Drop! Basic Training at the End of the Cold War
Duty
Why I Joined
I enlisted in the Army National Guard in August 1987 when I was nearly 26 years old.
I had always respected military service and assumed it was
part of one’s duty if you could enlist. My family has a pretty typical military
service history. One brother was drafted in the Army during the Vietnam War. My
other brother enlisted in the Air Force and served in
So with that history, I was starting graduate school in the fall of 1987 and it was crunch time for military service. Up until then, I’d always known that I was registered for the draft so if there was an emergency, I’d be called up. So enlisting didn’t seem like anything I needed to do during college. But I was old enough not to be in the first several waves of draft classes. So being registered didn’t mean anything at this point. My choice was to either join right then or accept that I’d never serve. I was also about to propose marriage, so another deadline loomed for all practical purposes.
I walked down to the National Guard armory in town and just walked in and told the sergeant on duty that I was interested in enlisting. He took the time to talk to me, although he said he wasn’t a recruiter. Looking at my longish hair, he pointed at it and told me, “You’ll have to get that hair cut.” Well, yeah, I knew that.
So after getting some recruiting pamphlets, I thanked the sergeant and went on my way.
I suppose it would have been easy to just give up. Hey, I looked into it! I almost joined. But that wasn’t enough. I called the recruiter on the card and we set up an appointment. He was a fast talker and knew the ins and outs of filling out the forms. He was pleased when I took the ASVAB test and the quick scoring at the Army Reserve armory showed I’d missed only one question. I wanted military intelligence, figuring it would be useful if I ever went into the CIA, which was what I’d planned on doing until marriage came up.
But there was no military intelligence unit with a slot
open. So now I had to choose whether I really wanted to enlist in a skill of no
use to me in my civilian life. A signal unit was in
So the recruiter told me about the bonus I qualified for and student loan repayments. I didn’t need them to join—I’d already decided—but it was nice to have them! I also got to start off as a Private First Class (E-3) because of college credits. I told my recruiter I had to have split training so it wouldn’t interfere with graduate school and I got it. I also had the delayed entry option so I wouldn’t go to basic training until the summer of 1988.
I went through the medical processing and drug tests and all
that in downtown
One thing that surprised me was that upon enlisting and even before I went to basic, I had to report to my unit! I was issued a single uniform and no gear. During the months from enlisting to the next summer I went through a weekend mini-basic training at Fort Custer, went to training in Newport where I learned about the equipment, learned a lot of basic military skills such as map reading, marching, wearing my uniform properly, and even went off to full weekend exercises where having no actual equipment was a bit of a handicap. No sleeping bag, rain gear, or change of uniform! But I endured and learned. Indeed, when it was time to go off to basic training in May, many in my unit were surprised. They thought I was prior service and had no idea I was just a civilian wearing a uniform. That made me feel pretty good, actually.
A formal letter from the Department of Defense started me on my way. It began:
“WITH CONSENT OF THE GOVERNOR OF THE STATE
OF
REPORT TO US ARMY RECEPTION BATTALION (OM81ER) FORT LEONARD
This was back before email so it was not considered “shouting.” Looking at it now it seems odd to be in all caps.
My actual training was about to begin. I’d gotten comfortable with my new unit but all that was behind me as I was about to be truly introduced to the Army.
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