We are not defined by ethnicity,
religion, geography, or race.
You cannot spot us in a crowd.
But we, the children of warriors,
have been shaped by a culture so powerful
we are forever different, forever proud,
and forever linked to one another.
-Mary Edwards Wertsch, Reflections on an Invisible Nation
T
raveling home by plane from college for the holidays my seatmate, a
man a bit older than me suggested that he could tell what part of the
country I was from just by having a conversation with him. I smiled and
took him up on his challenge. Throughout the conversation he would
pepper me with names of Midwestern states, then southern. By the end of
the hour long flight he gave up exasperated. When I told him I was
raised in the military and "from all over"
he laughed out loud.
Perhaps the reason he kept presuming it was a
Midwestern accent is because that was where I was living at the time.
In order to fit in quickly to new cultures military brats will adapt
their speech to mimic the local inflections and vocabulary.
So how many brats are there?
In
the United States today there are approximately 700,000 children ages
six to eighteen classified as military youth. The truth is that no one
really knows which is surprising for a country obsessed with polls and
statistics. No one has kept a running count of the number of children
raised in the U.S. military. The Department of Defense
(DoD) school system approximates that since 1946 it has educated four
million brats overseas or about 20-30% of the total brat population.
One guesstimate would be a total of at least 12-20 million brats.
'This
wouldn't include the children of National Guard, embassy and Foreign Service personnel, DoD civilian employees, missionary families and mobile corporate families,' notes Jump Cut journalist George T. Marshall, ' – all of who share more in common with military brats than with their fellow citizens.'
Where are all these military brats?
What do Christina Aguilera, LeVar Burton,and Norman H. Schwarzkopf
have in common with me? We're all military brats. It's impossible to
tell just by looking. We're every race, every age, and every belief.
We're the world over. We're spouses, parents, grandchildren,
co-workers, and neighbors. Because brats are not simple to identify,
discovering this "lost American tribe" as author Pat Conroy
puts it, can be difficult, but not impossible. Statistics point out
that roughly 60% of all military brats live in ten states: Texas,
California, Florida, Virginia, Georgia, Colorado, North Carolina,
Maryland, Arizona, and Washington.
So just who are these brats?
An army brat once said to me,
"Yeah, we moved a lot; Dad would agree.
I loved sixth grade in Maine—
Even seventh in Spain—
But it's hard to keep friends you don't see.
—Jane Auerbach
Brats
are children of military personnel. We come in several flavors, army,
air force, navy and marines to name a few. I'm an Air Force brat. Some
may think the term is a pejorative but most of us actually like the
moniker. "Webster defines "brat" as "a child, especially an impudent,
unruly child; scornful or playful term." says Mary Edwards Wertsch,
author of Military Brats: Legacies of Childhood Inside the Fortress."
But that definition doesn't define "military brats." Wertsch adds that
"military brats have such values as idealism; antiracism; loyalty;
patriotism and honesty. We look upon it as an affectionate term with
humor built into it. It connotes a kind of spunkiness, and spunkiness
is what's going to get you through...don't be afraid to use the term
'military brat.' It has various elements of truth in it, about our
experiences, and we should be proud of it."
There's no telling when the term arose in the military. A good guess might be that it was handed down from the British military
of the 18th century since they were the first to allow a soldier's
family to accompany him, and now her, to their post. During the
American Civil War the only brats around were those that belonged to
the officers because enlisted men were not allowed to marry. Military
brat remains an informal description for children with parents who are
serving or have served full time in a branch of the armed forces.
With
the advent of the internet and online communities the phrase is being
taken up globally as well. Primarily it means that our childhood is
different in significant ways. One hallmark of military brats is that
they are regularly deemed to be more disciplined than their civilian
peers. Other more tangible indicators are that we move frequently as
children. The average military family moves every 2-1/2 years,
according to the DoD. Moving was often a thrill: the whole process of
packing everything up, getting in the car with my parents and traveling
across country for days. We attend a lot of different schools, with
little time for setting up strong roots in a community.
We are exposed
to military discipline and authority from infancy and are adept in
dealing with institutional authority and occasionally leads to a few
rising up against it. We deal well with long-distance relationships and
we also have a high cross-cultural understanding. We think that
strangers are just friends waiting to happen!
