Jesse Pope's first day back in Blaine last month after a year deployed with the Minnesota National Guard in Kuwait was certainly emotional. But each day since he's been home has also presented its share of charged moments.
Sitting in his old spot on the couch. Opening a beer. Driving up his driveway again.
"Watching 'Game of Thrones,' " adds his wife, Shannon, laughing.
"When you first experience [those things] again, they're very powerful," Jesse Pope said Saturday before a homecoming ceremony in Anoka for nearly 200 Minnesota National Guard soldiers and their families.
Military personnel and their families filled an auditorium to welcome back the 34th Combat Aviation Brigade's Headquarters Company and the 2nd Battalion, 147th Assault Helicopter Battalion from respective yearlong missions in Iraq and Kuwait that changed in scope as the United States' conflict with the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant escalated.
Earlier Saturday, under a blanket of chilly rain, state officials and military leaders gathered at the Capitol to dedicate a monument honoring military families. The first of its kind in the country, the Minnesota Military Family Tribute features a maple tree-lined curving promenade, stones bearing correspondence from service members from each of the state's 87 counties and a "Gold Star Table" as a monument to families who lost loved ones.
"They're not the ones wearing the uniforms," U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar said of military families. "You can't easily identify who they are. That's a big piece of what makes Minnesota special: We work really hard to help them."
Klobuchar shuttled between ceremonies on Saturday. At the earlier dedication in St. Paul, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty clutched a piece of shrapnel he received from a chaplain in Iraq during a 2009 visit. Then, Pawlenty was among a group of governors visiting National Guard troops just days after a fatal mortar attack.