Huberman Lab - Coleman Ruiz: Overcoming Physical & Emotional Challenges
Episode Date: April 8, 2024In this episode, my guest is Coleman Ruiz, a former Tier One U.S. Navy SEAL joint task force commander. He served in Afghanistan and Iraq and as a BUD/S training officer. He shares his journey from ch...ildhood through the Naval Academy to elite Navy SEAL special operations. He shares the physical and emotional challenges he has overcome and discusses his struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He also talks about the key role of mentors, family and friends in building resilience. Coleman gives us a raw, humble account of hitting rock bottom. He tells of the intense pain, fear, depression and suicidality in his journey of redemption. Coleman’s story is a real-life hero’s journey. He tells it with extraordinary vulnerability and humility. He explains the challenges and sudden tragedies that helped to ground, shape and renew him. His story will inspire listeners of all ages and backgrounds. Note: This conversation includes profanity and topics that are not suitable for all audiences and ages. For show notes, including additional resources, please visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/huberman Maui Nui Venison: https://mauinuivension.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Plunge: https://plunge.com/huberman Momentous: https://livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Coleman Ruiz (00:01:55) Sponsors: BetterHelp, Maui Nui Venison & Eight Sleep (00:06:06) Childhood, “Wildness” (00:13:24) Wrestling, Combat Sports & Respect (00:22:26) Divorce, College Applications & Naval Academy (00:29:51) Sponsor: AG1 (00:31:22) Prep School, Patriotism, Fear (00:40:08) Growth Mindset, 24-Hour Horizon (00:43:02) Naval Academy, Mentor, Focus (00:52:45) Wife, Work Ethic (00:59:23) Sponsor: Plunge (01:00:51) Navy SEALs, BUD/S, Hell Week (01:04:51) BUD/S Success Predictors; Divorce & Aloneness; Rebellion (01:16:30) Patriotism, Navy SEALs, Green Team (01:22:15) Advanced Training, Tier One, Free-Fall (01:26:13) Special Operations, Deaths & Grief (01:36:08) Mentor Death & Facing Mortality (01:47:49) Warriors & Compassion; Trauma, Family (01:52:37) Civilian Life Adjustment (01:57:39) Hero With a Thousand Faces, Civilian Return & PTSD (02:07:03) Massage, Perspective, Space-Time Bridging (02:14:10) Psychedelics, Connection, Warrior Culture (02:19:15) Rock Bottom: Talk Therapy, Depression, Alcohol (02:25:50) Emotional & Physical Pain, Vulnerability, Fighter Mentality (02:30:42) Suicide, Asking For Help & Support (02:38:32) Therapy, PTSD Recovery, Dread; Pharmacology (02:44:54) Healing Process: Unsatisfaction & Asking For Help (02:54:03) Daily Routine, Movement, Nutrition (03:02:22) Manhood, Range, Parenthood, Surrender (03:10:08) Current Pursuits (03:16:01) Zero-Cost Support, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, YouTube Feedback, Momentous, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast,
where we discuss science
and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman,
and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology
at Stanford School of Medicine.
My guest today is Coleman Ruiz.
Coleman Ruiz is a former Tier 1 Navy SEAL special operator.
I think it's fair to assume that most of you
have never heard of Coleman Ruiz before.
And in fact, it was part of his former life job description
to be largely covert,
such that only his family and friends
really knew what he did for a living.
He is however, now living as a civilian.
And the reason I invited Coleman on this podcast
was essentially to tell us his life story,
which of course includes his time in the SEAL teams,
but includes so much more
that I'm certain is of value to everyone.
Today, Coleman shares with you his remarkable journey
from childhood through his teenage years into the military
and some of the things that happened during his time
in the military, which then informed
his post-military civilian life
and what it is to be a father, a husband,
and somebody who has experienced tremendous loss
at various stages of his life,
as well as tremendous triumph.
Indeed, if ever there was a life
that could be framed within the context
of the so-called hero's journey,
it is the life of Coleman Ruiz.
Coleman Ruiz's life is one that embodies focus and pursuit,
family and friends and love,
all the things that we think of
in terms of having a rich life,
but also one that includes many unforeseen tragedies,
many unforeseen challenges, both internal and external.
Coleman also shares with a rare
and extraordinary degree of vulnerability,
the extent to which challenges in life,
both external and internal,
have helped shape him as a human being.
What follows is a discussion that everyone,
male, female, young or old,
and regardless of position in life,
is sure to derive tremendous benefit from.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize
that this podcast is separate
from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort
to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science related tools
to the general public.
In keeping with that theme,
I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is BetterHelp.
BetterHelp offers professional therapy
with a licensed therapist carried out entirely online.
I've been doing therapy for over 30 years.
Initially, I started therapy because, well,
I was required to in order to stay in school,
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There are essentially three things
that great therapy provides.
First of all, it provides a rapport with somebody
that you can trust and talk about all issues with.
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And third, expert therapy can provide useful insights that you wouldn't have otherwise
had access to.
In fact, I consider doing regular therapy as important as working out one's body in
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And with better help, scheduling and doing therapy becomes extremely convenient.
They can match you to a therapist that can provide those three things, excellent rapport, support, and insight. And they can do so on a schedule that matches yours.
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Now I've spoken many times before on this podcast
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both enough sleep and enough quality sleep.
When we do that, everything, our mental health,
our physical health, performance in any sports
or school, et cetera, all get better.
And when we're not sleeping well or enough,
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One of the key things to getting a great night's sleep
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And now for my conversation with Coleman Ruiz.
Coleman Ruiz, welcome.
Thank you.
Very excited to see you.
It's great to have you here.
I'm guessing most people are probably not familiar
with Coleman Ruiz.
So let's start at the beginning.
Where were you born?
What was the context of your home life?
And maybe let's get up to maybe elementary school,
middle school, and whatever top contour
or deep details you want to get into.
Yeah.
We're all ears.
Okay, I'll bring us up to seventh grade
because I would say that was probably
the first big inflection point in my life.
I grew up in, I was born in New Orleans
in a suburb called East New Orleans East we call it.
And I have an older sister, two younger brothers. My dad was a welder. My mom was a dental assistant.
And we had a couple of boxers and dogs. And we had a very modest, very modest upbringing. I won't
over dramatize it. But you know, admittedly,
you know, sometimes we got cheese from the lady
across the street who didn't want her welfare cheese
and it was one of those.
You know, I could tell my parents were fighting
for every nickel.
And, but it was great.
I mean, my cousin grew up across the street from me.
He's exactly my age.
We had that, at least some of my memory, Andrew,
of it was it was very pleasant.
I learned later that you forget a lot of things
in your childhood that were unpleasant.
But my initial memories when I started thinking
about this kind of thing, and you know,
as you and I have discussed, getting professional help,
and you start to learn a little bit more
about your childhood. But I remember it being very pleasant. You and you started to learn a little bit more about your childhood.
But I remember it being very pleasant.
You know, you've told me about your background
in skateboarding and stuff.
You know, we skateboarded the neighborhood.
BMX was a big thing when we were kids.
It was very much a rat the streets upbringing.
There was a park behind the neighborhood.
We would cut through the fence and go,
you know, this kind of thing.
I played football and baseball,
and very normal in that regard.
Went to the neighborhood school.
And then in sixth grade, I went to what was my high school,
but it went fifth through 12th,
called Holy Cross High School in the lower ninth ward,
which that spot is now vacated because the school,
I went back after Hurricane Katrina,
the whole school had to be moved.
And I went there in seventh grade
and it was a hellacious start.
I mean, it was detention after detention,
you know, fist fight after fist fight and damn near.
Were you the instigator of those fights?
Probably some.
I definitely fell in with the wrong crowd initially
in that sixth and seventh grade years
and I wouldn't say it was so extreme that like it was complete mayhem but I was definitely on
you know problem situation number whatever when my parents were called in and it was kind of the
last straw type thing and I got cut from baseball. My grades were fine. I was always a pretty good student.
It was just teenager shenanigans. And then I went out for wrestling.
Can I just pause you for a second? So on the violence part, I have a little bit of experience
with this, but violence can come from trying to protect others. Yeah.
violence can come from trying to protect others,
instigating, it can come from the wildness, just trying to see what it feels like, experimentation,
and any number of other things,
all the way to pure sociopathy,
which we know you are not and weren't.
Do you recall feeling something inside that inspired this?
Was it for attention? Did it feel good afterwards? Do you recall feeling something inside that inspired this?
Was it for attention?
Did it feel good afterwards?
Can you recall what it was about?
I think it was the wildness thing, Andrew, honestly.
It wasn't, I mean, I believe I don't have a malicious bone in my body.
Like we all have that in us.
Obviously, my profession later in the military, you know, I
Was able to activate that and I feel like I still can and I was certainly able to in sports
Which is why that seventh grade year was really pivotal
but even now it's funny it's even funny you ask about the wildness because
Let me put it in movie terms like one of my favorite movie scenes of all time is in the movie The Town.
When Ben Affleck walks in the room, Jeremy Renner is his partner essentially, and he
walks in the room and he says, we're going to hurt somebody.
I can't tell you where and I can't tell you when.
And he pauses and Jeremy Renner takes maybe a three second pause and he says, whose car
are we taking?
He doesn't even ask, you know, he's just
They're just wild and excited about doing something wild. I don't promote like going to hurt somebody
Of course were you the Afflector of the renner and Affleck, excuse me or renner in that I was
I
Feel like I was mostly the renner
Put it this way if if you have some good idea this afternoon,
like let's go fucking try this, I'm good.
I'm ready.
And I think it's just exciting.
You know, I hate rules, I hate being told to do.
It's one of the things that was so frustrating
about the military.
The rules are in place for a reason.
They're written in blood, I get all that.
But we're so constrained sometimes.
I think that was just all coming into fruition
that seventh grade year.
And I enjoyed going wild.
It was just fun.
And frankly, we weren't.
These fist fights and this trouble wasn't
like going to get some kid.
Those other kids wanted the wildness too.
But the school didn't want that.
And then I went out for wrestling that year
and I could put it all into the wrestling room
and it was awesome.
Before we talk about wrestling
and why it was so meaningful as a channel for you,
a little bit of neurobiology or else I wouldn't be.
Great.
Andrew Huberman.
There's a really interesting phenomenon that one observes
in both animals and humans,
which is that somewhere around adolescence,
when the hormone surge begins, but even before that,
there's a phenomenon called dispersal.
It's very different than fighting per se
or sexual activity per se.
It's a literal dispersal from one's home environment
or an animal's a nest in which animals and humans,
and we're animals after all, start foraging new environments
in a very, as you point out, chaotic way.
It's not organized.
It's a little nuts.
And biologists and neurobiologists
in particular have observed changes in neural
circuitry that drive this.
So some of it's hormonal, but a lot of it is the brain taking all this input that one
has been exposed to, sun, earth, food, others, social interactions, and starting to essentially
throw the different paints, the different colors of paint together and just trying things. Some kids are more prone to this than others. It certainly has a hormonal component. Boys and
girls tend to do this differently, but they both do it. And psychologists and neurobiologists see
this as a fundamental shift in our underlying circuitry. So just a little bit of food for
thought to put what you just described in context. With that said, tell us about wrestling.
I mean, Andrew, in many ways, like I said, that was the first inflection point.
It was like immediate, I mean, immediate uptake.
Within a week, I knew this was my thing.
Maybe the first practice.
What do you think it was?
So when I was younger, my aunt and uncle,
when I was like seven years old,
they started taking me to road races.
And I'm sure, just running races,
one mile and 5K races when I was really small kid.
For you to run.
Mm-hmm, to run with them.
They were into the road racing thing back in the day
when it was brand new, you know, the 80s.
I'm 48, so I was born in 75, so I was seven,
you know, eight years old at the time and
I was into like obviously cannot win this race. I just the pain of
the effort
was so comfortable and
then
It's kind of silly but like I won the PT
Competition at like the Boy Scouts thing in Audubon Park. PT is physical training. Yeah, physical training.
Physical training.
And so I won like the whatever when I was young in Boy Scouts or something and then
it just snowballed.
Then I was just like the physical activity still today is I mean if someone said what
are you really in love with?
It's that.
And so when I walked into the wrestling room it was so extreme compared to
anything else I had ever done. Football, baseball, whatever. I never really liked any of those sports.
I played them all but I didn't like them. And always my dad wrestled in high school and college
and we were you know always rough and tumble in that regard. And I even have a couple of buddies in the teams,
you know, who obviously were college wrestlers.
There's a lot of wrestlers in the teams.
And people would always joke about how we're so handsy.
You know, our hands are always on each other.
And that was just a thing for us.
Like, I loved the close contact.
I loved the fight of it.
What I really love about combat sports,
because I boxed in high school between wrestling seasons was the respect. Tell me more about that. You just
don't have, there are some of course, like you can see guys hyping it up and doing
their thing in UFC these days and that's totally fine, but for the most part if
you have fighters of any type like like in a setting, when they
don't have to do, you know, the stuff for TV and whatnot, they respect each other because
and they respect the effort and because you know what it takes and you know how hard it
is to face another man in the middle of a mat with no equipment and nowhere to run and no timeouts and
No one to tap in that's extreme, you know, and it may not seem like high school wrestling is extreme
but as you just mentioned something about you know development when you're 14 and
You're facing another like that's the first time is someone trying to take your life? No, they're not, but it feels that way.
And then you go and you put in all these hours of training
and you don't eat during the week
and you run stadiums or you run levies
and fireman's carries and all of it,
while you're not eating and making weight
and you're in the sauna and it's just a very tough thing
to do, combat sports, and I love the respect
that it engenders between the people who do it.
I think it was Sam Sheridan who wrote
A Fighter's Heart, an excellent book.
And for anyone, male or female, any age
who's interested in the human spirit,
I recommend A Fighter's Heart because it's about the different fight sports,
but it's really about the path of self-discovery
that occurs in various martial arts.
And as you said, especially boxing is very gentlemanly.
You touch gloves, you start, then the bell goes off,
you go to your corner.
Sometimes people lose it, bite off people's ears
and things like that, but for the most corner, like it's, you know, sometimes people lose it, bite off people's ears and things like that.
But for the most part, the sport is very structured.
As you were doing this, what was happening with school?
Did it help your academic studies?
Did it keep them more or less the same?
And how did your family and your peer group view what you were doing?
Were you considered strange for liking wrestling so much?
I mean, you're dieting, right?
You're a young male dieting
for purpose of sport and performance.
You're sitting in saunas,
you're running wrapped in plastic bags.
All this like, I mean, a good friend of ours,
who was also in the SEAL teams said,
once said to me, he said, you know, wrestlers are different.
And I think he meant different in quotes.
Yeah, I think that's true.
School, my grades immediately went up, Andrew.
It was like, oh my gosh, the discipline of all of it,
my grades were always better in wrestling season
than out of wrestling season.
Interesting.
Like when I was cut loose out of the structure,
then it wasn't good.
And between seventh and eighth grade and all that, I didn't have any crazy shenanigans going on. I wasn't gonna get kicked out of school structure then, it wasn't good. And between seventh and eighth grade and all that,
I didn't have any crazy shenanigans going on.
I wasn't gonna get kicked out of school, whatever.
I was doing normal stuff for the age, but.
So the fight stopped.
Totally, totally,
because I could put it into the wrestling space.
And I think, I grew up obviously in New Orleans,
and I think down there, it's baseball, football, basketball, wrestling, wrestling is not I mean I was lucky to wrestle in college at all
because it wasn't like Iowa was looking to recruit me you know they have plenty
of people to recruit and they don't need any Louisiana wrestlers although Daniel
Cormier grew up like north of the lake he was four years younger I was telling
this to somebody we don't know each. I'd love to meet him Super impressive athlete we heard that and some kid up in the North Shore
I think is where he grew up whooping everybody's ass
His name is Daniel Cormier and then you know, obviously the rest is history
But the sport is not big in Louisiana, which is all to say that
We were kind of a unicorn. We had was it was very odd at my high school specifically,
we had one coach, his son, either national runner up,
his name was Willie Gatson, Willie passed away.
I think his son ended up at Iowa State
and within the last five or six years
was either a national champ or a runner up.
Willie, when I was in eighth grade, Andrew,
Willie was at my high school.
Like, I have no idea how Willie Gatson
ended up in New Orleans, but we ended up with this
cluster of wrestlers at that time with the right coaching and a few kids were going to
junior college and coming back and wrestling in college and coming back and there were
three or four guys, I remember specifically in eighth grade because I started, at least
in the junior high ranks, I started to take off my second year, these guys would abuse me in the wrestling room.
They were seniors in high school.
I was 112 pounds or 132 pounds my freshman year.
And they would just, in my eighth grade year, and they would just abuse me.
Define abuse.
In all the legal, normal wrestling ways.
Like, there's the wrestling gets broken up, obviously, by weight.
You got the heavyweights
on one end of the room, the lightweights
on the other end of the room,
and the young kids stay with the young kids
for the most part.
And a few of these guys would drag me down
to the varsity end and I would wrestle
with the middleweights and they would beat
the shit out of me.
And eventually you get to the point where you're like,
fuck this, I had enough.
And that's when sort of things started to turn.
But I think that wrestlers are different,
and my peer group, one or two of my really good friends
wrestled, but most of them played other sports.
And so, but in every sense of the word,
life got better for me because of that sport.
It changed my life.
So you wrestled all through high school?
Oh yeah, yep.
At that point, were you discovering relationships, girls?
Were you partying?
Were you a drinker, used drugs?
No drugs.
I mean, it's New Orleans, right?
It's like one of the things that was tough.
I'm glad I got out of the city, frankly,
because it was party time outside the season.
Yeah, girls, girlfriends, normal stuff in that regard lots of drinking
Lots of rat in the streets, you know in those days in the 90s
Um, but you kept it inside the lane lines sounds like no drunk driving no arrests
No a little bit of that but not nothing crazy in that regard. I think I understood the consequences and I really cared about my career. I really wanted to wrestle in college. My grades were excellent. My SAT scores
not so much, but I started winning really fast. And my last two years in high school, I was 89-0,
and I almost won my sophomore year. So I was runner up in the state my sophomore year. So I was runner-up in the state my sophomore year. I always
joke with the with the boys. All my boys are way better athletes than I ever
could think about. Your sons? Yeah, yeah. Right. But in eighth grade I made
varsity and it was like, was it eighth grade? Yeah, and I lost like 75% of the matches, you
know, but you just grind it out and it's how I got into the Naval Academy, which is a whole nother story, but.
