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Marines Build Confidence
Pvt. Michael Johnson finishes the Slide for Life. After scaling across the first 12-feet of the cables, Marines are told to hang by their hands, face the end of the pool, lift their legs up and around the cable, and to slide across the remainder of the rope.
Pvt. Michael Johnson finishes the Slide for Life. After scaling across the first 12-feet of the cables, Marines are told to hang by their hands, face the end of the pool, lift their legs up and around the cable, and to slide across the remainder of the rope.

As his bus arrived on the depot, the first thing he saw through the windows was the confidence course.

“The Marine Corps is known for its difficult training and challenging obstacle courses, so I knew that I would have to complete it eventually,” said Pvt. Michael Johnson, Platoon 2132, Company F.

One week before traveling north to Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Calif., for the rifle range and field training, the Marines with Company F tackled Confidence Course II.

With his peers watching, Pvt. Mahomad Luckett leaps to the final log on the Dirty Name obstacle. Marines are told to ensure their hips hit the log as they pull themselves up in order to successfully make it over the obstacle.
With his peers watching, Pvt. Mahomad Luckett leaps to the final log on the Dirty Name obstacle. Marines are told to ensure their hips hit the log as they pull themselves up in order to successfully make it over the obstacle.

Completing the course develops confidence in their abilities and make them face fears they are forced to overcome, said Staff Sgt. David Lopez, senior drill instructor, Platoon 2132.

Company F Marines were faced with three high obstacles during Confidence Course II: the Confidence Climb, A-Frame and the Slide for Life. They also took on the lower obstacles that they are already conquered in Confidence Course I, a week prior.

Wet boots dry after the Marine wearing them fell into the pool during the Slide for Life.
Wet boots dry after the Marine wearing them fell into the pool during the Slide for Life.

The Confidence Climb is a log ladder that ascends 30-feet into the sky. Marines climb to the top, swing over to the other side, and then climb back to the ground.

The A-Frame begins with a rope the Marines from Company F had to climb to reach the first level. Once there, they walked 20-feet across a series of logs to an A-shaped structure. They climbed to the top of it and then descended to the ground while swinging on a rope.

“I had the most difficulty scaling with the ropes, but once I learned the technique of using my feet as brakes to pull myself up, instead of my arms, it was simple,” said Johnson, a Riverside, Calif., native.

The Slide for Life was the final obstacle. It is composed of three cables angled over a pool of water from a 25-foot tower to the ground. Marines lay down on the cables and pull themselves across 12-feet of the length of the cable. Their drill instructors then ordered them to hang by their hands, face the end of the pool, lift their legs up and around the cable and then slide across the remainder of the rope.

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Marine Ditches Inheritance to Serve
Private First-Class Daniel Lageman stands in formation during Battalion Commander's Inspection Tuesday. Recruits spend hours cleaning their weapons, studying knowledge and perfecting their uniforms in preparation for this final inspection.
Private First-Class Daniel Lageman stands in formation during Battalion Commander's Inspection Tuesday. Recruits spend hours cleaning their weapons, studying knowledge and perfecting their uniforms in preparation for this final inspection.
At 12-years-old, one Company I Marine faced a tragedy that forced him to become the man of the house.

When Pfc. Daniel Lageman’s, father died from injuries sustained in a work-related accident, he overcame his broken heart and eventually discovered his inner strength within the Marine Corps.

Lageman’s father, a cement truck operator, was driving on the highway when he was blinded by the sun and jerked the steering wheel, causing his truck to flip over. He was hospitalized after suffering from a fracture in his vertebrae and was released a couple of months later.
Not long after being released, a blood clot formed in his artery which traveled to his brain, killing him instantly.

“I was very close to my father and his death came as a shock to our family,” said Lageman, a Denton, Texas native. “I was distraught after the incident because not only did I lose my role model, but I also lost my best friend.”

Because his father’s death was work-related, the government granted Lageman a monthly allowance to pay for his education through four years of college. Lageman said he felt he was not disciplined enough to dedicate himself to college in order to succeed and he did not want to waste the money.

Lageman was in his junior year of high school when he was watching television and a Marine Corps recruiting commercial came on. He said that as he watched the commercial of the Marine rock climbing he thought to himself, “I would love to do that.”

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Adopted Brothers Become Brothers in Arms
Timothy Hagen, right, and adopted brother Ryan Hagen, Platoon 2101, Company E, experienced rough childhoods, but were determined to join the Marines. They dreamed of becoming Marines since age 10, and today they accomplished that goal.
Timothy Hagen, right, and adopted brother Ryan Hagen, Platoon 2101, Company E, experienced rough childhoods, but were determined to join the Marines. They dreamed of becoming Marines since age 10, and today they accomplished that goal.
Individuals emerge from the depot after 13-grueling weeks of recruit training as hard-charging Marines with a common goal; defending their country.

However, before they step onto the yellow footprints, they come here from all over the United States from different backgrounds with their own personal reasons for joining.

Private First Class Ryan S. Hagen and his brother, Pfc. Timothy J. Hagen, Platoon 2101, Company E, joined the Marines seeking a challenge and a place to call home. After a long life of instability, bouncing around from foster homes to group homes and back, they found their real home with the Marines.

Timothy, a native of Mesa, Ariz., had a rough childhood since about the age of six. He was taken away from his parents due to their excessive drug and alcohol use and placed in a shelter for three months. When the day came for him to be placed in a foster home, he was unfortunately positioned with abusive foster parents. He remained there for the next three years before being transferred to a more caring home at age nine.

At this new home, Timothy was unaware of the brother he would soon meet, whom he would one day make a life-changing decision with to join the Corps.

Ryan, also a native of Mesa, went through a similar childhood. His mother and father were alcohol abusers who fought daily. This eventually led to Ryan and his father leaving his mother to start new lives.

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