I was born into an era when fear and relief played equal roles in the minds of many. Fourteen years of wartime rationing had only ended a few years before and the memories of that bloody conflict were still fresh in the minds, hearts and bodies of every adult, many of whom had also lived through the Great War. Few families were intact or wholly unscathed and the scars of those years would, in many subtle ways, affect my newborn generation.
The ‘war to end all wars’ had been rapidly followed by World War II. The Vietnamese conflict was at its height, the Cold War showed no sign of abating and there was no sign at all of peace bought at a cost of millions of lives. My own father was posted on active service with the Royal Engineers just after I was born. Even for the average family enjoying the new-found freedoms of the sixties, war and its horrors were an ever present shadow.
My grandfather, who had fought in Burma, owned a cine camera and projector. Where, or how, he had acquired it, I do not know, but amongst the very earliest Mickey Mouse cartoons, home movies and silent films was another, showing live footage of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
That film too was silent…and partly in colour. As the clouds billowed, creating fantastical shapes in the air, he would tell of the horrors that surreal beauty was unleashing on the ground. Back then, we knew only what had been publicly released…and that was little enough. We were too close to the war and the decisions taken to end it…too close to disaster for those in power to want to share the whole truth, perhaps… but he was both artist and scientist and could deduce much from what was known. The truth about the vaporising of life at the epicentre of the blast where the temperature was as hot as the surface of the sun, the horrific burns, melted eyes and radiation sickness that decimated and destroyed so many hundreds of thousands of lives…that would take years to become widely known.
But enough was known to horrify and sow the fear of nuclear war in every heart and mind. We all knew there were secret bunkers built to protect the chosen few. We knew of the watching stations designed to give the ‘four-minute warning’ most of us would probably never hear. There were still sirens, regularly tested, and instructions on what to do during a nuclear attack. And parents made their own plans for if and when the worst should happen, knowing the makeshift shelters behind sandbags and doors would do little good.
It was in the kitchen of the modern maisonette where we lived that my mother first told me what would happen. I can see the scene as clearly now as I could then. I could describe every detail, from the reinforced glass walls, threaded with steel wire, to the pile of scones cooling from the oven and the blackberry jam we had made together earlier that day. I can almost smell them.
“I would kill you first, then myself,” she said.
I would have been about nine years old, she in her mid twenties. Even though I understood her reasoning and the desire to protect that prompted her words, it was a shocking thing to hear and a shocking thing for a young mother to have to contemplate.
I care little for the minutiae of party politics and posturing. I keep abreast of the news and, like the rest of the world, watch in horror at the political wrangling that threatens to use human lives as pawns. It matters not at all who pulls the trigger if you are in the line of fire.
It beggars belief that this threat continues, that humanity’s leaders and governments continue to invest more and more money in bigger, deadlier weapons as a preventative measure against anyone actually launching them. We already have more than enough to obliterate the total land mass of the planet.
I have no answers. Perhaps there are none that include peace without that delicate balance of power versus responsibility. Unilateral disarmament is a dream that may never be realised… someone will always seek the upper hand, while ever there is power and position to be won, no matter how transient.
All I know is that I do not want any human being to suffer the horrors of nuclear war… or our children or grandchildren to be faced with the choice my mother feared. Or for our generation to go down in some silent and unrecorded history as the one that finally destroyed our home.
Reblogged this on The Militant Negro™.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sobering thoughts.
LikeLike
I doubt I am the only one having them at the moment.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Sigh so much to take in, I can only imagine the overwhelming feeling for a nine year old. Well done Sue
LikeLike
The memory remains very clear, even after all these years.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s a horrifying thought Sue….
LikeLike
One my generation grew up with, Ritu. You work with small children and are a mother yourself… it is not something any parent can contemplate without horror.
LikeLiked by 1 person
When the news came in about the goings on this weekend, we were sat at the breakfast table in the hotel… It’s a sobering thought, what could happen, and one you don’t want to have to think about at all, but we have to … unfortunately….
LikeLike
Maybe we need to be reminded of how fragile our tenure is and the responsibility our ‘ownership’ of the earth brings with it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
True…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well said – yes, sobering
LikeLike
A sad place for humanity to stand.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Reblogged this on Matthews' Blog.
LikeLike
Thank you for reblogging.
