{"id":110851,"date":"2017-11-30T13:18:00","date_gmt":"2017-11-30T13:18:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2023-01-08T11:04:38","modified_gmt":"2023-01-08T11:04:38","slug":"fanfare-for-common-man","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/2017\/11\/30\/fanfare-for-common-man\/","title":{"rendered":"Fanfare for the Common Man"},"content":{"rendered":"<div style=\"margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px;\" class=\"sharethis-inline-share-buttons\" ><\/div><h3 class=\"post-title entry-title\" itemprop=\"name\"><\/h3>\n<div class=\"post-header\"> <\/div>\n<p>This is the first New Year&#8217;s Day without my father.&nbsp; We buried him in  early December, barely five weeks after his 100th birthday.&nbsp; He led a  long, full and blessed life that continued literally until his final  breath.&nbsp; My father remained active well into his 90s, and was driving a  car barely a year before heart failure finally claimed his life.&nbsp; His  mind remained clear enough at the end to refuse treatment, a decision  that was confirmed by my brother.&nbsp; In so many respects, he lived life on  his terms, right until the end.<\/p>\n<p>His life spanned one of the most consequential periods in American  history.&nbsp; Seventeen Presidents occupied the Oval Office over the course  of my father&#8217;s life.&nbsp; He endured two World War, the Great Depression,  and the birth of the modern middle class.&nbsp; He witnessed the civil rights  era, the birth of feminism, and the advent of modern mass media.&nbsp; When  my father was born in 1915, commercial radio was still five years away;  motion pictures were still silent and television remained a gleam in  Philo Farnsworth&#8217;s eye.&nbsp; A century later, he was watching his beloved  Cubs on a flat-panel TV, connected to cable stations that delivered  24-hour sports programming.&nbsp; My father saw that as an advancement, even  if other developments like personal computers and the internet remained  incomprehensible and beyond his realm. <\/p>\n<p>Similarly, my father came of age during an era when aviation was in its  infancy.&nbsp; Most Americans who traveled took a train, or another  new-fangled contraption, the automobile.&nbsp; He would live to see the  advent of passenger flights on a mass scale, enabled by huge jets that  could deliver someone to virtually any point on the globe within 24  hours.&nbsp; My father also lived to see the era of manned space travel, with  his fellow countrymen traveling safely between the earth and the moon  and back again, not once but multiple times&#8211;less than 20 years after  President Kennedy vowed to make the voyage. &nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>He was a member of The Greatest Generation, that cohort of extraordinary  Americans who were born between 1900 and 1924, one of millions of men  and women who endured the deprivation of the depression years, then were  called to arms during the Second World War.&nbsp; They have been lionized  and rightly so; even today, as their ranks dwindle, their achievements  inspire both awe and gratitude.&nbsp; Not only did they save western  civilization, they returned from the battlefields and built the most  powerful and prosperous nation the world has ever seen.&nbsp; Those of us who  came later are forever in their debt, and our legacy can only pale in  comparison.<\/p>\n<p>My father&#8217;s story was typical of his generation.&nbsp; He was born on a farm  in eastern Mississippi, in Lowndes County, the eldest of four children.&nbsp;  His father migrated to the Magnolia State from West Texas, lured by the  opportunity of better farmland and the support of other family members  who had settled in that portion of Mississippi.&nbsp; Then as now, life on  the farm was hard.&nbsp; My father recalled missing schools for weeks every  fall, during harvest time.&nbsp; With only two sons to help with the farm, my  grandfather was a very busy man with a volcanic temper.&nbsp; My father  sometimes bore the brunt of those outbursts, and tried to shield his  brother or sisters from the wrath. <\/p>\n<p>Despite the demands of farm life, Dad developed a passion for sports and  his athletic skill was evident early on.&nbsp; In a day when most  communities had their own baseball teams, my father became the starting  catcher at the age of 16, handling pitchers who were sometimes a decade  older, and didn&#8217;t always agree with his pitch selection.&nbsp; There were a  few heated arguments but Dad stood his ground.