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LETTER: No celebration on Memorial Day

Pearl Harbor survivor Edward Miclavcic, left, and WWII veteran Frank Sacco, right, embrace at a ...

This is the quiet time.

This is not a time for joy and parties and festivities. I do not want to hear about your special sales and deals, this weekend only.

It is a time for reflection: to honor, to remember, to grieve. We who remain feel loss, anguish, sorrow, emptiness, guilt.

These feelings do not diminish with time. If anything, they overwhelm us at this time of year. All the “moving ahead” and “carrying on” and “dealing with it” we do for 51 weeks a year come crashing down leading up to this Day of Remembrance.

We can pretend we are strong and put on a good face as we march through life. However, beneath the calm exterior, the grief is building pressure, looking for a way out.

So when we look upon a grave or a memorial or statue of a hero, the floodgates open and it all comes out. Do not think me weak when I cry at a grave of an unknown warrior. You do not know the effort it takes, the strength it requires, to hold back the tears the other 364 days a year.

I find strength in the fellowship of my brothers in arms, for they have the same feelings, the same memories, the same sorrow. And I will support and love them as they support me.

No, I will not “celebrate” on Memorial Day. This is the quiet time.

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