I know some people are going to say things about PT doesn’t mean anything if you know your job, or if your PT is good body fat standard shouldn’t matter, or any of the other hundred reasons people have for under achievement and condoning it in their Soldiers.
My basic question is since when did just passing, barely meeting the standard or wanting the standards to drop to you instead of striving to be better become the way we do business. Is it just me? Am I the only one who sees this?
BLUF: Either you are trying to excel and not just meet the standard but far exceed it. Or…. You are just coasting by doing the bare minimum and are a detriment to our force.
You can have someone who is a gym nut and scores max points but be dirtbag and incompetent at their job. You can have someone who is exceptional at their job maintains standards and is a better asset in the long run. Of course someone who can max PT and be exemplary in their duties. Those are the ones who usually go further.
I still remember all the hoops I had to jump through when going to WLC because I did not score 70 in each event. I had a bad day that day, we are all allowed those every now and again.
I am not saying PT isn't good for you. We still need to fit but you can still be fit as a fiddle and score a 180.
Just my thoughts.
My worry is not waiving standards for contingencies. Hell, even generators have a battle short to keep running into critical failure just to provide those additional hours of power.
What worries me is that many Soldiers and Leaders think that's how we're always supposed to conduct business. I had a talk with a SFC recently where he related a story of how he was lip-synching the Creed of the Noncommissioned Officer after the first few lines and how someone was rude to call him out on that. My own WLC SGL told the class how he failed his most recent APFT and didn't display an ounce of shame or remorse.
That's the kind of stuff where the sheaths come off the knife-hands because we have authority figures in the military who don't "buy into that whole Army crap."
Frankly, I was as a mid-career junior NCO put out for not making progress IAW AR 600-9. Looking back at it, as I knew then, I was perceived by senior leadership as an embarrassment to my Soldiers. I accepted that I was "under the cannon" but I did try to get better. I also now view that while some senior to me were catching hell on my behalf, I also appreciate those who tried to help me or those who were honest to me about it.
Not befitting me, but understanding me and my issues and then even despite that, utilized my strengths still. I accepted as I did when I came back from knee reconstruction surgery that I was on borrowed time. My view is that it's not acceptable to expect what you as the leader cannot meet yourself. But like some of my seniors did, my Soldiers accepted me at face value, especially when I told them with regards to PT and AR 600-9 that they MUST be better than I am. And they were, even as I was being separated from service and beyond.

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