Jocko Podcast - 418: Keep Your Eyes on That Target Because That's Where It's Happening. With Mark Coch "Cochiolo""

Episode Date: December 27, 2023

>Join Jocko Underground<Mark T. “Coch” Cochiolo has over 30 years of Naval Special Warfare experience ranging from Special Warfare Operator, Operational Tester, Combat developer, Officer In... Charge, Training Officer and Weapons Instructor.Coch has four operational SEAL tours of duty to the Western Pacific (WESTPAC) under his belt and has spent eight years as an assaulter and breacher on the US Navy’s tier one counter-terrorist unit making operational and combat deployments to hotspots in Eastern Europe and the Middle East.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Jocko podcast number 418 with Carrie Helton and me Jocco Willink. Good evening, Carrie. Good evening. I was raised in the SEAL teams. And I know that, at least I say that, right? And I know that I wasn't actually raised in the SEAL teams. But when I consider who I am today and what my values are and what my principles are, what my driving forces in my personality are.
Starting point is 00:00:31 The vast majority of them came not from where I grew up as a kid, but came from the SEAL teams. Or more specifically from my fellow frogmen in the SEAL teams. And there's all kinds of different guys in the teams. There's the guy that worked hard or the guy that makes things happen. There's that tough guy. There's the chief that looked out for the boys. the officer that kept us out of trouble,
Starting point is 00:00:59 the guy that was awesome in the field, the guy that knew how to fight, the guy that could fix any engine, the guy that asked really good questions, the serious guy, the professional guy, there's just all these different individuals in the SEAL teams. And they say that, there's that saying, I guess,
Starting point is 00:01:21 I don't want to say they say, but there's a saying that you are the average of your five closest friends well in the teams you got a lot of friends and all those guys leave a mark on you especially when you're young right i've had many conversations with people about the impression that gets imprinted on you in your first platoon and a lot of times you think that that's the way the world should be is the way it was in your first platoon but it does continue to develop and you continue to change and you continue to grow but you really get you really get formulated a lot in your early days in the SEAL teams and everyone leaves a mark
Starting point is 00:02:01 on you that you work with and of course there's some guys that you don't like there's some guys that you reject that you look at them and think I'm not gonna be like that these are the slackers or the lazy guys or the incompetent guys but the good guys you try and do what they do and that's what I did in my career I tried to reject the bad examples and I tried to emulate the good ones. And there were a lot of good ones along the way that made a mark. And one of them was a guy named Mark Coach Yolo, who spent 30 years in Naval Special Warfare,
Starting point is 00:02:39 actually more than 30 years in Naval Special Warfare. He served in all kinds of different SEAL commands, including the J-Soc command. He rose up through the ranks, eventually retiring as a warrant officer. And even after that, he continued to work in the teams. and he had an attitude that I always remembered and I always admired when I was a new guy, a positive attitude that was just always ready to go and it's an honor to have him here with us,
Starting point is 00:03:06 here tonight to share his experiences. And lessons learned, Mark, Coach. Thanks for joining us. Yeah, man. Wow, that's an intro. I was getting worried there when he said, there's those guys you don't like. I was like, oh, is that me?
Starting point is 00:03:22 It was a setup And it's a dishonor to have one of those guys here tonight To tell you guys how not to act Yeah There'll be plenty of that, I'm sure Plenty of not acting good But yeah, whatever Yeah, no, I always remember
Starting point is 00:03:39 We'll get to it, but I always, you know You definitely left the mark up me when I was a young new guy Because you were not a new guy at the time I think you were four or five platoons deep And four and five platoons deep Guys can act a bunch of different ways and the way that you acted, the way you, I was, I think I might have turned 21.
Starting point is 00:03:56 Yeah, because we were on deployment, so I was 21. But, I mean, I was, like, young and dumb and full of motivation. And you were just a great, cool guy that set a great example for me and some of the other new guys that were out there at the time. But we'll get all that. Let's start at the beginning. So where'd you grow up? California.
Starting point is 00:04:17 I did all my elementary school in a little place called Pizmo Beach. Pismo. Yeah, Pismo Beach. Yeah, we were dirt poor. Uh-huh. Me and my mom, dad, and four brothers. Damn, four brothers. What number are you?
Starting point is 00:04:29 I'm two. Number two? Yeah. What did your dad do for a living? Well, at the time, he was going to school. So was my mom. So they were both getting their teaching credentials and stuff through Cal Poly. Oh, so you were up there.
Starting point is 00:04:44 They were up there slow. Yeah. Yeah. But we lived in Pismo Beach. You know, I don't know if you're familiar with it, but. You know, there's a restaurant called McClintox. Okay. It's up off of Maddie Road, right, you know, looking over the ocean.
Starting point is 00:04:57 Million, million, multi-million dollar view. You know, we lived in a little green farmhouse, and it was like 90 bucks a month. I mean, it was, we were just, yeah, yeah. And so were you kind of like a free-range child that was just running around doing whatever while your kids' parents are going to school? Yeah, big time. That was the thing.
Starting point is 00:05:16 You know, we went to school. We got dropped off either by the bus or, you know, whatever. you know, landed us back at home and we were just there, you know, running around the hills and chasing cows and, you know, all that. We didn't have any money, so it was like you didn't get to like learn how to ride a horse or anything like that. But yeah, you run around chase the horses and, you know, get chased by the bull and just, just, oh, God, it's amazing. I'm still amazed that all my brothers grew up with all our fingers and sighted in both thighs because we did some really stupid stuff. And how long did you live there for? Well,
Starting point is 00:05:53 kindergarten through sixth grade, so about seven years. So when you're in sixth grade, what are you 10 years old? Maybe a, actually 11, 12. So you had some legit time there. Yeah. Oh, yeah. And I mean, right there at the beach, you know, of course it was almost three miles to get to the beach. So we'd have any money or transportation. So I grew up watching the ocean, Never learned to serve. No, bummer. Swam around in a bunch and, you know, we'd ride our bikes down there and we were a little bit older.
Starting point is 00:06:23 And we'd swim around and our Levi's or, well, they weren't even Levi's, or tough skins, you know, remember those Sears, tough skins? Yeah, yeah. And we would swim. We'd just wearing our pants. And when we'd get back on the bike and ride home and you'd dry off on the way home and wonder why you're chafed, you know.
Starting point is 00:06:42 So then where'd you move to next? And why? Well, the folks graduated and got a job in San Jose, California. Wait, so your parents, they're going to school, but they already had four kids. Is that what I'm hearing? Yeah, yeah. So was this bad planning or what's happening here? My dad made a course correction.
Starting point is 00:07:02 He found himself in his really horrible job that was driving him crazy. He's like, screw this. What was it? He was working for the California Youth Authority. Okay. So he was dealing with just, you know, troubled kids. And it wasn't the kids that were the issue. It was the administration. Yeah. And he was like, I can't do this. I hate, you know, he'd come home and he would just be
Starting point is 00:07:25 just completely pissed off. And I was too young to remember all that. But he was like, you know what, screw it. We're going to go back, get our, you know, teaching credentials. And, you know, they took turns, you know, working on an odd job. And the other one would go to school back and forth. And so they both got their teaching credentials there at SLO? Yeah. Yeah. My dad got a job, but actually at the high school I went to. Okay.
Starting point is 00:07:51 And my mom, well, worked at a continuation high school in Gilroy. Okay. But, yeah, so we rolled up there. And when was it, like 79, 78, something like that. I don't remember. But junior high in high school was all in San Jose. Okay. East side of San Jose, which, you know, it makes like that, or back then,
Starting point is 00:08:13 I don't know what is now, but it was always made in the top 10 for murders in the United States. You know, a lot of gang activity and crap like that. And, you know, most of the guys that, you know, lived around us were either dead or in jail. You know, but, you know, kind of stayed. It kept my nose clean out of that as much I could. What were you doing in, like, high school? Were you playing sports? Well, my folks got us into taekwondo.
Starting point is 00:08:40 Okay. So that's what I was doing. And they also taught our niece, which I really liked. Okay. Stick fight and knife fighting type deal. It teaches you angles. It keeps you on your feet. You know, it was a, it's treatable stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:57 So I kind of, and then later on I trained in when we're in the Philippines with the Filipinos. And then in San Diego, we found a place called Sepita Brothers. And my brother and I trained there for a bit. What are you doing at score? Are you getting good grades? Are you like a knucklehead? Are you just passing? getting it done?
Starting point is 00:09:13 I was just passing, but I really like photography. So, I was one of photographers for the school newspaper and the yearbook and all that crap. And, you know, I thought, okay, I could probably, you know, do this for a living, you know. And that, you know, it was just, it was pretty easy for me. And if I liked the subject, I did good in it. If I didn't, then, yeah. So I think I graduated the mean 2.3, you know, GPA. There you go.
Starting point is 00:09:39 Art, had you heard about the military? Like, what was making you think about the military? Had you heard of the SEAL teams yet? No. No. In 1984, there was no, you know, unless you knew a SEAL, you didn't know anything. But, you know, both my folks being, you know, high school teachers, they were big on, you know, hey, you're going to college, you're going to college. But we can't pay it, so you can't find your own money.
Starting point is 00:10:05 And the Navy had this cool deal where they gave you money for college. And, hey, photographer's made. I mean, now I can go be a Navy photographer for a while. So that's what I did. And, yeah, so I graduated on the 14th of June, 1984. And on the morning of the 15th, I was on my way to Orlando, Florida. Rolling right in. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:31 Did you know what to expect because you'd never been around the military? Oh, I had no idea. Dude, I walked in there. It was like complete culture shock. It was exactly what they wanted to do to you. Yeah. It was like, yeah, all of a sudden, you just walk in, oh, yeah, here, shut up and, you know, stand there. All that stuff.
Starting point is 00:10:47 Yeah, it was, it was eye opening, but it was also really stupid, you know. And that's, honestly, that's how I got interested in the SEAL teams because, you know, boot camp, I was expecting to be a challenge. It was going to be this, oh, yeah, you know, D.I. is going to come in and yell at me and throw shit around. No, no, the lights came on. Okay, guys, get up. I'm like, what the hell? And it was just about folding your clothes. And, you know, it's just stupid stuff.
Starting point is 00:11:14 Like, I was like, dude, this is dumb. What else you got? And one of the guys was like, well, we got this UDT seal program. What's that? Well, you get to jump at airplanes, shoot guns and blow stuff up. I was like, dude, sign me out. Did you find out about that in boot camp or was it after boot camp? I found out about that in boot camp.
Starting point is 00:11:34 Okay. But I, so I, my mom. And my mom, I was 17, so my mom had to sign for me to get into the military, and she wouldn't sign active duty orders. So I'd go reservist at first. Dang. So I spent. Your mom was smart.
Starting point is 00:11:50 That's actually a smart move. You're a 17-year-old kid, and you're like, you don't know what you're getting into. How about we do this reserve thing? Yeah. That's actually not a bad move, Mom. Well, yeah. And it turned out probably pretty good because when my son-in-law was going through training, he said that half of his class, half of the 200 guys were 18.
Starting point is 00:12:07 years old and none of them made it. Not a single one because there's just not that maturity level yet. But Gardner, you know, Jason Gardner, he was like, of course you know Jason. But yeah, we heard some stat that if you're under 20 years old, it's a 5% chance of making it through. So, yeah, it's like you got to have that little something, I guess, extra little bit of modo. Me and Jason Gardner, we were both like 18 or 19, so get some. Jason was actually, I think he was actually, he might have been 17 turning 18. Wow.
Starting point is 00:12:40 He was pretty freaking young. So did you like do, so did you go to photographers mate school or something? Yep, I did boot camp and photo mate school six months in Florida. And then came back and I was a drilling reservist for about a year. The whole time. What do you do as a drilling reservist in the Navy? Well, I'd drive up to Alameda from San Diego. Jose. Take some pictures? One weekend a month and work in the photo lab there. And we have take pictures of
Starting point is 00:13:10 stuff and develop film and just do stupid Navy stuff. And yeah, I was like, okay, how do I get active duty orders? And no one had ever gone active duty from that place. So they had no idea. Turned out, all I had to do was just not show up and they would activate me. But I didn't want to be that, you know, a black mark. Like, oh no, now I got to go to a ship. I can't go, you know, be a seal. and it took, God, it took a long time, damn near a year of just drilling back and forth, hitting my recruiter up and these guys. And this is trying to get, to go active duty, go to butts.
Starting point is 00:13:44 Trying to go active duty and get buds. So I drove, you know, I did the screening test. So I drove down to San Diego, took the test, and ran back, and then went home in like two days. Were you doing anything to, like, train? Well, funny you should ask. Yeah, it was like, okay. I was training for the PST because that's all I knew.
Starting point is 00:14:08 So underwater recovery stroke, you know, use the school pool because my dad was still, you know, you know, an instructor there. So I could, you know, just practice the breaststroke and I say, okay, you got to run. So I ran some. I got to do some calisthenics. That's never been hard. I could do pull-ups and push-ups and stuff like that. But yeah. The first time I ran with Boondockers on was that day.
Starting point is 00:14:36 So you had, back then it was a mile in seven and a half minutes and I made that sucker in 723. So yeah. And it was good enough to get me through the door about, okay, I'm going to have to up that number, you know, make that better. And then, yeah, I drove back and kept training and, you know, they finally figured out, you know, how to do it and activated me and I rolled back in. And I got to San Diego too early, like three months too early from the class.
