Haggis
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 3,133
- Points
- 1,140
2332Piper said:I live in Ottawa, and, well, seems like some people are getting a little to comfortable with their officer jobs. A fit military is a confident military. I don't understand the lack of motivation to do PT with some people, being fit feels good.
I work in Ottawa. In many cases, finding the time to do PT has little to do with motivation and more to do with workload and the NDHQ lifestyle.
Shortly after arriving at NDHQ, I started taking time to do PT (and I still do). Every afternoon, I would go for a run along the canal, followed by some body-weight strength training (my building didn't have a gym). Almost immediately my civilian co-workers remarked that I was "leaving early". I explained why I was "leaving early" and it was a hard sell to those who don't have a "Physical Fitness Test" box to tick off on their PER.
Secondly, the civilians who work at NDHQ (both real and "uniformed") don't really care much if the meeting they've just scheduled bumps PT off your calendar. Very few civilian managers will factor in PT when doing thier time estimate for the task they've just assigned you. And if that task or project is due tomorrow, taking time off for PT just doesn't fit the bill.
Addtionally, most who work at NDHQ have their work day extended by a commute. If you carpool, as many do, your schedule is tied to that of four or five other folks who couldn't care less if you're fit as long as they don't miss "Everybody Loves Raymond".
In short, the NDHQ lifestyle can quickly turn even the most hardened field soldier into a uniformed public servant. (Ever see the standard of dress of the Canadian Coast Guard?)
All that being said, a major shift in attitude is required in the NCR. Like it or not, fitness IS a big part of dress and deportment. Simply ordering all the Warrant Officers and Officers into DEU to make the NCR "look more professional" is not going to fix the problem if the said Warrant Officer can't button his DEU tunic.
Dress and deportment is a combination of kit maintenance, fitness and personal pride. A uniformed public servant doesn't have those any more than a professional soldier has dreadlocks in uniform.