I wish I had some good advice or suggestions for you jubjub. I have no military experience except for being raised a Coast Guard bratt
but I sympathize with your questions
so it sounds like you are already in undergraduate school. I'm guessing freshman or sophomore year....or is it a 2 year program?
Any chance for ROTC? I don't know if that would help much or not, but perhaps....
So my story...always wanted to fly, but had zero exposure. Had never been in a small plane and had never known a pilot. At some point early in my college (engineering) I found a night school continuing ed thing at the school that was private pilot ground school. I took it just for grins.....and I had done a whole lot of reading about flying.
Later on as I neared finishing my degree (mechanical engineering) I spoke to Navy recruiter.
I really wanted to fly helicopters honestly, and for some reason had an affinity for the Coast Guard's mission, with Navy as sort of a second choice.
Anyway, this Navy recruiter who was set up behind a card table in the Engineering building at my school 200 miles inland, wore the gold wings.
I had reservations, and lots of questions just like you, that I knew he couldn't
really answer.
- Could I get a flying slot?
- Could I hack training and get through?
- Would I even be able to handle flight without getting airsick?
- Would they find some silly thing in medical that would disqualify me, such as one leg being 1/4 inch shorter than the other?
- and prob my biggest concern...would I sign up for a 6 year hitch (or whatever) and then get put into a non-flying job or end up in some college talking to a snot nose kid like this guy was talking to me....?
Anyway, this was in the late 80's and the military was doing some big down sizing. I figured that any slots in flight school that did come open would
probably go to academy guys. That was only an assumption in my part....but that, along with a few other things led me to decide to not pursue it.
Well all these years later, every time I see a helicopter fly over I wonder.....
Since then
I had a mild medical thing that came up I think in my late 20's or early 30's that made me jump through some hoops with the FAA...and that I suppose would have likely grounded me in the military....
Also, over the years I've known a few folks that joined the military with a very clear path in site, but they got put into very different jobs.... one guy joined the marines wanting to be a sniper ended up being a crew chief on harriers...and another guy went through civil engineering & NROTC wanting to get into explosives, or demolition, or something... but ended up taking care of reactors on submarines
Still, I wonder what might have been.... and a BIG part of me regrets not trying.