You might've gone to Encampment if...

Started by Black Knight, April 13, 2013, 07:22:21 PM

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Black Knight

 You might've gone to encampment if...
1. You wake up at 0500 and do PT.
2. Your alarm is revelry.
3.You know at least 50 ways to change into your BDU's in less than 5 minutes
4.You can take a complete shower in less than 2 minutes
5. Your room is set to inspection standards
6.When you're in line for food at school, you do the Air Force shuffle
7.You don't stop talking about encampment until the next one starts

Please fill in your own...
C/CMSgt Millson
First Sergeant
Rome City School District Cadet Squadron
NER-NY-801

That Anonymous Guy

No one at our encampment did the Air Force shuffle in the mess hall. At least no one I saw.
6. You recognize cadets at any CAP event in the future.
7. You find you CAP ID number on random tshirts
8. You can meet someone you haven't seen in months and instantly be reconnected.
9.  You've done things that most teens never have and never will do.

Black Knight

C/CMSgt Millson
First Sergeant
Rome City School District Cadet Squadron
NER-NY-801

Black Knight

Quote from: That Anonymous Guy on April 13, 2013, 07:44:22 PM
No one at our encampment did the Air Force shuffle in the mess hall. At least no one I saw.
6. You recognize cadets at any CAP event in the future.
7. You find you CAP ID number on random tshirts
8. You can meet someone you haven't seen in months and instantly be reconnected.
9.  You've done things that most teens never have and never will do.
You do things most adults dont do at encampment.
C/CMSgt Millson
First Sergeant
Rome City School District Cadet Squadron
NER-NY-801

SarDragon

Quote from: Black Knight on April 13, 2013, 07:22:21 PM
You might've gone to encampment if...
1. You wake up at 0500 and do PT.
2. Your alarm is revelry reveille.
3.You know at least 50 ways to change into your BDU's in less than 5 minutes
4.You can take a complete shower in less than 2 minutes
5. Your room is set to inspection standards
6.When you're in line for food at school, you do the Air Force shuffle
7.You don't stop talking about encampment until the next one starts

Please fill in your own...

FTFY.  ;)
Dave Bowles
Maj, CAP
AT1, USN Retired
50 Year Member
Mitchell Award (unnumbered)
C/WO, CAP, Ret

That Anonymous Guy

Quote from: Black Knight on April 13, 2013, 07:54:32 PM
Yes we did do the Air Force shuffle...
My flought didn't. Anyway we're getting off track.

Luis R. Ramos

QuoteMy flought flight didn't. Anyway we're getting off track.

FTFY

Flyer
Squadron Safety Officer
Squadron Communication Officer
Squadron Emergency Services Officer

ol'fido

...you wonder about the game plan of the cadet that showed up with only ONE extra pair of underwear in his luggage.
Lt. Col. Randy L. Mitchell
Historian, Group 1, IL-006

TJT__98

C/MSgt
Wright Award 21322

That Anonymous Guy

Quote from: ol'fido on April 13, 2013, 10:49:06 PM
...you wonder about the game plan of the cadet that showed up with only ONE extra pair of underwear in his luggage.
Seriously, I bring at least two pairs to any week long event.

ol'fido

Lt. Col. Randy L. Mitchell
Historian, Group 1, IL-006

aceofspades

-When you have to stop your self from saluting random adults
-When you call your teacher ma'am
-When you always tuck in your shirt
-When you belt buckle is always right on the seem of your pants
-When you say yes to meatloaf
-When you have to stop yourself from polishing your sneakers
-When you yell 'YES SIR!' at seats when your math teacher asks you if you've done your homework

That's all I got. For now...

A.O.S.
A.O.S.

FLY, FIGHT, FOXTROT!

Never call a Chief sir. Ever!

aceofspades

-When you don't have to think when someone asked you what the best week of your life was
A.O.S.

FLY, FIGHT, FOXTROT!

Never call a Chief sir. Ever!

TJT__98

C/MSgt
Wright Award 21322

That Anonymous Guy

Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?
I know it's common in the south but no one really does it up north.

TJT__98

Oh, although in south there ain't nobody who pronounces it like that  ;D.

Disclaimer: in real life I do not use "ain't" or double negatives.
C/MSgt
Wright Award 21322

a2capt

Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 11:45:39 PMDisclaimer: in real life I do not use "ain't" or double negatives.
Hate to break it to you.. but this is real life, too. There's plenty of life lessons where "it's only the internet" came back to bite.. hard.

