On vacation from the war in Iraq
Soldiers fresh from Iraq reconnect with their families at an Army-run resort near Disney World.
from the May 9, 2007 edition
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The Army announced last month it will add three months to the standard year-long deployment for all active-duty soldiers in the Middle East, another blow as times of rest between tours get ever shorter.
Shades of Green is one of four resorts worldwide run by the Family Morale Welfare and Recreation Command. The others are in Germany, South Korea, and Hawaii. The first opened in Germany in 1945. Now, to meet demand at the resorts worldwide, the military is considering a fifth resort at Fort Story, Va., Mr. McCrindle said. The resorts are run not with taxpayer money but the funds they generate. Any profits are reinvested into operating and maintaining the resorts, keeping costs low for guests.
Military members in a survey overwhelming called for a resort in Orlando, and Shades of Green opened in 1994. The resort consistently runs at or near capacity, despite an expansion completed in 2004 that doubled its size to 586 rooms. Overflow guests stay at nearby hotels that Shades of Green has contracts with. The resort offers two pools – one in the shape of Mickey's head – two PGA golf courses, and shops and restaurants.
Jon Vashaw is here for four days with his family. Home on a two-week break from Iraq, he is an Army captain and physician assistant who already has spent nine months there and will serve six more when he returns. His wife, Linda, and three children changed so much while he was gone that he hardly recognized them when he first saw them. The boys, ages 7 and 4, love Peter Pan, and Mr. Vashaw is looking forward to seeing their excited expressions at Disney's Magic Kingdom, where there is a Peter Pan ride.
The family is still getting used to being together again. Before a meal, one son prayed for his dad's safety, forgetting his dad was sitting right there. Vashaw is rediscovering his role as a husband and father.
"My family comes first. The hardest thing about all of this isn't the danger or being hurt. It's the separation," he says as his children press tight against him for hugs with big smiles. "I know I'm a soldier, but I'm a dad first."
Jacobsen likes Shades of Green because to him it's a comfort knowing other guests are going through the same emotional, complicated process his family is facing.
"It's warming because you can see the people who just got back," he says. "You can see that connection. You can empathize with that feeling because you know what that feels like. Just enjoying each other. Just getting to hold them."
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