Category Archives: SERVE – our military life

letting go

As our Caribbean adventure comes to an end today, there are a number of emotions that I did not want to bring into the next chapter of our lives. I knew that the children, also, had bad memories and experiences that would best be left behind. We came up with a small ceremony to mark the ending and the fresh start waiting for us.

We each took time this week to write.

These notes were lists and letters and rants and words that expressed every negative experience over the last 847 days.

The messages were collected and lit on fire.

fire

One by one, we each took a handful of ash and released it to the sea…

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washing our hands in the waves.

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And then there was a toast to the future.

toast

My note was actually a letter written to my children:

Dear Caitlyn, Victoria, Grace and Harry:

Sometimes being a military child is wonderful and exciting and gives you a charmed view of the world.

And sometimes it’s hard.

And then sometimes it just sucks. I wish I had a better word, but when I search into the depths of my vocabulary, I just don’t.

After a series of really great “homes” we uprooted you from people that loved you and we brought you to a place of contradiction – extreme beauty in contrast to such ugly filth and hatred.  For that I am so very sorry.

When I think of the things that I want to leave behind on this island, I imagine it as a ball in the pit of my stomach – it is made up of hate, and regret, and disappointment and so much sorrow.

I apologize for bringing you to a place where people wouldn’t like you, not because of the person that you are, but for the country that you represent. In the big picture, it isn’t personal at all: it is about history, and politics and discrimination. But when you are 7 and 9 and 11 and 13, and even old like me, the big picture is hard to see.  And it feels very personal. I actually believed that stereotypes and misconceptions could be broken down with time and effort. I was wrong. Some hatred is so deep within a culture; it will take generations to get past it. I’m sorry that two-and-a-half years weren’t long enough.

I’m sorry that people called you by a color or an ethnic generalization rather than by your name. That is demeaning.

 I’m sorry people took your things and destroyed your stuff. That too, is wrong. Adults are supposed to look out for you, and rules are meant to protect you. It feels like a violation when wrong-doing is ignored. I am still in awe of your open hearts to go back day-after-day believing that it maybe the next day would be different. I am sorry that it wasn’t.

It makes me sick that when you awoke to the sound of fireworks the other night, your first thought was gun shots. I hate that it only took a matter of weeks of living here for you to see people raise a weapon in anger.  Some people in this world are hateful. There is violence in many places. It is such an ugly part of our world.

I am sorry that there were adults in your life that made you feel like you weren’t smart. Any teacher who can use the words “You’re just no good….” don’t deserve the privilege of spending their days with children.

I am so sorry that you felt afraid.

I am sorry that you had to eat alone.

I am sorry that I taught you to lock your doors and look away when a stranger approached us. I let fear for our safety reign over our belief in helping others.

I am angry that going to the doctor was frightening rather than reassuring. I hate that you had to witness filth and incompetency in a place meant for healing. Sadly, your eyes have been opened to the norm in much of our world.

I am sorry that you had to sit in chaotic classrooms where bad behavior and foul language were condoned. I am proud that you still chose to be respectful, and conscientious, and work hard. That speaks volumes to your character.

I am sorry that the US military base, that should have been your welcoming home, was so horribly disrespectful. You deserved better.

I am sorry, that even in a home with the most spectacular view, you still saw people use this beautiful island as a dumping ground. Day after day trash was left behind for someone else to clean up. I am glad you are the kind of kids who helped clean it up.

Above all, I am sorry that I couldn’t fix everything. In my mind, I know that these were not issues that I could control, but in my heart I am your mom, and making things better is my job. Please know that I wish I could have taken away the pain and sadness that you had to go through.

I hope that someday you are able to forgive.

 Forgive them for being mean, ignorant, stupid, hateful…  whatever adjective helps you to understand why they behaved as they did.

I know that what I have to say next will not make what we went through any easier….

But, we have been given a very unique gift.

I know it doesn’t feel like it.

I’m 41 and I’m still trying to figure out how to weigh the balance of just how much I hated the last few years and what I might have learned in the process.

The gift we’ve been given is called empathy.

You now understand discrimination from the inside. You truly know the hurt that comes from being a minority in looks, nationality, and language and to be shunned for it.

Ours is a very unique experience. To recognize the heart of another who has felt lost and alone will be your souvenir from this difficult journey.  Don’t let it go to waste.

