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What Can You Do? Adopt A Soldier!

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I received this from a Lady in another group...she said I could pass

it

along.... This list provided by Monique is one of the most complete

and the

best list I've ever seen.

 

Take care,

Beverly

deployments

 

PERMISABLE ITEMS FOR MILITARY SUPPORT PACKAGES

 

Drinks:

" Instant Coffee

" Powdered Gatorade

" Plastic Jug to mix powdered drinks

" Powdered hot chocolate

" Kool-Aid, pre-sweetened

" Tea bags

" Country Time Lemonade Mix

Snacks:

" Tuna in the " fresh pouch "

" Crackers

" Easy Spray Cheese

" Slim Jim's

" Triscuit and Ritz crackers are great

" Potted meat and crackers

" Plastic knives for spreading Plastic Spoons for eating

" Single servings of bagged chips - The small bags stay fresh longer

" Cookies

" Candy - M & M's, hard candy - anything that won't melt

" Little Debbie snack cakes

" Graham crackers

" Gobstoppers Jaw Breaker Candy

" Little Debbie Cakes

" Chocolate-dipped pretzels

" Pre-packaged brownies

" Licorice

" Bubble gum

" Snack mixes- Chex Mix, Gardetto's

" Cashews, peanuts, etc

" Pretzels

" Rice Krispie Treats

" Goldfish crackers

" Applesauce, pudding or fruit cups with the pop-off lids

" Raisins and trail mix in several small Zip Lock bags for sharing

 

Non-Microwave Meals:

" Non-microwave meals have some hot meals listed that require access

to

boiling water - i.e. a coffee pot - most people do have access to one

or to

some sort of electricity or camp fire. You can send them a one cup

coffee

maker - they're very small and worth it!

" Cup 'o Noodles soups (made with hot water)

" Dry cereal the small, individual serving boxes stay very fresh

" Bowl Appetite dinners (made with hot water)

" Instant oatmeal or grits (Made with hot water)

" Breakfast bars Granola, cereal and power bars

" Pop tarts

" I've discovered that there is an enormous number of different soup

mixes

available that they can just add hot water to.

 

Microwave/Campfire Meals:

" Campbell's Chunky Soup - They have pop-top lids They're perfect and

they

can even be eaten out of the can if the line at the microwave is just

too

long :)

" Pasta Anytime dinners

" Dinty Moore Dinners

" Kraft has a line of Mac & Cheese Dinners

" If you send more than one package a month

" Microwave Popcorn - Send quite a few of these, because it gets

passed

around

" Small Cup Microwave Dinners

 

Toiletries:

" Clorox Wipes

" Razors & Shaving Cream

" Foot Powder

" Shampoo, Conditioner & comb

" After Shave & Body Lotion

" Soap or Body Wash

" Mouth Wash

" Deodorant

"

Comfort Needs:

" Gel Insoles

" Foot powder

" T-shirts, underwear and socks MONTHLY-trust me, they'll need them

" Sachets for their lockers to keep clothes smelling like home

" Glade Stick-Ups These are easy to hang in their racks

" Blanket from home

" A good sheet set

" A big fluffy towel

" An egg crate mattress pad Those racks are thin and not very

comfortable

" Small bottle of Febreeze It helps to spray down the bedding once in

a

while

" Toilet paper

" A small battery operated fan

" Baby wipes are good for fast, easy clean-ups

" Eye drops

" Sneaker Balls--they're like sachets for your shoes

 

Sundries & General Goods & Ideas:

 

" Board games-the ones they have made into key chains They're small,

light

and just as fun as the full size versions

" Use your computer to print onto magnetic paper They can put these

directly

onto their racks

" Send favorite magazines

" Disposable cameras They can take pictures then mail them home for

you to

develop

" A Walkman with extra batteries

" With a CD burner, make a CD of favorite songs You can also make a

cassette

tape

" Always write letters, but in addition you might record your letters

onto a

tape (or onto the computer to make a CD)

" Send a few toys Slinky, sidewalk chalk, squirt guns, etc.