&nbsp; Just over six feet tall  and 190 pounds, he was big and tough enough to go toe-to-toe with  teammates and opponents.&nbsp; My father also excelled at football and  basketball, starting at guard in both sports.<\/p>\n<p>Ultimately, athletics provided his escape from the farm.&nbsp; Dad earned an  athletic scholarship at Copiah-Lincoln Junior College in Wesson,  Mississippi, lettering in all three sports.&nbsp; But his time at Co-Lin  taught another lesson; scholarships for varsity athletes are renewed on  an annual basis.&nbsp; When the school made a coaching change, the new staff  decided Dad didn&#8217;t fit with their plans.&nbsp; So, at the ripe old age of 22,  he faced the choice of going back to farming, or trying something else.<\/p>\n<p>He opted for that latter option, securing a position as a management  trainee with the Kroger Company at a small grocery store in northeast  Arkansas.&nbsp; In 1937, that was no mean feat; nationally, the unemployment  rate was still in double digits and there was plenty of competition for  the few available vacancies.&nbsp; Kroger was impressed by his drive and  determination, and my father spent over two years in the grocery  business.<\/p>\n<p>In 1940, a new opportunity presented itself.&nbsp; Dad heard about an outside  sales position at an auto parts store in a small town in southeast  Missouri, with the promise of better pay and travel, even if the route  was within 100 miles of the store.&nbsp; He had been on the job a little over  a year when someone else beckoned&#8211;Uncle Sam.&nbsp; With no student or  family deferments to fall back on, my father was drafted into the Army  and sent to Camp Polk, Louisiana.&nbsp; He was there on December 7, 1941,  when word of the Japanese attack in Pearl Harbor was received.&nbsp; My  father was never given to hyperbole or prophecy, but he offered a simple  assessment for his buddies, who were only six months from  demobilization.&nbsp; &#8220;Well boys,&#8221; he opined, We&#8217;re in for the duration.&#8221;&nbsp; He  would not return to civilian life for another four years. <\/p>\n<p>Dad was part of the initial cadre for the 3rd Armored Division, which  was originally earmarked for the invasion of North Africa.&nbsp; The division  spent the first half of 1942 in the Mojave Desert before being  re-assigned to the invasion of Europe.&nbsp; He shipped out for England in  early 1943, part of the massive flow of manpower needed for the greatest  amphibious operation in history.&nbsp; It would be his first&#8211;and only&#8211;trip  outside the United States. <\/p>\n<p>My father received infantry training during his early days at Camp Polk,  and qualified as a driver on a Sherman tank crew during exercises in  the Mojave.&nbsp; But, like so many members of his generation, Dad was, in  the words of author James Bradley, &#8220;crafty with his hands,&#8221; able to  repair complex machines with very little training.&nbsp; Being a &#8220;shade tree  mechanic&#8221; was a necessity on a farm, and the Army recognized the value  of such skills.&nbsp; My father was classified as a vehicle mechanic and  after being promoted to Sergeant, he was put in charge of a tank  retriever platoon. <\/p>\n<p>The unit&#8217;s job was simple; pull damaged tanks (and other armored  vehicles) off the battlefield so mechanics could make necessary repairs  and return them to service.&nbsp; It was vital work, and a key reason for  Allied victory in Europe during World War II.&nbsp; The 3rd Armored Division  entered combat in late June 1944 with 232 M-4 Sherman tanks.&nbsp; Over the  next 11 months, the unit would lose over 700 Shermans in combat, but  thanks to the miracles of American logistics and maintenance, many of  them were returned to service.&nbsp; The M-4 was decidedly inferior to the  newest German tanks, the Panther and Tiger, but German commanders and  their panzer crews could only shake their heads at the seemingly endless  supply of Shermans, including hundreds that were repaired and sent back  into combat, sometimes in just a matter of hours.<\/p>\n<p>My father was something of a rarity among World War II veterans; he  would talk at length about his service, but concentrated on the lighter  moments of his Army days, like the night at Fort Polk when a friend  smuggled some moonshine in the barracks.&nbsp; &#8220;I woke up,&#8221; he told me  later.&nbsp; &#8220;The bed wasn&#8217;t spinning but the rest of the building was.&#8221;&nbsp; Or  rolling across western Europe, not far behind armored and infantry  battalions that liberated French and Belgian towns after four years of  German occupation.