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| subject: | Re: Military Mindset? |
From: "Jeff Shultz" 1. You know exactly who is speaking to you; 2. It ups the stress level of the person being yelled at (this is usually desirable); 3. Usually the drill sergeant is under some stress as well - which can have an effect on your voice as well. My Drill Sergeant in basic used to say he could tell exactly what part of a Basic Training cycle another drill sergeant was in, just from what shape his voice was in. Being on holdover after graduation was fun - the Drills unbent quite a bit an told us some terrific stories. -- Jeff Shultz http://www.wvi.com/~jbshultz As a student, my job is asking questions. "David N. Barnett" wrote in message news:2ukdisc5mnjanunjj59dnnuhn4tpggi7iq{at}4ax.com... > To Jeff, Bill L., and anyone else here who has served in the US > military: > > I was watching some some program on TV about basic training (I fergit > which branch...), and one of the drill instructors affected this > really strange voice. He sounded somewhere between Howlin' Wolf, > Billy-Bob Thornton's character in "Slingblade," and a throat cancer > victim with one of those mechanical talk box transducers. An > interview with the instructor proved that he was also capable of > speaking in a normal, human voice. > > I can't imagine a practical reason for someone to shout instructions > with such a vocal affectation, but then I've never served in the > military. Do any of you have any insight into this behavior? Is it > just a matter of personal style? > > --dnb --- BBBS/NT v4.01 Flag-5* Origin: Barktopia BBS Site http://HarborWebs.com:8081 (1:379/45) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 379/45 1 633/267 |
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