Cliff_Chambliss

Memories of encampment past.

Flying to Maxwell AFB on board a C-54 Skymaster.
Housing in old VOQ right on the Maxwell AFB Flightline.
Seemingly endless drill & ceremonies in front of the hangars at Maxwell AFB.
Doing push ups and counting sand fleas in front of those same hangars.
No BDU's or fatigue uniforms, all males wore khaki's starched so stiff they would stand by themselves, tie tucked in between the 2d and 3d button on the uniform. Females wore skirts.
Going to the range and familiarization firing with the M-1 Carbine.  (Marching to and from the range of course).
Salt Tablets
mandatory breaks where everyone had lay down and elevate their feet for at least 15 minutes.
Friday Afternoon Parade (it seemed all over the base). 
Flying home in a C-47.

11th Armored Cavalry Regiment
2d Armored Cavalry Regiment
3d Infantry Division
504th BattleField Surveillance Brigade

ARMY:  Because even the Marines need heros.    
CAVALRY:  If it were easy it would be called infantry.

jeders

Quote from: That Anonymous Guy on May 21, 2013, 09:44:41 PM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?
I know it's common in the south but no one really does it up north.

Depends on what you mean by north. Plenty of people I know living above the Mason-Dixon Line call their teacher ma'am or sir.
If you are confident in you abilities and experience, whether someone else is impressed is irrelevant. - Eclipse

Eclipse

Quote from: jeders on May 22, 2013, 01:56:42 PMDepends on what you mean by north. Plenty of people I know living above the Mason-Dixon Line call their teacher ma'am or sir.

Seriously. 

If respect and common courtesy isn't enough, how about self-preservation?  Anyone who provides you a living, a service, or can potentially negatively
effect your life should always be referred to in that manner.

"That Others May Zoom"

johnnyb47

Quote from: Eclipse on May 22, 2013, 02:25:06 PM
Quote from: jeders on May 22, 2013, 01:56:42 PMDepends on what you mean by north. Plenty of people I know living above the Mason-Dixon Line call their teacher ma'am or sir.

Seriously. 

If respect and common courtesy isn't enough, how about self-preservation?  Anyone who provides you a living, a service, or can potentially negatively
effect your life should always be referred to in that manner.
Growing up in Michigan just a few short decades ago my teachers seemed to HATE being called sir or ma'am.
They were big fans of being called Mr. xxx, Ms. xxx, Mrs. xxx or Dr. xxx if they had their phd.
In every conversation you said their name no less than 3 times. I think people in Michigan just like to hear their names out loud.

Not to be contradictory or anything.... same thing in reality. Formal and respectful at all times.
Capt
Information Technology Officer
Communications Officer


Uploaded with ImageShack.us

TJT__98

Quote from: a2capt on May 22, 2013, 07:16:11 AM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 11:45:39 PMDisclaimer: in real life I do not use "ain't" or double negatives.
Hate to break it to you.. but this is real life, too. There's plenty of life lessons where "it's only the internet" came back to bite.. hard.
Point taken. Unless I'm joking I don't use "ain't" or double negatives. Better?
C/MSgt
Wright Award 21322

Майор Хаткевич

In IL ever since I moved here it was Mr/Mrs/Ms xyz. In E.Europe it was Name and Patronym. So had I stayed there, it wouldn't be Mr. Hatkevich, it would be Mihail Valeryevich.

Storm Chaser

Quote from: Black Knight on April 13, 2013, 07:22:21 PM
You might've gone to encampment if...
1. You wake up at 0500 and do PT.
2. Your alarm is revelry.
3.You know at least 50 ways to change into your BDU's in less than 5 minutes
4.You can take a complete shower in less than 2 minutes
5. Your room is set to inspection standards
6.When you're in line for food at school, you do the Air Force shuffle
7.You don't stop talking about encampment until the next one starts

Please fill in your own...

Are we talking about encampment or basic training?

That Anonymous Guy

Quote from: Storm Chaser on May 22, 2013, 06:34:32 PM
Quote from: Black Knight on April 13, 2013, 07:22:21 PM
You might've gone to encampment if...
1. You wake up at 0500 and do PT.
2. Your alarm is revelry.
3.You know at least 50 ways to change into your BDU's in less than 5 minutes
4.You can take a complete shower in less than 2 minutes
5. Your room is set to inspection standards
6.When you're in line for food at school, you do the Air Force shuffle
7.You don't stop talking about encampment until the next one starts

Please fill in your own...

