Military Spouse
  • Employment
    • 2023 MFE
    • Virtual Job Fair
    • Get Hired Workshop
    • Military Spouse Careers
    • Open A Franchise
  • Education
    • Stepful Healthcare Training
    • Addo Wellness Institute
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Milspouse-owned
  • Life
    • Deployment
    • Homecoming
    • Moving
  • Relationships
  • At Home
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Winter 2025
    • Special 2024
    • Spring 2024
    • All Magazines
No Result
View All Result
  • Employment
    • 2023 MFE
    • Virtual Job Fair
    • Get Hired Workshop
    • Military Spouse Careers
    • Open A Franchise
  • Education
    • Stepful Healthcare Training
    • Addo Wellness Institute
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Milspouse-owned
  • Life
    • Deployment
    • Homecoming
    • Moving
  • Relationships
  • At Home
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Winter 2025
    • Special 2024
    • Spring 2024
    • All Magazines
No Result
View All Result
Military Spouse
No Result
View All Result

The Comfort Zone: Get To Steppin’

Natalie Hayek by Natalie Hayek
in Friends
0
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Originally shared at desideratastories

When I hear the phrase “the comfort zone,” it’s followed by sinister music in my head. Shouldn’t I hear something more like waves crashing on the shore? Birds tweeting? A breeze blowing through wind chimes?

Not so much.

Because The Comfort Zone is that sneaky little bugger that gets you all nice and cozy, all wrapped up in a warm blanket on that soft and worn couch that your parents have had for decades, which now lives in their partially finished basement because you wouldn’t let them throw it away.

The Comfort Zone lets you kick your feet up, take a deep breath, relax, and watch reruns of Family Ties or The Cosby Show…only to reveal that there’s not much going for you.

So you gotta get up. And you gotta step outside.

When we PCS’d to Fort Hood, our first Army post as an Air Force family, the transition wasn’t as easy as I thought it would be. It took a while. After we’d been there for a couple months, I’d grown happily used to our daily routines and felt that I’d gained some confidence in my new role as stay-at-home-mom to my infant son. There was just one thing missing… PEOPLE!

Then one day, my husband came home with an invitation to a baby shower for his coworker’s wife. “I was telling him you haven’t met any of the other wives yet, and that you wanted to, so he invited you to his wife’s shower,” Mike told me.

When Mike mentioned this to me, I think I uttered the word, “Uhhhhhhh,” and began devising ways to avoid going. You want me to go to a baby shower where I don’t know a single soul? I thought, incredulous.

Still, no excuse was good enough, or honest, so a couple of weeks later, I zipped up my just-started-to-fit-again red pants and made my way to the party.

I semi-awkwardly introduced myself to the hostess and to the guest of honor, who were both very warm and welcoming. The other guests were pleasant and kind. But sooner or later, as friends sat in groups to recall that funny thing that happened or to discuss plans to head to Austin that weekend, I was sitting on a couch with a half-eaten piece of cake in my lap, carrying on a generic and stodgy conversation with someone who out-aged me by fifty years at least. It was a bit of a lonely position, but I figured I’d wait out the next sixty minutes there and then crawl home.

Enter Angela.

She enthusiastically sat next me, saying, “So how are you doing?” as she happily settled herself. She seemed immediately pleasant and personable, and I was so grateful for her attention. My sense of awkwardness eased as we started chatting and found we had a number of things in common, to include six-month-olds who were just days apart.

Before the party ended, Angela asked for my phone number, and the following week we met for a playdate. And so began a most treasured friendship. It was only fitting – and not a little bit poetic – that she ended up throwing me my own baby shower two and a half years later.

Angela told me not long after we’d met that approaching someone as she did with me wasn’t usual for her. “I’m surprised I did that,” she said. I couldn’t have been more surprised that that’s how she felt. She’d seemed completely relaxed and engaging, and although she operates with some reserve, I wouldn’t describe Angela as shy.

And I never would have guessed that she was stepping outside her comfort zone when she struck up a conversation with me that day.

But the military life is all about stepping outside The Comfort Zone, and each assignment challenges us to do so in a different way. Although every move can bring with it a sense of imbalance, stepping outside The Comfort Zone has the fantastic quality of teaching us what we’re really made of. We have the opportunity to shake the dust off, oil our joints, and stretch our limbs.

It’s not easy, but we all can do it.

At this time of year, many of us are probably getting settled in a new place and some are probably wrestling with putting ourselves out there. But let me encourage you: no matter how “unlike you” it might feel, shake off that dust, and go for it. We can both go for it together. And if you learn something in the process, tell me about it. I promise I’ll be a cheerleader.  🙂

Connect with us on Facebook!
Tags: making friends after pcsmilitary friendshipsmilitary relationshipsmilitary spouse friendshipsmilitary spouse relationshipsnew military spouse
Previous Post

Male Spouse Perspective: Transitioning Out of the Military

Next Post

Thank Goodness We Can’t Visit Family this Year

Next Post

Thank Goodness We Can't Visit Family this Year

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

Fall 2025

MSM_Fall25_Cover

Copyright © 2026 Military Spouse

Career

Family

Finance

Wellness

Lifestyle

Community

Culture

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.