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Danielle Bean

Danielle Bean
Danielle Bean, a mother of eight, is Editorial Director of Faith & Family. She is author of My Cup of Tea, Mom to Mom, Day to Day, and most recently Small Steps for Catholic Moms. Though she once struggled to separate her life and her work, the two …
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Rachel Balducci

Rachel Balducci
Rachel Balducci is married to Paul and they are the parents of five lively boys and one precious baby girl. She is the author of How Do You Tuck In A Superhero?, and is a newspaper columnist for the Diocese of Savannah, Georgia. For the past four years, she has …
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Lisa Hendey

Lisa Hendey
Lisa Hendey is the founder and editor of CatholicMom.com and the author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms and The Handbook for Catholic Moms. Lisa is also enjoys speaking around the country, is employed as webmaster for her parish web sites and spends time on various …
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Arwen Mosher

Arwen Mosher
Arwen Mosher lives in southeastern Michigan with her husband Bryan and their 4-year-old daughter, 2-year-old son, and twin boys born May 2011. She has a bachelor's degree in theology. She dreads laundry, craves sleep, loves to read novels and do logic puzzles, and can't live without tea. Her personal blog site …
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Rebecca Teti

Rebecca Teti
Rebecca Teti is married to Dennis and has four children (3 boys, 1 girl) who -- like yours no doubt -- are pious and kind, gorgeous, and can spin flax into gold. A Washington, DC, native, she converted to Catholicism while an undergrad at the U. Dallas, where she double-majored in …
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Robyn Lee

Robyn Lee
Robyn Lee is a 30-something, single lady, living in Connecticut in a small bungalow-style kit house built by her great uncle in the 1950s. She also conveniently lives next door to her sister, brother-in-law and six kids ... and two doors down are her parents. She received her undergraduate degree from …
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DariaSockey

DariaSockey
Daria Sockey is a freelance writer and veteran of the large family/homeschooling scene. She recently returned home from a three-year experiment in full time outside employment. (Hallelujah!) Daria authored several of the original Faith&Life Catechetical Series student texts (Ignatius Press), and is currently a Senior Writer for Faith&Family magazine. A latecomer …
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Kate Lloyd

Kate Lloyd
Kate Lloyd is a rising senior, and a political science major at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in New Hampshire. While not in school, she lives in Whitehall PA, with her mom, dad, five sisters and little brother. She needs someone to write a piece about how it's possible to …
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Lynn Wehner

Lynn Wehner
As a wife and mother, writer and speaker, Lynn Wehner challenges others to see the blessings that flow when we struggle to say "Yes" to God’s call. Control freak extraordinaire, she is adept at informing God of her brilliant plans and then wondering why the heck they never turn out that …
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When Daddy's Away

12 tips from a mom who's been there

When I was a little girl my father was a naval officer and I always said I’d never marry a military man because they traveled too much.

My husband isn’t a naval officer; he’s a television producer who specializes in live remote sporting events. It’s the “remote” that gets us. Until they start playing professional sports in my backyard, he’s going to travel to support his family.

We’ve been at this a long time now and I’ve learned a thing or two along the way. Mike is usually gone three days a week—sometimes more, sometimes less. Here are some ideas geared toward families who are regularly separated from Daddy a few days a week, due to travel for work:

Go along. Whenever you can, travel with your husband. When our first two children were little, the boys traveled well and we were able to stay together that way. As our family grew, that became impractical but I do have fond memories of our traveling days. Now, our children all enjoy individual “Daddy Trips” as soon as they are old enough to behave in a production truck. None of those trips would have been possible without the sacrifice that went into acquiring frequent flyer miles.

Don’t complain. When you are left at home and you feel the full weight of caring for your family on your shoulders, I know how tempting it can be to throw a pity party and invite everyone you know. Don’t do that—it will only make you miserable. Instead, develop a sense of empathy for your traveling spouse. He leaves his wife and children, misses many moments you are privileged to witness, runs through airports, eats bad food, sleeps in lumpy beds in noisy hotels. He aches for his family, but presses on in order to provide for them.

Seek support. On the other hand, do reach out for help and support. Talk to other women and network to gain support. Start a babysitting co-op with other women whose husbands travel. When my children were all little, one of the greatest oases of comfort was a friend with similarly aged children. We shared dinners frequently and then bathed all the kids in one house, considerably lightening the evening load for each other.