Are we talking about encampment or basic training?
I went to the same encampment and she's barely exaggerating.

Black Knight

Quote from: That Anonymous Guy on May 27, 2013, 10:08:58 PM
Quote from: Storm Chaser on May 22, 2013, 06:34:32 PM
Quote from: Black Knight on April 13, 2013, 07:22:21 PM
You might've gone to encampment if...
1. You wake up at 0500 and do PT.
2. Your alarm is revelry.
3.You know at least 50 ways to change into your BDU's in less than 5 minutes
4.You can take a complete shower in less than 2 minutes
5. Your room is set to inspection standards
6.When you're in line for food at school, you do the Air Force shuffle
7.You don't stop talking about encampment until the next one starts

Please fill in your own...

Are we talking about encampment or basic training?
I went to the same encampment and she's barely exaggerating.
Yah, we did PT once, and it was at night. Or around 1900ish.
C/CMSgt Millson
First Sergeant
Rome City School District Cadet Squadron
NER-NY-801

aceofspades

Black Knight, did you go to the NYWG 2012 Encampment? We only did 1 PT, on the 1st or 2nd day, after dinner. (Which was a terrible idea.)
A.O.S.

FLY, FIGHT, FOXTROT!

Never call a Chief sir. Ever!

Майор Хаткевич

You might have gone to encampment if you're a cadet officer.

Eclipse

Quote from: That Anonymous Guy on May 27, 2013, 10:08:58 PM
Quote from: Storm Chaser on May 22, 2013, 06:34:32 PM
Quote from: Black Knight on April 13, 2013, 07:22:21 PM
You might've gone to encampment if...
1. You wake up at 0500 and do PT.
2. Your alarm is revelry.
3.You know at least 50 ways to change into your BDU's in less than 5 minutes
4.You can take a complete shower in less than 2 minutes
5. Your room is set to inspection standards
6.When you're in line for food at school, you do the Air Force shuffle
7.You don't stop talking about encampment until the next one starts

Please fill in your own...

Are we talking about encampment or basic training?
I went to the same encampment and she's barely exaggerating.

None of that is really that big a deal, encampment-wise.  Few of them will be doing 0500 starts anymore, but beyond that,
pretty much SOP.

"That Others May Zoom"

Black Knight

Quote from: aceofspades on May 28, 2013, 03:48:23 PM
Black Knight, did you go to the NYWG 2012 Encampment? We only did 1 PT, on the 1st or 2nd day, after dinner. (Which was a terrible idea.)
Yes, I did. I was in Charlie Flight. Got the third highest scire.
And doing PT after dinner was horrible. I believe it was the 2nd day we did PT
C/CMSgt Millson
First Sergeant
Rome City School District Cadet Squadron
NER-NY-801

Black Knight

-Your parents yell at you for yelling and calling them sir/ma'am when they aska question
-You carry your camelbak/canteens with you everywhere.
-You still study your OI in your free-time.
-Your friends ask why are there 6 numbers written on your gym shorts
C/CMSgt Millson
First Sergeant
Rome City School District Cadet Squadron
NER-NY-801

Duke Dillio

- You sleep at the position of attention or parade rest
- You call the room to attention when your teacher walks in the door
- You eat your lunch in 3 minutes flat and hold your empty cup over your head to show everyone it is actually empty
- You take your Red Sox cap off when you go indoors (sorry, I'm an old fan...)
- When your siblings do something wrong, you tell them to drop and give you 20
- You put hospital corners in your bed after you wake up in the morning
- You blouse your jeans into your tennis shoes before going to school
- You refuse to wear any color t-shirt other than black or white
- You raise your hand in class and ask the teacher, "Permission to ask a question?"
- You start to feel like you can't be friends with someone because they haven't been to an encampment or aren't in CAP
- When walking down the hall and an adult approaches, you hit the wall
- You salute your principal and your parents in passing and then get angry when they don't say "Good morning, cadet" or return the salute
- You actually believe that MRE's have great flavor
- You don't leave home without first checking to make sure that your CAPID is in your pocket and your canteen is full

I've got tons more...

ol'fido

-Your that one cadet that walks around with a camelbak sucking on the thing constantly like it's a friggin' pacifier.

