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Archive for military families

Coming Out

CoversMoving is always about change and transition.  As military wives, we are supposed to be the “experts” in this area, aren’t we?  We had a move that really hit me hard in the thermostat comfort zone though and the transition was not easy.  For years we lived in Orlando, Florida before we were transferred one year, in JANUARY, to Washington D.C.  Talk about climate shock!  Though it was a big challenge for my internal thermostat, the new life of seasonal changes and opportunities for snow were pretty exciting.

I did have one particular climate struggle in my new “cold weather” life.  It involved getting up in the morning.  Coming out from under the covers on those cold mornings was just a bear for me.  The comforter felt so great and the air on the other side was so chilly.  Given a choice, I almost always preferred remaining tucked under the covers – safe and warm.

Sometimes it is like that for the things God wants me to do.  At times I know God is asking me to step out in some new venture.  Maybe it’s inviting a neighbor I don’t know well to come over for a cup of coffee.  Maybe it’s beginning a new exercise routine.  Maybe it’s committing to consistently calling a lonely relative on the phone.  It does not have to be an earth-shattering undertaking – just something that means leaving my warm blankies.  But following God’s direction, being obedient when it means leaving my comfort zone, is challenging, even for a military wife who has walked through transition many times before.  These words define where I want my obedience to be.

The Master, God, opened my ears, and I didn’t go back to sleep, didn’t pull the covers back over my head.

Isaiah 50:5 (The Message)

So how is God opening your ears today?  Is there something He has asked you to do that requires coming out of your comfort zone?  If God has opened your ears to a task that He has for you, may I encourage you today?  The covers are warm and comfy, but they are nothing to compare with the joy that can follow coming out and being obedient to what God is asking you to do.

How about coming out to where He is calling you today?

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Have You Hugged a Military Spouse Today?

This post originally was shared at A Woman Inspired last year in March of 2010. With our military families now closing in on 10 years of ongoing deployments, I thought I’d share this again. Let me encourage you to show it to your friends, your churches and your communities. This isn’t written to the military spouse, but to those who desire to support our service members and their families. Sometimes it’s hard to say it yourself. So let this article say it for you. Feel free to post it on your own blog or site, just be sure to include a link back to Wives of Faith. ~Sara

As the leader of a military wives faith-based support organization and a military wife myself, I’m often asked by women’s ministry leaders and churches what they can do to support military wives and their families. You might be unsure of how to minister to an older woman with cancer or a young mom with twins if you have never experienced those things yourself, and in the same way it can be hard to know what to do for a military wife if you’ve never walked in her shoes.

It’s easy to assume that if you don’t live near a major military installation that military wives don’t exist in your community. But there are more than a million military spouses in our Armed Forces today and military wives are everywhere – National Guard and Reserve families often live far away from where their respective bases are, and active wives make the choice to move home and live with family when their husbands are overseas. This gives you and your church some wonderful opportunities to make a difference for our military by supporting their families while they’re away.

Connect with a military wife

If you meet a military wife whose husband is away for deployment, make a point to check on her regularly and let her know you’re praying for her. Deployment is not an experience you “get used to.” It’s an emotional roller coaster from beginning to end and there are good days but there are hard days too.

With all the technology available today to connect with our loved ones, we can still go days and weeks and sometimes months without a phone call, an email or a letter. We can get lost in all that we’re responsible for and forget to make time for ourselves. Sleep can become an issue for a lot of women when they’re not used to sleeping alone and the quiet of the house at night gives them the first chance they’ve had all day to really think about their husbands being away. Exhaustion can make a hard situation even worse and fray our emotions completely.

One of the absolute best gifts I received during my husband’s first deployment was when my friend Allison, another military wife, sent me an email on behalf of her small group from church and asked me to make a list of things I needed help with around the house. She had asked me this a couple of times before and I’d always dodged the request, but when she sent an email in black and white, I relented and put together a list of little to big things I needed to get done, thinking I’d give enough options that the group would find a couple of things they would be willing to do. On a warm spring Saturday, eight to ten friends I’d never met came over to my house and took care of absolutely everything on my list. And at the end of the day, what touched me most wasn’t the honey-do chores they’d completed for me, though I was very grateful for their help; it was the fact that they’d reached out in a physical way and let me know I wasn’t alone.

