Showing posts with label Navy Wife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Navy Wife. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2011

Week #1 Semi-Finalist: Proud Army Wife, Angela Streit



Where to start of about us, I’m Angela and my husband is currently in the U.S. Army. We are stationed at Fort Campbell Kentucky. On April 25th 2011 my husband left our daughters Nevaeh who was 4 at the time and Shaylin 1 and myself for a deployment that changed us as a family. When he came home for his mid tour leave we became blessed with becoming pregnant with our 3rd child a boy. He missed birthdays of both of our girls, moving into a bigger house on post, all of the doctors appointments while I was carrying our son. While he was gone we made sure to take tons of photos, video chatted, and sending him care packages to make a place that was hard on him being at and away from the people that cared the most about him a little bit easier. All in the mist of it all the due date for our son was to be before his homecoming. I was considered high risk in my pregnancy with all the complications so he was trying to make sure he got home to me in time for his birth. Thankfully he has an amazing chain of command that helped him get home less than 2 weeks before he was born. Through out a crazy up and down roller-coaster year of loss of friends that was with him, being separated, somehow built our growing family closer in so many ways. I’m truly blessed to be an Army Wife to an amazing man and have such a support system from all over. Thank you for letting me share our family’s story.
Thanks again,
Angela Streit



Happy Memorial Day~

Thank you for sharing your story, Angela! Many thanks to your husband, and the thousands of soldiers like him!


If you are a proud military wife then send us your story! Entries are welcome all summer long and I'll be posting a semi-finalist and her story every week until Labor Day. So spread the word to any military families you know.


Remember, a portion of my annual book proceeds to ASMBA-STAR every year. You can support our veterans by donating directly to ASMBA-STAR or purchase your copy of Unleashed.


How to enter: Send you story and picture of your spouse in uniform to sarataneyhumphreys@hotmail.com


*Please put 3rd Annual U.S. Military Wives Contest in the subject line!




Sunday, August 15, 2010

Week #8 Semi-Finalist: Momoko Noel

My name is Momoko Noel; I am a Navy wife. My husband, Master-at-Arms First Class Bernard Noel is proudly serving in the US Navy.
We have a 3-year old son, named Julian (see family picture attached).

My husband has been in the Navy for 10 years now, and has worked in Seal Beach, CA, Coronado, CA, San Diego, CA, Pensacola, FL, Fort Leonard Wood, MO, Fort Jackson, SC, Yokosuka, Japan, Kuwait, Qatar, and also did a 1-year combat tour in Iraq.

Our biggest challenge being a military family is the countless days or weeks or months we have to live apart. Moreover, my husband moved to the United States from Europe, and I am originally from Japan (we met when he was stationed there), meaning we have absolutely no family nor any support from anyone in the United States.

However, our biggest pride is to have the privilege to live in America, to protect this beautiful country, and since we both lived overseas, we know this country is the best!

Thank you.

Sincerely,
Momoko Noel

***Remember--- I will selecting semi-finalists to highlight here on the blog through Labor Day Weekend ! There are some great prizes up for grabs. A portion of my annual book proceeds go to ASMBA-STAR--my favorite charity for Vets and their families. So spread the word to all those hard working, dedicated military families out there.***

TO ENTER: Just send me YOUR STORY and a picture to
sarataneyhumphreys@hotmail.com

Friday, July 16, 2010

Semi-Finalist Week 6: A Multi-Generational Military Family



My name is Michael Smith, and this is a short version of my family’s history as a military family. My grandfather, James Smith, was a coal miner in Scotland before Great Britain got involved in “The Great War” now known as World War I. He joined the British army and was sent to fight in Europe, leaving his wife, Georgeanne and 6-year-old son, James Andrew at home in Bannockburn. Unfortunately, during heavy fighting, my grandfather was killed by German cannon fire. My grandmother and my dad moved around Scotland and England for a few years, when things were very hard for a single mother. She finally decided to go to another part of the British Empire, Canada, hoping for a better life. She met an American gentleman in Ontario on business, and after a few years he asked her to marry him and move to Illinois. She accepted, and they lived in a small town in Illinois for a while.