" Theme packages Make it all one color scheme with ribbon and confetti

" Send electronic games There are some little games that are about

$10 each

" Make your own custom crossword puzzle!

" Go here - http://wwwpdoslcsmitedu/cgi-bin/theme-cword - and follow

the

directions to print out a crossword puzzle using your own words

they'll love

it

" Use small baby food jars and fill them up with dirt from their

backyard.

You could also put sand from their favorite beach with a shell inside

It's

oddly comforting

" Two words - Silly Putty. They love it and it considered a premium

" Use your computer graphics program to create a cool calendar with

magnetic

dots that they can use to mark important days (like homecoming!) and

print

on magnetic paper

" GameBoy Color (a handheld video game system) is $69 at most stores

(although buying online with coupons you can get it for even less)

and the

games are $10-$30 each There are some great games, and the guys can

trade

when they get tired of playing

" Books on tape are nice, or for an avid reader send small paperback

books

that they can give away when they're done That way they're not having

to

store it

" If they're gone over their birthday, send a birthday box with

streamers,

hats, noise makers, a birthday card, and a birthday cookie decorated

with

icing (refer to the Tips section on how to ship cookies!) Record

yourself

and the kids singing Happy Birthday and of course, decorate the

outside of

the box with birthday stickers :)

" Foam footballs and basketballs, the miniature size. These will get

played

with all the time by the whole platoon

" A Frisbee The flexible ones are best

" A hacky sack (a little bean bag for kicking around)

" I found a keychain version of the Super Soaker squirt guns it

shoots 20ft

away! They really work and they'd be great to take to work, since

they fit

in a pocket

" Very carefully open a box of Cracker Jacks and remove the prize Put

your

own prize in the box (use the prize somewhere else in your care

package) Put

in a little note or a bigger prize--maybe something personal that

only your

marine would understand Then carefully seal up the box so they don't

see

that you've tampered with it Craft glue works best

" A small stack of Dixie cups

" A small battery operated light with a clip

" Dryer sheets, in a Zip Lock bag They can use them in their lockers

to help

things smell fresh, or they can rub them over their clothes before

they go

out It's just a nice thing to have

" Send

" If they didn't take one with them, send a cordless electric razor

The best

ones have the option of using them corded, in case the charge runs

out It

will make life so much easier

" Sun block

" A small sewing kit

" A stain remover stick (Shout makes a good stick)

" A stress ball

" CD/DVD disk cleaning kit, since the players and the disks will get

a lot

of use

" Stamps, paper and envelopes

" 5 padded mailing envelopes, just in case they need to send home

" Eyeglass cleaner wipes

" If you send store bought cookies like Oreos, something that cracks

easy,

take them out of their package and pack them loose in plain popped

popcorn.

The popcorn takes the shock of traveling and the cookies get there in

great

shape.

" I recommend sending packages Priority Mail It does help to get it

there

faster Priority mail will get it across country and into the hands of

the

FPO workers faster, and the FPO people respond quicker to Priority

mail

packages (maybe because they stand out more, who knows?) It's also

cheaper

in a lot of cases

" Place anything that could spill (shampoo, cologne) inside a Zip

Lock bag

and then tape that bag to the inside of the box On the outside of the

box,

write " This Side Up " and even though it will never stay " that side

up " , it

will help! Taping things to the side also helps to distribute the

weight and

keeps heavy things from crushing smaller or breakable items

" A good source of boxes is the post office. Visit www.USPS.com and

order

free boxes, labels and shipping tape and they will deliver it right

to your

door.

" When you send food of any kind, try to send a lot more than you

think

they'll eat Most food gets shared and they may not get much if you

only send

a single serving

" This is the most important tip I have It takes a special skill to

write a

letter during deployment. Avoid writing phrases such as " Everything is

falling apart and I can't handle it without you " or " Everything is

falling

apart and I don't need you any more to fix it for me " Either of these

will

cause your spouse, sibling or child terrible anxiety, and it's

dangerous for

them and for anyone they work with also I know how hard it is, but I

also

know how important it is. No bad news, nothing upsetting. Considering

what

they are going through, it is nothing that cannot wait until they

return

home.

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