Jocko Podcast - 368: Marc Lee's Story of Family, Friends, Fighting, and Faith, with Gold Star Mother, Debbie "Momma" Lee.
Episode Date: January 11, 2023Mother of Navy SEAL, Marc Alan Lee. First SEAL killed in Iraq. Debbie Lee shares who Marc was, how he was raised, and the sacrifice of Gold Star Families. AmericasMightyWarriors.org.Support this podca...st at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko podcast number 368 with Echo Charles than me Jocco Willink.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
It was another day.
We had been here just over three months and it was already a historical deployment.
The task unit was well known by everyone in Ramadi.
We had pushed the envelope and taken huge risks to aggressively destroy the enemy.
who was ruthless and evil.
They killed innocent men, women, and children,
beheaded local tribal leaders,
and implanted roadside bombs
that killed and maimed American soldiers and Marines.
We had already killed well over 100 of these demonic enemy fighters,
and in doing so,
saved hundreds of American soldiers and Marines.
But it was a tough fight.
Brave warriors, courageous soldiers and Marines
died every day,
from enemy sniper attacks, IEDs, and every other weapon you could imagine, including mortars,
RPGs, and heavy machine guns. Valiantly, these brave soldiers and Marines fought on day after day,
week after week, month after bloody month. We had also suffered some casualties,
the most serious of which was Cowie, who had been shot in the leg, severely wounding it during one of our first operations.
Even as he lay in bed, his leg torn apart from hip to knee, not knowing if he would ever walk again.
He pulled me in close and whispered to me so the doctors wouldn't hear, please let me stay.
Please, he wanted to be with his brothers.
Our other casualties were relatively minor.
We were blessed, especially when compared to some of the other units that we were there with, who had lost dozens of men.
One army battalion had arrived and lost seven men during their first 36 hours worth of patrols.
Another army company had lost a third of its strength in five months of fighting.
We had been lucky.
Blessed and lucky.
Aggressiveness on the battlefield certainly helped our luck.
We fought hard and brought destruction to the enemy.
We forcefully pushed into areas where the enemy was.
in control we went in where a quick reaction force might not have been able to help
get us the enemy was not ready for this they had not been attacked so boldly
and mercilessly we snuck in at night off of boats or in the day with
conventional forces we hid in buildings next to their strongholds we killed them as
they slinked towards our positions we surrounded their neighborhoods without
them knowing and killed them as
They prepared attacks on American troops.
The American commanders knew this.
And loved the seals because we were helping to keep their brave men alive.
Our aggressive tactics and high number of enemy kills earned us an incredible reputation.
The soldiers and Marines thought we were unbelievable on the battlefield, efficient killers that had barely taken any casualties.
We were indestructible killing machines there to save our,
fellow Americans and destroy the enemies of our nation. That was their impression. But there was
fear. Self-preservation is a natural instinct and is very powerful. Fear is one of the most important
tools for self-preservation and it exists on some level at every man. But this fear was overcome
by courage, camaraderie and faith. Mark was one of the greatest examples of these qualities.
He showed his courage consistently by leading from the front, always in the front of patrols, ready to fight and defend his brothers.
His camaraderie was always evident, as he joked with everyone, smiling and laughing, even as he was about to walk onto the battlefield.
And even on the battlefield itself, he was truly loved by all.
Finally, the depth of his faith was immeasurable.
He had an unbelievably strong relationship with God and this was reflected in his love for his family
who were always with him in his heart and on his mind.
Mark's qualities helped soothe the fears of everyone around him.
His spirit was contagious and it spread and comforted all of us.
He was a pillar of courage and so fear was defeated.
And mission after mission would result in the death.
of dozens of insurgents and continued success for the seals as we alongside our conventional
force brothers fought to win back the city from the wretched murderous insurgents but the
fighting was hard I was in the tactical operation center the morning of August 2nd
2006 Ryan had been wounded and was already being flown to ballade for further medical
attention we did not know at this time how severe his wounds would be but we were
thankful he was still alive the city had erupted in violence and the army unit we had
fought alongside for the last few months was in the midst of a very tough battle they
believe they had identified where some insurgents were located layf called me and gave me
an update on the situation he told me their iraqi army partners were too scared to fight then
laf said we're going back out i knew that this was a bold statement and that violent contact
with the enemy was imminent I replied simply Roger get some this reply was not senseless
bravado it was a statement of fact encouragement and trust fact because there was a vicious
firefight and as proud fighting men wrought with a strong sense of duty they all knew it was
their duty to join the fight no matter how dire the situation encouragement because we
regularly use this term to motivate ourselves and each other during trying
times and finally trust because I did not have to question what Laf and his
platoon were doing. I didn't need to counsel him on their plan or inquire about his tactical
decisions. No, they had proven themselves to be a great combat unit. And I trusted them to
perform with honor and professionalism on the battlefield. I now focused my attention on the
flat screen televisions in the Tactical Operations Center. A live video feed was coming in from
aircraft monitoring the battle.
The picture was fading in and out and was difficult to see, but I followed as tanks fired at buildings and cars and soldiers maneuvered in the streets.
I watched as two Bradley fighting vehicles left combat outpost Falcon.
I knew they were filled with seals.
I watched as the Bradley's stopped at one building engaged it and then stood by while the seals assaulted.
The seals were on small radio so I couldn't hear them.
Instead, I listened on the radio as the conventional company.
commander captain Mike Baima passed information about the situation to his battalion commander
my brother's seals looked unbelievably smooth fast and aggressive as they stormed the suspected enemy
building i felt proud after a few minutes they exited that building and reboarded the bradley's
which then took them to another building i listened as mike baima managed the battle space and
directed forces soon the seals entered another building again looking smooth and aggressive
I couldn't believe how good my guys were so professional so bold so glorious
Then a minute later I saw two seals carrying a motionless man quickly out of the building my heart sunk
We have a man down I said to the tactical operations center
Maybe it's an Iraqi soldier someone suggested no they had no Iraqis with them. It's one of ours the room got extremely quiet
I focused on the radio and listened for details.
Mike Baimaux was working to get the casualty to Charlie Med, the medical facility on Camp Ramadi.
I still couldn't hear Lay for any of the seals.
Then I heard Mike Baima say, I need to get this KIA moved.
I gave the River City order.
Navy speak for shutting down all external communications.
I told the person posting operational updates to stop writing.
The Tactical Operations Center watched in silence.
as the rest of the seals finished securing the target building,
then left loading back on the Bradley's.
The Bradley's headed back toward combat outpost Falcon.
Soon Leif got on one of the base station radios and called Red Bull 6.
This is Red Bull 1-6.
I keyed up the radio.
Red Bull 1-6.
This is Red Bull 6.
Go.
Laif, with so much emotion in his voice, that it almost sounded emotionless,
said, we had another casualty.
I think he's K-I.
This radio net was monitored by the entire brigade so we were both doing our best to remain professional
Also to prevent names of casualties from leaking out we do not use names on the radio instead everyone is assigned a platoon number
Which consists of a letter for their platoon and a number that indicates who they are
We keep the platoon numbers in the tactical operation center on a board
I responded to Laif Roger
Who is the casualty there was a pause
And then he responded slowly and clearly Charlie won four I looked up at the board slowly I didn't want to see the name but there it was
Charlie one for Mark Lee I couldn't believe it pillar of courage and faith it seemed impossible
I asked Laif to confirm can you confirm with his initials Laif replied Roger Mike Lima
Roger, pure devastation.
We had lost one of our brothers and one of our pillars of courage.
Everyone in Ramadi that wasn't actively fighting showed up later that night to see Mark
onto the helicopter for his final flight home.
It was late at night and the path from the medical building to the airfield was lined
with sailors, soldiers, Marines, and airmen.
The forces we worked alongside were all.
Also completely distraught by Mark's death.
They thought we were indestructible.
Now they realized we were flesh and blood like them.
Many of them knew Mark.
They remembered him.
They all knew he was flesh and blood like them, but that made his courage and spirit
all the more profound.
Mark Lee will always be remembered not just as a man, a seal, a husband, a brother, a son,
But as a hero who personified love, faith, and courage,
and one who inspires us all,
we will never forget the gift that God gave to us, Mark Lee,
who touched us so briefly, but so deeply,
he will be with us forever.
That is a letter that I wrote many years ago to Mark Lee's mom,
Debbie Lee.
who we call Mamma Lee.
And I wrote it to share with her what Mark meant to us
and one perspective of what had transpired
the day that he was killed.
And Mama Lee was unbelievably strong when Mark died.
And during our initial calls to her,
where we called with the intent of offering her
support and sympathy and comfort is actually the opposite that took place it was she who comforted
us it was mama lee that was asking how is everyone doing is there anything that you guys
need I am praying for all of you she was so strong and she still is but it certainly
has not been easy the loss of a child is unimaginable to everyone
And yet somehow she has endured.
And she set an example for all of us to follow.
And it's an honor to have her with us here tonight.
To share with her, share with us some of her experiences and her lessons learned.
And also to share the story of the warrior and hero that she raised, Mark Lee.
Thanks for joining us.
You bet.
thanks for having me and I remember when you sent that to me and the impact that it made when I read that
and obviously it's been 16 and a half years since we lost Mark and still will you read that you know
I got a you know bump in my throat and making sure I keep it together here but I know how much you guys
loved Mark and I know how much that burden that you guys carry and as you've heard me off
often say, you know, Mark was my kid who loved to give gifts. I mean, he would spend hours.
It wasn't a bag it and tag it, get out of here, check, mission accomplished. He would spend
hours looking for just the perfect gift. And he would be so stinking excited when he got that
gift. And I remember at Christmas time, he'd bought me a set of gold flatware, not solid gold,
but gold in color. And it matched my china perfectly. I had a gold room around my white china.
And he was so excited.
And he came home and he had it wrapped in the store.
And he came home and he's like,
Mom, wait, do you see what I got for you?
I'm like, oh, cool.
Thanks, honey.
And he goes, you got to open it now, Mom.
I'm like, no, put it under the tree.
I want to think open Christmas Day if you don't put it under there.
And he started to rip the package open because he couldn't wait.
He was so excited at what he had found.
And he knew that it would be something that would please me.
And he ripped it open and showed it to me.
And I realized after he passed away, he tried to explain the brotherhood thing to me before.
I'm like, yeah, yeah, I get it.
You're close to these guys, but as close as your brother you grew up with for 28 years?
He's like, yeah, Mom, that close.
And I joked, and I said, well, let me mind you.
I didn't birth them, so they really can't be your brothers.
And we left it at that.
And I had, you know, five of his friends.
I mean, you guys were all still deployed, but some of us,
swim buddy and some others that first week, you know, when he had been killed that
in our house and I saw, oh my gosh, they love Mark as much as we do and they're hurting just as bad
we are. And I remember I think, you know, the first time officially that I had told the Charlie
Boys was I had met with President Bush in October of 2006. And I was telling them all about you guys.
I had the team picture there, you know, and I remember even saying, and Jacco Willings there, he goes,
well, I've heard that name before, Jock Willing. You know, I'm like, who is this Jocco Willing guy?
that, you know, even the Admiral, we went in the day before the funeral, was, you know,
talking about Jocco Willington, that you were crucial in getting the Silver Star Award for him,
and typically that takes a while, and yet we had it for the funeral.
It was presented posthumously to us, but my final gift was you guys, you know,
and he intended for me to open that immediately and get to know you guys,
and that's why when you're deployed, it was, you know, we had phone calls.
It wasn't just that first one, you know.
We email back and forth.
I got the team picture and I put names on it so I could learn the faces.
So when you guys came home, and that was Mark's final gift to me.
And I knew it was a special gift in the beginning.
But, man, it is a priceless gift that you guys have been to me
and to our mission in America's mighty warriors.
And I love you guys and so blessed to have you in my life.
And I know sometimes that gift is a little bit more than you want from time.
when it was the timing of things, the way things happened,
General Brown, who is the Socom commander,
so he's the four-star general in charge of all of special operations.
He came to Ramadi on August 2nd on a VIP visit.
He was touring all of his, all of the troops,
the special operations troops around the world.
And he came to Ramadi on August 2nd.
He got there probably,
around lunchtime.
And he stayed.
And he actually was one of the people on the flight line.
And, you know, I was, I had worked for Admiral McGuire.
And Admiral McGuire, General Brown had left.
And then he had sent an email to Admiral McGuire.
And Admiral McGuire forwarded the email to me.
And it was a beautiful email.
And he basically described the situation of what he had seen of, you know,
the hundred.
of soldiers and Marines that were outlining the runway or lining the pathway to the runway.
And, you know, it's dark outside.
There's chemlights along.
It's in a war zone.
And he asked the question, you know, he said, all these guys are out here.
And this guy who, you know, we told him about Mark.
We told him as much as we could in a couple hours that he was there.
And General Brown basically closed out the email with, where do we get such young men?
And I think that's, you know, a great way to start off trying to figure out how you raised Mark, where he came from.
Like, where did this guy who was willing to give so much?
And it's interesting, you know, we just had George Monsor on talking about Mikey.
And oddly enough, one of the things that he mentioned was, oh, Mikey loved to give gifts.
He would, you know, even if he had to make them or find him out in the street and put together something,
he loved to give gifts.
And it's just incredible that here's Mark, same way, same mentality.
But to dig down, like, let's start with you a little bit.
Where'd you grow up?
What did your parents do?
What was going on with your life before?
Before Mark came.
Yeah, so I was born in Greeley, Colorado, which is about an hour north of Denver.
Kind of came in, difficult circumstances.
My mom at 17 had got pregnant with me.
and there's two sides that I've heard the story, so I don't know which one's true, but for whatever reason,
my mom ended up not marrying my biological father. And, you know, back then, that was something
that was a terrible shame. And so you tried, you know, they sent the girls away for a while.
And my grandmother, and I think they were doing the best they could with who they were and what was
handed to them. But my grandmother wanting to protect my mom and have me not more.
born out of wedlock, had my mom marry her boyfriend. So my mom's 17. This guy's 35.
My mom told a different personality than me. If that had been me, I'd be like, thank you very
much. I'll raise this child by myself. I'm not marrying that old part, you know, because at 17,
that's a huge difference. And it was just supposed to be, I guess, temporary and then have the marriage
and old afterwards, but that never happened. He was a police officer for the city of Greeley.
I didn't know any different as a child.
Wait, did your grandma give away her boyfriend to the...
Yeah.
Wow, that's weird.
Yes, very weird.
That's what I said.
It's just...
But again, I think with who they were, with the lack of education they had,
what they thought would be a solution.
Right.
You know, you're not going to really sleep with her.
You don't get any of those privileges.
You're just going to get married, then annul the marriage.
Okay.
That's what they were trying to make happen.
Got it.
Yeah, I think.
But still, it's weird.
That's what you were born into.
That's what I was born.
So then did you grow up with your 17-year-old mom?
I did.
Yes.
And what about brothers and sisters?
I'm the only child from my biological dad.
I hate it when people ask these questions sometimes because it is a very dysfunctional family.
But again, I didn't know he wasn't my father until I was 16.
So then they had twin sisters a year after I was born.
one died within 12 hours of birth and one died in 24 hours of birth.
So I didn't know them.
You know, I knew growing up that there were twin sisters that had died.
And then my mom and who I thought was my biological dad,
had my brother, Vance, who was two and a half years younger than me.
And that's, you know, who I thought was my family and who I grew up with.
My mom went through a divorce when I was about 11 and then got pregnant again
and married the father of that baby.
And I was kind of like a mom to him.
I was 13 and my mom was trying to figure out life and she was struggling herself, you know.
And so I was kind of his mama for a while.
And then I left home when I was 16.
So that was when I found out who my dad was.
And that's kind of when things all just fell in line.
So when you found out who your dad was, did that just cause a reaction to be like,
all right, I'm out of here?
Or did you go live with him?
Did you track him down?
I did track him down.
Finally met him.
And, of course, when I was 11, I was 5 foot 9 already.
My mom was 5 foot 6. My dad was 5 foot 5. There really weren't any tall the relatives. And that's when you start studying, you know, the biology and your DNA. And I'm like, what am I some kind of freak? And I met my dad. He was 6 foot 4, as he tells me on the phone call, and 5 foot on the other. He lost his leg in a tractor accident the year that I was born. And so because the circumstances, my mom and I were fighting when, you know, she told me about him. She said, you don't even know who your dad is.
You know, and again, you go back to that hurt people, want to hurt other people when they're hurting.
Of course, being a little bit of a rebel and strong will, I said, do you?
And, of course, whack up across the side of the face, you know.
And that was disrespectful and not called for, but, you know, that's a sensitive conversation.
You sit down and you prepare for a conversation to tell somebody something like that,
not in the moment of anger when you're fighting.
So it caused a lot of problems, you know, between my mind.
mom and I. I did connect with my dad and started to kind of get to know him and found out I had
another brother from the marriage he was in at the time, three siblings from his first marriage,
and then he married again, and she had several kids. So there's, I'm either an only child or I come
from a family of 13. But again, I think that's, and I don't want people at all to, you know,
have a pity party for me. These, as you go back to Mark and how he was raised, these tough
circumstances in my life are what gave me the opportunity to persevere and not quit.
And it's just like when you guys are going through your training at buds, they push you to the
limit to see what you can endure. And when you don't give up, when you persevere and when you
have that attitude, man, that's what prepared me for the toughest day, August 2nd, you know,
losing mark where then I knew I could still stand. I knew it would be tough. But those tragedies
and trials that you go through in life.
I love school, got good grades in school.
I was a cheerleader in school, so I had a blast.
I loved school.
So when you were 16, where did you move out to?
I went and lived with an aunt.
And then, but you're still going to school?
You're getting good grades.
You're on a good path.
Are you thinking about going to college?
What's you're thinking about for your future?
I didn't have real big goals of the time.
I did get several scholarships that I turned down
because I just wanted to be a wife and a mother.
The school that I went to was, you know, a very poor part of town.
I was one of the minorities, you know, it was primarily black and Hispanic in the school.
And all I, everybody, I was one of the oldest at 18.
I got married just weeks after I turned 18.
I was one of the oldest to not, you know, latest to get married or have kids.
That was what our problem was.
What was a population in your high school?
Was it like a small town?
It was small.
Well, no, it was in Denver.
It was a suburb of Denver.
Denver. There was probably 300 in the total school. But everyone's just getting married.
Well, or getting pregnant. Getting pregnant or getting married. Having babies, yeah. And you get married
when you're 18 years old? I get married when I'm 18. And is this Mark's dad? This is all my kids' dad,
yes. So married to 18. And who is this dude? He was, you know, played on the football team.
He was two years older than me because I didn't have that father figure growing up that really
gave me love, I didn't know what love was and I just wanted to be loved. And so, you know,
some of those things I interpreted, you know, sexual relationship as love, which it wasn't, you know,
but that was the first time. He used to walk three miles to my house every night to come see me,
which I walk five miles a day, so I guess three miles isn't that big a good deal, but back then it was.
I was like, holy cow, that's, you know. And I was like, okay, that's got to be what love is.
and my mom forbid me to marry him.
Like I said, I'm strong-willed,
and don't forbid a strong-willed person to do something
because that just pushes them to prove to you.
And literally, as a rebel, that was the reason that I married, you know,
intended for it to be for life, you know, really thought that that's what would happen.
So had he graduated from high school already?
He had graduated from high school already.
And what was he doing for a living?
You know, the time, I don't remember what he was doing for living.
He had been in trouble, and back then he was a Marine, and because he'd been in trouble,
they're like, here's your option.
You go to jail or you go on the Marines.
And so I didn't know the extent of all of that, you know, that that was the reason that
he was in the Marines, but I think he had just recently, that would have been in 72, so probably
just recently got out of the Marines.
And so we married had my first son Christopher when I was 20 and had my daughter at 21.
And alcohol was something for him that was, he was an alcoholic.
But Dr. Jekyll, Mr. Hyde, when he drank and was very abusive and finally tried to kill me.
And at 23, I said, mm-mm.
