Maine National Guard members in Iraq and Afghanistan are never far from the thoughts of their loved ones.
But now, thanks to a popular family-support program, they're even closer.
Welcome to the "Flat Daddy" and "Flat Mommy" phenomenon, in which life-size cutouts of deployed service members are given by the Maine National Guard to spouses, children, and relatives back home.
The Flat Daddies ride in cars, sit at the dinner table, visit the dentist, and even are brought to confession, according to their significant others on the home front.
"I prop him up in a chair, or sometimes put him on the couch and cover him up with a blanket," said Kay Judkins of Caribou, whose husband, Jim, is a minesweeper mechanic in Afghanistan. "The cat will curl up on the blanket, and it looks kind of weird. I've tricked several people by that. They think he's home again."
Friday, September 01, 2006
Paper Parents
This is horrifying in so many ways. I'm speechless.
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4 comments:
And when mommy or daddy comes home sans a limb or two, Flat Mommy/Daddy serves as a swell source of replacement appendages.
I am still speechless from that photo-op of Bush jogging with the double amputee marine. That was a lot of things, but above all, deeply creepy.
You're speechless. I'm flabbergasted. Wow.
Yeah, sigh. What a world.
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