Responses: 8
I am still in the Reserves, so I get my fill of "the good old days" once a month.
Civilian life requires some adjustment though. People don't understand, or think they do but say well-meaning but clueless things. I find I don't have much patience anymore since a deployment to Iraq. I get angry easier, and I have no respect for authority when "authority" does something senseless. I keep thinking to myself "that's the kind of $%#@ reasoning that gets people killed!' and I have to talk myself down and remind myself it isn't "there" anymore, it's "here", and here has more leeway for stupid.
Civilian life requires some adjustment though. People don't understand, or think they do but say well-meaning but clueless things. I find I don't have much patience anymore since a deployment to Iraq. I get angry easier, and I have no respect for authority when "authority" does something senseless. I keep thinking to myself "that's the kind of $%#@ reasoning that gets people killed!' and I have to talk myself down and remind myself it isn't "there" anymore, it's "here", and here has more leeway for stupid.
(4)
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I hate the wishy-washy-ness of corporate America. I long for the good old days where decisions were made and stood by (even with MDMP) 19 people have to have 5 meetings to decide the flavor of the Kool-Aid for the day. Pleasing corporate executives is not the same as taking care of your CO by a long shot.
(3)
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Very much! Beats being help accountable for others actions! No more deployments! Spending time with the family. Going home every night. You just cant beat it!
(2)
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