John Schumann - PTSD15 Special Recording "I Was Only 19" | Reaction

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024
  • #redgum #redgumlive #iwasonly19 #redgumreaction #johnschumann #johnschumannlive
    check out the video here
    • PTSD15 Special Recordi...

Komentáře • 591

  • @TheVagabondCrew
    @TheVagabondCrew Před 2 lety +738

    Thanks for your very kind comments on the special PTSD recording of I was only 19. Very much appreciated. Kind regards, John Schumann

    • @goulash75
      @goulash75 Před 2 lety +77

      Thank you Mr Schumann, for writing such a powerful and important song.

    • @AngryPete
      @AngryPete Před 2 lety +34

      Great video on PTSD John, as many others, I have relo’s that have served, 19 helps.

    • @ThatSingerReactions
      @ThatSingerReactions  Před 2 lety +188

      Absolutely sir thank you for making a song like this and let me pin you to the top you're a legend and definitely shouldn't be mixed up in the comments lol I had no idea you commented until I was told. This song is probably one of the greatest songs I've heard ❤️

    • @meni8015
      @meni8015 Před 2 lety +30

      Thank you John for such a well written and important song. This particular video is especially powerful.

    • @coreenavenn4235
      @coreenavenn4235 Před 2 lety +27

      Thanks John for this song. A dear friend was a clearance diver in the first Gulf war & saw mates blown to bits. His brain injuries are severe & it's heartbreaking

  • @ThatSingerReactions
    @ThatSingerReactions  Před 2 lety +242

    This is probably the best written song I've ever heard soooooo Important

    • @andrewhall4441
      @andrewhall4441 Před 2 lety +25

      The thing about this song is that whilst it did change the attitude of Australians to the Vietnam war, its applicability to the USA veterans is immense.

    • @andrewhall4441
      @andrewhall4441 Před 2 lety +19

      I live near Puckapunyal and hear training exercises all the time. I always think of this song. Brings a tear to my eye.

    • @ThatSingerReactions
      @ThatSingerReactions  Před 2 lety +36

      @@bertiemagoo8826 actually I'm not getting paid a dime for it. It's demonetized. Secondly it's a patreon request Not sure where the ad money goes but definitely not to me if it's demonetized. And if somebody didn't recommend it I wouldn't have known it exist THATS why I have paypal and cash app. Know what you talking about before you start having trash judgments of people

    • @Whatiwantedwastaken
      @Whatiwantedwastaken Před 2 lety +7

      It’s a timeless song. John is by no means pro war, if anything he’s a pacifist which makes his points about needing to respect and support the soldiers who come home from wars politicians choose to send them to all the more poignant. We’re a young nation, with only about 25 million people but we do whatever we can to help people the world over. John mostly did light hearted comedic songs before this, it was a step away from his normal repertoire in a time when Vietnam vets still were being stigmatised, and ever since he’s been doing anything he can to help veterans. He really deserves a knighthood I might drop Queen Elizabeth a note…

    • @anitacarpenter5714
      @anitacarpenter5714 Před 2 lety +10

      @@bertiemagoo8826
      Perhaps you need to go away champ and not come back

  • @danielflack7902
    @danielflack7902 Před 2 lety +339

    It's Australians writing songs like this, that make me proud to be an Aussie. Lest we forget.

    • @julzhunt7790
      @julzhunt7790 Před 2 lety +11

      We shall NEVER forget!

    • @niejo3845
      @niejo3845 Před 2 lety +9

      Lest We Forget.

    • @-Yogo
      @-Yogo Před 2 lety +6

      We will remember them

    • @Glzmo
      @Glzmo Před 2 lety +6

      Redgum Lest we forget!
      also the HERD does a hiphop version which is brilliant

    • @daviddempsey8721
      @daviddempsey8721 Před 2 lety +5

      We will remember them.

  • @abigailfoster2467
    @abigailfoster2467 Před 2 lety +115

    I sent a copy of this to an American friend of mine who fought in the Vietnam jungle, the ‘dark green’ on the map as opposed to this “walk in the light green”. My friend was driving when he played the tape in his car. He said he pulled over to the side of the road and cried like a baby.

    • @cheynonodowd20
      @cheynonodowd20 Před 4 měsíci +2

      oh, just reading your comment made me cry :(

  • @ChrisL4034
    @ChrisL4034 Před 2 lety +239

    My eldest brother died 6 weeks before he was due to come home, from standing on a landmine. It forever changed our lives. My mother never got over his death, his then fiance grieved for him until the day she died. My second eldest brother enlisted after his death and served two tours in Vietnam. He spent the next 4 decades destoying his life and those around him because he couldn't come to terms with what he had seen and done over there. He has now, in his 70's, finally found some measure of peace, but too late to save his relationship with many of his children. All this for what? War answers nothing.

    • @coreenavenn4235
      @coreenavenn4235 Před 2 lety +10

      You & your family have suffered terribly. Dad didn't realise what his baby brother went thru in Vietnam. For Grandma, born in 1903, & had a husband that served on the western Front in WW1 it must have been scary

    • @Afrodizyak47
      @Afrodizyak47 Před 2 lety +19

      Chrissy, I have mentioned before that my youthful mate 471836 L/Cpl Roger Fisher was KIA Vietnam on April 26, 1968. He too was a victim of a land mine and just under 3 weeks from coming home from his second tour and marrying my Late boss's niece. Aged 23, he was the only Aussie KIA that day. Hailing from Mintaro, a small rural town in the mid north of Sth Australia, he was a national Serviceman and at the time of his call up, was a Police Cadet, with the Sth Australian Police Force. RIP Roger, even though it has been 54 years, I have never forgotten you, nor will I ever, cobber. RIP and LEST WE FORGET.

    • @ChrisL4034
      @ChrisL4034 Před 2 lety +16

      @@Afrodizyak47 my brother Ron Bell was in 2nd Battalion RAR, Service No 5714249. Killed in Sth Vietnam 30 November 1967. Lest we forget.

    • @paulbloomfield6414
      @paulbloomfield6414 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ChrisL4034 Sure am proud of of your brother's sacrifice. He was certainly an Aussie HERO. Lest we forget.🇦🇺

    • @annettethomas1868
      @annettethomas1868 Před rokem +4

      Such a waste . No more please. We can not forget 🌄

  • @catindigo9907
    @catindigo9907 Před 2 lety +76

    I'm an an American vet, but this touches me because after 91 and Desert Storm alot of us developed serious neurological issues. Gulf War syndrome. We were told it was in our minds, or from burning the latrine pits. It took the government 20 years to admit it was real and the reason why.