By this time my dad was in his late teens, and felt like seeing more of this great country, so he set out first to St. Louis, the closest big city. He worked at a few odd jobs, then continued west to Kansas City. He fell in love with the City, and a young red-haired girl named Bessie Thomas. He got a steady job as a truck driver. He and Bessie dated for a few years, and he asked her to marry him. They were married in November, 1932. James, or Jimmy as he was known, wanted to give back to this great country, and decided to enlist in the Navy Reserve, even though he was not a permanent US citizen. He was very proud to have known a local political figure and supporter of the Navy Reserve, Harry Truman. Jimmy and Bessie tried for several years to have children, then in 1940 learned that Bessie was expecting. In January of 1941 Sondra was born, just a month after Jimmy’s 31st birthday. When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, 3 weeks before his 32nd birthday, Jimmy again felt like he needed to do more to help this country however he could, but with a baby daughter, he couldn’t leave his two best girls at home. As the War progressed, through some dark times, he felt more and more like he just had to do whatever he could, so he enlisted in the US Army in early 1944, at the age of 34. He had been preparing to become a naturalized citizen, and during Army training at Camp Roberts California, one of his proudest moments was realized when he was officially sworn in as Citizen of the United States of America. Bessie and Sondra made the long train trip to California in July and stayed with Bessie’s older brother, Sidney. They wanted to spend as much time as possible with Jimmy before he was to be sent to Europe following his Army training.

He was sent to Europe and fought in the Battle of The Bulge, where he received several wounds. None were life-threatening, and he continued fighting until receiving a more serious wound and was captured by the Germans on December 16, 1944. By this time he had learned that Bessie was expecting another child, and Jimmy was determined to get back home to his family. After spending several months being moved from one POW camp to another, and Hitler’s forces being beaten on all fronts, the Russian Army liberated the camp where Jimmy was being held prisoner. Not a large man to begin with, Jimmy had lost more than 40 pounds during his captivity, and the doctors wanted him to put some of that weight back on before they would send him home. He also learned that Bessie had given birth to a son in April, 1945, and named him James Gary Smith. Finally, Jimmy was returned to Kansas City and his beloved Bessie, Sondra and now James Gary. Jimmy and Bessie bought a little house on the west side of Kansas City, Missouri which they called home for the rest of their lives. In 1949 another son, Michael Don was born. (That was me.) During the late 1950s and early 1960s, the US was committed to stopping the growth of Communism, especially in Southeast Asia. James Gary, who everybody just called Gary, convinced Jimmy and Bessie to sign for him to enlist in the Navy in 1962, when he was just 17 years old. Gary made several deployments to the Western Pacific and the Tonkin Gulf aboard destroyers. In March of 1966 Gary was released from active duty but remained in the Navy Reserve in Kansas City. In 1969 I decided to join the Navy, also, but was mostly interested in Navy aircraft, specifically fighters or whatever the Blue Angels were flying. After basic training in San Diego and avionics training in Millington, TN, I was assigned to a Navy A-6 training squadron at Oceana, Virginia. During my 2-year tour at Oceana, Gary decided to return to active duty, and was sent to a new, nuclear powered destroyer home ported in Charleston, SC.

Gary and I visited each other whenever possible, and were able to spend Christmas together at our parent’s house in Kansas City in 1970. In 1971 I was transferred to a carrier based A-6 squadron assigned to the carrier USS Forrestal. The squadron was the first to receive the new, A-6E aircraft, and required a lot of training. Also, the Forrestal was undergoing a long period in the shipyard for some repairs and upgrades. After coming out of the shipyard, and several short cruises up and down the Atlantic coast for sea trials and aircrew training, the ship was scheduled to deploy in June, 1972 to Southeast Asia. A fire just below the flight deck the night before scheduled departure forced another carrier to take the place of the Forrestal. After another 3-month repair period, the Forrestal was deployed to the Mediterranean for 10 months. Gary remained on active duty in the Navy until 1988 when he retired to his home in the Jacksonville, Florida area. I married a Virginia girl in 1976 and got 3 step-children in the bargain. We also had a son, Robert, in 1977. I was discharged from active duty in 1978 and moved to Michigan for what I thought was a good job.

