Lewis, I Hardly Knew Ye

[June 1, 2024]  I recently came across an article written by Dick Conoboy and I was taken by his respect for a good friend.  The article, titled “Lewis, I Hardly Knew Ye,” is worth reading in its entirety.  His friend is Lewis B. Puller, Jr. and if that name is familiar, it should be.  Lewis was a Vietnam Veteran who had been severely wounded.  Here is Dick’s article.

Late in the evening of May 11, 1994, I awoke in my hospital room after having had surgery that afternoon. While in an anesthetically induced haze, I moved through the TV channels and found the face of my friend, Lew Puller, on the screen; that is, Lewis B. Puller, Jr., the son of the legendary Marine Lieutenant General Lewis “Chesty” Puller. I heard words such as “Pulitzer Prize winning author,” “shot himself,” and “died,” however, my friend’s death did not register with me until the next morning.

  • Where are your legs that used to run, hurroo, hurroo
  • Where are your legs that used to run, hurroo, hurroo
  • Where are your legs that used to run
  • When you went for to carry a gun
  • To be sure your dancing days are done
  • Oh Johnny, I hardly knew ye.

Traditional Irish

Lew Puller, who had lost both legs and most of his two hands in Vietnam, had been one of my best friends since 1984, when I first met him at the Pentagon. Now, he has been dead for 24 years and already his celebrity has faded away, as his Pulitzer Prize winning autobiography has faded from the bookstores. Yet every time I see someone in a wheelchair, I remember him. Often still, having heard an interesting story, I forget he is gone and think, “That is something I ought to talk to Lew about.”

Many of his friends, including me, have asked themselves the reason for which he took his own life at a time when outward appearances suggested such success. I thought I knew the man, but I had no inkling he was so despondent. We had spoken a lot over the years about his family, his wife, his children and the problems he experienced. No problem we discussed seemed to me to be so insurmountable as to lead him to suicide. Early in our friendship, I talked to him daily as he struggled to put on paper that which would become his autobiography. The book did not come to him easily. At most, he wrote only a paragraph each day. Often, he wrote nothing for weeks. Through all this, he never once showed me what he had written. As I look back, I see that, even with those who knew him best, he did not divulge the extent of his internal suffering. This video, recorded about three years before his suicide is ironically telling in retrospect.

I had small windows into his life outside the Pentagon where we both worked. I knew his wife, Toddy, and his two children, Lew and Maggie…and the basset hound, Josephine. My wife and I had been to their Northern Virginia home on several occasions. Lew’s mother, Virginia, was in the mold of a southern lady who spoke well, articulating each word distinctly. When I spoke to her at several of the large, annual Puller family gatherings, she always reminded me that her husband, Chesty Puller, was a “national figure.” My own mother loved Lew’s autobiography and bought extra copies to give to her friends. When Lew visited Cleveland on a book tour, my mother took the bus to downtown where she greeted him as he exited the car in front of the bookstore where he was to speak. She was delighted when Lew instantly recognized her name and told her I was one of his best friends.

I miss his sense of humor. He was always ready with a good joke, knowing just how to tell it. A lot of his jokes came from Bob Kerrey, who, as then-governor of Nebraska and a friend of Lew’s since their hospitalization together, would dine with Lew when he came to Washington, D.C.. I always looked forward to the following day when Lew would repeat a few stories at our daily breakfast meeting. From Lew I also learned the ups and downs in the lives of the handicapped: the patronizing attitude of store clerks, airline personnel and the public. He used to say, “I’m tired of having people stare at my crotch,” referring to the place at which his legs then ended. He did speak about pain in the stumps of his legs but never told me about the pain medication he was using…and abusing. One of the last times I saw him was at the Bethesda Naval Medical Center where he was recovering from a broken pelvis as the result of a fall from his wheelchair while in rehabilitation for his addiction. He was in terrible pain but was unable to get relief for fear of relapsing into dependence on pain medication and alcohol.

The day he killed himself, I was to have called him to invite him to a Sunday brunch, however, with my own hospitalization for surgery planned for that afternoon, I put off the call. In retrospect, I cannot help but wonder whether speaking with him might have prevented him from taking his life. I also ask myself whether or not I had been enough of a friend in the months prior to his death. My calls to him during that period were short, as he usually claimed that it was not a good time to talk. I took him at his word and gave him the space he said he needed – in hindsight, was I only giving him enough latitude to end his life? Some time after Lew’s death I had an exchange of emails with Kerrey, by then the president of the New School in New York City, in which I told him that I was not aware of Lew’s extreme distress.

I remember clearly the time, just a day or so after he won the Pulitzer Prize, that he came to the Pentagon cafeteria and told me about the reporters camped on the lawn of his home as he returned from work. Not having heard the news or known anyone who had won a Pulitzer, I asked him what winning the prize meant. “Do you get some money?” I asked. He replied, “Not sure. But when you die they begin your obituary by saying, ‘Pulitzer Prize winning author…’” We laughed.

