with them on a near daily basis when you were a LEO.
Yes. Blah. Not fun
Reminds me of a story from my dad's days in psychiatric medicine. Doc had a patient that he was very familiar with after years of work. Guy called him at 3 a.m and made a suicide threat. Doc (feeling he knew him well) said "go ahead., and hung up on him. Then spent all night worrying he'd made the wrong call :). (He hadnt, the man called him in the afternoon to thank him for calling him on his crap)
Not a recommended tactic if you aren't trained and familiar!
Always a crap shoot. My youngest, the ex Medic, has some Blue Falcon stories.
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