So let's talk about that.
So you finish high school,
you head to the Naval Academy.
Why the Naval Academy?
It's actually a crazy story behind this,
which maybe we'll circle back to, but
the summer, gosh, I had forgotten
that this started in seventh grade too.
The summer between my seventh and eighth grade year, my grandfather was too young to join
the Navy and he wanted to go to the Naval Academy during World War II and he lied to
the recruiter and he got into the Merchant Marines.
His pretty sure first cousin, my uncle and my cousins are like first cousins once removed.
My uncle Jim Therrell was at a family reunion in Mississippi, which we were at, and he didn't
mention the Naval Academy.
Family reunion ends, they all go home.
And he starts sending me Naval Academy paraphernalia.
I knew nothing about the military.
And I just thought about it, you know, and he would send me stuff
You know, you didn't I wouldn't have the internet right you sending these booklets and you don't like authority
No, I have not been in the military, but I've done some work with y'all. Yeah, and
There's a there's a lot of
Hierarchy and authority. Yeah, that's true. It truth, Andrew, is like it just seemed exciting.
I wasn't really thinking about the implications
as 18-year-olds, you know?
It looked very exciting to me,
and having gotten some professional help
in the intervening years,
what I really think was a big part of it
was my parents got divorced my senior year in high school,
and the family unit just blew up right and so it
also represented an escape you know get out and go get your life out of the New
Orleans and just go just go do something. Were you a part of that that obviously
you were part of the family that got divorced. Was it chaotic? Was it controlled?
You and I are the exact same age.
We're both 48, born in 75.
Back then it was a lot less common for people being,
they called them broken homes back then.
Yeah, that's right.
Nowadays I don't think they call that.
Everyone just cites the statistic
that more than half of marriages end in divorce,
as if perhaps to normalize it, but that's more than half of marriages end in divorce as if it perhaps to normalize it but that's more than half do you recall feeling
distraught about that or was it just kind of the natural consequence of
something you had observed a long time like oh that kind of makes sense that
no it was a shock to me it wasn't a shock to my older sister I just
remember come this was the thought at the time.
This is like seared in my brain.
This has nothing to do with me.
That wasn't like some sophisticated view.
It was mostly, fuck this, I'm not dealing with this.
I have my own life.
They're gonna have to do what they're gonna do,
meaning my parents.
I'm getting the hell out of here.
Not a bad mindset for a kid at that stage.
If it had been four years younger,
that might not be the best mindset,
but as you're heading off to college,
that's reasonably healthy mindset,
as opposed to getting enmeshed in the,
what happened and this and that.
Can I ask you, at that stage,
you're 17, 18 years old at that point,
were you journaling at that point?
No.
No, no journaling, no introspective work.
Zero.
No school psychologists.
No thinking about or talking about your feelings.
It's wrestling, Naval Academy, social things, school, SATs.
Very standard.
We're almost talking like a superficial list
of what happens at the end of high school in 1992.
And Andrew, the word superficial, and I carried this forward for years, which I'm
sure we'll talk about here in a second. Those binary focus areas, like I was
literally just going after them at full steam, stronger, faster, more intensity
with zero introspection, no excavation
of the psychology of anything.
Just full steam ahead, like let's go.
No meditation, no breath work.
Zero.
Which was not adaptive in the long run.
And we'll get to how that played out in the long run,
but nonetheless, you got into the Naval Academy.
Well, didn't first.
Okay.
So I applied.
I get, you know, my uncle's doing all this stuff.
Anyway, I applied and I didn't,
I still have the letter of the thanks,
but no thanks, you know, you're not qualified.
How'd that hit you?
At the time, it hit me kind of like everything I did.
When that age, when it didn't work out,
admittedly, Andrew, it was, it was like, there's got to be a way around this.
Like shit has to work out, but it, but it feels terrible.
Right?
Like it, you have a moment of what do we do?
And my kids have heard the story a million times.
My wife was a blue chip swimming recruit for Navy.
And so she was into the Naval Academy when she was at the beginning of her senior
year of high school. Right. What's a blue chip? I mean in my understanding a blue
chip is like you are at the very top of the list and the coaches put you
straight into the admission cycle saying nobody else gets in until this person does first.
So they wanted her they didn't want you. Not only was she a blue chip and I got the no,
I guess, well, the wrestling coach called me a couple of weeks after my no,
which is now in May. I'm about to graduate from high school. I'm not accepted anywhere.
You only applied one place.
Actually two, which you may bust out laughing when I tell you what the other one is,
because no internet. I got a mailer in a pamphlet from Stanford, the wrestling coach. I didn't know what
Stanford was. I had no idea that the college was even prestigious. I didn't
know they had a wrestling team. I filled out the application and wrote the letter
thing and I sent it into Stanford. Of course never heard back from them, but I
applied to two places, Stanford and the US Naval Academy.
Well, for those that follow wrestling.
Nothing to get into either.
That's a great story.
And I'll just briefly mention that a few years ago, there almost wasn't a wrestling team
at Stanford.
They had plans to cut the wrestling team despite having a NCAA champion at Stanford.
But you know, the power of gathering and and petitioning works and
Wrestling and a few other sports that were being cut from the curriculum
Were spared it's amazing. Yeah rescued so happy to see that. Yeah, so that so it Stanford does have a wrestling team
So the coach the coach back to like how I ended up getting in I
Appreciated my my college coach called and he said that I'm recruiting, I have one more spot at the prep school,
which is in Newport, Rhode Island.
I'm recruiting another kid from Pennsylvania.
If he takes that spot, then I don't have anything left.
And we were exploring going to prep school
and stuff like that, oblique ways to get in.
And he called me sometime in May,
like right around graduation and said,
can you be in Newport in July that kid went to I think
he went to Lehigh and
I went to the prep school so Newport, Rhode Island. Yeah in Newport for a year and it's a nice place. That's great
Yeah, and so you wrestle for you. I mean you do school
You know, you're you're in the West Point has a prep school in Colorado Springs has a prep school
And so we joked that my wife was first person in our class except it and I was in a prep school in Colorado Springs as a prep school. And so we joked that my wife was first person
in our class accepted and I was last,
which is highly possible actually.
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So you're in Newport, does that have a portal
to the Naval Academy?
Yeah, if you graduate prep school,
you're straight into the Naval Academy.
Like they fully expect you to be there the next year.
When junior year rolled around
and senior year rolled around of high school,
didn't anyone pull you aside and say,
hey, you might want to like apply to a few other places.
You might want to consider what you do. If this doesn't work out, what did they, you might want to like apply to a few other places. Uh, you might want to consider what you do if this doesn't work out.
What did they assume you were going to do?
They just head into the city of New Orleans and, um, bus tables.
Zero guidance, Andrew, really?
Like from my high school.
And I think the ecosystem I was in, like people just didn't really know how to do
that, you know, how to do that.
You know, how to apply to schools.
I mean, my parents obviously helped when I applied to the Naval Academy, but when I look
at the system that kids go through now to go, you know, their process to find the best
college experience, I never had one conversation with a guidance counselor about what to do.
I just didn't. I mean guidance counselor about what to do.
I just didn't.
I mean, I just got very lucky.
A few people, my high school wrestling coach intervened, I think at some point, and called
the Naval Academy to speak to the coach to say you should give this kid a chance, but
he didn't.
They didn't know who he was, you know?
I'm so lucky and so fortunate that I ended up where I ended up.
It's why I took it so seriously.
Like the focus with which I applied my time in high school,
I took that to 10X degree when I got to Newport
because I knew this was my chance.
There's something magical to that.
I can relate to that.
So you're in Newport and describe what a day was like.
Is it all wrestling?
You're taking general education classes
like one does in the first two years of university.
Yep, so the way the prep school is set up
for the Naval Academy is they're basically teaching you
the first semester of the Naval Academy.
So you take calculus, physics, chemistry,
I think you take an English class, et cetera,
and you go through like a pretty hellacious
first couple of weeks,
because you're away from the flagpole,
where no one can hear you scream.
You know, you're up in Newport,
you're not in Annapolis where everyone's watching.
And you do a couple of hellacious weeks
for an 18 year old who's never been in the military before.
So you're in the military, technically,
if you go to this school.
You're actually enlisted in the Navy.
Okay, so they own you to some extent.
Yeah, yeah they do.
And then you do-
You're wearing uniforms, you jog it in the morning,
you're doing salutes and marching.
Yep, you have four-
Bugling, they're doing taps in the evening.
Yep, all of it.
Got it.
Yep, and there's 300 people at the prep school.
It's distributed basically amongst folks
coming from the fleet. So guys who did four or five years in the military somewhere and they're
coming into the Naval Academy from the fleet and then athletes and then sort of
a mixture of other folks who need a little extra school, right? And so and
then you do a full school year. You're competing. It's basically a redshirt year
that's not a redshirt year. I competed up and down the East Coast against you know
all the other prep schools and you finish that year in May and then, you know, you're done with
the prep. The prep year is fine. It's a little bit of a shock when you're 18, but it's fine.
I've always been curious about these military schools and the people that go to them and
what happens to people there. Did you have any sense of patriotism prior to arriving
at this prep school? And did that sense of patriotism prior to arriving at this prep school and did that
sense of patriotism, you know, I'm talking like love of country, understanding the history
of our country and its position in the international landscape.
Are you thinking about that stuff?
Are they feeding you that or is it really like wrestling, get through the march, shower
up, go to the next thing?
Is it very like plug and chug? No, no, the feeding of, and I really appreciated this,
the feeding of those concepts starts when you get there.
But I was deer in a headlight, like I didn't think about
my life in this way at all when I was headed there.
I mean, what you get very early, because the school
very quickly starts to bring really high level accomplished people, colonels, admirals, whatever, generals to expose you
to these people.
I do remember sitting there within weeks, like this is way bigger than I thought it
was in terms of how serious this situation is, you know, and how serious this ecosystem of people take this.
Because I didn't have, my dad wasn't an admiral, he was a welder in New Orleans, you know, I didn't understand the bigness of it.
One of the reasons I asked this is that various times throughout my life I've had this experience of like seeing people close to me doing incredible work, you know,
like when I was a postdoc at Stanford, I had Nobel Prize was given that one week to the guy next door to me.
Yeah. So you see him in the morning and like you're hearing it on the radio and
obviously, I didn't have that kind of
stature or talent in science. I think I'm a good scientist, but good enough to you know, get tenure at Stanford.
But then there are levels within the game.
Yeah. but good enough to get tenure at Stanford, but then there are levels within the game. Yeah, yeah.
But there is something very special to the experience
of having people close to you physically
and in the same ecosystem as you described it,
achieving amazing things.
I also saw this in skateboarding.
I mean, there were a lot of, let's just say,
failures to integrate with normal life,
but there were also some guys that I grew up with
who started companies and set world records
and had their pro models.
And then if you zoom out from that and you go,
wait, I'm in this community.
It changes one's self view about what's possible.
So I think that's what you're describing.
And I think it's such an important thing
for people to experience at some point,
even if the goal isn't to be at kind of world scale,
for people to realize that the town they grew up in, the family they grew up in, that context
can expand.
So do you recall being at this prep school and kind of third person yourself and thinking
like, well, I'm Coleman Ruiz, I'm from New Orleans, I went from this to this to this,
the way you've been describing it, and I'm here and they're like,
I'm around some incredibly impressive people and I'm here.
Like once you make that recognition that you're there,
a whole bunch of things can open up.
No, I actually came at it from the opposite way
and this has been a hard thing for me my whole life
and I have to watch out for this perspective,
is I felt like every day
I had to wake up and earn my place there.
I was never good enough for myself ever.
So next day up is a restart to prove myself again,
on whatever standard I'm picking that day, right?
Looking back on it, I realize it was somewhat arbitrary
because it was just day by day. I didn't think, I'm Coleman Ruiz, I realized it was somewhat arbitrary because it was just day by day.
I didn't think, I'm Coleman Ruiz, I made it here, look, I'm part of this ego.
I was afraid, like Mike Tyson talks about being afraid every time, I was afraid every
day.
And I fought for a position in this place every day.
Now that was adaptive in some regard, right?
Very.
Because to me it was, let's go.
Like today's another new day and it's 100% all in,
full go.
I hope everybody's ready.
Do you ever recall falling asleep at night
and thinking like, well like-
I had a good day.
I had a good day or I'm scared, you know,
they're gonna discover I can't keep up
or I can't keep up.
All the time.
So a lot of fear, I mean.
Yeah.
Yeah, a lot of fear.
All the time.
And some of it I do, I genuinely know and believe in Andrew
that it was well intentioned.
Like I wanted to do a good job for the group,
whatever group I was in, my platoon, my squad, in the case of the prep school, you know that first experience.
I mean I was talking about this with my wife the other day just because stories come up. You know
we had a 25th reunion at the Naval Academy and this kind of thing and I was a really good runner
for my group in high school, like the people I was around. I ran cross country when I was a really good runner for my group in high school, like the people I was around.
I ran cross country when I was younger.
And anyway, I did, I suppose I'm going the other,
I sort of did have some level of confidence in my ability.
Then I got there and like all these college
cross country runners are like my son is now,
just crushing me.
And I think sadly, because it was just sort of in me
that fed my fear like shit
I thought I was better than this clearly I suck I
Have to get to their level so
I did have a very well intentioned excitement around just do a good job with the people you're around
There's something fun to that and wild, you know as we spoke about
But I was operating out of fear for decades.
But there was a, I need to get to their level statement
in there.
It wasn't, I can't keep up.
I better find a different path.
No, no, no, no.
I knew I could get to their level with enough work.
Was that something that your father or your mother or both had instilled in you?
Oh, for sure.
Yeah.
And my high school wrestling coach was, let's call it, maybe from the old school.
If you worked hard enough, you could get there.
So this is the essence of growth mindset long before Carol Dweck coined the phrase growth
mindset.
It's there.
I'm not there yet.
When I first read her book, I'm like,
when people teach us to shit more, kids.
Well, some of us got it, some of us didn't,
and it can be very context dependent.
I think that's one of the more important
and often overlooked aspects of Carol's work
and Ali Krum's work is that we can develop growth mindset
in one domain of life, but then another domain of life,
we get kicked in the teeth once and we're like,
I can't do that, there's a carve out where I can't function.
Some people do that, some people don't.
And we don't understand enough about it
to understand whether or not it's a global circuit,
and there's a lot of context.
But okay, so you're hanging in there at least,
you're surrounded by some very impressive people.
There's a lot of structure.
So we're a long way from the pre-wrestling days.
Oh yeah.
This is the opposite of chaos.
Totally.
This is structure.
You're told what to do every five minutes, more or less.
And this is scary feelings, fear is a scary feeling.
But you're channeling it,
and you said the unit of the day became important.
It's like, what can I do today?
Yes.
You're not thinking about the week,
you're not thinking about the season,
you're not thinking about becoming some war hero
down the line, you're just 24 hours.
Do the next day.
Yeah.
How was your self care at that point,
or is that built into the system?
It's not built into the system and it was zero.
I mean, it really was, Andrew.
Like it was the old school.
We were not doing anything sophisticated back then.
I mean, there's no, we stretched.
And in the grand scheme of things, this is gonna sound weird because there still is a lot of,
you know, primal nature to combat sports.
But in the grand scheme of things,
we were probably on the upper end of sophisticated,
like wrestlers jump rope, they stretch, they do aerobics.
You know, been in a sauna since 1993.
You know, it's like not purposeful,
not to cut weight in a garbage bag,
but there is some level of,
some level of balancing out your training, you know?
Wrestlers like to swim, like during the season
because you're getting out of that hot room.
Like you end up accidentally doing some of these things,
but there was no self care.
So you eventually go to the Naval Academy.
Mm-hmm, 94.
The actual Naval Academy,
and that's where you met your wife.
Yep, in 96, my sophomore year.
So when you get there,
what's different than the prep school?
First of all, it's big in the macro,
not just geographically big,
or footprint square footage- wise, it's big.
The concept is big.
You know, like the superintendent of the school is a three-star admiral.
You hear about his career.
You know, you're 19 years old.
You meet.
So there's two incredibly important people in my life in those early years at the Naval
Academy.
A guy named Doug Zembeck who's dead now,
who most people of my service time will know who he is.
When I was on my recruiting trip to the Naval Academy
and I was in high school, this is complete accident. Doug was a sophomore, we call him youngsters at the Naval Academy and I was in high school. This is complete accident.
Doug was a sophomore.
We call him youngsters at the Naval Academy.
He was a sophomore and we're the same weight class.
So coach matched us up because it was my recruiting visit.
And my first, this is back to being wild.
Literally my first night on the grounds of the Naval Academy,
I'm sleeping on Doug Zembeck's floor of his room with his other two roommates.
And sometime around 3 or 4 a.m., I get woken up.
It's like a bomb goes off.
There's a bomb didn't go off, but there's 12 other guerrillas in the room, all wrestlers,
maybe one or two other guys.
And Doug is hustling. I don't know any of these people,
Andrew, like I just met Doug the previous evening,
we just flew into town.
He wakes me up, he's hustling me to get my shoes on.
Again, I'm just this high school kid.
And then within two to three minutes,
all 15 of these gorillas bolt out of the room.
And Doug grabs me and I'm just following them, them right so we race out of Bancroft Hall
It's maybe four in the morning three thirty four in the morning. We race out of Bancroft Hall the barracks
We run across the parking lot into Lejeune Hall in Lejeune Hall is
the swimming facility and the wrestling room
That's it. That's the only thing that's in there. Right. The doors, we run up to Lejeune
Hall. The doors of Lejeune Hall are locked with a chain on the outside. And one of our,
Doug pulls on the chain so that the doors open enough at the top that the 142 pounder
can climb up and like get inside that little gap in the doors and run over and open one
of the doors that isn't chained.
