For all those “Uncle Jack’s”

16 minutes. 51 seconds.  A lot of people sitting in front of computers today will kind of go “Awwww, almost 17 minutes; I don’t have time for 17 minutes of old man time.”

16 minutes and 51 seconds watching an old B-17 navigator remember. And if 16 minutes and 51 seconds is a long time in techno-today with things waiting to be checked with a finger click, then certainly the early 1940’s were a really long time ago, right?

Well, I have a link to a short film – 16 minutes and 51 seconds – made by Sleeping Dog Productions for The Disabled American Veterans. So many men fought in WWII – almost all of us have a link to one of those now old men . . . or to maybe some man who didn’t come home to get old.

Gary Sinise’s Uncle Jack was one of them and because of the former’s connection with the DAV, he was able to give his uncle a chance to share his thoughts and memories and blend them with the present in a ride in a restored B-17.

It is 16 minutes and 51 seconds . . . I suppose that could seem like a long time when you’re sitting in a bomber crippled over Germany that is losing gas and trying to make it back to England on a couple of engines. I wonder how many segments of 16 minutes and 51 seconds there were in that trip? How many in all the other missions he flew?

We all need to take that quarter of an hour – for all the fliers, soldiers and sailors from a long time ago and . . . and all the time since and to come.

Here’s the LINK.