Helping military spouses deal with stress

Tips to finding your happy place

By Cassandra A. Fortin on January 18, 2010

Stress is not a disease.  It is a physical response to things that upset, worry, or threaten you.  You cannot catch stress, but almost everyone suffers from it to some degree.

For the general population, the top 10 life events that contribute to stress are a spouse's death, divorce, marriage separation, jail term, death of a close relative, injury or illness, marriage, being fired from a job, marriage reconciliation, and retirement.

However, on top of those general stressors, the military spouse has to deal with increased deployments, increased danger to his or her spouse as well as being a single parent during the spouse's absence.

Although there are thousands of resources on stress and how to cope with it, there are some general things that individuals can do to cope with stress that most of the sources agree upon.

"Make sure you have couple time and personal time with your spouse as often as possible before they leave," said Orthner, who has compiled several studies for the Army dealing with stress and deployments. "Spouses who handle deployments the best are the ones who know they have support and that their relationship is strong."