When we fly away, I promise that you never have to come back. I will spend the next years trying to make you feel worthy and loved and smart and safe. I will not rest until you ears hear fireworks first.

In the future, when the tightness in my chest relaxes and I breathe out the final sighs of frustration, I will remember you swimming in waterfalls, and doing cartwheels on the beach, and the thrilled look on your faces when you caught your first waves.

I will have good memories, but I will never forget how I felt. Fear and hate and loneliness are some of the saddest emotions. I hope that you remember these too and may they rest within you as a force for good.

When there is someone who is different and alone, be the first one to approach them, even if it doesn’t seem cool, or popular.

Because you know what it feels like to have your face looked at as nothing more than a color or a place.

Even worse, you know what it feels like to not even be looked at, at all.

Use your smile to communicate.

Offer a hand to hold on to.

Be the person to them that you waited so long for.

I love you,

Mom

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the home stretch

We are in the home stretch.

Our journey is 98% done.

In February of 2011 we started a life in Puerto Rico.

Like a fantastical break from reality, we left our possessions behind and moved to a tropical island.

Ironically, we are now, just over the 26 month mark, and like the grueling 26.2 miles of a marathon, we have been on a similar course.

We arrived optimistic, excited, ready for adventure.

There were things thrown in our direction that we were completely unprepared for and there weren’t nearly enough aid stations.

I wanted to quit.

A hundred times, I wanted to quit.

My mind wrestled with…

what was best for our children?

and what was best for our family?

and our commitment to the military…

and money…

and fear…

and frustration…

and a nagging feeling that we couldn’t teach our children that it was okay to quit just because it got hard; even if it was really, really , really hard.

When every part of my being wanted to jump in the ocean and swim away, I didn’t.

Whenever I questioned my decision to stay, I looked for signs.

Rainbows. Beauty. The kindness of strangers. Any sign from the universe to just hang in there.

I was given all of the above.

I was also given friends.

Not the kind the type of acquaintances that you meet when you are having a good hair day, wearing lipstick and laughing over coffee…. but the kind of people who see you at rock bottom, talk you off the ledge, and join you in both grins and tears when the only options are to laugh or cry.

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Here we are, just nine days to go.

I should be elated, but instead, I am heavy with mixed emotions.

I am relieved.

The worst 26 months of my life are almost over.

Yet I feel a strange sadness that I didn’t expect.

It’s such an anti-climatic end.

No finish line.

No baton to hand off.

No epiphany of what purpose this experience served.

No understanding of how to possibly say goodbye to the people who pulled me along when I didn’t think I could take another step.

This marathon will end, and in just a few days we will fly away.

And it makes me happy – because it’s over and we survived and I know that somewhere, someday we will be better for it.

And  it makes me sad  – for all that it never was.


PCS Packing

It never fails – the weeks surrounding a move are always a little bit off-kilter.

The last 10 days have not failed these expectations.

My last post indicated some quiet time of editing and writing and completing our home school lessons, as well as my own expectations of getting back on track with some sort of routine.

And then life laughed.

A 2:00 am ambulance ride through the streets of San Juan punctuated the start of a busy week. Note: 1) everyone is FINE, and 2) that is an entirely separate story.

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An overwhelming sense of anxiety led to the creation of this:

moving calendarOur countdown calendar: sticky notes marking what needs to be done and who needs to be where. With every morsel of our lives about to be placed in cardboard boxes, this was my answer to organization.

For those who have not packed up and moved house 7 times in the last 16 years, here’s a little overview:

A PCS (Permanent Change of Station) has happens for most military families every 2-4 years. Our shortest stay was 11 months and our longest 4.5 years.

YES. We are provided with packers who come into our home and pack EVERYTHING – right down to the trash in your trash can if you don’t watch carefully. I’m not joking.

YES. There are some people who just sit back and let the packers do it all. Empty their drawers and go through their closets and clean out the pantry.

NO. I am not one of those people.

Why?

1) I like to use this time to purge and sort – I do not want anything packed that I don’t want to see again on the other side.

2) I think it is creepy to let strangers touch my underwear.

3) We are living in a semi-furnished apartment – some of the things are ours, some are theirs. I had to make sure every item was carefully sorted so that the right things got packed and not the wrong things.

