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Mission Accomplished: Baby Shower Honors, Connects Military Families

Girl Scout Troop 32271 and a nonprofit organization hosted a baby shower for military families in Northern California on Saturday.

 

While touring white tables stuffed with baby clothes, toys and other gifts, expectant military wives and their families created new connections and entertaining memories during a baby shower hosted by the Tri-Cities Girl Scouts and a nonprofit organization Saturday.

Military wife and Sacramento resident Erin Sander said she was shocked to see all the gifts for her first baby.

“I feel like I’m on Oprah,” Sander said.

Girl Scout Troop 32271 and their families transformed a basketball gym at St. Joseph Church in Fremont into a “Bundles of Joy” party for military families living in Pleasanton, Walnut Creek, Hayward, Richmond, Sacramento, Modesto, Seaside and Tracy.

The event was co-hosted by Operation Showers of Appreciation (OSOA).

Saturday’s baby shower marks the first Northern California-based event for OSOA, which has been supporting military families since 2006.

Sander and her husband, Sgt. Aaron DeCanio with C Company, 1-168th Medevac, are expecting their first baby. According to Sander, she’ll find out the gender of their newborn in a couple of weeks.

“I think it’s a boy,” Sander said.

Staff Sgt. Michael East and his wife, Kristen, are Pleasanton residents who are also expecting their first baby in July.

“We’re crossing our fingers for July 4,” said Kristen East.

The couple said they were overwhelmed when they saw all the gifts for their baby boy that were donated by businesses and residents in Newark, Fremont and Union City.

Since November, troop members and their parents have worked to collect donations and funds for Saturday’s party.

“They did a tremendous job,” said Michael East, who serves as a survey team chief for the WMD Response Unit in the 95th Civil Support Team in Hayward.

According to East, his unit responds to major disasters like the huge wildfires in Southern California. East says he may spend up to six months away from home as military leaders deploy his unit to sites around the state and the country.

“It’s hard for military families when the spouse is not around,” he said.

Kristen East supports other military families as a Family Readiness Group (FRG) volunteer coordinator. She says she’s grateful for a chance to meet more women like her at Saturday’s party.

“It’s good to make these connections and to meet strong moms,” she said.

The Easts joined other party guests in baby shower games like identifying melted chocolates in the dirty diaper game and chugging water in the bottle-guzzling contest.

National Guard Family Assistance Specialist Deborah Burrow said she had no idea what to expect as she connected military families to the baby shower.

“I’m so blown away,” Burrow said.

Burrow, a Walnut Creek resident, says gatherings like this one help build bonds between military families who do not live on bases.

According to Burrow, many military wives use social media tools like Facebook and cell phones text messages to keep in touch, organize events and let each other know they can lean on one another.

Burrow says it’s important to create these relationships before a deployment period. That’s when family members feel vulnerable as they worry over loved ones who risked their lives to serve their country.

“It affects the entire family: mothers, fathers, brothers, everyone,” said Burrow.

Walnut Creek mom Olivia Currie says her baby girl is due on April 28.

“I’m a little nervous,” Currie said after she showed off a white baby doll dress with a tiny pair of sequined black slacks.

Her baby boy was named after her husband, Specialist Michael Currie, who serves with 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team in the 1-143 Field Artillery Battalion.

“I’m really excited to have all this girl's stuff because we have all boy's stuff at home,” Currie said.

Burrow says Currie’s husband and the 1-143rd FA are scheduled to deploy sometime next year.

  • Click here to learn more about Operation Showers of Appreciation.
  • Watch the video to hear why Girl Scout Troop 32271 wanted to host Saturday’s baby shower. 

Mona Taplin

9:09 am on Tuesday, March 8, 2011

This is a wonderful story. We hear so many bad things about today's young people that it's really refreshing to hear the amount of good they bring about. Hooray for them! I can just imagine how the military wives felt when they left with bundles of heartfelt love so freely given.

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