Starting point is 00:15:16 So you're on active duty? You get activated? Get activated? Yeah, they sent me down here. They had to go through two weeks of Navets training, you know, just, you know. It was for all the guys who, you know, tried to get away with not going to the reserve. meetings and stuff. So yeah, that was anti-motivational. But yeah, so they stowed me over at EOD Mobile Unit 3. And so we just did slave labor for those guys for like three months.
Starting point is 00:15:45 And then, you know, classed up with 141. And how'd that go? Well, it was buds, man. I mean, yeah. Had its highs and its lows, you know, and people always ask me, what was Bud's like? Well, it's the worst time in your life that you'll ever miss. You know? Yeah. Because it's so pure, you know. It's like just survive this next evolution.
Starting point is 00:16:15 And that's how you make it through Hell Week. You think, okay, set these little goals. Like there was one guy, Fred Swanson. He was a chief, and I was like really, really cold. you know, right at breakout. I was like, holy crap. I don't know if I can do this. Were you like 145 pounds?
Starting point is 00:16:33 I was 143 pounds. I graduated high school there. That was what was buds. I came back from my first deployment. Zero body fat. Oh, dude. I was so negative. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:43 What came to drown proofing. And, you know, they're talking, oh, yeah, no, we're going to tie your hands. You know, okay, but no one's negative. You just got to relax, you know. I'm like, okay, and I believe that. I bought into it, you know. Like, okay, you jumped in the pool. Okay, John, just relax and you'll float.
Starting point is 00:16:59 And so I'm, I could close my eyes and I'm relaxing, relaxing, and then I feel my feet hit with some authority on the bottom of the pool. I'm like, I look up, I'm like, well, I'm going to have to figure something else out. So while everybody else was floating, I was kicking the whole time, you know, because otherwise, yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:17 Do they really say no one's negative? Yeah, that's what the rumor was. That was trying to tell everybody. That's what the instructor would say, oh, yeah, no one's negative. I had a kid in my class. He was from Africa. He was like, he was an American citizen, but he lived his first whatever 10 years in life in Africa super nice guy like a physical stud
Starting point is 00:17:36 bro they threw they pushed him in the pool for drown proof and he just went literally straight to the bottom with a lot of authority and he didn't come up like whatever position he landed in like they had to go get him and he never he never made it like he was just too he had no body fat whatsoever and if you don't have any body fat whatsoever you are going to be negative and you're going down Yeah, but I mean, there's ways to figure it out. I was comfortable in the water because I grew up around the water. So it's like, okay, I can, I knew I could figure it out. But, I mean, you got to swim the length of the pool, you know, the long way and back, you know, with your hands and feet tied.
Starting point is 00:18:11 Well, that was after, you know, kicking for, you know, those 20 breasts or what the hell the requirement was. So it was a lot more energy that I had to put out. But, yeah. And so you say, you were saying you were freezing and some chief was going to hook you up? Oh, yeah. So Fred Swanson, he was the seal motivator, okay, that was there for that class. And if any other instructor had heard me just, you know, whine a little bit, it would have been a full court press to smash me, right? But he just kind of was, nah, here's what you want to do. Never quit during an evolution. Always tell you something, you feel like you're going to quit, quit after the evolution. I'm like, okay.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Okay. So, yeah, I mean, you're freezing cold, and then what's the next thing you do? oh, a race, we'll warm you up again. You know, like, okay. And then I was like, all right. And then that was it, man. Whatever it was, it could suck. It would just be the worst possible thing. I'm like, I'm going to make it through this.
Starting point is 00:19:08 And then I'll see what's, you know, see what I want to do, you know. And you want to see the sunrise, you know. It's like, okay, there's my goal. See the sunrise. Or make it the next meal. I mean, getting, you know, four meals a day and still just losing weight. Yeah. oath. But, yeah, you, so I've been in one hell week and I've seen one hell week. You know,
Starting point is 00:19:31 you only worked. You only worked. Because I was always on the island when I was, you know, an instructor. But watching a hell week right there as things are going down, you're like, oh my God, we are killing these kids. Somebody is going to die here, you know. But yeah, there's a method to the madness. Yeah. And they're still doing it right. You know, you're never going to get everybody that needs to go. I mean, it doesn't take much training to motivate somebody to just survive through whatever that next evolution is.
Starting point is 00:20:09 Yeah. There is like a, there is, you know, people that are going to make it through Hell Week, just talking Hell Week. Definitely those people are like, oh, they made it through because they were super motivated and they want to make it happen and they bring together the team. And there's a bunch of guys that are like part of that team that's getting brought together. There's some dudes that are literally just trying to make it through for themselves
Starting point is 00:20:27 and it is a group of people. It's not huge, but and I actually had this conversation. I was working with the Admiral when I was the Admiral's aide and he said something along the lines of he's like, you know, we went down to secure to Hell Week. You know, I didn't. He went down to secure to Hell Week. I stood there like a freaking jackass, you know, giving
Starting point is 00:20:42 him whatever he needed. And, but you know, when we're coming back, he's like, you know what the one thing is. He's like, you know, one thing, Jocko. It proves these guys are tough. And I was like, hey, sir, Sometimes I go sometimes it proves they figure out a way to sneak through the system He was kind of like that's a good point because you know it's true there are some guys that figure out a way They do just they in the right spot they get in the right spot on the boat they get in the right spot on the log
Starting point is 00:21:07 They get in the right spot they're good enough to they they sit out that one evolution they can tell when something counts They just skate and there's definitely a group of guys like that and it's easy to do now because There's information out there well yeah I was gonna say that too with look there was very limited information when I went and I went in 1990 so 1991 I was in buds so the amount of information for you was just like there was nothing now the these guys they have like the class schedule they watch the movie they seen the videos the documentary so they they kind of know what's coming but I also but I also know that the instructors now they they have counter measures
Starting point is 00:21:51 for all this shit yeah they have face schedules like it's they're gonna get you they're gonna get you hell week's not gonna be easy buds is not gonna be easy anyone that thinks it's gonna be easy is gonna have a real hard time like they're gonna figure out to make it hard you know summer how week winter hell week they're gonna figure out you're gonna get cold you're gonna be cold it's just how long you stay in the water yeah you know um yeah i mean buds for for us it was basically the same thing um was just you know First phase was kicking the nuts. And second phase was underwater kicking the nuts.
Starting point is 00:22:25 And then third phase was, here's your gun and your bomb. Oh, and you're kicking the nuts. When we figured it out, as I became an instructor, we wanted to make it so that we're actually training them. And that was the big focus then at me being an instructor. What year was that? Jeez. I got to Buds as the third phase training officer
Starting point is 00:22:50 in December of 2007. Okay, so we were well into the war and everything, and we need guys to be better. Yeah, yeah, guys. And looking at myself, I was still fighting a lot of training scars because I didn't learn how to shoot in buds. You know, I did okay. I, you know, got my two e-ribbins, but, you know, I had no idea.
Starting point is 00:23:13 And it wasn't until I, you know, got to that SOCOM unit that you're talking. J-SAC, is that what we're calling? Yeah. That's when I learned to shoot. And I was fighting all of these really bad habits. So I figured, well, if we could get these guys early on, no bad habits and drill them up. You know, I'd tell them, hey, look, I'm not trying to make you as good a shot as me. I'm trying to make you way better because I'm still fighting these training scars from years ago.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Yeah. Because what I was talking about in the opening there, the first impressions that you get in the teams, like your first platoon is hard to shake some of that stuff. You're like, you get a mold on your brain. You're like, all right. And it's just in there. And that's what you think is right. And you got to, that's, you know, you talk about the training habits of like your shooting position and all that stuff. But also just your mindset and the way you think.
Starting point is 00:24:05 If you're not careful, you can think that what you learned in your first platoon or your second platoon, you can think that that's the right way. And it's like, man, it's, first of all, there's many, many, many, many different ways to skin a cat. And anytime someone says, no, this is the right way, I always get a little bit suspect. Like, man, there's a lot of right ways to do this. Yeah. A lot of right ways. When they say it's the only way, it's like, no, no, no. Okay.
Starting point is 00:24:32 I'm immediately skeptical of your, your intentions, you know. Did you have any challenges in buds? Was anything like super hard for it? Did you fail? Did you get rolled back? No, I didn't get rolled back. I made pretty much everything every time. The one thing was the tread.
Starting point is 00:24:49 My legs cramped up and I sank. I mean, because I was, like I said, you know, it had no fat on me and I got cold. And the cold was just, it would go right through me. And, you know, you know, when it happens and you're like, now you're required to put out this extra effort. And, you know, when both your thighs just ball up on you, it's kind of hard to tread with your hands out of the water and the tanks on your back. So that came back the next day and did it. But right then it was like, holy. You know, ate a bunch of bananas, you know.
Starting point is 00:25:20 Get that potassium in there, yeah. That was the extent of our nutritional information at the time. Had cramps, eat bananas. All good. They weren't even really telling us to drink water yet. Like, I think drinking water as like a performance or health thing was kind of coming in around when I was in buds. Like some of the instructors would be like, oh, you should drink some water? Like, it wasn't, hey man, you really need to drink water.
Starting point is 00:25:47 You know, you're going to get dehydrated. It's not good for you. It wasn't really a thing yet. Yeah, I can't remember ever taking a drink of water in buds. You know, in how we, we had these, like, nurses that were following us around trying to figure out what the X factor was. They did for three classes, you know, they measured or, you know, they watched what you ate when you went through the line and you estimated how much you were drinking and all this. And, yeah. Doesn't mean anything.
Starting point is 00:26:13 Yeah, what they found out, you know, the results of that was the guy. who quits and the guy who makes it through are exactly the same. You know, the difference is, you know, neck up. You know, it's whatever your brain can make your body do. And they just confirmed it for us. We knew that already. Yeah. And you were all good in the water because you grew up swimming up.
Starting point is 00:26:32 So like pool comp and all that stuff, no factor. Yeah. No, no. It was like when they did, I think I was the third guy to go. So they were still, the instructors are motivated. You know, as the day goes along, you guys, okay, we're just going to do this. Next guy. No, no.
Starting point is 00:26:47 This was like, yeah. The guy who did me was very motivated. But I remember, you know, using a breathing technique. I go, okay, calm myself. All right, here we go. And as soon as I got in the water, they were playing the themes of the song from Jaws, you know, dunna, done. On the underwater speaker.
Starting point is 00:27:07 I'm the underwater speaker, yeah. So immediately that put me at ease. I was like, okay, this is funny, right? And they're like, okay, I just swim along that line. and then they'd come and they'd hit you and they'd do this and it just got progressively worse and I just, it was, you went through the process and it was like, no problem. No factor. No.
Starting point is 00:27:25 Now, I am, you know, being comfortable underwater. I liked being underwater. I could hold my breath for a long time. So it wasn't, you know, that big a deal. And it was just like, hey, you just do what they tell you. I failed pool comp the first time. And the instructor was, he was also highly motivated. And you know him.
Starting point is 00:27:43 He's a warrant officer. old UDT guy And So he I'm underwater And he just He doesn't He doesn't like hit me
Starting point is 00:27:52 And start rolling me He just comes down And knocks my mouthpiece out And then he goes up And then he comes down And as I'm putting it back And knocks it out again And then as I'm putting it back
Starting point is 00:28:01 And knocks it out again And as he comes and put it So I'm getting like A quarter of a breath each time By the time I suck the water Out of the tube and all this stuff And this goes on for 17 minutes And I'm not
Starting point is 00:28:11 I'm just I just keep dealing with You know getting on and then he just comes down and pulls me up and he's like you failed you looked uncomfortable down there and I was like I was so bummed and I was you know but what are you gonna say you're like because I came up I feel fine he's like well you didn't look fine you looked uncomfortable and I had literally stayed you know the slant of the pool where it goes from four feet I had only taken like one step forward so I was right there the whole time for 17 minutes and pool comp was only a half an hour long but I'd 17 minutes so pulls me up he's like
Starting point is 00:28:42 you failed and you go to the wall and so I failed and I ended up passing it the next time but you know fast forward 20 years or something or 17 years or 18 years and now we're at trade debt together and I'm the trade at O I see
Starting point is 00:28:57 and I was like hey man you remember failing me in a pool comp because oh yeah and I go why did you fail me? He goes I was just fucking with you I was like bro that's jacked up man this is like my whole life and I could have like freaked out and gone into some doubt psychological spiral and he's like, ah, you'd been fine.
Starting point is 00:29:14 I was like, okay. That was the real test for you, Jack. That shit was not cool. I was like, yo, what are you doing? So you get through second phase, no factor, third phase. Island. Well, actually, you guys did the work. You guys did it backwards, right?
Starting point is 00:29:28 Was the, yeah. Yeah, and that was, that was interesting. The island wasn't, you know, you know, just, okay, think tactically and they're teaching this stuff and you just kind of do it, but it wasn't really. really training. It's like I said, you know, it was like hell week with a gun. Yeah. Honestly. It's what it was. I mean, hell, we did, uh, uh, surf passage on the rocks out there, you know, by birdshit rock, you know, with IBSs in third, or it's in second phase. I'm like, what are we doing out here? And we did full, I don't know if you, they were still doing this,
Starting point is 00:30:04 the, uh, the full UDT cast and recovery and obstacle loading, you know, so we're down there. and the obstacles were at like 23 feet. I'm like, bro. Yeah. Hey, everyone, this is not an obstacle at 23 feet. No boat's going to hit this. We're good. They're like, oh, well, you're still going to blow that shit up.