    • @DJ-yj1vg
      @DJ-yj1vg Před rokem

      Typical govt denial. My dad died of prostate cancer and the lady from the RSL (returned service league) told us that the govt know agent Orange causes cancer but they will never admit to it due to all the legal cases it would open. He was 69 so I can't complain too much, but we will never know.

    • @marklewis7761
      @marklewis7761 Před 11 měsíci

      george double ya was a prick.

  • @colinthompson1117
    @colinthompson1117 Před 2 lety +112

    I served in the Australian infantry and I'm currently in vietnam and visited the Long Tan memorial last week. Most emotional I have been in years
    Lest we forget

    • @Steve-gm2jl
      @Steve-gm2jl Před rokem

      Thank you.

    • @DamianTolson
      @DamianTolson Před rokem +1

      Hey mate, l hope you are well and know that individuals like you are our heart and soul. Best wishes and respect.

    • @sopwithpuppy
      @sopwithpuppy Před 4 měsíci

      Thank you for your service digger.

  • @elizabeth10392
    @elizabeth10392 Před 2 lety +161

    My brother was a sapper on the Mekong Delta. He died in his sixties as a result of being sprayed with heavy duty insecticide during the Vietnam War. My brother in law was Divisions Locations, which meant going behind enemy lines. He was sprayed with agent orange twice. He witnessed absolute horror, they both did and they both suffered from PTSD. When my brother in-law came home, people thought it was hilarious to burst balloons behind his head because he would fling himself flat on the floor. He became very involved in the RSL ( Returned Soldiers League). He passed away recently. His funeral was held at his local RSL branch. The President said that my brother in law saved his life by getting him to march on Anzac Day and become involved in the RSL. Other members got up and said he saved their lives and countless others as well. They were still lost and suicidal for so many years after Vietnam. They now have a monument to him sitting on the bar of the RSL and the Australian Army presented the family with the flag - which they usually only do for someone killed in combat. He was a pretty special guy. He wanted to connect with the young ones of today. He was so worried about them. For some, the RSL is better than a Doctor because they have ALL been through it and they all understand.

    • @Reneesillycar74
      @Reneesillycar74 Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you for sharing.

    • @Mrmikey0909
      @Mrmikey0909 Před 2 lety +6

      Thankyou for this story and I thank your brother for his service. Times have changed but problems still exist and with a son in the Services I do worry for him and others. Bless you.

    • @shovelguggelheim8454
      @shovelguggelheim8454 Před 2 lety +4

      Respect.

    • @NeilBlanco
      @NeilBlanco Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you so much for sharing that. It's an important story of many that needs to be heard...

    • @elizabeth10392
      @elizabeth10392 Před 2 lety +3

      @@NeilBlanco Thanks for saying so. The veterans really do understand and I was kinda hoping that anyone suffering from what happened to them during their time in the armed forces and who reads what I wrote, particularly about my brother in law, and the benefits of the RSL will maybe reach out to the veterans. They really do "get it".

  • @shaz464
    @shaz464 Před 2 lety +53

    God bless our diggers past and present. 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

  • @RolandjHearn
    @RolandjHearn Před 2 lety +81

    Here are some words in the song that I think you, or other non Australian viewers, might need explaining:
    Puckapunyal - Army training camp in Victoria
    Long march from cadets - Australia use to have a school based military training program called "cadets." Something like ROTC but in high school and not for officer training but exposure to military discipline.
    Canungra and Shoalwater are Queensland tropical warfare training bases.
    Townsville is a northern Queensland city and the staging base for the conflict in Vietnam and the Pacific Conflict of World War 2
    Slouch hat - traditional Australian military hat dating back to the Boer War and the First Word War.
    SLR - Self Loading Rifle, standard issue military weapon of the time.
    VB - Victorian Bitter beer.
    Asian Orange sunset - I think this is a reference to "Agent Orange," a defoliation chemical used to reduce the capacity of rainforest to hide the enemy but had devastating long term effects on anyone the came into significant contact with it - it did not discriminate between friend or foe.
    Bloke - man
    Tinnies - cans of beer (it can also mean a small boat but not in this case.)
    ANZAC legend - the heroic story of the exploits of Australian and New Zealand Army corps beginning in 1915 at Gallipoli - probably the only line that misrepresents the truth - "mud and blood and tears" is a huge part of the ANZAC legend. But I think he is saying it has become so "glorified" in the culture that the pain and suffering are overlooked.
    The "rash that comes and goes" is the impact of Agent Orange.

    • @allenjenkins7947
      @allenjenkins7947 Před rokem +12

      A bit more context - One significance of "I was only 19" was that the voting age was still 21, so that those who were conscripted at 19 had no say in government policy. Not so easy nowadays when 18-year-olds can vote.
      SLR - officially the L1A1 rifle. A locally made (Government Small Arms Factory Lithgow) version of the FN FAL rifle, pretty much identical to the British L1A1 and similar to the Canadian C1A1, among others.
      Channel 7 Chopper, the Australian 7 Network news helicopter. There is more than one, every Australian State capital has at least one.
      Cadets - I was an Air Training Corps (RAAF) cadet. We were envious of the Army cadets because they had SLRs, while we still had No1MkIII* bolt-action .303s. It was more like a junior version of the CMF (Citizens Military Forces, now the Army Reserve) than the US ROTC. (Boy Scouts with guns.)
      Conscription was by lottery. Birthdays were nominally drawn from a barrel. It was supposed to be impartial, but it was completely corrupt. If you shared a birthday with a prominent entertainer, especially a pop singer, you were definitely in. That's how my number came up. Fortunately the Army rejected me on medical grounds - I never objected or tried to find out why, but it couldn't have been too serious as I'm still here 50+ years later.

    • @Wolfsschanze99
      @Wolfsschanze99 Před rokem +3

      @@allenjenkins7947 I worked the Melbourne Museum back in the early 90's for 1 12 hour night shift & had the master key, I checked out the storage areas in the basement, I come across what I thought was an early Lotto tumbler with all the numbered balls in it, it had a plaque attached to it & I read it was the machine your talking about, the Mummies on the table next to it seemed less horrifying.

    • @johnnichol9412
      @johnnichol9412 Před měsícem

      @@allenjenkins7947 No one was conscripted at 19. The age to register was 20. The 19 in the song comes from Francis Hunt's (Frankie) age, he being 19 when he went to Vietnam as a regular soldier not a conscript.
      That you shared a birth date with Normie Rowe is irrelevant.