This is what you'll later do professionally.
I still have exactly and what I frankly did as a kid like back in the day and so I'm terrified
because I don't know what's coming you know and so you don't bother to ask what are we
doing.
There's no time.
There's just no time like these guys are to me they're full blown war heroes they're
not they're college kids but I'm 17 they're 21 all these wrestlers I'm hoping I'm 17, they're 21, all these wrestlers,
I'm hoping I'm going to come here and be their teammate, you know. We run into Lejeune Hall,
go to the second story, we climb up the utility ladder where Public Works goes to get in the
ceiling above the white foamy ceiling tile things. So we're now on the catwalk where the HVAC guys would be working.
And I'm starting to get a sense of what's coming.
We go a couple feet down the catwalk, everyone stops.
Someone reaches over the catwalk
and pulls one chalky ceiling tile out.
So now you can look over the edge of the catwalk
and see right through the ceiling into the diving well. Remember the diving well
has a 10 meter platform and then we're another, I don't want to over exaggerate
this, we have to be another 20 feet into the ceiling. So you're above the diving
board? We're way above the diving board. We're five feet above the ceiling. So you're above the diving board. Most people are called that. We're way above the diving board. We're five feet above the ceiling,
which is 20 feet above the 10 meter.
Got it.
Right, and so, and now I've realized what's happening,
and two or three wrestlers,
they sort of, you climb over the catwalk,
get, you know, backwards,
get your hands all the way down,
and then very lower yourself in a reverse pull up
so you don't
kick the ceiling tile
And three or four guys go and you can hear them hit the water after what is a
terrifyingly long time when you're you know my age and scared in the dark. Oh, yeah
No one's supposed to be in there. Um
And then one of the guys looks over when you're a a recruit, you're called a drag. They're like, drag, you're up.
And I'm lowering myself, Andrew,
and I kick the adjacent ceiling tile,
and it hits the dive tank,
and it turns into pancake batter,
and goes to the bottom of the pool.
Oh my.
And one of my teammates is like, you motherfucker.
One of my future teammates, you know, he's going nuts. I drop I live and
This is back to Doug I
Come up Doug clearly goes behind me, but I don't hear him and
One or two guys are going nuts you high school piece of shit
like you're gonna go down to the 15 feet and pick it all up. And Doug comes up, and he just blasts everybody.
He's our responsibility.
This is not his fault. We brought him here.
Like, just totally backs me up.
And then the rest of the visit happens.
I end up there. Doug's now a senior. I'm a freshman. And he's just
the legend. He was all American. And to this day, Andrew, you need to hear this loud and
clear. Like for all the people you and I both know and the people I've been around, no other
human in my life have I met with his physical and mental toughness not even close the guy was born in the wrong century
is the way I describe him and
He was
Like my mentor and
He was my guy, you know and
He was killed in 07
Marie mm-hmm. Yeah, we'll talk about Doug. You've written about him. Yeah, he's unbelievable.
I feel like I know him a little bit thanks to you.
We'll get around to that for sure.
I think people are getting a sense of where we're headed.
So that's the, to answer your question about like that, the bigness of the Naval Academy,
that's how it started for me.
Like everything was just on steroids, you know, all these kinds of people.
I get the impression, at least up until now,
that you're kind of just,
you just go with what's right in front of you.
A hundred percent.
Like there isn't a lot of pause and reflect,
although your rudder is not haphazard.
It's not random.
No.
Well, yeah, I can say right now,
you and I are as similar as I, you know, we may be in
certain respects like we're very different in this way.
Like there isn't a, there isn't like a foraging, you know, in biology, we call them random
walks.
You know, a lot of, a lot of organization that comes out of biology is through random
walks like animal or human like finds a node and moves.
And life is like this.
Steve Jobs talked about not being able to connect the dots
except in retrospect and I subscribe to that and his life was a bit of a random walk but that were guided by some central beam of
Uniqueness Robert Green was when he was on the podcast talks about that. Yeah, your beam is is more narrow it seems and
The propeller behind that beam is
High rpm. Yes, that's very clear and It seems and the propeller behind that beam is a high RPM.
Yes, that's very clear.
And what I'm not hearing here is like, yeah, you know, at one point I paused and wondered whether or not I wanted to, you know, be here wrestling in the Naval Academy or or even like what I might do when I get out.
Am I going to work for an investment firm?
What am I going to do?
Your real your horizon. It seems to be about 24 hours at that
Yeah, I hope not anymore. But at that point at that point. I mean, I'm no psychologist. Yeah, but but it just seems like
You're it's not like you're playing checkers, but you're you're
optimizing for a fairly
Short horizon there's no question. That's right optimizing for a fairly short horizon.
There's no question that's right.
And the other part that was probably the most important
to me, Andrew, was the person or the group.
Because, this is gonna sound very arrogant,
but when I got to, I'm going to this prep school,
I'm going to the Naval Academy, I think on day one,
I'm gonna literally meet the cream of the crop
in the country. And that was not the case. And it was not the case at to Naval Academy. I think on day one, I'm going to literally meet the cream of the crop in the country.
And that was not the case.
And it was not the case at the Naval Academy.
And frankly, it wasn't the case in the teams either.
Like, I'm not saying I'm better than anybody, but I thought every single person when I got
to the Naval Academy was going to be entirely focused on whatever our mission was.
And I didn't even know what my mission was there, right?
I just knew I was going to be told what Wright looks like.
And Doug, not only did I meet him in high school
and have the luck of having him as a teammate and a mentor,
for me, he is what Wright looked like.
So a focused beam and a propeller running at high RPM
with the Wright, you know, quote unquote swim buddy,
so to speak, was literally all
I cared about. That was it. Everything else was white noise.
Were there other interests at the time? I mean, presumably you listened to music every
once in a while, but I mean, I would whatever, but didn't fall in love with it. Didn't feel
the need to pursue anything else, learn an instrument, do anything else. It was, it was,
it was a, it was that narrow narrow beam so you met your wife in 96
sophomore year at the Naval Academy and was she as driven is she as driven I
mean she's obviously a very talented swimmer I'm presumably works hard as
well it's kind of interesting I didn't realize until a few years ago that the both you were you know military
Yeah, she definitely just different different driven way smarter way more
You know, it's obviously not one-to-one for men and women but way more successful by
Gradient standards she's in the Navy Hall of Fame. She was Patriot League swimming champ
She was on junior national triathlon team when she was 20 I think.
Really talented in every regard. Ninth in our class I think, first female
graduate, number one female graduate our class. Tell me more about that, how's that
work? You have a, I don't even know exactly how the grading, first of all, her grades are,
her academic success is just remarkable. And then you get a military grade and you get
a physical grade, not for your athletics, I don't think, but it's like your PRT scores,
which is your physical readiness test, all this military stuff you do. You get this other
cluster of a grade that goes along with your academic grades.
And she was number nine in the class and the first female graduate based on that cluster of grading. And I mean, she's an amazing person. Was her success in academics and swimming,
was that part of what drew you to her? No, no, no, she was just nice and you know
I didn't really care about the achievement. It doesn't it certainly sounds like I care about achievement because of the narrow focus, but
It wasn't really that you know she was just really normal
In a group of a lot of abnormal people frankly like there's some kooks at these schools. You know
And I'm probably in that category. I don't know but everybody's just really different there normal people frankly. Like there's some kooks at these schools, you know.
And I'm probably in that category, I don't know, but everybody's just really different there.
You have this athlete group, you have, I mean,
you know, Andrew, I mean, you went to Stanford.
I mean, some of the, you know, the group of Naval Academy
and West Point, like these schools who produce like
the Rhodes Scholar level person, that cluster of group at Navy,
I remember, they're super impressive.
Then there's the rest of us doing our best, getting pretty good grades and stuff, but
there's very different groups inside the school.
Yeah.
I looked at some of my colleagues, like a former guest on this podcast, Ali Crum.
She's incredible scientist, was a division one gymnast,
and is a licensed clinical psychologist.
Also maintains a healthy relationship
with children in the home.
Like, I just go, who are these people?
You know, I mean, you know, every once in a while,
we talk about the person with the quote unquote extra gear.
You know, like some people just seem to have
that extra gear, and I don't want to take anything away
from Ali
or anyone else's incredible work ethic
that goes with what people perceive as an extra gear.
Who knows if they have an extra gear or not.
I always just want to know what their parents did.
Yeah.
And it turns out Ali's parents, I hope I have this right,
but recollection of this is that her mother ran
a theater group and her father ran a theater group
and her father was a martial arts teacher.
Okay.
So, you know, there's nothing that speaks
to academics per se.
And I find that really important to me and to highlight
because I think people hearing this conversation
and hear about people like allies
and other examples like that,
they think, oh yeah, you gotta come from an academic family
to end up at a top tier institution
or to win a Nobel Prize.
In fact, there are so many exceptions to that or you have to be a natural athlete or be
born with some genetic gift or some extra gear, as it were, in order to succeed.
But I think so much of success is the thing that you seem to operationalize really quickly,
which is to really focus on that 24-hour horizon and where one has seen failure to just keep
going.
I mean, a big part of it is just to keep going, but also to make sure that you're continuing
to go in a direction that is adaptive and functional.
Because imagine had you not found wrestling
and you had gotten into some group
where the metrics of success were around dealing weed
or doing something which back then was highly illegal,
now is varying levels of legality.
But where the points came back for effort
in domains of life that could take you down into the
gutter.
And you see this.
So I'm convinced that the work ethic is the fundamental piece, but there has to be that
rudder and the rudder has to be pointed in the right direction.
So along those lines, you meet Bridget.
And was it instantaneous?
No, we kind of had a friendship first.
I felt like at least we've discussed this.
I mean, I instantaneously enjoyed her company. company So I met birds in February of sophomore year. I
Was on the campus of Naval Academy is called the yard
I was on the yard all winter because the wrestling season is an shittiest time ever right it crosses over the holidays
You have to make weight there in Thanksgiving. You have to make weight during Christmas
we were on campus on the yard and
during Christmas. We were on campus on the yard and it was easily waist deep snow and we were doing two-a-day practices. Everybody else is home on
vacation. That winter I considered leaving and thank goodness for no cell
phones and stuff because I didn't know how to leave. It was like... You considered leaving
like leaving the Naval Academy. I was just but it didn't have how to leave. It was like. You considered leaving like leaving the Naval Academy. I was just, but it didn't have anything to do
with the Naval Academy really.
It had everything to do with that moment.
I was miserable.
Like I was making, I wrestled 190 my freshman year
and Doug graduated.
He was the 177 pounder.
So sophomore year I dropped into his spot.
I went down to 177.
Fighting weight for me is like 193.
But you know, back then Andrew Andrew I'm lifting a lot I was 210 to 215 in the offseason and I cut to 177 sophomore year and I
was just generally miserable and if it was easy to leave I probably would have
and then I met Bridget in February and I was like, fuck it, I'll stay.
She's better than this place anyway.
Having followed my high school girlfriend off to college
and not gone to college when I got there,
I just lived in the parking lot outside her dorm room.
I can relate, you know, there's a,
I probably wouldn't be sitting here today
were it not for Eleni.
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So at what point did you decide
you wanted to aim for the SEAL teams?
It's a great question.
I mean, things, you know, as compared to
at a gunnery sergeant in the Marine Corps at prep school,
who I thought, these are back to the first people
you meet in this environment, Gunny Flynn.
And he was great.
Like he was super hard on us,
but I obviously kind of loved that.
And I thought I was gonna go into the Marine Corps,
and Doug wanted to go into the Marine Corps.
I'm a freshman at the Naval Academy,
he's my wrestling partner.
Doug could literally tell me to jump off of a building as long as he came with me. I'd
do it no problem and enjoy it all the way down. Doug was going into the Marine
Corps. I thought I was gonna go into the Marine Corps and I did a summer training
in Quantico between freshman and sophomore year and it was okay. It was
good but I didn't love it and I met a couple other guys who were going to compete
for spots in the SEAL teams who were years ahead of me.
But to answer your question, junior year,
you can sign up and say,
I want to start competing for a billet.
We had 16 spots in my class.
I think there's 32 spots these days.
You know, the force has grown since 9-11, obviously.
And I want to say maybe 150 or so people, You know, the force has grown since 9-11, obviously.
And I want to say maybe 150 or so people, they put you through this weekend, overnight,
two-day, hell two-day things at Navy.
Some people quit.
I don't know how many go to what we used to call mini-BUDs in the summer between junior
and senior year.
You go out to Coronado and Buds instructors they still have it
It's called something different
You spend two weeks at the Buds compound they run you through a mini program and so Buds for the some
This won't know don't know the acronym the acronym is basic underwater demolition seal school
That's our school in Coronado a screening process for who gets in who doesn't yeah
And when you're at when you're at the Naval Academy, it's obviously different than guys coming into the enlisted ranks
You have this pool of people a hundred and fifties guys say they want to go
Sometimes junior year they run you through this weekend pretty hard at Navy
Because we have SEALs stationed at the Naval Academy and then I'm just gonna guess that goes from 150 to 80
Maybe 80 guys go to the summer program in Coronado
when you're still, you know, a midshipman at the Naval Academy. I've never, maybe people have quit
Minibuds, I don't know, but I don't know if I really saw anybody quit the two weeks we were out
in Coronado. And then you get, you know, graded on your performance and stuff. And then you come back
for senior year
And you go through a series of interviews with a bunch of seals
who come out and do interviews and you don't really know what you're doing and
Then they select down. I don't want to again overdo it, but it's probably
Seven I don't know maybe 50 or 60 qualified guys they select you down to 16
And so to answer your question about when I got interested was when I knew I didn't want to go in the Marine Corps 50 or 60 qualified guys, they select you down to 16.
And so to answer your question about when I got interested was when I knew I didn't wanna go in the Marine Corps,
I never ever had the top gun fever thing.
I wasn't interested in flying.
I just wasn't interested in anything else,
but something super physical.
And that seemed like the next best thing.
And because I grew up in New Orleans
and spent a lot of time in the water,
that wasn't intimidating.
That screens a lot of people out, obviously.
Yeah, and got selected in the group of 16,
and was at Bud's after graduation,
you know, a couple of months after graduation.
There's been a lot put out into the world around Bud's.
You know, people have seen the log carrying and the boat carrying and the screaming and the set, screaming of the instructors
and the running and the, you know, clasped arms in the water and hell week, no sleep
and on and on.
It's obviously tough.
It calls 85% of the people that go out there thinking that they are the absolute last person who would ever quit.
Ring the bell, so to speak.
You obviously got through. A while back you mentioned to me three are, I just will just tell people that yes,
of course you made it through Buds successfully
and went into the teams, very successful career
in the teams, but you've also been a Buds instructor.
So you've been on the other side of the equation too.
What are those three things?
Yeah, this was, as you know, this was very anecdotal,
but it lined up.
We, when I was back there in 05 as an instructor, I feel like we're not scientists, right?
But I feel like we tried every correlating data pull that we could pull from pull-ups
to runtimes to you name it, to regions of the country that people grow up near water.
At least back then, nothing correlated.
And so I was a first phase OIC, officer in charge.
And so our team in first phase,
we can talk about what that is in detail if you want to,
but first phase is in charge of Hell Week,
you know, Hell Week's in the first two months of training.
And a couple of the guys said,
all this bullshit about this can get you through,
that can get you through I
bet That every single person we talked to out here on the grinder has one of these three things
They were a varsity athlete in high school or college their parents are divorced or they got suspended from school
I guarantee it and we would walk around the grinder and ask and I mean
You know, this isn't gonna pass
an independent review board,
but it's gotta be 90 to 95%.
So that's incredible because, you know,
so much has been made of Buds and Hell Week.
And just to just fill in a few of the blanks
for those that aren't familiar,
Hell Week is what, it's five nights no sleep,
you get an hour, a couple minutes on one day,
but you're basically in constant movement for about a week.
And that's when most people voluntarily ring the bell.
And most of them do it before Wednesday.
Okay. And I know it's got chaotic components, guns going off blast.
It's got hard work, boring components. People, the,
the people trying to make it through,
we have no sense of how long the run is gonna last or what's gonna happen.
And you hear all this stuff like, okay,
you just don't quit or you just go meal to meal.
But what you just described is really interesting.
Let's break those three things down
because playing a varsity sport has certain elements.
Having divorced parents has certain elements
and getting suspended in parents has certain elements and getting suspended in
school has certain elements.
Let's start with divorced parents first.
Cause varsity sport, I think we can probably just quickly say, okay, there's
structure, you have to listen to somebody.
You have to be able to push yourself.
You have to have some level of physical competence, coachable, mental
competence, work with others.
So there's something there, right?
And you presumably have to go through junior varsity to get there. So there's some oomph and required
in any event But the divorce parents pieces is what's surprising to me still is
What you have divorced parents? So do I divorces occur for any number of different reasons?
what in the world do you think is the consequence of,
or of a divorced household that would predict so well,
at least in this back of the envelope measurement
that you made, but as an instructor,
that people would get through this
excruciatingly difficult period of time?
For me, it was one thing specifically.
I felt like I was alone if I didn't have the team.
So I don't know what it would be for other people,
but I was like, if I don't have this team,
then what team do I have?
So I'm not leaving.
You could crank up the cold and misery
as high as you fucking want, but I'm not leaving.
Yeah, that hits deep.
I didn't do buds.
I didn't even know what the SEAL teams were,
but I certainly know the feeling of looking outside
of the household for a sense of family and belonging
and the feeling that like, I'd much rather, like from almost from a sense of family and belonging
and the feeling that like, I'd much rather,
like from almost from a place of joy,
like I'd much rather die for these people,
hopefully not with these people,
but much rather die trying to save others
and to do well in that than to quit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's a powerful thing that you just shine light on. I don't think
of the hundreds of interviews with team guys, ex-team guys, BUDs instructors, etc. that
are out there. I don't think anyone's ever highlighted that.
I don't think I was aware of it then, Andrew, but I just, you know, again, it's in retrospect.
Well, the retrospect is in large part what we're here for. To go a little deeper on
that, I think that a lot of people have challenging homes.
The parents aren't necessarily divorced.
