If you don`t like it , get out and do something else you enjoy, the military is not geared for everyone and the pay is horrible.
2007-03-09 23:17:39
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answer #1
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answered by Heads up! 5
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From what you are describing you probably attended "Pre-Rep" Training. It's a little "Taste" of basic training. You should be proud that you made it through. I retired from the Army and did a few stints in the Guard, It was great. Basic is tough, but from the sounds of it, so are you, so buck up Troop you can do this. You are on the first leg of a great adventure and it is not all as tough as in the beginning. Basic will break you down and build you up. You will have more confidence in yourself and after that, everyday of your life just remember this; You can handle any problem that comes along and handle them well. You'll be stronger mentally and physically, you will be doing things you will never be able to do again and things your friends in college or working a job will never get to do. You will also make friends, TRUE friends, because they are going through the same thing you are and they are just as scared and unsure too, but you will lift each other up and you will come to depend on them. As if that is not enough, i met my Wife there and after 15 years we are still in love like Newly Wed's! If it is one thing I truly miss out of the 20 years I did in the service though, it's my buddies. It was an honor to call them my friends, and no matter how long a time it is until you see them again, it will be just like they were never gone when you finally do. Now I passed the end and had to let them all go, all the good times, all the stories, gone. And you think the beginning stinks!!! But you are at the beginning and you will have it all, everything I had to give up. I envy the hell out of you Young Lady. Go, have fun, do the job, make new friends, live the adventure and GOOD LUCK to you.
2007-03-10 00:42:40
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answer #2
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answered by SGT. D 6
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Just keep pushing forward things will get better. Trust me I was 17 years old when I joined the marine corps and I felt the exact same way. Then when I graduated boot and was called a marine everything was worth while. As a young soldier it takes a little while to be comferatable in your new settings. Things get better when you are assigned to a unit. you'll make friends and youll be at home being a guardsman so you can have an escape from the millitary when your not on drill. Trust me in a few months you will look forward to going to drill and catching up with your fellow soldiers. Good luck on your career and I hope you choose to continue serving.
2007-03-10 09:52:29
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answer #3
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answered by im_the_online_jesus_fukers 2
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try for Linguist, army or military. contained in the military, that is 35P, army that is CTI. And from what I understand army CTIs fairly do not do a lot cruise time in any respect. in case you do not score extreme adequate on the DLAB for that, bypass for army CTN/CTT or the military equivalent of 35N. Or All source Analyst, 35F. regardless of which service you opt for, in case you get language college, it truly is a domestically accepted institute, meaning you get 40 5 truthfully college credit popping out of there. in case you're taking your ordinary factor math, English comp, historic previous, and technological awareness with a lab, at the same time as there or afterwards (and also you could CLEP out of all besides the undeniable fact that the technological awareness with a lab) then you fairly may have your associate's degree. the military does have an enlisted to officer application - that is stated as eco-friendly to Gold. if you're chosen, you bypass to college finished time to end your degree, and then come back as an officer. having stated that, you could go away the service on the suited of your enlistment, and then use the GI bill to end a level - or your experienced commerce, then you fairly can come back into the service as an officer and end your occupation then. i might want to say bypass for it. you purely stay once, and also you're at a level on your existence the position this may be your very last danger to serve.
2016-10-17 11:29:02
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answer #4
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answered by uday 4
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Home is always going to be home. I have been in the military for almost 15 years. You have to change your mental perspective of everything. Look at the military as a new lifestyle. You can choose to enjoy it and have a good time, or you can choose to totally hate it and just be bummed out all the time. Remember, it is the guard and you only have to work 1 weekend a month and two weeks a years unless deployed. You are doing something worthwhile by serving your country, so try and be positve about the whole thing.
2007-03-09 23:26:08
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answer #5
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answered by Billy R 1
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It's hard hey? I've been there. My basic was the harest thing i have done in my life. I'm a chick too by the way.
I hated being there. I wanted to go home. But when i finished i felt so proud of myself. I as a female have done so many things that other female i know could't do. I kept up with they boys some of which had 100lbs on me and 6 inches. But i did it. me little old me.