Third Culture Kid
(TCK) is a more universal expression for this experience which is
defined as a, "person who has spent a significant part of his or her
developmental years outside the parents' culture. The third culture kid
builds relationships to all of the cultures, while not having full
ownership in any. Although elements from each culture are assimilated
into the third culture kid's life experience, the sense of belonging is
in relationship to others of the same background." (Pollock & van
Reken, 2001, p. 19)
When I first understood the term Third
Culture Kid there was such an indescribable sense of identity. I was no
longer on a fence between military and civilian life. Finally there was
a culture of my own to belong to.
What kind of culture do brats come from?
Every
day when I wake up in the morning and go to school, it gives me great
honor to know that I am going to school with not just ordinary kids,
but unique kids. They may look like the average schoolgirl or
schoolboy, but there is something special about them - they are
military brats. Some people may think military brats are treated
better just because they have a parent in the armed services. This
stereotype is incorrect. There are no mints on our pillows.
–Aldrin Muya, a junior at Shoemaker High School outside Fort Hood, Tx.
Military brats often come across as mature for their age. In some ways
we are sophisticated and worldly from a young age. We can be hard for
some people to figure out. Dad is a career military officer (ret.) from
Texas, whose job required his family to move many times to different
military bases. One of two children, I changed schools seventeen times
in twelve years, and finally graduated from college after attending
four years in a row. Woo hoo!
The drawback to moving around so
much means that we may not learn some of the harder lessons about
dealing with people. Once I heard the "M"
word I picked a fight with my best friend because it was easier than
saying good bye." If you have an enemy in one place, you may not have
to resolve things because you get transferred away," writes Mary
Edwards Wertsch.
"You may not know how to be a friend over the long
term. That creates an immaturity that underlies that outer layer of
sophistication and seeming older than your years." How true.
In
the US, most of us are born and raised on federal property. We receive
medical care, subsidized food and housing until the day we finish
college. The bases are small communities unto themselves. We have our
own bowling alleys and churches. We tell time and dates in our own
unique way. We stand for the National Anthem before the movies start
and pull our cars over and stand with our hands over our hearts for Retreat
when the flag is lowered at 1700.
When we are required to turn in our
military ID card that grants us these rights and privileges, it is a
hard moment for many because it means we can no longer go back to the
ball fields, movie theater and other hang outs of our youth. Even if we
could who would be there?
We don't have the all-encompassing
home that our parents grew up in. When Dad went home he slept in the
same bedroom in the same house where he went to his first day of school
and brought home his first girlfriend. When Mom went home the same roof
creaked when the sun went down on her as a child and the same friends
who knew her were ones that had always known her.
Home for my sister and I was wherever we loaded the dishwasher. Shoe polish, Brasso and JP8 are smells that evoke memories of B52's
just beyond the backyard. When the United States needs a soldier,
military brats do their best to best to provide one. Our contribution
to the country is small, but so are the brats most of the time, and
they give all that they can.
The 2000 census reported that "20
percent of Americans moved within the previous 15 months. Other surveys
say half of all Americans move every five years." That makes today's
brats a lot more like the kids in their schools. This is very
heartening to read. There are more children who find home to be a place
made by the pure presence of their immediate family. It's the scent of chicken fried steak
bubbling in an iron skillet. Home is eating at the supper table and
putting away your own laundry. Home is going to church on Sunday night
and our thousand holiday rituals. Home is wherever we are.
Where do all the brats go?
I
think being a military brat is one of the strangest and most
interesting ways to spend an American childhood. The military brats of
America are an invisible, unorganized tribe, a federation of brothers
and sisters bound by common experience, by our uniformed fathers, by
the movement of families being rotated through the American mainland
and to military posts in foreign lands. We are an undiscovered nation
living invisibly in the body politic of this country.
There are
millions of us scattered throughout America, but we have no special
markings or passwords to identify each other when we move into a common
field of vision. We grew up strangers to ourselves. We passed through
our military childhoods unremembered. still does not feel like a
civilian, despite the fact that the vast majority had associated almost
exclusively with civilians for the whole of their adult lives. In some
undefined way they sensed they were still products of the Fortress,
still to a degree outsiders in a civilian culture in which they could
function with ease but with which they could not wholly identify.