Starting point is 00:30:23 Still got to get it. And the weird thing about Buds is you never have, you're never, it's kind of like going to an MMA fight. You're never going to be in perfect shape. So in buds, even though like, oh, I can hold my breath for a minute and 48 seconds. You get to buds. Now you have like, you always have a little bit of a cold and some kind of weird lung thing and a nose full of It's not.
Starting point is 00:30:41 So your breath is always shitty. Your breath holding's always shitty. So going down to 23 feet to load an obstacle, you're getting like one half of a knot each time. Oh, yeah. I went down on one, and the search was really good. It was 20 feet plus. I get down there, I'm wrapping my legs around the horns,
Starting point is 00:31:04 and I'm tying this knot, and I'm tying this knot. And then all of a sudden I don't have to breathe anymore. I was like, oh. And I was like, well, but that was a symptom of something, but I couldn't think of what it was right then because your brain's already like, and the knot was like, it was there, but it wasn't a good one. I was like, okay.
Starting point is 00:31:22 And then so bubbles came out of my mouth and went up and I kicked off and followed the bubbles up. And the next day I know, I was laying on the... In a zodiac. Well, no, no. It's a zodiac. It was a long way off. I was just laying on my back and floating.
Starting point is 00:31:40 And I was warm. The water was like 50 degrees. But as the oxygen came back in, it was like, oh, yeah, so did the cold. You know, had I been caught? Yeah. You know, a bunch of guys have gone to some of those breath-holding schools, and it really helps them a lot. And there's like a knock at the door.
Starting point is 00:32:05 Like the first, they teach you like, oh, the first knock at the door, like you want to breathe, you don't need to listen to that one. second one, you don't need to listen to that one. The third one, pay attention because you're about to black out. And, you know, when you do it, you can feel it and they learn how to get through those things. But it's, it's definitely, guys improve their breath hold. They'll, like, double their breath hold in three days by learning what the real signs are and what they can push through and what they can't push through. So it's pretty cool. I've done a little bit of Wimhoff method. That's, you know, that increases, but you're relaxed at that point. You're not like
Starting point is 00:32:39 Trying to tie a knot on a freaking Jap, Scully. Yeah, which is so useful now. But honestly, while I was the warrant officer, the third-fay training officer, they wanted to get rid of it out of training. I was like, dude, well, what are you going to call to school? Basic underwonder demo. Oh, yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:32:58 And the thing about it is it's a really, it's a perfect exercise for like the little microcosm. What you're going to do with the rest of your career? You're going to plan this thing. you're going to do a dirt dive, you know, and then you're going to take this into this hostile environment and execute them. And it's going to be different,
Starting point is 00:33:15 and you're going to have to figure some stuff out. And it's... So much of the SEAL teams is learning and training to have an open mind and to figure shit out. And I was talking to a guy the other day that's, you know, in ULT type scenario. And he was like, God, I don't focus on this or focus on that or focus on something else.
Starting point is 00:33:35 And I was like, hey, this, the training that you're going to be, going through is to make everyone be able to look at a problem and figure out how to do something with it. And it doesn't matter if that problem's in the mountains, doesn't matter if that problem's in the desert, doesn't matter if that problem's in the jungle, if it's in the city. Where that problem is, you're going to learn how to look at that problem, apply our basic tactical principles to it and come up with a solution. And that's what you're doing. And all your guys are doing that too. So, and you know, a good example is when Seals ended up doing security
Starting point is 00:34:04 for the Iraqi government. Like none of those guys had done that specific mission before, got tasked with the mission, like, okay, we're going to figure it out, and they made it happen, and kept those guys alive for a long time. I was just talking about this with Bobby Holland. We did over 100 urban sniper overwatches in Ramadi in 2006. And, yeah, I was like, do you remember how many we didn't work up? And he goes, zero.
Starting point is 00:34:32 We didn't do one. but we did we did uh whatever rural sniper oh or sniper hides recons and so the principles we just took those principles okay yeah well here's what we got to do here's we got to set up we got to make sure we have good security being a good spot check our our you know escape routes and we'll be good to go and that's what we just took that and applied it to an urban environment and you're good so that's what it is and that's one of the best things about the seal teams is you learn how to solve problems and you take the fundamental tactics that we have and you can apply him to any situation and we started doing in training out here we started doing
Starting point is 00:35:09 key leader engagement training right so you're going to meet with the key leader of a village and the first platoon we're putting guys to guys had started doing this overseas and now we started training guys to do it back here and the first platoon that did it they were kind of confused like well what should we do and basically I looked at him and said if this was a target that you were hitting how would you set it up and they were like oh we'd have security over here and we put this over here and I was like well so you're going to meet a guy it's the same thing do you want to have security yes where would you put it same spot okay great so it's the same thing
Starting point is 00:35:39 it's just a little bit of a different posturing when you roll into the target instead of rolling in guns up ready to kill people you're rolling in there you know weapons down ready to shake some hands and and meet and greet some kiss some babies and it's all good and if something goes south no factor take you half a second to turn things around so that that mentality of looking at problems and really training and what you're talking about obstacle loading, something that we did in World War II. But it's a skill set. You're going to work together with your friend.
Starting point is 00:36:08 You're going to figure out how to do it. It's hard. It can get confusing. You have to coordinate with the other people because you've got to tie that whole thing together. It's just a big, it's basically, and I've been saying this a lot when I talk to companies right now. Everything you're doing is basically a big team building exercise. And that's what you're doing.
Starting point is 00:36:26 Oh, we're going to work together because if you and I are, going through land warfare together, and you think you should do something, we should hit a target one way, and I think we should hit another way. Now you and I start arguing about it. Now we're getting to fight, and you got your guys on your side,
Starting point is 00:36:39 and my guys, the platoon's falling apart. And so we're testing the team to see if they can, you and I can go, you know what, coach, your idea is better. Let's go ahead with your, cool. And we can figure it out and we move forward. It identifies the egos, and it identifies the fissures in a platoon
Starting point is 00:36:57 when you put them in these situations. And it happens in a class, but that's so much of what the SEAL teams is, is can we, as a team, look at a problem and apply our fundamental tactics to it, come up with a solution, go execute. And that's actually, if you think about it, that's actually what we're kind of good at. And the reason we're kind of good at it is, if you can figure out how to get off of a ship with a zodiac boat, with four zodiac boats, transit 14 nautical miles, drive across or insert swimmers have them swim across in wet gear come across across unwaterproof all your gear set up your brief like there's so many little problems that have to be solved by every go hit a target capture somebody have a life jacket for that person and a dry suit you can swim this person out to the like there's so
Starting point is 00:37:48 many things you've got to figure out and and if you can do that in the water everything else is easy every take take me in a helo take me in a vehicle Take me on foot patrol. That's all a joke compared to salt water, six foot seas, sand, mayhem. Like it's a disaster. That surf zone is, I mean, oh, yeah, look, it's just a couple lines of surf. Yeah, and I drag all this stuff through there. I mean, you know, and it never stops, you know, but that's that environment right there.
Starting point is 00:38:25 That's what puts you in that. It's the worst place in the world to actually have to get across and do it. You know, if you can't solve it with technology, you can just solve it with, you know, planning and, you know, just guts and just go do it. And we did it enough over here. We got a lot of beach space and a lot of surf here on the strand. And, man, you just learn so much, you know, going through that. And, you know, okay, it's big surf.
Starting point is 00:38:55 All right. So what's the best way to get through big surf? you know, and then you figure it out. And it's going to tumble you. You're going to be all screwed up. And then finding your guys, getting everybody back together again. I mean, not everything's like that cool commercial where they're like, oh, yeah, there's footprints and then they're gone.
Starting point is 00:39:12 You know, it's like, no, no, no, yeah. Yeah, the reality is. There's one set of footprints. They're gone. No one knows where he is. When we started getting away from the water a little bit, so like mid-war, right? you know all of a sudden in in ULT and training like all of a sudden the the Mar-Ops goes from four weeks or five weeks down to three weeks down to two weeks down to like a week and some people like oh you know we're losing our ability to work in the water I said hey we'll get it back like if the if the war turns and we got to get in the water again hey the first night that a platoon goes out and does OTB they're going to be a disaster and then someone's going to be like hey we need to have waterproof signaling devices Oh yeah, so that's what they learned that night.
Starting point is 00:39:54 Then the next second, hey, we need to make sure we have long tow ropes in case someone gets stuck inside the surf zone. That's like a little, here's a little detail. You have a couple zodiacs. You put really long tow ropes in them, like 100 yards. And somebody can swim out a tow rope to the other boat. You can tow the other boat without having to go on the surf zone. Those are like, they'll learn that lesson day four, right?
Starting point is 00:40:15 And all of a sudden, you fast forward, you put them through five weeks of Mar-Ops. And what they'll have done is they'll have done what we just talked about, which is they'll take that problem set, they'll apply fundamental tactics, and they'll make stuff, they'll get good at it again. And that's what, that's why I think, like, our breaches are so good,
Starting point is 00:40:31 our snipers are so good, our J-TACs, like our guys just get into stuff, and they just keep peeling back layers until they get it to its core principles, and then they just build it out. So that's the mentality that we get. And some of that comes from loading obstacles
Starting point is 00:40:49 at San Clemente. Island at night. That's what it is, dude. Check. So now you graduate, buds. And what years is it? This would be early, like, February,
Starting point is 00:41:04 87. So what's going on in the world? Well, not much. Not much at the time. You never know, but what did happen is the Iranians started shooting circular missiles at at the shipping going through the straight there.
Starting point is 00:41:24 Oh, that's right. This is when the, like they put the barges out there. Yeah. Did you do that? Well, the guys who manned the barges left unit one in the Philippines and went to man the barge. And that left a hole there. So I had just got into this platoon, right? So where did you go, Team five?
Starting point is 00:41:46 Team five. And we were doing our workup. and it was August. So I got there in February, and in August, they deployed us. No kid. No Trident. Damn. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:02 Just over to unit one to basically sit in that place and be that checkmark, you know. How old are you at this point? 20. Damn. Yeah. Well, that's right, because you came in right out of high school, then you spent a year doing Jack. So you're still pretty young. I mean, 20 years old, freaking outstanding.
Starting point is 00:42:21 Yeah, I had just turned 20 when we started Buds. So, yeah, I was still doing that. What was your job in the platoon? Were you hit Gunner? No. You were a point, man. Well, it couldn't be a point, man, because I was a new guy. So I had rear security.
Starting point is 00:42:36 And so that kind of helped out with everybody, and I was the Intel guy. So I had the, the Blu-ray machine was up, and all the pencils were sharpened. And, you know, because I was a pH, right? Oh, you're the Intel guy. All right, cool. Being the Intel guy in a seal platoon sounds so cool. When you're an Intel new guy, like you're literally sharpening pencils. Dude, where's the freaking maps?
Starting point is 00:42:58 And this is why I got good at other stuff because I was always helping somebody else. You know, ordinance always needs, you know, someone to help, you know, move the guns and count the guns and, you know, whatever. Prep, that kind of stuff. Air, when that happened, you know, being there, you know, learning to pack shoots and whatever else. building ducks that was a big you know group you know deal anyway but we were I was still going through back in the in those days you went to Buds six months long and then you get to your platoon and you had six months carrying your little PQS book around you know performance qualification standards and I was on you after a day of work you know going the airloft hey chief
Starting point is 00:43:40 can you sign me off here and say oh yeah sure no problem just empty my shit cans and uh he's sweeping and then we'll talk. Like, damn, okay. And that's how you kind of, you had to make that happen. You had to get those signatures and then you had to get your board at the end of that six months
Starting point is 00:43:56 and that's how you got your Trident. I think that was the same for you, right? Same with me, yeah. There was no SEAL tactical training, STT stuff at the, you know, there was no SQT, nothing. We had at Team 1, I went through STT. So I showed up there
Starting point is 00:44:10 and we didn't have our tridents, but we immediately, not immediately, but after a few months, they let a couple, rounds of new guys show up and then they put us all through STT SEAL tactical training and it was basically like a Limited platoon workup, but we went and did air we went did land. We went and did Mar-op so we did everything they just gave us a higher level gave us some actual kind of the model of what SQT is It is what it is what well SQT is awesome now, but it was a yes it was early it was of course Neophyte version of that
Starting point is 00:44:40 But no we didn't get any of that damn None of that went to nine with one with more with my platoon. And yeah, you just had to kind of figure it. There was no training going on. It was just, you know, you figured stuff out as you went along. And I think part of that, we've lost a little bit because, you know, the guys who are like, you know, thoroughbred horses from, you know, boot camp all the way up.
Starting point is 00:45:03 They know they're going to go to the teams. And, you know, so they're giving a lot of stuff. Back then, I mean, my idea of seal prep should be like, okay, here's your workout. You make it happen. No, whereas these guys are like they're showing up in the morning. They're getting their workout, which is good. You'll learn how to do stuff and maybe not injure yourself. But you're kind of missing that self-starter.
