I finished copying over all of my Babble posts into this blog. (Well, everything except the slideshows--those you'll have to read over there if you want to track them down.) I was tired of all that writing being buried and not searchable, and it's frustrating that most of the pictures were lost or that some of the posts were jumbled into other people's work. The dates are gone, and the comments have been wiped out, which is a shame because there were some really interesting and entertaining discussions there. It's disconcerting to have a heartfelt record of a stretch of your life mishandled in that way. I feel better having copies of it all here.
I did a lot of writing at Babble! More than I realized. As of this date I am still about half a dozen posts shy on this blog of the total amount of posts I did for Holding Down the Fort, so I've doubled my archive.
It's been a tedious process doing that much cutting and pasting, and finding old photos again (any posts where the photos were merely nice but not necessary I just left photo-less), but it feels good to finally have all of it where people can read it. There are many times I haven't bothered to write about certain topics here because I felt I'd already said what I wanted to say in an earlier post on Babble, but if nobody can find it it's the blogging equivalent of "If a tree falls in the forest..."
It's put my head in a strange place, reliving all that time during deployment again. The same way you eventually forget the true toll of sleepless nights with a new baby, the deployment stress has faded to something I recall but don't usually feel. It's good to remember and then appreciate where we are now. It's amazing to go back to the earliest posts and see just how young my kids were, and see in what ways they've changed and in what ways they never do.
So here are some links to Babble posts (as transferred to this archive) I particularly like that maybe you haven't seen, or that may still be of interest. I have yet to address any of links in them (I suspect most will take you to a picture of Micky Mouse saying "oops") and if there are any weird mistakes I missed while up late doing my copy and paste thing please feel free to let me know. (Think of this as a rainy day list for the times I am lax about posting often enough! Just come here and pick an old post or two.)
My original two Babble essays before I started my blog were about Ian being gone, and about adjusting to Ian coming home again.
I think my funniest post remains The Ultimate Game. But Styrofoam, how I hate thee, let me count the ways.... still makes me laugh, too. The world's most hilarious/awful Christmas card was made in Mommy's Sweatshop.
Posts that people contacted me about years later still wanting to reference them were:
Showing posts with label Holding Down the Fort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holding Down the Fort. Show all posts
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Babble Posts
Sunday, September 27, 2015
Revisiting the Fort
I recently came across a link to my old archive, which I thought was completely lost. I'm feeling quite nostalgic for my kids when they were little after reading those old posts. I do not miss the stress that came with my husband's deployments, but that has been interesting to remember as well.
For those who don't know, I started blogging at Babble.com back in 2009 with a personal blog called Holding Down the Fort. Babble was a new kind of parenting site when it started a few years earlier, and my dad had sent me an article about it. After reading that article I contacted them about writing an essay based on my experience as a parent whose husband was deployed. My piece, called The Home Front, was rated their most inspiring in their first year online. I did a followup piece when my husband came back from Iraq called Return to the Home Front, which got picked up in various places.
It was a good experience getting paid for my writing and interesting getting feedback from people in so many places. Babble was quirky and surprising at the time, and the editors I was in contact with originally were great.
When my husband was called up for a second tour in Iraq I approached Babble about blogging my experience during that deployment. The first deployment was incredibly isolating, and I thought blogging the second time around might help. It did. I enjoy the discipline of regular writing, and the personal nature of blogging and direct contact with readers is satisfying. I loved my blog at Babble, and I'm still grateful for many of the contacts I've made through that site.
Although it started out fine, working with Babble was frustrating. I was one of about a half a dozen personal bloggers at first. The bigger names (such as Rebecca Wolf with her spinoff blog called Straight from the Bottle, and Katie Granju) didn't really involve themselves with our little community on the site, but others I felt close to, the way you do when you regularly follow a parenting blog and reach out through email. Jane Roper I still actively follow on her new blog, and others like Dawn Meehan and Oz Spies are still at Babble in some capacity. One of the best blogs I've ever read was Divorced with Kids, which was a spinoff of Irretrievably Broken, whose anonymous author is now one of my most cherished friends. Our little corner of personal bloggers at Babble was a special place for a while.
