Never coming home again?
Issue date: 11/21/08 Section: Opinions
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We ran to our mother with our arguments - both adults yet still pushing and shoving like toddlers. Matt brought out the fire and claws in me - all good big brothers do, I suppose.
As we grew up, he would torment me until I ran from the room crying. I would flaunt my straight A's as he hunched over his homework, crippled by the ADD that's plagued him since infancy.
When Matt enlisted in the Army five years ago, my family was relieved to see him do something productive with his life other than wear a dent in our living room sofa and drink all the milk.
Our grandfather, a World War II veteran, shook Matt's hand proudly before he boarded a plane to Baghdad. Our mother cried. Our grandmother clutched her like a life raft, her eyes wet and bloodshot. A camera flashed.
I stood to the side. A lifetime of sibling rivalry had forged a rift between Matt and me that I wasn't quite sure how to cross. But the clock was winding down, he was leaving soon, and with a burst of rare emotion, I wrapped my arms around him.
"Bye, little sis'," he said, towering over me in his uniform and boots. "Stay away from boys."
He was gone for a year, when he came home on leave. I was taking a summer course. One day, a classmate, whose boyfriend was fighting overseas, did not show up. The young man whom she spent most classes gushing over would not be coming home, our professor told us.
I stumbled from class, my tears falling to the pavement like silent bombs. I ended up somewhere on North Campus before I pulled out my cell phone and dialed Matt's number.
"I just want to say … " I was sure I would hyperventilate before I got the words out. On the other line, Matt waited impatiently. "I just want to say that I love you."
It took one girl's loss to make me realize how much I had to lose if Matt found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time. Stupid sibling rivalry or not, I knew it would destroy my family if he was not a part of it.
These days, even from thousands of miles away, Matt still manages to annoy the hell out of me - only now it's via webcam, which unfortunately denies me the satisfaction of punching him when he steps out of line.
As I sat at my cubicle at The Red & Black recently, reading the Associated Press, I came across a headline and froze. "Bomber strikes U.S. convoy in Afghanistan … death toll: 9."
I read such stories every day - 30 civilians killed by a suicide bomber at a market in Baghdad. Dozens injured in a raid in Kabul. Gunfire. Massacre. Explosion. Attack. Murder. Killed. Killed. Killed. Never coming home again.
Others can turn the other cheek, head over to Perez Hilton for a few laughs and a break from reality.
But I quickly signed into Yahoo! Messenger, the only way to get in touch with Matt these days. Nine dead. My mind raced. What if it's my brother this time? What if it's our family, our grief, our lives shattered?
"shut up i'm trying to get ready ofr work," Matt wrote in his usual sloppy, disjointed type.
I breathed again. It was 3 a.m. on his side of the world, and I was the obnoxious little sister distracting him from his work.
Never again will I take this role for granted.
- Mandi Woodruff is the associate news editor of The Red & Black.
Spring Break

Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 20
Cliff
posted 11/21/08 @ 8:11 AM EST
I pray that your brother comes back to you safely, and you always remember how much he means to you.
Lambert H. St. Peter
posted 11/21/08 @ 8:26 AM EST
I think that we often forget that the soldiers are only a portion of those who sacrifice for their country, and I have found that they spend more time worrying about their families than about the possibility of death. (Continued…)
Winslo
posted 11/21/08 @ 8:50 AM EST
To Mandi:
What a great article. God bless you.
Just in case you have never seen this:
IT IS THE SOLDIER
It is the Soldier, not the minister
Who has given us freedom of religion. (Continued…)
mike
posted 11/21/08 @ 11:22 AM EST
What a fantastic editorial. Thanks.
TMC
posted 11/21/08 @ 11:26 AM EST
I've been in your situation with my brother as well and this article seriously made me cry, thank God, my brother made it back home this past year. Just keep praying, its the only thing that'll make it better. (Continued…)
T. Gross
posted 11/21/08 @ 11:45 AM EST
I think it's great you're writing about something worthwhile. It's an insult to all us veterans when the Red and Black does a front page story about pageants and yet does absolutely nothing to pay tribute to the uncountable service members who never made it home in November 11th's (Veteran's Day!!!) newspaper. (Continued…)
Winslo
posted 11/21/08 @ 12:01 PM EST
To Earl:
You are a sad case ....... but I think you already know that.
"Every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier, or not having been at sea. (Continued…)
Matthew Sheahan
posted 11/21/08 @ 1:23 PM EST
Thank you for this excellent piece.
Hailey
posted 11/21/08 @ 1:50 PM EST
This is by far the best article I have ever read in the Red and Black. I read it while waiting for class this morning and it brought tears to my eyes. (Continued…)
Jim D.
posted 11/21/08 @ 10:13 PM EST
Mandi... Thanks for sharing this. I am impressed with your honesty and generosity. Love ya!
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