The Allgoods : Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love

The Allgoods : Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love I’m Alisa Allgood, daughter of Richard & Sarah Allgood.

After their passing, I discovered their love letters from the Vietnam War. “The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love”shares their story of love, sacrifice, and resilience, one letter at a time.

A year ago, I started reading my parents’ Vietnam-era letters for the very first time.I didn’t even know these letters e...
05/12/2026

A year ago, I started reading my parents’ Vietnam-era letters for the very first time.

I didn’t even know these letters existed until 2021, when I cleaned out our family storage unit and found box after box of air mail envelopes.

Somehow, they had survived everything.

Including Hurricane Andrew.

In 1992, after Hurricane Andrew destroyed my family home in Miami, the letters were packed up and transported away with whatever else could be saved. A banyan tree came through the roof of my parents’ bedroom and onto their bed during the storm. We were on the north eyewall of Andrew, and like so many South Florida families, our lives were never quite the same afterward.

And yet these letters survived.

Actual air mail envelopes kept in boxes for more than fifty years.

When you open them, they still carry that old paper smell — musty, preserved time.

Before I could even begin the podcast, every letter had to be carefully placed back into chronological order, photocopied, and preserved so I wouldn’t have to keep unfolding the originals over and over again.

Then came the real work.

For the last year, almost every single day, I woke up around 4:30 in the morning before my regular workday to transcribe and read the letters.

Every day.

The podcast honestly began as a way to keep myself accountable. I thought if I committed to reading the letters publicly day by day, I would actually finish the project. And I also thought people might be more inclined to listen than sit down and read hundreds and hundreds of pages of letters.

Now I’m not so sure.

Some of these letters are so intimate, funny, emotional, and occasionally so unbelievably raunchy and X-***ed that reading them becomes an entirely different experience.

What started as a project slowly became something much bigger than I realized:

a love story,
a war story,
a pregnancy journal,
a family archive,
and eventually, part of my own story too.

When the letters begin, my mother is in San Antonio while my father is flying rescue missions in Vietnam.

But Miami is always there in the background.

The place they planned to return to.
The place where many of their closest friendships were rooted.
The place that eventually became part of my childhood too.

And after I was born, the letters slowly stop being only written between my parents and begin being written to me too.

That changes everything when you read them.

Recently was Mother’s Day, and being back in Miami — only a few blocks from where I grew up — has made this entire experience feel deeply emotional.

The banyan trees.
The royal poincianas my mother loved.
The frangipani blooming.
Mango trees heavy with fruit, mangoes dropping onto the sidewalks.
The humid air.
The birds in the morning.

Somehow it all still feels exactly the same.

It feels like memory lives in the landscape here.

Today, I’m headed back out on the water near Elliott Key — close to the place where I spread my parents’ ashes with two of my lifelong family friends, Kelly and Adam Spiegel Osman.

And somewhere between finishing these letters and being back here in Miami, I think I’m only now beginning to understand what this project actually was.

Not just a podcast.
Not just an archive.

But a way of finding my way back through the lives that created mine.

I’m incredibly proud that I stayed with this and finished it.

“The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love” tells the story of my parents, Sarah and Dick Allgood — both Air Force captains — writing each other daily through the Vietnam War while building a family through the mail.

If you’d like to follow the story, I’ll put the website link below.
The podcast is available on major streaming platforms.

In 1971, two young Air Force veterans — Richard and Sarah Allgood — found themselves separated by the Vietnam War, yet connected through hundreds of heartfelt lette…

Some things wait for us until we are ready.For years, I had one box I could not open.Inside a larger box wrapped in clea...
04/28/2026

Some things wait for us until we are ready.

For years, I had one box I could not open.

Inside a larger box wrapped in clear packing tape was a wooden box with a sunflower on it. Inside that were hundreds of letters my parents, Sarah and Dick Allgood, wrote to each other during the Vietnam War while my father was deployed and my mother was home first pregnant with me, then caring for me as a newborn while waiting for him to come home.

I found them after losing both of my parents in 2020.

But grief has its own timing.

I wasn’t ready yet.

About a year ago, something shifted in me. I opened the box, placed the letters in chronological order, copied them into binders, and began reading them one by one.

What I found was so much more than paper.

I found two young people deeply in love.
I found loneliness, humor, longing, resilience, and hope.
I found the story of my parents.
I found the story of my own beginning.
And in many ways, I found parts of myself.

There have been pauses along the way. Life has been hard at times. Healing is rarely neat or linear.

But today I’m back.

We have reached March 1972 — the final month of letters before my father comes home from Vietnam.

