Building the No Neck Army: The Military’s Holistic Health and Fitness Program
There was a time when military fitness was simple. You ran until your lungs tasted like metal, you did pushups until your arms trembled like loose wiring, and if someone asked how you were doing mentally, the official treatment plan was: drink water and walk it off. It was an era of straightforward suffering. If your knees sounded like microwave popcorn every time you climbed stairs, congratulations—you were probably in excellent shape by Army standards. Then the Army looked around and realized something uncomfortable: maybe turning human beings into sleep-deprived, nicotine-powered pushup machines wasn’t exactly the optimal long-term strategy. And thus emerged the modern masterpiece known as Holistic Health and Fitness , or H2F , which sounds less like a military program and more like something you’d see advertised on a smoothie bottle next to a picture of a yoga instructor holding a green drink that costs $14. But make no mistake. This isn’t yoga. This is the Army’s attempt to b...