All Content from Business Insider 10月28日 17:53
军事婚姻中的挣扎与身份重塑
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本文节选自Heather Sweeney的回忆录《伪装:我如何从军事婚姻的阴影中走出》。作者讲述了作为一名军事配偶的生活经历,尤其是在丈夫Tristan部署期间,她独自面对的挑战和内心的挣扎。文章深刻描绘了军事生活带来的不确定性,以及在丈夫远赴伊拉克前,夫妻二人不得不进行的沉重对话和为年幼的孩子准备的“爸爸电视”。作者坦诚地表达了在丈夫服役期间,她所经历的骄傲、愤怒、焦虑和恐惧等复杂情绪,并提及作为一名“个体增援人员”的配偶,她缺乏其他军事配偶群体所能提供的支持系统,独自承担了巨大的心理压力。文章强调了军事生活对个人和家庭的深刻影响,以及作者在经历这一切后,对自我身份的探索和重塑。

🛡️ 军事婚姻的现实冲击:作者强调,即使了解军事生活的表面信息,也无法完全预料其对个人生活的真实冲击。从丈夫加入海军到部署伊拉克,作者经历了从对军事生活的不确定到面对沉重现实的转变,包括为可能发生的意外进行准备,以及为年幼的孩子录制“爸爸电视”以维系亲情。

😔 情感的复杂漩涡:面对丈夫的部署,作者内心充斥着矛盾的情感,包括对丈夫服役的骄傲,但也伴随着对战争的恐惧、对自身处境的愤怒和焦虑。她坦承曾试图寻找一个可以责怪的对象,以应对这种复杂的情绪螺旋。

孤立无援的经历:由于丈夫是“个体增援人员”,作者发现自己无法像其他军事配偶那样获得来自同一部队的群体支持。她曾设想的与其他配偶互相支持、分担压力的场景并未出现,这使得她在丈夫离开期间感到更加孤单无助。

facade of strength and inner turmoil: On the outside, the author strived to project an image of strength and independence, aiming to be the supportive military wife her husband needed. However, internally, she was struggling, feeling overwhelmed and questioning who would support her amidst her husband's absence and the immense pressures of military life.

Heather Sweeney, author of Camouflage: How I Emerged from the Shadows of a Military Marriage, outlines how she felt when her husband was deployed and she was left at home.

If military spouses could compile a list of things not to say to a military spouse, one of those taboo sentences would be "You knew what you were getting into."

It's impossible to comprehend and foresee military life until you're in the thick of it. You can read the books. You can watch the news. You can absorb the tales of those who have done it. But knowing the logistics of what you're getting into when your spouse becomes a service member is far different from knowing how you're going to react to it, knowing to what degree those logistics are going to upend your life, his life, your family's life. Even military brats who grow up to marry service members must learn for themselves how to navigate the lifestyle as a spouse, as a parent, instead of as a child.

I underestimated what came next

I had no idea what I was getting into when Tristan joined the Navy, and I certainly didn't know that I was about to face far bigger challenges than a lack of meaningful friendships.

Six months after Grady was born, Tristan deployed to Iraq.

We had three weeks to prepare for the six-month deployment, a timeframe that was somehow both not long enough and painfully drawn out.

This deployment required legal documents like wills and a power of attorney. It included purchasing gear and creating a staging area in the house to incrementally pack. It included somber discussions about Tristan's possible death and his wish for me to remarry a good man to raise Grady, about where he wanted to be buried, about who should inherit his most valued possessions, conversations meant for an older couple with gray hair and complaints about aching feet and resolutions to wear more sensible shoes. At 28 years old, we were too young for this heaviness.

The author, Heather Sweeney.

But the most heartbreaking aspect was planning for what this deployment could mean for Grady, a process that included Tristan filming himself shaving, tying a tie, and reading "Guess How Much I Love You" and "Goodnight Moon," videos we called "Daddy TV" that Grady could watch to connect with his absent father, to remember his voice, his face, and in the worst-case scenario, to have a piece of Tristan in the event he didn't return.

Watching Tristan film himself talking to Grady, watching the two of them play on the floor with blocks, watching them cuddle in our bed for story time with Cody beside them, all filled me with emotions I didn't know quite how to label. These scenes seemed so natural, so normal for a father and son spending quality time together. But they were far from normal.

I was full of mixed emotions

I was proud of Tristan for serving his country, but every thought I had between his announcement and his departure was laced with anger. Or anxiety. Or sadness. I was paralyzed with fear not only for his safety, but also for the indelible imprint war would leave on him when he returned, if he returned. I needed someone or something to blame for putting me in this spiral of emotions, for giving me only three weeks to prepare to send my husband to war. I could blame President Bush for initiating the war in Iraq. I could blame the Navy for accepting my husband into their club. I could blame Tristan's CO for signing off on the deployment. Or I could blame Tristan because he had volunteered for it.

I didn't have the support other military spouses had

Tristan's deployment classified him as an individual augmentee, or IA. This meant he wasn't going to Iraq with his command. He wasn't part of a unit that deployed together. He was temporarily leaving his command in Pensacola to join a different one in Iraq.

This also meant I was the spouse of an IA. I didn't have a support system within his command because no other spouses were going through what I was going through. I always imagined that if I ever had to face a deployment, I would have other women to bond with, to commiserate with, to call for help, to chat with while our children played together, to drink wine with as we shared babysitters.

But this deployment wouldn't resemble that daydream at all. Tristan was deploying on his own, and I was being left behind on my own.

"Camouflage: How I Emerged from the Shadows of a Military Marriage," by Heather Sweeney is available now.

Just as I'd been warned about other aspects of military life, I'd heard the preparation for a deployment was almost as tough as the deployment itself. It wasn't a romantic time spent cuddling and gazing lovingly into each other's eyes. And it didn't include promises, because those weren't guaranteed. I fought to ignore the stress, but the stress won. Some days, I wished he would leave already and get it over with.

On the outside, I tried to prove to him that I could handle this, that I was the independent military wife he needed me to be, that I could keep the home front running so he didn't have to worry about his family while he focused 100% on his mission.

On the inside, I was crumbling under the facade that I was OK with all of this. I was supporting my husband, but who was going to support me?

Excerpted from "Camouflage: How I Emerged from the Shadows of a Military Marriage by Heather Sweeney." Copyright 2025 Heather Sweeney. Published by Knox Press, an imprint of Post Hill Press.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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