Lately while I've been trying to make my school selection and telling people about VMI/ROTC, they've seemed to ask me, "Do you want to make a career out of the military?"
I was always under the impression that being in the military was just a stage of your life, people serve in the military for a few years and then get a job in the civilian world. How common is it for people to actually make a career out of the military? It would seem pretty hard since I've heard of people getting forced out, or simply not making the promotion cuts.
Opinions?
I guess what you are asking is: Do most people who go on AD stay to retirement? I don't know what the numbers are, but No most don't stay on AD to retirement, for a variety of reasons:
a.
They Don't want to either because they don't like it, or they are sick of it, or because they want to do something else more than they want to keep doing this.
b. They never intended to stay on AD for a career- - they like the Army but have civilian interests as well- lots of folks like that in the Reserve or NG. So the Army is still something they do but they are not doing it full time.
c. They aren't very good at it, as determined by promotion boards. As an officer once you are passed over , you are dead in the water and you are on your way out. OR else- as drawdown occurs you are selcted to leave- this is gonna start happening more and more.
VMI is actually built around your premise- the concept of "Citizen soldiers" (to quote the parapet -'Fair Specimens of Citizen soldiers, attached to their native state, proud of her fame, and ready in everytime of deepest peril to vindicate her honor and defend her rights") who do their duty when they are needed and have careers in the civilian world. About 20% of grads become career military (ie... they stay to retirement) while the rest have primarily civilian careers even if they started off on AD for an initial tour of duty.
So having said that- your choice of major in college DOES MATTER A LOT in my opinion. The Military may be a shorter period of employment than you thought when you were 18 for all kinds of reasons - and when you start looking for a job- some degrees are a lot more employable than others. So don't get target fixated on the Army as your only future option- you may just discover by the time you are ready to commission, that you aren't as gungho as you were a few years before, and that is doubly true of how things may look once you have been in for a couple of years. More than one Lt has discovered that he is not signing up for a John Wayne movie and things aren't as exciting as he once thought, and he is counting the days till his commitment is over.