DON'T BE THAT CADET. SAY NO TO THE CAMELBAK "BINKY".
Lt. Col. Randy L. Mitchell
Historian, Group 1, IL-006

That Anonymous Guy

Quote from: Duke Dillio on June 02, 2013, 08:10:10 AM
- You take your Red Sox cap off when you go indoors (sorry, I'm an old fan...)
I actually do this fairly often wih my Yankees hat (apology accepted) because I don't really wear a hat unless it's a cover and I've been raised that its not polite to wear a hat indoors.

miss.aviator.girl

Quote from: ol'fido on June 02, 2013, 02:32:54 PM
-Your that one cadet that walks around with a camelbak sucking on the thing constantly like it's a friggin' pacifier.

DON'T BE THAT CADET. SAY NO TO THE CAMELBAK "BINKY".

Yup, there was definitely some of that at ILWG Summer Encampment 2013.  ;D

Mslayton_24

Quote from: That Anonymous Guy on May 21, 2013, 09:44:41 PM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?
I know it's common in the south but no one really does it up north.
Actually it isn't really common in the south. Well at least it isn't down here in Georgia. A bunch of kids are rude and disrespectful.
On the battlefield, the military pledges to leave no soldier behind. As a nation, let it be our pledge that when they return home, we leave no veteran behind.
       ~Dan Lipinski

Jaison009

Quote from: usafaux2004 on May 28, 2013, 08:38:04 PM
You might have gone to encampment if you're a cadet officer.

Got to love sarcasm and stating the obvious :clap: :clap:

a2capt

Except there are the few that didn't go to encampment, as you know it. ;)

Joystick

You square all your corners
You are still recovering your voice
You bed has perfect hospital corners
You get all OCD and want to hospital corner your sibling's bed
Jodie's are stuck in your head all day long

Silva Bullet

#39
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?

When I grew up the first 12 years of my life in California, not once did I ever hear ma'am. Totally different story now in Georgia.

Also...
-When you wake up before your alarm goes off.
-When you whistle your flight Jodie.

Dracosbane

When you still remember your flight song from 1997.  Delta Rolling Thunder, baaaaybeeee!

Garibaldi

Don't forget...if you are in line for something and you stand at parade rest, come to attention, take a step forward, and go back to parade rest. Gets funny looks in the bank.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

TexasCadet

-Your Dad was a TAC officer and you still salute him at home.
-You sleep in your PT gear.
-You don't know the answer to a question in class, you say "This cadet does not know, but will endeavor to find out."



Eclipse

Quote from: TexasCadet on July 24, 2013, 08:29:44 PM
-You don't know the answer to a question in class, you say "This cadet does not know, but will endeavor to find out."

CAP does not use the third person in cadet training.

Where does this stuff come from?

"That Others May Zoom"

Майор Хаткевич

Isn't there a CAP pub that has "I do not know, but will find out"?

Brad

Quote from: Eclipse on July 24, 2013, 08:36:31 PM
Quote from: TexasCadet on July 24, 2013, 08:29:44 PM
-You don't know the answer to a question in class, you say "This cadet does not know, but will endeavor to find out."

CAP does not use the third person in cadet training.

Where does this stuff come from?

Cadet staff watching a bunch of youtube videos from other encampments and thinking it would be "cool" to try at theirs. And those other encampments saw it from a bunch of youtube videos about USMC recruit training, etc., and they thought it would look "cool" as well.
Brad Lee
Maj, CAP
Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, Communications
Mid-Atlantic Region
K4RMN

TexasCadet

I don't know if that is improper or not, but I wasn't about to contradict the flight sergeant or the entire encampment staff (cadets and seniors).

Eclipse

Quote from: TexasCadet on July 24, 2013, 08:53:54 PM
I don't know if that is improper or not, but I wasn't about to contradict the flight sergeant or the entire encampment staff (cadets and seniors).

It's improper and silly.


"That Others May Zoom"

TheKing

You Might have gone to encampment if you pack an MRE for school lunch.

Майор Хаткевич

Quote from: TheKing on July 28, 2013, 11:54:46 PM
You Might have gone to encampment if you pack an MRE for school lunch.

Why did they feed you MREs at encampment?

Nearly Dark Side

When adults start telling you to stop calling them sir or ma'am.

TexasCadet

Hey, I thought of another one.

-You square your corners in public.

NC Hokie

Quote from: usafaux2004 on July 29, 2013, 03:47:11 PM
Why did they feed you MREs at encampment?

NCWG encampment is held at an austere National Guard Training Center with no available dining facility.  Breakfast and dinner are cooked and served under a large picnic shelter, but lunch is usually a MRE distributed wherever the cadets happen to be at lunch time.

