I was having a discussion with another former cadet Saturday night about guidon bearers in the Corps and we both have some interesting perspective that I was hoping to discuss here.
Both of us transferred to A&M from USAFA, and I also served on active duty as an enlisted airman.
As I'm sure most, if not all, former cadet know, being the guidon bearer is the highest honor you can get as a pisshead. The guidon itself is to be fiercely guarded, and any person who touches it either gets a beatdown or smoking. Bottom line is that the guidon is a big deal in the Corps.
Contrast that with USAFA. At USAFA, the guidons are displayed on the wall in the hallway of the dorm, completely unsecured. Theoretically, anyone could walk in and take it. Being selected guidon bearer is a total boof, and being selected as such is defintely not an honor, and is far from desirable for any sophomore cadet.
On active duty, guidon bearer duties were relegated to whichever sucker wasn't smart enough to not be around when they are looking for someone to do it. In basic training it was slightly prestigious, but involved a lot more work and was a total time screw that left your buddies picking up the slack for you in the barracks if you were (un)lucky enough to get guidon duty.
I'm just curious if anyone has any perspective that might shed some light on why things are so different at A&M when it comes to being the guidon bearer.
Both of us transferred to A&M from USAFA, and I also served on active duty as an enlisted airman.
As I'm sure most, if not all, former cadet know, being the guidon bearer is the highest honor you can get as a pisshead. The guidon itself is to be fiercely guarded, and any person who touches it either gets a beatdown or smoking. Bottom line is that the guidon is a big deal in the Corps.
Contrast that with USAFA. At USAFA, the guidons are displayed on the wall in the hallway of the dorm, completely unsecured. Theoretically, anyone could walk in and take it. Being selected guidon bearer is a total boof, and being selected as such is defintely not an honor, and is far from desirable for any sophomore cadet.
On active duty, guidon bearer duties were relegated to whichever sucker wasn't smart enough to not be around when they are looking for someone to do it. In basic training it was slightly prestigious, but involved a lot more work and was a total time screw that left your buddies picking up the slack for you in the barracks if you were (un)lucky enough to get guidon duty.
I'm just curious if anyone has any perspective that might shed some light on why things are so different at A&M when it comes to being the guidon bearer.