Carl Kneel
New member
Jobs are boring. Again, they have to pay you to get you to show up. It's what you do with your life that matters. Don't identify yourself through your job. The job is a means to an end. It's a paycheck and that check allows you to do stuff you find interesting.
My job is OK. Mostly I fix printers, answer stupid questions and do other IT related tasks. For fun I weld, I sculpt steel, I work with Greyhound Rescue, I play the piano, I play the cello, I read, I ride motorcycles, I work on motorcycles, I hike, camp, target shoot and I'm a member of an international social organization. On top of that I do this shit, I work with Taylor on some of his side projects... The job just allows me the financial ability to do all of that.
Don't romanticize the military. You could just as easily get stuck doing the same thing you're doing now without any change of pace or scenery. Short of combat troops a LOT of the folks in the military sit around doing the same stupid shit day in, day out with no end in sight.
You are more likely to get a support role than a combat role in the military. The Marines might decide that you're an electrician fixing broken outlets in Buttfuckistan Idaho for all you know. Or maybe you'll be a unit clerk (secretary). My neighbor was a Marine. They trained him to be an HVAC tech. Basically he fixed their air conditioners.
So be certain before you join up that the military is going to fix what's wrong. And it may be that you don't need to fix what's wrong so much as find something NEW to do outside of work. It sounds to me like a new roommate and a hobby might be all you need. And if not you can still join up. I'd just be a bit cautious about making a decision that you can't un-make if you understand what I mean.
My job is OK. Mostly I fix printers, answer stupid questions and do other IT related tasks. For fun I weld, I sculpt steel, I work with Greyhound Rescue, I play the piano, I play the cello, I read, I ride motorcycles, I work on motorcycles, I hike, camp, target shoot and I'm a member of an international social organization. On top of that I do this shit, I work with Taylor on some of his side projects... The job just allows me the financial ability to do all of that.
Don't romanticize the military. You could just as easily get stuck doing the same thing you're doing now without any change of pace or scenery. Short of combat troops a LOT of the folks in the military sit around doing the same stupid shit day in, day out with no end in sight.
You are more likely to get a support role than a combat role in the military. The Marines might decide that you're an electrician fixing broken outlets in Buttfuckistan Idaho for all you know. Or maybe you'll be a unit clerk (secretary). My neighbor was a Marine. They trained him to be an HVAC tech. Basically he fixed their air conditioners.
So be certain before you join up that the military is going to fix what's wrong. And it may be that you don't need to fix what's wrong so much as find something NEW to do outside of work. It sounds to me like a new roommate and a hobby might be all you need. And if not you can still join up. I'd just be a bit cautious about making a decision that you can't un-make if you understand what I mean.