Tuesday, April 21, 2015

7 Years of Navy Life in a Nutshell, Plus the Future...

            Sometimes life gets away from you and before you know it you’ve been married for 7 years and married to the Navy for almost just as long. You’ve been through countless Dets and are on your 3rd deployment. Somewhere along the way you stop and think, “How did it all fly by so quickly?” and that’s when you realize all the happiness, madness, and just life you’ve experienced in just 7 years.
            Looking back I remember when we first joined, and yes I say we because we were married before he went to boot camp, and how confused I was about, well, everything. I did not have any clue what a BAH was or what the difference was between base pay and special pay. I did not know what a peanut butter uniform was nor how to shine shoes. I had no idea how to circumnavigate this thing called “TRICARE” or what Prime or Standard meant.
            No all I knew was that I loved my husband whom I now call my sailor, my love, my explorer, and most of all, my gift from God. I never knew the challenges we would face being married to the Navy. I never expected to go the route our life has taken us…but I would never change it for the world. When we got married I thought it would be different than it was because I was all too familiar with how the Air Force did things. My friends who were in the AF were home often and worked normalish shifts.
            Eye opener! The Navy was NOTHING like the AF and more closely related to insanity. When we first joined hubby did his boot camp thing and then came home but only to have to stay in the barracks because he wasn’t yet allowed to live off base even though we were married. Since most of his schools were in the state in which we grew up in I stayed in our hometown going about my daily life working and visiting friends.
            I kept dreaming that one day he would be allowed to finally come live with me and we could be married and happy. We spent countless weekends driving ridiculous hours just to see each other for a short while. Once that day finally came he was never home but training day in and day out trying to be the best sailor possible. Then he broke a bone in his foot…
            They then uprooted him from our home and sent him to a new school that required perfect vision knowing very well that his was slightly off. Then we got tossed into a whirlwind of what do we do now because the Navy counted that as his second school. Freaking out he went to a higher up and spoke with him and, thankfully due to his awesomeness, he squeezed him into the flight engineer program! With the warning “You better be first in your class!” and sure enough 9ish months later hubby graduated top in his class.
            Thankfully we had someone show us kindness when we first started our journey or our lives would have gone a completely different way. Thankfully God steered my husband on this journey because, even though it is chaotic, he loves it and if it makes him happy I’m happy as well. We were so blessed to be dropped into this aircrew community and into this wonderful state. Shortly after he graduated we were told to get to the other side of the country in 6 days to report.
Needless to say we made it in 7 due to inclement weather. But what a journey we had getting here and we both saw more of this country in those 6 days, ooops I mean 7, than we had ever done before. Also, we discovered a state that we love and might want to retire in one day. Somewhere along the way we discovered I have Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome a very evil disorder that makes it difficult to conceive.
In a community surrounded by reproduction it has made us the outcasts, in a way, in our community. Events that our command has held only brought heartache from time to time. Rude encounters with people who do not understand drove me, at one point, to be a recluse from the Navy community and almost despise it. However, one instance stood out and I’m somewhat thankful it occurred. One Family Readiness Group leader had said some harsh words on how it was “Not my fault that you do not have children” and this forever scarred me because I had just had a miscarriage.
However, it was this one mean instance that encouraged me to join our FRG when there was an opening to be an advocate for others like me or for those spouses who were just married but did not have children. Boy am I glad I did because since I’ve joined people have opened up within our command and it has flourished. We have such an amazing group of women leading these spouses to connect and become active that this deployment has not been nearly as bad.
In our 3rd deployment I can finally say I can do this and it has not mattered that each deployment has brought on one extra month each go. It has not mattered that each home cycle has had more and more dets. I have them and they have me and while it is not an Army Wives episode it is nice to know you are a part of a community; of something that is more than just you. But a community that you can rely on and I only hope that every spouse has the good experience I have had this deployment.
It is not about the fact that bad things happen while your spouse is gone but that you normally have them to help you through them. I look back and I used to focus on the negatives of deployment, this broke and that is not working properly. However, these things happen when my sailor is home too. It is how you handle them that makes you stronger. Let’s just say this deployment my sailors truck has died, the kitchen lights have gone out, the smoke detectors have gone off again, my father was in the hospital yet again, our microwave died, and I had major health issues that lasted a month.
You cannot focus on the negatives of that because these things have happened when my sailor was home I don’t even know how many times. What you can focus on is that you overcome it time and time again. It is rewarding because you did it by yourself or you had the wits to get help when you needed to! I live by the reward of bettering myself while my sailor is gone because my sailor deserves the best me I can be!
So three deployments down, I don’t even know how many dets, a total of about 4 years apart in our 7 years of marriage, two bachelors degrees and an almost masters degree, and I can definitely say I’ve worked on bettering myself. I am proud of who I’ve become and now we will start the journey of In Vetro Fertilization when my husband finally comes home to me yet again for, what feels like, the millionth time in our 7 years of marriage. Will we be parents? Only time, and the Navy hahaha, will tell…..