And I think for me, my self-esteem was so bad back then.
I felt like I deserved it.
And I don't feel ever that that's the circumstance.
I think the only time a guy should ever hurt a woman is she's trying to kill him, you know,
and he's defending himself.
But so it was some tough, crazy times, you know,
and I was going to persevere and show my mom I could make this work.
But when it came to that point, he used to, he'd act like in the beginning,
like he's going to throw a punch at me, and he'd get right to my face.
And then he'd bring his hand up to his nose and itch his nose.
And he did that to Christopher.
three years old. And I think that was for me the holy crap. Maybe I deserved it, but my kids don't.
And so it was at that point, you know, that I finally said, and we separated. We were together
and apart and together and apart and together and apart. But at that point, I was like, I am done.
This is not happening again. And because of all the violence in the marriage, the day that I filed
for the divorce, it was final. And I found out two weeks later I was pregnant with Mark. And they heard two
heartbeats the entire time. This was not when they did ultrasounds, you know, to find out early on,
you know, where the health of the baby or the sex of the baby. But they always heard two heartbeats.
You knew Mark. I was like, okay, that's why my body had two heartbeats. But again, what a blessing,
and it's such a dark time in my life. And you talked about his humor, you know, and the joy that he had.
And even from a young age, such a smiley baby and giggly baby, and he would tell these knock-knock jokes.
He was probably about four.
And oh my gosh, Jocco, they were so bad.
But he thought he was hilarious.
And again, knowing Mark, you can piece this together, he'd be laying on the floor as a child,
just laughing, laughing, laughing.
And you couldn't help but laugh at him, you know, laughing at himself.
And so then he thought he was really good.
but got class clown two years in a row.
And I'm like, and that's going to get you to college.
How?
But what a blessing and what a gift.
You know, the struggles again, you know, that you go through in life,
that we have a choice.
And we can let that defeat us or we can overcome that.
And with the perseverance, that's, you know, what I chose to do.
I wasn't going to quit.
I wasn't going to give up.
You put up so much, put up with so much in the marriage.
but it sounds like the turning point was when you saw that your husband at the time might hurt your kids.
And that was just like the breaking point.
Like, I'm done with this.
Now, what do you do when you're 23 years old, you got two kids and you got one on the way?
Where did you go?
How do you get through that?
So I started working for tectonics, which is a manufacturer of different electronic equipment.
And it was a little bit better paying job, but still not a good paying job.
What were you doing for them?
Just assembling the equipment.
Just on the manufacturing line.
And that's not me at all.
I mean, I'm good at it.
I was skilled.
I think a kid of 10 took 40 hours is what they, you know, figured it should take you to build it.
And I could build it in 36.
And they're like, check her a QC.
She can't be doing this right.
But there was no challenge once I got that done.
You know, I'm a very people person.
And so I need to do something where I feel like I'm making a difference in somebody's life
and changing things.
I had several jobs.
You know, one point I was working three jobs, 96 hours a week, was managing a bank during
the day.
And I'm not sure when we went through the divorce, I was still working at one of the banks.
But managing bank, tending bar at night, tending bar on the weekends, you know, just to take care
of my kids.
I didn't get any child support.
You know, he didn't take him at all.
He wasn't in their lives.
Who's watching the kids when all this is going on?
I had them either in home daycare or in a child care center.
But basically the second job was to pay for the child care.
So, yeah.
And then so this is all taking place.
Is this all taking place in Colorado still?
Yeah, I'm still in Colorado at that point.
And then will the kids start going to school?
Do you get on to like a legit, like a more regimented career path at some point?
I would say it was probably 28 when I got a little more goal-ordering.
At that point, it was just survival.
You know, I'm not thinking about me or how, you know, looking ahead.
You know, I'm downward looking going, okay, I got to feed them.
I got to get closed.
We've got to be here.
We've got to go there.
And I was probably 28 then when I had some health issues.
And it was like, okay, what do I really want to do?
What do I want to be when I grow up?
and that's when I loved flying and I was like, you know what, I'm going back to school to be a pilot.
And so at 28 with three little kids, I went back to school.
I was at Metro State College.
It's now a university in Denver and went back to school to become a pilot.
And how'd that go?
Well, it went really well until I fell and injured my back and couldn't pass my first class medical.
And again, that was, I mean, for my kids, they already been through so.
much and now I'm going to fly the friendly skies and someone else is going to raise them when I'm
gone and of course I had fed myself the lies of it's not you know it's not the quantity of time
that I spend with them it's the quality so if I'm only with them a couple days I'll make that be
good days out of the month and I think part of it you know I was so tired at that point of trying to
maintain and do this all by myself that it was kind of like okay that's my little escape yeah you're like
Maybe a four-day trip with flying an airplane would be all right.
Get these old rascals out of my hair for four days.
But again, who would have they been?
You know, we wouldn't have had Mark being a Navy SEAL, you know, change in the world.
So did you make that connection?
Like you hurt your back and then you're thinking, you know, what am I going to do?
Am I really going to fly around the country while my kids are at, you know, with the daycare or something?
Yeah, I think it was after that point.
That was for me.
And I grew up in a Christian home and, you know, accepted Christ as a child.
But we didn't live it in our home.
That wasn't taught to us with church on things.
Sunday, but that was about it. But for me, that was when I completely surrendered my life. I had made
a mess of my life. I had fought God, you know, I thought he wanted to make me into this mamsy, pamsy,
wimpy, you know, have no backbone. I'm like, mm, I can go on there. And because I had made such a mess.
I literally spent three months on my back where I couldn't hardly roll over. And they didn't know
if I'd walk again. And like, the only place I could look was up. I'm like, oh, you were trying to
get my attention, weren't you? You used to two.
two by four and I ignored you and used a four by four and I just kept going.
And now the freight train hit me in.
And so I came to a place where I said, I made a mess of my life.
It's not much.
But what I've got, I'm laying at your feet.
You take it.
And I'm not going to pass go.
I'm not going to collect $200.
I will stay here and not get in trouble anymore.
Just put me on the shelf.
I got it.
Thank you for your forgiveness of all I've done in my life.
And that was, you know, the point that he said, I made you the way you are.
Well, I don't want to make you a mamsie, pamsy, wimpy.
You know, but I didn't understand who he was.
So for me, that was the major turning point in my life where, you know, I started reading my Bible every day, learning who he is, studying, you know, his character.
And, you know, for me, no doubt that was the strength, how I got through, you know, lose a mark and continue to every single day.
But yeah.
So then what was it like?
So you make that turn in your life.
You kind of surrender yourself, okay, now I'm going to focus on what I've got.
And then pragmatically, what did that look like in day to day?
Like, did you get into, what was your new job?
And now you can't fly anymore.
So what did you proceed with in that?
Well, and I had remarried just shortly before that.
So, you know, he was the wage earner for the family.
He was a long-haul trucker.
And so at that point, you know, we'd had some major problems.
problems with one of our kiddos, and I was like, I just need to focus on them. They've been through
so much. You know, they've got to have some stability. And how old were they when you got
remarried? They were 11, 9, and 7, I believe. And how was that transition bringing the new dad
on the scene? It was rough, you know. Christopher, my oldest, he'd been the little man. You know,
and he struggled and felt like, because he wasn't the little man anymore,
he wasn't loved. And so, oh, man, we had some crazy stuff, you know, that we had to work through.
And so at that time, you know, I really tried to focus on being a better mom, helping them and
supporting them. Then we moved to Oregon. My mom had a preschool and kindergarten there, and so,
you know, I started working with her. I've always loved kids. And she basically did kindergarten,
first grade and second grade, so private Christian school at the beginning ages. And I started a preschool
program for her there and then eventually ended up purchasing the school from her and that's where
you know my mission was was these kids and loving on them and you know helping their parents raise them
and be the best I can you know when the parents couldn't be there I still 100% believe if parents
have the opportunity to be home with your kids I know a lot of them can't but make that sacrifice
for you know one of those parents to be there because I think they turn out so you know so different
And people are like, oh, yeah, I'll be there in the beginning years.
I'll stay home.
They need you the teen years just as much as they do in the beginning.
But I understand, excuse me, not everybody has the ability to be able to do that.
So when you move to Oregon, you got your new husbands there
and you're all kind of like living a pretty normal life.
I mean, it sounds like you've got three kids, you got your husband,
he's doing long-haul trucking, you got a decent job.
So it's relatively stable?
relatively. Yeah, I mean, it was probably the most stable that my kids had known.
And how long did that stability last for?
I would say probably the first four years maybe in the marriage and then started seeing some real issues.
You know, there was unfaithfulness on his part. And then he ended up taking his life 28 years ago.
Again, a lot. And like I said, I never tell all.
this all at once, but you think back through it, and you're like, oh, my gosh, how did any of us,
you know, turn out? But again, that was the healing that God's provided in my life and letting me
know that I am valuable, that I am precious, that he loves me. And it's a growing process.
I mean, none of us become a super saint overnight. And, you know, I'm sure there are still things
that I had done or still do today that he's like, Deborah Sue, what the heck are you doing? You know, really?
But I don't ever want to do anything purposely that would grieve him or upset him.
And that's why for me I want to know, what are those things you don't like?
Okay, well, I'm not doing them then.
And not that there aren't times, like I said, that I'm sure I disappoint him.
I'm not perfect by any means.
Trust me, ask my kids, they'll tell you.
But that was the major turning point in my life.
And I saw him get me through losing my husband.
Like I said, it wasn't perfect marriage.
Not that there is a perfect marriage, but we'd been married for eight years.
You know, there were issues there.
Not that I wanted the guy dead, but, you know.
So now the kids are a little old.
The kids are older at this point.
Yeah, they're 2018 and 16.
So Mark's 16 years old.
Yeah.
And his stepdad kills himself.
And what's that like walking through that with?
I mean, because you figure Chris is 20.
you know your daughter's 18 like they're a little bit more mature Mark's still 16 that's
yeah there's a big difference between 16 and 18 there's an even bigger difference between 16
and 20 yeah um and how how is mark handling of it I think it was definitely Mark of the kids
that that was the roughest to go through um I had homeschooling my children and at that point
I'm like I can't I can't do this anymore going through the grief you know run the preschool and
kindergarten and trying to homeschool is just too much. So we put him in the Christian school,
and he came to me one day and said, Mom, could you please homeschool me again?
And my kids, when they were homeschooled, we're always like, oh, my goodness, we just go to school.
But I think now they look back and see the blessings and the life lessons that you learn
in the midst of that. I don't think homeschooling is for everybody, you know, but I think that
that was a blessing. And so it was Mark's cry.
to say, I just want to, I just want to be home with you, mom.
I want to be where it's safe, you know.
And so I did, you know, started homeschooling again.
And this is before, nowadays, homeschooling is a lot easier than it used to be because I,
I homeschooled, well, I should say my wife, my wife.
Yeah, get credit where credits do.
My wife did 80% of homeschooling.
We just did it with one kid.
And it's because, you know, well, you know, in my opinion,
from what I saw, the school system was built by women, and it was very well suited for girls,
meaning sit at the desk and do these things.
And like, my girls were a lot more okay with that.
You got the freaking kid, the boy, they're antsy and jumping around and want to break stuff
and build stuff.
And it was a lot to be cooped up in there.
And if my daughters, I've offered all my kids.
Well, hey, if you don't want to go to school, just tell me.
We'll figure something out.
But they're all like, no.
which is weird.
You can't be mad at me
if you're thinking
old Jaco treated his daughter's different.
No, I'm telling you right now,
they all have the option.
And if any of the girls would have said,
hey, I want to be homeschooled.
It's been like, awesome.
I wanted to homeschool them.
I liked them being home more.
And you want to homeschool,
which in my family meant you get to homeschool.
That means you get to jihitsu all day.
You get to surf all day.
You get to do a little bit of math or whatever.
But that's a cool way to go.
And I offered it to my daughters.
But they didn't,
they didn't want to do it.
I mean, I just tell that to my youngest daughter right now.
Like, hey, if you don't want to go to this, you know, I was like, oh, you got homework?
She'd be like, yeah.
And I go, cool, you want to do it or you just want to hang out with me?
Because we can just do the hang out with me.
They go, that's homeschool.
And she says no.
But, but yeah, but back in the day, you must have had to create your own curriculum
and everything.
I did.
And we were, we never had much money growing up.
So that wasn't an option.
They didn't have like you can today.
You know, you can sign up for online.
And you have teachers that instruct online.
But we didn't have the money, even the curriculum that was available to go by that.
So I would go to the library.
I tried to pick topics for them that, you know, Mark back then loved aviation.
I'm like, awesome, that's my background.
So I would make, you know, the spelling, the English, everything, you know, math, you know,
let's figure out how much gallons of fuel you're going to need for and make it relatable.
And so, you know, that made it easier to teach.
My daughter kind of self-taught herself.
You know, she would say, okay, by the end of the year, I have to be through this book, and I have to do that.
So I got to break it down.
But, man, you can, it's such a shorter day.
We would, and I did try to be structured because it is too easy if you're not to say, we'll do that tomorrow.
Let's go surfing.
But we would, school was from 9 to 12.
And we got everything done in that time, you know, because you're not teaching 30 kids in the classroom.
the teachers direct attention.
And then they could go have jobs.
They could go, you know, be involved in sports and athletic.
Mark played soccer, you know, at the local high school because you could do that.
You could take the extracurricular activities and participate in those.
And so Mark played soccer at our high school.
When you hear about like, okay, so Mark's, you know, his first dad or his biological dad's not around,
His stepdad comes in.
He kills himself.
Like you can almost formulate in your mind and there's not much money and there's
like stuff going on.
You formulate in your mind this picture of this guy who must be, you know, kind of closed down,
kind of angry, kind of rough.
And like you're not at all.
And it's just the absolute complete opposite.
And so that was just always the case.
Like from birth.
Yes.
Because Mark lit up a room.
He was always laughing.
Like you couldn't, you couldn't suppress his happiness.
Like no matter how hard you tried, it was coming out.
And so that was, it kind of reminds me what you're talking about.
You know, when you're telling me that you at some point in your life were sort of felt like you needed to be meek and mild, it's hard for me to comprehend that, knowing you.
And then you look at kind of the burden of life that was put upon Mark.
and it's hard to,
you just can't suppress his,
just personality.
He's unsuppressable.
Yeah.
And so it was always like that.
Yes.
That was just who Mark was.
Yeah.
And I think, you know,
you're,
that's who God designed you to be.
You know,
you can't be a class clown
if you're,
that's not in you,
you know,
you could try,
but it's not going to be,
back to back champion of class crown.
Junior years,
senior year,
Which is no surprise at all.
So who's he hanging out with?
You know, because he's homeschooled.
So is he mostly, is he going to play sports at school?
He's playing sports at school.
What sports he played?
Very active in our youth group.
He was the soccer player.
Just soccer?
Anything else?
Nope, just soccer.
Came home his freshman year and he's like,
hey mom, I'm going to be a professional soccer player.
And I'm like, and I always told my kids, you put your mind to it.
You can do anything you put your mind to.
And when he came home and told me that, I'm like, ro-ro.
Mark, you've never played soccer in your life.
We didn't have the money for them to play in a little league or Pee Wee or he literally had never played soccer.
And because we homeschooled them, it's not like you did it in, you know, P.E. class.
And I was like, oh, but this is what I've taught them.
I'm like, all right, we'll get you, you know, enrolled in the high school at soccer.
And okay, let's do this.
And that was after my husband had passed, so there was a little bit of money to at least, you know, pay the
and get him in the program.
And it was, his coach was our youth pastor at our church and good family friends.
And after the funeral, or maybe even at the funeral, Chuck had said, oh, my gosh, he was
probably the worst soccer player he'd ever seen in his life.
And Mark did his freshman year, got Most Improved Player.
Granted, if you're the worst soccer player in the world.
You know, you don't have to go too far to get Most Improved Player.
he became the youngest soccer coach that high school had ever had
and was in fact trying out with the Colorado Rapids
the national team in out of Colorado
and the night before tryouts blew out his knee
had to come home and have surgery
Torres meniscus and his ACL had half his meniscus removed
which we had in the refrigerator forever
because we wanted to show everybody
but finally I'm like Mark throw that away
Somebody's going to come in and think that's something deep in their, yeah.
And even missing those parts of his body still became an ABCO.
But it was really cool probably three years ago.
The Colorado Rapids reached out to me and they said,
we want to present you Mark's team jersey.
We know he'd have made the team.
And so I got to go up there and they had fireworks for him.
They showed two different videos, three minutes long about Mark and just honoring him.
And I was like, Mark, you got your team jersey buddy.
So, yeah. Determination, definitely, one of his characters.
So he's going to high school, but he's homeschooled.
You're teaching him, which means he's getting straight A's.
I mean, I hope, right?
Yeah, no, he wasn't getting straight A's.
He was having a little hard time focusing at the time, you know, granted.
My kid got straight A's, but he was over 100%.
No, I was probably harder on them that I would have been the kids at the school that we're going through.
So, but he's playing soccer.
So as he's, you know, freshman year,
sophomore year, junior, is he starting to think about going to college?
And is Christopher already in the Marine Corps?
Christopher's not in the Marine Corps yet, but he's living in Colorado.
And then Mark had decided, yeah, he was going to go to college.
He wanted to be a youth pastor.
So he went down to the Masters College.
Is that in California?
Yeah, it's California.
Just north of L.A., Santa Clarita.
And how's that for him?
It was good.
He loved it.
It was doing great.
Playing soccer for them there.
And then after his first year when he was home that summer and he did construction work,
oh my gosh, they would say, that guy will carry three sheets of plywood all by himself up the stairs.
But if you know, Mark, he was built, you know, big guy.
That's why he got the big gun.
But yeah, so to see him, you know, do those things and carry on in the determination was pretty amazing.
So he's going to college.
I mean, it sounds like this is, as far as I'm concerned, like you raised him?
kid they're now going to call they got it in college they're playing soccer
cause this is like a big win for you you're I mean successful mom right you're
you're thinking not successful mom but you know I did my best but literally my kids
should have been their background should somebody should have been you know
killed in a drug overdose somebody Cheryl should have had you know 15 kids by the time she was
20 and and I didn't I just I was hoping if my kids got to 18 and nobody was pregnant
nobody is an alcoholic we're good yeah so you guys
I've got a kid, that's what I'm saying.
You got a kid that's like going to college playing soccer.
Not because of me and my skills as a parent, you know.
Well, I'm sorry to disagree with you, but you had to do something right to get these kids from a rough background.
And here you got Mark.
He's going to college.
He's playing soccer.
That's incredible.
Like playing soccer or playing any athletic pursuit in college is awesome.
And so then how's that going?
So he's going to be a youth pastor.
He's on a good moral pastor.
moral path, everything's going awesome.
Yep.
And then when he came home that summer, decided he was going to change his major from being a pastor,
he now wanted to be a lawyer.
And so in my warped sense of humor, I say, first he was going to save him, then he's going
to defend him, and then he became a seal and said, I'll just kill him.
But obviously that's a terrorist, none.
But, and went one semester with the switch to law.
Back to the same school?
Yep, back to the same school.
And then said, you know what?
I'm going to go pursue, you know, the Colorado Rapids and try to be a professional soccer player.
So I think that's what.
Maybe he went in between, maybe that's what it was, in between the first year.
Then he went and played soccer and then decided when he blew out his knee to go do one more semester.
And that's when I really started seeing him reading as he was recovering books about other Navy Seals and what they'd gone through.
Again, we, they never had swim lessons growing up.
You know, we didn't have a pool.
So I noticed he started going to the local community pool and swimming laps and reading about swimming.
Was there anyone that told them about the seal teams or did you just find it somehow?
Not that I know of.
I don't know that we knew anybody or he had any of those.
Every kid he'd watched a movie when he's 16 that said, I want to be a Navy SEAL.
Every young boy at that age that watches it thinks they're going to be a cool Navy SEAL.
They get all the girls, they get to blow things up.
Yeah, best job.
