Saturday, March 16, 2013

#37 Wounded Heroes Ride for 2012 The 23rd Dedicaded to Pual Brawner



The Twenty-Third
Dedicated to Paul B. Brawner    1949-2012
 
Yea, though I walk…

Where are all the legs? This was one of those times when the brain refuses what the eyes capture. While squeezing the brake levers in front of building 62, dissonance jammed my senses.  In every direction, camouflaged warriors roll and shuffle around on titanium and carbon fiber where flesh and bone used to be. After a half dozen similar trips with the Wounded Heroes Foundation[1] it shouldn’t be so disturbing.  But then there is that silent declaration, “Be disturbed and stay disturbed until the rest of the Soldiers and Marines come back home whole!” Good thing politicians don’t show up when our band of bikers rolls onto a military base hospital; they’d get an earful. If all those turkey-lips[2] down the street in the Capitol were handed a M16[3], stuffed into a C5 cargo plane, flown to some third-world pile of rocks twelve thousand miles away from their family[4] and had to dodge IEDs, wars would end quickly or more likely never get started. Then we’d get serious about fighting drug crazed jihadists and energy independence so the young folks in camouflage could stay on two good legs. Well, once again I have jumped the gun on my story and gotten all worked up.

Green pastures…

Green is a horrible color for a car or motorcycle but it is the perfect hue for the Ohio River valley in May. The entire countryside is nearly monochromatic from the ridges and pastureland to the trenches gouged by the last Ice Age.  Green is invasive; it swallows everything no longer in motion.  This verdant tint envelopes OH247 and OH73 as they tumble to the Ohio and WV10 is swallowed by that shade as it carves its way sort of south through the coal packed mountains. Later, Skyline Drive would finish its northern leg with a tunnel of trees before squirting me out into a cacophony fast food and traffic in Front Royal, VA.  The rhythm of the road and the states blanketed in green lulled me into thoughts of another event that week. Paul will be laid to rest in green pastures next Monday. Conflicted since the first text of his death about whether to head west to his funeral or to the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for our annual tribute ride for the wounded military, the front tire remained pointed east.

Still Waters….

The Ohio River may be so lazy it appears still but any water in West Virginia or Western Virginia has no choice in the matter. All the blacktop in this part of the country huffs and puffs uphill beside water falling downhill in the opposite direction then crossing another gap, races another stream headlong to the bottom of the next valley. Riding is finding vistas that can leave an everlasting picture in your memory and this ride is no different as numerous watercourses along US219 and WV92 lead to the rendezvous at Seneca Rocks. All the other riders came from Chicago with the chase crews and this was the logical place for me to meet them. They rumbled up to the tourist trap and bar about an hour later than Skip, the road boss, had forecast but darn near perfect for a few dozen independents cusses and assorted female companions that make up these annual trips to military medical centers. Skip is a cold-war vet, a ball-buster, a M60 tank gunner that has organized these rides for years. His limitless humor and genuine concern for the younger vets has inspired our tiny band of volunteers.

When Land Shark, a very successful attorney and the chairman of our little non-profit, pulled in at the end of the column he parked beside my oddball ride. Handing him donation checks and exchanging our usual cracks about following Harleys[5], we caught up on how the ride had gone so far. After getting my t-shirt and patch the plan was to drop in behind the file of Milwaukee iron and trail along beside Land Shark’s BMW for the ride over the Skyline Drive to Front Royal. Two days alone had changed all that. Solitude had become more important than belonging so while the crew had lunch, the little Beemer headed east on US33. Johnny B-Good and Skip told me later they figured I never was gonna ride along. Johnny B thinks it’s the “need to lead”. Can you keep a secret?      Going fast enough to stay out front and acting like you know the way isn’t leading.  Nope, not a leader, just an awful follower.

This day there was more to leaving than just chaffing at the confines of parade riding. There was Paul to consider. We worked together for many years and nobody deserved respect more than Paul. An Air Force KC-135 pilot that bought the values he lived in our nation’s service to work with him every day, he was revered by his staff and his boss.  The 128th Air Refueling Group in Milwaukee treated me to a guest ride on a live exercise one Saturday morning. Two of the Boeing 707 bodied tankers flew patterns over Lake Winnebago as F-16s from the 132nd Fighter Wing, The Blackhawks, of the Iowa Air National Guard took turns sipping from the refueling boom. Lying beside the boom operator and looking into the eyes of fighter pilots as they plugged into the straw from the behemoth gas tank inspired awe of the skills, the resolve, of the entire flight crew and skill of the F-16 jockeys holding station mere feet from the tanker’s wingtips. Yes, Paul wore a suit and tie but he was also that steely eyed aviator holding station in the clouds.

I shall not want….

For the first time the trip didn’t sneak up on my calendar creating the last minute havoc of arranging work, family and deferred cycle maintenance to get away. Retired geezers have time-a lot less money-buts loads of time. Candidly, time is the greatest gift and I’ll always be grateful to Barry and Bill, my former taskmasters, for granting time.  After three heart surgeries, the doctors at Mayo convinced me that pounding away at the credit crisis any longer would mean never seeing my granddaughter drive her mom and dad crazy as a teenager.  No way could I miss that!

Eleven cycles means not wanting for travel options but this trip was about going back to the beginning. The green, there’s that color again, coulees of Western Wisconsin were the first explorations aboard a 1972 DT360 Yamaha that ‘ring-ding-dinged’ off into parts unknown.  This time the simplicity of the BMW F800GS fit the bill with eighty five horses that are more than enough now that the pounds caused by years of sitting behind a desk started melting away.  The 21 inch front hoop and great brakes meant it was ready for whatever West Virginia would throw our way and there was something else this simple putt could do.

