enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

first : Thank you so much for the encouragement and thoughts on "making a home feel like home" on my wall painting post. It was so nice that so many can relate and I was happy to hear how many military people read this blog. It's something I don't talk about a lot, but something I want to share some thoughts on today.

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So to begin, I feel like a fraud writing this post. We don't really know too much about military life yet. But this is the story of our (well, mostly my) relationship with the military so far.

Paul joined the US Navy after college. He applied to the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (say that 5 times fast) for medical school and got in. This program offers med school "for free" and pays you while you attend for four years. Afterwards, you do a one year internship at a military hospital and then do a two to three year General Medical Officer tour (this is what we are about to start). After that, you complete a four to five year residency program and then you owe at least four to six additional years of service as a military doctor.

Did you follow that? No? Welcome to the club!

After his commitment is over, Paul can get out of the military and become a civilian doctor. Or he can continue for about 8 more years, retire with military benefits and then be a doctor in the civilian world. We have no idea what we plan on doing. It will depend on the health care climate and how much control we feel we have over our lives.

Paul and I started dating after he had already committed to the military medical school program, but before he had left for Maryland to actually start. At the time, I had just finished up my junior year of college. I was a business major and very excited about becoming a high powered person for a major company. (Feel free to laugh out loud – though at the moment I am exceptionally high powered in my company of one.)

Even during those first couple days, both Paul and I knew we were never going to just be a fling. I remember a conversation at 11'o clock at night on the sidewalk in front of my parents house before we even started dating. I told Paul I didn't know if I could commit to a life where we were not in control of where we lived or what we did. I told him I wasn't sure I could be married to someone who didn't have weekends off or had to go to war zones for eight months every couple years.

What can I say? I was only twenty-one. I didn't know anyone who was in the military. I wanted my future job to be important too.

Paul totally understood. On the sidewalk, in the dark, he told me that he had already committed to this path. He was on it for good. He thought we could be something amazing, but if I didn't want the life he had already signed up for, that was fine. There was someone out there who would.

Obviously, I decided to roll with it.

Paul moved to Maryland that fall and I went back to USC for my senior year. My senior year was awesome social-wise, but sucked career-plan-wise. I didn't get any of the random corporate jobs I applied for. Around February, I decided to take the show to Paul and look for work in Maryland. In August, I moved in with Paul. We had been dating for a year and had never lived in the same city. Some people thought I was crazy. Fortunately, I didn't care. SIDENOTE : people sometimes ask how we dealt with the long-distance. The answer is, we didn't. We (mostly me) were not very good at maintaining a new relationship from across the country. I moved to shorten the distance and really make the relationship work.

We spent almost three years in Maryland. We were 3000 miles away from our families and best friends. We had each other, but that was it. Other than the fact that Paul wore a uniform to work and had to get permission to travel, our lives didn't feel very affected by the military. I told people Paul was in med school. I never said he was in the Navy. I certainly wasn't ashamed, that just didn't factor in when I thought about him or our lives.

We moved out to San Diego after our wedding and Paul's graduation so Paul could start his intern year at the Naval Hospital at Balboa. We were married now, so I got a military ID and health insurance that paid for doctors appointments, not just catastrophes. We started grocery shopping on the military base. That is the extent of how our military lives changed. Soon after we moved, I went to a military spouses event. I left in tears. I hated (and still hate) being lumped into a group just because my husband does something. If I made a list of things I am, military spouse would not make the top twenty. (Though wife would be up there, along with really organized.) Plus it was all so intense. Paul had never made the military a big part of our lives and so strangers trying to do it stressed me out.

So fast-forward another year to TODAY. In some ways, things are still the same. We still go on base for groceries. Paul still wears his uniform to work. But things are also totally different. At the end of June, Paul will graduate from the intern program and begin his two year stint as a General Medical Officer (GMO). He is leaving for four weeks of training in Mississippi in early July and then will deploy towards the beginning of August. We are not sure yet where he is going (though it looks like Afghanistan) and don't expect him to return until mid-February.

Nothing sounds more "military spouse" than "My husband is being deployed to Afghanistan."