LikeLiked by 1 person
My pleasure, Sue.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Reblogged this on anita dawes and jaye marie.
LikeLiked by 1 person
The threat grows larger every single day, and our fear grows with it. I wonder how many of us realise just how near we are to disaster?
LikeLike
It would take so little to tip the balance again…
LikeLiked by 1 person
What with Trump and Korea spoiling for a fight. They must have very short memories, that’s all I can say…
LikeLike
Or an ego where ambition rules out common sense and compassion.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Not much of these around these days, at least not in the political world where it is needed the most.
LikeLike
I can’t imagine what you had gone at that young age. I watched the news of what happened in some countries. I’m horrified of what could happen to us.
LikeLike
I was lucky enough to have missed the wars, but my parents and grandparents lived through them. It made a difference to childhood.
LikeLiked by 1 person
My parents went back to China when Japanese took over Hong Kong in WWII on a Christmas, thus named that day as black Christmas. I didn’t have experience of living through the wars.
LikeLike
Neither did I, but my family did and those experiences shaped the world I lived in.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m sure that’s the case. The economy was affected by it and when my parents went back to Hong Kong, they had to start over, but jobs were scarce. They were glad to have a place to live and any job my dad could find!
LikeLike
There were probably more jobs than men left here, though the women had been doing them for a while by then.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That might have been the case. My dad didn’t like talking about those days.
LikeLike
Few of them did.
LikeLiked by 1 person
My neighbor were in WWII and Vietnam war, he never talked about it. When he did, it was so interesting. When I was doing full time counseling, one client had schizophrenia, whenever he closed his eyes, he could see his friend dead right next to him.
LikeLike
Poor man, sounds like the trauma of his loss never left him.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder needs professional treatment. It doesn’t go away by itself.
LikeLike
I know that all too well, Miriam.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, it’s so hard on the ones who suffer!
LikeLike
It is. A dreadful thing to live through.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, I’ve seen quite a few!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well put, Sue. It certainly does beggar belief that this threat continues. Pure Idiocracy, it is.
LikeLike
One day, we might grow up.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I’m the same generation, Sue. I didn’t have that conversation with my mother but I do remember asking my father what we should do if we heard the four minute warning. I can’t remember what he told me; the expression on his face was telling me something else too scary to contemplate. I heard someone on the radio the other day being asked why North Korea was so determined to develop nuclear arms and the answer was, ‘Same reason as other countries who already have them – security and prestige.’ It’s terrifying to think our fate is in the hands of people with over-large, easily bruised egos.
On a slight detour, I think Theresa May should be made to go and live in the Yemen for a couple of weeks and see the results of selling arms to Saudi.
LikeLike
I doubt if any of our generation escaped that fear, Mary. I had a long conversation with Nick about nuclear warfare today. Athough we taught him about the consequences of war, the holocaust, and the Bomb, he has only recently become aware of the true enormity of the devastation caused by such weapons in human terms. It makes me wonder how many others of his generation and yonger are fully aware… and whether it is better to grow in relative ignorance or knowledge.
Believe me, there are a good many politicians I would like to see personally living with the consequences of their actions and policies…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Beautifully said Sue. As if the normal everyday party politics and posturing weren’t enough, added to that is the fact that the fate of the world is now in the hands of two dangerously insane, power hungry maniacs.
LikeLike
We can live in hopes of more measured characters holding power..
LikeLiked by 1 person
We can and must. The alternative is untenable.
LikeLike
Utterly.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Reblogged this on Die Erste Eslarner Zeitung – Aus und über Eslarn, sowie die bayerisch-tschechische Region!.
LikeLike
Thank you, Michael.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for the always great information. Have a nice week ahead. Michael
LikeLike
You too, Michael…and less rain than we have here at the moment, perhaps 😉
LikeLike
Pingback: Self-destruct | Not Tomatoes
Reblogged this on Joyce's Treasures of Encouragments and commented:
No one wins in WAR!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I remember learning about Nuclear, Biological and Chemical warfare some time ago. It is utterly terrifying and has stayed with me ever since.
LikeLike
I think we make a mistake when we fail to learn about such things as adults, even if childhood may not be the best time to do so.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That is so true.
