StyleCoin said:
Nikois666 said:
If you want to land in a good job in the field of computer science, then you need hard skills. There is a lot of competition. And with international students pouring into first world doesn't help, most of them are desperate to stay to get permanent residency, so some of them do the work for lesser salary. You are an SS, I think you can definitely get a good job if you work hard. Hard work back by a right working and an iron will = success.
If my plans don't work out, I will have to join the army and follow a military career, but if they ask for proof of vaccination, I ask to be discharged from the army, maybe in the future I can get into the special operations squad.
I would suggest not to make any rushed decision. You always need to stack evidence of why something is right for you, and then develop a step-by-step plan of how you are going to achieve them. A supporting lifestyle needs to be developed in order to succeed at each step toward your goal.
Not everyone is suited to be in the special operation forces and and the special forces. I would say 1% of active infantry could make it in the SOFs and around 1% of SOF people could make it in the SFs, which draws a really low percentage. Whatever the case, in both the SOFs and SFs you need to fit in with your team as well. If you don't, you're not going to last long.
Considering this, it is well-known by reputation that these people have a heavy drinking culture and many of them even smoke. These are their mechanisms to cope, the mechanisms of someone who doesn't know themselves and doesn't have the courage to face themselves. The training should requires a specific type of resilience, which is based only around enduring the situations in a robotic way. Even that is difficult to achieve for most, and nearly impossible for anyone who's a couch potato or otherwise spend several hours a day (2+) doing passive entertainment activities.
Training programmes for wannabe military are very often wrong, because they focus on building bulk through bodybuilding and/or weight-lifting, which is the opposite of what these 'elite' forces need. You need the endurance to walk and run for tens of miles with equipment (a backpack, weapons, combat jacket, etc) that weighs as much as you (sometimes more if you are on the lighter side of the spectrum). Bulk is not only useless in this case, but also dangerous because it will eat your stamina away faster and will increase the amount of calories you consume daily (militaries don't usually give enough food to sustain a lean person, let alone a bulky one).
This is also why bodybuilders and heavy lifters don't even pass pre-selection for this units, excluding in Hollywood and other mediatic nonsense to dumb people down. These people need lean and strong muscles, which stands on the other side of the spectrum. The strongest parts need to be your back, shoulders and legs to support the weight you carry. Strong =/= big.
Even programmes given by the respective militaries are often insufficient to prepare you for high levels of stress. Not only because they focus mostly only on the physical, but also because the physical fitness they lead to achieve is quite mediocre. Preparing yourself for this type of life requires several years, not a few months. It is a lifestyle that needs to be ingrained into you so much that you don't even need to think about it. You need to develop to a level where you can often run with a heavy backpack and train your body multiple times a day like a professional athlete, which obviously doesn't happen overnight or in just a few weeks/months.
You need to develop the right mentality, where there is no space for indecisiveness, lack of confidence and lack of assertiveness. You need to be a leader, and also a leader for yourself first and foremost.
An example of day in your routine could be:
- Wake up around 4:30am-5am
- Warm up by running 10k
- Do interval training (for running), then strength training
- Have a shower and breakfast
- Learn new things about important subjects, including both theory and practical drills
- Have lunch
- More learning
- Practice hand-to-hand combat training
- More learning
- More strength training or conditioning
- Have dinner
- Review all the topics in the day and any prior topic you are unsure about, making sure you remember everything
- Make sure your room is clean and tidy (immaculate), your equipment/possessions clean and ready (including having bought replacements), all your shoes clean, and any laundry done.
- Sleep
- Some nights a week, spend the whole night with a heavy Bergen (you can put sand in it) walking and running through mountains and woods with inconsistent terrain
- Never sit unless you're having a meal or sleeping at the end of the day, which should take very little time for you.
- Your team mates are your mates, not aliens. If they waver, a good team mates motivates them and uplifts. Team work exists as much during work time as it exists outside of it. You need to develop and support each other, instead of alienating yourselves or slacking off during time off. And your best mate is usually your battle buddy or a similar figure depending on what branch you are in. You may be team mates but the military is an Aries profession, which means you are little leaders part of the same team, and the job of a leader is exactly what I stated above: being a driver, a supporter, a promoter and an analyser. Being a shining example that draws admiration from both the rest of your team and also civilians.
This is not even SOF level. This is more similar to what some countries paratroopers do during training stages.
Most people take SOFs and SFs too lightly, and end up getting burnt because they can't pass pre-selections, selections or training. Or, worse, they get injured because they're not adequately prepared.
On the team side, can you fit in with a culture with heavy drinking and smoking? (some even do other recreational drugs because checks are usually only once a year or so). (the Navy Seals fall under this) Not to mention the clubbing and strip clubs culture, which is the other oh-so-average form of entertainment that most military people seem to enjoy. Are you mature and wise enough to persuade them to be better and do better, in a way that actually influences their behaviour positively instead of making them build barriers between you and them?
A few last things when it comes to SOF and SF namely come to down to calling and awareness. Is such a career your calling? If this is not your vocation, you might want to go into a less stressful branch where you have relatively more freedom, and you won't be risking your life as much. On the awareness side, the current administration doesn't value supposedly elite forces, which is why you can see much immaturity in them (the entertainment directions I described I earlier) and also why they are basically puppets to do whatever retarded operation that is not in the interest of the citizens but only in the interests of the enemy. Do you think of yourself as expendable? In that case, you may have serious psychological hang-ups.
If they valued people, their psychological and psychiatric assessments would be more thorough and not based on simple interviews, psychometric tests and superficial stalking. They would actually conduct much more thorough and in-depth observation to identify true potential and put people on a proper path for their vocation based on their starting level, also building them as leaders and assets.
If this was your vocation (which I doubt), it wouldn't be an after-thought. You would be burning and itching to go there. And you shouldn't do it because now all there is there is a poisoned organ of the country. The best bet is, instead, to become an officer and work your way through the ranks so you can detoxify the system completely. But this should only be done by those who have a vocation for this. Only 0.001% need apply for such endeavours. The best thing is always to find your own calling and go from there. That's where you are needed to make an impact.
On a final note, you can also get your genetics degree you mentioned earlier, get the military to pay for it afterward, and work AS A GENETIC ENGINEER in the military. That is, if this is actually your burning passion. We are SS. We are allowed to pursue our callings, and we have witchcraft and spiritual power to back them up, unlike muggles. And you may want to build a business around your calling. This way you could get the independence you deserve as an SS, instead of being a slave like most people who are employees and self-employed. Building a business can be done in your spare time as you still slave for the enemy, and obviously one should only transition fully into their business NOT when they earn enough to replace their income but much further than that, when they're earning a lot more.
One thing is sure: you need to prevent the poison from other people's defeatism to corrupt you, whether they are muggles or confused SS. Otherwise, you will never truly grow as a person.