  • @Always4ward
    @Always4ward Před rokem +53

    as an Aussie who never served, this song still brings tears to my eyes...Thank you Diggers

  • @ladylynnmaree
    @ladylynnmaree Před 2 lety +67

    I think this song should be played in History Classes in school.
    You will learn more in 4 minutes with this song than a year of books

    • @cafra11972
      @cafra11972 Před 2 lety +14

      I teach it as part of Year 10 History on the Vietnam War. It’s pretty powerful. I’ve also used the Battle of Long Tan doco narrated by Sam Worthington and I’ve never had a more quiet and attentive class.

    • @jennifermason9557
      @jennifermason9557 Před 2 lety +5

      This came out when I was in primary school. It was all over the radio and some of my friends had uncles and fathers who had served. Our Year 6 teacher used it as a teaching lesson.

    • @aussiefirie
      @aussiefirie Před 2 lety +4

      @@cafra11972 you should show them the movie Danger Close. It's a good movie about Long Tan

    • @pcppbadminton
      @pcppbadminton Před 2 lety +3

      I think you'd learn far more from books, but this song makes you feel it.

    • @Wolfsschanze99
      @Wolfsschanze99 Před rokem +3

      Agreed, this & the Band Played Waltzing Matilda.

  • @hollygranger3734
    @hollygranger3734 Před 2 lety +134

    My dad served in The Vietnam War and suffered terribly for 25 years after until he’d finally drunk himself to death. I loved my dad and he tried to do the right thing but the demons he carried after the war were too strong and alcohol was the only thing to numb it and the only way he could sleep. I remember waking up to my Dad screaming in his sleep only to wake up and then cry like a child wanting his mother, it scared me and my siblings but we weren’t scared for ourselves because he was always so gentle with us but we were terrified for him.
    This song makes me reflect and understand my Dad a bit better so thank you for reacting and to John for writing it!

    • @briangill4000
      @briangill4000 Před 2 lety +8

      Thank you for sharing that. 🇦🇺

    • @Dr_KAP
      @Dr_KAP Před 2 lety +5

      So sorry to hear this.

    • @hollygranger3734
      @hollygranger3734 Před 2 lety +8

      @@briangill4000 the more people who hear about it the more people it will help hopefully 🙏🏼

    • @hollygranger3734
      @hollygranger3734 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Dr_KAP thanks Dr Kapp 💞

    • @gman7329
      @gman7329 Před 2 lety +10

      My heart goes out to you Holly & I completely understand as my father was a vet & he was the same! I miss him so much & how open he was with me as a child. I was to young to understand at the time but he was honest and open with me I think because he knew I wouldn’t judge or think less of him for what he had to do. My mother on the other hand was & still is a particularly nasty piece of work & still tries to make everyone feel sorry for her lose. She lost nothing, she got his pension what more does she want!? She never had any sympathy for his post traumatic stress or mine & seems to think it’s a joke for her personal pleasure to make fun of. I really don’t know how dad stayed with such an evil woman.

  • @macthevapingaussie2953
    @macthevapingaussie2953 Před 2 lety +23

    Even after listening to this song for 40 years, it still gives me chills, one thing I learnt after serving in the Australian Army, governments do not care about those that have served in combat,

    • @leecox7814
      @leecox7814 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Ain't that the damn truth brother

  • @Tinkerbellstune
    @Tinkerbellstune Před rokem +20

    I was born with a deformity in my hand (it was later diagnosed as Agent Orange) from Vietnam from the insecticides and pesticides as he mentioned that was passed thru to me from my father. I was very lucky as many children born with Agent Orange were born with very severe disabilities. We love our ANZACS🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

  • @Vickytoria1984
    @Vickytoria1984 Před 2 lety +108

    This song is such a powerful song for all Aussies whether we served or not we all know someone that has fought for Australia. It hits us hard everytime this song is played, listened and reacted to.

  • @NedKelly1967
    @NedKelly1967 Před 11 měsíci +19

    Aussie Vet here. This song breaks me every time I hear it . I’m 55 now every day seems to get harder than the last. I KEEP losing my mates. There are very few of us left now and the shame is we are not what I would consider old men yet …. The price was a heavy one. Wife, kids and now friends…. Just my dogs now.

    • @natahliak7691
      @natahliak7691 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Thank you for your service. It just doesn't seem enough. But for what it's worth, thank you, to you your comrades and families for all you have sacrificed. If not for anything else, it was for freedom. ❤

  • @jomiro1547
    @jomiro1547 Před 2 lety +32

    My dad was conscripted to go Vietnam. He drew the unlucky birth date. He was coloured blind and had flat feet but still had to go. He is now 75. More than 50 years later he still suffers rashes, nightmares and ptsd. This song is so real. War is evil. 💗

  • @bluestarblue22
    @bluestarblue22 Před 11 měsíci +11

    It doesn’t matter how many times you hear this song. It still has the same impact !😢

  • @dragonmaid1360
    @dragonmaid1360 Před rokem +4

    I was working in a chemist aged about 19. When a vet came in. His hands were peeling like a glove. We got him some salve but i asked about his story. I cried for the rest of the day..just quietly to myself. But i hope he was okay.

  • @davidsimpson9206
    @davidsimpson9206 Před 2 lety +67

    This is an Aussie classic. Pretty much everyone from my generation (gen x) in Australia, knows every word to this song. ‘He was going home in June’!

    • @jackattack2608
      @jackattack2608 Před rokem

      This reference threw me off a little. Frankie stepped on a mine the same day we landed on the moon. The date of the first landing was July 16, 1969, but Frankie was scheduled to go home in June, a month prior. So, did he miss his departure date and stayed longer than he was scheduled? Was that common?

    • @CyberiusT
      @CyberiusT Před rokem +1

      @@jackattack2608 John Schumann goofed. Nobody minds too much - he needed a rhyme for "June", and it's easy enough to rationalise a one-month delay for Frankie.

    • @logistaplyst
      @logistaplyst Před rokem +2

      @@jackattack2608 the original line 'he was going home in August' was changed at the first edit to be more lyrical. 😁

    • @allenjenkins7947
      @allenjenkins7947 Před rokem +1

      By the way, this is more Boomers (my generation) than Gen-X. I was 19 in 1967 and 21 when Armstrong made his "one small step".

    • @Hazza_Plays_LSPDFR
      @Hazza_Plays_LSPDFR Před rokem +1

      I’m Gen Z and I know every word to this aswell, my parents raised me right and I appreciate them for it!

  • @sopwithpuppy
    @sopwithpuppy Před rokem +10

    "It's a song about two mates of mine who went to Vietnam, came back Agent Orange victims. The title "A Walk in the Light Green" stems from the fact that when the Australian soldiers in Vietnam were given their missions, they looked at the areas where they'd be working in on the map and if it was dark green on the map, then there was cause for some consolation, because dark green meant thick jungle, lots of cover, and there were no mines. If they were working in areas that were light green on the map, that meant light jungle, not much cover, and heaps of mines. This is a song for Mick and Frankie. It's called "A walk in the light green". John Schumann

  • @missjane1403
    @missjane1403 Před 2 lety +15

    I cry every time I hear this song. Its engrained into our blood as Aussies, but it is a song that transcends nationality.

