Military Spouse
  • Employment
    • Military Friendly Employers
    • Virtual Job Fair
  • Education
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Open A Franchise
  • Life
    • Deployment
    • Homecoming
    • Moving
  • Relationships
  • At Home
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • All Magazines
No Result
View All Result
  • Employment
    • Military Friendly Employers
    • Virtual Job Fair
  • Education
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Open A Franchise
  • Life
    • Deployment
    • Homecoming
    • Moving
  • Relationships
  • At Home
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • All Magazines
No Result
View All Result
Military Spouse
No Result
View All Result

My Grief Over Military Spouse Friendships

Crystal Bettenhausen-Bubulka by Crystal Bettenhausen-Bubulka
in Life
0
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

In military spouse life, there comes a moment when we need to challenge our perspectives, we need to hear through a new lens. The idea of listening through something you look through might seem perplexing, I shared the same skepticism when I first encountered this saying. This notion prompted me to reflect on how, as military spouses, we often undermine our well-being by peering through a cloudy lens. 

For nearly two decades, I’ve been fortunate to build profound friendships. These relationships have been a cornerstone in this vibrant military life. These connections have been the linchpin between merely surviving and truly thriving. 

After enduring eight PCS moves and countless boxes, I hit a friendship wall. Tearfully, I confided in my husband about yearning for “a Daphne”—that friend who shows up with Starbucks during volunteering events speaks candidly when needed, and whose absence is deeply felt across time zones on difficult days. Despite recognizing the necessity of new friends, I decided against making them. While juggling a challenging doctoral program, building a business, and parenting, I convinced myself that a friendship wall was the solution to shield me from personal grief. 

It was an attempt to escape the fear of never finding friends like those from past duty stations. Rather than confronting my grief, I ran from it, labeling it as a “boundary.” Grief, however, does not dissipate; it lingers, its journey nonlinear. Often, we only acknowledge grief in the context of death, overlooking the myriad of losses in a military spouse’s journey—pets, communities, careers, confidence, trust, and friendships. Minimizing grief compounds it, making well-being difficult to obtain. 

Recognizing loss as grief is the first step towards recovering from grief. In my formal training, I learned to listen to the heart when working with grievers. In my own case, my heart struggled to trust myself to find new friends, and distorted thoughts clouded my ability to forge connections in my new zip code. The friendship wall was high, and only through recent revelation did I realize my attempt to replace the loss was futile. 

Grief teaches us that losses are irreplaceable. Expecting the same experiences at each duty station sets us up for disappointment and compromises mental health. 

With grief, a shift in perspective is necessary. My expectation for an instant best friend next door mirrored past experiences but failed to consider the uniqueness of my new situation. My lens needed cleaning—it was cloudy, scratched, and offered an unclear picture.

Owning my grief meant identifying friendship losses on a grief timeline, and it revealed a pattern—I had never truly recovered from the loss of any of my military spouse friendships. This only hindered my own ability to recover. 

Military spouse life leaves little time for exploring feelings amidst the chaos of unpacking boxes and worrying about family. The first step to overcoming grief is curiosity. When I became curious, I realized I was simply lonely. Acknowledging this loneliness gave way to the ability to hear through a different lens.

Previous Post

Summer Fun on a Budget: Board Games to Combat Boredom

Next Post

Christian Writers Institute Expands with New Leadership and Free Course Offerings

Next Post

Christian Writers Institute Expands with New Leadership and Free Course Offerings

Latest

Life

When “Strong” Starts to Feel Exhausting

Family

Raising Resilient Kids Without Raising Tiny Stress Balls

Life

Spring Bucket List for Military Families (No Leave Required)

Life

Living in Compressed Time: Why It Makes Friendship Feel Intense

Life

Why Military Friendships Form So Fast

Life

What I Wish I Knew Before My First PCS (That No One Told Me)

In Case You Missed It

Intentional in the Ordinary: A Hello From Your Friend Next Door

The Unofficial Military Spouse Spring Reset Checklist

The Loudest Voice in the Room Is Yours

March Madness, But It’s Just Our Schedules

We Don’t Need More “Strong Spouse” Narratives

Luck of the Military Spouse: 10 Things We Call “Lucky” (But Totally Aren’t)

Terms of Use
Our Team
Advertise
Newsletter
Submit an Article
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Compliance

Fall 2025

MSM_Fall25_Cover

Copyright © 2026 Military Spouse

Employment

Family

Lifestyle

Sitemap

No Result
View All Result
  • #5590 (no title)
  • 2016 Kensington Book Club
    • Author Guest Posts
    • Book Club Picks
    • Deals of the Month
    • Exclusive Excerpts
    • Giveaways
    • Recipes
  • 2017 Military Spouse Friendly Employers®
  • Account
  • Advertise
  • Affiliate Disclosure
  • Air Force
  • Army
  • Base SOY Survey
  • Base to Beaches
  • Brands
  • Career
  • Career Resources
  • Coast Guard
  • Compliance
  • Contact Us
  • Contests
    • Contest Rules
  • Deployment
  • Editorial Calendar – Our Themes
  • Education Resources
  • Giveaway Sign-up
  • Hangouts
  • Health
  • Home
  • Home 2
  • Home 3
  • Home 4
  • Home 5
  • Homeschooling
  • I Pledge to Embrace Video Page
  • Login
  • Logout
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Fall Issue
    • Fall Issue
    • January / February
    • July / August
    • March / April
    • May / June
    • November / December
    • September / October
    • Special Issue
    • Special Issue 2024
    • Spring
    • Spring Issue
    • Spring Issue
    • Winter
    • Winter Issue
    • Winter Issue
  • Malmstrom AFB SOY 2016 | Alexandra Fuller
  • Marine Corps
  • Members
  • Military Kids
  • Military Spouse [Live]
  • Military Spouse 2019 Media Partnership Guide
  • Military Spouse Education eNewsletter
  • Military Spouse Friendly Employers®
  • Military Spouse Media Partnership Guide
  • Military Spouse Partners
  • Military Spouse Quality of Life Survey
  • Military Spouse Student Leadership Award and Military Spouse Champions in Higher Education Award
  • Military Spouse Sweepstakes Official Rules (“Official Rules”)
  • Military Spouse Team
  • MILITARY SPOUSE: EDUCATION GUIDE
  • MILITARY SPOUSE: EMPLOYMENT GUIDE
  • MILITARY SPOUSE: PCS GUIDE
  • Military Spouse: Submit a calendar event
  • Money & More
  • MSOY Homepage
  • MSOY12
  • MSOY16 Live ☆
  • National Guard
  • Navy
  • Navy Mutual
  • New Spouse Email Series
  • Our Team
  • Password Reset
  • PCS
  • Privacy Policies
  • QAs
    • Submit a Question
  • Register
  • Share
    • Glossary
      • A
      • B
      • C
      • D
      • E
      • F
      • G
      • H
      • I
      • J
      • K
      • L
      • M
      • N
      • O
      • P
      • Q
      • R
      • S
      • Submit a Glossary Term
      • T
      • U
      • V
      • W
      • X
      • Y
      • Z
  • Share Your Military Lifestyle!
  • Share Your Photos
  • Simplify Your Crazy, Wonderful Military Life
  • Site Map
  • Small Businesses
  • Spouse 101 Download
  • SPOUSE 101 GUIDE
  • Starbucks
  • Submit an Article
  • Terms of Use
  • testing of the Gutenberg
  • Thank You
  • The Military Spouse Resource Collection
  • User

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.