 The time limit is 04.45. The head is secure. The head is secure. The head is secure. Pulse. Pulse at night, sir. I'm all set. Please, sir. You close front, Pulse. You go outside. You go home. You close underneath the lights. I'm all set. When this recruit wakes up in the morning, it can be quite challenging because the drill instructors come in all of a sudden and are screaming, and you may have just been dead asleep, but now you have to get up. You have to get your linen on. You have to get your pillow. You have to get your sweat tops and sweat pants off. And it, at the beginning, can be very, very surprising and challenging. No one advice that I would give to pullies coming in to recruit trainings here is that start moving with intensity and move very, very fast. So First Face is all about taking that civilian that we received and receiving and breaking them down into a recruit. It involves early mornings, waking up at 0405, getting online, making their racks, which is something they've probably never done before, and keeping the house clean at all times. The drill instructors are looking to cause constant stress throughout the entirety of First Face. This is to make sure that they understand where they are at and that they obey every order that we give them. Every Sunday morning, the recruits will wake up, go to Chow and then be delivered to each individual recruits' religious service. There, they'll spend anywhere from an hour and a half to two hours at their religious service and then go back to the house for further training. Change only back! This drill goes back to the days of Musket Fire, where we had to find a certain strategy in placing men with muskets in a formation to optimize that slow rate of fire. Now today we used drill to establish teamwork and discipline. Now these individuals that come here to become United States Marine Corps recruits, they're used to touching their face, doing whatever they want to do here in formation, they don't have that luxury. We take that away from them. Now that's going to establish that discipline to understand that there may be a circumstance where they're put into where they don't have that luxury to do that in combat, where they have to understand instant willingness and obedience to orders and drill is the foundation of that. IT is very intense. Whenever you do something wrong, they take you to the quarter deck and start making you do physical fitness. And as fit as you could be, those drill instructors will break you down. IT, or incentive training, is a tool used by drill instructors to fix discrepancies. As the recruits get here, we as drill instructors demand perfection every day. Once a recruit is imperfect, you'll end up on the quarter deck. For future recruits, it's important to understand one thing. No matter what kind of physical shape you're in, when you get to recruit training, the stress mixed with the exercises is very difficult.