I sing the red-capped Master Sergeant,
chief instructor of the Rangers on Gamaksan,
whose voice once rolled through the mountains
like thunder among the pines,
whose boots struck the ridges
and taught young men
how to climb fear,
how to cross the impossible,
how to return.
I sing him now,
though he rests beneath quiet grass
in the National Cemetery,
his campaigns folded into history,
his medals sleeping in the earth.
Yet no life ends.
The mountain remembers him.
The wind remembers him.
The young soldiers he hardened
carry his shadow still.
Long ago,
he looked upon me
and saw only a slender private,
a young man following love
up the steep trail—
following the bright-eyed woman
who would become my wife,
his cherished sister-in-law.
I was uncertain then,
a recruit of both the army and the heart.
And the years marched on.
Decades unfurled their banners.
From the high country of eternity
he has watched us.
He has watched the son,
once commander of a Navy patrol boat,
standing firm against restless seas,
now guiding others
through the currents of commerce and responsibility.
He has watched the daughter,
beloved and strong,
building her own way through the world,
and beside her
the tenor husband,
lifting songs into the air
where hearts gather and listen.
He has watched the grandson,
newly returned from Air Force service,
bearing the invisible marks
that every generation leaves
upon the next.
He has watched the grandmother,
the woman he treasured,
still holding the family together
with the quiet authority of love.
And I see them all now,
gathered around one table,
laughing,
telling stories,
breaking bread,
the years forgotten,
the generations mingling
like rivers entering one sea.
O comrades,
what is a family
but another platoon?
Not assembled by command,
not driven by rank,
but formed by trust,
by sacrifice,
by the stubborn refusal
to leave one another behind.
Here is our company.
Here is our regiment.
Here are our colors.
Love is our discipline.
Faith is our training.
Hope is our field manual.
And when life throws us
against cliffs that tremble,
against storms that test our footing,
against the long marches
through grief and uncertainty,
we move forward.
We lift one another.
We complete the mission.
For we are Rangers still.
Not merely of mountain and battlefield,
but of affection,
of loyalty,
of memory.
Yes, we are the Ranger Platoon
of love and belief,
marching together
through time,
through loss,
through joy,
and answering every roll call
with the same enduring cry:
Present.
Still present.
Together.
— TaeHun Yoon, 6/24/2026



































































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