What are these 'bonuses' you speak of? LOL
I watched the soldiers around me cash in on the bonuses being offered over the past decade but never managed to hit the window for myself.
I am not complaining, though. I've had some outstanding assignments over that period and wouldn't trade them for any of amount of bonus money (well, maybe that one they were offering SF). :)
SFC Cook,
The situation that you presented is one that has many options, all of which you must honestly weigh against each other based on what has the most value to you. I have seen a great SFC who is making the transition right now to Warrant and is extremely happy (message me if you want his info, he is just finishing WOC and was a 12yr SFC), and I have met folks who have stayed in for the wrong reasons and were miserable. The bottom line is that there is an obvious loss for the time that you have already committed to the Army if you leave. However, you have to personally balance that against the opportunity loss of not being around your family in the near future. If you stay it should be because your job still gets you excited, and you are happy with being in the Army. There are tons of rich people out there that hate their jobs and we spend too much time at work to be miserable. In the end it has to be a personal choice and yours is a balance of personal satisfaction, job satisfaction, and monetary loss (or gain depending on your next job). I would be interested as it has bearing on the next job if you get out, do you already have your Bachelors?
I reenlisted the first time after realizing that both my wife and I were set to ETS just a month apart and had no real job prospects lined up. It was supposed to be an interim measure to pay the bills while she got established in a civilian career.
About 5 years in, we were getting divorced. Leaving the military had been 'our' plan, but I never actually had a plan for just me. Since I enjoyed it enough, and the math worked in my favor, the decision at that point was easy.
CSM, I think NCOs should get a wooden rudius when they retire with 20 or more years to symbolize their separation from the military and their faithful service.
The Roman legionnaires and gladiators used wooden swords in order to practice.
One Roman term that it is known by is the Rudius.
This was a wood sword that was given to a gladiator to symbolize his freedom from the arena.

Military Career
Retirement
Esprit de Corps
Time in Service
Service
