A question every #veteran amidst transition should ask themselves is: To what extent am I willing to reinvent myself?
Leaving the #military causes income uncertainty. You have options to solve for this and lots of them, all of which fall somewhere on a spectrum of reinvention.
Many will gravitate toward status quo, pursuing roles that look strikingly similar to their work on active duty.
Others will traverse the spectrum, become founders in far off sectors and occupy time in complete contrast to whatever job they did in the military.
Nothing wrong with either approach. What you might consider, however, is what's possible when we pursue the middle ground.
Early in career, Gary Maxworthy, aspired to join the Peace Corps after hearing JFK's call to serve. However, after starting a family, the need to provide stability and distractions turned into a three decade career in food distribution.
When he lost his wife to cancer, he was determined to make more of his life and decided to leave his corporate job.
He decided to join VISTA, a partner-organization to the Peace Corps, and found himself managing a San Francisco food bank.
It was in that food bank that he noticed all food being distributed was canned or non-perishable.
Because of his previous work experience, he knew cosmetically damaged food, seen as undesirable by grocery stores could be brought to food banks, vice being thrown away, and he knew he had the distribution know-how to make it happen.
He started Farm to Family, which did exactly that, eventually helping support 600,000 families a week.
There's no right or wrong answer. But it's a conversation worth having with yourself.
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