I currently feel like I'm on cloud-nine and I'm still trying to get used to the fact that I'm actually a police officer now. I will be sworn-in in about 2 weeks on the same day that I start my new career.
That one, seemingly simple phone call was worth all the nerveracking days.... all the fingernail-biting, all the hopes and realizations of the possibility of failure. It was all worth it.
I now sit at my current job thinking about what is to come in the next few weeks. This is a job that I've wanted since I was a kid (what boy doesn't want to be a cop when they're young?), and now I'm finally realizing that it is happening to me.
So, after all the months of traveling to this city to test, interview, test, test, and test, I am going to be reaping the benefits. This goes to show that if you keep pushing and trying with all your heart, you WILL accomplish your dreams... whether that dream includes law enforcement or not.
I will keep this blog updated with what kind of training I go through in the months to come. Also, don't forget to check out my main blog HERE for further updates.
On a Tuesday, I showed up to the department at 1000 hrs. I was placed in a room with a polygraph machine for about 20 minutes..... staring at "the machine." I think this was all part of the process. The polygrapher came in and we went over all the questions that would be asked. I had nothing to hide or lie about, so I was very confident that all would go well. We chatted for a while about anything that would possibly come up during the test. After being hooked up for what seemed to be about 10 hours (I think it was only about 30 minutes), I was free to go.
After grabbing some lunch, I reported back to the department for my psychological evaluation. This consisted of 3 different written tests (fill-in-the-bubble) totalling about 1,300 questions. It was about 5 hours of reading seemingly pointless questions and filling in the corresponding bubbles on the answer sheet. There is a good reason they use these tests, and that is to get a good idea about the mental stability of the candidates. I hope I didn't come off as crazy! :-) Any type of question that could have possibly have been asked was asked. Don't get me wrong, it's not like they locked me in a room for 5 hours. They told me I was free to come and go (take breaks) as I needed to. By the time I was done, it was past 5:00 PM and the whole building was dark. The psychologist (who I thought had left for the day) had to come in and get me and show me out of the building because I was technically locked in!
The stress-test consisted of being hooked up to about 12 "diodes" or whatever those things are called that they stick to your chest. I was then placed on a treadmill and went through a variety of speeds and inclines which got my heart to do different things. They found that my blood pressure was a little high, but other than that, I was good to go.