We're talking, of course, about trying to understand the human spirit, certainly not
accomplishments per se, but the human spirit.
So I think that a lot of people, especially nowadays, they look to their home
life and if, God willing, they had a great home life, that is the base. It's like the
touchstone for them that they can return to. But for a lot of people, even people who go
home for the holidays or who touch in with their parents, whether or not they're divorced
or not, they don't feel like that family unit is really a solid thing. Maybe they're in a place, I see this a lot, where they're the parent. They had to grow up taking
care of the parents. I see that a lot on both the male side and the female side. I see that.
So you're saying that one strong predictor of getting through is a feeling of people want,
essentially making it their, almost like biological identity to get through.
It was certainly the case for me.
I mean, when I got, again,
I don't really like to overdo these things
because it tends to feed the mythos a little.
But when I got to Buds, Andrew,
like when I got to the Naval Academy,
I had a very strong sense of this is my chance.
And you know, you develop over the years
and you spend time thinking about this and having mentors.
When I got there, that was very much my first time of,
you better bring the nastiest shit on the planet
because I'm not leaving here.
Like, it's just not, I'm not, I'm just not going, you know. And there's
a Navy bit to it too. Like I didn't want to do anything else in the Navy. So back to fear,
I was afraid I would get stuck doing a job I didn't like. But there's some people are
not wrong, you know, about Buds. There's some very difficult days where you do start to wonder, like, is this really worth it?
And I never once thought about quitting.
It never crossed my mind because I just had these other things that I really had to do
for myself and my life or else I felt like I was going to have nothing.
And so, again, I don't think operating out of fear is particularly adaptive, but sometimes it,
you know, the bit in your teeth is useful.
Yeah, certainly in my own life, I could say, you know,
getting real scared about being 19
and essentially realizing I'm not good at anything.
I'm not good at anything.
And I was terrible at a lot of things.
And some of those things were taking me down
a dangerous path that that was the fear.
I'm grateful for the fear piece.
It scruffed me.
And let's talk about the suspended in school.
Yep.
First of all, that implies getting caught.
Yes.
Not just misbehaving, but getting caught.
Yeah, what do you think that's about?
So we're really talking about a sense of rebellion against authority or the system that one finds
themselves in.
Which is super important for our line of work.
Like for me, again, I can only speak for myself.
For me, it was the wild fuck you factor.
Like you have to, there's just a nasty reality of the work we had to do.
You know, I was in from 98 until 2011.
In the SEAL teams. In the I was in from 98 until 2011. In the SEAL teams.
In the SEAL teams from 98 until 2011.
Everybody knows what was happening between 9-11 and then.
It's not that it didn't stop happening.
I know from my own experience from 03 through 2010
was extremely intense.
Obviously the military has rules and we need rules and you follow the laws of armed conflict and you follow the rules of engagement
there's no question about that ever but the shit that happens to you out in the
field for real does not follow any pattern. And so if you are a complete,
you know, non-suspended from school rule follower, I'm not saying you won't be
successful, I'm sure plenty of people are, but in our line of work if you ask
people, most of them had a weird streak as they were coming up, like they have a
little bit of a side eye when somebody tells them this is how stuff is.
Like maybe it's like that, but you don't know that.
And where it really became clear for me, Andrew, was look at every stage in your development,
you're still looking for what right looks like.
And when I was a, I'm now a Naval Academy graduate, not that that means anything special,
but I'm smart enough. I'm now in my twenties.
I'm at Buds and I have this recollection later.
Like people are always telling stories about the teams.
And when you're a new student at Buds, you're, you kind of believe everything
the instructors tell you because it's pretty impressive shit.
And then you find out later when you, when I checked into SEAL team three,
and you actually start to understand the arc of the job
It's like all these guys were telling
Training stories those weren't real combat stories those they never said
That that was a story from training and so my point is like
What you hope guys are getting it now, but what we didn't get a lot of was the real story
in a sense.
Meaning I will say definitively, my first combat deployment was 03 when we invaded Iraq.
I was a platoon commander when we invaded Iraq.
And I remember within a week of being in that situation thinking not one single instructor
had the experience to
mentor and coach me on this not one and so you have to go back to that wild
suspended fuck you factor mindset like all your silly rules about how the
military works none of that shit's happening out here like all this other
stuff is happening that doesn't have anything to do with your training manuals,
except for the things you don't violate,
which is, to your best of your ability, stuff happens,
but there are rules of engagement
and laws of armed conflict.
Everything else is a toss-up.
The tactics aren't.
That's not a toss-up, but you know what I mean.
Like, the environment is completely chaotic.
It's a new sport.
It's a brand new sport that no one coached you on.
And it's high risk, high consequence for you and your teammates, but also for the other
side.
I mean, every 15 seconds is a new consequential decision.
Yeah, because you obviously don't want to kill civilians on the other side either.
Of course not.
So you obviously get through Buds.
You probably weren't surprised,
given your mindset.
No, I wasn't surprised. At this point, I'm maybe building a little self-confidence and they'll just operate out of fear.
But happy, presumably. Oh, yeah. And... I'm maybe building a little self-confidence and they'll just operate out of fear, but happy
Presumably. Oh, yeah. Yep, and
but I Feel obligated to ask well, I'm just curious to ask that you you know
You've been in a system of military for a long time. Is there a bigger
Pole of patriotism there or that's just it's there
But I mean, are you thinking about country or are you thinking about team?
You think about the day.
Yeah, I mean, at this point, you know,
I'm fully indoctrinated in a sense.
You know, the Naval Academy really does give you a sense
of, again, bigness and you meet people
from World War II and Vietnam and, you know,
an amazing guy, which, you know, we can cover later.
I don't, I wasn't around when he was coming up,
but Colonel John Ripley is a guy
who won the Navy Cross in Vietnam.
The book, The Bridge at Dong Ha is about him.
He knew my, this is back to my Uncle Jim who introduced,
he and my Uncle Jim were buddies.
And I met him, he's since passed away.
I met Colonel Ripley when I was a pliebe
at the Naval Academy.
I work with one of his sons now, friend, teammate, mentor. He's a great guy.
Colonel Ripley, he's a legend. Like this guy's a Navy Cross winner.
Should have won the Congressional Medal of Honor by all accounts.
If you read the book, the Bridge of Donghai, you are gonna have no
ability to understand why he's not dead. And these are the kind of people you meet. So back to the
patriotism, you know, thing. By the time I was in the teams, I knew where I was, sort of, in this
ecosystem. Admittedly, though, what I didn't really have, Andrew, because it, I mean, I love the country,
of course, but it wasn't, again, I didn't grow up with a dad who was like, you know,
this was always in our house or just wasn't that big of a thing.
This came for me after 9-11, obviously.
But yes, the patriotism and the importance of the jobs there.
But when I remember checking in SEAL Team 3, what emerged very quickly for me
because we had Vietnam Vets in the training cell
at SEAL Team 3 and just some amazing people,
what I realized right away was, okay,
play time is completely over.
And that was very useful, like early lesson.
Not that anyone was fucking around in buds,
like you know it's serious.
But you meet a guy like Master Chief Martin who's got 100 combat missions from Vietnam.
He's about to retire.
He was like the third person I met when I checked into the team.
And you suddenly are like a kid again where there's just no fucking around.
So you're in the teams, presumably liking the work.
Loved it.
Loving the team component.
It's hard.
It's unpredictable.
And that's part of the fun.
It's amazing.
Yeah, the job's amazing.
You do a number of different deployments.
And at some point, you get called to try out for the tier one
division within the SEAL teams. Maybe just explain a little bit of what
tier one means and you know we don't want to speak in code here but you know
just inform people that there are levels within the teams and that yeah tell us
what tier one is. Yeah well I, I'll just refer to it,
special mission unit, it's probably the easiest.
We have a bunch of teams on the East and West Coast,
as a lot of people know nowadays,
this shit was not public knowledge years ago.
Yeah, so you've got these different units
within the SEAL teams.
Yeah, so you have to raise your hand.
I was 10 years in, Andrew, I had been platoon commander during the invasion of Iraq.
We came to Monterey, I went to school and went back to be a budge instructor.
It was 10 years.
I felt like it was time to take my shot.
It's a little risky because it's hard to make it through.
Green team and stuff at the special mission unit, it's a nine month advanced training
program.
You're 10 years into your career. You're not 22 anymore. And not everyone gets called the green team. Not everyone
can go. You can't say I want to go. I want to try out. You can say you want to try out and you do a
pre-screener. Okay. So the command training staff, I'll call it the command for purposes of this
conversation because I'm familiar with that term for us. The command training staff comes out. They
put you through all this stuff. of its psychological some of its physiological
I don't think we did a blood test, but they checked the trainers checked everything on me
Which I thought this is actually a description of why the units tier one I was
Even in the pre-screening it was the first time the way I joke about it is like I really felt like I was doing
What was in the brochure?
Like it was real varsity stuff, you know?
I'm presaging a later conversation that we'll get to,
but at this point, had you ever sat down
with a psychologist and done a therapy session?
That was no therapy, but I sat down with a psychologist
because they put us through the battery,
the neopir, the raven, stuff like that.
They're asking you, how do you sleep at night?
How do you feel? All that, yeah.
What do you dream about?
How much do you drink?
And you say two beers a week and.
And you're lying.
Everyone's lying.
Yeah, but now it might be two beers a week.
Now it's zero.
Zero, right.
But yeah, so it was good screening process.
I was like, oh shit, these guys are not messing around.
This is exactly what I wanted to do.
And the physical tests ramp up.
And coincidentally,
I worked for him later, still friends with him now.
On my interview board was Britt Slabinski,
who won the Congressional Medal of Honor.
Britt was on my interview board and he's a great guy.
And so yeah, then you just wait.
And if you get picked up, you go out to the East Coast
and you really roll in the dice
because I was on the West Coast.
You move your whole family, sell your house.
You may not have to sell your house, but we did.
And you move and you're gonna do
a nine month advanced training program at the command
just to get into a tactical unit,
you know, which we call squadrons.
And the best way, tactically,
for me to describe the difference,
and look, my time at Team 3 was amazing.
I'm not diminishing it. But let me just use freefall military freefall for anybody who's you know even done civilian freefall
So it's jumping out of jumping yeah
So if you go if we go to the drop zone and we go jumping right FAA regulations
Have you jump at twelve thousand nine hundred ninety nine feet because as soon as you go above thirteen thousand you have to use supplemental oxygen
Which is not a huge deal, but it's a pain in the ass for the airplane to have it.
And so 99% of all your jumps,
well, at any standard drop zone,
your civilian jumps are gonna be below 13 grand.
For all of our jumping at SEAL Team 3 is below 13 grand.
It just makes the training more efficient.
And you'll jump during the daytime,
maybe a little night jumping.
You'll probably have some lights for safety and if you look out of the
airplane you would be able to see the orange T on the drop zone right that's
your standard jump profile maybe you'll jump with some weight you'll certainly
jump with your weapon probably your helmet but not all your jumps because
you're bringing guys from zero to be able to do tactical military freefall as a group. When you go to the
command, your jumps are from 25,000 feet. You do 30 minutes of pre-breathing on
oxygen, helmet, night vision, zero lights, an attack board that has your navigation system on it, a
hundred pounds of gear, your weapon, your oxygen, all your shit, and 45 dudes piled
up in a C-17 and you drop miles away from the drop zone because your over
ground speed at 25,000 feet is hauling ass, you know, because of the wind and if
you take your hands out of your gloves at 25,000 feet, it's curtains.
Like you're not going to be able to use your fingers because it's so cold.
And you jump from way away, obviously.
And all your jump is completely blacked out.
Everybody turns IR lights on their helmets and infrared light.
So you can see through night vision.
Um, and you got to fly that canopy multiple, multiple miles and land
everybody on a drop zone
you know, that's if you take every tactical thing we do and
Expand
The same way you would expand freefall. That's the difference at the command which is look
I was I want to own this when I was at team three because you think about this
I had many many moments where I was thinking, uh
because you think about this, I had many, many moments where I was thinking, oh, fucking man,
those guys aren't that much different.
Like, we're super high end, right?
And we are.
And then when I got there, I was like,
this is another level.
What percentage of people that go to green team
get through and get sort of...
Ah, I think I had 65 in my class. You don't drop that
many. Maybe 10 guys didn't make it or something. Maybe 15-ish. So then you were... why do they
call it tier one? No idea. It must have some official reason. Like, because if you go into
like real documentation, Andrew, like there's echelons in you know
at this this command is echelon this this command is echelon this and the
military Congress sets end strength numbers it says the Navy you get at the
one time it took some class the Navy had like 355,000 people and that's the
Navy's end strength and they have to distribute those numbers across everybody in the Navy.
So I don't know why it's called Tier 1, but I think it has a reason.
So you got through, you were accepted, and then you're doing very different sorts of
things than you were doing previously.
So my understanding is this is largely counter-terrorist work.
So all the work in the military and SEAL teams
is high risk, high consequence.
But now it's special operations, as the name implies,
where things have to be worked out on a case-by-case basis.
It's highly unusual.
It was unusual before,
but now it's highly unusual circumstances.
What was it like to be there?
Did you like that family?
I loved it.
It was the best place to work.
And this is 2000?
This is 06 through 2011 for me.
Okay, so it's post 9-11 through 2011.
Okay, so I'm sure a lot happened,
and most of which we can't and won't discuss,
and that's not what's important here.
But clearly you met and worked
with some amazing individuals.
I happen to know because we've spoken before and we have some common friends in that arena
that you had both the privilege of doing this work and this really important wartime, but
also the unfortunate experience of being close to and working with quite a lot of people
that were killed. How many? So I mean I don't know why I did this or why anyone
does it. It's way over 40 but I try not to over-affiliate myself with a larger
group than I actually knew. But the people that I personally knew, Andrew, it's exactly 40.
We could spend probably weeks detailing how impressive each and every one of those people
was in their individual cases.
This is perhaps an opportunity to put a call out.
There's a wonderful book, I think an important book
that isn't so well known in the array
of quote unquote military and SEAL books,
which is the book about Adam Brown, the fearless book.
I heard they're gonna make it into a movie,
but what I like about the book is,
actually has very little to do with the SEAL team.
Totally, that's the last thing.
Is that Adam had a serious, serious problem with addiction
that he masked at times and it came back
to pull him under various times while he was in the teams.
And I know you worked with Adam and you're close.
He was in my green team, yeah.
Yeah, so that's a great book for anyone
that wants a different sort of book.
It's really about addiction and family
and his discovery of the path out of all that.
His tenacity is incredible.
Awesome, awesome book, Human,
about an awesome, awesome human.
So you do those years.
And then, you know,
what happens when, you know, 40 people close to you die?
I have to imagine involves that you get pretty good,
unfortunately, at taking what each and every one of those
is a tragedy and just continuing.
So let's just talk about that for a bit if you're willing.
So guys are getting shot and blown up
and you're close with them to say the least.
And what was your role in the aftermath?
Like what do you do?
You go to a funeral, you toast a, you, um, toast a few beers,
and then you go back to work?
I mean, it's, that's kind of, you know, in the most simplistic terms,
Andrew, that is exactly what happens.
Um, there's obviously, you know, a lot more that goes on,
but if you script the diary, so to speak,
it wasn't, you know, a funeral every three months, but on average, if I average it out,
because I've done this in, you know, excavating the last few years, we were at a funeral or memorial effectively every 90 days and in that
time period but it wasn't obviously you know that simple like for for me and our
family Doug was my first super close teammate killed and it wasn't in the
teams right I'm now at the command I I was back from Afghanistan, from Kandahar.
This is way before the Marines built up
100 kilometers west of Kandahar.
We were operating six of us with like 180 Afghans,
kind of the Wild West back then.
And Doug was killed that summer of 07.
And I got a phone call from a friend. I was standing in my kitchen
in Virginia Beach and it was like, like the whole scaffolding of the world was just gone.
Because at that age, and here I am like I I'm some kid. I was in my 30s.
But I'm thinking, you know, things get more and more serious as you go, like at that time.
But when Doug was killed, and I was at Paul Berenice's funeral, and you know, we came
up to Annapolis.
He was living in Annapolis because he was working.
It's now been publicly released, which is nice for Pam, because she can talk about it more. He was working at the agency and when after his funeral and just the
days around that and then I go back to work and what I mentioned earlier about Doug and what I
knew about him just as an operator, he had been a company commander in Fallujah. He was on the front
page of the LA Times, like Tony Perry is a reporter in San Diego.
He was in Fallujah following Doug. The guy was, and Doug is not a
like a public people, people just attracted to him to tell his story.
I have so many stories that I heard later from his bosses, his regimental commander,
you know, told stories about his unit in Fallujah, his Sergeant Major
and his amazing guy. I've talked to him about like what went on in Fallujah. Doug is just a
fucking legend. I mean, he was awesome. And the dominant thought after his funeral was,
if things, it's not that you don't think they're serious. And I mean just about life, Andrew. It
wasn't just about combat action and hard deployments It was about if Doug can be killed all fucking bets are off
They're all off like if I didn't respect the rules before and didn't think
Society was particularly ordered in a way that I respected you know shit that I think is made up. I
Knew when Doug was killed that
It's all fucking made up. Like, he was supposed to be the immortal one.
And if he's not, none of us are.
Like, everything has to be reevaluated.
You know how old was I?
I was 32.
And you've got kids at this point.
Mm-hmm, yeah. Yep.
Yeah, Ollie wasn't born yet, my youngest.
Because you now have three boys.
Yep, three boys, 21, 18, and 14.
And the older two were born.
My middle son was two at the time.
Did it occur to you at the point when Doug was killed,
or maybe some other point that at some point you could die?
Oh, I mean, that's what I mean and you're like I
You know personal work and therapy afterwards
It was then that I started looking over my shoulder
Just in general like everything was suddenly
Like has to be watched with a vigilant eye
something that like has to be watched with a vigilant eye. Something that close friends,
close male friends of mine have told me,
these are friends that are married with kids.
And I've heard this from people that were in the military
and as well as those that weren't,
was that it was very important to them
to marry somebody who were they to die,
they knew their kids would be well taken care of.
Oh, that one's not even, there's no question about that.
