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SGT Robert Pryor
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Good piece. The nurses were tops in my book. After 51 years, I still think almost daily about three of the nurses that took care of me after I got wounded; one at Travis AFB Hospital and two at Letterman General Hospital and the Presidio of San Francisco. The one at Travis was only for three or four days -- until I had recovered enough from the flight over the Pacific to make the short chopper light to the Letterman. I can't remember her name, but she stayed by my side the whole time I was there. She waited on me hand and foot. She even cut my food and fed me. It was something I never imagined would every happen to me. I was in the same ward for a couple of months at Letterman and got to know the nurses real well. I still remember the full names of my two favorite nurses there.
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MAJ Byron Oyler
MAJ Byron Oyler
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It is a two way road and really great opportunity to take care of our country. Had a patient after the Mosul mess hall bombing that thought he saw the bomber praying before he blew himself up. Another was a soldier that spoke to me about killing three men. He was at Landstuhl for an eye injury and I could tell he was the real deal with the somber tone in his voice. Of course I never asked SM if they ever killed, that is forbidden in this line of work. Primarily took care of Afghanis in country and even though I never left the wire, I probably engaged them more than most soldiers, especially the Taliban wounded. An experience I will never forget and I have the same combat patch as my Father, 44th MED Brigade.
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SGT Robert Pryor
SGT Robert Pryor
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MAJ Byron Oyler - That is so cool about your combat patch. And I'm sure many of your patients will carry memories of you to their graves.
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LTC John Griscom
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Great post about what the nurses did.
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CW5 Jack Cardwell
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