Shaina McGarry
Abstract
The on-going issue of a walking caravan moving towards the United States’ southern border has been a controversial topic in the recent news. Members of the United States military have been given orders to stand watch at the border. They have also been given permission to use deadly force if necessary. As American citizens, it is easy for many to turn a blind eye to the suffering endured by immigrants. However, what do you do if your heart is with both immigrants and the members of the military?
Daysi is the daughter of immigrants from Honduras and El Salvador. Daysi is also the wife of an Airman at the southern border. This essay looks to capture the conflicting emotions Daysi has felt throughout the recent events involving the walking caravan coming to America. As her family members attempt to escape the corruption, poverty, and violence in their home countries, her husband has been given orders to secure the border, and if necessary, end the lives of families just like hers.
As a fellow military spouse whose significant other is currently deployed, I have developed a specific appreciation of the difficulty of Daysi’s situation. I cannot begin to imagine how Daysi must feel. However, I do understand the inner turmoil often felt as a military spouse. All you want is your significant other to come home safe—no matter what it takes. Yet to have other people’s lives hanging in the balance as a consequence makes you feel completely helpless. As if this position isn’t hard enough, Daysi has family members that she loves who are trying to seek a better life, and her husband is ordered to make sure that they are not allowed into the country. With this essay, I hope to do justice to Daysi’s emotions and unique situation, as well as shed a light on the complicated situations many military families often face.