If you don't feel great tha you did something so hard and finished then maybe the Army isn't for you. And there is nothing wrong wth that. But just remember all that it took for you to finish the course. And the way you felt when you where finished. come on how many other chicks do you know that can dig a trench and fire a weapon? All on her rag if need be.lol.
2007-03-09 23:28:19
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Alexis ... I'm much, much older than you are, but I clearly remember something similar happening to me when I joined the service near the height of the war in Vietnam, 1969.
Yes, they DO break you down ... AND build you up, just as you described. The reason is to condition you to realize that you're part of a big team, now ... to link you to your fellow team members and your mission.
The Army certainly doesn't want you to die, but imagine how those guys must have felt who stormed France's northern beaches at Normandy on D-Day to counter the German occupation of France during World War II. Did any of them approach the invasion feeling confident they'd survive? Knowing there was a good chance they'd be killed, they went forward anyway. So imagine for a moment how they must have felt.
You seem to have feelings similar to the ones I had, but not because you've been sent on a deadly mission. I think you're feeling this way because your eyes got opened by basic training and your world, as you used to see it, got turned upside-down and you haven't completed the adjustment yet.
Let me tell you this little story, please. When I joined, they made me an intelligence analyst. Studying the military forces and capabilities of other countries was an eye-opener for me. At about the same time, I suddenly took a great interest in the news and world events and suddenly things began to make better sense to me. I began to understand things I never could've comprehended before ... and absorbing the meaning of world political events took on a meaning and purpose that I never had until then.
To intensify the effect this had on me, I found myself assigned to intelligence organizations. At the highest levels, they study, collaborate, and plan for many possible scenarios. Out in the field, the intelligence components collaborate closely with the command centers and we had to keep on constant watch for events that impacted our defense readiness.
All this changed my perspective ... And seeing the enormity of the Army seems to have affected you similarly.
The point is simply this: your world is immensely bigger, now, and I suggest that you just go forward with completing the adjustment. When I joined up with my buddy George, as we arrived home after training, although we were happy to see our friends, we weren't much interested in the same things anymore. Although we all still liked one another, our friends back home looked at us a little differently too. George and I had suddenly grown up a LOT ... and the same just happened to you ... the same as has happened to millions before you.
Just do your job, Alexis, and go with the flow. I'm sure you'll be quite all right. By the way ... Thanks for choosing to serve our country.
2007-03-09 23:42:23
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Dear Soldier,
I see that you are tired
I tell you,drop your sword
And put down your shield
Why worry about the fight?
After all,it's not your battle
Its mine.
All you have to do is
to be in the battlefield.
Then againts the thousands
Who tried to destroy you,
There I will stand and rescue you.
Winning this war requires
Neither only me nor only you
But rather,Me and You
Just do your best
And I will take care of the rest.
Your Commander
Jesus Christ
This is dedicated to all those who go into harms way to defend freedom for all mankind,and to those who fight for those who cannot fight for themselves.
2007-03-10 01:09:14
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answer #8
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answered by HighSpeedLowDrag 2
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Seek some counseling, I think that will help you. Since this is your first time away from home it has been an emotional and cultural shock. You will do ok. There are many educational opportunities in the service if you want to pursue them. Good Luck in your life and Than You for your service.
2007-03-09 23:23:43
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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there is a reason military and police types hang out with their own kind...nobody else has the same perspective they(you) do...find a bud,male or female that is of a similar bent and get drunk together,talk about things,hang out..it will get better and you will adjust...you have passed a hump in your life few people get to experience..enjoy it and move on.....you are a better person now...
2007-03-10 00:18:04
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm not quite following the order of your training, but if you are feeling burnt out, ask to talk to a chaplain/chaplain's assistant. They are typically experienced enough to understand, or at least empathize, with what you are going through. They can help you with putting things in perspective, if need be, or getting you some help, if need be.
2007-03-09 23:19:19
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answer #11
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answered by T.I. 3
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