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Big Decisions


Gerard

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I'm looking for the help of our wise cop-bashing tgtap members to help me make a pretty big decision in my life.

I'm currently in sixth-form college, and should be going off to university next year.

I'm considering joining the RAF (Royal Air Force), who would pay my university fees and give me a job as soon as I leave.

Financially, I get £4000/year ($8k) for university, plus £1500/year payment for attending RAF camps etc. When I leave university I do Officer Training, then go into Engineering Officer training, which last 30 weeks each. After training, I'll be earning £2700 ($54k), with accelerated promotion to higher ranks, earning £40,000 ($80k). If i serve 12 years (double the minimum six) I get a full military non-contributory index-based pension, which would be a few hundred a month for the rest of my life.

The job itself is great - a Comms Engineering Officer is in charge of an individual project, which could range from maintaining communications at an airbase to installing a new radar system in Iraq. Most of the time, certainly through uni and training, you're out going skiing or learning to fly etc, all for free, even getting paid a full salary to do that.

The downside is that I have to give up six years of life after uni, which is the big decision I need help with.

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Yeah, I agree it is an amazing opportunity and not many undergraduates have job security for the next 12 years of their lives.

My only issue is that I'm not sure whether it IS what I want to be doing for the next 12 years. There's less opportunity to specialise - if I stayed civvy my plan is to specialise in computer security - but if I was in the RAF I could be doing anything. That in itself is a good thing though.

Tis all a bit confusing :P

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Well,to be it sounds pretty good.Actually,it sounds great.But then again,i'm 12 years old.And even though if this is gonna take "6 years" of your life away the RAF is gonna financially help you while you're going through this and after that they're gonna give a really good job.(comms enginnering officer)And like i shot a bear said about people not even getting jobs relating to their degree means you're really lucky.You are lucky.So like I can't make you do this you know but if you do,i'm with you 100%.But i shot a bear has a good point again.What you'd be doin in the RAF like you said is a big decision and is this what you'd like to do with your life?

Edited by $GTA_4_LIFE_$
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A bit yes, well if your not certain then maybe not. If its your life long dream then yes you should defintly go for it. 12 years is a long time but the most important thing is your happiness. Yes you would have job secruity and earning alot but money is not everything. If you are not sure if would make you happy then it might not be such a great oppurtunity. You need to do what makes you happy.

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Sounds like a great opportunity, sacrificing but great. If you like your job then it is good; you'll make new friends, good pay and you'll learn a lot of new skills to help in the world. Like $GTA_4_LIFE$ said don't listen to him since he's 12 and I'm 13 which doesn't make me much "smarter". Hell it's not our decision but yours if you really like it then go for it. 6 years is long but it won't be that long if you like what you're doing. Good luck!

Edited by ArturKim21
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I'm going through a similar dillema right now, but completely different and still 3-4 years in the future. I'm kind of a workahaulic; I don't stop until the job is 100% and I'll do whatever I need to for money. That job pays very well and with the job security - it's definitely good. Plus, having the RAF on your resume can't be a bad thing.

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I'd say go for it! It's a great opportunity really, especially since you get enough money that you can be independent. Plus you've said you'd like the job. And all those benefits...

Man, I'd accept if I was you. But still, think twice. It's a big and important decision after all.

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Yeah pretty much.

  1. I go to University for free for 3 years
  2. At University, I get £1500 for doing 45 days of RAF activites
  3. After University, I go straight into Officer Training with the RAF
  4. I get six years of job, getting paid between £27k and £45k
  5. If I do 12 years of job, then I get free pension for rest of life
  6. On top of that I can get another job when I leave the RAF
  7. And I even get a state pension when I retire

And the (other) good thing is that this is the RAF, not the army - so there isn't all the same daily assault courses and parades every half hour. This is the good life. You can even buy a house near to where you're working, and you don't have to live on base.

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  • 1 month later...

Well I've got my RAF Interview on Wednesday, but I'm still not sure about this whole thing.

I feel I shouldn't be making decisions that will affect me in 12 years time. It is a great opportunity, but if I simply don't like it then it is gonna be a big mistake. Does anybody agree with that, or do you think its just too good an opportunity to pass up?

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  • 2 months later...

Well i got my rejection letter from the RAF Medical Board this morning. Basically I can't join for long-standing medical reasons, even though that doesn't apply anymore. Happens a lot, I gotta move on. Shame though, cos a heluvalot of money was involved.

However, in response to this I have been digging deep into the Royal Navy. Good news is I can apply to become a Weapons Engineering Officer - which looks after weapons, communications and emergency systems on a ship. I can apply when I get to university, getting a similar amount of money as I would have in the RAF, and (I believe) I only have to serve three years afterwards. Sounds quite good to me...

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Did you read the rest of the topic? I can't join the RAF... so I'm thinking of joining the Navy.

A bit more digging reveals the Engineering (Information Systems) Officer post, which looks after computers and communications on a ship. The advantage of this is that I would go straight in as a Lieutenant, earning around £35,000 ($70k) just a year or so after I leave University.

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