Friday, April 24, 2015

Graduation

I was so ready for this day! Not only did it mark the end of a long journey through school, but this also marked the time that Gentry and my living apart would end. No longer a "weekend wife," I was so grateful to finally reach this point! 
When I imagined graduating from college this was definitely not the way I pictured getting there, but in the end, all that mattered what that I was here, I did it, and I had my friends and family around to support me. 

Here are some pictures from that day: 







 Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training & Exercise Science = accomplished!

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Littlest Brother's Baptism

In March 2014 my youngest brother, Samuel, chose to be baptized into the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Gentry and I were lucky enough to go and enjoy the baptism and have some family time after. 

Samuel and a few of his friends











Only missing Elder Jameson from this one. 

Congratulations to Samuel on this important decision to join the LDS church. It may seem like a small decision now, but it will become even more consequential as time goes on. 


Monday, April 20, 2015

Reviewing the pain and the happiness

While I'd love to forget this section of time, I realize how important it is to document these months.
During this time, Gentry and I were still living apart, making the time to see each other every weekend. 


As I look back at some journal entries from that time, I can feel how much pain there was from not being able to be with my eternal companion. Now that it's passed, it seems like the small blip of life that everyone told us it would be, but I never could quite believe until it was over. It was the longest year of my life, and while I continued to tell myself that I'd try and be as happy as I could be throughout the week and live life to the fullest, it just wasn't the same. 


I found myself yearning for those weekends when I could hold him and feel complete again. I'm sure it all sounds cheesy, and while I do believe that we are still individuals, there is something to being married. It's becoming a whole person, when you didn't realize that only half was there beforehand. And to have to strip that away every Sunday night by saying goodbye for another week was nothing short of torture. 


I have a great friend who I was telling some of my woes to, and she made a great point that's stuck with me. I was feeling guilty for saying how hard Gentry's and my separation was, because I know there's army wives and other families that have to live apart for much longer times and don't have the blessing of seeing each other every weekend. How could my experience even compare, when I had an ending in sight, and I knew I'd see my husband every Friday? She told me: "Yes, but you also didn't sign up for that. This wasn't something you foresaw and accepted. And it's okay." 
Have you ever noticed how sometimes all you need is for someone to just say it's okay? That your justified in your feelings, no matter how irrational that may be? In that moment it was exactly what I needed to hear, and I was grateful for it.  


And to be honest? I was terrified of what it would do to our marriage to be apart for that long. How many fights would occur because all we had was a phone conversation at the end of the day? How much communication would be lost because we couldn't see and read each other's body language? How much would our relationship lose as we changed? Because the growing was inevitable, would we grow together, or grow apart? 


While the challenges that came from being apart did come, and the struggle of being alone was indescribable, I can now look back and see how much our marriage grew from that time. I learned to appreciate the small things. So often on our weekends together, we would end up doing nothing but laying around the house, holding one another, simply because we could. There was no need to go do something; all we needed was each other. And it made me realize just how significant marriage and our eternal family is. Because even if it was just us two, we still are a family. 


I say it often, and I will never stop saying it: Gentry is my everything. He increases my understanding tenfold, and while yes, I could go on and be a good person on my own, by having him at my side, loving and supporting me no matter the circumstance, I know that I can someday become a great person. Naturally I am not there yet, but with him? I'm closer than I've ever been. 

And...we're back

I look back on this blog, and it's hard to believe how long it's been since I've written. For so long I was uninterested in telling our story, that it wasn't important to anyone. (Along with this I didn't try and write many journal entries either.) I didn't think we had anything going on in our lives that was worth mentioning.

But I've come to realize that our lives - Gentry and mine - as the Gasser family, we do matter. And as I attempt to review our past year and a half and what we have to look forward to in the future, I hope you enjoy what I have to say and what we have learned.