Deployment can feel like an emotional hurricane—days blur, sleep thins out, and even the smallest tasks can feel enormous. As a military spouse who’s walked alongside many military spouses through these seasons, I know that gratitude can sound like an unrealistic request when your heart is aching and your person is far away.
But gratitude isn’t about pretending everything is fine. It’s about gently training the mind to notice what is still good in the middle of what’s hard. Gratitude doesn’t erase grief; it steadies it. It becomes a practice of mindfulness—staying present with what’s true, both the pain and the peace.
Let’s talk about ten practical ways to practice gratitude, even when the mess of deployment threatens to swallow your joy.
Begin With One Quiet Moment
You don’t need a long morning routine or perfect peace. Start with one deep breath. Take 30 seconds to ask, “What’s one thing I’m thankful for in this exact moment?” Maybe it’s a strong cup of coffee, a text message, or simply the sound of your own heartbeat. Small gratitude moments are powerful building blocks.
Keep a “Deployment Gratitude Journal”
Each night, jot down three things that went well or brought a smile. They can be small—sunlight on the kitchen floor or your child’s laugh over FaceTime. The key is consistency, not perfection. Over time, these notes become evidence that light can coexist with longing.
Practice “Cognitive Reframing”
Here’s the therapeutic concept to understand: cognitive reframing means intentionally shifting how we interpret our circumstances. Instead of “I’m alone again tonight,” try “I have the strength to manage this evening with grace.”
This isn’t toxic positivity—it’s mindful resilience. It’s acknowledging the hard, then choosing to see the capable.
Create Gratitude Touchpoints
Set phone reminders to pause for gratitude—morning, midday, evening. When the alarm goes off, breathe deeply and name one person, place, or gift that sustains you today.
Write Letters You’ll Never Send
Deployment brings waves of emotion. Instead of bottling them up, write them out. Write to your spouse, your children, even yourself. Gratitude may slip in between the lines—thankfulness for love, growth, or strength you didn’t know you had.
Surround Yourself With Affirming Voices
Seek out friends or support groups who remind you of goodness and hope. Isolation makes gratitude harder. Connection—even through online spouse groups—can spark joy through shared understanding.
Practice “Five Senses Mindfulness”
When you feel overwhelmed, ground yourself by noticing five things you can see, four you can touch, three you can hear, two you can smell, and one you can taste. Pair this with a statement of gratitude for each. This anchors your mind to the present and cultivates calm amid chaos.
Make Gratitude Visible
Create a “Gratitude Wall” or jar. Post sticky notes with moments, quotes, or photos that remind you of blessings. Seeing these daily retrains the brain toward thankfulness—even when you’re weary.
Rehearse Gratitude With Your Spouse
When you’re able to talk, start or end your conversations by sharing one thing you’re grateful for that day. It may feel small, but it reinforces connection and resilience, turning deployment dialogue into something healing.
Give Gratitude Away
One of the fastest ways to feel thankful is to express it outwardly. Write thank-you notes, send a small gift, or volunteer locally. Gratitude grows when shared.
Try this. Reflection Exercise: “Finding Gratitude in My Current Chaos”
Take 10 minutes with your journal or a quiet space. Write down:
- One thing that feels heavy right now.
- One thing you can still appreciate despite that heaviness.
- One small action you can take this week to nurture that gratitude.
Read your answers aloud. Speak them into the air—sometimes hearing your own words helps the truth settle deeper.
Gratitude doesn’t demand that you love deployment. It simply invites you to notice beauty—even if it’s tucked between the cracks of loneliness. Practicing thankfulness is not about dismissing the hard; it’s about holding both—the ache and the awe—and learning that your heart has room for both.