Sisterhood
I am a military wife -- a member of
that sisterhood of women who have had the courage to watch their men go into
battle, and the strength to survive until their return.
Our sorority knows no rank, for we earn our membership with a marriage license,
traveling over miles, or over nations to begin a new life with our military
husbands.
Within days, we turn a barren, echoing building into a home, and though our
quarters are inevitably white-walled and unpapered, we decorate with the
treasures of our travels, for we shop the markets of the globe. Using hammer and
nail, we tack our pictures to the wall, and our roots to the floor as firmly as
if we had lived there for a lifetime. We hold a family together by the
bootstraps, and raise the best of "brats," instilling in them the motto, "Home
is togetherness," whether motel, or guest house, apartment or duplex.
As military wives we soon realize that the only good in "Good-bye" is the "Hello
again."
For as salesmen for freedom, our husbands are often on the road, at sea, or in
the sky, leaving us behind for a week, a month, an assignment. During
separations we guard the home front, existing until the homecoming. Unlike our
civilian counterparts, we measure time, not by years, but by tours -- married at
Knox, a baby born at Portsmouth, a special anniversary at Yorktown, a promotion
in McDill.
We plant trees, and never see them grow tall, work on projects completed long
after our departure, and enhance our community for the betterment of those who
come after us. We leave a part of ourselves at every stop. Through experience,
we have learned to pack a suitcase, a car or hold baggage, and live indefinitely
from the contents within: and though our fingers are sore from the patches we
have sewn, and the silver we have shined, our hands are always ready to help
those around us.
Women of peace, we pray for a world in harmony, for the flag that leads our men
into battle, will also blanket them in death. Yet we are an optimistic group,
thinking of the good, and forgetting the bad, cherishing yesterday, while
anticipating tomorrow.
Never rich by monetary standards, our hearts are overflowing with a wealth of
experiences common only to those united by the special tradition of military
life.
We pass on this legacy to every military bride, welcoming her with outstretched
arms, with love and friendship, from one sister to another, sharing in the
bounty of our unique, fulfilling military way of life.
Author Unknown