It wasn’t, so I went to work for the US Department of Defense in 1984. My supervisor convinced me to join the Navy Reserve in 1985. As a DoD civilian employee I moved first to Atlanta in 1986 (where I got a divorce, and custody of my son) then finally, in 1987, I moved back to Kansas City, still in the Navy Reserve. One of my stepsons, David, is also a Navy veteran, having served on the USS Forrestal, too, before it was decommissioned. In 1988 I married my high school sweetheart, Kathy Hough, who had also been married before and had 2 children. In 1993 I was “hired away” from DoD by the Federal Aviation Administration. I retired from the Navy Reserve in 1995 at Naval Air Reserve Center Olathe, KS, formerly Naval Air Station Olathe, just before it was closed permanently and turned over to the State of Kansas. I was transferred to southern California, still with the FAA, in 1997. Jimmy and Bessie were very proud of their 2 sons and their devotion to their country. Jimmy passed away in 1988, and was given full military honors at his gravesite. Bessie passed away in 1992, just a month short of what would have been her 60th wedding anniversary with Jimmy.

Sondra, who loved her ‘little’ brothers, and shared her parents’ pride in them, passed away in 1993 from cancer. Gary passed away from leukemia the day before his 57th birthday in 2002. I still live in southern California where I am still employed by the Federal Aviation Administration. I take great pride in riding my motorcycle with a nation-wide organization, the Patriot Guard Riders, whose “mission” is to escort fallen military on their ride to their final resting place at Riverside National Cemetery, or, to greet and escort military units or individuals on their return home from deployment.


Thank you,

Michael D. Smith

USNR (Retired)

***Remember---Each week between now and Labor Day I will select 1 semi-finalist to highlight here on the blog. ! There are some great prizes to be had. A portion of my annual book proceeds go to ASMBA-STAR--my favorite charity for Vets and their families. So spread the word to all those hard working, dedicated military families out there.***

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Week #2 Semi-Finalist- Crystal Weatherington


Hello

I am not going to tell you how difficult that life can be as a military family, because I am sure that you know first hand what life is really like.

A little about the Weatherington Family:

I am a stay at home mother and wife to a wonderful 5 year old little boy named Trenton. When my son was just 2 years old we all moved from the warm sunny state of Florida to support my husband in a military career. We had a huge shock the minute we crossed the state line into upstate NY. Always living in Florida this was a huge shock for us, to go from sun and sand to snow and endless months of winter. Anyways, enough about being up here in New York at Fort Drum, like I was saying we all moved up here to support my husbands military career, and we all couldn't be prouder of him. He is an Air-traffic controller in the US Army! We are getting ready to hit our second deployment in 3 years, I have found alot of things important by being a military spouse. Like lending a hand to a wife in need, or being there to listen and lend support. I am still a young wife (26) but I have learned alot in the time we have been here. My FRG was such a welcomed family I was happy to help when asked to be a key caller, not only did I get the opportunity to connect with alot of military families but I had the pleasure of learning what military family is really like. I was recently asked to be the new FRG leader and cannot wait. I love my military life and wouldn't trade it for anything.

As a side note....children are so invaluable that when my husband deployed for the first time my 4 year old son came to me one night while I was crying and said "mommy it's ok, don't be worried I am the man of the house now and will take care of you!" Children in the military live a completely different life from most children, my son has grown up so much...

Well I am sure this is long enough...

