Life Without Him

It’s taken me awhile to write about Colton being gone. Not because I’m particularly emotional or because it’s especially difficult to write about. Wait, no, I take that back - it is difficult to write about, but not for the reasons I would have expected. It’s hard because I think for most people deployment is an extremely multifaceted issue. For the range of emotions, experiences, and feelings that exist in a time when being understood is so important, it’s extraordinarily easy to be misunderstood. I find myself stuttering over each word I type, wondering if it will be perceived the way I intend it to be. It’s a lengthy process, to say the least. But here I am, finally taking the time to sit down and write. And breathe. I’ve brewed a pot of coffee and promised myself I won’t leave my office until this post is complete. If for no other reason than the fact that I’ll regret having never written down how I feel today. Not just the happy days, and not just the sad. I want to remember the gritty in-between days when I forget to feel anything. Even those days are important to this story we’re living.

You should know that this experience is only my own. I cannot even begin to generalize life during war for anyone else. There are too many differences between branches of service, jobs within those branches, regions within each country, and dynamics of life at home for any one person’s experience to be like another. So let it be known that this will only ever be my account. And I hope, I desperately hope, you won’t assume it’s true for anyone else. There are couples who have traveled through five and six and seven and ten deployments over this past decade of war who have drastically different perspectives than I do. I’ve seen women with toddlers in diapers, babies on the hip, and children in the womb (yes, all three!), who, with a strength that is truly unfathomable to me, are able to kiss their husbands goodbye with smiles on their faces. This is something I will never understand.

For me it’s an ache. And it comes in waves. Colton and I can go weeks, even months, living on the excitement of life together again. Dreaming of the day when our weekends will once more be filled with mornings slept in, French pressed coffee at home, afternoon naps in each other’s arms, and late night bottles of wine. Talking of the adventures we’ll have when the weekends are truly ours again.

But eventually, and without any warning, the wave crashes and we find ourselves so desperately yearning for any ounce of closeness. What I wouldn’t give to touch his cheek, to kiss his lips, to see him smile. What I wouldn’t give to turn to my left and find him already looking at me.

There are times that are harder than others. Like when he has to ask three times whether or not I’m still on the other side of the phone. And when he realizes the tears streaming down my face are preventing words from leaving my mouth, he’s suddenly overcome with sorrow and at a loss for words as well. It’s ironic, isn’t it? That for weeks we’ll wait to hear one another’s voice, yet when we’re finally afforded a phone call we are physically incapable of speaking.

What then, am I supposed to say when he calls from a satellite phone in the middle of the desert in the middle of the night in Afghanistan, asking how to write a letter to a 21-year-old widow in Illinois?

It's surreal for me to think that one of these boys is not coming home. That one of these bags won't be returning on the back of its owner...

And all of this makes me wonder where the 14-year-old boy I fell in love with so many years ago went. How did we get here? Me here and him one million miles away in a land torn by war and violence and corruption and despair?

What has come as the most delightful and unexpected surprise during this entire journey has been an overwhelming sense of peace. It’s a peace that truly surpasses all understanding. And I know, beyond all shadow of a doubt, that it’s because of an incredible network of individuals who are keeping Colton and I in their thoughts and prayers. I feel as though for this season they are doing what I cannot. While I know my prayers are equally as effective, they seem different. My thoughts are simple and my prayers are childlike, almost visceral. I find myself begging God to keep him safe, to dry his tears, to make him laugh. While their prayers are my backbone, my prayers are my air.

And I know that he’ll come back different. I know he won’t be the same Colton I left on that California base three months ago. He’ll come back aged and scarred and weary and different. But he’ll be back, and we’ll be together as we fall to sleep each night.

I’m crying now, but these tears remind me our lives are rich – our experiences deep. I miss him. I miss being so deeply known by him. I miss the ease of life with him, of not having to explain things (particularly, myself), and of that simple little ordinary life we share. Right now life seems extraordinary. And eventful. I think we’re going to welcome a long bit of time without much excitement.

Happy Memorial Day Weekend, M.

Matt & Lacey

She was the first to notice him, though she did have the distinct advantage being perched atop the campus balcony one Hilo afternoon with her roommate, Sammy. And while it wasn’t uncommon for Lacey and Sammy to sit and scope out the University of Hawaii, Hilo’s most eligible and study, something about Matt was different. It wasn’t long before Matt, handsome, funny, baseball-playing Matt, found an eye for Lacey as well. After all, a girl as kind and genuine and sinfully beautiful as Lacey doesn’t go unnoticed for long...

Matt and Lacey were married on the beach, in the sand, without their shoes, at Kona’s King Kamehameha hotel. And while the pre-wedding weather had done everything in it’s power to convince Lacey that there would be rain, on the day of the wedding someone had other plans. As the beach-layers and sun-tanners were cleared from the ceremony site, the clouds made a clearing as well. Leaving room for the most beautiful rays of Hawaiian sun to grace the newlyweds with its presence.

Lacey and Matt, thank you. For the kindness you showed me throughout your wedding and the entire week beforehand, I am so grateful. And above all, thank you for bringing me to Hawaii to join you on your incredible day. It was an honor to witness you two become husband and wife.

Lots of love! Michelle

This would be how Matt looks at Lacey all the time...

I lovelovelovelovelove, Love. Especially when it looks like this...

Lacey and Matt had the best (but really, the best) bridal party. All of their bridesmaids and groomsmen were so kind and fun and ridiculously photogenic. And they all went out of their way to welcome me. Leaving me to feel as though I'd just made 18 new best friends.

At the end of night Lacey's family friend, Rosemary, surprised everyone by performing the most beautiful traditional Hawaiian Hula. And if you were listening carefully, you would have heard guests exchange whispers of the fairytale evening before them.

Eli & Emily

They’ve known each other for, technically, ever. And really, they were destined to be together from before they were born. With mothers who were college roommates and too many shared experiences to be considered coincidental, Eli and Emily were truly just meant to be. But with families in completely different parts of the state, for years Emily’s only memory of Eli was the annual Conlee family photo that came with each year’s Christmas card. So when Mrs. Conlee and Mrs. Blaylock saw one another across the room on the first day of their children’s college orientation, it was as if no time had passed at all... for the former college friends. For Eli and Emily, however, it was day one of a friendship that would last throughout the next four years and well into their post-university adventures. And while they would admit to finding one another ever so attractive, it was their friendship that had truly grown over college classes, backyard barbeques, and dinners initiated by the rekindled friendship of their mothers.

But all this changed last fall when the Conlee’s came to visit the Blaylocks. Emily had just moved home from a few years of living in Washington D.C. and something felt different, better, about her friendship with Eli. Fortunately for Emily, Eli was feeling the exact same thing. It didn’t take long to realize that all the while the past six years of friendship had been leading to a lifetime of love for these two.

Eli and Emily, ohmystars. I didn’t know I could love you any more. But then you go and plan this absolutely perfect engagement session and I find myself even more excited for your August wedding. Your smiles make me smile and I’m just so happy for you both. Thanks for letting me join you in this crazy beautiful adventure of falling in love, planning a wedding, and marrying your best friend!

Michelle

This light? It's the reward that comes to those few individuals who are willing to wake up 4:00am on a Sunday morning for their engagement session.

Eli designed Emily's ring himself. And then he patiently waited for four whole months for the ring to be completed before he would propose.

I love this session because Eli and Emily made a point of incorporating so many details that were important to their relationship. From sentimental books that they'd gifted to one another to cupcakes and bread that they made together, not a thing was included that didn't have meaning.