I have worked as a secondary English teacher in urban districts, and as a substitute teacher in well-off suburban districts, and in both settings my military background has been invaluable in gaining the respect of the students and control of the classroom. However, in both settings I am consistently faced with the same question: “Did you kill anyone?” (Sometimes they just assume that the answer is yes and jump straight to an enthusiastic “How many?!”) No matter what the background of the students, regardless of the age, grade, or class, those are the first words out of at least one student’s mouth when they learn that I served in Afghanistan .
I don’t want to sound like an off-the-deep-end mother and blame it on video games, or the media blitz, but the reality of the situation is that those are a part of it. For so many people here on the home front, the war is simply a numbers game: troops deployed, casualties, troops being pulled out, pounds of coffee donated. For those of us who have been a part of it, there are names, faces and stories behind each of those numbers.
For many kids in this country, the concept of war is perceived through the lens of Call of Duty, where the kill number is more important than making sure that the guy next to you doesn’t bleed out or lose consciousness on the chopper back to base. Where you can use cheat codes or just start over. Where if you don’t properly cover your sector the only casualty is the pride of some college kid in Tuscaloosa .
But it’s not just video games and the media that cause me to be asked about my confirmed kills on a near daily basis. The problem is that the students don’t know any other questions to ask. Unless they have a relative who also served, they don’t realize the sensitive nature of the question. No kills is weak and shameful to them, the higher the number, the cooler you are. They don’t understand that the higher the number, the heavier the personal toll, the more vivid the nightmares. They don’t realize that I was more focused on making sure my guys made it out of there safely, whatever the cost, than on picking off the “bad guys”. But back here, the actual reality seems to be less important, simply because it isn’t as widely known.
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