Support is Needed for Military Families

by Tonya on February 15, 2010

Hello Everyone!

Sorry about the delay for Monday’s post, but my eyes were hurting a little.  I had to visit the eye doctor again…I’ll update you on that later.

Today, I have a guest post by Jocelyn Green.  If you remember, I did a review on her book, “Faith Deployed.”  It’s a fabulous book of encouragement and inspiration for military wives, regardless of whether your spouse is currently deployed or not.

Jocelyn is passionate about seeing military families get the resources they need while their loved one is fighting for our country.  I am 100% in agreement with her, especially after surviving this last deployment.

Below is her article.  Please, not only read it, but act on her advice.

Have a wonderful Monday!

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Don’t wait for the government to support military families


by Jocelyn Green





In his State of the Union Address on Jan. 27, President Obama said that our men and women in uniform must know “that they have our respect, our gratitude, our full support.  And just as they must have the resources they need in war, we all have a responsibility to support them when they come home.”


I agree. But if we really want to support the troops, that can’t be all we do. It’s not enough to slap a “Support the Troops” bumper sticker on our cars, or even to say thank you to the men and women in uniform we come across as we’re bustling through the airport. If we want to support the troops, we need to be supporting their families at home.


Obama mentioned that the government increased investments for veterans last year (applause), that the government is building a 21st century VA (applause), and that the First Lady has joined with Jill Biden to forge a national commitment to support military families.  (Applause.)


Fine.  Good. The need is great. But let us not think for one moment that government spending and initiatives to support these families can replace what neighbors, churches, and fellow citizens can do for one another.


Army wife Benita Koeman says, “I adopted a genuine ‘I can do this’ attitude about the second deployment. But I couldn’t do it alone, and most good intentions to help from the people we love fell by the wayside. As I struggled to take care of our young children (ages two, four and six years old), I felt alone and abandoned. At one point I bordered depression. I tried my best to smile, to fake like all was okay and to convince myself it was. But it wasn’t.”


The evidence for military families in need isn’t just anecdotal. A large-scale study published in January in the New England Journal of Medicine looked at electronic medical data for more than 250,000 of the nearly 300,000 women whose active-duty husbands were deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan from 2003 to 2006. The study found that 36.6 percent of women whose husbands had deployed had at least one mental-health diagnosis, such as depression, or an anxiety or sleep disorder.


And let’s remember- these are just the results of those with official diagnoses. Many women resist seeking help for the same reason their husbands in uniform do—they fear a negative stigma.


“Besides fear for the safety of their loved ones, spouses of deployed personnel often face challenges of maintaining a household, coping as a single parent and experiencing marital strain due to a deployment-induced separation of an uncertain duration,” the study says.


Let’s face it. You don’t need a mental illness diagnosis to need a helping hand.


“I really needed signs to know that as I struggled, that people cared, cared enough to do something,” says Koeman. “But I did not get that.” As a result of her experience, she founded the Web site www.OperationWeAreHere.com, to serve as a clearinghouse of resources and ideas for how to support military families.


Please, don’t wait for a government initiative to do what anyone can and should do for one’s fellow American. Send a “reverse” care package to families of the deployed, remembering them on holidays, birthdays and anniversaries. Watch their kids so the solo-spouse at home can get a break every once in a while. Create a coupon booklet for free babysitting, a coffee date, financial counseling, running errands, an hour or two of housework, etc. Drop off a basket of favorite foods, movies or books. Find out what home appliance is broken (it never fails to happen during deployment) and help fix it. Rake leaves. Shovel snow. Clean out gutters. Pull weeds. Bring a meal, make a phone call… be there.


Supporting the military wife allows her to support her husband and children in a way that only she can. And knowing that his family is supported back home will allow the deployed spouse to better focus on his mission. When you minister to the military wives and children, you are supporting the troops as well.


Jocelyn Green is the author of Faith Deployed: Daily Encouragement for Military Wives(Moody Publishers 2008) and co-author of  Battlefields & Blessings: Stories of Faith and Courage from the War in Iraq & Afghanistan (AMG Publishers 2009).

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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

Tabitha February 15, 2010 at 9:44 PM

I so agree! My family and I would love to send goody bags to children of our soldiers, but are having a hard time knowing where to start. Any suggestions?

Reply

KK February 15, 2010 at 11:20 PM

Thank you for reminding me to go check on my neighbors! I know she's too busy to even ask for help, so I better just go volunteer.

Reply

April February 16, 2010 at 12:40 AM

This is SO GOOD! I watched my mom deal with this a lot-I am still not sure how she did it, other than faith in God.

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Christian Mommy Writer February 16, 2010 at 9:44 PM

@Tabitha – I sent you an email.

@KK – Your neighbor will love you!

@April – Faith in God will carry you far during a deployment! :-)

Reply

Lori December 13, 2010 at 9:08 PM

Hello, I am not a military wife but I’ve been searching all over to find a way to directly donate to a miltary family but have been unable to find one. Do you have an ideas?

Also, I think your blog is terrific.

Reply

Tonya December 14, 2010 at 12:40 AM

Hi Lori! Thanks for stopping by my blog and for your desire to help military families in need. If you are located near a military base, you can contact the Family Readiness/Support Center or the Chapel. Most bases have a thrift shop that accepts donations. If you don’t live near a base, you can contribute to Toys for Tots, which is a program sponsored by the Marines. Toys R Us partners with them for that program. The Fisher House is a wonderful charity that builds homes on military grounds so that family members that visit hospitalized service members can have a nice place to stay. The link to their website is: http://thinkmoderate.com/. Hope this points you in the right direction! :-)

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