
Memorial Day is here, draped in flags, parades, and the solemn beauty of remembrance. Our town is home to the Northern Nevada Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery. Each year, hundreds of volunteers arrive on the Saturday before Memorial Day to place a flag at the grave of each soldier. More than 10,000 are laid to rest. HHH and I were two of them.
As we honored those who never came home, HHH softly said their names. We placed a flag and a red carnation above the grave marker and paused for a moment of gratitude before going on to the next. In a few short hours, all flags were in place. Each year, the number grows, as does the number of volunteers taking time to help.
But there are those soldiers who did come home. At least physically. And for many of those, the ghosts of war often returned with them, haunting them for the rest of their lives.
Young men and women left for distant lands carrying the full weight of duty on their shoulders. Most boarded planes and ships, believing deeply in protecting fellow troops, serving their country, and defending America’s honor. They were trained to survive, react, and remain alert long after exhaustion set in. The warrior switch was flipped on.
Throughout their tour duty, they longed for the day they’d return home, expecting life to resume where it had paused.

But coming home after any long absence can be tricky.
While the soldier stood center stage in another world, the play at home continued without them. Friendships shifted. Children grew older. Marriages strained or quietly disappeared. Parents aged. Neighborhoods changed. The familiar suddenly felt unfamiliar, and the script no longer matched the one they carried in their minds.
Perhaps hardest of all was that they weren’t taught how to stop being warriors.
The human mind is not a machine with a simple off switch. Hypervigilance, fear, grief, guilt, survival instincts, memories too terrible to explain — these things don’t vanish neatly once a uniform is folded and placed in a drawer. Some veterans spend decades trying to quiet battles no one else can see.
Our country carries a heartbreaking number of broken soldiers.

Sometimes we pass them without noticing. Sometimes we do notice them standing on street corners in cities across America, carrying backpacks instead of rifles, eyes distant and exhausted, still searching for solid ground beneath their feet. Haunted. Vexed. Unsure how to move forward in a world that keeps spinning while part of them remains trapped somewhere far away.
Not every wound bleeds openly.
This Memorial Day, honor not only those who died in service to our country, but also the living who still walk with what they saw.
Some gave their life in a single moment, while others continue to give pieces of their lives slowly over decades.
For some, the war never completely ends.
For those brave heroes and their families, send prayers for comfort and peace. Remember the sacrifices made so we can enjoy the freedoms we have.











