Do something

One of the hardest things for a military wife to hear is “Let me know if I can do anything to help.” It’s very difficult to ask someone else for help, especially if you’re unsure of what that person is willing to do.

The best thing you can do to help a military wife is to put yourself in her shoes and like the Nike commercial said, just do it! Would you get tired of planning dinner and cooking for a year without a break? Give her a gift card to eat out or call her up and let her know you’re bringing dinner tonight. Would you have trouble knowing what to do with the car or the yard during the peak of summer? Rally the men in your small group to help change the oil or share yard duties. Would you be worn out if you were responsible for your kids 24/7 without another adult to give you a break occasionally? Offer to take the kids for an afternoon so she can do whatever she wants. Would it be hard for you to put Christmas lights up or other holiday decorations by yourself? Offer to do it for her.

If you offer to put a care package together for her husband, don’t forget to put a little package together for her – bubble bath, Starbucks cards, or a little book of Bible Promises are all little things that can make a world of difference for a military wife and give her encouragement and hope to keep going. And chocolate! Don’t forget the chocolate!

Be sensitive

As much as you want to be able to help and appear understanding to her needs, resist the temptation to compare your husband’s two-week business trip to her husband’s year-long deployment. Unless your husband is also trying to avoid mortars and IEDs (improvised explosive devices), it’s really not the same.

Avoid saying things like “I don’t know how you do it,” or “I can’t imagine being in your shoes.” Most of the time she doesn’t know how she does it either, but it’s the only choice she has – to do it or give up.

Encourage her. Tell her what a great job she’s doing and how her husband will be so proud to hear how well she’s doing holding down the fort at home. And then make sure he does hear how well she’s doing.

If a military wife is in your small group at church, make sure there are enough activities happening she can attend that aren’t strictly couples-oriented. Consider holding off on that Love and Respect marriage study and do another study that she’ll be able to feel included in. When you do have events such as Christmas parties or Super Bowl parties, make a point to call her and make sure she’s coming; there’s a greater chance she will if she knows someone will miss her if she doesn’t.

Support those who support our heroes
Military wives don’t want pity or to be felt sorry for, but they can use prayer, encouragement and all the emotional support they can get. Ask most service members what their greatest worry is when they’re deployed and they may surprise you when they say it’s not getting wounded or killed – it’s making sure their families are okay back home.

I believe God can use the hardest of times, like deployments, to grow us and stretch us and make us into the daughters He wants us to be. But we need others to come along side us in the journey.

Help to make sure that the spouse and family are well taken care of and you also help take care of the soldier. So feel free to pass those hugs out to military spouses today – they will thank you for it!

Sara Horn is the founder of Wives of Faith (www.wivesoffaith.org) and the author of GOD Strong: A Military Wife’s Spiritual Survival Guide and Tour of Duty: Preparing Our Hearts for Deployment, A Bible Study for Military Wives. She enjoys speaking to both women’s and military wives groups about God’s incredible strength. Email her at sara@sarahorn.com.

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The Twelve Blessings of Christmas

The Twelve Blessings of Christmas, written by author T.J. Mills, is a book designed to most assuredly increase the Christmas festivities in your home.  Published by J. Countryman, a division of Thomas Nelson, this cute little book is full of activities sure to fill your home with Christmas celebration throughout the month of December.

Dividing the book into twelve sections of “Blessings,” author T.J. Mills has filled the pages with recipes, activities, anecdotal stories, lyrics from Christmas Carols, and scripture.  Blessings include the blessings of “Warmth,” “Music,” and “Love,” just to name a few.  There are activities you can develop into lessons for your children like making Pomander or Spice Dough ornaments.  Recipes include Friendship Tea, Homemade Rolls, and Gingerbread Men which are sure to make your child smile.  The most important story, the account of the birth of Christ, is included in the pages along with several scriptures all pointing to a life of love and peace in God.