We are in the midst of an over-seas move. We will be separated from our possessions for the next two months (give or take a week.) The items will live in a crate that will spend time on a truck, a dock, a boat, a dock, a truck and possibly a warehouse before we see them again in Illinois. (Scott AFB – just across the Mississippi from St. Louis.)

With that in mind…..  If you had to pack only a suitcase for 2 months what would you put in it?

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Over the last few days we have put our hands on everything we own. Every room had elaborate piles of SHIP ….. GIVE AWAY ….. SUITCASE ….. STAYS.

And of course we came across a few items that needed to be used up.

One night we enjoyed stray Christmas Crackers with our pizza.

Christmas Crackers

Re-discovering the sombrero and a package of stick-on moustaches were timed perfectly with our Cinco de Mayo dinner.

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Now who says moving isn’t fun?

We sorted through books and toys and clothes and cooking utensils, ultimately emptying all the bedrooms and creating organized-ish  stacks for the packers.

We went to bed tired and little bleary eyed from the stirred up dust.

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This morning packing day finally arrived.

packing dayToday we passed the hours listening to the crinkle of paper and the screech of tape.

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What looked like this at 8:00 am:

books

Looked like this at 4:00 pm:

books in boxes

Tomorrow, they load the truck.

Adios stuff, we’ll meet you in St. Louis.

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Fun Moving Fact: My Prince Charming once lost his wedding ring in one house, only to have it found by one of our movers in the next house!


My last FIRST date

Eighteen years ago today I went on my very last FIRST date.

I met my prince at an Air Force ball on April Fool’s Day.

That night, at twenty-two-years-old, I took my first steps into the military world. One that was completely foreign to my existence. A life that I found both intimidating and exciting; but mostly intimidating.

In those early years I remember being incredibly young and inexperienced compared to those wives who’d been around for a while. The ones who knew what it was like to go weeks, even months at a time without any word from their husbands. The ones who sent handwritten letters and care packages to loved ones in foreign lands. The ones who packed up their belongings every few years and made a new home relying solely on faith, good manners, and the strength of an oak and the flexibility of a willow.

At military lunches I looked to these ladies with a sense of awe. They had beautiful furnishings, collected around the world. They knew how to make strangers feel like family in their homes. And they had stories. The most wonderful stories you’ve ever heard. Stories of births and travels and loss and friendship.

Just a few weeks ago we received the news of a promotion. This is a great honor for my husband and a wonderful acknowledgement for our entire family.

It also makes me feel old.

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I have become one of those seasoned wives. I corresponded with my deployed love without the aid of cell phones, or Skype, or even a computer in our house. I set up six different homes before Pinterest gave me decorating ideas. I even moved to new cities that I had never Googled.

I have furniture built in Europe, rugs from Turkey and scrapbooks filled with exotic travel. I have friends that I consider family dotted all over the world.

Writing this reveals my antiquity. But with age comes wisdom, and with life experience come the stories. Today, on April first, I share one of my favorites.

Every love story needs a great beginning. Here’s ours: TWO APRIL FOOLS


Treading Water

It is 4:37 AM.

I rarely have the type of insomnia that doesn’t allow me to fall asleep. Instead, mine wakes me up in the early mornings, 2:18, 3:45, 4:15. Even though my body is tired and longs to stay in the warm darkness, my mind is swirling. I am awake. Rather than toss and turn, I get up to empty it.

And “what thoughts?” you ask.

The future.

Not the future as in what to make for dinner, or the school board meeting later today, or the list of doctor appointments that I must call and book.

I am talking THE future, FUTURE.

A few nights ago I dreamt that my husband was out in the ocean treading water. I watched from our balcony as many men and women were treading for hours, waiting to be called onto the beach to receive their next job assignment. And in the dream I was upset that I wasn’t allowed to tread for him, because while he is a better swimmer, I am better at treading. I could survive out there for days.

 I don’t need a professional to analyze this one.

253 days from now we will be somewhere else. The question is, as it has been for the last 17 years that I have known my husband, WHERE?

This pending move is different than ones of the past for two distinct reasons.

1) In every other instance, I was sad to leave. There was hesitation to pack up because I knew that good byes would be difficult. Unfortunately, this is not the case.

2) This is possibly our last move. Now don’t get me wrong, it could just as easily be 1 of many more, but it could really be the last. Depending on the assignment, this might bring us right up to retirement. If the location is great, and we are happy and involved and comfortable, it might be easier to stay rather than go.

