BeeVee,
From the other SWA post that just went up it sounds like you took the plunge and decided to stay in for 2 more years. In this game there is no right or wrong answer, so I recommend not kicking yourself over it for the duration. Last summer I got out, got married, and went on a honeymoon that ended early Sep. Had job offers from a major and a national. Everything for the wedding/honeymoon was planned before the job offers. I decided to keep the plans, and sacrifice a couple week's worth of class dates/seniority. Things changed, missed both jobs by less than two weeks, and am back to square one. However, I did beat the stop-loss, love my guard unit, and my wife and I are happy. I made my choice, and now I have to accept the consequences. But I made it once, someday I'll make it again, and until then we are happy. You and your family now have income and benefits and you are still flying. There will be more airline jobs waiting in two years, and assuming a 20-25 year airline career for you, a two year wait will not hurt your ability to live and retire comfortably. Best wishes with the choice. It's done, now just enjoy it and keep yourself prepped for your "next" DOS.
From the other SWA post that just went up it sounds like you took the plunge and decided to stay in for 2 more years. In this game there is no right or wrong answer, so I recommend not kicking yourself over it for the duration. Last summer I got out, got married, and went on a honeymoon that ended early Sep. Had job offers from a major and a national. Everything for the wedding/honeymoon was planned before the job offers. I decided to keep the plans, and sacrifice a couple week's worth of class dates/seniority. Things changed, missed both jobs by less than two weeks, and am back to square one. However, I did beat the stop-loss, love my guard unit, and my wife and I are happy. I made my choice, and now I have to accept the consequences. But I made it once, someday I'll make it again, and until then we are happy. You and your family now have income and benefits and you are still flying. There will be more airline jobs waiting in two years, and assuming a 20-25 year airline career for you, a two year wait will not hurt your ability to live and retire comfortably. Best wishes with the choice. It's done, now just enjoy it and keep yourself prepped for your "next" DOS.