I was always interested in aviation, but being on the wrong side of the tracks in a tiny little own, I was always told that airplanes were for the rich people and I had no business bothering the Cessna pilots at my local airport. Funny enough, that airport still gets crappy reviews in ForeFlight for being non-friendly.
5 years after I graduated HS and I still had no direction in life. I was going to college...but....why.... So, I took the ASVAB. I quickly got a guaranteed job as a linguist, that was just as quickly shot down during basic. I ended up being a Crew Chief for F-15s. I volunteered to go international and was quickly sent to England for my first duty assignment. From there, it was a whirlwind of training, deployments, more training, and more deployments. I ended up being a Crash Recovery/Aero Repair tech at Nellis in Las Vegas. By the time I got out of the mil at 10 years after I attended Basic, I realized I had became an F-15 guru, that had done a whole lot that most normal mechanics don't get the chance to do. I put all of that into a resume, and long story short, I became a Design & Development mech on the F-35. I've changed positions many times, but I am still on the program.
After 23 years of maintaining, experimenting, and developing airplanes, I figured it was time to figure out how to fly them. Funny enough, I struggled becoming a PPL, as I often engaged in analysis paralysis... the last few decades have taught me to overthink everything...sometimes to a fault.
But, as a few months ago, I finally passed my checkride and became an O-Fishal pilot. I will always hold the USAF in respect for giving me the opportunity to become what I am today. And I will always pay respect to those that came before me and paved the way for me to learn what I needed to know, and to know how to get the knowledge when I didn't know.
Thanks,