&nbsp; Happy villagers often thrust bottles of their best  wine or cognac through the windows of their vehicles, a gift to the  liberators.&nbsp; Tank retrievers carried as many as a dozen large tool  boxes; Dad and his troops quickly improvised, tossing the tools into the  cabs of their vehicles and converting the boxes into liquor cabinets.&nbsp;  They had plenty of liquid refreshment during infrequent breaks from the  Allied push across western Europe.<\/p>\n<p>He spoke less about the grim episodes associated with armored warfare.&nbsp;  Dad once mentioned that one of the first tasks in repairing a damaged  Sherman was repainting the interior.&nbsp; I was puzzled for a moment; surely  patching up holes in the armor or replacing a damaged engine,  transmission or cannon was more important. <\/p>\n<p>Then it hit me: a German 88mm shell entering the crew compartment of an  M-4 often caused horrific damage. &nbsp; Painting the interior&#8211;after a  thorough scrubbing&#8211;was a way to cover reminders of the human cost when  the tank was turned over to a new crew.&nbsp; I never asked my father how  many crew compartments his men repainted.&nbsp; He also alluded to close  calls with enemy artillery while removing damaged tanks from the  battlefield.&nbsp; A Sherman weighed 37 tons and tank retrievers moved at a  crawl when pulling one across open terrain.&nbsp; On more than one occasion,  German spotters observed Dad and his assistant dragging an M-4 through  an open field, and tried to &#8220;walk&#8221; rounds onto their retriever. <\/p>\n<p>But it wasn&#8217;t until the last year of his life that I learned the biggest  &#8220;surprise&#8221; from Dad&#8217;s military career.&nbsp; As his health declined (and the  subject of a nursing home entered the conversation), I was asked to  look for a copy of his discharge papers, needed for a potential  application for VA benefits.&nbsp; The discharge form was near the top of the  stack; I knew most of the details, but under his awards and  decorations, I found the Combat Infantryman&#8217;s Badge (CIB).&nbsp; Thousands of  American soldiers have earned the CIB over the past 74 years, but  recipients must meet three criteria: first, they must be an infantryman,  satisfactorily performing duties associated with that specialty;  secondly, they must be assigned to an infantry unit at the time it is  engaged in active ground combat and finally, the solider must actively  engage the enemy in ground combat. <\/p>\n<p>I was stunned, having always assumed my father was a maintenance troop.&nbsp;  During a subsequent conversation, Dad told me he had trained as an  infantryman during his time at Fort Polk.&nbsp; His discharge papers  confirmed assignment to an armored infantry battalion that was part of  the 3rd Armored Division.&nbsp; As for that third requirement, my father  would only say &#8220;we got in a few scrapes.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As one of the peacetime draftees from 1941, Dad was among the first to  be demobilized after Japan surrendered in August 1945.&nbsp; Before returning  to his job at the auto parts store, he spent a few weeks at home in  Mississippi where he met a stunning young brunette in the town of  Columbus.&nbsp; A whirlwind courtship ensured and less than two months after  they met, my mother and father were married.&nbsp; I have a copy of their  wedding photo on my desk; they were a handsome couple, their smiles  conveying the hope of so many young men and women who were eagerly  looking to the future, after years of depression and war.&nbsp; My mother had  three brothers; all enlisted after Pearl Harbor and one of them never  returned.&nbsp; A Marine rifleman, he died at Peleliu, shortly after his 21st  birthday.<\/p>\n<p>The post-war years were a happy time for many American couples, my  parents included.&nbsp; They worked hard and saved their money, but they  sometimes splurged on a weekend trip to St. Louis for a Cardinals game,  or a big band concert.&nbsp; Dad paid cash for their first house in 1951,  following a pattern so familiar to young men who came of age during the  Great Depression. <\/p>\n<p>There was heartbreak as well.&nbsp; My older brother was still born in 1952,  and mom suffered a miscarriage two years later.&nbsp; Given her medical  history, I was considered something of a miracle baby when I arrived in  1958, and my brother earned the same title at his birth three years  later.&nbsp; We settled into a rather ordinary middle class existence in our  little ranch house.