- Reaction score
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- Points
- 410
DVessey said:Not sure which way this is going to go, but instructors first have to be able to do push ups themselves. One past instructor of mine tried doing push ups with our platoon during morning PT. It was very hard for the platoon to keep a straight face, as this DS had his arse way up in the air, completely improper position.
Were exactly is that stated. So far no one one has come up with an actual answer in the form of a Standing Order, CANFORGEN, CANLANGEN, CFAO etc. that states that an instructor must do the push ups as well. My guess (and thats all it is, is a guess) is, that some course officer somewhere, on some course, some time ago, decried that all the subordinate instructors on the course he was running, must do the push ups as well. And that, because of this one particular incident the idea that instructors MUST do the push ups as well spread, to the point where it is dogma/urban legend and no one has bothered to really question/ challenge it.
Now for someones question, what do you do if troopy can do 100s of push ups no problem. To that I say, thats when you as an instructor have to start getting creative. Instead of regular push ups you can use dive bombers/diamond push-ups (ie hands together)/diamonds on a helmet/ wide space (ie hand spread out twice the normal distance)/elevator push-ups/push ups wearing FFO/push ups wearing marching order/push ups with you feet raised up. On my basic course we did all these variations, sometimes the instructors were doing them with us, other times they were right beside certain candidates "motivating" them.