None of the cadets that I know have complained about this arrangement.  In fact, some of them actually like it!
NC Hokie, Lt Col, CAP

Graduated Squadron Commander
All Around Good Guy

Eclipse

Quote from: NC Hokie on July 29, 2013, 07:57:52 PM
Quote from: usafaux2004 on July 29, 2013, 03:47:11 PM
Why did they feed you MREs at encampment?

NCWG encampment is held at an austere National Guard Training Center with no available dining facility.  Breakfast and dinner are cooked and served under a large picnic shelter, but lunch is usually a MRE distributed wherever the cadets happen to be at lunch time.

None of the cadets that I know have complained about this arrangement.  In fact, some of them actually like it!

A reasonable accommodation and as you say, probably popular with most participants, but based on the published photos of this activity,
I don't know that calling Camp Butler "austere" is fair.  It looks pretty nice, actually.

"That Others May Zoom"

TheKing

Quote from: usafaux2004 on July 29, 2013, 03:47:11 PM
Quote from: TheKing on July 28, 2013, 11:54:46 PM
You Might have gone to encampment if you pack an MRE for school lunch.

Why did they feed you MREs at encampment?
At NC wing encampment, everybody got MRE's for lunch. It wasn't that bad actually. I kind of miss them. They had heaters, so they weren't cold.

You might have gone to encampment if:
You use your command voice to give presentations at school
You yell at your TV screen when someone says "Over and out"
You navigate hallway corners using flanking movements
You call the room to attention when the principal walks in the room
You ask your teacher to refer to you by your rank and last name (IE, Cadet Senior Airman King)
You wake up your friends at sleepovers with whistles and yelling to tell them to wake up

Майор Хаткевич

That must make you real popular at school.

NC Hokie

Quote from: Eclipse on July 29, 2013, 08:28:32 PM
I don't know that calling Camp Butler "austere" is fair.  It looks pretty nice, actually.

It's very nice for what it is, and the cadets seem to like it, but it's nothing like past encampment sites like MCAS Cherry Point, Camp Lejuene, or Seymour Johnson AFB.
NC Hokie, Lt Col, CAP

Graduated Squadron Commander
All Around Good Guy

TheKing

Quote from: usafaux2004 on July 30, 2013, 12:14:43 AM
That must make you real popular at school.
I have only done the one about navigating corners. The rest I haven't done.
Yet.

SJFedor

Quote from: NC Hokie on July 30, 2013, 12:42:12 AM
Quote from: Eclipse on July 29, 2013, 08:28:32 PM
I don't know that calling Camp Butler "austere" is fair.  It looks pretty nice, actually.

It's very nice for what it is, and the cadets seem to like it, but it's nothing like past encampment sites like MCAS Cherry Point, Camp Lejuene, or Seymour Johnson AFB.

I did my basic encampment at Cherry Point in 2004, it was definitely well worth the trip.

Quote from: TheKing on July 30, 2013, 12:43:02 AM
Quote from: usafaux2004 on July 30, 2013, 12:14:43 AM
That must make you real popular at school.
I have only done the one about navigating corners. The rest I haven't done.
Yet.

Let me save you some embarrassment and bullying:

Don't.

Steven Fedor, NREMT-P
Master Ambulance Driver
Former Capt, MP, MCPE, MO, MS, GTL, and various other 3-and-4 letter combinations
NESA MAS Instructor, 2008-2010 (#479)

TheKing


Abby.L

Looking at all these examples, I find it rather silly that everyone has issues separating reality from CAP.
Seriously? MREs for school? Squaring your corners in public? While respectful, calling Every. Single. Person sir/ma'am? And somehow, I don't see anyone sleeping at the position of attention or parade rest.

Just sayin'...  :P
Capt Abby R. Lockling
SSgt(Sep) USAF, 41ECS
Charlie flight, NBB 2013

a2capt

We used MRE's at encampment, too. With the cadets mostly split between two locations, on base and on the other side of the island, since we had to do something for those off base, and the Wing had MREs..

Use what you've got.

Luis R. Ramos

Squadron Safety Officer
Squadron Communication Officer
Squadron Emergency Services Officer

a2capt



Luis R. Ramos

Already answered... But is Parris Island ever used for a CAP encampment?

:)

I would imagine Sea Cadets, but not CAP...

Flyer
Squadron Safety Officer
Squadron Communication Officer
Squadron Emergency Services Officer

SarDragon

CAWG has had encampments at USN and USMC bases. Parris Island wouldn't be a stretch.
Dave Bowles
Maj, CAP
AT1, USN Retired
50 Year Member
Mitchell Award (unnumbered)
C/WO, CAP, Ret

jimmydeanno

Quote from: flyer333555 on August 29, 2013, 05:04:20 AM
Already answered... But is Parris Island ever used for a CAP encampment?

