Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Turning over a new leaf

For everyone who reads my blog on a regular basis I would like to THANK YOU! I have checked my stats and I cannot believe that every month it gets on average 700+ views. The response has been more than I could ever imagined and hoped for. 


So with that being said I am "turning over a new leaf". 




I know a lot of my fellow military wive friends are entrepreneurs and I am definitely planning on taking that route after our big move as well. So I had this idea to partner up with many of these ladies for a monthly giveaway. One that would promote their business and my blog. A little old fashioned marketing if you will. So if you have a business and would like to partner with me in promoting it with a giveaway, let me know :)




So here is how it's gonna work:
-Every month on the 2nd Wednesday I will be posting a new blog promoting a fellow Military Wives business and doing a giveaway. 
-The first 40 people to comment on the blog and like the businesses page on Facebook (if one is provided) will be entered into a random drawing using http://www.random.org/integers/.
-The winner will be announced on Friday via Facebook! (and/or email)
-The winner must notify me via Facebook or email-agrisham2183@gmail.com with all shipping info. 

Now lets get to the fun part............let me introduce you to Sarah Alvarado-Owner of Dreaming of Dandelions
Go to her Facebook page here and "like" it Facebook.com/dreamingofdandelions
and visit her store on Etsy www.dreamingofdandelions.etsy.com

Sarah and I went to high school and played soccer together. Her husband Anthony played baseball. Anthony enlisted in the Marine Corps...here is her story :)

 "Looking back, the history of Dreaming of Dandelions is based largely around our experiences as a Marine Corps Family. While I was attending The Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising, my husband was deployed to Iraq twice. I finished my classes two weeks before he returned from his second deployment. At this time I was also 9 months pregnant. I spent the next few years enjoying being a mom and wife. My husband spent his last year in the Marine Corps stationed in Okinawa, unaccompanied. Major bummer. However, while he was gone it gave me lots of free time to explore my creativity again. I began to sew again and completed lots of projects around the house. I always wanted to start my own handmade business but couldn't quite pinpoint what I wanted to focus on. Well, the time approached for my husband to finally come home. Of course, I needed the perfect outfit. I had the dress but I gave up on finding the perfect clutch to go with it...so I made one myself. That was the beginning of Dreaming of Dandelions. The perfect combination of my love for fashion and handmade."


What an awesome and inspiring story! Her stuff is super cute too :)


So here's what we have for you! The give away will be this handmade zipper pouch. Isn't it cute? Well get your "like" on and comment below for your chance to win it :)













Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Oh Pinterest! I love and hate you :P


 I was on Pinterest this morning, and I came across a blog where a woman talked about how homemaking was her job, and she took it seriously.  She gets up early, cooks, cleans, prepares delicious meals, blah, blah, blah.

I wanted to choke her. 

The next blog in my reader, was describing how to create HANDMADE love notes for your child's lunch box.  Seriously?  Write on a napkin or buy the ones premade, never mind that.



Don't get me wrong, I love Pinterest. I get lots of recipes and craft ideas from it.  You can find me here: http://pinterest.com/amg2183/

I was joking with a friend about my "findings" and she just laughed at me. I asked her why she was laughing and she said I was a "Pinterest" Mom. Reminding me of all the things I do and how envious she was that I seemed to have it together and still make time to volunteer and keep a pretty busy schedule. I was utterly flattered by her perception of me, but also thought, "hey I must be putting on quite the show!" lol


thoroughly enjoy my busy schedule and all the things I am involved in. But I am not the "Pinterest" Mom. I'll give you a few examples:




We had Hamburger Helper one night for dinner.

The laundry isn't done, the floors aren't spotless, and I don't get up early to make my kids a hot breakfast every morning.

I think it's okay if my kids wear the same pajamas more than one night.  (I don't think they should wear the same clothes every day, but luckily that's not an issue here!)

I don't hand make my husband cards.  

I don't water my lawn.

I don't save everything I am getting rid of for a garage sale.  

I do love my kids, take care of my kids, workout, keep the house reasonably clean, and make sure there is always toilet paper.  The dog gets walked, fed, and watered.

I don't spend my free minutes scrubbing, cleaning corners with q-tips, or making sure the underside of my chairs have no spots on them.

