I only served one tour in Vietnam, late in the war. However, I came home twice on short leaves before my final homecoming. In the course of those 3 homecomings, I was spit on, called a baby killer and called a mercenary. By the final homecoming it was becoming expected. When I came in and finished processing at Ft. Lewis, I took a plane to Spokane WA where I had lived once to pick up some things I had left there in storage. While there, I went do dinner at a restaurant where I had worked. I was in uniform. While I was eating, the other patrons ignored me, obviously avoiding looking my way, with the exception of one elderly lady. She looked like a retired librarian of something, very stern look on her face. She stared (at the time I would have said 'glared') at me the entire time she was eating. When she finished eating, she paid her bill and then approached me very deliberately. I thought to myself "Oh no, I REALLY don't need this, not here, not now!" When she reached my table, she said, in a loud, gruff voice "Young man, did you just return from Vietnam?" I resignedly said "Yes ma'am." Then she stuck out her hand and said "Well I just want to shake your hand and tell you thank you." I was gobsmacked, After shaking my hand, she turned and left the restaurant. That was my mixed welcome, but that last act meant the world to me.
Clifton B. SommerSpencer, WV