Yeah, so that was like a primary criteria.
And I think in your line of work, I mean,
that must be especially important
because the probability of dying is, well, let's face it, is much
higher as my sister who doesn't like sharks once told me.
She said, the best way to not get eaten by a shark is to never go in the ocean.
There is a way to limiting probabilities.
She'll swim in the ocean a little bit, but the point being that when you're in the military
and your shoot, move, and communicate is a big part of the job description.
And the enemies also talk to shoot, move, and communicate
that there's a decent probability that you could die.
So did you ever think, okay, well, if I die,
my kids are okay because Bridget's solid?
Or were you still just operating on this 24-hour schedule
that you had adopted way back in
the seventh grade?
No, I think, well, maybe.
I'd have to ask her that question.
I think I was backed away from the 24-hour ledge a little bit.
I knew that the boys obviously would be taken care of with my wife.
That never crossed my mind probably
until you just asked the question.
That was almost just like table stakes.
Back to this adaptive but maladaptive behavior.
When Doug was killed, I just realized I had to work
even harder to try to stay alive.
Cause if you met the guy, there is, I'm going to say it in prime multiples,
there is not a fucking human on the planet that was as tough and as focused
and as hyper-dialed in to how to do the job 100% effectively
as he was.
And it happened to him, you know?
And I just never, it's almost embarrassing, Andrew,
to say I never thought about it like that
until Doug was killed.
And yet, and I'm not challenging that at all,
of course, I mean, life, circumstances,
the other team gets a vote too. Totally. Right, I mean, life, circumstances, the other team gets a vote too.
Totally.
Right, I mean, somebody can be seemingly indestructible,
oh so capable and talented,
and get t-boned at an intersection and die.
Right, like that.
We've known people like that.
All of us, you know, you hear these things,
that's why they're called tragedies.
Yeah, we just, like to put it in context,
we have to remember is part of the beauty
of taking a young person and taking all the ingredients
that a person comes into special operations,
pick your service.
I'm not, I'm agnostic.
I mean, some of my best buddies are on here, Marine Corps,
like I'm agnostic to the service head
is when you end up at a certain point like
and you look back you realize for 10 or 15 years I've been indoctrinated in a very adaptive
way to believe that I'm immortal because if you didn't you certainly wouldn't jump out
of aircraft at 25,000 feet with no lights and you for hell for sure wouldn't go into
some of these fucking towns we go into and end up in these firefights like
you have some weird I'll speak for myself I was entirely convinced that I
couldn't be killed and I just because I was in some way Andrew convinced that
our training was so good that that shit wouldn't happen to us.
Let's take a step back for a second and acknowledge the truth all around that set of statements,
which is that I think most people can think of the government
and the training programs as honing the body,
but it's probably not lost on you at this point in your life that you were, you're a weapon.
Your mind became a weapon, right?
Your body became a weapon.
You were a weapon of the military from the inside out.
And in the statement you just made encapsulates that.
And that weapon honed itself for a long time,
but then that's what the military is.
It creates weapons out of humans.
And I'm not demonizing the military whatsoever.
I wanna be very clear.
I realize that statement could be construed differently,
but that mindset encapsulates that.
So with the other guys,
I wanna make sure I finish your question.
So it started with Doug and then,
you know, I don't know what direction you want to go here specifically
But then it just kept going Andrew right like at that time
Doug was 07 and then we went to Iraq in the winter of 07 08 which was
Complete mayhem and the troop was I mean my my troop in the winter of 07 08
We're like fucking superheroes.
And a guy named Tommy Valentine was the troop chief.
And we got home, and he was killed in a parachute accident.
After all that shit we went through.
Badger, a guy named Mark Carter, was killed in that deployment.
We got home, and Tommy was killed in a parachute accident.
And me and a guy named Dutch
We went up to Minnesota
to notify Tommy's parents and his sister and his brother and
We're not the Navy calls him Keiko's like casualty assistance officers
These are jobs in the military where you're trained to do this stuff
You know one of the things that's amazing about us is if a guy gets killed, we send a team guy there.
But think about the team guy.
Like, it's great for the family that you send the team guy,
but we don't know shit about sitting with a family
who's about to be notified that their son,
in this case of Tommy, was killed.
Britt went to Christina's house, it's a lie, Britt Slabinski.
He went to Christina's house,
and me and Dutch went up to Minnesota.
And I'm shaking right now, like I was shaking the whole drive.
We had to get to International Falls all the way up north.
The Valentines are incredible people.
And I mean, notifying a family was just It was brutal. And so this is this is that this is a wait and
Then it just keeps coming. It's Nate and it's Mike and it's Lance and it's extortion in 2011 and
in the middle of that
Adam gets killed right like tons of people know about extortion because it was a one helicopter obviously full Well, maybe we just just you know if we want to manage that was August 2011 as I recall yes
Yeah, August of 11. Yeah, so but in 2010 Adam is killed and
I
Got a phone call and and I wasn't best friend
I mean Adam has some very close friends as the command that I don't want to make some
Anybody give the impression that like me and Adam were boys. We were we knew each other well, right?
We went through green team together. He was in a different squadron though. So you sort of get separated a little and
I got a phone call in the middle of the night from one of my buddies who's still in who is another legend and
I
Answered the phone and it's midnight, I knew something was wrong.
And we were kind of in this pattern then. And you're like, actually, a few of the commands
were, like our partner command and a bunch of other guys we work with in other units.
It was a hard time, like guys were fighting hard overseas. And that just comes with the
consequences we know, you know, and I get the phone call in the middle of the night,
I'm like, whew.
And so this guy tells me, you know,
get your uniform, you need to come in, something happened.
I'm like, I fucking know what happened, like tell me who it is.
And they, you know, didn't want to say it over the phone,
which I get.
And I had like one of those moments where I told him,
no, I can't do that again.
Like you have to get somebody who knows
what the fuck they're doing.
And he just didn't let me off the hook, you know?
Get your shit and come into the command
because you got to do all this prep stuff.
And I walked into the conference room.
I mean, I remember it clears day. And I walked into the conference room I mean I remember clear's day and you're I walked into the conference room and I could see it on
everybody's face again this is 2010 now they were more terrified than I was and
these are some you know civilian guys guys who retired her now civilians they
work at the command and amazing people and they looked like I know if you've seen Peter Jackson's remake they shall not grow old oh you
have to watch it they shall not grow old is Peter Jackson took real World War one
so I did see that yeah yes put the color and the lip reading and it and there's a
scene I don't know if it's a battle of the bulge or and there's a scene, I don't know if it's a Battle of the Bulger exactly,
there's a scene where this young unit,
army unit is about to go up over the top
and run across an open field and the camera pans over
and there's a young kid with his rifle in front of him,
the bayonet affixed to it his helmet on
his lips are sort of flat and pursed and
He everybody in that conference room looked like him
When I saw that movie later, I'm like every single person looked like him and they told me it was Adam and we were gonna go
notify Kelly
his wife And he had little ones at that point. Savannah and Nathan, yeah, they were small. And
we knocked on, she had a sort of a stained glass like window and I could see her at the top of the
the stairs.
That was the worst, man. It was the worst, man.
It was the worst.
So we sat with Kelly and a bunch of other guys were there, of course.
It wasn't just me.
And we did our best.
And I learned later, you know, reading Paul's work, Dr. Conti and other people and like that was it dude.
I was like a, I don't know if it's a locust
or whatever that sheds their skin.
I literally like left a shell of myself
on Kelly's front porch and walked out of my skin.
It was, that was tough.
That was tough.
And so that was kind of the tempo to
answer your question. Like it wasn't exactly every 90 days, but almost every
90 days from 06 to 2011 for me. I got out in the fall of 2011. It was memorial at
the theater, memorial at the People's house, you know, and our neighbor
across the street in Virginia Beach, she lost her husband in 07, so one house over,
so she was best friends with us, you know, and so you are trying to live two lives.
You have this military life with all these consequences where every bone in your body is telling you to go
full Spartan like no not that the Spartans didn't have families because
they did whatever did nothing else like just cut off every other thing in your
life completely you have to go do this and you have to do it full-on because
clearly all bets are off like we're barely making it through.
We're losing our best guys.
And how the fuck do I survive if at this pace?
And so because we're all in the same community
in Virginia Beach, you're around it all the time
when you're home, you know, and you should be
because you're supporting your teammates, families,
and that's important.
But it was just, it's almost like a
dream, you know, when I think about it now, how do, how did we live like that? How does anyone live
like that? And I know, you know, my experience as a military people go through, you know, all sorts
of tough situations and different walks of life. But I have so much compassion for anybody who's
trying to live in an environment like that, where, you know, you are going on the next deployment.
I mean, look, Andrew, we left Bakuba in 08 before Tommy was killed.
Three fucking weeks later, guys are getting blown up in the same area, like, and they got all the debris from us.
They knew exactly where to go, but it was just such a kinetic environment.
They knew exactly where to go, but it was just such a kinetic environment.
It was almost like you couldn't stop it, you know? It was just like the balls rolling. And
when I think about people overseas and, you know, different situations that countries find themselves in right now, I can feel it for them, you know, what it takes.
It's an intense environment.
Yeah, certainly that comes through.
I think years ago you said to me,
and this will be an important way of setting aside
which side people are on, you know,
whether or not you side with one group
in the Middle East or the other,
or you feel for everybody that one of the things
that you said that really rung in my ears for a long time
is that the warriors on both sides,
in their own minds, each and all of them
are just doing what they think is right
for them and their families
So you cannot erase that fact like whether or not the government of this country or the government of that country group was
Correct or incorrect whether or not you're even talking about a terrorist cell
Versus a military a formal military group or special operations group that in the minds of the warriors
They're doing what they truly believe is
in the minds of the warriors, they're doing what they truly believe is right for them and their families and sometimes country as well.
When I heard that, it was sort of an obvious statement on the one hand, but it's a very
important one I think to the psychology that everyone's fighting tooth and nail because
they believe that they are right or they're just fighting tooth and nail for whatever
reason.
And that was an important thing for me to hear,
and I think about that a lot when I see any news stories
about international conflict or terrorist military conflict,
terrorist civilian stuff, even the people,
there's something about the human brain,
people get this into their mind, like this is my job,
and they're doing it, doesn't justify it.
But going back to this thing of being a weapon,
humans can be trained as weapons
and it's often not the weapons themselves
that are making the decisions about where to go
and what to do.
Sometimes it is.
At this time, Coleman,
what's going on with the three boys with Bridget?
I mean, your boys have turned out really well.
They're amazing.
They're amazing.
And there's no coincidence there.
And obviously, it was a team effort with you and Bridget.
But there are a lot of things about the way
the scenario you're describing here that speaks to, like,
how can a home function?
But obviously, it functioned well,
and it's remarkable, but it can't be due to chance.
So were you able to compartmentalize,
like the moment you hit your front door,
your dad at home, your husband,
and was that a pause in a conversation
with yourself at the front door?
That's just something that becomes reflexive.
Uh, I mean, I,
I think it was just reflexive. It wasn't really a pause at the front door.
And admittedly, the story I would like to tell is that I was super zen about it.
And I had this process
and I would come home and I would take this off
and put on regular dad things.
And I think I was just,
by the same level of effort
that we put into what we were doing,
Bridget and every other wife, mom,
at least the ones that I knew,
they put that level effort in as well.
It made our home life just very comfortable,
so it was easy.
Like, I didn't have to go through some process, right?
It was, this is how I remember it, it was easy for me.
I don't know if it was easy for Bridget,
she would have to answer that question, it was easy for me. And so I felt like for the most part, like I was, I wasn't like Platoon
Commander dad, you know, some movie, you know, the great Santini type dad, you know, I think
Pat Conrad wrote the great Santini. His dad was crazy apparently, or it's like, that's
what he writes about. It wasn't like that. It was more of this, this home is such a relief and Bridget is so dialed that I
don't have to, unfortunately hard for Bridget, I don't have to do anything.
You know, the time that I'm here, I can be here and then, you know, go away again.
And so it's, as we know, what trauma does to the mind.
Like there are many, many stretches of that time period
that I just don't remember.
And what I do remember is mostly,
obviously the fun times, the front yard,
the whatever, playing with the boys,
doing rough housing and going on vacation and stuff.
But when I was in the grind,
when we were in the training cycle of our cycle
or deployment or whatever,
I don't really remember sections of it.
So a lot, far too many,
I guess even one would be far too many doorbells,
ringing on doorbells.
You decide to get out.
Was that a conscious decision based on time, conscious decision based on like, I would
like to have the rest of my life?
You're done.
I like to call it a regret, you know, but it's just kind of emblematic of where I was. It was the right
decision. I do not regret getting out at the 13 year mark, not for a second. It, I needed
it. We needed it as a family. Um, it was a snap. It was a snap decision. It was like,
uh, what do we say? 24 hour just 24 hour horizon. I was standing on the ledge of the 24 hour horizon.
Right.
And you said what year was that again?
That was the fall of 2011.
2011.
Yeah.
I guess that's about four or five years
before you and I met.
Yeah.
Yeah, so extortion, we can just,
we don't have to touch into it too deeply
because people can look it up,
but this was a massive loss of special operations
including a lot of seals.
It was basically a helicopter shot out of the sky
with a grenade, right?
Yeah, RPG. RPG.
People can look it up if they want to,
and there's a lot of material out there about it.
It can only be described as a tragedy.
So, and I'm not trying to make light of it.
I just think that we could do,
there's a lot to explore there in a different discussion.
In case you're out,
now the probability that you're gonna die
is much lower provided-
It's not what my nervous system said.
Right, but you're out.
And what do you do?
Meaning, what do you do with all that energy?
The energy of the way you've been operating up until now,
these intense battle rhythms, vampire schedules,
as you call them, but also what do you do
with all the energy of what happened?
You know, I think this is where I think our conversation
really hopefully has been related to other people happened. You know, I think this is where I think our conversation really
hopefully has been related to other people as we've been going but that you know
Sometimes I stop and I'm like, I know I'm supposed to process all this stuff, you know
That's happened. It's like what do you do when so much has happened or when something's happened that you know You have to move on from you know you need to compartmentalize but that lives in our
nervous system so are you thinking about that no your Coleman Ruiz at that point
you're just you're just going forward just fucking crazy I mean I just didn't
know you know it's 2011 doesn't sound like that long ago, but still, in 2011, this was not a topic for conversation.
And I took maybe one week to process out.
I turned in my gear.
I turned in my badge.
And my next visit to the command years later, I had to be escorted on by people I worked
with in the same fucking squadron.
So within a matter of one week, I'm a stranger like I can't get on the base
I there's reasons for that I get that but I'm just using it as a there was
nothing dishonorable about how you went it's just that their security reason
once you're out like you can't just drive on the base anymore you know and
this is like emblematic of of course I didn't talk to anybody about it not even
Bridget but um at the time in in those first, call it, couple of years or even couple of months, I don't know.
The question you just asked me is the question I was asked, like, what do I do? Like, not with work. Like, what do I do, period, with life? Like, how do I manage my time? And I'm not some bumbling idiot. It's not like I was walking around the neighborhood like trying to figure out where my house was.
I had just been in that environment for so long to your point that I didn't know what
to do. I didn't know what to do with my thoughts, my feelings, my, you know, I could go to the
Buddhist five aggregates, my thoughts, feelings, perceptions, physical form,
and kind of like all these things I've learned about
and thought about later that have helped so much,
I didn't know what to do with any of it.
Like, I didn't know what to do with nights was,
I didn't know what to do with,
I thought the term PTSD was the biggest fucking joke
on the planet until I read all the symptoms
and I'm like, wait, wait a minute.
Um,
sounds like it sounds familiar.
And so it's that Andrew is like, and so I remember like even the little things that kind of make the point of the big things.
I didn't know how to get a dentist.
Like I could just go to the dentist in the military.
I, you know, I thought when I was walking around the food line that somebody was
going to call me and say, come back to the base because like the bubble went up.
I had zero context and didn't have the courage, not even just the courage, but know who to
ask.
It wasn't the mentoring.
One of the most important books in my life in the last 12 years has been Joseph Campbell's
The Hero with a Thousand Faces
for the backend of the hero's journey.
And-
I haven't read it.
I know I should.
I know I should.
You should actually listen to it.
I need to listen to it.
It's better to,
I've probably only listened to five audio books in my life.
I prefer to read in paper because I can take notes.
In the margin, that book is better listened to.
Hero with a Thousand Faces.
The Hero with a Thousand Faces.
Could you just highlight a couple of the things that you took from the back end of that, that
somehow shifted your mind toward like, like cued you.
I'm thinking Coleman Ruiz circa 2011 is like, like, what do I do now?
And then something cues you.
There's like a beacon someplace.
It's like, I was thinking of this like a texture or something.
And you're like, oh, I want to,
you know, you want to feel it more to get a sense
of what it is.
Is that about right?
It was in that case for sure.
So Joseph Campbell wrote that book in 1949
and the Here with a Thousand Faces is effectively
the 17 stage hero journey, which by the way,
George Lucas says and has said many times publicly,
he built the arc of store wars around the
17 stage hero's journey.
He credits Joseph Campbell's book for helping him.
If you ever read it or you go through the 17 stages or you see it or watch a short video,
anybody, you'll see how damn near everybody's life, which is why it's called the monomyth.
He describes it as the monomyth or the cosmogonic cycle.
A little weirder term for it. But what he lays out in the book is, I don't know,
maybe supposedly 2,000 years of culture across multiple cultures. The book is
incredibly complicated in that sense. Andrew, when I...so I listened to it audio
first and then went back to it and listened to it in paper. I could not believe how a human
could put this narrative together, honestly.
And so, but the summary,
I struggle with the first 10 stages a little bit,
but I'll try to come back to them.
If you look at the image, when you lay out the 17 stages,
the way it's in a circle is the ordinary world
and the extraordinary world is on the circle is the ordinary world and the extraordinary
world is on the bottom of the page and there's a horizontal line the diameter
of that circle goes horizontally across and the extraordinary worlds in the
bottom the ordinary worlds on the top okay and so let me talk about the back
end of the journey first because what I was mostly concerned about with when a
friend pointed me to that book was my return to the ordinary world and he told
me you Coleman you got to read this book.
