Why we honor our men and women who sign up to serve. This is awesome. Get your tear gear ready.

tinydancer

Diamond Member
Oct 16, 2010
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This teeny tiny baby broke ranks during an official welcoming back home.

Check out the stills. She is such a little doll.

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Now personally this is the one that kills me.

2D29EC2900000578-3261533-Lt_Daniel_Ogelsby_and_his_men_had_just_completed_a_nine_month_de-a-17_1444215517631.jpg
2D29EC2900000578-3261533-Lt_Daniel_Ogelsby_and_his_men_had_just_completed_a_nine_month_de-a-17_1444215517631.jpg


Hahahahaha she knew who she was aiming for.
 
And no matter our differences. They serve. And their babies are left at home without them for duty TO COUNTRY.

Please note all the other good men and women who are trying not to crack a grin but they cant help it.

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Oh and take a look at everyone's faces around them.

This is breathtakingly wonderful.
 
When my wife used to fly back from deployment I and our daughter, when she was little, would be waiting on the tarmac for her to taxi in. She could barely stand and would be leaning up against my legs and waiting for mommy to get off the plane.

The most dangerous thing I have ever done in my life was rep punk bands at larry's hideaway. mmmmmmmmmm okay some gigs at CBGB's And a couple of hockey games cheering for the Leafs at the Buffalo arena.

To send of a loved one into a kill zone. Oh my. It I'm trying to find words here.

This baby really truly made my day.
 
My wife is sleeping now but I've forwarded a link to the youTube video to her for viewing tomorrow. She was an Army brat who was a daddy's girl and you'll never know how much this will hit home with her. Her father was captured in Italy by the Germans, and later became a Special Forces Green Beret member who served in Korea and Vietnam. He passed away 11 years ago and upon viewing I can imagine her joyful tears of recalling their own homecomings. Thank-you oh so much tinydancer and OldSchool.
 
My wife is sleeping now but I've forwarded a link to the youTube video to her for viewing tomorrow. She was an Army brat who was a daddy's girl and you'll never know how much this will hit home with her. Her father was captured in Italy by the Germans, and later became a Special Forces Green Beret member who served in Korea and Vietnam. He passed away 11 years ago and upon viewing I can imagine her joyful tears of recalling their own homecomings. Thank-you oh so much tinydancer and OldSchool.
Hey, her old man deserves way more thanks than we do. :thup:
 
My wife is sleeping now but I've forwarded a link to the youTube video to her for viewing tomorrow. She was an Army brat who was a daddy's girl and you'll never know how much this will hit home with her. Her father was captured in Italy by the Germans, and later became a Special Forces Green Beret member who served in Korea and Vietnam. He passed away 11 years ago and upon viewing I can imagine her joyful tears of recalling their own homecomings. Thank-you oh so much tinydancer and OldSchool.

This was hard for me. I'm a die hard fan for my dad. I didn't want to start a thread that could ever exploit him. Not ever.

But when I saw the still my heart broke into a million pieces. But it is still a good thing. Fathers matter. Fathers really really matter.
 
My wife is sleeping now but I've forwarded a link to the youTube video to her for viewing tomorrow. She was an Army brat who was a daddy's girl and you'll never know how much this will hit home with her. Her father was captured in Italy by the Germans, and later became a Special Forces Green Beret member who served in Korea and Vietnam. He passed away 11 years ago and upon viewing I can imagine her joyful tears of recalling their own homecomings. Thank-you oh so much tinydancer and OldSchool.

You are so very welcome and I hope this little gem of a moment makes a difference. A moment that you can grab on to. I better run the dog now or I am going to start blubbering sp did I just pull a Palin

Is blubbering a verb?
 
Navy SEALS payback 50 year old debt to their guide in Vietnam...

Navy SEALs Give Back to Their Guide in Vietnam
Oct 23, 2015 -- Ten thousand dollars. Spread out over four years. It doesn't seem like much, especially by U.S. standards. But in a small village in rural Vietnam, the donation might change the future of an entire family -- and could help repay a 50-year-old debt.
Nhu Nguyen didn't ask for the money. Her grandfather, Nguyen Hoang Minh, bled for it. The former combat interpreter volunteered to fight alongside some of the first Navy SEALs in Vietnam, guiding them on hundreds of secretive nighttime missions deep in enemy territory -- work now enshrined in early SEAL lore. But when the war ended, Minh didn't get to leave with the commandos. His association with "The Men With Green Faces," as the Viet Cong came to know them, would cost him. Two years in a communist prison camp. Decades working in fields and doing odd jobs for little pay. No way to get ahead. When his old SEAL teammates finally found him a few years ago, Minh was living in a tiny thatched hut with a leaky roof and a dirt floor, where he and his wife were raising their grandchildren.

seal-training.jpg

The SEAL brotherhood chipped in to upgrade Minh's home. Later, they sent him money to cover medical bills. Feed his family. Fill the gas tank of his motorbike. They paid to bring him to Virginia Beach two years ago, fulfilling his dream to see America before he dies. And now, this week, perhaps the most important contribution of all: The Navy SEAL Foundation has agreed to pay to send Nhu, his eldest granddaughter, to National University in Vietnam. "It's a little outside of what we typically do," said Robin King, SEAL Foundation CEO. "But when someone as important as Minh needs support, we're willing to flex our mission and do what we can." The $2,500 a year for tuition and fees isn't much for the nation's largest SEAL charity, foundation leaders acknowledge.

