Spring in military life doesn’t always mean flowers.
Sometimes it means orders.
If a deployment is coming, there’s an emotional timeline most military spouses quietly move through.
Let’s name it.
Phase 1: Denial
“It’s months away.”
“We won’t think about it yet.”
“Maybe it’ll change.”
You operate normally. You don’t want to borrow stress from the future.
Totally valid.
Phase 2: Hyper-Organization
Suddenly you’re updating passwords, organizing binders, scheduling oil changes, meal prepping like you’re on a reality show.
Preparation becomes your coping mechanism.
Control what you can.
Phase 3: Irritability
Small things feel big.
Conversations feel loaded.
You’re both stressed — and neither of you wants to say it out loud.
This isn’t dysfunction. It’s anticipatory grief.
Phase 4: Sentimental Overdrive
You take more photos. You notice the small things. You feel nostalgic before they’ve even left.
The countdown becomes real.
Phase 5: Survival Mode
After they leave, the adrenaline kicks in.
You manage. You function. You get through.
And somewhere in the middle of solo parenting, school emails, and quiet evenings, you realize something:
You’ve done hard things before.
You’ll do them again.
Pre-deployment seasons are heavy. They can feel lonely even when you’re not technically alone yet.
But every phase has purpose.
Denial protects you.
Organization empowers you.
Irritability signals emotion.
Sentimentality honors connection.
Survival mode proves strength.
If deployment is part of your spring forecast this year, know this:
Nothing you’re feeling is wrong.
It’s just military life — asking you to stretch again.
And you will.