Anchored & Armed
About this episode Today's episode kicks off OCF's newest podcast, Anchored & Armed, designed to share conversations with women of faith in the military. Hosted by Air Force officer Mackenzie and military spouse Naomi, their inaugural episode features guest Patti Broderick and kicks off a four-part series focused on the topic of loneliness. Patti's military journey spans multiple roles: Air Force Academy graduate and civil engineer, military spouse at Ramstein and Aviano Air Force Bases, military widow after her husband's F-16 crash, and mother to three sons and two daughters-in-law who served. Now retired and caring for her aging parents, Patti shares how her darkest season of loneliness—isolated in a German village with two babies while her husband was frequently TDY—became the foundation for unshakeable faith that carried her through widowhood and beyond. Her honest testimony reveals how wrestling with God through poetry and rejecting the lie that God promises comfort transformed her understanding of His trustworthiness. This conversation offers hope for Christian women navigating the unique challenges of military life. Resources for listeners: * Discover OCF's Women's Ministry [https://www.ocfusa.org/sisterhood/] * Contact the podcast via email [anchored@ocfusa.org] * Access the Anchored & Armed contact form [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScRfAVj0Qc5FgN94ygU2sE7T5xcw6ltpuGIJ2pcv9WckyGBmw/viewform] Questions answered and themes covered in this interview include: How can Christian military spouses handle loneliness during overseas assignments? Patti describes her "deepest darkest time" at Ramstein Air Base in Germany with a two-year-old and newborn while her husband was TDY half the time. Living in a German village without speaking the language made friendship difficult. She explains: "It was a long haul. It was hard in the very beginning until I found, until I made more connections with the wives, and then it got better where we could support each other better, but at the beginning, I just remember being pretty dark, dark days." The loneliness was compounded by multiple transitions simultaneously: new country and culture, new military base culture, and transitioning from active-duty officer to stay-at-home mom. Patti says these layers "all felt like they piled on top of me." Her breakthrough came through authentic prayer and poetry writing during those lonely evening hours after the children were asleep, creating space to wrestle honestly with God about her expectations versus reality. What spiritual lies do Christian women in military life believe during seasons of loneliness? Patti identifies the biggest lie she wrestled with: "God wants us to be comfortable." She explains this stems from prosperity gospel thinking—"if we serve God that He ought to do something in return for us as if He hasn't done everything. And so, He ought to make our lives comfortable. And when it's hard, we can get angry and we can rant and rave whether we do it externally or just internally with things like depression. We can be very angry with God for our situation." Working through this lie became transformative for Patti. She began writing poetry as prayers to God: "Lord, I thought that it was going to be like this, but it wasn't like this. And I thought you were this and you're not that." This honest wrestling helped her "think about Him right and help me think about my world right and help me enjoy my life still." Rejecting the comfort lie opened her to God's actual purposes in suffering. How does God use loneliness in military life to build faith for future hardships? Patti's perspective on this is striking: "For me to say that my darkest time was when Mark was TDY is kind of crazy for me to think of" given that she later became a widow. But she explains: "In those times of discomfort, I turned to Him and I found Him trustworthy. I think that is the thing that solidified my faith to where it didn't matter what came, I knew Him. I couldn't see it all the time, but I knew who He was." The trust built during those lonely Germany days with young children became the foundation for surviving widowhood: "The things that He taught me in those times, they held. It's amazing when I look back." She learned she "just had to take the time to seek Him out. And there would be a bigger perspective that I could gain and He was completely trustworthy." This illustrates how God uses present discomfort to prepare believers for unforeseeable future trials—building faith muscle through current suffering. What spiritual practices help Christian military women process loneliness authentically before God? Patti's primary practice was writing poetry as prayer during her husband's TDY absences. She describes it as learning to "be incredibly authentic with God" and bringing raw emotions to Him: "I could bring it to Him and He could meet me." The poetry became "prayers to God to just sort through" her wrestling thoughts and expectations. Her practice requires being outside—usually running, even taking her small children along in Germany "just to get out of the house because you felt like you were locked inside." While running and "noticing nature, just thinking through something I'd read or just being honest with the wrestling," she communes with God best. There's a "confession element that's really important," she notes, believing "we're seeing things wrong and that we need His wisdom that opens ourselves up to something bigger than we can see with our blinders on." This authentic lament created space for God to meet her and correct her limited perspective. What does humility before God look like for Christian women facing military life challenges? Patti identifies pride as her "biggest cancer" and explains that loneliness taught her "how little I knew. And that's been really helpful to me to know how little I know." Rather than self-deprecation, this awareness creates "excitement about who God is next to me—that seeing the smallness of who I am and how little I know gives me a bigger picture of who He is." She uses the analogy of standing at the ocean's edge: "I'm just standing at the edge of the ocean and He's the ocean. And I can only see just a few feet in front of me." She also compares herself to a toddler receiving shots—painful experiences she can't understand but that a loving parent knows are necessary. "I think that there's a real beauty in giving up of yourself and of dying to self that allows for the growth that he's not going to circumvent," she reflects. This daily humility practice—acknowledging limited perspective while trusting God's infinite wisdom—sustained her through multiple military life transitions and tragedies. How should Christian military community members bring their honest emotions to God? Drawing from years as a Christian counselor, Patti observes: "I saw how people learned Scripture and memorized and did all the things. And what they didn't do was just open the rawness of their heart up before the Lord and say, 'This is me. I'm a mess.' They were scared to do that or scared to be honest with how they felt about God." Her encouragement: "I would want people to know that He's trustworthy with all of that. We're going to get nowhere in this world until we can bring it to Him." She describes faith as venturing into "a vast ocean out there that's absolutely beautiful and it's also dangerous and it's crazy and it's scary. It's all the things, but it's also the most exciting journey to be on." Patti emphasizes that suffering in military life still "hurts incredibly"—acknowledging pain is real even while trusting God's purposes. The path forward isn't denying emotions but bringing them authentically to a trustworthy God who can handle our wrestling, our questions, and our raw honesty about the gap between our expectations and our reality.
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