Jennifer Lambert

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10 Gifts for a Military Family

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November 14, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

What can you give military families?

10 Gifts for a Military Family

We were lucky that when my husband deployed the first time, it was after Christmas.

Not so lucky that he left on our anniversary, but oh, well.

And he returned before the next Christmas.

The second deployment, he left in early fall and return in spring.

We miss celebrating holidays and other fun events.

Major.jpg

You can give the gift of time or service for a military family, deployed situation or not.

We often don’t need more things and we often won’t ask for help, even when we need it most. We’re used to fending for ourselves and caring for our own. And pretending everything’s ok.

This list is great year-round, for military families with a deployed member or not.

10 Gifts for the Military Family:

  1. Yard care. If you live in a climate with winter, you can shovel or snow-blow their driveway and sidewalks. It will be much appreciated. Trust me. Mow the lawn. Help with yardwork. Lots of youth groups or scout troops need community service. This is a great way to show support.
  2. Caffeine. Drop by with coffee, tea, or hot chocolate. Or gift cards to a local coffeeshop that has a drivethru. Especially on cold, dark, rainy, or snowy days.
  3. Visit. Stop by unannounced – maybe with donuts or fresh bread and clean the kitchen. Bring wine! Some friends from church did that for me on my birthday when my husband was deployed. I was elated. It was such a beautiful thing.
  4. Take the kids. Treat my kids to ice cream. Or to a park. Or to a museum. Or a movie. Out. Somewhere. Anywhere. Give this mom a break for an hour or two. As a homeschool mom with four kids and a deployed husband, I need a break, people.
  5. Encourage self-care. Take the kids for an evening (or weekend) so the couple can have a date night. If the military member is deployed, offer to watch the kids for an hour, an afternoon, or an evening to help out. Often, military couples have a hard time finding child care so they just don’t ever go out. Not cool. We need that adult couple time. A couple from church once took our four kids all weekend long so we could go away (only about an hour away, but still!). It’s only the second time we’ve done that throughout our whole marriage!
  6. Vehicle care. Get our vehicle serviced or detailed. Seriously. This is something a friend of mine received when her husband was deployed and I thought it was the greatest thing ever! I never think of it until the dashboard lights come on. I don’t know how to check my tire pressure, y’all. And then there’s trouble and usually lots of expense involved!
  7. Hospitality. Invite the family over for a meal, dessert, drinks, a music event, a holiday lights display. Something. Include them. We’re often far from home and family and feel isolated and excluded. And we’d love to learn new traditions and celebrate with you. We may decline for some reason, but we will feel loved.
  8. Carpooling. If you know the kids have music lessons, dance, gymnastics, art, sports, church activities, whatever…offer to help out, especially if there are babies or toddlers or preschoolers in the household. I am so stressed juggling my four kids and their activities when my husband is deployed. Sometimes, I would skip something to let the baby finish a nap. It was just easier.
  9. Anticipate needs. Bring grocery necessities by or call if you’re at the store to see if they need anything. It’s so frustrating to run out of milk or eggs or realize you’re missing an ingredient for a recipe and have to drop everything to run to the store. But to drag four kids out in a blizzard with no help and not being able to call, “Honey, can you pick up ____ on the way home?” Depressing. And I went to three stores yesterday to stock up on everything and still forgot the effing milk.
  10. Appointments. If they have medical or vet appointments, ask if you can help. Most vets and doctors prefer children not to be in attendance so there’s no distraction, so offer to watch the kids during appointments. Many moms don’t get check-ups since it’s so stressful. Help her maintain her health!

Ask. Offer. Be sincere.

We often say we’re just fine when we’re really hanging onto sanity by a fine thread.

You can offer to walk the dogs. Or just come over for a chat. Bring a bottle of wine or beer over after the kids’ bedtime. Email or call for some encouragement. Send a note or flowers that you’re thinking about her.

If something breaks in the house or car and she’s used to relying on her husband to fix it, help her find someone to do the job – for free or really cheap! We don’t have a network since we move around so frequently.

Be someone they can call if they need help. Be a listener. Be a doer.

Our neighbors helped to clear everything out of our basement when it flooded on a holiday morning and my husband was deployed the first time. (Thank God for my amazing neighbors. Bless those people!)

Be available. Be a friend.

