Definitely. I’m a helo dude so my options guard wise might be more limited I’d think. Have definitely thought about Coast Guard to mix things up or Navy TAR, just kinda burnt out on doing the same thing mission wise over and over. Talked to a dude who skillbridged into regionals and isn’t digging the lifestyle right now but I’d be willing to eat dirt for a few years for a spot in the majors.
I was where you were at a few years ago. HSC -> VT IP, now flying 121 wide bodies. The VP folks in my instructor tour were almost all headed straight to legacy jobs in the 2016-2019 timeframe but there was well tread ground for the RTP programs. I didn't "fully commit" until my disassociated tour, which almost broke me as a human being. I then lived through leaving active duty in Jan 2020, COVID, a furlough during Basic Indoc, retaining on active duty, one year disassociated orders, resigning again, a Skilbridge Internship, Regional Indoc, being a regional CRJ FO, getting hired at my "dream airline", an economic downturn, seniority stagnation for 4 years, contract drama, and on and on. Now we're on trending to an upturn and things feel pretty good!
I moved back to my midwest hometown area and it fucking rules. I commute, oh well, but it works for my family. I'll never have to move again unless I chose to. I have college buddies I play golf with on my days off, neighbors who come over for poker and bourbon, season tickets to a local theater, a hunting club membership, and on and on levels of shit I missed out on while I was on active duty and missed dearly. I'm super proud of what I did on AD, I've made lifelong friends from the Navy I'd consider close than my actual siblings, and I'm still slinging it as a SELRES trying to maximize smart and minimize bullshit for myself and my sailors on the off chance my country needs me again.
I say all that, just to say, you probably know how you feel deep down. I was not a player in my community, so I have no regrets. If you're upwardly mobile in your community and want to make a play for DH and CO, go for it. If you want to do DH and then find some cool off the path job, go for it. If you're proud of what you've done and want to turn flying into "just a job" so you can focus on your life, go for it. The industry's tolerance for rotor trash ebbs and flows, but once you get in at your destination, no one gives a shit.