Yeah. But I don't know that there was anybody or nobody, you know, obviously a homeschool,
nobody came to school and talked to him about it. But my oldest son went in the Marines in
August of 2000. My daughter's husband went in the Army in October of 2000. And Mark went in
in May of 2001. And I'm sure being the youngest, you know, he's like, I'm going to one up you guys,
watch this. So very competitive.
is. But yeah, so on 9-11, all three of my kids' lives were involved in the military. And I could see
the handwriting in the wall. I knew we were going to have loved ones deployed. Yeah. You know,
and I remember doing an interview with the town we lived in was about 5,000 people. And the reporter said,
you know, I know all your family's involved. What if someone dies? And I said, well, God forbid
that would ever happen. But I've seen God walk me through death before. I know he would do it again.
And who knew that August 2nd, we would end up dealing with that.
But I'm so proud of all my kids' choice to serve in the military
and to make a difference because they loved God, they loved our country,
they knew it was the right thing to do to stand for and protect this nation that we love.
And I get so frustrated at times that, you know, obviously for those of us in the military,
we understand that sacrifice and not just the sacrifice that Mark gave of his life,
what you guys have sacrificed in your health,
what the families have sacrificed for all the deployments that are gone with the kids,
you know, not having a parent around.
And it is so important for those civilians to recognize that sacrifice that is made
so that we can live free every day.
And when I autograph the books that I'm contributing author in,
I sign it, live your life worthy of that sacrifice.
And we do owe that to all of our men and women who served to live lives, honoring them, and recognizing.
You know, I don't think anybody, unless they've served or close to somebody, really completely understand that.
But you need to try to understand it as much as you can.
There's a huge price paid for the freedoms that you enjoy every day and don't ever take those for granted.
As Mark's joining the Navy, so Christopher joins the Marine Corps.
What's he doing in the Marine Corps?
Christopher was and do you shoot me for not remember in his MOS?
Well no it's fine because I was actually communications.
Okay.
But a lot of people that aren't in the military, they don't even, they're like, oh, you're in the Marine Corps?
That's just like what you're doing.
Like every Marine is just a Marine and then, you know, oh, so you're going to the Marine Corps?
Okay.
You know, you got it.
And you kind of know what a Marine is.
Did you have any clue about what a seal was?
No, I really didn't.
I mean, I knew there were seals.
I mean, they're special guys,
but that was about the extent of it.
And so when he enlisted,
when Mark enlisted to be a seal,
did you start doing research?
Did you start trying to figure out
what was going on?
Or were you just like, okay,
well, sounds like it's going to be hard.
Good luck.
Go get some.
Yeah, pretty much.
Like, I don't think my,
I was talking about this yesterday with a guy.
I was like, I don't think my parents
actually understood anything that was going on.
They just, you know,
I'm like, oh, I'm going through some hard training.
They're like, okay.
Like, okay, bye.
You know, I called him six months later.
I made it through that hard.
hard training I was talking about, oh, okay, good job.
You know, okay, great.
You know, like there was no, there was no, I don't think they just comprehended.
Whereas nowadays, there's so much information.
Yes.
That you can really.
I did watch the 234 video.
Okay, well, there you go.
History Channel.
So that was out.
National Geographic or.
Okay.
Well, no, that's, that is a pretty, there's a lot of information in that.
Yes, there was.
It's definitely not, you know, the way it's edited.
It's an introduction.
Yeah, it's an introduction.
And it definitely is a nice.
perspective it's in a rose-colored glasses you know on seal training a little soft yeah
so mark goes and how you got what a son-in-law in the army you got a son in the
Marine Corps and so September 11th comes and you're yeah that is a heavy that is a
heavy deal for you yeah I mean three for three um when
how long is where's mark at when september 11th happens so he must have been done with boot camp
was was he already at buds i want to say he might have been down at his a school in
he might have been at a school so he's going to a school which is the old way they used to do it you'd go
to like you learned a regular navy job he was a an aviation ordinance man a oh two mark lee
coming in hot that's before they have their own you have your own job now on the seal team's
called an S.O. Special operation, special operator, something like that. When he went to
Buds for the first time, how's he doing? Was he ready? Were you talking to him? He was good.
His mindset, you know, again, looking back from that side of it, I felt like his mindset was good.
He was determined he was going to, you know, he was going to do this. And he, on Thursday night
of Hell Week, so just the point he was an hour away from being rolled forward. They had done med-jep.
checks on him. And he had pneumonia and he had pulmonary edema. So he had water in the lungs and water
outside the lungs. And they pulled him from training. And even then he was like, no, no, I got this.
I can do this. And they said, no, we lost a guy two classes go exactly. We have to pull you.
And so, as you can imagine, very devastated, you know, that that happened. He had to start all the
way back at the beginning, you know, wait for the next class. He was picking up trash or doing
something in between and, you know, very frustrated, but he's ready to go at it again.
And then that was class 239 that he started in. Then 2-40, he started over again and got to
Hell Week. And Monday night of Hell Week, he called me. And he said, hey, Mom, I'm D-O-Rd, which
dropped on request, he rang the bell. And I'm like, you know, and the jovster he is. I'm like,
yeah, whatever, I know how bad you wanted. There's no way. So what else is going on? He goes,
mom, I'm serious to rang the bell. I'm like, Marks, knock it off. You know, this is not something
you joke about. He's like, Mom, it's Monday night of hell week. I wouldn't have privileges
to call you if I was still in hell week. And I'm like, oh, I remember that from before.
And of course, when you ring the bell, then you still owe the Navy time. You don't just go back
home and get a new job and move on with life. Yeah. Note to anyone that's listening that thinks you
might want to be a seal. Just remember if you don't make it, which you probably won't. And I know
you don't think it's you you all don't think it's you you think that oh I'm not going to be
the one that quits everybody thinks it's someone else but most likely it's you and I guess there's
some people I've heard some people say like you actually know like you actually know if you're
going to make it or not I don't know if that's true or not I know I was going to make it I'm not
not saying I was cocky I wasn't too cocky I was still worried like you're worried you're like
damn I could fail something tomorrow and that could be that and so that's why you're
I was paranoid the whole time.
But I was, you know, I had a pretty good level of confidence.
Like I know I'm not going to quit.
So just keep that in mind.
So Mark, and this is also good to remember, Mark quit his first time through.
He did.
And instead of being like, okay, well, I'd give up forever.
He's like, okay.
So how long when you talked to him that night, was he, what, do you have any idea what drove
that decision?
Um, he had met a gal and fell in love and she felt like this was not conducive to family life, which agreed.
Okay.
It's tough on family life.
Once again, anyone that's listening, you think you might want to do this job.
Postpone the ladies.
Postpone the ladies.
They're not going to help you get through this.
There's like very rarely.
Yeah.
So let's let's hold off on the ladies until you get done.
Then you can go and find yourself.
Stay focused.
So Mark meets a girl.
And he's a freaking romantic dude anyways.
You know what I mean?
He's kind of like a hopeless romantic.
Yeah, yes.
Kicking his ass too.
And he's, you know, pretty good looking.
Yeah, yeah.
I can't judge that because I'm a man.
But I'm sure if you ask a bunch of women,
they would make that judgment that he's handsome.
And kind of jacked too.
Yeah, very much so.
Which is good to be.
So when you're talking to him,
he's like, I met this girl.
Did he have immediate regret?
A lot of times people quit, they have immediate regret.
Was he like, no, I think I made the right call.
What was his attitude?
Yeah, no.
He was sent to Virginia Beach, was assigned to the USS.
I always have to stop and think of its Enterprise or Eisenhower.
Eisenhower.
And it was in Dry Dock.
So he was sent to the Army base there to drive a shuttle bus for them.
I have a picture of him with his head on the steering wheel.
Like, oh, my gosh.
He's gone from being Navy Seals now.
I'm picking up people on the base on this bus.
And hate in life, he was not happy.
And I remember him calling me and saying,
Mom, I screwed up.
I'm like, what do you do now?
He goes, I shouldn't have rang the bell.
And I said, are you positive?
We prayed about this?
He goes, yeah, Mom, I need to go back.
I said, then you need to get your butt back there.
You need to do whatever it takes.
If you're sure this is where you're supposed to be
and where God wants you, you get, do it.
And it took him about a year.
He had to do meet with officers.
He had to do extra PT.
He had to write essays.
I mean, the evals and stuff.
And rightfully so.
How do they know?
You've already quit once.
You know, how do we know?
We get you back there and spend all this money training you in.
And you quit again.
You know, so he really had to prove himself.
And he did and ended up being in running for the honor man.
And I remember he called that night and he goes, mom, I didn't get honor man.
And I'm like, Mark, you got your trident.
But I get it.
I'm competitive.
you know.
But, yeah.
Did he train more or do you think it was just the mindset was there?
What happened to the girl?
By the way.
She's still in his life at that time.
So, you know, but he just realized this is what I'm supposed to do.
You know, and like I told him, if you do not do what God designed you do,
you're going to come home and kick the dog and your wife, you're going to be fighting all the time,
or your girlfriend or, you know, you need to be where you're supposed to be.
And so, you know, and again, they're in Virginia Beach.
I'm in Arizona at this time.
So I didn't see a lot of that extra training.
I'm sure he had to do extra training,
you know, nor was real familiar with what was going on
with their relationship at that time.
Did he make it through?
Do you know if he made it through, like straight through
in the second time he went to Buds?
I think he made it straight through.
I think there was one pool comp maybe
where they let him do one more time.
That'll get you.
Yeah.
So I think he, are you given a couple of times?
in pool comp?
I think you definitely get more than what, but you get a few tries and if you don't make
it then you get rolled back a class.
Yeah, he never got rolled back.
Oh, okay.
Well, then that's awesome.
But he did the pool comp the first time.
Yeah.
I failed pool comp the first time.
Yeah, I failed pool comp the first time.
I think.
Yeah.
And then I passed it my second time and I was totally paranoid.
Yeah.
But I'm already preparing my, my grandkids for that just in case they want to do that.
We do drown proofing in the pool at home.
So that's good.
Let's be safe.
Let's be safe.
I'm safe.
I'm safe, trust me.
Yeah, that's impressive to get it through the first time.
And again, I've had a couple people that I've known that had kids that went to Buds that quit.
And if I think that they're good kids, I will tell them about Markley and Mikey Monsor.
And I'll say, hey, you know, Markley and Mikey Monsor?
And they go, yeah.
And I go, both of those guys quit the first time they went to Buds.
and if you learn from this, you can go back and you can get after it and you can do awesome in the seal teams.
Or if it's not for you, then just accept that and go do something else, which is perfectly fine.
Yes.
It's not a job for everyone.
There's different personalities and there's different things.
It doesn't make you a bad person if you don't make it through seal training.
It just means that you weren't supposed to be a seal.
Go be something else and do something else cool, which is fine.
But like you said, if that's what you really think.
you should do and I'll tell you another thing to watch out for everybody if you're
listening to this and you're thinking this might be the path for you it's this is like
when marks this is this is during the war there's no war going on right now the second
chances that were pretty fairly common are not that common right now and if you quit right
now people are like okay well you don't really want to be here and that's that so if you go
don't think that there's a second chance don't go into an attitude with don't go into
with the attitude there's a second chance because likely at this current time, there's probably
not going to be a second chance for you.
Just because that's, there's no war going on.
I mean, you're talking this is 2004, 2005, like we needed seals.
And so those slots were more open.
So did you come out to graduation?
I did.
Yep.
Came out to the graduation.
And one of my favorite pictures that I have was Mark and I on the O course after he graduated.
Oh, yeah.
I've seen that picture.
Yeah.
Love that picture.
He got, yeah, he got his trident at graduation, right?
Okay, so this is the old way you didn't get your trident at graduation.
You went to a team.
So he got his trident at graduation.
And now he's going to, he gets assigned to Seal Team 3.
Yep.
Which to you, that doesn't mean anything.
You're just like, oh, Seal Team 3 sounds great.
No, now it does.
Best team in the world.
So you're like, okay, he's going to Seal Team 3.
And how fired up his market at this juncture?
He's pretty fired up.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, think about it.
After going through three Bleds classes, you know, you've finally done it, you're successful.
You know, there's a mission.
You know, you're going to be deploying soon.
You know, that's what he trained for.
Yeah.
He trained to make a difference in the world and, you know, to get rid of the evil that's out there, you know, for our family, for America, for everyone that lives here, you know, because he knew it was the right thing to do.
Yeah.
Sometimes people think or their perception is that someone will change,
buds will change them.
Some people have the attitude that like, no, they didn't change the person.
They just got rid of the people that weren't that way in the first place.
What did it look like to you with Mark?
Yeah, I don't think it changed Mark.
You know, he's always been the determination when he puts his mind, you know,
talk about soccer coming home saying, I'm going to be a professional soccer player.
You know, then he followed through.
It didn't just happen because he didn't do.
the hard work to make it happen. I can remember him on Saturdays, we got a ball machine that
would shoot the balls at him so he could, you know, practice dribbling or heading it or, and
he'd be out there for eight hours on a Saturday. What 16, 17-year-old do you know that's going
to be that determined to reach his goal by giving up his Saturdays to be able to do that?
And so that's who Mark was. I don't think it changed him. I think there's some things that
might have, you know, habits that he developed maybe a little bit different, but it didn't
change who Mark was.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And again, like, you can just see that he has just an unsuppressable personality of fun.
And so, yeah, that's not going to change.
So when Mark showed up to Seal Team 3, he actually got assigned to task unit Charlie.
That's what he got assigned to.
Is that the original one he got assigned to?
This is the original one he got assigned to task unit Charlie.
So I forget which platoon he was in,
but he's either in Echo or Fox Shop.
Okay, so he's an Echo Patoon at Steel Team 3.
And we're all going through.
I didn't know Mark at all.
You know, he's in a different task unit.
He's a new guy in a different task unit.
I'm in Task Unit Bruiser, but we're, you know,
we're all doing different training.
So we're not even, even though we're at the same team,
we're not, we're rarely all together.
You know they're at the desert, we're at the jungle, where at the ocean, they're at the mountain.
So you don't really get to know people right away in one workup for sure.
And then what happens is task unit Bruiser, there's different task units going to different parts of the world.
And they had to send one task unit to Iraq and another task unit was going to go to the Pacific theater.
And task unit bruiser gets chosen to go to Iraq.
and when that happens, we get an opportunity to bring a couple more guys in from the task unit that was going to the Pacific.
And so we got to sign a couple guys.
One of those guys is Mark.
And Mark shows up.
And, you know, so he shows up.
He's a new guy.
He had some buddies in there, you know, from, that were other new guys and whatnot.
But, like, you just get a guy that's showing up.
And it's probably the best move as a new guy to a platoon or to a task unit.
And our task unit was definitely, I mean, we were called task unit bruiser and we were,
we were definitely.
You lived up to your name.
Yeah, we were definitely an aggressive group of dudes.
And probably the best call would have been to kind of gray man, you know, that expression,
gray man, get in there, lay low, let me just like kind of fit into this gig.
And I'm not going to stand out.
And that's what I'm going to do.
Not Mark.
Mark was, Mark was freaking not like that at all.
He was out of the gate.
Like, but the weird thing was in the SEAL teams, the primary, as a new guy in a SEAL
teams, the primary result of your mouth is to get you in trouble.
Like, any time you open your mouth, there's a 90% chance you're going to get yourself
into trouble.
You're going to end up, you know, saying something you should have said, doing, you know,
offending someone you shouldn't offend it.
It's probably going to get you in trouble.
And so that's one of those things that makes people go, hey, like, I don't need to
roll the dice on this.
I'm just going to keep my mouth shut.
And Mark was just not like that.
But the interesting thing was his mouth didn't get him into trouble.
It kind of, it was like.
Drew people to him.
And it made, he was very endearing.
And had that like childish sort of fun thing where you really couldn't be mad at him.
Like even if he said something that normally would have made someone rage with anger,
the way he would say it and the way he would say it.
and the way he would laugh about it and the way he would shrug his shoulders and, you know, raise his eyebrows like, hey, you know, I'm, you know, as a matter of fact, there's a video of Mark. And he's like doing something in a car. I've searched and searched for. I haven't been able to find it. Have you seen a video where like Mark's in a car and he's like singing a song? Yes, but I don't know who's got that. I don't know who's got that. But it's hilarious. It's the type of thing where you go, yep, that's it's it. How could you be mad at that? Like, it doesn't matter what he's saying to you. When he's acting like that, you can't be mad at him. Okay, try parenting something.
like that. Oh, he had to be. He must have gotten away with, he must have got away with pretty much anything.
Because, um, so interestingly, when he rolled in, so he's, so he's automatically, like, I think
one of the first things he said was like, I can't be choked out, you know, like, I can't be choked
out. He's laughing and he's getting choked out, but it's like, no, it's mad at him. They're just
laughing. Like, it's hilarious. Uh, one of our, so, so we're done with our pre-deployment training.
So now we're in our sort of, um, like, we're doing sort of, sort of, um, like, we're doing sort of,
specialized training that we want to focus on and we end up doing this trip where we go to hawthorne
nevada and we go to nellis air force base which what this means is nellis air force base is just outside
of las vegas and hawthorne is like within a short drive of reno and tahoe so we end up getting awesome
training while we're also having like an awesome time pre-deployment we're ready to rock and roll and this is
where when we're and this is where you know we really started to see mark and what he was like
we end up and I don't know if I don't know if there's a what is it a what's the word for like when you
can't get in trouble for anything anymore like a diplomatic immunity not diplomatic it's
when too much time has passed oh statute of limitations so I don't know if there's a statute of
limitations on stuff on my kids say there is so okay so I'm not
I'm going to assume we're past it.
But here we are.
This is where we're a seal task unit and we're going to train in these two places.
We end up in Vegas.
And while we're in Vegas, instead of staying like on the base that's up there, we stay.
We get like a wing of a casino.
We have.
We're there.
And we're training hard.
But then at night we're coming back.
And it's like we got casinos.
We got booze and clubs and all this stuff.
And this is where really like Mark is just on.
fire.
He's got an audience.
Oh, he's got an audience.
He's like living the dream.
And of course, when you're a young seal, you're the richest person in the world.
You've got more money than you ever know what to do with.
And there's some classic Mark Lee lines, which number one playing blackjack, like we're
all sitting around the blackjack table and playing.
And every time the dealer would bust, Mark would just be like, everybody's a winner.
And he's got everyone saying this.
And it's like embarrassing the freaking dealer.
And they're causing all kinds.
Like legitimately, like pit bosses are coming over.
They're like checking him out.
Like what's going on here?
Then like one time they're, they bring in other dealers.
Like they want to cool down the table.
Like they bring in a cooler.
And Mark would be like, oh, they think they're bringing in the ice man.
They think they're going to cool me now.
You can't do it.
He's like talking this just immense amount of shit to these, to these dealers.
And he's just a freaking maniac.
I remember I like come down to the casino floor and I'm looking like across and I see Mark and he's at a blackjack table and he's like, hey, sir.
I mean, this is like a public place.
Hey, sir, sir.
And I look over and I'm like, what's up?
And he goes, hey, when are the new Cadillacs coming out?
I mean, he's just going nuts.
Like uncontrollable mayhem.
Right.
And this is what you're dealing with with Mark.
It's just like this unstoppable, unsuppressable attitude doesn't just doesn't care what.
anyone's thinking, he's just having a freaking blast.
And actually, this is, this is when I found out that Mark was married.
Well, you found out before we did.
I know.
And so what happened was, so I didn't know he's married, right?
And like, we're sitting there playing blackjack and like it's, you know, guys are
starting to peel off and like, hey, we're going to the club because most of the guys are
single.
I'm not single, so I'm playing blackjack.
And so finally I'm like expecting Mark to get up and go.
You know, I'm like, hey, man, you know, are you going to the club with those guys?
What are you doing?
You're going to roll out, you know?
You're going to go chase the girls or whatever.
Like, that's what these guys are doing.
And he's like, he kind of like gets a little quiet, which was weird.
You know, he's like, he's like, hey, I'm actually, I'm actually married.
