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Base Buddies Podcast: Connecting Military Spouses Through PCS, Deployments, and Loneliness

Ley Wright watched her life get boxed up every few years as her husband, Dominick, moved for Navy assignments from Florida to Washington, the Middle East and Texas, and she decided to build something to stop the loneliness. What started as a personal search for real friends turned into Base Buddies, a podcast and online community connecting military spouses from Korea, Spain, the Middle East and right here near San Antonio. This article follows Ley’s story, explains why the group matters to spouses navigating deployments and PCS moves, and points readers to Base Buddies’ online presence.

Military life asks a lot from spouses: leaving jobs, uprooting routines, and rebuilding social lives every two to three years. Ley says those repeated transitions wore on her emotionally until she felt she needed to do more than cope. “I felt isolated, alone, misunderstood, and unrepresented,” she said, and that exact feeling became the spark for creating a space where others could relate.

Base Buddies began as a podcast and quickly became a place to swap stories and swap strategies for surviving the next move. Ley and Dominick have lived in multiple states and overseas, and those experiences inform the conversations. The group covers practical topics like permanent change of station planning and the tricky logistics of deployments, but it also makes room for messy feelings and mundane victories.

Ley is blunt about what military spouses actually need: honest friendships that last beyond a single potluck. “The idea of Base Buddies came from finding friends,” she said, and she built the community to recreate that kind of real connection for others. Members report that the space helps them recognize they are not failing at married life or parenthood just because duty orders force constant change.

Base Buddies launched six months ago and already includes spouses stationed all over the globe, proving the demand was there. Conversations range from the raw to the hopeful: “We talk about absolutely everything. We talk about the raw, the good, the bad, the ugly,” Ley said. That openness lets people swap tips, vent, and celebrate small wins that feel huge when you’re far from family.

San Antonio is mentioned often because it hosts one of the nation’s largest military communities, and Ley sees Base Buddies as a bridge for newcomers who don’t yet feel at home. She watches spouses arrive, attend a few events, and leave without finding the deeper friendships they expected. “Making them seen, heard and understood is the reason why I started the podcast in the first place,” she said, and that mission shapes every episode and online thread.

What started as a personal remedy for loneliness has turned into practical support as well: members trade contractor recommendations, school tips, and ways to handle the emotional fallout of sudden moves. The group’s tone is supportive without being saccharine; members are candid and helpful, and the podcast episodes highlight both personal anecdotes and useful takeaways. For many spouses, the community is the difference between feeling alone and feeling understood.

Base Buddies doesn’t promise to fix military life, and it doesn’t try to hide how hard repeated relocations can be. Instead it offers a consistent place to land, a network of people who have been through the same goodbyes and fresh-start jitters. Ley’s hope is simple: spouses who join find at least one person who gets it and can share the load for a while.

For more about Base Buddies, visit their YouTube page and follow them on Instagram: https://www.youtube.com/@BaseBuddiesPodcast and https://www.instagram.com/officialbasebuddies/.

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