I call bullshit. Your posts are way to coherent for drunk posting.Never getting drunk and posting on AW again. I assume you followed me for the lels.View attachment 17450
Just admit it, you're "different".
I call bullshit. Your posts are way to coherent for drunk posting.Never getting drunk and posting on AW again. I assume you followed me for the lels.View attachment 17450
Holy fuck the world is ending....I just "liked" a Brett post.
Six beers is a lot when you're a lightweight. Maybe our classifications of "drunk" are different. I had enough feel emotional and reply. But fine I'm strange.I call bullshit. Your posts are way to coherent for drunk posting.
Just admit it, you're "different".
He is currently in San Diego until May 2020. Is there a way he can begin his second tour early, and we both move to Everett? And secondly, would getting married make that possibility greater? Thanks.
If you are not married, the military will not do anything to attempt to co-locate you and your boyfriend.I’m going to revive this thread with a quick what-if question. I’m going to be commissioning at the end of May 2019 as a SWO. I have been dating another SWO for 4 years, and we would love to be stationed together. He is currently in San Diego until May 2020. Is there a way he can begin his second tour early, and we both move to Everett? And secondly, would getting married make that possibility greater? Thanks.
Unfortunately, this is far from the dumbest question ever posed by an Ensign.Think about what you just said/asked. Do you really think the Navy is going to pull someone’s orders or move someone just for a girlfriend?
Co-location only comes into play after you are married. Period. Anything beyond that is detailers taking the time to listen to their detailees.I’m going to revive this thread with a quick what-if question. I’m going to be commissioning at the end of May 2019 as a SWO. I have been dating another SWO for 4 years, and we would love to be stationed together. He is currently in San Diego until May 2020. Is there a way he can begin his second tour early, and we both move to Everett? And secondly, would getting married make that possibility greater? Thanks.
If you are not married, the military will not do anything to attempt to co-locate you and your boyfriend.
If you are married, the military will attempt to co-locate you, but I don't think that they can do much to get your tours to perfectly align. Additionally, co-location is not guaranteed. Even if you do co-locate, you could be on ships that have opposite sea/shore schedules.
Unfortunately, this is far from the dumbest question ever posed by an Ensign.
Seriously, dude. Drop this chick like a hot potato. I see all kinds of Sailors with spouses who have depression or other mental health issues. They're miserable. Plenty of other fish in the sea, and the women who will be attracted to you when you're a successful Naval Officer can be an entirely different caliber then the ones you can get now.
You're not responsible for what she does or how she feels when you break up with her. Do it today.
Co-location only comes into play after you are married. Period. Anything beyond that is detailers taking the time to listen to their detailees.
It is highly unlikely that he will be able to begin his second tour early. Part of it is going to depend on HOW early you are talking. If you are talking leaving a year early when he is only on 2 year orders? Yeah, not gonna happen. What is more likely is that if you get stationed in Everett and are married when he comes up for orders, he will have a higher probability of getting Everett.
The bigger issue is that y'all are gonna be staggered at that point. Assuming he does his second tour with you in Everett, you will be rolling into your second sea tour while he is rolling to shore. Not gonna lie, but i don't know how many career enhancing shore tours are in the Everett area. It is possible to catch up a bit during your shore duty--if you roll into DH school early and roll in with him. I have seen that happen in at least one case to work co-location.
That is utterly mind boggling given that when my husband asked his detailer to consider the fact that I had deployment orders as a reservist, he was told that it didn't count because I was a reservist and he could suck up what orders he got. No offense, but giving co-lo to non married couples when married couples on the AD/RC split don't get consideration is rather frustrating.FWIW, these days in SWO-world (PERS-41) Co-Lo for non-married couples is a thing.
That is utterly mind boggling given that when my husband asked his detailer to consider the fact that I had deployment orders as a reservist, he was told that it didn't count because I was a reservist and he could suck up what orders he got. No offense, but giving co-lo to non married couples when married couples on the AD/RC split don't get consideration is rather frustrating.