I saw this on "Angry Staff Officer", Like I have stated in the past, Mack had turned me onto the guy, so it is his fault. He told me that he actually met the guy and that is one angry Army Officer.
The Military “Give a S**t” Spectrum
Let’s face it: the Army can be a place that wears you down, both physically and mentally. It takes a special kind of person to be able to take the brand of crazy that the Army pushes year after year and walk away from it relatively unscathed. As such, it seems like you usually get several different types of people that manage to make it to that ten-year mark of service.
First off, you’ve got the overly-motivated person who’s
still acting as though it’s their first day in the military. They’re the
majors or sergeants first class that still wear high and tights, own
Army-themed apparel, and don’t understand why people leave the military.
Their enthusiasm is nauseating and one suspects that when they go home
at night they enter their home, sit down facing a blank wall, and simply
stare at it all night until they reboot for the next day.
Next you get the ones who probably *shouldn’t* still be in
uniform. In normal society we call these people “crazy.” In the Army
they’re called “seasoned.” Whether they’ve been on too many deployments
or not enough, they use lingo like “we’re gonna go in there and stack
bodies,” which should make you wonder just how they envision an
operation going. Polite people refer to them as the “break glass in time
of war” type of person, while the rest of us would like to see them
behind glass or at least out of uniform before they do something
colossally illegal/stupid.
Then you have the incredibly talented, intelligent, and
passionate officers and NCOs that have been bashing their heads against
the brick wall of military bureaucracy for ten years. They fight for
every hill and for every soldier. They are amazing leaders who inspire
their troops and are beloved by them. However, at the ten year mark,
they realize that they are getting promoted and recognized at the same
pace as the mouth-breathers and window-lickers. After all this time of
fighting, they are burnt out and exhausted. And so they leave.
Which leaves us…
The most dangerous ones: the ones that have seen all the
stupidity that comes with ten years of military service and decide that
they’re okay with it. They are not only immune to the “hurry up and
wait” mentality but seem to thrive off it. They are not motivated in any
way, they are just…there. They have no special talents to speak of, are
not noted leaders, and don’t often care about the troops they lead.
They simply exist. However, since they can tolerate the BS and have
remained when the talented troops are gone, they get promoted. And then
promoted again. And unless they’re caught, they rise to levels of rank
not commensurate with their mediocrity.
Lastly, you’ve got the rest of us. Neither dull nor
brilliant, we simply muddle our way through, attempting to avoid the
poor leaders and stay close to the ones that shine. Often our motivation
is simply spite: the desire to hang on long enough to get to a point
where we can make some changes and hopefully watch those bad leaders
retire. And we spend our days in fear of becoming the very people that
we despise. Which is why we’re all cynical, jaded, and have turned to
sarcasm as our weapon of choice. We can’t believe we’re gonna try to do
ten more years of this.
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