dilettante
Well-known Member
- Location
- Michigan
Life can present us with many forks in our roads. At each one the coin flips, the dice roll, we take a chance or not... and we go left or we go right.
One of mine came at the end of high school. The draft was newly in abeyance, but one evening after school a buddy and I were messing around downtown and got lured in by a recruiter just a bit before daily closing. We got a pitch, and we were urged to take a "no obligations" written test. Bored killing time... why the heck not?
Not long after i got a call at home. The U.S. Navy was offering me a Saturday tour of a new nuclear power plant still under construction. A car came by to pick me up, several other guys inside. It was extremely interesting, we had early access to the Visitor Center and two engineers gave a talk.
Then I got another call "Please come take another test. No obligation."
This was a long battery of tests in a building with a big anchor out front, and a lot of others guys. I quickly found out they had all signed up. A bit of a panic, but I wasn't actually on the hook.
Later I kept getting pestered. All through college they'd contact me about ROTC and scholarships. They wanted me for the Nuclear Navy. I turned them down, but my life would have turned out very differently if I hadn't.
Anyone have alternate paths to share?
One of mine came at the end of high school. The draft was newly in abeyance, but one evening after school a buddy and I were messing around downtown and got lured in by a recruiter just a bit before daily closing. We got a pitch, and we were urged to take a "no obligations" written test. Bored killing time... why the heck not?
Not long after i got a call at home. The U.S. Navy was offering me a Saturday tour of a new nuclear power plant still under construction. A car came by to pick me up, several other guys inside. It was extremely interesting, we had early access to the Visitor Center and two engineers gave a talk.
Then I got another call "Please come take another test. No obligation."
This was a long battery of tests in a building with a big anchor out front, and a lot of others guys. I quickly found out they had all signed up. A bit of a panic, but I wasn't actually on the hook.
Later I kept getting pestered. All through college they'd contact me about ROTC and scholarships. They wanted me for the Nuclear Navy. I turned them down, but my life would have turned out very differently if I hadn't.
Anyone have alternate paths to share?