I did take my children to story time, to the park, on a walk, had a movie night, and took them to  Wendys because I didn't want to cook. 

Life is good, and if my baseboards are a little dusty, at least I know it's for a good reason--Alanna and Brycen


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Getting this off my chest!

There is a rule I like to follow where I don’t talk politics on Facebook or my blog. And with the overwhelming negativity and boasting on social media outlets, I am sure you could understand why. But I feel like there are a few things that I need to get off my chest. 

I am disgusted. Not with the outcome of this election, but by the words that have been used to show that we are not as united as we’d like to think. Did I vote for Obama? No, I didn’t. But I am still supportive of our nation’s decision in choosing to keep him as our President.  

As a military spouse, choosing a president is extremely important to me. With a husband who serves this country, you can understand how essential it is for me to stay on top of political issues when foreign affairs are involved.  And it is even more important for me to stand united with my country while thousands of men and women, including my husband and friends are still fighting for us. 

Both Romney and Obama supporters are guilty here. I get that those who voted for Mitt are disappointed. And I understand those who voted for Obama are overjoyed. But we can share our feelings without being foul. Recently I watched a solemn crowd listen to Gov. Romney give his last words in the 2012 election. And as he offered prayers to our President I felt at peace with this decision. But once the cameras showed Obama’s headquarters in Chicago I couldn’t help but feel disgusted by the sight of t-shirts that read “99 problems and Mitt ain’t one” “Once you go black you never go back”, or reading a sign that is in accordance with the Civil Rights Movement that read “We HAVE overcome”.  Again, I understand that our country is excited, but associating this debate with the hard times our country faced years and years ago only makes me feel like we have stepped backwards. It hurt me deeply to read that sign that almost alluded to the fact that because I didn’t vote for Obama then I must be against him as a black man. In 2008 I understood and shared in the excitement over electing our first African American President. I remember feeling a bit of joy over it as I did vote for him. But this year’s election shouldn’t have been about that at all. To suggest that those who voted for Romney to be racist (and I have seen statements that have said so) is wrong. How is that uniting us? 

But what also hurts are those who have said that our country is “stupid”, or that we are doomed because Obama has been reelected. That to me is ignorance. The majority of our country has made it clear they believe in our President. They support him. And by no means do we all have to agree with this decision, but as a united nation we should respect it. He is just one man. His decisions alone are not what shape this nation. We are not doomed. Our nation isn’t going to fall into socialist hands. We will survive another 4 years. I promise. For some it might be a little harder and for others it may come easier. But that’s all part of our democracy. That is the beauty of our country. And the fact we as a nation decide upon all issues, is one of the most admiring aspects of the Unites States of America. 

And for all who are utterly disappointed in how our election system runs, let me remind you that there are hundreds of countries that don’t ever have the choice to pick their leader. Many are forced to live under the rule of a dictator.  Be thankful for our countries right to vote. 

And I will close with how proud I am of our Presidents speech. Even though I didn’t vote for him, I must have faith in him as my president.



“I believe we can seize this future together because we are not as divided as our politics suggests. We’re not as cynical as the pundits believe. We are greater than the sum of our individual ambitions, and we remain more than a collection of red states and blue states. We are and forever will be the United States of America.” - President Barack Obama


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Gobble, gobble, gobble!

It’s officially the week of Thanksgiving and you can feel it in the air! People are taking to the streets and to the stores. I’m not sure how many are dancing and spreading the blessings of thanks to one another and each and every person they see and meet along the way! But, I do know that the energy is gearing up for those days ahead and I want you to get your attitude of gratitude on as you remind yourself to be safe as you venture out and about!
While some are counting their blessings more than once, sending cards, texts, and emails of thanks to those they love.  Others are feeling the pressure. They are on the run, and running they are as the grocery stores gear up and the retailers are preparing for the opening of Black Friday. Some even beginning it on the day of Thanks and some lining up on the sidewalks to buy on sale what will still be on sale in December but they just have to have it now.




 Ah yes, Thanksgiving is upon us!

