Aug 4, 2016

Strange and Breathless Days

{photos by kdarling photography}
 "The first week of August hangs at the very top of the summer, the top of the live-long year, like the highest seat of a Ferris wheel when it pauses in its turning. The weeks that come before are only a climb from balmy spring, and those that follow a drop to the chill of autumn, but the first week of August is motionless, and hot. It is curiously silent, too, with blank white dawns and glaring noons, and sunsets smeared with too much color. Often at night there is lightning, but it quivers all alone. There is no thunder, no relieving rain. These are strange and breathless days." 

Every summer, I wait. Impatiently and with expectation, I live through the heat and sweat until that first crisp, cool day, when the air smells faintly of cinnamon and apples and the leaves begin to turn. Fall has always been my most favorite season, and I revel in pulling out plaid shirts and cozy scarves. This year, I think I'll feel the cold even more without the warmth of his hand in mine.

The night he told me, he was states away for drill with his new unit. He told me over the phone, and I kept it together until we hung up. Then, in the dark, I felt my way through the hall and into the living room. I switched the light on and held up our tiny globe, tracing a line from Illinois across the blue ocean, all the way to the other side of the world, letting my fingers land in that country as I took a breath. It's too far. He'll be too far.

I didn't go to bed until four the next morning. All night, my mind raced with what this would mean for us. A few days later, I had to take his will to the safe deposit box. I followed the cheerful bank clerk down the stairs as he made small talk, folding the will in half so he wouldn't see what I held, and it was about that moment when it began to sink in that my husband really is leaving.

There are days that this swallows me whole. I am so terrified, so heartbroken thinking about the dark cloud looming over the next year, that I sometimes cannot breathe. And instead of being able to calm my racing heart, it's reminding me that this panic won't be for the future what ifs, but for the reality of day in and day out until he is home. It often feels grueling to live for the moment when I see a wild tornado spinning on the horizon.

So this is what it's like. I have been an emotional wreck in between the normal. I can usually hold it together for about an hour before reality insists on being felt, and I have to run to my room to wipe the tears away. I want to cling to Sky every second, and at the same time, put up walls in the hope that I won't miss him as much that way. I rehearse where and when and how we'll tell Millie and Walter that they won't see their dad until next year. I stop thumbing through a rack of clothes because there's a sad country song playing, and what's the point in buying something he's not even going to see me wear anyway? I've stopped picking him up much from the store, because what would he be able to use in 130 degree heat and sand? I want to talk about the deployment every five minutes (hence this blog post) because it is all I can think about, and because the planner in me wants to micromanage every second of his absence. I ask him to make me promise after promise. And despite all of this, a very tiny part of me still has a hope that this is all a giant misunderstanding, that they won't need him after all, that this isn't happening


Soon, he'll be gone for training, and then home for a just a little while before he's officially in deployment mode. The time feels so short. We're trying to plan a trip away, a last hurrah, because the military didn't give enough notice to be able to send us to their weekend of information and bonding. I've felt so utterly alone when it comes to getting support from the Army, which is made more frustrating by the fact that we are a Reserve family, living no where near a base or anyone who could help. It's so strange that my husband is being sent to the other half of the earth and no one will breathe a word to me, and barely to him. We are having to plan and decide and gather completely on our own, and going from our normal life to a temporary active duty family is the biggest adjustment and challenge.

I am hoping, maybe after a month or two into deployment, that I'll find my strength, leave some of the sadness behind, and feel confident and calm about being here while he's there. For now, this is what I'm capable of, and I can't apologize for it. I've tried to come up with metaphors to describe it in non-military ways, but they all sound overly dramatic and probably silly. So I will just say this- it hurts, and it's confusing, and I am trying to cherish our remaining days.

When Millie's tooth came out the night before her birthday, I sat in the other room and looked up, whispering a prayer of thanks that he was home. It is one less thing he'll miss in an ocean of those moments. He was here for their birthdays this year, even if he may miss the next ones. And though it is part of what makes the timing of this especially crushing, I am so glad that we are happy. So many years of struggle went before, but we have spent these last months in true happiness. It devastates me to finally reach this place only to have it taken from us, but it also makes me so grateful that our parting will be one of love and hope. Our next anniversary won't be spent together, but it will be one of the hardest, sweetest, and most meaningful.

So this year, autumn will be chilly long before I sip a hot cider. I'll have to learn how to love it in different ways, and learn how to love it despite what it will be taking away from me. I will have to feel the snap of confetti-colored leaves beneath my feet, lift my face to the harvest moon, and know that, by next autumn, I'll feel his warmth beside me again.

Until then, I'll carry these last searing days we have together like hot coals, watching them glow, feeling every last ember in my hands until the leaves turn yet again.

10 comments:

  1. Erika, I'm so sorry you have to go through this. D hasn't been deployed but he's been to a few schools (which I'm not even trying to compare to a deployment). We're a Guard family so I do know how it feels not to have that support. I hope, for your sake, that this next year passes quickly and that he is kept safe while he's away.

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  2. Erika, the way you write and express yourself is truly beautiful. I teared up a bit, reading through this post, because I could feel your emotion. I'm praying for you, for your marriage, for Sky, for the kids. I know this is hard and sudden, and I'm sorry! Big hugs to you, and let me know if I can do anything!

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  3. I absolutely love the way you write, it's just amazing!

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  4. I'm sorry he has to leave but it'll be okay. You are strong and will make the time fly.

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  5. I mentioned to Christopher last night that I feel so bad you're in a civilian town without the support of a military community. I can't imagine. It can become exhausting explaining things over and over to well meaning civilians. I wish I could come visit you with coffee and doughnuts. I'm praying for you all.

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  6. Erika, I love your writing style. Keep doing what feeds your soul. Be strong for your children, but that doesn't mean don't cry. When my Hubs is "out playing in the dirt/sand," I am in Constant Physical Movement. CPM. Just keep going, and going, ...and going. **hugs**

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  9. This is such a beautiful and heartbreaking entry and I applaud you for handling this scary time with such grace and strength. My husband recently joined the Reserves and while I'm so proud of him for serving this country, I dread the day "that phone call" might come. Thank you so, so much for this blog. I've been following it for some time now and it is so helpful to hear from someone who's been through the same experiences. I think one of the greatest challenges for Reserve spouses is feeling like there is a lack of support, but people like you and blogs like this help create a valuable network to remind us we're not alone! While mine is only in the early stages, I'd love to invite you to check out my own blog where I discuss my life as a brand new milspouse! https://amberinprogressblog.wordpress.com/

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  10. It is so hard being a Reserve family. I know that feeling of isolation and having to explain to everyone around me that he wasn't just on a business trip. Know you have support around you.

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