:)

I would imagine Sea Cadets, but not CAP...

Flyer

"Hey Kid, I hear that you are looking to go to encampment?"

"Uh, Yes, Corporal."

"Well, it turns out that I'm signing people up right now!  I'll even waive the fee.  Just come right in here and fill out the application..."
If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the law. - Winston Churchill

That Anonymous Guy

I'm not sure about 2013 but a quick google search showed 2011 was at Parris Island.

Pulsar

Quote from: Black Knight on May 30, 2013, 08:53:55 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 28, 2013, 03:48:23 PM
Black Knight, did you go to the NYWG 2012 Encampment? We only did 1 PT, on the 1st or 2nd day, after dinner. (Which was a terrible idea.)
Yes, I did. I was in Charlie Flight. Got the third highest scire.
And doing PT after dinner was horrible. I believe it was the 2nd day we did PT

Are you serious?? I never heard of an encampment doing that! WE ALWAYS Did pt every day until graduation  at 0545 sharp!  ???
C/LtCol Neutron Star
PAWG ENC 2013/ AMMA 2014/ NER W RCLS 2014-5 [Salutatorian] / NER Powered Flight Academy 2015

"A fiery strength inspires their lives, An essence that from heaven
derives,..." - Vergil, The Aeneid

(C) Copyright 2013: Readers who choose to hardcopy my comments are entitled to specific rights, namely: you may print them off and read them repeatedly until you have memorized them and then rattle them off as if you had thought them up yourself; However if asked, you must say they were signaled to you from a neutron star.

ol'fido

Quote from: a2capt on August 27, 2013, 03:24:51 PM
That would be Oahu.
I remember seeing CAP at an encampment on Schofield in the late 80's. I remember thinking "wow, they're wearing BDUs now in the program". That would have been maybe 89, 90, 91 time frame I guess. They were using GP Mediums out at Area X(the firing ranges) on the north side of Schofield.
Lt. Col. Randy L. Mitchell
Historian, Group 1, IL-006

TheKing

I'm going to list a few more examples, but before I do, I would like to point out that these are just exaggerated examples, and never have I done these, nor will I ever do these:

You sign papers with your name and rank
You give your unit's charter number when somebody asks you where you're from
You wake up in the middle of the night at home to do CQ patrol
You eat every meal as quick as possible
You put as many patches as you can on anything
You wear dress blues to a civilian formal event
You use proper radio speech over the phone

Garibaldi

Quote from: TheKing on October 24, 2013, 02:23:10 PM
I'm going to list a few more examples, but before I do, I would like to point out that these are just exaggerated examples, and never have I done these, nor will I ever do these:

You sign papers with your name and rank
You give your unit's charter number when somebody asks you where you're from
You wake up in the middle of the night at home to do CQ patrol
You eat every meal as quick as possible
You put as many patches as you can on anything
You wear dress blues to a civilian formal event
You use proper radio speech over the phone

You forgot calling the conference room to attention at a business meeting when the boss walks in.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

stillamarine

I've signed things with my badge number before.
Tim Gardiner, 1st LT, CAP

USMC AD 1996-2001
USMCR    2001-2005  Admiral, Great State of Nebraska Navy  MS, MO, UDF
tim.gardiner@gmail.com

TexasCadet

One time I saluted my father at home...

C/Cool

You wake up and expect Chef Steve's breakfast.
I'm sorry, did the middle of my sentence interrupt the beginning of yours?

cap235629

Quote from: flyer333555 on August 29, 2013, 05:04:20 AM
Already answered... But is Parris Island ever used for a CAP encampment?

:)

I would imagine Sea Cadets, but not CAP...

Flyer

It wasn't encampment but the MCJROTC version.  I spent 2 weeks at Parris Island over Spring break in 1989.  We stayed in the white WWII era barracks that were next to the rifle range.  We had 3 Drill Instructors assigned to us.  We had an AWESOME time.  It was stressful but educational.  We started every morning with the daily dozen, ended every day with drill and did everything from live fire with M-16's, beach landings from landing craft, helicopter rides, rappelling, obstacle and confidence course and even went through the gas chamber.  BEST. SCHOOL. TRIP. EVER.  and on the way home to Massachusetts we even visited Washington DC. 