Starting point is 00:45:29 Yeah. You know, because you had to do that. If you had six months and if you didn't get that done and you didn't get your board done or you failed it, you had one more chance and then you're gone. So, I mean, yeah. So we did that, you know, in the Philippines. Yeah. So you go on deployment, you're back filling these guys that were over in the Gulf,
Starting point is 00:45:51 taking care of the oil platforms is generally what they were doing. Yep. And you're on your, how long was that deployment? That was, it was supposed to be a short one. I heard that before. Yeah. Well, we got in some trouble. We went to, at the time, they thought the Philippines was going away,
Starting point is 00:46:10 so they're looking for other beaches, other places. So we went to this little island called Polarok. And I wasn't even in this fight, but my platoon was. I was sick as a dog and I didn't go out that night. And so they had big running with the locals. So I'm banned for life from the island of Palau. Me and the rest of my platoon. But so that caused some issue.
Starting point is 00:46:40 You know, we got home from that one and then immediately there was a target, a real world target that was supposed to have silkware missiles on it. Wait, you came home from deployment? No, no, we went back. Oh, you came home from the P.A. So you go back to the P.I.
Starting point is 00:46:56 Back to the P.I. And immediately get tasked with this target that's moving silken missiles. Damn. Yeah. I mean, that, that, you know, the first Charlie Sheean movie, you know,
Starting point is 00:47:10 Navy SEALs, that, where they go and they get on the boat And that was us. That was our, that was what we were supposed to be doing. We were in a VBS at Zucker. And so they flew us out there. And meanwhile, the admiral who was kind of in charge of this area, he really liked the Palauans. And he went to the CEO at, you know, unit one.
Starting point is 00:47:33 And he's like, sorry, they're on a secret mission. This admiral did not like that. It was the wrong answer. So, yeah, he was real motivated to hammer us. And yeah, so anyway, the op came down to the last minute and Reagan decided he didn't want to, you know, do any, you know, high-seas piracy or whatever. So they solved it another way, not us. How, like, did you load heloes? Did you, well, okay, for three nights, we, you know, like, okay, if we're going to wake you up at two o'clock in the morning, if we don't wake you up at two o'clock in the morning, then just, you know, come up at seven and have breakfast and we'll talk about it.
Starting point is 00:48:13 it and for three nights it was like that and we were doing runs and you know just you can again you know cqs in infancy and we're just you know we're figuring stuff out how to oh they're going to land here fast rope onto this part of we had pictures of the boat and ideas of like what is that is a gun in placement and it turned out it was a fire hose or something no no it was a swing set because on the the list of people on the on board apparently there were people that brought their kids You know, as part of those, they work and bring their transport. Well, I don't know what the hell. But, yeah, I was like, what the hell is that thing?
Starting point is 00:48:49 It looked like a game. No, it was playground equipment. Did you get your trident where you were overseas then? Yeah, yeah. We got a trident overseas. And then, well, after all that came back, we went back to the PI, and then they started the hammering of us over the incident in Palau. and they would send guys back.
Starting point is 00:49:14 Like, okay, the platoon's going home. And then they said, well, we're going to send the married guys first, so they'd go. And they're like, no, we're going to keep you guys. So they had us, they were interrogating us every day over, I don't know, I think there was some alcohol or something that we had brought with us to the eye. It was some trumped up horse crap. But anyway, so yeah, this went on. And they're like, okay, go to the pool, study for your. you're tried until 1600.
Starting point is 00:49:43 If we haven't called you, then you're good. So from like 10 o'clock until 1600, we were at the pool, you know, studying our PQS books and whatever else. And then 1600 roll around. We go out in town and drink our faces off. And they finally got bored with that. And, you know, it took a while. But we were the last two of me, Jeff Payne,
Starting point is 00:50:04 and like two other guys and our chief, Fred Swanson, who had helped me. out earlier, who was the chief of my platoon, they basically had to drag us kicking and screaming onto the bus to send us home because PI was a, it was magical place. And so we went to XOI for that one. And as the, me and Painter in the back, and we're getting read the riot act by the, the XO. And at the end, he's like, but I would feel that the extra time that we had to spend in the Philippines was punishment enough.
Starting point is 00:50:40 And I'm looking over a side eye in each other and going, yeah. Yeah. Anyway, but that was my first platoon, and that put the hooks in. It was like, it had everything. It had party in the P.I. It had a real world mission, even though it didn't go down. It was like, no, this is me. I'm staying.
Starting point is 00:51:00 So you're rolling your next platoon? Yeah. So we rolled back. Team five had put in a gym. They didn't have any, you know, the little weight locker or whatever, but now it was full on gym. So I was like, okay, it's time. And I started lifting.
Starting point is 00:51:16 And I went from 143 pounds to 175 pounds in about six months. Every time it's like 22, whatever. Every time I walked into that gym, I left, you know, I walked in. I could lift more than yesterday. I was like, yeah. And, you know, that's nutrition. Yeah, okay, I drank a lot of beer. microabritos. I mean, that was, uh, yeah, but you're 22 years old. You're freaking
Starting point is 00:51:44 dude. Basically, your whole body's just a big testosterone producing machine. Yep. Yep. And then, boy, I put it out, man. And it was like, yeah, bobs just got bigger and stronger and not faster. I always kind of sucked at running, but you know, whatever. Um, yeah, then we got, did you step up to be in point man in your second battalion? Second battoon. Yeah, second platoon, point man. Um, and it was an arg. So, okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, got to ride the ship. What ship was it? We spent time on the Denver and the Duluth.
Starting point is 00:52:15 I did a whole six-month deployment on the USS Denver. Probably slept in the same damn compartment we did, yeah. Wait, was it 117 degrees? Oh, yeah, that's the one. Yeah, right at the water line. So a splash, you know, bang, bang, bang, all night long, yeah. That was us, you know. And it's funny because like regular Navy guys, they've got a job on that ship.
Starting point is 00:52:39 We're just cargo, you know. So that's when you really learned to, like, drink your motivation juice, you know. It was like, oh, coffee up and then go lift or whatever. Otherwise, you just sit in your rack going, oh, my God, you know, what the hell's going on here? Did you hate it? Being on the ship sucks. Going different places. I mean, we had, you know, Australia and Hong Kong and, you know, the Philippines a couple times in Japan and Korea.
Starting point is 00:53:05 And, you know, so there was a lot of, you know, stuff that we got to do. Dude, my first, so my first appointment, I was with you, or I saw you, we hung out, I was in Guam, right? That's my first platoon, and I was 21 years old, and it was, you know, you're basically, you know, you have this fat per diem checks and you're doing whatever you want.
Starting point is 00:53:22 Like we, and that early time in Guam, we had great relationships with the police, we had great relationships with, like locals, it was all, it was just like awesome, we do everything, hang out, it was great. And then my next appointment was an Argue Patoon and I was an E4. and it was like E4 back on the ship by 10 o'clock.
Starting point is 00:53:41 Like there was almost no rules whatsoever in Guam when I was 21. So now I'm 22. Yeah. And they're like, you know, E4 is back on the ship by 10 o'clock. And I'm kind of like, hold on, bro. What are you talking about? I'm in the freaking seat. And they're like, does that ID card say E4?
Starting point is 00:54:03 Because if so, 2,200. I mean, in Guam, we weren't even. Getting warmed up at 2,200. The party was starting at 2,200. So now they're saying, oh, you got to be back on at 2,200. But I found a good way around that. I'd go out. I'd bring my running shoes and my shorts and a t-shirt,
Starting point is 00:54:21 go out till whenever, come back at 5 o'clock in the morning, go on a two-mile run with that backpack on that was filled with my outgoing outclothes. Come running back up to the jibis, went for a run. Because the change of shift was whatever, like six. So, yeah, I left at 5.30. Just did an eight-mileer. Your breath smells a little alcoholic. It was from, you know, from 2,200.
Starting point is 00:54:45 Yeah, I got to run that stuff out of my system, man. I'm sweating it out. Just freaking dummies. So you're on this ship, anything happened on this while? You're on this freaking chipboard deployment bunch of? No, nothing, nothing really that mentionable. I mean, there was a couple little things that were, everything, you know, the spin-ups that happened.
Starting point is 00:55:05 But, yeah, nothing. And so that was the first half of 1989. And we come back. Our gear is getting taken off the ship. I come back into work one morning. And the executive officer calls me in. I'm like, oh, shit, what's going? I'm expecting, you know, a problem.
Starting point is 00:55:27 He's like, hey, coach, can you be ready to deploy again in like six hours? and I was like, I looked at him like, well, let me think. Let me go home and get my pool queue. And then I just moved my stuff from the incoming palette to the outgoing palette. What it happened is, a guy got hurt or something. Yeah, yeah, not really hurt. Last night, all he had to do was not get in trouble. And he gets drunk, steals a bike, has a fight with the cops in Coronado,
Starting point is 00:56:00 and he's in the can and he can't deploy. So I get, hey, here you go. Oh, yeah, you were the Intile. Oh, yeah, yeah, your first lieutenant guy now. Okay, awesome. You're doing motors. I'm like, okay. Yeah, I can do motors.
Starting point is 00:56:14 Yep. And that's what, you know, that's how I got my second, my first, or second two deployments were back to back, basically. I spent 10 days of 1989, actually in the United States. And went to get a spec ops of the Philippines for that six months. Yeah. Like, woohoo. I was at, I'd been in training cell.
Starting point is 00:56:38 So now I was at Team One, done three deployments. And now I just got put in a training cell. And of course, I want to go to training cell. We want to go on deployment. And the master chief of the command comes down at quarters. And he's like, hey, we need two guys to go on deployment like tomorrow. And me and my run and mate, we're just like hands up. Like, didn't even look at each other.
Starting point is 00:57:01 We're roommates too. We were just like hands up. And the freaking master chief that was in charge of trade at was like, what's up? Picking the hair's down. And then, you know, we proceeded to get our ass tuned.
Starting point is 00:57:10 Like, you guys are in freaking trade out. You're not going anywhere. We're like, all right. Hey, they just said, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:15 they just said they needed someone to go on employment. Like us too have our shit in cruise boxes right now. We're ready to roll. Right now. Yeah. There's nothing better than being that kind of e dog at a team when they're like, we need volunteer. Your hand is up.
Starting point is 00:57:28 Where are we going? Don't care. Send me. Well, let's go. Let's get it on. Yeah. I didn't have anybody that had to call it home to, you know, hey, honey, is this going to,
Starting point is 00:57:36 no, I was like, let's go. Let's do it. That was the good attitude that, I mean, the higher upstate, they noticed that stuff. It's like, ah, he didn't even, he didn't know what the hell that was. And he's like, I'm game. Like, all right. Note to self. If you need somebody, go to him.
Starting point is 00:57:51 Yep. That's 100% it, man. And then what do you do over there on that deployment? Was that when, did the volcano go in that deployment? No, that was the next one. This one was the, uh, the, um, the, um, the, um, the, um, um, the, Revolution in PI. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:05 So what was going on? What was that like? So Corazon Aquino, she was the wife of the, it was, it's politics and the PI is all screwed up. But yeah, they decided they were going to do a coup on her. And so we were there and we were kind of locked down on the base. The guys, there were guys that were training with the Phil Mars. There wasn't our platoon, another platoon.
Starting point is 00:58:30 They were over on Green Beach. And when this came down, they were like just quietly took all their guns because they didn't know which side they were going to be on. Yeah, but then we got ready. Our mission on that one was going to be if she requested extract from the palace, we had to go get her. So there you go. Back to the surf zone, right? Figuring this stuff out. So we're going to have to drop a boat because there was no place to land a helicopter where the palace was.
Starting point is 00:59:01 But across the river from the palace, there was a ball field. So we had to figure out how to drop a duck, basically, in the river, get it inflated, and get it over so we could ferry her and, like, her bodyguard over here. It was like nobody else and us. And then we're going to combat loss them and, you know, fly out. Well, no one ever done that before. You know, the limp duck is you kick it out, and it takes you 15 minutes to get, there was no time for that.
Starting point is 00:59:31 So we figured out how to do it. We just honeycomb the crap out of a full, full-blown duck, or full-blown Z-bird, only one. You put it on a big piece of plywood and, you know, tied it all together, keep it all together. And you went out with your stuff on and your flotation. But, you know, so Brad Cooper, he was the air guy. And he came up with this.
Starting point is 00:59:56 And the CEO asked him, he's like, can we do this? He's like, oh, yeah, we did it all time. It's like, okay, cool. And so we do this on a dry run. And, of course, I'm the, you know, I'm the first Louis guy. So I got to be the first guy in the boat to get the engine started. And so I'm the sea anchor because as the helicopter is hovering at, you know, five knots or whatever, and they kick this thing out, the rotor wash would have just blown this empty boat away.
Starting point is 01:00:22 So I was holding on to the bow line as they kicked it out. And it's like, you gink. And I'm like, at first, boom, into the water. climb up the line, get in, cut the lines, get the motor down. By then, the other guys have gotten close. They pull the pallet, basically, from underneath, get the thing started. It was like three minutes, and we were running. And we could do that with two of them.
