About Beth

I have what I consider to be the best job on the planet. I have the privilege of supporting and encouraging the brave men and women who were the uniform of the US military. I did not set out to start a nonprofit organization, I simply did what came naturally when my son joined the US Marine Corps in 2004. I followed my mother’s heart.

As the mother of three boys, I spent countless hours as home school mom, room mother, team mother, and parent volunteer. One day I found myself to be the adopted platoon mom to a unit of Marines. What started out as a mother sending care packages to her son has turned into a fast-growing nonprofit that keeps me busy day and night, and I love every minute of it!

When I mailed the first care package several years ago, I had no idea that I would have an opportunity to send out thousands of care packages each year and become an advocate for Wounded Warriors and Veterans suffering with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury. When I became the mother of a disabled veteran suffering with TBI and PTSD, and saw, firsthand, the struggles and the needs, I knew it was my obligation to support those who have been willing to stand in the gap for my freedom. It’s the least I can do to say thanks.

I work with various programs in our community, as well as other advocates and organizations to meet the needs of our military and veteran population in Central Kentucky. I also have the privilege of serving on the board at Voice of Warriors and enjoy hosting VOW Talk Radio’s weekly program on Monday nights.

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We receive many emails each day requesting care packages. Read and find out why your donation makes a real difference in the life of an American Hero!

Dear Military Missions, 
Just wondering if it was possible to get a  care package for the Christmas holiday? I currently have no family members in support of my military career. It would be greatly appreciated.

 

Dear Military Missions,

Thank you so much for accepting our request. He is truly my hero. He is really struggling right now and his spirits are really down with the Christmas holiday right around the corner and money being so tight. I am worried about him not getting any packages while we adjust back home to our new budget.  I am thankful for your help! I submitted a recent pic of my sailor and hope you can use it! Thank you so very much!


Hello! My brother just recently deployed to Afghanistan and won’t be home until NOV 2012. I would love it if you could add him to your mailing list. He is in the Army and it’s hard for us to get stuff shipped to him (money) so please, anything will help him get thru this.

 

Dear Military Missions, I came across your website.  This is the second year in a row that I will be deployed throughout the holidays.  I greatly appreciate everything you are doing.  I hope you don’t mind that I signed myself up.


Dear Military Missions, 

I have names of four Marines that our Family Readiness Office has given me. They are not getting any mail from family members so if it would be ok, can I send in their info so they can receive care packages? Thank you.

Dear Military Missions,

Thanks for replying back with an email. We have 42 Marines in the platoon.  We really appreciate all the stuff you guys are doing for the troops. I told Marines about the care packages and they were super excited about it. We’ve been here for only a couple of weeks now but are really short on food so this would definitely be a morale booster!!  Some Marines never receive any packages or mail. We haven’t received any mail yet in the platoon because we just got here, but I’ve seen multiple occasions where Marines didn’t receive anything just simply because they didn’t have any family members back home. Once again thank you so much and hope to hear from you soon. We are working on taking a platoon picture and we would be glad to send you guys back some pictures and letters. Thank you and have a good day!

 

Click here to find out how you can make a donation.

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If you are planning to spend any time today shopping online please be sure to stop by our donation page on our website at Military Missions Inc and make what is sure to be the best purchase of your day. You can make a tax deductible donation via PayPal, and bless the socks off a deployed hero! We have over 4,000 names on our Christmas list this year, but we may not have enough money in the bank to pay the postage to send a package to each one. We need YOUR help!

Do you have someone on your Christmas list who already has everything?  Why not make a donation in their honor. We will send them a letter notifying them of your generous gift in their name and you will make it possible for every soldier on our list to receive a package for Christmas.

We receive many emails each day requesting care packages. Messages like the ones you just read above are just a few we have received. As you can see your donation can make a real difference in the life of an American Hero! We thank you for your support and partnership to SEND CHRISTMAS to our deployed troops!

Click here to find out how you can make a donation.


 

A Seat of Honor: Giving Thanks for our Military

As we approach the Thanksgiving holiday, most of us will stop and count our blessings.  Many of us will count living in the United States of America and all the freedoms that come with our citizenship as one of our biggest blessings, but most of us will not feel the sacrifices made for that blessing on a personal level.

For those who have a loved one serving, there will be an empty seat at the table. There will be a missing smile and a void that no one can replace while their loved one is deployed.

For many families, the smile and presence of their hero will be only a memory because their loved one gave their life so that we can continue to live in a free nation and celebrate this annual holiday.

As we pause to give thanks for all of our blessings, let’s set an extra place at our tables this year in honor of those who serve.

Let’s give that place setting the seat of honor at the head of our tables.