Then the Voices started. In preparation for the Disney buyout, Babble decided to create a wall of big name bloggers who were supposed to attract big numbers coming over from their already popular blogs.
For those who don't know, I started blogging at Babble.com back in 2009 with a personal blog called Holding Down the Fort. Babble was a new kind of parenting site when it started a few years earlier, and my dad had sent me an article about it. After reading that article I contacted them about writing an essay based on my experience as a parent whose husband was deployed. My piece, called The Home Front, was rated their most inspiring in their first year online. I did a followup piece when my husband came back from Iraq called Return to the Home Front, which got picked up in various places.
It was a good experience getting paid for my writing and interesting getting feedback from people in so many places. Babble was quirky and surprising at the time, and the editors I was in contact with originally were great.
When my husband was called up for a second tour in Iraq I approached Babble about blogging my experience during that deployment. The first deployment was incredibly isolating, and I thought blogging the second time around might help. It did. I enjoy the discipline of regular writing, and the personal nature of blogging and direct contact with readers is satisfying. I loved my blog at Babble, and I'm still grateful for many of the contacts I've made through that site.
Although it started out fine, working with Babble was frustrating. I was one of about a half a dozen personal bloggers at first. The bigger names (such as Rebecca Wolf with her spinoff blog called Straight from the Bottle, and Katie Granju) didn't really involve themselves with our little community on the site, but others I felt close to, the way you do when you regularly follow a parenting blog and reach out through email. Jane Roper I still actively follow on her new blog, and others like Dawn Meehan and Oz Spies are still at Babble in some capacity. One of the best blogs I've ever read was Divorced with Kids, which was a spinoff of Irretrievably Broken, whose anonymous author is now one of my most cherished friends. Our little corner of personal bloggers at Babble was a special place for a while.
Then the Voices started. In preparation for the Disney buyout, Babble decided to create a wall of big name bloggers who were supposed to attract big numbers coming over from their already popular blogs.
Labels:
Babble,
blogging,
Disney,
Holding Down the Fort,
Voices
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Welcome!
To my shiny new blog!
I'm proud of the writing I did for the past three years at Babble, and there is a link available to Holding Down the Fort above my blog roll in case anyone wants to check it out. Leaving Babble was not my choice (and if anyone wants details they can email me directly since I don't feel like devoting any time to that here), but I'm excited about this new space. It's mine in a way that my other blog never was, to change and do with as I will. I feel like I have a new toy!
It will take a little time to learn how this toy works however, but soon I will have pictures up of our recent trip to the cottage, progress on my latest violins, and a look at what my kids are up to.
Thanks for reading. It's nice to have you here.
I'm proud of the writing I did for the past three years at Babble, and there is a link available to Holding Down the Fort above my blog roll in case anyone wants to check it out. Leaving Babble was not my choice (and if anyone wants details they can email me directly since I don't feel like devoting any time to that here), but I'm excited about this new space. It's mine in a way that my other blog never was, to change and do with as I will. I feel like I have a new toy!
It will take a little time to learn how this toy works however, but soon I will have pictures up of our recent trip to the cottage, progress on my latest violins, and a look at what my kids are up to.
Thanks for reading. It's nice to have you here.
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
The Home Front (Babble)
It had been a long week with the kids and it was
only Tuesday. I had a cold and my right shoulder hurt, so I couldn’t
lift the baby without pain. I was tired of dishes and diapers, of my
five-year-old’s whine and her younger sister’s excellent imitation, of
their tireless mission to unravel all our diaper genie refills. It was a
relief to finally get them tucked in bed and kissed goodnight. Finally,
I could open my laptop and check email while the baby kicked at my
side. I had one message. It read: “Happy Birthday, from your secret
admirer.” At first, I was confused – not because my secret admirer is
much of a secret (it’s my husband), but because my birthday wasn’t until
the following day. Then I remembered: where he is, it’s tomorrow.
