If you quickly open a soda, there is some chance the contents will foam up and spill over the top. Shake that bottle for thirty seconds before removing the top and you'll have a much more intense experience. Talking with people about relationships with loved ones in the military is like opening a bottle that has been violently shaken. The pressure inside is so great that the questions and experiences come out fast and strong, and they spew in every direction.
Here are some of the comments I have received about deployment and its impact on relationships.
Anonymous wrote: Guys usually don't communicate the way women do. I know my husband loves me and missed me on deployments. Did he ever write that in a letter? No. The best I would get was a "miss you Babe" on a phone call.
Fadeintoyou82 wrote: My boyfriend is deployed. We had been together for 7 months before he left. Everything was going great the first half of the deployment, then out of nowhere, he starts to become distant and disconnected. Then he tells me that he doesn't know if he has the same feelings for me anymore.
HappyLittleGirl wrote: I am experiencing my first deployment away from the most fantastic man I've ever met besides my father. We've been dating for 8 months and love each other. He's in the Navy and deployed somewhere in the Middle East... I love him dearly and I know he loves me... but I worry that he doesn't miss me.
nicolem28 wrote: I'm engaged to an AF guy and he's been gone 50% of our relationship. This trip he's on now has been awful since he has minimal communication opportunities, so I understand how the doubt can creep in.
Lyndsey wrote: Military relationships are special. if they make it through the training and first deployment, they can make it through anything.
Your Relationship Can Survive Military Deployment
I've asked one of our partners, Mike Jones, to talk about loved ones on deployment. Mike is a former US Army Captain with two tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan. Mike shares openly about some of the struggles and how to overcome them when your loved one is deployed.
Coping with Lack of Communication
Dawson: It seems that with a lot of our callers the lack of communication with a deployed spouse or boyfriend/girlfriend is what puts a lot of pressure on relationships.
Mike: Communication with those back home is difficult for several reasons. A lot of time soldiers are in isolated situations with limited or command-only communications. If you're front line like infantry soldiers, you are busy 24-7-365-360 (every hour, every day of the year, all around you). You're either on patrol, on guard duty, or crashing. There's very little downtime, but even then, the enemy may decide it's time to lob a few mortars or attack the compound. A lot of that downtime is focused on getting ready to go again.
Dawson: Perhaps it's more than just the number of emails or the amount of talk-time. If couples really don't understand or feel what the other is going through, they'll still have a disconnect whether they communicate a lot or a little.
Importance of Situational Awareness
Mike: It's really important for those at home to try to gain some situational awareness regarding their deployed soldier. Talking to other experienced military spouses helps. One of the things to understand is that a soldier needs to stay completely focused on the assignment at hand... not home, not family, not kids, not you... their assignment. If their heads are not intensely focused and in the game, someone can get hurt. Even when a unit is just walking down a road everyone is looking in a prescribed direction for particular things. If one soldier loses intense mental focus and is not looking the right way, you have a sector uncovered. Soldiers are trained to switch off everything else when the mission is on.
Struggles in Switching Modes
Mike: Also, there are times when soldiers don't seem to have much to say. Spouses need to understand that it's hard sometimes to switch back from being warrior to being relational. And sometimes they can't talk about what's going on because it's either too hard on them or they fear it will be too hard on you.
Dawson: Do deployed soldiers typically feel guilty about being away from home and family?
Mike: Mostly they are so engaged with what they're doing that they don't have time for that. But in some cases; yes. If you've got a deployed soldier feeling guilty about being away, the last thing they need to hear is complaining about problems at home.
Focusing on Home can be Difficult
Dawson: While it's difficult for loved ones to understand what their deployed soldier is going through, by comparison, is it much easier for soldiers to understand what it is like at home?
Mike: No, not true at all. Some soldiers have no clue about how difficult it is for those at home. Like I said before, some soldiers have a harder time flipping the mental switch from combat focus to home-life focus. Their life in a combat zone is so intense, fear mixed with exhilaration, a sense of mission accomplishment mixed with the pain of losing a comrade. Problems at home that are huge to their loved ones may seem trivial compared to the combat zone. Again, the more loved ones can gain some situation awareness about these things, the easier deployments will become, particularly combat deployments.
A Suggested Conversation with a Deployed Loved One
Dawson: Do you have suggestions for how loved ones should approach those rare, unscheduled, middle-of-the-night phone calls?
Mike: Maybe something along these lines: Honey, we're okay here. We've had a problem with _____, but we've got it under control. Mom and dad are helping, and so is my brother. The FRG (Family Resource Group) is there when I need to talk about Army stuff. We're all good. I love you (i.e. don't be concerned about me being unfaithful). Be safe, stay focused, we're all going to get through this! (NOTE: TheHopeLine partners with Centerstone Military Services for additional resources for military personnel and their families.)
Strong Spouses and Loved Ones
Dawson: It sounds like the soldiers and their loved ones all have their individual battles to fight.
Mike: Very true. Spouses, parents, children, girlfriends or boyfriends all have different types of battles to fight, but you all go to war together as a team. If you can hang onto that kind of perspective, things are going to be a lot easier. The worst thing is fighting the battle of deployment and fighting one another at the same time.