—Pat Connery, author of The Great Santini
Frequently,
military brats grow up to accept jobs in foreign cultures, several join
the military and diplomatic corps. In civilian life many work in the
social services or caring professions like medicine and education. All
in all, a good number of us choose to continue to serve our respective
countries in some way.
One thing all researchers report is
that brats as a whole don't view themselves as civilians. "Out-here" in
civilian life, home is still the place where I load the dishwasher. I
simply ended up somewhere and coaxed a home out of it. Toss me into
just about any social setting and I can make my way very well. People
of any class, any background, any line of work, I can strike up a
conversation with them and be quite at ease. "The biggest reward brat's
have is the understanding that our lives have meaning because we serve
a meaningful mission.
The military is more than a lifestyle, it's a
culture with its own norms and values, said Mary Edwards Wertsch. She
names it a 'fortress,'
with a capital "F," which portrays a togetherness within and a
disconnection from civilian life. The military's command for readiness
establishes it and its people apart from civilian America, she relates.
The author calls the "all-powerful military mission" the "unseen member
of the family."
While we were out shopping at the BX Dad was called to picked up an AWOL
who had decided to turn himself in and took him to jail. My civilian
friend was terribly upset because she thought the valor of turning
one's self in mitigated the circumstances of the crime and he should
have been left go to return to work. My sister and I could understand
this, but my friend had a really hard time of it. The military is not a
democracy. It works on the principle of authority because that's the
way things have to be to create order and discipline.
Because of the
authoritarian lifestyle kids grow up straddling two different worlds.
Not only do we manage a militarized way of life we also have to
navigate the very wobbly environment of a civilian school.
"The
biggest thing overall is that the commonalities of (the military brats)
rearing are so powerful," Wertsch said. "It's an identity that
supersedes almost all others. It cuts across lines of gender, race and
class. It shapes us our entire lives through. You don't stop being a
military brat when your parents retire from service life. Retirement is
also part of the story."
One example she names as the outcome of being
raised in the military is that brats carry an attitude that's not just
non-racist, but anti- racist. "Military values are the things that
separate us most from the civilian world," Wertsch says. "Idealism --
military brats tend to be very idealistic people. We've been raised in
an environment where you do things for principle, to support an ideal."
Web Resources for Military Brats
There
are multitudes of web sites military brats use to connect with each
other -- and outsiders can use for insight into the brat lifestyle.
Here are several:
Military Brats Online is available to help us to re-connect with our Military Brats heritage and with friends old and new. Military Brats Online
(external link). Started in 1995 the site is a free resource
established to reconnect military brats with each other and their
heritage. It hosts a school alumni page. (external link) Military Brats Registry,
(external link). I've been a member there for a number of years and
have been contacted by a friend of my sister. The site is designed as a
way for brats to locate other brats from childhood. Brats are great
storytellers and the site hosts articles by brats on aspects of the
brat experience as well as links to other sites. Operation Footlocker,
(external link) founded by Wertsch and two other brats in 1996. This is
a neat project. There were three footlockers crisscrossing the country
up until 2002. Brats can still add memorabilia like significant objects
or written memories -- to the footlockers. Their contents will be
archived for a future brats museum in Wichita, KS. TCK World.
(external link) The host of Operation Footlocker, the site is for
"Third Culture Kids." Has a lot of useful links. Last updated in 2003. Military Teens on the Move
(external link) website hosted by the DoD. Created for teen-agers and
provides information on coping with moves, as well as teen advice. Overseas Brats
(external link) Started in 1986 for U.S. citizens wo have attended
school overseas. It helps connect overseas high school alumni groups. Sons and Daughters in Touch
(external link) Established to offer connection and support to the
children of those who died or remain missing as a result of the war in
Vietnam. Sources:
Jump Cut: http://www.film-festival.org/NEED06_4.php
Accessed August 23, 2006
Military brat: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_brat
Accessed August 23, 2006.
Military Brats Are a Special Breed: http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Aug2001/n08202001_200108203.html
Accessed August 23, 2006
The Ups and Downs of Being a 'Military Brat': http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/speakout/mystory/militarybrat_2-11.html
Accessed August 23, 2006
A son drives home a discovery about belonging: Military brats can.: http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=105111&ran=245432
Accessed August 23, 2006
Youth mouth off in 'Military Brats': http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=1-comnews-1989660.php
Accessed August 23, 2006