Role as Medic a bit Different

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Description

Dealing with life and death situations, Mr. Williams tells of the bond amongst comrades and how it differs because of the type of connection he has within the unit.

Transcription

As medics we’re a little bit different like in the army and stuff like that. Our role is different dealing with life and death every day and how we deal with it compared to what they are doing. Some of the bases I was too were with smaller units, we got to know each other’s families, we were very close, well-knit bases, we partied together and lived together kind of thing. It was really good that we all knew each other, it was good that way. It was hard on deployments because in most cases, you’re from another unit as a medic going in there whether it be when I was with, in Bosnia or Kosovo, so you’re a small group of six or seven people, you try to get along with these people but they all have other jobs they don’t know you, they just met you two months before you go overseas and they know that when they go back to Canada they won’t have anything to do with you again. You see you get to know a few of them, you don’t get to know a lot of them very well so it’s hard being dropped in and said, okay know all these people and get along and all of a sudden you didn’t get the real connection with them all the time and stuff like that. You do it with a few but not as many as you would like so it makes the tours a little harder because unless you like the other five or six medics you’re with it can make for a long six months.

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