There is something comforting in the thought that my 4 children, who were each born in a different hospital, might all hold diplomas from the same high school. There is pleasure in the thought of un-packing for good, rather than for now. There is happiness in giving my children the confidence to go ahead and delve into a friendship that doesn’t have an expiration date.

And right along with these reliefs, comes fears. For nomads like us, setting down and settling in is S.C.A.R.Y.

Are we ready?

Is the adventure done?

What does one look for in a permanent home?

Where do we want to go?

That last question is the hardest and most ridiculous of all, because we don’t really get to choose.

We get to hope, and request, and give in the “Dream Sheet” that I am pretty sure has never really made anyone’s wishes come true.

So why do I find myself scanning  realtor.com pages in a multitude of different cities through the United States? Why do I know the GreatSchools ratings of High Schools from Colorado to the East Coast, from Boston to Florida? It is my coping mechanism. When I don’t know the answers to the big questions, I like to have all the information I can gather. I feel safer creating a Plan A, a Plan B and a Plan C – even though, if history repeats itself, I am pretty sure that we are looking at Plan H. The one that isn’t even on the table yet.

We will know something in the next few weeks, or maybe sometime in March.

And so I find my peace in my faith: that we will end up exactly where we belong.

And until faith and destiny rise to the surface, I will  be here treading water as the sun comes up.


Superheroes

Some little boys grow up idolizing Batman, Spiderman and Superman.

 My little boy knows a different kind of superhero.

Instead of capes they wear boots.

They run into burning buildings.

They fly into danger.

They man ships that protect our coasts.

They jump into the unknown.

Today I thank our real-life avengers.

The ones who put the lives of others before themselves.

Every. Single. Day.

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HARRY’S HEROES

Dad’s airplane.

Harry wearing the helmet # of his namesake and great-grandfather Harry Wind. It has been worn by three generations of New York City Firefighters.

Harry with his great-uncle and cousin.

Watching the planes with Daddy.

 

See my other tributes to 9-11 here:

 I Remember September 10th

From this day on….

 

 


Charading Normal

When I don’t write much, it is usually one of three reasons.

1. Lack of computer access.

2. Life has gotten unusually busy, without much downtime to sit, reflect and write.

3. Upsetting situations leave me at a loss for words.

 In the recent days, I can claim all of the above.

1. With Caitlyn’s online classes and the other kids using the (awesome) online versions of all of their textbooks, there is a waiting list to get on the household computers. My “fun” is ousted by Algebra, Spanish, and Science.

2. I am busy. Aside from some  infuriating  hours wasted in doctor’s offices and the commissary, I have been tied up with long runs, barbecues and taking time to reach out to the new families around here.

3. Every week here bad things happen. Murders, drugs, robberies…. it isn’t a new story. I can’t explain why some weeks are harder than others, but I will try.

I feel like I am living a double life.

Some believe that I am in Paradise. The beaches and palm trees along the azure seas certainly encourage that line of thinking. My own photographs propagate the illusion.

Yet the same Puerto Rico that provides tropical breezes a fantastic pina colada, is ridden with crime and corruption.

“Puerto Rico faces a grisly reality. Inside the Caribbean island territory known by many Americans as a scenic tourist destination, U.S. citizens are gunned down and stabbed daily in drug-fueled attacks as rival traffickers feud over turf and addicts fight for another fix. Last year, a record 1,136 people were slain within the island’s borders. Officials say Puerto Rico’s murder rate is five times the U.S. national average.” Read more of this CNN article here.

Don’t get me wrong. We moved here knowing that we were exposing ourselves to a different level of danger than we had experienced before. We believed that if we were smart, and careful and stayed out of the wrong places, we would get some up-close, in-person visual lessons on street drugs and violence. My kids now know that when I say “eyes straight ahead, no eye contact” that we are in a bad situation and that I am adamant about avoiding conflict.

So, why was this week any different? After 20 months shouldn’t it all just roll off my back?

I think instead of toughening up, I carry the weight of fear and stress, so that even one event can be the proverbial straw that breaks my back.

This week the DEA and the Coast Guard were extremely busy, busting US Postal workers and intercepting a massive cocaine shipment. Read about it here and here.

Aside from the fact that many of these actions practically take place in our backyard, I know these agents and I know the men and women out on the Coast Guard ships. When their names and faces are plastered on the local news and in papers, I worry about retaliation. I fear for the safety of their families. I don’t trust the local police to protect them. Police Corruption.

