Chief Change Officer - #414 Jevon Wooden: From the Military to Mindset Mastery — Part Two
Episode Date: June 16, 2025From facing seven years in prison at 17 to leading soldiers in Afghanistan, Jevon Wooden’s story is more than a redemption arc—it’s about owning your power the moment you realize you’ve still ...got one.In Part Two, Jevon gets tactical. He breaks down the frameworks behind his coaching work—from redefining confidence, to managing emotional triggers, to the underrated power of setting non-negotiables. We talk inner dialogue, identity shifts, and what it means to actually “own your kingdom.”This isn’t just mindset—it’s method. And it’s built on real scars, not theory.Key Highlights of Our Interview:Confidence Isn’t Loud“Confidence isn’t ‘I know everything.’ It’s knowing you can figure it out.”Why true confidence starts with humility—not bravado.Triggers Are Teachers“If something sets you off, it’s pointing to a wound. Not the world.”How to decode your emotional responses instead of avoiding them.From Victim to Victor“You don’t need to wait for closure. You get to choose the story you tell yourself.”How Jevon reclaimed his narrative after being wrongfully accused.The ‘Own Your Kingdom’ Philosophy“Your kingdom is your mind, your energy, your space. Guard it like royalty.”What leadership looks like when it starts from within.When to Say No“If it doesn’t align with your purpose, it’s a distraction—no matter how good it sounds.”The power of non-negotiables in building a life by design._____________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Jevon Wooden --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.20 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 1.5% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>180,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation
from around the world.
Today's guest is Jvon Wooden, Army veteran, leadership coach, and someone whose story
grabs you from the very first moment.
At 17, he was facing prison time.
A few years later, he was leading soldiers in combat.
In this two-part series, Javon shares how trauma shaped his purpose, how empathy became
his strategy, and why he now helps leaders build emotional intelligence
like the careers depend on it? Because they do. Let's jump in.
So you stayed in the army for over 10 years? Is that right? Yep. I was in there for 12 years. And my last deployment was probably not probably, it was the hardest thing because, and this is one of the reasons why I knew like my body couldn't handle it, mentally and emotionally, and I just couldn't do it. So I was in Afghanistan in 2016, 2017, and there was a suicide bombing that
happened where I was stationed on Bagram-Peerfield.
And the suicide bombing was on Veterans Day.
So Veterans Day, traditionally has been a very hard time since then.
We lost, I think we lost six or seven people and then 18 others at least got
injured, got injured physically.
But of course, mentally and emotionally, those of us who survived or who wasn't hard physically,
that plays a toll on you.
And then I was a part of the remains cleanup team where that's what mentally really hit me hard
because I'm like, I'm treating the bomber with the same respect that my friends and my comrades
and my colleagues that he killed.
And that was the, another inflection point for me, because I, when I got home
from that deployment in 2017, I just was not the same sick and it hit me like six
months later, here I am, like after that, I took some time to just like travel and
get back into the space of civilian life.
And it just didn't work.
Six months later, I struggled severely with depression and PTSD.
Kept having the same nightmare over and over again.
And at the end of that nightmare, it was a red flash.
I just remember the red flash.
It was the detonation from the bomb.
And I had to go to therapy, and the therapist once asked me,
she said, what happens at the end? I said, I don't know.
It doesn't end.
Once the flash happens, I wake up.
And she was like, I want you to see that as something that's saying that there's
something unfinished in your life.
So she gave me this whole exercise to find what was unfinished.
And this ties back into my childhood because what was unfinished
was my relationship with my father.
And I hadn't been in touch with him.
He actually got arrested while I was with him.
So that was when we were trying
to establish a relationship.
SWAT team jumps out while we're at the gas station
and they put me down on the ground.
I thought it was something I did, but it wasn't.
So it was him.
So fast
forward, I had to reestablish that relationship with my father and that nightmare stopped
since then. And what another changed, my daughter was born on Veterans Day. So it went from
the worst day to the best day. And that's just how things happen, right? That's the
end of this moments that I really leaned into now with all the change and adversity that
has gone through throughout my life.