The year before was a similar experience at Little Creek, the year before at Quantico.....

I have pictures put away from those trips 25 years later
Bill Hobbs, Major, CAP
Arkansas Certified Emergency Manager
Tabhair 'om póg, is Éireannach mé

C/Cool

#77
.
I'm sorry, did the middle of my sentence interrupt the beginning of yours?

C/Cool

#78
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn’t before?

Calling your parents and your teachers Sir or Ma'am should come naturally. I think it rather disrespectful not to give them the respect they deserve.
I'm sorry, did the middle of my sentence interrupt the beginning of yours?

TexasCadet

Quote from: VAcadet on November 22, 2013, 07:21:30 PM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?

Calling your parents and your teachers Sir or Ma'am should come naturally. I think it rather disrespectful not to give them the respect they deserve.

I call my father and mother "Dad" and "Mom", respectively. Any other adult, I call them "Sir/Ma'am".

Майор Хаткевич

Quote from: VAcadet on November 22, 2013, 07:21:30 PM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?

Calling your parents and your teachers Sir or Ma'am should come naturally. I think it rather disrespectful not to give them the respect they deserve.

In the parts of the world where we live in the 21st century, said teachers prefer Mr. Smith or Mrs Smith, or even Dr. Smith.

Mitchell 1969

Quote from: usafaux2004 on November 22, 2013, 08:49:48 PM
Quote from: VAcadet on November 22, 2013, 07:21:30 PM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn't before?

Calling your parents and your teachers Sir or Ma'am should come naturally. I think it rather disrespectful not to give them the respect they deserve.

In the parts of the world where we live in the 21st century, said teachers prefer Mr. Smith or Mrs Smith, or even Dr. Smith.

In the part of the world where I live (TN), all adults tend to be addressed as "Sir" and "Ma'am."  The two teachers in my family only get addressed as "Mrs. Wilson" or "Miss Wilson" when there are multiple "ma'ams" present and there is a need to distinguish one from the group.
_________________
Bernard J. Wilson, Major, CAP

Mitchell 1969; Earhart 1971; Eaker 1973. Cadet Flying Encampment, License, 1970. IACE New Zealand 1971; IACE Korea 1973.

CAP has been bery, bery good to me.

thatonecadet

Quote from: Mitchell 1969 on November 22, 2013, 10:50:34 PM
Quote from: usafaux2004 on November 22, 2013, 08:49:48 PM
Quote from: VAcadet on November 22, 2013, 07:21:30 PM
Quote from: TJT__98 on May 21, 2013, 09:21:11 PM
Quote from: aceofspades on May 21, 2013, 07:21:00 PM
-When you call your teacher ma'am
You didn’t before?

Calling your parents and your teachers Sir or Ma'am should come naturally. I think it rather disrespectful not to give them the respect they deserve.

In the parts of the world where we live in the 21st century, said teachers prefer Mr. Smith or Mrs Smith, or even Dr. Smith.

In the part of the world where I live (TN), all adults tend to be addressed as "Sir" and "Ma'am."  The two teachers in my family only get addressed as "Mrs. Wilson" or "Miss Wilson" when there are multiple "ma'ams" present and there is a need to distinguish one from the group.

And in the liberally dominant area where I'm from, most teachers/adults prefer being called by their first names, rarely even Mr./Mrs. Jones. They tell us to stop if we even start to call them sir/ma'am.
MasterMac

TheKing

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...................................,

Let me just say that after a few months of waiting, seeing the conversation go this far off topic is a bit discouraging. So here are some new you might have gone to encampment ifs. Again, never done any of these myself and I never will.

You build a professional Obstacle Course in your backyard
You bring your 24 hour pack on a regular neighborhood stroll
You look for uniform mistakes in regular civilians
You snap to attention when answering someone of higher authority
You ask for a buddy to come with you to the restroom
You ask for a buddy to come with you anywhere

Garibaldi

Please refrain from using ASCII text to create wastes of space. Thank you in advance. While creative, it has no place on CAPTalk.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

SarDragon

Quote from: Garibaldi on January 21, 2014, 10:41:05 PM
Please refrain from using ASCII text to create wastes of space. Thank you in advance. While creative, it has no place on CAPTalk.

Space? Where? How?

