Unassigned at 0200

Long nights are easy. It’s the quiet ones that test you.

At 0200 the world feels paused.

The house was dark except for the kitchen. Fluorescent light humming overhead. Boots lined near the door. The smell of fried chicken and mashed potatoes cutting through the fatigue. Coffee brewing — strong, black, my drug of choice.

My soldiers sat at my table, shoulders heavy from training, forks scraping ceramic in low rhythm. Eyes red. Movements slower than they’d admit.

She moved through that room like it belonged to her — because it did.

No rank at the table. No posturing. Just young men being fed while the rest of the world slept.

That hour belonged to us.


By day — or whatever passed for day in that schedule — I was responsible for personnel and millions of dollars in equipment. When something broke, it was my problem. When something failed, it landed in my lap. I didn’t just carry that weight — I knew what to do with it. Solving complex mechanical issues while the rest of the world slept was its own kind of high. Clarity. Consequence. Outcome tied directly to effort.

At home, I wasn’t the one in charge.

I was a husband. A dad. Later, a grandfather.

That was my safe space.

I believed the two worlds would sharpen each other. Discipline at work would translate to steadiness at home. Patience at home would temper intensity at work.

Sometimes it worked.

Sometimes it didn’t.

I remember one of my daughters standing there, hands on her hips, eyes locked on mine.

“I’m not one of your soldiers.”

That hit harder than I expected. For a second, I wondered if I’d come down too hard.

“I’m aware,” I told her. “If you were, you’d already be moving and I wouldn’t be hearing this nonsense.”

Her eyes narrowed — defiance she definitely got from her mother. Because I’m famously agreeable.

I adjusted.

“You’re right. My bad. What was I thinking… oh that’s right. You’re my daughter, so you still have to do what I say. Now go on.”

She held the stare another beat, then walked off muttering under her breath. I’m pretty sure she got that from me.

Leadership and parenting share tools. They don’t share contracts.

That took time to understand.


If I ran hot, she ran steady.

I would vent about lazy soldiers, about standards slipping, about the “gods” cursing me with a fresh crop that didn’t take things seriously. I’d be losing my mind over it.

There were things about my job I couldn’t tell her. Some details stayed where they belonged — inside the wire, inside the unit. But she didn’t need specifics to see when something was off.

She’d listen first.

Always listen first.

Then she’d lower the boom if necessary.

One day I was in their backs hard enough that one of them told me the phone was for me. I told him to have whoever it was call back. He insisted.

I grabbed the phone.

“Hello?”

“Leave my boys alone.”

“But they—”

“Leave them alone. Promise me.”

I complied.

Later that night she asked if I could  tell her what had me so worked up.

I shook my head.

She studied me for a second, the way she did when she knew I was missing something.

“Go listen to some music. Read your Quran. Get your mind right. Dinner will be ready in an hour.”

She wasn’t undermining my authority.

She was protecting it from me.


People assume military life means you always have it together.

Pressed uniform. Calm voice. Decisive posture.

We’re trained to function under stress. That doesn’t make us immune to it. You can operate with adrenaline in your veins and still carry anger, fear, exhaustion. You can compartmentalize without ever processing.

At 0200 in my kitchen, none of that mattered.

There were just tired men eating, strong coffee keeping us upright, and a woman who understood that intensity needs shelter.


Retirement was scheduled. Predictable.

Her death wasn’t.

She passed before my final day in uniform.

So, I stopped being a soldier and a husband at the same time.

One minute I was responsible for people and equipment. The next I was walking into a civilian job where I wasn’t the boss — exactly what I thought I wanted. A paycheck. No stress.

Except the problem-solving part of my brain wouldn’t shut up.

There were inefficiencies. Gaps. Things that could be tightened. I tried telling that part of me to stay in its lane.

It didn’t listen.

What I didn’t expect was how loud the quiet would be.

The first time I woke up at 0200 with nowhere to be, no one waiting in the kitchen, no boots by the door — I just sat there.

No mission brief.

No plates clinking.

No voice telling me to get my mind right.

Just the refrigerator humming and my own thoughts circling.

I wasn’t angry.

I wasn’t even sad in the way people expect.

I felt… unassigned.

Like a man trained for deployment who had nowhere left to report.

I used to vent to her about what I could. She didn’t need operational details to understand the weight I was carrying. She could see it in my shoulders, in the way I moved through a room.

Without her, there was no counterweight.

No one to say, “Leave my boys alone.”

No one to study me and see what I couldn’t.

The house got quiet.

Not 0200 quiet with plates clinking and low conversation. Not the smell of fried chicken cutting through fatigue. Not coffee brewing while boots rested by the door.

Just quiet.

I still drink coffee.

Strong. Black.

Old habits don’t retire.

So, I listen to some music, read my Quran, and get my mind right.

Some nights, neither do I.

Daily writing prompt
Describe a phase in life that was difficult to say goodbye to.