This Girl's Navy
Speaking of seasick, my uncle was a nuke on subs and had to eat something greasy when they were surfacing otherwise he'd get seasick, other than that he was fine. Hopefully I don't inherit that part!

Interesting, hadn’t thought of that!

Also I’ll take any reason to eat greasy food.

whenever u went underway. do u ever get sea sick? if u did how did u managed to deal with it? i've always wondered about this. im planning on joining the navy also but im scared i might get seasick lol.

I was on a giant aircraft carrier. Seriously, it didn’t move enough for me to get seasick! The only time we really had significant movement was going around the horn down under South America. And carriers don’t even do that very often. I still didn’t even get sick.

I get seasick and motion sick sometimes too, but on small craft or jerky things or reading in cars. That aircraft carrier never triggered it. I guess the smaller boats might have, definitely not a submarine since it was underwater…I think IF I’d had to deal with that, I would have invested in some dramamine at first and tried to ween myself off it over time.

Sometimes the gentle way the Reagan swayed would just rock me to sleep though. It was so nice!

Navy Hint (works in real life too!)

There was one thing that I did that really helped me succeed in the Navy. And I’m passing this secret on to you…

Find the biggest hard-ass with the scariest reputation (who by the way most likely hates you) and align yourself with them.

In prototype, my advisor had the worst reputation for failing people, discouraging everyone, and probably crushing souls. But I went to him at every opportunity. I had my practice final board with him (you know, to see if I’d pass the final final board), and you know, the final board on nuclear power was SO easy after him, I just rattled off nuclear procedures and system specifications like nobody’s business.

Seriously, it makes your life easier later on to get a little ass-kicking at first!

Dammit, Navy, the only way I’m comfortable listening to music on my walk home through the city is if I have only one earbud in and I BLAME YOU!
Hey! I'm considering joining the Navy. My husbands actually a marine right now and we are stationed in CA. I'm extremely interested in the health care field. I was wondering what the Navy has to offer that wouldn't require me to deploy..or if it does not much at all. He's infantry so we're away from each other enough to begin with! Also, I was wondering what jobs they actually offer in healthcare fields when just starting out? I'm really nervous i want to make sure ik everything first

So you want to “Join the Navy! See the world!”? If you joined the Navy, you would be deployed. Probably a lot. Even a shore duty post might be overseas! Most people considering joining would enjoy that, but seems to be the opposite of what you’re looking for…

Your best bet might be reaching out to a Marine spouse group or organization and see what they recommend—my limited understanding is that they try to help spouses with jobs, career paths, and other aspects of everyday life. There might even be facebook groups and whatnot to answer questions better than I can!

Aircraft Carrier TV Show Coming Next Fall

Interesting! Saw this article online today which featured a blurb about a new fall drama:

WILD BLUE. ER, The West Wing and Top Gun collide in this young ensemble about the working men and women on board a US Aircraft Carrier. Equipped with a 500 foot landing strip, a nuclear reactor and 6000 souls on board, Wild Blue is an upstairs/downstairs look at pressure-cooker lives of the US Navy. Will Rothhaar stars.

A few thoughts:

It’s TWO reactors, Entertainment Weekly writers, SHEESH! (Hmm unless they’re taking artistic liberties I suppose. Who am I kidding, it’s not like they’re going to have a nuke main character, it’s gonna be freaking airdales and pilots.)

I think it would work better as a comedy.

Last Navy show they tried to make got cancelled but we’ll see how this one goes.

As long as it doesn’t feature women wearing pony tails in uniform I’ll give it a chance!

Below: UNSAT HAIR IN UNIFORM.

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No really. Nuke qualified electrician = Cleaner who knows a fair bit about nuclear power and electricity.

No really. Nuke qualified electrician = Cleaner who knows a fair bit about nuclear power and electricity.

I just found your blog, and I already enjoy reading everything. I'm hoping to pass the physical part of MEPS, I have yet to do that after this winter break. But with a 75, I was curious if you had an idea as to what kind of jobs would be good for a female who's interested in hands on things. I do want to be in tv production after the navy. Is there anything that could slightly be useful for that?

Are YOU in luck, I wanted to be a filmmaker when I went in, and I did nuclear electricianing which was PERFECT!

Haha I still enjoy writing and I’d like to…oh say sell a screenplay by the time I’m 50, but it’s not what I want to do full time. And actually neither is nuclear power.

Anyway enough about me. TV Production sounds pretty technical, and with like equipment and stuff, and you’re obviously bright, so you could do some interesting technical field: electronics or something with equipment…

Yeah stupid answer I know. In my opinion though, learning something technical as quickly as we do in the Navy makes you valuable to any field you’re interested in. Maybe look in to the kind of training companies expect of TV production people. Halfway through my enlistment, me and a friend of mine bought our way into a screenwriting conference and had a blast learning SO much about something we’re passionate about. A friend of mine took leave to intern on a film set, so there you go!