Get organized. The worst trips for me are the ones that sneak up on me. If you can, make plans and acquire the provisions necessary before your husband leaves.

Make a date. Set a time every day for a phone date.  Even with a time difference, make it happen.

Share the small stuff. Couples who remember to tell each other little details of the day remain much more closely knit, despite the distance.  It’s the little things that nurture the intimacy of really knowing what your life is like.  If you stop sharing the little things, eventually you stop sharing all the little thoughts. Then, it’s harder to share the bigger thoughts and suddenly, you’re back together in the same state and you each have separate histories.

Remember rituals. Our two-year-old calls my husband’s cell phone from her bed every night to sing him the song from Love You Forever.  And then, no matter where he is or what client is sitting with him at dinner, he sings it back to her (I’ve never quite figured this out). On the very rare occasion that his phone doesn’t work, she sings to his voice mail.  We have precious recordings of her lisping “As long as I’m living, my Daddy you’ll be…”

Don’t ditch dinner. Make dinner every night and sit down to eat it with the children, just as if Daddy were home.  Our meals are noticeably simpler when Mike’s not here, but they are still family dinners.  I fight the urge to get something done while they are occupied because it really seems important to them that I sit. Consider making and freezing meals ahead of time to ease both the preparation and the evening cleanup.

Consolidate outings. My children are older now and I can usually leave them home with my eldest when I have to run errands, but not so long ago, it was the errands that killed me.  It’s exhausting to do all the running and you long for someone to call and ask if you need him to pick up a gallon of milk. See if you can trade off with a neighbor to go solo.  Otherwise, get really organized and don’t let yourself run out of milk.

Focus on the positive. Even when your spouse is away, remember that you are married. Single parents don’t have the ongoing emotional support of a husband. They don’t have the cheerful and willing self-sacrifice of a man who is working hard to provide the best life he can for them. They don’t have the grace of the sacrament. They don’t have the joy of a well-timed phone call. They don’t have the hope of happy reunions at the end of a trip. But you do.

Accept that you’re it. You’re all alone caring for the physical and emotional safety of a small crowd.  There will be things you can’t do because your time is very different from your neighbor’s.  And there will be things only your husband understands because no one else can empathize so well.  Write it all down and talk about it during the next phone call.  And then, be sure you sleep.

Pray. I like to pray the rosary as I go to sleep and fall asleep praying.  It doesn’t matter if you don’t finish your decades and it’s way better than crying when your head hits the pillow.

—Elizabeth Foss is author of Real Learning: Education in the Heart of the Home. Visit her online at ElizabethFoss.com.

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Comments

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I’m so glad you’re writing about this this morning.  My husband doesn’t travel every week, but occasionally.  I would say about once a month.  It just so happens he left this morning for the week.  Your comment about not complaining really hits home.  I think that’s my biggest downfall.  Or used to be anyway.  It’s so easy to fall into that mentality of, “Why does my life have to be like this? Why can’t my husband have a normal job?” And you are so right, it makes life ten times worse when you do this to yourself.  It always helps me to answer my own question.  If my husband had another job, I probably wouldn’t be able to stay home with my children.  The reality is is that his job provides for all of us.  And I am able to be the caregiver of our 3 children.  How lucky am I. 

Do I miss him when he’s away? Absolutely.  In many different ways.  I look at my kids and know that I’m very blessed to be here with them.  But I do feel selfish sometimes.  Does anyone else?? I feel selfish because I’m able to be with the kids all the time and I don’t miss anything, but what about my husband? Is it fair for him to be away so much and miss so much? I feel guilty sometimes for not taking on a job that will contribute to our income and maybe he could have another job, with less hours (and less pay of course).  But that would mean that he could see our kids more.  But then I think about all the stress that might add to our lives.  But I still feel guilty for being able to see our kids all the time, and he doesn’t.  I know he misses them.  Anyone else have this feeling? What helps you get over that? Or through it?

 

Great article!  My husband travels every week to his job, because we’ve uprooted our children so many times already that we’ve decided they couldn’t handle another.  The funny thing is, he was in the army and deployed to Haiti when I discovered I was carrying our son.  We left the army because we didn’t want to have that gypsy lifestyle.

In civilian life he has “gone ahead” to new homes 3 times while I tied up loose ends (i.e., sold houses, finished school years), and now we have the weekly traveling thing.  But at least, unlike our brave military moms and dads, my children get him on the weekends and his personal safety isn’t an issue!

