A couple of weekends ago I had the opportunity to represent Wives of Faith at a table for one of the pre-deployment briefings the 278th held for their families. This is the largest National Guard unit in Tennessee (3000 or so) and for many it’s their second deployment in four years.

It was a privilege and a pleasure to get to talk with several wives and I got to encourage a few of them who got a little teary. I was in their same shoes two years ago and my heart still skips a bit when thinking back to that time. It’s not an experience you ever forget, preparing to say goodbye to your husband for a year.

A recent USA Today article highlights the current woes many of our military families and couples are experiencing with prolonged and multiple deployments.

Look at some of these statistics:

The Pentagon says divorce rates among enlisted soldiers and Marines increased to about 4% in 2008, a full percentage point jump from when the Iraq war began. The civilian rate is 3.5%, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Researchers tracking 226 Army marriages at Fort Campbell, Ky., last year, found that 6% ended in divorce and that nearly 12% of the couples either became divorced or separated, according to results provided to USA TODAY.

Troops in combat who worry their marriages might be failing rose from one in four in 2005 to one in three in 2007, according to an Army study published last year that examined mental health issues plaguing combat troops. More than 250,000 active-duty soldiers are married.

These stats probably don’t come as a real surprise to military families. The hardships are definitely real. But the question remains: how do we keep our marriages strong? How do we cope with deployment-driven cycles and seasons which currently serve as the gear that turns the wheel of life as we know it?

I don’t think you can if you don’t have a deep faith and belief in God. And if you have that, you still can’t unless you have a deep faith and belief in your marriage. Any number of little cracks can weaken the capstone of our relationship – stress, miscommunication, mistrust, mistakes and regret.

My own marriage is going to be tested in the coming months and years, I know. Cliff is probably going to start signing on for many more Navy schools which will mean months at a time of being away, all in the year leading up to our next deployment.

I’m going to be exploring this issue in more depth over the coming months and I’d like your help with it. Let me know what are some of the issues that you deal with when it comes to your military marriage. What are the struggles? What are the problems? What do you wish you could wave a magic wand and undo or make better?

Related posts:

  1. Military Marriages
  2. Military Marriages: The Telephone Game
  3. How do you stay busy during deployment?
  4. Announcing “GOD STRONG: Nine Spiritual Truths Every Military Wife Should Know”
  5. Keeping a Strong Marriage