TER General Board

Guys: How many of you have seen providers who were in the armed forces?...
mrfisher 111 Reviews 1141 reads
posted

I've been with a handful and one in particular was in special forces and convinced me she could take me down with one well placed pinch.

Is that exciting or what?

Have been with 3...

IMHO sad that they choose this career instead of continuing in service, there are admin jobs they could do to further their experience.

Hon, what makes you think some of them are unhappy? Also, some of them might have been injured and had to retire from the military. Just a thought.

Kisses,
Ciara

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 9:21:52 AM

and have communicated with quite a few others. In every case these ladies were mature, well organized, self disciplined and effective communicators; they easily established rapport with clients and were very consistent and professional. As a lifer myself I attribute this to their military experience. CMA: Not to say that providers without military experience are not capable of these attributes.....

In 22 years of active duty, it wasn't terribly uncommon to find some of the women in uniform working as a provider of one sort or another in their off duty hours.  It was even more common to find military wives working.  The times I saw rapant providing by wives were in locations like the Philippines where the decadant and indolent lifestyle easily purchased by even low ranking GIs seemed to get some of the women working out of boredom!

Overseas, particularly in Japan, some of the ladies were tempted by the HUGE dollars Japanese men would pay to have sex with a western woman (yeah, tall, blonde, big chest - so predictable).  Unfortunately, a number of those young ladies ended up discharged under less-than-honorable conditions when the operation was busted by the OSI (USAF version of the FBI).  

My only direct involvement was with a female Marine Lance Corporal who was working.  She and a friend danced at a bachelor party I threw for one of my squadron mates and quite readily suggested  'taking on a few guys' after the other dancer left.  Several of the guys took a turn that night.  I had a memorable solo GFE with her a few nights later.  

I was dating a WILD USAF nurse in San Antonio once and got the drift that when she didn't have one of her boyfriends handy, she would go work hotel bars on the River Walk for fun and profit.

I was recently online friends with a woman who claimed to be a USAF nurse now and was working both as a stripper and hooker on the side AND she had two nurse friends who worked with her sometimes.  Particularly they took trips together and turned tricks - oh yeah... all three are married and moms.  I never met her but she had her USAF story straight, so who knows?

Today, I'm told by reliable sources, that the most common breach of discipline by female sailors at sea is prostituion on board the
ship.  Supply and demand!  

mvr

They are officers after all and the scandal would be too great if caught. A stripper would be too easy to be ID'd  by one of the enlisted.

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 12:04:23 PM

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 12:14:13 PM

...  said she had stripped and hooked her way through college/nursing school and got hooked on the rush of it all.  

Is it 'iffy' ... yeah.... but she sure as hell knew her stuff about the USAF... right down to how to spell 'Landstuhl'... so who knows? It could have all been BS...

MVR

and served in Iraq (before porn and escorting). She was/is well known  for her ass and got into the sex business after winning a contest in a strip joint. Came to my house for a session with her mother as driver, who wanted to visit the touristy town where I live.

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 12:12:11 PM

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 12:22:41 PM

is a veteran of the Air Force. She was open about and it was on her website.

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 12:34:20 PM

and other parts of you, we bring to "Attention!"

I served in the USAF, USN and DOD

My military service experience has been with me throughout this journey. Like when I first started out in the biz..... :)

When I wanted to be a cowgirl, I'd ask. "Permission to climb aboard!"
Thanks for the salute.
Sexy Carolina

I am currently in Iraq, and I have to chuckle about this post.

Number one, if you check with MOS, you must still be a male to get these Hooah type jobs.  The most front line jobs a female can get in the military is MP.  I am not talking about garrison, but a field MP.

She may have been an officer who was attached to a SF unit, who knows.  I would ask her about her unit, and where she has been.

A lot of people think anyone who has been in military intelligence, as a pathfinder (women do these things now), with the 82nd, etc., are special ops. The term Special Forces means just that. They used to wear green berets and some people called them the green berets, especially after a Special Op guy produced a song and movies were made about them. Unfortunately, they all wear the maroon-colored berets now (which were mainly prevalent for the 82nd Airborne Division). And, camel-colored berets in the desert, blue for NATO.  Even "Legs" (sorry, but it's what airborne troopers used to call people who didn't jump out of airplanes)wear berets now.

Then, of course, you have Delta Force guys. You are not supposed to know them and they are not supposed to spread the word that they are with Delta Force. I used to get a kick out of guys in bars who didn't know I was in the military try to tell me they were Delta Force. My girlfriends and I would just laugh our asses off. Hey! They just wanted to get laid.

There are so many special units: Marine Recon Group, The Army Rangers, the Navy Seals, etc. It's easy to see where people get mislead. However, there are women who are in jobs that were not opened to them a few decades ago, unless you were a nurse on the battlefield or got lucky enough to be a pilot when it was finally permitted.

