At the end of your commitment for flying for the Navy/Marines, do you think it was worth it?
I did non-flying shore and disassociated tours and am getting forced out for not making LCDR but still think it was worth it. I look at my friends I went to high school or college with and do not envy their careers/experiences. Military service is still a respected occupation whether it is just for the minimum time or to retirement. Also, unlike a lot of my civilian friends, I feel like I have a lot of options available to me. Keep flying? PhD? federal civilian service? A&P license? I can do any of those because I paid next to nothing for my degrees or the hours in my logbook.
What were some of the other career paths you considered?
I always had something aviation related in mind: part 135 flying in Alaska, wildland firefighting, crop dusting. However, I picked up degrees in a subject (natural/cultural resource management) I found interesting that I knew I could do if I couldn't fly.
What was the peak experience of your career?
Both my deployments were flying MEDEVAC which was very rewarding. Red-lining a helicopter en route to a hospital is an amazing experience and certainly a career peak. The lows... pretty much the last year and a half has been a low because of being at a staff command and knowing I am just waiting around to get passed over.
I still love flying but I would say that flying in the military is only about 30% of the fun civilian flying is. I know lots are going to disagree with me on that point but being the sole decision maker and on my own schedule make flying fun. I've ferried two aircraft from Alaska to the lower-48, circumnavigated Australia, flown my own plane to Airventure (Oshkosk), flown seaplanes in Maine, and bounced around backcountry strips in the West. If your only experience with civilian flying is renting a bird to fly to an FBO and get a burger you're missing out on some amazing flying.