We Are Military Spouses
Being a military spouse is quite the journey. There is nothing quite like being married to someone serving in the military. This way of life is unique, filled with the good and the bad.
As military spouses…
We jump right into this life, dating someone who wears the uniform. Knowing that if we are going to get serious with them, we would have to be on board with a different type of lifestyle.
We marry civilians, and over the years, things changed and we stand by them as they sign papers to join the military.
We stay home, they go off to basic training, both of us not knowing what to expect, and hoping we made the right choice.
We pack up our first home, after waiting on orders for our first duty station, unsure how a California girl is going to do in Kansas.
We Are Military Spouses
We fly over the ocean for the first time, arriving in a city in Germany, ready to spend the rest of our 20s in a different country.
We move into military housing, unsure how we were going to make this tiny home work, but we will somehow figure it all out.
We stand by as the deployment orders come, knowing they will come again in the future too.
We comfort our friends as they say goodbye to their spouses, knowing that our turn is coming soon too.
We Are Military Spouses
We try to understand what all the terms mean, but even after years as a military spouse, some still confuses us.
We go to FRG meetings, even when we are not sure what to expect.
We leave our comfort zone because we know it might be the only way to make some friends who understand this life.
We feel left out of family events, since they are 2,000 miles away, but we take comfort in finding family-like friends at our duty stations.
We Are Military Spouses
We are never really sure how long we will be a military spouse, the struggle over re-listing is real.
We get frustrated with TRICARE but are thankful to have it all the same.
We hope and pray that the military doesn’t mess up our pay, and check the LES religiously just in case it does.
We start new hobbies, and learn new skills, trying to stay busy during the deployments.
We Are Military Spouses
We want to work on our own careers and get frustrated when the military makes that difficult.
We still try to do what we can, even if it seems impossible.
We are stay at home moms, work at home moms, and working out of the home moms.
We are stay at home dads, work at home dads, and working out of the home dads.
We Are Military Spouses
We come from different backgrounds and can learn a lot from one another.
We know that not everyone grew up like we did, and we have a window into other ways of doing things.
We are young, barely out of high school and we are more seasoned, turning 40 during our spouse’s 6th deployment.
We have been to college, or want to go, and hope that the military will help make that happen.
We Are Military Spouses
We have five children, or three children, or one little baby.
We don’t have children and don’t intend to ever change that.
We have dogs that stand by us through the hardest of days, and cats that piss us off, even though we love them so much.
We live on post, we live off post and make the best of any housing situation.
We Are Military Spouses
We have lived overseas for half of marriage and hope to go back someday soon.
We are scared to death to get orders to Europe but know it will be an experience of a lifetime.
We want to go to Hawaii, it’s always been a dream, and now with the military, going over there can happen.
We are not sure we will ever be able to be stationed OCONUS, but hope that it can happen with our next PCS.
We Are Military Spouses
We worry when our loved one is in a dangerous place.
We know, no news is good news, but that is hard to remember sometimes.
We learn OPSEC, PERSEC, and try to remember both even in the midst of a difficult deployment.
We know who we can lean on, and we reach out to others going through the same type of situation.
We Are Military Spouses
We welcome back our soldier, airmen, sailor, marine, or coastie, having spent hours finding the perfect outfit.
We know that the outfit doesn’t matter, just being back in their arms again does.
We worry about after the deployment, not knowing what to expect.
We try to be there for our spouse as much as possible, as they try to make their way during reintegration.
We Are Military Spouses
We solo parent, even with three toddlers under our foot.
We give birth without our partner, hoping we can video chat sometime during labor.
We depend on our friends, and family members to help when they can but we know we have to do a lot of it by ourselves.
We can’t help but laugh when Murphy’s law hits hard, that first day of deployment.
We Are Military Spouses
We dream, we hope, we pray…
We cry when things get hard, we comfort when they get hard for our neighbor.
We know that things could always be worse, and we know that things can and will get better when we are in a difficult place.
We grow stronger through it all and know that someday we will appreciate what we have been through if it hasn’t happened already.
We Are Military Spouses…the partners of those who serve our country. The ones back at home. The ones who wait.
How long have you been a military spouse???