&nbsp; My mother remained at home to care for us, while my  father worked six days a week to support his family. <\/p>\n<p>Dad&#8217;s career was rather remarkable.&nbsp; He was a very successful salesman  for almost 50 years, despite having a rather reserved personality.&nbsp; With  customers, he could turn on the charm, but it often vanished when the  sales call was over.&nbsp; He had few close friends and avoided civic groups  and service organizations like the plague.&nbsp; But my father was active in  the local Methodist Church, serving as an usher for years until the  denomination&#8217;s increasingly liberal theology prompted his conversation  to Catholicism. <\/p>\n<p>I always assumed Dad would have been more engaged if he had more time.&nbsp;  But his workday typically began at 6 am and continued for at least  twelve hours, five days a week (with a half-day on Saturday).&nbsp; The  owners of the auto parts store had decided years earlier that an outside  sales rep could add greatly to their profits and my father certainly  delivered.&nbsp; He called on the same repair shops, car dealerships, farm  implement dealers and other clients for five decades, and they bought  huge quantities of parts, welding supplies, paint, electrical equipment  and other items from the store&#8217;s inventory.&nbsp; Dad delivered some of the  items himself, typically in a battered, company-owned station wagon.&nbsp;  But eventually, the store had to add a full-time delivery driver to  deliver the rest of orders to my father&#8217;s clients. <\/p>\n<p>He followed this routine for years, always without complaint&#8211;another  hallmark of the World War II generation.&nbsp; But occasionally we saw  glimpses of dissatisfaction, or mere speculation about staying on the  same course for the rest of his working life.&nbsp; When I was in elementary  school, my father took a long, hard look at buying a cattle ranch near  Starkville, Mississippi, not far from his boyhood home. My mother,  brother and I were somewhat shocked and prepared for a possible move,  but eventually, he decided against it.<\/p>\n<p>Three years later (in 1967) my Dad made a decision that assured the rest  of his career would be spent in the auto parts business.&nbsp; The store&#8217;s  owner was killed after delivering a new car to one of his daughters in  Illinois, and the heirs had no interest in retaining the business and  its associated real estate holdings.&nbsp; My father was given a chance to  buy into the business, for the worldly sum of $50,000.&nbsp; Dad&#8217;s response  became something of a legend in our hometown.&nbsp; Then as now, $50K was a  lot of money, but years of saving left my father in an enviable  position.&nbsp; &#8220;Do you want cash or a check,&#8221; he asked, underscoring his  desire to become a part of the ownership group. <\/p>\n<p>With Dad on the road, the business continued to thrive, but his marriage  grew strained.&nbsp; My brother and I could never quite pinpoint the cause  (and Dad refused to talk about it), but by the time we reached middle  school, our mother and father were leading separate lives.&nbsp; Dad was up  early for his route and Mom took a job with the local school system.&nbsp; At  the end of the workday, there was little interaction between our  parents, dinner and TV watching were quiet affairs, though there were  occasional, loud arguments.&nbsp; Our parents had apparently decided to stay  together &#8220;for the good of the kids,&#8221; but there were times we wished they  go their separate ways.&nbsp; Of course, divorce was out of the question,  since it would be an admission of moral failure, another hallmark of  their generation.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>Our world changed forever during my junior and senior years in high  school.&nbsp; Mother had ignored warning signs for years, then finally went  to the doctor.&nbsp; The diagnosis was grim; metastatic breast cancer.&nbsp; She  underwent two mastectomies, along with chemotherapy and radiation, but  it was a forlorn battle.&nbsp; Mom died in January 1976, on a cold, clear  afternoon.&nbsp; There was something of a reconciliation between my mother  and father before her death, but we were left wondering if the damage  might have been repaired years earlier. <\/p>\n<p>Dad found greater happiness in his second marriage, which lasted for 38  years.&nbsp; By that time, I was in college and my brother was finishing high  school.&nbsp; We had wildly divergent interests and career plans, but we  agreed on one thing: the auto parts business was not for us.