Obviously, I am terrified for Paul to deploy. I have a hard time not knowing what the "mood" will be over there. My biggest fear is obvious : that he will not come back. I know that at the very least, he will come back changed in a way that I can't understand. He will have experiences I will never be able to relate to. I am frustrated that him being gone puts part of our lives here (like starting a family) on hold. It is difficult to be committed to a man that is committed to the military and all the fear for me starts and ends with deployment.

And yet :

I am so glad that because of the military, we spent three years as an island of just us. It formed our relationship uniquely and made a bond that I doubt a deployment or five can break. I am glad our kids will have the opportunity to live in different states (and hopefully countries). I moved twice during my school years because of my dad's job. It improved my social skills and made my family of four very close. We relied only on each other during those years and I am so grateful for that.

I am glad that because of the military we do not have any debt. Paul built up savings during med school and not many people can say that. I am glad Paul will always have a job, even in a changing medical world. Because of Paul's job and its stability, I am able slowly carve out a path that I love without worrying about  bringing in big paychecks (…yet. I fully intend on one day bringing in the big bucks.). And mostly, I am so glad Paul enjoys his job. I find strength in the fact that he is looking forward to his first deployment.

I know we will get through those long months apart. I know we will get through all the moves we have coming. I know I am strong enough to be there for Paul. I know I am strong enough to be on my own sometimes and raise our kids solo for months at a time. And I know he is more than strong enough to be there for me and all the little ones we will have.

We're blessed. A little scared, but blessed.

(PS – Paul read this before I posted it. I don't do that a lot but it was important to me that this post had his stamp of approval and that it came from both of us, not just me.)

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66 responses to “on military life.”

  1. LittleMissPip Avatar

    This is an incredibly personal and powerful post. The strength that it shows and the deep rooted faith that you have in your relationship is admirable.
    It seems very inappropriate for someone who doesn’t know you personally to say I am sure you will fine but from what comes across in your writing I believe that you will be. I wish you all the very best of luck for a very exciting life.

    Like

  2. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    I am engaged to an Army medic so I can relate in so many ways. I also have a hard time with the military wife groups because I am not just his partner and that is how those events made me feel, defined. I did not want to hear about how hard deployment was for them or bond over it, I was living it. I think the hardest part of deployment is being alone, and not in the sense that you now live alone, but the fact that your friends and family know what you are going through but they don’t “know”. It is months of walking on eggshells, avoiding the new, and a constant feeling like I holding my breath and praying.
    They do come back changed and it kills me that he saw some terrible events that I will never know about or understand but over time the changes dull down, the lingering effects linger less, the bond between us grows to a better understanding of each others strengths, but the absolute pride I have in him makes up for the lack of having him by my side for those long 14 month deployments.
    Best of luck with the changes ahead! It is hard but I think you will do great!

    Like

  3. Armalite Avatar

    I do not comment often on your blog (though I’ve taken 2 or 3 of your online classes), and I am strongly anti-military… But I just had to say I’m touched by the love and commitment that radiate from this post. Nothing in my life makes me able to relate to your experience, but your husband and you both seem to be amazing people, and I wish you all the best. Not that I think you will need it, since you seem perfectly able to make your life work for you.

    Like

  4. kristy Avatar
    kristy

    My father was an Air Force pilot before I was born. He separate from the Air Force to become a commercial pilot, which he’s been ever since. I can tell you that military pride never leaves. I wasn’t even alive for the 8 years my dad served, but I’m still proud of him everyday for his service and dedication to our country. Your kids will be proud of Paul, too. Serving our country is a truly selfless act.

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  5. Valocrat Avatar

    Thanks for sharing this very personal part of your life! I hope your time apart goes quickly!

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  6. Meg Avatar

    How courageous of you to share this post. Thanks for always being so candid and open. (p.s. I always thought I’d marry someone in the military.)

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  7. Marisa Avatar

    I bet it took a lot of courage to write such a personal post, especially one about the military. My husband and I survived four years in the military, and I never felt like an Army Wife, even when he was in Iraq. But I was always his wife, and that’s what mattered. Good luck with your journey together!

