⚾ 2026 New York Yankees HOPE Week Honoree! 💚🚜🙏

🌱 501(c)(3) Nonprofit · EIN 85-3447661 · Est. 2020

Blog

The Generation That Doesn’t Ask: Why Vietnam-Era Veterans Need Yard Care Help They Won’t Request

July 12, 2026 · I Want To Mow Your Lawn

The Generation That Doesn’t Ask: Why Vietnam-Era Veterans Need Yard Care Help They Won’t Request

A 75-year-old veteran stands in his driveway on a humid Saturday morning, looking at grass that’s grown shin-high over the past month. His knees won’t let him kneel the way they used to. His hands shake a little more these days. But the thought of calling someone—of admitting he can’t manage what he used to do without thinking—feels like something he just doesn’t do.

This isn’t a character trait. It’s a generation.

Who They Are

More than 5 million U.S. veterans served during the Vietnam War era, and today, most of them are in their mid-seventies and early eighties. That’s roughly a median age of around 73 years old—and climbing.

They’re also geographically scattered in ways that matter. Veterans with Vietnam-era service have higher representation in rural communities, often living far from organized veteran support networks or even family.

They came home to a country that didn’t celebrate them the way it celebrated other generations of soldiers. Many faced indifference or outright hostility when they returned from service. That changed how they relate to asking for anything—especially help.

Why Asking Feels Impossible

Military culture runs deep. Stoicism, self-reliance, handling things without complaint—these aren’t just personality preferences. They’re the values that kept people alive in combat and that stayed with them for five decades after.

Research confirms this isn’t perception. Studies of veterans consistently show that stoicism and self-reliance are among the most common barriers to seeking help, with many enduring hardship without complaint until the need becomes undeniable. For yard work—something that feels small, manageable, ordinary—a veteran may wait until the situation has become unsafe before considering outside help.

And even then, many won’t ask.

Why It Matters Now

Aging changes everything about yard work. A task that once required an afternoon now carries real risk: falls from mowers, heat exhaustion in summer, overexertion on joints and a cardiovascular system that may be working harder than it appears. Recent research from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health found that combat exposure and PTSD in Vietnam veterans are linked to chronic health conditions that persist decades after service—conditions that make physical labor riskier than it seems from the outside.

The paradox is sharp: the generation most trained to handle things alone is also the generation most likely to face serious health consequences from trying to manage yard work independently.

What Neighbors Can Do

Asking permission isn’t always the right approach. Veterans who won’t request help often respond differently to an offer framed as something a neighbor is doing anyway, or a way someone can be useful.

Look for the signs: grass growing tall over weeks, a yard that was once maintained and now isn’t, an older person moving more slowly or carefully than they used to. Sometimes the offer is simply, “I’m cutting my grass Saturday—I’ll run the mower over yours while I’m at it.” That’s different from asking if they need help. That’s just being a neighbor.

I Want To Mow Your Lawn (IWTMYL) exists because this exact situation plays out across all 50 states. Volunteers connect with veterans and older adults who need this kind of relief—no application process, no guilt, no red tape. Just help.

How to Help

If there’s a Vietnam-era veteran in your neighborhood whose yard is becoming overgrown, consider volunteering to help. Joining IWTMYL takes just a few minutes. Volunteers across the country are already doing this work—maintaining safety, preserving dignity, and showing a generation of quiet, self-reliant people that it’s okay to let neighbors help.

For a more interactive way to learn about the mission, try the MOW app or download it from the App Store. It’s a simple way to understand how the network works and how quickly yard care can change a neighbor’s situation.

The generation that doesn’t ask for help deserves neighbors who offer anyway.

📖
Deep Dive

Reading the Yard: How to Recognize When a Vietnam-Era Veteran Needs Yard Care Support

Not every overgrown yard is a cry for help—sometimes it’s a quiet sign that mobility, health, or injury has made yard work dangerous. Learn what to look for, how to approach the conversation, and why the way you offer help matters more than the help itself.

Support our foundation to unlock this resource

A donation of any amount unlocks all bonus guides, templates, and deep dives for 30 days.

100% goes toward connecting volunteers with neighbors in need.

Have a group? Organize a Community Service Day — we'll match your team with neighbors who need help.
Want to help us reach more neighbors? Our Marketing Toolkit has copy-ready posts, press materials, and flyers you can share in five minutes.

Share this article

Daily puzzle + volunteer tools.Play MOWGet the iPhone app

Supported by partners and community champions