By Air Force Airman 1st Class Alexa Culbert
42nd Air Base Wing
MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ala., July 24, 2015 – On July 16
here, an Air National Guard officer took command of the Air Force Officer
Training School's Detachment 12 from another Air Guard member.
While that may not seem strange, what is unusual is that the
former and new commanders have 23 years of history together.
Air Force Lt. Col. Loralie Rasmussen assumed command of the
detachment from her husband, Air Force Lt. Col. Reid Rasmussen.
Detachment 12 of the Academy of Military Science falls under
the Air National Guard Readiness Center. The detachment is a line officer
commissioning program and its staff of 31 total force members commissioned
about 500 total force officers in the past year with plans to commission more
than 1,000 next year.
Meeting at the Air Force Academy
The Rasmussens’ military journey began in 1992 when they
were single freshman at the U.S. Air Force Academy.
"I remember we were being organized based on home
states, and while walking toward the group of other Virginians, I noticed a
lone cadet holding up a Delaware sign," Reid said.
Cadet Loralie Edinger stood alone as the sole representative
of her home state. At that moment, two things were clear to Reid: he was a
cadet and he wanted to know more about Loralie.
While at the academy, Reid and Loralie began a friendship
that developed into a relationship. Considering the time and distances they
were going to be apart from each other as an Air Force couple, they decided not
to marry after graduation and braced themselves for a long-distance
relationship.
After completing flight school, with Loralie on the RC-135
Rivet Joints at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska, and Reid on the A-10
Thunderbolt IIs at Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina, the pair received
permanent assignments, more than 1,200 miles apart.
Keeping in Touch
To keep their relationship going, they took advantage of
military space-available flights as much as possible.
"I have so many nights spent on airport floors and only
getting to see him for 24 hours," Loralie said. "A lot of people said
we should have ended the relationship. They didn't think we could handle the
long distances and flying the very different air frames, but clearly we have
proven that wrong."
In March 1999, Loralie and Reid finally said their "I
do's," only to be apart again after she received a deployment notification
just days after returning from their honeymoon.
This would be a never-ending cycle for the couple.
Arrival of Children
However, in 2002, a life-changing moment occurred with the
birth of their first child, which prompted Loralie to join the Air National
Guard in 2004. Two years later, the family added their second son.
Loralie's decision to leave active duty provided much needed
stability over the years while Reid continued his career.
"Honestly, my Guard time reminded me who I was as an
officer and not just as a single parent," Loralie said.
In 2012, Reid assumed command of the detachment and looked
after their two sons while Loralie worked as an executive officer at Tyndall
Air Force Base, Florida, pregnant with their third child.
For a year Loralie made the trip from Tyndall to Maxwell
every weekend until she received an assignment in 2013 as the Air National
Guard advisor to the commander of Air University's Carl A. Spaatz Center for
Officer Education here.
Selection for Command
With her family and not wanting to venture away again,
Loralie assumed that a command position for her would be out of the question.
Her assumptions were proven wrong when she was selected to assume command of
the detachment from Reid.
Loralie said she's appreciative of the opportunities she and
her husband have had at Maxwell's Air University to be together as a family and
plans to plant roots for a while.
"I wanted to command, but I had just gotten my family
under the same roof, so I didn't want to explore other opportunities to put us
back apart. I'm definitely grateful to be able to command and not separate our
family," she said.
When asked about commanding a total force detachment,
Loralie responded, "I don't feel like I'm Guard, I feel like I'm Air
Force. I know a lot about the Guard, and I know a lot about the Air Force ...
so this will be exciting. I'm thrilled!"
Taking command of a unit from a spouse could sound daunting
to some, but Loralie said she's ready to continue what Reid started, but in her
own way.
‘I Am Not My Husband’
"I don't know if I would have chosen to follow my
husband, but we work really well together ... so, in this capacity I couldn't
have asked to follow a better person,” she said. “I know what he's gone
through, I've seen it from a leadership perspective and I know I have big shoes
to fill. I hope to allay some fears right off the bat and say, 'Hey, I think
very differently from my husband, and I am not my husband.'"
Her biggest supporter and wingman has no worries either.
"My first reaction was that it's good for the
unit," Reid said, who is now an Air War College student. "They're
lucky to have her. She will 'kill' it like everything else she's done."
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