And so the back end of the hero's journey in the return section is seven stages of the
17.
It's the ultimate boon, which is you learned something big in life.
Depending on everybody learns something where you sort of realize that something
big happened to me. That's the ultimate boon and you have this incredible desire to do something
with it. It's either knowledge or it's experience or whatever. And the ultimate boon you have and
you feel like this life thing. And then the next stage is typically refusal of the return. You really don't want
to come back to the ordinary world because you feel that there is some level of consequence
that maybe you can't handle or somebody won't understand, you know.
Or maybe it's too mundane. You'll be...
Maybe.
You'll feel adrift.
Totally. Yeah. And this is in the description of the stages, what you just described as part of that description.
The next stage you're coming up back into the ordinary world on this return is magic flight. And the way it's described in,
you know, myths or in real life is
you have to escape that extraordinary world and take one more dangerous flight or
to escape that extraordinary world and take one more dangerous flight or sneak away or something is catapulting you to take that ultimate boon and fight against that refusal,
you're taking magic flight.
Amazing. Is it... It's assistance, I think.
It's like assistance from a, um, like a special power or something, which could be your own or somebody else.
Right? And then, and then suddenly you're into the last three, which is crossing the return threshold into the ordinary world.
Master of two worlds, where you finally realize through help and or process,
where you can hold these two opposing
life experiences in place.
And then the very last stage, 17, is freedom to live.
And when you can, I'm gonna give you
my little pet theory in a second,
when you can work your way through those stages,
you can have the freedom to live.
What I realized potentially happened to me,
just my internal feelings about, you know,
my coming out of the military and back,
is if you skip or you don't figure out
how to deal with the refusal to return and and
You just pick I'm gonna call it the next big thing
you catapult yourself into a new cycle and you never finish and
One of two things has happened. You're either two people trapped in the ordinary world or you're one person trapped in the in two worlds
I don't know which it is like either two worlds in one person or it's two people trying to live in one
world but shit gets crazy right because you just haven't done the cycle and it
sounds very misculin but if you read it here with a thousand faces like this
journey is not new like this is thousands of years a very typical human
cycle now if we go back to the top of the circle, let me try to scream
through the first ten, which will be very obvious for Star Wars fans. Just think
about what Luke does. And I'm not like a super Star Wars person, I've seen the
movies, but it's a call to adventure. Most of us have a call to adventure of some
sort in our life. Refuse the call, help from a mentor, crossing the first
threshold, the belly of the whale, which is a mentor, crossing the first threshold,
the belly of the whale,
which is described as when you first truly separate,
this was me leaving for college,
when you first truly separate from the ordinary world,
road of trials,
meeting the goddess,
temptations, atonement with the Father, apostasis,
which is kind of like dying a death while you're still alive,
and then you're into those return stages.
And when I first read that book, Andrew, I was like,
I'm trapped in the return.
I'm trapped somewhere in the return, just emotionally.
And one of the places that I was absolutely trapped in the
return was I didn't have the mentor to help me cross the threshold. I knew I had
to move on in my life. I knew I had learned something extremely valuable. I
knew that there was a way through because people across thousands
of years of humanity have done it. I don't think I'm special. And I never had the mentor.
I got mentors later, you know, a couple years out. And it reminds me that in the, so I got
out in the fall of 2011 in the summer, one of my very good friends who lives in Connecticut. He works in New York
He brought me to a lunch
At some fancy club in New York
With a guy named Buddy Buca Paul, buddy Buca who won the Congressional Medal of Honor was a West Point grad
He won the CMH in Vietnam
I've been around a lot of you know famous military people lunch was very normal, but Buddy was amazing. It was a normal lunch.
We didn't talk about much impact.
We didn't talk about combat action or whatever.
There was a green velvet set of stairs.
We were leaving the club, the upstairs.
We were coming down the green set of stairs.
If I remember, Buddy's a little bit shorter than I am.
He reached out his left, I was on his left.
He reached out his left arm.
I was a stair, one stair below him. He stopped me. I turned to my right to look at him. He
looked at me. He said, son, you have it. You know that? You have it. P.T.S. And you're
gonna have to deal with it. And we left. I got in a cab and I left. And I remember
thinking, you might have it, but I don't.
Because that's the old days. Like we were prepared for this shit.
I was still convinced that I'm good.
Like nothing happened to me.
Nothing in the military happened to me,
that's just normal stuff.
And all of our training, it's a story I told myself,
all of our training prepared me for that.
Like this, the rest of my life is just gonna, nothing bad is gonna happen because I'm good, whatever that
meant. And when I started to learn more and read more and talk to people who
are helping me, I remembered Buddy telling me that. And back to those return
stages, Andrew, it's just incredibly important for me to understand that my journey is not special.
We are part of a long history of evolution
that people who go through very challenging,
and I mean, the 17 stages in Joseph
could not be more accurate to like, to my life,
particularly the return.
And of course, if one looked from the outside, they would agree with your
mindset then and say, you're alive.
You certainly done very hard things, extraordinary things.
You're married, you got three kids, they're thriving.
PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder and things like it.
Cause I don't think any single acronym or diagnosis
can capture anything.
I think Paul Conti made that very clear to us
in the mental health series.
These are names by necessity.
It's a framework.
It certainly taught me something.
Absolutely.
And certainly those who haven't been in the military
maybe had a seeded vent of something challenging
or whatever it is.
Many people struggle with these kinds of things military, maybe had a seeded vent of something challenging or whatever it is, you know, many
people struggle with these kinds of things that live inside them in their nervous system.
They pack it down.
Maybe they don't.
But that was inside you at that point.
I think you and I first got acquainted in somewhere around 2016 when you and some other folks from tier one community and related communities
started coming to the lab and my lab,
and I never really talked publicly about my lab
has been involved with various things in Canada and the US.
Not trying to create any mystique there,
but it's not a point of interest what we did.
But I recall at that time just thinking,
like this guy's just an amazing team guy.
But in any event, you know, we got to know each other a bit
and my sense then was like, it's like a,
that's kind of indestructible, right?
You know, and now I realize nobody's indestructible.
We're flesh and bone.
But, but if we may,
let's, let's, let's fast forward a bit, um, to a
couple of years later, um, if you're willing to
talk about it, um, maybe talk about some of the,
uh, the evolution that happened.
So you started working a job, um, getting back
into civilian life. Yep.
And, um, I recall a conversation about this time of year, probably about three
years, three years ago.
Yeah.
And you had done what, um, a lot of, uh, vets from, um, tier one operations
have done and are now doing, which I actually have mostly a favorable outlook on,
which is there, now these are, I wanna be very clear,
legal and sanctioned explorations
of the psychedelic space, right?
And I remember you called me and you described
the experience that you had had,
and some of the connection with warrior culture
that had helped emerge for you.
So could you explain what happened there?
You know, probably the entry, Andrew, is as important,
meaning it's not all about books,
but this is actually another thing I've really learned.
I was very intellect and achievement central.
And as you can see how easy the emotion comes out now,
I kind of very frighteningly understand people
who like feel stuff a lot more.
It's a whole other landscape.
It's miserable.
Well, wait, yeah, it is and yet it's, I agree.
It's a very uncomfortable space, you know,
but we'll get there.
It's a journey for me, let me put it that way.
So, you know, there's a bunch of other,
I'm a voracious reader, I really enjoy it.
And you know, my entree and little window
into the world of getting that kind of help
came from a lot of different areas.
I found in our area a craniosacral therapist who it still seems like, because I mentioned
to people and it sounds fringe to them, it's a very light touch, not even chiropractic
like and it's closer to myofascial type of massage.
Some tapping.
Yep.
Yeah, some stuff on your head.
Very light tapping on the top of the head. The part I actually love the most is the back of the neck,
sort of manipulation.
You're lying down relaxed.
Yeah, you're clothed, super easy in terms of that.
Couple years of that, just because of athletics,
I love massage and that's kind of my entree.
So through the body, somatics.
Yeah.
Which frankly in many ways is my favorite, back to the physical orientation to the world
is what's useful to me.
But also, I read Sam Harris's first book, End of Faith, in 2006.
And so I've followed him for 15 years, religiously, read all of his books, Lying, Moral Landscape.
And his, I don't know him personally, so public stuff notwithstanding, that's not important
to me, but waking up and I took an online course with Robert Wright, who wrote Why Buddhism
is True, but that's really not what he's known for, you know, Princeton professor. He's so funny, he's very humorous, and I started to work my way into...
I don't have some like... I don't want people to think I have some like whiz-bang,
like spiritual practice, that's whatever, you know.
But it became very interesting to me, Andrew, this...
I needed to find... I started to realize I needed to find a way
to back away from the 24 hour ledge.
Like that super hyper focus,
I needed to get a little bit of perspective.
One of my favorite short videos
is Richard Feynman's Pale Blue Dot.
I needed to just back away.
That reminds me, thank you so much
for talking about time space bridging, I think, the other
day.
Yeah.
We make, I'll cue people to that clip in the caption.
It's a way of taking oneself out of one's immediate sphere of vision and literally looking
further out into one's environment and then back again as a perceptual exercise of understanding
that as our visual field expands, our perception
of time also expands.
The binning, the chunking of time.
Yeah.
That, in mind your conversation years ago about horizon and activating the parasympathetic
system instead of sympathetic, I just very slowly started to realize I needed to back
away from the small picture and the
reading and the craniosacrum size and I was still not really getting consistent real help,
but I thought I could do it through educating myself intellectually.
And I thought it was time to, and it was, it has short-term consequences, but long-term it's been amazing,
to deal with the plant medicines
in a controlled and curated environment.
And that experience was super safe
and quite amazing actually,
the weekend or the three or four days,
was super intense, but I didn't leave there thinking,
again, I kind of thought, I'm good.
That was great.
Yeah.
A couple of things.
One, we've covered psychedelics on this podcast before.
I'd say this not for liability reasons, but just really to emphasize for people's safety,
to protect them.
Plant medicines are illegal most places still.
This is changing, MDMA has been filed with the FDA
as a potential treatment, it's not yet legal.
These things have great power to heal
in the right circumstances,
and they also have great potential to harm
in the wrong hands or circumstances.
People with potential for psychosis, et cetera.
But with that said, I remember I was driving,
I was on a phone call with you around this time of year,
three years ago, maybe it was four,
but I think it was three years ago,
and I said, what was your experience with Ibogaine DMT like?
And you said, you know,
it was among the most profound experiences
of my entire life.
And I recall you saying that you felt
that it had connected you through time
to all the warrior cultures that had preceded you,
not just the US military,
but all warrior cultures.
And you sounded great.
You sounded like better than great.
You weren't high, but you just sounded like, man, like something had synced up.
And I thought, this is great.
And I hadn't explored plant medicines,
at least not in a long time, because I had done the recreationally as a youth,
which I do not recommend. It took me down a bad path. But, and more recently,
I've explored them in controlled conditions. But I thought, awesome.
This worked.
You got this new job. You did some very controlled, and again, physician assisted,
Ibogaine DMT experiences,
and you're telling me how great everything was.
Yep.
And then about, I think it was about three,
four months later, I got a very different call.
Yep.
And if you're willing, I remember that call.
Maybe you can tell me about that call.
I mean, the experience, it was incredibly powerful.
Humor is such a powerful way to get through hard times
is why I'm laughing.
But it really was, Andrew.
I mean, to be fair to thousands of years of people
having experience with these things, we often joked about what poor sucker reached out and grabbed that root for the first time and chewed
on it.
The iboga tree.
Boy, he found out.
Or she.
Or she.
Yeah.
To be fair.
To be fair, probably some session that wasn't supposed to go that direction and someone chewed on the wrong route
But um
It was extremely powerful
I've heard that you know
The 5m EO for some people is not much. It's like black
for me it was just
liftoff and
I Saw an entirely perfect for me it was just liftoff and I
saw an entirely perfect geometric mosaic in light blue and white and
That was the warrior culture connection like that whole 20-minute ride was just something else
As you know, I haven't done it. No attic is the word no attic. Yeah that people use and very difficult. I don't have the language for it and
Couple months later the bottom dropped out
Yeah, and it be and I want to talk about that now
I also want to emphasize I know a good number of people that have
Had the same experience you did with avigain DMT through the Veterans Solutions Group.
And I know Marcus and Amber Capone very well,
actually a bill just got passed in Congress
that Dan Crenshaw helped spearhead to bring funding
to use of psychedelics for PTSD treatment in military.
And I should mention,
cause this was interesting to learn that
that bill was highly bipartisan.
I'm not gonna name off the names,
cause if I do, there's gonna be a lot of cringing,
screaming and yelling.
But it's like, if ever there was a bill
that was supported from both sides of the aisle
with the like the most diametrically opposed names
who came together around that funding, It's that bill. Yeah and
Just striking it's a and so there's a very bipartisan thing. So I will say a number of people
Have been greatly benefited by the veteran solutions work
But and we can't causally link what happened to you afterwards to that at all. There's a lot to it.
There's a lot of contextual stuff.
So we're not doing that, but we're an open book here.
And I think that's a great group, by the way,
Veterans Solutions is amazing.
A few months later, you said the bottom dropped out.
So what happened and when did you start to notice it?
And then maybe we can talk about that phone call.
Yeah, I think, you know, looking back, Andrew,
I think a couple things.
Most people who call me about, you know, friends who say,
hey, should I go do this?
I initially tell them, well, 100% of the time,
I tell them no, until, until you get,
I was having this conversation last week with a guy who I never met before you need to stabilize
Your situation whatever your situation is through some very slow deliberate
dr. Conti level help
because in the case of I'm happy to see that some people are using just a wider spectrum of on ramp not the nuclear option to start
Can tell you unequivocally I began in 5m me of DMT two days apart is the nuclear option and it's not right for everybody
Just I'm not a scientist. There's no question that cannot be right for everybody. That just doesn't makes any sense
There's other ways to enter I believe
That cannot be right for everybody. That just doesn't make any sense. There's other ways to enter, I believe. And when you say the Conti option, well, just for those that didn't see
the series with Dr. Paul Conti, we'll put a link to in the show note captions. But
what Coleman's referring to is talk therapy with somebody highly skilled and perhaps also
prescription medication, if that's necessary, maybe hormone therapy, if that's necessary,
that's up to the physician. But clearly talk therapy with a skilled clinician.
I believe I needed, I don't know what other people need,
I needed a mentor to help me contextualize
what I was coming from and what I'm going to.
And my experience with the plant medicines was it kicked the door wide open
and took that beautiful ice sculpture, perhaps at a person's wedding, and shattered it on the floor.
And I was, again, left alone, my fault, not anybody else's, left alone to figure out how to put that ice sculpture back together,
piece by piece.
And my belief is I could have avoided that
by having a much more deliberate process.
So when suddenly the ice sculpture was on the ground
and every bit of intellect that I built over,
you know, however long, four decades,
I was flat on my back.
And as I told you, Andrew, and I've been, you know,
really verbal about with so many friends
who only want to talk about it in quiet circles,
which I totally understand and respect.
And if you want to talk about it in a quiet circle,
like email the Humor Live podcast,
and you can give them my
cell phone number because I know how important it is to people in there in that stage is that was
another thing that I never thought was possible for humans. It was severe depression,
severe. And I was so because I guess I just never thought about it,
again, or never had a mentor, the shocking thing, Andrew, was how shocked I was. It was
like if I had known something like this was real, not that I would have listened
to anybody if they said it, but the most shocking thing was that, again, this could
happen to me. And when it did happen, I was completely unequipped
to deal with it took, forget how weak,
forget every other thing in my life.
It took 10,000x the energy of anything
I've ever done in my life before to just put my feet
on the ground in the morning.
I could not PT. I couldn't run,
and you're like, I could not fucking function.
I did function somehow, to some level,
but it was so terrifying.
I just have, for anyone listening who has been through,
I just have such incredible respect
for people who have dealt with it
and have learned to get through something like that.
Depression.
Oh yeah, or any, pick the title, right?
Whatever tough situation someone's in emotionally,
I have such tremendous respect for them.
Because I would have been, years ago,
the guy who like, just tighten up your boots and get to it.
It's not possible. Like, you have to get help from people who care about you and
you have to like you have to step back away from the problem set somehow and
And work through it, you know step by step
One of the most helpful things and I'm so feel so fortunate that it never really had like the chemical dependence thing
It was easy for me to stop drinking.
When did you decide to stop drinking?
It was around three years ago or so-ish.
Prior to the slaps into depression.
No, no, right during.
Yeah, right during.
You just figured alcohol is a bad thing right now.
Yeah, and I mean, you and I have been friends for a while
and I wanna do some of the things you and I have discussed
and I hear you talk about publicly. They were just good reminders, you and I have been friends for a while now, Andrew. Some of the things you and I have discussed and I hear you talk about publicly,
they were just good reminders, you know?
One of the things I absolutely hate, but I do every day,
which is wait 90 minutes to drink coffee.
Oh, it's the worst.
I cannot tell you how much of a difference
that's made in my energy throughout the day.
And the drinking was similar.
You know, I, like, look, I'm just gonna drop it
for a couple weeks, and then suddenly, my sleep's better, my fitness is better.
So we all, even my friend, you chat about stuff.
Oh, what are you doing at this age?
I'm approaching 50.
That helps you stop drinking.
Everything else, all the other recommendations come second,
at least for me.
Was that pretty easy for you to do?
Because I know there's a big culture of drinking in the teams.
Yeah, I was just lucky. So my point there is, you know, the just the respect I have for people who
who work through stuff like that. And I was going to say, the reason I referenced the drinking is
because I started reading a lot about the 12 steps AA. I've never been to an AA meeting but the Simpson the PTSD and the 12 steps
I'm like oh my god this is me. Like I need to go through these steps in my own
way not for you know not for drinking but for whatever this low-grade the way
I've described it is you know the Buddhist obviously called dukkha it's
unsatisfactoriness. This low-grade irritation that I carry around every day.
The one amazing thing that that couple of months did for me
and the way I described it visually
is if someone cut me from neck to belly,
inflate open my chest and took a propane torch
and scorched me from the inside
and then put me back together and said, start over.