Many are looking forward to a day of great smells in their homes. Shared stories of those they love, the memories of times once held together, precious memories of those that were good, great, not so grand, or all wrapped into one.
And then there are the traditions that now are only figments of the imagination. Those times that seemed like so long ago, they were real and touchable, but yet so gone as are those who held them together.
A holiday that many savor just as the smells and aromas that fill homes or the memories of so many.

Turkey, dressings, and pies, oh my! The Thanksgiving Parade and football! The joys of a day.

A day to GIVE THANKS and to be thankful. To remember the First Americans, their hospitality, the extension of self for the greater good, and treaties broken. The circle of life in lessons learned, in gratitude. Interesting how that works isn't it?

I am thankful for so many things, so many people, so much of life's lessons and continue to be blessed by all.
I can look forward to doing that “Black Friday” thing; an interesting study in human behavior it is. I love going with friends and enjoying a pumpkin spice latte. It is a wonderful time to kick back and just people watch, to have several laughs as you watch people just lose their ever lovin' minds without filters or restraints. 
Now that is just funny and so wrong on so many levels …Maybe it is just funny that it is wrong or wrong that it is funny!
We will be spending our Thanksgiving with some of our closest friends. Gonna cook it up real nice with Nicole for about 20 people.


Sometimes it is time to change it up, to switch from what was to what is and what fits you best for now. Sometimes it is time to break from tradition.
Perhaps this year, this week is your week for major changes in how you do this holiday, and I pray you begin it with a breath of gratitude, the wind of hope that touches your face to remind you that we are all connected in this thing we call life, both here and in the next place.
Be gentle with people and extend kindness to all you encounter. Remember those who are now growing or grown and they do not need us like they once did, do not always express their love the way they once did, and we have given them the strength to fly, yet it is us who miss what once was more than they do. 
May you have a glorious day while taking one step of dance at a time and letting you decide how you will enjoy this week of Thanksgiving.
Will it be with gratitude or jacked up stress?
It is up to you now.

Friday, November 16, 2012

It's Ball time...yeah baby!


237 years ago, the United States Marine Corps was born in a tavern in Philadelphia, PA. Each year, on November 10th, Marines all over the world celebrate the birth of the Corps. Marines and their wives/dates go to balls, with a formal cake-cutting ceremony and a solemn reading of Gen. John A. Lejeune’s birthday message, summarizing the history, mission, and traditions of the Corps. The country is reminded of the valor, the pride, the honor, of being a United States Marine. The Corps values of honor, courage, and commitment still remain strong today, and Marines deployed all over the world uphold those values as they fight to defend our freedoms.
237 years later, Marines remain faithful. When Semper Fidelis was adopted as the motto of the Marine Corps, it was taken to heart. From Marines who remain fanatically devoted to their country, to the Corps, and to their fellow Marines, to the wives who stand devoted by their husbands’ sides through war and peace, we remain steadfastly faithful through the good and the bad, the easy times and the times when you feel like you can no longer go on.
As a Marine Corps wife, Semper Fidelis is my vow, too. It is my duty and my honor to stand beside him, to be always faithful not only to my husband but to the values of the Marine Corps as well. It takes honor to be a Marine Corps wife. It takes courage and commitment, especially when your husband is fighting halfway around the world and you don’t know if he’ll be coming back or not. It takes a special kind of woman to be the wife of a Marine. When you marry a Marine, you aren’t just marrying the man. You’re marrying the Marine Corps as well, and Semper Fidelis applies to the women left behind as well as the men who don the uniform.
There are many nights when I can’t sleep for fear. There are many times when I feel like I can’t go on alone anymore, living in terror and loneliness. There are times when I would love to have my husband never deploy again, for us to live a life of civilian peace. And there are those occasional phone calls, where he tells me he doesn’t think he can do it anymore, either. Being a Marine, or the wife of one, doesn’t mean there are never moments of doubt, or fear, or anger. It means that we persist despite those feelings; we continue on because we believe in the Corps, we believe in what we are fighting for. When he feels like he can’t keep going, I raise him up. When I feel like I can’t do it anymore, I remember the man that he is, the pride I feel in his courage and his convictions, and I remember that our shared sacrifice will lead to a better world for our children and our grandchildren. I support him unconditionally, and I will remain faithful to the very end. Semper Fidelis is my motto, too.
Not only on this special day we celebrate every year, but always, remember the Marines around the world who sacrifice every day defending our freedoms. Remember the families left behind. And remember the Marines who made the ultimate sacrifice, Marines who heard their country’s call and gave their all.



