Posted on Nov 30, 2013
Retirees - When did you know it was time to hang up the uniform?
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Whether the choice was yours, your spouse's/family's, medical condition or you ran into one of the military's service length requirements, when did you know it was time to hang the uniform up for the last time?
Thousands of service members retire each year...your responses may impact their decisions.
Note: Keeping your responses short will allow for more views/responses.
Thousands of service members retire each year...your responses may impact their decisions.
Note: Keeping your responses short will allow for more views/responses.
Posted 12 y ago
Responses: 89
For me it iwas a medical condition I have been fighting with for a few years now. I will have 23 years in when my retirement date hits. I promised myself that when my body cannot handle the pain anymore I would step down to allow another Soldier to step up and take my place in this great Army. I just hope all the Soldier's I have the pleaseure of teaching, mentoring and training has learned from my accomplishiments as well as my mistakes.
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When BS + PC > Moral compass.
I believe in Unity of Command. Every time there is a bad decision made by the Big Army™, I need to ask myself if I can with integrity live with my disagreement and execute. The day I can't is the day I drop my packet. So far, so good.
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After 35 years TIS my body is telling me it is time to hang it up. I love being a soldier but have noticed a severe loss of respect and discipline in the army. It will be sad to hang my uniform up and at the same time I am ready to be able to go and do whatever I want whenever I want.
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MSG (Join to see)
Thank you for your dedicated service SFC Chaplar. Good luck in your future endeavors.
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I submitted my packet when my fun meter was pegged.
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With more than enough time for retirement, these types of discussion become more and more relevant.
I know for me, I'm still having fun and I'm still being challenged and I still have that passion to give back.
I think, especially at the Senior level, that is my role now - to give back and make people better. When I don't have a passion to do that anymore, that'll be the time to hang it up.
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When it's no longer fun and rewarding.
I said in another thread: the Army has given me a lot but it has also taken a lot (my health, family time, a couple marriages). When it takes way more than it gives could be another time.
I said in another thread: the Army has given me a lot but it has also taken a lot (my health, family time, a couple marriages). When it takes way more than it gives could be another time.
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When it stopped being fun and turned into a job. Also with office and base closures.
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My decision was simple. When I was in Korea I heard the phone calls to children back home who were heart broken their mom/dad was away for a year or more. I vowed then that if I should ever have a child that would be my last term of enlistment. My son was three weeks old when I was shipped out to Iraq in Feb. 2003. My term ended while I was in Iraq and when I returned I ETS'd back home.
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A few things led up to it. I was scheduled for CSM Academy and rotation out of Germany after 7 1/2 years. I finished up my tour in Kuwait during Desert Shield/Storm and returned to my unit in Germany to find out they wanted to send me back into the Airborne. That was the straw that broke the camels back for me. We retired out of Germany, took a 45 day terminal leave and processed out of the Army at Ft. Carson, Colorado at 37 years old. I don't regret it for a minute.
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