Since she was a teen, Rebekah Witter dreamed of becoming a commercial airline pilot. But she put her career on hold when she and her husband, who serves in the Army, found out they were having a baby. 

โ€œI was like, I gotta stay home, especially with my spouse being military,โ€ said Witter, now 22. โ€œSomeone needs to be there to be stable with my son while his father is gone.โ€ 

Witter didnโ€™t mind becoming a stay-at-home mom. But she felt like she  was disappearing. 

Now Witter is grounded in a routine at Fort Braggโ€”juggling a 1โ€‘yearโ€‘old and college classes while trying to hold on to the identity she built long before she became an Army spouse. She worries that an upcoming move to Alaska will erase the progress sheโ€™s made. 

โ€œIโ€™m more than just Sergeant Witterโ€™s wife. Iโ€™m more than just Royโ€™s mom,โ€ she told CityView. โ€œIโ€™m Rebekah. I have my own dreams and aspirations.โ€ 

On Wednesday, she joined about 30 other military spouses trying to build careers sturdy enough to survive the next set of orders, and the ones after that. They packed a classroom at Fort Bragg for a professional development event hosted by Hiring Our Heroes, a program that connects military families with โ€œmilitaryโ€‘readyโ€ employers. 

โ€˜A National Security Issueโ€™

Military spouses have an unemployment rate of about 23%, leaving many families dependent on a single paycheck. 

Roughly half of military families cite spouse employment as a top concern, and an Army survey found that 28.5% of soldiers consider the impact of military life on their spouseโ€™s career a reason to leave the service. 

Hiring Our Heroes aims to teach spouses how to build portable careers, navigate automated hiring systems, and translate their skills into strong resumes. The organization hopes to keep spousesโ€™ ambitions alive while strengthening both longโ€‘term military retention and the broader workforce that relies on it.

Melissa Sanderson, senior director of military spouse programs at Hiring Our Heroes, said none of this is newโ€”but the consequences are growing. 

The organization launched in 2011 to help veterans and transitioning service members find work. But its leaders quickly realized the militaryโ€™s employment crisis extended beyond soldiers. 

โ€œMilitary spouses are one of the most overlooked talent pools in America,โ€ Sanderson said. โ€œEven the most highly skilled spouses struggle to maintain stable careers โ€ฆ because every PCS (Permanent Change of Station) means starting over.โ€

Military spouses are forced to start over โ€œevery two to three years with every move,โ€ Sanderson saidโ€”turning what might look like a workforce problem into what she calls โ€œa national security issue.โ€

โ€œFinancial stability directly affects service member readiness, morale, and whether they choose to stay in the military,โ€ she said. โ€œEverybody needs a dual income in 2026. When spouses canโ€™t build sustainable careers, the entire force feels it.โ€

Photographer Tara Ruby captures a professional headshot for a military spouse during a Hiring Our Heroes workshop at Fort Bragg on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. Credit: Rachel Heimann Mercader

Two Sisters, One Unpredictable Future

Wednesdayโ€™s event at the Iron Mike Conference Center was part of Amplify, Hiring Our Heroesโ€™ signature program for military spouses. Itโ€™s a oneโ€‘day crash course that includes oneโ€‘onโ€‘one coaching and smallโ€‘group workshops. Participants rotate through sessions on networking, professional branding, rรฉsumรฉ building, interview prep, and negotiation. 

They took part in an IBM SkillsBuild demo, posed for professional headshots,  and engaged in mock interviews to test their pitches in front of real employers.

For Witter and her 24-year-old sister, Angela Braaten, the abstract problems Sanderson described are already shaping every decision they make. They grew up just outside Fort Braggโ€”their father was stationed there for more than a decadeโ€”and both still lived in the area when they met and married their husbands in 2024. Now theyโ€™re trying to build careers that can  survive the constant churn of military life.

When Witter chose to stay home with her son, she switched to studying engineering in hopes of finding more stability as her family moves. 

Sheโ€™s a  fullโ€‘time student  at Sandhills Community College, but she knows she will have to restart her job search in Alaska by early next year

Braatenโ€™s path looks different but carries the same instability. She earned a degree in criminal justice in 2024 and hoped to work in law enforcement. But soon after graduation, she realized she didnโ€™t want theย  lifestyle that inevitably comes with that career. She applied to government and civilian positions within an hourย  of the base, but all of her applications went nowhere.

โ€œI swung my bat many times, and many times I ran into โ€˜you don’t have experience,โ€™ or โ€˜this isn’t the resume we’re looking for,โ€™โ€ Braaten said.

Rebekah Witter, left, and her sister Angela Braaten attend a Hiring Our Heroes career workshop for military spouses at Fort Bragg on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. Credit: Rachel Heimann Mercader

โ€˜You Find Ways to Be Flexibleโ€™

Eventually, Braaten pivoted to real estate, earning her license in 2025. She figures she can carry the job state to state, even if it means retaking licensing exams with every move. Her husbandโ€™s hopedโ€‘for commission in the Air Force could move them again within a year or two, so she plans to pursue an online law degree to keep her longโ€‘term goals alive.

โ€œYou find ways to be flexible, but also to stay together,โ€ she said. โ€œYou never know what the future is going to be, but you do know youโ€™ll be moving.โ€

For both sisters, the drive to build a career isnโ€™t just about incomeโ€”itโ€™s about identity. 

โ€œItโ€™s incredibly important to me,โ€ Witter said. โ€œIt keeps your individualism.โ€

The transition from soaring through the skies to staying home with a newborn was jarring. โ€œIt was really hard going from flying airplanes every single day to cleaning toilets and changing diapers,โ€ Witter said. โ€œI felt like I lost a sense of myself in that transition. As much as I love being a motherโ€“I love my baby, I would never trade thatโ€“but it is so important to maintain this aspect of โ€˜this is what I was meant to do. This is what keeps me happy.โ€™โ€

Both sisters said Wednesdayโ€™s workshop offered something they rarely get: clarity. 

By midday they had already started to rethink how they present themselves on paper. 

Witter realized her resume had been formatted incorrectly for years. Braaten learned how to tailor applications to beat automated screening systems that had shut her out.

And in a room full of spousesโ€”all trying to build careers that can withstand the militaryโ€™s constant reshufflingโ€”they said they finally felt optimistic, and less alone.

Government reporter Rachel Heimann Mercader can be reached at rheimann@cityviewnc.com or 910-988-8045.


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Rachel Heimann Mercader is CityView's government reporter, covering the City of Fayetteville. She has reported in Memphis, the Bay Area (California), Naples (Florida), and Chicago, covering a wide range of stories that center community impact and institutional oversight.