On Motherhood and Children, On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson On Motherhood and Children, On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Raising Children Who Know Hard Doesn’t Erase Good

Resilience is not the absence of struggle, but the understanding that struggle and goodness are not mutually exclusive. A moment can hold grief without being emptied of joy; something can be hard without being wholly bad. It is learning to sit with what is real, even when it is uncomfortable, and to return, again and again, to what is still within reach.

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On Military Life and Service, On Grief and Loss Lael Cowell Anderson On Military Life and Service, On Grief and Loss Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter for When the Cycle Begins Again

You can feel it before anyone says it out loud, even when nothing in your immediate world has changed yet. Not in a calendar or a briefing or a date circled on the wall, but in the atmosphere itself. Conversations carry a different weight. The news lingers a little longer. And beneath it all sits a quiet, shared question that no one quite wants to name: Is this real? Are we doing this again?

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On Love and Partnership Lael Cowell Anderson On Love and Partnership Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter to the Man I Keep Choosing

Anniversary week has a way of making a person look backward for a moment. Not toward grand gestures or sweeping declarations—the sort of things people imagine when they think about love stories—but toward the quieter accumulation of ordinary days. It is the sort of week when you suddenly notice that a life together has not been built in dramatic moments at all, but in a thousand small and steady choices.

So today I am setting aside my usual reflections for a moment and writing something a little more personal. This letter is for my husband.

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A Letter on Resilience Under Strain

I have done this for over a decade. I have weathered months-long TDYs and half-year deployments. I know the rhythm of it — the suitcase tucked quietly into the garage, the louder-than-intended "I love you" thrown over the sound of crying, the first night that feels both too quiet and somehow still too loud. I know the choreography of goodbye.

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On Home and Belonging Lael Cowell Anderson On Home and Belonging Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Embracing Imperfect Homes

We have never lived in a house that fit us seamlessly. Not in size, not in layout, not in the way a dream home is described in glossy language. Given the nature of this career, we may not for many years to come. But I have come to understand that there is a subtle difference between acknowledging limitation and living in quiet resistance to it.

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On Change and Starting Over Lael Cowell Anderson On Change and Starting Over Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Finding Home Wherever You Are

I have noticed this: home does not begin with affection. It begins with familiarity.

It announces itself quietly. In small, almost forgettable moments. The first time I can drive somewhere without checking directions. The first morning I wake up and don’t have to rehearse how the day will work. The moment the landscape stops feeling like something I must navigate carefully and starts feeling like something I know how to move within.

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A Letter On Love In The Time Of Duty

This is not a love born of exceptional resilience or unique temperament. It is learned. It is practiced. Military families have been loving this way for generations, through letters written across oceans, long stretches of silence, and returns that were never guaranteed. We are not inventing this kind of love. We are carrying it forward.

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A Letter for the Funerals We Travel To

Funerals you have to travel to ask something different of you—not because the loss is greater, but because getting there is never assumed, and presence itself becomes something that must be negotiated rather than expected. They are not the kind where you grab your keys and go, or where presence is automatic. They begin instead with a quiet reckoning: before grief is allowed to surface, you must first determine whether you are even able to be there.

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A Letter on Loving Through the Small Years

There is a specific weight to the small years that is hard to explain unless you are living inside them. It is not the tired of a long day or a busy season—it is the tired that settles into your bones and stays. The kind built from interrupted sleep, sticky hands, endless questions, and the quiet weight of shaping a tiny human into someone who will one day walk out into the world on their own.

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On Home and Belonging, On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson On Home and Belonging, On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Finding Steadiness in Routine

There is a particular relief that comes from knowing where you are meant to stand in a day. Not because the day is easy or especially gentle, but because it is known. The constant decision-making quiets. The internal bargaining softens. You are no longer asking yourself, at every turn, what comes next.

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On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on the Year Arriving Quietly

It comes the way most things do in this life: quietly, almost unnoticed, slipping in beside the routines already in motion. The same coffee mug waits on the counter. The same kitchen light hums on before the house stirs. The same life continues, intact and unfolding, even as the calendar insists we call it something different.

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On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter for the New Year

And uncertainty, as this year ends, is not abstract. It is layered and present, already pressing forward. Change is coming — movement, transition, another reshaping of what home will look like — and military life has taught me that no amount of planning removes the unknown. Every year arrives carrying something new, whether we feel ready or not.

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On Work and Invisible Labor Lael Cowell Anderson On Work and Invisible Labor Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Knowing When Enough Is Enough

This is not the pause at the end of the season, the exhale that comes when everything is over. It is the breath taken while standing in the doorway, hands finally still, before stepping back into the noise and movement of what is to come. It is the quiet recognition that nothing more can be added without asking something back in return, and that continuing to press forward will not necessarily make what follows more meaningful—only more exhausting.

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On Home and Belonging, On Work and Invisible Labor Lael Cowell Anderson On Home and Belonging, On Work and Invisible Labor Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Holiday Preparations Beginning

The holidays never sweep in all at once; they arrive gently, on tiptoe. For us, the beginning is marked by a carton of eggnog waiting in the fridge until Black Friday, by music humming through the kitchen, and by the tree rising in its corner while the children scatter boxes of ornaments like treasure.

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On Distance and Connection, On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson On Distance and Connection, On Becoming and Growth Lael Cowell Anderson

A Letter on Gratitude Across the Miles

There are seasons in this life when miles stretch longer than we’d like—deployments, TDYs, or even the ordinary separations of being scattered far from the people who know us best. In those seasons, I’ve learned that gratitude behaves like a seed: small, intentional, sometimes planted in rocky ground.

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A Letter to the Spouse Facing Deployment for the First Time

I recall my first deployment as a spouse as though it were only yesterday. I was ten weeks postpartum, tired in both body and spirit, still trying to find my rhythm as a new mother. The days leading up to departure were a blur of sleepless nights and tender hours, when I wanted every moment to count but felt too drained to hold it all. The goodbye itself was painful, but what nearly undid me was the sight of the calendar — a stretch of time marked only by uncertainty. Four months was promised, but it could stretch to six. That kind of open horizon is heavy when your heart is already weary.

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