You need to know absolutely everything. How to count and be on time, march and be in step, do the right moves and be in sync, and loads more of small details that makes an okay band a phenomenal band. Going from just a normal band student to a colorguard member was much more difficult than I was expecting. It was awfully hard and was a great deal of work but it paid off in the end. Before it did though, we had to work hard as a guard and personally by practicing when we could. Sometimes only one person wouldn’t be prepared so the whole guard would have suffer. If someone forgot their headpiece the whole guard couldn’t wear the headpiece or if someone forgot bobby pins we would all pitch in and give a few to the member who forgot. Though I loved guard toward the end of the season I was surprised with one of the worst thing for a guard member to get. This dream crusher of a monster is named tendinitis. I hated that it was not only very painful but it caused me to sacrifice thing I love most, the guard. It was definitely hard to cope with but we made it work. In parade performances I use both of my arms but since I have tendinitis in one of them I couldn’t do those, but on field performances we mainly use our right which is luckily the arm I don’t have tendonitis in so I was able to perform in those events but I would be in a lot of pain afterwards. When I got diagnosed, the doctor prescribed me to take four pills of