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Articles

Turning Points and Trajectories in Military Deployment

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Pages 129-148 | Published online: 10 Mar 2014
 

Abstract

Previous military family research has assumed a stable set of deployment phases. In line with critiques of such models within family communication, we identified the varied turning points and trajectories military spouses experience across deployment. We interviewed 50 Army and Army National Guard wives whose husbands served in missions to Iraq and Afghanistan. Participants graphed turning points and corresponding marital satisfaction levels across a recent deployment. Participants reported 519 turning points that fell into four supraordinate categories: Deployment/Military-Related Events, Life Events, Communication Events, and Other. Trajectories within each deployment phase reflected five patterns: Turbulent, Increasing, Decreasing, Stabilized, and Dipped. Most participants' trajectories reflected turbulence during the predeployment and deployment phases, and declining or dipped satisfaction during the postdeployment period. Results reflect varied experiences and provide useful information for those experiencing wartime separations or those supporting military families through deployment.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors sincerely thank the women who graciously participated in the study, Sarah Nebel Pederson and Sarah Ewing Schiffman for their research assistance, and Loreen Olson and the reviewers for their careful reviews of the manuscript.

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