Posted on Jul 22, 2016
I have a buddy who recently joined AD and wants to switch to reserves. Is this possible?
58.5K
685
225
12
12
0
READ UPDATE!!
He's OCONUS and has mentioned he will purposely fail a PT test, and I talked him out of it. He wants to move to the Reserves, but from the looks of it, he CANNOT. He heard what he needed to hear and the consequences of Malingering. I appreciate the responses, but any answer after this edit, will not be read by myself.
He's OCONUS and has mentioned he will purposely fail a PT test, and I talked him out of it. He wants to move to the Reserves, but from the looks of it, he CANNOT. He heard what he needed to hear and the consequences of Malingering. I appreciate the responses, but any answer after this edit, will not be read by myself.
Edited 9 y ago
Posted 9 y ago
Responses: 104
There is no Chap 22 - I regret my personal decision, separation in AR635-200
Your buddy is in for his term of service that he signed a contract for unless involuntarily separated.
But I gotta tell you, in most future employers (or reserve commander) eyes, anyone who fails on purpose because they dont like a temporary situation they made for themselves is not worth thier time, effort, loyalty or financial compensation.
He made a decision (enlisted for a chosen MOS), its not fatal, and its not permanent.. finish the term of service he signed a contract for and move on, lesson learned.
Your buddy is in for his term of service that he signed a contract for unless involuntarily separated.
But I gotta tell you, in most future employers (or reserve commander) eyes, anyone who fails on purpose because they dont like a temporary situation they made for themselves is not worth thier time, effort, loyalty or financial compensation.
He made a decision (enlisted for a chosen MOS), its not fatal, and its not permanent.. finish the term of service he signed a contract for and move on, lesson learned.
(116)
(0)
CPT (Join to see)
I wonder how much of this is due to his generations' attitude. I don't remember any of my peers ever doing this or hearing of this kind of thing happening. Now a days, if kids don't get what they want, they throw a tantrum (wich is what this looks like). Too bad he isn't considering the long term consequences or the impact this kind of behavior has on his peers.
(0)
(0)
SFC David Xanten
SGT Jose Perdelia-Torres - Actually I spent two years teaching NCO's at the 7th Army NCO Academy from 69-71. It was a very rewarding assignment because we taught NCO's from E-5 to E-7 the skills required to motivate their men/women to be better soldiers. We also taught the NCO's what it took to be better, so that they could become better leaders. Good leaders find a way to get the job done regardless of the obstacles.
(1)
(0)
SGM Erik Marquez
SFC David Xanten - Good leaders find a way to get the job done regardless of the obstacles.
Good leaders are able to objectively evaluate each Soldier, able to discern when they have reached thier limitations in mental or physical capabilities and employ them within those limits. A good leader will do all they can with what they are given, but it is a poor leader that falls for the ill conceived book answer that it is always the leader's fault if the student does not, can not, is unwilling to learn, unable to retain, cognitively unable to understand, physically limited in ability.
Life is not a book, or a NCO academy motto... real Soldiers do not always fit a ideal concept. There is also the very real limitation of physical time and resources. It is a poor leader that wastes precious amounts of both on a SINGLE soldier ignoring the duties and obligations of the unit. The Military is not for everyone, forcing a bad position because the leader has unrealistic mindset they are a failure if a single SM is deemed unwilling, unable or both. There is good reason we have involuntary separations, for the better of the unit and thus the Military and the Nation.
SFC David Xanten It is commendable to go into every situation, or approach every soldier in "I'll find a way" mentality.. So credit to you where credit is due.
But it is just as commendable for a leader to recognize when, winning the battle is a lose for the war.
Good leaders are able to objectively evaluate each Soldier, able to discern when they have reached thier limitations in mental or physical capabilities and employ them within those limits. A good leader will do all they can with what they are given, but it is a poor leader that falls for the ill conceived book answer that it is always the leader's fault if the student does not, can not, is unwilling to learn, unable to retain, cognitively unable to understand, physically limited in ability.
Life is not a book, or a NCO academy motto... real Soldiers do not always fit a ideal concept. There is also the very real limitation of physical time and resources. It is a poor leader that wastes precious amounts of both on a SINGLE soldier ignoring the duties and obligations of the unit. The Military is not for everyone, forcing a bad position because the leader has unrealistic mindset they are a failure if a single SM is deemed unwilling, unable or both. There is good reason we have involuntary separations, for the better of the unit and thus the Military and the Nation.