Starting point is 01:00:48 And right after that, Brad's jumping up and going, I knew he could do it. I knew it would work. And, yeah, so now it's actually they do that. They practiced those now. So anyway. So you guys are on standby? Yep. Did you ever get the call?
Starting point is 01:01:05 No, never got the call. We stood by. We bounced around. We were ready to go. There was, you know, a lot of moving parts. That was our part of that was going to be that. Some other guys were going to go when there was a high rise that had journalists in it. And they were going to take that down, you know, land on the roof and just clear it to, you know.
Starting point is 01:01:28 But none of that ever. came through, they worked out another way. But you were spun up for a while. Dude, yeah. It was spun up, ready to go. It was like, all right, jump another bit. Let's do this. Let's do this.
Starting point is 01:01:42 And you come home from that one. What's next? Yeah, another platoon. I dropped into Delta platoon at that point. And in the first, geez, what do we do? We did a night combat equipment jump on. on February 14th, 1990. Static line?
Starting point is 01:02:04 Static line. In the desert out here? Amigo DZ. Okay. And so when I hit the ground, my left ankle snapped. And I was out of the platoon. And I mean, I got out of the airplane. I had a lot of twists and stuff.
Starting point is 01:02:23 I'm bicycling out of that, getting all that stuff going on. You know, you got to get the convert equipment off of you. I never did. Get there. By the time I was getting to that, I was, I was seeing the horizon come up. I was like, oh, here we go. And I hit, and it snapped. It boom, right there. So I'm laying there. I'm like, and immediately, I'm like, oh, shit, they're going to, you know, they don't know where it's night, you know. So I'm, I'm yelling, hey, I'm over here. I'm down. I'm hurt. And then Dano gets over and I was like, hey, coach, quit screaming, you pussy. Get your earpro out
Starting point is 01:02:54 because I couldn't hear myself. It was like really, really loud. So the doc gets over there and he cuts my boot off and he's like, he's poking at it. And I go to lift my leg up and my foot stayed on the ground. My leg came up. And he's like, oh, don't do that. And so as everybody came over like, hey, what's going on? What's going on? Hey, check this out.
Starting point is 01:03:15 Like, stop doing that. Yeah. So I got pins and plates and all that crap. So it took a little while to get better. And right as the Gulf War was. kicking up. So I missed going there. I just got my cast off. There was, in fact, there was a guy I forget who it was that couldn't go with their platoon. I was like, oh, I'm in, I'm in. And I'm like, Master Chief's like, coach, you can't even stand up. Yeah, but we're not going to do anything right
Starting point is 01:03:46 away. I'll get better. I'm good. He's like, no. So he had to, he put me down for that one. And then I got in another platoon right away, you know, and just started the workup. And that was when Penetubo blew up. Okay. Were you on deployment for that one? Yep. What was that way? Dude.
Starting point is 01:04:07 It was funny. You hear this thing, you know, the rumblings and like, oh, yeah, there could be, you know, volcanoes. Like, okay, whatever. You know, thinking it's a long way off. And it was. And the wind, normally, went from Subic the other way. So it was going to push all the ash away from us anyway, right?
Starting point is 01:04:25 So it's rumbling. The volcanologist sort of, oh, no, this is going to happen. So they move all the Air Force guys from Clark just descended on Subic Bay and brought their cars and parked them on the ball fields. And it was like, and then just raided the damn PX. So, you know, it was like locusts showed up. You couldn't get toothpaste or anything else. And when the, when the mountain blew up,
Starting point is 01:04:51 up. It was during a typhoon. So the wind changed and blew everything our way. So it was like concrete, you know, just falling down, sticking to everything. And of course, you know, the American buildings were built like bomb shelters so they could, you know, handle. We figured it was probably about 40 or 50 pounds per square foot. Damn. That was, yeah, because we cleaned all that crap off the off the roofs with paddles. We wore them down to nubs. You know, just in case it was going to happen again, we didn't know. But town was not built for that.
Starting point is 01:05:30 You know, everything. It was like... Just collapsed? Yeah, collapsed. So because this is going on, we're like, all right, nothing for us to do. So we went on in town as this is happening, right? So you drink... It's like as ashes are falling.
Starting point is 01:05:47 Well, I mean, what else are going to do, right? Do you go drinking? Did no one say like, hey, this is going to be some kind of a big natural disaster. Was it kind of like, oh, there's going to be some ash, no big deal? It was a tychoquake, man. There was earthquakes. There was lightning that was orange because it was igniting all the stuff that was in the air.
Starting point is 01:06:03 And at noon, it was dark like midnight. And you guys were like, party time? What else you're going to do, man? Yeah, like Guam, you have, you know, the typhoon parties, right? But here it's like, all right. So we go out in town and you're drinking in your favor. at bar and you hear some creaking and grinding and you're like, hmm, you need to run outside and the bar collapsed. The roof would just come in. And like, okay, well, I guess, uh, Rolling Stones is done.
Starting point is 01:06:32 Let's go to Slims, you know. Yeah. And we spent some time out there doing that. And, um, yeah, uh, the next day, the next time the sun came up, um, it was hard to navigate because all your landmarks were gone. Um, even that, you know, palm trees were, um, just like peeled down like like bananas any any palm fron that was horizontal because it was wet it made this stuff stick and just it the weight of it just tore everything down 100 year old trees just you know the the branches had fallen off there were people getting killed um nobody that i knew but like out in the villages were like yes stuff collapsing and yeah was there a humanitarian disaster that you guys had to be like help out?
Starting point is 01:07:23 Not, well, what we came up with, they came down with it for us to do was clear all the ash off of the buildings. So there wasn't a shovel, so we used our paddles. And we just, you know, scoop that off just so that there would be less weight on there. You know, we did officers' houses. We did the barracks. We did. There's the big mission, bro.
Starting point is 01:07:45 Yep. Working all day. Just scooping ash. Yeah. Yeah. And then they figured out that, hey, you know, and we just gotten back from Australia. A good Australia trip, right? And then, no, that wasn't Australia. That was Thailand even better, right? And then this happens. And then they go, okay, well, we're supposed to be worldwide operational. We're not because you couldn't take off. You know, the dust was eating the jet engines.
Starting point is 01:08:16 okay so what they would do is once they got the runway cleared off they would basically tow your plane to the you know because you couldn't run it you know it couldn't run the engine you know to taxi so they would tow the airplane to the base of the runway and then they'd wind it up and go and that was okay right that wouldn't damage the engines too much but that wasn't good enough for being this worldwide capability that we were you know supposed to have um So they decided to move us to Guam. And it was my platoon. They got moved to Guam.
Starting point is 01:08:53 And that's, you know, that wasn't the Guam that you remember. That was the Guam prior to that when there was like, nothing there. Nothing there. There was no, no unit, no debt, no nothing. They set us up in an abandoned building. And we moved all our crap in there. And we just, you know, it's just basically so they could say that we had a capability. But yeah, we were just out on her own.
Starting point is 01:09:16 And it was just your platoon. Just my platoon. Yeah. And then there was a team one platoon that joined us. And, you know, but they did like separate stuff. They were, you know, whatever. They did theirs. We did ours.
Starting point is 01:09:34 But, you know, we were just sitting there waiting for the balloon to go up living in open bay barracks. And, yeah, it sucked. And so the PI gets shut down. You finished that. Or is that when you're, when you were in Guammer, you're like, hey, wouldn't mind come to the unit if it's coming over here or did that did you get fallen told there there was no it was no unit um and there was no idea that that was going to happen you know that there were no idea they've been talking about moving the unit for years
Starting point is 01:10:02 you know so and whatever um so i got back off that diploma i was like i'm going to take a break i'm going to go to the philippines and hang out for two years and and work the you know the uh at the unit and i got the orders and then they switched the unit to Guam. So my orders said Subic, Maine, Philippines, but they didn't, you know, yeah, I went to the, went to Guam for two years. And that was, what was your job? How was the current operations petty officer? I was the E5. I was, you know, that's insane. Dude, I was an E5 for seven years. Because I was not a rate grabber. I was like, I, I wanted, you know, show up with my gun and my bomb and let's go to work, you know.
Starting point is 01:10:48 You know, yeah. So, I mean, we did, we set up targets for the teams. Did you say operate? What did you say? The current operations. Current ops, petty officer. Yeah. That is freaking awesome.
Starting point is 01:11:01 I know. And I said, what do you do? Well, I write some stuff down and, you know, and again, it wasn't that hard. So I, you know, worked out all the time. You know, I led PT because it was more fun than just, you know, just doing it on our own. Because we had to, you know, three days a week, you're out there. I'm like, well, I'm out here. You know, I'll do the counting and yelling and whatever.
Starting point is 01:11:26 Now, you just do you do for those two years. You know, we set up targets for the, you know, when the guys deployed out there, we'd set things up for them and all that. So, you know, unit stuff. Yeah, we, I know when I deployed there, as soon as we got on the ground, they, like, gave us a target, and we had to go hit. It was a training off. But they gave us the target.
Starting point is 01:11:47 We had to come over the beach. We had to go up in the killhouse. You probably set it up. We went in there, shot a bunch of balloons or whatever. Pretty cool, you know? And then that was that. We got ready for whatever exercise was next. But yeah, that's when I first remember running into you.
Starting point is 01:12:03 And I just remember you being, you know, there's a lot of guys that would have two, three, four platoons that would kind of be, it's one thing for a guy to be like an asshole to you because you're being an idiot, which is not only understandable. It's actually justified. But then there's some guys that would be assholes because they're assholes. And like, you were a guy that was cool and you'd like teach and like, hey, you should do this or hey, try this or hey, come over here. Just like give good guidance to a younger group of guys, which was me and my buddies.
Starting point is 01:12:35 So I always remember that. I always remember you having a good attitude. And you were like doing what I think it's Tony. Tony Afradi says like just being mayor, just like just having good relations. with people, whether it's the cops, the bouncers, the girls, you're like, you just could kind of maneuver and know a lot of people, which is an important thing. Yeah. That was my actual job. You know, the current operations, I was like, okay, that's what I did at work.
Starting point is 01:13:02 But, yeah, I mean, whether it was, you know, the bars in town, you know, all the all the girls would, you know, hang out at the beach. So, yeah, you get to know their names, you get to know the bartenders, you get to know the bouncers. We worked with the cops, you know, we trained with them in the, with the, you know, the, you know, the, you get to know. the kill house so I mean we could do no wrong you drop a drop a name like everybody knew this is a forget his name but he was like famous on the island and he was like their big swat guy so I got pulled over a bunch yeah get a police escort after you get pulled over yeah yeah it was you build good relationships you don't act like an idiot because eventually we seals wore out their welcome welcome there pretty bad I
Starting point is 01:13:40 think they've recovered now but the other side of my job there I saw was to help the teams I want to make better team guys. And I know from my experience of just being thrown into stuff and having to figure it out, that kind of sucks. You know, so that being able to pass, what,
Starting point is 01:13:59 I didn't know that much at that time, but I knew enough that I could, you know, I was, you know, I'd had, what, four platoons under my belt.
Starting point is 01:14:05 So, you know, I did what I could to make anybody that would want to listen. Yeah. That much better. Yeah. And that's, that makes an impact,
Starting point is 01:14:15 you know, on a guy, like I said, me and my buddies that were, kind of knuckleheads and we all wanted to like be better you know our attitude was like we wanted to be good seals that's all i ever wanted who's like i want to be a good seal so someone can show me something about shooting or someone can show me about breaching or someone can show me about whatever i wanted to know because you don't know jack man and so i always appreciated that that attitude and i would
Starting point is 01:14:39 love to tell you that i really did a good job of that and i will say it i did that i was too much of an asshole. If people weren't doing good, I was a little bit too much of an asshole when I was younger. You know, like my second platoon, my third platoon, I was not, you know, if you were jacked up, I was a real asshole. So we're all of us, you know, we just had that bad attitude. But we also really wanted the guys to get better. So when there was a good guy, we would like invest. What it is, we care, we just cared about the teams and cared about the platoon and we wanted the platoon to be Awesome. And so when a guy was doing what I want to know something, we'd freaking, we didn't go home. You know what I mean? We didn't go home. We didn't have anywhere to go. We didn't have anything. So, oh, you want to do more runs? Cool. We'll stay here and do more runs. Oh, you want us to show you how to set up your gear. Cool. We'll show you to set up your gear. But if you wanted to go home or you didn't want to take the time to get your squared away, you were like an enemy. And I was mad. Me and my buddies, we were like mad at you. Because we were in the freaking team.
Starting point is 01:15:46 This was our family. And now all of a sudden we got someone in the family that doesn't want to carry their weight. They're like, oh, this is a problem. And I probably went, instead of like nowadays, I would have been better at like saying, hey man, let me show you how this works.
Starting point is 01:15:58 If you show up without your gear squared away, that tells us that you don't care about what's happening. Do you care about what's happening? Yeah, I care what's happening. Okay, so part of caring about what's happening is make sure you get your shit squared away. I would probably be more like that now. Back then, I was a little bit more.
