lowing wrote:
imortal wrote:
lowing wrote:
Well, what you suggest can be done, and has been, but c'mon really, why put all of that on a person that actually has a choice between college BEFORE military and college DURING military? Why subject yourself to all of the enlisted bullshit when they do not really need to put up with it?
I was enlisted in the Air Force, I got my A&P while I was in, and went on to an airline career ( actually several) I am also a private pilot.
The thing is, what you suggest works for people that do not have many options. Poseidon apparently does.
My first college experience was straight out of high school and was basically a waste of time, education-wise. A few years in the military made a world of difference for me, discipline-wise, and is helping me to make my way through college much more successfully this time.
The military is not just a way out for people who have few options. It helps create options. Military service can also be a (metaphorical) mirror; helping you look at yourself in different enviroements and helping put to the test your dreams and goals. Not to mention free training and pretty easy money. Not to mention that I was army, and I do view enlisted in the Air Force as... more comfortable.
I found it humorous that you followed a similar track I was suggesting. There are so many people here suggesting college, then military. It is the more traditional, I grant you. I went to a military college first, and saw that life from the inside. I am presenting an alternative method of getting to Poseidon's goals. Options are rarely a bad thing.
Though I think it a bit pretentious of us discussing his future here while he sits back and observes. Poseidon, how is your thinking going? I hope you have time to seriously think about all of this. It is not a descision to make lightly. There are various ways to get to your goals. Beware of recruiters, either college or military. Listen to them, gather information. Even get suggestions from us. But make your own descision.
I think you put too much emphasis on what college has to offer. The reality is, college offers nothing more than a right of passage to pursue interests off limits to people without a degrees. Nothing more.
For example, to fly in the military, all you need is a degree, it doesn't even need to be in anything aviation related, it can be in hotel management for all they care. All the military wants to see is a piece of paper saying you have a degree. Now why would that be? Because college is used to weed out people for selection for UPT. The only reason I went into the military as enlisted was because I to wanted to fly but my vision wasn't 20/20 so I picked the next best thing. Working on them. No college required. As it is I make just as much as the majority of college grads anyway.
People do not go to college to learn shit, they go to college to get a piece of paper that magically opens doors regardless as to how smart you are. I know a ton of people with college degrees that couldn't scratch their ass with a bobcat in each hand.
Yeah, let me tell you about college. My first time through, I was a Criminal Justice major. Then Field Artillery in the Army. Then a security guard in civilian life. Now, I am an EMT going to Nursing school. What I would have given for a clear vision when I was young.
Yes, in a lot of ways, college is a pretty waste of time in order to get a piece of paper that makes you eligible for employment nowadays. But it does not always have to be. College can provide knowledge to either complement your career choice, or provide you with a depth of knowledge so you know about fields beyond your career path. In that way, I view it in a similar manner as an enlisted military experience.
Another thing. I would not get caught up in "how long" it takes to get there. I am 36 now, and I don't feel old at all (unless I am talking to a bunch of kids), but I will admit my body is catching up to me. I look back and see how impatient I was to "get out in the real world," and I see all that I wasted by being in an all fired hurry. The best wisdom I can impart is "30 is only old until you get there." If you have a plan that takes 15 years to come to fruition, so what? That means you will be set when you get there. And the time along the way is NOT wasted. YOu are still living and experiencing that entire time. My plan now doesn't have me getting to my goal until I am 45, and so what?