That's how it felt.
That's literally how it felt.
I mean, I could not believe, Andrew,
and you can obviously, you know,
Dr. Conti can articulate this better.
I couldn't believe how emotional pain
could be so physically painful.
That whole experience, again, the shocking part was the shocking part.
I just didn't think it was real.
And so then when it was, and I'm like, how many fucking things do I have to deal with?
And I realized everybody deals with a lot of stuff.
And it was challenging. And I realized everybody deals with a lot of stuff and
It was challenging and then slowly, you know, it got better and better and
Guys like, you know friends very close friends a very very small tight group were
And what people
do when you finally tell them
and you think, oh, this guy's gonna... he's never gonna talk to me again.
They do the opposite.
They rally immediately for you, you know, and then guys that aren't in your inner circle necessarily helping directly and they're in the next circle.
Because now this is very weird. Back to like the feeling thing. I can not a
hundred percent of the time but a lot of guys in my community if I speak to them
and they're in a bad spot I can detect it within five seconds.
Just the tonal and kind of like the tempo.
And when you tell that ring of people, not your super inner circle,
they dump it immediately.
As soon as you open the door, they're like, hey, man,
I had a couple of tough months.
Boom, they're right in for the most part.
They open up.
Yep.
And that really scares me, Andrew, because I know,
like if we need to flip the switch this afternoon,
like we can flip the switch.
Meaning like I can go to old school, you know,
15 years ago, that's what you and I have discussed
in the past,
is kind of come back to the fighter mentality,
is the problem with that, the hardcore, intense, focused,
that's easy.
Like, it's so easy to do that tough stuff.
That's easy.
This is the hard part.
And that's what was so challenging.
It was to go to people who normally we do,
you know the, yeah, yeah, let's do this, let's do that,
let's do something crazy.
Okay, well, tell that same person
who you've built persona, identity,
around them and with them,
they're like, you're this guy.
And then you have a tough spot.
Now you have to go tell them the opposite.
Like, I'm really not doing well.
It's terrifying.
It is terrifying.
But I second with both arms,
your statement that when we actually open up
to somebody trusted, hopefully a friend
or somebody close to us, but like some people go to clergy
or AA or any number of the different resources.
And those resources really are out there at zero cost.
They really are there if one has to look a little bit,
sometimes a lot, unfortunately, but they're there.
My experience has always been,
and in observing others,
that there's something about the human spirit
that wants to help.
Totally.
And sometimes that help comes from somebody
who's really been through it,
but even if somebody hasn't been through it,
there's something in our nervous system
that sees real pain in somebody.
And contrary to what we think,
they don't judge and think that everything
that the person who was hurting was before was a fraud.
The contrary, they see it as an act of strength.
Mm-hmm.
And, but it feels like hell to reveal that.
It feels, and I totally agree.
I think all the tough stuff,
all the, anything physical is like a fraction
of the emotional pain.
And thank you for highlighting the physical aspect
of emotional pain, especially if one isn't accustomed to it.
If one isn't accustomed to it.
If you're willing, you know, how bad did it get?
I mean, the call we had suggested it was bad.
I sometimes refer to a line and I'd be lying
if I didn't admit that I've seen that line
a few times in my life.
I've been right up next to it a few times
and now if I ever see it, I know to do many things
when it first comes into my visual sphere,
the line of course being the point
which one is considering taking their own life.
Something that happens far too often,
even once is far too often.
And we've sort of skirted around this topic.
After all the wartime stuff and the gunfights
and people dying in the doorbells,
been a lot of friends of yours and some of whom I know,
but most of whom I don't.
Two this year.
Who continue to kill themselves, to put it bluntly.
Where were you at with respect to that line?
Because depression is one thing, there's mild depression,
there's severe depression, there's recurring depression, there's management
and on and on and on.
But ultimately that's the thing that hopefully
everyone's seeking to avoid.
And it's a, yeah, how close were you?
I would say there was probably,
I really want to say one day.
And the truth is it was one day.
It lasted one day.
Being that close to the line.
But it only takes a moment to go.
That's the scary thing, right?
And it probably lasted a couple of weeks,
but there was only, back to the Buds thing,
like I never thought about quitting,
I thought about it one day.
What was the thought?
It was, I mean, sort of like the classic symptoms.
Andrew, I was up all night sweating and shaking and it's back to the shock of it.
It was, okay, I actually was able to step, like one of two things is happening.
Either I am fundamentally bad.
There's no way you can feel this bad and be good.
So one of two things is happening.
Like I'm just bad, a bad person, which I know is not true,
or something bad got inside of me that I have to get rid of,
and I don't know how to get rid of it.
And so sweating, shaking, you know, up at three in the morning and legitimately thinking
this is just the scariest thing and for anybody in the situation, you think with every ounce
of your being that people are better off without you. And then somehow, thankfully through chemistry,
neurobiology, past learnings,
I stepped back away from that very quickly.
But the feeling of putting me up to that line
didn't go away.
I just intellectually was able to,
it was kind of where the maladaptive behaviors,
back to training work in your favor,
which is I'm not quitting.
Like this can't be just me,
even though it did feel like just,
I mean you suddenly become the core
of the entire existence of the universe.
You think like you're it, you know?
But in the negative side of it, not the adaptive existence of the universe. You think like you're it, you know, but in the negative side of it, not the
adaptive side of it, um
because the pain is just so extreme and um
but I was able to back away from it and then over
I'm so grateful to so many of my friends. I can't imagine how many hours if we collect up those hours
How much time I spent with them on the phone?
um how many hours if we collect up those hours, how much time I spent with them on the phone.
And one of my, in the, like, in those really hard weeks, maybe a little bit after that, Andrew,
one of my buddies, I was actually just talking to him
yesterday, because I had time in the car.
The tough love side of it, when you're feeling that poorly,
is a little tricky.
Like I wouldn't, I probably wouldn't deliver tough love unless
I really thought the person could handle it. I think it's you got to really deal with kid gloves at that those moments
But one of my buddies told me if you do something to hurt yourself
You will have proven to every person who knows you that you are a fucking liar and a fraud
everything you've been about your whole life is a fraud.
And Andrew, we were on the phone, I was like,
whoa, my God, he just went tendering, I mean dead center.
And that was a pivot, like that really helped me a lot.
That's what you needed.
I mean, I don't know that that's what I would have needed.
I recall when we spoke, because I obviously not professionally trained in any of that,
I just remember thinking, how do I put in this into language that Coleman's going to understand?
I just said, I think your goggles are, I know one thing for sure, which is that your goggles are foggy. So you have to outsource your decisions now.
I think you might've also told me to outsource my identity.
And that helped a lot because it was that idea
of you have foggy goggles,
you're clearly like not on stable ground.
Everything you believe about yourself,
just let it be the spokes of a wheel
that somebody else can hold for you for a period of time.
It was like, well, I can do that.
And then my other buddy, I didn't wanna be a liar
and a fraud, I was like, I can do that.
And.
Yeah, I mean, I'm grateful for the opportunity,
but unfortunately I had a few circumstances
where people close to me were at that edge, and I'd be lying if I say I've been at that
edge.
So I knew where I had some sense of where you were at.
And under those conditions, I don't think there's a playbook.
I mean, obviously, when people have a plan, and they're thinking about implementing that
plan, those people need to be put under protection from themselves.
Fortunately, it didn't come to that.
Yeah.
And you know, a few friends just did the basics, Andrew, which was I really wanted to talk
to you at that time because I knew you would give me some advice.
You know, I was so uncertain about just the, I'll just say the chemistry, but the chemistry
and like something is not right.
And you know, different friends offer different,
and some friends just sat and listened to it all.
And when I think back, it's like,
I would take a bullet for them.
Cause they just took it, you know,
and let me offload it.
It's an amazing experience for people let people help you
Which I was never willing to do
No, and you were
We have to highlight something that might have been overlooked earlier because it we went through it quickly
But that you were you know, you're a commander of a unit. So
You're head of a family. I know Bridges also head of family. There's a there's a trade
You go back and forth. Right, exactly. But you're used to leading and protecting others.
I think it's awesome that you're able to have access that raising your hand and asking for help.
Yeah, I have to.
It's such a sign of strength and skill.
And it feels like the exact opposite in the moment.
The exact opposite.
And then we go to these narratives like,
oh, if I've ever done that in the past,
people didn't help.
You know, we come up with a million excuses,
but in the end, it's such a thing of strength to do that.
So you did ratchet yourself out of that very, very dark hole.
Slowly.
And I wanna place this in the context
of this hero's journey.
Would you see that, you talk about the magic flight
that you're against, you're like the refusal,
you won't go back.
But so it was accepting, it seems that there was
that some pieces of you needed work.
That there was this PTSD, this gentleman that you mentioned
saw that and you refused to kind of deal with it.
And so shine a light on it and God, the universe,
whatever your beliefs are, force you to see it.
And you went to the very bottom, forced you to see it. Yep.
And you went to the very bottom, but not out the bottom. Yep.
What was the process of putting things back together?
I mean, really, I mean, a lot of it, Andrew,
was cutting out.
So as a practical matter, I mean, I'm gonna go,
just go back to regular therapy,
because I don't, that, I mean, I'm going to go just go back to regular therapy because I don't that I mean, my therapist is amazing.
So you're not you.
At what point did you enter immediately?
I mean, immediately then.
So you got a quote unquote therapist because oh, yeah, yeah.
I mean, effectively, you know, Bridget and I and multiple at point, Bridget was like,
this is it, full-time help, effective immediately.
And I knew it was necessary, but if I'm really honest,
I would have avoided it.
I would have somehow tried to gut through the situation
without full-time help.
And I mean, once a week therapy, therapy yeah so the idea of sitting down with somebody and talking about past
present and maybe some ideas of future was was worse to you than jumping out
playing at 3,000 feet or going into a gunfight not even close not even close
and hearing yourself say that, do you realize how...
Ridiculous.
Well, how untrue that must be at the physical level, but the nervous system doesn't know.
To quote Dr. Balkhanti, the limbic system that experiences or creates this sense of fear and dread
doesn't know the clock or the calendar.
It's like if you go... meaning if you experience that, there's the idea that it's going to
go on forever.
I think that's the fear.
That's correct.
Yep.
That's exactly right.
Thank you for saying that.
The fear was this will go on forever.
But so yes, I just did not want to, you know, back to Bessel Van der Kolk's, when I read this word in his
book Body Keeps the Score of Lexothemia, if that's a real thing, where you can't put language
to what's going on.
I didn't want to put language to it.
I couldn't, I just didn't feel like it.
Like I just felt like gutting through it.
And then I got, you know, once a week therapy,
amazing people.
And I don't know, Andrew, the first three months was,
you know, I mean, gutting through,
I just couldn't, I couldn't seem to shed
that emotional burden of,
pick the category of stuff from the last,
let's just say 20 years.
It was just, but it was all,
I couldn't stop it from coming out
and obviously that's a good thing.
And so that just continued and every day got,
and when I say, this is the tough part for at least me,
and I know a lot of guys like me the
gains are minuscule you know but things improved slowly but surely. Were there
ever moments where you felt you were drifting backward? Not really and that's
that was nice you know you see that there's some stall you know plateaus.
You don't have to share this but
Because I'm a believer that talk therapy can be very effective
Certainly that's a good experience is I wouldn't be here if it weren't for it for two in particular amazing
People really helped me along the way but in that way, but I do think there's a place at times for
Pharmacology to assist the process sure I know nowadays people hear SSRIs and they demonize those.
That wasn't, I'll come clean, so and then maybe if you feel like it, you can.
I had a bout of depression during my post-doc, did a short run of Welbutin-Brupropion, which
is more of the dopaminergic noradrenergic agonism, mostly adrenaline noradrenergic.
It really helped.
It nuked my memory at the dosage they suggested,
which meant I had to take a very low dose.
And then eventually I came off.
And I think that that's one thing I learned from Conti,
which is that most of these medications were designed
to help people get over a bump,
as opposed to be taken continuously.
Some people need to take them continuously.
I have been able to be away from that for a long time, but I think pharmacology can
help.
Oh, yeah.
I think I'd have to go back and look four months maybe of pretty low dose of wellbutrin.
Thanks to... Yeah, that's about right.
Yeah.
Thanks to my buddy Jimmy. You know, I called him and asked him what he thought, and he said, well, you use a gun
sight on your weapon, don't you?
And you use glasses if you can't see.
No, and you're reading glasses.
You need glasses if you can't see, right?
It's like, fucking take the war butcherman, chill.
Like, just get it, get some space back to the space-time bridging concept.
Just get back away from the danger for a few months.
That really helped.
And that's very different than the backing away
from the danger with say alcohol or drugs.
And look, my stance on cannabis is some people
can use it safely, most people probably cannot,
but some can.
But there's something different about the drugs
that have an addiction potential
or the drugs that disrupt sleep.
Like ultimately, if you look at people who commit suicide,
and I've spent a lot of time with this literature,
in almost every case, in the preceding weeks,
there's a disruption in sleep schedules,
meaning disrupted from what they were doing prior to that
when they were not feeling suicidal.
So then you think about alcohol disruption of sleep, even if you think you're sleeping.
And like, there's a story, like a common theme starts to emerge.
So you stabilize sleep, you were getting some dopamine and noradrenergic assistance from
the low dose woebutrin, and you're basically also just-
Offloading.
You're just letting it all out with a therapist.
With a therapist.
And the thing that strikes me as to your point about my resistance to the therapy versus
jumping out of airplanes or whatever, the most important people in my whole life since
day one have been people that have helped me, coaches, parents, friends, boom, Doug, work colleagues, the guys that I work for now,
like other, you have all these people helping you
and then you hit this thing that's so unusual,
I'm like, I don't want anybody to help me
and I don't want to tell anybody about it.
It's like, what is that, Andrew?
That was the, it's like, what is that?
And it's not like I wasn't in these environments
where I've been coached and mentored.
I've had coaches and mentors on my ass my whole fucking life.
Like instructors, you know, it's a nonstop.
And I don't know, like I couldn't,
I just couldn't do it until I did it.
And then, you know, it's been a process since
and I'm super grateful for it. And I don't know where we are in the journey but in terms of like the hero's
journey but I hope I'm at freedom to live some version of it because with my
rea- this is dangerous because I only say this like with my really really really
close friends I know this is going to more people in my cli- I feel like a
completely different person and none of that stuff really ever goes away.
It's all a process, right?
And I'm never gonna stop the process.
But I don't even recognize myself in some ways anymore.
And that's been a good thing.
Because in those times when I was just
on the 24 hour horizon sometimes, I just did not know
what the fuck was going on other than exactly what I was doing, you know? And
it's just an odd experience to be in a different place. And it's scary to know
that without that experience and without people really kind of forcing me to get
help and things forcing me,
I might be doing the same stuff, which is a hard way to live, you know?
Or worse.
Or worse.
You might not be here.
Or worse, which has happened to many of our buddies, you know? And I want to go
like retroactively hug them and collect them up in like a net and say, guys, just stop for a second.
You know, like we, it doesn't have to go there.
Yeah, I feel that the yearning in that statement,
I suffer from a terrible,
very destructive, debilitating desire to travel back in time
and fix things.
It's like I know I don't have, my graduate advisor who unfortunately all three of my
graduate advisors are dead, but she used to say, my time machine's broken.
Anytime I'd raise something that could have, would have, should have, my time machine's
broken and we know
that, but I felt that statement in every cell of my body.
It's clear you would, but you're also, in sharing this experience and this information,
you're doing that now in what we call in biology in the intero grade fashion.
Many people are going to hear this and cue to the recognition of what's happened to them,
hopefully, before they get to that line.
Yeah, you have to, and...
you just got to tell somebody, you know?
It's like, it's crazy how simple that is, Andrew.
I mean, months.
It's like, I can't tell anybody.
I can't tell anybody.
And maybe we drill into this a little bit deeper,
because I think that this really speaks I can't tell anybody. Well, and maybe we drill into this a little bit deeper
because I think that this really speaks
to the global experience of being human
where unlike a physical wound,
where if you see bone exposed,
you're like, this is pretty serious.
We all have different thresholds for what we can tolerate
in terms of pain and seeing ourselves wounded.
We all don't have to decide what's the difference
between hurting and injured. But when it comes to psychological stuff, we all don't have to decide what's the difference between hurting and injured.
But when it comes to psychological stuff, we don't know.
You know, we also are dealing with a world now
where some people feel psychologically injured
by everything, you know, so that's the extreme there.
But what we're, I think, I think what comes through,
and I think people need to perhaps highlight in their minds is when something's kind of nagging
or scratching at you beneath the surface, that voice,
what do you think that voice is?
I call it the low grade pain.
Okay, for me, it was, there was a low grade,
just slight hot burning starting in 07, probably before that, but it was for me,
it was a weird mix, Andrew, of like an uncertainty, a seeking, a, this just doesn't feel right,
like it has to be fixed.
There has to be an intellectual and achievement way
to sort of get around, this is where the Buddhist
writing and thinking really helped me a lot.
There has to be a way around this low grade
unsatisfactoriness somehow.
My sense for me, and I'm obviously not, you you know the dr. Conti in the room
Just because of all the things I've learned and how it it it just had to be
The this constant I'll use the word trauma, but for me was it was like
Something had to happen to our system
Obviously it does something happens to our system. That is a little bit of a there's a shock there
boom and then a buddy gets killed and then you it's not even always with that then you have
Extreme firefight or you know close call and then it's just boom boom shock shock shock. It's almost like getting
TBI for the nervous system. It's just a constant high it to me. It always felt like
that constant high end.
Now, if you keep going, perhaps,
if you never recognize any of it
and you just keep jacking the dopamine and the adrenaline
your whole life, maybe you can just never recognize it.
But for me, when I shut the engine off and I decided
it's not really how I wanted to live
and I was trying to work out of that low grade
whatever residue that I was left with.
It was like every time I came home from deployment,
I would get sick that night.
Like I would have a fever that night, headache and fever.
And I tend to get sick at the end of the year.
Last two years it was Christmas,
this year it was Thanksgiving.
And you know, Bridget and I always joke about it.
It's because I slightly turn the engine down a little.
