Archive | military life

transition.

becca-garber-transition

I always felt like every year in college was totally different from the year before… almost like I was attending a different school each time.  Some things stayed the same — the Lawn, mochas in the library, and tried and true friends that I’d had since school started — but everything else shifted.  New faces became dear and familiar.  A new house or roommate changed my living experience.  New professors or classes changed my school experience.  New organizations or clubs (or friends to enjoy a slow glass of red wine with) changed my social life.

All these things made each year entirely different than the last.

Real life is like this, military life especially.  Every year people arrive.  You might even add a new baby to your family… how’s that for major transition!

I am feeling the crunch of transition right now.  I looked at my “Favorites” list of numbers in my phone and realized all those friends have moved away.  (Well, except my husband, thank goodness.)  At my women’s Bible study in the fall, I will only know about 5 people there instead of 20; everyone else has moved away. The friends that we have loved and relied upon since Day 1 in Sicily are no longer here.

And suddenly we’ve turned into the old fogies.  We’re now the ones who speak the most Italian (what?!), the ones who know the best places to eat here, the ones who know where to park there, the ones who can lead the caravan of friends’ cars instead of follow it, the ones who can say, “Well, two years ago winter storms killed the orange blossoms, but last winter it wasn’t so bad, and so I think the blood oranges will be plentiful this year.”

(^ dork alert ^)

Suddenly, even more frighteningly, I am the one who needs to welcome, invite, include, initiate.  I have always been on the other end of this, first as the newbie and then as just a friend.  Now there are so many people who need me, who need to be found, who need to be befriended, who need another mom who will suggest we pack multiple children into hot cars and head off on a mid-week adventure, just because it’s Sicily and why not?!

Can I love as I have been loved?  Can I — with mere months left here — hold open my arms and say, “Hi!  Want to be my friend?  Are you free on Thursday?”

Last night Elliott and I were praying together, and I prayed that we would “make room” in our lives for new friends.  I called this blog “Making Room” because we want this to be a habit in our lives: welcoming people into our home, offering friends and travelers our guest room, having new and old friends over to dinner, participating in Bible studies/community groups that include whole families in each other’s houses, seeking out needs of others and clearing our schedules so that we can meet these needs.

We’re not good at this.  We confront our own selfishness (or busyness, or introverted-ness, or exhaustion, or internal strife… this is a safe space!) every day.  When faced with these frustrations, we usually choose to make excuses instead of making sacrifices.  We choose self over service every day.

But thankfully, we have two things to combat our selfishness and help us “make room” this year.

The first is that we serve a God who not only made room for us in His Kingdom but gave life to us, welcoming us just as we were and then gently and faithfully continuing to sanctify us year by year.

The second is that we have had wonderful examples.  So many friends here have opened up their lives, homes, refrigerators, minivans, and hearts for us, welcoming us just as we were.  They have never assumed anything of us, other than that we’d like to be included.  They have made this strange and wonderful land a home for us, a place we love because they loved it first and showed us why.

Can we do this for others?  Can we seek out the newcomers and tell them what we’ve learned?  Can we catch them before they escape after church, shy and overwhelmed, and ask them about themselves?  Can we get their numbers and invite them to dinner?  Can we take them to our favorite beaches, pizzerias, hiking trails, and agriturismi?

Can we love as we have been loved?

12 :: in friends, military life, my faith, Sicily, thoughts

walking in Sicily in the springtime

becca-garber-sicily-wisteria-votive

Last Wednesday was such a perfect, blue-sky day!  Lena, Gil, and I took our usual weekly walk to buy fruits and vegetables, and along the way I took some pictures of our town in the spring.  Don’t you just want to bury your nose in those beautiful wisteria blossoms?

becca-garber-sicily-motta-mural

Above, a mural of our town showing a festival below the cliff.  On the right, Lena pokes through her snacks for the good stuff while I do my shopping.

becca-garber-sicily-architecture

becca-garber-sicily-water

^^^ Already I can’t walk anywhere without a big bottle of water to keep me hydrated.

becca-garber-sicily-castle

becca-garber-sicily-motta

becca-garber-sicily-wisteria-fish

On the left, I picked some wisteria blossoms and hung them up at home as “spring mistletoe.”  On the right,  I bought these fish in town and then realized they weren’t gutted!