Lewis, I hardly knew ye.

—————

Reprinted by Permission from Dick Conoboy, 30 May 2024

Dick ConoboyDick Conoboy is a recovering civilian federal worker and military officer who was offered and accepted an all-expense paid, one year trip to Vietnam in 1968. He is a former Army Foreign Area Specialist for Western Europe and Southeast Asia, counter-terrorism intelligence analyst and information/security manager at the Defense Department. Dick also worked as a resource manager at various government offices to include then VP Al Gore’s National Partnership for Re-inventing Government, now recognized as having been a shamefully neo-liberal “think tank”. He speaks fluent French and a passable English learned through many years of elementary school experience diagramming sentences. Dick owes his writing ability to consuming large amounts of chemical laden and fried fresh water pike and perch fished from Lake Erie in the 40s and 50s near his native Cleveland whose Cuyahoga River regularly catches on fire.

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Please read my books:

  1. “55 Rules for a Good Life,” on Amazon (link here).
  2. “Our Longest Year in Iraq,” on Amazon (link here).
Author: Douglas R. Satterfield

Hello. I provide one article every day. My writings are influenced by great thinkers such as Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Jung, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Jean Piaget, Erich Neumann, and Jordan Peterson, whose insight and brilliance have gotten millions worldwide to think about improving ourselves. Thank you for reading my blog.

19 thoughts on “Lewis, I Hardly Knew Ye

    1. KRause

      Read the bio for Dick Conoboy, I love it. Vietnam Veterans, R E S P E C T…….

      Reply
    1. Douglas R. Satterfield Post author

      Dick, I do appreciate the permission to reprint your article. Many of those who are regular readers of my blog here are Veterans or families of Veterans and they know of which you write.

      Reply
      1. Eddie Gilliam

        Gen Douglas my friend thank you reaching out to Dick for the article

        Reply
    2. Eddie Gilliam

      Mr Richard Conoboy
      Thanks for your service. I am retired E-7 in the Air Force. I enjoy your article and the video on your best friend Lewis Puller. Awesome video. I watched the video on Lewis father Casey the most decoration Marine. He was a Awesome Hero’s that served his men and country well. GEN Patton the cuz of the Puller family set the bar high.
      I shared the videos with several veterans friends

      Reply
  1. James Earl Samson

    I do think that Dick Conoboy grew up around the same time I did. Those who came of age in the 1960s have a different view on the world than the pantywaisted, lazy, smartphone addicted, unhappy youth of today.

    Reply
  2. Harold M. Smith II

    Mr. Conoboy, thank you for sharing your thoughts about Mr. Lewis and the terrible things that happened because of his horrible injuries in Vietnam. Mr. Lewis is an example of what we lose when there are wars and regardless of one’s thoughts about the war in Vietnam, there are many lessons to be learned. And I do think that our military learned and adopted those lessons. I enjoyed reading this story and I want to thank also Gen. Satterfield for getting permission to reprint it. Thanks to all.

    Reply
    1. Eddie Gilliam

      Harold Smith
      Excellent comments. It’s so critical we keep taps on put veterans mentally and physically.

      Reply
    1. Pastor John 🙏

      Thank you Ayn. This is one of the side of the calling that I have. And I see that the author is just as impacted as any family member, maybe more so because he was a friend and companion of Lewis Puller. Just for everyone who would like a little more information on Fist Lieutenant Lewis, USMC, you can read about it on the Arlington Cemetery website here: https://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/puller.htm They do a good job of telling the story. “He suffered terrible wounds that never really healed.” We are all sad for the loss but we should also celebrate in our own way that there are many who knew him and were rewarded for that friendship.

      Reply
    2. Tom Bushmaster

      Ayn Jalut, and too you as well, God Bless. ⛪✝️

      Reply
  3. Emma Archambeau

    “Lewis, I hardly knew ye.” – Dick Conoboy. Thank you!

    Reply
  4. Willie Strumburger

    We are losing too many of our Veterans thru suicide. This is another tragic story. We lose 22 of our Vets a day.

    Reply
  5. Liz at Home

    To Dick Conoboy, sir, thank you for this chance to share your story about Lewis Puller, Jr. While I never served in the military or obviously in any war, I hope, one day to understand better. However, I am a big big supporter of our veterans and their families too, I say families because they are the biggest support network for those returning from war. Good luck sir and God Bless.

    Reply
    1. Kevin Cratz

      Well put Liz. I too read this story and was saddened because it tells us about the tragic story of Lewis and the impact of suicide and the frustration and pain drugs and their effects on Lewis. Dick Conoboy does a good job of it. And now we are losing so many of these men from the battlefield and as well, their stories are being lost too.

      Reply

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