PV2 J M3152852<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Can basic training be "fun" in a way?2017-12-07T13:35:24-05:00PV2 J M3152852<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Can basic training be "fun" in a way?2017-12-07T13:35:24-05:002017-12-07T13:35:24-05:00PVT Vlad Meier3152860<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>are you crazy? hell noResponse by PVT Vlad Meier made Dec 7 at 2017 1:38 PM2017-12-07T13:38:51-05:002017-12-07T13:38:51-05:00SPC David Willis3152884<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Sure can, don't get me wrong you'll be miserable for most of the time, but eventually you'll hit a point where the more miserable you are the more fun you have.Response by SPC David Willis made Dec 7 at 2017 1:49 PM2017-12-07T13:49:19-05:002017-12-07T13:49:19-05:00SGT Dave Tracy3152981<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Only in retrospect.<br /><br />And really, that's just a "maybe".Response by SGT Dave Tracy made Dec 7 at 2017 2:34 PM2017-12-07T14:34:47-05:002017-12-07T14:34:47-05:00SFC J Fullerton3153006<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Sure, if you can get past being homesick and feeling sorry for yourself all the time.Response by SFC J Fullerton made Dec 7 at 2017 2:45 PM2017-12-07T14:45:58-05:002017-12-07T14:45:58-05:00MAJ Don Bigger3153042<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Basic Training “fun”? I suppose. If you join the Air Force ;)Response by MAJ Don Bigger made Dec 7 at 2017 3:01 PM2017-12-07T15:01:21-05:002017-12-07T15:01:21-05:00SFC Private RallyPoint Member3153100<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Sure! Your attitude will dictate a lot ! Keep a positive attitude, don't let others bring you down, believe me you'll be able to see those with a PP Attitude. HOOAH!!Response by SFC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 3:25 PM2017-12-07T15:25:07-05:002017-12-07T15:25:07-05:00SGT(P) Private RallyPoint Member3153145<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It's up to your definition of fun...if you enjoy PT and dragging yourself on dirt while angry men and women yell at you for expecting you to know things they haven't taught you yet. If you've shot before you're gonna hate shooting if you haven't shot before you MIGHT hate shooting or love it. The grenade range was fun, although the actual grenade part was about 10 seconds. It's up to you, don't forget you get from it what you put into it.Response by SGT(P) Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 3:43 PM2017-12-07T15:43:30-05:002017-12-07T15:43:30-05:00SFC Jim Ruether3153153<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Heck yes it can be. I enjoyed it myself. I didn't take anything personal that my DI was screaming at me. I learned from my mistakes and never repeated them. Easiest way to avoid having a bad day is doing it right and charging on. I watched my DI chew out a guy and then come into the Trng Btn office where I was CQ and ask if there was any pizza left. You would have thought that the DI's first born had been killed by this recruit when he was chewing him out and then he came in and was calm, collected and actually told a joke which we all laughed at.Response by SFC Jim Ruether made Dec 7 at 2017 3:48 PM2017-12-07T15:48:11-05:002017-12-07T15:48:11-05:00Cpl Justin Goolsby3153163<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Hell yes. You will hate every minute of it, but eventually you'll snap and start to enjoy it. When you leave, you'll start to miss it. My rack mate's family sent him the Sunday funnies every week and we'd pass them around and read them after dark. Calling out running cadences is fun, especially when you're competing against another platoon. Boot Camp is one big team building competition.Response by Cpl Justin Goolsby made Dec 7 at 2017 3:51 PM2017-12-07T15:51:20-05:002017-12-07T15:51:20-05:00MSG Private RallyPoint Member3153289<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I enjoyed the hand to hand and dueling it out with the pugil sticks. Firing range and grenade range were a blast, no pun intended, lol. As far as DI's, I got an idea of what they go through when I became a PLDC instructor in the late 90's!Response by MSG Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 4:47 PM2017-12-07T16:47:26-05:002017-12-07T16:47:26-05:00SSgt Private RallyPoint Member3153301<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Sure. Years later. In hindsight.Response by SSgt Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 4:51 PM2017-12-07T16:51:28-05:002017-12-07T16:51:28-05:00SPC Private RallyPoint Member3153319<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I enjoyed some things and I disliked others. I enjoyed the range, the field, and some of the classes, I