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*********************edit*******************

STOP!!!

Last edited by Fireproof; 03/21/10 11:58 AM. Reason: tos - continued badgering - reposting moderated posts
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Fireproof,

Sorry I did not see your post. I was writing mine when you posted it. Asyou instructed, I clicked the "notify" button and submitted my concern.

Thanks for your patience. I am a relatively new member.
Have a good day.

Last edited by ChrisInNOVA; 03/21/10 12:01 PM.
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Chris, I'm sorry if you don't like it that I value marriage more than America's military policies.

You might note that in the Old Testament, ancient Israel's military policies allowed a man to go home to meet his new wife's emotional needs. Would be cool if America did too, wouldn't it?


If you are serious about saving your marriage, you can't get it all on this forum. You've got to listen to the Marriage Builders Radio show, every day. Install the app!

Married to my radiant trophy wife, Prisca, 19 years. Father of 8.
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If your wife is not on board with MB, some of my posts to other men might help you.
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I'm sorry that this is what you understood from what you read here.

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Originally Posted by ChrisInNOVA
I hope to the Almighty God that no active duty people read this thread. They would be in despair.

I am at a loss as to how ignoring data would help them. I want them to be helped. Dr. Harley wants them to be helped. I don't think pretending that separated marriages can work out well when you don't know of a single separated marriage that has worked out well is a good way to help any body. I don't believe it would somehow fill them with optimism in such a way that it would cause their marriage to work out well as a result.

If it takes deciding not to reenlist to save a marriage, then I'd rather people do that and save their marriage. It's a question of values, and you're welcome to value things differently from me, but I value American marriages more than America's military. I would hate to think that other people's lives and marriages have to be torn up for my benefit.

Almighty God's military policy was friendly to marriage, including a provision for soldiers to meet the emotional needs of their brides, giving them an opportunity to go home before each and every battle. Perhaps America's policy is not compatible and needs to change.


If you are serious about saving your marriage, you can't get it all on this forum. You've got to listen to the Marriage Builders Radio show, every day. Install the app!

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Hi Markos,

"Military marriages ARE DOOMED." --> may be true (may not be true)..but certainly cruel.

"In addition to typical relationship challenges, Military marriages face unique challenges which go above and beyond those experienced by non-military couples." --> truthful & on point, yet not cruel.

That was my point.

I am no advocate for delusions. I firmly believe that reality / realizm solves problems; however, we can be "real" and truthful while being kind.

I hope that clears things up.

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Originally Posted by ChrisInNOVA
Hi Markos,

"Military marriages ARE DOOMED." --> may be true (may not be true)..but certainly cruel.

Chris, you are the one who said "military marriages are doomed." That was YOUR concoction. This was in response to a discussion about the very high divorce rate amongst military families. That is NOT CRUEL to state this true fact. IT is CRUEL to pretend there is no problem.

This forum was started by Dr Harley at the behest of some military chaplains because of the problems in military marriages. The purpose here is to find solutions and it is out of line and INAPPROPRIATE to label Dr Harley and others as "cruel" for acknowleging a real problem and looking for solutions.


"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.." Theodore Roosevelt

Exposure 101


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Chris, here are your quotes:

Quote
Your marriage is doomed.
Your marriage should not have even happened.

Quote
To me, the responses here to my questions about that seem to be:

Military marriages are doomed.
Military marriages shouldn't take place.

Quote
Many military marriages are DOOMED

Many military marriages are DOOMED

Many military marriages are DOOMED

Here is what I said:

Quote
Dr Harley stated that divorce rates for military marriages are higher than any other marriages. And that is what this forum was set up for, to find solutions. So maybe you can help in that regard?

Which is "cruel?"


"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.." Theodore Roosevelt

Exposure 101


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I have stated my side of things and my side of things does not include labelling Dr Harley (or anyone else here) or a belief on my part that military marriages are doomed. These are blatantly strawman arguments.


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Originally Posted by ChrisInNOVA
Hi Markos,

"Military marriages ARE DOOMED." --> may be true (may not be true)..but certainly cruel.

But I'm not actually saying that stuff. These are your rewordings of things I've said, projecting your thoughts onto them. What I said had an awful lot of nuance in it, which you are skipping over.

I didn't say military marriages are doomed.

I did say I think I would advise people not to enter into such a marriage because I would be fearful the deployment situation would be too hard on their marriage. I don't know a solution, so I know ahead of time that I'd have no clue how to help and encourage them if they came to me some day, so, yes, I'd advise them not to.

I also said I thought the current policies aren't right.

And I said, quite brazenly, that I value marriage more than the military. I understand this would probably get a lot of people pretty emotional.

I don't think anything here translates to "doomed."

Would it be cruel for me to tell a young man "I don't think you should enter the military, because you could be deployed to the Middle East and it might wreck your marriage?" Is there a way that I can reword that to make it less cruel? Would it be cruel for me to tell a young woman "I don't think you should marry him, because he could be deployed, and it might wreck your marriage?" Is there a way that I can reword that to make it less cruel?


If you are serious about saving your marriage, you can't get it all on this forum. You've got to listen to the Marriage Builders Radio show, every day. Install the app!

Married to my radiant trophy wife, Prisca, 19 years. Father of 8.
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No you didn't say that Markos. And I never said it was you. What you said was that you don't think military people should get married.

At this point I'll leave you & Mel to it.

I have bigger fish to filet.

