Dwell time! They’re resting in between shifts
And I think I’ve finally nailed how to color them!
As before, prompt list by @belltrigger and @glassesblu ✨

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Maldives
seen from China
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
Dwell time! They’re resting in between shifts
And I think I’ve finally nailed how to color them!
As before, prompt list by @belltrigger and @glassesblu ✨

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Hi! These RS Submastobers were for 15, 18, and 17 ! [SPICY], [LOST TICKET], and [DWELL TIME] respectively!
They contained mature themes so I withheld them from tumblr. Check the replies for links to my twitter posts! Or you can wait for them to be posted in a compilation on AO3 !
Doing some quick searching and didn't see if this was answered anywhere, but apologies if it was! How long does a deployment typically last? And how long do you get between deployments? Just wondering on some timing--basically, are there breaks at all? How much time is spent 'deployed' versus at home?
Back during the early days of the WOT, deployments could easily last 14+ months. These days, 9 months is more common for active duty. ADA and some other parts do 12 month rotations and I believe Special Forces exclusively can be deployed up to two years. Early days of WOT, dwell time (time between deployments, can be waived by soldier but shouldn’t be overridden by army) was about twelve months, meaning soldiers couldn’t be deployed for twelve months after returning from a previous deployment. Nowadays, twenty-four is more common.Soldiers can deploy more frequently by waiving their dwell time and they can deploy less frequently. They might be nondeployable, (usually those on an extreme profile) or already on an overseas assignment, or they just so happen to keep changing stations before they get to deploy with a unit. I’ve known people who’ve been in for five years and deployed for three and who’ve been in seven years and deployed for 0. It’s all relative. Typically it is pretty uncommon to go through your contract without at least one deployment, but it’s certainly not unheard of.R&R is/was a sort of two week vacation during deployment. The army would pay for your ticket anywhere in the world, and you got two weeks away from deployment like a normal civilian. While I was deployed, R&R was becoming more restricted so that certain deployments don’t qualify for them anymore, so you’d have to do more specific research on where the deployment is and what your soldier’s unit does to determine how their R&R will work.Please remember that this is deployment to a combat zone! An overseas tour can last one year to idk a decade and they aren’t considered within the army to be the same thing.-Kingsley
I'm so grateful for this blog - the secondary MC in my new project is a veteran, and I have so many questions that Google hasn't been able to answer. (1) How does the military determine where you're stationed for training/pre-deployment? (2) In 2004, it was almost inevitable that he'd be deployed to Iraq/Afghanistan right? (3) Would 24 months have been standard then? (4) What kind of communication would he have had access to? Sorry for my ignorance or if you can't answer! Thanks in advance!
I’m glad to help! Sorry it took so long to get to you.1) For training, there’s a predesignated post in the U.S. You’d have to know the MOS in order to look up where its school is. Otherwise it depends on a lot of factors, namely your MOS. Some MOSs are universal and can be sent nigh anywhere, such as 91B (wheel mechanic) 92G (cook) or 42A (human resources). So those sorts of soldiers can be sent literally anywhere. Others may have very specific locations where they can only be sent. If you’re trying to figure out where to place your soldier, say your soldier was sent to South Korea and you’re trying to decide where to place them. You see Osan Air Base and look at the units, but it’s mostly air force and air defense people. No good -- you’re looking for infantry. So you see Camp Red Cloud right up by the DMZ, and you look at the current units stationed there. Mostly infantry, MPs, and ordnance. Bingo. Some locations depend on your special schooling or training, your language ability, and your rank. Obviously if a certain location really needs E-5s, and you’re an E-5, you’re way more likely to be sent there.
2) While it’s true an awful lot of units were being deployed to the Middle East in the early years of the invasion, the army still had other obligations in other parts of the world. We have garrisons in Germany, Japan, South Korea, Guam, Kuwait, Jordan, Hawaii, and all over the U.S. We still need to maintain those places. So while it suddenly became more likely that units would be redirected to the Middle East, it wasn’t a guarantee. I’d like to clarify (just in case) that individuals aren’t deployed; units are deployed. Individuals also have something called “dwell time” that basically means they can’t be deployed back-to-back. Back in 2004 dwell time was only 12 months, but now it’s 24. You can waive your dwell time if you want to be deployed immediately.3) Nowadays 24 month contracts are uncommon, but in 2004 I think 24 month contracts were still being issued. I wouldn’t necessarily say it’s “standard;” when I enlisted my options were 4 years, 6 years, and 8 years, so I imagine in 2004 the options were probably more like 2 years, 4 years, and 6 years. I believe they offered lowered contracts during the WoT because they wanted to give people the option to serve but not be chained to the army for too long. Of course, that’s not exactly 24 months; the soldier has to go through training and AIT, and if that accumulates another six months of training then the soldier actually served 30 months active duty. This isn’t including the IRR, which basically means that when you enlist in the army, you’re promising EIGHT years of service, no matter what your contract says. If the army deems it necessary, they can recall you from civilian life after you’ve gotten out up to eight years after you enlisted. So if you only did a two year contract, you still have about six years of technically being a soldier. This is ignored if the soldier is chaptered or medically discharged.4) This one I can’t answer because I’m afraid I don’t know what you mean! Feel free to clarify your question and resend it if you still need an answer.
-Kingsley
Was this post informative? Entertaining? Eye-opening? Then consider supporting SPC Kingsley on Patreon!
In peace I will both lie down and sleep, For You alone, O Lord, make me to dwell in safety.
Psalms 4:8

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Dwell Time: SEO ve Kullanıcı Deneyiminde Kritik Bir Metrik
Dwell Time, bir kullanıcının arama motoru sonuçları üzerinden tıkladığı bir web sayfasında geçirdiği süreyi ifade eder. Basitçe açıklamak gerekirse, kullanıcı bir bağlantıya tıkladığında sayfada ne kadar vakit geçiriyor ve ardından arama sonuçlarına geri dönüyor? İşte bu süre, Dwell Time olarak adlandırılır.
Xqui & Dogs Vs. Shadows ~ Dwell Time
Just in time for the holidays, The Subexotic Shopping Centre Trilogy arrives, and would make a wonderful gift for the discriminating vinyl consumer, especially one who lives in Britain. Carlisle City Council‘s The Lanes Re-Development is a tribute to the cobbled streets and working class area replaced by The Lanes shopping center in 1984; James A. Jaycock‘s Music for Space Age Shopping doubles…
Why procurement may be the biggest gateway to an enterprise cyber breach
Here are excerpts from an April 2010 article in which I interviewed one of the industry’s top cybersecurity experts, Richard Stiennon – How Vulnerable Are We To A Cyberattack? – https://bit.ly/3TlEVkr ✳ Based on the above conclusions, Stiennon suggests that the best way to deal with the threat of a cyberattack is using economic levers as the primary deterrent mechanism “by increasing the costs…
View On WordPress