Military Spouse Appreciation is More Than a Hashtag
May rolls around, and suddenly social media lights up with #MilitarySpouseAppreciationMonth posts and quick “thank you” posts.
It’s nice to see, but for many of us juggling solo parenting during deployments, hunting for jobs that fit around PCS moves and carrying the invisible load of keeping the household running, those shoutouts can feel surface-level.
After two decades as a Marine spouse, I’ve learned that real appreciation doesn’t come from social media posts. It starts inside, with recognizing our own strengths and taking small steps to celebrate them year-round.

Military spouses didn’t always sign up for this life the way our service members did. When we said, “I do,” few of us pictured the loneliness of moving every two or three years, never quite putting down roots and always being the new face in the spouse group. We didn’t anticipate career dreams getting paused and restarted so many times.
The reality for many spouses is that each new base means another entry-level job, another gap on the résumé and another hit to retirement savings — because there’s rarely time or stability to build a 401(k) of our own.
By the time our service members retire, many of us realize we’ve sacrificed decades of our own financial security.


Military spouses who become parents face many additional unexpected challenges, such as giving birth alone in a hospital while our spouse is on the other side of the world or raising toddlers far from grandparents and cousins.
We become solo parents far more often than we ever imagined: handling every bedtime, school conference and midnight fever solo while our spouse trained, deployed or stood duty.
We didn’t plan on restarting medical care for ourselves and our kids after every move, hunting for new doctors who accept TRICARE, explaining our child’s history all over again and waiting months for appointments.


The challenges are real and stubborn. The isolation of military life can be crushing — leading to depression, anxiety and even secondary post-traumatic stress disorder from years of constant uncertainty. These are deep, painful sacrifices that civilian friends and family rarely see. They are unseen burdens that are rarely acknowledged or discussed. No gift card or cute hashtag can fix them.
But here’s the empowering part: True appreciation begins within us, not from others. If you are feeling unseen or underappreciated, think for a moment about whether you ever acknowledge yourself. How have you celebrated your own accomplishments? When you look in the mirror, do you smile with confidence at the person you’ve become and the situations you have conquered?
Start by building a personal “wins” list. Jot down what you’ve accomplished lately, no matter how small. Maybe you kept the kids fed and happy through a long temporary duty, navigated a tough school enrollment after a move or just got out of bed on a hard day.
During one deployment stretch, my “brag wall” included things such as “Took five kids to the festival, no one got lost!” and “Caught the mouse in the kitchen.” Reading it back gave me a quiet boost.
Do this regularly. It’s a reminder that you’re not just surviving, you’re thriving in ways most people can’t imagine.

Next, lean on the resources designed for us. There are hundreds of employers committed to hiring and retaining military spouses, and many offer flexible, remote or portable roles. Military OneSource’s Spouse Education and Career Opportunities program is a gold mine.
Through MySECO, you can connect with career coaches who have advanced degrees in counseling or education. They can help at any stage: clarifying goals, résumé tweaks for military life gaps, finding portable certifications or prepping for virtual hiring fairs. It’s free, confidential and available 24/7.

Advocating for better support in your community is another powerful step. When we speak up together, change happens — more flexible policies, better awareness and real support.
Join or start conversations in local spouse groups, online pages or base family readiness programs. Share what’s working (or not) about child care, employment barriers or license portability. Push for events beyond the May spotlight, such as ongoing workshops or employer meetups.
Appreciation Month is a great reminder, but don’t limit it to May. Instead, make it a habit. Celebrate small victories, use the tools available and lift each other up. True strength comes from within, from knowing you’ve got this, even on the toughest days.
So this month (and every month), look in the mirror and say thank you to the strong, capable person staring back. You’ve earned it.
Blog Brigade unites military spouses by creating a community built on shared experiences and mutual support. Navigating the complexities of military life can be challenging, but you don’t have to do it alone. Military OneSource offers valuable resources focused on well-being, readiness and connection. Explore a range of mental health resources tailored to your needs.


