Episodios

  • June 28, 1971: The Quacks Salted the Clouds
    Jun 28 2025

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    In this letter from June 28, 1971, my mom, Captain Sarah Allgood, is nearing the end of her military nursing duties — just five days from maternity leave and three months pregnant with me.


    She’s tired, fed up with a chatty coworker, and not holding back about how much she misses my dad. She also blames the endless rain on “the quacks salting the clouds” — a line that sounds like a joke, but isn’t. Between 1967 and 1972, the U.S. military really did seed clouds to alter the weather during the Vietnam War.


    This letter is raw, funny, affectionate, and full of the kind of honesty that only comes from someone who’s in love, in uniform, and very, very ready for a nap.


    💌 Read aloud by their daughter, Alisa Cecilia Allgood

    🌐 More at www.theallgoodslove.com


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




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    6 m
  • June 28, 1971: More Than Love
    Jun 28 2025

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    In this letter from June 28, 1971, my dad writes from Vietnam with tenderness, humor, and longing. He tells my mom how much he loves her — but also, how much he likes her.


    That mattered to both of them. My parents used to tell me that love alone isn’t enough to make a relationship last. You have to like each other — genuinely. You have to enjoy who the other person is, day after day.


    This letter is full of raw emotion, sexual tension, and deep connection — but what lingers most is the reminder that the strongest relationships are built on more than love. They’re built on friendship, respect, and liking each other at the core.


    💌 Read aloud by their daughter, Alisa Cecilia Allgood

    🌐 Learn more: www.theallgoodslove.com


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




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    5 m
  • June 27, 1971 – My Panties Are Wet Just Writing This Letter
    Jun 28 2025

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    In this letter, written on June 27, 1971, Captain Sarah Allgood isn’t shy about how much she misses her husband — or how badly she wants him.


    It’s raw. It’s funny. It’s incredibly personal. And it’s real.


    From splitting headaches to bridge games, tacos, teenage neighbors asking awkward questions, and heartfelt longing, Sarah’s voice leaps off the page. She jokes about how hard it was to go four pages without writing “I love you.” She remembers the way Dick kissed her eyes and hair. And yes — she tells him her panties are wet just writing the letter. This one is pure, unfiltered Sarah: sexual, playful, deeply affectionate… and just trying to make it through another weekend alone while pregnant during wartime.


    Her humor and horniness live right alongside her heartbreak.


    And maybe most incredible of all — this letter, like every one she wrote, somehow survived. My dad saved it in Vietnam, brought it back to the States, and it sat quietly in a storage unit in Big Sky, Montana for decades — through freezing winters and everything else life threw at us — until I found it. Dry. Intact. Waiting.


    Now I get to read it to you.


    💌 Listen and follow the journey at theallgoodslove.com


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




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    8 m
  • June 27, 1971 – Not a Cold Bastard: Love, War, and the Letters That Survived
    Jun 28 2025

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    This letter from Captain Dick Allgood, written on June 27, 1971, reveals the tender truth beneath his famously gruff exterior. “I am not a cold bastard,” he writes to his wife, “I just may present that on the surface.” And it’s true. Anyone who knew him knew he was a softy at heart — a man who loved fiercely, laughed loudly, and proudly identified as a tit man, even offering free Allgood T-shirts to any woman in the bar who’d change into one on the spot.


    But in Vietnam, even the most loving letters carry shadows. In this one, Dick writes about a young airman — the same man mentioned in earlier letters who had contracted the clap and then crabs — who became so overwhelmed with depression that he attempted suicide. It’s a stark reminder: even though Dick rarely describes the war itself, he was still living in the middle of it. It was hot, humid, and full of misery — rashes, bugs, broken spirits. The men may have been trained not to write about it, but the war still bleeds through the margins.


    And yet, these very pages survived. My mom wrote them. My dad treasured them — carrying them with him through war and home again. Somehow, decades later, I found them intact in a freezing storage unit in Big Sky, Montana. They never got wet, never got lost. He saved them. And now, I get to read them to you.


    💌 Follow along at theallgoodslove.com


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




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    8 m
  • June 26, 1971: A Lonely Day, A Wittle Tear Break
    Jun 26 2025

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    This project is starting to get heavy — not just because of how much they wrote, but because of what these letters carry.


