Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Tips for Couples Facing Military Deployment

Original Posting:
http://best-marriage-tips-marriage-love.blogspot.com/2013/06/tips-for-couples-facing-military.html

Maintaining a healthy marriage through deployments can be a challenge for many couples. With tens of  thousands of military members currently deployed, many military couples continue to face the prospect of additional deployments. Keeping your marriage strong while you are apart takes dedication, patience, trust and commitment. The following tips can help you work towards building and strengthening your own healthy marriage.

1. Be Realistic
Communication may be very difficult during deployment. Have realistic expectations that the demands of deployment for the service member may make communication inconsistent and at times impossible. Keep the information as positive as possible and reassure your deployed spouse that you are coping well with his or her absence. In order to focus on their mission, which during war may be very dangerous, the deployed spouse needs to have a sense that things at home are stable. Overall, make the most of the time you two have speaking over the phone or skype. You don't get much of it so enjoy it while it lasts.
2. Get Connected
For the spouse staying at home, accessing military resources is extremely important. Surround yourself with friends that support your marriage and are aware of the hardships related to deployments. Spending time with others who are coping with deployments in a healthy way is an invaluable experience and helps make the time apart easier.
3. Remember How it Started
In letters to your partner, be sure to talk about the unique history that you share together. Recall key events in your love story like when you first met, buying your first home together, and other marital milestones. These memories will help you stay connected while apart from each other. Positive shared memories can strengthen your marriage.
4. Send a Care Package
Send care packages filled with practical and fun things to your deployed spouse. Enclose a small calendar to begin a reunion countdown. Make and send a small photo album or scrapbook. Care packages are not just for the one who is gone, prior to leaving the service member can make packages for their spouse that a close friend or the neighbors to deliver while he or she is gone.
5. Focus on the Future
Write down and discuss your future plans and dreams together. Planning for the future implies that you will be reunited and stay together. This process can forge a feeling of mutual long term security and reduce stress brought on by the distance. Make long term and short-term goals for yourselves and for your family. Having something that you are working towards is a great way to make time seem to pass faster. Goals can be practical like what kind of home you want to live in. They can also be value and principle-driven involving setting goals for the lives of your children.
6. Write it Down
Keep a personal journal while apart and exchange journals a few weeks after reuniting. Take the time to read the journal and discuss the contents. Knowing that you are both doing this while apart will help strengthen the marriage. This is also a great habit to remain in once you have reunited. Writing a journal is a great way to chart growth in your marriage and also as an individual. Having a record of this growth and progress is a great resource particularly during challenging times.
7. Mix it Up
Music seems to play an important part in the lives of most people. In the realm of a relationship, it is a key ingredient in any romantic night. Music is powerful in that it can take you back in time to specific moments. For that reason, you can create special music mix collections to share. You and your partner may have a song which you both consider to be “your song.” Burn or download that song and others and send them to each other on disc or by email.
8. Study the Stages
Understand the stages of deployment and reuniting and be aware of the emotional cycles of deployment. Understanding them will be a key step in developing a smoother transition to life with both of you home. This emotional cycle may include periods of sadness, detachment and sometimes resentment towards the military. For the non-service member they may feel resentment towards their partner for separating the family. Negative emotions are normal and are all part of the cycle of deployment. Anticipating them and knowing how to work through them will help to normalize your interactions.
9. Respect the Transition
Understand that each of you will be changed as a result of the deployment. Some spouses may become more independent and self-confident. Others however may experience the onset of anxiety and dependency when their partner returns. Both spouses need to understand that the experience of war is an extraordinary life event for the service member. Leaving a war zone and returning home can be a very difficult transition but it can be managed well with proper preparation and mutual support.

For times between contact if you are having a hard time dealing with your time without your spouse utilize close friends, family, etc. For the deployed individual, use your battle buddy, chaplain, or another trusted friend. And for both members of the relationship, remember you're never alone.

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