There's a waiver for everything, if you can get the waiver signed.Thank you for the reply. I'm correct in my assumption that my age DQs me for everything except Intel? I've never served.
What do you want your designator to be?
There's a waiver for everything, if you can get the waiver signed.Thank you for the reply. I'm correct in my assumption that my age DQs me for everything except Intel? I've never served.
There's a waiver for everything, if you can get the waiver signed.
What do you want your designator to be?
I just read through the majority of this forum and certainly feel a lot of my questions were answered by reading and searching.
Of course, everyone has a unique story with little twists and turns that makes their own theirs.
So, if I could possibly get someone's opinion or advice on my specifics, I would be very grateful.
Here is some of my personal data:
29 y/o Male
Prior AT2 (frocked when discharged) (AW), MUC, Good Conduct, etc. Honorable, RE-1. 5 years total AD
All MP evals.
ASVAB: 83
Penn State: BS in Cyber Security and Information Modeling and Analysis. 3.1 GPA cumulative, 3.6 In major.
I Have some Lor's set up, (professor, Senior chiefs(2), retired Col USMC, retired Col, Army.)
I still have about 1 year left at Penn, and haven't directly contacted the local OR; and also still have not taken the OAR or ASTB.
I had a waiver approved when I enlisted for MJ, which was also dismissed on civilian record for enlisting. This was ~10 years ago. (not sure if I even declare it at this point)
I have seen the question asked: "Do you want to be a Naval officer, or do you want a specific job?"
I will answer that proactively and say that I want to be an officer above all else and will make necessary sacrifices.
That said, I am interested in all of the intelligence communities first and foremost but, I would defer to other options if those were unobtainable for me.
My age hurts for a couple options (even with the 24 month waiver), and my GPA hurts me with some of the other options but,
some positives are: good prior service with a secret clearance, and a directly related degree from a good school.
I understand that it's called a "package" for a reason, and that they look at people as a whole during these boards.
Also, I already used my Post 9/11 bill which saves the Navy a nice chunk of change. (Some of my fellow sailors and I deduced that for Perform to serve they seemed more likely to
boot the married guys with BAH than the single guys in the barracks.) Or maybe they just rolled dice; but the Navy does like to save it's money.
So I would think my next step is building a rapport with the recruiter and getting some interviews setup, taking the ASTB and building up my package.
How does this look to some of you more knowledgeable guys/gals? Is there anything else I forget to mention that could help my chances?
Thanks for your time!
Besides what RUFIO said given your age I would say if you really want to serve take the ASTB and look at SWO, Supply, NFO and submit those before you age out, you have to be commissioned by age 31.I just read through the majority of this forum and certainly feel a lot of my questions were answered by reading and searching.
Of course, everyone has a unique story with little twists and turns that makes their own theirs.
So, if I could possibly get someone's opinion or advice on my specifics, I would be very grateful.
Here is some of my personal data:
29 y/o Male
Prior AT2 (frocked when discharged) (AW), MUC, Good Conduct, etc. Honorable, RE-1. 5 years total AD
All MP evals.
ASVAB: 83
Penn State: BS in Cyber Security and Information Modeling and Analysis. 3.1 GPA cumulative, 3.6 In major.
I Have some Lor's set up, (professor, Senior chiefs(2), retired Col USMC, retired Col, Army.)
I still have about 1 year left at Penn, and haven't directly contacted the local OR; and also still have not taken the OAR or ASTB.
I had a waiver approved when I enlisted for MJ, which was also dismissed on civilian record for enlisting. This was ~10 years ago. (not sure if I even declare it at this point)
I have seen the question asked: "Do you want to be a Naval officer, or do you want a specific job?"
I will answer that proactively and say that I want to be an officer above all else and will make necessary sacrifices.
That said, I am interested in all of the intelligence communities first and foremost but, I would defer to other options if those were unobtainable for me.
My age hurts for a couple options (even with the 24 month waiver), and my GPA hurts me with some of the other options but,
some positives are: good prior service with a secret clearance, and a directly related degree from a good school.
I understand that it's called a "package" for a reason, and that they look at people as a whole during these boards.