And I was like, what?
He's like, yeah, he's like, yeah, I'm going to get, you know, we're going to do the real thing when I get back.
But like, I got an awesome girl.
And he was totally stoked.
And that was that, you know, so he was definitely, he was unofficially married at the,
that time to Maya and he was definitely in love with her like ridiculous and that's why he was
just content to hang out with the old guy which was me at whatever I was 34 or something like that
like the oldest guy in the world and he was content just to hang out with me and um and waste our
money gambling yeah which again and and the Cadillac relates to the Charlie Patch yeah
I mean, that's the emblem on there is the Cadillac emblem.
So, yeah, that was part of the connection to the team too.
But I'm thinking, you know, hey, they should give me a Cadillac, right?
Yeah, they still use that.
Seal Team 3, Charlie Team still uses that Cadillac symbol,
which has, I think it came from actually the platoon before as the guys that started using it.
So that was what it was like.
That was the mayhem up there.
And this was, this was Mark.
Just literally 24 hours a day.
Yeah.
You know,
because we're going out training and he,
what's he doing?
He's just,
you know,
fired up laughing,
poking fun of everybody,
you know,
just doing like whatever random athletic
because he's a really awesome athlete.
So whatever random,
like athletic thing to try and do,
he's doing it,
throwing rocks at the target,
you know,
jumping off this thing,
whatever.
He's just a bundle.
Sideways on any poles
where he gets stretches?
He would do that.
the stop signs. It's just, it's just 24 hours a day. Like, that's what he's doing. But you guys
did try to, you know, the new guys come to the platoon and you guys try to make it terrible for them.
And I heard that they tried to do that mark and after a couple days you're like, oh my gosh,
we love this guy. We can't, we can't do this. Yeah. That you took bets on how long he carried
the gun with no sling, the big gun. Yeah. Well, that, that's what I was trying to get across. Like
most guys when they get into a platoon,
they're just going to be like,
okay, look, I just need to be a gray man.
And yeah, you're right.
Like the guys in the platoon,
the more senior guys,
you're just fresh meat.
And they're just sharks looking for a little bit of weakness
and then they're going to rip you apart.
And whatever's going to bother you,
they're going to figure out what's going to bother you,
that whatever little name they can call you
or whatever thing they can do to you,
flick your ear or hide your gear
or call you a name or poke you,
whatever it is that they can do,
that they figure out is going to make you mad,
they're going to just harp on that thing and make your life miserable.
So yes, 100%.
That's what's happening.
And they just can't find a chink in the armor of Mark.
Like no matter whatever he does that's stupid,
he's laughing harder to himself than anyone else.
Like the knock-knock joke is when he was a kid.
Exactly.
So it's just mayhem.
And yeah.
And he's a really, he's a stud athlete.
So, you know, he's carrying his A-dub, his machine.
gun with no sling and people are yeah you're going to need that it's like oh no I'm actually a I'm
actually a badass I got this oh you're a badass yeah watch this and there you go and he's going to
carry that pig with with with no sling and that's that's how he's rolling yeah and that's how we always
rolled um so that's what we're doing we actually then we do our are our we finish that kind of that
those little blocks of training that we're running ourselves we're we're getting honed you know we're
We are doing a lot of legitimate hard training.
We're putting all the junior guys in charge so that they have better understanding of the leadership roles.
We're doing a lot of standard operating procedures.
We're really drilling those.
So we are doing a lot of work while we're having this much fun.
We finish up with those little blocks of training.
We do our operational readiness exercise, which is like a big training exercise where they have all kinds of cool training assets.
and we're out in the middle of the desert.
We're on the Army Baza, Fort Irwin,
which is the huge national training center for the Army,
and they have, you know, entire infantry brigades out there
that are doing their training.
That means we're doing interoperability with tanks and soldiers.
And it's just really awesome.
We had some great training missions up there.
And then we're going on deployment.
And for deployment, we were supposed to be going to Baghdad.
and downtown Baghdad there was a group of seals and special forces guys that had been working with the most elite of the Iraqi forces,
which is called the Iraqi counterterror group, ICTF, Iraqi Counter Terror Force, ICTF.
And these guys had like American weapons and American Knight Vision.
So these guys were really highly trained.
And that's what we were.
The mission was supposed to be.
That was our mission was supposed to be.
I actually went on pre-deployment site survey to go over there and worked with them a little bit just to get to know, meet the people, come back with some, you know, lessons learned and get ready for the deployment.
And we were on pre-deployment leave.
So guys are on pre-deployment leave.
But everyone's on pre-deployment leave.
And I get called in by the CEO, the commanding officer.
And he says, hey, we're going to convince me.
consolidate all of our seal team in the west in Alambar province and that means instead of you going to
Baghdad we're thinking of sending you to Ramadi and
at this point everybody knew how bad Ramadi was and
I knew that that's where everybody in Tasking Bruiser wanted to go
I didn't let on that with the skipper. I played it like well geez sir that's a really a that's an extreme change I might need some extra
gear and I might need some extra people.
You're working it.
I worked it with the skipper and he gave me some good stuff and that's what we did.
We ended up going out there.
And I don't think, I don't think Mark, I don't think we even told the guys because they
were on pre-deployment leave.
There's no means of transmitting classified information to them and so I don't think, I don't
think we even told anybody until
Everyone came back from pre-deployment leave and we just brought everyone in.
Like, hey, we're not going to back down anymore.
We're going to Ramadi.
So I don't know.
Did you know where he was going?
I knew that he was going to Romadi, but I don't remember now that you mentioned that
because he came home before he deployed.
Yeah.
And his birthday's in March.
And it was you guys deployed, I think, the end of March beginning of April.
And so he was there for his birthday and I had taken him to, or just down the street from
where the Rangers and the Royals do their spring training.
And so I'd taken him to a baseball game and had after the, well, seventh or eighth inning, on the marker board, they put, happy 28th birthday, have a safe deployment, love you, mom.
Nice.
And, you know, in the game, I'm like, hey, Mark, Mark, look, look, and he's just, you know, nonchalantly drinking his beer and acting like, oh, okay, whatever, no big deal.
But the guy said when he got back and he was all like, guess what my mom did for me.
But I remember when he was getting ready to leave and pulling him.
away, Maya came with him. And as they were pulling away, I looked at my older son. And I said,
man, I don't feel good about this. And I am not a warrior or fredder. That is just not my personality.
And Christopher is the same way. And he looked at me and said, neither do I, mom. And it's not like
every day that a black car pulled up on my street that I'd be like, oh my gosh, it's today
the day. I mean, I prayed more for Mark than anything I've ever prayed for in my life.
But at some point, I did know he was going to Ramadi. And I've been watching the news. I knew
or Madi was, you know, as you guys say, the hellhole of Iraq or the worst piece of real
estate over there. But I really, you know, knew that it was in God's hands, whatever the outcome was,
but I think we all felt like you guys were invincible. You're trained well, you've got great equipment,
you know, you're going to be fine. You're going to be good to go. You know, I think we had lost,
you know, now looking back at it, you know, Operation Red Wing was just the year before.
And I think in the community, we felt like we paid our dues.
You know, we paid the price.
We're good to go.
Nothing's going to happen for a while.
And so I think when we lost Mark, I think it was definitely a wake-up call in the community.
Go, oh, man, we are still invisible.
There are still going to be, you know, a cost here.
But I don't remember if it was at that point.
I think you're right.
I don't think he knew then.
He just knew he was going to Iraq.
And I think he may have called me before he deployed and say, I'm going to Ramadi.
Once we were on the ground, like how often were you talking to Mark?
I would say I probably talked to him at least once a week, maybe.
What did you think about, what did you know about what was going on there?
Oh, he was training the Iraqis.
They weren't doing anything real dangerous.
He was just training the Iraqis.
And we had a couple conversations.
I'm like, well, so what the heck's taking so long?
you keep training them for months.
I mean, you're just teaching them to shoot and how to maneuver and do things.
And he's like, Mom, they don't even know the left hand from the right hand.
I'm like, wait, what?
You know, I had a preschool in kindergarten.
That's one of the first things you teach these kids, you know, L for left.
And, you know, your hand makes the L.
And I'm like, I can't even comprehend, you know.
And so then the reality of the language barrier and just some of their customs
and, but I think he, you know, pretty well protected us to really know the extent of, you know,
he'd say I'm going out on a mission, but, you know, and I know at one point he did say that,
you know, the numbers that you guys were at for your missions, which is way more than other,
you know, SEAL teams had been doing for the number of missions, but I don't think I completely
understood.
I obviously knew he was in a very dangerous place.
all the casualties come in every day.
Yeah.
I know it was weird for me because when we got back, like I had friends tell me, I wasn't thinking
about this, but like guys in the SEAL teams, they were reading the after actions reports
that would come out every day and it'd be like, oh, this engaged as many gunfight here.
And they were just super fired up.
They were like, we knew you guys were freaking after they were like they would read them
at the morning meeting like everyone's just.
sit down, like read them aloud.
And I was like, damn, like, we didn't think about that.
We were over there.
We're just over there like, hey, we're submitting these.
And we didn't even think about where these things were going.
But then I know that on the news, and it was a weird thing on the news because there
wasn't, there was very few reporters out there in Ramadi, very few reporters.
Like when I was in Baghdad, there's a reporter.
Like you could, couldn't, what is the expression?
Swing a dead cat without hanging a reporter?
You couldn't, there was a lot of reporters.
It's okay.
I'm not a cat lover.
So that's okay.
There was a lot of reporters, but in Ramadi, there was very few reporters.
And so, where does the news come from?
It comes from reporters.
So when there's not a lot of reporters, there's not a lot of information.
Now, the casualty reports were, would come in regularly.
And they would say, two Marines killed in Al-Lambar province.
That's what they would say.
They wouldn't usually say in the city of Ramadi, again, because there's no one there
that's really hyping the story of what was going on in Ramadi.
And so it was it was I think it would have been hard to really understand what was going on
Without without without actually either if they were had him you know reporters that were there that were that were that were actually putting out work because there were some reporters there that were reporting but they were on small like small platforms and
And so you wasn't like this wasn't not wasn't on wasn't on Fox it wasn't like boom boom boom they're like the like the
stars and stripes had some people that were out there and so they would actually catch some stories
but it was definitely a challenge to um to figure out what was going on yeah and that and outside of like
i said my friends and the seal teams that would be like bro we were reading your a rs every morning at
quarters i was like that's freaking awesome but outside of that i mean my parents had my parents had
know my wife had pretty limited idea and actually I've read the emails that I wrote to my wife
during this deployment and they're like hey you know I'm like hey how's everything you know how are the
kids like there's literally almost nothing about the actual deployment itself which is kind of a bummer
because I would want it now to see what was going on yeah they're all just very bland but that's
but as you know now I mean that was that's what we were doing that's what Mark was
doing and Mark was doing just an outstanding job across the board. And one thing, and I know you've
heard a little bit about this, but, you know, we were working with Iraqis. And some of my guys
had a really hard time forming relationships with Iraqis. And Mark did an awesome job of that.
I know you know he, they played soccer. There's a soccer stadium in downtown Ramadi, a big giant
soccer stadium and not that we used it we used it for a different purpose but um iraqi's love
to play soccer and so here was mark you know of an actual skilled soccer player and most what we
didn't ever have i don't think there had been skilled soccer players there before from america
and so all of a sudden we had like a championship team based about based around one guy
based just around Mark being a badass and being a badass soccer player
and being able to beat them in the game that they would usually, you know,
pulverize you guys.
Polverize the Americans, you know.
They didn't ever want to play American football at Coach Charles.
They didn't ever want to play baseball.
They wanted to play soccer.
And I did hear that there is a football field somewhere in Ramadi that was named after Mark,
that he had made such an impression on those.
that they played with. And of course, you know, because you guys had won several of them,
they're like, we want a rematch. And I said, well, that rematch is going to have to happen in heaven.
But, yeah, even then, you know, my first trip over to Iraq, I got to meet the interpreter
that was with you guys who had been sick that day and didn't go out on that mission.
Of course, he felt like that was his fault that we lost Mark, that if he could have been there,
you know, he could have saved Mark. And like I've told so many others, there was somebody
bigger in control that day, you know, not that God caused Mark's death at all. But he could have
stopped it and he chose not to. And I think we're blessed 16 and a half years later to see the impact
Mark's still making today and the lives he is still saving his teammates' lives. You know,
we were in an event yesterday that was a funeral for one of our guys. And just as I kept meeting
people thinking, oh my gosh, this is someone else that, you know, we've helped through the foundation
that wouldn't have happened if it wouldn't have been for the sacrifice that Mark chose to make, you know.
And, you know, soccer field and Ramadi, you know, trade-up building, you know, that was named after Mark on the base, you know, movies, books, you know,
and I know we've been up to Mark's grade before and I've said, man, that's the hardest thing to see your kid's name on a headstone.
You know, that's not normal. That's not the way life should be. We should be living, you know, full lives.
and dying in our old age.
But when we have heroes who did what Mark did
and what you guys did, their stories need to be told.
People need to understand the sacrifices that are made
and who these guys are, what their character is.
You know, you guys are some of the toughest warriors
that we have in America.
I'll tell you what, some of the most kind,
compassionate caring men I've ever known.
And how God gets that mixture together in your body
is it's absolutely...
Amazing so yeah, yeah, and I think that's what made Mark so amazing is he had the extreme of both those
facets
You know, like we're talking about a move talking about how
How insuppressable his personality was from a just fun and humor
Side
but like on the on the war fighting side we mentioned you know he's out there he's he's a he's a he's a
machine gunner he's carrying his machine gun with no sling he's a lead turret gunner in the
vehicles which night after night you know in Vietnam in the Vietnam War um the point man is the
most vulnerable guy because you're walking through a jungle and you're having to break trail and as you
break trail guess what you might hit a tripwire you might walk into an ambush and you're going to get
killed. And so what they did in Vietnam was they rotate that guy out. They go, okay, you do it for
you know, an hour. Then we're going to get another guy up there for an hour because you can't
handle that much vulnerability as a human. Well, in Ramadi, the lead turret gunner in a vehicle,
he's the most exposed guy because he's up out of the vehicle on his machine, on his 50 caliber
machine gun and the primary threat in Ramadi is roadside bombs and so when you hit a roadside
bomb with a convoy it's a person in the lead vehicle that's in the turret that's going to most likely
be killed or be gravely wounded and the the horrible decision that someone made in Ramadi was to put
the vehicle what we called the vehicle graveyard which is 75 or
hundred vehicles that had been blown up in Ramadi and when they drag them back to
base they would just put them on into this field and you every time you left base you
would see a hundred of these mangled vehicles burned out vehicles and every one of those
vehicles you know that there was one two three four military u.s military personnel that were
wounded or burned or killed inside those vehicles and that's what you got to see and so mark
going out night after night lead vehicle lead turret gunner never never said hey you know can i go in the
second vehicle can i go in the third vehicle can i go in the back never one time just lead vehicle every time
just taking just taking the all the odds and just saying i got it boys don't worry about me and you know i
would you know if i wasn't going out or not i you know as the vehicles were lined up i'd go out like you know
make sure everyone's good to go.
I'd give him a little hand salute as they were rolling out.
And I was, like, it had to been marked 38th mission in a row of being in the lead vehicle.
And I'm looking up at him and he's looking down at me.
And I'm like, hey, bro, you, you're feeling good?
How are you feeling?
He's like, I'm feeling lucky, sir.
Let's go.
Like, that was his attitude.
Big smile.
It's a big smile.
A big giant smile on his face.
Yeah.
as he's getting ready for the 39th, 40, 47th time in a row to go out and go down those roads where the main road, route Michigan in Ramadi had 7 to 10 roadside bombs detonated on it a day.
A day.
And that's what he's rolling out to.
Yeah.
And he's laughing.
Yeah.
And he's smiling.
But I think part of that was he was secure.
He knew if anything happened.
Not that he wanted something to happen, but he knew if anything happened, he knew he was going.
He knew when he got to heaven.
There's no pain, no sorrow, no sickness.
You know, lots of times I've thought about him up there in his oneriness.
I'm sure God's maybe sometimes going, oh, boy, maybe we should send it back.
But he's making, you know, heaven exciting, that's for sure, not that it might have been exciting before.
It's more exciting now.
He had that confidence.
Yeah, he had that confidence.
He knew that it wasn't over for him.
it might be over for him here on earth, but he knew beyond a shadow of a doubt where he's going.
And oftentimes, you know, people tell me, oh, yeah, Mark's in Bahawah, you know, Warriors Heaven, you know,
because of what he did for his country. I'm like, okay, well, I would probably die from my country
if it was needed, but I'm not going to be at a place probably where that's going to be required
to me. But he knew. He knew 100%, you know.
And for me, then what's that mean for me?
How do I get to heaven if I got to die for my country?
No, Mark's in heaven because he knew Jesus Christ was his Lord and Savior.
End of story, you know.
It's not based on what we do or what we don't do or what we say or what we don't say.
Christ's already paid that price for us.
And Mark knew that beyond a shadow of a doubt.
And so I think that was the smile on his face.
He wasn't scared, you know.
He may have had fear and had that courage to push through it, but he knew the end of the story.
Yeah.
after seeing a lot of guys and a lot of tough situations to not be able to really pick up an ounce of like hesitation from a guy is very rare it's very rare and so he definitely knew because you're gonna you're gonna show something yeah and he didn't didn't have any fear yeah which is incredible um so this is now
like we're getting, we've been on deployment.
Did you know, did you know,
Cali came home? Did you were even aware of that?
No.
No.
So you're-
I really did not know a lot about the team.
I had met Bobby Gasoff,
who was his swim buddy at,
and I think Maddie Long,
who was on three,
but not on Charlie Petoon or Tasking at Roosier.
I met them briefly at graduation,
but I didn't know any of the other guys,
didn't know anything about really what was going on.
You know, obviously what I know now is what I've learned afterwards.
Yeah, so you're kind of tracking.
And again, to me, it always, and I kind of relate it to my family,
because my family is my wife, just not knowing what's going on.
Like, she's just, and I think in a lot of ways she just didn't even want to know.
She's like, hey, you go do your thing.
I do my thing.
You take care of it.
And same thing with my kids.
They were young at the time.
So they were just, you know, I was just dad.
He's not here.
Where is he?
I don't know.
But he's not here.
He'll be home in a little while.
My parents just, I'd been in the Navy my whole, you know, adult life.
They were just used to me going on a point.
They wouldn't hear from me for a month or two.
And then I'd, you know, everything's cool.
So I think that sounds like that's where you were at too.
Like, hey, son's on deployment.
They're, that's, you know, he'll be back.
Let's track it.
You got an email in July, like a group email from Mark.
just before July 4th.
Just after, yeah.
And I want to read this email.
Mark says this.
Glory is something that some men chase
and others find themselves stumbling upon,
not expecting it to find them.
Either way, it is a noble gesture
that one finds bestowed upon them.
My question is,
when does glory fade away
and become a wrongful crusade
or an unjustified means by which consumes one completely.
I've seen war.
I've seen death,
the sorrow that encompasses your entire being as a man breathes his last.
I can only pray and hope that none of you will ever have to experience
some of the things I have seen and felt here.
I have felt fear and have felt adrenaline pumped through my veins,
making me seem invincible.
I will be honest and say,
that some of the things I've seen here are unjustified and uncalled for.
However, for the most part, we are helping this country.
It will take more years than most expect, but we will get Iraq to stand on its own feet.
Most of what I've seen here will never really mention or speak of, only due to the nature of those involved.
I've seen a man give his food to a hungry child and family.
Today I saw a hospital that most of us would refuse to receive treatment from.
The filth and smell would allow most of us to not be able to stand to enter, let alone get medicine from.
However, you will be relieved to know that coalition forces has started to provide security for
and supply medicine and equipment to help aid in the cause.
I've seen amazing things happen here.
However, I've seen the sad part of war too.
I've seen the morals of a man who cares nothing of human life.
