If living in Iceland was the break from reality that I wish everyone was able to experience, then setting foot back in the states was certainly a wake-up call. I remember after graduating high school thinking that now I was free and there was no one to tell me what to do and I was now able to do whatever I chose to do. I am still unsure why no one told me that those thoughts were completely ridiculous and so untrue, though I am pretty sure that the reality actually was that various people had spent years attempting to make me aware of this fact of life and I in my infinate lack of wisdom decided not to listen.
My father flew back with me on my initial return to states, stayed for a couple of days and helped me to find a car. We both had learned years earlier that my knowledge of anything mechanical and whether or not it was a good vehicle soley relied on his experise. With, I am sure, a splite sense of pride as well as doubts and fears he sent me on my way to Flordia where my two best friends were waiting for me. Looking back now I wish that there had been a three day indoctrination when returning to the states as there had been when we first went to Iceland. If I remember correctly it was not more than three or four months before all three of us realized that we had gotten ourselves in over our heads. Stubborn as I was, and still am, after a few weeks of staying with my best friend Eddie at his parents house, I ventured out on my own, rented my own apartment, had a job and within the month realized that I was in trouble.
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The one logical and rational decision I had made at this point in my life was to join the military, more so to get away from home than anything, yet thinking that I was a making a very determined and good decision for myself. Though my parents were very proud of my decision I certainly did not make the next few months any easier on anyone by being back under their roof. As I began to look for a job while I waited for new year to ring in and to be sent off to boot-camp, I also began to sink into a depression that I had no clue as how to deal with. I began to realize how much I missed the kids that I had worked with in Iceland and during my brief stint in Florida while volunteering at the Youth Center at NAS Pensacola. I was able to fill that void by finding a job working at LaPetite Academy in nearby Chesapeake.
Things were a little different working at La Petite, I was after all back in the states and not on a military base, so the rules were a lot different. I was still lucky enough to work with a great group of kids and when the time came fours months later to leave and head off to boot-camp, I can not say that is was easy. I am pretty sure that when I returned home briefly after graduating boot-camp I went to the academy first to see the kids before I even went to my house.
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