This coming Saturday I get to celebrate this AMAZING celebration of the Marine Corps with my husband. I am soooo excited to get my hair and nails done, put on my dress and heels, and get all fancied up with my Marine. We will also be celebrating 7 wonderful years together.
Sometimes we get so caught up in the glamour of the Ball that we forget what it's truly about. Be proud and stand by your man. And have a lil fun while you're at it :)

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Tagged!

It's been like 90 billion years since I've been tagged in one of these things, but Ash decided she wanted to know these fun facts about me... So here you go!





#1. What did you do ten years ago?
Let's see... I would have been 20 years old. I was a waitress and going to school. I was hanging out at bars and singing karaoke evevy Tuesday at TGI Fridays. Oh those were the days! 

#2. What did you do one year ago?
A year ago my husband was deployed and I was enjoying my first day back in Cali in 3 1/2 years. 

#3. Five snacks that you like?
Wheat Thins, Cheeze-its, Chesse Puffs, anything chocolate, and strawberries, I guess.

#4. Five things you would do if you were a millionaire?
-BUY A HOUSE!!! 
-Go on another missions trip
-Take a vacation and bring all my friends
-Wardrobe malfunction days be gone.
-Buy houses/cars/clothes for all my family. :)


#6. Five bad habits?
-Become obsessive about projects
-Being too critical about myself 
-Caring too much 
-Facebook. Is it really necessary? Yes. ;)
-Checking my alarm 500 million times before I go to sleep-- just to make sure.

#7. Five things you like to do?
-Be with Matt.
-Be with Family.
-Go to Church.
-Drink wine
-Watch my kids grow up.

#8. Five things you would never dress in or buy?
-Anything with shoulder pads.
-Leather pants.
-Crocs. 
-Things with never ending ruffles. 
-Non flattering anything-in my standards

#9. Five Favorite Toys:
-My phone.
-Laptop.
-Camera
-Car
-Ipod!


I am not going to tag anyone specifically, so if you want to do this, consider yourself tagged! :)



Wednesday, October 24, 2012

How to deal with people who complain all the time

We have all been there. Whether it was friends or family that were annoying us all the time with their endless complaints and not doing anything about it attitudes. I find that there is a lot of this in the Military community because we are constantly being put in situations the average person isn't used to. But what do we do? How do we deal with these sorts of people without being rude? Here are some little tips I came up with during a recent conversation with a close friend of mine. (Thanks Ash) 


There is a difference between someone who needs help and a chronic complainer. A person who is actually asking a question or wants advice will ask once and generally take it or thank you for your suggestions. A chronic complainer does not want actual solutions to the problems they are talking about or for you to join in their complaints. If they did, once you gave them a solution, they would stop complaining. Generally ignoring and confronting them won't work since they may become more agitated, passive-aggressive or unload on someone else, which could make the whole situation blow way out of proportion.





So here are some tips:

  • Show complainers you understand. The key to stopping the complainer is to give them what they want, and complainers want empathy. This is why solutions like joining with them ("yes, they are just pathetic"), cheering them up, or ignoring them may not solve the problem. Saying things like "I don't know how you deal with so much" or "It really sounds like you had a tough day" eliminates the cycle of complaints and gives the complainer what he is looking for.
  • Don't be sarcastic, and you don't have to agree with complainers. Realize that what may seem like a trivial matter for you, is a big deal for them, and the proof is that they are going on and on about it.
  • Try different solutions. There is no one solution that will work for every person. Agreeing with the complainer since this may "take the wind out of his sails." Particularly if the complainer is looking for arguments, the quickest way to end an argument is to concede. Sharing a story of someone who perhaps was in a similar situation. This separates you from telling the person what to do (which may appear bossy) into you telling a story of someone else. It may help them stop and think.
  • Let them vent into a solution. Writing it out for everyone to see. Try writing on a board two columns, one entitled "Ways to Make It Work," the second, "Why It Won't Work." Have the person come up with ideas for both sides, then cross out the second section and say that we need to focus on fixing the problem and move on.
  • Try jokes. If you have been told by others that you do have a good sense of humor (not in your personal opinion) try to find a way to make the situation funny. Do not embarrass the complainer. Try to focus on you or the general situation. While the complainer may not laugh at first, if they see that others laugh at it, they may begin to realize there is something wrong with them or their perception.
  • Set boundaries. There may be some things you can't solve. Some people only complain when a painful past issue or hot topic is brought up. If this is not something you can or want to solve, put a boundary on what you or they will talk about.

