Perfect, I will practice that way moving forward. Thank you!Incase you still care, it would be "one half-inch gold stripe" and "one quarter-inch gold stripe"
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Perfect, I will practice that way moving forward. Thank you!Incase you still care, it would be "one half-inch gold stripe" and "one quarter-inch gold stripe"
Practice YELLING all of Appendix B at the top of your lungs while doing high knees, pushups, leg lifts, squats, and running so you'll be conditioned for RLP. You'll get a lot of practice during the first few weeks, but if you do it ahead of time, it'll be less of a shock to your system.Perfect, I will practice that way moving forward. Thank you!![]()
Excellent advice. I'm going to start doing this immediately. Are burpees common during RLP?Practice YELLING all of Appendix B at the top of your lungs while doing high knees, pushups, leg lifts, squats, and running so you'll be conditioned for RLP. You'll get a lot of practice during the first few weeks, but if you do it ahead of time, it'll be less of a shock to your system.
Not in the traditional sense where they tell you to do burpees. It's more like a DI or RDC yelling "PUSHUPS... HIGH KNEES... PUSHUPS... SIDE-STRADDLE HOPS... What does a Gunnery Sergeant wear as a collar device? PUSHUPS... LEG LIFTS!!!!"Excellent advice. I'm going to start doing this immediately. Are burpees common during RLP?
Damn, this is great insight! One last question: are you screaming Appendix B from start to finish or are there small "breaks" where you can catch your breath and just knock out reps?Not in the traditional sense where they tell you to do burpees. It's more like a DI or RDC yelling "PUSHUPS... HIGH KNEES... PUSHUPS... SIDE-STRADDLE HOPS... What does a Gunnery Sergeant wear as a collar device? PUSHUPS... LEG LIFTS!!!!"
Then you realize you did a bunch of burpees for 8 minutes and didn't even know!
It depends on who you get. RLP is very subjective, so just give it all you gotDamn, this is great insight! One last question: are you screaming Appendix B from start to finish or are there small "breaks" where you can catch your breath and just knock out reps?
Will do, and thank you again!It depends on who you get. RLP is very subjective, so just give it all you got![]()
I just submitted an ISEL package for SNA. Two questions:
1) does anyone know how far out I can expect an OCS date if I’m accepted? Is June/July likely, or should I be prepared to hear something later like September/October?
2) I have (repeatedly) informed my recruiter I’d like to ship ASAP, and he told me that there’s a possibility that slots become available as applicants get cold feet, get injured, etc. How often does this actually happen?
I just got accepted for SWO from the January board, and the other applicants that I applied with, we were told the earliest we would be reporting to OCS is August/September. Pretty much like you, I'm ready to go. After letting my recruiter know I wanted to ship out sooner, she checked if there was availability, which there was. After confirming this, she submitted a request for me today and scheduled when I needed to take my PRT, I didn't have to sign any forms or write any letters.I just submitted an ISEL package for SNA. Two questions:
1) does anyone know how far out I can expect an OCS date if I’m accepted? Is June/July likely, or should I be prepared to hear something later like September/October?
2) I have (repeatedly) informed my recruiter I’d like to ship ASAP, and he told me that there’s a possibility that slots become available as applicants get cold feet, get injured, etc. How often does this actually happen?
That’s great information, thank you for your perspective!I just got accepted for SWO from the January board, and the other applicants that I applied with, we were told the earliest we would be reporting to OCS is August/September. Pretty much like you, I'm ready to go. After letting my recruiter know I wanted to ship out sooner, she checked if there was availability, which there was. After confirming this, she submitted a request for me today and scheduled when I needed to take my PRT, I didn't have to sign any forms or write any letters.
As others have said, it’s very variable. As a general rule the Marines care more about PT - my RLP was basically just a gunnery sergeant PTing me until I nearly puked and asking like 5 Bravo questions, whereas some others were asked in-depth questions throughout. Don’t expect a break, but also at the end of the day it’s like 8 minutes, you won’t need one.Damn, this is great insight! One last question: are you screaming Appendix B from start to finish or are there small "breaks" where you can catch your breath and just knock out reps?