Have her do what I am doing, try to join the USNR! No colocation problem there.Then that brings up the whole colocation problem.
My wife has taken the teacher's licensing exam and gone through the "provisional" process required of new teachers in 3 different states. It's not terrible, especially within the first few years out of school, but it does get old to be treated like a brand new teacher over and over when she has almost 9 years experience. And after a while, at least in my community, your options of where to be stationed get pretty necked-down and your personal preferences can help funnel those options into fewer possibilities that will likely be better for your family as a whole, if not always your military career in particular.
Buddy of mine is married to a lawyer. His first sea tour, they did the geo batch deal so she could do a clerkship and get barred in her home state where she went to school. Shore tour, she moved to CA with him and got re-barred there and works for a firm that essentially does public defender stuff. It's not the seven-figure corporate law job that they make prime time dramas about, but she likes the work and she's building a resume.
Another JO I know, his wife was in residency in a different state across the country when showed up to the squadron. He didn't see her much that tour. He chose his next two tours based on following her around to places she got a fellowship and then a job offer. He seems to be doing fine in his career progression and she's pulling in 6 figures already.
Oh, one more. My first DH had a wife who was a pediatric anesthesiologist (IIRC). Regardless of specifics, she is some exceedingly rare (and highly sought-after) flavor of doctor. Before they would PCS to each new duty station, she would cold call the hospital nearest the new base and fax a resume. She never had a problem getting hired. He screened for command last cycle.
As others have alluded: it's totally possible for a military spouse to have a professional career. . .it's just not going to be the cookie-cutter career path for most fields and it will likely require a bit of sucking it up at times to make your two careers work together.
Has she ever considered joining the JAG Corps? She could put on a uniform and serve along side of you.
Have her do what I am doing, try to join the USNR! No colocation problem there.![]()
My wife and I are in the same position as you. She is about to graduate from SLU Law in May and I go to OCS this summer. She will take the Missouri bar, which is apart of the multi-state bar, and it is applicable for 8 states with Washington being one of those states. The ability for her to work for a money making firm is almost 0, until after I retire. She accepted this fact. She does want to work for the state, which is a lot easier getting employment in, although the pay is about $30-50k a year (depending on the city). One thing to note though (and why it is good for her to work for the state) is when someone does 10 years of public service as a lawyer.....ALL of their student loan debt is wiped clean. It pays to work as a public defender in the long run. We would much rather have her make the $30-50k a year and only pay 10 years of loans instead of 6 digit figures for 25+ years of loans. Might be a good option for you guys as well.
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To respond to an above question...Geo bachelor means being stationed in a different location from your dependants.
If you are on TAD orders, you collect per diem for food as well as BAH from the higher of the two duty stations and are entitled to gov't quarters in your duty station (e.g. you live out of the Navy Lodge or something). This is known as involuntary geobachelor because the Navy won't pay to move your family unless you have PCS orders, so they comp your additional financial costs for it.
If you are on PCS orders and decide to leave your family, you don't get per diem and have to afford two places on one BAH from your current duty station, even if it's lower, with no allowance for additional gov't quarters (if you're doing it so your spouse can make 6 figures at a law firm you probably win financially anyway). This is voluntary geo bachelor because the Navy will pay to move your dependants but you elected not to for whatever reason.... kids in school, spouse's career, etc, so you don't get comped for additional costs.
The fun part is when a single person undergoes a change of homeport for 6-8 months and owns a home. By fun I mean complete bonejob as they are not entitled to a HHG move. Also, they are not entitled to BAH and gov't housing (only one or the other) thus making them an involuntary geo bachelor of sorts without any pay compensation for it. Also applies to divorced sailors whose dependants reside with the ex spouse.
Anyone have advice on that side of life as a Naval Aviator?
Not as an aviator but I'm 30 still renting and will be for the foreseeable future, as moving once every 3 years with the current market makes buying silly.It gets old. Whether you can get that white picket fence depends on your duty station and standard of living in the area. When on sea duty and in some shore duties there is no such thing as a schedule, so dinner everyday at 5pm with the fam and holiday weekend getaways just won't happen.My girlfriend and I do plan on getting married eventually (sometime soon) and her main worry is surprisingly not so much employment but quality of life and missing out on the "picturesque" white picket fence, kids in the backyard, frisbee with dog, barbeque on the patio, get home at 530pm and make dinner together, etc.
Anyone have advice on that side of life as a Naval Aviator?
My girlfriend and I do plan on getting married eventually (sometime soon) and her main worry is surprisingly not so much employment but quality of life and missing out on the "picturesque" white picket fence, kids in the backyard, frisbee with dog, barbeque on the patio, get home at 530pm and make dinner together, etc.
Anyone have advice on that side of life as a Naval Aviator?
Most of the friends I grew up and went to HS with, have all the above; however, most have worked the same hum drum desk or menial blah income 40hr/wk jobs all their lives, and never crossed 2 state lines in the same day. The most danger they've ever faced, is the same old daily commute. They have no idea what continent Korea or Israel is on. Frankly, the USAF may be much closer to the family life you're looking for!My girlfriend and I do plan on getting married eventually (sometime soon) and her main worry is surprisingly not so much employment but quality of life and missing out on the "picturesque" white picket fence, kids in the backyard, frisbee with dog, barbeque on the patio, get home at 530pm and make dinner together, etc.
It's all there in the posts above.Anyone have advice on that side of life as a Naval Aviator?