Drowning in a Sea of Red

I remember searching for weeks for  just the right journal for him to carry with him on his second tour.  Something small, but with bulk, so that he would have lots of room to write.  Something simple, yet elegant, to remind him of home.  The journal I chose was lime green, engraved with the one simple word, Journal.  It’s pages are lined, and the edges are silver.  It has been over a year since I quietly presented it to him, and he just as quietly tucked it away, hidden somewhere deep in his gear.

The book that he took and the book he brought home are one and same, but yet, it is very different. The cover, once new, is scratched and water-stained.  Little bits of the front appear to have been torn off, perhaps by being jostled by all of his heavy equipment. The pages are no longer clean and crisp, but they are bent and covered with words. That little book has taken a minor beating, but I find its appearance all the more fitting and appropriate, because of what it represents.  Deployment changes and reshapes you; the scars on the journal are a small visualization of the deeper scars deployment left on each of us, my husband, my child, and myself.  We all were a little battered and bruised, and like the journal, we survived to tell the tale.

And what a revelation those pages hold!  I waited until I had just the right opportunity to sit down and read my husband’s journal.  I waited until I was strong enough, emotionally and mentally to handle what I would find.  I knew it was going to be challenging, and I also knew I needed to give it my full attention.  My opportunity came this past March when my spouse was tasked for a short-term t.d.y. (temporary duty). I began my acquaintance with the small green book by taking it and staring at it.  I left it out where I could see it, and occasionally, I would pick it up and just as quickly put it down.  It took me a week to gather enough nerves to open the first page, take a deep breath, and read.

If you asked me to describe what reading my deployed husband’s first words were like, I can’t describe it.  I just can’t.  The best I can do is to tell you to close your eyes and imagine slowly being encased in a large ice-cube. And imagine that as you are freezing, a heated sensation spreads from the center of your heart, until your inside is on fire, even as your skin turns to ice.  That is what it was like for me.  Seeing my husband’s world so vividly described is very painful, very prideful, and very hard.  I could not read it all at once, and each time I read it, I cried, I shook, and sometimes, I gasped for air, because I could not breathe.

It has taken me two months to even begin to process the power of his words and the reality of his life in the combat zone.  The images and sounds he described are so clear, that they are seared on my mind and my heart.  I had nightmares, and actually, sometimes, I still do, because of what I read.  My husband lived in a sea of red.  You can see a ball of red-orange emotions, volcanic and fiery and blazing.  He swam red, breathed red, and even slept red. He was surrounded by it, from broken bodies, shattered limbs, charred skin, and everywhere, blood. It amazes me that the pages are ivory, when I all I see is crimson.  The journal drips blood, and I am surprised that my hands aren’t covered from holding it.

But, red is not the only color that the book holds.  As you are reading it, you are almost blinded by the glare of pure white. It radiates from beginning to end, and it is so bright that it almost pulsates.  The white is with his team, in the operating room, as they work hour after long, hard hour to save and  to repair lives.  You can follow the white in the stitches, and the needles, and the equipment, flashing here and there, illuminating the room.  You can trace it as tears fall, when, despite possible every effort made, their battle was lost.  It glistens when compassion and mercy make their presence known, breathing encouragement and support into the room.  It shines with a shine that it unique to our service members, a white that is created only when duty, nobility, pride, selflessness, and service are blended together. This white has no name; yet, when you see this  particular white, you recognize it immediately.

Finally, the last color that is hidden in the pages is blue.  It is subtle and shaded; it blends almost into the far edges of the pages.  That blue is there, hidden in the binding, and yet it holds the entire journal together.  It is soft and gentle, and like a new-born baby’s cheek, you want to reach out and stroke it.  It is in the twinkle of my husband’s eyes, when they crinkle in laughter at the jokes his unit makes. It marks the intensity of a child’s gaze, peering up at him behind his mask of pain. It is the color of joy, tinged with sadness, when recovery is evident and can be quietly celebrated.  And, it is the dark depths of unspoken griefs, bottled up emotions, deeply buried.  Blue is the silence and longing and all the words that were never written, yet are still there, existing between the lines. It is the language that only he speaks and only I understand; it is how I color love.

Two months have passed since I’ve read my husband’s private gift to me.  It has taken me that long to process the words and sift through the various shades that are found on each page.   While my spouse was t.d.y., there was a period when I was so overwhelmed by both his experiences and mine that all of the colors blended into a dull grey.  It took a month for the grey to clear, but now, I can see each color, vivid, real, and  present on the pages.  The little, lime-green book has been carefully packed away, with his journal from his first deployment.  I don’t know when he will deploy again, but I am prepared to accept it.   And, you can be sure that I will send him with a new journal, just as carefully chosen as the last.

The Word Dead Never Sounded Sweeter

You heard the news, right?  Where were you and what were you doing?  I was in the process of straightening my living room, shutting down the computer, and getting ready to go to bed.  Then my phone rang, and it was my mother calling.  My mom Never calls that late, so I knew at once that there must be an emergency.  Relieved to know that it was not a family matter, my heart sank and filled with dread by her words.  I do not have television,(another story for another day), so she was calling to let me know that  a major announcement was going to be made to the entire world in thirty minutes.  I powered up my computer, hung up the phone, and raced upstairs to awaken my sleeping husband and alert him to the news.  As I ran to get him, my initial thoughts were one, that a major terrorist attack either had happened or was happening, and two, that my husband’s phone was going to ring with a command telling him to high-tale to base.  When I heard the words, “Osama Bin Laden is Dead”, my dread and anxiety instantly vanished and changed to relief to shock to awe and wonder. My husband and I sat side by side,  stunned with surprise, and I fervently hoped that this was not a rumor.

