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Supporting Youth With Deployed Family Members

It’s Military Family Appreciation Month! We are thrilled to welcome BGCA’s Kat Adams, current Director of Sports & Recreation and (former) Navy brat back to the blog!

The only thing bigger than my poms is my love of Navy football (and beating Army)

For Military Family Appreciation Month, let’s look at one of the most difficult parts about being a military brat – deployment. Deployment is when a member of the military is relocated for a specific task or mission. The stereotypical deployment is overseas during a conflict, but training deployments happen all the time and to places all over the world, including within the United States.

There are 496 BGCA-affiliated Youth Centers on U.S. military installations worldwide, but plenty of military youth live and go to school off-base, going to traditional Clubs. This means any Club can have members experiencing a deployment.

Wondering how to support Club members who are dealing with the disruption of a deployment? I’m so glad you asked! Here are some top tips and activity ideas to support military youth and their families.

Provide emotional check-ins and support

No surprises here- emotional safety is super important!

Maintain routines

Any deployment disrupts household routines. A two-parent household goes to functioning like a single-parent household overnight. Or if a single parent is deployed, or both parents are deployed, the youth or teen will have a different guardian entirely.

Communicate

Even in the age of texting and FaceTime, communicating with a parent during deployment can be difficult. There are plenty of times when internet and phone service is restricted or not available at all, not to mention time zone differences.

Where in the world is your service member?

One of the most interesting parts of deployment is being able to learn about other parts of the world and even our country. Knowing the history, culture, and day-to-day life of the places their service member is deployed to can give youth a feeling of ownership and understanding.

Be ready for reverse-culture shock

As we mentioned, when a parent or caretaker is deployed, day-to-day routines change. When deployment ends, and the emotional high from the homecoming dies down, families have to readjust. Youth may feel confused that routines that were finally comfortable have been disrupted again. Teens who took on added responsibilities or had more independence during deployment may be resentful when they have to give them up, or feel like their growth is not recognized.

Ultimately, what military youth need is the same high-quality youth development experience that every youth needs, but with an awareness for military culture. Plus, being there for youth during this difficult time also helps their deployed service members. When service members know that their families are being taken care of at home, it makes focusing on a stressful job a bit easier. Supporting youth and their families during deployment is a way that every one of us can serve our country.

How do you serve the unique needs of military families? What are your best tips for supporting youth whose family members may be away for long periods of time? Comment below, on the BGCA Youth Development Facebook page, or email ClubXBlog@bgca.org to share.

 

 

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