crashtestdummy
Platinum Member
- Feb 18, 2010
- 2,893
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I'm pretty distraught about this. I'm a 34 year-old school bus driver, and it's not hard to guess that this isn't what I want to do with my life. I have always struggled to find motivation to make something of myself, or even figure out what I really wanted to do with my life. I've always been in awe of the US National Parks, and after recently talking to someone that has worked with the NPS for the past 4 years, it just made sense that that would be perfect for me. Knowing that I would start at the bottom, and do the most menial tasks, at first, would be fine, and I'd be content with that. More than content in fact.
I don't want to go to war anymore than the next computer nerd does, but I never intentionally avoided signing up. In fact, who would do such a thing if they had a full understanding of how permanent the consequences are/were?
If something like this is mandatory, required by law, then why do they even make it seem like an option? Why isn't registration automatic? I read above where someone mentioned that they were automatically registered when they got their license. I know that I received at least 2 different licenses between the ages of 18 and 26, so why wasn't I registered then?
I was trying to think of an analogy earlier, and I came up with this:
It's like sending someone to hell for not asking Jesus to forgive them of their sins, when they only had a vague idea of who Jesus was, and certainly wasn't aware of the consequences of not doing so.
What about working for a state park system, the Appalachian Mountain Club (there's a shuttle driver position under "seasonal jobs"), the Sierra Club, a climbing gym, a guide service (whitewater rafting companies, for example, will often train you) or even an outfitter in a cool place. A lot of these won't be year-round jobs, and they don't get you a lot of money, but they'll get your foot in the door.
 
				
		 
			