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Using these techniques
Wall-to-wall counseling is much like any other
counseling.
You choose the place, inform the counselee, meet him there,
counsel him until his problem is solved and conduct follow-up
actions. In wall-to-wall counseling, though, how you determine when
his problem is solved is when he screams for mercy. Then you hit
him once or twice more to reinforce the counseling session and make
sure the problem stays solved, and only then end the counseling
session.
Determining how much wall-to-wall counseling is
enough
The successful wall-to-wall counselor needs to be able to
determine how much wall-to-wall counseling to give. A soldier who
misses one formation can be sufficiently counseled by hitting them
once in the back of the head. A soldier who missed every formation
since he arrived at the unit two years ago, however, will require
counseling with dimension lumber and a baseball bat. The counselor
will quickly learn the proper amount of counseling to give.
Of course, if the soldier is a rapist, robber or murderer, just
start your wall-to-wall counseling session and continue until the
military police arrive.
Follow-up actions
No counseling is complete without follow-up actions. This is
especially true in wall-to-wall counseling. Following up a
wall-to-wall counseling session is covered in the chapters entitled
"Triage" and "Legal problems."
The counselor should be prepared to wash his hands of the whole
matter, especially if the session drew blood. The counselor should,
therefore, place a bar of Lava soap in the latrine prior to the
session. Its gritty consistency will remove all traces of blood
from your fingers, and it will help to dean off your baseball bat,
too.
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