If you get seriously get fed up listening to the complainer complain. Then be honest and say that you don't want to hear it anymore. Sometimes we become so consumed in other peoples issues that when it comes to dealing with our own, we don't. Never let someone else's problems become yours. It's a vicious cycle. 







Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Where does the time go?



It’s almost that time. My last child is getting too old for naps and that special time I had with him, snuggling up in the afternoon is finally going to be gone. My favorite part of parenting has always been that feeling of a child curling up on my chest or snuggling next to me and then going to sleep. I don’t know how else to explain it except that it feels like a perpetual hug. I wish they could stay little for a lot longer.

My kids are growing so fast. Brycen will be 3 in four weeks and Alanna will be 5 in less than two months.


  • Caitlyn is growing too fast. She’s starting to look long and beautiful, a real little lady.
  • Alanna is our little book worm. She is so smart and picks up things very easily. She will be the brainiac of the three.
  • Brycen is no longer the noisy toy loving kid he used to be. Now he’s all about monster trucks and trains. He gets excited about playing with legos and building things. He is also so inquisitive.


All of this is cool. It’s amazing to watch them grow and mature. When I first saw it happening in them I comforted myself with, “They'll always be my babies.”


Now that’s going away too.

Brycen wants to be like his older siblings so badly that he tries to do everything they do. Sometimes he succeeds but mostly it just ends in frustration. It’s very cute to watch, we comfort him and it all works out. He throws the most tantrums but I understand where it comes from. And I see in his eyes the understanding he is acquiring about everything around him and he doesn't want to be little anymore. At almost 3 he is done with baby toys, tricycles, and almost pull-ups and will start t-ball sooner than I can imagine.
Regularly, someone I’m talking to will say, “Hey, pretty soon your littlest one will be going off to Kindergarten and you’ll have all of them in school full time. Wow, you’ll enjoy that!”

I just wish they’d shut up!






Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Time? Where do I find the time?


As a mom I sometimes feel stressed everyday because it feels that I have too much to do and not enough time to get it done.  As a busy mom of 2 I know this feeling all too well.  Fortunately I have somewhat learned how to use  time management skills that I learned from my own mother, other moms, and in the workplace to manage my time at home.  I believe that balance in life is one of the keys to happiness, and that all moms should be able to balance what they have to do with what they want to do.


My days are very busy and there is always too much to do and not enough time.  
However, at the end of the day I almost always get it all done.  


My day is full of little events, activities and chores that fill up, even before it starts. Most of these things seem insignificant and usually never ending. We fill up our days with wiping counters, cleaning up our children's messes, playing, and running errands. In between breaths and during naps, we check email, update our Facebook and maybe even grab a cup of coffee.

What about the important things of the day? The big events? The big projects? The big priorities? Like reading to your kids every day, being attentive to your husband, spending quiet time with your Bible or keeping your body healthy with food and exercise? Will they fit into our lives when we are overrun with all the little things?

Hardly. As mothers we generally spend more time focused on others—school schedules, husband’s work and kids’ activities. And our big priorities? They become an afterthought

What if you got up early and read your Bible? What if you stopped fretting about spotless floors and spent time playing with your kids? What if you shut the computer during breakfast and talked about your kids’ day? What would happen to all those little things that “have to” get done?
I know, as a mom, I don’t have time for time management! I volunteer with the SNCO Wives Club, go to Bible study,  Assistant Coach my daughters soccer team, I am our church Nursery Coordinator, I volunteer as a FRA for my husbands squadron, and keep busy with other activities. But I do have time for priorities. I do have time to do what's important. I do have time to focus on the good, big, significant things.

