EP 49: What They Didn't Tell Me About Being a Marine Door Gunner
Larry Winters served as a Marine helicopter mechanic and door gunner in Vietnam, stationed at Phu Bai and Marble Mountain outside Da Nang in 1969. He grew up in a house with no electricity or running water in upstate New York, ran away from an abusive father at 16, and joined the Marines at 19 trying to "become a man." What he found in boot camp and Vietnam set him on a 56-year journey to understand what war actually does to the people who fight it. In this conversation, Larry talks about the brutal turning points of boot camp at Parris Island, his attempted AWOL into Mexico, the day he refused an order to fire on Vietnamese fishermen, and the concept that's defined his life's work as a therapist: moral injury. His take on why veterans are dying by suicide will challenge everything you've been told about PTSD. Larry is the author of "The Making and Unmaking of a Marine" and is currently finishing his second book. ⚠️ Content warning: This episode contains discussion of war, combat, violence against civilians, suicide, and moral injury. If you or a veteran you know is in crisis, call the Veterans Crisis Line at 988 and press 1, or text 838255. CHAPTERS 00:30 Growing up in Newpaltz, NY 02:30 Signing up for the Marines at 19 05:00 Parris Island — the yellow footprints 09:30 Boot camp turning points: the hot sauce and the rifle bolt 13:30 Coming home, ITR training, and shoe polish in the barracks 22:30 Metalsmith school and shipping out to Vietnam 29:30 Landing at Phu Bai — 126 degrees and Marston matting 32:30 Tet, the move to Marble Mountain, and a sergeant's chilling words 35:30 Locals on the base, peace symbols under shirts 37:00 Becoming a door gunner — and getting in trouble first 39:30 Three months on perimeter guard, the starlight scope 42:30 The sandpan incident: "I'm not firing this" 47:30 Flying missions, napalm, and the bulldozer that wouldn't lift 52:00 The Freedom Bird home and protesters in San Diego 58:30 College, poetry, and the long road to becoming a therapist 1:10:00 Moral injury vs. PTSD — what's really killing veterans 1:16:00 Presence as the best treatment 1:20:00 Creativity, spontaneity, and finding his voice 1:24:00 Final Reflections 📕 Larry's first book "The Making and Unmaking of a Marine" — https://www.amazon.com/Making-Making-... 📕 Larry's upcoming book: https://www.koehlerbooks.com/book/the... Larry's Substack: https://larrywinters.substack.com/ 🎙️ Ask A Vet Podcast — honest conversations with the men and women who served. Subscribe for new episodes: / @curious.humanography Follow on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4UvdMjk... Follow on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... 👉 If you’re a Veteran struggling with VA benefits, click this link to schedule a free consultation: https://ameconsultation.com/ref/AVPP1... Disclosure: This is a referral partnership with American Medical Experts. We may receive compensation if you book through our link. If you or a Veteran you know has a story that should be heard, we'd love to hear from you at [email protected]. 🎖️ Curious Humanography is proud to partner with Utah Honor Flight, helping veterans visit memorials built in their honor. To learn more or support their mission, visit UtahHonorFlight.org and honorflight.org. If this story moved you, please consider liking, commenting, and subscribing — it helps us continue sharing stories that deserve to be heard. #AskAVet #VietnamVeteran #MoralInjury #MarineCorps #VeteranStories #Podcast #Vietnam #USMC

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