By Jonathon Spalding
As a society, we are fascinated by war stories. Movies, television, video games and literature all do their part in capturing something that is so fundamental to human nature, yet so incredibly hard to imagine. From the beginning of time we have huddled around campfires and told each other stories of conflict, complete with a triumphant victory or a symbolic defeat, a hero and an enemy fighting for something worth dying for. Today, most of the images we associate with war are carefully and artificially crafted in a Hollywood studio or neatly twisted into a storyline fit for the nightly news.
But for the soldiers who actually live it, war is not a fictional escape but a harsh reality.
Many veterans struggle with the traumatic events of their wartime service and may never be able to express what they saw “over there.” With the inherent