“How Do We Support the Troops?” A Veteran’s Reckoning with the Threat of New Wars by Iraq, Afghanistan and Desert Storm Veteran Frances Wiedenhoeft

War leaves marks that don’t always show, and slogans rarely hold the weight of what service members actually endure. In this poem, the question “How do we support our troops?” becomes more than a patriotic refrain- it becomes a reckoning. Written by someone who has lived the realities behind the uniform, this piece invites readers to look past the familiar phrase and into the quiet, complicated truths of survival, memory, and the cost of asking ordinary people to bear extraordinary burdens.

How Do We Support the Troops?

I see you

I see the reels that already play behind your eyes

or that will

the wonder

at your world suddenly on fire

wandering through your first moral maze.

“To Any Soldier,” the joke they say

cards written by school children as an exercise

“if you cared you would at least know my name.”

“If you cared, you would reach your hand through the miles

hold firm as I fight

that I feel your support

no care package baby wipes

you see me

my fight is your fight

I am not alone.”

I held firm to a hand once

I-will-never-let-you-go grip

you began to slip

I reached from my precarious position, two hands

slow slide

or maybe you let go

Support Our Troops.

I see you

as the temptation to crash and burn grows

I fight it with fire

protest in the singular, in the thousands

we call the names of your dead

even as silence is no answer for the living.

When you return we will see you

we will be there in the background waiting

as you try to get a life back on track

that pulled up stakes and left while you were gone.

Support our troops

they are ours

with the space of a watchful circle

we wait for you with new navigational tools

and cautious optimism

most of us make it

Let us help you remain in the land of the living.

Published with permission of author.

Fran Wiedenhoeft studied creative writing at Madison College. Her work can be found on warwriterscampaign.org, in the 2015 Ariel Anthology, Praxis Magazine Online, the American Journal of Nursing, the Spring 2020 issue of Deadly Writers Patrol, The Adelaide Review Literary Magazine, and Veteran Voices Magazine.
She was a finalist in poetry at the Adelaide Literary Magazine Award Contest 2024 and won the Pallas Athene Best Story award for “Glory.”
She completed a residency at Write On Door County in March 2021. Her poem “To Any Civilian” was published in “As You Were,” and nominated by Military Experience and the Arts for a Pushcart Prize.
She is a writer, poet, mother, and grandmother. She is also a twenty-two-year Army veteran who served in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Desert Storm.
She volunteers as a reader for the Gemini Review.

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