Now, myself, I did a lot of things that some women in the military don't do and it was tough yet fun. Some women go through SEARS training now, too, and train sometimes with the infantry. You're right, I believe the person who Mr. Fisher is talking about was attached to a Special Ops branch for awhile, etc.

Hugs,
Ciara

-- Modified on 4/19/2009 5:46:19 PM

A little history lesson and correct me if a few things have changed, ManSnow. By the way, hoooah to you in Iraq.

I think the reason why people get mixed up with the term "special ops" is because some units go on Special Missions/Operations that are confidential.  Hence, the loose-termed word "Special Ops."  A special operation, not the actual Special Forces group.

The term for units that report directly to SOCOM (special ops command) and work with training groups in other countries who "used" to wear the green berets and can speark one or two languages are actually Special Forces. However, there are many 82nd Airborne people attached to these units and even go with them to support them overseas with food, supplies,logistics, MPs, etc. And, they can jump into areas with them. Are they in dangerous areas? Sometimes, because they are attached to them and stay in camp with them -- totally different than with the 82nd where the A2 shops and admin were in tents but not too far from the action. Have some of them been fired upon? Hell yes! Remember, sometimes back at base camp it's very dangerous because the S4, S2 and logistics are all camped there making executive decisions -- we're sitting ducks.

Now, once you've made the rank of E6 -- or in training for it (if it's still the same) and you earn your Master Jump Wings and can complete all the mental and physical testing, you might be able to join this industrious team of Special Forces, but it's harder than you think. They don't just take anyone, and usually your First Sergeant and Captain of his company also has to release him from his unit. These brave men who pass rigorous physical training, mental exams and tests -- and have learned another language, maybe two -- are eligible to continue their ops training in the elite Special Forces. It's quite an honor to be chosen (as it is in any special ops unit in any of the armed forces). When I was in the 82nd, there were only about 120 ladies training with me at Fort Benning. Fifty four of those did not make it. It helps to be a long-distance runner and have strong arms and self-determination.

It can be confusing to civilians or even regular army who are not stationed at Fort Bragg. Some of us, at one time, were attached to the special ops building that focuses on supporting the Special Forces group (as said above: SOCOM). DISCOM (division support command) focused on the 82nd Airborne Division. Another one, and Damn it I can't remember the name now, focused on regular army at that base but encompassed all the units at Fort Bragg.

So, when you casually hear the word "special ops," it could just mean someone is on a classified mission that some lazingly refer to as special ops.  See how easy it could get distorted to civilians or even regular army.

I believe Special Forces still have three groups but not sure. When I was at Fort Bragg, it was Third Group and Seventh Group. They learned the languages that was needed for the countries they would be training in and often times have very dangerous assignments. Anyway, everyone at Fort Bragg know them as Special Ops. Several people nickname certain special units in the military as special ops. Of course, SnowMan and I would know that none of them are actually Special Forces. Those were the green berets, who now wear the maroon beret which was only worn by the 82nd until a few years ago. Now, even regular army wear them to be cohesive, but it pissed a lot of us off. Some of us really earned those darn maroon and green berets. I hate that part.

Anyway, I was with the 82nd, yet attached to special forces for awhile in Saudi, and the 82nd is considered a special and elite branch of the military, too.  We were party animals. They don't call us the Devils in Baggy Pants for nothing.

Hugs,
Ciara

...but she's a lover, not a fighter!


and stationed overseas most of my time. Seen things I would not wish upon anyone. The experiences I had while in are what made me the strong person I am today.

And to the one guy, umm I am not a provider because I am to lazy to do admin, in fact I am board with engineering so I Chose to be a provider and am quit happy with what I am doing.and stationed overseas most of my time. Seen things I would not wish upon anyone. The experiences I had while in are what made me the strong person I am today.

And to the one guy, umm I am not a provider because I am to lazy to do admin, in fact I am board with engineering so I Chose to be a provider and am quit happy with what I am doing. In fact the cultural experiences make me more in tune with my body and spirit and help me connect with many different type of people in this business.

Kisses,
Karrie

I saw things I'd rather not relive again and still occasionally have bad dreams about them. Shoot! Even at garrison, some major crap happened on base, not to mention in Saudi. Some people get lucky and have minimal to no tragedies while serving, while others (like many of the Vietnam vets, World War II vets and active-duty members in Afghanistan and other parts of the world) see an entirely different picture of things. Some only sit in tents, some get shot, some go to work and come home every day with no battle scars. We're all vets.

Hugs,
Ciara

AzMajicman188 reads

Amen.. and you are so very correct..

To all who served.. are serving and those unfortunately not coming back..

WE do SALUTE YOU.

I lost a number of buddies and friends by the time I got out in 74.

Register Now!