-Source-Politico- For the better part of a decade Christopher Croghan was at war. He deployed to Iraq for the first time in 2007 at the height of the conflict. Returning home he found it no more peaceful than the desert. Like many in his generation of post-9/11 veterans Croghan found it almost impossible to speak candidly about what he had lived throughparticularly with those closest to him. When faced with the choice between returning to the battlefield and processing at home the trauma he brought back he repeatedly volunteered for redeployment even as a soldier for hire after leaving the Marines. The only stuff my family knew about the war and me is that every once in a while we would have a celebration and I would get way too drunk" Croghan said. And Id say Well youve never shot at a fucking kid so shut the fuck up." Croghans drinking led to a DUI. Both the judge and his therapist at the VA encouraged him to pursue writing his personal outlet of choice. One day however a slightly adjacent program crossed the desk of Croghans therapistthe Armed Services Arts Partnership a nonprofit that teaches creative- and performing-arts classes for veterans and military families. ASAPs mission is to forge a new path for veterans to reintegrate into civilian life and for our communities to welcome them home." Which is how on a warm evening in May Croghan came to be standing on a stage at the Drafthouse Comedy Theater on Washington D.C.s K Street just a few blocks north of the White House preparing to deliver a monologue that he had spent the previous six weeks perfecting in a storytelling class with nine other men and women. Burly and tattooed Croghan 32 looks like he should be standing guard as The Rock frantically defuses a bomb in a Michael Bay film. But his story bore little resemblance to the depictions of war that have glutted popular culture in the generation since 9/11. He described the smells of copper and sulfur; nights spent sleeping in boots in anticipation of an ambush; a friend lying in a shallow pool of blood a reassuring sign he might still be alive. And he spoke too of the light-bulb moment in his life when he realized the extent to which his combat experience had alienated him from his family specifically a younger brother who had idolized Croghan.
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