I have seen hate towards a nation's people who has never committed a wrong,
except being born of a third world, ill-educated and ignorant to Western civilization.
It is not everybody who feels this way, only a select few,
but it brings questions to mind.
Is it okay for one to consider themselves superior to another race?
Surprisingly, we are not a stranger to this story.
of attitude meaning that in our own country we discriminate against someone for what
nationality they are their education level their social status we distinguish our
role models as multi-million dollar sports heroes or talented actors and
actresses who complain about not getting millions of dollars more than they are
currently getting paid our country is a great country don't get me wrong on this
otherwise none of us would be living there my point of this is
is how can we come over here and help a less than fortunate country
without holding contempt or hate towards them
if we can't do it in our country?
I try to do my part over here,
but the truth is over there in the United States,
I do nothing but take.
Ask yourself, when was the last time you donated clothes
that you hadn't worn out?
When was the last time you paid for a random stranger's cup of,
coffee, meal, or even maybe a tank of gas.
When was the last time you helped a person with the groceries into or out of their car?
Think to yourself and wonder what it would feel like if when the bill for the meal came
and you were told it was already paid for.
More random acts of kindness like this would change our country and our reputation as a
country.
It is not unknown to most of us that the rest of the world looks at us with doubt
towards our humanity and morals.
I am not here to preach or to say,
look at me because I am just as at fault as the next person.
I find that being here makes me realize
the great country we have and the obligation we have
to keep it that way.
The fourth has just come and gone,
and I received many emails thanking me
for helping America great, keep America great,
and free.
I take no credit for the career path I have chosen.
I can only give it to those of you who are reading this because each one of you is contributed
to me and who I am.
However, what I do over here is only a small percent of what keeps our country great.
I think the truth to our greatness is each other.
morality, morals, and kindness passed down to each generation through example.
So to all my family and friends, do me a favor and pass on the kindness, the love, the precious
gift of human life to each other.
So that when your children come into contact with a great conflict that we are now faced
with here in Iraq, that they are people of humanity, of pure motives, of compassion.
This is our real part to keep America free.
Happy Fourth.
Love you.
Mark Lee.
P.S.
halfway through the deployment.
Can't wait to see all of your faces.
Was that an indicator of some of the heaviness that was happening with Mark?
Yeah, I think very much so.
You listen to that letter and you see the transfer.
that happened for Mark, what he saw over there, what he endured, the humbleness, the reality to say,
oh my gosh, I'm not any different than the rest of you. When I was there, all he did was take.
You know, he realized the blessings that we do have. And I can't, I've never been able to get
through that letter without getting choked up at the end where he says, halfway through the deployment.
Can't wait to see your faces. And I know one day I'll see him.
again. And he successfully completed his mission. He did what he was supposed to do over there.
But for us, we're halfway through deployment. There's still something we're here and we're
supposed to do. And that was Mark's challenge. But there's, I mean, we could do a whole podcast on
dissecting just that letter apart and what he talks in there. It talks about the country and the
great country we have and the obligation we have to keep it that way. And you see so many people
coming into our country and trying to change it into something else?
You see people, I sent Colin Kaepernick in that letter
when he wouldn't stand for the national anthem or for the flag.
And I was like, yeah, it was the national anthem at the flag.
But I said, you know, Colin, my son even talked about you
and his last letter home, you know, multi-million dollar sports figures
complain.
And I said, Mark stood.
He didn't kneel.
He didn't sit.
He stood for what he believed in this country.
You know, you need to stand for what you believe in here.
If you want to make a difference, go do something to make a difference.
Of course, we never saw him impact anything there.
I'm like, that red stripe on that flag, that represents my son's blood.
You will not disrespect that.
And so many others that have given so much.
You know, he talks about the random acts of kindness.
You know, and that's kind of how the foundation, you know, not officially,
but that's how I started doing those things, honor mark.
I could pay for a stranger's cup of coffee.
I could pay for a meal.
Tank of gas back then wasn't as expensive as it is now,
but I could do those things.
I understood the price that was being paid and the sacrifices that were made for me.
That's a pretty simple thing to go up and say,
hey, I'm going to buy your coffee.
Thank you.
You know, let me buy your tank of gas.
Let me buy your meal.
You know, it talks about opening a door for, you know, someone
or helping them with their groceries into or out of their car.
What's happened to America that we've gotten so far away from that?
You know, and to end that with, to my family and friends, do me favor.
Pass on the kindness, the love, the precious gift of human life.
We understand that precious gift and how quickly it can be gone.
But holy cow, is America, what's happened to us?
Why can't we pass on that kindness?
We can have different opinions.
That's what you guys fought for so we could have those different opinions.
But that doesn't mean you need to be so mean and hateful to people.
And I just really think some of those things, basically, if we did those as humans that Mark challenged us to do, we'd be living in a different world.
And, you know, when I first got that, like you said, it came as an email.
It was about two weeks before he died.
And it wasn't supposed to be that if you're reading this, I'm gone.
And I read through it on the computer, and I was like, who wrote this?
And, you know, Mark was not stupid by any means, but language, I had not seen that as a lot.
a strength or, you know, his forte. And so I scroll back to the top to see who sent the email. I'm like,
dang, you know, that was Mark. And you just feel the changes that took place in not just his mind
in his heart. And after he passed, man, then that letter was even more significant, the meaning of that
and the impact. And literally, Jock, I don't, millions and millions of lives have been changed by Mark.
I never would have thought when I held him as a little baby in the midst all those struggles.
Like I said, I didn't have high goals for him. Nobody's pregnant. Nobody's now calling. Nobody's drug addict at 18. I'm good.
And to see that. But that came through the struggles. That came through the perseverance of what we went through.
And those are the things that mold us and shape us.
you know and what he saw over there
you know he's talking about Saddam about you know
the man who cares nothing you know about moral life
and on my first trip over I was at Biop which is in
Baghdad which is the main base there for you guys
and there's a lot of Saddam's palaces
and one of the palaces there
was where he would have his way you know with a virgin
and then he either behead them or throw him off the balcony
and then he'd put a heart on the lattice to remember them by.
I'm like, what kind of sick person does something like that?
And obviously he didn't care about human life.
He had no morals, you know.
He put all the waterways around his palaces
because he figured that, you know, Allah wouldn't be able to see his sin
if he, you know, put the water around.
I'm like, well, you don't think your God's big enough
to look right down at what you're doing.
But there's some evil, evil stuff in this world.
And that we've got men like Mark, men like you, so many others that are willing to confront that evil that most of us in America have never even seen or hopefully never will see.
Mark talks about that, you know? And it's just amazing. You know, you talked about his humor and who he was.
Yeah, what a caring, compassionate, and his words, words of wisdom way beyond his 28 years. Most of us takes a lot.
lifetime to get that. I know it just I would encourage everybody that's listening to go to our website
you can read that on our website at america's mighty warriors.org powerful powerful letter.
August 2nd and this is what I kind of covered in the opening of this podcast you know the guys are out
they're doing a clearance this is this was just the daily basis doing big clearance
supporting big clearances,
Ryan gets wounded.
And, you know, it seemed like Ryan may die.
He was, I mean, he shot in the face.
I mean, it's horrible.
When that happens, you know, it's on a rooftop.
And it's a single shot, boom.
And what does Mark do?
Mark steps right into where Ryan,
was to lay down suppressive fire so the guys can get to so the corman can get up there and get
Ryan to cover and start getting him worked on so like out of the gate this is this is just what
this is what mark is doing um they get Ryan evacuated and again I'm talking to Leif and Leif was not
optimistic and they they go back to combat outpost Falcon and this is this is this is
Laif and Laif's a platoon, this is Chargton, so it's Laif, it's BTF, Tony, Chris Kyle, Kevin Lace is there, Jason Hogan, I mean, there's a bunch of other guys, obviously.
But a bunch of great guys, they're all, you know, they're obviously, they're worried about Ryan and everything.
And when this happens with Ryan and these guys go back to combat outpost, Falcon, you know, the army goes out.
go they start going hard and it's Mike Baima and the he's the company commander from the
one three seven from the bandits and they go out and they start meeting really fierce resistance
and they eventually find some buildings like where they think they've got the enemy um they
ask Laif like hey can you can you guys come out and hit some of these buildings and that's
when they've called me and he's like hey the Iraqis aren't going the Iraqis are too scared
We're going on like Roger
This is again
This is what I read in the beginning
I'm watching the Bradley's go out
Seeing them hit the first
Buildings and then they moved to this other building
And actually one of the assistant
Patoon commanders, great guy
Under Laif
I remember talking to him
And he like as they pull up to the second building
There's they're in a Bradley fighting vehicle
And there's rounds hitting the Bradley fighting vehicle
fighting vehicle and and this assistant platoon commander is trying to yell to the tank to the
bradley crew don't open the door he's like trying to get their attention and it's too loud and they
just open the door and so then what do you do you go and that's what they did um and you know it opened
they assaulted the building um once they're in the building you know there's there's stairs going up
They're taking fire and and Mark instead of taking cover instead of hiding, he steps out into the line of fire to protect his brothers.
And this is all taking place the morning of August 2nd in Iraq.
So back here, it's 11 hours ahead in Iraq.
So it's probably late at night here.
you're probably at least going to bed
or you're getting ready to go to bed and going to sleep.
What are you doing?
What were you doing on August 2nd when you wake up in the morning?
What's going on?
I know that from our perspective,
I mentioned that, you know, when someone gets killed,
you immediately stop all communications
because they want the notification process to take place
and you don't want to get to the news.
you definitely don't want someone, some family member to be watching the news.
So it's a race.
What are you doing on August 2nd when you wake up?
I don't remember when I woke up that morning what I was doing.
But I know that there was, and I know Mark had changed the paperwork.
I had moved from Oregon where I raised them pretty much down to Arizona.
And I know he'd called and got the new address and new information as he was updating his paperwork before he left.
but for whatever reason
they were trying to find me up in Oregon
where I'd lived
and we send
in the SEAL community
we send our own Keko group
up there so that group was up
in Oregon
and the building
where I lived I still owned
but it was empty
and they had been there
for about eight hours trying to find
finally they knocked on one of the neighbors
and they said she doesn't live here anymore
she lives down in Arizona
so this
This is evening by that point.
And like you said, they're afraid I'm going to find out on the news.
So they called Luke Air Force Base isn't too far from me, so they called there and they had
a small detachment of Navy that's there and sent out the Navy Keko officer and a chaplain.
And I was gone that night.
I was actually at my Bible study, at my small group.
And they waited for a while and then knocked on the neighbor's door and her husband had served
in the military, so she kind of had a clue of what was going on.
didn't have my cell phone number, didn't know how to get a hold of me.
And she said, well, I know Debbie's son works at Lowe's, you know, the Lowe's just down the street.
So they called Krista, and again, he served in the Marines.
You know when they show up at your house, it's not good.
If Mark had been wounded, you know, they'd have got word to us and got us to him.
And so, oddly enough, we were celebrating my birthday that night.
We hadn't met the week before, which my birthday was the Wednesday before Mark died on a Wednesday.
And we'd had missionaries that were there speaking to our small group,
and they're telling the story about Cuba,
and I think it was his brother-in-law,
and how they had been captured for being a spy or something,
and two guys showed up at the wife's door
and knocked on the door and said,
you need to grab your children and come with us if you want to see your husband again.
And as they go through the story, it ends up its Navy SEALs.
I'm like, oh, my son's a Navy SEAL.
you know, he's in Mahadi. Of course, at that point he'd already passed, but we got done, we were
celebrating my birthday, and my girlfriend gave me one of those willow tree angels, and those are the
wooden angels with the wire wings, and each one usually has a character quality, and the one
she gave me was courage. And this was before we found out about Mark, and she just said,
with all you've been through in your life, you just remind me as such a woman of courage.
You still are positive, you still serve God, you're not a negative person, you're not a hateful,
person. And little did we know how much more courage was going to be required in the next half
hour. And I always turned my phone off that night I hadn't, and Christopher called,
nothing in his voice to alert me. He wasn't speaking too fast. He wasn't crying. He's like,
hey, Mom, where are you? I'm like, Wednesday night I met my Bible study. Why? What's up?
He said, how long will it take you to get home? Oh, that's an odd question. I said,
I don't know, five minutes, seven minutes, why what's up?
And he said, you just need to come home.
And I knew at that point what was going to face me when I got home.
And I grabbed my purse and I just told everybody, please be praying something's not right.
And I got in my car and there was a song from my past and it says, I put my hope in you,
oh Lord, trusting you, I will not be shaken.
Knowing that you will see me through, I put my hope in you.
and I just sang that over and over and over and over.
And I got to the main intersection by my house,
and there was probably three or four fire trucks
and a couple of police cars and ambulances,
and I'm like, my house blew up.
That's all that's wrong.
And trust me, I would have rather lost all my worldly possessions
and still had mark.
And to this day, I have no idea how I got through that intersection,
but I got back into my subdivision,
and there are no more emergency vehicles.
So I went back to, I know what's going to face me
when I get home. And as I turned the corner, I expected to see a black car parked there. I guess
I've watched too many movies, but there was no black car. There was no unusual car. They'd park
down the streetaways. And my oldest son, Christopher, was just pacing back and forth on the sidewalk.
And he said, Mom, the Navy's here. And I remember just putting my whole head on his shoulder and cry and say,
no, no. And we walked in the house, and of course they'd been in my house for a little bit because
they were trying to find me, I guess I can be elusive at times. And they said we can tell by being
your home, you're a woman of faith. You need to rely on your faith for what we're about to tell you.
Your son Mark Allen Lee has been guilt in action. As you can imagine, the most devastating
words you could ever hear as a parent. And yet even at that moment, I knew where my strength
was going to come from. I knew that God was going to see me through.
I knew this would be much harder than losing my husband,
but I knew he would see me through.
And my circumstances had drastically changed that day.
But my God had not.
He was still the same God on August 2nd as he was on August 1st.
His character hadn't changed.
And we went and sat on the couch,
and I've got a skinny window next to my door
did in the other house that I lived in at the time.
I looked outside, and my friends were from my small group
we're all standing outside and I'm like what the heck get in here I need you in here and um the neighbor
next door was from New York um very proper and he's like oh no you don't go in there you give them time
and so they came in and we just talked about Mark and tried to process it and we cried and
prayed and cried and cried and they stayed for a couple hours and it was probably about
11 o'clock and everybody had left.
My son Christopher was still there.
He served in the Marines.
He was in Okinawa for five years or plus.
Met his wife over there and she, before they had five kids, would go home every year for six weeks.
And my daughter and my daughter-in-law had both just lost babies the year before at five and
half months in their pregnancy, which is pretty unusually lose a child that far along.
And of course our first thought was, oh no, no more loss, no more babies.
They were just both three months in their pregnancy.
And so he had decided to protect her to not tell her what was going on.
He knew that she'd be back home before the funeral.
And how he did that struggling with probably the toughest pain he's ever known
and not tell his wife and carry on conversations is beyond me.
But he said, Mom, I'm going to stay here tonight.
I said, thank you, son.
He said, I'm going to try to get some sleep.
I'm like, okay, long noon, there was no way sleep was coming to me.
And I just wanted somebody to hold me and tell me it's going to be okay.
We'll get through this.
At that point, I'd been a widow for 12 years, and so there was nobody there.
And I remember thinking, okay, God's promised to be a husband of the widow and a father to the fatherless.
I know where my strength is going to come.
And so I went and grabbed my Bible and just opened it and opened a psalm's
27, that's right where it plopped open. It said, the Lord is my light and my salvation.
Whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life. Of whom shall I be afraid?
When the wicked came against me to eat up my flesh, my enemies and my foes, they stumbled and
they fell. Though an army may rise against me, I will not fear. The war may come against me,
and I read that going, oh my goodness, did you write this today for me, for my first circumference?
and the end of it says, I would have lost hope.
If I had not believed, I'd see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.
Wait on the Lord, be of good courage, and I will strengthen your heart.
Wait, I stand, Lord, and I closed my Bible, and I saw that courage thing again.
I got the courage angel at the beginning of the night, and now God's reminding me again, courage.
I'm like, I got it, Lord.
And as I sat there and was praying, I've never audibly heard God speak,
but in my thoughts, he said,
I want you to read this at Mark's funeral.
I want you to give everybody else the same hope
that I've given you.
As I said, I was a rebel in my 20s.
Oh, my teenagers, too.
You know, God says he said, eight, seven things.
I'd done six of them.
I was faithful in my marriage.
You can go read the rest of them.
I don't want to get into all that.
I've learned that if he asked me to do something,
to just obey and do it.
It may not make any sense.
He tells us his.
ways or not our ways. But I'm sure I kind of was like a teenager and kind of went,
are you kidding me, God? That's my son's funeral. I don't know if I'll throw up or pass out.
I don't know what I'll do. And I pause and I say, I will walk through whatever doors you open
thinking it just meant to speak at Mark's funeral. I know that if God would have told me what he
had in store and all the different places that I'd be at one point, I spoke in front of a million
people in the wall in the mall in Washington, D.C. And I know that I'd be. And I'd be at one point, I spoke in front of a million people in Washington, D.
and I was terrified, terrified to speak in front of people.
The preschool and kindergarten, we had two programs a year, one at Christmas and one at the kindergarten graduation.
I would literally hold the microphone with both hands and it'd still be bouncing all over
because I was terrified to be in front of people.
So this was not my comfort zone.
This wasn't something I'm like, oh yeah, I'm such a great speaker.
Oh, yeah, this would be awesome.
I'm like, okay.
And to see what he's done and the toughest thing that I could go.
through in life and how he's taken that, taken Marx-Royce, his story to continue to impact people
and change the world is nothing but a miracle. But again, the toughest pain I've ever known,
you know, you can't avoid pain. You've got to walk right through the middle of it. You can't
go around it, over it. You can't get stuck in it because then you don't heal and you don't get to
the healthier side.
But all the greeting I've done on grief that said,
that's the toughest thing you could ever go through
is the instant death of a child.
And I would have to agree with that.
You know, granted, my husband wasn't the love of my life
that I've been married to for 50 years,
but much tougher, much tougher.
But so proud of Mark,
I look forward to that day when I do get to see him again,
give him another big hug, you know,
kick him in the butt.
and say, okay, why did you not tell us you were married?
But if I know anything, I know God doesn't waste pain.
You know, if we allow him, he will take that and use that for his glory.
And, you know, in his wisdom, he doesn't have him meet.
I'm not flying planes going, oh, well, yeah, it's just because I'm so good at this.
That's why it's working.
It's like, no, no, you don't understand.
I don't have any skills or talents to be a public speaker,
never taking classes on it.
you know it's just going through that life experience and really what am I going to be afraid of
mark ran into the line of fire how many times just on his final day I'm going to be afraid
to speaking in front of people yeah I don't think so the as I mentioned in the beginning
you know basically as soon as we found out that you had been notified you know we get the word
and then guys start calling, calling you to talk to you.
And it's actually all happening from,
I have an office in the Tackle Operations Center
with the direct landline to America.
And so guys are coming in, calling from there.
And again, our attitude was we're going to have to be consoling,
you know, Mark's mom.
And it was literally the opposite.
It was literally the opposite.
You know, it was my guys that needed consoling.
You were the one that was saying, you know, what do you need?
What can I send you?
What do you?
How can I help you guys?
And, I mean, so it was like this courage that you had gotten the message on you immediately put into action.
And then it was just for us to be able to.
to talk to you, the guys talking to you,
and hearing your voice and your encouragement
is what allowed guys to be able to say, okay,
you know, we can move forward.
And, you know, that scene of coming out of Charlie Med
and seeing all those soldiers and Marines just lined up
and, you know, that's like,
sometimes people will attempt to bait me
into saying something negative about the Army of the Marine Corps,
and they can't do it.
Nothing but love for those guys.
When did you, so we sent guys home,
guys came home with Mark, you know, guys escorted Mark home.
When did you start meeting the guys from the task unit,
from Charlie Butoon, from tasking to Bruiser?
