You don't get burned out of that?
Hacker, how did you manage to make it 20?
Well, I hate to say it, but...for all that it absolutely sucks ass, for all of the incompetence, mind-bending, skull-grinding, work and idiocy, for all of the risks, for all of the time spent away from home and family, for all the stress, for all the headaches and heartaches (I could go on for an entire page with these...you guys get my drift on the magnitude and depth of the suck).
For all that, as Hook said, there is simply no other job on earth that allows me to do the things that I've been able to do in the USAF. Those unique experiences have ultimately been what has made it worthwhile over that time, even in light of all of those crappy points.
A couple months ago there was a great thread of guys bitching about how much it sucks to go through the grind of working at crappy flying jobs while moving up the ladder toward the majors. That thread had some very sage advice that said, you are responsible for your own happiness.
That's exactly what I've done during my military career. I have had the "long game" in mind for quite some time...I have some life and career goals that I've wanted to achieve that required me to make a full 20-year career of the USAF.
@MikeD spoke of the "fun bucket" vs the "pain bucket", and the balance that guys make. Like him, I've had plenty of times where my fun bucket was pretty much empty and the pain bucket overfloweth. I've been in a non-flying job the the last three years and been at the butt-end of some pretty heinous treatment by the AF during most of that time (once I'm retired from the AF and not on probation at a 121 shop, I promise I'll let you all in on what I've been going through)...but I've always kept in mind the long game, and that I was responsible for keeping myself happy while I soldiered on toward the goal.
Going to retirement hasn't always been my goal. I seriously contemplated getting out of the AF three separate times...and each time I stepped back, looked at all the factors involved, spoke to my family and trusted friends (both in and out of the military), and ultimately decided to stay in and continue. Back about 2007 or 2008 in when I actually committed to myself and my family to go all the way to 20, knowing that the last 8 years would probably entail the crappier duties and experiences than the first 12 years. For all the years as a Lt and Captain, out there turning-and-burning, and thinking I was the world's finest fighter pilot, flying into danger, getting shot at, killing bad guys and saving good ones....those years were offset by the inane queep, politics, and spirit-crushing work as a Major and Lt Col.
It has been both a great ride and a phenomenally crappy ride -- really no different of a balance that people would find in any other occupation. Ultimately, it all balances out in the end so far as I'm concerned, and I've made the choice to be happy doing it.