Monday, August 2, 2010

It's easy to forget.

Really, it is.

It's so easy to forget that we are at war. That men and women are gone, fighting, sometimes dying. That wives are home alone, hoping, praying, trying to keep everything running. That little girls and boys are waiting, wishing their mommies and daddies would come home. That parents and siblings are trying to run their daily lives, hoping that no news really is good news.

It's easier to go about our daily lives and not think about it. It's even easier when you have no connection to this war--which so many Americans can claim.

I'll admit--with my husband home, safe and sound, and most of my friend's husbands home, even I sometimes forget the gravity of what we are doing. Even living on base, I forget. It seems so far away, so long ago that he was gone.

Then, sitting at breakfast one morning, the ground rumbles and the air shakes and you look out your window to see Marines in AAVs rolling down the street in full on war gear, driving towards Marines dressed the same prowling around the buildings. Your husband rushes to the window, picking up your daughter, so she can see, she can realize, she can know what is going on, what our men and women are doing, what Daddy did while he was gone.

And suddenly, you remember. You remember just what is happening in other parts of this world, and how you've not given it a thought, and how maybe, just maybe, you should stop complaining about anything going on in your world.

5 comments:

  1. Once C got home from this past deployment, I sort of started to forget that there were still a lot of people deployed. I didn't realize I was forgetting until my friend's husband got called up to serve as a causality notification officer last week. That hit all of us like a ton of bricks.

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  2. I love this. Every bit of it is so true. When you're settled in, and it's just plain ol' everyday stuff, you kinda forget that on the other side of the world, there are terrible things going on and somebody is probably getting a knock on the door at THAT second.

    You kinda forget that just a short while ago, it was you waiting and you're taking everything you have right now for granted. And then, something happens...maybe something tiny or not-so tiny, and it just slaps you in the face and breaks your heart. Things could always be so much worse, and we forget that all too often.

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  5. Hi, I like your blog!

    I am a casting director for a USO sponsored docu-reality series called ROAD TO REUNION. We are looking for military families who have a loved one on active duty overseas and want to tell your story. For more information please email me at roadtoreunioncasting@gmail.com or fill out a submission form at www.roadtoreunion.com

    Thanks!
    CHRIS

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