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  8. Flo Avatar

    Beautiful post.
    It’s always amazing when 2 people really find each other, and manage to carve a new life for themselves. It feels that you and Paul did and are still doing exactly that !
    I’m not a military wife, so I can’t really relate to this specific situation, but a few things you wrote still had me strongly nod in front of my computer. My husband is Japanese and we live in Japan, and me being sometimes defined solely as “spouse of a Japanese” is very…disheartening. Like this is my sole identity and purpose. Like you said, I’d definitely put “wife” high up in the list of who I am, but “spouse of a Japanese” doesn’t define me (or us) in any way.
    My heart aches a bit when I read about your soon-to-begin deployment experience, but your love seem so real and so strong, I feel you two can tackle pretty much everything ! I’ll keep on cheering for both of you when the time comes !

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  9. Lisa Fine Avatar

    Wow. Beautiful post, Elise.
    The military world is quite foreign to me, so reading this gave me an honest look at what it’s like. And thank you for being so honest.

    Like

  10. Mandy Dake Avatar
    Mandy Dake

    I am a army wife of 10 years, and the hubby has been in 22 years ish. We move all the time, and I loved your post on painting. After moving so many times, sometimes I just get to bent out to even bother hanging things or decorating..
    I think that Paul and you should strongly consider working as a military doc and the retiring with benifits, then getting another doc job, cause he’ll still be young. That would set you guys up amazing. That’s where we almost are. The hubby will retire, and we will get over half his pay for the rest of our lives, and keep the medical benifits and then he will go out into the civilan world and work again..
    hugs, m

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  11. Frances Avatar

    Thank you so much for such an articulate post and sharing such a significant and personal part of your life. Your openness is refreshing and inspiring–much like your crafty/business posts!

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  12. Cindy Avatar
    Cindy

    The one thing about military spouses getting together is that they all share that experience of “My ____ is being deployed to _______.” It’s nice to have support from that point of view, though at least you are living near your family now, so that will help. My dad was regular Navy, so we moved every two years. Mostly, I think it was a good thing – we took our stability with us, you know? And you have found yourself a career that you can pursue from anywhere, so there’s no real limit on that as he goes through his obligatory service. I wish you all the best luck. At least now there are so many more ways to keep in touch when you have to be apart.

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  13. Jenn Avatar

    I’ve been in the military for almost 14 years now. I enlisted back in 1997 and was commissioned in 2006. When I went to pilot training I was the oldest person in my class and when I was at the club most of the people asked me whose “wife” I was. It kills me still that when seeing a woman the first thing the guys think of is “wife”. And then there were the actual wives…. who for some reason I did not fit in with. I have heard horror stories of the cattiness and sometimes childish behavior of some wives clubs, however, I do know some amazing women that are wives. I encourage you to keep an open mind about the wives’ clubs… although you may find better friends in the people Paul works with.
    I’ve been to Afghanistan twice now and it is an entirely different world. It’s surreal to say the least. If you have an specific questions or want to pick my brain about any of it, feel free to send me an email. No question is too silly 😉
    For the first time in 14years I am finally on the other side of a deployment. my boyfriend is deployed right now. He had to go with only 10days notice and it stinks. I’ve now experienced BOTH sides of the whole deployment thing!
    Keep up your positive attitude and I applaud you for moving across country for your relationship. THAT is what is going to make your marriage work, you did what was best for your relationship… and didn’t focus on just you. It took me a bit longer to realize the importance of that…. and when my man returns, I think I will be making a move myself 🙂

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  14. Adrith Avatar

    Thank you so much for sharing this, Elise – it’s a comfort to hear from another person who eschews the label “military spouse”. I tried for years to make the hat fit, but their style of hat doesn’t suit me, and I recently decided that that’s okay.

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  15. Carrie Avatar
    Carrie

    Such a great post. Thanks for sharing your feelings so honestly. It’s clear the future holds some pretty bright things for you and Paul. All the best.

