Military Homecomings
You’ll spend weeks preparing for this special day, and the full military homecoming experience may last for weeks afterward. However, as with any highly anticipated event, the reality for your family could be different from your expectations. Having your loved one back is wonderful, but returning home from deployment is also another significant transition. With advance planning and some military homecoming ideas, you can prepare your children for the joys–and occasional stresses–of having the whole family together again.
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Video: Dear Elmo: Coming Home
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How to Reconnect After Separation
Find ways to bridge the gaps as your children grows and changes during a parent’s deployment.
How to Reconnect After Separation
Remember, even a few months is a long period in a child’s development. A lot will have happened in the time between deployment and deployment homecoming. Relationships have changed; family members have grown emotionally and, in the case of children, physically, as well. Identify how to reconnect after separation with the points below.
Talk with your children beforehand about what to expect
- Over the last few months, children may have grown an inch, moved up a grade in school, or learned to say the ABCs or ride a bike without training wheels. Remind your kids that, just as they’ve changed, so has the parent who is returning home from temporary duty or being deployed again. The parent who’s coming back may have been to a new place, experienced stressful situations, and also learned new things.
Readjust slowly
- Take it slowly; be patient. If one of your children is shy at the initial reunion, you can set the example. Let children see Mom and Dad hugging. Let them each establish their own comfortable timetable for reconnecting.
- Routines will need to be readjusted. Introduce changes slowly. Little by little, you’ll have to learn how to be a team again. The amount of time it takes to adjust may depend on how long the parent was away for. But the awkward phase and the feeling of newness will pass; the family will adjust to the new normal. Help younger children adapt to changing routines with the Things We Do Together and Picture This printables.
Reassure your children
- Just because the deployed parent is back with the family doesn’t mean that there won’t still be feelings of sadness, anger, anxiety, or confusion. Your children may also find it difficult to reconnect if they know the parent may be leaving again. Comfort your children as often as they need–softly, loudly, daily. Hugs help, too!
- Use the Pocket Full of Hearts printable to encourage communication and expressions of love. For older children, think about leaving them positive messages on sticky notes.
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Multiple Homecomings
Develop tools to manage multiple military homecomings and constant adjustments.
Multiple Homecomings
When a service member is deployed again, the whole family is deployed again. For children, multiple homecomings mean constant adjustments.
Wait to talk about deploying again
- It’s important not to say anything about deploying again until orders are actually in hand and there are visible signs–such as the parent packing–that something notable is happening.
Be reassuring while breaking the news
- Emphasize that deployments are part of the parent’s job. Reassure your children, as many times as needed, that deploying again is not a result of anything anyone did or said.
- Use the previous deployment as a model. Remind everyone: “Remember when Mom/Dad went away last time? It was hard, but we pulled together as a family–and we will again.” Go back to the ideas and strategies that worked before, and to the people you depended on. But stay flexible, too; each deployment is different.
Be there to talk…and listen
- Try to resist saying “don’t feel bad” or “don’t cry.” And remember to listen: The most important thing to your children is for you to hear them out.
- Don’t be surprised if you have to answer the same questions over and over again. A child might want to know, for instance, why the parent has to go away again, but a friend’s parent doesn’t have to go away at all. In this case, you might say something like: “Everyone has a different job. Mom/Dad’s job is one that needs to be done in another country (or a place far away).”
Spend time together before redeployment
- If you have more than one child, make time for each, doing something as simple as reading together or going to the park to play. You will send an important message: “You matter!”
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Additional Resources
Helpful links related to Military Homecomings