Well, the title pretty much says it all. I'm 24, a year out of college (a darn good one, one of Newsweek's "New Ivies"), albeit with a non-technical (History) degree, and the idea of a few years' national service sounds pretty good. I won't lie; if I'd been offered a cushy civilian job up until a week or two ago, I might never have thought of this, but now that I have thought of it, I'll still look into it even if a job offer comes through.
I'd go for the Navy partly because I grew up on the Pacific, and am most comfortable on or near sea, but mostly because I don't have the fighting instinct/drive for the Army or Marines; I'm just not an aggressive guy. (That said, I of course appreciate that any service's Basic Training can be tough at best, and am not afraid of boot camp itself.) I understand that through the Individual Augmentee program, Sailors can be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, and in such a situation I'd saddle up and do my best, but I'd prefer to serve in a non-combat rating if possible.
I haven't contacted a recruiter yet, but I'll give them a call tomorrow. I assume that I'd most rather do OCS (Officer Candidate School); it'd take some advance physical training, but I think I could do it.
So, I'd just like to ask if anyone has any tips or advice on how to proceed, especially in terms of recent books describing Navy life. I'm reading One Bullet Away, the memoir of a Marine Recon's tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, which has great info on their OCS, and would love to know of any comparable Navy books. Wikipedia links to a description of OCS from a decade ago, but while there seems to be some solid info there, I'd like to find all the best current info I can. Also, if anyone has any useful observations on how the Great Recession has affected competition for OCS spots, ratings and such, I'd love to hear that too.
Thanks!
I'd go for the Navy partly because I grew up on the Pacific, and am most comfortable on or near sea, but mostly because I don't have the fighting instinct/drive for the Army or Marines; I'm just not an aggressive guy. (That said, I of course appreciate that any service's Basic Training can be tough at best, and am not afraid of boot camp itself.) I understand that through the Individual Augmentee program, Sailors can be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, and in such a situation I'd saddle up and do my best, but I'd prefer to serve in a non-combat rating if possible.
I haven't contacted a recruiter yet, but I'll give them a call tomorrow. I assume that I'd most rather do OCS (Officer Candidate School); it'd take some advance physical training, but I think I could do it.
So, I'd just like to ask if anyone has any tips or advice on how to proceed, especially in terms of recent books describing Navy life. I'm reading One Bullet Away, the memoir of a Marine Recon's tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, which has great info on their OCS, and would love to know of any comparable Navy books. Wikipedia links to a description of OCS from a decade ago, but while there seems to be some solid info there, I'd like to find all the best current info I can. Also, if anyone has any useful observations on how the Great Recession has affected competition for OCS spots, ratings and such, I'd love to hear that too.
Thanks!