But in Vietnam, the money could lift a family out of poverty -- ensuring Minh's descendants won't have to struggle like he did, said Rick Woolard, the retired SEAL captain who has spearheaded efforts to help his old interpreter. Woolard and two other veterans returned to Vietnam earlier this year to visit Minh and his family. There, they hatched the idea of sending his granddaughter to college. "Minh is now in his mid-70s and in failing health," Woolard wrote in an email to SEAL Foundation leaders earlier this month. "Once he passes away, the family's prospects for escaping poverty are gloomy. The only hope on the horizon is Minh's granddaughter." Nhu had to be a star student just to be accepted into the university, Woolard said. But without financial help, she wouldn't be able to go. Minh's granddaughter wants to become a pharmacist. Classes start next spring in Ho Chi Minh City.

Navy SEALs Give Back to Their Guide in Vietnam | Military.com
 
the killer pic and I really think it says it all. Bless you souls who serve.

2D29EC1100000578-3261533-image-a-19_1444215530370.jpg
Absolutely bless our men and women who serve us and our country. and thanks to their families for doing the same for us.

just awesome postings dear. thank you:eusa_clap:
 
This teeny tiny baby broke ranks during an official welcoming back home.

Check out the stills. She is such a little doll.

2D29EC2500000578-3261533-image-a-13_1444215241609.jpg


Now personally this is the one that kills me.

2D29EC2900000578-3261533-Lt_Daniel_Ogelsby_and_his_men_had_just_completed_a_nine_month_de-a-17_1444215517631.jpg
2D29EC2900000578-3261533-Lt_Daniel_Ogelsby_and_his_men_had_just_completed_a_nine_month_de-a-17_1444215517631.jpg


Hahahahaha she knew who she was aiming for.


Is an actual show with just these family reunions. Some obscure channel here has it. Caught the one with a little stepdaughter on stage for a magic show, magician asks her if she could have anything what would it be, girl replies her stepdaddy who's deployed so the magician brings out a magic box, has the girl say some magicword thing and opens the box and there's her stepdad in uniform. I lost it. :)
 
Navy SEALS payback 50 year old debt to their guide in Vietnam...

Navy SEALs Give Back to Their Guide in Vietnam
Oct 23, 2015 -- Ten thousand dollars. Spread out over four years. It doesn't seem like much, especially by U.S. standards. But in a small village in rural Vietnam, the donation might change the future of an entire family -- and could help repay a 50-year-old debt.
Nhu Nguyen didn't ask for the money. Her grandfather, Nguyen Hoang Minh, bled for it. The former combat interpreter volunteered to fight alongside some of the first Navy SEALs in Vietnam, guiding them on hundreds of secretive nighttime missions deep in enemy territory -- work now enshrined in early SEAL lore. But when the war ended, Minh didn't get to leave with the commandos. His association with "The Men With Green Faces," as the Viet Cong came to know them, would cost him. Two years in a communist prison camp. Decades working in fields and doing odd jobs for little pay. No way to get ahead. When his old SEAL teammates finally found him a few years ago, Minh was living in a tiny thatched hut with a leaky roof and a dirt floor, where he and his wife were raising their grandchildren.

seal-training.jpg

The SEAL brotherhood chipped in to upgrade Minh's home. Later, they sent him money to cover medical bills. Feed his family. Fill the gas tank of his motorbike. They paid to bring him to Virginia Beach two years ago, fulfilling his dream to see America before he dies. And now, this week, perhaps the most important contribution of all: The Navy SEAL Foundation has agreed to pay to send Nhu, his eldest granddaughter, to National University in Vietnam. "It's a little outside of what we typically do," said Robin King, SEAL Foundation CEO. "But when someone as important as Minh needs support, we're willing to flex our mission and do what we can." The $2,500 a year for tuition and fees isn't much for the nation's largest SEAL charity, foundation leaders acknowledge.

But in Vietnam, the money could lift a family out of poverty -- ensuring Minh's descendants won't have to struggle like he did, said Rick Woolard, the retired SEAL captain who has spearheaded efforts to help his old interpreter. Woolard and two other veterans returned to Vietnam earlier this year to visit Minh and his family. There, they hatched the idea of sending his granddaughter to college. "Minh is now in his mid-70s and in failing health," Woolard wrote in an email to SEAL Foundation leaders earlier this month. "Once he passes away, the family's prospects for escaping poverty are gloomy. The only hope on the horizon is Minh's granddaughter." Nhu had to be a star student just to be accepted into the university, Woolard said. But without financial help, she wouldn't be able to go. Minh's granddaughter wants to become a pharmacist. Classes start next spring in Ho Chi Minh City.

Navy SEALs Give Back to Their Guide in Vietnam | Military.com

Another great story about our men and women who serve. awesome
 

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