&nbsp; I always  sensed that Dad was disappointed in that choice, but he never challenged  our decision.&nbsp; After five years in broadcasting, I embarked on a  military career, while my brother became a CPA, eventually based in  Atlanta.<\/p>\n<p>My father and his partners sold the business in 1984, the same year he  retired.&nbsp; The new owner was only slightly older that my brother and I,  and he quickly announced sweeping changes for the store.&nbsp; The outside  sales position was eliminated, along with the successful sidelines in  electrical and plumbing supplies.&nbsp; Despite the presence of other retail  parts outlets in our hometown&#8211;and the advent of national chains like  Auto Zone&#8211;the owner thought he could dominate the local trade.&nbsp; My  father shook his head as he deposited the check for his share of the  business.&nbsp; &#8220;He won&#8217;t last three years,&#8221; Dad predicted.&nbsp; A little over  two years later, the store went under.&nbsp; The successful enterprise that  my father helped sustain for over 45 years was gone. <\/p>\n<p>Dad&#8217;s retirement plans were predictably modest.&nbsp; While he had  accumulated a sizable nest egg, there would be no exotic trips or a  winter home in Florida.&nbsp; He was content tending the large garden that  took up most of my stepmother&#8217;s backyard, and did all of his yard work,  despite advancing years.&nbsp; He was cutting his own, half-acre yard (with a  push mower, of course), at the age of 94, and took daily walks until  his 97th birthday.&nbsp; A few years earlier, he terrified all of us by  announcing plans to go up on the roof and patch a small hole, saving a  few dollars in the process. <\/p>\n<p>As you&#8217;ve probably surmised, my father was extremely stubborn, a quality  illustrated by two episodes from the end of his work life and the  beginning of retirement.&nbsp; Just months before selling the business, Dad  was involved in the only serious traffic accident of his life.&nbsp; At the  end of his route, he was t-boned at an intersection in Dunklin County,  knocking him (and that worn-out station wagon) down an embankment. <\/p>\n<p>A good Samaritan happened on the scene, and panicked when she saw my  father.&nbsp; &#8220;There&#8217;s a big piece of glass sticking out of your head,&#8221; she  screeched.&nbsp; &#8220;Well, pull the damn thing out,&#8221; Dad replied.&nbsp; She refused,  and so did the EMTs that arrived a few minutes later.&nbsp; Predictably, he  refused a ride to the hospital, announcing he would hitch a ride with  the wrecker back to our hometown.&nbsp; Once the vehicle was deposited at the  junk yard (and Dad&#8217;s personal effects were removed), he finally sought  medical attention.<\/p>\n<p>This created a minor problem, since my father had already outlived his  long-time general practitioner.&nbsp; So, he sought treatment from the town&#8217;s  pediatrician, the same doctor who treated my brother and I as  children.&nbsp; We could only imagine the reaction from that waiting room  full of kids and their parents when an elderly man, his head covered in  blood, sat down and awaited his turn with the doctor.&nbsp; That pediatrician  (a former neighbor) treated Dad for the rest of his career.&nbsp; My father  outlived him as well. <\/p>\n<p>The other example of Dad&#8217;s stubborn ways was entirely his doing.&nbsp; Just  retired, he decided the roof of my stepmother&#8217;s house needed some work,  but he saw no reason to waste good money on an extension ladder.&nbsp; His  &#8220;solution&#8221; was a jury-rigged contraption that consisted of a overturned  50-gallon drum,with his step-ladder sitting on top of that.&nbsp; With a  little luck, Dad calculated, he could step off the top of the ladder and  onto the roof.&nbsp; My stepmother was horrified at his plan, but my father  dismissed her concerns, instructing her to proceed with her trip to the  store. &#8220;I know what I&#8217;m doing,&#8221; my father exclaimed.&nbsp; &#8220;Go about your  business and I&#8217;ll take care of mine.&#8221;&nbsp; &nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>You can guess what happened.&nbsp; After his wife departed, Dad tried to  climb up the barrel\/ladder combination.&nbsp; He was a step away from the  roof when the entire thing gave way, sending my 70-something father  plunging to the ground.&nbsp; Here&#8217;s how he later described the incident:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;When I came to, there was a man standing over me.&#8221; (A motorist driving  by the house saw Dad&#8217;s tumble).