Too much of the motorcycle culture has been high-jacked by the costume ball crowd. No matter the origins or the current culprit, two wheeled travel has become about what you ride, how you look and do others approve. Kinda funny when you consider the first cycle gangs were about separation from the crowd. My favorite line the movie The Wild Ones is Lee Marvin’s line when the old timer asks, “What are you young fellows rebelling against?” and Marvin replies, “What da ya got?” I think Lee would approve of a lightweight, weird looking, cross between a dirt bike and street machine because it meant not caring one wit about style or acceptance; the machine becomes far less important than the journey and this journey was becoming even less about machinery. .

Yea, though I walk…revisited

D.C. drivers don’t care what noble pursuit brings you into their city; they are just outraged that your tight file of cycles and road captains is disrupting their caffeine laced commute. After several near mishaps viewed from the sweeper’s vantage, the band of misfits arrived at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and our rally point, Building 62. While the swag, the gifts, was off loaded, Rockie Lynne and his band headed off to the inpatient building for face time. The most important part of these pilgrimages is building relationships with these heroes. Our little group did all the symbolic rides, raised money and wore the t-shirts but until we sat on their beds, firmly shook their hands and assured their family,  it never really meant much.  Sincerity involves risk. Walking a hospital, you have to ‘cowboy up’ encountering a triple amputee or a marine burned over 95% of his body.  Many fellow riders cannot go into the inpatient wards because that risk is too great. That doesn’t make them weak, it means they deeply feel.  For me,  the risk is seeing these men, my son’s age or younger, as a father does. But it is worth it to learn their name and hear their story. The best part is taking that risk to brighten their day and when they demonstrate commitment, loyalty, and honor it makes your day brilliant.

Through the valley of the shadow of death…

Rockie and his band [www.rockielynne.com] strolled right in singing songs, greeting families and praying. Yes, this 82nd Airborne vet doesn’t have much regard for the PC we are subjected to when we visit hospitals in our nation’s capital.  No matter how firmly uniformed personnel lecture us about the latest “no-no’s” of government facilities,  Rockie has earned the right to say a blessing over a warrior’s bed and nobody interrupts.  

A cadre got to tag along and visit other patients.  We met a soldier from Minnesota that lost one leg to an IED and had the other one damaged beyond use.  Still, he managed to crawl out and pull his comrades from the burning vehicle.  If we had any doubt about the veracity of his fantastic tale, his Staff Sergeant was two doors down and could not say enough about that hero when he told us his version.

Paul would have loved walking among these veterans of the valley of the shadow. He would have proudly commended them for their service and exhorted them to keep up the good fight. Paul was not there so next best thing was to do it in his honor.

 He restoreth my soul…

The most troubling wound encountered did not show up on an X-ray or leave a stain of blood.  A desperate young wife humbly requested a visit to her Marine curled up on his bed in a darkened room.  There was no cure, no solace from his demons. There were just kind words, expressions of gratitude and a promise of remembrance.  It did not end with some miraculous report just a sobbing bride quietly expressing her ‘thank you’ for our visit.  

Thou preparest a Table…

By the time we returned to Building 62, Rockie Lynne and his band were at full tilt in the cafeteria. If you visit his website you will get a good feel for his music. His military experience, his heart and his style seemed to connect with all the colors and generations of the warriors in that room. Skip, Land Shark, Johnny B, Big Dave and the others were handing out swag while becoming fast friends with anyone who’d stop to tell their story. The day quickly passed and the time to leave the base was upon us. What came upon me was a need to be moving. It was as if mental processing couldn’t be done while sitting still or even moving in the confines of team travel.  The brevity of the departure was regrettable even if most of the crew tolerate  my social shortfalls.

Some years back, my administrative assistant, Winnie, gave me a small pillow for a birthday gift.  Stitched on the cover was, “You never see a motorcycle parked outside a Psychiatrist’s office.” If she only knew how true that was once Gaithersburg was behind and Hagerstown was ahead.

He restoreth my soul…part II

No plan was in place when the gates of Walter Reed were in my mirrors at 1430 hours. The day was uncomfortably warm in D.C. but every mile in Maryland took my higher and, mercifully, cooler. Perhaps a couple hundred miles and a cheap motel; maybe Morgantown, WV would be a good tally after a long day like this.  The miles plied up on my trip odometer as the bar graph on my fuel gage disappeared.  The exit signs for the home of the Mountaineers briefly flashed by heading south to I79 but it never registered to cease motion.

The sun  lost its’ grip on the day settling into the horizon and the mountains leaned across US50 to lend their shadows to the road ahead. Good rides are not always remembered in detail because what is truly good may be going on inside the armored rider and not just what is passing by. Paul was on my mind, on and off, for the entire eight hours it took to reach my little farm some 450 miles from Building 62. My favorite day dream was of him at the yoke of his KC-135 and how much of a hero his was to a jet fighter pilot who was “bingo”[6] on fuel. Paul’s twang must have been assuring to those thirsty fighters.  Some of us were lucky enough to enjoy it for years.

A $1000 memorial was given to the WHF in honor of Paul and his service to this country.

Psalm 23   The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.3 He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake.4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





[1] www.woundedheroesfund.net
[2] Paul Brawner’s favorite pejorative
[3] M16 –yep, that’s an assault rifle, a good one
[4]  Let’s not forget mistresses so Bill Clinton won’t feel left out. He’d never go to war. Not because he’d miss Hillary-she’d drive anybody into the arms of the Taliban-but he’d miss blue dresses and never stand for helmet hair.
[5] “It’s a good thing they are loud ‘cuz they sure are slow!”
[6] Bingo-Minimum fuel for a comfortable and safe return to base. Aircraft can fly and fight past bingo fuel in combat situations, but at considerable peril. www.tailhook.org

No comments:

Post a Comment