Griffon Summer 2015

Page 6

6 • THE GRIFFON • Summer 2015

From the Command Sergeant Major

By Command Sgt. Maj. Robert Riti 108th Training Command (IET)

I recently read an article by Command Sgt. Maj. Daniel A. Dailey, the 15th Sergeant Major of the Army. In the article he spoke about the importance of physical fitness training and included his workout. What really caught my attention was that he runs five to seven miles every Monday,Wednesday and Friday, rain or shine! By ending the sentence with ‘rain or shine’ is an indication that he does PFT no matter what. He ensures PFT is part of his daily

routine and just as important as anything else that may be on his busy schedule.There shouldn’t be any excuses for anyone not doing PFT. The Sergeant Major of the Army also mentions the fact that there are many Soldiers out there that are not doing PFT as often as they should and it shows. I too have visited some of our units and noticed several of the Soldiers in our formations that did not present the positive and professional image we are required to maintain as Soldiers in the U.S. Army.These Soldiers usually have the same excuse,‘that they have too much work to do and will do PFT later’ but later never comes. I suggest that you start your day off with PFT because when you do, everything else seems to fall in place. I can honestly say that I am at the gym as soon as it opens at 0500, five to six days a week. I do my best to ensure I always maintain a positive and professional image because perception matters. I am bothered when I see Soldiers who are obviously out of shape because we should be enforcing standards and not allowing excuses. In fact, Soldiers should be disciplined enough to do PFT without being told to. The last decade spent fighting wars has built up a lot of support

I suggest that you start your day off with PFT because when you do, everything else seems to fall in place. I can honestly say that I am at the gym as soon as it opens at 0500, five to six days a week. I do my best to ensure I always maintain a positive and professional image because perception matters. from the American people and we don’t want it to end. Out of shape Soldiers, in uniform, in public puts a different perception on the way the American people view us. So let’s do as Dailey does and ensure we’re doing PFT at least five days a week. I would be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge our outstanding Warriors who make PFT part of their daily regimen. Scoring a 300 on an APFT is an outstanding achievement and it deserves recognition so, for all of the officers, NCOs and Soldiers that exceed the standard and score a 300 on their APFT, I commend you and am truly grateful you’re part of our formation. Another thing that caught my attention a few weeks ago was during a Town Hall meeting that Maj. Gen.

Leslie Purser and I had with Soldiers. One of the participants mentioned that they never have time to conduct NCODP or ODP with everything else they’re required to do during BA. Our leaders are built by ODP and NCODP. Though it should be scheduled every month, it doesn’t have to appear on a schedule for professional development to be conducted.We should use every available minute to share our experiences and expertise with our Soldiers and continue to build them to lead Soldiers. Stop saying it’s impossible to take care of everything we’re required to do during BA. Remember, nothing is impossible for a Soldier, especially when that Soldier is in a leadership position.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Griffon Association Annual Picnic at Latta Plantation

1hr
pages 62-86

Soldier’s Gold Mine

6min
page 60

108th Training Command (IET) Drill Sergeant Graduates

2min
page 59

The Drill Sergeant Journey

2min
page 58

Clemson ROTC Cadets Hone Leadership Skills at FTX

5min
pages 56-57

Valex

3min
page 55

2X Citizen: Lt. Col. Dan Higgins

2min
page 53

Annual Field Training Exercise Conducted by 1-354th

2min
page 54

U.S. Army Reserve Competitive Marksmanship Program: 95th Division Soldiers Bring Home All Army Trophies

2min
page 50

98th Training Division Under New Responsibility

4min
page 51

Honor Flight Veterans Receive First Class Welcome

5min
page 52

Drill Sergeant Judge JROTC Drill Competition

3min
page 49

Army Reserve Commander Strives for Mirror Image

5min
pages 46-47

Memorializing the Hardships of the Past

3min
page 48

Devil’s Brigade

5min
pages 44-45

Soldiers into ‘Integration’

4min
pages 36-37

Cadre in Focus: Staff Sgt. Paul Hayes

3min
page 38

Clemson ROTC Cadets Sink and Swim in Water Survival Test

5min
pages 39-41

Senior Leaders Experience History on Revolutionary War Battlefield Echo Company Incorporates Reserve Component

5min
pages 34-35

Sandhurst 2015: Cadets Ascend Through Teamwork

6min
pages 31-33

A Path in Life: Becoming a Drill Sergeant

3min
page 30

Tulsa Battalion Bids Farewell to a Fallen Comrade

2min
page 29

Mentorship on the Hardwood

4min
pages 26-27

Cadre in Focus: Sgt. 1st Class Christina Martinelli

3min
page 28

Soldier Heals with Music and Service to Community

4min
page 25

CONUS Replacement Center Prepares Service Members and Civilians

5min
pages 22-23

Cadre in Focus: Sgt. 1st Class Jordany Urbano

3min
page 24

Historic Plattsburgh ROTC Program to Close

4min
pages 20-21

Task Force Marshall: ‘One team. One fight!’

7min
pages 18-19

Precious But Not Promised

4min
pages 16-17

Training Command’s Best Warrior Competition

5min
pages 8-9

From the 95th Training Division (IET) Commander

1min
page 10

Maintaining the Standard Among the Best 14

11min
pages 11-13

Soldier Spotlight: Staff Sgt. John Lueke

3min
page 14

Noncommissioned Officer to Officer

3min
page 15

From the Commanding General

3min
pages 1-3

From the Command Chief Warrant Officer

3min
page 6
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.