Ian
is an Army Reserve Captain stationed at Camp Anaconda, about fifty
miles north of Baghdad. As far as I can tell, his job is to sit in front
of a bank of computer screens that show him events from around Iraq in
real time. He analyzes what he sees and makes recommendations to the
general above him. The job is an ideal match for his talents, but
sometimes he feels guilty being in a position where he’s relatively
protected. I don’t share his guilt. I just want him to be safe.
When we met in college, I was a music major and Ian was wearing an ROTC uniform. I didn’t run into soldiers in the orchestra, so I didn’t think much about it. All the term “cadet” meant to me was that, three mornings a week, Ian left my bed early to exercise, and that he ironed his uniform every Wednesday night.
About a year after we started dating, Iraq invaded Kuwait, and I had the first flash of what it meant to love a soldier. Ian assured me, correctly, that the government wasn’t going to yank him out of college to fight, but I realized then that when I chose to make a life with a man in the Army Reserves, I was donning a uniform by proxy. It’s a volunteer army, but soldiers’ families are drafted.
On September 11th, I was seven months pregnant with our first child. Ian was contacted by his superiors and told to put on his uniform and spend the evening at the Reserve center “just in case.” I cried alone in front of the television and wondered if the stress would harm the baby squirming in my belly.
The next few years were a mix of joy and uncertainty. We had one daughter, then another. I was doing a variety of part-time work – teaching, performing and repairing violins. Ian couldn’t find a job in his field (I suspect, but can’t prove, that no one wanted to hire a reservist in wartime). During the week he was a stay-at-home dad, and he spent many weekends doing reserve work for the unit he commanded.
When the U.S. invaded Iraq, we knew it was only a matter of time before Ian would be called overseas. I didn’t want him to leave, and I’ve never approved of the war, but Ian was frustrated honing skills he wasn’t using and watching other soldiers go off to do jobs he knew he was qualified to do. And, in a way, we were tired of waiting for the inevitable.
Ian was called up in April of 2006, when I was two months pregnant with our third child. We had less than a week to prepare. He showed me where the fuse box was. He explained the bills and our bank accounts. He handed me power of attorney papers and his official Army will. At five in the morning, I dragged our little girls out of bed and we took their daddy to the airport. This is what it means to be parenting alone: if I had to go to the airport, we were all going to the airport.
We don’t have family in town and it’s hard to repeatedly ask neighbors and friends for favors, so when I had performance and teaching commitments, I scrambled for sitters. I was up at 5:30 every morning to make breakfast and stayed up past midnight every night to get the house in enough order to tackle another day. By the end of my pregnancy, there were times I literally couldn’t walk and our unborn son didn’t let me sleep.
To make things worse, for the first time in our relationship, Ian and I grew distant. He’d entered a world I couldn’t relate to. He emailed me about inconceivable heat and about learning to sleep through the sound of mortar fire. He was required to wear full body armor just to walk to the bathroom; a rifle was his constant companion. I chose not to burden him with anything that might distract him from his job, but that made life at home even lonelier. I tried not to let the girls see me cry.
Ian’s deployment was not typical. We don’t live on a base like so many army families, but rather in a working-class neighborhood in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, not far from where my grandfather was born and raised during the Depression. Ian was plucked out of his reserve unit and assigned to fill a slot in an active-duty unit in Texas. That unit has a support network for relatives, which is known as a “family readiness group,” and the Army has a twenty-four-hour hotline, but these things haven’t been helpful to me. Every so often, I would get a call from a well-meaning Army outreach person asking how I was holding up. They didn’t seem to know what to do with my usual answer: “Not well.” A pleasant officer in Ohio once asked what he could do. I told him: unless he could lug the laundry up from the basement, not much.
Fortunately, Ian was able to arrange his two weeks of leave to overlap with our son’s birth. Quinn was born big and healthy and pink, and I loved seeing Ian so proud and happy. I left the hospital after only two nights – much too soon considering I’d had a C-section, but I hated sitting alone in my room watching reruns of Law & Order when I knew I was missing time with Ian. It was wonderful having him home. He got to visit our oldest daughter’s new school, carry the younger one on his shoulders and cuddle his newborn son for a few days. We found ourselves at the airport again much too soon. I can’t imagine what it was like for him to walk away from all of us for what we knew would be at least nine more months. For us, it was beyond painful.
