Published in Overland Issue 211 Winter 2013 · Uncategorized Vietnam ritual Barry ODonohue Sitting in the primordial light of jungle each day I placed a finger on my forehead, then on my chest where the bullet would strike. Then I would rest the palm of each hand on my knees, soon to be blown away by a Russian mine, and watch the smoke from my Marlborough drift into the tangled vines and rain forest trees as if the world were on fire and the world was a small place. We’d get up then, in single file, me breaking through the wall being the first, being the scout. At night starts struggled through the high canopy pin points against the dark and I would curse the nature of my flesh for it was intact, not torn apart. I slept in a scrape hole on the jungle floor, my grave, knowing that tomorrow I would perform that wretched ritual again, where the bullet would strike, or my limbs blasted against trees. Now I am young but in old flesh. I gave up smoking. What doesn’t kill you . . . The marks on my forehead and chest are stigmata, knees gone to titanium, and all the stars that were then and are now have gone in to their own war, galaxies to the north. Barry ODonohue Barry O'Donohue is a Brisbane-based poet who has been writing for 40 years. More by Barry ODonohue › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 13 April 2026 · Disability The proletarianisation of disability support work: workers’ perspectives on the NDIS Nick Crowley Support workers, rather than creating objects, create a caring relationship. The scrupulous observance of organisational policies and ‘best practice’ codes is not sufficient to create such a relationship. This can only be created when workers take the time to understand their clients and build trusting, authentic, equal relationships with them. 10 April 202610 April 2026 · open letter Open letter: RMIT staff and students oppose disciplinary action against Gemma Seymour over video opposing links to weapons ties RMIT University Staff and Students Freedom of speech and expression is absolutely vital in academic institutions. Students who engage in activism should not be punished for doing so, and discipline procedures are not there to be abused as a tool of intimidation. We call for the disciplinary process against Gemma to cease immediately.