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Filed Under: Military Tagged With: Christmas, deployment, giftguide, military, milkid, milspouse

Homeschooling During Deployment

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March 13, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

When I hear or see the word “crisis,” I think of something really bad.

What is a crisis?

  • a time of intense difficulty or danger.
  • a time when a difficult or important decision must be made.
cutting the wedding cake

We are a military family and my husband has deployed and we PCS (move to a new location) every 2-4 years and that often calls for daily living in crisis-mode.

If I really think about it?

We’ve been in crisis-mode for the duration of our marriage.

All of life’s stressful events – marriage, the sudden deaths of both Aaron’s parents, births of babies, moving across the country a few times, deployment…those are crises and somewhat unusual for most people to experience in their lives – and seldom during the same year.

I don’t know any other way other than to keep on keepin’ on.

I dive into work and homeschool and cleaning and doing daily life.

We don’t have to follow a traditional August-June school year in our homeschool and sometimes, we PCS well in the fall, after most schools have returned to their regular routines. We generally homeschool year-round to give us more freedom in our schedules, especially during PCS years.

During the purging, organizing, packing, loading, moving, unloading, unpacking, organizing, and set-up that accompanies all the moving, we only do the barest schooling necessities. I only keep school items that can fit in each child’s backpack since we don’t have much room in planes or the van when we travel from our old home to a new one.

Check out how we did overseas PCS while homeschooling.

I think there are many opportunities for life school along the way on these adventures.

at the border

When we left Georgia for Texas, Elizabeth was only 4 (isn’t she cute!?). We had such great fun exploring the rest stop museums and learning along the way, seeing Gulf Coast beaches and then desert…and we had no intention of homeschooling then!

When we left Texas for Hawaii, Liz was almost 7; Tori was 2, and Katie was a newborn. We brought some light learning toys with us on the long plane ride and left the heavy school books for the packers. I regret that, since it took a long time for our possessions to arrive in Hawaii by boat. We didn’t receive them until well after all the homeschool co-ops began their “school year.” We were still so new to the whole homeschooling world. It was such fun being in such an exotic new place. We did lots of new things and learned a lot about ourselves as a family during that tour.

When we left Hawaii for Utah, Liz was almost 10; Tori was 4; Kate was 3, and Alex was a newborn. The girls all had backpacks filled to the brim with workbooks, school things, snacks, and fun manipulatives to spend quiet activity time on the super long plane ride. It took a few days to recover from the jet lag and receive our van from the boat. Aaron flew to the west coast to drive it home. And this is the first location where we had any real seasons. That was a learning experience!

Then he deployed only a few months later.

It was hard saying goodbye.

Homeschooling During Deployment

My first winter in my entire life, alone with four kids in a strange state, thousands of miles from any family!

We used this time as a learning experience.

Curriculum

We did essentials, but I tried to make everything fun. 

Geography and history about the region where my husband lived in the desert for 7 months.

Politics that led up to the conflicts.

Learning about our new state too.

Winter unit study and winter books.

Schedule

The kids and I all learned to rely on each other.

My girls helped so much with their baby brother. Big sister Liz really stepped up and started being so responsible with everything.

Thankfully, we didn’t have too many problems.

We experienced some illness and I handled it, taking Alex to the ER for a breathing treatment when he looked rather bluish around his lips one evening. We all pulled together and got drive-thru Chick-Fil-A for dinner – super late at night! We ate in the car on the drive home.

Thankfully, there were no injuries. There was no car trouble!

We took it one day at a time. The home dynamics were so different without Aaron here. I ran this place like clockwork.

We were scheduled to a fault, but I knew that I wouldn’t be able to “hand them off” if I got too tired or frustrated, so I made sure I was super proactive about meal planning, cleaning, school, everything.

I’m very self-reliant, confident, and capable. I was a single mom before I met Aaron. I’m capable and intelligent. I can be a little too controlling at times.

And I realize that I can be a little lazy when my husband is home.

Help

I had no help from Aaron’s co-workers or any of the military spouses or our church.

I guess no one really understood that I was alone with 4 kids 24/7 for 7+ months – homeschooling, cooking, cleaning, functioning – with no breaks and no help.

The only offers of help were people who wanted to babysit my kids so I could go out.

I had nowhere to go and no one to go with, so that was pointless for me. I’m an introvert. And the commander’s wife came and shoveled snow in my driveway. That was weird and uncomfortable for me and I didn’t need her to do that.

