MilSpouseFest

MilSpouseFest

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Catch us at Milspousefest.com for more information. MilSpouseFest provides content that informs, educates, and entertains.

MilSpouseFest and our sponsor, USAA, are presenting virtual and in-person events with speakers, resources, prizes, and fun throughout the year all in a mobile-friendly app! MilSpouseFest empowers military spouses by providing them with the information, resources and community to support them in their everyday lives. MilSpouseFest hosts in-person events that celebrate military life, in military towns around the area. (Check milspousefest.com for the latest dates and places.)

06/18/2026

This story hit home for a lot of military spouses.

On June 30, we’re continuing the conversation, and your voice belongs in it.

(Register link in the comments or pinned post.)

Join us for the first Mighty MilSpouse Mental Health Workshop, a free virtual event created to give military spouses space for honest conversation, practical support, and real community.

In “Mental Health and the Military Spouse,” Angelina “Strike” Stephens put words to what so many spouses are carrying: the invisible weight, the pressure to stay “resilient,” and the need for support that truly meets them where they are.

June 30 • 10 AM PT / 12 PM CT / 1 PM ET

06/15/2026

Tampa spouses, tonight is the night to grab your +1 and get out of the house.

Jariko Denman will be at tonight’s FREE Lucky Strike screening in Tampa, and this is one of those chances to meet someone who helped bring real military experience into the film.

Denman is a retired Army Ranger who served more than 15 years in the 75th Ranger Regiment, deployed 15 times to Iraq and Afghanistan, and worked on Lucky Strike as a military advisor.

The film is inspired by true events from World War II and follows one soldier trapped behind enemy lines, fighting to make it home.

Tampa screening is tonight at 7 PM EDT.

Seating is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis. One ticket per registrant. Movie is rated R.

Reservation link is in the comments.

06/12/2026

Military families are invited to a special FREE advance screening of Lucky Strike. (Link in the comments)

Inspired by true events from World War II, the film tells a story of courage, survival, service, and the fight to make it home.

We are partnering with Roadside Attractions to bring these screenings to select military communities June 15 and 16.

Seating is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis. One ticket per registrant. Movie is rated R.

Upcoming FREE screenings:

June 15
Tampa, FL, 7 PM EDT
Fort Campbell / Clarksville, TN, 7 PM CDT
San Diego, CA, 7 PM PDT

June 16
Norfolk, VA, 7 PM EDT
Fort Bragg / Fayetteville, NC, 7 PM EDT

Scott Eastwood Roadside Attractions Saban Films

06/11/2026

Scott Eastwood has a message for military spouses, service members, veterans, and families.

We are partnering with Roadside Attractions for special FREE advance screenings of Lucky Strike near select military communities.

(Reserve your seat by tapping the link sticker in stories or the link in comments.)

Seating is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Inspired by true events from the Battle of the Bulge, Lucky Strike follows one soldier trapped behind enemy lines during World War II and forced to rely on courage, ingenuity, and spy craft to make it home.

Military families know there is something powerful about stories of service, sacrifice, separation, survival, and the fight to return home, because those stories are never just about the person in uniform, they are about everyone waiting, hoping, supporting, and carrying the weight in their own way too.

Upcoming FREE screenings:

June 15
Tampa, FL, 7 PM EDT
Fort Campbell / Clarksville, TN, 7 PM CDT
San Diego, CA, 7 PM PDT

June 16
Norfolk, VA, 7 PM EDT
Fort Bragg / Fayetteville, NC, 7 PM EDT

One ticket per registrant. Movie is rated R.

Saban Films

06/11/2026

Have you ever felt that gripping feeling deep in your chest? It catches your breath and slows time down as you imagine everything that could possibly go wrong in a moment.

That feeling isn’t unique to military families, but I would argue that military families stand alongside first responders with a familiarity that takes a toll. You get so used to that feeling, you start to rehearse the worst possible moments over and over again in your mind so that gripping feeling doesn’t stop you in your tracks.