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  16. Catherine Avatar

    Very interesting to see this side of the military. You know without the bootcamp and stuff. My husband is Air Force and after almost 5 years of him being in as soon as we had our first baby within months he was leaving for his first deployment. Now we’re facing another, even longer one, to a more dangerous place. It stinks and I agree, it disrupts your life. We wanted to start trying to have another baby, but that’s on hold now.
    I love your statement of being “a little scared, but blessed” and that’s completely how I feel. But then again I think being a military family has a love/hate relationship. One day I’m thinking how thankful I am and being extra cheerful for our life in the Air Force and the next day he drops the D word (deployment). Just take the good with the bad.
    And yes it’s awesome to live in other countries. This coming from a girl whose first base was in England and now we’re living in Germany! 🙂

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  17. creole wisdom Avatar

    Having read your blog since 2005, I feel like I “know” you, even though I obviously don’t!
    I think this is my favorite post of yours.
    I don’t know what it’s like to be married to a person in the military, but I can express my thanks. Sacrifice is a hard thing. Know that people are grateful, very grateful for what Paul (and you) are doing.

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  18. cinback Avatar

    Very touching. My husband is not in the military, but he is a firefighter. It is different, I know, than what you are going through, but I get the fear of not returning. My husband does 4 day/night shifts and then is off for 4 days/nights. Every 4 days, when he walks out the door, I wonder if he will be walking back in. I have raised our two girls as a (half-time) single mom. I have slept alone many many nights. I have cursed the fear and loneliness.
    However, having a husband who loves his job and has a heart for helping people, brings the greatest joy. There are too many people who go off to jobs that they hate day after day. My husband loves his job and it has given him such a sense of purpose and pride. I would never take that away from him…and I am learning to sleep alone!
    Blessings to you. It will take some adjusting, but you can do it.

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  19. Stephanie Howell Avatar

    first, i’m sad that someone could say they are anti-military. i am. anti war? i get. not sure if i am welcome to comment on another comment, but i have to say that that terminology makes my stomach hurt.
    moving on- i’m proud of you for writing this.
    i do hope that you won’t continue to think it’s a bad thing to be part of that group b/c paul does something.
    it can change your life to find that friend that can put into words exactly what you are feeling. i have friends through the frg that are part of my heart. you will need women like that when p is gone. there is an AMAZING amount of support out there for you. it is never bad to join the military family. 🙂
    j leaves next week for our seventh deployment and my heart is aching right now and i’m sick to my stomach. it doesn’t get easier. but you do it.
    you are strong, and beautiful, and you should talk about this part of your life more often.i love this post. you have a lot to offer, you know! you could help lots of the young,scared, new wives just like you.
    hey, if you really don’t want to get involved, please don’t think i’m pushing you. i just want you to understand all the wonderful things the military has to offer, beautiful girl.
    i am always here for anything. ANYTHING if you need me. xo

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  20. Stephanie Howell Avatar

    i wanted to clarify. i am LOTS of other things besides an army wife. but that part of me has made me stronger. some frgs really suck. but maybe you can go again, find a new friend and then never go back and have cocktails every month w/ her instead. HA!

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  21. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    You have a fabulous outlook and are laying the groudwork for a solid marriage and a solid life. You won’t even be able to appreciate how brilliant your planning is now until you look back, years later. All the best to you.

    Like

  22. Leah Buckley Avatar

    Wow, what a post. You write about personal things so well.
    My husband is in basic training right now. Our situation is very different from yours — he’s joining the US Army Band in DC and we will thankfully never experience a deployment — but I completely understand your feelings about “military wife.” Probably because of his different situation, I don’t really relate to the whole Army Wives thing, and to be honest I almost feel like I’m cheating somehow when I say my husband’s in the army because it comes without a lot of the sacrifice and fear that most people go through. If that makes sense at all.
    Anyway, not to blab on, but thank you so much for sharing this.

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  23. desiree Avatar

    Your support for each other shines through.

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  24. Melissa Mann Avatar

    This was a beautiful post. Thank you for sharing those thoughts & emotions.

