I apologize, I don’t know where this post is really going, and it is kind of weird to come back to my blog and start with this, so you are warned now to just move on because this is a very rambling post more to get out of my head wha I am thinking then to be a cogent, informative post.
I woke up missing my dad. He wasn’t in the main part of the dream, it was about me being a kid and growing up with the bikers and vets, a lot of mishmash of my childhood, but at the end there was a knock at the door, and I remember as an adult going to the door excited that he was there (somehow I knew it was my dad). Just as I opened the door, I woke up.


He passed away on 2/11/16, and I guess I have some sort of daddy issues when I say there is something that still feels torn when he left.
That being said, this morning after I woke up I felt sad, but not just about him. I found myself worried about about two dozen guys (and gals), and thinking about a group of Vietnam vets and bikers.

Oh friendly warning, Contrary to what you see on tv/movies, they did not like a lot of photos of the group, primarily I assume FBI/police but also I think they may talk tough, they weren’t fond of who they ended up being, they didn’t see themselves like I saw them. They did take a lot of photos me me though, so you get stuck with those.
Then I realized the biggest part of the sadness is that when I pass on, in probably 20ish years, everything they shared with me will pass on from their world.
I grew up surrounded by hardened Vietnam vet bikers (1% Outlaw MC). I lived day to day as a child through all of their problems. Taking care of them when they were low, and being taken care of by them when they weren’t.

Nowadays I see the same groups keep their kids out and don’t seem as close. I’m sure some groups are still that close, and maybe the groups I was with were the ones that were unique.
It is why watching things like Sons of Anarchy annoy the living shit out of me.
The show feels close to what I grew up with, but if it is based on true things now, it is obviously built on current-day advisors, and it results in a weird separation I didn’t see as a kid (and my friends that were kids went through the same thing).
Growing up, the kids were part of the club. Even the meetings would have kids coming in and out, asking for things and during the most tense standoffs, several times one of the kids coming in would defuse it. It was a set point that all of members seemed to have agreed upon. The children were a centering point, maybe they shouldn’t have been, but I suspect it was closer to what old traveling bands were like then what you see in the movies.
I notice now, at least according to media, that kids are kept away, not allowed to know what the club does with a fear the kids might turn them in or somehow don’t know. Trust me, kids know what their families are doing in criminal or outlaw organizations. I absolutely hate the trope in movies that the family has no clue, they all know, and it is normalized.
Somehow watching them it feels like they (the bikers, other militant groups) have lost some of the humanity. That’s not quite the right word, but it comes close to what I’m trying to share.

I wondered why it was so different back then (70s and 80s), and then I realized: watching Westerns about the last group of hardened gunslingers always had a kid that traveled with them, did things for them, and loved them (think Guns of the Magnificent Seven or others like it). All the cowboys expecting to die, but sharing their time with a kid. That’s how they grew up (the vets, I mean). It was part of the media, the culture, etc. It was just the last real bit of humanity they could share. That is probably one of the reasons the vets and everyone around us thought it was a normal thing.
I realize most would say they shouldn’t be including children in their lives, and maybe that is the healthier way for the kids. But I think it also contributes to the loss of that connection those groups have.
It absolutely did damage to me as a kid. I still have baggage I carry because the vets had no one else to confess things to, to be sober with, and because I was there to take care of them when their broken bits wouldn’t work right.
Now that being said, I wouldn’t recommend confessing how many you killed or how you did it, is good for the child (I still can remember counts and stories but starting to forget which story went with which vet), probably best to just share the overall regret instead. That being said, I don’t regret being there and giving them a small piece of peace at least momentarily.
Of course decades pass, and my life moved on, but sometimes I wake up worried that the vets were alone after I grew up and things changed, and no one was there to take care of them.
I also realize that for the child it probably isn’t the healthiest. I do have additional CPTSD because of being there to care for them. I have a ton of baggage that I will carry with me to the end of my days. Yes I know I have been parentified, and it isn’t good for the kids, but part of me wouldn’t change it either.
The result is, I feel sometimes like I have the same, or close enough to call it the same, baggage and PTSD that a Vietnam vet had without having fought a war. Of course all the other stuff that happened as I became an adult with the club only adds to it.
People have told me it is purely because the vets I grew up with included me in their lives, but I don’t think so. Someone who is broken by what they do brings that baggage no matter what. The family still suffers, the alcoholism is still there, the violence and police issues occur.
I could be wrong, but overall I think the families and groups that stayed fully in each other’s lives and didn’t try to carve away the bad parts ended up a little better. All the children of these families are fucked, but I think there is more possible support when a community of broken people help raise each other (there are exceptions and abuse, not saying there isn’t).
Even so, I don’t regret any of that. Even when I wake up sad with some of the memories, I also remember the love they had for me. I never felt safer than when I was with them, taking care of them. Not once did I ever feel fear about them, even when they had flashbacks and violence.
I guess mostly I am sad that people get so broken, and how unfair it is that it happened to them. And whatever the state of god or not, either way it is so unfair people have to go through that. Then all those experiences get lost, even after having gone through so much.


Or… maybe I woke up with anxiety due to the surgery I am getting today. Either way, this is good therapy, and I do feel better rambling.



