Quote from: Julia1996 on April 03, 2018, 09:12:27 AM
They make you do stuff even when you're sick? That's really mean and awful!
If you are sick then during PT formation you go to sick call. But don't expect too much sympathy though if you have a hangover. And others will know and then... Just suck it up and drive on. You will not be the only one hung over believe me.
I did not do PT in Korea. Still had to take the PT tests though along with weapons qualification.
But no if you are sick or inured then you go to sick call and the Doc will give you a "profile" which will allow you to be on lighter duties but hung over is not being sick or injured. That is just making a bad choice the night before and everyone does it.
But dear, a hangover is a bad decision you made the night before and not being sick. With a hangover you still have to do the PT and that includes running. Just drop out, throw up and catch up. If not you will never hear the end of it. When you go TDY, that is pretty much party time. No PT, you get money and it is pretty much a gravy duty. But you still better be where you need to be on time.
The Military is a little different than civilian life. I mean I had to get someone out of jail in Osan. It was a guy I worked with that got a little drunk and assaulted a KN. Not quite an international incident that made AFKN and I paid the fines and since I was his superior, I never said anything to mine about it other than I handled it.
The thing that gets me is that most everyone that has never served think it is like eternal Basic Training or Boot Camp with R. Lee Ermy calling recruits steers or queers and so on. When you get to your first duty station then a lot of that military BS goes our the window. You will serve with these people for a year or more and unless you are in trouble, then the Military Bearing goes out the window. It is nothing more than a job outside of a training environment.
Julia, it really ain't as bad as what most think after basic or more intense training. So don't think that military service is like Hollywood portrays it. It is actually pretty lax after the training and pretty much just another job. It is kind of like being a cop. You become temporary family members that realize you may die together or have to sacrifice yourself for them or used deadly force to save them.
Yeah the training environment sux. But the rest is pretty lax.