Dialogues · Heated

“I want to join the military.”

Career declaration that lands hardest in parents who didn't see it coming. The reflex to argue; the work is to investigate.

Line art of a teen and parent walking by a quiet park bench at dusk
For ages
16–18
Topics
Career & FutureIdentity & Self
Teen profile
Boys More Targeted
Family context
Affluent/High SpendingStrict Household
I.
The scene

What's happening.

Your 17-year-old, on the walk after dinner: “I've been thinking about it. I want to enlist.” You feel multiple things at once.

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

Absolutely not. You're going to college.

Teen

I already met with the recruiter. He said —

Parent

Recruiters lie. End of conversation.

Teen

(stops including you in the decision; signs up at 18 without your input)

III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

Okay. That's a big decision. Walk me through it — what's pulling you toward it, what branch, what role, and how long have you been thinking about it?

Teen

About a year. I want Air Force, cybersecurity track. The training and the GI Bill at the end. I don't want $200k of college debt for a degree I might not use.

Parent

Okay. That's not impulse, that's a plan. I have feelings about it because you're my kid and you're going to be 17 in a uniform — but my feelings don't decide. Here's what I'd want, as your parent and as someone who loves you: before you sign, we go to two more recruiters from different services to compare contracts; we have an independent person (not a recruiter) read whatever you sign, because the small print matters; and we talk to two people who've actually done what you want to do — one current, one who's been out for five years. After all of that, the decision is yours. Workable?

Teen

Yeah. Workable. Thank you for not flipping out.

IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

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