Also, I already used my Post 9/11 bill which saves the Navy a nice chunk of change. (Some of my fellow sailors and I deduced that for Perform to serve they seemed more likely to
boot the married guys with BAH than the single guys in the barracks.) Or maybe they just rolled dice; but the Navy does like to save it's money.
So I would think my next step is building a rapport with the recruiter and getting some interviews setup, taking the ASTB and building up my package.
How does this look to some of you more knowledgeable guys/gals? Is there anything else I forget to mention that could help my chances?
Thanks for your time!
Saying you need an age waiver for Intel as a 29 year old shows me you haven't done enough homework for the requirements for the program. Sit down with your OR (if you haven't already) and come up with a good game plan for the next year.
Besides what RUFIO said given your age I would say if you really want to serve take the ASTB and look at SWO, Supply, NFO and submit those before you age out, you have to be commissioned by age 31.
You have to disclose all law involvement even if you were waivered before, that doesn't mean you will get waivered again, but probably will, now several boards in the past have considered any drug involvement an automatic N
Should be interesting in to the future. A lot more MJ legalizations this year. I feel like the self righteous people on the board are throwing out a good chunk of population simply because people decided to smoke some weed.
Sorry, I didn't clarify, I meant a waiver for SWO/NFO from 29-31 as per the prior service clause. I will be 30 and change when I finish my baccalaureate so it would be a rush to get a package submitted and hope I commission by 31. Between waiting for a cycle to submit to, a response from the board and getting through meps, etc I could easily turn 31 before or during that 3 month long OCS, and I heard you are forced to change or go home if that happens.
So I have been considering Intel and other programs that relate to my degree; upon closer Inspection I realize I made a mistake and I meant IW not just Intel. So the best suited would be IW (1810) or IP (1820) as I see Intel also looks for poli sci, international relations, government, etc.
While I was an ATI I specialized in radar, electronic warfare and frequency analysis. (F18/EA-6B radar systems) so my NEC was related a bit to IW/IP.
My fiance and I are both trying to finish up the last ~<1 year of university and are both working full time, so rushing through to try and beat the buzzer to make swo/nfo is a very long shot.
Other than IW, IP and possibly Intel what else could I possibly qualify for or look at (at least for the Navy)?
Thanks for the responses NavyOffRec and RUFiO.
Should be interesting in to the future. A lot more MJ legalizations this year. I feel like the self righteous people on the board are throwing out a good chunk of population simply because people decided to smoke some weed.
You make a good point, though the counter-argument is that MJ is still a DEA schedule-1 drug, which is illegal under federal law. Caveat Emptor. People should use discretion when deciding what to put into their bodies.Should be interesting in to the future. A lot more MJ legalizations this year. I feel like the self righteous people on the board are throwing out a good chunk of population simply because people decided to smoke some weed.
This honestly surprised me. Especially when you consider nearly half the population has admitted to trying it. I'm curious if there was a little of coaching on applicants to not disclose usage?I had the same experience as RUFIO and I recruited in a state that before legalization would let anyone smoke it without legal consequences.
I now work for a fortune 100 company and even though it is legal in the state anyone that shows up stoned (or drunk) is not working there anymore, and they are drug tested prior to employment.
You make a good point, though the counter-argument is that MJ is still a DEA schedule-1 drug, which is illegal under federal law. Caveat Emptor. People should use discretion when deciding what to put into their bodies.
Whether it's food, supplements or recreational drugs like MJ and alcohol - there can be good/bad/unintended consequences.
This honestly surprised me. Especially when you consider nearly half the population has admitted to trying it. I'm curious if there was a little of coaching on applicants to not disclose usage?
http://www.gallup.com/poll/184298/four-americans-say-tried-marijuana.aspx
Understood that MJ is still illegal federally, I think that most of us will see that change in our lifetime. It seems to be a lot less destructive than booze for one.
This honestly surprised me. Especially when you consider nearly half the population has admitted to trying it. I'm curious if there was a little of coaching on applicants to not disclose usage?
http://www.gallup.com/poll/184298/four-americans-say-tried-marijuana.aspx
Understood that MJ is still illegal federally, I think that most of us will see that change in our lifetime. It seems to be a lot less destructive than booze for one.