Not sure what to say or do about Memorial Day? Are you supposed to say anything? if so, to whom? This is one Army wife's perspective on Memorial Day Grace.
Army Wife Life,  Holidays

Memorial Day Grace & Perspective from an Army Wife

(Last Updated On: May 18, 2018)

Before 2005, Memorial Day wasn’t really on my radar, even coming from a family of servicemen. It was the beginning of summer, BBQs, and I could wear white shoes again.

But wasn’t really tangible for me until I kissed my young man goodbye and sent him to war.

Luckily when I gave my heart to a soldier, he came home to me.

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Not every service member comes home, and I cannot speak for their families. I can only speak for my heart on this issue.

About a week before Memorial Day each year, posts begin circulating on social media about knowing the difference between Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and Armed Forces Day.

They are different technically. Veterans Day is for those who served in the past. Armed Forces Day is for those currently serving. While Memorial Day is a day to remember those who died in the service of our country.

Spreading knowledge is admirable, but the tone of some posts was hostile.

“Don’t thank my husband on Memorial Day!”

“If you wear the uniform, Memorial Day isn’t about you.”

OUCH! Those hurt MY heart.

I can only imagine the grief that spurred those posts, but is that really the tone we want to have towards ANYONE who is grateful for military service?

Absolutely, Memorial Day is about those who gave all.

Memorial Day honors those who won’t ever come home: dads, daughters, sons, mothers who sacrificed everything to stand for our nation.

Absolutely, Memorial Day honors those who gave all, but don't reject thanks for those that gave some. Click To Tweet

The depth of that sacrifice is too great to quantify. Boys never returned to marry waiting sweethearts. Men will never meet their child on this side of heaven. Mothers will never kiss their babies goodnight again.

It’s too heavy to grasp unless you’ve lost someone.

Not sure what to say or do about Memorial Day? Are you supposed to say anything? if so, to whom? This is one Army wife's perspective on Memorial Day Grace

But while I look at those green fields lined with white crosses and see people who will never hear another heartfelt, “thank you for your service,” I also see my husband who will never be the same.

And I think, why reject someone who gets it wrong and thanks a living soldier on Memorial Day? or an active service member on Veteran’s Day?

Gold Star families who lost someone might answer differently, but I imagine if they could thank their loved one more time, they would.

I want everyone to know we celebrate Memorial Day to recognize and honor those who paid the ultimate price, so the next generations understand how valuable their freedom is.

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But if you also thank a living veteran or active soldier, that’s okay.

Should you thank a service member on Memorial Day? It's not for them, but reminds us to be grateful. Click To Tweet

Because All gave Some, too. And no one serves without risking all.

Take every chance to say thank you while they are alive.

Memorial Day reminds us of those who went willing to make that sacrifice, like my husband. He lived things that haunt his nightmares so I can sleep in peace.

And I never want to discourage someone from appreciating his sacrifices. However, we should be mindful that some veterans bear emotional scars and even genuine thanks reopens those wounds.

Instead of a harsh rebuke, just say thank you if someone gets it wrong. It comes from a place of gratitude.

If you want to recognize a service member, say, “I know this is Memorial Day, but I appreciate your service, too.”

I want to invite people to understand this military life, its costs and sacrifices as well as its joys and adventures; but there is a price, and I don’t think we can honor those who pay it too often.

Not sure what to say or do about Memorial Day? Are you supposed to say anything? if so, to whom? This is one Army wife's perspective on Memorial Day Grace.

My husband doesn’t stand when service members are recognized, because he doesn’t consider himself a hero.

I love his humility, but I remind him that he stands not for himself, but those around him can recognize his service and sacrifices and connect a face to those who serve. Especially in an era where standing for our national anthem has become a controversy, making sacrifice human again is crucial.

Memorial Day may be about those who’ve died, but it’s for the living, for us to remember the cost of our freedom. And there is no wrong time to do that.

