An amazing journey you've taken. Thanks for telling us about it. I'm glad you didn't have to go to Vietnam. It destroyed some of the people I care about, either immediately or long term. What was your rank when you retired? How long were you in? What were your masters degrees in? Did you get the degrees while you were in the service or after you got out?
I retired as a Commander (O-5) after 31 years. The laws as they applied to me would have enabled me to stay in for a total of 42 years, but my wife's career was taking off and that took priority. The Admiral I worked for offered me the choice of going to Scotland, Japan, or back to Spain. We always wondered if we made the right choice by not going to Scotland or Spain, but my career had "driven our train" for most of our marriage and her career was becoming increasingly important to her. It was her turn, and I settled into a Laboratory setting that was very agreeable. Overall, we are pretty sure we made the right choice, .... as long as we stay away from photos of Scotland.
I got both of my Master's Degrees and my BS in Engineering Science while I was on active duty. My Masters in Business Management was done at night school, but the Navy send me to school full time for my BS and for the Masters in Electronics Systems Engineering. When the Navy sends you to school "on their nickel", you live like a Monk and carry a heavy load. I had one quarter where I had four electrical engineering courses all going at the same time. At the end, they steer you into a research project for something that the Navy needs and for which they would probably have to hire a contractor. In my case, I researched a program that a big company was trying to sell the Navy at a pretty high price tag. My research lead me to conclude that their approach was not realistic, the payoff was likely to be very low, their prototype did not interface with the ship's existing electronics very well, there were better way of doing it, and the $50 million for six ships was too high to begin with. My Thesis helped kill that useless project. Later that company got in touch with me and told me that "I should not bother sending them my resume when I retired." I am still rather proud of that and had they send me something on paper I would probably have framed it.
I got to do many other very interesting things:
I studied environmental chemistry and environmental law at night school and got to lead a couple of EPA inspection teams on site inspections. I was not the expert, my role as a senior officer was to ensure that the station cooperated with the scientists and trust me, their normal preference was to cover things up.
For unknown reasons I was appointed as the Equal Opportunity/Race Relations Officer at a large station. Our sole Black Officer had a subordinate site about 90 miles away. I had a couple of sexual harassment cases that resulted in disciplinary action and one forced retirement. (We still had men who could not accept women in the mid 1970's.) I was also the station legal officer and head of the courts martial board.
I did a lot of JAG Investigations during my career including one after the hanging death of a military dependent in on-base housing. Very sad.
I briefed President Reagan's Science Board on a particular project that I was focused on. I also had a one-on-one with Admiral Gracie Hopper when she was still on active duty at the age of 72. What an impressive lady and scientist. She is one of my heroes.
So I never suffered from boredom, and I wish that everyone who served had as much fun as I did.