DebbieB
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 24, 1999
- Messages
- 55,433
While failure in the miltary does not always mean failure in civilian life, the inability to adjust to certain disciplines can carry over into life in general. Gas chamber drills may sound more like unnecessary torture or punishment, it is actually very necessary training and takes place in a controlled environment. Everyone who has been in the military over the last 90 years has gone through it. While it's not a pleasant experience, it is essential to learning how to deal with the real thing. The same goes for the rest of the training.
I doubt any of us enjoyed potty training, but it certainly made life better for us once we were trained.
To be honest, I doubt my brother would have made it in the military and that drill probably proved it. He was never able to take discipline at home or in school. He didn't listen to my parents, he didn't listen to his teachers. I can't imagine him taking orders from his commanders that he didn't like. He was 18 and didn't know what to do with himself, so he went in the army. I really don't remember how he came to that decision. The point I was trying to make is 25 years later he can barely stand on his own 2 feet, he never had a plan to develop himself. So if the military isn't for OP's son, he needs to find something that is, not just let time slip away barely getting by.
) He still has them all. 