From what I know, the military really shaped you, taught you leadership, exposed you to all kinds of people and pressure.
Most of us never experienced that. We work in stable, quiet, and peaceful environments. You didn't
just learn resilience. You lived it. These days, a lot of people talk about resilience,
but few have actually walked that path. I've had my own struggles, including three episodes of depression, but nothing
like what you've gone through physically or mentally. So I'm curious, was that what led you to become a coach and speaker on emotional intelligence?
Did all of that push you to help others this way?
That's the component of it for sure.
That's everything that I've seen and gone through and realizing that tech was just not,
it wasn't my thing.
I didn't feel like I was making an impact in that.
So I wanted to really help people. And so that was one catalyst. And then the other one is,
when I look at the world from this lens that I have, I see that the biggest cause of all the
issues we are facing is connection. Human is going out the window for a lot of leaders, whether that's in the country level,
whether it's in the corporate space, doesn't matter.
It's like going away.
I mean, yes, we can blame technology, but it's not.
Technology can be an extra force multiplier, so to speak, because we can do this.
Right?
I can see no matter where you are, we can have these conversations.
But that's just a scapegoat that I see people use.
What it really is people are not taking the time.
They're not putting in the effort to make genuine connections.
And so what have you done for me lately, society?
It's say, oh, I'm going to blame this thing and that thing instead of taking
accountability and taking ownership for what I can do to improve the
situation in my company.
Those types of things.
So that's really what sparked me to really dig into this and research all of this stuff
and start speaking on the topic and coaching and everything else.
And the reason why I focus on like readers specifically is because that trick was down.
So if you have a leader that is not emotionally intelligent,
that does not show empathy,
that does not take care of those people,
I've seen the cause of that.
And the cause of that, a lot of people are like,
oh, you just leave a job, you just do this,
and then you go to your normal life.
That's not what happens.
That is impacting people's lives.
That is causing people to take their lives.
Opioid addiction is at an all time high.
Substance abuse is out, is crazy right now
in a lot of industries.
So that's really what has caused me to do this.
Like I've lost a lot of friends to suicide.
And when I look back at it,
a lot of them didn't show any signs.
Because in the military, you're just taught to,
you show this facade, like I'm good.
They say, if you're in the pain, you break your leg, you drink water.
And that's the, that was the mentality.
Even the military has had to change their culture because they realized that what
they were doing just does not work because we are humans.
We have emotions and when you get weighed down and you go into that
darkness, it's very hard to get out of it.
I don't want people to get into that darkness, it's very hard to get out of it. As you know, I don't want people to get into that darkness.
Or when they start to feel like the light is leaving a little bit,
I want them to realize that they can get support,
that they don't have to walk that walk alone,
that they are people who really care and support genuinely,
that love is not just a business strategy, but it's a human thing.
So all these things really just drive me and keep me going
and has caused me to want to double down
on this emotional intelligence thing.
You've worked with a lot of corporate leaders.
Without naming names,
what kind of issues are they facing?
You can give me a general overview or if there's one story that
really captures it. Feel free to share that too.
A lot of us were taught to show strength, to always act like we've got it together.
And many think resilience means just powering through.
But we both know that it's only part of the picture.
So I'd love to hear what are these leaders struggling with,
and how do you help them shift their mindset or approach?
Absolutely. In the U.S., the construction space has been,
that's one of the industries that is going
through all these issues that I just mentioned. Now, with corporations and leaders, typically,
they're focused on like the bottom line. So everything I do has to tie into that, right?
Profitability, right? Employee engagement, retention, et cetera. So everything I do is under
the guise of those, right? And so I'll come in and I'll speak about emotional intelligence.
I let them know that's a byproduct of taking care of your people.
So results over people is no longer the way, it's not going to work.
People aren't going to stay in places that they don't feel valued, etc.
But what I like to do is I like to take statistics.
I like to show them statistics of how, if they continue on this path, I was going to impact their people, them, and their companies.
So that statistic I mentioned of suicide, right? Construction industry is second only to the mining and oil and gas industry here in the United States to suicides and opioid addiction.
