Find Inspiration Within the TAPS Magazine

TAPS Magazine is dedicated to America's fallen heroes and their surviving families and friends. 

This quarterly magazine is sent free of charge to anyone interested in receiving it, including survivors, service members, supporters, and grief professionals. Subscribe to the TAPS Magazine.

The articles in each edition are written by military survivors, grief professionals, and TAPS staff. We hope you find inspiration, comfort, support, resources, and a sense of belonging within these pages. 

 

Share Your Story

Your stories can bring hope and healing to our TAPS families. If you would like to share a story about your loved one or your grief journey, we would love to hear from you. All submissions will be considered for TAPS Magazine, our stories, and other TAPS publications. We invite you to read our submission policy and submit your story

 

Submit Your Experience to Dear TAPS

If you would like to share a short statement for print in our Dear TAPS section of the TAPS Magazine on how a TAPS program, event and/or resource has helped you heal, complete our Dear TAPS submission form.

 

Latest Magazine Articles

img-description

Leaving the Grief Box Open

A surviving father shares about the time, trust, and the right setting for men to open up fully open our grief boxes and leave them open.

img-description

Winter Beginnings

Through programs like the Snowball Express and TAPS Good Grief Camps, surviving military children find connection and sometimes much more.

img-description

The Empty Chair

There’s an empty chair in our house and I am not sure what to do with it. It’s been empty a long time.

img-description

Dressed Blues

An Air Force Veteran and surviving sister captures her final goodbye to her brother in poetry.

img-description

A Lonely Cross

A story of how one town in Cherryfield, Maine carries their fallen heroes' legacies, says their names, and keeps their memories alive.

img-description

Hindsight Is 20/20

Our vision looking forward at the start of our grief journey can seem blurry and near-sighted. A father takes a look back at his post-traumatic growth.