We May Not Have It All Together, But Together We Have It All.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Our rules......

Love is composed of a single soul inhabiting two bodies.   -Aristotle

We are now down to a matter of weeks before Ry has his two week leave home.  We are all excited and anxious about seeing each other again.   There is a flood of emotions and thoughts that rush into my head. Many of these are just wonderful and anticipatory but some are anxious and cautious feelings.  I remember our first deployment and how the cautious feelings made me feel like a horrible spouse because they seemed “wrong” for me to feel.  But through experience and lessons learned I have found that even though some of the feelings are not the best they are none-the-less “normal” parts of separation and reintegration. 

Brock has started a list of what he wants to “talk about” with daddy and Syd is excited for Ry to come to her softball games.  I on the other hand have the cautious thoughts.  Like preemptive strike planning.  Will there be distance between us because we haven’t seen each other for so long?  Will the kids feel at ease around him?  Will he feel “at home?”……yea, maybe some of these things will be present, but it’s OK

With all this said, from experience, Ry and I have set four rules for leave that are paramount for us to have a good experience.

1.  I will not hand over the parenting duties to Ry when he walks in the door.  Let me just say that I would LOVE to do this.  Say “here ya go” and take a break.   I can get pretty sick of 7 and 10 year old talk.  But I know that isn’t good for Ry, for me or for our children.  You may ask why?  Because....first and foremost our children are now used to a “normal” and that normal is mom handling the discipline, daily scheduling etc…and to change that for only two weeks would simply be unfair to them because they would have to just begin another adjustment process to only have him leave again. They have had enough changes. 
For Ry…..well he is coming home for only a short time and he is in his “army mode” frame of mind. 
This means, Ry is used to 24/7 giving orders, being in an authority position, nobody questioning him and people just doing what they are told.  And let’s face it….a 7 and 10 year old will not do what you say and will question everything. 

2.  Take a “mini family getaway” during leave.  We also have learned this through prior trials.  Sometimes leave is so hard because two weeks is just long enough to start “feeling back at home” but then Ry has to leave again.  Therefore, spending some time together, but being away from home is perfect.  This allows for the much needed bonding together but in a way that Ry doesn’t “settle” back into home and make it much harder to leave again.

3.  We set aside a specific time and length of visits with extended family. Of course extended family wants and should see Ry but at the appropriate time and length.  This has been a very difficult thing because Ry is usually the one to not want visitors but sometimes I am the one to have to deliver the news.  But, this is our time.  Our leave is a chance for us to reconnect after a long absence and it sustains us for the remainder of the deployment.  One of the best things we learned from deployements was to be selfish and ok with it.

4.  And finally, as terrible as it sounds, we drop Ry off outside of the airport.  We don’t sit in the airport with him for his two hour wait and add misery to the pending departure.  We simply have learned that it is easier for all of us to say our goodbyes and not to draw it out.  Ry is able to then focus his mind back to his mission after his leave (which most likely never left anyway) and the kids and I are able to immediately start healing again.

We are hoping these next few weeks fly by and our embrace comes fast.  We know that our "rules" make our life and all it's unique challanges easier.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Heros.....

“True heroism is remarkably sober, very undramatic.  It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost.”   -Arthure Ashe


Today was a really special day.  The kids went to the Capital to be part of a proclamation by the Governor announcing April and Military Kids Month. 

The kids got to sit in the cameral hall, see the proclamation by the Governor and stand before an audience that applauded them. 



As I was taking pictures I was reminded about how heroic and brave they really are.  I can sometimes get busy and go through each day and forget what an amazing journey Syd and Brock are taking on.  My children, and many other military children, have to learn to adapt and change all the time and many times they have to grow up just a little faster than others their age. 















I am so proud of them.  They have taken on this deployment with integrity and heart.  We have our ups and downs but those are part of our life.  This deployment has brought my children and I closer in ways that I could have never imagined.  In part it's because we share a combination of pride and loss that balances us together.  So, if I look at today’s experience openly, I can allow myself to say....that I have gained something else very special from this deployment.

Thank you Sydney and Brock for being YOU!


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Halfway???

I am slowly nearing the halfway mark of this deployment.  I hear people comment about how exciting this must be.  I have to honestly say, halfway is much harder than exciting.  I know how far we have come and I am so proud of my children and myself, but to me...halfway means, I have as far as we have come left to go.  And that seems daunting at times.

    

Halfway is more of a peak of emotions for me.  If I could put into words how halfway feels it could be “Ok, I have really had enough of this now.”  

It seems like halfway brings on a whole new meaning to “missing Ryan”.  However, in remaining true to my goals for this deployment I have had to ask myself several hard questions.  Why does missing someone equal sadness?  Why cant a person miss someone without that “feeling”  Is it really “sadness” because of “Missing” him?

I guess for me I see it as understanding and accepting balance in my life.  Which is not an easy thing to do for anyone.   If I accept it then it normalizes it and makes it OK in a sense.   Knowing that you cant have one thing without the other.  That is balance for me.  I cant have happiness without sadness, I cant have fun without boredom, I cant miss or loose someone without love.  So this “missing” feeling isn’t scary and sad….its just a product of my love. 

Hopefully I can keep the end in sight.  I like to see it as a metaphor and visualize it glowing.  Like getting closer to a light.  I can always see it..... it started off a pinpoint and quite dark, but as the days move along the light is getting brighter and glowing….it is starting to illuminate my path and making other things in my path more clear. 

Maybe this is a way that many things in life can be considered.  Have a wonderful week and trust your light.