When President Obama addressed the nation with these words, “Good evening.  Tonight, I can report to the American people and to the world that the United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden…” that was all the confirmation I needed.  I wish you could have seen the waves of emotions that swept across my husband’s face.  From sheer joy to a glimmer of sadness to fierce pride and finally steely determination.  As he kissed me good night, I watched him as he climbed the stairs.  I noted how proudly he stood, and how his jaw was tense with resolution.  Resolute and determined, because as a military family, we know well what the death of Osama Bin Laden means.

Deep down, in our heart of hearts, we know. It means that threat from terrorism, especially from Al Qaeda,  is not diminished, but it has been greatly weakened by Bin Laden’s demise.  We know that this may not be the end of deployment nor is it the end of the war on terror, but it most certainly is a game changer. It also means that every sacrifice we’ve made, the challenges, the trials, and the pain we’ve experienced as a family, in support of my husband’s service, has been Worth It.   Our family has now endured two tours of duty, equating to over fourteen months of separation in three years.  Yesterday’s headlines validated every tear I’ve shed, every long lonely night, every day of silent suffering, every anxiety and fear I’ve ever faced.  And let me tell you, there was a moment during my husband’s last deployment when I wasn’t sure if he was going to come home.

Call it love, call it women’s intuition, call it God’s whisper, but somehow, between the lines of a brief email and a strained voice on the phone, I knew with every cell in my body that something had gone terribly wrong.  My husband would never, could never, confirm or deny any such query, because to do so would directly violate OpSec. All I was  left with was unanswered, unspoken questions and a cold, bone-chilling fear.  I was certain that his base had been attacked, and nothing family or friends could say could convince me otherwise.  Two months after my husband came home, he turned to me one day and asked, “How did you know?”- because, my gut instinct happened to be right.  When he showed me the pictures of the shelling, my knees gave out, and I nearly fainted.

As a military wife, I am very thankful for my husband’s safe homecoming.  As an American, I know the cost that our nation has suffered and paid during ten years of war, war sparked by the plans of  cruel master-mind and cold-blooded killer.  From the innocent victims lost in 9/11, from the all of those lost in the Towers, the Pentagon, Shanksville, to the last soldier killed in the combat zone, our nation has seen suffering and endured loss.  We have seen brave men and women come home wounded, scarred emotionally and physically, and our hearts have been broken when we’ve learned the names of those not coming home at all.   Yesterday’s headlines marked a momentous, somber, glorious moment our country.  Though it  cannot erase and undo the suffering and pain inflicted upon our nation and our families, it can start the healing process. For myself, and for my family, this is a moment worth celebrating.

I do not celebrate the death or the demise of Osama Bin Laden.  But, I do celebrate a major, key, decisive victory in the war on terror by our troops.  I celebrate the fact that shadow cast on my daughter’s childhood, of having to grow up in a time of war and watch her daddy deploy, has thinned, and her future has just got a little brighter.  I celebrate in support and honor and recognition of the sacrifices and the service of the members of the Armed Forces.  I am so very proud of my husband, of his unit, and all those who serve or have served with him.

So far, my celebrations have been limited to decorating the house in red, white, and blue.  I was determined to greet the new day with the colors of our flag, and I stayed up all night to make that happen.  As I was celebrating, I was pausing to remember.  I remembered to say a prayer for those of our troops still deployed and abroad.  I pray for their safety and their well-being, because I fear that we will see retaliation in the weeks and months ahead.  There are men and women still in the combat field, facing attack and possible enemy fire.  Some of those deployed and abroad happen to by my husband’s co-workers and some of those at the bases abroad are my friends.  I remember the names and faces of our Fallen Heroes, and I remember and celebrate for them, in honor of their sacrifice. Shortly before I was getting ready to log off and start decorating, I struck up a conversation with a young man who needed to celebrate and remember, too.

He was remembering his best friend and buddy, who was killed in action two years ago.  He told me that  this victory was for him.  I learned that his name was Nick, and he joined as soon as he graduated from high school, at the young age of eighteen.  He was so driven and so inspired by the events of 9/11, that he simply had to serve.  His friend recalled that his enthusiasm and patriotism was so passionate, he would often try to recruit his classmates with him into joining, too.  Nick died in combat, just barely twenty-one years of age. His friend said that there was no doubt that Nick was joining the party in heaven.

I believe that after enduring a decade of war, our nation has earned the right to mark and celebrate this momentous occasion.  I believe we need to show our troops our gratefulness and pride.  I feel that we need to celebrate as a country, to show our troops and their families, a unified home front, a nation that is proud of its accomplishments. I believe that we owe it to our service members to pause and celebrate, to remember our Fallen, like Nick and Matthew Snyder.  Just as we came together to mourn the events and the loss on 9/11, we need to come together to celebrate this victory.  I am very grateful to the Navy Seals for successfully conducting and carrying out this covert mission, and I know I am not alone in my sentiments.  I feel that we need to take a moment to gather and celebrate that finally, after ten long years , President Obama was able to say with clarity and conviction, to our nation and to the world, “Mission Accomplished.”

“Let us remember that we can do these things not just because of wealth or power, but because of who we are:  one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” – President Barack Obama, May 1. 2011 11:43 p.m. E.T.

God Bless Our Troops and Their Family Members! Thank You for Your Sacrifices and Service to our Country!