Continuing to Be Affected by the Vietnam War: "The Things They Carried" and "Regret to Inform"

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In the novel The Things They Carried and the documentary Regret to Inform, people that were involved share their recollection of events that occurred during the Vietnam War. Consequently, both works also share the underlying idea that people are affected by the war even after it is done. They convey this meaning through the stories of mental and physical harm each witness deals and dealt with because of the war.

The novel, The Things They Carried is a story of one man’s accounts resulting to his tour of duty in Vietnam. Many of the men that are discussed in the book continued to be effected by the war, long after they returned home. Men were left emotionally scared, even if they managed to get out of the war physically unharmed. The violence they witnessed and injustice they were forced to carry out left them socially inept and made it difficult to transition back into society. This is clearest in the character Norman Bowker. He struggles to “find a meaningful use for his life after the war” (O’Brien 155). He is unable to hold a job, and wanders aimlessly in the years that prelude his suicide. And although he returns home perfectly fine physically and manages to mimic some semblance of societal normalcy, Bowker struggles to cope mentally. The guilt he feels concerning Kiowa’s death follows him home to Iowa and haunts him until he is no longer able to deal with it. Driving repeatedly around the lake, trying to strike up a conversation with the cashier at the A&W, and wading in the lake with his clothes on may seem incomprehensible too most, but simply are his way of conveying his inability to find a method to communicate his feelings. An inability that ultimately results in his suicide.

Inability to deal with emotiona...

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...at he was dealing with.

The Things They Carried, and Regret To Inform are war stories. Although the women from the documentary were never enrolled as official soldiers, they share many mental trials the enlisted had to deal with. The soldiers from the novel, as well as the wives were plagued with the after math of the war. They had to live with the good and bad of what happens when a country goes to war even after the troops were called home. The effects of war are not simply single deaths. War effects the families of those involved just a much as the actually person in the field. Not to mention that the physical wounds are just as detrimental as the mental issues inflicted by the constant violence witnessed. Nevertheless, not all effects are negative. Sometimes, if properly handled, it is possible to learn from the issues inflicted by war, and grow from them.

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