    On June 26, 1971, my mom wrote two letters to my dad. She was pregnant with me, and he was across the world in Vietnam. They couldn’t call. There was no FaceTime. No text. Just words written by hand — and a wait of days, maybe even a week, for each one to arrive.


    In her first letter, she is aching with loneliness. In the second, she softens a little, shares a poem, pats her belly, and dreams of banana coconut ice cream. It’s one day in their life — and reading it, I cried.


    These letters are beautiful. But they take time. And energy. And some days, I don’t know how I’ll keep up with the pace of it all. The podcast part is easy. It’s the reading and feeling and transcribing that take the most out of me.


    So if you’re listening — thank you. Your support helps me keep going.


    💌 theallgoodslove.com

    🎧 patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




    Más Menos
    9 m
  • June 26, 1971: Pie Arrives, the Lines Are Down, and the Waiting Continues
    Jun 26 2025

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    On June 26, 1971, Dick writes from Vietnam after a quiet, unsettled day. Two new pilots have just arrived — one of them, nicknamed “Pie,” seems like a good guy and will soon become part of this story. The other is clearly nervous, a reminder that no matter how long someone’s been in the Air Force, this place can shake anyone.


    Dick tries to call Sarah — again — but the call won’t go through. The overseas operator can’t make the connection, and Dick is left sitting with the silence.


    So he does what he’s learned to do: he writes.


    He tells her how proud he is that she’s preparing to leave work behind and focus on being a wife and mother. Even across the world, he can feel her readiness, her heart. And he promises to keep showing up — to provide, to write, to love her as hard as he can, from wherever he is.


    💌 theallgoodslove.com

    🎙️ patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




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    5 m
  • June 25, 1971: Love Delivered (or Not) by ESP and the U.S. Mail
    Jun 25 2025

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    In this letter from June 25, 1971, Sarah writes to Dick on her day off — lazy, cozy, and full of longing. She didn’t get a letter that day, and it leaves her feeling empty inside. She knows he’s writing. She just doesn’t trust the U.S. Postal Service to get it right.


    Still, she finds comfort in rereading his old letters, eating pineapple sandwiches in bed, and talking to her “beautiful, handsome husband by ESP.” And what’s remarkable is that — even though he hadn’t received her letter yet — Dick wrote on the same day about feeling that connection too.


    They didn’t have the words for it back then, but we do now. It’s real. They were in sync, across oceans and time zones, speaking to each other in ways science has only recently begun to explain.


    She also includes Glenn and Dale’s address — because yes, they’re telling people they’re going to be parents. ❤️


    💌 theallgoodslove.com

    🎙️ patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




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    5 m
  • June 25, 1971: The Kind of Love That Reaches You
    Jun 25 2025

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    In this letter, my dad writes from Vietnam on June 25, 1971 — and something about it stopped me.


    Yesterday, my mom wrote about ESP. About how she could feel him reaching for her across the world. He hadn’t received that letter yet — she’d just mailed it. But somehow, he writes back with the same intensity, like he’s answering without even knowing it.


    He doesn’t call it ESP. He just calls it love. But it’s there — that connection. The kind that reaches you, even from thousands of miles away.


    This letter is full of longing and humor, but also something deeper. He talks about their upcoming first wedding anniversary and how much those early months of marriage have meant to him — how they’ve shaped his whole life. He jokes, he flirts, but then he admits that sometimes the tears still come while writing her. That the ink used to smear when he’d cry — and now, he’s just learning to hold it back a little better.


    He loved her. Fully. Bravely. And he never stopped showing up for her, even from a war zone.


    💌 theallgoodslove.com

    🎙️ patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Support the show


    The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love is a personal podcast project based on real letters exchanged between Capt. Richard Allgood and Capt. Sarah Allgood during the Vietnam War. Photos of the original letters, family snapshots, and behind-the-scenes commentary are available for supporters.

    Support the show:

    Recurring support through Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2489476/support

    Join our Patreon community: https://www.patreon.com/TheAllgoodsLove


    Visit the official website: https://www.theallgoodslove.com




    Más Menos
    7 m