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Visite esta página para explorar en su idioma las oportunidades de educación y carreras para sus hijos en el Navy. Navy.com
Hey all,
I recently received a comment on my wall (you guys can go look), from a mom, who said this:
"At 5:06pm on August 9, 2010, Denise (A Seabee's mom) said…
good afternoon,
I was directed to a group for PIR 9-2. I was looking at a couple comments that you have posted. There is a panic in that group about the treatment of the recruits. I would think that you being retired that you couple clear it better. The term "hell week" is a Ricky rumor. Hell Week is a untouched Term used by our SEALS. Being retired it seems that this is the way the information should be passed on. All the sailors I know past and present talk about "hell week" the same why. I just wonder why it is that you refer to it and a boot camp term. Were you in before Battle Station 21 was put in? I have heard from past sailors that they thought that the final week of boot was hell?
Just tying to clear a few things up.
Thanks "
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I have asked, and because she won't open her profile to let me see who she is, I guess I need to post her comment here so she can remain on the "down-low" and so I can answer her and hopefully she will answer back. Denise are you sure you're not an RDC peeking in?
"Hey Denise,
It doesn't seem like you ever read what I actually wrote, which was:
"Week 4 is known a "hell week". This is where everything the recruits have learned to date is tested. Several things happen. They wake up the recruits at 3:30am to get them ready for the day's activities. They bring in RDC's from other divisions and they compare their division to your division. They see how well you learned. Most RDC don't like to admit that your division is better so they find the simplest of fault to hit you on. You might have a small string hanging out of your pocket...hit. You might not have your "gig line" straight...hit.
By getting so many hits, your RDC are ticked. You get Physical Trained (PT) and Intensive Trained (IT). You will be standing at attention and parade rest for hours waiting for your turn to be inspected. Don't think this is punishment, think of it as teaching your recruits how not to faint while standing for hours. Knee's unlocked! What these RDC don't want is during the PIR for the sailors to faint in front of the crown. It's bad press. Those that are really taking hits during the inspection could be rolled back (set back) into another division to relearn what they have already been taught."
Where in the above can you find that "Hell Week" for a recruit in boot camp would be anything near SEAL/BUDS training? You can't. A person would have to be an fool to think they would be the same. Yes, both happen about 1/2 through, and yes, they are both extremely hard. However, being hard to one group of people is not the same for the next.
Do you realize that "Hell Week" originated long before the SEALS ever came about? In fact, it was used since the 1800's. So from what you're saying "the untouched term" was actually stolen by the SEALS? I don' t believe the SEALS would do something that low, I do believe they were fond of the word and added to their own vocabulary just like college students, police officers, etc.
Per BS21, it was installed in 2007. I wasn't in the Navy then. However, I do run two Navy websites that have 100's of sailors that have returned and talked about the fun they had during BS21. They officially must sign a page 13 which is place into their service record saying they will not discuss what happens. However, they all have said it was fun. They also say that "Hell Week" was the worse.
So there you have it, hope that helps.....
Craig"
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So lets talk about Hell Week:
Below is what happens during week 4 (give or take a day). This is the week the sailors are tested. Doesn't it It seem like there is alot of test this week? Yes, the sailors are being tested. They are actually tested each day, but this week is when they seperate the men for the boy (sorry lady sailors, that's a generic term). This week has the most test of any. BS21 is nothing to this. By the time BS21 comes around they have already learned their stuff. Ask any sailor who has been trrough it, they LOVE it.
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4-1 Day
- PFA for Olympic Flag, no more than 10-15 people can fail.
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4-2 Day
- SAMT Laser gun training
- Zone Inspection
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4-3 Day
- Live Fire 9mm and Shotgun. You need to score 180 or more to receive a ribbon/medal for uniform.
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4-4 Day
- Drill inpection for Drill Flag
- Photo's
- Photo's and Navy "yearbook" division in house compartment pictures
- Tailor #2 (individual Dress uniforms)
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4-5 Day
- Trift Savings Plan class
- Test #2
- Go to NEX for shampoo and conditioner
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