My 2 pennies.....(sorry to keep this thread off topic but hey...)
Instructors know or will know who was in cadets/reserves period. Very easy to spot during your first formation, or group movement before drill is taught. "Hippity hop....mob...Stop!"
The recruit in this situation,(all recruits actually) will be watched to see how they interact with their peers. If the recruit in question is a good recruit, (when I say good, i mean hard working, team orientated, as opposed to "look at me.. I know everything!..), the instructors will monitor the recruit as any other and carry on. If the recruit is capable, the others on the course will seek that persons help with things that they are good at. Likewise, the recruit will find things during the course that they will have difficulty, and find help from the other recruits. (notice the team and the lack of I)
On the other hand, if said recruit brings with him and displays the know it all, better than the rest attitude, he will find himself, just as any other know it all, better than the rest idiot,(yes even those with no prior experience) discovering that there are things you know because you have been taught them by your instructors, and there are things that you
think you know.
The staff are there to teach you.....Learn from them.
What you learned in the cadets/reserves may or may not be the same as you are being taught. This is not a point to argue with the staff on your course. Just because you have past experience, does not mean your past experience is right/proper/current or safe.
The staff is there to train you, not fail you. You fail yourself. If this happens it will not be as a result of the staff trying to fail you. You are all there as recruits, expected to perform as recruits.
There are many horror stories of cadets/reservists being singled out and picked on. This extra attention is the same extra attention that any recruit (with or without cadet/reserve experience) in the same situation, displaying the same attitudes and performance levels will attract.
Examples that all who have gone through can relate to I'm sure.
Going back a few years, but, we had a reservist on our basic (Cornwallis 87), who thought his poop did not stink, barley made it through, not a good team mate for the first few weeks but he finally caught on.
Another, recruit with cadet experience, again thought his poop smelled like roses, during inspection, week one,battle school, '89 "What is it that gives you the right to have a PPCLI cap badge in your locker? You have not earned it yet.no one else has one.....(Every one grab your helmet.. push-up time), yet he did not clue in that this was not the way to act. This behavior continued despite the best efforts of the staff to educate the young lad. Re-coursed.
Go....learn...be a sponge....soak it up.... when someone wants your opinion or help, they will ask, just as you will ask others.
I was a former reservist entering Cornwallis....I followed the don't offer advice, unless asked track. It starts with your bunk buddy, and then goes from there. You learn to trust each other, support each other and beyond that, value each other.
If your bunk buddy is going elsewhere for assistance, you might want to rethink your behavior and attitude.
In closing.
You will have fun and LEARN. Not many people can look back on basic without smiling and laughing, even years later.
I guess it was more than 2 pennies worth...
