Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Where Are His Memories?

Over the Thanksgiving holiday we spent time with Bryan’s brother and his family. His brother reminisced about Bryan learning to drive and recalled that he was driving too fast. His dad, who was in the front seat, warned Bryan to slow down and he wouldn’t so his dad pulled the hand brake to make him stop. His brother asked Bryan if he remembered this story and he didn’t. After another conversation about another childhood memory later in the day Bryan’s mother asked if he remembered. Once again he had no recollection of the events they were talking about.

On the way home from his parents, a buddy on Facebook posted a quote from Bryan. It read, “ditch, ditch, DITCH!- Bryan Gansner”  This young man was driving the Humvee the night Bryan got blown up. I asked Bryan if he remembered the quote. He didn’t so I asked his soldier what happened. He replied,  “We were pulling an all-night OP before a morning raid on a village and we were driving along a canal. I was heading straight for square dip on the right side. He saw it and started saying ditch, ditch, DITCH! I was like what is going on right before I hit it and broke the rim. First time I changed a Humvee tire in body armor. It makes me laugh every time I think about it.” I asked Bryan if he remembered and he said, “It sounds vaguely familiar but no, I don’t remember.” We decided not to tell his friend that he didn’t remember as to not hurt his feelings.

I milled over these missing memories for several weeks. I have so many memories from when I was a child, rich with details and he remembers nothing. I wanted to ask if he remembered our wedding. It was a double-edged sword. If he says no, I will be heartbroken. If he says yes, I will be relieved but would want to know exactly what he remembered. Finally, I got up the gumption to ask him. I said “Do you remember anything about our wedding?” His response was, “Yes, I remember two things.” That sinking feeling started to tug at my heartstrings. I said, “Ok, what do you remember?” He said, “I remember you walking down the beach and you looked beautiful and I remember these people kept walking by us while we were trying to get married and it pissed me off.” I responded, “I am glad that you remember what I looked like but honey we did get married on a public beach in Kauai, Hawaii, so they had the right to walk by.” Now that I look back I see some re-integration troubles after his first tour to Iraq.
Part of me feels heartbroken that he barely has any memories and part of me feels like I need to get over it and continue to document new memories so that he can remember them. It doesn’t seem to bother him too much that he can’t remember his childhood, details from his deployments or even all the details of his wedding but I haven’t gotten up the nerve to ask and possibly open a can of worms. I wish those memories hadn’t vanished when that bomb went off.
(This is where Bryan was sitting in the up-armored Humvee. His seat is soaked with blood and the floor was ripped open by the IED.)



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7 comments:

Warren Baldwin said...

Can't imagine how hard the memory loss must be. And the picture of the vehicle ... how were you able to get a copy of that?

Hoping for you guys a great Christmas.

Wife of a Wounded Soldier said...

Hi Warren, his soldier that was driving took it and some others of the vehicle and sent them to us. I have been trying to track down his medical records from the hospital in Balad and pics of right after it happened but no luck so far. Since I couldn't be with him I want to know every detail.

AmyPink said...

It's such a small world . . .
We are currently living at Fort Bragg and Obama came for a visit today. I've always wanted to work with wounded soldiers and their families - I'm a RN and would love to assist with medical care in any way. So I started jumping from FB page to FB page and found your blog. I looked at your links, saw Knox News, and thought "Is there any way she could be living in K'town?"
YES! You are living in the place that we called home for almost 4 years. My husband worked at the 489th and we moved from Farragut in 2010. It's such a great area and we'd love to move back one day. You are so lucky to be living in such a great area.
I only wish we had known you were there. I was involved with the FRG and it would have been a blessing to help you and your family.
Wishing you a very Merry Christmas
Amy

Sara T. said...

I hear you about the memory thing. My husband didn't get hurt like many other men but he was near enough IED's that it may have had an effect. He is good at memorizing things in the moment, but long term is another story. I ask him things about his childhood and some he remembers and others he has no clue. He often confuses timelines as well thinking it happend way before or after it really did. While is memory loss isn't horrible it is really evident in his school work. He went from all A's to being lucky to get a C in college and not for lack of trying. :(

The Mrs. said...

((HUGS)) That really tugs at my heart. I'm glad he remembers a little of your wedding.

I hope you have a very wonderful Christmas. ((HUGS))

CongoWife said...

My husband recalls very little about his childhood. Some memory loss was from the TBI as to be expected and some is repressed from having a rough aqbusive childhood. These guys may get memories back. Especially if there are triggers that urge them to remember. Your husband very well may have some come back and it may take time. They may be few and far between. I know I will remind Bill of things he has done and said before his deployment and even after and he is lost by the lack of details he remembers. The only comfort that I have is the fact that we are now making new memories that we can work on remembering together. I am constantly taking pictures and this helps, but there are certain smells he has come to relate with memories such as the smell of my perfume to remind him of times we have had together and the smell of chocolate chip cookies takes him back to when I visited him at Walter Reed and brought him homemade cookies. I have learned to accept it and now when I am recalling a moment or situation or event....I use as much detail as I can when explaining. It always makes me feel good when he surprises me when he remembers little details that I thought he wouldnt. Which is why we got married on his alive day. I figured this way he could never forget our anniversary. It also helped make his alive day that much more positive. Keep your head up, you have come so far.

Project 365 Vets said...

I hope that you are able to eventually find the information that you seek. You are both incredible people who are fortunate to have one another. I thank you and your husband for his service and the sacrifices your family has and continues to make.

T. Shang
Project 365 Vets
http://365vets.wordpress.com