Posted on Aug 24, 2020
SPC Emergency Medical Technician (Emt)
63.9K
451
159
104
104
0
So we all know those people that seemed to never want to leave basic training. From reception to profile/quarters. What’s the longest you have heard of someone being stuck or lingering around? When I went there was a girl that was in quarters for nearly 2 years.
Avatar feed
Responses: 86
Votes
  • Newest
  • Oldest
  • Votes
LTC Hardware Test Engineer
40
40
0
I was HHC Commander for the medical retention unit on Benning for 27 months. There was a guy who was there when I arrived and still there when I left.
(40)
Comment
(0)
1LT Rich Voss
1LT Rich Voss
>1 y
SP5 James Johnson - my strangest memory there was after completing basic we were sent home on leave (Christmas time) and had to return as part of a holding company. The "returnees" like me had all enlisted for schools and the Army wasn't sure where they were going to send us. One day during the first week back our TOP comes out to formation and asked for volunteers to paint. I raised my hand because I knew it was too cold to paint outdoors. A couple friends saw that and joined me in volunteering. We had it made ! Reported to an empty hall and a young 2LT asked if any of us had artist abilities. Yep ! Turns out the Officers Club was having a big party with a tropical theme. He had a big budget. We built out of plywood an aircraft fuselage, palm trees, a bar, and other items. Then everything had to be realistically painted ! It took us the better part of the month we were there, and we never had to do the "policing" details or KP etc. All of us agreed that volunteering had benefits ! (and we got 50 mile passes every weekend !!!)
(2)
Reply
(0)
SP5 James Johnson
SP5 James Johnson
>1 y
1LT Rich Voss - I had no such luck. We were simply cannon fodder. The USS Pueblo was attacked while I was in basic. Rumors flew but we were ignored and slogged on. What I remember was bitter cold, wet and thoroughly miserable.
(0)
Reply
(0)
1LT Rich Voss
1LT Rich Voss
>1 y
SP5 James Johnson - yes, indeed. Road march and bivouac rain/cold. M14 qualifying day, same thing. Recall wind left to right & made adjustments accordingly. Most of my company were draftees like me from Chicago and suburbs. Those few guys from KY/TN had no problem with using (as they say) "Kentucky Windage". I scored expert because my farmer cousins taught me to shoot at age 9. One of them was a paratrooper with Screaming Eagles while I was there. He jumped 3 times in 'Nam & is still alive and farming !
(1)
Reply
(0)
SP5 James Johnson
SP5 James Johnson
>1 y
1LT Rich Voss - In basic I caught some crud and had a high fever. In hospital for a week. The day I returned we had to march 14 miles and bivouac. That was a real bitch. I was trained to shoot by my father. I was accustomed to shooting a 30-06 and >.5 inch groups at 200 yards. But I hadn't shot nor sighted in my M-14. At the range we shot 50 meters first. I wasn't even on paper. Had to shoot into the sand berm to find where the bullet struck. I just barely qualified. But I did make it. My old man was discussed with my low (sharpshooter, I think) badge. But when I told him the story he said I had done a good joe to qualify.
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SPC Training Room Nco
30
30
0
When I was in OSUT, one of our company holdovers had just been med dropped out of cycle number 3, and had been there a little over a year.

Then, when I was cadre at Jackson, we had a prior service (marine) guy come through and get held over at reception for 16 months due to the TS he needed for the Intel job he had contracted for being slowed up by various issues (foreign family, offshore bank accounts, dual citizenship with Iraq, etc). He was an interpreter for 6 years, came to the US to join the marines, gained dual citizenship (somehow), got out and then came over to the Army. It was all confusing trying to process this kid with all the crap he had going on.
(30)
Comment
(0)
SSG AH-64D Armament/Electrical/Avionic Systems Repairer
SSG (Join to see)
>1 y
SSG Watis Ekthuvapranee - You can hold dual citizenship and still serve in the U.S.Army. I am a dual citizen and served from 1993 until my retirement in 2017. It was never a problem for me.
(2)
Reply
(0)
SSG Watis Ekthuvapranee
SSG Watis Ekthuvapranee
>1 y
SSG (Join to see) Oho! What's your level of clearance? What's your job in the Army? By DoD regulation, no. In reality, too little # of people to enforce it. The higher and more crucial roles you have the more scrutiny you'll get.
