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HH6

One of the most important parts of supporting your service member as they serve our country is “holding down the fort” (See also: running a smooth, loving, and supportive home life for you and your family, while keeping all things going in your service member’s absence). Easy peasy, right? Sometimes, not so much.

With this category, we cover everything behind the scenes, such as organization, communication, marriage, parenting, overcoming trials, and just some good ole fashioned humor.

Join us as we embark on figuring out the home-life balance as a milspouse and find ways to thrive and excel! No matter what your life at home looks like, one of our Experience Bloggers or Command Team members has probably been in a similar situation and is here to share their triumphs, lessons, and laughs along the way.

A Father’s Letter To His 9 Year Old Daughter: Part II

A Father’s Letter To His 9 Year Old Daughter: Part II

When I did reach you there was blood on your nose, lip, cheek, and head, and there was grass in your mouth. Your arm was limp and curved slightly. My first thought was you had possibly dislocated your shoulder or had broken one or several bones in your arm. Now I know that you were simply coming out of unconsciousness, so you did not quite have control of your limbs.

I am grateful to have volunteered as a cross country, basketball, and baseball coach this school year, so my CPR and First Aid training was fresh. I know this provided some help in my initial check on how banged up you were. However, even with that training, this was something I had never experienced with either you or your siblings. This accident looked as if it could have snapped your neck, your spine, cracked your head open, or possibly all three.

Or worse.

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A Father’s Letter To His 9 Year Old Daughter: Part I

A Father’s Letter To His 9 Year Old Daughter: Part I

Dearest Eva,

It is seven hours since your accident and there are tears in my eyes as I write this. Tears of concern and tears of fear.

I was just telling your mother yesterday that regretfully I cannot agree with folks that argue those of us not infected by COVID-19 should not talk about the blessings this shelter in place world has brought us. My argument was that if we as individuals can never see blessings when others are suffering, then no one would ever have cause for celebration, as human suffering is always abundant on our planet. It does not mean we do not pray for the sick and grieve for the dying, but we must acknowledge the newfound blessings that have entered our lives.

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Walking the Walk

Walking the Walk

So there I was, two Christmases ago, sitting at my in-laws’ table at the Iowa farmhouse, reading the local newspaper after the dishes had been washed and put away. All of a sudden, I saw it.

Tucked in among the tractors for sale, current corn and soybean selling rates, rain predictions for that week, and pictures of the prize-winning farm animals, was a small blurb about the Iowa section of the American Discovery Trail, or the ADT—a complete walking/hiking/bicycling trail that runs east to west across the entire United States, from one coast to the other.

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Keep Going, Do Not Give Up

Keep Going, Do Not Give Up

I am struggling. Every day, I need to make an intentional decision to keep going. Being intentional with eating healthy (and not snacking on all the extra food that we have in the house), to exercise, and to stay positive. A couple weeks ago I really hit a low point where I was getting depressed and did not see a way out. Everywhere I turned, in the news, Facebook, etc. was COVID-19, and most of it was not positive.

On April 1, I was supposed to take my exam for my certification; I have been studying for it since December 2019. When the exam was cancelled and the exam site closed, I was close to crying. It was hard to see it as a blessing, an opportunity to continue to study, even though I have no idea when I can take my exam.

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Thank You, Mom

Thank You, Mom

Dear, Mom:

Mom, we talk nearly daily despite the time difference, and you are always there to pick up the phone. I don’t think I have actually ever told you what you mean to me, so I would like to say thank you. And since I can’t be with you in person, I hope my words can be enough for now.

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