I really just wanted someone to take the kids for an hour maybe once a month to get them ice cream or go to a playground to give me a little break at home.

A couple ladies from church surprised me super early on my birthday morning with donuts and did my dishes. I didn’t even know them that well.

It’s hard for me to ask for help when and if I need it.

Problems

My parents visited in mid-May and that was a disaster. I had to entertain them – and we have quite a strained relationship. The kids don’t know them and were constantly sent to the basement to quietly play. The kids’ schedule got way off and they became hungry, tired, and irritable. My parents got mad and left early, telling me I’m a horrible mother.

When our basement FLOODED on Memorial Day morning, I learned what true friends we had in our neighbors. I Skyped with my husband, feeling so helpless and frustrated that I could only keep the kids out of the way…while the men of my neighborhood put their fishing trips on hold and rushed over to clear out our basement (it’s our school space!) and place everything in the garage and they removed the carpet and padding to dry. They sterilized the basement immediately.

It was over a month before everything was back to normal. We sifted through the garage for items we needed to complete our lessons. Everything was a mess and we did the best we could, completing our schooling in the kitchen and living room and even on the deck since it was getting warmer into late spring. And it encouraged me to simplify our schooling and store everything well in plastic tubs for the future!

We had to be flexible.

I know many people have horror stories of their spouse’s deployments – illness, injury, and other major crises that I cannot imagine.

We were really blessed to only get a flooded basement and no major problems.

Homecoming was great. Everything was on time.

Homeschooling During a Military Deployment

How do you homeschool during deployment?

Resources:

  • This Is Where You Belong: Finding Home Wherever You Are by Melody Warnick 
  • Almost There: Searching for Home in a Life on the Move by Bekah DiFelice
  • God Strong: The Military Wife’s Spiritual Survival Guide by Sara Horn
  • Tour of Duty: Preparing Our Hearts for Deployment: A Bible Study for Military Wives by Sara Horn
  • Chicken Soup for the Military Wife’s Soul: 101 Stories to Touch the Heart and Rekindle the Spirit by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, and Charles Preston
  • Faith Deployed: Daily Encouragement for Military Wives by Jocelyn Green
  • Faith Deployed…Again: More Daily Encouragement for Military Wives by Jocelyn Green
  • Faith, Hope, Love, & Deployment: 40 Devotions for Military Couples by Heather Gray

See how others homeschool in a crisis.

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Filed Under: Homeschool, Military Tagged With: deployment, homeschool, military, milkid, milspouse

Deployment Day for Kids

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April 29, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

Well, the girls are getting bored with all this “preschool” work we’ve done the last year and a half or so.

They think they’re “big girls” now and ready to move on to bigger and better things. Real Work. I am streeeeetching out everything I can for a couple more months before I officially start Kindergarten work.

So…I downloaded Funnix back when it was free, in January, I think. I ordered the workbooks because my youngest daughter, Katherine, really enjoyed it when I showed it to her. We’ve been doing other things until last week when I really got Victoria and Katherine into a schedule of sorts with watching the show and completing the pages. They love it and I feel lots better about their progress with reading now. I have them take turns on my computer in the mornings after our family time (usually when Bubba is taking his morning nap). And, duh, I just realized that it is essentially the same program as Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. So, it’s really great then.

The base had a deployment day for the kids to learn about what our troops are doing Over There. They had a checklist just like out-processing and saw military dogs and an EOD team with a robot. Katie was rather upset that Daddy was not there. I guess there was some confusion when I told her what we were going to do. He doesn’t get to come home for two and a half more months.

Tori and Katie were thrilled to get to sit up in a 5 ton truck.

Military Truck Exhibit

Tori even got to start her up!

Girl in a Truck

For Tapestry of Grace, we reviewed Creation through Noah’s Ark in Bible and HIStory. We made creation collage books. I’ve started the girls on notebooking and it’s just awesome. It’s all pictorial right now, but we will progress to writing captions next year, I’m sure. And they love maps, thanks to Dora. ;) We color a map each week based on what we are studying. Labeling will come in time.

So, now we need to step it up with math and science…they listen to me or Elizabeth read from Exploring Creation Human Anatomy, but they’re not real interested sometimes. I’ve given them science crafts and work to do from Scholastic eBooks I’ve bought when they have those super $1 sales.

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