&nbsp; &#8220;I thought you were dead,&#8221; the man told  him.&nbsp; &#8220;So did I,&#8221; Dad replied.&nbsp; &#8220;Do you want me to call an ambulance?&#8221;  the man asked.&nbsp; &#8220;No,&#8221; my father replied, &#8220;I&#8217;ll just lay here for a  while, then crawl in the house.&#8221;&nbsp; And that&#8217;s what he did.&nbsp; After a week  in bed, and bruised over most of his body, Dad resumed his normal  routine. <\/p>\n<p>It&#8217;s little wonder we viewed him as almost indestructible.&nbsp; Dad was  blessed with remarkably good health well into his 90s; his mind remained  sharp and clear, virtually to the end. I always told my father he would  live to see 100, and that prediction proved accurate. &nbsp; The last day I  spent with Dad was on his 100th birthday; he had been moved to a nursing  home (due to mobility issues), but still remembered the names and faces  of players from his basketball team at Co-Lin, 77 years ago. <\/p>\n<p>The end was expected, but it still came with shocking speed.&nbsp; My father  was diagnosed with heart failure almost a year ago; at the time, his  physician gave him a year to live, perhaps two.&nbsp; He entered the nursing  facility in January 2015 then rallied, allowing him to return home for  three more months.&nbsp; But, as his condition declined, he suffered a series  of falls at home.&nbsp; None resulted in serious injuries, but it affirmed  the progression of his disease.&nbsp; He entered the nursing home for the  second (and last) time in June.&nbsp; His condition remained somewhat stable  until he reached 100; it was if he was striving to achieve that one last  goal.&nbsp; After that, he was ready to go, and made that desire known to  the family. <\/p>\n<p>Early in the morning of December 4th, the nursing home staff discovered  he was bleeding from his rectum.&nbsp; Dad was rushed to the county hospital,  but he refused treatment, affirming his desire to let the Lord take him  home.&nbsp; Initially, the doctors and nurses ignored his request, assuming  Dad was suffering from dementia and could no longer make decisions for  himself.&nbsp; That required my brother&#8217;s intervention; he had arrived in  town a few days earlier, after our stepmother was rushed to the  hospital.&nbsp; My brother told the staff our father was rational and  coherent and capable of making this decision.&nbsp; Dad requested a sip of  Dr. Pepper (the only soft drink he would touch), and was given morphine  to make him comfortable.&nbsp; Twelve hours later, just before 4:30 pm, my  father passed.<\/p>\n<p>The funeral service was brief and simple, per his request.&nbsp; Two members  of the Missouri National Guard rendered military honors, in tribute to  Dad&#8217;s service during World War II.&nbsp; The shadow box with his Sergeant&#8217;s  chevrons, ribbons and medals was on display during visitation at the  funeral home.&nbsp; Dad was proud of the box&#8211;and his military record.&nbsp; I  cursed myself for not putting it together years earlier, instead of five  months before his death. <\/p>\n<p>Almost a month later, the pain and loss is still raw.&nbsp; The man who was  the greatest influence in my life is gone, leaving a void that will  never be filled.&nbsp; He was an extraordinary man and a common man, the  embodiment of the finest generation this country has ever produced.&nbsp;  Most of them have already departed and the rest will be gone before we  know it.&nbsp; I had a chance to thank my father for all he did before his  passing; it was a simple, tearful acknowledgement.&nbsp; At a moment like  that, words fail and you&#8217;re left with the love and gratitude a son feels  towards his father.&nbsp; Dad nodded in acknowledgement.&nbsp; There was nothing  left to say. &nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This is the first New Year&#8217;s Day without my father.&nbsp; We buried him in early December, barely five weeks after his 100th birthday.&nbsp; He led a long, full and blessed life that continued literally until his final breath.&nbsp; My father remained active well into his 90s, and was driving a car barely a year before [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/110851"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=110851"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/110851\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=110851"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=110851"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=110851"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}