Well, I have a few questions, and this might be a really long explanation.
You can guess, based on where I posted, I'm interested in enlisting in the Marines.
First off, I guess I should introduce myself. You can read my bio. haha moving
on, first I'd like to state my medical situation and ask a few questions about
it. I have been diagnosed with mono, which I've had for the past month and a
half, but more importantly, I I have hyperthyroidism. For those who don't know
what that is, my thyroid is producing too much hormones, and my natural
antibodies are trying to fight it off. When I went to MEPs the first time (But
for the Army National Guard) swollen glands in my neck were why they sent me
home. Went to the nurse, she said I might have a cold, went to my dorm and took
some cold medicine and went to sleep. Few weeks later I went back, and she did
a mono spot test, I tested positive, and while doing a blood test for strep
throat she noticed abnormal thyroid readings. Went home, talked to my private
practitioner, he sent me for x-rays, and I went to a specialists, and now for
the past week I've been on am anti-thyroid called Methimazole (generic for
Tapazole). The doctor said it'd take about a year to test whether or not my
thyroid problem has gone into remission, but I'm currently researching
information on enlisting with this medicine. I'm under the impression you
cannot enlist if you're taking medicine, which I think is fair, but I wasn't
sure if that was just for the army or if it was for all branches of service. I
also sent an email through the army website Thursday asked for further
information on getting a waiver when my problem goes into remission. If/when I
get an email from the army, should I expect the Marines to give me the same
answer?
"Screw up your metabolism" is something I saw on the Newbie
FAQ. Hyperthyroidism does just that, because your metabolism is located in your
thyroid. Pre-medication, I lost five pounds in a week, which I consider a lot
for someone who is condoned to bed rest due to her mono. Are there any ways
other than more pills to help regulate my metabolism while I start
conditioning? I liked the Navy Seals work outs; it seemed to work easiest for
my schedule and availability. My mono thankfully should just be about gone in
that although I'll be really weak at times for a few months still; I won't
rupture anything by working out, which I ran the risk of a month ago. But that
still means right now I don't have a stable work out schedule, which I will
normalize once I get back into shape and my symptoms wear off. I know that in
basic training, they will tell us to work beyond the pain and to push yourself
harder, or a quote I found 'work until you're numb and sore and can't go on,
then do it again and again...' but is it safe to work through exhaustion or
muscle pain due to mono?
When I first wanted to enlist, it was through the army national guard. When
my friend, now boyfriend, enlisted he went active army, and I had the enjoyment
of meeting his recruiter, who then tried to tell me how futile it is to join
the guard, and to join active service. They were both down right lying to me by
the end of it, once I told my other recruiter what one was saying and asking if
it was true. It more so infuriated me than anything; I had a clear interest of
enlisting in NG why are you still lying to me buddy? I know this next question
is awfully naive of me to ask but...are Marine recruiters pretty cut throat and
twist the truth to get recruits up to the bus at MEPs? They'd lie about little
things, like, if I went NG and wanted to switch I had to switch within six
months after training and no the other said, I had to choose in six months.
Also, do the Marines have Split Op available? When I can do boot camp one
summer, a year of college and then come back and do secondary training that
following summer?
I will contact my recruiter...in a few months when my hyperthyroidism
details are solidified a bit more. I got a 70 composite on the ASVAB, I've been
told that's pretty good, and in the army it gets me into most anything I want
to do. Do the Marines have a DLAB (defensive language aptitude test), or is
that an army test? I was originally looking at Military Police, as according to
my friends I'm "just a girl who wants to kill stuff," hahaha. That
isn't entirely true.
Almost done with questions - if all else fails and i
get DQed for a record of hyperthyroidism (in some cases brought on by stress,
which boot camp is going to do to me), do the Marines have something like the
Army Civilian Corps? I promise I’m almost done! My dad is a retired W4 in the
Army National Guard, so he knows the ins and outs of recruiting. When I first
mentioned going Active duty he fired off a lot of questions for me to find
answers to, such as, if I get deployed how will I do education...etc. So if you
guys had any questions answered during your recruiter process, or anything you
wish you'd known before signing those wonderful papers, could you share a
little bit about it? There must be a few female Marines on this board, or
spouses of female Marines, could you tell me a little about your experiences?
Also, I'm not saying my father is going to go crazy on me for wanting to enlist
in the Marines, just make sure to a fault it is what I want to do.
Well I’ve spell checked this and made sure I capitalized the
‘M’ so I hope none of it is offensive or seems juvenile. Thank you for your
help!
Also I really hope this site doesn't have server lag or anything, because if it does I might've accidentally posted this post twice.