To help me prepare for the longest stretch without Ian, my mother came for a couple of weeks. We cleared his things out of the closet and emptied his dresser so I would have more space. We packed up his office for use as a guest room. I don’t run across his shoes anymore, or his books. I use a different, girlier bedspread. On my own, I’ve had to handle trips to the emergency room, school events, a mice infestation, car problems and sewage backup in the basement. When something goes wrong, my first instinct is no longer to consult Ian.
The kids are getting by, too, but not without sacrifices. Quinn won’t know his father at all when he gets home. Our baby boy, now four months old and full of smiles and giggles, is sweet and remarkable, but Ian won’t have any firsthand memories of him at this stage. Instead of holding the baby’s pudgy hands and feeling that warm weight in his arms, Ian just has some emailed jpegs and the home movies I send him on DVD.
Mona was only two when Ian left for his training in Texas. She’ll be starting school by the time her dad finally comes home. The changes she has undergone are the most difficult for me to try and describe for Ian. When he came back from Texas for a couple of days after being gone for a month, the two were already having a little trouble connecting. He poured syrup on her waffles for her and she threw a tantrum. I had to explain that she had learned to do that on her own in his absence. I don’t think at this point Mona remembers her dad as a member of our household, and I worry about what she’ll make of him occupying his place at the table when he returns.
Aden was four when Ian left and she misses her father desperately. When she sees other children playing with their dads, she’s quick to tell them she has a dad too, but that he’s deployed. The weekend after he left, I took Aden with me to the store to pick out any picture frame she wanted so that we could put a nice photo of Ian by her bed. She was excited by the idea, but when we got the frame home and put the picture inside, she became very quiet. The next morning, she hid the picture in our family room while the rest of us were still in bed. When I asked her about it, she said, “When I see it, I just want my real daddy in my room and it makes me sad.” He’s grown in her mind into a more perfect version of himself. When Aden and I don’t get along, she tells me how when daddy gets back, he’ll make her happy.
And it’s not getting any easier. Both our pet rabbits died last year, which Aden lumped with her father’s absence into a great ball of grief. Ian used to email me about once a day. Since the “surge,” I hear from him far less. The other day, when I asked her to say goodbye to a little girl she was playing with, she burst into tears and said, “I don’t want to say goodbye to the little girl! I’ll miss her! Like I miss the bunnies and I miss daddy and all the things I’ve lost!” She cried in my arms, repeating “I want my daddy” over and over while Mona playfully ran in circles and Quinn looked on serenely.
Ian used to email me about once a day. Since the “surge,” I hear from him far less. There was no corresponding surge in any of the supporting areas, which means he has much more work to do every night. Every few weeks, if I’m lucky, I get a phone call from him, usually late in the evening. I used to think it would be nice if he called early enough so that Aden could talk to him too, but at this point she just wants her daddy home, period. Anything short of that she sees as a cruel tease.
For my part, as much as I miss him, I’ve started to worry about how we’ll all adjust when he comes back. He’s missed a great deal here, but our experiences aren’t beyond his imagination. I can’t fathom what he’s going through. There’s now such a large portion of his life that I don’t share and can never understand. I’m worried that when he comes home, the kids and I won’t recognize him completely, that he won’t know us.
Last night, Ian called. He sounded exhausted, but he can’t tell me much about what he does these days – it’s classified. So we just talked about the kids and I tried to paint a colorful picture of our day – laundry, diapers, giggles, time outs, meals, baths, bedtime. And while we were talking, I suddenly realized with great clarity how I have the better end of the deal. I know that seems obvious – he’s a soldier at war, after all – but I’ve been so overwhelmed and isolated that it’s been easy to forget: I’m the lucky one.
Labels:
Army,
deployment,
first essay for Babble,
Holding Down the Fort,
Iraq,
parenting
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