Starting point is 01:16:14 more, you know, of a dick. Yeah, age and maturity, man. You learn how to talk to people and get the effect that you want, you know, and the effect is like, I want to make this guy better. If he's not going to listen, he's not going to listen, but you've got to give it that best chance because you come in hard. And remember, he's a team guy too. And, you know, you just start button heads where if you come in a little softer
Starting point is 01:16:39 and be like, hey, here's what we're seeing. And we don't like that. You know, so you fix this, please. Yeah. And, you know, and here's how to fix it, you know. Yeah. You can't say, hey, don't do that. It was like, here, do this instead.
Starting point is 01:16:53 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I definitely had some grown up to do in that respect. I have had those guys. I mean, because, of course, they all stay in teams. They all, and we all became friends. And they, you know, I'll see him at the reunion or I'll see him wherever at a memorial service.
Starting point is 01:17:09 And they'll be like, I'm so glad you guys were like that. You know, they're five. We're fired up now, but still could have been better, you know, could have, could have done a better job. And I wish I picked up more of that from you than I did. But, you know, I also had other influences. You know, there was other guys that were like that's how it's rolling. Like you, this is a family. This is, you know, in my mind, like, we're counting on, I'm counting on you to keep me and my friends alive.
Starting point is 01:17:36 You're part of this. We're all keeping each other alive. And there's not even war going on, by the way. This is just like me being crazy. But it's also like what the job is. Yeah. And, you know, the guys that put me through training, most of them were Vietnam guys.
Starting point is 01:17:49 And so that was big. I was like, no, you know, you have to do this, you know. They came from the war. You know, so it was like, you know, yeah, you're going to be there for your buddies. And this is why everything, you know, they say, oh, yeah, it's all our SOPs are written in blood. No kidding.
Starting point is 01:18:06 They are. But guys tend to forget that. And, you know, it becomes more. personal. So it's not you just being, you know, screwed up like, oh, yeah, we're going to, no, you got to be ready for it, though. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:20 Yeah. It was a definite gang mentality for us for me and that crew of guys and you know all the guys, because that crew of guys have new guys that in that platoon where I was over in Guam when you were there, we all stayed, well, a bunch of us stayed together and we were tight and we stayed together for three straight platoons. And so, you know, and a bunch of us, we went to buds together. So it was like, you know, seven years of 24 hours a day. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:45 Doing shit together. So it's us against the world. You know, that's what you end up with. And if you're part of the platoon, you know, that means when we're going, we're going. That means when someone calls you at three o'clock in the morning, like, hey, we're going. People should get, look, you got 15 minutes. Like, where are you at? Oh, you don't care about us.
Starting point is 01:19:05 Gets hostile. Yeah. And better or worse, I never had that. I moved, I moved, the guy did the most deployments with was Jeff Payne. He was my first, my second, and then he was, while I was in a platoon, he was doing the seal support debt, you know, SSD, whatever the hell it was. So he was over there at the same time. We just weren't doing the same stuff. So I kind of was just, I never had that click to, you know, to hold on to. Yeah, I hate to use that word click, but I use the word gang. It was kind of a click to,
Starting point is 01:19:40 to be all, if we're going to be all, keep it real around here. Yeah. I don't know though. Do clicks beat the shit out of each other if they step out of line? We had a great time. And even, even those,
Starting point is 01:19:52 you know, my second and third platoon, like the guys that we were with were just, I still talk to them. I still see them. Like, when I see them, they're fired up,
Starting point is 01:20:02 you know, so I guess it all works out in the end. But I, from, like you said, a more mature scenario, being a little bit, Having a better understanding of building relationships and cohesive teams being more positive is a better way to go
Starting point is 01:20:17 Yeah, yeah. It's hard to understand that when you're 22, but that's how we roll man So you're over there in Guam for a couple years and then you screen to go out to the East Coast And and go through selection. You get picked up. Yep, I Did my screening and yeah, that was it. It was like, okay, cool, off you go and I was looking at for a fight. You know, I figured, okay, though, I felt, I felt jipped, honestly,
Starting point is 01:20:45 because I missed the Gulf War. You know, I was like, damn it, you know. But, you know, my leg was broken long before there was any even rumblings, you know. So it wasn't my fault,
Starting point is 01:20:56 but I still felt like I missed something. So I want to get in a fight. And the best place to get in a fight was over there. So, yeah, I threw my hat in a ring and, yeah, rolled out,
Starting point is 01:21:08 um, showed up, and the training officer for selection immediately hated me. Straight up. I'm like, and I'm not used to that. I'm not used to guys hating me. I'm like, you know, I'm coach, whatever. And no.
Starting point is 01:21:27 Your nickname coach is very fitting. Like your nickname suits you really well. Like coach, it's coach. You know, he's here to coach. He's here to help out. It's coach. You know, that's what I've always thought of coach. So that's a weird, that's weird for somebody to hate you out of the gate, dude.
Starting point is 01:21:40 Yeah, and he hated me. And I know, because at the end of training, he's like, coach, you know how much I hated you. I'm like, yeah, I know you didn't like me very much. He's like, no, no, no, no, no. I hated you. What was, did he tell you why? I was too happy. Okay.
Starting point is 01:21:59 Okay. I was too positive. And he just had this buck up his ass about me. And he tried to poison everybody else in the cadre, you know. And I had to work so hard. Hard. I mean... I hate you because you're too happy. That's freaking...
Starting point is 01:22:16 He just hated me, but yeah, my attitude was just like, I was just like a happy-go-lucky. Yeah, yeah, cool, man, I'll show up, Bob. You know, I hated it. And so I had to win over all the cadre, you know, whether it was like Patre was big into Muay and stuff. So I was his punching bag. I got out there and just, and I laid into him, he beat the snout out of me, but I kept coming back.
Starting point is 01:22:39 And so... Oh, got a thumbs up from Pat. And Mark Lee, not the one you know that they're both gone now. But, you know, I had to light him up with simulation because he figured I was going to be looking, you know, in the hallway, not where I was supposed to be. When he came to the door, I wasn't. I was looking right where I was supposed to be. And I lit him up, thumbs up, you know. So I just had to do that for everybody and then, you know, survive, you know, six months of selection.
Starting point is 01:23:08 And, yeah. So that was a rough time. And selection is just like buds. They put you in that same scenario, except there's a lot of, at the time, a lot of alcohol involved. You know, you had to be up drinking with the cadre,
Starting point is 01:23:22 buying drinks, and then being ready to do whatever we were doing, whether it was diving, skydiving, or shooting the next morning. So, you know, that was the intent back then, I guess. Well, luckily you at least did some preparation for that.
Starting point is 01:23:35 Oh, yeah. My liver was in good drinking. And then, so you're out there, you got you're out there at that command when the Bosnia stuff was going down. Yeah. So that's pretty, that was pretty awesome at that time, right? Yeah, that was like our best thing, you know, the the Piffwick operations, the personnel indicted for war crimes. So we're basically kidnapping people off the street. How cool was that?
Starting point is 01:24:00 Oh, it was awesome. That was really. Give us a rundown. Like, well, how to go down? Okay, the one I talk about, he called himself. the Serb Adolf. Just voluntarily giving yourself the name the Serb Adolf. All right.
Starting point is 01:24:17 You get the down check, homie. Yeah, dude. But he wasn't high enough of rank to have anybody helping him. He didn't have the intel. The higher ranking guys had Intel and they would know when we showed up. So we went over there to catch these guys and we did some stuff and couldn't find them and I'm like okay so it pulled back and then went back over but this time they shipped us in shipping containers so yeah forklift brought in here hanging on the little the trojan horse they call it
Starting point is 01:24:54 little straps to hang on to you and they wheeled you into the big clamshell you know hanger closed it up and that's where we lived for a couple of weeks and yeah we end up we snagged that guy and had another guy that was a dry hole who obviously had enough intel to know if something was going on, so they bugged out. But yeah, that was cool. We did that for... Were they, like, low-vis ops,
Starting point is 01:25:23 where you, like, roll out in civilian vehicles and stuff? Yeah, civilian vehicles, civilian clothes, everything. You know, you have a bunch of guys, you know, the guy driving the van would look like, you know, you would pick him, you know, like to tell you open your mouth, You just look like one of the locals. But the back of the van was full of ass eaters with, you know, have her MP5s and full kit, just ready to go, you know.
Starting point is 01:25:46 It's funny we were still using MP5s back then, isn't it? Yep. It's freaking crazy. Yeah, dude, when did we get the CQBRs? That would have been late 90s, early 2009, 2009. So I can't remember exactly when. But yeah, we basically turned in everything except the Ks. and the SDs.
Starting point is 01:26:08 What do you think about this recommendation? I don't know why I stumbled upon this idea, but you know, people always say, like, what's the best weapon for home defense? What should I get for home defense? How about that MP5 for a home defense weapon? You know, honestly, it's so good. It would be good.
Starting point is 01:26:25 The biggest problem with it is nobody knows that manual arms. Your manual arms is M16, M4, okay? That's where, you know where the charging handle is. It's automatic. And that was like the biggest thing. When we went to the MP5, it was because Princess Gate had happened. And the SAS had them. So everybody who was anybody in the hostage rescue realm was carrying MP5.
Starting point is 01:26:49 Yeah. But would have been smarter for us to do was going with a Colt Commando and 9 Mill because all, you know, but it wasn't as cool. Yeah. But the MP5, if you're a normal person and you're like, all right, I need a. I don't really have a weapon for my home defense and I need to get something. The MP, if you're going to learn something for home defense. Okay. How much is one of those costs?
Starting point is 01:27:17 Well, they cost a lot. Yeah, like 25, three grand, you know, for anything worthwhile. What I have for home defense, I made a 9mm AR. Okay. So you agree that having a 9 millimeter platform like submachine gun, rifle type is a good choice. It's a good choice for most people. The recoil's low.
Starting point is 01:27:41 So I built a special one. CMMG makes this radio delay blowback system. So it's kind of like the roller delayed, but it's different. But it keeps everything nice and light. You say radio? What? Radial delay. Radial delay.
Starting point is 01:27:56 Okay. Yeah. Things pretty cool. And I took an eight-inch rifled barrel and found an eight-inch, we'll call it a high. volume linear compensator. It's basically a suppressor with no guts in it, right? And a pendant welded it, right? So it's on there. So it makes 16 inches, which makes it a rifle. So it's California legal, whatever. And it also, because it directs all that blast away from you towards the guy you're throwing lead at, you can shoot this thing without air pro. It's loud.
Starting point is 01:28:27 But it doesn't, it's not going to ring your bell. It's not going to give your wife tinnitus and, you know, deaf and your dog or anything like that. It's, you know, but, you know, but, you know, but it shoots a decent round. And, you know, that eight inches, you know, the Germans, they always, you know, over engineer everything. Yeah, that the MP5 barrel is 7.7 something inches long. Like, okay, this isn't eight inches.
Starting point is 01:28:50 I think that's optimized for 9-mill. We'll go with that. And then I added that other piece on the end so that to make it legal. Is there anyone else that makes this recommendation? What do normal people make recommendation for a home defense weapon? You know
Starting point is 01:29:04 He asked 10 different people He get 10 different answers But shotgun is what they They come around with The thing with a shotgun though I mean obviously you can't shoot as accurately With a shotgun as you can with The thing that I always remember
Starting point is 01:29:18 The thing that I was loved about the MP5 Is you could just drill nails With that thing You could put round after round after round after round After round through the same freaking hole You can do that with the one I built too And it has AR you know,
Starting point is 01:29:33 function, right? How's the reliability? It's been fine. Nice. And I put it together myself. I mean, I'm actually talking with some people to make one commercially.
Starting point is 01:29:46 Oh, now everyone's going to want one. They're going to hear this. They're going to want to order it up. Yeah. I guess we have to figure this out. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:29:54 Get some. But the thing, so you got nine mil. You could use a round like a frangible round so you're not punching through your walls and hitting other family members. Yeah. Yeah, there you go.
Starting point is 01:30:03 Hollow points. You're going to be shooting super accurate. There's no recoil. They're easy to shoot. So who's going to be defended in your house? Is it a Navy seal or is it your daughter? Yeah. Your wife.
Starting point is 01:30:16 Yeah. You know, so that's the thing about the shotgun. They're going to take it out. They're going to shoot it once and be like, oh, my God. And they're not going to train with it. You have to aim a shotgun. You don't just point the damn things. Plus, you're responsible for every one of those pellets that comes out, right?
Starting point is 01:30:31 the AR platform is just so ergonomic, so easy to use. You know, and I set mine up with a light, a red dot site, and a sling. This is a no-brainer all day. Yeah. Yeah. So you can, I can hand that to any one of my daughters, you know, whatever. In five minutes, you can have them, you know, punch in a little tiny group at 10, 20 yards. For sure.
Starting point is 01:30:57 Easy day. No recoil. No real, you know, blast issues. use my wife's, she's recall sensitive and blast sensitive. She's sensitive, right? She's a girl. She's awesome. But, you know, that's her thing. You know, she's just not good with that. So a shotgun? No, that ain't going to happen. A lot of people talk pistol. Like, okay, well, pistol's good. But if someone's coming to invade your home, chances are they're going to have a pistol or a shot of shock, something small. Okay. And if I'm going to get in a gunfight with somebody,
Starting point is 01:31:29 I want to have the upper hand. And if I'm home, I'm bringing my full-on gun, you know. And so I've got one that's set up like that in 9-mill and 1 in 300 blackout. Oh, yeah. And they're set up exactly the same. So I can train with the 9-mill. But if I want to throw that, you know, 220-grain subsonic round at somebody, in case that home invasion goes to the street, son.
