reverie Posted January 4, 2009 Report Posted January 4, 2009 (edited) *rewritten for a Veteran's Day service at Starr King School for the Ministry. I was the only self-identifying veteran in the room. My name is Sean and I am Veteran of the U.S. Army that served from 1997 to 2005. Although, I never saw combat, I cannot help, but feel the service changed me -- changed something deep and fundamental in the way I perceive the world. This became clear to me, last year at a Unitarian Universalist (UU) campus ministry meeting in North Carolina. We were doing Psych Problems to challenge our moral constructs. The problem we were working on, asked us to consider: “When is it right to take one life for the sake of another.” Some of you may be familiar with it: The Trolley Dilemma. I bring it up, because in a room of over 20 UUs, I was the only one to choose the position of “in action” over “intervention.” This provoked strong reaction from my peers, and I was never able to persuade any of them to consider changing their position. To date, I’ve only encountered one other person that has agreed with me, or at least humored me because we were dating at the time. So I wrote a poem about it. This poem may evoke strong moral reaction, I apologize if this disturbs you. With Friends Picture five people tied to a track, and just before the unfortunate, on an opposing rail, lies another person likewise tied. At this moment, a trolley car will likely crush the life out of these five folk unless someone switches the rail from a near tower, which you just happen to be imagined upon, too far to do anything, but watch and or hit the control that will lock the switching rails onto the diverging track thus, shifting the fate away from those five innocent lives to another waiting as innocently below. The trolley dilemma tells me much about myself. For in a group of twenty friends, I alone choose to let the car ride on without the benefit of my intervention. Who am I to take the life of one for the sake of many? I say. And my friends answer, Well, who are we not to save the lives of many over the life of just one? This bothers me for a while. No one seems to see why I lament their thoroughly considered utilitarianism. Given the same problem with a slightly different turn where you must push a fat man out of a car to save your own life as well as everyone else aboard. Again, I stand alone in choosing to let the game play on without my hand saving what might as well be the whole world for all I care versus the guilt of having to extinguish one inconvenient life. I am not so sure why I see it differently from my friends, yet I do remember how justified the explanation for dropping another Fat Man over the crowded lights of a far away place called Nagasaki seemed to a much younger version of myself, safely tucked behind the dissociating veil of a history that I did have to live through. Now, I am older and have been taught a little of what it is to kill as a soldier, conditioned to react to the human form as rubberized targets to be shot down as they popped up within the sights of my M-203 equipped assault rifle. Maybe failing to resist my conditioning is what has shamed me, and now I can no longer take for granted the right to save the lives of any number over a single person killed in a calculated wreck of cold blood. Edited January 6, 2009 by reverie
Mardrax Posted January 5, 2009 Report Posted January 5, 2009 It still is a beauty, well thought of, well performed. From memory, this version seems more calculated than the previous, and I'm not quite sure if that's an improvement. Though that might be just my memory playing up on me. A sleepless night spent doing homework tends to deprive of the will to look stuff up. one small thing I'm assuming is a mistake: "I am can..." in the last stanza, 11th line. Keep it up.
reverie Posted January 6, 2009 Author Report Posted January 6, 2009 fixed! Thanks nice catch. I am the typo king. Doesn't matter how many times I reread a piece, I always miss something. Even reading out loud from print. I so need an editor. I always worry if my edits improve or hurt the feelings I was going for when I write. Pretty much, I never want to stop editing my poems, which is great when I learn news skills, but bad when I forget what I was thinking about when I wrote it initially. Still, deep reflection sometimes can only happen when I years away from an experience, so it's give and take. cheers
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