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Tempted by Civilian Life
Sarah Smiley | January 20, 2009

I feel like a traitor. Here I am a military wife -- the one, in fact, who writes a syndicated column and books about being a military wife -- and lately I've flirted with the idea of not being a military family. I have said those words -- you know, the unthinkable ones for people in my position:  "Honey, are you ever going to get out?"

My husband only has nine more years of service before he can retire and immediately collect the military's relatively decent pension for the rest of his life.

Therefore, he usually "answers" my question by leaving it completely unacknowledged, as if I've just asked him if he will run for President tomorrow or something.

I understand his position. He has trained, worked and sacrificed (as have I) for 11 years. It seems crazy to throw it all away now, when his "20 years" is actually in sight. A military retirement literally means money in the bank and health care for the rest of your days.

So how can I possibly ask my husband the dreaded "are you ever going to get out" question? To know, you'd have to understand my position, too.

During the last 11 years, I lived in eight different places. I planted countless trees and shrubbery that I've seen grow. I left behind pets (dead and alive). I made friends, left them, made more friends, and moved again. I had so many different mailing addresses, my alma mater no longer knows where to send their requests for money. (Not such a bad thing, come to think of it.) I sold and purchased real estate seven times. Old our coffee table has a row of different colored moving stickers stuck to the bottom of it.

However, what wasthe most upsetting of all is the fact that I measured my sons' 
heights on four separate closet doors, always painting over the measurements when it was time to move again.

Just the other day, I looked at my son Owen, 6, and realized that the jeans I bought him in August are already hovering two inches above his ankles. "Wow, you've really grown," I said.

"How much?" Owen asked.

"Let's measure you and find out."

I took Owen and his two brothers, Ford, 8, and Lindell, 2, into the bedroom that Ford and Owen share.

"We'll mark your heights here," I said, opening the closet door.

"But how will we know if we've grown," Ford asked. "Our last measurements are on the closet door in Florida."

It was a good point. But I couldn't think about it right then, or else I would start to cry.

I stood each boy against the back of the closet door and measured their height with pencil: "Ford, Jan. 2009"; "Owen, Jan. 2009"; Lindell, Jan. 2009." Owen and Ford were -- and always have been -- exactly two inches apart. But there was quite a bit of white closet door between Owen's marking and Lindell's.

"Someday, I bet Lindell will catch up to us," Owen said.

But will it be on this closet door? I wondered.

The kids got back to playing Star Wars and I went up to my bedroom to think. I'm tired of moving my children from one place to another. I'm tired of marking their heights and then painting over it. I'm weary of making new friends, now I just want to keep them and grow old with them. When my boys go to college, I want to find comfort in my friends who knew the boys when they were going to kindergarten and every grade in between.

I want roots. I want my boys to say, "this is the street I grew up on."

I want one closet door to be covered with the measurements of how much my children have grown.

Of course, I could always mark their heights on something more transportable than a closet door. Or I could take the closet door with us.

But, that isn't really the point, now is it?


 

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Copyright 2009 Sarah Smiley. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.

 
About Sarah Smiley

Navy wife Sarah Smiley is a syndicated newspaper columnist and the author of Going Overboard: The Misadventures of a Military Wife (Peguin/NAL 2005). She has been featured in the New York Times and Newsweek, and on Nightline, The Early Show, CNN, Fox News and other local and national news outlets. Her liferights were optioned by Kelsey Grammer's company, Grammnet, and Paramount Television to be made into a half-hour sitcom. Visit www.SarahSmiley.com for more details.