Memorial Day Grace & Perspective from an Army Wife

33 Comments

  • TheDaddyBlitz

    To be honest, I’ve never even thought about the differences in the holidays so I am glad you brought that to my attention. I just always remember and am thankful for all military, whether deceased, active or retired, whether they served in war or not, on those special days. I would think all military would share in the esprit de corps mentality, where all are part of one in spirit and mind. When one dies, others hurt. When one fights, others support. Etc. But I have no close connections to military, so maybe that would be offensive. I know now to be more aware!

    • Jennifer

      My point was that we should act more like a community and celebrate any gratitude towards service rather than offer hostile correction to people who don’t know the difference. That kind of negative attitude doesn’t speak well of us as military or Christians.

  • Marisa Boonstra

    I really enjoyed and appreciated this post! Wish I had seen it earlier, because I would have shared over Memorial Day Weekend. I never really knew the difference between the holidays, but a veteran shared them with us at church this past Sunday. It’s important to know why you’re celebrating or observing something, but I agree that if you get a little mixed up and thank someone for their service on the “wrong” day it’s okay. I’m sure they would like to hear an expression of gratitude for their sacrifice on Memorial Day, instead of not at all. This line gave me chills- “knowing he lived things that haunt his nightmares so I can sleep in peace”- wow.

  • Emily

    What a wonderful post! My husband had this happen to him this year. He made a comment about honoring those that have served and was quickly corrected and told that Memorial Day is about those that died serving our country. A mistake he won’t make again but we had a very similar discussion about this exact thing after that. I suppose it’s a good thing since it got us talking about it. Thank you for sharing so eloquently. Beautiful post!

    • Jennifer

      Thank you! I don’t know how your husband felt after he was corrected, but I think I’d rather encourage gratitude than shush it. There are ways to say, “I appreciate all those who’ve served and sacrificed, especially on Memorial Day when we pay homage to those who died in the service of our country.” and support all forms of gratitude with grace and invitation.

  • Sarah Eliza @ devastateboredom

    Thank you for sharing your thoughts! I think you have a wise and compassionate point of view. And too, maybe a lot of living service members and veterans have lost friends and companions in service… so Memorial Day might be awfully personal for those folks too. I have to agree with you that appreciation on any day can hardly be a bad thing!

  • Katelin

    Although I don’t have direct ties to the military within my immediate family, I always tear up a bit when service members are asked to stand to be recognized–and I LOVE when spouses are also asked to stand. There’s a sacrifice in being a solider, but also a sacrifice in being married to one.

  • Pamela

    Beautiful. I do think many never think of those who gave so much so we can live with freedom. And often we forget the spouses who keep the family running back home, and the children who miss mom or dad, too.

    • Jennifer

      The children break my heart the most. My stepsons gave up four years of their childhood. Dad was just gone. They got a few phone calls and letters, but we didn’t really have much access to skype then. I cannot imagine how it hurt them to have a dad who was gone every other year. How it damaged their relationship with their father is something we can’t measure. The kids definitely aren’t considered when the soldiers are repeatedly deployed or sent on two-three year tours without their families. It’s ridiculous.

    • Jennifer

      I think they are just wounded broken-hearted people who mourn a lost service member and their hurts just overpowered their sense. But I still have my soldier, so I try to empathize. Thank you for being mindful of his service. He would say it’s just his job, but I know better.

  • Kay

    Wonderful post. So sad that this day has become a day for BBQ and picnics and the true meaning of it has really been forgotten.

    • Jennifer

      We’ve been a safe place for so long, we are out of touch with the cost to keep it that way. I think less than 1% of our nation serve. We just don’t know the cost if we aren’t associated with it.

    • Jennifer

      Every time I see a vet, I try to say thank you if I get the chance, and I thank my husband every time we hear the national anthem. I don’t think you can appreciate their service too much.

  • Rachel Osborn

    I was just talking about this with my husband this morning! I think it is funny so many people don’t know the difference, but I also think there is no harm in thanking a living serviceman. Thank you for this post- you put it all to words very nicely!

    • Jennifer

      I guess I’d rather people thank too often than not enough. And if I were to get mad about something, it would be people who don’t recognize the sacrifices our military make for our country.

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