So that's one of the first things I wanna show.
And then once I do that, it shows them like empathy
and all these things that I'm talking about is relevant.
All right, so that's the first thing I do.
Second thing is I show them what it looks like
because there's a misconception
that being empathetic is weak.
All right, they're like, oh, if I'm empathetic
then I'm just gonna get walked all over.
So I have to dispel that myth.
So I have to show them my empathy is actually the opposite because empathy is
holding yourself and that person accountable.
It's the ability to see and understand their perspective and standpoint and get
to the point where you can ask them questions that clarify what's going on.
What do they need to feel supported?
What do they need to succeed?
To have foresight to say they're going to need these resources.
Put yourself in their shoes.
To get these things done, they're going to need support from you.
And a lot of leaders just don't have that type of vision.
So I really help them to see how empathy taps into their daily operations.
How it can improve, for instance, supply chain.
If you don't have an inclusive space,
you're skipping over people who may have better ideas
than you do as the leadership committee.
You're not giving people their voice.
You're not able to see the diamonds that you have
within your organization because they don't look like you.
So all those things, right?
All those things are part of emotional intelligence. Like I mentioned earlier, realizing my biases, looking in the room
and saying, okay, everyone looks like me. So how are we getting the best diverse
perspectives? All those things tie into emotional intelligence. So if you're
going to really create the spaces that organizations have been talking about,
especially now with DEI initiatives being rolled back.
We have to say, what exactly were those initiatives for?
Because the work was not about hiring unqualified people into roles.
It was about amplifying, giving people opportunities who deserve those opportunities.
And that's really what emotional intelligence is.
But to see it, you have to listen.
You have to take a step back
and not feel like you have to have all the answers. You have to be willing to try different things and
take calculated risks, right? You have to be willing to invest in your people and realize that
whatever result you want, it will not happen if you don't take care of your people. Because if
your people are not at their best, you cannot get the best results.
So these are a lot of things that I work on, but it's always tied to the bottom
line initially until I come in with them.
Same thing with coaching.
Leaders are under the perception that they cannot be empathetic and that they
need to make decisions fast and all these other things.
I show them case studies on what that looks like.
So if you think about Microsoft, for instance, when Satya Nadella became the CEO,
right, he didn't just go in there and make sweeping changes.
He actually listened to his people, saw what they thought, right?
He went to different locations and all this other stuff.
The CEO of Best Buy did the same thing.
He went to different stores, got ideas from them for the people who were doing the work every day.
That's empathetic leadership.
That's transformational leadership.
They're really synonymous.
So that's how I do the work these days.
Let me ask you this.
Empathy.
You've mentioned that word a few times already.
And I want to zoom in on it for a moment.
We all say it's important.
We know it matters.
But the truth is, empathy is hard.
Hard to develop, hard to sustain.
Because at the end of the day, we are wired to look at the world from our own lens.
We are naturally self-focused. It's just how we're built.
And sometimes people even confuse empathy with sympathy.
So I'd love to hear you take.
How do you help leaders who struggle with empathy?
Can you share an example?
Maybe a CEO or someone in a senior role who came to you
stuck and how you help them really understand
and practice empathy in a meaningful way in a business setting.
And I'm glad you're bringing this up. So again, empathy is really counterintuitive
to our normal human condition, right? Because you really have to stop and pause and say, you know, I'm going to go out on the limb. I don't feel safe doing this action, but I know I need to do it.
For instance, like giving someone delegation.
Delegation is a part of empathetic leadership and a lot of leadership
struggle with letting go of that control.
So that aspect is counterintuitive to what they're used to.
So for instance, I have a leader, he's a CMO for a company
and I've been coaching him and he comes off just brash.
Quite frankly, they say he's an asshole at work.
And his leader came to me.
She said, you know what?
This is his last shot.
Really?
This morose, I have to find someone else.
I don't want to cause he does great work, but he's really making it hard for everyone
else.
Like the culture is just suffering because of the way he comes at it.
He's apathetic.
He doesn't give a dang what his people care.