enjoyed Drill Sergeant Time. Not sure I enjoyed the first 3 rucks, but I kind of enjoyed the final ruck. Maybe because it was the last one... Not sure. There's also parts I disliked, it wasn't so much the Drill Sergeants as it was my fellow Recruits. Being together 24/7 for 73 days is... Something people don't experience very often. Combine that with no phone, no internet, no free time, and people tend to get on each others nerves. You get over it though, I'd take a bullet for those guys.Response by SPC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 5:03 PM2017-12-07T17:03:01-05:002017-12-07T17:03:01-05:00SGT Philip Roncari3153447<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I think that depends on what you define" Fun" as ,I look back on it now fondly ,but I was in basic training in 1965 ,so maybe that's just my senility kicking in,seriously though it's probably going show you what you are really made of,the thing I learned was don't quit,ever!Response by SGT Philip Roncari made Dec 7 at 2017 5:57 PM2017-12-07T17:57:28-05:002017-12-07T17:57:28-05:00SPC Private RallyPoint Member3153453<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I don't think it should be necessarily "fun". It all depends on what you do while you are there. You get out what you put in. That in mind, there are always things to enjoy and things to dread. For example, fights in the barracks were fun while most people dreaded the bunk inspections. You just have to know how to embrace the suck.Response by SPC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 6:02 PM2017-12-07T18:02:02-05:002017-12-07T18:02:02-05:00LTC Private RallyPoint Member3153463<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It's the kind of shit you hate every minute of right now but 48 years later you'd give anything to do again. You never tell good stories about it but it hits you sometimes after a hard day when you open a beer, you remember something. My Dad's parting advice, you bugged the shit out of me playing Army all your childhood. Now they are giving you real things to play with, uniforms, and they are paying you. Just remember how fun you thought it would be.Response by LTC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 6:06 PM2017-12-07T18:06:44-05:002017-12-07T18:06:44-05:00SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint3153626<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Maybe for the DIs....?Response by SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint made Dec 7 at 2017 6:57 PM2017-12-07T18:57:48-05:002017-12-07T18:57:48-05:00SFC Private RallyPoint Member3153736<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>When I was going through basic, I hated it. But now looking back i realized how much i actually enjoyed it. You're constantly busy, doing something, learning something, experiencing new things, and learning new things about the people around you. Yes there will be miserable times, you'll be smoked, you'll clean things that are spotless, and worry if you actually did lock your wall locker or just shut it from the second you leave your bay to the time you get back. But overall, it was a great.Response by SFC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 7 at 2017 7:40 PM2017-12-07T19:40:16-05:002017-12-07T19:40:16-05:00SP5 Larry Morris3153848<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>not there for fun learn somethingResponse by SP5 Larry Morris made Dec 7 at 2017 8:16 PM2017-12-07T20:16:36-05:002017-12-07T20:16:36-05:00SGT Matthew S.3153973<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>In a way, yes. You'll develop a camaraderie that you can't find most other places in the world and you'll learn that there's a dark humor in shared struggle & adversity. I found several aspects enjoyable; I've always enjoyed working with knots & ropes and the land nav course was a day out tromping through the woods - something an avid outdoorsman will never forget after weeks of ranges; barracks; and training rooms.<br /><br />It all comes down to what you make of it, and that you get out what you put in. See it as a personal challenge instead of the guaranteed worst time of your life, and you'll find something enjoyable while you're learning a new life.Response by SGT Matthew S. made Dec 7 at 2017 9:00 PM2017-12-07T21:00:45-05:002017-12-07T21:00:45-05:00SGT Mark Halmrast3154157<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Years later, you forget how bad it was.<br />At the time, you curse yourself.<br />(Benning, '84, airborne grunt. 