Likes and dislikes while in the Service

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  • Weasel
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 3696

    #16
    Liked stationed with VRC 50 at NAS Cubi Point PI for 15 months. Disliked stationed at NAS Whiting Field Milton FL for 2 yrs. Now you talk about chicken sh!t that was it.

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    • coastie
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 181

      #17
      Coast Guard!
      1966-1970
      Alternate good and bad:
      I have yet to be shot AT!
      Going out in the proverbial "dark and stormy night".
      Bringing in a vessel formerly in distress.
      Obtuse senior petty officers
      Great senior petty officers.
      Leaving Port Aransas [Oh, the beaches in summer!]
      Leaving Port O'Conner--[actually would be a good station if you like to fish and HAD A CAR!]
      Aced Navy Quartermaster School
      Bombed Navy Signalman School, ergo no Coastguard QM3
      CG had you take both courses because CG had no signalmen.
      Posted to Buoy tender in Galveston and home is Houston.
      Assigned to buoy gang after meet and greet with pompus XO.
      New XO and recent Bosun Mate Chief finally got to take servicewide for QM 3....aced it!
      Reserve Ensign didn't recognize symtoms of severe Mono and had me up on insubordination charges untill squashed by XO and Doctor's reports. [his history: 12 years getting Navy signalman, 5 years getting his degree from Kingpoint, then CG Ensign at age 35{?}]
      Did my job on the bridge and got to like it.
      Terriffic row with above noted Ensign when I believed our position returning to Galveston from Sabine Pass to be too close to shore and then being ORDERED OFF THE BRIDGE BY THE CAPTAIN!
      [40 minutes later, the East Jetties were seen through the heavy haze by the bridge and bow watch as set by the BM Chief who "had concerns" after my bridge fiasco. and a HARD TURN to port was executed.
      Was not allowed to take test for QM2.
      When asked about reenlistment by the [good] XO, what he saw was air moving where my body had been.
      Yeah, I miss SOME of it, and wish that, as a 2nd class--E5, I might have stayed in, but my mouth got me in trouble when I knew I was right.
      And I was more right than in error.

      Oh, 10 weeks after separation, the QM striker--3 years in that position--called me at my parents home.
      I returned the call.
      He and the QM2 wanted me to come back and update the nautical charts that had been my duty and they had been neglecting!
      Gee, talk about "good" shipmates!

      Comment

      • C5M1
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2009
        • 608

        #18
        Was stationed at Ft Bliss Tx after I got back from VN. If it weren't for Juarez just across the border and a 22 pistol, I may not have made it through it.

        Spit and shine, typical stateside bull crap, man, that was hard duty. Never showed up for any work details, missed everything except most morning roll calls. Always being called in by the CO for many a a$$ chewing. Just didn't give a chit. After roll call and breakfast it was to the desert with the 22 to kill Jacks and while away the day. Juarez in the evening for a good buzz and some female companionship.

        One occasion the CO called me in and had someone slam a door while I was standing at attention. Jeezus, I almost melted. Looking back, many yrs later, I think he done that just to gauge my reaction, cause he never gave me anything more than an a$$ chewing...... I think he understood.

        I got away with some crap that would have landed just about anyone else in prison.
        Can't remember the CO's name, but, my hat is off to him, and others like him.


        regards, dennis

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        • Art
          Senior Member, Deceased
          • Dec 2009
          • 9256

          #19
          Dislikes:

          The "bait and switch" they ran on me when I was recruited but that actually turned out ok.
          The Reception Station.
          "Busy work"
          Drunks, lots of them in the Army in the late 1960s
          Squad bays
          Hurrying up to wait.....
          ....to do "busy work."
          A truly incompetent C.O. (he was a West Pointer to boot.)
          The realization that for a lot of the N.C.O.s the title really did stand for No Chance Outside.
          The latrines weren't in the barracks in Korea which meant a 30 yard run to get a shower and shave in -20 degree weather in the winter.

          The good stuff:

          I'm with Tom Sudz on breakfast and I thought the food overall was pretty good, there was enough of it and I didn't have to pay for it.
          I had two excellent Drill Sergeants who taught me a lot in 8 weeks.
          My M.O.S. was good so like I said the bait and switch worked out ok and may even have saved my life.
          I got to travel a little.
          The Army paid for my college, and gave me three years to get ready for it, I wasn't up to the challenge right after High School.
          My military time also got me a guarantee on my first mortgage.
          I didn't get shot, see any of my team mates shot or have to shoot anybody
          Last edited by Art; 07-01-2011, 04:34.

          Comment

          • alibi
            Member
            • Aug 2011
            • 94

            #20
            I was in ROTC in high school and went to college with the idea of a career in the military. This was in the 1960's, the attraction of a career wore off and I was eventually drafted. I was on active duty as Correctional Specialist (PMOS 95C) and was discharged 5 months early because the Army was reducing and at the same time promoting the Volunteer Army (VOLAR). I was in the inactive reserve for a year when a friend talked me into transferring into the National Guard. Shortly after I started drilling with the Guard I was accepted to the State OCS program, although I didn't sign up for it my friend wanted a "buddy" to go through the program with him and had submitted my application. As it turned out his marriage conflicted with OCS so I went and he didn't, then near the end of the training tried to talk me into resigning and restarting with him in the next cycle. I was commissioned and while I was in OCS the unit had been reorganized and redesignated and there were no billets for me. I found a position in the Division Cavalry Squadron. Later I was in the Division G-4 Section and the S-4 of the Signal Battalion.
            I transferred into the USAR that did annual training at the same place I had discharged from active duty. Later I got in on an annual training in Korea and was scheduled to go back the following year but Bubba Clinton cancelled the exercise. I assumed command of a detachment that went through 2 or 3 MTOE changes. The unit supported the Boy Scout Jamboree at Ft. Pickett, an air defense exercise at Ft. Bliss, a brigade exercise at Ft. Polk and one annual training in Panama. I retired with 27 years service. I only share this to indicate how much there was to appreciate, love and hate about the military, that it is difficult to state exactly what was most appreciated and what aspect was most despised.

            In general terms I enjoyed the travel and found adventure and interest in new places everywhere I went. I often enjoyed the challenge of leadership and successfully guiding people through events and exercises. The Armor Officer Basic Course training at Ft. Knox is mostly a great experience and conjures pleasant memories.

            My most unpleasant memories are of people that for whatever reason made the situation more difficult and demonstrated a lack of ethics in their actions. My assignment as a Correctional Specialist (stockade guard) was in an environment that was nothing but negative and personally depressing. There was no aspect of that 14 months working in a prison environment that appealed to me or brings pleasant memories. Overall I regret missing out on opportunities for training and assignments that probably would have been interesting and challenging.

            Comment

            • blackhawknj
              Senior Member
              • Aug 2011
              • 3754

              #21
              My overall impression was one of Lack of Integrity. Vietnam was the bloody fiasco it was large part due to the constant lying about the body count, in the peactime Army-which included all that wasn't directly involved with Vietnam, it seemed that most training and maintenence was conducted via the M-1 pencil. When I left Active Duty in 1971 the MOS mismatch rate was running between 25 and 50 percent.

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