J
Jason Jarvis
Guest
Ghost778,
I was one of those cadets who complained about not doing "army stuff," but I was an air cadet so it was a bit of a moot point! I made up for this by joining the rifle team (we still had .22s then) and becoming a survival instructor.
But cadets isn‘t so much about doing "army stuff" as it is developing the all-around skills and confidences that young people need in order to thrive and succeed in today‘s world. This might sound corny, but I firmly believe that I‘m the man I am today -- both good and bad -- because of what I did and learned in cadets.
My wife isn‘t crazy about me joining the CIC because she doesn‘t like the fact that I would become a reservist -- she‘s worried I could get called up. I‘ve told her that there‘s no way in h*ll this would happen, and that if it did we‘d have bigger problems to worry about -- hello, mothership!
If I hadn‘t spent that summer tramping around the Quebec wilderness, I probably never would‘ve become a skydiver, went to grad school or met my wife -- and that‘s not a life I can even imagine.
Of course a lot of cadets go on to join the military, that‘s one of the reasons for the existence of cadets. But it‘s not the only one, and I would argue not even the most important one. Canada needs confident, well-rounded individuals who can think for themselves, don‘t mind working hard and want to make this country the best it can be.
I was one of those cadets who complained about not doing "army stuff," but I was an air cadet so it was a bit of a moot point! I made up for this by joining the rifle team (we still had .22s then) and becoming a survival instructor.
But cadets isn‘t so much about doing "army stuff" as it is developing the all-around skills and confidences that young people need in order to thrive and succeed in today‘s world. This might sound corny, but I firmly believe that I‘m the man I am today -- both good and bad -- because of what I did and learned in cadets.
My wife isn‘t crazy about me joining the CIC because she doesn‘t like the fact that I would become a reservist -- she‘s worried I could get called up. I‘ve told her that there‘s no way in h*ll this would happen, and that if it did we‘d have bigger problems to worry about -- hello, mothership!
If I hadn‘t spent that summer tramping around the Quebec wilderness, I probably never would‘ve become a skydiver, went to grad school or met my wife -- and that‘s not a life I can even imagine.
Of course a lot of cadets go on to join the military, that‘s one of the reasons for the existence of cadets. But it‘s not the only one, and I would argue not even the most important one. Canada needs confident, well-rounded individuals who can think for themselves, don‘t mind working hard and want to make this country the best it can be.