Tag Archives | deployment

What Do You Do When There Are Only Two?

English: lonely, unhappiness sp: tristeza, des...

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It sounds like something out of a horror novel doesn’t it… But no, it’s trying to figure out how to adjust to the down-sizing of your family. In actuality the family is up-sizing in certain ways, we accumulate spouses, girlfriends/boyfriends and grandchildren, but yet the house gets quieter and quieter.

Our third child has gone back to college for the semester and Anthony is away on military duty for two months, and now there are only two. Elijah, my youngest, and I sometimes just look at each other and ask, “What do you wanna do now?”

Evenings are quiet, weekends the house feels like a tomb, but dinnertime is the worst. For a family that has always made it a priority to eat dinner together, the empty chairs are a sad reminder.

For Elijah, I think there is occasional boredom and missing the spontaneous visits to his sister’s room to chat or annoy her (pretty much the same thing.) There is also the fact that he is the only one left in “mom’s crosshairs” now!

For me, it is always lonely when the children leave. I have said goodbye to two that are out on their own now, living their own lives, and the third has one foot out the door. Now there is only one and I know that my time with him is limited.

It is even more difficult when Anthony is gone. There is the loneliness of the empty side of the bed, but even more, there is a knowing, that someday I may be alone. And for a woman who has centered her life around her family, that is a very sobering thought indeed.

 

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Surviving and Thriving During the Holidays: Tips for Military Families

English: A bauble on a Christmas tree.

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As I look back over my posts and journal entries from last year’s holiday season, one thing is clear, while the holidays can be fraught with emotions run- wild, they can also be a time of peace and joy even while our loved one is deployed. There are many things we can do to set the tone and mood of the holiday and how we and our families experience this time.

Don’t feel as though you must celebrate as you “normally” do – It’s OK to alter some traditions and eliminate or simplify your activities. You are busy, you don’t have the energy and you’re not in the mind. Those are all valid reasons to trim your holiday tasks and commitments.

Seize the opportunity to try something new – While my husband was deployed to Afghanistan I decided to put the tree in a different place (where I really wanted it) and to change up our Christmas meal (he always made a labor intensive cooked brunch…I didn’t want to.) Try to look at this experience as a chance to experiment rather than as a loss.

Ease up on your expectations – Stress runs rampant and it can take control of your life and overshadow everything good and joyous about your holiday. Especially if you have children, don’t allow your holiday to be hijacked by stress. Do not place unrealistic expectations on yourself. You may not be able to find the perfect gift for everyone; good enough is…well…good enough. You don’t need to bake 12 dozen cookies, unless you really love doing that. Your house does not have to look like a magazine, forget that. Take the time to watch holiday movies with your kids, drink cocoa and play in the snow and give yourself a break. You deserve it!

The little gestures do matter – I took the time to write my husband a letter and included it with his Christmas card; one, so that the greeting would be more personal (handwriting is more intimate than email,) two, so that he would know that he is worth some of my precious time and that I am thinking of him.

Stay connected to your deployed loved one – A few ideas:

  • I mailed my husband a tiny tree with plastic ornaments and garland for his unit to decorate, holiday music cds and cookies with packets of hot cocoa. They had such fun having their tree trimming party and it gave them a holiday pick me up to share just a bit in the holiday cheer.
  • Print out pictures of your loved ones gifts and wrap them, that way they have something to open and they don’t have to ship any bulky gifts home later.
  • Take lots of pictures both of holiday traditions, concerts, and parties and such as well as everyday activities, snowman building, cookie baking, making decorations, shopping or present wrapping. Your deployed soldier will be comforted by the scenes of normalcy. It’s a reminder of what is waiting at home.
  • Take advantage of modern technology; Skype if you have access, send videos or audio recordings. Use whatever avenues you can to help your soldier stay as connected as possible to your family.
  • Involve them in planning and decisions if you can and they are able. I asked for input on everything from gift choices to budgeting, to planning our holiday entertaining. My husband likes to know that his opinion still matters and that he is still needed in some way. Yours most likely will too.

Most importantly, remember that it’s all right to enjoy your holiday and be happy. It’s there, under the surface, the loss, the heartache, the frustration, but there is also joy and laughter. Your best gift to your deployed loved one and to yourself is to have the happiest experience you can.

For more tips and ideas on thriving during the holidays read the Care.com Interview Series or the Care.com Military Family page. It is a wonderful resource for military families.

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21 Best Tips for Dealing with a Spouse’s Deployment

I came across this old post over on iVillage that is still very relevant today.