They are counting the days.
Planning Miami.
Dreaming of being under one roof again.
Imagining ordinary life after extraordinary distance.

And more than fifty years later, I am reading their words and hearing their voices.

This project has become one of the deepest experiences of my life.

Thank you to everyone who has listened, supported, encouraged, or quietly followed along.

The final month begins.

❤️Five Months, 240 Episodes, 500 Letters ❤️I’ve just finished recapping the first five months of The Allgoods: Vietnam T...
10/02/2025

❤️Five Months, 240 Episodes, 500 Letters ❤️

I’ve just finished recapping the first five months of The Allgoods: Vietnam Through the Eyes of Love — April through September 1971.

That’s 240 podcast episodes, about 500 letters, and still only halfway through the archive. Each one I’m reading for the very first time. My parents never told me about these letters, and somehow they survived 50 years untouched — a miracle.

These letters aren’t just their love story. They’re mine too — I was the baby they wrote about every day. And now I’m sharing them so my son Wylie can know the grandparents he lost too soon. He was only five when they passed.

This project is for him, for me, and for anyone who’s ever held onto love across distance.

Follow along, and if you’d like to support the journey: buymeacoffee.com/theallgoodslove

https://www.theallgoodslove.com

I'm Sharing the love story of my parents- two Air Force officers separated by war but connected through hundreds of handwritten letters during Vietnam. If these letters move you, your support helps me

💌 August 15, 1971: Rain Showers, Ray Charles & Counting Down to Seven Days of LoveOne week before their first anniversar...
08/15/2025

💌 August 15, 1971: Rain Showers, Ray Charles & Counting Down to Seven Days of Love

One week before their first anniversary, my mom was in Miami — splitting her time between friends’ houses, going to birthday parties, and enjoying summer nights. A ticket to see Ray Charles cost $7 in 1971… the same as a Miami Dolphins game. She even writes “Rain, rain, go away, come again some other day” — and I can still hear her singing it like she did when I was a kid.

Meanwhile, my dad was in Vietnam, counting down the days until their R&R in Hawaii. In one of my favorite lines ever, he wrote:

“I will make love to you each minute of the seven days — mostly in our love sessions but also in my sleep.”

Two people, half a world apart, completely wrapped up in each other.

🦅 Read their letters from this day here:

It’s August 15, 1971 — just one week before my parents’ first wedding anniversary.

📬 I’m Still at ItI’m still here, still reading every single letter my parents wrote during my dad’s Vietnam deployment —...
08/09/2025

📬 I’m Still at It

I’m still here, still reading every single letter my parents wrote during my dad’s Vietnam deployment — and I’m now up to 191 episodes thus far.

Since April 27, 1971 in the story — and April 27 of this year in real time — I’ve been sharing their words just as they were written, for the very first time.

These letters are a love story, a family history, and a pregnancy journal all at once — a day-by-day record of their lives across continents and in the middle of a war.

If you’ve been following along, thank you. And if you haven’t tuned in for a while, now’s the perfect time to come back.

🎙️ Listen here: https://theallgoodslove.com
☕ Support the project: https://buymeacoffee.com/theallgoodslove

Sarah wrote this yesterday in 1971
07/28/2025

Sarah wrote this yesterday in 1971

I haven’t posted in a little while, but I’m still here — and so are Sarah and Dick.More than 150 podcast episodes are no...
07/27/2025

I haven’t posted in a little while, but I’m still here — and so are Sarah and Dick.

More than 150 podcast episodes are now live — each one drawn from the daily letters my parents wrote during my dad’s deployment to Vietnam. That’s over 150 love letters shared, read out loud, and brought back to life, one day at a time.

As we reach the end of July in the story, we’re closing out the first three months of a twelve-month journey. There’s still so much more to come — and it’s all unfolding in real time.

Right now, Sarah is pregnant and traveling to Miami to visit her friend Judy — a visit that quietly changes the course of things. Back in San Antonio, Myra has entered her life — someone who will become part of our family forever. Meanwhile, Dick is still in Vietnam, counting the days to R&R, filling every letter with humor, longing, stereo dreams, and hope.

This is a daily podcast, and keeping up with the letters, the photos, and the emotion of it all takes a lot — but I believe in this story. And I’m grateful you’re here for it.

If you’ve been listening or following along — what would you like to see more of?
Photos? Transcripts? Behind-the-scenes? I’d really love your feedback.

