Solutions December 2018 | Page 8

I explained to my audience that Stockdale had been the highest-ranking officer captured as a POW during the Vietnam War. I told them how a vast number of men also captured within a similar timeframe committed suicide only months after their capture. Many others lost their minds and were subsequently killed by their captors. But James Stockdale was different. He was a survivor. Prisoners were separated to prevent communication, so in an effort to sustain morale and retain sanity, Stockdale initiated an ingenious method through which he and his fellow prisoners were able to communicate. His system used Morse code, but the delivery methods were subtle: banging on the building’s internal piping system, tapping on walls and doors, even humming and whistling. Of course, this system had the extra benefit of keeping the prisoners’ minds occupied. But that was not the most important factor distinguishing Stockdale from the others. Stockdale had a specific image engraved on his mind—a singular mental picture that set him apart from all those who lost their sanity or committed suicide. “When they entered the camp,” I told my audience, “most prisoners tried to anticipate a particular date on which they hoped their captivity would end. I’ll be out by Christmas, the new arrival would promise himself. Christmas would arrive and pass, and he would still be a prisoner of war. Every time the specified day arrived without the prisoner having attained his desire, it brought him down a notch, increasing Listen to Sophea’s story. Click to play. 8 • Solutions