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Counseling for military families

You've been holding it together. Let's hold it together.

For military spouses managing bedtime alone on month eight, for teenagers who stopped talking after the third deployment, for partners who recognize the flinch before the firework lands — this is your place.

TRICARE-friendly
Evening & weekend hours
Military family counselors
Mother and young child embracing warmly in soft golden afternoon light
Woman smiling softly looking out a window with warm light on her face
Group of friends laughing together outdoors on a sunny day
Teenager and parent sharing a quiet moment on porch steps at dusk
Family reunion hug with warm golden hour backlight
Small child reaching up toward a parent in uniform, fingers intertwined
Young woman sitting at kitchen table with coffee, morning light streaming in
Two people sitting together on a couch in conversation, warm lamp light
Couple laughing on a porch swing, late afternoon sun, candid moment
Parent holding hands with two children walking down a neighborhood street
Counselor and client seated knee to knee in a sunlit therapy room
Man sitting quietly at a kitchen table with coffee, thoughtful expression

Free, No Strings

Start here. No email, no obligation — just something useful for today.

Journal PromptsFree · Instant Download

14 Prompts for Kids Processing Deployment

Age-appropriate conversation starters and drawing exercises that help children 5–16 name what they're feeling when a parent is away. No therapy required — just a quiet Tuesday night and some crayons.

"What does brave feel like in your body?"

"Draw what home sounds like when Mom/Dad is gone."

"If you could send one thing to the base, what would it be?"

Transition GuideFree · 12-min read

PCS Season Survival Guide for Spouses

Written by a counselor who's moved seven times. Covers the 90-day emotional arc of a PCS move, how to find community fast in a new duty station, and what to do when your partner is already at the new post and you're still packing.

The grief no one names when you leave a duty station

Finding your people: 6 strategies that actually work

Talking to kids about the move at each age

The Community Gallery

Whatever you're carrying — someone here has carried it too, and wrote something down to help.

Spouse Story
""I called Muster during month seven of a nine-month deployment. Three kids, a broken furnace, and I hadn't slept a full night in weeks. The counselor didn't try to fix me — she just helped me breathe again."
Portrait of Danielle R., Army Spouse, Fort Campbell

Danielle R.

Army Spouse, Fort Campbell

Reintegration

When They Come Home Different: A Guide for Partners

The homecoming photo is beautiful. The first week is hard. The first month is harder. This guide walks through what's normal, what's worth watching, and when to ask for help — written for the partner who's been holding everything together.

By the Numbers
1 in 3

military spouses report clinically significant depression during deployment — most never seek help.

You're not alone. You're not weak. You're carrying something genuinely heavy.

Therapist Dr. Keisha Morrison speaking warmly in a well-lit office setting
Recorded Webinar

Talking to Teenagers After Dad Comes Home

58-minute session with licensed therapist Dr. Keisha Morrison on rebuilding connection with teens who've emotionally checked out during a parent's deployment.

Veteran Partner
""My husband came back from his third tour and I didn't know how to reach him. I knew the flinch before the firework. Muster gave me language for what I was witnessing — and for the first time, we could actually talk about it."
Portrait of Carmen L., Marine Spouse, Camp Pendleton

Carmen L.

Marine Spouse, Camp Pendleton

For Teens

To the Kid Who Stopped Talking

A short, honest letter for teenagers who've gone quiet since a parent deployed or came home changed. No advice. No worksheets. Just someone saying: what you're feeling makes complete sense.

Muster Results
89%

of Muster clients report feeling "genuinely understood" in their first session.

Because our counselors have lived this life too.

Podcast Episode

The Long Goodbye: Emotional Labor of Solo Parenting During Deployment

A 42-minute conversation with two military spouses about the invisible mental load — and how they learned to ask for help without feeling like they were failing.

Transition Story
""We were six months out from ETS and neither of us knew who we were without the Army. Muster helped us figure that out together, before it tore us apart."
Portrait of James & Priya T., Post-Army, Austin TX

James & Priya T.

Post-Army, Austin TX

Free Resource Library

Grab Your Family's Toolkit

Tell us where you are right now. We'll send you the exact resources for your season — deployment guides, reintegration workbooks, transition checklists, and more.

Step 1 — Where are you right now?

Step 2 — Where should we send it?

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. We respect your inbox like we respect your time.

Real Families. Real Outcomes.

The coffee's already on. Pull up a chair.

Marcus, an Army veteran with a warm smile, photographed outdoors in natural light
Veteran
I spent two years thinking I just needed to be stronger. Muster helped me understand that asking for support isn't weakness — it's the most military thing I could do. My family needed me whole, not just present.

Marcus J.

Army Veteran, 3 Tours

Renata, a service member in civilian clothes, smiling warmly in a sunlit outdoor setting
Active Duty
My daughter stopped hugging me when I came home from my second deployment. Six months with Muster's family counselor and she runs to the door again. That's everything.

Sgt. First Class Renata D.

Active Duty, Fort Liberty

Terrence, a veteran, photographed in warm indoor light with a thoughtful expression
Transition
ETS date hit and I didn't know who I was without the uniform. My wife and I were speaking different languages. Muster gave us a translator — and a reason to stay in the same room.

Terrence & Aisha M.

Post-service, San Diego

Ready to talk to a real person?

A free 15-minute call. No intake forms, no insurance hoops. Just a counselor who gets it, listening.

Appointments available evenings and weekends. TRICARE-friendly.