jazzspot
Fire Starter
- Apr 9, 2007
- 44
- 10
Ken, Many congrats on your 21 years of service!!! I know how you feel. This year is my 10th year of my retirement from 21 years in the USAF. Man... time flies by!!
Like you, I had much trepidation and uncertainty of what I was going to do with my life. I was a single parent at the time (daughter was 17, son was 13). And at that time I hadn't found my love for BBQ'n.
The one thing I did was remained positive about my retirement from the USAF and that my technical skills/education/maturity would be highly sought in the job market. I knew I had to find a job and if a job opened in a good awful location, I'd suck it up, just like I did on those many TDYs and deployments I had to undertake. But thankfully, I was offered a good job right near the base that I retired at and the location was just fine. I bought a home and my children did not even have to change schools. Talk about positive thinking!! I knew I wasn't just lucky, for I know that I was blessed by the Man upstairs that He allowed me and my children to have a life after the military where their lives weren't disrupted by a move to another location.
Ten years later.... I'm still in NJ, now married 4 years, still working but for a different company, my daughter graduated from college in 2004 and going to be married next year, and my son as been in the USAF (stationed in England) for almost 3 years and is doing well. And I've found my love for BBQ'n!!!
So life does go on. But as always, I steadfastly remained positive. And that in itself is a rather difficult attitude to have in these very trying times.
You'll do well Ken. Enjoy life!! You have what sounds like a loving and caring family. And in the end... they ARE what really matters in life.
Just my .02¢
Like you, I had much trepidation and uncertainty of what I was going to do with my life. I was a single parent at the time (daughter was 17, son was 13). And at that time I hadn't found my love for BBQ'n.

The one thing I did was remained positive about my retirement from the USAF and that my technical skills/education/maturity would be highly sought in the job market. I knew I had to find a job and if a job opened in a good awful location, I'd suck it up, just like I did on those many TDYs and deployments I had to undertake. But thankfully, I was offered a good job right near the base that I retired at and the location was just fine. I bought a home and my children did not even have to change schools. Talk about positive thinking!! I knew I wasn't just lucky, for I know that I was blessed by the Man upstairs that He allowed me and my children to have a life after the military where their lives weren't disrupted by a move to another location.
Ten years later.... I'm still in NJ, now married 4 years, still working but for a different company, my daughter graduated from college in 2004 and going to be married next year, and my son as been in the USAF (stationed in England) for almost 3 years and is doing well. And I've found my love for BBQ'n!!!
So life does go on. But as always, I steadfastly remained positive. And that in itself is a rather difficult attitude to have in these very trying times.
You'll do well Ken. Enjoy life!! You have what sounds like a loving and caring family. And in the end... they ARE what really matters in life.
Just my .02¢