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We only go around once, but if we do it right, once is enough~

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Vietnam~ Waiting Wives 1970 ~ Part 3

It is said that we glorify the past. I look back on that time as a time of personal growth. A test of strength and endurance. Maybe with that statement, there might some glorification of those 18 months. I remember vividly so many things that went wrong and the few that went well.

I remember the postman. I sat on the front steps each day, weather permitting, to watch for him. A letter meant my pilot husband was OK. and was a boost to my day.
We had no text messaging, no cell phones and no Internet for emails. Communication was strictly through the 'snail mail.'
Letters took 10-14 days, but on a daily basis, it seemed to be immediate contact.

Each day, the postman would by-pass other houses to bring the letters right up the steps to me as each day, I grew fatter with baby. He smiled as he walked up, just as if he had personally written the letter himself. The letters all had the red and white boarders and stood out from other mail.

The first day there was no letter, he was more concerned than I. With sincere apologies he broke the news..."I am so, so sorry, but I don't have a letter for you today."
The next day, two letters arrived. They arrived being waved in the air by one happy Postman.
Seeing how he worried, I explained the protocol ~the Air Force would have sent a black car with two officers to my door, had there been a tragedy.

After spending time with many people I had known before I married and moved away, it didn't take long to realize my life was totally different than my civilian friends. I realized I needed the company of other military wives.

The Air Force assisted me in locating 82 Waiting Wives in the City near were I lived. Soon, we established the Waiting Wives Club for that area.
We had a luncheon monthly. We swapped stories and it was good to hear others talk about the cities and remote locations in Vietnam.
By phone, news in the group traveled fast.
We only lost one member when her husbands plane was shot down. That stunned us into the reality that any day, we could have the same news.

Another loss of a different kind~
One of the husbands was a Military Doctor in Vietnam (a MASH Unit) met and fell in love with a nurse he met there in Vietnam. That was another reality of the war and separation.

Each day~ I wrote a letter with stories of the children and Trixie the dog. How I wish I had those letters to publish today.
cont...

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I love this blog!!! And I do remember the letters that came! Wasn't Daddy a Captain then? I remember the red little stripes around the edges. YOU STILL HAVE THOSE LETTERS, RIGHT??

Unknown said...

What memories your entry brings back. I have written several poems about my year while my husband served with 1st Air Cav. It was surreal. I remember wanting someone to say it would be ok, only nobody could. I grew up very fast those first few months. I had our infant son to care for, and though I wrote letters my husband wanted me to send tapes. That actually worked for when he came out of the field! I have all of his letters home, and some of mine he brought back. He was wounded in his 6th month, but recovered. I'm not always sure I have, thus I've been writing more lately.

Memories ~ Life is a great trip!


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