Putting the laundry away. Spending an hour or two with my husband before I fall asleep. Reading my Bible before the kids wake up. Taking a shower and getting dressed before breakfast.
When I do those things, I find myself empowered to tackle bigger things while still enjoying the small things (Facebook, blogging, girls’ nights out , and getting pampered) as I want.





Wednesday, October 3, 2012

The value of "military" friendships :)


So in the past 7 years of being a Military Spouse I have learned quite a bit about friendships.  You enter an entirely new lifestyle that only those living it can fully understand.
Recently I said "see ya later" to my best friend.  She is my partner in crime, my confidant, my battle buddy, my stand-in spouse when my real spouse is gone. And a few short days ago, she left me behind as she embarked on her next PCS adventure. And in the next few months I will be the one saying "see you later". 
Saying “good-bye” to friends is not a unique concept in our military world. We’re always on the move. We don’t have the luxury of settling down in one location for the rest of our lives, of watching our children grow up with the same circle of friends they’ve had since birth, of knowing we’ll never have to update our address books. No, most military families are in a constant state of motion. And with all that moving around comes a steady stream of good-byes.
So how do we handle all these good-byes? How do we maintain and nurture the friendships we form throughout our military travels?
It’s not easy, but remember, we’re Military Spouses. So we use the skills we've learned from being married to service members and apply them to our friends. We adapt. We make the effort to communicate. We alter our expectations. We rely on technology. We send care packages. We find ways to overcome time and distance. We get creative. And at the end of the day, we remind ourselves of the secret formula that makes military spouse friendships as long-lasting and special as they are:
Our bonds don’t break. There’s something about sharing the ups and downs of military life with other spouses that strengthens our bond with each other. I have friends who have no connection to the military, and as close as we may be in every other aspect of our lives, we will never have the bond I share with my Military friends.
We’re only a phone call apart. We may be geographically challenged, but that doesn't matter when it comes to our friendships. Thanks to cell phones, Facebook, email, texting, and Skype, our friends are never as far away as we think they are. Sure, they may not be around to meet up for a play date or a Girl's Night Out, but they’re still there when we need to share exciting news or shed a few tears. (Plus, we’ll never complain about phone calls in the middle of the night. Our husbands call at all hours of the day. We’re used to it.)
We will meet again. I know that someday my friend and I may or may not be stationed together again. But it’s never good-bye. It’s see you later.
We pick up where we left off. It doesn't matter if we've lived on opposite ends of the country or world for years, when we do finally meet again, we manage to fall right back into step with each other as if we had simply been on vacation. Children may get bigger and we may change, but our friendships remain the same.
In the next couple of days, my best friend will be crossing state lines and opening the front door to a house that is no longer than an hour from my parents house. She will no longer be the emergency contact listed, she will won't be one of my stops to say "hi", she won't come over to hang out, and she won't be at Girls Nights Out. I’m heartbroken that she’s gone, but I know eventually that revolving door will bring her back to me, and we’ll pick up where we left off. 

I am sad but happy all at the same time. This life is so wonderful in so many ways and it gives us many opportunities to meet the AMAZING people we call FRIENDS! 



Wednesday, September 19, 2012

It's not as glamorous as it seems

I repeatedly get asked questions about military life by my civilian friends and family.  I'm often faced with good intending yet frustrating questions. Not frustrating because of the questions themselves, but frustrating because I just can't answer them. I either don't know how to answer, I'm sworn to OPSEC secrecy, or it's impossible for civilians (myself included sometimes) to truly understand the sacrifices our service members make for our country.  And it has come to my attention that my life is quite glamorous and I am so lucky. Glamorous? Maybe once a year when I go to the USMC Ball with my husband. Lucky? Oh yes you bet your last dollar I am.  

THE TOP QUESTIONS NOT TO ASK A MILITARY SPOUSE

12) I don't know how you do it.
Well, guess what? In all honesty, I don't know how I do it either. I just do. Because really, what other choice do I have? We do it because we have no other choice. These are a wife's options. She can A) fall apart, or B) rise to the occasion. Most of us choose option B, even if  "rising to the occasion" only amounts to gathering the strength to make something besides macaroni and cheese or cold cereal for breakfast.

