The Skewed Perspective of the Military Child
Published December 12, 2007
The military child, especially the child of a parent who regularly deploys, has a slightly different view of the world than civilian children. Their reality is fraught with concern for the parent(s) they dearly miss, and yet they’re able to balance this with a set of coping skills that Family Service Centers throughout the military only wish they could teach. Still, there are those times when it’s clear that the military child’s perspective might be a little bit skewed.
My children have long known the heartache of missing their Marine father while he was away on numerous operations, attending professional schools, and deployed. Until his 20th year, he was gone no less than four months and as much as a year. His last few years before retirement found him in a “non-deploying” unit (the term doesn’t mean what it implies; only that the unit won’t deploy first), and he was gone for no more than 30 days at a time.
My children found it delightful to have him around so much because they’d grown so used to him being gone. He hadn’t realized just how accustomed they’d become to his absences until he arrived home one day from a two-week stint in Africa. He had no sooner set his bags down inside the front door than the children walked in from another room, looked at him and his bags, and asked, “Dad, where are you off to now?”
During the first year we were stationed in Germany, my then 18-year-old son needed surgery on his kneecap to keep it from slipping out of place. The surgery was performed at a city hospital in Boeblingen, just a few miles from the base where we were stationed. He woke in the middle of the night after surgery and was a little disoriented. As he tells it, he looked around the room and saw nothing familiar until he spied his portable CD player and CD case on the nightstand next to his bed. "…And like a good military kid, I thought to myself, 'Oh, right. That’s my stuff, so this must be my new home.'"
- The Skewed Perspective of the Military Child
- Published: December 12, 2007
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Culture
- Filed Under: Culture: Family and Relationships, Culture: Personal History, Culture: Society, Culture: Travel
- Writer: Diana Hartman
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- Diana Hartman's personal site
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Boy, this brings back memories for me, Diana. After my father's return from duty (we never went with him when he was stationed overseas-it was too expensive), there was always an adustment period. When we were very young, it sometimes took days. Later on, it was easier.
Civilian families have no idea about what it takes. The constant moving. Making new friends in school. Plus worrying about your dad. My husband, who grew up in the same neighborhood from birth through college, couldn't comprehend it. He couldn't stand it when I moved the kids from one school to another in the same general area. I could easily relocate again, to somewhere new, but he's the opposite.