Anonymous wrote:I raise my kids on a military base in Germany like 20 years ago. My husband was mostly deployed to Bosnia at the time. I had 3 toddlers and my best friend had four! They would come over for a playdate, then we would feed everybody dinner, then sometimes they stayed overnight. Sometimes there were other families involved. The ladies watched a movie and had a glass of wine after everybody went to bed. Like a giant slumber party that revolved around the neighborhood. I was so lonely when we moved back to the states. I had no idea that other women found being a SAHM lonely and isolating. On a military base, it feels more like being in a sorority. And these were officers wives. We had a blast.
Anonymous wrote:I raise my kids on a military base in Germany like 20 years ago. My husband was mostly deployed to Bosnia at the time. I had 3 toddlers and my best friend had four! They would come over for a playdate, then we would feed everybody dinner, then sometimes they stayed overnight. Sometimes there were other families involved. The ladies watched a movie and had a glass of wine after everybody went to bed. Like a giant slumber party that revolved around the neighborhood. I was so lonely when we moved back to the states. I had no idea that other women found being a SAHM lonely and isolating. On a military base, it feels more like being in a sorority. And these were officers wives. We had a blast.
Anonymous wrote:I raise my kids on a military base in Germany like 20 years ago. My husband was mostly deployed to Bosnia at the time. I had 3 toddlers and my best friend had four! They would come over for a playdate, then we would feed everybody dinner, then sometimes they stayed overnight. Sometimes there were other families involved. The ladies watched a movie and had a glass of wine after everybody went to bed. Like a giant slumber party that revolved around the neighborhood. I was so lonely when we moved back to the states. I had no idea that other women found being a SAHM lonely and isolating. On a military base, it feels more like being in a sorority. And these were officers wives. We had a blast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its actually easier with little kids and a deployed husband sometimes. You can give them waffles and fruit for dinner and let them eat it in pajamas rather than having to make a big dinner for your husband. My husband would get stressed out by a messy house but life was a bit more casual while he was gone, etc I sleep trained two babies by letting them cry it out during deployments without him insisting on picking them up.
Thank you for this perspective. I don't have any friends in the military, so I don't know that world at all. It's hard for me to picture it especially moving every year or two and starting over in terms of friends and community support. Anything else you can share about your experience as a military spouse. Would you do it over again?
Anonymous wrote:They are young, christian and vibrant not old liberal and tired like post meno moms of dcum
Anonymous wrote:Its actually easier with little kids and a deployed husband sometimes. You can give them waffles and fruit for dinner and let them eat it in pajamas rather than having to make a big dinner for your husband. My husband would get stressed out by a messy house but life was a bit more casual while he was gone, etc I sleep trained two babies by letting them cry it out during deployments without him insisting on picking them up.
Anonymous wrote:
I found dealing with 2 very easy, and one of them has special needs that take up a lot of our collective efforts and headspace. Sadly, no more kids for me. So I suppose this mother has equally “easy” children and was able to have 5. It happens.