You mentally prepare for the worst while you’re doing the dishes, while you’re driving your kids to school, while you’re smiling to show everyone around you the resilient badass they expect you to be. In the meantime, your mind is rehearsing every possible tragic outcome, every possible minor emergency, every possible problem you might have to solve when the military inevitably throws you a curveball you haven’t seen before.

The fear of loss and traumatic outcome is enough to strain anyone’s mental health, but when I spoke to hundreds of military spouses during Mental Health Awareness Month 2026, not one listed those fears as their biggest stressor.

In fact, they shared so many impactful stories and experiences that they believed were critical to sharing the mental health experience of military spouses, I struggled with where to start.

Across their experiences, a few themes kept coming up.

The Invisibility Cloak

If you walk into a room of military spouses, you’ll undoubtedly be surrounded by highly accomplished professionals, multi-degree educators, veterans, and individuals with unique and interesting experiences. As the years pass, a life of military service wears away those aspects of their identity that are hard to maintain alongside their servicemember. It’s often just too hard to continue a civilian career alongside a career of service.

Certifications don’t transfer, application cycles are too long to fit into assignment timelines, and for parents, unpredictable deployments and solo parenting in locations without built-in support systems lead people to make the difficult choice to set their own hopes and dreams aside in service of their family.

One spouse described their experience as being “dehumanized,” as the label of military spouse overcame their own identity. The word “invisible” came up again and again, not to imply that they weren’t surrounded by an incredibly supportive community, but to try to put words to the loss of personal identity they experience as a spouse of a servicemember.

The Unbearable Weight of Expectation

What you will do, who you will be, how you will act, dress, live your life. Where you will live, how you will spend your time, how many hours will you volunteer to work for free. The expectation that you will sacrifice your own dreams for the sake of your spouse’s military service. The weight of expectation looks different for everyone.

As spouses step away from their own identities, they often find themselves facing expectations that carry a weight and responsibility they never expected. Military spouses are often expected to lead, manage, and support other spouses in a capacity that matches the responsibility of a full-time job, with no pay or compensation.

But They’re SOOOOOOO Resilient! (Military Spouse Eyeroll Goes Here)

A phrase that masquerades as a badge of honor showed its true colors in the testimonies of hundreds of military spouses.

“Resilience is not an infinite resource.”

“Resilience is drained with the strain of the lifestyle.”

“Continually calling spouses and children ‘resilient’ perpetuates the stigma that they must be strong and unbreakable, so if they falter in their strength they are weak and failing.”

“The stigma that you have to be OK because you’re ‘strong enough’ to get through it, and the adversity only makes you stronger, keeps you from leaning on others fully or admitting how hard it is.”

“Being called ‘resilient‘ makes you feel guilty for struggling.”

Military spouses are resilient. They wouldn’t survive a day if they weren’t. But it’s time to acknowledge the cost: constantly draining that resilience is often the slow degradation of mental health that impacts the strongest and most resilient of them all.

Managing the Chaos

You haven’t felt overwhelm until you’ve borne the burden of a military spouse’s to-do list during a PCS move.* Some ranks or career fields go through the chaos of a military move every one to two years. Your entire life is uprooted and planted somewhere that was chosen for you. You start over again and again, with deployments sprinkled throughout the “stable” periods, trying to build a sense of normalcy for yourself and any family you bring along for the ride.

That lack of stability is amplified by the fact that a military spouse manages life without a consistent partner, and often without a stable support system they can lean on when times get tough. Even when surrounded by the most supportive communities, military spouses often struggle to find social support they trust on their toughest days.

“When your support system is other spouses experiencing the same burdens, it is even harder to reach out for support, as you know they are experiencing the same load.”

Just Go Get Help!

Easier said than done.

Many spouses brought up the fear of stigma, not for themselves, but the risk to their service member’s career if their spouse sought mental health support. Others talked about the burden of supporting the service member’s mental health, many facing complex traumas inherent to their job. That burden led them to neglect their own mental health as they tried to fill the gap for a service member facing stigmas of their own.

Those that sought help faced another layer of challenges. It can take weeks, sometimes months, to find a provider covered by insurance, and then months more to build the rapport and courage to share your experience. Before you know it, you’re moving again, and struggling to find the strength to start over somewhere new.

