January 01, 2005

LOOKING BACK

I liked Bryan Strawser's 2004 recap so much that I decided to do one of my own. His will have nicer photos though.

Couples who survived OIF I have told me that timelines are hard to maintain after redeployment. They say it feels like they're missing a year of their life together, and that it's often confusing when they say things like, "Remember last year when we went to Spain?" when in fact it was two years ago. I wonder sometimes if when my husband gets home, 2004 will seem like a weird dream to both of us.

February brought OIF II and my husband's deployment to Iraq. On Valentine's Day, to be exact. We said our goodbyes and parted for 13 months.

yellowribbon.bmp

In March I began teaching ENGL101 at the college and have taught four sections of English this year. The experience has been extremely rewarding, and I'm sorry to see it come to an end. But I've decided that once my husband gets home, I no longer want to work nights and weekends; we've been apart enough already.

In April I started hanging out with two girls who have been a blessing during the deployment. (You two know who you are!) They started reading my blog and we found we have much in common, and I have learned a lot from their life experiences. I found that there were people right here in my own backyard who shared my interests in politics and the military, and they've been a crucial part of my deployment experience.

In August, our good friend LT A was wounded in Mosul. He has been in and out of the ICU for months, and he finally went home for good a few weeks ago. He's doing everything he can to stay in the Army and stay combat arms if he can. LT A's injury was my first brush with heartache during the deployment. It wouldn't be my last.

In September, my mother came to visit. We went to France, Italy, and Flossenburg. In France, my relatives asked what I wanted to do there. I said I wanted to see the American soldiers at St. Avold. They said, "Oh, do Americans work there?" To which I solemnly replied, "No, I'd like to see the soldiers who died for us." I wanted to see Joe and Tommy.

stavold.jpg

In September my heart broke when one of our students from the college died in Iraq. In November it broke again when my friend's husband was killed.

2_2551689.jpg

In November my husband came home for R&R. It was wonderful to have him home, and it felt great to have life back to normal for a while. We watched in joy as President Bush was re-elected and as Yassir Arafat kicked the bucket. What a month!

rulesdrools.jpg

At the end of November, my co-worker picked a fight with me. A combination of my irritatingly low salary plus the fact that I had been reading Atlas Shrugged prompted me to quit my job as a college registrar. I took the rest of December off to use up my vacation days, and I go back to work on Monday and officially give my notice.


Looking forward, 2005 will bring many changes for us. I am applying to be an English teacher at the high school, so we'll see how that turns out. My husband's branch detail came through too, so he'll be switching jobs. For those of you who don't know the system, officers can sometimes be "loaned out" to other branches for their first two years of their commission. My husband's control branch was Armor, which is how he ended up as a tank platoon leader in Iraq. But his basic branch, the job he would be in if he decided to stay in the Army, is...(drumroll)...Finance Corps. That's right, my husband is one of the illustrious 30 commissions per year to become a finance officer. It turns out that the Finance Detachment here needs him, so after the deployment he will be switching branches. Big changes on the horizon for both of us.

If all goes according to plan, my husband should be returning from Iraq in the middle of March. That will conclude OIF II and the year of our life that didn't really exist. I'm anxious to move on to 2005.

Posted by: Sarah at 05:38 AM | Comments (4) | Add Comment
Post contains 725 words, total size 5 kb.

1 Sarah, Well done! I'm glad that you stole the outline Do have a wonderful 2005 - all of you are never far from my thoughts. Bryan

Posted by: Bryan Strawser at January 01, 2005 09:54 AM (csJBt)

2 Thanks for the link to the dissident frogman, by the way, I had never read his posts before - and the one you linked to is fabulous. Bryan

Posted by: Bryan Strawser at January 01, 2005 10:18 AM (csJBt)

3 Sarah - I loved your year in review. Boy - did you ever think you'd have these experiences both happy and sad. Life and it's twists and turns can bring such surprises. It's been a joy to be acquainted with you Sarah. Happy New Years to you and Russ.

Posted by: Toni at January 01, 2005 01:20 PM (FdSgw)

4 Yes, it is weird to figure out how long ago things were because of deployment. I generally just start with a year and a half ago when she left for Ft. Lewis and go from there. It is weird to at least mentally write off an entire year or more because of being apart.

Posted by: Beth at January 01, 2005 01:32 PM (xIxao)

Hide Comments | Add Comment

Comments are disabled. Post is locked.
47kb generated in CPU 0.0119, elapsed 0.1018 seconds.
48 queries taking 0.0949 seconds, 174 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.