Let’s remember that while we are gathered with family and friends, there are many who stand watch over us and our families and ensure that we can continue to celebrate our freedoms and our blessings each year.

We also ask that you consider showing your gratitude by making a donation to ensure that each of the deployed troops on our list can receive a package for Christmas.

Our staff at Military Missions Inc is made up completely of volunteers.  No one gets paid, so every dime of your donation goes to ensure a package gets into the hands of each hero on our list.

You can donate right from our website via Paypal. You can also mail us a check, or you can stop by our office and make a cash donation.

Here are a few of the faces of those who have received our packages.

Thank you for your continued support of our troops through Military Missions Inc. It is our honor to be able to partner with you in this way.

On behalf of Military Missions Inc., we want to thank each one who is currently serving, and all who have worn the uniform in the past.  We also want to thank the families who serve here on the homefront.

We are forever grateful for your service and your sacrifice.

Happy Thanksgiving!

America’s Best

We’ve all been watching the Olympics for the past couple of weeks.  There is nothing more exciting than watching Team USA dominate and win so many medals.  While we can appreciate all the hard work and sacrifice that our Olympic athletes give to represent our nation, let’s not forget those who are making a bigger sacrifice to represent the United States of America.

All of us at Military Missions, Inc. want to thank each and every one of you who has put on the US Armed Forces uniform and stood in the gap for our freedom.  You ARE America’s best!!

Photo by Karen Sparks and Beth Pennington

A Season of Change

Since the fall of 2004, when my oldest son began to prepare for his first combat deployment, I have been working to provide support to our troops, our veterans, and our families.  Though I never intended to start a nonprofit, it has been a blessing to be a part of the birth and development of Military Missions, Inc., which has evolved into an incredible organization with many amazing, energetic, and sacrificial volunteers.

As the organization has grown, we have taken on more and more service projects and have gradually become far more involved  than we ever dreamed possible.  In an effort to better serve the thousands of troops who request support, as well as better develop our local community service initiatives, we are restructuring our board of directors to include many gifted individuals who have experience and expertise in nonprofit leadership and will allow us to accomplish far more in the future.

As we move forward, I am stepping down as president of Military Missions, Inc.  I will continue to serve on the board of directors as an advisor with a desire to focus on advocacy for our veteran population.  As the parent of one of our nation’s disabled veterans, I am constantly made aware of new issues and struggles faced by those who have served on behalf of our nation. It is my hope that I can use the additional time I will now have in my schedule, along with my new found awareness of obstacles to veteran care, to bring attention to issues which need to be addressed, and in turn, help to make improvements to services provided to our veterans.

I want to personally thank each and every one of you who has stepped up to support me personally over the years.  You have sacrificially given your blood, sweat, and tears to serve our troops and our veterans and given the credit to this organization.  There is no way that Military Missions, Inc. could have ever become the organization it is today without the help and support of each one of you over the past seven and a half years.  From the bottom of my heart, I will always be grateful for each individual who had a part in making this dream of mine become a reality.

As we step into a new season, we do so with an incredibly gifted team.  I hope you will take a few moments to get to know our new board members whom are listed here.  We are all very excited about the road ahead and the great things that Military Missions, Inc. will continue to accomplish.  We have much planned and hope you will join us as we continue to support our troops, our veterans, and their families.

Blessings,
Beth

Memorial Day Reflections

With a warm and genuine smile on her face, the receptionist wished me a “Happy Memorial Day” as I left the doctor’s office.  I can only imagine the expression that must have come across my face.  My good manners kicked in and I managed to choke out a “You too,” as I walked out of the office, but my mind was screaming,  “What, exactly, is it that you find HAPPY about Memorial Day?”

I remember a time in my life when I was personally unaffected by the tragedy of war and had basically been brainwashed by our society to think that Memorial Day was simply a holiday marking the beginning of summer, picnics, barbecues, and the promise of bargains to be found by serious shoppers.  That time, however, was long ago.

Now, after ten long years of war, Memorial Day’s meaning has changed for me.  I’ve watched my son go to war.  I’ve watched him mourn the loss of his battle buddies.  I’ve watched my friends bury their sons and husbands.

Now, as I walk alongside those who must continue on, despite the loss of the one who was willing to make the ultimate sacrifice for all of us, I find it extremely difficult to understand how anyone could combine the word “happy” with Memorial Day, and yet I realize that those who have sacrificed for our freedoms would want us to enjoy this holiday weekend.  If asked, they would want us to honor their lives by enjoying American pastimes and spending time with family and friends.  After all, they fought and died so we could live.