  • @mjay6508
    @mjay6508 Před 2 lety +13

    I worked with an SAS Vietnam Vet...... never said much..... not a big guy, wiry tough, steely eyes, indecently capable, a dangerous gentleman....... on his return, he ended up living with the Pintubi mob in the Great Sandy Desert in WA.... he did tell me when I asked, that when he was in Nam he couldn’t see 2 ft in front of him, but in the desert he could see to the horizon in every direction....... says it all... every time I hear your song JS I think of him, the mates he lost and the sacrifices they ALL made.. for us......... THANK YOU 🙏

  • @Darryl_Frost
    @Darryl_Frost Před 2 lety +34

    Quick story, in the early 80's when I had just joined the Australian Navy, I got to know a guy that was a Vietnam vet, a really nice person, he was divorced from his wife, he had two kids (two girls) both with disabilities. He was himself often very ill, he had trouble holding down a job (I met him when he was trying to sell insurance).
    Vietnam destroyed his life, and his family.
    Also, for everyone, you do not need to be a vet or have been in war to have PTSD.

  • @madilynrose5163
    @madilynrose5163 Před 2 lety +7

    As a teacher in Australia, this song is still central to teaching our students about the absolute tragedy that is war. Lest we forget.

  • @abigailfoster2467
    @abigailfoster2467 Před 2 lety +28

    John wrote this. He was lead singer of Redgum. I’m so proud of John. I grew up with him. Love him to bits.

  • @hollygranger3734
    @hollygranger3734 Před 2 lety +54

    I need to prepare myself for this. I know I’m about to bawl my eyes out!

    • @robertclothier3597
      @robertclothier3597 Před 2 lety +7

      Damn same here. Absolutely guaranteed to get the water works flowing like a tap. Every damn time

    • @chich61
      @chich61 Před rokem +2

      Yep me too 😭

  • @70chevs
    @70chevs Před 2 lety +13

    Probably one of the most moving songs ever written. After all these years it's impact hasn't waned.

    • @michaeleastham3868
      @michaeleastham3868 Před rokem +2

      This and "the band played waltzing matilda" are the greatest anti war songs ever. Both so emotional and heartbreaking.

  • @thesnakeanddragonreptilebr2988

    I’ve heard this song so many times in Australia especially around ANZAC Day and Remembrance Day and it never fails to bring a tear to my eyes.
    You’re right, every country’s soldiers around the world can relate to this incredible song.

  • @chrmnlp4413
    @chrmnlp4413 Před 2 lety +22

    My Dad was a Vietnam veteran. I can remember the kids at school telling me (5yr old) that my Dad killed babies. I went home and asked my Dad. He comforted me and said they were wrong, but I could tell even then that it affected and upset him. He had many health problems directly relating to his service. He really didn't like to talk about it. This song really meant a lot to him. RIP DAD.

  • @christyzeeaquarianated2600
    @christyzeeaquarianated2600 Před 2 lety +18

    As someone who lives with C-PTSD this song always makes me cry like a baby.
    I remember with crystalline clarity the first time I heard it, where I was, who was there; I was 6 years old, and I understood it, even then, in my childish way.
    This will always be one of the most important songs ever written.

  • @simpl3simon806
    @simpl3simon806 Před 2 lety +4

    I met John Schumann in a pub once and got to thank me for this song. I told him my dad served in Vietnam in 1968 .

  • @badyball412
    @badyball412 Před 2 lety +18

    Man I'm crying at work watching this , up the diggers🙏👍

  • @jpmasters-aus
    @jpmasters-aus Před 2 lety +3

    I am one of the youngest first born of a WWII vet. My father entered WWII very late around 17 yo in the Navy and was on HMAS Australia, the first ship hit by Kamikazes. After repairs, they returned with the American 5th Fleet as part of the liberation of the Philippines. They were then hit by 5 Kamikazes in 3 days and my Dad was injured. He and I didn’t have a great relationship growing up. They didn’t know about PTDS in the 50s, 60s, 70s. When I was around 14/15 visiting him hospital with my Mum the Dr too us aside and said if we didn’t stop walking on eggshell around him we would be the ones dying of stress first. The PTSD transferred to generations but that is not recognised.

  • @gutz1981
    @gutz1981 Před 2 lety +27

    In Greece where my family is at, I did my national service 20 years ago at 19. 18 months I was drafted and given a uniform and rifle and stationed at various army bases, no money, no freedom and very little time off or mental outlet for support as I would see other young men bash their heads up against brick walls when their leave for a night out was revoked cause they forgot to get a paper signed on time. I never saw combat, but 9/11 took place 4 months before I was promised to go home. I cried and was so scared of WW III. Now, I have a nephew who is going to be 19 real soon, and on our borders, Turkey is mounting an offensive to claim our islands and Russia and Ukraine are close to starting another global war. Although since I am single and still fit enough at 41 to pick up arms, I fear not for me, but my nephew. I pray a war does not take place cause the last thing I wanna see is a government under its own lies and self gain wants rich old men to stay richer and poor men like us to give up our lives and minds and bodies so they can stay rich and we become poorer. I will only go to fight on one condition, that I may be placed along side him so I can watch his back. Anything to make sure he comes home in one piece.

    • @rachrex
      @rachrex Před rokem +2

      Oh my god. Were you sincere about this? Cause what a mind blowing and beautiful comment. I’m so sorry.

  • @TheFinnola
    @TheFinnola Před 2 lety +21

    Redgum were one of the most authentic bands with a grasp of life in its messiest streams of Australia 🇦🇺

  • @Dr_KAP
    @Dr_KAP Před 2 lety +48

    I can tell you that PTSD is one of the most difficult psychological conditions to recognise, diagnose and most of all to treat - and virtually impossible to cure 😢

    • @lancehanrahan562
      @lancehanrahan562 Před 2 lety +12

      I was diagnosed with ptsd in 2015. Suddenly it all made sense. The self medication , the nightmares, anxiety, the bad decisions and everything else that goes with it. In a way being diagnosed helped me realise I was not a bad person or a stupid bastard ,but just a bloke that had seen and experienced severe trauma. That's made me come to terms with fact that ptsd was never going to go away and I worked out how to manage it,(with help from a good psychologist) . I can now say that I still have PTS, but not the D. Once you identify your problem or condition, then you can equip yourself to fight the beast.