👉 Listen or catch up here: www.theallgoodslove.com

This picture was sent from my mother to my father in June 1971
06/30/2025

This picture was sent from my mother to my father in June 1971

⸻💌 June 27, 1971 — “I Am Not a Cold Bastard”This letter from my dad, Captain Dick Allgood, is one of the most personal o...
06/28/2025



💌 June 27, 1971 — “I Am Not a Cold Bastard”

This letter from my dad, Captain Dick Allgood, is one of the most personal ones yet. He writes to my mom from Vietnam about love, longing, and lust — but also about what was quietly happening around him: depression, su***de attempts, STDs, and the quiet misery of war that most soldiers were trained not to write about.

Even though he rarely mentioned the war directly, it was always there. The heat. The bugs. The hopelessness. The guy with the clap — and then crabs — now so depressed he tried to end his life. And through it all, my dad kept writing about love. My mom. His “wittle chickadee.”

He even jokes about being a “tit man” (which he always proudly was), and if you knew him later in life, you probably remember the Allgood T-shirt offers he made to women who’d change right there in the bar. Gruff on the outside, a total softy inside. And he knew it too: “I may present that on the surface to some people,” he wrote, “but I am not a cold bastard.”

And the miracle is that this letter — like all the others — survived. My mom mailed it to him in Vietnam. He kept it safe. He carried it home. And somehow, it sat for decades in a freezing storage unit in Big Sky, Montana… completely intact.

And now, I’m reading it. Preserving it. Sharing it.

Here’s the full transcription below — exactly as it was written in 1971.
Scroll down and take a moment. It’s worth it.
💔📜



27 Jun
Sunday

Hello, lover of mine,

How is my wittle chick-a-dee today? Not long to work, huh? I hope you can relax and feel good without that damn hospital. Boy do I love & miss my wife. You sure do command my thoughts and love. I don’t know what I would do without you.

Well another Sunday. I am on alert again. Tomorrow I am off. I can’t believe it. I am going to sleep, sun (if it is out) sleep some more. Go to the movie, beat off, dream of my lover/wife and groove to the letters I have gotten from the most beautiful girl in the world. How did you ever get to be so pretty & sexy. I want to thank the



2

people responsible. I just can’t believe your big b***s, & such a tiny little tit man. (those fu***ng Air Force pens are no good.) Just think my playground is bigger now, I love you.

Had a typical day on alert. No flying. Just read, sleep & pass the time. I save writing my baby until nite time. I really can write to you at nite, I hope you don’t get tired of my rambling on & on.

Do you remember me telling you of the man with the clap? Well about a week ago he got the crabs. He is really sad



3

Just an immature, 18 year old. Well last night he tried to cut his wrists. Just like always he did it for attention. This time it will backfire. They are going to send him to Cam Ranh Bay to see the shrink.

Speaking of people with problems another young guy got a letter from his sweet that she is 1½ mo. preg. She still loves him & wants to marry him in 2 months. The fellow here has not seen her in 10 mo.

So you can see there are people worse off than us. I have to count my blessings. I have a love greater than love itself.



4

I am so happy and proud of my love. It is such a beautiful feeling, to be happy and content in love. You have made me a happy man. I owe my happiness in love to one beautiful Sarah Jane. I want you to know how much I feel & think & groove to our love each day. I love loving you.

I can’t wait until tomorrow. I am going to get n**e, shower, read your sexy letters, look at your sexy pictures & get a hard on. I am then going to dream of your mouth on me and then (your) my quiff surrounding (my) your d**g.

I will then put 50¢ in the pot



5

because I am sure it will be good. Not nearly as good as you but I will have to rely on my dreams for a few more weeks. I can’t wait for R&R. Boy are you going to get a work out. I am going to be p***y whipped every day. I can’t wait.

I got a letter & a card today. I sure love you. You are my precious darling. How is the baby. I am glad that you have not had too much sickness. I am really proud of you seeing the Dr. & obeying his instructions. I have the feeling that you are doing all you are supposed to. I have a real comfort knowing



6

that my wife is healthy.

Always love me Sarah. I glow when I write you. I sit with a smile on my face. Then at times my eyes swell. You can bet your life that I am not a cold bastard I may present that on the surface to some people. I have a whole group of emotions & warmth for my love. Don’t you ever worry about that.

There is not a minute in a day that my mind does not think of you at least once.

Sleep warm love, your lover is with you in heart, soul, and mind.
Dick



7

Hugs, kisses, and all of the other things that you do so beautifully are really missed on this end. Soon our bodies will be together again

Until then … … …



8

I send you the biggest ration of hugs & kisses, and all types of physical love by mail.

I like you so much.

I be loving you,
Sarah Jane
love
Dick

Address

Big Sky, MT

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