I really like this book.  There are so many things in this book you can do with your children to create memories.  Some of my favorites include the list of children’s Christmas books you can read with your child, the recipes for Sand Art Brownies, and a Brisket recipe to cook as part of an “Old Fashioned Dinner.”  The author has even included some ways you can serve the people in your community and get involved in a very important aspect of Christmas, which is the act of giving.

On a personal note, I received this book from a student while I was doing my student teaching and pregnant with my first child.  It is very special to me because it always makes me think of that time in my life.  I recommend this book to anyone who would like to give a Christmas book as a gift to someone special this Christmas.  If you want to create memories with your family, and would like to have lots of information you can refer to year after year, then this book is a good choice.  If you are a homeschooling mom, then this book would be a good resource for you as well.

The Twelve Blessings of Christmas is a beautiful book with lovely illustrations that will be a treasure on your shelf and that you can refer to for many years to come.

The Twelve Blessings of Christmas can be purchased at christianbook.com, mardel.com, familychristian.com, lifewaychristianstores.com, and barnesandnoble.com.

This review first appeared at The Way I See It.

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Prayer of Thanksgiving

“Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good. His love endures forever. Give thanks to the God of gods.  His love endures forever. Give thanks to the Lord of lords: His love endures forever.”  Psalm 136:1-3

Tomorrow is Thanksgiving Day and I know that many times we cannot see those things that we should be thankful for.  But, no matter what we are facing or where we are in life, one thing to always remember is to be thankful for Jesus.  He reached down and saved you, He has promised you a place in heaven, He has said He will never leave your or forsake you, He has promised His provisions for you, He is waiting to put His arms around you in comfort, He owns a cattle on a thousand hills and can meet any financial need you have, He is the Great Physician and can heal all that ails you, He awaits with encouragement just for you, He showers you daily with love, He is there to carry you when you can no longer go on.  Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good.

Prayer prompt: Today, let your prayers be praise.  Ask for nothing, but instead give to God a song of praise that will fill His heart with joy.

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Interview with Angie Smith

I am pleased and honored to welcome our special guest today: Angie Smith. Angie’s husband Todd is a professional musician with the Christian group Selah. Angie blogs eloquently at Bring the Rain,” which is named for the beautiful infant daughter the Smith family lost in 2008, Audrey Caroline. Audrey’s story is found on her blog, beginning here, and is also written about in Angie’s wonderful book I Will Carry You: The Sacred Dance of Grief and Joy.

Many Wives of Faith readers and members have emailed us through the past few months with tender and broken hearts concerning miscarriage, stillbirth, and the death of infant children, with grief compounded by additional challenges brought about by being the wife of a serviceman. Today, Angie offers each of us words of hope and consolation.

If you’re a mother who has lost a baby, or the friend who wants to minister to one who has, Angie offers wonderful advice for us all.

Angie, thanks for joining us at Wives of Faith.

Grief is a tricky beast. It doesn’t go away even after counseling, or writing a book. It can surface at any time, with any number of triggers. How do you deal with the grief of losing your daughter even now?

A tricky beast is right. And you can never plan for the thing that is going to bring back the memories or trigger something you thought you had processed. It is definitely a moment-by-moment grace.

Your story is told in beautiful—and sometimes painful—detail on your blog and in your book. In a nutshell, how would you describe where you are today?

Believing. And to say that is pretty remarkable considering where I have been in the past. I had moments where I didn’t know if I could really trust Him to be everything, and although it isn’t a perfect walk by any means, I believe Him when He says He is good. That doesn’t mean I don’t question Him or that I don’t struggle, but I am resting in knowing that the foundation is solid.

It’s evident you were blessed with friends and family to stand beside you and Todd through the loss of Audrey. How would you comfort a woman in this situation who is away from her support system? How would you encourage a woman who has lost a child while her husband is deployed? How can we as Christians help a woman in that situation?

My goodness. I started to write my response and was humbled by a prompting to pray for these women, because the truth is that I could make the answer look great on paper but I haven’t been there and I don’t want it to sound glib. I can’t imagine how much more difficult it would have made the situation, but my best answer is to seek community around you from good, solid believers who will walk with you. Don’t be afraid to ask for the hard thing, because what they want most of all is to know how they can help. Don’t isolate yourself or allow Satan to convince you that you are forgotten. Easier said than done, I know. With that said, I want to say I am sorry you have to walk it this way, and I will continue to pray for wisdom and peace as you grieve.