12 weeks basic + AIT, then to jump school the following Monday.)Response by SGT Mark Halmrast made Dec 7 at 2017 9:58 PM2017-12-07T21:58:49-05:002017-12-07T21:58:49-05:00MSgt George Cater3154220<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>You mean to imply somehow that it wasn’t?Response by MSgt George Cater made Dec 7 at 2017 10:26 PM2017-12-07T22:26:01-05:002017-12-07T22:26:01-05:00PFC Private RallyPoint Member3155138<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>YesResponse by PFC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 8 at 2017 9:54 AM2017-12-08T09:54:47-05:002017-12-08T09:54:47-05:00CAPT Kevin B.3155576<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Fun? No. Different? Very much so. Most everything you did up to that point from schedule, school, work, sleep, food, laundry, TV, or whatever is ripped away and something else is imposed. So the closest to "fun" you get is when your brain switch flips into the "Embrace the Suck" mode. That takes a lot of confusion off your shoulders and simplifies life greatly. You learn quickly the few things that are really important in keeping alive and doing the mission. So it's a more a matter of what level of misery are you concluding you have. Misery and fun are at opposite ends of the same spectrum. So I guess the less misery you decide you have, the closer to fun you get. Now leaving a turd in the CC's rack was fun, until he discovered it and the misery commenced.Response by CAPT Kevin B. made Dec 8 at 2017 1:08 PM2017-12-08T13:08:37-05:002017-12-08T13:08:37-05:00Sgt Private RallyPoint Member3155619<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div><a class="dark-link bold-link" role="profile-hover" data-qtip-container="body" data-id="1327751" data-source-page-controller="question_response_contents" href="/profiles/1327751-pv2-j-m">PV2 J M</a> I would not tell the DIs that you are having fun, or you will pay. I went through Boot Camp in June, 1968, and can look back now with a different perspective. You will be challenged and learn what it takes to be a Marine. These lessons will remain with you for the rest of your life. You will be proud of what you are accomplishing, but fun is not part of the equation. Stay squared away during Boot Camp, while you serve and later in civilian life. After you finish Boot Camp, please let us know if you found the experience fun.Response by Sgt Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 8 at 2017 1:19 PM2017-12-08T13:19:38-05:002017-12-08T13:19:38-05:00PFC Private RallyPoint Member3155633<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Basic is what you make it. Don't be the private with no hair getting to AIT and the only thing you can talk about is drill sergeants and basic training stories, everyone had the same basic training experience. It not hard by any means but it will teach you things that will help you.Response by PFC Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 8 at 2017 1:23 PM2017-12-08T13:23:59-05:002017-12-08T13:23:59-05:00LTJG Private RallyPoint Member3165453<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Depends on what you define as 'fun'... you learn a lot while in basic. If you consider learning in a stressful environment about the branch in which you are entering, then yes it will be fun. It looks like you are going Marines, so.... yes..... lots of 'fun'Response by LTJG Private RallyPoint Member made Dec 12 at 2017 8:15 AM2017-12-12T08:15:11-05:002017-12-12T08:15:11-05:00SGM Joel Cook3167018<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It is right up there with having a dentist drill your teeth with no Novocain. I did enjoy the comradery but the only thing I enjoyed about basic training was leaving.Response by SGM Joel Cook made Dec 12 at 2017 6:46 PM2017-12-12T18:46:29-05:002017-12-12T18:46:29-05:00SFC Charles Vanzant3168746<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Basic, like life, is what you make of it. Enjoy camaraderie with other troops. Enjoy the growing strength and endurance of your body. Attitude is all. success and enjoyment come in a can. Failure and disappointment come in a can't.Response by SFC Charles Vanzant made Dec 13 at 2017 12:20 PM2017-12-13T12:20:09-05:002017-12-13T12:20:09-05:00SPC Private RallyPoint Member3229851<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>It was the most fun I never want to do again.Response by SPC Private RallyPoint Member made Jan 5 at 2018 4:26 PM2018-01-05T16:26:57-05:002018-01-05T16:26:57-05:00LCDR Keith Trepanier3518246<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>If you don't have any fun, you did it wrong. Did parts suck? Hell yea. Big time. But running obstacle courses, shooting all sorts of ammo down range, joking with new friends, and my favorite, wondering when that vein in my drill sergeant's neck was going to explode, were all fun. It was not all rainbows and unicorns but fun can be had doing just about anything.Response by LCDR Keith Trepanier made Apr 6 at 2018 2:49 PM2018-04-06T14:49:24-04:002018-04-06T14:49:24-04:002017-12-07T13:35:24-05:00