Can you quit ait




















And I believe you will be too, if you stick with it. Basic training is tough. The military wants to weed people out.

They want people to quit, because it means their force is stronger than it would be if they opened the doors to everyone.

But how will you handle quitting? Knowing that you went back on the oath you swore to your country when you enlisted? Knowing that you could have performed better, but you chose to take the easy way out?

Will taking the easy way out now make it easier for you to quit when things get hard in the future? Because they will. You will face difficult times many times in your life. The decisions you make now will impact your future decisions. Only you can answer these questions. But I would encourage you to stick with your training, graduate from AIT, and enter into the operational military.

You will quickly see that life on the other side of training is much different than living and working in a training environment. You will also gain the satisfaction of staring down a difficult task, and defeating it. Give it a shot. Ryan Guina is The Military Wallet's founder. He is a writer, small business owner, and entrepreneur. Ryan started The Military Wallet in after separating from active duty military service and has been writing about financial, small business, and military benefits topics since then.

He also writes about personal finance and investing at Cash Money Life. Ryan uses Personal Capital to track and manage his finances. Personal Capital is a free software program that allows him to track his net worth, balance his investment portfolio, track his income and expenses, and much more.

You can open a free Personal Capital account here. Featured In: Ryan's writing has been featured in the following publications: Forbes, Military. These responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. Load More Comments. Departments of Defense or Veterans Affairs. The content on The Military Wallet is produced by Three Creeks Media, its partners, affiliates and contractors, any opinions or statements on The Military Wallet should not be attributed to the Dept.

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You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. Some are discharged because they are deemed mentally or physically unfit for duty. In fact, far from it in many cases—but if the DoD chooses to let you go due to a medical issue physical or mental this is one early out option that does not carry the stigma of punishment, change of mind, failure to adapt, etc.

One common medical separation? A sole surviving son or daughter may be given special consideration in this way, and there are other scenarios that may warrant a hardship discharge depending on the branch of service and the circumstances involved.

While it is true that those who decide they are conscientious objectors after serving some of their enlistment or commission, getting out early as one is NOT easy. The military places the burden of proof on the servicemember to show a real shift in thinking toward pacifism, or whatever objection is stated as the reason to get out of the remainder of a military contract.

Furthermore, the beliefs leading to the objection to military service must have developed the objection AFTER joining—those who felt objections at enlistment time would not be eligible. This retainability issue is one that is not consistently applicable but usually comes into play when a branch of military service is downsizing.

If by AIT you are referring to Advanced Individual Training, the school you attend after basic training…then the answer is sort of. If you join the army, you are under contract and you have obligations as does the army. It depends on your AIT and the privileges you have earned. For example, the 68C AIT is a year long and two phases.



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