Dealing With Deployment During Christmas

The first Christmas my husband deployed, I remember staring at the tree lights long after the kids had gone to bed. The house was quiet, but my mind wasn’t. The season felt both beautiful and unbearably heavy — joy wrapped in grief, hope tangled in loneliness, that is dealing with deployment during Christmas.

If you’re navigating a deployed Christmas this year, I want to begin with this truth:
Your feelings make sense.
You are not overreacting.
You are not “too emotional.”
You are a human experiencing an abnormal situation with incredible strength.

The holidays highlight what deployment takes from us — shared traditions, partnership, emotional safety, and the comfort of ordinary daily rituals. And while we can’t make it easy, we can make it manageable.

Name Your Emotions (So They Don’t Name You)

In clinical psychology, we call this affect labeling.
Simply put, naming what you feel reduces its intensity.

Say it out loud or write it down:

  • “I feel lonely.”
  • “I feel frustrated.”
  • “I feel overwhelmed.”
  • “I feel sad.”

When you name the emotion, you move from being inside it to observing it. That little shift gives you room to breathe — and room to cope.

Adjust Your Expectations With Compassion

Deployment Christmas will not look like your favorite Hallmark movie, and that’s okay.
It doesn’t have to be glossy to be meaningful.

Give yourself permission to:

  • Simplify decorations
  • Lower your pace
  • Skip events that drain you
  • Redefine “special” in this season
  • Say no without guilt

You do not have to compensate for the absence of your partner.
You do not have to orchestrate a “perfect” holiday for your kids or yourself.
You just need a real one.

Ask for Support — Early and Often

This is not a season to muscle through alone.
Support is not a sign of weakness; it’s a sign of wisdom.

Reach out to the people who love you and be specific:

  • “Can you send a care package for the kids this week?”
  • “Would you mind helping me with decorating?”
  • “Could you order the gifts online so I don’t have to manage it all?”
  • “Can you check in with me on Christmas Eve?”

People want to help — but they don’t always know how.
Give them the blueprint.

Schedule Rest, Even If It’s Only Five Minutes

Deployment fatigue hits harder during the holidays.
Your body is carrying mental load, emotional load, and holiday load all at once.

Create short, structured rest breaks:

  • Five minutes to breathe
  • Ten minutes to sit in silence
  • A short walk outside
  • A warm drink alone before bed

These micro-pauses regulate your nervous system and reduce emotional overwhelm.

Build Connection In New Ways

You can still nurture the sense of “togetherness,” even from a distance:

  • Open gifts on video call
  • Send voice memos daily
  • Share photos of your holiday crafts
  • Cook the same meal and eat it “together” online
  • Keep a shared journal you pass back and forth

And if that isn’t possible due to time zones, duties, or limited access — create connection with others around you.
Invite a neighbor over.
Host a small “solo spouse dinner.”
Offer or accept company.
Loneliness eases in togetherness.

Expect Emotional Waves, Not Emotional Failure

Homesickness, anger, and sudden sadness are not signs you’re doing poorly. They are natural responses to unnatural stress.

When a wave hits, ground yourself using the 5-4-3-2-1 method:

  • 5 things you can see
  • 4 you can feel
  • 3 you can hear
  • 2 you can smell
  • 1 you can taste or imagine

This brings your mind out of the spiral and back into the moment.

You are carrying the weight of two people right now.
You are navigating the emotional complexity of absence during the most sentimental season of the year.

That deserves compassion — especially from yourself.
Let the season be what it is, not what you wish it were.
There is still joy available, even in smaller, quieter forms.
Let those be enough this year.

If you’re struggling this season, reach out to:

  • Your installation’s Military & Family Readiness Center
  • A chaplain
  • A trusted friend
  • A therapist or counselor

And tell one person in your circle,
“Hey — check in on me this week. It would help.”

Because you may be navigating this Christmas differently — but you don’t have to navigate  it alone.

Military Spouse Team:
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