Funny story about those fish, actually.   I saw the fishmonger’s truck and spontaneously decided we’d have fish for dinner.  The fishmonger saw me waiting with my children and broke into a huge smile of recognition, saying to the five men waiting around me that the signora would go first.  After some discussion, I made my selection and was about to pay for them when I realized I was out of cash!  Embarrassing.  He told me not to worry, he’d set them aside for me.  Around the corner to the bank I went, hurrying as quickly as I could when I have a two-year-old who loves to press the ATM buttons for me.

When I came back around the corner… the fish truck was gone!  Dismayed, I asked a man in the piazza when the fishmonger would be back.

“He went down that way,” the man said.  “He’ll be back in 10 minutes.”

“Ten?” I asked.  “Or twenty?”

*shrug*

I sighed, deciding I couldn’t make two babies wait in the piazza for 10 minutes.  I turned my stroller towards home.  Suddenly I heard someone calling, “Signora!  Signora!”  I turned around and saw an elderly man who had been another customer at the truck… and he was holding my bag of fish!

“He gave the fish to me,” the gentleman explained.  “Here you go.”

I handed him the money to give back to the fishmonger, thanking him over and over.  What a kind, trusting gesture!  I was so touched.

It’s moments like this that I feel most at home in this little Sicilian town of ours: when people take care of me just because they want to.  They know I’m American, they know I’m probably here with the military, they know I’ll come and go just like whole generations of military families before me.  And yet my impermanence does not stop their warmth and generosity to me.  When they admire my children, wave at me in cheerful recognition even though we’ve never spoken, nod politely as I move through the piazza, call “arrivederci!” every time I drive by, pile oranges from their groves into shopping bags and tell me to come back for more, slip fresh eggs from their chickens to my daughter, memorize my order at the store… I actually feel at home in Italy.

14 :: in home sweet home, life lately, military life, Sicily

in the States!

boarding a military flight in Sicily

Yep, I’m back in Virginia… again.  For the fourth time this summer!  (Find photos of other trips home here in May, here in June, and here in July.)  We were all planning to come back in October for Elliott’s brother’s wedding, but Elliott has to travel a lot for work for the rest of September.  We decided that Lena and I should go home early so I could spend more time with my family.  As this will be my last trip home until next summer (when we have another babe in arms), and because we are all deeply grieving the recent loss of my little sister, we thought these three weeks would be a valuable time for me to be at home with my family.

exploring airports along the way home 
& fun times in Auntie Em’s room once we got back to Virginia 

I took a bit of an unorthodox route home: a military flight.  Are you imagining cavernous cargo planes and Lena strapped into a jump seat?  I did too, but then I actually tried space available military transport, and it is so different than I expected!

First of all, you ride on a normal commercial airline, complete with regular flight attendants, hot meals, and movies.  The military contracts North American Airlines* to fly these “rotator” flights for them, and so every two weeks a regular Boeing 767 will start in Norfolk and fly through Rota (Spain), Sigonella (Italy), Bahrain, and Djibouti, picking up and dropping off passengers along the way.  On its way back this time, the plane picked us up in Sigonella; took us to Rota; dropped all of us off in the terminal on base for about 2 hours while it refueled, stocked up hot meals, and took on new passengers; and then flew all of us across the Atlantic to land in Norfolk around 3:30am on Friday morning, where my sweet parents were waiting to drive us all home to Fairfax (3 hours away).  It was a long, long day for everyone!

