1. I have 7 years till retirement and I need to put the well being of my family first
2. Maybe if I stick it out I can make a difference; if not at least I tried
3. I still have a little fight left in me and a job that needs to get done.
I have served thirty years, and I believe in paying forward. I believe in the sacred oath of protecting and defending the Constitution of the United States.
I remember those that have mentored and poured their heart and soul in mentoring me when I was an E-1. I believe in preserving the sacred military traditions and I believe in our future.
The old saying that cream rises to the top, and the waste gets flushed away!
Adversity such as times as this create the next generation of General Patton's! It is not in comfort and stability, when cream rises to the top. It is in turmoil and conflict, when one stands up for what is right and does not back down!
I think for most people's reasons evolve during their time in, like a marriage. I know may reasons have changed several times. I originally joined for the college money. My plan was 4 years and get out. As I progressed I began to like being a Soldier and adopted the Army Values as my own. Then when I became an NCO I enjoyed leading Soldiers. The dark part of my career was when I went to Recruiting. I went to recruiting before 9-11 and times were very different. Needless to say recruiting at that time was a toxic environment. Then the unimaginable happened, 9-11 and the Army had to involuntarily convert 300 NCOs to career recruiters (MOS 79R4O). I was one of the lucky few, but I had just made SFC and went over 10 years, so I decided to stay for the pension, but I was miserable for about 7 years and couldn't wait to retire. I went back to school so when I left the Army I had an education to fall back on. Then the officer opportunity presented itself. Now I have 21 years active and I am having a great time. The difference is all the pressure of reaching 20 is gone, I can leave whenever I want.
So as I said, it evolves. Either you evolve to stay or you evolve to try something new.
Bottom-line is I love working with Soldiers and find nothing more rewarding. When I was a recruiter I was able to "peek" into the civilian world, I didn't like what I saw...
I stayed as long as I did (27 years) for two reasons:
1. I loved doing what I did
2. I thought I could make a difference.
I think every Soldier that makes it to either the NCO or Officer ranks thinks or hopes they can make a difference and I also believe that is the main reason most stay in for the long haul as well.
CPT Miller:
Respectfully, what are your suggestions to prevent this from happening?

Benefits
Military Career
Culture
Motivation