And it was, excuse me,
I think it was the majority of you guys, it was when you came back from that deployment.
Yesterday we were at the funeral and I was like, who spoke at Mark's funeral?
I'm like, how can you not remember your son's ceremony and who spoke?
I remember being in another one and the same.
It was at the chapel there on North Island.
I remember being later at another funeral there.
I'm like, did we have Mark's Gaskin in here?
I don't remember more.
I'm like, but I think just part of that, it's too much.
It's just a big blur.
So you just don't remember it.
So I don't, I know Bobby Gassoff.
At first, that was his Mark Swim Buddy, and, yeah, man, that's a pretty tight connection with your swim buddy.
And they weren't going to send him at first because they said, no, he's in too much pain.
This is not who we send.
And, of course, now they've learned that that is.
And they said, Commodore Puybus at the,
the time at now Admiral Pibas was on our doorstep the next morning. And you know, Sean,
you know, what a compassionate, caring man. And again, I still don't even at that point,
didn't understand the ranks. I knew Admiral was something special, but an Admiral showing up
on my doorstep. Granted, he was Commodore. Would he have been Admiral as the Commodore? No,
he was a captain. I always had the hardest time with the Commodore thing. I'm like,
and it's a position, not a rank?
It's a position, not a rank.
But he was there at the door, and I remember them saying,
what else can we do for you?
I'm like, give me Bobby Gas off.
I want Bobby here.
And so they did get Bobby home.
I think he might have been in the Philippines at the time.
He stayed with me.
He and his wife stayed with us for a week.
But I don't even remember who the other one was.
I know later that Brian Yarboe told me he was one of them that escorted Mark home.
And I want to say, was Jason Hogan the other one, or do you remember?
think so yeah we sent a few it was a few guys it was a few guys we sent home yeah um and and then
obviously we sent guys home with mike too and when guys came home with mikey they were coming home like
we knew that they weren't coming back because it was the end of deployment right so i i can't remember
exactly which guys went with who with mark and which guys went with mikey um because some of them
came back and it was pretty close it was like seven seven half weeks but i think the majority of that
started by phone calls and emails while you guys were still deployed. I remember thinking,
oh my gosh, I can't make any decisions. My brain is mush. Holy cow, those guys are in combat.
They've got life or death decisions. They've got to make them. Once I realized having Mark's
brothers in our home for the week, wow, you guys love Mark as much as we did and you were hurting
And that's something like, oh, the brotherhood thing, I got it now.
It makes sense.
And so my concern for you guys is you're in that combat zone.
You're still going out on patrol.
Man, how are you guys going to deal with this?
How are you guys going to process and stay safe?
You know, and you, you know, I think it was Laif was the one.
I'm like, you guys go back out there.
You go get them, you know, don't hang in your rooms.
And, you know, Mark would want you to continue.
you the mission. But that's really when those relationships started. I got a copy of the Charlie
Batoon picture. And I'd say, okay, who's the one on the left? And I'd write the name down. Okay,
the tall guy in the middle, who's that? And of course, they gave me their name names. And then they
talk about Biff or I'm like, I don't have a Biff on the sheet. Who's Biff? You know, and then I learned,
okay, most of them have other names that they go by. But, and I'd get phone calls. And I'd get phone calls.
even from some of the moms of the guys, you know, checking on me.
And I knew, I didn't know I was going to start a foundation,
but we had a lot of support up to the funeral.
And then I live in Arizona.
I'm not near a base.
I'm not here in, you know, San Diego where, you know,
the rest of the community is or a major part of it.
But once a funeral was over, there was nothing.
I mean, other than talking to you guys over there,
It just, you know, it stopped.
And I'm like, oh, crud, well, it's just starting for me now.
The process, the journey of grief is just starting.
And I've never been one to feel sorry for myself.
And it's like, okay, I can't change anything you think for myself,
but I can change it so nobody else has to go through without having support.
There is somebody that knows what it's like.
So when I got the call that Mikey had died, I knew I had to be there.
I didn't know what I was going to do, but I just knew I had to be.
there. And then that was about the time, you know, the first ones were starting to come back home.
And I'm like, man, I've got to be there for my boys, not to be, oh my gosh, there's poor Mark's mom.
But to say, woohoo, the rest of my boys are home, you know, thank you, thank you. And, you know,
so was here and then came over for the funeral. I remember coming over and it was the same hotel
where they'd put us up for Mark's funeral. Same black vehicles.
I don't know, it was the exact same, but, you know, that black SUV that you guys have.
And I was standing down there that morning,
had given, you know, Sally and the family big hugs and said, I'm so sorry.
And Admiral McGuire came down and asked how I was doing.
I said, hanging in there.
And he said, we want you to go in the vehicle with the family.
I'm like, oh, no, no, no, no, I'm not here.
This is not about bark.
This is not about me.
at all. I'm just here to support the family. And they said, exactly, you know, and almost a panic,
you know, here we got another one. You know, we thought we were good for a while. And now seven
weeks later, we got another one. And he said, exactly, that's why we want you in the vehicle
to support them. I'm like, okay. So now I'm in the vehicle reliving, going back up to Fort
Roast Cranes. Same casket, Mark was buried in. Same place, although now, I know what it's like to get
the folded flag. I know what to be done with the funeral and start that grieving process.
Amanda just, you know, the little bit of the wound that was starting to heal was now ripping open.
But still, I knew it was the right thing. I knew that's where it's supposed to be to support this family.
Just to be there. I didn't have anything planned. I didn't, you know, just to be there.
And that's why I tell people all the time, when someone's grieving, just be there.
Don't worry about what you should say, what you shouldn't say. Should I take anything? Should I not take anything?
Just be there.
It means so much to have someone else there with you.
If they want to talk about it, they'll probably open up and start talking about it.
You don't need to worry.
You know, it's not like I don't remember that, you know, I had a son Mark and what happened to him.
But it's so important to be there.
And that was really the first family that we supported.
You know, we got pretty close to the Mansour family.
And, you know, Sally just passed away a couple months ago.
And so we were there again, you know, to be able to support in honor Mikey,
but because I love that family.
I understand their sacrifice.
And that's really what started the America's Mighty Warriors process thinking.
And then I would just happen to be in Washington, D.C. when Jay Redmond was there,
you know, before even the note was posted on the door of, you know, don't feel sorry for me.
If you're coming in here to feel sorry for me, I earned these wounds doing what I, you know,
love doing and don't I don't need your sympathy. I was in the hospital when Dan Kinnatson was brought
down from surgery. I just happened to be in Washington, D.C. So these things just kept happening.
That is my spiritual gift is to be an encourager and, you know, to support people. And so that's where
my strength. That's where I work well when I'm doing those things. And then after a while I'm like,
oh okay I get it I think there's a mission ahead I don't think I'm just supposed to do this once or twice
and you know that's when I'm like okay I can't continue to afford to fund this on my own time
so we really do need to so officially we started the foundation in 2008 but and the name of it
America's mighty warriors the meaning of the name mark means mighty warrior you know he
definitely lived up to his name didn't you get that name from like a menu or something?
Did Mark put that in your head to tell me that?
I think you told me a long time ago.
He's always like, great, you got my name from a menu, mom?
That's what it is, right?
And it was.
It was from a menu.
As I mentioned, I'd already gone through the divorce.
I was by myself here.
I'm having this baby.
I have a three and a half year old, two year old, and now another little one.
Of course, back then you stayed three days in the hospital.
That was common.
It was rare that they let you go before that.
And they always ask, do you have small children and do you have help?
I'm like, yes, I have small children.
No, I have no help.
And I knew that they heard two heartbeats.
I knew that I knew that I was having twin girls.
So I had names picked out for girls, but no boy names.
And they came in the day after he was born and said, you've got to go home.
We need your bed.
And I'm like, but bud, I don't have help.
And they're like, sorry.
So they said you've got to name the baby before you go home.
And no one to discuss it with, no one to figure it out.
And he was born in March.
I looked down at the menu for the day that was on my tray table.
And the age was covered up.
And I saw M-A-R-C.
Being a Debbie, everybody in my era, at least half the world, I think, was named Debbie.
We were cheerily, there were ten of us.
Five of us were named Debbie.
And you'd say Debbie and half the hall would go, huh?
You know?
And I'm like, I don't want that for my kids.
I want them to have an individual name.
But that was also in the hippie era.
So you were getting some really funky names that they were naming their kids.
And I didn't want them to have weird names.
Leave that to me.
But so when I saw Mark with a C, because back then everybody was spelling Mark with a K.
And I did not know at the time it meant Mighty Warrior.
But that's where the name of our foundation is America's Mighty Warriors,
because it's not just about Mark.
obviously marks the story we tell, marks the reason that we do what we do.
But it's about every man and woman who's served.
It's about every other family who's lost a loved one.
You know, and that's been, you know, a lot of work, a lot of challenges.
But man, what a blessing, what a reward to be able to have that relationship.
I had a call from one of the other guys, a team guy that were helping,
haven't heard from him for a while.
and he goes, I don't know you well, it wasn't any, Mark's teammates, you know, the really close ones.
But there's something unique about my relationship, the even ones that I first meet, you know,
and he said, he's having some struggles.
He said, you were the first one I thought of to be able to reach out to.
And that God has given me that blessing, that honor to be able to be there and to understand
and give you guys hope and encouragement.
I'm not going to baby you.
If you think you're coming to Mom and Lee,
aw, I'm so sorry, a poor little guy.
Why don't you go lay down again?
No, I'm going to listen, I'm going to hear you out,
I'm going to validate it, but then I'm going to say,
get your butt up.
Here's what you need to do, you know, lovingly.
But you guys don't need somebody pampering a baby in you guys.
That's not who you are.
You know, and I will do that.
know, until God gives me my final breath to be able to continue to support you guys and be there for you.
So you started it in 2008.
Officially.
Officially.
Officially.
With the IRS, yes.
That's when you went through all that process.
And then, I mean, it's September 2009's when we lost Ryan.
Yeah.
And that, that was like, um, so.
unexpected and you know we kind of thought like you're beyond you think you're okay you're home
yeah just it's not going to happen you're home you're safe same thing with chris same thing with
Seth you know you're just like wait you did all those paddles Ryan survived like you said
a lot of the guy said they didn't think there was any way he could survive those wounds he did
he thrived he didn't just survive you know I've got still a pound of the elk meat in my freezer
that I'll never eat from the elk that he went out and shot as a blind person.
You know, he had, he had, you know, just completed, I don't know if it's his bachelor's,
or his master's that he, yeah, that he just completed.
You know, he called, yeah, exactly, he called, we all found this out later, everybody saying,
guess what, I'm going to be a daddy, but don't say anything because I'm not supposed to tell anybody.
But he called everybody that he knew and told everybody.
Yeah, and just so, so tragic, it didn't have to be, you know.
And then, and then it was like, Chris, which again, is just so out of, so totally unexpected.
Yeah.
And I know you would become really close with Chris.
Yeah.
You know, as obviously Chris being such a legendary figure and how he's portrayed all the time.
And, you know, whenever I'm talking to someone, like personally talking to someone that wants to know about Chris, if I know them, you know, having a conversation with a little more depth.
You know, the one story I always tell people about Chris is that when at the memorial story, you know, at the memorial story.
service we did for Mark in Ramadi like you know guys got up and talked and you know read things or
you know told little anecdotal stories about Mark and like Chris couldn't do it and and we got done
like he was he was crying so hard and he was apologizing to me he's like I'm sorry he was just
breaking down he just he just couldn't do it and and that's you know that's the
I know that it doesn't get portrayed that way.
But that's, that, that was Chris.
Like, Chris just was heartbroken.
Yeah.
And I know that he had become really close with you.
And, yeah, then so that just was another just completely and utterly unexpected.
Yeah.
Well, and it was, I had a more physical, violent reaction when I found out about Chris than I did with Mark.
obviously my pain was much more intense for mark my son
but I actually threw up and I was
freaked out I'm just like
and I had found out
that he probably had been killed before his wife
had had had did and I knew I just talked to her and she didn't know
and so then I'm you know they're like we're in route
we're in route we're going to tell her
but it was just like another one
you know and I um
I thought about that and I thought, this is so painful, you know, how much of this can you endure?
And as I thought about that, I'm like, okay, well, the other option is not to have known you guys, not to have been close to you.
I'm like, no, that's not an option.
This is just part of what comes along when you love people.
And sometimes the grief is, you know, part of that love, you know, that you cared for them.
And Chris and I had just been at Shot Show.
We were trying to rebrand him.
He wasn't taking any money from the book.
He'd started his tactical company craft.
He was paying his staff, but he still wouldn't make much from them.
So we were trying to rebrand him, you know, so he could have some regular money coming in for him.
And it was amazing time.
So many great memories, you know, from those four days that we were there together.
And then just two weeks later, he's gone.
You know, and it was just like, and again, he survived.
How many deployments did he do?
And he'd come home in some nut job.
I mean, people have tried to, and the media portray that as the guy that shot him had PTSD
and this was because of war.
No, the guy was messed up before.
He tried killing a family member as a teenager.
And his family, to protect him, didn't, you know, report that.
to the police. And Chris, you know, Chris had a huge heart. That was where, you know, his kids
went to school. The mother, the guy that killed him was, you know, one of the AIDS in one of
his kids' class. And she just said, hey, he's really struggling since he came back, you know,
from his deployment. Do you think you could help him? Man, I hold her culpable for not sharing
the extent of that, because Chris would have done something else. He still would have helped him,
but he'd have done something else that day. And the guy wasn't, you know,
far enough gone.
He knew what he was doing.
He waited until they'd fired all their ammunition.
Chris had holstered his weapon.
He shot Chris first and then his buddy Chad.
And then he went and got a taco before he went to his sister's house.
I'm like, oh.
So yeah.
And, you know, I know we've talked about this before Jocko,
but I'm like Chris's mom's name was Debbie.
My name's Debbie.
Seth is mom's Debbie.
So I'm like, if you're,
on Charlie Butuna, your mom's name's Debbie, please go tell her to change her name.
You know, but it's just so much is given, and yet so much was required.
So you obviously, you know, you and I, unfortunately, have been through all these things,
and you've been with them with all of us, and your reaction to these things is America's Mighty Warriors.
That's what you do because you know that the pain and the loss isn't limited to us.
There's all kinds of people that, you know, anybody that served has gone through these kind of things.
With a little bit more detail on America's Mighty Warriors, because I know what you do.
I have friends that have been pulled out of the depths of hell from what you do.
can you just give us some of the high level like you got veteran advocacy?
So what does that mean?
So, and probably that was stronger when you guys were still in combat.
Right.
Any issues that there were for our veterans, we're going to stand up and change this.
We're going to make it right.
But like you've gone to D.C.
You've testified.
You have relationships with people.
You can call people.
Yep.
Got great connections there.
I don't know if you remember back in, you might have been deployed them.
but Delta Airlines, I think it was 2008,
they were charging our troops coming back
from the combat zone excess baggage fees.
And I'm like, oh, come on, no, that can't really be true.
And I've never been one just to react.
I'm going to verify just because it's on the internet, don't believe it.
And so I called Delta Airlines and I just said,
you know, I understand that you guys are charging
our service members who are coming back excess baggage fees.
Yes, that's our policy.
That's correct.
I said, well, you do understand they're bringing back their weapons that they've used to defend you and your freedom.
You know, it's not like they went R&R and they're bringing Turkish rugs back home.
And she said, yes, ma'am, we understand that.
I said, well, you really need to refund that money to them.
Well, that's not our policy.
We're not going to do that.
I said, well, I've got a pretty big, you know, following and outreach.
If you don't refund that to them, then I'm going to let people know the details.
I'm going to give them your phone numbers, your emails.
Just okay, fine.
Within 48 hours, they had reversed their decision and were refunding the money
because people were canceling their frequent flyers with Delta.
They canceled their flights.
And obviously it wasn't just me.
It was the sphere of influence that God's placed around me to help do that.
But the one voice, one person can make a difference.
The other one was, and I can't ever remember who was the Joint Chiefs of Staff when the ISIS flag went back up over Romani.
And man, he got on there and said, there's no significance to that.
And I'm like, I felt like somebody literally had sucker punched me.
I'm like, are you kidding me right now?
My son's blood is on that soil?
Don't tell me that's not significance that the enemy flags flying up there again.
and as we know, as Ramadi goes, so goes the rest of Iraq.
And so again, I'm like, okay, called the Pentagon.
I wanted his address.
And they gave me the main address for the Pentagon.
I'm like, I wasn't born yesterday.
He has an address where his mail goes.
I'm not going to send this where you get millions of pieces of mail a day.
Could I please have his address to send that to him?
And they said, no, here's the address.
I'm like, okay, so I mailed it off, but then I sent out to my media contacts.
and I got a call Saturday morning from his PAO, and he said,
ma'am, we understand that you've demanded an apology from the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
I said, yes.
And I said, not just for me.
It's every other man and woman who served there.
It's every other, you know, veteran who left a body part behind there.
It's every other family who's lost a loved one there.
You should know better than anybody else.
How powerful your words are and what that meant.
He said, well, I want you to know, you know, he carries in his pocket jacket, the names of the fallen, and he rotates that out.
I'm like, great, then he's going to have no problem apologizing.
And he goes, well, ma'am, that's not going to happen.
And again, for three days, I did, you know, national media and even CNN.
And they had done a great interview, like eight-minute interview, which is pretty long when you're doing national media.
and I just got off Lou Dobbs show on Fox and was in the car coming back home.
And I had looked at, I think it was Facebook, I had a message because they called the office,
but I wasn't there, and they were trying to reach me right away.
And they said, please call whatever the PAO's name was.
And he said, we'd just like you to know that you will be receiving an apology letter
and he wants to personally speak with you.
and I got home and my son Christopher and one of his buddies were there already and I was like oh my gosh
and my daughter-in-law being from Japan you know she's like okay so he apologized what's the big deal
and my son's like well he's in charge of the army the Navy the Marine Corps you know the Air Force
and um again I don't ever want to be Cindy Sheehan was you know out there and protesting against the troops
you know, before Mark died, she ended up losing her son, who believed in the mission, who believed
what he was doing just like Mark did. And how you can take an opposite stand to me, that's disrespectful
to your loved one who gave their life. You can have a different opinion, but that's not how you
honor them. And I never want to be, you know, like she was. I always wanted to make sure I honored
and respected Mark and everything that I did and that I don't ever do anything to dishonor him or his
name or his sacrifice, you know, and she was pretty wackadoodle in some of her tactics.
That was the Medea Benjamin and what was the coat pink.
Well, I confronted them numerous times in D.C., but, you know, just passionate about making
sure that you guys get what you're entitled to, you know, rules of engagement back then were
pretty bad, so we worked on that.
Our random acts of kindness that Mark talks about, we started with the coffee, meals,
tank of gas, and do those off and, you know, thank you, Mark.
for leaving that because on those tough days, that's what I go do.
And it really changes things, you know, when I go to an Air Force base or going a village in
and see the, you know, Vietnam veteran hats or whatever, and you go up and you do that for them.
And it, you know, it really makes a difference in lots of time.
And they're like, no, I'm good, ma'am.
I'm like, no, no, no, you don't understand.
My son's last letter home challenged me.
Oh, yes, ma'am, yes, ma'am.
Yes, ma'am.
And we expanded that program.
It goes up to a $5,000 grant.
So just this last week, we had two different SEAL families.
And we do all branches of the military.
Obviously, the SEAL communities, my family, so we do a lot for them,
but had circumstances that we were able to help with a $5,000 check for each family.
You know, that the veteran can't come ask because there are veterans, unfortunately,
are just going from charity to charity to see what they can take, you know.
And that's not who we want to help.
So, you know, you could reach out.
and say, you know, here's the circumstance.
You know, their child has cancer,
and, you know, they need somebody to take care of their other kids
why they're in the hospital all the time,
or, you know, unfortunately, we do a lot of funeral expenses.
But those are huge.
That lets somebody know they're not alone in the midst of that.
We do our Gold Star Family Program.