As we head into this holiday weekend, let’s celebrate the freedoms and the blessings we have been given as Americans, but let us not forget who made living this American Dream a reality.  Don’t let this weekend pass without taking the time to honor those who stood in the gap and paid the ultimate price on our behalf.

To Mom with Love from the Combat Zone

I have a question for all the mothers out there.  What comes to mind when you are asked about your favorite Mother’s Day gift or tradition?  For most of us it is probably something very simple.  Mother’s Day is synonymous with breakfast in bed, hand picked flowers, finger paintings, and sloppy kisses.  Mother’s Day gifts are rarely store-bought because the best ones come straight from the heart.

In the early years, it’s usually up to dear old Dad to make sure we aren’t forgotten.  It doesn’t take much to make us feel loved.  Any day we can put up our feet and listen to thank you’s is special. The memories of hand-made cards and the burnt toast served by chubby little hands will always be etched in our memories.

As time passes and our children reach the teen years, we are touched to find out that the act of planting those early seeds has blossomed into our children coming up with their own ways to express their love to us on the annual holiday.  The coffee mugs made in pottery class, the marigold ready for planting in the backyard, and the homemade cookies baked just a pinch past perfection are proudly given, and we are touched that these hormonal teens have taken a break from their text messages and Facebook posts to sit down and spend a few minutes to say, “I love you, Mom.”

Through the years, I’ve always been pleasantly surprised by the creativity that has gone into the gifts bestowed upon me for Mother’s Day, but to be honest, I always knew those gifts were coming.  With the Hallmark commercials and the Mother’s Day specials advertised all over town, our children and our husbands would have to be living in a shoebox to miss the fact that Mother’s Day was coming.  I never knew for sure, but I always felt certain that I was going to, at the very least, receive a card or be taken out to lunch.

It goes without saying that my favorite Mother’s Day memory of all time was totally unexpected. It came all the way from the Middle East and it came two days early.  My son, who was deployed to Iraq for the second time, called me to tell me I needed to check my email.  I was fully expecting a wish list of items that he wanted me to send to him in his next care package, but much to my surprise, when I opened my email, I found the most amazing Mother’s Day gift ever!  The moment I saw the photo of my beautiful boy holding the cardboard sign wishing me  “Happy Mother’s Day,” I burst into tears.

There was nothing more beautiful in the entire world than to see that my boy, who was deployed to a war zone, had the forethought to figure out how to make me feel special for Mother’s Day.  I wouldn’t have even expected him to know it was Mother’s Day.  In fact, the year before, during his first deployment, he was outside the wire and had no idea Mother’s Day had come and gone.  I never told him he missed it because he had much more important things on his mind.

Maybe his platoon sergeant ordered him to remember Mother’s Day.  I didn’t know and I didn’t care!  What I did know was that my brave Marine was halfway across the globe and he still loved his mom!  My heart filled with Marine Mom pride and I showed that photo to everyone I knew

It’s been seven years since I received this gift but I guess I’m still able to find a way to show it off.  I think it’s worth sharing because it speaks for the many who are out on the front lines right now and simply not able to say “I love you” this year with a card or a phone call.

Happy Mother’s Day to all the military moms past and present.  You’ve raised children who stepped up to sacrifice and serve their nation so you must have done something right!

Originally published on comfycouchcommand.com.

May is Military Appreciation Month

Here at Military Missions Inc, we show our gratitude to our troops, veterans, and families every day of the year, but because May is Military Appreciation Month, we hope you will all join us in saying thank you to all who have served and sacrificed on our behalf.

When you see someone wearing the uniform, take a moment to thank them for their service.  Be on the lookout for our veterans. You can usually spot them. They are usually wearing a hat or a tee shirt that let’s you know they served.

A simple thank you only takes a second.  If you want to do more, you can always make a tax deductible donation here at Military Missions Inc.  We need your help to send care packages to thousands of deployed troops on our care package list.  We will gratefully accept your items to be included in our packages and we would love to have you join us as a volunteer.

We all live in a free nation, safe from harm, because someone stood in the gap for each of us.  Let’s thank those who make living the American Dream a reality.

From Here to There

OPSEND EASTER was a huge success! We are so grateful to all who made it possible.  From those who donated cards and care package items, to those who packed everything up and got the boxes shipped out to the troops, we want to say thank you to each one who makes all of our efforts possible.

We received a message of thanks along with some photos from one of the units who received our packages which we now pass along to you, our faithful supporters! This is for each of you who faithfully support our troops through Military Missions Inc.

Thanks for the care packages that we received. It’s nice not only to get stuff that we can use, but even more to know that we have support. Every Armed Forces Member should have advocates like you in their corner. Keep trudging on, you have a lot of people behind you. Thanks for being our voice!