 

This is timely, since my husband just left today to work out in the field (he is a geologist) in the southern part of the state for the week.  We will spend part of the week studying the periodic table, doing a Latin review, & having some friends over for homemade sarsaparilla floats!  We eagerly await his return!

 

Thank you for this article!  The not complaining is what I need to do! I have forgotten how hard it is on him, while I focus on “I have these two 14 year olds driving me crazy”.

My husband lives 3 hours away during the week and is home on weekends.  What has really helped with our 14 year old twins is Skype~ real time video phone calls.  DH can see the girls, and they can see him.. . he can see HW assignments & most importantly, their expressions!  This has made this situation much easier.

I grew up with my dad working in the midwest while the rest of the family lived in the south.  I watched how my mother ran a business and raised 6 children on her own.

 

Just what I needed today, thank you Elizabeth and others. KarenC, I know what you mean about the guilt. My husband has been working M-F 5 hours away since October, and trying so hard to find something nearby, none of us wanted to move. But move we will, at the end of August. We decided since the relocation was permanent, we would relocate the family. It is what is best for us. But I know about the guilt. I could probably find a job here, but it would break my heart to live my little guys, so I don’t. I know how hard it is for my DH to be away from the kids, and I sometimes wish I could just fix it all, but it is in God’s hands, and we think maybe he has some great things planned for us in our new home.

I would add one thing to Elizabeth’s list - lower expectations and do less. I found with activities for the older children, I just couldn’t do what their friends with two parents around every night were doing. It was better for us to limit our activities and my volunteer time at school in the Spring, rather than always being in a rush and having to be in 2 or 3 places at once. Everyone was calmer and happier with less to do.

My prayers go out to all of you experiencing this.

 

Seeing all the comments makes it easier dealing with this knowing that you’re not the only one who thinks and feels this way about a situation with your family.  I think you’re right Danielle M.  It is in God’s hands.  My husband likes his job, but I know he misses us when he’s away.  He’s good at his job, and I have become good at mine here at home.  This was actually a blessing because it made me realize how valuable I am as a wife and mom here in the home.  So I guess good really can come from bad.  God bless you all.

 

Oh, this is so timely for me, I’m so glad I found it!  My husband leaves for basic training for the Army next Tuesday (gulp) and will be in communicado for 9 weeks (double gulp), and then away from this for another 14 weeks for Officer School.  Phone calls from him are possible while in basic, but not guaranteed, so i have to be prepared for the meanest Sargent possible, and 9 weeks of phone silence, just in case.  Lots of letter writing is on my plate for my 18 months old and I.  some of these don’t apply, obviously, like going along, but the other things are all super helpful.

Thanks so much Elizabeth for a great article!

 

Lina, as a former army wife, I can tell you that letters from home are VERY important!  I took the view that if he were home every day, and I would of course be speakingto him every day, why not just write it down and stick it in the mail?  Those were the days before cell phones and email.  I can tell you that I actually forgot what his voice sounded like during one deployment.  But we saved all of our letters to each other and they are upstairs in a trunk in our bedroom.  smile

 

I have at the moment a husband who works away for 2-3 weeks at at time and comes home for the weekend. It is realy hard for us all to adjust to that time when he is home and when he leave.
It is such a build up till Daddy comes home and then a preparation for him to go. The fact he is only ever here for 2 or at the most 3 nights including the late night he comes home on means there is not a lot of time to do things together.
We are just praying this ends with the sale of our house soon as we have found it extremely difficult.
The hard thing for him is he dose not get to see the little ones grow. You know he misses those little things they do and grow out of so quickly. It is very hard on him too as we have each ohter at least.
I don’t know how we would handle it if it were permanent
But maybe that is what makes it hard for us as we know that we are living a life in limbo instead of this being our life routine.

 

I saw your comment Gae in my email inbox and just knew it was you! I truly hope you guys find some peace with your situation very soon.  God makes us all suffer for some reason or another, and we may never know what that is.  He must trust you a lot, with your hands full of all of His little blessings, with running your household.  And somewhere out there He is able to use your suffering to relieve another. 

God bless you and you are in my prayers.

 

Dear Karen,
You are so dear to offer that encouragement. I think we sorely need that.
Thank you.

