Your enlistment anniversary: How important is it to you?
I do. I entered the Air Force on 6 Feb, 1996 and served for a year and half before getting discharged because I decided to be stupid and get into trouble. On June 26, 1999 the Army National Guard gave me an opportunity to "do it right" by allowing me to re-enlist. I celebrate that date every year. It's always a quiet celebration. Just me and a glass of Jameson Irish Whiskey and a cigar, but it's a day I say thanks for what I have and how far I've come. I've gone from young stupid kid to an Active Guard Reserve E-6 and now have 16 plus years of honorable service.
Celebrate your date!! You've come far.
Great comments, SFC Paulk. I comletely agree. Some of the comments my Drill Sergeants made long, long ago now make so much sense.
DS (SFC) Rivas put it best:
"Where the f*** else can you go and get to play with guns and explosives and not get arrested, get free flights all over the world, get moved to a new place right when the neighbors start annoying the s*** out of you, free food, free medical, free clothes, new job every couple years . . . hell, I can't believe EVERYONE doesn't want to sign up!"
It only took me about a decade and half to understand and appreciate that man! LOL
DIEMS in May means nothing any more. PEBD in July means service stripes and pay raises. BASD in December means I'm closer to retirement (I don't actually observe the date; I keep a running count). April is when I came on tour so that means GCMs and clothing allowance.
Honestly, if it doesn't affect my uniform I don't pay it a whole lot of attention.
Just like a birthday, your "Army Birthday" should have you looking back over the previous year, asking yourself what have you done well, what have you done that could be improved, and what do you want to do in the next year?
The practical side however, means another clothing allowance, if it's a 3rd year multiple then it's another award of the AGCM (hopefully), and/or a "graduation" to the next step in pay level.
As an older Soldier, I can say that you should treat each year "in the bag" as a gift and look forward to doing better in the coming year.
Recalling my first 3 years, it went slow and I thought it would never come to an end. I was in for 4 years initially. I went delayed entry in June and active in that September in Oakland, CA.
Some of my basic training platoon were from there and they came to the recruiting station in handcuffs by the law. They were ok. It was the Drill Sergeants who came back from Thailand and Vietnam that we had to worry about. It was a crazy and alternative universe back then. At Ft. Ord, I did 18 months, I had a short-timers attitude, then I went to Germany and completed 26 months.
Back then, dates were important to me. It was also part of the army culture on how many days and a wake up there are til a Soldier goes home. The days were counted everyday and the wake up is the day a Soldier left his unit and got on the free bird back to the world.
I remember counting the days on my calendar to deros, get back to the world, Conus. Getting on that freedom bird was an experience for me. I did ets at Ft. Dix...landed and processed out in a week. After I went home, 72 days later, I re-enlisted.
It was not enough time to adjust to civilian life but I had the opportunity to get back in, so I did the next 16 years in active duty and eventually retired at 20 years. Still looking back on my first hitch, I take pause now and then on my first formation and the Drill Sergeants.
My first enlistment, I received a Good Conduct Medal and a service stripe. That was it. Service members derosing from Germany at that time were receiving Army Commendation medals and some MSMs. I didn't get jack because all I wanted to do was get on free bird, and get back to the world and get out of the army. I thought that time 4 years was enough.
The National Defense, Overseas, Professional Development, Army Achievement Medals and everything else did not come until later on.
It was a different time and a different generation ago.

Enlisted
