Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
Steve Poltz
I'm waking up and staring out; it's kinda hard to see
I'm thinking back to growing up in Tupelo, Mississippi
I first left home when I was twenty and still really green
Sent me off to Camp Pendleton to become a Marine
I have a wife and child, who just turned five, this week
I miss him, so I can't believe that he can really speak
I wrote my wife once every week so she could hear the news
She wrote me back once every day to clear away the blues
They trained me well, I made the cut; they couldn't make me cry
I shined my boots and cleaned my gun and shouted, "Simplify!"
I made some friends and shared some fun, they caught a little flack
With a swagger and a prayer we flew into Iraq
With a swagger and a prayer we flew into Iraq
Sometimes at night I wonder what I'm doing in this place
It's hard to sleep; there's too much noise, I'm afraid I'll fall from grace
My CO says, "Don't worry, son. Just keep up the pace
I'm glad you're in my platoon; you've got a street fighters' face
I'm glad you're with me, son; you've got a street fighters' face"
The man said, "Mission Accomplished" on TV; we'd won the war
We celebrated a new life; we opened a new door
We danced a bit, and drank some beers, and then we drank some more
For once I finally fell asleep; I passed out on the floor
For weeks we cruised the streets; they said that we were not done
The sun's so hot, my clothes are wet; we're always on the run
We cruise Felusia in our jeep; just me and my three friends
A roadside bomb blew us to hell and made the metal bend
I woke up in Bethesda on a hospital bed
They finally broke the news to me that all my friends are dead
My legs are gone and I can't feel a thing on my face
Man, I don't even look like me; a monster took my place
Sometimes at night I wonder what I'm doing in this place
It's hard to sleep; there's too much noise, I think I fell from grace
My CO says, "Don't worry, son. Just keep up the pace
I'm glad you're in my platoon; you've got a street fighters' face
Yeah, you served your country well with your street fighters' face"
Well, my wife don't come around much; she found a new man
And I don't really blame her; I don't feel I'm worth a damn
And I stay in most nights with a bottle to wind down
Sometimes I try to smile, but mostly I just frown
My son's half grown up now; he visits me sometimes
We share some stories and some drinks; I usually end up crying
He pushes me in my wheelchair outside for a walk
When people see my face they always turn away in shock
I wonder what we fought for and if it was a lie
I pray to God for my dead friends; I still say, "Simplify!"
I wish that I could just go back, or somehow hit a race
It's just me all alone with my street fighters' face
Sometimes at night I wonder what I'm doing in this place
It's hard to sleep; there's too much noise, I think I fell from grace
My CO says, "Don't worry, son. Just keep up the pace
I'm glad you're in my platoon; you've got a street fighters' face
Yeah, you served your country well with your street fighters' face"
I'm waking up and staring out; it's kinda hard to see
I'm thinking back to growing up in Tupelo, Mississippi