SFC David Xanten It is commendable to go into every situation, or approach every soldier in "I'll find a way" mentality.. So credit to you where credit is due.
But it is just as commendable for a leader to recognize when, winning the battle is a lose for the war.
(2)
(0)
SFC David Xanten
We come from different times, I was in during the draft and when the Army became All Volunteer. The times may have changed but the NCO Corps is still the backbone of the Army. That being said, it is hard for me to understand how giving up on someone is acceptable to anyone. I would think that during training is the time to weed out the undesirables and not after being sent to a duty station. Not everyone performs up to the standards of some, but they should be given the chance to learn or be transferred to another unit or job.
(0)
(0)
If he is chaptered out due to APFT failure, the reserves are not going to touch him.
(63)
(0)
CPT (Join to see)
Well I would like to side with the recruiter however he is already 7 months into his contract and passed the window for his recruiter to have any influence on him....
(1)
(0)
SGT (Join to see)
There are plenty of people walking around the Army that are overweight and fail multiple PT tests.
(0)
(0)
SGT (Join to see)
Col Dona Marie Iversen - I'm in the army reserve, spent a few years on active. The standard is the same on paper, but I've been in 3 reserve units over 9 years and I've not seen one take PT serious, most just pencil in a score. I've been giving the same soldiers a PT test every month for nine months now and they still continue to fail. I ask my chain of command why we aren't maintaining the standards and chaptering these soldiers out. They blow me off, so most reserve units will take anyone as long as you have a pulse
(0)
(0)
Col Dona Marie Iversen
SGT Calloway,
Delayed response, gave up the computer for a 4 day getaway...
Early on when PT first became a requirement I would agree with you.
But in all my assignments, we were all held accountable 100%. We even had leadership from other squadrons or units on base 'test' us to avoid favoritism. If the third time was not a 'charm' one received their walking papers.
We were forbidden to fly, deploy and participate in exercises etc if we did not have a valid passing score.
Respectfully disagree with the last sentence: "they blow me off, so most reserve units will take anyone as long as you have a pulse"
As with AD, Guard, Reserve and civilian employment, adherence to rules, regulations , all depends on leadership.
Delayed response, gave up the computer for a 4 day getaway...
Early on when PT first became a requirement I would agree with you.
But in all my assignments, we were all held accountable 100%. We even had leadership from other squadrons or units on base 'test' us to avoid favoritism. If the third time was not a 'charm' one received their walking papers.
We were forbidden to fly, deploy and participate in exercises etc if we did not have a valid passing score.
Respectfully disagree with the last sentence: "they blow me off, so most reserve units will take anyone as long as you have a pulse"
As with AD, Guard, Reserve and civilian employment, adherence to rules, regulations , all depends on leadership.
(0)
(0)
Anyone willing to tank their APFT because they want something better isn't exactly living the Army Values; and as an NCO in the Reserves, that's not the kind of "soldier" I want to deal with.
(47)
(0)
SSG (Join to see)
SGT Dave Tracy - I prefer the extra duty bit. I know it's 100 degrees and we been working out here all day, but someone needs to watch the ammo.. Congrats dipstick you earned it.
(0)
(0)
CW3 (Join to see)
never a good idea to just flunk a PT test - getting flagged and eventually getting booted does not make for any reserves or guard to want you there either. You should really consider what you are doing. This is your life right now; do you know what the Army Values are? Integrity is a big one and failing a PT test is a testament to your integrity. Don't do it!!
(0)
(0)
(0)
(0)
Sounds like someone not mature enough to accept commitment and responsibility. He will not do any better in the Reserves. I recommend growing up, finish your commitment and shine even when the going gets tough. That is a larger reflection of character and you must live with yourself.
(37)
(0)
SPC Frederick Coate
Well put Mam! Although I feel I achieved a lot during my time in service, there is so much more I could have accomplished/ experienced had I pushed my self just a little more.
Just tell your buddy to suck it up. Because, when the job sucks, it sucks for everybody. You think it's difficult now? It has been ten years since I ets'd but I'd bet that being a PT failure is still the biggest SIN in the Army....??????
Just tell your buddy to suck it up. Because, when the job sucks, it sucks for everybody. You think it's difficult now? It has been ten years since I ets'd but I'd bet that being a PT failure is still the biggest SIN in the Army....??????