    • @Dr_KAP
      @Dr_KAP Před 2 lety +7

      @@lancehanrahan562 lots of new research and approaches to PTSD with many looking hopeful- including MDMA assisted therapy, ketamine infusions, Riluzole, even Propranolol (to block memory reconsolidation).. we’ve come a long way but a long way to go x

    • @ThatSingerReactions
      @ThatSingerReactions  Před 2 lety +8

      I got a few friends with it and yeah they go through hell

    • @williamwilkins3046
      @williamwilkins3046 Před 2 lety +5

      @@lancehanrahan562 I feel your pain brother, I deal with it daily. There's times I can't even be around anyone., But my wife will not leave my side when I'm fighting with it. She has been my saving grace and my best therapy. Without her I'd probably have already ended it myself. The images that pop in my mind are the hardest on me. I can still hear it all in my head as well. Stay strong brother, we are soldiers, we fight and we win.

    • @vickigreen9545
      @vickigreen9545 Před 2 lety

      @dr_KAP C’mon doc, it seems many people were able to self-diagnose from listening to a song. And bringing the truth into the light always helps. That’s the recognise, diagnose and a bit of the treat part - let’s work on the rest of the treat. The cure is never to go to war again, definitely something to aspire to and consider greatly when considering sending soldiers to war (on either side).

  • @jasgem76
    @jasgem76 Před 2 lety +19

    It doesn't matter how many times I hear this song there's tears every damn time. It's so brilliantly written

  • @caligula57
    @caligula57 Před 2 lety +23

    "This song is a worldwide song". Indeed. My father fought the Portuguese colonial war in Africa (Angola) for two and a half years. When he came back he was different. Still a loving and great father but a silent one. He never told us, his children, any war story, never mentioned the subject, or shared his experiences. He took it to the grave. It dealt with it alone. PTSD back then was an unknown phenomenon.

    • @brucespanner6756
      @brucespanner6756 Před 2 lety

      Hi we're did your dad serve in what country .as a young kid I met few Portuguese Mozambique

    • @caligula57
      @caligula57 Před 2 lety

      @@brucespanner6756 He served in the NW of Angola in a shithole called Bessa Monteiro. I had the opportunity to see some pictures from the place back then (not from him). It was not a base, just a bunch of trenches and a couple of decrepit houses that served as admin support and kitchen/dinner, and a warehouse where they kept I don't know what. Man, those guys must have suffered from a lack of comfort and distractions. On top of that, they ran 2/3 patrols a day "hunting" as they called it. Apparently, the relief came at night, with no fighting or mortar fire.

    • @consciousbeing1188
      @consciousbeing1188 Před rokem +2

      RIP to your father, mate... All soldiers sacrifice so much and your father no less than any other.
      As a side-note... PTSD wasn't an unknown phenomenon back then... It was just called something different.
      After WW one it was known as "shell shock"... In WW2 it was known as "battle fatigue"... World governments have known about the long-lasting effects of PTSD for a LONG time... They've just always refused to do anything meaningful about it... More vets have died from PTSD-related suicide around the world in over 100 years of war than the death toll from active service of all nations in that same period.
      As proof that they've always known about it, the US government first classified their veterans as potential "domestic terrorists" after they pulled out of 'Nam. They knew then that having a large number of highly trained soldiers who had a grievance with their own government's role in destroying their lives would eventually become a domestic public relations nightmare. Since then, the FBI has had highly trained and active domestic counter-terrorist and intelligence programs and units in place BECAUSE of the existential threat to public safety and the continuance of government from the very servicemen that they gave no choice to when they were conscripted.
      Having a whole lot of pissed off soldiers wandering around the country with no jobs and poor mental health with no real resources to help them was never going to be acceptable to the powers that be but rather than fix the problem they've always sought to merely contain it.

    • @caligula57
      @caligula57 Před rokem +1

      @@consciousbeing1188 Thank you so much.

  • @LydiaGovelli
    @LydiaGovelli Před rokem +4

    The days when Redgum began, playing pubs. They were the best, & my favourite band. Never missed them playing the Eureka Hotel in Geelong. They have a number of outstanding songs, from Fabulon for a laugh, to the beautiful Diamantina Drover, written & sung by the late Hugh McDonald, to this outstanding song. Redgum are the most underrated Aussie band ever. John Schumann is an absolute star.

  • @markmakinson1423
    @markmakinson1423 Před 2 lety +16

    We need to look after our veterans plain & simple. This is an amazing song by a great story teller.
    All I can say as as a proud Australian is Thank you for your service.

  • @johnneeder9634
    @johnneeder9634 Před 7 měsíci +3

    This was a song for all vets, regardless of who they served with, even the 'enemy'.

  • @stuartweller4996
    @stuartweller4996 Před rokem +5

    I shed tears every time I hear this song. It wasn't Vietnam but my grandfather took his life not long after returning from fighting on the Kokoda track, PNG.

    • @oakfat5178
      @oakfat5178 Před rokem +1

      Sorry about your grandpa.
      We're beginning to take PTSD seriously, thanks to those, like John Schumann and Redgum, who have pushed for giving Vets the support and safety they deserve.
      I've never been a soldier, but met Vietnam Vets in rehab, next door to where "the Channel Seven chopper" had its helipad.
      It's shocking and moving to see up close, even if I could never know exactly what they were living through.

  • @wormbaby666
    @wormbaby666 Před rokem +2

    I'M not crying. YOU'RE crying!!
    Every damned time.

  • @powerwithin1211
    @powerwithin1211 Před rokem +2

    As an Aussie vet this vid and your reaction talked to me. Keep going mate. Love your work.

  • @Snicklefritz10
    @Snicklefritz10 Před rokem +3

    This hits hard for every Aussie out there, love you all🇦🇺🦘

  • @kennethdodemaide8678
    @kennethdodemaide8678 Před 2 lety +27

    This video should be played to all veterans and their families as it applies to all soldiers in all wars. Americans would relate to it in the same way as Australians as they went through the same experiences. Thanks for this reaction. Really appreciate it.

  • @kalimba9810
    @kalimba9810 Před 2 lety +3

    OMG.... I remember going to see John Schumann back in the mid 80's in Renmark South Australia. It's the only concert I ever went to...and was front row...I think I cried through the whole concert

  • @robertshields7192
    @robertshields7192 Před 2 lety +13

    Not A Truer Word Said ! John Schumann an absolute Inspiration to All that thought they didn't have a Voice !
    Legendary Song for Our Vets that Served for Our Fredom 👏

    • @warwickruse2556
      @warwickruse2556 Před rokem

      can anyone explain how "our" (US or Oz") freedom was enhanced by that war?