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I could really use some help with the questions in the original post. How is it possible to even do any of the steps when a spouse is on deployment?

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Smiley,

I think the lack of posts shows how hard this really is. A key factor in building/maintaining a passionate M is spending hours of undivided attention together. And, of course, this is impossible during a deployment. My H first deployed in 1996 to Bosnia. During that deployment, we were able to get together twice during the deployment - once for a long weekend in Budapest (I flew in from Washington DC for that weekend) and once when H came to the states. We went on a family vacation to the Bahamas. In between, we wrote, called and emailed. Our M did pretty well during that deployment.

H next deployed to Kuwait/Iraq in 2003. Communication was more dfficult and we weren't able to speak as often. During that deployment, H came home on R&R and does not even remember it. The stress level of the war in Iraq was so high. He then deployed again and was gone for nearly 4 and 1/2 out of the next 6 years. The M really went down the tubes without either one of us realizing it. I think the differences were the amount of time apart and the inability to really stay in touch with each other.

We have a son who is in the Army now. My advice to him if he were to fall in love and marry would be to regard his service as something to be proud of and to leave the military. And we come from a family where many have served long careers.

AM

Last edited by armymama; 03/24/10 05:49 AM.

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I realize this thread is old, and I'm just a lurker but felt compelled to sign up so I could add to it.

I've been lucky that my husband has always had the internet while deployed which really opens up the options. Email and webcams do a lot for a separation like that. We would play games together online. I would record things on my phone, just little love you messages, or the sound of our son laughing, and especially once he learned how to say dada, and then I could email those to him. He would put them on his ipod, so he had a little playlist of "home"

Despite the near everyday emails I still wrote him letters most days just so he would feel special at mail call. I sent packages, and sent him things to give to his guys. He also reciprocated, sending me precious little things and love letters. I still have all of them.

I put in a lot of effort to make sure he had a say in things in our day to day lives. He picked out what our son wore for his first birthday, he picked out gifts for our moms on mothers day, etc.

Again we were lucky with the internet access and also that we started dating as long distance so we were used to adult phone activities, lol. I was used to being married to my telephone.

It was definitely stressful when he came back. We had to ease back into the groove slowly. We had both done a lot of reading about how to cope after a deployment and I think that helped, we could talk about it and know what was normal and would pass with time.


I don't think military marriages are doomed. I think there are a lot of factors that go into military divorce statistics. Most get married very young, or because there is a pregnancy. The vast majority won't have family or lifelong friends around as a support system. I think a lot of young guys idealize marriage, and want out of the barracks, but don't think about the responsibility side of it. We have met many couples who don't make it very long at all, but we've also met some really strong couples in this life. It's not impossible, but I do think you need to be very proactive. The military offers free marriage retreats, free counseling etc. Heck, I just got free books about marriage, and PTSD and raising military children.

We put a lot of time and effort into our marriage. We avoid temptation. You won't find us out at the bars, and H doesn't hang out with the younger single guys outside of work.

I never thought I would be married to a Marine, living in Japan over 7000 miles away from any family....but here I am. It's really hard sometimes and everytime my H has to leave I have a little cryfest and then I pick myself up and find a way to use it to my advantage. I have way more than I deserve and I'll be darned if I don't do everything in my power to keep it.

We definitely didn't follow all of the LB's and EN's while he's gone but we also didn't know about them yet. Dishonesty...well it's better for all involved if he keeps certain things from me. He fills me in on the terrifying details later, when he's home and safe.

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Hey,
I would like to share what I've learned through the years about this.
First when the spouse is deployed, you should basically Plan A. (if i understand the plan correctly)Avoid LB's which includes complaining about all the work and stress about being separated. Send the deployed spouse letters everyday, send stuff from the kids if possible, send items from home that are allowed(cookies, favorite candy, mixed cds,). Keep phone conversations positive. You have to become independent, but let the deployed soldier know that you are their number one fan. Work on a hobby while they are deployed, remember that you need to keep them in your heart while away, so when they return it can be joyous. Keep in mind it takes a little time to re-adjust to their return. Another mistake I see is the forcing co-habitation to fast and hard. Don't dump chores and to-do list on each other.
Another thing I've seen, is when a soldier marries someone who knows nothing of the military life, the unknowing spouses seem to have a hard time adjusting. Regardless, military marriages do add a new level of stress on a marriage. It takes patience, understanding, and commitment.
I've seen a decline in marriage period. It is not just military. I think people just dont believe in it anymore as a whole. Sometimes it gets tough and you have to work together. Maybe society has taken the "If it was meant to be, it should be easy." We all seem to forget that vow "for better or worse". Just some thoughts...


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WOW.

I came to this thread hoping to see some kind of answer for military marriages. Instead I've read that my marriage is doomed about 150+ times.

I don't feel so good anymore.


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I have seen a lot of soldier's who have good healthy marriages. It does take more work, but it can be done. I don't really feel like I can give any advice because I'm not sure I can say my marriage is the most healthy. I do believe that both people in the marriage have to really want it to happen because in the military it is too easy to get out of. Some spouses disappear while their soldier is deployed. Some soldier's just stop communicating essentially disappearing themselves.
I think you really as a family have to prepare for deployment, not just the person being deployed. You have to have a plan and a goal. Right now divorce in military is at about 80%....I'm hoping not to fall in that stat, but will see I guess.


When I vowed for better or worse - I meant it!
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