When I started posting there were not many replies, and now I feel a little guilty about grumbling, seeing what others are going through. I will pray for each one of you and for peace in your hearts. Something I am not very good at myself.
God Bless

 

Oh don’t feel guilty Gae!! You are just venting.  At least you aren’t venting on your children.  We all deserve a little complaining here and there.  But then again, God showed you to look at all of the positive things that you have!! And that there are others out there who are worse off.  (I really wish He wouldn’t do that!! Sometimes I just want to complain!! smile)

 

Thanks for the reminders.  You words are always hepful to me.  My husband is a Naval Officer and has been deployed since early April and is expected home in October. Before he left he recorded books on video for our girls (2.5 and 17 months) to watch every night before bed.  God bless you and your family.

Christy

 

Thank you for your wonderful pointers.  I think the “Don’t Complain” should be number one though!  My husband used to travel a lot when my children were little.  Yes, it was difficult at times, but whose life isn’t difficult?  I remember complaining so much about a particular trip that he was on when I was cut-off by a friend who admonished me for my self-centeredness.  When you are so busy focusing on your own suffering, it is easy to miss all the blessing that you have (a gainfully employed spouse, healthy children, able to stay home, etc), and not notice other people who may have it worse, or just as hard as you have it.

 

Great article!  My H is in the military as well is gone for a week or more every couple of weeks.  We try to use this time as a couple to look at ourselves and appreciate each other more.  We do things we can’t normally do when he’s here (for him it’s going for long runs, for me it’s watching chick flicks wink  We’re blessed with 3 under 3, so I also try to make the time go quickly for my littles with projects every couple of days.  It doesn’t have to be anything big, or pricey.  We’ll have picnics outside, build forts under the table, have a popcorn and movie night, go to the library, make our own popsicles, bake cookies, do a craft form crafty crow, or any number of things.  We can’t change having time apart, so we just try to make the most of it smile

 

Oh, and a construction paper chain is a good way for littles to see the passage of time/countdown til Daddy returns. smile

 

Great article. If there is one thing to be encouraged more than any other of all the wonderful points held within it, I would specify it to be “Do not complain”. It sounds trivial but in the big picture, it isn’t, believe me.

My husband has always traveled often for work, away for up to weeks at a time, and recently he just isn’t well medically on top of that. When the older ones were younger, it was sure tough being home all the time without reprieve. As the children have aged, married and grown, I find a little mommy time is always in order, but not possible for all mommies out there, as in my own daughter in law whose husband (our son) is away with short notice round the clock.

This past year has been extreme for us, one of two the past three years with him away, a lot. We calculated 277 days of one year apart over a one year period to March this year. Not fun! He was able to commute during the week and return for weekends. At least we were able to carve out “family time” and attended mass on Sunday together as a family, one small condolence. It was very difficult but when everyone worked together, it became a blessing rather than a burden for me. Fridays were special when he flew into town and left again early Monday am. And then we moved, four hours away for a work transfer and in our new community, we knew no one. And then he was hospitalized for seven weeks in the dead of winter. Still, what would complaining do? grin We need to trust in our vocations as wife and mothers. Truly God has already ordained all of our days, even with husbands working out of town. Okay, this is my little soapbox for the day here…laugh.

Blessings to all of the mommies out there who have hubbies that travel and area away. grin It does become easier as the children grow. It does. But, no complaints. LOL

 

A way to save yourself from “emergency errands” - keep powdered milk in the house at all times!  I don’t love the taste, but it will “do” until I can pack the children out shopping the next day.  You never discover the milk is gone until the children are in bed!

 

My biggest failing is in keeping him informed of all the small things.  My dh deploys in November to Afghanistan and I am going to make a concerted effort to keep him informed of the little things in our lives.  And, we are going to have Skype which will be such a wonderful thing.  Much better than last deployment.

Great article, Elizabeth.

 

The thing is that sometimes even if your husband doesn’t travel he is physically exhausted at the end of the day.  My husband works as a union carpenter.  He generally gets up between 3:30-5 in the morning.  He works 8-10 sometimes 12 hours a day.  He comes home and manages to be present for us through dinner and bedtime.  Then falls asleep on the couch.  Sometimes I want him to stay awake for me.  But i know he is giving all he can and then some.  The same advice follows.. don’t complain.. They are out there every day trying their best to provide for their families.  Appreciate that.  Appreciate them.  Their are many evenings when I know he is exhausted and he still manages to stay awake with me for a little bit.

