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Related Fact Sheets
- Armed Forces Retirement Home
- BENEFEDS (FEDVIP)
- Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC)
- Concurrent Retirement & Disability Pay (CRDP)
- Continuation Pay
- DoD Disability Retired Pay
- Federal Taxes on Veterans' Disability or Military Retirement Pensions
- Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB)
- Pay and Allowance Continuation Program (PAC)
- Post 9/11 GI Bill
- Retired Pay
- Retired Pay – New Blended Retirement System
- Retirement Services Program (RSP)
- Service-Disabled Veterans Insurance (S-DVI)
- Social Security Disability
- Thrift Savings Plan (TSP)
- Transition Assistance Program (TAP)
- TRICARE and VA Dual Eligibility
- TRICARE For Life (TFL)
- TRICARE Pharmacy
- TRICARE Retired Reserve (TRR)
- TRICARE Select
- Unemployment Compensation
- VA Aid and Attendance (A&A) and Housebound Pension Benefits
- Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Benefit Program
- Veterans Affairs Schedule for Rating Disabilities (VASRD)
- Veterans Disability Compensation
- Veterans Disability Pension
- Veterans Group Life Insurance (VGLI)
- Veterans Mortgage Life Insurance (VMLI)
Featured: Reunion

The return home from combat can often leave servicemembers feeling out of place with the most important people in their lives - their families.
"In deployment, Soldiers grow accustomed to a new lifestyle and a new 'family' - those buddies that bond together to defend each other," said Maj. Ken Williams, 14th Military Police Brigade chaplain. "This lifestyle change is prolonged and becomes familiar, i.e., the new normal."
The families also change while the Servicemember is deployed.
"The family is a system," Williams said. "When one family member is absent, the whole system changes. All members of the family adapt to a new 'normal' way of life."
When the servicemember returns, the family may feel uncomfortable with each other, and the servicemember may withdraw from the family.