LikeLiked by 1 person
No one wins in any War. Lives loss and homes destroyed. So sad in 2017, we still can’t find a way to get along with each other. To agree to disagree. To Pray more. Thanks Sue!!
LikeLike
You would think we might have learned better by now… but apparently not.
LikeLike
Wow! I tried to think, “”What would I have felt had my mother said the same thing to me?” Like yours, she was a practical woman. Loving, yet no-nonsense. I think that would have shocked me to the core. Your excellent post is thought provoking.
LikeLike
I am not at all sure that she had the facts, even then, but fear was enough.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m sure it was!
LikeLiked by 1 person
What upsets me the most, Sue, is that all of this is a choice. And it may not be easy, but we as a world can choose differently.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I agree, Diana, but that choice may feel as if it has gone beyond us.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Your words remind me of the feeling all of us had during the so called “cold war”. In the eighties hope was enormously rising that this threats of nuclear war never will happen again. And now… One could say “Oh, this guy over there in North Corea and that guy over here in the USA are only two dumb boys.” But there have always been the dumb boys that brought most of the suffering and bloodshed to humanity…
LikeLike
My sons were born in the eighties. We hoped…but the so far, the madness persists.
LikeLike
Amen!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s too horrible to contemplate. I will never understand how the powers that be don’t/ won’t learn from the lessons of history.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Probably because those who want and seek power are usually the ones who shouldn’t have it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Can’t argue with that… absolutely right. 🙁
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sadly 😦
LikeLiked by 1 person
My generation is the one that came to adulthood during the ‘cold war’. Our nightmares were of global nuclear annihilation. Many of us were quite surprised, and delighted, that we were still alive at the turn of the century.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Mine too…I believe we are the same age.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yep. 😀
LikeLiked by 1 person
I grew up in the age of “duck and cover drills” where hiding under our desks was supposed to keep us from dying from nuclear bomb. Even as a little kid, I thought that was incredibly stupid. All these years later, we don’t seem to have advanced much from where we started when I was a child. I keep expecting common sense to overcome politics. It never does.
I don’t worry about the big war. No one will survive it anyway. But — it was supposed to be better than this. Different.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I watched one of the public information films the other day on how to build a fallout shelter by leaning a door against a wall…
But then, we are taught even less these days.
I agree…different would have been nice.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Amen Sue. A powerful piece from you. It’s all about power and foolish little boys antagonizing one another at the expense of human life. Such a sorry state of things right now. I pray the generals will be the decision makers, rather than ‘the orange one’. 😦
LikeLike
Anyone with vision and common sense will do….
LikeLiked by 1 person
❤
LikeLiked by 1 person
Extraordinary piece. We live in chilling times. I remember doing “duck and cover” drills in school, and not really understanding what the danger was (I was in 1st grade). As my understanding grew, I became horrified and terrified. You have captured that feeling so well. I’m reblogging this. Thank you for writing it.
~Audrey
LikeLike
I don’t think we ever did those drills but the knowledge and fear of what we can do to ourselves was ever-present.
Thank you for reblogging, Audrey.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: Self-destruct (reblogging) | ArmsaKimbo Blog
During the Cuban missile crisis, we had those duck and cover drills, which gave us little comfort, but I never addressed it all with my family. I can’t imagine the conversation you had with your mom…how terrifying for you. Now, decades later, as you say, the madness persists. Nagasaki and Hiroshima need to be revisited, that history can not be repeated. sigh…
LikeLike
We taught the boys about war through their love of old aircraft, but the full scope and reality of the human cost is, I think, only just sinking in.
LikeLiked by 1 person
The Cold War was actually a much safer time than now.
LikeLike
That is what worries me…
LikeLike
Yep, I get that. But I can’t say I lose a great deal of sleep over it. Humankind’s presence on the planet is for a limited time only and we can shorten that a bit if we behave poorly….
LikeLike
Agreed, but I can still hope we can learn to behave and grow up…
LikeLike
Probably not. If organisms learned logically bacteria would have overrun everything already. I had a basset hound as a kid – intelligent SOMETIMES. but when it came to learning from mistakes – NOTHING there
LikeLike
I have a dog whose intelligence is without question… but whose choices are capricious.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, and unfortunately we are not dealing with dogs but with crazy people
LikeLike
With far less sense sometimes…
LikeLiked by 1 person
absolutely
LikeLiked by 1 person