Thank you for reading
Crystal Weatherington
**I hope you enjoyed Crystal's story! I know I did. Keep those entries coming!!! Send your story to sarataneyhumphreys@hotmail.com and YOUR story could be next!**

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Week #1 Semi-Finalist: A Mother's Tribute


I would like to enter my daughter, Carrie Reyes. This is her husband's fourth time to go to Iraq. They have four children, two with special needs. She spreads herself pretty thin to take care of them, and go to school but she has managed both very well. This year has been pretty rough because the state of Georgia doesn't have much knowledge or tolerance for children with Autism. She has had to stand up to the school system for not treating her child in the proper manner. Even an expert from Emery could not change the schools way of treating her son. It was good for her son to see that she was brave enough to stand up for him. She and Adam have another son who has sever medical problems. Both Carrie and Adam have treated this son as they do the others. He goes to the accelerated high school where they live and recently was asked to write an essay on how his handicaps have
helped him get to where he is. I think what he said is a great tribute to their parenting. He said, "I don't have any handicaps."

She is always sending her husband "care packages" and makes sure all the guys in the unit has a bag of snacks when they leave. She also bakes cookies and sends them to the whole unit. She is very thoughtful, but it doesn't stop at her husband, whom she loves very much. She checks on several of the wives to make sure things are going ok for them. All in all, I think she makes an excellent Army Wife.

And Adam, her husband is the best 1st Sergeant I've known. He has been in EOD for over 20 years with no mishaps. He is good to those under him and makes sure they are trained right. He also worries about them when they are out on a mission and he has to stay behind. He is sharp when he needs to be and concerned when he needs to be. He has had to watch his wife raise their kids almost on her own while he is serving our country. And what better praise can be given to him than, his mother- in-law loves him as her own son.

Joyce Phillips


***Remember---Every weekend between now and Labor Day I will select 1 semi-finalist to highlight here on the blog. ! There are some great prizes to be had. A portion of my annual book proceeds go to ASMBA-STAR--my favorite charity for Vets and their families. So spread the word to all those hard working, dedicated military families out there.***

Want to enter? Send your story & picture to info@novelromance.net

Saturday, April 10, 2010

2nd Annual U.S. Military Family Contest--Entries Welcome!


Last year, as a special thank you to our service members and their families, I held a very special contest for Military Wives. It turned out to be an incredibly rewarding experience. I had the privilege of meeting several incredible women and their beautiful families. It's so easy to forget that there are real people who are deeply affected by the conflict overseas. Hearing the personal stories of these families helped me remember that our troops are husbands, fathers, brothers and sons who are immensely loved and sorely missed.


I have decided to make this an annual contest. I am very excited to report that ASMBA-STAR, an outstanding organization for Vets and their families, has agreed to continue their partnership with me.


This contest will run from Memorial Day Weekend through Labor Day Weekend. Once again, a portion of my annual book sales will be donated to ASMBA-STAR.


Who is eligible? This year I've opened the contest up to ALL U.S. Military Families. Moms, Dads, Sons, Daughters, Wives, Husbands, Sisters, Brothers. If you have a family member that is serving our country...tell us about them!


How do you enter? Send an email to sarataneyhumphreys@hotmail.com with a picture of you and your family member in uniform. Tell us a bit about what branch he/she serves in, where you've been stationed, challenges and so forth.


Please put "2nd Annual Military Families Contest" in the subject line.


Once a week, beginning Memorial Day weekend, I will pick one entrant to be highlighted on my blog. These weekly entrants are semi-finalists. Labor Day weekend I will select three winners.


Second Prize: A $25 Amazon Gift Card, a signed copy of "The Amoveo Legacy" and a Team Amoveo T-Shirt.


First Prize: A $50 Amazon Gift Card, a signed copy of "The Amoveo Legacy" and a Team Amoveo T-Shirt.


Grand Prize: A book signing event at their local Bookstore and the winner will be the special guest of honor. 5 Free Signed copies of "The Amoveo Legacy. (1 for them and 4 of their friends) A $100 Amazon Gift card and a Team Amoveo T-Shirt.


