Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Carry on my wayward son...

I went to a barber shop today, in a city I really shouldn’t have returned to. Inside, I encountered another former Marine. Like many of us, he was tattooed down, world-weary, and battle hardened.

Usually, all it takes is a second of eye contact. A knowing look of recognition passes where in the back of your head you just know that this guy has been there too. He was the one to say it first,

“Semper Fi, devil dog.”

Ed was there. The P.H. OPSEC creative team was just taking a 30 min. mess and maintenance break. After a few minutes of conversation, I learned that my new brother marine had also been down that same path of razor wire I’ve known too well. Ed and I had once believed our behavior to be so off the charts for returning Marines trying to adapt to “civilian life”. Yet here was another locked and cocked individual, still in shape, still full of USMC ritual and routine, but...

He had been in some trouble since he separated from mother green.

Prison in Spain.
Robbery in Greece
Prison in Peru
Then two years in a California prison

Just like many of us, if you didn’t know any better, you would say it was impossible. Not that squared away gentleman, right there?

We discussed how the training, the conditioning we received in the corps had literally saved our lives on various occasions. We also discussed how that very same training made us prone to involve ourselves in situations that others would deem hazardous, deadly, or downright insane. It seemed like we were naturally wired to take any normal, challenging situation one might encounter in life, and escalate it way beyond the socially acceptable outcome. And like the rest of us, we look back and think,

“How in the hell did I take things so bloody far?”

Well, it’s late and my fire watch is over. Take care, my brothers, wherever you are.

Stay green.

Keep it clean.



Semper Fi,


P.H.

8 comments:

  1. who is this guy eddie roche and 12 marine vs 6000 inmates,patriot hustler who is he

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1 marine vs 6000 inmates eddie roche patriot hustler

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  3. Great writing man, i like the intensity

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  4. Hey steve can u give us some writing, eddie roche patriot hustler eddieroche

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  5. eddie roche patriot hustler, whats you with you steve lets get.

    eddieroche
    patriot hustler

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  6. My name is Justin Patterson, and I have been working on this amazing true life story. This a national story and needs to be told. It is the heart of journalism.

    Eddie Roche buys a small house in the only location he can afford: Inglewood, Ca. He quickly finds himself the only white man in the beating heart of blood territory. From the first day he not only befriends the neighborhood, but becomes their mentor. He teaches air conditioning in his back yard, showing the gang that they can not only survive in a world that has beaten them down, but thrive in it. He looks past their history, their sins, and speaks to their very core, assuring them that they too can follow their dreams and that all life is worth living.

    Eddie Roche not only taught the gang but learned from them. He experienced what it was like to be a blood: from partying at the clubs, to being home invaded and robbed at gun point. He lived a life where death was waiting at every corner, and the police oath of protection does not apply.

    Beneath the shades of our skin and dialect of our tongues we are all human. This is what Eddie Roche teaches us through his incredible life story; a lesson that proves the only race that matters is human.

    thank you,

    Justin Patterson
    justinmichaelpatterson@gmail.com
    www.patriothustler.com

    ReplyDelete