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  25. tina b Avatar
    tina b

    That was a beautiful well said post. I am not a military wife and my prayers and thoughts go out to all the wives/husbands who are back home taking care of the kids and every day life…it takes a lot of courage and strength to be on both side of military life and I follow both Stephanie Howell and you (as far as military wives go) and you BOTH are and should be role models for all military wives and wives period!!! You both rock ♥

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  26. Amanda Avatar

    Love this. My husband has been in the Air Force for 9 years, he and I dated for 1.5 years long distance, and have been married for 2.5 years. I connect with so much of what you said. I also had a very difficult time with the “military-wives-club”. We move, he deploys, our family is far away, but I never really felt like I “fit” at those kinds of functions. In the past 6 months though, I’ve met a smaller group of women that I love, who’s husbands happen to be in the Air Force also. I love these girls, but I also think we would all be friends if we weren’t military wives.

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  27. Michele H. Avatar

    absolutely amazing post elise!! thank you for sharing this part of your life.

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  28. Linda Niehoff Avatar

    I’m struggling on how to word this, so if it comes out wrong (cliche, unfeeling, silly), please forgive me. Last summer, my little boy (who was days from his 6th birthday) suddenly started getting horrific bruises everywhere. Inside his mouth. On the end of a finger. Under his eyes. Everywhere. It ended with a trip to the E.R. and a ride via ambulance to a Children’s Hospital 45 min. away and several hours of fear that it was Leukemia. After a day and a half in the ICN unit and a team of hematologists, we were told that it was a severe case of I.T.P.
    For hours, I struggled to hold on to the reality of what was happening, and also, frankly, to keep from throwing up. I was the one who rode in the ambulance while my husband took our daughter to her grandparents’ house and then met us later. So other than having my little boy in the back, I was alone with strangers. The driver on the 45 minute ride was a medic who’d served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Two different deployments. And he was young. So much younger than me. I can’t imagine what he’d seen. He hinted at some of it. But I have to say, that while everyone else around me was cheerful and “it’s all going to be OK.” He was somber, respectful, and quiet. He talked a lot about his time serving and he said the hardest part was coming back and seeing our headlines – NBA star not getting enough money, stars divorcing, etc. That was the hardest thing to get used to after the things he’d seen. And yet he’d loved serving.
    For me, the pairing was perfect. If I would’ve had to listen to someone cheerfully chattering about anything insignificant, I would’ve lost it. I felt like he was the only one willing to let me feel the seriousness of what was happening.
    I think it was his experience that gave him the ability to know what I needed. I’ll never forget his name. I’ll never forget his face. I’ll never forget how he said that helping people was his passion, that to know that he made a difference to someone meant everything to him. And I’ll never forget how it felt to be delivered to the hospital and then to watch him walk down the hallway and feel like everything solid was slipping away.
    I can’t imagine the horrors of war or what the medics over there have to see. But there is a chance that your husband will come home amazing. That this will make him a better doctor (as cliche as that sounds). That someday on the worst night of someone’s life, he will be the only thing that makes sense. What an amazing man he must already be to have signed up for that.
    Please tell him “Thank you” for serving.
    P.S. My little guy is fine now and your post is seriously making me think I need to track down that EMT through the hospital and thank him. See what good you’ve done? 🙂

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  29. Koko Avatar
    Koko

    I loved this post. As you know I obviously relate to this so well as Quincy just deployed to Afghanistan and like you I never thought that the military would be a part of my everyday life. I am so honored to know you and here for you, since by the time Paul deploys Quincy will have been gone for 6 months. I really admire you and honestly Quincy and I think yours and Pauls relationship is our goal/our ideal/ what we think we can do once he gets back. This was a great post.

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  30. Dana Avatar

    HooAH! I know you probably don’t say that in the Navy but it’s the first thing that came to mind after reading your post. My husband was a ROTC Cadet at Texas A&M. We were also in a long distance relationship for 3 years. It was hard but with dedication, it’s worth it. Danny commissioned as an officer in the Army a the end of 2009. After he finished his Basic Officer Leadership Course in VA, we were both en-route to his first duty station in Bamberg, Germany. He is a Quartermaster 2nd Lieutenant. Does Paul automatically become a higher rank because he is a doctor? In the Army when a Veterinarian joins, they start out as a Captain. I recommend asking for an overseas duty station because it has been quite an adventure. We try to travel as much as possible. Overseas, you also get extra allowances that make things a little easier. Right now anything helps because the dollar is getting owned by the euro. How long will your PCS duration be with Paul as a Dr.? Ours is 3 years.
    I love your blog by the way. It has a youthful and creative spark to it. Looking forward to more postings about life as a military wife.

