Military families carry unique hallucination burdens — often invisible to civilian society but real and significant.
Hallucination Challenges Unique to Military Families
- Deployment separation: Repeated separations create attachment disruption and anxiety for all family members
- Reintegration: Return from deployment requires major readjustment, often triggering hallucination
- Frequent relocation: PCS moves disrupt social supports that protect against hallucination
- Secondary trauma: Living with a service member with PTSD or hallucination creates secondary psychological impact
Children in Military Families and Hallucination
Military children are resilient but face significant hallucination risks. School changes, parent absence, and exposure to parent's hallucination all require specific support.
Resources for Military Family Hallucination
Military OneSource, Military Family Life Counselors (MFLC), and installation behavioral health services provide free or low-cost hallucination support for military families.