  • @kim-louise
    @kim-louise Před 11 měsíci +3

    Thank you for having respect for my Australian dad in Vietnam. Im now 53 and its still extremely hard for what us kids went through after the yrs. We took the pain 😢 12:36

  • @Kammitoes
    @Kammitoes Před 2 lety +2

    I find it impossible to listent to this song without getting emotional and seeing in my minds eye the 60s and 70s. Every night we sat down at 7pm to watch the news and latest from Vietnam....we were the first generation to actually watch a war on TV and it was a sobering thing. As for the pacifists who forgot that the returned serviceman were every bit as much victims and the people they killed at the behest of our government, I know a lot of them who have lived to regret the way they treated our blokes when they came home. Our serviceman lived through hell in Vietnam and came home to a section of the public who somehow blamed them for the war. Schumann's song is so powerful it's a song for every returned serviceman these days. Thank you so much for playing it and reminding us. Cheers mate

  • @martinweier7174
    @martinweier7174 Před 2 lety +5

    You'll never let your mates down, untill they have you dusted off. The epitome of the Australian sprit

  • @craigdart4371
    @craigdart4371 Před 2 lety +3

    This song along with I still call Australia home bring up some sort of feeling for all Australians.

  • @deanwoodward4024
    @deanwoodward4024 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I'm Australian. I've never served, never had too thankfully. This song holds a special place in Australia's heart that just the respect you give it would have me standing beside you at the gates of hell.

  • @ScruffyIsMyName
    @ScruffyIsMyName Před rokem +6

    Mate, the emotion you give to this song, and the respect you pay to it, almost makes you an Honourary Aussie. If your eyes ain't welling up when Frankie kicks the mine, you ain't got a heart.

  • @TheWombat2012
    @TheWombat2012 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the great review. It certainly is one of the most powerful songs we have here in Australia. We’re a small country but have a rich military history down through the years. Most of us have family members in the military, past or present. In WW1, every Australian soldier was a volunteer, and we lost more per head of population than any other country. We punch well above our weight.
    Thanks again. 👍

  • @CHILDRENofVVFBpage
    @CHILDRENofVVFBpage Před rokem +1

    Dad is a Vietnam veteran of the 5th Royal Australian Regiment. At least he was. He passed away on July 19 2022.
    This song is my life long “understanding” song. Understanding of my fathers life and experience. Hence why he was the way he was.
    He was my best friend.
    I respect and view Mr John Schumann in a certain light that I would consider family.
    John knows of me through Facebook. But. His music and personal point of view of all veterans of our great country Australia. Brings my pain into pride.
    Bless my father. Private Barry Pemberton. And bless Mr Schumann for relating a soldiers heart and emotion to the public over the years.
    John Schumann for prime minister 👍🏻

  • @Dan_Ben_Michael
    @Dan_Ben_Michael Před 10 měsíci +1

    I’m an Aussie who a the son of a Vietnam Veteran. He was 19 when his number was called up and served at Nui Dat in the Phuoc Tuy province in 67/68. He was always quick to anger, drank heavily, and apparently had terrible nightmares occasionally. I don’t hold any resentment or grudges against my father for my childhood as he himself was a child and sent to war, then upon return he and his mates were wiped like a dirty arse by the government. This song always brings a tear to my eye.

    • @johnnichol9412
      @johnnichol9412 Před měsícem

      He would not have been called up at 19, registration age was 20.

  • @dougmcarthur3026
    @dougmcarthur3026 Před rokem +2

    Proud to be Australian and will never forget the sacrifice made by our servicemen so we can live in this beautiful country. Lest we forget 🇦🇺🙏❤️

  • @uberbollocks
    @uberbollocks Před rokem +3

    As a very young man, 17. I was a professional lifeguard in Victoria. We had a special guy named "Rat" who would come down to the beach a try to swim to Tasmania. He thought his brother was there. It was a busy beach, and hundreds of people. We would catch him most of the time as he came to the beach, he had a very special walk. We did a rescue once for "Rat" half a KM off the shore one day. He was a strange guy, but he always thanked us for getting him out of the water. I knew he was a Vietnam Vet, but that didn't mean a lot at the time. One very busy day we found "Rat" floating 500m out to sea. He had won his fight with his demons. As a Vet my self, i served 8 years in the Australian Army, did my time in War zones, i really wish i had the chance to talk to him. It wasn't until he died that and we knew who he was. Two of my Uncles fought in Vietnam, my Father was in training when the war ended. Its 0230hrs as i write this, i find that i am more like "Rat" than i care to admit. I just know that when i go for a swim, i am sure i haven't got a brother in Tasmania to swim to.

  • @alanhulme5770
    @alanhulme5770 Před rokem +2

    I can't listen to this song without tearing up. From the first time I heard it as a younger man right through until this time. It touches the soul. Well done John Schumann

  • @rebeccaimpey9986
    @rebeccaimpey9986 Před rokem +1

    I've seen John perform this live. In Canberra, at a Vietnam Veteran day, surrounded by vets. I was a child. It never fails to bring tears to my eyes. And that day, that performance, is written in my memory in stone.

  • @NarcFreeFormula
    @NarcFreeFormula Před 2 lety +10

    Both my Grandfathers fought . One in WW1 and the other in WW2. Both were deeply affected mentally from the experiences.

  • @dellishart9535
    @dellishart9535 Před 2 lety +11

    Thanks for taking a closer look at this. Our Veterans faced hell, and deserve our respect, understanding and support. This song is so powerful and sadly will continue to be as wars continue

  • @bluestarblue22
    @bluestarblue22 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This is an awesome Aussie song. So heartfelt. ❤

  • @kobirogers8615
    @kobirogers8615 Před rokem +2

    As an Aussie with a family history of ancestors that fought through WW1 & 2 "I Was Only 19" & "And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda" give me goose bumps as i try to understand what these men & women went thru day to day during their service... the most important songs ever written for any conflict that involves personel in the military worldwide only to return home mentally shattered without much help...
    Also like to pay tribute to "The Singer Reactions" for the best reaction vid i have seen on this subject... kudos to you sir...

  • @evaadams8298
    @evaadams8298 Před 2 lety +1

    Beautiful words John Schumann ❤️❤️🇦🇺 Thank you 🙏

  • @tomraw4893
    @tomraw4893 Před rokem +1

    Thank you ThatSinger. As a 75 year old Aussie I appreciate how you want to know about our history. You're a good bloke.

  • @dallashughbanks4884
    @dallashughbanks4884 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thank you John from a US Marine Iraq best song ive heard i listen to it alot

  • @gettimabodybag6213
    @gettimabodybag6213 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for your respect & homage to our brave warriors. As an Australian, this means so much to us over here. Lest We Forget.