He just wants the job done. All right. But when I coach him, he says,
I actually really care about them. I want them to do well,
but I don't know how to communicate that.
I don't know how to say like when they make a mistake, Oh man,
how can I support you?
How can I make sure that you have what you need so that in the future you have success?
Instead he comes out and he says, what the, didn't I just explain
to you what needs to be done?
So that's the thing.
Placing that interrupt between how we normally react, filtering it and
understanding we can get the same message across without being that way.
With taking the other person's perspective into account.
And sometimes that starts with a question.
Sometimes as a leader, instead of saying, why the heck did you do this wrong?
I gave you everything I need.
I thought I told you exactly how to do it.
You can say, okay, let me ask you this, right?
Cause this isn't what I expected to see.
What I would like to see from you is this thing.
What can I do to help you get there?
Sometimes that's the best thing that you can do.
That communication shift says the same exact message,
but gets the point across differently and helps that person
feel like they're supported versus feeling like they're a
little kid when they're an adult.
So you have to be willing to think that way and pause for a
minute because a lot of people are not taking that pause to really hit the cognitive mind.
They're letting their emotions get the best of them.
And a lot of people will say, I'm not emotional.
Yes, you are.
Yes, you are.
I mean, that's what's driving the way you're reacting and responding.
And the key to that is I mentioned react versus respond.
A lot of people are reacting.
They're just knee-jerk.
They're just not taking a break, not taking a moment.
So we have to get to the point where we're responding intelligently to things.
And then the other component is relinquishing that control,
realizing that you are better off as a team than as a solo unit.
So a lot of the leaders, they feel like they have to have the right answers.
But I always challenge them to create like feedback forums
so they can get new ideas, innovation from their people,
near real-time feedback on how they could be a better leader,
you know, what people need. Those are some of the easiest wins,
but they're hard because again, they're not what they're used to doing.
They're used to coming into the little siloed environment
with their leadership team.
They make a decision up here
and then they trickle it down here
and then they wonder why it fails.
We have to get it where it's bottom up.
We have an idea, but we want to co-create it
with the people that's actually creating the impact
that's really working to get the outcomes that we're getting.
So there's a lot there
and we can have a whole another conversation.
How funny.
But the real key is showing them the difference
between empathy, not really caring,
just focusing on the bottom line.
Sympathy, saying, oh, I'm sorry that you had to go that,
get it done anyway.
You're looking on the outside end,
whereas empathy is putting yourself
in that person's perspective and saying, you know what,
how can I support them better? Because I understand that it may be something that I can do to help them
out. And even if you have someone who's just not performing at the level, you also have the
opportunity to see if maybe that's not the fit for them first before you get rid of them, before you
fire them. Right? So a lot of times a job rotation could be a part of your solution. So that's a part
of empathy, giving people the opportunity to showcase their various
skills even though that's not what their resume said.
Because I've seen it where I've come into an org for a cultural transformation consultation
and people showcase the skills, but because the leader is not seeing it, they're not looking
at it, they just see them as a role, a fit in this role.
They don't understand that they can actually
be better over here.
So we really have to open our eyes as leaders
and slow down a bit to understand what's happening
and get the diverse perspectives of our people.
And that's how we're going to be firing our own cylinders.
You focus a lot on emotions and emotional intelligence.
And of course, we're human.
We have emotions.
But being able to understand them,
manage them, and work with them,
that's what makes someone a better leader,
a better teammate, a better person.
So here's my question.
What are some of the emotional blind spots
we need to watch out for?
Maybe it's fear, maybe ego, maybe something else.
I ask this because it's not just about learning what to do,
it's about knowing what to look out for.
These hidden villains, if you will, can pull us back into old habits or reactive behavior.
And if we can name them, we can manage them better. So from your work, what are those few things we should all be more mindful of?
Whether we are leaders or just trying to grow as human beings?
The first step is to master you.
So I see a lot of leaders who really don't take time to just be with themselves, to get to discover who they are, what are their values, all these types of things.
And a lot of people say it's fluff. It's really not.
Because what happens is they're so busy. They have meetings back to back.