11)  If you truly supported your husband, you would be protesting so..he wouldn't have to deploy again/could be brought home/the war would end.
Really? My definition of support must be much different than that of these people. Supporting my husband means supporting him in what he does and what he believes in. It does not mean disrespecting the men and women who volunteered to defend our country and our rights. If it weren't for them, I wouldn't have the right to protest in the first place. I'm certainly not putting myself in a position where it could be construed as anything other than 100% support for our troops and their families. 


10)  I could never deal with it if my husband was gone for that long.
Hmmm...how does hearing how someone else can't deal with it help me to deal with it?  And that's why you aren't married to a service member.

9) Where exactly is your husband?
Heck if I know? There is a thing called OPSEC (Operational Security). Learn, live it, deal with it!

8)  "Your husband won't have to leave again, will he?" "Are you scared that something may happen to him while he's gone?"
This one has always really perplexed me. Of course, I'm scared. I wouldn't be human if I wasn't. But being reminded of the fact that he may have to leave again or something may happen to him doesn't help me out.

 7)Do you miss him?
Every time I was asked this, I just wanted to respond "Oh, no, definitely not. I like it when he's gone. It gives me the chance to be all by myself 24 hours a day, 7 days a week with 2 kids that are constant reminder that 1/2 my heart is not with me. Who wouldn't want that?" Of course, I miss him. Wouldn't you miss your husband?


6)   Do you worry about him cheating on you? Or along the same lines...How can you go without sex for so long?
Well, people, it is a little thing called self control. That and a love for my husband and respect for my marriage. Do some people cheat? Sure they do - both here in the states and overseas. But people cheat in civilian marriages too. Being in the military has no bearing on that. And furthermore, there are a LOT of marriages that DO survive even after one or the other has been unfaithful on both the military side and the civilian side of life. It happens, nobody is perfect, and though the time and distance apart isn't helpful to regular routine family life, if someone is going to cheat, they are going to do it whether they are on the other side of the world or lying right next to you every night in bed.

5) I know just how you feel. My husband was on a business trip last month for three days and I just thought I would die.
Are you kidding me? First, I barely notice now if my husband is only gone for three days. Second, unless his business trip was to a place where everyone is openly carrying a gun in the street trying to kill him, suicide bombers and roadside bombs are prevalent, his ship could be attacked, or his plane could crash, its not remotely close to being the same. The only thing I may give you on this one is that you know what it's like to sleep in an empty bed.

4) Doesn't it bother you that he misses out on so much of your children's lives?
This question is very hard to answer. Not because I can't find the words, but because it really is something that hits me really close to the heart. I can't stand that my husband has to be away for long hours, a few weeks at a time, or on deployments. But, I do know that we are raising some resilient children.

3)  I'm so sorry your husband had to be deployed. Don't you hate the president?
My husband joined the military of his own free will (BEFORE  9/11) knowing full well that he would probably be deployed. The President may be the one running the show, but my husband knew what he was getting into when he joined. I'm proud of him and his accomplishments. 

2)  I can't believe your husband did this to you. Aren't you mad at him?
Um, what?! My husband didn't do anything to me. He honors his agreements and he follows the orders of his superiors. There's certainly nothing sad or maddening about having a husband who fulfills his commitments. Don't feel sorry for me. I'm proud of my husband and I completely support him

1) Did you watch the news the other night about all those people who were killed?  Your husband isn't there is he?
 NO! I didn't, and I'm not going to see the news. And quite frankly, statistically, my husband has a greater chance of being killed or seriously injured in a car accident driving on the highways every day than he ever did when he was deployed. And that is a fact.

 Clearly there is a disconnect between what military families want to talk about and what civilians want to know. This gap, I fear, is often filled with bitterness (on both sides). But the truth is that all of us have more in common than we might first imagine. For instance, military families should remember that they aren't the only ones who "do it" all by themselves. Single mothers do this every day, and they have no Homecoming in sight. Likewise, there are other careers that are equally as dangerous as the military and involve the same amount of commitment to service.
Having said all of that, I recognize in a deeply personal way the unique aspects and demands of military life. And I know that the one thing a civilian can never go wrong saying to a military wife is, "Thank you."