COURTESY OF MICHELLE BERNDT

Berndt urges readers to challenge themselves and pursue their dreams.


Do hard things

If you had asked me four years ago what my college experience would look like, I never would have imagined 4:30 a.m. wake-ups, jumping out of planes or leading a battalion of 60 people before turning 22. I entered the Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) with an open mind and little military background. Within weeks, I realized it was only about 10% tactics and 90% everything else — leadership, interpersonal skills, discipline, organization, public speaking and more. 

Most of my growth, both as a cadet and as a person, has come from deliberately choosing the hard path. That meant waking up before dawn to ruck 26 miles with 42 pounds, stepping out of an aircraft in full combat gear — five times — walking into unfamiliar rooms full of unfamiliar faces at leadership conferences, pushing through long, cold, rain-soaked days in the field and carrying the weight of responsibility as both battalion commander and operations officer. 

If there’s one piece of advice I’d give, it’s simple: do hard things. Seek out the challenges that make you hesitate. Over time, you become comfortable being uncomfortable — and once you reach that point, there’s very little you can’t handle. Go do something hard today.

Michelle Berndt is a fourth-year Army ROTC cadet and former student-athlete majoring in Molecular and Cellular Biology from Cullowhee, N.C. She will continue her education at the North Carolina State College of Veterinary Medicine, with career plans to be a U.S. Army Veterinarian. 


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