By Paul A. Bauer, Jr.
After high school and a few months of college, at 17, I served my country. It is on my driver’s license, on my VA card, when I present my military ID, and anywhere I use the military discount.
“Thank you for your service” began as a sympathetic and corrective phrase. It grew especially strong after Vietnam, when the country recognized that many returning veterans had been ignored, mistreated, or politically blamed for wars they did not personally start. In that sense, the phrase was meant to restore respect: we see you, we appreciate your sacrifice, and we will not repeat the mistake of dishonoring returning service members.
But over time, the phrase has become so common that many veterans hear it as automatic, ceremonial, or emotionally empty. Pew found that 76% of Americans reported thanking someone in the military for serving, and 92% of post-9/11 veterans said someone had thanked them after discharge. That shows how widespread the phrase became, but widespread use can also make it feel formulaic. (Pew Research Center)
The problem is not gratitude itself. The problem is shallow gratitude. Many veterans do not need strangers to perform respect with a slogan. They often prefer real curiosity, human recognition, and informed conversation. The Department of Veterans Affairs itself suggests that after thanking a veteran, people can ask questions such as: “What did you do in the military?”, “How long did you serve?”, “Did anyone else in your family serve?”, and “Why did you choose the service branch that you did?” (VA News)
That is a better approach because it recognizes the veteran as a person, not just a symbol. “Thank you for your service” can unintentionally reduce a veteran’s entire experience to a patriotic phrase. Asking, “What branch did you serve in?” or “What did you do in the military?” opens the door to a story. It respects the difference between Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, Space Force, National Guard, combat arms, intelligence, logistics, aviation, medical, administration, training, and countless other roles.
A fair conclusion is this: “Thank you for your service” is not wrong, but it is incomplete. Said sincerely, it still has value. Said reflexively, it becomes a social script. Veterans generally respond better when gratitude is followed by interest, listening, and respect for the complexity of military life. Some veterans welcome the phrase; others find it hollow or uncomfortable, especially when it feels disconnected from actual understanding or civic responsibility.
A stronger public message would be:
Instead of only saying, “Thank you for your service,” take one more step. Ask, “What branch did you serve in?” “What did you do?” “Where did you serve?” or “What did your service teach you?” Veterans do not just want ceremonial appreciation. Many want their service understood.
That preserves gratitude while moving beyond a worn-out phrase into genuine recognition.
Paul A. Bauer served and retired from the Airborne Combat Arms branch of the U.S. Army from the Vietnam era, in Cold War Berlin, through Grenada, Haiti, the Panama invasion, the Persian Gulf War, the Somalia intervention, and the Bosnian conflicts. This period provided him an accumulated wealth of knowledge, experience, and disciplined leadership shaped by some of the most consequential military and geopolitical events of the late twentieth century.
Today, May 2, 2026 is Military Appreciation Day at JBER. Must Read Alaska says thank you to all our amazing veterans. If you are a veteran, please share with us about your military service in the comments!