To see OPSEND Assembly photos click here.  To LIKE us on Facebook and keep up with our updates and photos, click here.

We need YOU to Volunteer for Military Missions!

Military Missions Inc is in the process of looking for volunteers to help out with the following positions.  If you are experienced in these areas, and are looking for way to give back to our troops, our veterans, and their families, this is a great way to get involved without having to leave home.  All you need is a computer and some time to give.

WEBMASTER: We are looking for someone to keep our website updated when current information needs to be posted.  This would require an hour or two of your time each week.

SOCIAL MEDIA REP: We are looking for someone who has an hour or two, 3-4 days a week to keep our Facebook and Twitter accounts active and help us to keep a presence in online communities.  This individual needs to have a good understanding of the use of social media.  The chairman will potentially be supervising a team of volunteers who will help with this need.

NEWSLETTER EDITOR: We are looking for someone who is willing to write our monthly newsletter. This is an online task that is produced via the Vertical Response website. The newsletter keeps our volunteers and supporters informed about what is going on at Military Missions.  This would take a few hours each month.

WRITER: We are looking for someone who is willing to write an article featuring events and other important issues that need to be posted on our website. If you are interested in writing for us, we could use your help a few hours each month.

COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD REP:  We are looking for someone who is willing to post our events onto online calendars and bulletin boards.  This position requires just a few hours each month.

If you are interested in volunteering for any of these positions, please contact Beth Pennington at beth@military-missions.org.

Thank you for your support of our troops, our veterans, and their families through Military Missions Inc.

Reboot-Refresh: Invisible Wounds Support Group

 

This month, Reboot-Refresh is taking a “field trip”.  We have found out that the documentary, Hell and Back Again, will be coming to Lexington, Kentucky, for one night only. Since the documentary is being presented at the same time we normally meet, we have decided to attend the showing of Hell and Back Again, and then meet afterwards to discuss the film.

We hope you will join us. Here are the details:

The movie is 90 minutes. It is being shown at LexArts, 161 N. Mill Street, Lexington, 40507.  It is free and open to the public. It is being presented by KET as part of the ITVS nationwide Community Cinema program.  We will meet in front of LexArts at 6:00 pm, Thursday, April 19.

Here is some information about our Invisible Wounds Care Group, Reboot-Refresh.   We meet on the third Thursday of each month.  We meet at Southland Christian Church, in Room B133.

Our focus is to support one another and learn to help one another through life after combat.  Many of us are playing a role of primary support for someone who has served in combat at some point in their past.

If you know your loved one is dealing with PTSD or a mild TBI, this group is for you.  If your loved one doesn’t have a diagnosis, but you know life is simply not the same anymore since their return from war, this group is for you.  Statistically, at least 20% of returning troops will have PTSD.  Realistically, everyone who serves will come back changed.

PTSD carries a stigma that we don’t speak of outside our homes. The symptomatic behaviors are often nothing to brag about and we prefer to keep problems to ourselves, hoping and praying that the situation will resolve itself in time. Thousands of veterans return home from war finding themselves unable to fit back into society. These men and women now face a battle on the homefront which can result in broken relationships, substance abuse, mental illness, homelessness, and suicide.

Even if your loved one is seeking treatment, there is much that we, as caregivers, need to learn so that we can help our loved one work towards health and healing.  Often times, our emotional reaction to what is happening will make the situation far worse.  You may even find that you are exhibiting symptoms of Secondary Traumatic Stress and you probably feel overwhelmed and at a loss as to how to get any help for yourself.

We are not experts, but we are survivors.  The purpose of this care group is to provide a safe atmosphere in which participants can share their hearts and their struggles. We have all experienced the spiritual, mental, and emotional battles that come with supporting and loving a combat veteran living with war’s invisible wounds.

We welcome anyone who has already walked this path in supporting a combat veteran.  You can show us some of the lessons and techniques you have learned and teach us to be a better support for our own combat veteran.

If you are a veteran who is willing to share your perspective about living with PTSD, we would welcome your participation and suggestions for helping family members learn to be a better support for their combat veteran.

If you are the parent, spouse, family member, or close friend to one of our nation’s veterans suffering with PTSD and TBI, we hope you will join us on the first and third Thursday nights of each month.  The group will meet monthly, on the third Thursday evening of the month from 6:30 – 8:00 pm.  Childcare is provided.  We will be meeting at Southland Christian Church, Room B133, located at 5001 Harrodsburg Rd., Nicholasville, KY For driving directions, click here.  For a building map, click here.

If you have any questions, please contact Beth at beth@military-missions.org.