I hope you'll help me spread the word about this contest. I look forward to meeting more incredible families! You can support our veterans and their families by purchasing a copy of "The Amoveo Legacy" or donate directly to ASMBA-STAR .


Saturday, September 5, 2009

Click on the Pictures to Read the Stories of the 13 Semi-Finalists: U.S. Military Wives Contest











































































I am absolutely amazed at how quickly the summer has flown by! When I started this contest back in May, Labor Day Weekend seemed a million miles away but here it is! I have really enjoyed this contest and meeting these outstanding women. Although these ladies are not necessarily enlisted in the military they play a vital function for our soldiers. These women, and thousands like them, are the invisible soldiers. They fight the battles at home, often alone, while their husbands fight for our freedom in far flung lands. A few things in particular stood out as I read their stories. First of all, they are all 100% dedicated to their families and show unwavering support for their husbands and what they do for us as a country. I have also been incredibly moved by how supportive the military has been of these families during times of personal crisis. It's nice to see that not only do they support our military but our military is helping them as well.



Winners will be announced on Monday!










Sunday, July 12, 2009

Week #6 Semi Finalist--U.S. Military Spouse Contest


My husband is in the Navy. The picture I attached was from the actual night he deployed to Iraq this past March 2009. This is our second deployment since being married and our first one with a child (now 7 months, a girl). We've been married for a little over six years now. Honestly, the most difficult thing about the military life is having to send my husband off to war. I struggled with our first deployment because my husband was fresh out of a Navy school/training & had never deployed doing his current job. To make matters worse, about a month before he left in 2007, a friend from that same Navy school/training was killed in Iraq. I was still mourning the loss of our friend as I watched my husband climb aboard the large aircraft carrying him to the same destination & job! I suffered with anxiety and had a few actual panic attacks while he was away. It was mentally exhausting! I finally got myself pulled together about a month before my husband came home from that initial deployment with the help of God, my church, other military wives, and a counselor to deal with grief and anxiety.


In 2007 I was so nervous about having children when my husband returned because I knew I just couldn't be the "mess" I was during that deployment with small children to care for in future deployments. I am happy to share that I have found and made my peace with deployments. It is possible to make peace with deployments. Honestly, all the glory goes to God. He saw & still sees me through every single day, whether my husband is home or deployed.
Our current station is in California. Another challenge in the "military life" that I've recalled, is that my husband doesn't like me to share specifics about his command/job in public forums. It's difficult to "cheerlead" for your husband when he's the reluctant hero.


Sincerely,

Amy

Monday, June 15, 2009

Week #2 Semi Finalist-- Wife of a Sailor


My husband is a Missile Tech in the Navy. He and I actually met through an online dating service while he was a recruiter in my area. We dated a year and a half before getting married... just this past March 21st. I haven't been a Navy wife for long, but we have still had our challenges already.


My DH left for his new duty station in Bangor, WA less than two months after we were married. I stayed behind in Michigan and will be here until I either sell the house or find a job in Washington. Single-handedly, I'm responsible for getting the house ready to be put up on the market. That includes painting most of the rooms, tiling, grouting and sealing the kitchen floor, refinishing the kitchen cabinets (including sanding, staining and polyurethaning), painting the trim on the house and much more.


I'm doing all this while I also took a second job in order for us to be able to afford the two households we are currently supporting.I should also mention that I was selected to receive a direct commission into the Navy Reserve as a Public Affairs Officer. I am expecting to commission this week... I'll be a full-time Navy wife and a part-time Navy Officer.


When I either sell the house or get a job in Washington, I'll be trying my hand at transporting two cats and three dogs (the smallest of whom is a 78 pound Greyhound) cross-country. That should be an exciting trip!If you'd like to know more, please feel free to ask or you can visit my blog at wifeofasailor.com.

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