And then I saw this news clip that has been pounced upon by republicans. Some are angry by her specific threats.  Others posted it because of frustrations toward media outlets that chose not to. I’m not posting it for either reason. Hearing her made me cringe. It was the tone of her anger. It was the strength of her hatred. I have felt it.  Just listening to her words hit a nerve that can only be understood by those who have also  looked this contempt in the eyes.

I am acutely aware that I am not in the United States. When living abroad I appreciate that I am in someone else’s space. I don’t agree with or understand many behaviors, but who am I to say anything? This isn’t my home. But on a military base I have different expectations. Inside the gates of an Air Force base or an Army post, I expect courtesy. I expect some level of human respect. And above all, I expect safety.

And this is the final straw.

On Wednesday my husband went to work with the base under lock down. A local man, who was employed on the base, had just lowered the American flag and lit it on fire. He had also called in a bomb threat. After hours of a thorough search of buildings and planes, it was deemed that his threat was false. Local authorities called his actions a misdemeanor (a false 911 call and destruction of property.) He was standing up for his political beliefs and taking a stand for the independence of Puerto Rico. Why does this bother me more than the alarming murder rates? Not because of what he chose to do, or even the potential danger, but because it was dismissed so lightly. Threatening Americans, on a military base in a United States Territory just isn’t a big deal.

As the election grows closer and the debates over Independence and Statehood grow more heated, what will be next? When one of the leading parties is against America’s influence over this territory, how will that impact the safety of Americans currently living here? Are we targets? What acts are angry protestors willing to do to get the attention of international media?

I can’t help but ask “Why are we here?” I am sure my feelings are not unlike those of thousands of military men and women who have spent time in foreign lands, fighting a war that they may have lost sight of. All I know is that we are not wanted. On base. Off base. In school.

With hostility suspended in the humidity, some days I want to pack my bags and go home.

But we are in the military. And as long as they say so, we are home.

And so the double-life goes on. I do the laundry and pack school lunches. I create Halloween costumes. I make birthday cakes. I volunteer with the PTO. I read books and train for marathons and help my children with their homework.

I pretend that life is normal even when I know that is the furthest thing from the truth.

Because some days charading normal is the best you can do.


Find a need…..

I have just returned from a spectacular week in the mountains of Colorado.

The air was crisp.

The sun was shining.

The sunflowers grew wild along the roadside.

I made my way back to Estes Park, CO to celebrate the retirement of a former mentor, Robert Burkhardt,  and to celebrate the amazing school that he created and led for the last 20 years. This school is nestled in hundreds of acres of the Rocky Mountains, marked by the distinct Eagle Rock.

Take a moment to check out Eagle Rock School.

Now back to the story.

I knew Robert before I ever met him. You see, I showed up on the doorstep of The Eagle Rock School in the summer of 1994, but 10 years earlier I had his twin brother as my English and Social Studies teacher. I can say, without a doubt, that knowing Ross and Robert Burkhardt shaped many of my core values and life’s path.

Thanks to a recommendation from Ross, I landed my first post-bachelor’s-degree job: a six-week internship in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. A bit of fun before I returned to Virgina to get on with my real life, working in the admissions office of James Madison University and starting my graduate degree. My safe, familiar plan was sent into a tail spin when Robert talked me into staying in Colorado beyond my short internship.

“Graduate school will always be there. You will learn more here.”

My first year at Eagle Rock was not easy. I was green with inexperience. I was naive. At 22 I was far closer in age to the students than any of my professional peers. I had unbelievable amounts of passion and hope, and there were many times that I found myself heartbroken by frustration. Robert was right, I learned.

I learned about expectations, and limits, and balance.

In a world that had always been clear-cut to me: right/wrong, black/white…. I learned the many nuances of gray.

This week we celebrated an accomplished and well-loved man, one who has impacted lives far beyond those he has ever met in person. When asked to share  a favorite memory, it is one of the Robert-isms that has stuck with me the longest. He has a number of famous phrases….

Take all you want, but eat all you take.

You have no right to no opinion.

Participation is not optional.

Leave everything better than the way you found it.

 There are many, many more, but the one that comes to my mind time and time again is:

“Find a need and fill it.”

We are self-centered. We grow up dreaming about what we want to be when we grow up. We make choices based on what might make us happy or fulfilled .