They're always on. They're always thinking.
Once they're done with that, they have to do things with their family or be social.
All these, all these things they get to do, but they now feel
like they have to do because it's just, it's just a job.
So I recommend for everyone to just take some time daily, even if it's 15
minutes to just be right.
Put some time on your calendar to just focus, to disconnect from tech, to
disconnect from meetings, to just re, to disconnect from tech, to disconnect from meetings,
to just re-center yourself.
That's the first step to get to know who you are.
What are your thoughts even saying?
What are you saying to yourself?
That's the first thing.
That's the self-awareness component.
The second thing is understanding your behavioral patterns, because once we get
the pattern recognition down, now we can make some changes.
So if you understand your behavioral patterns, how do you typically operate in a given situation?
What are your triggers?
What's frustrating you?
If you notice that there's always, you can have the best day and then one person comes in and that just
throws you off for some reason.
What is it about that person?
Right.
That's really the thing that's triggering you.
So we have to get into the perspective of looking at it from that lens,
like understanding who we are first,
and then being able to pause and really filter our emotions
before we respond or make a decision.
Because if you make it from your emotions,
chances are it's not really that rational.
We may try to justify it and say it's rational, but it's probably not.
So you have to recognize and be able to name
the emotion that you're feeling,
because the making allows you to say,
am I in the space to be making
these key decisions right now?
Do I need a moment?
Do I need some more information?
Whatever the case is,
it's really about taking ownership of you,
being accountability of you,
and then identifying who
can be your support system to make sure that you're in the best position to be your best self.
And then you can move into talking about the social and relationship side of things.
So from that perspective, I want leaders to just identify one way that they feel like they can
interact a little bit better, communicate a little bit better.
Just in general. So for me, I had to focus more on listening to understand and coaching really helped
me with that. So I would be the person, I'd be like, uh-huh, uh-huh, blah, blah, blah. Or I can say my,
I want to get my point out there because naturally I'm a very assertive person, I'm a very direct
person, et cetera. But I realized I could still do that, but understand that I can respect the other person's point.
And now I'm very curious about what other people think and why they think that way.
So I recommend that leaders look at their behavioral patterns and then see how that kind of shows up
when they're interacting with various people and then seeing if they can identify how they can just communicate
with that person just a little bit better. Sometimes you can ask. Sometimes you can ask the person,
like, hey, what's the best way to communicate with you? But wanting to get you, give you feedback,
what would be the best way to do that? We can be proactive with our conversation. So when we do
get into that moment, that's a little bit more heated, we've already trained as we fought at so as the military says, because that's really what's going to make us better.
So emotional intelligence starts from within, starts with us.
I couldn't agree more.
I'm a big believer in self-awareness. And honestly, I've seen this so often.
People go through life all the way to retirement and realize they never really got to know themselves.
They just follow the playbook, check all the boxes, did what was expected, and maybe they did it well, made money, built a career, but deep down,
they don't feel fulfilled, they don't feel happy. That's why self-awareness matters.
When you know who you are, it helps you build empathy and resilience.
Losing a job, for example, is hard.
But that doesn't mean you've lost yourself.
You haven't lost your skills.
You haven't lost your value.
You haven't lost who you are. Resilience is remembering that empathy includes self
empathy to which is self love. Supporting yourself the way you will support others.
That's one of the biggest lessons I've taken away from our conversation today.
Absolutely. And when you think about that example of job loss, if you are empathetic and you ask for support from people, they are more inclined to help you find that next role because you've treated them well and they remember that.
Is this anything you'd like to add?
Something you really want to share with the audience?
Please go ahead.
The mic is yours.
Oh, no.
I really appreciate you.
I think you're a phenomenal host.
You got it down to a science, man.
So I appreciate you having me on.
It was a great conversation.
I really appreciate you.
Great conversation. I really appreciate you. That's the end for our series on Javon Wooden.
Javon shows us that mistake isn't weakness, it's the work.
If you're trying to lead, to build, or just grow as a person.
His experience is proof that change isn't only possible.
It's contagious.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget to subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated reviews,
check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.