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The Watercooler
A sense of vocation
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<blockquote data-quote="skeeter" data-source="post: 493824" data-attributes="member: 439"><p>My son decided at age 12 he wanted to be an air craft mechanic. He became a member of Civil Air Patrol at that age (did it all on his own, which for my extremely shy son was a miracle in and of itself). His ASVAB scores were so high that all branches wanted him, so he went up one day after high school to the building that has all in it and went back and forth till he got the best deal (Navy). Served 4 years in the Navy - his CAP rank transferred to the Navy, he started basic an E2, came out 9 weeks later an E3, and spent 4 years on the USS Truman working on F18 engines. He's currently in school for avionics.</p><p></p><p>His younger brother, on the other hand, still has no idea what he wants to do, but he is working and living on his own, which is a good thing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="skeeter, post: 493824, member: 439"] My son decided at age 12 he wanted to be an air craft mechanic. He became a member of Civil Air Patrol at that age (did it all on his own, which for my extremely shy son was a miracle in and of itself). His ASVAB scores were so high that all branches wanted him, so he went up one day after high school to the building that has all in it and went back and forth till he got the best deal (Navy). Served 4 years in the Navy - his CAP rank transferred to the Navy, he started basic an E2, came out 9 weeks later an E3, and spent 4 years on the USS Truman working on F18 engines. He's currently in school for avionics. His younger brother, on the other hand, still has no idea what he wants to do, but he is working and living on his own, which is a good thing. [/QUOTE]
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