Strength isn’t loud. It’s a thousand quiet choices.
When people hear the words military spouse, they often picture strength.
But strength isn’t a straight line.
It isn’t always calm. It isn’t always polished. And it certainly isn’t painless. For me, strength has been a thousand quiet choices — choosing to stay when it would be easier to shut down, choosing to listen when my own pain felt louder than the person I love.
My husband Jay is a combat veteran and a right leg amputee. I am a veteran and a survivor in my own right — of trauma, of breast cancer, and of the mental battles that follow both. Together, we have built peace one honest conversation at a time.
But peace does not mean calm.
It means awareness.
It means understanding my triggers, my emotions, my patterns — and choosing not to let them run the show. It means recognizing when I am reacting from pain instead of purpose. It means learning how to stand firm without becoming hardened.
In this column, I will talk about mentality — about the difference between surviving and thriving. I will talk about what it takes to stop being your own roadblock. About hormone changes, burnout, and the quiet courage it takes to look in the mirror and still choose grace.
Most people in our community know me as a mentor and problem solver. Through the nonprofit I help lead, Shield of Sisters, I work daily with service members, families, and survivors who are rebuilding their lives from the inside out. But what I share here will not be theory.
It will be daily life.
Real conversations. Real recalibration. Real growth.
I have learned that self-love is not soft.
It is strategy.
It is what allows me to love my husband well without losing myself in the process. It is what keeps me grounded when the world feels heavy. It is what helps me lead others without neglecting my own internal work.
I am not here to hand out easy answers.
I am here to talk about the messy middle — the emotional recalibration that comes with change, the discipline required for self-awareness, and the strength it takes to stop standing in your own way.
Because we cannot love others the way they deserve until we learn to get out of our own way first.
And that work starts within.
— Kaila