The Liberating Realization That Nothing Is In Your Control

This article first appeared on militaryspouse.com’s website on August 8, 2017.

She gave up!

It’s happened to us all, or it will. It’s the day you finally give up, the day you realize that nothing is in your control and you surrender to it all. It’s very liberating. And as a military spouse, I wish all of you the peace and happiness you will find when you throw in the towel.

When I was first married, I was as bright eyed and hungry for adventure as most are. How could I not be? My fiancé had promised me a life of travel and experiences. While he was still at the Air Force Academy, he filled in his dream sheet.

Ah, the intoxicating form that makes us all go crazy.

It is billed as a way to state your desires and have them fulfilled. And at this point in our lives, I believed it. We wrote down our wishes and fantasized about where we would start our Air Force career. Our top choices were, of course, overseas assignments. After that came locations on the East or West coast. We are New Englanders after all and the ocean calls to us.

Imagine our surprise when assignments dropped and we were relocating to Omaha, Neb.! That’s nowhere near an ocean OR anywhere exotic.

Let’s call this Disappointment No. 1.

Eek!

But as a good military spouse, I looked at it as a new adventure anyhow. Nevertheless, it was somewhere I’d never been.

We arrived at Offutt AFB in the middle of the summer and my husband began his life in the command post.

That job required shift work so our schedules very rarely meshed. Disappointment No. 2.

Our first Christmas had him working mids while I had the time off since I taught in public schools.

That would be Disappointment No. 3. I cried quite a few times that holiday season.

After a year, my spouse cross-trained into a new field and we were heading to Florida for training! Woohoo! I get my ocean!

But wait, Disappointment No. 4 is on the horizon.

We are at Tyndall AFB and located nearby is a papermill. So, every day the breeze would deliver that lovely smell. I tried to be positive since I got my coastal living but it was hard since I was pregnant and my senses were heightened.

I knew that after training, we would be heading to Oklahoma. Disappointment No. 5, but at least I was prepared.

Really?

Back in the early 1990s, there wasn’t much to brag about in Oklahoma City. But we bought our first house and found great friends. Life was good — for a while.

Around the three-year point into that assignment, our friends started getting new duty stations. My spouse and I began mapping out where we would like to go and how our lives would look at each new base. He would hear of new assignments and we would start dreaming.

“Saudi Arabia is available.  What do you think?”

“It’s not my first choice, but it could be fun.”

“They need someone in Hawaii.”

“Duh. You don’t need to ask, just put in for it.”

“How about Alaska?”

“It’s so cold there but I guess I could do two to three years. It would be different.”

You get the picture.

And here come Disappointments Nos. 6 to 25. 

Each time he would talk about a change of scenery and it didn’t happen, I was crushed. More disappointments came as our friends would go to new bases and we remained in Oklahoma.

After five and a half years, we moved to Georgia. I was beginning to think that I could surrender to the Air Force gods and go with the flow. But I would be sucked back in whenever my husband would pull out that carrot called the dream sheet and I would get my hopes up once again.

The final straw for me came when a higher-ranking officer told us that my husband was getting a remote so she could assign him to teach at Weapons School in Las Vegas.While I looked forward to Vegas, I dreaded the remoteIt was that confirmation that we are pawns in the game of Air Force chess that I finally surrendered.

Peace out

Afterward, I no longer took stock in the dream sheet or my spouse’s charts that plotted what would happen if we got assignment X or Y. I gave myself permission to ride the wave without stress. My spouse would try to drag me back in but I couldn’t do it. And let me tell you, I was much happier this way. I never say that I “gave up;” I say that I retained my sanity.

So now as a seasoned spouse, I try to pass my knowledge off to others.

We can’t control much but we can abandon the hold that “what if” has on our lives.

For some people, that concession may never come. But for others, the release of that one area of our lives can be so freeing that everything else seems easier. It is a sweet surrender.

I’m free!

Time In Oklahoma-A Weekend of Festivities

This weekend was chock full of fun! There was no long drives down Oklahoma road that led us to disappointing locations. Instead we had fun locally.

It all started on Saturday. I held a “thank you” brunch for the Key Spouses in our wing. The Air Force has a program where selected spouses have the opportunity to communicate the vision of the commander to other spouses. This is a peer-to-peer program that provides support to all families within the unit. These men and women work tirelessly for our families and a brunch is a small way to say “thanks”.

Even though I don’t “do” hostessing, I did it for these women. We had a good turnout and I think everyone enjoyed themselves. There was plenty of food and my co-hosts were exceptional. They alleviated my stress and provided some yummy food too.

Eating food and having fun!

After that wonderful morning, we headed over to the Oklahoma State Fair. Who doesn’t love a fair? We have gone every year we’ve been stationed here. It was different this year since there are no kids at home. There was no need to go to the petting zoo or the rides. And with that, we had the freedom to go where we wanted to.

And we took advantage of that freedom. Oklahoma is a big agricultural state so the 4-H and the FFA had big displays. I love seeing what kids can do! And once we finished that section, we wandered off to the food entries. I love seeing what people in the local community can create. And a bonus is that we know a woman who enters many submissions to the fair, and she wins!

Pam is not only a wonderful baker, she is the consummate hostess. She invited us, as well as other commanders on base to her house for a BBQ party. She bakes up a storm and her husband, Mike, always has touching words for us. They are incredible supporters of our wing as well as the base as a whole.

They opened their home to us on Sunday evening. We were not disappointed. Pam had her baking prowess on display. I love all of the desserts as well as the way she displays it all. You can’t go home hungry.

And they make sure you don’t. Mike told us that the rule was that you had to have “two hamburgers, two hot dogs and dessert.” I didn’t quite succeed in that endeavor but I tried.

Since I failed, I had to take home a few doggy bags. I wasn’t upset at all. The desserts were delicious! It gives me the opportunity to continue the joy each brownie brought me. In addition, Pam sends us home with extra treats that weren’t out for all.

And that’s how you keep a party going.