In this episode of Dearest Suzie, Popi’s June 4, 1965, letter is a short but telling glimpse into a week of steady missions and routine hardships. He’s worn out after long days, reflecting on the slow grind of war and the small comforts of home, a letter from Suzie, an update on car payments, and those custom shirts he finally managed to send out. Tucked in this letter is something that bridges Popi’s world with the larger conflict around him: a request for Suzie to track down a copy of Life magazine from May 28, 1965. Inside, on page 23, is a story about Lieutenant Dale Meyerkord, a man Popi called a friend. Meyerkord was killed in action and Popi wanted the article for his keepsakes. It’s a small but meaningful request, one that reveals the impact of loss, the ways soldiers carried each other’s stories, and how those stories became part of the archive of memory they would bring home.
The second half of this episode takes listeners deeper into Meyerkord’s story, an extraordinary tale of service, sacrifice, and humanity amid the chaos of war. We hear about his fearless leadership, his close partnership with his Vietnamese counterpart, and the quiet moments he shared with those around him. Through the words of the Life magazine article, and through Popi’s own memories, we glimpse the human connections that tie soldiers together. And then we step back, asking the hardest questions: How much can we really know a man through the words he left behind? How much can we really know ourselves? In the end, it’s a meditation on memory, connection, and the search for understanding that never truly ends.
What’s Covered:
- Popi’s June 4 letter: updates on daily life, mail delays, and family logistics
- The request for Life magazine’s May 28, 1965, issue—and what that says about how soldiers carried each other’s stories
- An exploration of Lieutenant Dale Meyerkord’s heroism and humanity in Vietnam
- Reflections on the challenge of truly knowing someone—through letters, stories, and memories
- The realization that sometimes even the most detailed words leave questions we can never fully answer
📷 Featured Photo: A Vietnamese civilian boat rests on the bank of a river, complete with an interior where passengers once sat—perhaps a ferry or a family’s floating home. It’s the kind of vessel Meyerkord would have seen on his missions through the Delta, a reminder of the everyday lives that intersected with the war.
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