Author Topic: NSR  (Read 1627 times)

Neil955i

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NSR
« on: January 13, 2026, 04:44:30 PM »
This truly moving story is lifted from X where I read it today:

When his 25-year-old son was killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq, this 60-year-old surgeon made a decision that would change everything.
Dr. Bill Krissoff was a successful orthopedic surgeon in Reno, Nevada, living the life he'd worked decades to build. But on December 6, 2006, his world shattered. His son, 1st Lieutenant Nathan Krissoff, a Marine officer serving in Anbar Province, was killed when an IED exploded during combat operations.
Most fathers would have buried their son and lived with that unbearable grief forever. Bill Krissoff decided to do something else.
He closed his medical practice, walked into a Navy recruiter's office, and said he wanted to enlist. He was 60 years old—far beyond the maximum enlistment age. The military said no.
Bill didn't give up.
He wrote letters. He made calls. His story eventually reached President George W. Bush, who was so moved that he personally approved a special age waiver. Dr. Krissoff would become Lieutenant Commander Krissoff—a Navy trauma surgeon deployed to the very war zones where his son had fought and died.
"I wanted a sense of completing my son Nathan's unfinished task," he said.



And he did. Lt. Cmdr. Krissoff served at Camp Taqaddum in Iraq—the same province where Nathan died—performing life-saving surgeries on wounded Marines and soldiers. He later deployed to Afghanistan, treating combat casualties under fire, doing at age 60+ what most people couldn't do at 30.
He operated in the same dust, heard the same explosions, treated Marines who could have been Nathan's brothers in arms. Every soldier he saved was, in some way, his son coming home alive.
Bill Krissoff couldn't save Nathan. But he saved dozens of other sons and daughters, giving other families the ending his family never got.
That's not just military service. That's a father's love turned into a mission.
Nathan Krissoff was 25 when he died serving his country. His father was 60 when he enlisted to continue that service. Both men wore the uniform. Both men sacrificed. Both men are heroes.
Regards & ride safe,
Neil

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Stig / Major Tom

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Re: NSR
« Reply #1 on: January 14, 2026, 01:24:10 PM »
Inspiring, Neil.

There were a number of nights during which I worked alongside some young physicians in Vietnam, and although they often lacked little enthusiasm for the Army, or in the latter years - for the purpose of the war - they would stand there in a penny smelling puddle, bent over for hours while piecing together other youngsters....sometimes to no good result.

One of my favorites involved Major Parmeter, mid-30's something, ophthalmologist who was drafted out of his lucrative practice in Chicago. Poor guy could barely find his 'cover' (hat) on any given day - and paid for it under the grumpy head nurse. But he was one hell of an eye surgeon - humorous as a soldier, but not for lack of trying. One week he's in Chicago - a couple of weeks later he's in the Army and in Vietnam! Like a lot of doctors over there - he purchased a Nikon camera to record his work. Injuries not seen in any textbook....learning as he went.

These doctors were raunchy hell-raisers - but because the 71st was an evacuation hospital - any time the kid manning the radio announced that casualties were incoming, and the number of Hueys bringing them - everyone became very professional and focused.....and stayed that way for however long it took.

I bet that 60 yr old doctor felt very good about what he was doing.
Stig



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Iahawk

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Re: NSR
« Reply #2 on: January 14, 2026, 02:15:09 PM »
great stories from both Neil and Tom!
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randyo

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Re: NSR
« Reply #3 on: January 14, 2026, 03:14:23 PM »
My PCP just retired from Naval Reserve, rank of Captain, during covid he was deployed to a hospital ship docked in NYC, prior to that he was deployed in Afghanistan, not sure of his deployments before I was his patient (about 8 years now)
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Stig / Major Tom

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Re: NSR
« Reply #4 on: January 16, 2026, 01:35:51 AM »
My father was 30 yrs AirForce - so I have only respect for the military.
I was a conscientious objector 'combat' medic in Vietnam. "Combat" in that I served 9 of my 12 mos tour with a combat unit, on the ground and received a combat medic's badge for being in firefights. One could drop his C.O status at any point during his tour and pick up a weapon, though I only knew one C.O. who did.
A young draft age man had a few options during the war - one of which was to train as a medic and spend a year, unarmed but not unprotected, giving medical care to our generation. (Once you showed your fellows that you would care for them - they would care for you.)