*(Have you ever heard of North American Airlines?  No, me either.  For all I knew, it could have been a fake airline.  Wouldn’t that be a perfect setting for a horror film?  “Everything seemed safe and secure for Captain Ghenty and his family… until they boarded a chartered flight home on an unknown airline… and somewhere over the Atlantic, everything changed….”)

Thankfully, the trip was uneventful for Lena and me.  We paid only $60 to get home (“taxes… sorry, ma’am”) instead of close to $1,000 as on commercial airlines.  We could have been stranded in Rota if there wasn’t room for us on the plane, but we weren’t… this time.  Lena and I will repeat the adventure again in October to get home and we’ll see if all goes as smoothly next time.  I’ve heard tragic tales of unaccompanied dependents (ie. wives and babies traveling without their high-priority active duty husbands) getting stranded for a week at a time along the way while full planes leave daily without them and I’ve heard of them eventually buying one-way commercial airline tickets just to finally get home.  I hope I don’t have to write my own horror story on the way back!

***
Check back later today for some fun photos of a festival I went to in D.C. on Saturday.  It’s good to be back in the U.S. of A!
4 :: in Army, military life, travel, Virginia

in the States!

boarding a military flight in Sicily

Yep, I’m back in Virginia… again.  For the fourth time this summer!  (Find photos of other trips home here in May, here in June, and here in July.)  We were all planning to come back in October for Elliott’s brother’s wedding, but Elliott has to travel a lot for work for the rest of September.  We decided that Lena and I should go home early so I could spend more time with my family.  As this will be my last trip home until next summer (when we have another babe in arms), and because we are all deeply grieving the recent loss of my little sister, we thought these three weeks would be a valuable time for me to be at home with my family.

exploring airports along the way home 
& fun times in Auntie Em’s room once we got back to Virginia 

I took a bit of an unorthodox route home: a military flight.  Are you imagining cavernous cargo planes and Lena strapped into a jump seat?  I did too, but then I actually tried space available military transport, and it is so different than I expected!

First of all, you ride on a normal commercial airline, complete with regular flight attendants, hot meals, and movies.  The military contracts North American Airlines* to fly these “rotator” flights for them, and so every two weeks a regular Boeing 767 will start in Norfolk and fly through Rota (Spain), Sigonella (Italy), Bahrain, and Djibouti, picking up and dropping off passengers along the way.  On its way back this time, the plane picked us up in Sigonella; took us to Rota; dropped all of us off in the terminal on base for about 2 hours while it refueled, stocked up hot meals, and took on new passengers; and then flew all of us across the Atlantic to land in Norfolk around 3:30am on Friday morning, where my sweet parents were waiting to drive us all home to Fairfax (3 hours away).  It was a long, long day for everyone!

*(Have you ever heard of North American Airlines?  No, me either.  For all I knew, it could have been a fake airline.  Wouldn’t that be a perfect setting for a horror film?  “Everything seemed safe and secure for Captain Ghenty and his family… until they boarded a chartered flight home on an unknown airline… and somewhere over the Atlantic, everything changed….”)

Thankfully, the trip was uneventful for Lena and me.  We paid only $60 to get home (“taxes… sorry, ma’am”) instead of close to $1,000 as on commercial airlines.  We could have been stranded in Rota if there wasn’t room for us on the plane, but we weren’t… this time.  Lena and I will repeat the adventure again in October to get home and we’ll see if all goes as smoothly next time.  I’ve heard tragic tales of unaccompanied dependents (ie. wives and babies traveling without their high-priority active duty husbands) getting stranded for a week at a time along the way while full planes leave daily without them and I’ve heard of them eventually buying one-way commercial airline tickets just to finally get home.  I hope I don’t have to write my own horror story on the way back!

***
Check back later today for some fun photos of a festival I went to in D.C. on Saturday.  It’s good to be back in the U.S. of A!
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4 :: in Army, military life, travel, Virginia

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