The Ultimate Marine Recruit Training Guidebook
eBook - ePub

The Ultimate Marine Recruit Training Guidebook

A Drill Instructor's Strategies & Tactics for Success

Nick Popaditch

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  1. 192 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

The Ultimate Marine Recruit Training Guidebook

A Drill Instructor's Strategies & Tactics for Success

Nick Popaditch

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About This Book

The transition from civilian to that of a Marine is a process unlike any other in any branch of the military. As any potential recruit can imagine, Marine recruit training is difficult and challenging. Its purpose is to mold a Marine from the inside out. Nick "Gunny Pop" Popaditch is best known as the "Cigar Marine" and author of Once a Marine, a candid memoir about his service as a tank commander in Iraq, his horrific wounding in the first battle of Fallujah (where he was hit in the head by a rocket-propelled grenade), and his long and difficult recovery. Gunny Pop has experienced the Marine recruit training process from both perspectives: as a new recruit and as a drill instructor. This new book brings together his nearly 16 years of Marine Corps expertise. The Ultimate Marine Recruit Training Guidebook is a comprehensive, practical, and easy-to-follow guide written specifically for every new or prospective recruit about to enter basic training. Gunny Pop offers step-by-step instructions and solutions, including helpful charts and graphics, for how to prepare both physically and mentally for boot camp. Written by a Marine who experienced it firsthand many times over, Gunny Pop explores what recruits will be asked to do (and in many cases, explain why) and the motivating forces behind drill instructor lessons and behavior. The Ultimate Marine Recruit Training Guidebook was written by a Marine and former drill instructor for young men and women who want to become one of the few and the proud. No one should undertake Marine recruit training without having read this book. About the Author: From East Chicago, Indiana, Nick Popaditch enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1986. He was wounded while commanding a tank in Fallujah (Iraq) in 2004 and medically retired from the Marines in 2005 at the rank of Gunnery Sergeant. "Gunny" and his wife April have two children, Richard and Nicholas. They reside in Chula Vista, California.

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Information

Publisher
Savas Beatie
Year
2012
ISBN
9781611210996

Chapter 1

Why Join the Marine Corps Instead of Other Branches?

“Most people spend their lives trying to make a difference.
Marines don't have that problem.”
—President Ronald Reagan
Why would anybody want to become a Marine?
I can answer that with a single word, one that will surprise many of you: character. The Marines offer what I call “The Win-Win Scenario.”
In 1775, the Continental Congress established two battalions of Marines. The Corps has been winning our nation's battles since the days of our founding. From the Halls of Montezuma (a reference to the Mexican-American War) to the shores of Tripoli (a reference to our fight against Barbary pirates in the early 1800s off the coast of Africa), Marines have discovered the key to success on the battlefield. And that key is character.
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John Glenn NASA
Character wins in combat. In other words, the better man will always prevail. The equipment carried on your body is secondary to the values and ethos contained within the Marine. The Marine Corps trains character.
Whether or not you arrive at Recruit Training with any character whatsoever, you will leave with the core values and ethos of a United States Marine. In return, the Marine Corps gets a resilient decision-maker, a leader who will be victorious in every climate and place. You get the character required to do that, and you carry it with you for the rest of your life. I call that a win-win scenario.
Character isn't just useful on a battlefield. It will make you better at everything else you do in life. Take a look around your neighborhood, your community, your nation. If you scratch the surface even a little, you will find that Marines are leaders in every walk of life. United States Senators Zell Miller and John Glenn are both Marines. Senator Glenn was also an astronaut, one of the men who led the world into space. Former heavyweight boxing world champion Ken Norton also earned the title Marine, as did NFL running back Mike Anderson, who honed his skills in the Camp Pendleton League. The Ultimate Fighting Championship's Brian Stamm, Hollywood's Rob Riggle and Drew Carey, and recording artist Shaggy all served in the Corps. These are just a very few examples.

The Building Blocks of Character

Just as the Marines will build your fighting stance and teach you firing positions, your character must be built from a solid foundation. We call this foundation your “Core Values.” They are Courage, Honor, and Commitment. In the civilian world, these values or attributes are referred to as intangibles—things you can't see, touch, smell, or taste. That is not true in Recruit Training and in the Corps. There, these attributes and values are quite tangible: visible, obvious, touchable, and TRAINABLE.
You will use these Core Values constantly and develop them just like the muscles that move your body. It's true, they aren't as easily built. You will be challenged in ways you never have been before. To learn these values, you will face things you are accustomed to avoiding. Here are a few examples:
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“Stairway to Heaven”—one of many high obstacles that will test your courage.
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You will be put in situations where you must lead your fellow Recruits. United States Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Matthew S. Lemieux

FEAR

You will be confronted with a constant barrage of events and experiences that will scare you. The purpose is to make you confront your fears. Some of these experiences—such as the high obstacles on the confidence course—will make you fear for your physical safety. Other experiences may include the fear of telling others what to do during stressful situations. The point of these exercises, however, is always the same: to force you to face your fears. The more you do this, the less fear will affect you.
Through fear, you will develop your COURAGE.

STRESS

It is easy to say you are going to do the right thing. It is another thing entirely to actually do it when the time comes. We will put you in positions in which doing the right thing is the most difficult thing to do. We will test you to see whether you will take the easy way out. After teaching you the right thing to do, we will challenge your conviction to stick to it. A Marine's word is his bond, and there is no exception.
Through stress, you will develop your HONOR.

FRUSTRATION

You will feel frustrated all the time during Recruit Training. Success will be very infrequent during training, and very difficult to earn. You will never be praised, and rarely even encouraged; despite your best efforts, your team will often fall short of the goals set out for any exercise; and you will be punished frequently. This is very unusual for most young people, but it is all intentional and done to weed out the weak-minded. Anyone can say he or she has the desire to achieve X—but talk is cheap. We will frustrate you repeatedly—to see what you really have.
Through frustration, you will develop the COMMITMENT necessary to become a United States Marine.
The Marine Corps offers two things that no other branch of the military can offer you:
  1. The challenge of Marine Recruit Training, and
  2. The opportunity to become a United States Marine.
We don't promise you a rose garden. If you are looking for someone to give you things, you should look elsewhere. Marine Recruit Training will teach you to achieve and earn things on your own, not just during training but for the rest of your life.
You will choose us if you want to be one of the nation's finest. We won't give you anything.

Who Should Join?

Anyone who has the COURAGE to take the oath of enlistment and the HONOR and COMMITMENT to be true to his word should join the Marines. Don't forget the win-win scenario I discussed earlier. You will arrive as a civilian; but if you have the desire to see it through, you will leave as a United States Marine, complete with the ethos and core values passed down by more than 230 years' worth of our nation's finest.
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Recruiting Poster United States Marine Corps
Note: During Recruit Training, never look directly at (or “eyeball”) your Drill Instructors unless you are given the command “Eyeballs!” Only then will you look at them. In this book, EYEBALLS! graphics offer information you should read very closely and understand. Here's the first one:
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EYEBALLS!—The Oath of Enlistment: “I, (name), do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.”

What Physical Shape Should You Be in When You Join?

One of my biggest fears prior to shipping out was the physical conditioning requirement. The Recruiters tested me after my enlistment physical and discovered that I could only do one pull-up. You read that right: ONE PULL-UP. “You need to work on this,” they advised me. I took their recommendation to heart and worked on it. I also began running daily. By the time of my ship date I could do three pull-ups. On my final Physical Fitness Test (PFT) at Recruit ...

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