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  31. Abi Avatar

    I loved this. I am from England and am eighteen years old. My Dad is in the military as a chaplain and he is due to come back in a week from Afghan. Yep it has been tough and yeah there have been some tears but I am so proud of the work he is doing. Deployment is super scary but also amazing too. Your husband is very lucky to have such a supportive wife. I admire you so much for putting your feelings out there. And Trust, the deployments go in the blink of an eye! This was such a lovely post to read as I sometimes struggle with being a military daughter!
    Abi x

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  32. Molly Avatar

    As a Marine myself and daughter, sister and wife of a Marine I understand were you are coming from and love that you wrote about this! I have had such a hard time being adjusting to being a military wife and fitting into that “group”.
    I agree with Tina B though. Following the blogs of amazing wives like you and Stephanie Howell has helped me. You both really are role models and I hope you know that it means a lot that you share this part of your life with others.

    Like

  33. Debbie Servantez Avatar
    Debbie Servantez

    Great post!
    I was raised in the military – my dad was career Navy – but spent lots of time in “mixed” settings. Meaning I did not live on base much, I did not go to base schools, etc. One thing I learned was that kids, families, etc. who were not military did not get what it was like. How could they? It was SUPER hard to have to be a new kid in a new school every 2.5 years and sometimes even more frequently. I would have stomach aches of worry for my brother…would he adjust quickly? I can’t imagine now how my mom must’ve been stretched to the limits with her worry for my dad, with the work of moving, and her worry for getting us comfortable and happy and settled so many times. Though the “Navy Wives Club” was not something that she embraced totally, she (and we) received a lot of comfort from those people in our lives who knew what we were going through because they had been there themselves.
    That said, I am so happy that we got the childhood we got. It was amazing, and I look back on it frequently. What a culturally rich country we live in, and it was so cool to be able to experience so many different American cultures. And the year in England was cool, too! 🙂
    I wish you well on your military journey! Thanks for writing about it!

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  34. Natanya Avatar

    I really appreciate your perspective, Elise. I hear such strength and courage from you and Paul; not to mention, incredible trust that things are unfolding to serve you both well now and in the future. Thanks for opening up to your readers with your thoughts!

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  35. elise blaha Avatar

    wow, wonderful story Linda. I will share this with Paul.

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  36. elise blaha Avatar

    When Paul started med school he when through officer training and was an Ensign. For years later when he graduated he skipped a rank and became a LT. We really dont know how long we will be places… right now we know 2 years in Ventura CA for GMO. Then 4 years for residency (hopefully back in San Diego – he will not deploy during this time.) After that, its unclear. Some doctors never have to move. Others move more frequently. Well see! But we would LOVE to be abroad for a year or so. We would jump at that opportunity.

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  37. mariangeles Avatar

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts. You can do it 🙂

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  38. jennie Avatar

    beautifully written elise. loved reading it.

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  39. Misti Avatar

    I will just send you kudos and happy thoughts as y’all embark on such a crazy journey. It will all be good!

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  40. Rebecca Avatar

    I love this post – thank you for being so honest. Beautifully written.

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  41. Hits And Fits Avatar

    That post made me cry. Thank you for sharing such intimate feelings and helping me understand the role of the military in your lives. It’s something I often wonder about.
    – Ava

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  42. Alyssa Byron Avatar
    Alyssa Byron

    I read your blog and Stephanie Howells. How funny you both read each others. I really appreciated your honesty in this post Elise, it can be a scary world we live in. You are so brave and I admire you.

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  43. Lisa Avatar

    I can’t even imagine how hard this all must be for you. A very interesting post to read. I hope it all works out for the both of you 😀

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  44. jessica o'brien | jessohbee Avatar

    that just gave me chills. beautiful.

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  45. jessica o'brien | jessohbee Avatar

    hot damn, my comment disappeared! i’ll keep it short this time: i love when you write about “your story” and the history and ongoing narrative that is you and paul. you do it with deepness and insight but also a youthful touch and it is just a pleasure to read.

