Posted on May 5, 2015
This soldier refused to give up on an Army road march. Your thoughts?
106K
1K
345
59
59
0
Responses: 125
Are you kidding me? I've done the EIB. When I was PFC. I was in the same way at 2 hours and 59 minutes. EIB or the EFMB is no joke. When a Soldier, male or female, can push themselves to finish something tough like this when their body says, " We're done" That sh** pumps me up. It would have been too easy for her to just stay down. But she said, "F*** you legs, lets go, now!"
"Murica is strong in this one.
"Murica is strong in this one.
(72)
(0)
SFC (Join to see)
CPL Bishop, I completed my MCREST HIKE on Camp Pendleton, Camp San Mateo in 2000. I was stationed with 1/5 B.Co 1st PLT. That Hike was no joke. My Boot Camp Picture
(1)
(0)
Cpl Christopher Bishop
Awesome! Yeah those hikes...I don't imagine too many have much energy left for combatant activities afterwards lol
(1)
(0)
Maj John Bell
Cpl Christopher Bishop - The standard allowed for 5% drop between the core rifle battalion and non-rifle battalion reinforcements.
(0)
(0)
I would like to comment on this as I was there. I was a candidate who was fortunate to of earned an EFMB with her and was proud to be in formation next to her as we were awarded our badges.
To me its not about the fact that she is a female or an officer, it is about is someone that reached their physical limit but had the mental toughness to finish what she set out to do and to not quit. I can tell you that the training/testing was demanding both mentally and physically.
There were soldiers there from all walks of the military. Some came trained better than others, some prepared more than others. Some soldiers were in peak physical condition and others not so much. Looking back on this I am sure that we all would of trained more. This soldier obviously had the toughness to finish when her body was telling her to quit. I am also certain that she will share her experience and help the future candidates be more prepared.
I think that when stories like this hit the social media circuit it is easy for us to judge or to form an opinion. As a leader I find her accomplishment to be nothing short of inspirational. I think that good leaders always push their soldiers, we try to teach our soldiers to overcome barriers, to keep pushing ourselves. She did just that and thats what is important. She lead by example.
During the graduation ceremony which immediatly followed the ruck march they placed a chair next to her in formation and she refused to sit in it and had it taken out of formation. To me this was another act of her mental and physical toughness.
Prior to EFMB I did not know this soldier or any other candidate for that manner. What I can tell you is that we all pushed ourselves day in and day out. It was not easy by any means.
In closing I think that we can all take something from this. Something that we can use to motivate fellow soldiers or even ourselves, friends or family members. To her I say congratulations and job well done!
To me its not about the fact that she is a female or an officer, it is about is someone that reached their physical limit but had the mental toughness to finish what she set out to do and to not quit. I can tell you that the training/testing was demanding both mentally and physically.
There were soldiers there from all walks of the military. Some came trained better than others, some prepared more than others. Some soldiers were in peak physical condition and others not so much. Looking back on this I am sure that we all would of trained more. This soldier obviously had the toughness to finish when her body was telling her to quit. I am also certain that she will share her experience and help the future candidates be more prepared.
I think that when stories like this hit the social media circuit it is easy for us to judge or to form an opinion. As a leader I find her accomplishment to be nothing short of inspirational. I think that good leaders always push their soldiers, we try to teach our soldiers to overcome barriers, to keep pushing ourselves. She did just that and thats what is important. She lead by example.
During the graduation ceremony which immediatly followed the ruck march they placed a chair next to her in formation and she refused to sit in it and had it taken out of formation. To me this was another act of her mental and physical toughness.
Prior to EFMB I did not know this soldier or any other candidate for that manner. What I can tell you is that we all pushed ourselves day in and day out. It was not easy by any means.
In closing I think that we can all take something from this. Something that we can use to motivate fellow soldiers or even ourselves, friends or family members. To her I say congratulations and job well done!
(42)
(0)
CSM Michael Chavaree
SSgt (Join to see) - do you have less time for PT? Or is less of your time spent on PT...
(1)
(0)
SSgt (Join to see)
CSM Michael Chavaree - I worked with some Rangers for a while. During normal day to day operations, their mission was to train and do PT from the time they came to work till the time they went home. Of course I do PT on my own everyday, but my point was that I have a job to do while I am at work and don't have the luxury of doing PT 8-10 hours a day as my primary duty. My time working with them was very limited, so I cannot and will not say that its like this everywhere. Just going by what I have seen.
(1)
(0)
CSM Michael Chavaree
SSgt (Join to see) - I served in the Ranger Regiment for a while, we have work to do as well, we get the same exact amount of time for PT as everyone else, not sure what Rangers you saw doing PT for 8-10 hours...
(1)
(0)
I like seeing soldiers succeed. Their gender is irrelevant in that regard.
(39)
(0)
SFC Charles S.
COL Jean (John) F. B. Sir, agreed, I think just achieving the Win in the Team column is a great thing.
(2)
(0)
Read This Next