The text characters amount to 1,676 bytes. A similar sized JPG (450 px X 450 px) is 34,683 bytes.
Dave Bowles
Maj, CAP
AT1, USN Retired
50 Year Member
Mitchell Award (unnumbered)
C/WO, CAP, Ret

Garibaldi

It is huge, ungainly, and took me 5 minutes to decipher what it was. Looks like the meme of Picard doing a face palm.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

LSThiker

Quote from: Garibaldi on January 22, 2014, 03:06:37 AM
It is huge, ungainly, and took me 5 minutes to decipher what it was. Looks like the meme of Picard doing a face palm.

It is Picard.

SilentPhantom

you wake up doing to-the-rear in you sleep. (this happened to me at my basic encampment and I almost fell off the bunk  ;D )
you randomly notice when people have their hair out of regs.
you form a ripple line in the mess hall at school
you constantly have jodies running through you head
you stalk all the people from your basic encampment on Facebook
you don't stop talking about encampment till your next one
you can't stand people who ask you, "Why would you do that?!" when you tell them you just spent a week of your summer at a boot camp for fun
you listen to the songs from your encampment video every day and tear up with nostalgia
you square your corners in public
you have to stop yourself from shouting "YES SIR!" at your teacher when he asks something
C/2dLt

Garibaldi

Quote from: SilentPhantom on June 03, 2014, 06:38:43 PM
you wake up doing to-the-rear in you sleep. (this happened to me at my basic encampment and I almost fell off the bunk  ;D )
you randomly notice when people have their hair out of regs.
you form a ripple line in the mess hall at school
you constantly have jodies running through you head
you stalk all the people from your basic encampment on Facebook
you don't stop talking about encampment till your next one
you can't stand people who ask you, "Why would you do that?!" when you tell them you just spent a week of your summer at a boot camp for fun
you listen to the songs from your encampment video every day and tear up with nostalgia
you square your corners in public
you have to stop yourself from shouting "YES SIR!" at your teacher when he asks something

You refer to the cafeteria at your school as the mess hall.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

SilentPhantom

Quote from: Garibaldi on June 03, 2014, 06:56:28 PM
Quote from: SilentPhantom on June 03, 2014, 06:38:43 PM
you wake up doing to-the-rear in you sleep. (this happened to me at my basic encampment and I almost fell off the bunk  ;D )
you randomly notice when people have their hair out of regs.
you form a ripple line in the mess hall at school
you constantly have jodies running through you head
you stalk all the people from your basic encampment on Facebook
you don't stop talking about encampment till your next one
you can't stand people who ask you, "Why would you do that?!" when you tell them you just spent a week of your summer at a boot camp for fun
you listen to the songs from your encampment video every day and tear up with nostalgia
you square your corners in public
you have to stop yourself from shouting "YES SIR!" at your teacher when he asks something

You refer to the cafeteria at your school as the mess hall.

Yes. It's another sign of having gone to encampment   ;)
C/2dLt

PHall

Quote from: Garibaldi on June 03, 2014, 06:56:28 PM
Quote from: SilentPhantom on June 03, 2014, 06:38:43 PM
you wake up doing to-the-rear in you sleep. (this happened to me at my basic encampment and I almost fell off the bunk  ;D )
you randomly notice when people have their hair out of regs.
you form a ripple line in the mess hall at school
you constantly have jodies running through you head
you stalk all the people from your basic encampment on Facebook
you don't stop talking about encampment till your next one
you can't stand people who ask you, "Why would you do that?!" when you tell them you just spent a week of your summer at a boot camp for fun
you listen to the songs from your encampment video every day and tear up with nostalgia
you square your corners in public
you have to stop yourself from shouting "YES SIR!" at your teacher when he asks something

You refer to the cafeteria at your school as the mess hall DFAC.

FTFY! ;)

SilentPhantom

Quote from: PHall on June 04, 2014, 01:19:47 AM
Quote from: Garibaldi on June 03, 2014, 06:56:28 PM
Quote from: SilentPhantom on June 03, 2014, 06:38:43 PM
you wake up doing to-the-rear in you sleep. (this happened to me at my basic encampment and I almost fell off the bunk  ;D )
you randomly notice when people have their hair out of regs.
you form a ripple line in the mess hall at school
you constantly have jodies running through you head
you stalk all the people from your basic encampment on Facebook
you don't stop talking about encampment till your next one
you can't stand people who ask you, "Why would you do that?!" when you tell them you just spent a week of your summer at a boot camp for fun
you listen to the songs from your encampment video every day and tear up with nostalgia
you square your corners in public
you have to stop yourself from shouting "YES SIR!" at your teacher when he asks something

You refer to the cafeteria at your school as the mess hall DFAC.

FTFY! ;)

;D
C/2dLt