Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
UGL OZ
UGFREAK
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsUGL OZUGFREAK

Blat Blat Blat!!!

Thank god I live Australia is all I have to say.. having to pull a gun 4 times in two yrs wow I have lived in what has been considered a dangerous suburb and no guns get pulled ever noone even has guns.. not saying ny country is better then your just yours sounds pretty hectic.

Sent from my GT-I9300T using EliteFitness

Look at me I live in Australia who the fuck do you think you are
 
No, he said he had to draw his gun four times in the last two years, I was asking if he had to fire it? And there was no hidden agenda or implication there, I'm genuinely interested in learning.

Ah I didnt catch that, ok. I would imagine people whove had to shoot people dont like talking about it, kinda like combat vets who had to shoot people.
 
Ah I didnt catch that, ok. I would imagine people whove had to shoot people dont like talking about it, kinda like combat vets who had to shoot people.

I've done it in both situations and lose no sleep.

In combat, it was a job. Do or die. Can't think too deeply into it or you'll just end up confused.

In the other situation, it was an attempted car jacking/robbery. I was the only carrier in a Ford Excursion in Houston. Six women, my grandmother, two aunts, my sister, mother, and girlfriend. My Brother in Law was inside a towing business trying to get his vehicle back when some wanna be thug approached the back passenger door and smashed the window and held a gun in my grandmother's face.

I told him 4 times to walk away and he rounded to the driver door and started to smash the window, so I opened the door and he put the gun in my face and said to give him the keys. I pulled the keys out of my pocket and held them out, and the idiot pulled his aim off into the ground and reached out to grab them. I use a reverse grip inside holster, so I drew and put him down before he even knew I had a gun. He didn't die, but I wouldn't feel any different if he had, I've killed people before. Sometimes you do what you have to do, including using lethal force.

Oh, and fuck Australia.
 
Lololololol

far from enjoyment rob

But the phaggots who shell up about it and break out in cold sweats are either lying about it or seeking attention. It is what it is
 
Lololololol

far from enjoyment rob

But the phaggots who shell up about it and break out in cold sweats are either lying about it or seeking attention. It is what it is

I know bro. You talk about it so nonchalantly though. A good friend of mine was home over the summer and didn't like to talk about it much. He was fresh from deployment though and still skittish. You deal with any of that?
 
I know bro. You talk about it so nonchalantly though. A good friend of mine was home over the summer and didn't like to talk about it much. He was fresh from deployment though and still skittish. You deal with any of that?

Fuck yes. My whole first year home was bullshit. Two 13 month deployments in 3 years, both to helmund province (a complete shithole) will make anyone a little shaky.

didn't like being touched while asleep, a few bad dreams here and there, that kind of shit.

Talking about it was a little tough after my first deployment. I didn't really know how to deal with it and not look like a complete heartless asshole, or a huge pussy, or have people think I was either lying or bragging. After my second I was pretty much used to it to the point it became a job and I didn't give a fuck anymore. Turning back into a civilian is the hardest part, that transition is so fucked I can't even describe it. Anger/ depression/ frustration/ sadness/ all kinds of fucked up feelings all at once.

It's been 2 years in december and now I can talk about it openly if someone asks and really don't give a fuck what people think about it
 
Fuck yes. My whole first year home was bullshit. Two 13 month deployments in 3 years, both to helmund province (a complete shithole) will make anyone a little shaky.

didn't like being touched while asleep, a few bad dreams here and there, that kind of shit.

Talking about it was a little tough after my first deployment. I didn't really know how to deal with it and not look like a complete heartless asshole, or a huge pussy, or have people think I was either lying or bragging. After my second I was pretty much used to it to the point it became a job and I didn't give a fuck anymore. Turning back into a civilian is the hardest part, that transition is so fucked I can't even describe it. Anger/ depression/ frustration/ sadness/ all kinds of fucked up feelings all at once.

It's been 2 years in december and now I can talk about it openly if someone asks and really don't give a fuck what people think about it

Yeah, that sounds exactly like what my buddy dealt with. Appreciate the service bro
 
Yeah, that sounds exactly like what my buddy dealt with. Appreciate the service bro

Thanks Robert, I miss it a lot sometimes. But I got a great job and a little family starting so I guess on to the next phase of life.
I still love to travel, and met some good buddies from the Augusta area in the Corps who I still visit occasionally. How far from there are you?
 
hm. my dad lived it every day for 4 years and he never liked to talk about it and had nightmares for the next 65 years until he died.

Seems like the guys that did it in WWII didn't like to talk about what they had to do at all. Guess people are different now.
 
Top Bottom