And then, you know, the immune system.
Yeah, that's the way it works.
Everyone thinks stress depletes the immune system,
and indeed it can.
But if you think about it in evolutionary adaptive ways,
go, go, go, go, go, allows you to stave off the infection
or at least to not have the symptoms
of combating infection.
And then when you relax a little bit, go on vacation,
boom, you get sick, which is not to say constantly stress,
but you need to modulate.
Right.
You gotta modulate.
But when you're on deployments, you don't have the option.
No, you don't.
You're in gunfights every day.
Yeah, so as soon as you turn it off, you get sick, right?
But for me in this particular instance,
what do I think it is?
I think it was all of those experiences at once,
turning the generator all the way off,
or the electric panel fully off,
and then it just all came out.
Well, for people or anyone listening
who is facing that feeling,
that underlying feeling,
or who is challenged with like a breakup,
loss of a loved one, fear about the future,
languishing because they don't know what the future holds,
or the feeling that quote unquote, so much has happened,
or some combination of those five things,
where do you think the healing process starts?
I hope, again, back to the Hero's Journey,
I hope for every single person
that it's not a rock bottom moment,
but it seems like if you follow a lot of enough people
and you hear enough stories,
you've talked with Dax, right?
Dax Shepard. Yeah.
He talks about it nonstop.
Like, unfortunately, I think a version of bottom
is where the process starts.
All the people I know, the stories they tell me,
the process started when they hit some version of bottom. What's the quote that I love is,
you don't change until the pain of staying the same
is worse than the pain of change.
Amen to that.
I have experienced that more times than I would like to admit.
And that brings me actually to this more macroscopic question.
My understanding of the hero's journey from, obviously I haven't read or listened to the book,
is that we don't complete this cycle and then rest at the ordinary world where we are
living in bliss and peace forever. We actually have to go around that wheel over and over and over again.
Hopefully not going to bottoms that put us,
our lives in danger, but it is not a process
in which we ever really get to cruise.
So let's orient Coleman Ruiz in that cycle.
You seem to have returned to the ordinary world.
For those listening and not watching,
whenever you describe the feeling of getting through,
but also that people assisted you, you smile.
As friendly a guy as you are, I think in the first three years, I knew you, I didn't see you smile once. That's probably true. I didn't see you smile. As friendly a guy as you are, I think in the first three years,
I knew you, I didn't see you smile once.
That's probably true.
I didn't see you smile once.
I just thought like,
and these like tier one team guys,
they're serious.
They're locked in.
They're locked in.
But you smile a lot now.
Yeah.
So I think you're back in the ordinary world.
What are the things you're watchful for?
You're not drinking, you pay attention to your sleep.
You always trained, you always did it.
You call it PT, but physical training.
Yeah, yeah, I trained pretty hard.
Cycle, run.
Swim, lots of kettlebells.
Every morning?
I train probably five out of seven days,
and the two days that I don't train,
I'm in a sauna at my house.
I'm in sauna at least for an hour.
So funny how team guys talk about getting into cold
or getting in the sauna like it's just a regular thing.
Like they never post it to social media.
For them it's just, it's part of the routine.
But I say that because I think a lot of people think
it's like this esoteric biohacking thing.
Wrestlers and people in the military
are accustomed to like sauna cold, sauna cold, just like cardio
lifting weights.
It's not this esoteric thing.
No, no, no.
I mean, I think on average, there's a sauna in Finland for every single person in the
country.
We didn't invent some amazing recovery process by doing sauna.
What do you think it is about physical movement that helps the mind? Obviously, I
consider it necessary, but not sufficient. You need to do the talk therapy, the working
through the writing, the reading, the introspection, the talking to other people, maybe pharmacology,
but it does seem to be so important for resetting us. What do you think it is about physical
movement?
I mean, since it might go back to John Rady's little
anecdote in Spark, you know, the sea squirt, I guess,
swims around, and then as soon as it does whatever it needs
to do, it just dies when it stops moving.
Oh, yeah, so the sea squirt is this aquatic animal,
a plesia, as it were, that when it lands on a rock
and stops moving, it actually digests its own nervous
system, that movement is the great Nobel Prize winning
scientist, Sherrington, that said that movement
is the final common pathway.
That movement is the way that the nervous system
tells the brain and rest of nervous system
that it's still needed here on earth.
Which I like.
It's like, it reminds us of our own utility.
In a neural way. Which I like, it's like a, it reminds us of our own utility.
Yeah. In a neural way.
I mean, whatever that is, Andrew, right?
The chemistry and the neurobiology of it all,
this goes back, again, going back to seventh grade,
I was at the end of the rope on the detentions
and the suspension, and I have this very clear memory
that before my dad got home, like I ran laps,
I don't know how many, but a lot around the block.
And by the time he got home, I was like,
whatever my punishment is, I'm good.
Like I'm not worried about it.
That physical activity for me all the time,
I don't wanna overdo the runner's high thing,
but whatever that is, that's what I think it is.
Like when I'm in motion or my heart rate's up,
for the most part, everything's
fine. And I'm clear headed and I cannot be, again, dropping and drinking. I can't be
lethargic and sit around. Like I have to, you know, take care of myself in that regard.
I watch my sleep super close. If it gets past 1030. I'm in like a full-blown panic. I need to get to a pillow
The basics like I don't do anything crazy really
You eat what you want?
No, no, I would say on the neurotic scale of things. That's probably my most extreme
There's probably a little bit of cutting weight kind of like eating disorder issues if I was guessing not that extreme
So you eat meat vegetables? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, but I'm I'm a really light eater. I eat like a bird and probably
Eight times a day maybe more
Eight times a day. Oh easily I'll have
You know, thanks to you. I'll wait an hour and a half to have coffee, which is miserable
You're welcome.
But it's amazing, thank you.
It's helped me so much.
Well, I take some shit for it because some people say,
do I have to?
Well, if I train first thing,
then I'll have my coffee first thing.
It was really to stave off the afternoon crash,
but a lot of people find that experiencing
that natural wake up, and look, it's 90 minutes.
It's not like cutting out for two days or two weeks or Michael Paul and I think quit
coffee and I was like, why in the world would you do that?
Would you quit coffee?
Yeah, why in the world?
I love coffee, love Yerba Mate, always have from first sip, which by the way, I had my
first gourd of Mate, Caffeine Mate when I was four.
There's a picture of me and my grandfather's that Argentine side.
Yeah.
So, but the point here is that, you know, these practices, these things, I think that
they were involved a little bit of discipline, but they really can't have an outsized effect,
I think.
Oh my goodness.
Yeah.
It's incredible.
I mean, the eating thing and then maybe, you know maybe one more mental thing in this regard,
I'll probably have maybe an avocado in the morning and then two hours later,
maybe one hour later, I'll have sliced cheese and an apple and then...
So you're a light grazer.
Really light. I'll probably have the smallest plate at dinner in my house.
We've always been in great shape, like visually, you're tall, you're lean, you're strong.
I think we're realizing now that you can still train on, you have to be gorging oneself with
calories.
Yeah, especially now, right?
Like we're both approaching 50.
It's actually surprising how much I've discovered we can do on how few calories.
I'm not trying to test it some crazy way,
but then just eat throughout the day.
And you know, macro life experience,
I just cut a bunch of extra bullshit out of my life.
Big and little things like I don't,
I try to just do my job and do a good job at it
and hang out with my people, friends and family, and all the
extra shenanigans.
I'll maybe do, you know, I was always doing some big race or some big mountaineering adventure
or I was just piling stuff into my schedule.
I might do one race in the spring.
Everything else is
Casual work really hard at it. I like cycling a lot. It's one of my favorites and go hard, but I'm not
trying to race cat to or you know
win some event or
that release of
Extra bullshit in my life has been as big as anything else and And your boys presumably take some time and attention in here.
Yeah, they're great.
Yeah.
Your son's a runner, university level runner.
A lot of our conversation gets to some kind of core features of being human and the psychology
of challenge and thinking one is or others are invincible,
discovering that none of us are invincible, but that we are renewable. You clearly illustrate
that. There's clearly a message that everyone is gleaning from this, many messages, but what if any revision or adaptation do you think we need
of the concept of being a man, growing oneself into a man?
I'm not a gender studies sociologist, psychologist, neuroscientist, but setting all the sociology and the nomenclature aside,
if you had a short list of things, it seems like you believe that it's important to be
able to do hard things, but sometimes those hard things are not the hard things that you
are.
We think they are like sitting down and telling one story being more terrifying
than going into gunfights overseas.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, it's funny that the prelude a little bit is I'm not a gender studies scientist
either or a sociologist.
I stay away from most of these conversations, you know?
Their barbed wire.
Yeah, they just, people seem to be so over-activated over stuff.
It's very odd.
But for me, in my life experience, Andrew, it's range.
I like to use David Epstein's book title, right? It's range.
And I've noticed this so much because of parenting and watching my boys grow into men.
because of parenting and watching my boys grow into men. If I think about, I'm gonna come back to range, if I think about myself at 17 or 18, not my parents,
not my coaches, unless I really wanted it, you could not fucking tell me what to do.
You can't tell me what to do now. Like if I wanted, I love the mentoring and the
teammateship and the things that get you where you want to go.
But if it's something I don't want to do,
I'm not doing it, you know, no matter what.
And so if I think about that in terms of being a dad
or manhood is, let's take it back to my kids.
Like I think one of the most important parts of my job
is to release the grip and take the reins off and just barely keep them inside the boundaries of alive.
Because they're going to make all their own decisions anyway and they have to.
And so I think a big part that I see and I saw myself a lot for years was we over grip sometimes
as men like we are so afraid of losing control in an already uncontrollable world that we
over grip everything.
And I over gripped everything.
And suddenly when I'm not over gripping stuff,
things are going better.
And when it comes to range, it's okay.
For me, it's okay to have your tough guy moments,
your fighter mentality moments.
I would never want to lose that because no matter how much help I get,
when I'm out with my family or my wife or my boys,
my head is on a fucking swivel and if somebody touches them
it's curtains and
we need to keep that because
That is just a part of life like you have to be
you cannot move through life with blinders on like there are people who are not good people and
It's okay to have range and have that in your toolkit
and it's okay to have range and have that in your toolkit. What I don't think is okay to do is to let that slice of the traditional whatever you want to
call it aggressive manhood be your whole life. Like that's just not functional. You
know it's not good for relationships, it's not good for parenthood. So every
other little tool you can put in that toolbox that takes you all the way over here to what we might consider
Oh Coleman's gonna. He's soft now
No, no, don't mistake my kindness or weakness
There's a category for everything and I think that makes you such a much more complete person
It's made me a more complete person. It's difficult. I
Feel like I'm brand new
at being able to do other things in my toolbox.
Like this part's easy.
I can go jump to that in a nanosecond.
This part over here of normalizing life across a whatever,
80, 90, it's really hard to sort of excavate the normal shit.
But that's what I think we need to do. It's really hard to sort of excavate the normal shit.
But that's what I think we need to do. You know what I mean?
It's okay to be kind and calm and gentle,
and you know, there's nothing wrong with that.
And I'm guessing the word surrender
probably held a far different meaning for you in the past.
A lot of what you're describing is surrendering to the realities of life that we can't control everything.
And just how painful it is to undergo that surrender.
And here I'm talking myself too. It's a process I'm still deeply involved in.
You know, as somebody who's tried to go rung over rung as best I can.
Doesn't Andrew speak to our like evolutions?
Like that is so difficult,
at least for me and guys like me,
I'm putting you in my group here.
That is so hard to do.
Like that just tells me more about
the evolution of our male system.
Like that part's so easy,
and this part is not so easy.
But man, it's a battle to remind myself,
you know, slow down, listen, just the basic shit.
You don't have to go attack every problem
like a fist fight.
It's tough.
It is tough, and I think that the more
that I resist surrender, the more that,
well, I believe in God, so I'll just say God,
but God the universe or whatever it is for people.
But for me, the more that God places me in circumstances
that make the act of surrendering harder.
Like if I would just do it on my own,
it wouldn't have to be so hard.
I wouldn't have to, a good friend of mine,
I've been mentioned by name Tim Armstrong,
he just said like, you gotta hit every branch
on the way down, you know?
He was putting me, I had to, you know? He was like, you're a stubborn punk rocker, you gotta hit every branch on the way down, you know? He was telling me I had to, you know?
He was like, you're a stubborn punk rocker, you have to.
And he was talking about himself too, like there's certain,
there's certain phenotypes where we have to,
but like the universe just screams out,
you don't have to.
You can actually just like lower yourself down on a rope
to the ground and walk away, but then there's that stubbornness.
But I think that that stubbornness.
But I think that the stubbornness
has its evolutionary adaptations too.
And the hero's journey, nothing in the hero's journey
says that the transitions between these different states
are linear, are of equal duration, are of certainty,
only that they exist and that there's no way,
as you pointed out before, to skip steps.
You can't skip.
I couldn't skip.
If somebody skips, I mean, it's like you hit every branch.
No, but nobody skips.
And whether or not somebody tries to skip
through psychedelics or through being the toughest
or through the acquisition of money
or just focusing on family, you know,
family obviously is super important,
but that's not going to accomplish the other aspects
of the journey. It's a huge part of important, but that's not going to accomplish the other aspects of the journey.
It's a huge part of it, but it's not the only part.
Again, necessary, not sufficient.
Yeah, it's like, again, the 12 steps are some,
I'm not that experienced in it,
I just read about it a decent amount.
It's like hitting every branch.
You got to follow the steps, man.
Or you can live with that low grade pain nonstop. You know, it's, that's not a good way to live.
No, because it, because even if you're not conscious of it, it erodes you in ways that
are very destructive. I wasn't conscious of it at all. You know, until the universe, as we say,
came in with a fucking wrecking ball and said, fine, you're not going to listen,
sent you all these messages, you're not going to listen? Sent you all these messages, you're not going to listen?
Okay.
I think it's important that we
at least briefly touch on where things are at right now.
Because it would be remiss for us to give the impression
that like you're sitting there meditating,
you're drinking your coffee 90 minutes late,
after you wake up, you're sitting there in bliss
and thinking about all the great things that happened,
how you made it through.
Like there's still a lot happening right now.
So to the extent that you can share,
you're working all the time.
What are you doing nowadays as a vocation?
I was in private equity for a while before I met you.
Run a company for, companies for a really good friend of mine named Tom Ripley, amazing
guy.
And then I stepped away because I was exhausted and I didn't know how to say it.
I didn't know how to tell anybody.
Like I needed to escape again, take magic flight somehow, you know?
And he and I are incredibly close.
Like he was one of the guys who is in that super tight inner circle
And then I came back to it with you know with this team that I'm on and
Serve as the chief operating officer at Lid Sports Group the largest brick-and-mortar licensed sports retailer
In North America, we have 2,000 stores during
the holiday. We have 8,200 employees and amazing team. The private equity firm that I work
for is an amazing team and the company is an amazing company and just incredible group
of folks. And so yeah, I work a lot. I was out here doing store visits in San Francisco in LA and that's it's all good and I think
I
Do those little things?
All day long all the time, but no I am NOT sitting on a mountaintop like most days. There's no meditation at all Andrew
it's meditation as a workout Tom and I throw kettlebells around multiple times a week and
I do those other little things,
but the difference for me is I'm okay with it.
And I say that because I was incredibly busy, you know, before when I first got out of the
Navy.
And I wasn't okay with it because I thought, again, this is back to the hero's journey,
I thought like the return to ordinary life
was gonna be sunshine and rainbows.
Look, I have the ultimate boon.
I had this big experience,
not that I wanted to be front and center in the media,
but here I am, world.
It's calm out here, right?
We get to chill and have a good time and sleep
and nothing is stressful in the
real world, right?
Wrong.
I just wasn't ready for that.
Like I really genuinely thought that it was just going to be easier.
And so when we talk about the low-grade pain injury and like the, you know, what is that?
To me, that was one of the biggest frictions.
Like, holy shit.
I did all this stuff, all these deployments,
lost all these buddies, and there's no fucking rest.
The regular world, it's supposed to be easier.
At least that's the story that was in my mind.
Going through all the stuff we just talked about.
Now I'm okay with it.
I like it, I know how to manage my life,
I know how to manage my time for the most part.
I have a different relationship with my teammates and my mentors and my bosses and my own work
life and I love it.
I feel like I'm back to, in a very different way, where I was when I was in the squadron
back in 07.
I feel like I'm on, hope this doesn't 07. Like, I feel like I'm on...
I hope this doesn't get clipped, but for me,
I'm on another level.
Like, I really feel good about where I'm headed.
And I haven't felt like that since I went into college.
You know, I felt like shit was just deteriorating.
And now it's not, which is nice.
Well, the beauty of what you just said and everything you've shared today is that... I don't know if it occurs to you or not, which is nice. Well, the beauty of what you just said and everything you've shared today is that,
I don't know if it occurs to you or not,
but you've been providing mentorship
to millions of people in the form of sharing your experience
of your own hero's journey.
And I wanna thank you for making it so clear as to what
your experience was and being unafraid or perhaps afraid
and doing it and telling us anyway exactly what that felt
like, even better in that sense, you know,
and stepping into that fear.
But also making it so clear that while your life experience is extraordinary,
SEAL teams, Tier 1 teams, all of it, that everyone's life has these components of extraordinary
and the opportunity for extraordinary and the return and renewal through the ordinary world.
So much of what you shared has meaning regardless
of people are male, female, young, old.
So thank you for being a mentor today and for having the bravery
for stepping out into the quote unquote ordinary world,
which is oh so. Unordinary. Unordinary. the bravery for stepping out into the, the quote unquote ordinary world,
which is oh so,
unordinary. Unordinary.
And if you're willing, I think it'd be great
to have you back in a,
maybe a couple years and see where you're at.
Meanwhile, you and I will be in touch often
as we frequently are.
So. Thanks Andrew, appreciate it.
Coleman Ruiz, thanks for everything you've done.
Thank you.
Thanks for everything you're doing.
And thanks for coming out today
and sharing with us what real life's about.
It's always great to see you, appreciate the time.
It was a joy, thanks.
Likewise.
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion
with Coleman Ruiz.
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