(1)
Reply
(0)
SSG AH-64D Armament/Electrical/Avionic Systems Repairer
SSG (Join to see)
4 y
I was an AH 64 D armament and electrical repairer. I worked with the attack helicopter. I did not need to have a specific level of clearance. I have already retired 4 years ago.
(1)
Reply
(0)
PO3 Kenneth Suvanto
PO3 Kenneth Suvanto
4 y
SPC Rich Sigel - I also ended up in the Hospital for a month and a half...the people asked me at the hospital if I was a recruit...I said no, I graduated...(that was a lie, sorry). Anyway, while in hospital, I had liberty etc. When discharged from hospital, I was sent back to boot-camp to finish. They put me in a clothes folding company (I guess a holding company, till they figured out what to do with you). While washing my clothes my former Company Commander was walking by and spotted me and asked what I was doing...I told him washing my clothes...he marched me up to battalion headquarters and I graduated the following week...missed most of boot camp training as I had only been in boot-camp a week or so before I went to hospital (due to broken jaw and other injuries, long story). So, I basically skated out of most of boot-camp! Sincerely, Ken
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SSG Roger Ayscue
23
23
0
I was permanent party at Benning. We would get privates that were on med hold or had been on profile so long that they lost their slots for assignments and so we got them so they could do something constructive until the Army figured out what to do with them. I guy I know was there two years trying to figure out some medical issues
(23)
Comment
(0)
SP5 James Johnson
SP5 James Johnson
>1 y
In my day, after I enlisted, basic was a bitch. Jan at Ft Campbell KY in WWll barracks, drafty, fire hazards, etc. If you missed you lost your slot and they made you an 11B. That wasn't good as Nam was HOT and heavy. 100's of KIA per week. We lost a 1000 one week while I was there. The cold and mud, wind howling. Wet clear thru. I spent 1 week at the hospital and was scared out of my mind that I would lose my 26D slot. I didn't but it was close.
(2)
Reply
(0)
SN Shane Clark
SN Shane Clark
4 y
When I was dealing with cardiology while in tech school in Great Lakes, IL, I met a girl that was on med hold and lost her prospective assignment, and then the Navy conveniently lost her medical documentation and sent her to Corpsman A School instead.
(1)
Reply
(0)
MSG David Clifford
MSG David Clifford
4 y
A little different. When I showed up at Fort Leonard Wood in August of 85, there was a USAR PFC that had been held over for right at 6 months due to APFT failure. He’d do PT twice a day with the drill SGTs while we were at training and sat around the S-1 all day. My third week there, they asked me (I was a prior service USAR Soldier myself) to be a witness to a counseling session with the Company 1SG. 1SG said “you’ve been hanging out here too long, you PT fine with the Drill Sergeants, but you always choke when it comes to the APFT. One more failure, and we’re going to discharge you for Unsat Performance.” PFC said, no problem, I’ll pass now. 1SG asked “What makes you so sure you’ll pass it NOW, when you’ve failed one a week for the last six months?” PFC said, “Easy, my college classes start next week.” The look on the 1SG, Senior Drill and Drill Sergeants faces was PRICELESS!
He ran it the next morning, and got a 300.
(4)
Reply
(0)
SGT Jonathan Persons
SGT Jonathan Persons
4 y
MSG David Clifford - Dude gamed the hell out of the system there. Promote above peers.
(2)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
Avatar feed
What is the longest you have heard of someone lingering around in Basic training?
SGM Joel Cook
12
12
0
I was a hold over after Basic Training for a Top Secret Security clearance. That took just over six months. While waiting for that to go through I was offered an opportunity to compete for a position in White House Communications. About twenty soldiers applied and it quickly got whittled down to about seven. After a bevy of tests and procedures it was down to three. Myself, a cowboy and a Senator’s son. Of course the Senator’s son was given the position even though the cowboy and I both outperformed him in several areas but that is usually the way things work. I was given a position in the AIT class room as an assistant instructor while waiting for my clearance and competing for the WHC position. It took about 10 months total for both to go through or be finished. I then reported to Fort Hood, Texas a few days after Christmas.