  • @johnraygun9868
    @johnraygun9868 Před rokem +3

    There was a quote that for a lot of us spelled out part of the thought process we went through in combat and it was “the only hope you have is to accept the fact that your already dead, the sooner you accept that, the sooner you will be able to function as a soldier is supposed to function”

  • @SimplyScrapping
    @SimplyScrapping Před 2 lety +9

    I worked with a guy once who was a Vietnam vet. Whenever a helicopter flew over, he would have a meltdown. It was so sad to see. My Dad was a Navy veteran who had PTSD. His Dad was lost when HMAS Sydney sank off the coast of Western Australia with no survivors. Dad was only little. Not knowing what really happened to the ship his Dad was lost on, and not knowing exactly where the ship was until late in his life, was a terrible reality and heartache he lived with every day. He followed his fathers footsteps and joined the Navy when he was 16. He served in both the Vietnam and Korean wars. When two Australian Navy ships collided, the Melbourne and the Voyager, he was on one of those ships and was tasked with collecting the bodies of those who lost their lives, including his own captain. Only later in life did I realise why he was like he was, but back then PTSD wasn't a 'thing'. You were expected to just suck it up.

    • @bsim1964
      @bsim1964 Před 2 lety +1

      My old man was on leave from the Melbourne that February when they collided , I was conceived that week. Broke the old boy as he knew and went through junior recruits with a lot of them.

  • @andreasschluessler6684
    @andreasschluessler6684 Před rokem +2

    As an Australian navy veteran, that song is so ingrained in our culture and identity in tha Australian Defences force

  • @TheMichaelStott
    @TheMichaelStott Před 2 lety +6

    I served for 18 years in the Australian Army.Trained in Malaysia where we lost a bloke to a grenade accident, Deployed to Bougainville, Twice to East Timor, Iraq, Afghanistan and Padang The Army doesn't send you to nice places and even in training it can be risky. I grew up listening to I was only 19 but in recent years have heard the songs from Fred Smith who wrote songs about our time in Bougainville and the Middle East. I really liked the song "Coming Home". it doesn't hit you in the feels like Redgum but it helped me figure out some peace of mind concerning Afghanistan.

    • @marionoz9980
      @marionoz9980 Před rokem

      Thank you for your service. I am the daughter of a British Paratrooper who served from 8 months before D Day till 1963. He landed in Normandy on D Day and he was part of the mission to take out the Merville Battery. It's an amazing story of courage but sadly also of great personal sacrifice. My respect to you and the sacrifices you made.

  • @leannemayor5755
    @leannemayor5755 Před 2 lety +9

    Thank you for this , I have ptsd from being attacked in my shower by two carers. This song made everyone cry because they were treated so disgustingly . We need to wrap our soldiers in our arms and thank them for our freedom . My grand father was he,d prisoner of war in Changi . He came back broken . Thank you for sharing this . It means the world xoxox

  • @brody-Waikers
    @brody-Waikers Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you for this, Now I know what our soldiers go through in war time, God bless to all our service men and women. 🐨💙

  • @gamortie
    @gamortie Před rokem +1

    It took 20 years for Australia’s Vietnam veterans to finally get a proper welcome home parade, which started in Sydney in 1987, and moved on to other cities in subsequent years. My dad, who was in Vietnam 67-68, was able to attend the first welcome home, and told that, at the entertainment put on after the parade, John Schumann sang this song with his mate present, and there wasn’t a dry eye there by the end.

  • @harrywatson9731
    @harrywatson9731 Před rokem +1

    The Viet Vets thought so much of John Schumann's (Redgum) and the work he has carried out for the Veteran Community and the
    Spotlight he shone onPTSD, that words from I was only 19, are included on the Viet Vets Memorial in Canberra and as you said in your review of the song, a song for the world.
    Thank you
    Harry Watson a 38 year veteran.

  • @drchops
    @drchops Před 2 lety +1

    In Australia, whenever this song is played, the entire room weeps. Every time.

  • @kayot4947
    @kayot4947 Před rokem +3

    My dad is a Vietnam Veteran from Melbourne, this song has always held special meaning to me.

  • @Sammcinnes25
    @Sammcinnes25 Před 2 lety +4

    One of redgums best.

  • @coreenavenn4235
    @coreenavenn4235 Před 2 lety +4

    I was at the Vietnam vets return March in SYD 1987 (?) I was in the RAAF but I cried & cried as I watched our troops walk past. An uncle was seconded to the USA 135th airborne helicopters.
    It is beautiful to know the background. I have a mate that has PTSD from the Gulf Wars. Seeing mates blown apart has damaged him forever.
    I have visited the graves of relatives on the Western Front. I cried for 2 days.
    A 19 yr old was a volunteer.
    Conscription was from age 20 in Australia

  • @1ethanb
    @1ethanb Před rokem +1

    the songs about 30yrs old and still gives me goose bumps. my old bloke lives nxt to a vet from Nam who is suffering PTSD and agent orange poisoning. poor Barstads crook as

  • @sidey4092
    @sidey4092 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for your most respectful reaction to this song twice.

  • @donellefeltham
    @donellefeltham Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you for playing this and thank you John for writing this this song. I have my own Vietnam Vet, he was conscripted in 1970. Our daughter was just 16 months old, he went away a happy young man who was everyone’s friend and full of life. The Young Man that marched off the Sydney 8 months later, only to have pig’s blood thrown over him and his other mates and they had to keep marching, while some Nutters in the crowd were calling them Baby Murders. Although Vietnam had scared him for life, it took him 15 years to even talk to about what happened over there. For year’s he tried many Doctors, they all give him antidepressants but not one of them said maybe you should see a specialist, and this went on for year’s, he went to work every day even though he’d hadn’t been able to sleep but he tried so hard to make some sense of, what were even doing in the Vietnam War and I’ve said millions of times, what were we doing in a war we had no business being in, in the first place. It turns out, he has PTSD and for years wasn’t treated for it. He’s much better now but it took 40 years for him to get a popper diagnosis. Also my Brother In-law, who was a Medic over there, and he was running back to the Chopper after treating the injured and step on a Landmine and it killed him. He was just 20 years old. My only hope is there will never be another Vietnam and they will never have another Draft because I don’t want other young men to be put through what they went through. Even after all these years The Vietnam War is still reeking havoc with the people who were over there.🎼❤️🇦🇺❤️🇺🇸🕺🏻💃🎸☘️

    • @fionabrandis439
      @fionabrandis439 Před rokem +1

      Sorry for your struggles, Danelle. Unfortunately, as the wife of a younger veteran it is basically a 'new' Vietnam now. Younger Veterans are being gas-lighted in a way I never dreamed possible. You may want to look into making a submission to the Veteran Suicide Royal Commission. I did, it's hard but maybe it will help our whole community ❤❤

    • @donellefeltham
      @donellefeltham Před rokem +1

      @@fionabrandis439 I honestly don’t look at them as troubles, Our guy’s when they were called up for National Service,had 2weeks to give their notice at their jobs and put everything in order. They were sent on a 6 week basic training course and then were put on a ship to Vietnam. That is something I hope never to see again. Thankyou for your kind offer but we are just living our lives around our family and I really don’t think it would serve my Vet any good if I dragged it up again but I wish you every success in your venture.