 

Thank you so much Elizabeth - my husband was just gone a week on a mission trip. This article has helped more than you know!

 

Thanks for the article! DH and I are both military and DH is currently halfway through a 12m deployment right now…we’re counting the days until his ‘vacation’ in mid-Sept for the birth of #2! Our DD is turning 1 next week, so it’s been pretty difficult, but at least being with our daughter gives me so much joy in the midst of all the stress. DH doesn’t get that gratification,  and is missing out on a big part of her life, so there are a few things we’ve tried to do consistently:

- send as many 30sec video clips and snapshots as I can (i’m able to do this on my phone and send it to his email with the quick touch of a button).
- record as many different daily activities as possible…pics/videos from playtime inside, outside, at the playground, brushing teeth, eating, in the grocery cart trying to grab items off the shelf, saying bedtime prayers, etc. These are all the things DH is missing but loves to see and ‘share’
-position pictures around the house and stop whenever we pass by one to look at Daddy. DD can successfully identify a picture of “Daadaa!!!!” on the wall or fridge many times when i’m not even paying attention.

Between the two of us:
-we keep something in a pocket (for us it’s one of those plastic toy soldiers) so that each time I reach in the pocket and feel it, I say a quick prayer for him/he says one for me
-We try to end every phone conversation (between once or twice a week) with prayer together.
-we both have a magnificat subscription so we can do the daily readings/morning and night prayers “together.”
-we started a countdown once we hit the 90-day mark till his vacation! today we’re at 51, hooray! Now our biggest prayer is that #2 doesn’t decide to join us too early, and that he makes it home in time for the birth!

I think one of the greatest things about enduring seasons of separation is realizing how thankful I am for my hubby and what a wonderful team player he is when he’s home…I just pray I won’t take that for granted again when he returns!

 

My husband doesn’t travel too often, about 4-5 times a year but when he does he is gone for at least a week at a time including a trip to Europe every fall. His travel ‘season’ is coming.
This year I am going to try and go with him to Germany. Now to get childcare…...

 

I really feel for families with traveling dads, but every situation has its own set of challenges. My husband works at home. The trade-off is we live very, very frugally for him to be able to do this. Sometimes I wish we could have the travel experiences, family vacations, field trips, homeschooling books and helpful gadgets that other families with dads with regular, normal jobs, but then we wouldn’t have dad around as much. This is the lifestyle we’ve chosen, but it is a life on the edge financially. It’s been stressful at times, but we’ve always paid the bills and, I think, have a very rich lives in other ways.

 

God bless all of you that spend so much time separate from your spouses! My husband travels about 1-1/2 hrs. away 4-7 weeks a year. And I dislike it. But we make do. You’ve helped me put it into perspective!

 

The post and comments are helpful in reminding me to focus on our blessings when my husband travels, because I admit I get jealous.  It’s hard not to!  In our case, my husband’s work travel is not frequent enough nor long enough in duration for him to truly miss anything with the children—other than responsibilities! (Ha!)  In fact, his trips come around and last just enough days that, for me, resembles the perfect vacation getaway (once every 3 or 4 months for 3 or 4 days at a time).  And despite him trying to downplay it (since he is aware of my feelings), I *know* during these “work” trips he is getting to do all the relaxing things I would love to enjoy every so often…staying in a very nice hotel, having long quiet dinners with adult conversation—one or two cocktails, appetizer, meal, dessert (when our family goes out to eat on our expense we’re looking for places to share an entree, free kids meals, coupons, etc.,—and believe me they are not dining at those kind of restaurants)  Sure, they may start the business day early or be in meetings past 5:00, but once they are finished, imagine being totally free of responsibilities (to go shopping by yourself, play golf or workout, read!!!, get a massage, ...anything you want and even have someone making your bed for you!)  Meanwhile I am home trying to care for all the children, run the household, etc., 24/7 by myself.  Now I consider myself characterized as an unselfish person, but when hubby is away on these trips it’s very easy for me to become resentful.  (I imagine Satan loves opportunities like this to bring us down.)

One idea I had…Of course it’s not an option… but wouldn’t it be great if companies would allow you to keep the cash difference from your expense account if you were willing to stay at more moderate accommodations, eat at less fancy restaurants, take a red-eye flight, etc., and let you use that money to pay for a break for the spouse back at home once or twice during the timeframe of the trip to hire a “second set of hands”.  Business travel reform anyone???


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