To all the people who NPQ, attrited flight school/OCS, etc. what are you up to now? Did you find happiness doing something else? Whats your story?
I was NPQ recently due to my vision. I really got interested in aviation around my join date 2004. I did the opposite of what is recommended and enlisted in the Navy. At the time I had really poor college grades, no money, no leadership experience, and while I had good decent work habits I was pretty much still a "kid". No chance of getting a NROTC schloarship with my poor grades and I couldnt even get into a NROTC school with my grades.
I decided that I would work as hard as I could and put in an STA-21 package when I felt the time was right, I was qualified, and could be compeititive. I would also take college on active duty and try to complete my degree and apply for OCS as a backup plan if never selected for STA-21. Sea duty was tough and my officer plans got put to side in lieu of my primary duties.
Come time for shore duty I decide Im ready, compeititive, and actually have time to concentrate heavily on my package and not worry about deployments, 3m inspections, INSURV, and all that. Started working on my package and got the Nami whammy. I knew my vision was always bad but I had been going by the refraction on my contact lenses as my gouge. The prescription Nami uses is for your glasses which is stronger since glasses sit farther away and are not embedded in your eyes like contacts. My refraction limit is too great even for a waiver such as PRK.
In those 6 years I went from a kid who really accomplished nothing to someone who is confident in everything I do now thanks to the opportunities the Navy gave me to lead and excel. I have good college grades now, an associates degree, leadership experience (workcenter supervisor on ship and instuctor on shore), (SW/AW), (MTS) master training specialist, great evals, various personal awards (NAM, FLOCS), etc. All this in hopes of getting a commission in aviation someday. 6 years of hard work crushed by 5 minutes in the flight surgeon's office.
I am researching other areas in and outside the Navy that will give me the same passion. I dont know know if I ever will find one but I have to at least try. Sorry for the long post this is probably more of a rant then info that will actually help anyone out I suppose.
I was NPQ recently due to my vision. I really got interested in aviation around my join date 2004. I did the opposite of what is recommended and enlisted in the Navy. At the time I had really poor college grades, no money, no leadership experience, and while I had good decent work habits I was pretty much still a "kid". No chance of getting a NROTC schloarship with my poor grades and I couldnt even get into a NROTC school with my grades.
I decided that I would work as hard as I could and put in an STA-21 package when I felt the time was right, I was qualified, and could be compeititive. I would also take college on active duty and try to complete my degree and apply for OCS as a backup plan if never selected for STA-21. Sea duty was tough and my officer plans got put to side in lieu of my primary duties.
Come time for shore duty I decide Im ready, compeititive, and actually have time to concentrate heavily on my package and not worry about deployments, 3m inspections, INSURV, and all that. Started working on my package and got the Nami whammy. I knew my vision was always bad but I had been going by the refraction on my contact lenses as my gouge. The prescription Nami uses is for your glasses which is stronger since glasses sit farther away and are not embedded in your eyes like contacts. My refraction limit is too great even for a waiver such as PRK.
In those 6 years I went from a kid who really accomplished nothing to someone who is confident in everything I do now thanks to the opportunities the Navy gave me to lead and excel. I have good college grades now, an associates degree, leadership experience (workcenter supervisor on ship and instuctor on shore), (SW/AW), (MTS) master training specialist, great evals, various personal awards (NAM, FLOCS), etc. All this in hopes of getting a commission in aviation someday. 6 years of hard work crushed by 5 minutes in the flight surgeon's office.
I am researching other areas in and outside the Navy that will give me the same passion. I dont know know if I ever will find one but I have to at least try. Sorry for the long post this is probably more of a rant then info that will actually help anyone out I suppose.