I arrived at Eagle Rock School just after graduating from college. I spent 4 years focussed on myself, my goals. Time, classes, money all so that I could become something. I had a college degree. I was qualified. I deserved.

I left Eagle Rock to teach in Louisiana. I met my future husband. I returned to Eagle Rock. I got married. I had 4 children. I lived in 6 different homes in 3 different countries. I took part in a multitude of tasks and projects and learning experiences.

 At ERS this saying was a simple reminder to take on the mundane chores that needed to be done around campus. Clean the bathroom. Empty the trash. Help make dinner. Do it without being reminded. Figure it out before being asked.

At some point this saying became more than a  reminder of chores; it became ingrained in my approach to life choices.

Many look at a military wife as one who has forfeited a career or her own goals for the sake of her husband’s.

This philosophy of filling needscan  change a random list of temporary homes into a continual thread of purpose.

With every zip code we can look around, listen, and do what needs to be done.

Each community will be left better because of these acts of service.

As the sun set and the chapter closed, I realized that this place  and the people in it are a significant part of who I am today.

Robert, I thank you for your words, your service and your example.


Welcome Home

There’s nothing like a good night’s sleep in your own bed.

Fresh from a solid 9 hours, I am working my way through a pile of dirty clothes and making lots of lists – groceries, appointments, and upcoming events. After 5 wonderful weeks stateside, we are gearing up for an exciting year ahead. In the next 12 months we will hear of our next assignment, pack up and head in that direction. In the meantime we will embark on 3rd, 5th, and 7th grades – plus venture into the world of a Virtual High School. There are runs and triathlons in the future, some great beach parties and a few exciting trips.

During the last few weeks I have picked up a number of new readers and I thought that today was a good day to give an update and an overview. As we are being welcomed home to our tropical island, I welcome you to Wind Inspired.

A year ago I started writing. This blog was to serve as a way of keeping in touch with family and friends during our assignment in the Caribbean and become  a family record of stories, recipes, and photos. In the end it has been a wonderful connection. Living on a tropical island can be somewhat isolating. Reaching out to military spouses around the world and to those who share my loves of photography, ar,t travel and food, have made our distant location seem a little bit closer to civilization.

In an effort to keep everything organized and accessible all of my past posts are filed under the headings at the top of my home page.

ABOUT – Some info about me and my motley crew. It is also the location where you can look back on any posts that pertain to motherhood, marriage, and interesting perspectives on life.

CAPTURE – I am a photographer. At times professional – right now just playing, researching, and learning. Short assignments and different country’s tax laws mean putting the business on hold for years at a time, but the plus side to that means time and freedom to experiment and get better at what I do. See what I am working on.

CREATE – Painting, writing, sewing, beading, gluing…. I have an undergraduate degree in Art and my concentration was in drawing and painting. In a dream world I would be an illustrator, in the real world I always have projects on my art table that are “in the works.”  Check out my completed creations as well as some fun stuff I’ve done with the kids.

EAT – This family eats with enthusiasm. I love to create recipes and cook. I enjoy having helpers in the kitchen. Everyone eats. The thing is – it has to be gluten-free. Join in on our quest for great recipes, restaurants and products that make our GF lifestyle more enjoyable.

EXPLORE – Travel. While my husband and I do get an occasional get-a-way alone, most of our travel is our children. Everything I write about is focussed on fun and exploration for families. Where to eat, what to do, times, costs and tween approval.

HEAL - Living with chronic illness is a daily challenge. We meet this challenge head-on. A healthy lifestyle, good information, and family support helps. So does a huge dose of humor.

RUN - From 5ks and sprint triathlons, to Marathons and Ironman races, we are an active bunch. This area will lead you to thoughts on training, events, and accomplishments.

SERVE – Service to others is a way of our military life. While our lives are dictated my husband’s service to the US Air Force, we are also passionate about volunteering and giving within our community. This is where I share the ups, the downs and the discoveries of being a military family.

CELEBRATE – I love a party. Whether the six of us are celebrating Chinese New Year or I am throwing a birthday party for 20 teenagers, I love the details that make an event special. Check out my ideas for food, favors and activities.

Into Pinterest? I have my boards organized under the same headings as my blog. I am often trying out a new project and recipe and I love to share my pinteresting successes and failures.

Thanks for stopping by. Take a look around.