Continuity of care is nearly nonexistent due to lack of providers and licensure barriers. As one spouse shared, “rigid prescription laws refuse to recognize the transient reality of military life.” In many cases, spouses face lapses in critical prescription medications and therapies that hit them at the most stressful inflection points in their lives.

The Mighty Military Spouse

If not infinitely resilient, what is a military spouse?

A military spouse is a force to be reckoned with, who faces insurmountable obstacles and keeps moving forward. A military spouse carries the weight of the world on their shoulders and keeps finding ways to carry more, like that neighbor who needs to grab that last grocery bag with their pinkie and open the door with their foot. A military spouse is a heroic person who may need to be reminded that even heroes need to rest, and that even the most powerful heroes team up with each other eventually.

Every one of these heroes is human, and deserves to have the kind of support system that lifts them up, notices when they need to take a step back, and recognizes them for the incredible individual they are.

If you are a military spouse, I see you. I took your struggle for granted until the day I stepped into your shoes. I’ll never forget the first call I made to a dear friend after my first event without the armor of my own uniform:

“Remember all those times you told me you felt invisible and I didn’t get it? I see you now.”

To my fellow military spouses, don’t be afraid to take down the armor and care for yourself as intentionally as you care for everyone else around you. When others reach out and offer a hand, don’t be afraid to grab on tight. It won’t make you weak, it will rebuild your strength so you can step back into the arena stronger and more badass than ever.

Full story by Angelina “Strike” Stephens found in the comments

06/09/2026

Promotion ceremonies have their own ecosystem.

There’s the script, the seating chart, the obligatory congratulations, and then the part that really tells you everything: the spouse introductions.

That’s when you start to figure out who is who.

There’s the quiet senior spouse who has survived more moves than most people can imagine, somehow stays calm through all of it, and probably knows exactly what to say to housing without making it a whole thing.

There’s the spouse holding everything together. The one who “prefers to stay out of the spotlight,” which usually means she is the reason everyone knew where to be, what time to show up, who needed help, and which group chat was one vague message away from complete collapse.

Then there’s the low-key spouse who seems quiet until you realize she is running a business, managing the move, and holding a full-blown logistics operation together with flats, tape, and a water bottle.

It’s a gentle roast, but it’s also true.

Promotion ceremonies are a reminder that behind the uniform is an entire household adapting, rebuilding, and holding it together.

And if you feel out of place walking into that room, maybe the better way to see it is this:

You are not walking into a room full of strangers.

You are walking into a room full of potential teammates.

06/03/2026

Check the comments…👀

06/01/2026

Ask a civilian what the hardest part of military life is, and they’ll probably say deployments. Long separations, missed birthdays, the whole Hollywood version of sacrifice.

Ask a military spouse?

You’ll get a different answer. And it’s not always the one people expect.

When I asked a group of military spouses to share their biggest struggle, the responses weren’t about one specific moment. They were about something deeper. Something quieter. Something that doesn’t always make it into the welcome brief or the Family Readiness Group (FRG) meeting.

It was about identity. Everyone typically talks about the struggles of being a military spouse—but not the transformation.

There’s a moment in military spouse life when you realize you’re not the same person you were before the first set of orders arrived.

It usually doesn’t happen during the Pinterest-perfect homecoming photos or the emotional airport goodbye scenes Hollywood loves so much. No, it sneaks up on you somewhere between your third DMV change of address, your fifth “So what do you do?” conversation, and realizing you can pack an entire house like a Navy SEAL loading a deployment pallet.

People love talking about the struggles of military spouses. The loneliness. The career interruptions. The deployments. The constant goodbyes. And sure, those things are real. Military life can stretch a person thinner than government-issued toilet paper.

But what nobody really talks about is the transformation.

Military spouses aren’t just surviving this lifestyle.

They’re reshaped by it.

05/30/2026

When MilSpouseFest and MIC link up, you expect strategy, content, networking, and maybe a few meaningful conversations.

Reality: two teammates handling a shark and immediately questioning every life choice that led us to this point.

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