Starting point is 01:31:54 Yeah, in case I got to reach out, you know. But, you know, that's just me. I'm a gun guy. So I was like, I think about something, and I go and build it. Well, yeah, the thing about a pistol for home defense. And look, if it's you and me, like all day, of course, no problem. But my wife, my daughter has to pick up a pistol stressful situation. It's night.
Starting point is 01:32:12 Like there's mayhem going on. Their group at whatever at 10 yards is going to look like a shotgun blast compared to with one of those with a submachine gun. It's like they're going to dial that thing in. It's game over. Yeah. And it's easy. You've got two points of contact. small enough that you can maneuver around.
Starting point is 01:32:31 And, okay, in your home defense scenario, you're not clearing your house. Okay, you're going to collapse back on the weakest or least mobile individual's room. And you're going to hold there, call the cops. And with the door closed, you know, you let them know, hey, I'm armed. I'm in here. And if he comes through the door, you smoke them. And you've given them forewarning. This idea that, you know, maybe I might clear the house.
Starting point is 01:32:59 But I've kind of done that a little bit. But even then, one-man CQB is not optimal. Just FYI, I'm 100% clear in the house. My CQC, my one-man CQC is optimal. Some people are getting dropped. Yeah, I mean, you do you, man. But it all depends on who's home and where I'm at and what's going on. But, yeah, my recommendations for self-defense shooting,
Starting point is 01:33:25 because that's kind of my big focus now that I'm not working with the Navy anymore. I want to make Americans. I want to make them better prepared. Yeah. Okay. I was going to get into this. But so for a long time, I was focused on making Navy SEALs better. I'm not doing that anymore.
Starting point is 01:33:49 So now I've shifted my focus to the regular, potentially armed American. Okay. Now, there's plenty of guys out there that want this information. And this is what ties into why I did the stuff with Tactical Hive. You know, and I don't know if we're getting ahead of stuff, but cool, yeah, I do, I do videos for Tactical Hives. They're on YouTube and I don't hold anything back. I don't like tease and then you got to come to my, you know, course. And it's like, no, I will show you everything that that I can in that 10, 15, 20 minute, you know, spot.
Starting point is 01:34:25 You know, and if you watch it, if you do it, you'll get better. You know, because maybe you don't have the money to come, you know, pay me my price to, you know, go shooting with me. But I want you to come away with something. You'll get better, quicker with me. Yeah. You know, because I've done it for such a long time. You know, when we built that course at Buds, I put a lot of stuff together, you know, as a team. We put these things together and you watch it happen.
Starting point is 01:34:55 and you see guys making mistakes and you figure out how to fix it, you know, you reverse engineer everything. And then we started training the instructors that would come in. They're only there for two years. And that's not a lot of time. So I have to ghost me and, you know, watch how I correct, you know, whatever the problem was. And then they would listen to the words that we're using, keeping everything, you know, common.
Starting point is 01:35:21 And then in no time, you know, they could fix it. about 80% of the common problems guys had. So it was a big force multiplier. And I look at that and I'm like, all right, how can I shift this over to just regular folks? And the regular marksmanship train, closing one eye, line up front side. That doesn't, most people,
Starting point is 01:35:43 if you want to learn to be a target shooter, yeah, go do that. But I'm going to teach you how to point shoot. First, two eyes open, because two eyes are going to be open in that stressful situation. And you're going to have to deal with, you know, using natural point of aim and, you know, spend enough time on your grip so that it naturally points to where you want it to even when it's looking at the sites. Because you ain't
Starting point is 01:36:03 going to be looking at sites. You're going to be looking at the target, you know, because that's where the interesting information for your lizard brain is, right? It's like, that's the danger spot. So you're going to be looking there. So instead of doing, like, when in Buds, we had, the first week was all marksmanship training in the second was combat shooting. And so I've taken basically the first week off the board and just do wave tops of the second week and get you started there and, you know, I can make you better. We've been teaching cops. He's got back from Chicago teaching, or Illinois, a little town called Rockford. We did, we're post-certified there now, so we can teach the COP. And I think the difference between seal teams and
Starting point is 01:36:50 cops, you know, the big differences, we train all the time. They don't, that's not where their money is. Their money is, you know, on the, on the ground, doing the job and almost no training. Yeah. Which is terrible. I've been, I've been further past many, many years, I've been saying police should train 20% of the time. And if they did 20% of the time, you know, so it's one day a week or maybe that's two hours
Starting point is 01:37:14 a day, like, however you want to break it up. But they would be so much better. Because right now, like that group that you just trained, how much, training are they getting a year in CQC? None. There you go. How many rounds are they shooting here? The guys are having a, you know, they get like 60 rounds paid for.
Starting point is 01:37:32 I mean, if they want, if they want to, you know, get better on their own. 60 rounds. So just so everyone that's not like a person that has shot weapons before, 60 rounds a year for training is not going to make you a proficient shooter in a normal situation. in like a flat range situation. Yeah. Oh, that was just for the qualification. That's not training.
Starting point is 01:37:54 So thinking that you're going to be, you know, have one of these, you know, we expect our police officers to be able to handle these crazy dynamic, especially right now, crazy dynamic situations where things are going on, people have all kinds of armament. They do crazy things. Thinking that a police officer is going to be ready for that, just because they've been on the job, it just doesn't make sense. And we're really failing, not only failing our police officers, but we're failing our civilian populace as well. Because oftentimes the police officer that's not well trained doesn't handle a situation right.
Starting point is 01:38:29 And it ends up terrible. And you can tell so clearly when a police officer is trained, they just respond infinitely better than someone that's not trained. So I'm going to, I don't know what else to do about that. Hopefully we continue to push that message. And people will say, well, they need to be on the. street right no well they need to be out there they need to be out there that so they don't have time to train okay so let me ask you this would you rather in your neighborhood have 10 cops that haven't trained patrolling that you know at 2 o'clock in the morning or one or midnight or
Starting point is 01:39:06 whenever would you rather have 10 cops that have trained two hours in the last year or would you rather have eight cops that have trained you know 20% of the time anybody that that has any sense at all will say, I would take the eight guys. There's no doubt about it. I would take two guys instead of, I would take two guys that are well trained over six guys that aren't well trained.
Starting point is 01:39:30 The problem is that, you know, the guys paying for it, you know, they're in charge of the train. They're like, they have to have these guys on the street. You know, they've got to fill that schedule. But that's what I'm saying. Somebody needs to say, hey, having an untrained person on the street
Starting point is 01:39:44 is not worth that savings. They just haven't figured this out yet. And I don't know how they haven't figured it out. Because when we do have these negative incidents happen with police officers, it's most of the time, any common sense person with tactical training will be able to say, oh, yeah, if this would have happened, they would have been able to do this, and the problem would have been solved. And we watch people like you and me, we watch those things,
Starting point is 01:40:09 and we're like, it makes me sick, it makes me cringe because I know 20 minutes doing de-escalation procedures would have solved this problem. You know, a half an hour on a Monday morning going through, hey, think through this problem. Let's walk through it a couple times. You come up in this situation. What are you going to do? Well, I'm going to run up and start yelling at him. Okay.
Starting point is 01:40:30 Well, let's think about that. What if he doesn't respond the way you expect him to? Well, you know, most of the time when I yell at a guy, tell him to get down, he gets down. Okay. But is that a great first move? How about we get some cover? How about we yell from behind cover? Now you got some time to react.
Starting point is 01:40:43 Now you got some time for decision making. Now you've got some distance between you. So all these things that you can teach really. Easy and then you got to drill them. You got to drum but look what I just said you could do that for free. That doesn't cost anything It takes 20 minutes. Let's run through the scenario talk through it and then let's do it and then you have a guy come up come upon someone that's causing problems and instead of running up and yelling at him Get down because like they get trained to do that from working right? Because most of the time when a cop yells at somebody to go they don't want to get arrested or they don't want to get in trouble so they obey It's that one percent of the time. Yeah that the person's on drugs. They're going crazy. They don't care. They want to do They want to kill that person is the one we're worried about the person that you yell at from behind a car and be like hey get down and they get down
Starting point is 01:41:24 Cool. We're all happy when you yell from behind a car get down and they don't do what you want to do Cool now we have other decisions that we can make we have escalations that we can do we're in a protected position We don't have to freak out we have time to react there's all kinds of things that we can do So those basic training protocols that aren't happening right now That's what a lot of these problems are coming from very seldom do I see a video of a police officer that has that something has gone south where you can you say to yourself oh the intent of this police officer was to have this bad situation happen normally like oh their intent was to solve the problem and they
Starting point is 01:42:02 did not have the tools and the training to get it done which is a freaking nightmare yeah and I love training cops okay but honestly as much as I can you know they got to pay by doing these videos for Hive, I want to train everybody. I want to give everybody that. You know, the situation awareness you're talking about is not that hard and you can, you can train it, you know. You just, you know, distance gives you time, angles, gives you a way out, and then just
Starting point is 01:42:33 keeping your head up and on a swivel, you know. And if you can remember those three things, you know, the guy who's looking to grab you or, you know, treat you as a victim, that predator is not looking for a hard target. they're looking for the easy target. And if you're doing stuff, if you're looking around, you're not, you know, everybody's, you know,
Starting point is 01:42:54 in their little private phone booth, you know, staring at, just if you got to talk on the phone, bring it up in front of your face rather than looking down. If you do that, you're not going to have trouble most of the time in those transition spaces and everything else.
Starting point is 01:43:06 So, I mean, you know, that kind of training. And then here's the next level because that firearm that, you know, you're carrying, all that does is gives you an extra option. it's not I'm armed so I'm going to go do you know I'm a sheep dog and I'm going to involve myself no no that's just you have to deal with all these other like the escalation de-escalation figure that out and if somebody pulls a gun on you and they've got a gun on you
Starting point is 01:43:33 you are not I can't outdraw them okay you got to figure something else out you got to wait for your time your opportunity yep and you just how did you get yourself in that situation you know what I mean how did you get someone get close enough to you and you were lacked situational awareness that they identified you and that they were able to pull out a weapon without you being able to create distance and get yourself into a survival scenario. That's just a lack of awareness, and it's a lack of training. Yep.
Starting point is 01:43:58 And then it's the gear as well. You know, these days, when COVID hit, you know, you couldn't buy a gun because they were just all sold out. You know, everybody who didn't have a gun went and panic, bought something. You know, there's a bunch of stories about that. It's like, oh, yeah, give me the gun show loophole. You know, how much more I've got to charge for that, you know. And studies have shown that if that guy who bought that gun came home, put it on his coffee table and stared at it and was like, and got no help from a gun guy, he's now more anti-gun than he was before.
Starting point is 01:44:31 Explain that. They're afraid of it still. It's like they bought a rattlesnake and brought it home because they have no idea what it is. Now it's a gun and they've been told, oh, no, I'm 20% more or 80% more likely to be, you know, killed by a gun in my house because I have one. And so what, do they sell them? Yeah, they normally sell them or put it away or whatever. But if the other group, same guys, you know, probably voted, well, for stuff like this. But now they needed a gun because they, you know, cops aren't going to come there to, you know, save them in their toilet paper.
Starting point is 01:45:05 Yeah. If they had somebody in their life that was a gun guy that could help them out, that gets them past that first, you know, step, okay, I bought the gun. What? Well, no, get some ammo. Let's go to the range. Here's how to hold it. Here's it. You know, those are, those guys are now way on the other side. They're on our side now. You know, we're, um, the, the, the armed citizen. I mean, cops can't be everywhere, but armed citizens can be. Okay. We just need more of them. More guns equals less crime. If you have the right people, you know, that know how to use the gun. So my latest thing, um, I, uh, doing tack-eye of stuff, I got noticed. by this company called Lipsies,
Starting point is 01:45:47 and they do special limited edition guns and stuff. So I've been talking with them about taking out the roadblocks for civilian gun ownership. Okay. You can't change it from the other side of the law, but on this side, guy buys a gun. Okay. Now he wants to carry it so he buys a holster. Well, now he wants to put a light on his gun.
Starting point is 01:46:09 It ain't going to fit in that holster anymore. And it just, if you're not a gun guy, it's a big pain in the ass. So what we're planning on doing, I think this is going to happen early next year. They're going to come out with, I think, Smith & Wesson first, the coach edition. You know, I think there's a couple revolvers, and then they would do some auto loaders. I don't know exactly for sure. But what comes along with that, when you buy one of these, there'll be a little code that you can go on the interwebs, and there's going to be me explaining exactly what you got in this box and how to use it.
Starting point is 01:46:45 why we made the decisions on the grip and the sites and everything else. And then when you decide, you know, that you wanted, you know, after you've taken to the range and got some rounds down on some reps, now you want to carry it. Well, there's going to be, ideally, there'll be a little drop-down menu, you know, inside the waistband, outside the waistband, red dot, light, and everything will fit together. So it kind of takes that, the guesswork out of it.
