Brihard said:
Other things to consider at the many months you'll spend away on basic training, confined to living in barracks with your course. Then there's the time spent on training exercises in other parts of the country or the world where you'll be incommunicado. Dutt can strike hard and fast with little warning that could take you away from family.
Some people still pull off the single parent thing in the military, but I can't imagine how. I remember my dad being gone six months here, a year there, two months here again. Without another family member co-located - either a parent or someone willing to fill in - it would be very challenging, and frankly not fair to the child. Sorry for the discouraging answer, but I wanted to lay it out for you honestly.
Thank you for you response. I was hoping for an in depth and blunt answer, which is also why I have yet to question a recruiter. Nervous that their response would be "apply now, and we'll figure out the details later".
Is "dutt" an acronym? Or was it a keystroke error and intended to be duty.
My main point of apprehension is tour length. Not in the sense of planning for the care as the length can change at any time, but to the impact on my children. If the tours were weeks, then it can be dealt with. If the tours are months, then my kids at their present ages would have issues with it. Of course this is all predicting the future which is rather difficult. Either way, thank you for your post as it has given me some points to consider.
fraserdw said:
I spent 7 years as a single parent, fortunately as a HQ slug, so my experience was some what easy. I would never attempt to be a single parent in a unit. You need a good stable extended family close by to make it as a single parent in the army and at a lower rank.
I have family in the Edmonton area, though I'd prefer not to be dependent on that network. It would limit the bases I could be stationed at, and therefore limit the positions I could apply for. As for the slug... Well, I am posting questions to an online forum as opposed to physically asking them at a recruiting station so I likely would fit right in with fellow slugs.
CDN Aviator said:
I made single parenting work in a high-tempo unit. It's not easy but very much depends on your personal situation. I was lucky that i had great freinds that would look after both my daughters and some family only a few hours away that could step in as required. No-notice deployments were always a problem but i somehow always made it work. I was lucky that my girls were old enough and mature enough to handle themselves if i had to divert to another airfield for the night when i was flying from home base.
How long were your tours typically? Also, were your daughters children/pre-teen/teen?
Wookilar said:
Just want to clear up something though, re: the quote from you above.
Not sure what you "understand" but my spouse is a stay-at-home mom and she would spit venom at anyone that suggested the CF has ever done anything for her or us as a couple/family. Hell my first tour I had less than 2 weeks notice lol.
My apologies to your spouse, I should not have used the word "much" since I was only able to think of a single example. Which is of alternating tours when both parents are serving, so that at least one parent is able to remain with the children. From the perspective of a couple, this is nothing. I am not a couple, so I took it from the perspective of my children, and from that perspective a single parent is
much better then no parent.
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I suppose that many are questioning why a single parent would consider joining the military. Well, there is no ideal career for a single parent, and so I'm looking into careers that I'm interested in. Might as well settle for a less then ideal career doing what I want, rather then a less then ideal career which holds no interest for me. No matter what I choose, there will be difficulties.