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 Salvaging U.S. Soldiers' Marriages
Old December 30th, 2004, 04:49 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Salvaging U.S. Soldiers' Marriages

HOPKINSVILLE, Ky. - With studies showing divorce rates as high as 21 percent among couples where one spouse has been sent off to war, the Army is spending $2 million on a variety of marriage programs, including vouchers for romantic getaways to places like the Opryland Hotel in Nashville, Tenn.

When Sgt. Jose Bermudez returned from Iraq early this year, he came home to a new baby and a troubled marriage. "We were on the brink of divorce," Mandy Bermudez acknowledged as the couple ate lunch recently with their three children, all under age 3.

The Bermudezes were among 300 couples with the Fort Campbell-based 101st Airborne Division who have attended "marriage enrichment" seminars put on by the Army in hopes of saving war-ravaged relationships.

"I've been in the Army 20 years, and I've never seen the Army pay for programs like this," said Lt. Col. Chester Egert, chaplain for the 101st.

One program being implemented Army-wide teaches couples forgiveness and the skills to communicate. It includes a 40-hour course with lessons on the dangers of alcohol and tobacco and how to recognize post-traumatic stress. Soldiers who complete it are rewarded with promotion points and a weekend retreat with their spouse.

"If you learn those skills, you can make an impact on the number of divorces, and the number, we think, of reports of physical violence," said Col. Glen Bloomstrom, director of ministry initiatives for the Chief of Chaplains.

To make the program more desirable, commanders are encouraged to give their soldiers time off to attend. Baby-sitting is often provided.

"What we're trying to do is change the culture, that it's OK to work on your marriage and take some time, and invest in your lifelong relationship _ especially now when we're asking so much of your military spouses," Bloomstrom said.

Jose Bermudez said it seems as if everyone he knows at Fort Campbell is either getting a divorce or contemplating one. Many couples want to get things decided because the division has been alerted it could return to Iraq as early as mid-2005.

At Fort Campbell and elsewhere, many couples got married right before one spouse left for Iraq. Others, like the Bermudezes, have been married longer but still have spent little time together.

The Bermudezes met in 2000 and married six months later. He was later sent off to Kosovo and Iraq. "We didn't know each other that well. That's part of the problem," Mandy Bermudez said.

Bermudez is 26, his wife 25. Their second child was born while he was in Iraq, and she became pregnant with the third while he was home on a two-week leave.

Mandy Bermudez said part of the problem with their marriage was that he had trouble adjusting to the routine she had established for herself while he was in Iraq. Finding affordable day care has also been a major source of stress, she said.

She said the two joined a church, and "it turned our marriage around." He and his wife decided to stay together.

"I can't leave these three kids with her," Jose Bermudez said. "It's worth it to try and work it out."

The Army's recent foray into marriage counseling was started in the late 1990s by a chaplain in Hawaii working with a unit with a high number of divorces. In 2001, laws were changed to allow the Army to pay for lodging and meals for the retreats.

The effort is similar to another series of Army programs to help returning soldiers reconnect emotionally with spouses and children. Those programs began after four wives at Fort Bragg, N.C., were killed, allegedly by their soldier husbands, in 2002.

Egert said the Army's effort doesn't just make for stronger families _ it makes for better soldiers.

"Soldiers will come apart in Afghanistan and Iraq. They'll absolutely collapse if they think their wife is going to leave them or their husband is going to leave them," Egert said. "I've seen soldiers hospitalized because they absolutely had a nervous breakdown because they were worried about their families."

Added Bloomstrom: "You are really giving something that the couples know they need, at a time they may be receptive to hear it."

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Old December 30th, 2004, 09:19 PM   #2 (permalink)
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This really bugs the heck outta me because you would think that a person from the beginning of the relationship would know that this is what his/her spouse does!!! Serve in the military??

I don't think it's like in the movies when you marry someone with this type of status and consider it happily ever after. I don't think it (divorce) is something they look forward to but, these women and men go though H@il over there.

Their mentally changes dramatically of course because they experience things that we can only imagine. SURE CNN candy coats their ordeal over there but we don't know their story.

Everyone gets vaunderable I'm sure and they lose that trust factor. But then again, this is a different generation altogether. It's also the real world.

It's up to them salvage their marriages.
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It's Like That

Due to the current financial restraints the light at the end of the tunnel will be turned off until further notice.

Last edited by JamieC : December 30th, 2004 at 09:22 PM.
 
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Old December 30th, 2004, 09:34 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Personally I'm glad to see programs like this. Its messed up how they send people to catch bullets and kill others for so called freedom and then leave them out to dry when they get back home.
 
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Old December 31st, 2004, 03:53 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Well, I too am glad they are implementing programs of this nature. However, the problem is this, many of the marriages had problems before the soldier went off to war. Once gone, the woman gains independence and liberty like she always wanted. After World War II the divorce rate was exceedingly high, I think it was said to be 44% (mind you I wasn't of that age, I just read about it). Anyway, that was because women had to get out and work and they loved their independence and freedom. When the men came back and tried to bind them up again, they couldn't live like that any longer. They had tasted liberty, independence and freedom and they wanted to retain it.

In like manner, I think this is the case with soldier's wives of today. They take control on the homefront, meet with friends, and establish a peaceful environment without him. When he comes home, they don't want to be bound up again and so divorce happens. At any rate, the incentive marriage programs could and hopefully, will help some through the transition. I mean, by the time they come home, they both are different people so maybe it will work and maybe it won't.
 
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 having worked with military families
Old December 31st, 2004, 04:14 PM   #5 (permalink)
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having worked with military families

Quote:
Originally Posted by originata
Personally I'm glad to see programs like this. Its messed up how they send people to catch bullets and kill others for so called freedom and then leave them out to dry when they get back home.
the problem is far worse than what folks could possibly imagine. Husbands get deployed and the wife cheats, worse, get's pregnant, and then has the nerve to divorce the guy, while he's serving. The women can be just as devioius.

Makes me think about the Bible reading we had a couple of weeks ago about this very subject. Check this out, Deut 24:5 "In case a man takes a new wife, he should not go out into the army, nor should anything else be imposed onto him. He should continue exemt at his house for one year, and he must make his wife whom he has taken rejoice." Basically stating that they need to be together....Isn't it loving how that provision was married. Of course that could never happen here, in these times, in this system, but still.

I'm glad that they're doing this, but people definately need to understand that marriage is hard enough when both people are here. Sending a newlywed spouse to war makes it even harder. It wouldn't be me.
 
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