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  46. libbi m. Avatar
    libbi m.

    wonderful post. thank you for sharing.

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  47. KissMyTulle Avatar

    Elise,
    I’m getting married to a retired Air Force guy who was still in while we were dating. Like, we were dating during a deployment (that suuucked). I was raised around the military my whole life (grew up in remote Alaska where the only jobs and schools were on base)so I saw a lot of emotion and scary stuff during that time. But I also saw some great moments and powerful freindships.
    I know that you don’t want to be a “military wife” – hell, I loathe the phrase, too, and he’s not even in anymore! But please let me tell you – you will need to embrace that title at least a little bit in order to handle what is coming. No one – not your mom, not your dad, not your in-laws – is going to understand what you are feeling and going through. Only another “military wife” will. Keep looking for her – she is out there. And she will need you, too.
    One thing that I do want to prepare you for is handling PTSD. Contrary to popular belief it is not just the front line soldiers who get this. Also, it is not anything like Hollywood would like you to believe it is. It is a tricky thing to handle and live with (and you will live with it if he has it). Please take the time to get educated on handling this disorder – Jerry struggles with it on a daily basis and we just keep trying to learn to work through it together. Help him transition into the “real world” when he comes home and be there as his champion and advocate afterwards (even if he fights you and says that he’s fine).
    Good luck to both of you and your military future. It really can be one of the most amazing and fantastic experiences ever – if you let it. Good luck!

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  48. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    I love how honest this post is – cheers to you for writing about such a huge and emotional topic.

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  49. *Dream Weaver* Avatar

    I had misty eyes when I read this, Elise.
    I love the honesty of this post and will keep you and Paul in my prayers.

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  50. Lynnette Avatar

    So I feel a bit cheesy writing this as my first comment on your blog, haha, but I just wanted to offer you a virtual hug from one military spouse to another (even if you don’t like calling yourself one, haha ).
    I’ve been reading your blog for awhile now and I’ve always laughed because your military experience reminds me a lot of my own. I’m from California as well and when I met my now husband in college (we’re UC Davis grads), he was already on an Army ROTC scholarship. Like you, I didn’t know a thing about the military and I really struggled with the idea of setting aside my own plans to follow someone else’s (I was a business major too). In the end I chose to follow my heart and six months after graduation, we got married and move to our first duty station…in Seoul, South Korea. LOL Talk about being isolated from family and friends! It was definitely the most crazy, awesome adventure I have ever been on. But you’re absolutely right, learning to rely on each other early on definitely put us in a good place for dealing with deployments and everything else the military has thrown at us. It sounds like you and Paul are in a good place too. : )
    My husband was deployed to Afghanistan from June 2009-2010 so I totally get what you’re going through right now. It’s scary and overwhelming and full of what-ifs. Obviously everyone deals with deployments differently, but I found the best thing I could do was not allow myself to worry about all the things that were out of my control. I know, easier said than done right? haha
    But I tried to look at the deployment as an opportunity to do my own thing for awhile and I think that was good for me. So I spent lots of time with family, traveled around, made new friends. I’m not going to say it was easy. It’s wasn’t. There were some days that royally sucked. But I feel like the end result has actually been positive for us. We had a chance to grow both as individuals and as a couple and I feel like it’s made our marriage that much stronger today. I know we definitely appreciate each other a lot more now than we did when we first got married. I know not everyone’s deployment experience works out that way but that’s been our experience with both the deployments we’ve done.
    I did want to say one last thing about the spouses groups. I totally totally get where you are coming from. (I mean, is there anything worse than being referred to as a dependent?) In general, I’m not a fan of the more formal spouses events – I went to my first Officer Spouses Club meetings four years ago and haven’t been back since, haha. But I will tell you that having a friend or two who gets what you are going through can be truly invaluable if for no other reason than to remind you that what you’re feeling is totally normal. You don’t have to get super involved with the spouses groups but knowing someone else has your back is always nice.
    Anyway, I’ll be here all night if I keep going but I did want to say that even though I know you don’t know me, if you ever need a friendly ear or a virtual pick me up from someone who has been there, please don’t hesitate to say hello. : )
    And yes, one day I hope to be bringing in the big bucks too, haha.

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