Jackie

Need a starting point? Here are a few of my favorites:

Beauty is in the eye of the beekeeper:

 http://wind-inspired.com/2011/05/24/beauty-is-in-the-eye-of-the-beekeeper/

Come fly with me:

 http://wind-inspired.com/2012/01/10/come-fly-with-me/

Fear of Falling:

 http://wind-inspired.com/2011/07/28/fear-of-falling/

Worth the Weight:

 http://wind-inspired.com/2011/10/28/worth-the-weight/

Laughter is the best medicine:

http://wind-inspired.com/2011/10/12/laughter-is-the-best-medicine-the-beginning/

Lots and lots of Legos:

http://wind-inspired.com/2012/02/28/lots-and-lots-and-lots-of-legos/


A Special Pair

It takes a special pair of people to withstand the roller coaster life of a marriage, family and a military career.

One half active duty service member, the other half spouse.

Today is Military Spouse Appreciation Day.

Appreciate doesn’t even come close.

Some people might look from the outside and determine that the biggest advantage of our gypsy life is the world travel. As an insider, I assure you that my life has been improved, not by standing atop the Eiffel Tower or putting my toes in the Mediterranean Sea, but by the strong, talented, funny, loving women that are my compatriots.

These women act as friend, confidant, and emergency contact. In a matter of weeks they take on family status as they are the ones that share your Thanksgiving table, cheer from the sidelines of soccer games, hunt for Easter Eggs, and celebrate birthdays with as much love as an aunt or sister.

This week I threw a small lunch to honor the ladies who stand by my side in our current adventure.

My little party took on a Pear theme, with a play on words as to the importance of the pair in the success of a military life.

I created a keepsake photograph for each guest:

We had a simple meal – A big salad bar with greens, cheeses, nuts, roasted chicken, vegetables, fruit, seeds and croutons. It was a “make your own” to meet the needs of a variety of tastes and diets. I did some mini-quiches too, they were appreciated at lunch and again by my kids for an afterschool snack.

Then we shared some decadent desserts.

Chocolate Tiramisu Trifle

Pina Colada Cupcakes

But most popular were individual Pear, Carmel Cheesecakes.

I came across the recipe here:

http://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/salted-caramel-cheesecake

I followed the recipe exactly, except that my oven required longer cooking times. The process was lengthy, but not difficult. The end result was a really creamy cheese cake and wonderfully GLUTEN FREE!

CHEESE CAKES

  1. 1/2 pound cream cheese, at room temperature
  2. 1/2 cup sugar
  3. 3 large eggs, at room temperature
  4. 1/2 cup sour cream

CARAMEL

  1. 6 tablespoons light corn syrup
  2. 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar
  3. 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  4. 1/2 cup heavy cream
  5. Fleur de sel
  1. Pre-heat the oven to 325°. In a large bowl, beat the cream cheese and sugar at medium speed until smooth. Beat in the eggs, 1 at a time, then beat in the sour cream. Pour the batter into six 5-ounce ramekins or custard cups.
  2. Set the ramekins in a small pan and set the pan in the center of the oven. Add enough hot water to the pan to reach halfway up the sides of the ramekins. Bake the cheesecakes for 10 minutes, until set at the edges but still quite jiggly in the center. Turn off the oven and leave the cheesecakes in for 1 hour. Transfer the ramekins to a rack and let cool completely.
  3. In a heavy medium saucepan, heat the corn syrup. Stir in the sugar and cook over moderately high heat, undisturbed, until a deep amber caramel forms, about 9 minutes. Off the heat, carefully stir in the butter with a long-handled wooden spoon. Stir in the cream in a thin stream. Transfer the caramel to a heat proof pitcher and let cool. Stir in 3/4 teaspoon of fleur de sel.
  4. Pour 1 1/2 tablespoons of the caramel over each cheesecake and swirl to coat the tops. If the caramel is too thick, warm it in a microwave oven at 10-second intervals. Refrigerate the cheesecakes until chilled, at least 3 hours. Sprinkle with fleur de sel just before serving.
The cheesecakes can be refrigerated for up to 2 days.
To my fellow Military Spouses out there – I appreciate you beyond words!
Check out many more Military Spouse Blogs – click on the button to the right celebrating Military Spouse Appreciation Day! Thanks to Household 6 Diva & Riding the Roller Coaster for linking spouses all over the world together!

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