Without watching this entire video does this mean that you can join the Air Force as maintenance or whatever and then try out for specwar after 2 years of service?
@@McCoy27-t9e yes, but like these beautiful gents stated, it’s probably in your best interest to try for SPECWAR from the beginning. Things happen, you get distracted from your goals in regular AF.
Surrender to it. If you really want to do this (or anything) it helps to have a “even if” mentality. Even if I fail, even if I get hurt, and yes even if I DIE. Something that helps me too is a passage from the Bible; “Greater love has no one than this, that a person will lay down his life for his friends.” You may have to change your views on death but it’s not a terrible thing when you think about it and I just think it would be an honor to lay down my life to save another. Hope this helps!
Great information and humor as always. Looking forward to the ass kicking challenge 🇺🇸 I was curious if there has been any native americans in the special warfare career fields. Have a good weekend fellas 🤙🏾
I’m sure you guys have already answered this in past. My son who is in development made comment… I wonder how much of training and skills gained in AFSpecWar carries over to civilian life after exiting military. Maybe y’all could visit this in a future episode?
@@jarradphillips2218 we have covered it, but you asked, we will refresh. Bottom line- the skills taught in these career fields transfer to anything your son wants to do. Ask yourself- would you want an employee hyper focused on teamwork, grit, determination, coach ability, humility, drive? Doesn’t matter what the job is- that person crushes it. Thats what we have across all career fields.
Hey fellas! Thanks for the shout out and love. Such a great time doing those episodes with yall.
Excited for the cross trainee episode! Cross training for PJ here soon submitting my package in January 2025.
Thank you and good luck!🍑
So ready for this one
I also do NOT have 105mm and 30mm from my deployment 😂😂looking forward to the deep dive on retraining!
Cross trainers only need 1 year on station 2 years total service for AFSPECWAR. Great content gents, appreciate y’all
@@danielcassidy9772 thanks for the clarification!!
Without watching this entire video does this mean that you can join the Air Force as maintenance or whatever and then try out for specwar after 2 years of service?
@@McCoy27-t9e yes.
@@McCoy27-t9e yes, but like these beautiful gents stated, it’s probably in your best interest to try for SPECWAR from the beginning. Things happen, you get distracted from your goals in regular AF.
I am interested in the PJs but I keep on getting hit with the idea of death and not knowing how to deal with the possibility of dying. Any advice?
Send it
Surrender to it. If you really want to do this (or anything) it helps to have a “even if” mentality. Even if I fail, even if I get hurt, and yes even if I DIE. Something that helps me too is a passage from the Bible; “Greater love has no one than this, that a person will lay down his life for his friends.” You may have to change your views on death but it’s not a terrible thing when you think about it and I just think it would be an honor to lay down my life to save another. Hope this helps!
@@2.paco408 I appreciate the help. I was actually thinking about that same verse from the Bible too! God be showing you signs I guess!
Great information and humor as always. Looking forward to the ass kicking challenge 🇺🇸 I was curious if there has been any native americans in the special warfare career fields. Have a good weekend fellas 🤙🏾
Oh yeah, there certainly have been.
next FAQ we need to know Aaron's skincare routine
How do I send along along a private note?
@@kevinshaw8797 you can email us- we all use firstname@onesready.com (like Aaron@onesready.com or jared@onesready.com) or shoot us a DM on Instagram.
I’m sure you guys have already answered this in past. My son who is in development made comment…
I wonder how much of training and skills gained in AFSpecWar carries over to civilian life after exiting military. Maybe y’all could visit this in a future episode?
@@jarradphillips2218 we have covered it, but you asked, we will refresh. Bottom line- the skills taught in these career fields transfer to anything your son wants to do. Ask yourself- would you want an employee hyper focused on teamwork, grit, determination, coach ability, humility, drive? Doesn’t matter what the job is- that person crushes it. Thats what we have across all career fields.
I was eating dinner while watching this and when Aaron got to his infection story… ☠️
@@kilroyfrills3084 my bad bro. I’ve been known to ruin meals
18:28 never heard it called a “personal interest” before