Some examples:
"How do you do it?"
This was an often repeated example of "insensitive" questions. I must admit that I receive this one quite a bit, too. Whether or not it bothers me really depends on the day and also my internal dialogue: Am I really "doing it?" Or am I just getting by?
In any case, to answer the question: we do it because we have no other choice. First of all, the military does not send home a permission slip to be signed by the wife/girlfriend before deployment or before they leave. There is no vote. (Remember, the military is protecting democracy, not practicing it.) This narrows down a woman’s options. She can A.) fall apart, or B.) rise to the occasion. Most of us choose option B, even if "rising to the occasion" only amounts to summonsing the strength to make something besides macaroni and cheese or a bowl of cold cereal for breakfast.
To make this point even more clear, think about what it's like to raise a two-year-old. Every whine and tantrum is cruel and unusual mental torture for the parent, and yet letting the child get lost in a corn maze is both illegal and morally wrong. So you get by as best you can and ignore all those mothers who say, "You think two is bad, wait until he is a teenager!"
It's only later, once time has had a chance to heal those emotional wounds, that the parent looks back with fondness to all the times said child fell asleep with his diapered bottom sticking up in the air, his legs and arms tucked beneath his belly, or how cute he looked when he smiled after dropping a plate of spaghetti on the floor.
"Your husband won't have to leave again, will he?"
If it is your neighbor who asks "will your husband/boyfriend have to leave again," reflect on the amount of times you asked him or her to help you with the lawn mower or to investigate strange noises in the attic.
If it is someone from whom you've never solicited support, try: "Give me some time to enjoy the moment, and then I'll think about the future."
"Military families don't pay for groceries or healthcare, do they?"
No and yes. We do pay for groceries, but if we are lucky enough to live near a commissary, we don't pay taxes on our groceries.
We don't pay for healthcare, or at least not in the traditional sense. Nothing is ever truly "free," least of all any of the military benefits. The pros and cons of military medicine are best left for another column, but it's fair and efficient to say that families "pay" for their healthcare in ways that might seem totally foreign to most: missing the delivery of your first child, for instance.
Clearly there is a disconnect between what military families want to talk about and what civilian families want to know. This gap, I fear, is often filled with bitterness (on both sides). But the truth is that all of us have more in common than we might first imagine. For instance, military families should remember that they aren't the only ones who "do it" all by themselves. Single mothers do this every day, and they have no Homecoming in sight. Likewise, there are other careers (I'm thinking of firemen, police officers, etc.) that are equally as dangerous as the military and involve the same amount of commitment to service.
Having said all of that, I recognize (in a deeply personal way) the unique aspects and demands of military life. And I know that the one thing a person can never go wrong saying to a military wife/girlfriend is, "Thank you."