Check out Nicole's 7 Great Ideas to help your relationship survive military deployment:
"I am in a relationship with a man who his spending the next six months deployed. This is our first deployment as a couple. It is also his last deployment, as he will be retiring following this trip. He has been very open with me about the fact that this will be hard, but we are a strong couple, and not getting through this was never even mentioned as an option. I am very sad, because I hate that we are separated, and I worry about his safety. However, I have been keeping myself busy with ways to cope and it is helping.
Some of the things I did are:"
- I wrote him thirty letters to take with him, made myself a copy of each, and I open one a day also so I remember what I wrote to him.
- I started a journal. It is a great place to vent and talk about/work through my fears.
- I made an awesome Deployment countdown poster and I am crossing off the days.
- I made a list of things I want to do while he is gone.
- I am planning/researching the trip we want to take when he gets home.
- I am keeping a mason jar and popsicle sticks, and every time I think of something I want us to do together, I write it on a popsicle stick and pop it into the jar.
- I plan out care packages with themes, and I will send them over the course of the upcoming months.
"Soooooo, I guess I am hoping this will help those of you who are struggling like me. This sucks, but six or seven months of sadness is a small price to pay for a lifetime of wonderful.
Strength to all!"
Thanks, Nicole, for sharing your ideas!
Military - TheHopeLine.com
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This is the first time for me dealing with this. We have been seeing each other for about six months and now he is leaving for 9 months. The last few days he has been distant, wanting to be alone, etc.
As a military girlfriend two months through a deployment this is so comforting to read, I remember reading it pre deployment and I think I made notes of it somewhere, however I did lose them... 😂
Reading this article back really solidifies how myself and my other half are handling this deployment. I'm using the time he's away to work hard at work and get some family time in with my own family, while not forgetting to keep in touch with him whenever and wherever we can. I leave the texting and calling up to him because at the end of the day my life is nothing compared to his at the moment, but in between the contact I get I make sure I'm keeping busy and have started countdowns, lists and and a journal which I've found is really helping with what I would normally vent to him. We've decided to leave all of our stories of our time apart to the side for when he gets back. Whenever I do hear from him I'm constantly reassuring him I'm ok, that I love him and that everything at home is as is.
Again so glad I found this post again, very grounding to read so far into deployment and finally on the home run!
Much love and respect to all military families and service men and women
X
Hi,
Im in the same situation and my boyfriend of 3 months was deployed a few days ago. He is alos in special forces and seemed so different and distant before he left which made things harder because as a girl I take everything so personally!
May I ask how you are coping after 3 months? Im struggling atm 🙁
Thanks
Mel
Hi Mel,
I'm wondering how you are doing after 4 months. My boyfriend is also SF and he leaves the Monday after thanksgiving. We are at Fort Campbell. This will be his 7th deployment but my first with him. I'm dying wishing he didn't have to go.
I meet a.sergeant in the.military he told. me he was going to another state to do training he called.me.Friday and said got.30 seconds to talk. Then he said call u when I can. Today he called but I guess he didn't realize it. I texted him yesterday and no response I know he busy and said he call. when he can. Should I let him. call me
Hi, I'm really happy I've found a forum like this. My boyfriend is currently serving his second term in the army and we're already in a long distance relationship for about eight months. I'm not too familiar with how the army works even though my sister was married to a soldier. My boyfriend was supposed to be away for a couple months training but it's been four months now and I haven't heard from him still. I've been hearing news from his mom via social media.
I feel kind of left out of the loop considering that I'm just his girlfriend and am abroad. I hadn't had a chance to discuss what would happen if he goes away longer than a couple months. I've been leaving him private short messages on social media as I have no way to send a care package even though I really wish I could. I don't even have a count down to know when he's coming back. I understand he is going through a lot right now so I'm being super patient and understanding. But it's difficult when I'm not in the environment and not having the support of other women or people who have been through this.
What else can make it a little easier to get through this? Also would it be impossible for them to call or contact me from abroad? Any advice would be really helpful, thanks.
Hello, I am in the same situation as you, this is our first deployment, the first few months we we're always chatting on social media and she Always makes me happy and not to worry and all of a sudden it's over a week now I haven't heard from her sent a lot of offline messages but they still haven't delivered, am so worried scared, and I cry myself every night don't know what to do or how to make it easier, I don't even have her address to send care packages. I never ever thought it would be so hard
My boyfriend of 6 months just got orders for deployment to an undisclosed area for an undisclosed amount of time. I am dreading this since I didn't grow up military and I have no experience. He is SF and that scares the crap out of me when I see so many SF Green Berets dying. I hate that I won't be able to call and I won't have an address to write him. I've tried reading all the information I can about what to expect and how to get through the deployment. All I want to do right now is cry.
Well they say some times crying helps, I still havent heard from her yet, I am praying every minute of the day that she is ok and doing fine, since that's all I can do. I cant call or send care packages but I still send emails and offline messages hoping that one day when she can she will see it and I am holding on strong and patiently even though it sucks my love for her is stronger than any troubles