We weren't supporting anything...... but our high school classmates. Frankly, when your belly down in a paddy - you can't see much further than your buddy anyway.
Stig
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Neil955i

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Re: NSR
« Reply #5 on: January 16, 2026, 07:46:57 PM »
Stig, you have my utmost respect for what you went through. I can’t even begin to imagine it.
Regards & ride safe,
Neil

Current garage:  Kymco DTX360 & Triumph Street Triple 675R
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Stig / Major Tom

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Re: NSR
« Reply #6 on: January 19, 2026, 02:25:27 PM »
Stig, you have my utmost respect for what you went through. I can’t even begin to imagine it.

Half of the C.O. (Medics) in Vietnam were 7th Day Adventists....and I know for a fact that some others, ill-advised fellows, in my 6 wks basic training class, thought that being a C.O. would excuse them from Vietnam!

Now Neil, consider the mind of a teenager who'd spent a footloose Summer of Love in Calif.  It didn't change me - but cemented some ideals in me.
So, to be a medic in time of conflict involving my generation....was a "noble undertaking - by an altruistic and profound young man."
 :) ;)
Once again . like leaving home when I turned 18 - "It's all hot air, unless you do something."

We all puffed up when they finally called us "Doc"! (Doc - 10 weeks of medical training! - though I managed 22)

I went in, a hippie kid wearing a peace symbol* under my uniform, but I was never not quietly proud of myself for showing up to the dance - tending to those amazing youngsters.

Stig

*I saw a great many peace signs inked on helmet covers over there - but those same guys would fight for each other as hard as any WWII soldier.
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randyo

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Re: NSR
« Reply #7 on: January 19, 2026, 02:39:11 PM »
my older brother was CO, he volunteered at a local teen rehabilitation center, I was 2S till '72, then when the lotto started, I was a high number
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Neil955i

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Re: NSR
« Reply #8 on: January 19, 2026, 05:01:53 PM »
Just a thought Stig, but was your unique sense of humour in place at age 19 or is it a product (at least in part) of the fun & games in Asia?
Regards & ride safe,
Neil

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Stig / Major Tom

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Re: NSR
« Reply #9 on: January 20, 2026, 01:37:45 PM »
Just a thought Stig, but was your unique sense of humour in place at age 19 or is it a product (at least in part) of the fun & games in Asia?
'In place', sadly, yes.
In my senior year at Paris American High School, I was voted the "wittiest"
Wonderful.
Later, my dad, the Colonel*, looking through my yearbook - called to my mother, "Look, honey - our boy has been voted the class clown!"
That was a tense dinner.

Stig

*I'm pretty sure that my becoming a conscientious objector prevented my father from any future promotions. He never mentioned it - but I overheard my mother one time. My brother was cool with it, served honorably with missiles in Germany - my younger brother repaired tanks in Colorado and refuses to be in the same building with me - which makes funerals awkward. After mom, dad and brother passing - there's no reason to ever be in the same state again.
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Neil955i

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Re: NSR
« Reply #10 on: January 20, 2026, 02:50:35 PM »

*I'm pretty sure that my becoming a conscientious objector prevented my father from any future promotions. He never mentioned it - but I overheard my mother one time. My brother was cool with it, served honorably with missiles in Germany - my younger brother repaired tanks in Colorado and refuses to be in the same building with me - which makes funerals awkward. After mom, dad and brother passing - there's no reason to ever be in the same state again.

Aww families eh?  I have (had?) two half brothers, one I never met!  He was 10 years older and always knew about me but never got in touch, the other, my elder by 19 years, only responded if I initiated it so I eventually gave up and in 24 years since have never heard a peep.  I'm guessing they're both long gone now?

Their loss; as are you for yours!

You keep that sense of humour Stig.  We love you for it.
Regards & ride safe,
Neil

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Iahawk

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Re: NSR
« Reply #11 on: January 21, 2026, 02:41:01 PM »
You keep that sense of humour Stig.  We love you for it.
  :D
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Stig / Major Tom

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Re: NSR
« Reply #12 on: January 23, 2026, 08:22:25 PM »
Did our nurses look like this?*



If they did - Mike and I would have taken turns shooting each other!
Nice clean thru & thrus!

Stig

*dumb post - because 95% of those gals were skilled & compassionate sweethearts.
Lest I forget:  I had a cute 19 yr old Calif blonde wife waiting back in Massachusetts!
« Last Edit: January 23, 2026, 08:25:59 PM by Stig / Major Tom »
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