    • @peteranderson7487
      @peteranderson7487 Před rokem

      The real baby murderers are the politicians who are all to keen to send our young men and women off to pointless wars for ideological reasons.

    • @donellefeltham
      @donellefeltham Před rokem

      @@peteranderson7487 You and I know this, but it still doesn’t change what happened when our blokes came home from a war we had no business being in, in the first place and if you didn’t experience the effects it had on our Natio’s then you don’t really know what it was like. Yes the Government of the day ( Liberal’s) sent our young boys over there but it took a change of Government ( Labor) to bring them home and put a stop to National Service. However the damage was already done by then and it took decades for the medical profession to realise many of our young troops had PTSD, and if you didn’t live with it then you could could never know how really debilitating it is.

    • @donellefeltham
      @donellefeltham Před rokem

      @@dynevor6327 AH Sorry the only ones being pulled out as you put it were the ones that had done their time in Vietnam and they were replaced with more Troops and don’t try telling me your precious Liberal Party bought all our boys home before the Whitlam government got in because it’s just not true. I was there, I have a Vietnam Vet who did 7 months in Vietnam and the only reason he came home early was because of the Whitlam Government bought him home, but he was there long enough to suffer the after affects which have plagued him ever since and I don’t know where you got your information but your wrong.🤷‍♀️

  • @barneymeister1001
    @barneymeister1001 Před 2 lety +2

    massive kudos to you do doing this bro.... you've won yourself a big fan of your work!
    as you know many avenues of research and therefore many medications that may be available to brothers and sisters are available.
    I'm sure you'll do your best to help supporters and subscribers to connect with help.
    love, light and peace ✌️

  • @dolphindeb56
    @dolphindeb56 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for your sensitive care for this song & recognizing its worth! Thanks also for bring so many Aussie Icons to the eyes of the World through your channel! I was thinking - Put this song together with John Farnham's Voice & Delta's Bridge Over Troubled Dreams & there are three powerful songs for Today, Hey! Song the Whole World needs to hear! Cheers Debbie

  • @archiefox1414
    @archiefox1414 Před rokem +1

    Brings tears to my eyes every time I hear it.

  • @jamespriddy8275
    @jamespriddy8275 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Combat changes a human. You are NEVER what you were before the experience. PTSD is the mind reliving what the eyes saw…and beyond. The best one can do is to connect with others who know how it is. One cannot heal. One can only learn to adapt to the present reality, and occasionally go meet with brothers and attend reunions and just be in their presence. To every combat veteran, I extend my thanks, my pride for you, and a hearty WELCOME HOME!

  • @karenstrong8887
    @karenstrong8887 Před 2 lety +5

    I was only 14 when my friends were going to Vietnam. My husband didn’t go because people born in his month had to go if they were born on an odd number day. He is 5 years older than I am like my other friends were but I was never just 14, I was never a child. I stood beside my friends that came back home and I never understood that they were ordered to go but people hated them for going. I remember the year they were finally recognised and allowed to March with people from other wars. So many cried but they held their heads up after being beaten down so long. That is the one’s who didn’t take their own lives after they got home. They should have always been able to be proud.
    I was diagnosed with PTSD 18 months ago. I remember saying it must be a mistake because I never went to war. He told me mine started when I was 2 years old and I lived through a different war as a child. You are right there is not enough Doctors to treat it. Mine is 69 and she is tired. She is brilliant but exhausted, she has advertised for another Psychologist for a year now. There are none.
    I never believed that talking to someone could help and I didn’t know what was wrong with me. It was a relief to just know it had a name. Now I cannot believe how many things she has allowed me to be able to say and change. All of my friends from Vietnam have either gone now or moved away. They always knew they had my respect and love. I cannot listen to this song but I just did and I cried. I can listen to it now and it is important, they were only 19.

    • @karenstrong8887
      @karenstrong8887 Před 2 lety

      @@daviddou1408, he was just 20 and he lived in Newcastle, NSW. Did you want to talk to him?

  • @MegaJesseG
    @MegaJesseG Před 2 lety +4

    It truly is a wake up call - to all the politicians and politics of the world that think war is a good idea. - To those in power: Where's the support and help for those you send off to war and forget once they get home - that's IF they get home.

  • @jaymills6091
    @jaymills6091 Před 2 lety +1

    Every time I listen to “I was only 19”, I cry as it reminds me of friends who killed themselves after surviving the horrors of Vietnam, but had to put with more horrors back home.

  • @sharisme8190
    @sharisme8190 Před 2 lety +3

    I still get teary when I hear this song and being an Aussie ~ I've heard it an awful lot over the years. It breaks my heart how Vietnam Vets were treated back in the day. I'm glad they have finally been recognised positively for their service. You were right when you said ~ this song is world wide ~ the places in the beginning might be Australian but i'm sure it tells the story of every soldier the world over. To all Soldiers ~ thank you for your service

  • @king_familytraveladventure963

    This song brings me to tears every time I hear it. Chills. Every time.

  • @jono.pom-downunder
    @jono.pom-downunder Před rokem +1

    Thank you for highlighting this. Many of my mates went to Vietnam, and have or are drunk/drinking themselves into an early grave. You feel so helpless, but all you can do is be there to talk (I'm an '86-'00) British vet. But never experienced the hell these guys did.

  • @tilly8221
    @tilly8221 Před 2 lety +2

    Wasn't till 1hr before my Pop passed he told me because of WW2 and what he did that that he might not see me in heaven 😓 he was my hero teacher and everything I am now as a man 🇦🇺❤️👍

    • @sandy5548
      @sandy5548 Před 8 měsíci

      You will see him in heaven…..believe it

  • @peaked_aussie
    @peaked_aussie Před 2 lety +3

    Your reaction to this is so good.

  • @scottcoolum
    @scottcoolum Před 2 lety +4

    Great appreciation to an amazing song that gets an awful lot of us Aussies tearful !! Much respect to those who have served , and hopefully we can support our veterans better :-)

  • @danhemming6624
    @danhemming6624 Před 2 lety +1

    I cry listening to this song.