I was going to say, yeah, the Gold Star retreats that you do.
We do those in Texas.
We've been doing those for 12 years.
And again, my philosophy on grieving is it needs to be.
be natural. Don't force me. If I'm having a good day, please don't put me in a circle with 20 other
Gold Star moms and we're all telling our loved one story. We're all going to be blubbering idiots,
you know, when we get done. If we're sitting at a table and we're sharing a meal and you want to say,
hey, what do you do on his anniversary? You know, how do you handle the birthday? Does this feeling
normal for you? You know, it's natural. You've got a choice whether you participate or not.
You know, again, there's swimming pools, there's kayaking. There's,
There's zip lining, paddleboarding.
One time I accidentally said, we're waterboarding.
And they're like, oh, no, sorry, but bring the terrace here.
I got no problem waterboarding them.
But we have a house in Arizona called the Heroes Hope Home
and one in Florida called the Trinity Hope Home
where they can come stay free for a week.
We take care of their flights, their rental car, everything,
and just love and pamper on them, let them know.
We won't forget your hero and we won't forget you.
Our biggest program right now is our Helping Heroes Heel program.
Right.
And that's for our veterans, combat veterans who are diagnosed with traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress, many of them suicidal.
Now we're paying for hyperbaric oxygen therapy, hormone and supplement therapy, natural things that are actually healing them.
There's so many things out there that are just masking the symptoms.
And I get it.
I really do understand why they want to try anything and everything to get rid of the pain, whether it's physical, mental, spiritual, all the above.
I get that.
But let's try things that are proven to heal you.
We've been doing spec scans of the brain before and after.
And to see those is just phenomenal.
Some of them I see them the first time before they go through the treatment.
I'm like, how are you even functioning?
I mean, literally, it looks like an RPG went through their head.
There's just part of it that there's not getting any oxygen to it.
and then to see that contrasting scan afterwards and to hear their stories.
And I remember it's probably been about four years ago now,
but we had another Navy SEAL who'd gone through the program,
and I called to just check and see what symptoms are different.
You know, what did you notice?
Because everybody heals differently.
Everybody has a different extent of their injuries.
And he went through the things that were better.
And I'm like, that's awesome.
He goes, you saved my life.
And I said, well, you were willing to give your life for me.
This literally is a no-brainer that I would do this.
you and he paused and he said stop I'm like rot row made a Navy seal man that is not going to end well he goes I wouldn't be alive today if it wasn't for you and your foundation and the therapies you provided you saved my life and when he said it that strong I thought of mark his final actions standing up in the line of fire to save his teammates and I was like oh my gosh you still saved
saving his teammates. He's not physically here, but he's still saving his teammates. And so to see
that impact, you know, to continue to be, even if that were only one time, mission accomplished,
woohoo, but to see that continue to happen over and over and over. And, you know, I know yesterday is
we're at the funeral, there's, you know, so many more of our guys that this has caused things to
surface in them. And I probably had at least 10 yesterday that were like, we need help,
Mama Lee. I'm like, here, here's my card, send me your email, we'll get you an application,
we'll get things going. And on my average, the cost is $20,000 for them to go through a year-long
program. Last year, we had 175 guys in our program, and gals. We do both branches. I say guys
kind of generically, but including our women, because we have some amazing female veterans that
need help as well. But to have that opportunity to see that impact, who, you know, that God allowed me
to be able to do that and to be able to continue to meet so many of our amazing warriors who
give so much, and their families. You know, it really is a blessing, but, you know, it's not
cheap to provide those therapies. And I just really want to encourage any of you.
guys and gals that are listening who served, if you are diagnosed with TBI or PTSD, or if you're
struggling with suicide, please, please reach out. I know that you get to that place where you feel
like there's no hope. You've tried different therapies that maybe haven't worked and you feel like
this is how I'm going to have to live the rest of my life. And it doesn't have to be that way.
There are actually physical things that are happening to the frontal lobe your brain, to other
parts of your brain from the blast wave exposure. That affects your memory. That affects your
sleep. There's parts of your brain, a rational decision making, and there's things that we can
do to heal that. So please, that is not a sign of weakness to ask for help. That takes courage,
that takes strength. You're being a leader to be able to do that. So please reach out to us.
My husband committed suicide 28 years ago. So that's another thing that we've lived.
live through that gives us the ability. You're not going to say anything that's going to freak me
out or scare me or cause me to act irrationally. I'm going to be there to give you hope to listen
to you, to encourage you, and let you know in that healing process where you're at. And we've
suffered too many losses, and it's got to stop. It's got to start a different attitude,
you know, at the headshed and our different branches of the military.
you know, I tell them, if you lost your leg in combat, you wouldn't be like,
oh, I'm good, I got this, I'm fine.
No, you'd be like, get a tourniquet, quick.
And that's what we need to be doing, and it's not just emotional.
There are physical things that are going on.
And when you guys notice those difference, you need to say, quick, get a tourniquet.
I need help.
Yeah, I've had a bunch of friends that have gone through your protocol.
And like you said, so it's the hyperbaric chamber.
what is it once a day, twice a day?
Once a day is the preferred, so 40 consecutive treatments.
The therapy does build on the oxygen from the first treatment,
the second treatment builds on that has a greater impact, greater impact.
So it does need to be 40 consecutive.
Sometimes we can't get time, you know, if guys are still contracting
and they're still going overseas and stuff, they can't do that.
Then it's like two days of two times a day, but four hours apart or something like that.
There has a certain protocol.
There has to be four hours in between so they don't risk.
oxygen toxicity, but it's so safe. There's not any, you know, it's like you read the prescription
bottles for a lot of the medications that our veterans are taking. And, you know, two-thirds of them
say may cause suicidal tendency. I'm not a doctor. I've never played one on TV, but that makes
no sense to me. Why? Even if it were a small chance, if they're already depressed and discouraged,
why would we give them something that that could be a side effect? And the impact, we had one of our
veterans who was on 53 prescription drugs at the same time.
Your kidney and your liver is not designed to process that.
How can that be even freaking?
That should be malpractice.
Yeah.
That just makes no sense to me either.
And half the time, one prescription they're giving you is to relieve the symptom from
the other prescription.
You know, it's like, oh my goodness.
But yeah.
So it's the hyperbaric chamber.
It's the hormones.
It's the vitamin therapy.
It's working out, eating.
being good.
Yes.
Not, you know, stop freaking drinking.
Yes.
You know.
There are things that you need to do to be responsible for this.
And I get it.
We're such a world that we put something in the microwave for a minute.
We get frustrated because it's not done cooking.
You know, we want a one stop, one step, take this pill, do this treatment, and I'm healed.
I'm good to go.
And they don't want to assume responsibility.
You know, the things that you're doing, we've also done.
spec scans on people that are drinking and compared that to a TBI and the alcohol is just as bad as
the blast wave exposure that's damaged your brain. Same thing with the marijuana, the illegal drugs.
Stop already. Do you really want to get well? Like I said, I get why you want to mask the symptoms,
but you're only making it worse. And so you need to do those things. You need to be working out
regularly. There's a feel-good endorphin. I wrote something about a year and a half ago that he was
probably going to be published. I'm like, okay, I can't just put in there.
It's a feel good endorphin.
So I researched it to see what that endorphine was called.
It was just called an endorphin, but it said it can have the same impact as morphine.
I'm like, holy cow, no wonder we feel so good when we do an intense workout, you know.
For your brain health, the most effective way to eat is the high protein low carb, you know.
And so make those choices, do those things that are not damaging yourself, not destroying more than you already have.
And, you know, so many guys and gals have been fighters.
You know it's a different battle now.
And you still have to know the enemy.
You have to know the tactics.
You have to put on your full armor every day.
You know, I can guarantee, Jocko, you never went out in combat.
We're like, yeah, I don't think I need my weapon today.
I'll be good.
No, that's crazy.
You didn't say, I'm not taking grenades with me today.
Or I'm not taking my water.
That's, you know, extra weight.
I'll be good.
No.
you put your full kit on and you were prepared for a plan a b c d however far you needed to go
you probably even put an extra grenade in there just to be ready but you knew the enemy you knew the
tactics and you know there's a component of spiritual battle that's going on here too and so you have to
know that enemy you need to put on your gear every day and be prepared and then the self-talk that we
tell ourselves. You know, I think back to after I went through that divorce, and even though I
divorced him, he's like, you're fat, you're ugly, nobody's ever going to love you. And so that tape
that played over and over in my brain was, you're unlovable, you're unlovable. Who's going to want a
woman with three children? And like I said, about when I was 28 and, you know, surrendered everything
to Christ, I started, I read a scripture and says, you're fearfully and wonderfully made. I'm like,
wait, wait, wait, that's what Christ says about me.
Okay, this other crap's a lie then.
And so every time he would try to do that, I'm like, nope, that's not the truth.
And now that tape rarely plays because he knows that's not effective on me.
But we have to reprogram that self-talk that we tell ourselves, you know, and find something
to replace that you can't just say, I'm going to stop saying that, because you've got to have
something else to replace that with.
And so you find out what that truth is, whatever your strength is.
struggling with, I can guarantee you, there's a scripture in the Bible that deals with that,
that ones you've got that memorized. But you've got to do that warfare. It's a different
kind of battle, but it is still a battle. And you're helping people with that battle. Yes. I know
I read like a stat on your organization, 96.28% of the funds that you receive go to treatment.
Yeah. That's freaking awesome.
I am what my board says politely, very frugal.
But I did not take a salary for the first 10 years.
I was so committed to making sure you guys got the healing.
And not that because I take a salary now, I'm not committed.
But I wanted to prove ourselves as one of those charities that don't waste your money.
When you're giving your money to us, you can count on it's not.
being wasted. We're not having a big party somewhere, you know, making our CEO come in on a
flying something or other. I don't know. There's some bizarre stuff out there. And I think a lot of
these people when they started probably had pure hearts, but then the money entices them. I'm not a
person that's driven by money. Yeah, we all need money to survive in the world, but that's not why
I wake up every day to, you know, my mission is to wake up every day and, you know, get help to our
our veterans and our Gold Star families.
And yeah, it's
been an amazing run, so I'm very frugal
how that money is spent.
And we're fortunate. We've got a ton of people
that do volunteer.
You know, if you've got a skill or a talent that you can give,
you know, if you're a CPA, we could use, you know,
someone to donate an audit. You know, we've got a lawyer
on our board, so that's taken care of. We don't pay legal fees.
If you're a graphic design artist or social media,
reach out. We need volunteers
to help, you know, that are willing to do those things for us as well so we can continue
to make our dollar go so much further.
Yeah.
And that, again, just going back to the program, which I've had friends go through, I haven't
gone through it, but I've had friends go through it.
It's helped them so much.
It's like, think of the reset that you get by, I don't know if I should use this term,
a freaking 40-day vacation where you get to get this awesome treatment, you get good food,
You've got stress removed from your life.
It's like a reset on people's minds.
Then it's the aspect of the oxygen, pressurized oxygen therapy that you're getting to get that oxygen into places in your brain that hasn't had it for a while.
It's like a legitimate reset for people.
And it's so helpful.
And it is expensive because you're sending people, you have to pay for their food, for their, you know, where they're going to live.
They stay in a hotel or whatever for this extended period of time for 40 days.
But that's what you need to do.
If you've bounced off the track, you can't just get back on the track in a day or two days.
You need to take a serious reset time and get it back together.
And that's what you're doing.
Yeah, it's a commitment.
And we do have, we work with facilities all over the United States.
So sometimes there's a clinic near you and you don't have to go away for the 40 days.
But you do have to then arrange your schedule.
So if you're going in at 7 o'clock in the morning and it's a half an hour to drive to get there,
It's going to be a couple hours out of your day, but it is so worth that commitment for the life change that happens.
The battle, you are like the Pentagon of the battle.
You're running things.
That's how you do it.
You know, that's what you do.
You do it for others, just like Mark.
Just like Mark.
What else?
Are we up to date?
we caught up?
Is that what we're doing?
Is that where we're at right now?
Maybe.
Maybe.
I'm trying to think if there's anything else.
You know, again, just reminder that if you need help, we are here.
There's no excuse.
Pick up the phone.
We don't tell people who we're taking care of.
Your information doesn't go anywhere.
We don't report it to your commands.
We're here to help.
Obviously, we've already had a huge outpouring.
So if you're someone that can help support a veteran, if you're a corporation, you can do, you know, a nice charity or donation to our charity, if you can organize a fundraiser, you know, we need the money to come in to be able to continue to take care of these guys.
I'll tell you what, oh, I'm not going to be happy camper if we ever got to a place where someone who has was struggling to reach out, calls finally.
And I have to say, I'm sorry, we don't have any money to be able to do that for you.
Yeah, that didn't going to happen.
I'm going to be selling my own stuff.
But, I mean, come on.
These are our men and women who have sacrificed greatly for us.
And I feel like we do a terrible job as a nation, getting your health restored to you.
You know, especially in our community, you get the best training, you get the best equipment, you get the best missions.
And then you come home and you get out, and I feel like it's that leaving a man.
behind you know like bye see you thanks you know we're getting better we're improving on some
things but not at all where it should be the VA and then I know there are some good
VAs but they should be disgraceful you know for the lack of the care and the time that our
veterans have to wait and again I'm not going to sit around and wait and say well they should do
no let's go you know Mark's final words as he got ready to go up the stairs that day
or on me.
What you guys know what he was saying?
He's like, I got the lead on this.
You guys follow me.
I can't do it alone.
Let's go together as team.
And that's what it is.
And that's my challenge.
I'm saying, on me, come on people, let's go.
Whether you need help and you need to reach out and ask for help,
whether you can help support us,
whether you can donate monthly,
whether you can donate a service,
it's a team.
This doesn't just happen because Debbie does it every day.
you know and I'm blessed Chaco by you guys who faithfully do the match when we do the muster
you know and on average you'll raise $30,000 $40,000 at a muster and you know the different clients
that you've worked with you spread the word you know so thank you for the impact that you guys
have made and continue to make you know but most of all thank you for being Mark's brothers
and you know that I'm blessed to be Mama Lee and you know have you guys in as
part of the family and so, so, so grateful.
Well, like you said, I mean, Mark is just still taking care
of his teammates, still giving.
You know, it's like you think Mark has given everything.
He's not, he's still finding more to give,
still saving guys, still helping his teammates,
and that's where it's all about.
And again, it's a choice, no matter what you're facing,
facing, whether, you know, I had no choice the news that was given to me on August 2nd.
I could have stuffed my fingers in my ear, I could have refused to go home, talk to the Kiko officer,
but that wanted to change the fact that Mark was gone. And oftentimes in life, we're faced with
financial health, relationship issues, where maybe we don't have a choice. Maybe some of them are
self-inflicted like some of mine were.
but we do have a choice how we respond and to curl up in a ball and feel sorry for yourself
or blame it on somebody else isn't going to change it you got to get up you got to make a choice
and you got to move forward and I think a big part of some of the struggles that I've seen are
our men and women is the shame issue you know let go of that shame let go of that guilt if there is something
you're involved in ask for forgiveness and then let it go don't keep picking it up and carrying it on
I have nothing today good to see you yeah very good to see you as always um you need to speak a little
bit less though that's what they say sometimes uh america's mighty warriors dot org that's where you can be found
um Instagram America's mighty warriors dot org that's where you can be found um Instagram America's Might
Twitter, America's Mighty.
Facebook, America's Mighty Warriors.
You got a YouTube channel, America's Mighty Warriors.
So.
Yeah, I think one of those movies, or one of those movies,
I don't know movies.
One of the YouTube's is you, Jocko,
when we did the On Me 20.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
That was during COVID, yeah.
And we did 20 podcasts, 20 days in a row.
Who, won't do that again.
But it's a lot different when you're on it
versus when you're organ,
organizing it and planning it and promoting it.
But there's some great wisdom.
We had so many great guys come on there.
So yes, we have a YouTube channel.
Anything else, Momaly, for us?
Let's go get some.
We're definitely to go get some.
Thanks so much for joining us today.
I know I didn't have you on here for a long time.
And I was super not ready to have you.
you on here and you know the way things happened um george monseur you know they uh they had that book
come out and you know we were talking and i was like you know come on the podcast and as soon as i got
done we're recording with him i sent you a text i said i just had george monsor on the podcast
he's like i can do this and that means and i got forced into that one you know i got forced into
that one and i said you know let's go and um
You know, I think you've told me many times that you've seen me cry.
I think you've seen me cry more than anybody.
So just you got that going for you.
Yeah, that marks great.
I'm like, oh, that's probably not the image Jocko wants out there.
But again, people, this is who Jocko is.
You know, we see your picture, you know, the tough, you know, knuckle dragger kind of, you know.
And that's not who, you know, and you're always the square, you know, face when you're doing the, or whatever.
I do have a square face.
I tell you what, he does have a sense of humor, people.
He does have emotions and very much carries that.
Mark's lost.
Yeah.
Well, yeah.
And that's like, you know, that's, again, that's why I was, it was really hard for me to say,
you know, what, I got to do this.
And it was George Monsor and Mikey, you know, pushing me over the edge.
Because I know, it's super emotional, obviously.
And if it's emotional for me,
I can't even imagine how emotional is for you guys.
But I'm so glad that you're able to come out here today
and that you've been with us through so much.
You've been with us through so many really horrible things.
And you've always been there for us since day one.
So thank you for all that.
Thanks for bringing Mark into this world.
My blessing.
You raised a warrior and you raised a warrior who willingly sacrificed his life for his friends.
And we won't ever forget him.
And thank you for all of that.
Thank you for what you're continuing to do now.
Supporting all our veterans, supporting all our veteran families, your strength is absolutely incredible.
It's absolutely incredible.
and the work that you're doing is impacting the lives of countless people,
people that I personally know, and all of that stems from.
Yeah, he made his mark.
I was like, and I made my mark.
But yes.
And again, everybody else can make their mark.
Here, halfway through the deployment, get your butts up and make a difference.
That's what it is.
Thank you, Mama Lee.
Thank you. Love you.
And with that, Mama Lee has left.
Lots going on in that podcast.
And, you know, Mama Lee and I talked for a long time before it, a long time after it.
So just heavy at mark in our lives and very lucky and very blessed to have Mama Lee in our lives.
So, you know, as she said, we need to live a good life, live a life to honor them, which means we need to go get after it.
It's interesting because I know mom, I'm trying to think when the first time I met her was, I'm probably at a muster, but I feel like I've known her for so long.
I see her mostly at the musters and events or whatever.
And it's so interesting how you immediately understand why everyone calls her Mama Lee.
She's kind of like you're, you know, the kind of where she's just so happy to see everyone, you know?
And at first I was like, oh, you know, I must have made an impression on her.
She's so nice to me, you know, kind of a thing.
It's like, oh, yeah, she's just like that.
She's nice to everybody.
Mama Lee.
Yeah.
So it's, this all makes sense the way she, like, supports all this stuff, all the veterans, so passionately, you know?
Just all.
And actually kind of, she made a good point, man, with the charities or whatever, where it's like,
oh, yeah, she kind of mentioned it quick when she's like, oh, I'm sure their heart's in the right place at first.
But when the money starts coming in, then they'll, like, have a party that's a little bit more lavish.
or whatever um but her like the the way like what she focuses on is like so far from that almost like
you can't really touch that element of her yeah of her like pursuit you know for sure no she's
and and I tried to make it clear I don't know if I did or not but like I have personal friends
that have gone through the treatment program that she her charity pays for and it's had an immense
positive effect so
One thing that's kind of cool is like, remember those charities when you were a kid where they'd be like, oh, if you donate this much money, you're going to get this many meals a day for this kid.
They would like give you a name and it would kind of connect.
It's sort of like that.
Now you don't get to know the name of the veteran that you're helping.
But when you donate, like you are helping a veteran get their life squared away.
And I really do think that this is like a great first step.
Like if you're going to escalate your treatment, this to me is a great place to start because it's, you know, it's natural and there's no negative side effects and you can get it done.
It's like 100% positive.