My [Pattie's] belief is that most Christians don’t say anything to a woman in this situation because they just don’t know what to say; they are afraid to say the wrong thing, so they say nothing at all. Can you give us an idea what we should never say to a grieving mom? Can you tell us what it’s safe to say to her?

A few people told me I should get over it because I had three healthy children, or that I was young and could have more. Others said that God must have needed another angel. Some said it was probably for the best and that it was better off this way. I think as a society we aren’t comfortable with the silence, and we want to help. Some of the moments that ministered to me the most were when people just sat with me in my sorrow and didn’t try to explain it all away. I always welcomed people asking questions, though. I don’t ever want it to be the elephant in the room. The other thing is that you have to really be in prayer about how to minister, because in our flesh we say things we don’t mean to say and many, many times I have prayed that the Lord will bless a conversation and take away anything unnecessary or hurtful.

Which Scriptures helped you the most, and which ones just made your pain intensify?

Any Scripture that had to do with the promise of heaven was wonderful. I know a lot of people say this, but I love that the Bible tells us that Jesus wept. I needed to feel His humanity and His divinity in a more intense way than ever before, and to know I have a Father Who is able to sympathize with me was comforting. I can’t think of Scripture that intensified my pain, but I can think of people who tried to use Scripture in a way that hurt me. I had a neighbor tell me that my daughter passed away because I didn’t believe the way I should have…she quoted Job, but I’m pretty sure she didn’t finish that chapter of the Bible. I think the most important thing is to love well and ask the Lord to fill in the gaps. If someone said to me, “Well, the Lord gives and He takes away” in a flippant way, it would hurt me. I don’t disagree with the verse, but the intention could be harmful.

How can you hang onto hope when your emotions are raw?

It’s not easy. You keep your nose in your Bible and your heart open to the whisperings of God. And you tell Him how you feel. Don’t think you can scare Him away with your questioning or your hurt.

How do we affirm the life of a child, even in death?

I think that acknowledging the baby (or child) is the first step. You may have miscarried at 5 weeks, but that baby was already being knit together in accordance with the will of God. Don’t dismiss someone’s hurt because it was early, and don’t shy away from asking specific questions, like, “Do you have any sense of the baby’s gender?” “Did you have names picked out?” or even suggesting ways to have the child’s life recognized. I had wonderful people who thought to snip pieces of Audrey’s hair and take pictures and get her footprints and many other things I treasure today. Ask the person who has lost a child if you can see pictures or hear stories about the baby-for me, this meant that people cared about her and not just me…there is a difference that matters.

How can we be the hands and feet of Jesus to a friend during this emotional time?

Pray. Ask. Volunteer to help. Be available and willing to walk into the unknown. Grief is scary but it’s so much easier when it’s shared.

You say in your book you have had a difficult time asking for help. How was that process for you, and do you still have a difficult time asking for help?

Yes. I give good advice that I should take myself!!! :) I have gotten to the point where it is a little easier, but I will say that being able to be on the other side of the grief many times since then has helped me see that it is wonderful to be asked and there is a blessing in it for the giver. I have to keep that in mind instead of feeling greedy or needy. People want to help. Someone said to me once, “If you don’t let her do that, you are robbing her blessing.” I thought that was great advice.

Angie, thank you again for your words of wisdom and comfort.

We are giving away a copy of Angie’s book, I Will Carry You: The Sacred Dance of Grief and Joy. To be eligible to win, all you need to do is post a comment on the blog here between now and next Monday, November 15. The winner will be chosen at random from each comment left. I do ask that you enter your email address as you leave a comment (it will not be posted, but it will be visible to me) so I may contact you directly. You can find more information about her book here.

Thanks again, Angie, for joining us. God bless you and your family as you continue to celebrate Audrey Caroline.

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I never posted the winner! Grig is the winner of I Will Carry You . Congratulations!

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