I don’t think there’s any right way to get where you want to go, and the journey is the cool part that you get to brag about later.

Twelve years! I wasn’t quite in the Navy at this point, still a couple months away from shipping off to boot camp, a glimmer in the Reagan’s eye!

Twelve years! I wasn’t quite in the Navy at this point, still a couple months away from shipping off to boot camp, a glimmer in the Reagan’s eye!

I found your blog when I was searching for something, anything really, that was positive and would help me understand what I'm getting myself into. I'm from Whidbey Island, so I sort of have an idea from my friends that have joined. But with how many complications I've run into, I just keep coming up with more questions. I'm enlisting in the reserves, and can't really make up my mind about which rate I'm going to chose, and everything is super complicated and ahhh!

RELAX!!! NOW!!

What are you worried about, that you make the wrong choice and hate the job you chose to spend at least four years in?

If you ask me, any rate is worth it and will help you down the road. I’m not a nuke electrician anymore, like I was in the Navy. Currently I’m an admin assistant. I love what I do. But two years ago, I didn’t know this is the job I wanted. I’m 30 and I only recently figured out how to put together all my random-ass skills into a career I’m passionate about. But it was really fun trying different things, like being a Navy Nuke and getting an English degree (summa cum laude, by the way)!

And you know, I was pretty damn happy being a nuke electrician—I even sometimes get former Navy supervisors say they would hire me in a second. My advice is pick something that sounds fun, or interesting, or challenging, and go for it! I told myself if I could make it through six years of being a nuke, I could do anything I wanted.

One compliment I often get from supervisors is that I’m a fast learner. I’d say everyone in the Navy acquires that skill and THAT is what has taken me where I want to go.

Good luck and BREATHE.

Were you mocked by sailors or had them stare because of your shaved head? I'm considering shaving my head, but I've read that it's a terrible idea for bootcamp, and your fellow sailors will probably bother you. Is this true?

I get that question a lot.

I shaved my head about 4 years into my enlistment, while on deployment. I joke that I shaved my head to JUST stop all the guys from hitting on me so much, but it just changed their pickup line to “So, why’d you shave your head?” (I explored the social effects of a haircut in a previous post) I was just curious what it would look like and deployment seemed like a great place to experiment when I didn’t care what ANYONE thought of me. Some guys would say “I liked you better with hair.” Guess how much I cared. Yeah that much. Lame comment on their part!

You’re really concerned what a bunch of noob recruits just like you are going to think? Because I think you’re too badass to care, especially if you’re thinking about joining the coolest Navy ever. And honestly, in boot camp, you become SO close, you’re like family. We had one girl who I judged the crap out of when I first saw her. But really that first week you’re so exhausted that you couldn’t care less about the existance of another person. At all. (Her story in boot camp: she struggled a lot, got punished a lot, but she worked her ass off and THAT’S what everyone responded to. We pushed her, we cheered her on, and we were proud of her.)

Anyway, my biggest point is, you’re far too awesome to care what anyone thinks. If you want to try it, go for it! HAIR GROWS BACK!

Things People Google About the Navy: “Hot Navy Girls”

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OBVIOUSLY.

hey, i'm wondering about the physical requirements for the navy and after you swear in before you ship, i know that the army and marines have pt. does the navy also?

The Navy likes their women fat.

Okay maybe not fat but it’s not physically demanding to be in the Navy. Here’s a list of physical requirements, I mean really you just NEED to pass, not get outstanding!

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The website I got this from also has other age groups if you’re curious. By the way, you do EITHER the run OR the swim.

My DEP group worked out a couple times, of course I was freaking out about boot camp and I got my pushups and situps better and ran…I don’t know, a bit.

Boot camp isn’t too hard, but that’s the most I worked out in the Navy. The more physical rates (such as rescue diver) obviously work out more, but as a nuke the worst physical test was being in a machinery room in the middle of the Persian Gulf where it felt like being inside a giant hairdryer. Sounded like it too.  I was a disgusting sweaty mess by the end of a 5 hour watch. That’s a kind of PT…

In my four years on the ship we had the PRT test 4…possibly 3 times. Never did it when we were on deployment. Hope that helps!

How do you feel about the Intelligence (IS) community? What are they like?

I’d tell you, but then I’d have to kill you.

Nah, never really knew anyone in Intelligence! They’re probably just like normal people, some cool, some less cool, some superfreaks, and what not. They just got different training!

Things Navy people talk about when we get out of the Navy.

Things Navy people talk about when we get out of the Navy.