Breaking up is hard to do, except when one is following
their dreams.
My husband is currently on another deployment, this time
Africa. Thankfully, this is a short one - only six months. Meanwhile, I am living
in our current duty station of Wiesbaden, Germany, trying to learn the
language, building a network of friends, and just barely staying sane.
Yep, he’s ARMY (Hooah) and has been for about 8 years. I joined the party about 5 years ago when he
swept me off my feet in a fairytale-style romance. At the time, I was enjoying a long career with
a local company in San Antonio. The pay
was awesome (the company Mercedes a nice perk) and the downtown apartment was
every city girl's dream. I felt like
Carrie in Sex & the City (minus the active sex life).
When we got married, I had to reinvent myself. As you may know, it is hard for a military
spouse to keep a career. Mention to a
potential employer that you’ll be moving to another duty station in a couple
of years and they place your impressive resume in the “Not a Chance” pile. No hard feelings…I was a business manager too. I get it.
Did I mention my husband is a total geek? Dungeons and Dragons, first-person shooter
games, Magic: The Gathering, and airsoft are just a few of the immersive
hobbies that became my world when we got hitched. Fortunately, my own previous hobbies were minimal due
to working long hours, so I welcomed the change…and love every minute of
it! Who knew role-playing games could be
so much fun?
A few years ago, we decided to host a weekly D&D
campaign in our home (Ft. Hood at the time.) Working long hours himself, Paraic decided to
pass along his miniature terrain building skills to me. He taught me how to create stone blocks using
silicone molds and plaster, how to build them into miniature replica of
castles, taverns, & ruins, how to paint them and even add flocking and
weathering touches. The pieces we
created together became the setting for our miniature D&D town of Two Creek
Crossing.
Our players loved the terrain so much, Paraic suggested I try selling
the pieces online. A year later, I was
operating successful Ebay and ETSY online markets, devoted solely to miniature
fantasy terrain. Every time my ETSY
phone app would signal a sale by making a little cash-register chime, I’d get
goosebumps. The satisfaction I experience
from creative expression is unlike anything I ever felt holding down an
executive position in an office setting. The feedback from my customers
motivated me to look for inspiration, create new pieces and continue to expand
my business.
It was just about that time that we received orders to
Germany. The idea of living is Europe is
much cooler than actually living here.
While we are grateful to have the opportunity to travel and experience the
German culture, we find it difficult to get our game on here. ARMY housing
is…well, let’s just say that I had a larger apartment than this when I was a 19
year old cashier at Burger Time.
Not
only does the lack of space and the prohibitive business laws prevent me from
operating a home-based business, the cramped quarters make it difficult to host
games here. We made several efforts to get involved in games at local hobby
stores, but the language barrier is a real issue. If you can’t talk trash to
your opponent, games become seriously competitive and stressful. So, Magic is
out. D&D is out. Airsoft is illegal
here and so we have thrown ourselves in to our newest hobby - Star Wars X-Wing
Miniatures games. Excellent game, but even
dogfighting becomes boring after a while (whining ends soon, I promise).
Paraic’s answer to this is to design an
X-Wing campaign, allowing the game play to last for weeks, even months. He is in Africa now, researching other
campaign style games and incorporating some of their rules and ideas into our
G.E.E.K campaign – Galactic Epic Escalating Konflict.
Back to the breaking up part…
Don’t worry, this story has a happy ending. Paraic and I Skype every night from Germany
to Africa. We talk about the GEEK
campaign and about life in Germany for me and the pups (we opted out of
parenting humans). Our conversations
inevitably go philosophical and the more we talk, the more we realize that we
are not happy. While the ARMY has been
good to us, it is keeping us apart too often and holding us back creatively. So one night, we entertained the idea of
separating from the military. I
suggested we use all of our passion, creativity, gaming knowledge, business
management experience, and Veteran resources to open our own hobby shop. It was something we had talked about before
in a “wouldn’t it be cool if” sort of way, but that day, it was a viable option
on the table. “Let’s do it”, he
said.
So, we are breaking up with you ARMY. It was a successful relationship in that we were good for each other and we can part friends, but life is short and we’d like to return to our own planet now.
Looking forward to watching the development and growth of your business!
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