Managing Expectations

 

The movers come tomorrow.
I wipe January’s to-do list from the white board
We never got around to updating.

The plans we made linger,
The ghosts of the great potential the new year
Laid out before us.

Each tick mark faithfully declining
Until, then, the halt of forward momentum. The
Days that stopped.

Perhaps next year, next duty station
Next month, next KD billet, next school year, next race,
Next rest stop, next tick mark on the list.

The movers come tomorrow.
I’ll call you from the road.

Memorial: A Villanelle

Memorial, or, The sun cannot break its shackles…

 

Midday softens under the fog-weighted shroud,
A black-winged bird scrapes the slate-gray sky.
The sun cannot break its shackles of sullen cloud.

The crow cries, harsh and unavowed,
Your memory arises in reply–
Midday softens under the fog-weighted shroud.

I forgot the time the words were said aloud,
And then I forgot the way and words to cry–
The sun cannot break its shackles of sullen cloud.

The stillness of that moment returns to enshroud
Me in this autumn day in July,
Midday softens under the fog-weighted shroud.

Again that cry, like yesterday spoke aloud.
Though summer wings from winter memories fly,
The sun cannot break its shackles of sullen cloud.

But who could stand before the sun unbowed,
And, unblinking, its simple rays defy?
Midday softens under the fog-weighted shroud–
The sun cannot break its shackles of sullen cloud.

Chosen Family (Song)

Sharing

These are the nights that I love the best
When we set a place at the table for an unexpected guest.
For we have love and light and food enough to share,
And if you bring an extra friend, we’ll just pull up another chair.

Come and walk in the dream awhile with me–
Come, be my home, be my chosen family.

Now the fire beckons, and its glow will start to bring
The memories of an old song and a new one yet to sing.
And we’ll tell an old war story we all know the ending to,
And if you have to leave, we know you’ll take a piece of us with you.

Come and walk in the dream awhile with me–
Come, be my home, be my chosen family.

My family is my home where I can safely rest,
It’s chosen in love, and by this love is blessed.
And even in a foreign land or campaign ‘cross the sea,
These are the ones I love, this is my chosen family.

Come and walk in the dream awhile with me–
Come, be my home, be my chosen family.

Community

Sharing

There will always be a civil-military divide, or gap, or chasm–if we are always standing on one side of a bridge. We–military, veterans, servicemembers–are HERE. You–everyone else–are THERE.

Then we ask the question, “But how do we bridge the gap?”

The answer to that question is whatever particular hammer we happen to be carrying at the moment.

But what if we–the ones who served–started to think of ourselves as a neighborhood. Or a family. Or a gathering. Or a home.

Here in the center of our family are those who give it definition–the human being in uniform, no matter what job they do, or how long they served. At least once in their lives, they signed on the dotted line and stepped up to the service of their country.

Standing around them, though, who are they? The support system. First, we find those who have deployed with us, even if they did not wear a uniform. Here’s the person working the food line at the chow hall in Kuwait. Here’s the contractor working on an innovation in robotics to save lives. Or the civilian medical professional taking care of servicemembers for everything from a routine appointment to emergency medicine.

The edges of our community grow blurrier as the neighborhood continues. Here are our families–spouses, parents, siblings, children. They often wear our service as a badge, or with pride, because careers, even four-year enlistments, are “needs of the Army,” not “needs of our loved ones.” And they get it.

Keep traveling, all roads connect us. Here’s the difficult part of town. Here is the block of those whose service–or whose loved one’s service–has burned them. The divorcee, the underemployed spouse, the failure to adapt. The ex-servicemember who suffered from assault or abuse. These lives have been touched by, and have touched, uniformed service. They’re part of the community, even if we don’t drive by that part of town very often.

Just stopping by for a visit, these are the friends whose only touchpoint with the military might be that person from back home they knew in high school, and connected with later on social media, who give a “like” to pictures of their old friend in uniform, but don’t really get the jokes in the DuffelBlog articles they share. Maybe it’s the people who “support the troops,” but haven’t taken the time to really drive around town and get to know everyone.

To stretch this metaphor to the point of killing the elastic, there is one more point. When we think of ourselves as a neighborhood, or a community, it becomes easier to envision traveling outside that community. Maybe that is literal travel, perhaps it’s the ability to share stories about life in the neighborhood. In any case, we are no longer faced with a deep chasm, gaping between our side of the road and “their” side of the road.

Instead, we are much larger than we think, and those we include can help us connect–and stay connected–to the other communities we touch.

MEASURE

My daughter places her hand in my palm,

Singing a song with no words,

Folding my fingers around hers.

 

On this fine spring day of green and yellow,

With a breeze that does not remind me of the desert,

I watch her measure her short hand against mine.

 

She will hold the things that I have held in those hands—

A guitar, a rifle, a friend, a lover—or not.

These are my memories, the relics of choices long past.

 

Perhaps one day she will measure herself

Against an old photo, the one where I hold a rifle

On a day in the desert, with a breeze that scorches memory.

 

My daughter places her hand in my palm,

On this fine spring day of green and yellow—

I fold my memories away, and hold her hand in mine.