med retired with insomnia
Invest all of it in BMY, CHK and MiloCoin
>>1921391
bodyguard or security
just stand or sit around and browse the chans
How did you retire at 29? You join at 9 years old?
>>1921600
you only have to be in the army for 13 years before you retire dude
>>1921391
I'm assuming you live in the US so you should probably move to another country that has a lower cost of living and try to get work as a bodyguard, teaching english to other people etc. What are your passions and hobbies op?
>>1921391
What did you get retired for, and how did you work it with the VA?
I've got hella insomnia too now from all this rotating shift work, and wouldn't mind a decent rating.
>>1921603
It's actually 20 years, but you can be medically retired at any time. I know someone who's getting medically retired at 3 years.
>>1921401
And DD on BMY and CHK?
>>1921612
insomnia itself is a diagnosis. MEB gave me 70, VA upgraded it to 100 after six months. non combat related, my circadian rhythm got scrambled from night duty. i was in a psych ward on ambien for three months, at the end they were just like, your done, sleep outside the military. i do sleep now thank god, but im still tired most of the time
>>1921610
I enjoy reading and cooking and weight lifting. i suck at language and hate kids though, not sure i could teach, plus as i said I'm sleepy as fuck all
>>1921391
>29
>retired
Does military pay that well that you can retire that young? wtf?
>>1921637
He's basically on service related disability.
>>1921632
Thanks, I can't seem to sleep more than 5 hours on work nights, and I think it's because I've been switched from days, swings, and mids over 15 times in the past 6 months.
I don't think I'm anywhere as bad as you were, don't see myself in a psych ward.
>>1921637
No.
If they break you and you aren't useful to them any longer, they will "retire" you, where they kick you out and pay you some dollars every month (depending on your rank, etc). The logic is that the military broke you, so it's the military's responsibility to at least make sure you have some money for the rest of your life.
It used to be you could do 20 years and retire with a pension that was about 1/4 of your pay, but they're getting rid of that.