in the marines he learned about pushing limits to perfection and not giving up if there remains but a drop of strength. Today david stern uses those tools to teach boys — who always assumed they were failures — how their goals are within reach.
Excerpt: dave stern thought he was going to die.
From his first day of us marine boot camp at parris islandsouth carolina the physical exertion his drill sergeant demanded of the new recruits was many degrees beyond anything stern had ever experienced even as a teenage black-belt candidate in the japanese martial art called ninjutsu. Even worse emotional abuse rained down on the platoon from every direction to the point where the young men felt totally broken. For three months the group had no contact with the outside world no days off no respite from the physical and mental exhaustion and no hope that an end was in sight for their suffering. For the fresh crop of marines the specter of death was real and prevalent every day of basic training.
Fifteen years later he says it was an experience he wouldn’t trade for anything in the world.
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