Posted on Sep 25, 2017
What is your 'favorite' memory from MEPS?
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Meal consisted of a single cheeseburger, fries and a drink at Burger King. NOT a Whopper, NOT a chicken sandwich. The equivalent of a kids meal... I had a 2 hour bus ride to the station and a 2 hour bus ride home..basically an all day physical, and tests. Yes, folks in 1983, the USAF recruiter would not give anyone a ride to the MEPS station, so I had to go to the BUS station and get a ride to the MEPS office. I remember the rejection rate was about 80 to 90%... you would have been amazed what kind of people tried to enlist, back in those days. I seem to remember only about 1 in 20 in high school actually passed the ASVAB test.
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I remember my first week and one situation come to mind
Drill Sgt to me “are you a f***ing idiot (right off the Bus) yes drill Sgt I am
Drill Sgt to me “are you a f***ing idiot (right off the Bus) yes drill Sgt I am
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Since I enlisted in 1965 long before MEPS had come about I find the following posts very interesting,my memories of the induction process must sound prehistoric to current Service members
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My favorite memory of MEPS? Well, I had gone through a day-long processing at the Memphis MEPS center back in early 1967. I was waiting in this one area as I was told to do. This guy came out and called out my name and escorted me into the doctor's office. The doctor looked at me with a great big smile and said, "Good news, you are underweight and will not be drafted!" I just looked at him for a moment and then I said, "I wasn't drafted. I volunteered for the Marines!" He gave me this strange look and then said OK and signed a waiver. I guess he thought he was doing me a favor. LOL
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I joined the Navy in England so there was no MEPs. I joined under delayed enlistment in March and was told that my departure date would be sometime later in the year. Not one day later I get a phone call telling me I'll be shipping out in April. I flew out of London's Heathrow Airport on April 24th and arrived in Orlando where I was met at the airport by the USO "greeters." They put me on a bus and a few minutes later I was at the boot camp in Orlando, Florida.
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PO3 Donald Murphy
I had not been back to the states since 1978 so USA 1985 was a culture shock for me. ATM's, drive-through fast food. I had no earthly idea where I was!
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Only thing I recall about MEPS was my second trip there for my actual day to leave for Basic Training. It was the wee hours of the morning and my mom, step-dad and I where driving to the MEPS station when my step-dad asked me what exit do we need to get off at. I had no idea. I had driven myself there close to a year before for all the initial processing but had never returned since. It was somewhere in downtown Columbus, OH. Fortunately it was right off of an exit and somehow I recognized the area as we came to it.
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Ummm favorite??? I wouldn't sy favorite, but being scared as all hell of the unknown!!!
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Just before taking the oath I was pulled out of the formation. I had to wait until the next day because of a paper work problem.
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Capt Brandon Charters for me MEPS was a great experience over all. It meant that I had really lost enough weight, and gotten myself into good enough shape to pass the tape test and go into the Navy. So despite doctors with cold hands, the fear of answering a question wrong and being sent home, and my oath of Navy enlistment being conducted by an Air Force Major, I loved the whole day spent at MEPS.
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I had a MEPS staff member (pushing 70) hook me up to an EKG, told me there would be electric charges sent through the wires, then left the room. At 21, needless to say my readings were off the the charts.
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