(12)
Comment
(0)
SGM Joel Cook
SGM Joel Cook
4 y
I should add an additional comment that I was in a system called OSUT for one station unit training. This was a system where Basic and AIT were combined into one concurrent system where we kept the same barracks, Drill Sgts and facilities with only a single weekend between our completion of Basic and our start of AIT. Only our classrooms and instructors changed. Besides having an opportunity to compete for one day weekend passes we got few other privileges that other AIT students got after completing Basic and transitioning to AIT. Even after I graduated from AIT and all my classmates departed for their first duty assignments I was kept in the same Basic Training barracks even after a new class of trainees arrived. It was a bit confusing for myself and the new trainees as they thought I was on equal status with the Drill Sgts. I was only a PFC and these new trainees would call “at ease” whenever I walked into a room. At first I told them not to do that but one of the junior Drill Sgts corrected me and told them to continue calling at ease when I entered the room. About a week later the Senior Drill saw this happen and got a bit upset. I asked him if I could talk to him privately to explain and he then corrected the situation and told the Junior Drill Sgt to not be making policy without clear information and instructions. However the trainees had been calling at ease for a week already and it was nearly impossible to get them to stop even after they were told not to do it at the morning PT session, which I stilling took part in.
(2)
Reply
(0)
1px xxx
Suspended Profile
4 y
Fort Hood
1px xxx
Suspended Profile
4 y
Fort Hood Booooooo
SGM Security Specialist
SGM (Join to see)
>1 y
SGM Joel Cook - I think if you had the "Follow Me" patch they were conditioned to do so. I went to Dix for BCT then Benning for 11C AIT. Anyone at Dix that had the TRADOC patch was called at ease including SPC 4's etc.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SSgt Christophe Murphy
11
11
0
I have seen a few that pushed 18-24 months while they healed from medical issues ranging from breaks, surgeries and even cancer. Other were there pending limdu and a medboard.
(11)
Comment
(0)
MSgt Robert Cunningham
MSgt Robert Cunningham
4 y
After active duty for a year and some months-my foot was rolled over by a 5000 lbs cargo pallet that was being down loaded off of an aircraft. Medical leave to take care of the injury was in order for a couple extra months after deployment. Similar to the SSgts report.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
GySgt Aaron Andrews
9
9
0
When I went to Boot Camp, we picked up a recruit on training day 2. He had been on med hold for just around 7 months. He had surgery on an undescended testicle and was not allowed to return to training until fully healed. Yep- he gave his left nut for the Corps!
(9)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
CPT Jack Durish
8
8
0
They were known as "bolos" back in my day. What are they called today?
(8)
Comment
(0)
CPT Jack Durish
CPT Jack Durish
5 y
SPC (Join to see) - We had people bolo Reception Center
(2)
Reply
(0)
LTC Hardware Test Engineer
LTC (Join to see)
5 y
SPC (Join to see) - There was a shitbird in my flight in USAF basic training who had been there several months when we arrived. This guy wasn't a med hold or anything. He was just a screwup and kept getting recycled every 2-3 weeks. He was hating life. He got recycled to us, lasted about 10-11 days and then got recycled down to the class that was 2 weeks behind us. Never understood why they just didn't kick him out. Maybe they just hated the guy and wanted to make him suffer as long as possible. Airman Ford, dude claimed he was Mickey Gilley's nephew.
(2)
Reply
(0)
SGM Joel Cook
SGM Joel Cook
4 y
In the late 70s they were called recycles or retreads. I a very sure they have a more politically correct name for them now.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGM Security Specialist
SGM (Join to see)
>1 y
CPT Jack Durish - LMAO. I was in that era and concur.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
MSG Intermediate Care Technician
7
7
0
Not sure about Basic, but there was a guy in my first AIT...he had been a medical hold over for at least 5 months because he managed to crush about 90% of the bones in his hand.
(7)
Comment
(0)
SGT Christiphor Ballestero
SGT Christiphor Ballestero
5 y
How in the hell....?
(0)
Reply
(0)
MSG Intermediate Care Technician
MSG (Join to see)
5 y
SGT Christiphor Ballestero - I asked him that very question. His answer was "I was being stupid"
(2)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
1LT Ordnance Officer
6
6
0
Edited >1 y ago
A friend was going through Basic at Fort Dix in 1968. He contracted some type of dental infection requiring him to be set back several times. Eventually, he was assigned to the dental facility and completed his 2 year obligation there. He was decorated for fighting the war against tooth decay.
(6)
Comment
(0)
SGM Security Specialist
SGM (Join to see)
>1 y
I've heard of that OOD Operation Orthodontist.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.