You know, and I think if you try this, there's a decent chance like, oh, you're going to feel a lot better and then maybe you can start to work some stuff out.
Look, and there's more extreme measures, you know, that people, treatments that people go to.
I mean, we've had Marcus Capone on, like, those are some extreme measures.
Yeah.
And sometimes I think people get to that point.
But I think this type of treatment is a great place to start to see if we can get some things under control with kind of like the minimum amount of intervention.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh, yeah, fully.
And then it always, like, like, like, real quick, like before you get surgery on your knee.
You do rehab first.
Before you get surgery on your back, you try stretching, you try yoga, you try some injections.
You try, you know, you try other things.
And then eventually they go, okay, look, man, you're, you got a real issue that can't be solved through this stuff.
So I think this is sort of the first, maybe it's the second step.
Because at first, look, man, quit drinking, eat healthy, work out.
Like see how you feel then.
Yeah, yeah, that makes sense.
Okay, that doesn't work.
Okay, now we're going to try a hyperbaric chamber.
Now we're going to try, you know, some of these vitamin therapy, some of these hormones.
So that's, I think, the next escalation.
And then, you know, there's other things you can do.
And then eventually you get to a point where like, okay, like I got some friends.
They're at the end of the rope.
Okay, what do you need to do?
Hey, you're going to go and talk to the vets, the Marcus's thing and get some of that.
What is it called?
One of those drugs called.
Psychedelic therapy, right?
You might get there.
But, you know, I would look at it.
And some people are scared of that, right?
Oh, yeah.
I'm scared of that.
Like, I don't want to do that.
I don't think I need to do it.
Turn into loving joke.
No, it's not that.
I just, it seems like a risk.
You know, you start putting things in your system.
Maybe you open something up.
You don't want to open up, right?
So that seems like a risk to me.
This is low risk, high reward.
Yeah.
So, again, like, I think I know people.
I mean, Marcus is a great example of that, right?
Like, so that you can get there.
And then if you get there, it's like, okay, I get it.
but this stuff as an initial start,
why not give this a try,
see if you can get some problems under control
and maybe you turn out all right.
And that's what I think what's great about what Mama Lee's doing.
I mean, just like I said, it's a 40-day.
I hate to call it a vacation,
but it's kind of like a 40-day vacation.
And you get perfect food,
you get to work out,
and you get this awesome oxygen treatment.
So the hyperbaric chamber treatment,
that's like reintroducing oxen,
to places of your brain that are damaged from lack of oxygen.
Yeah, and like things get messed up. Look, I don't I'm not a scientist clearly.
No, you're not. I don't. There's a bunch of, uh, what is it called? Literature about how these things help out. Right. So, so consider that right where if you have something physically damaged on your brain and that's causing this very specific behavior or whatever, like going to some other treatment that doesn't address the physical injury,
It doesn't seem like, I don't know, like you, I'm not a scientist, but that part still
makes sense, you know, where like if you're in a spiraling thought pattern, that's different
than if your brain is physically damaged.
Like, you know, like, you get, you know, you hear football, we know football players where
like they had literally said, hey, I'm going to commit suicide.
I'm not going to shoot myself in the head because I want you to study my brain.
Like there's something wrong.
Yeah, yeah.
Did you know junior sale personally?
Yeah.
No, not good.
He came into my club all the time that I used to work out.
But I met him like the same thing.
I met him like at a bar one time.
It's super cool, super chill.
Yeah.
And like that's one of those cases.
You look at a guy that killed himself.
You know, Junior Say out, the guy is one of the most beloved athletes in San Diego history.
And if you're going to be a beloved athlete in a city,
San Diego is a great city to be a beloved athlete.
Yeah.
Because San Diego is just a cool place.
You know, there's a lot of fun things to do.
And you go out in San Diego.
It's not overwhelming.
Like, let's say you're Michael Jordan in Chicago.
Sure, you're beloved, but you're almost getting mobbed, right?
Yeah.
There's a level of chill in San Diego that if you're Junior Seow, you're going out in San Diego, you're like having a good time.
Like I've been out like you, like you're saying, Junior Seah would go to your club, go to your bar.
Yeah.
I've been in bars like seal like bars that are, were a bunch of.
Seals would go and like junior sales in there. He's not getting mob. He's just you know having a beer or whatever. Yeah. I don't think there's a lot of cities where that's the same. Yeah, you know, so if you're gonna be so your junior sale, you're playing in the NFL, you got a basically unlimited money, right? You're living a great city. You're famous in the city. You're beloved in the city because there's also athletes that are in a city, but they don't like them because whatever they came from a different team or whatever. He's like beloved. He's like beloved.
in San Diego.
Where you're down for Junior Sale.
Yeah.
And you take a guy like that and he kills himself.
I mean, just horrible.
But more telling, saying straight up, hey, there's something wrong.
Like, this is how much I think something's wrong.
You know.
So anyway, the point and the point there is where that's not a spiraling thought pattern
that's just, you know, getting in the way of his like family life, his health,
causing them to like, hey, maybe drinking, we'll kind of alleviate these thoughts
and keeping them up at night or whatever.
Those are like and that in and of itself is terrible is can jam me up big time
Regardless of where it comes from can jam me up big time but it is different than if you have straight up damage to your brain
Yeah, so the treatment's gonna be different. Yeah, and by the way we're gonna you know we're seeing this now in the special operations community
Absolutely in the seal community that there's something going on
That is damaging guys brains and we heard it from Sarah Wilkinson
her husband, Chad, was not the same guy that she married.
And it's not like, oh, he's been through some stuff and he's, you know, he's got a different
attitude about such and such.
No, he's a different person.
And we're seeing that.
And look, sometimes being a different person maybe it means, you know, I have a worse temper
or sometimes being a different person means I'm more focused on something else.
Right?
There's a different level of like, hey, he's a different person.
Now, but occasionally, and that's what we're seeing in the SEAL teams and it's freaking awful, you've got guys that are getting into these mental places that they absolutely no one expects them to be in. And you can't, this the equip, actually the equivalent of junior sale, beloved SEALs, everybody loves them. They have a great career. They, they're respected by everybody. They're, they're
in a great position and we're seeing that outcome and so this well like you're talking about
when there's some kind of physical issue with the brain and I don't know what it is
obviously and actually unfortunately no one really knows what it is yeah they haven't
been able to say oh yes this is what happened to junior say I was brain here's the impact
here's the nerves that got rattled here's the reconnections that got made here's the
shortfalls that happened. No one said that yet. No one said that about seals that have taken
their own lives. Oh, okay, here's the thing. Here's what they went through. Here's what we needed to stop.
And no one's saying that. But one thing that's happening right now is people are saying, hey,
we can't do this anymore. We need to identify. We identify the symptom that is guys are killing
themselves. We got to figure out what's causing it and then figure out how to how to get that under
control. I mean, it's absolutely horrific to see this happening. So I think what Mama Lee is doing
this, this, this intervention with, and like I said, I've seen the impact that it's had on guys
and she's just continuing to get out there and make this happen. And, you know, as we talked about,
this is Mark. Mark Lee. Like I said, this is a guy that you think he's given everything,
but he's still trying to take care of his teammates.
Bro, I love looking at stuff like that,
like how she would say it, you know,
and obviously, Momley's a very spiritual person.
But the idea of like, you know, like you have this war, right?
You have the bad guys against the good guys
and the bad guy takes out a good guy.
Oh, but did he take out that good guy?
Not really, because the very taking out of that good guy
kind of spread all this other goodness.
So it kind of went beyond the grave kind of stuff.
And literally, that's true, literally.
Actually, factually true.
And I thought about that too when Ryan Mannion was on.
Because she said it.
She was like, hey, she was like, in a way, it was a blessing because I would have never done this and this and this.
If this terrible thing didn't happen.
And I was like, oh, that's crazy.
That's kind of true.
Or it is true, straight up.
But, you know, at the same way, it doesn't change the fact that it's like a tragic loss or whatever.
But it's like it spawned, like that sacrifice spawned so many other good things that literally wouldn't happen.
Wouldn't have got spawned.
It's crazy.
Mark continues to give.
Yeah.
Yep, and it's I wish I could do his personality justice.
Yeah.
Because it's just one of a kind, you know.
So that's what we're doing.
We're trying to live.
We're trying to live good lives.
In order to do that, you need some, well, you need some good fuel, to be honest with you.
Jocko fuel.
Yep.
Yeah, easy supplements, good supplements, supplements with integrity.
Yep.
Jocco fuel.
Got some protein called milk, ready to drink, too,
the way yeah if you didn't also yeah if you don't I just pounded one yeah
I don't know look the chocolate one look the chocolate one is just straight
delicious sir the vanilla is also delicious you know got to give it up for
for Keegan Keegan Roberts came up with the perfect description the vanilla
is like melted ice cream yeah but and bananas the bananas yeah so you
you know why we because normally you don't go normally you don't go
Chocolate vanilla banana right? That's not normal what's normal strawberry maybe strawberry right sure
Yeah you what you know why you go banana because the banana was so freaking good
Oh yeah just let's start making this banana one
Ready to drink milk get that stuff you know make it happen yep don't forget about your joints big deal
Because once they go don't matter how much protein you get joints don't move well it always matters
Support your muscles with protein support your joints with joint warfare
Yep, it's true
Super krill.
Super krill oil in there.
Vitamin D3 in there.
Cold War immunity.
Important as well.
Especially nowadays.
Actually,
not even especially nowadays.
All the time.
Community.
Yeah.
We're making the best possible products we can.
If you go to Wawa,
get yourself some drinks.
If you go to vitamin shop,
you can get everything at vitamin shop,
you can get stuff.
Should be at the military commissaries.
I had somebody reach out the other day
say it wasn't their military commissary.
Tell the manager.
Be a Karen.
Be like, hey, there's no Jock Fuel here.
No, I'm just kidding.
Don't be a Karen.
But maybe in a respectful way, say, hey, can we get some jocco fuel up in this piece?
Yeah.
Haniford dash stores.
And look, I got the same message about Hannaford, H.E.B., Murphys, Myers, Meyer, any of these stores, if they don't have jocco fuel in stock, let them know.
Be like, hey, we're looking for that jocco fuel.
Where is it at?
That way they can, you know, help us get the logistics squared away, get more stuff sent to them.
So there you go.
Or you go to joccofuel.com.
And you can get all the stuff as well order it make it happen if you need some Jiu-jitsu gear to wear on your body which you might need rash guards
We're not doing the freaking pancreation just going naked
No we're not doing that we're not doing that some of these like Dean Lister sometimes he wants to wear them little
Sung gals right? Yeah, he goes in that direction
He leans in that direction he doesn't do it anymore
Freaking horrible when he used to do that you don't know what a sung cow is it's like a look they're basically like a bikini for a man
And it's a Brazilian thing, which look cool, man.
Nothing against the Brazilian culture.
That's their culture.
Yeah, on the beach.
Yeah, on the beach.
But when you come into the, on the mats of justice,
we're gonna leave down on.
We don't want it to be the mats of just ass, right?
You want it to be the mass of justice.
So put some clothes on.
Right?
Put some ghee on, put a ghee on.
Put a rash guard on.
And we got all that stuff.
And guess what?
It's all made in America.
You know, it's interesting I talking to some people yesterday.
They don't even know that it's made in America.
They're like oh, it's really it's all made in America. Yes, it's a hundred percent made in America
That's what one of that's what makes it awesome. Look if we were making it overseas and it was as good high qualities it that'd be cool. Yeah cool
But the next level is made in America
So origin USA.com by the way we're starting to backfill all that hunt gear
So if you needed hunt gear get on there order yourself some hunt gear. I know listen might seem like oh
hunt season is not for another few months.
As you know, hunt sneezes and sneaks up on you.
And you're like, dude, I haven't been shooting enough.
It's going to sneak up on you.
Get your hunk gear. OriginUSA.com.
Made in America.
Yep, it's true.
Also, Jocco is a store called Jocco Stores where you can get your discipline.
You goes freedom shirts and hats and it isn't stuff.
Good.
Represent.
Represent on the path.
Hey, we're on the path.
You guys got this where we have the reset.
Yep.
Joko reset.
That's a path.
It's a program.
for it's kind of is that a competition would you call it a competition I'd say you know what I would
say it is what it's a reset yeah that's what it's called that's what it is this one equals freedom
reset get yourself back on the path and it's amazing I said this a long time I think I said it to
Jordan Peterson a long time ago sure JP like you fix one thing like you said you if you write down
what you're supposed to do tomorrow tonight and you do it that's awesome and you had a good day
and you made progress in your life now
imagine if you did that for a week now imagine if you did that for a month now imagine if you did that for a year now imagine if you did that for five years where would you be if you actually did what you're supposed to do that's what's the reset's about okay so it's a in um the deaf reset.com oh that's where it's all outline boom yeah so if you want to represent why on this path speaking of the car docco store dot com also we have the thing called the shirt lock it's a subscription scenario getting a new shirt every month different designs
People seem to like that one.
But yeah, check that one out.
I like that most recent one.
The no free dopamine.
No free dopamine.
No free dopamine.
That's part of the reset, man.
Hey, if you're wearing a no free dopamine shirt and you're holding your phone in your hand and you're scrolling, you can't do it.
You can't do it.
You're going to put that away.
You know it's free dopamine.
Yeah, exactly right.
You know it's free dopamine.
Yeah.
So get away from that.
There you go.
That's the Sherlocker.
Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast.
Don't forget we got Jock on the ground.
We've been releasing a bunch of those.
putting out word little little additional information
answering questions if you have questions by the way you need to add more questions to the doc
we're almost out so you when you guys send email those questions then we upload the doc
and we answer them so there you go check that out jocco underground dot com don't forget we
got a YouTube channel don't forget about origin USA YouTube channel don't forget about
psychological warfare don't forget about flipside canvas Dakota Meyer making cool stuff to hang
on your wall
Don't forget about books.
And by the way, if you want to get books,
you can get any book that Debbie Lee, Mama Lee,
has either helped write or she's been a part of in any way.
She solves them on her website.
A lot of times they're signed.
So if you want to get books,
you can get it through her website,
America's mighty warriors.org,
and you go to store and you can buy some of the books there.
Look, a bunch of books.
You guys know my books.
All right.
Only Cry for the Living.
Holly McKay,
unbelievable book.
That's from Jockel Publishing.
Final Spin.
There's news on Final Spin.
News.
Yeah, we're keeping it on the DL.
But yeah, there's the cool things.
Very cool things, we'll say.
Very cool things are happening with Final Spin.
So that's pretty awesome.
I look forward to talking more about that.
And as we go through that process.
By the way, way of the Warrior Kid five is out.
Way of the Warrior Kid five is out.
You may not have known that.
I didn't do a great job of whatever, promoting it.
Yeah.
I did a bad job.
I'm not talking trash, but.
I do a bad job.
It was not promoted in the way that the other ones were because the other ones,
I was like, I felt the hype, I felt the bill, I couldn't wait.
And now you tell me this.
I'm like, dang, okay.
This was, I'm reading it.
It's just like, you know, when you write something and then it takes a while for it to come out, right?
And then you read it again.
You're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You kind of feel.
And I've always said this about Way of the Warrior Kid.
When I read them, I kind of don't feel like I wrote it because it's written in another,
it's written from the aspect of.
you know a little kid yeah and see i'm reading my god that's a cool i'm like oh yeah i wrote that so
we're very happy check those out way the word you could five is out right now order it and then order
one two three four whoever you know whatever kids you know uh mickey and the dragons get that for little
kids about faced by hackworth extreme ownership the dichotomy leadership we got eshlam front
eshlamfront dot com which our leadership consultancy that's what we do every single day this is a
a pretty cool statement. Every single day, there's somebody from Eschonleon Front in the world teaching
leadership to a company, probably two or three of them, sometimes five or six of them. So that's what
we do. We solve problems through leadership. Go to Ashlandfront.com. We do live events too. We got,
by the way, the battlefield sold out. The next one we're going to do is Little Big Horn,
but Gettysburg is sold out for now. But get on there early. These things sell out. The muster,
Orlando is the next one April 3rd through the 5th check that one out and then it's going to be
Dallas after that in October 18th through 20th look these things all sell out so if you want to come
please get on there eschonfront.com go register we also have the online training academy extreme
ownership academy we're on there all the time we are putting out word we are answering questions
you want to ask me a question just go on join the academy and then ask me your question say
Hey, Jock, I got a question.
Boom, I'll ask you a question.
You got a leadership issue, got a life issue, got a jiu-jitsu issue.
We can get an answer.
Extreme Ownership.com.
We got a bunch of course.
We put up free courses right now.
We got a course.
Dave Burke and I did a curve.
Good deal.
Yes, good deal.
Dave.
We did a course about extreme ownership.
And then Jamie Cochran and I did a course about the barriers to extreme
ownership.
So check that one out.
If you want to help service members active and retired, guess what you can do?
Mama Lee's got an incredible organization.
You heard all about what it did today, what it does say.
Hey, by the way, as she was leaving, she also mentioned she's hiring.
She's looking to hire someone.
So if you want to help out with the administrative side or you want to volunteer with some of the other areas, let her know.
America's mighty warriors.org.
Reach out.
This is a great organization.
And also on Instagram, she is at America's Mighty.
Twitter.
America's Mighty Facebook America's mighty warriors YouTube America America America's
mighty warriors that's how you connect with Mama Lee that's how you can help out
that's how you can get involved then if you want to get you know involved with
Echo Charles or with me I am at Jockel Willink echo is at echo Charles don't forget
that echo Charles is Twitter he compromised it's true right I was like worried when
you when your Twitter got I'll use the
I was like, dang, like this is weird.
Like how, what kind of people are out there?
What kind of nefarious people are out there?
I pictured, you know when you see a mission impossible type movie?
Yes.
And the guys show up and they plug in little wires and they're running through a program
to figure out what the password is.
And there's nine people on the radio that are calling back to a big mainframe computer
to break in and get the password.
Yeah, sure.
when you first told me it, that's what I picture.
Okay.
And then you told me what happened.
Yeah.
And I realized you were just dumb.
Yes, sir.
I realized you were just dumb, dude.
You did some dumb shit.
Yes, sir.
That's true.
Hey, live and learn.
So, Echo gave away his password, lost his thing.
He got fished.
Yep.
But it's back.
But it's back.
Totally back.
We're back.
So, yeah, if you want to reconnect him.
Reconnect.
Echo Charles.
He now is 19 followers.
on Twitter.
How many do you used to have?
I appreciate every single one of them.
Did you know what you used to have?
Yeah.
50,000?
Do you have 50,000?
I think it was like 70.
70,000, look at that.
Sure.
Don't wonder where you're at.
71?
I don't know.
Yeah.
We should have made up a better story, do you know?
Hey, that's real.
You should have said, I left Twitter because of whatever.
Oh, my political views.
Yeah, there you go.
So there you go.
So there you go.
That's where you can get in touch with us.
and thanks once again to Mama Lee for everything.
A better teammate in your son.
We could have never asked for a better supporter
and we could have never asked for a better second mom
for so many of us.
So thank you, Mama Lee.
And thanks to all the military personnel out there
and especially a thanks to the military families
all of you you sacrifice so much for our country when you support your military service member
so thank you and then a solemn thanks for the gold star families we are forever indebted to what you
have given to us and also thanks to our police and law enforcement our firefighters paramedics
EMTs dispatchers correctional officers border patrol secret service all the first responders out there and and your families as well
You all keep keep us safe, but you're able to do your job
Thanks to the support and sacrifice of your families
So thanks to our first responders and thanks to your families as well
And to everybody else out there
Let's think about Mark Lee
Let's think about his last letter home
And think about that for him to be in combat, to be in danger on a daily basis.
And what he says in that letter is he asks us to pass on the kindness, the love, the precious gift of human life.
What he wanted us to do was help each other.
What he wanted us to do was commit more random acts of kindness.
What he wanted us to do was take less and give more and that's coming from a man who gave everything he had, but let's give more, let's do better, let's be better.
Zeko and Jocko.