How do military wives shoulder the enormous responsibility and inevitable sacrifices that come with being a military wife? Here they share their 21 best tips:

1. Hang tough. “I’m stronger now when he’s gone, and I don’t focus as much on being left here, though I do have bouts of loneliness and frustration. I try to keep myself busy. Writing him emails helps. I get to yell at him even though he’s not here.” –gargoyle89

2. Keep busy. “The very first night he’s gone, I’m out of my mind with sadness. I just cry all night and hug something that smells like him. After the first week or so, I start getting busy with my own thing. A typical day with my husband gone: Go to work, go to school, go to the gym and work on my Website until bedtime. I also set goals for finishing things, saving money and getting in shape.” –kelnelmo

3. Call on your friends. “At first it’s a little taste of freedom since we don’t have any kids. It was nice having the house all to myself without having him flip through the channels on the TV or other silly stuff. But by that first night I was very lonely. I had some really terrific friends and they were always there for the rough patches.” –flyp3navy

4. Remember your promise. “The most common emotion is one of being overwhelmed. With the kids and the house and no help and no relief in sight, it’s often really hard to keep from being completely overwhelmed. But I’m a military wife. I knew the job description when I married him, so I feel like I don’t have any right to complain.” –hollydawner

5. Throw a pity party. “I always experience loneliness. I deal with my feelings by giving myself permission to be ‘depressed.’ I take off from work the first day he is gone. I stay in my pajamas all day, eat microwavable food or order in, watch daytime TV and stay up as late as I want. The next morning I get up and get back to my normal routine.” –armylola

6. Be prepared. “Get as much stuff taken care of ahead of time, so you are as prepared as you can be. Learn to ask for help (I really have trouble with this one). Line up some visits to family and friends to help pass time and give you something to look forward to.” –seamour

7. Face your feelings. “Take things one day at a time. And let all your emotions run their course. You are going to have good days, and you are going to have horrible days. When you feel like crying, cry. When you feel like you are on top of the world, you are. When the going gets tough, look for something humorous about what is making life hard at the time. Laughter is a wonderful medicine.” –izzyandalexsmommy

8. Be realistic. “Don’t set impossible goals. Remember that nothing is set in stone. Six months can turn to seven, and he misses you as much as you miss him.” –pandabr74

9. Accept a helping hand. “I learned to accept and, yes, sometimes even ask for help from others. Find a support group, be it online (my option) or a family support group (I would if there was one nearby).” –seamour

10. Do not drown your sorrows. “I would go out with friends (fellow deployment widows) on Friday nights and have a few beers, and then on Sundays I’d try to figure out why I couldn’t stop crying! I then remembered that alcohol is a depressant, and it wasn’t conducive to me being ‘happy girl.’ So, I became more careful about the amount of alcohol I consumed.” –flyp3navy

11. Stay healthy. “Eat right. It’s tempting, while your husband is gone, to snack and not eat well, but you need the best nutrition to help keep your mental state on an even keel.” –hollydawner

12. Trust each other. “My husband and I have not always had the perfect marriage, and we’ve had some serious trust issues in the past. The trust issue presents a huge problem with deployments, and is one of the big sources of pre-deployment arguments. But I just try to keep my husband informed at all times, and he tries to express his fears reasonably instead of with snide remarks. As a result, we often have excellent communication during deployments and always make it through okay.” –hollydawner

13. Find yourself. “You have to have a life aside from your husband. You just have to, whether it’s kids, a job, friends or a hobby. I have actually known a few women who relied on their husbands completely for their happiness. That won’t work. You have to have something to do, something you care about, and try to stay busy!” –kelnelmo

14. Keep your routine. “I have learned not to get upset over the pending deployments. There is really nothing I can do to stop them. I try to keep home life as normal as I can for my children.” –countryvic

15. Stay strong. “I’m a pretty independent woman, so that’s what has helped me – I believe – get through deployments. I still send my man off with lots of love and smiles and reassurances that I can handle the affairs at home, so he need not worry about us.” –reeseccup

16. Keep your husband posted. “I write letters to my husband every day (we don’t have access to phones or email this time) detailing what our daughter did that day, so he will feel like he’s part of her day-to-day life. I take lots of photos of our daughter to send to him. It’s difficult because at times it feels like our lives are ‘on hold’ until he returns.” –erinnicolevan

17. Become a boardie. “I keep in contact with other women through message boards, and that helps me remember I’m not doing this alone.” –gargoyle89

18. Work out. “It goes faster when I’m thinking, ‘I only have three more months to get a body like Britney Spears (ha, ha)!’” –kelnelmo

19. Stay active. “I have found it vital to have at least one regularly scheduled activity while my husband is gone. It becomes something to look forward to each week, which gives me little milestones along the way.” –lizzbert2000

20. Be proud. “I remember that he is gone not because he wants to be away from me, but because he is a terrific person and is dedicating his life to serving his country.” –flyp3navy

21. Focus on other things. “Keep your chin up. Find things to keep your mind off your loneliness. But avoid sappy movies, unless you need a good cry.” –reeseccup

Originally posted on iVillage on 3/23/2003 by CL-AMERICANAROSE AND CL-BEA_N_GOOD.

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