(3)
(0)
CW3 (Join to see)
True Ma'am = that's exactly what I said - you said you swear to.... so do what you said you would do and suck everything else up. Drive on!!
(2)
(0)
If he's the kind of person who would fail a PT test to get out instead of going though the proper channels, it'd probably be better for all parties involved if he got out. He's going to have to take PT tests in the Reserves too and failing one isn't really a good course of action just because one doesn't like their current situation. It sounds like your Battle may need a reality check.
(33)
(0)
(2)
(0)
SSG Leroy Farmer
The Army has a way of adapting from generation to generation while fielding a fearsome force limited only by political pussies. That being said, take his ass out to the pit!!
(1)
(0)
CW3 (Join to see)
yes fulfill what you started - nobody held a gun to your head to enlist right? Just suck it up and do your best - turn your frustration into something positive by doing the best you can instead of the worst!!
(0)
(0)
SSgt Luke Hunt
SGT Kenneth Martin - no offense sir, but how will changing the MOS affect a person's intent to fail a PT test? Aren't all Marines/soldiers/Airmen/ seamen required to participate/pass a PT test to retain their grades?
(0)
(0)
Fail a APFT on purpose? Don't need somebody like that in any component. Perhaps military service is not for him at all. And no, he can't just switch to the Army Reserve. He has a contract he is locked into until his ETS date. If he doesn't make it to that date, then likely the Army Reserve won't be an option for him anyway.
(22)
(0)
This could be just a temporary depression.
Your buddy has been in 7 months. If I can recall that far back, that is when the training assignments have been completed and the "real Army" starts. He's been yelled at and made to push hard for 7 months. Now the rest is relatively easy. In Germany? Love it. Enjoy the recreation. Learn to ski. Take trips to France and Switzerland, etc. Then he might see the whole situation differently and become a squared away soldier.
Your buddy has been in 7 months. If I can recall that far back, that is when the training assignments have been completed and the "real Army" starts. He's been yelled at and made to push hard for 7 months. Now the rest is relatively easy. In Germany? Love it. Enjoy the recreation. Learn to ski. Take trips to France and Switzerland, etc. Then he might see the whole situation differently and become a squared away soldier.
(15)
(0)
Ryan Grimes
Good advice. May be a case, don't brow beat him, string it out, and see how he feels in 3-6 mos. I did not get to serve do to injury, but I can imagine basic taking its toll on some peoples psyche, and once it is done, the depression may just go away. The physical stress I imagine can also take a toll on the mind. As that physical stress lessens after basic, he might come around. I guess we don't have all the facts of his situation. You don't want to lose what may be a great soldier, because he is a bit down. Everyone reacts differently.
(2)
(0)
CW3 (Join to see)
yes true - if he is in the beginning, he hasn't really even given it a chance - he's probably young too and doesn't really know what he wants yet. Just give it a chance; you never know; after your obligation you may see yourself reenlisting - stranger things have happened!!
(1)
(0)
Usually this conversation is the other way around. A lot of my friends want to switch TO ACTIVE COMPONENT. The reserves is hard when you go to battle assembly and go through the usual goat rope. It is hard to build teams and get a substantial amount done. You miss the camaraderie and high speed training and discipline. I agree if you are that apathetic about your career that you would purposely fail an APFT, the Army doesn't need you. I can train a Soldier on how to correct any deficiencies but apathy is not one of those things.
(12)
(0)
Tell your buddy to do his time and walk away. He will create more harm by trying to circumvent the system.
Incidentally, a contract is just that. I know of no case where you can "change your mind" and go reserves.
Incidentally, a contract is just that. I know of no case where you can "change your mind" and go reserves.
(12)
(0)
SMSgt Brian Kearney
The USAF uses it to keep the investment (basic, tech school, training) in one way or another when they have personnel like this. 11B sucks. Most soldiers who work where I am all cross train out of there (after getting easy promotions) and into a MOS where they will be employable in the future.
(1)
(0)
CDR William Kempner
Sage comment, SFC. The guy should just man up, honor his commitment, don't do anything stupid, and make the best of it. An Honorable Discharge says A LOT to any potential employer, not to mention other benefits-Veteran's Home loans, Education assists, any disability payments, even FUNERAL benefits-no one thinks of that, but it is a big deal for your family, etc. 'Nothing lasts forever"-he may get offered an early out, or have an opportunity to re-train or go into something new. It will end and if done right, he will be better and better off for it.
(0)
(0)
Read This Next