Starting point is 01:47:12 I mean, I got a box of freaking holsters that I don't. use. Some of my bought, some of them aren't given to me, right? But if you're not a gun guy, you know, it's just that much more of a pain of the ass to deal with, right? And if you can just buy it in a package and then have somebody teach you how to use it, you know, and in person is always better. But if you can go over, okay, this is how you stand, this is why, and here's where your natural point of aim is and try these drills. And, you know, I think that's going to be the best way for me to, to expand this and get the, I want people, Americans to be able to defend themselves.
Starting point is 01:47:59 Because cops can't be everywhere. And, you know, don't be afraid of the equipment, you know, know how to use it. And it takes the fear out of it. Well, now we're going to have to make a nine millimeter cult for, freaking AR based, freaking submachine gun for the house, home defense. That's what's coming next. Yeah, actually, yeah. Well, through this company, Lipsies, they can work with anybody, anybody in the gun industry.
Starting point is 01:48:27 So, yeah, we'll be pushing something like that. And, yeah, coach branded. I mean, I had to come up with a color and a logo and all this stuff. I was like, really, man. Yeah, I never wanted this, you know. Hopefully it's just a big smiling dude. Yeah, yeah. I mean, when Tack Hive, when it started, my buddy, Doar, he was still active duty. So he came to me and was like, hey, coach, I got this opportunity to like do this, you know, video channel stuff.
Starting point is 01:49:00 But I can't be on camera. You want to help me out? I said, no. The last thing I want to be was a guy in front of the camera. I was like, oh, no, it's really easy, man. Just just, you're basically going to teach a class to this little, you know, Asian guy. is a little Filipino guy and his brother, you know, and his videographer is going to, you know, shoot it. I'm like, video, who's got a, he's got a videographer? But anyway, so we did that and did a couple of them as his journey, because he wanted to, he was a big BJJ guy.
Starting point is 01:49:29 And he realized that if somebody shows up with a gun, okay, he didn't know what to do. So he wanted to find out. And JJJ is ineffective in that scenario. Yeah, against firearms, it's, yeah, has its limits. I love jiu-jitsu, but. It doesn't work against a gun very well. So that was it.
Starting point is 01:49:48 He wanted someone to film his journey. And then, you know, so we did a couple of those. And then they found out I held this gear. Because when I, when you, you know, you improve your gear, you get new stuff. I would just take the old stuff off, throw it in a bag. And it went in my garage. So I basically have like gear history from, you know, the late 80s through the early 2000s. And Doors kind of the same guy as me.
Starting point is 01:50:14 He's got everything from, you know, the late 90s, early 2000s all the way out to, you know, he retired last year. So he's got all that cool kit. And those videos get a lot of hits because people love gear. Yeah, they do. But yeah, so that gave me that, you know, we do training videos. We do gear reviews and fire reviews and basically gear history. But there's a big problem with YouTube.
Starting point is 01:50:42 they hate guns. So we've got like over 400,000 subscribers. We get fewer hits now than when we had less than 100,000. So it doesn't make any sense. So we're struggling with that at the moment. But, you probably just aren't getting into the algorithm. Yeah, there's something, man. Do you like your, do you do any pure gear videos?
Starting point is 01:51:06 We were just talking about like, I saw one of your videos was like about cold, weather, you know, the PCU. Does that get more because it's just getting the algorithm or anything? You know, we did retro like training techniques and we do it with a 45 and it got like 400,000 views in a couple of weeks. I was like, cool. So we did like a bunch more. And they got almost nothing like 20, 30,000 here. And they're like, okay, that's nowhere near what this one did.
Starting point is 01:51:34 So whether that's algorithm, whether it's, you know, just the fickle nature of the audience. I don't know. It's weird. It's weird. I don't even think about that stuff because I think it's too hard to comprehend what's going down. Do you think about that stuff, K, Doc? Yeah, absolutely. Is there, can you make sense of it?
Starting point is 01:51:55 So there are strategies to improve how your videos perform on YouTube, for sure. A lot of that has to do with what people initially see, how that first pool of people react to it. Clickmate. 100%. Yeah. Is it an engaging title of the video? What's the description like? What's your thumbnail image look like?
Starting point is 01:52:17 All these things that contribute to whether or not somebody's going to click on that thing in the first place and start watching it. Then how long they watch it, all that contributes to how it factors into the algorithm and then how it's delivered to a wider audience based on the engagement it's getting. So there's a lot of strategic stuff going on. Just make cool videos. That's my recommendation. The cool videos 100%. That's what we're trying to do. Put out good information, you know.
Starting point is 01:52:44 Help people. Yeah. And then, you know, then nobody looks at your backlog. It's like, you know, like, okay, we got a thousand videos. Because I'm, I'm not an owner of that website. I'm just a subject matter expert that's been there for four years now from the beginning. You know, and since then, I have this whole electronic realm, you know, come up. I'm like, all right, so practical firearms instruction.
Starting point is 01:53:09 that's my website if you want to come train with me that you go there and then what is it practical firearms instruction dot com yeah yeah practical firearms instruction dot com maybe she's shorten that to just pfi.com you'll be able to get that somebody already owns somebody yeah probably try and charge you five million dollars to get pfi.com that much i do know yeah and then um you know i'm i'm kind of branching out my wife's like no you should do your own videos i'm like okay So she just made me a YouTube channel. So PFI coach on YouTube is going to be, that'll be me. There's no videos there.
Starting point is 01:53:48 You can look at there now. There's nothing. But it's like we're just, start filling stuff out. Let me tell you, you better get some up. It's coach C-O-C-H, right? Yeah, C-O-C-H. And the reason I did that is because if, you know, you write it like a coach, you know, C-O-A-C-H, then when they write out my whole name, it's Coacchiolo.
Starting point is 01:54:06 It's like, no, I'm not. No, just C-O-C-H. Plus, I could trademark that one. C-O-C-H is trademarked to me. There you go. And, you know, just, it was part of this whole deal. It's like, oh, we're going to put coach on a gun. So, okay, better get that trademarked.
Starting point is 01:54:20 Right on. You know, and I got ideas all the time. So I'm thinking about a smart watch band. So, you know, commando bands. I got a trademark on that one. We'll see what. Yeah. I want one.
Starting point is 01:54:33 I don't really know what it does, but like I'm in the game. Let's get that commando band rolling. And that 9-mill AR platform. Yeah. That's a totally, you're going to be hype on that one. Like, you know, I get, my algorithm,
Starting point is 01:54:46 we'll have all kinds of shooting stuff in there. And I don't see that very often. People recommending like a submachine gun for home defense. And I think it's a great solution. Effectively, it's not a submachine gun because it's just going to be semi-auto. Okay. So, you know, it's not a machine gun.
Starting point is 01:55:02 So, okay. What's the proper terminology then? A semi-automatic. A pistol caliber carbine. is what they're that's the new right thing so the PCC the PCC yeah you good thing for the home defense yeah I mean it all
Starting point is 01:55:15 basic it's gonna save your ears you know when it comes down to it and now it's we'll figure it all out I mean you know people are coming to my brother who's on forge and fire and he made some cool knives he's been on three times
Starting point is 01:55:32 oh really we're like gonna do a collaboration knife but you know he's he's an artist so he's up making swords in in Oregon. I just got to get up there. We got the initial design. It's been sent out for years. I'm like,
Starting point is 01:55:44 come on, we need to do this thing, right? No, I got, I've seen like advertisements for that. It's just dudes out there just hammered on metal, right? Making cool stuff.
Starting point is 01:55:52 So Nick, my brother. Is your brother? Yeah, he's the only one. He's the one next to me, next down from me. All right. So he's two years younger than me.
Starting point is 01:56:01 But to this day, his sword is the only one that's cleave the pig in one go. This big, you know, big no-dachi, you know, armor-splitting, you know, katana, you know, samurai sword. And it just hacked it, boom, and like, cool. Does he do the whole process, like folding the metal over 10,000 times or whatever? Yeah, I mean, there's, you know, he could tell you all about it. But, yeah, he heats the stuff.
Starting point is 01:56:24 What does he do for a living? That's what he does for a living. Like, but you can't just be on that show for a living. You got a, oh, no, no, no, no. Okay, so at the time, he was a steady, cam operator. And when COVID came around, it killed that. So he's unemployed from that. But by then, he had been, you know, the society for creative anachronism. They basically a bunch of guys dressed out of armor and beat, beat on each other with sticks in tournaments. Oh, oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:53 It's pretty cool. I see that. I see that. But yeah. So he, you know, speaking of Gardner, like, you know out in Petrero. Have you seen that stuff? Yeah, the Petrero War. Yeah. My brother came down for that one. Yeah, they go out there and it's just like dudes. He's, for, you know, freaking armor rednecks in armor just getting after it beating the shit out of each other well Nick didn't have a lot of money to buy the armor so he started making his own and then that branched off into making swords and now he makes just absolutely beautiful works of art you know and he's selling him and that's how he makes his yeah yeah he's making his his limiting is uh is selling you know belt jewelry basically to uh people because they're way too nice to go fighting dude people are like you know he's out in the
Starting point is 01:57:34 bar and the girl's like so what do you do and he's like I'm a freaking sword maker or what he's like what up yeah and she's either like I want to marry you or like get away from me yeah you sicko no he's good to go he's married he's got his whole business is you know he moved it all up there and he's got a big shop and 16 ton press where he just you know he heats the stuff and he's on facebook uh Nick cochillo Nicholas coachilloh I'm not sure look him up them up. But yeah, so we've been talking about doing this collaboration with him, and it takes some time before he moved to Oregon and everything else.
Starting point is 01:58:15 Home defense katana. Home defense katana. When was the last time? Swipe. Run through. On the corner, yeah, he was run through. Gunshot wounds. Jack.
Starting point is 01:58:29 Where were you on September 11th? I was at Damnick, and we had a three-letter agency that was there with us training. And we were in the high bay. And we didn't know when the first plane hit, but when the second one did, they came in and said, hey, guys, you got to look at this. So we came in and, you know, they replayed it a bunch. And these guys, they packed up and headed back to Washington. and they were actually on their way
Starting point is 01:59:03 when the plane hit the Pentagon. Damn. Yeah. So we just basically sat around watching the TV in a team room going to call the wife. Things are going to change. Yeah, we had no idea. And actually, my particular group,
Starting point is 01:59:23 we didn't go to Afghanistan first. We went to Bosnia one more time because they didn't know. They didn't know. where things were going to go. So they'd send us over there because there was some rumblings or whatever. So that was the first place we deployed to
Starting point is 01:59:36 for a month or two. And then came back from that and we were the second group over into Afghanistan. We did our three-month deployment doing high-value or high-value targets. It was a basically we were focused on.
Starting point is 01:59:55 So Elvis sightings and, you know, whatever. Elvis sightings. Yeah. The intel was, you know, sketchy at the time. So you're just like spinning up, looking, spinning up, looking. Yep, ready to go, flying off, hitting a place, you know. And, you know, of course, a bunch of dry holes, you know, because we didn't get him.
Starting point is 02:00:16 And they didn't have that whole hierarchy of, you know, the bad guys yet. And it was on one of those. It was actually the last mission that we're doing in that three months. They advertised a TF160 awesome guys But they're like, oh yeah, 20 foot rope I'll put you right in there Okay, cool So I didn't have my big gloves on
Starting point is 02:00:39 My sexy shooting gloves on And that turned into a big fiasco They pulled up short I was in dash 3 Dash 1 pulls up short Dash 2 Damages his airplane missing him Because we were like 800 yards short
Starting point is 02:00:55 of the actual target And what he thought was Whatever he stopped here Anyway, all those guys, they did a crash landing, you know. Dash 2 does a crash landing. Dash 2, crash land. The dash 1 put its guys out? Yep.
Starting point is 02:01:08 Okay. They're into a target that's 800 meters short of the actual target. And apparently it looked similar for I don't know exactly what the dish, the deal was. But I mean. Murphy's Law. Yeah. It's cold. Yeah, it's nuts.
Starting point is 02:01:22 All right. So we got guys on the wrong target. Guys in the wrong target. Crash bird. And the bird's going down. Guys are like, you know, undone. ready to go, rope in hand, and watching the canyon walls go flitting by in their little, you know, green toilet paper tubes. And then that pilot found the only place in a square
Starting point is 02:01:39 mile that you could put down an age 60. And, you know, when the 60s rotors are turning, they're nice and flat as they slow down. They dip a little bit. And when they dip, they start hitting boulders and they just busted them all up. So they're dealing with that. we watch dash one puts out their stuff i'm the last guy off of dash three last bird and then we had a 47 we're the idea was they were going to come in and we're get a foothold you know control it and then bring in the main force with the 47 anyway so i'm looking out this thing and i'm going this does not look like the pictures you know and i look down and it's a hundred foot rope and there's maybe 20 feet on the deck and you know and
Starting point is 02:02:26 And the last time I looked down there, the rope was going right to the center of that, of this little square on the roof. So I zip on there, you know, and this is hot, hot, hot, hot, you know, and I hit the ground, I throw the rope away. And as I'm reaching from my weapon, I step back. Well, I thought I was in the middle. It turns out my heels were right on the edge of the roof. So when I stepped back, I stepped back into nothing.
Starting point is 02:02:53 And I know the last thing that goes through your head before you die, because that was that. I mean, and it was like, I was just really disappointed. I was like, fuck. Everyone's going to think of a jackass. Yeah. And then, you know, Bing, Bing, Bing, things start happening. And then it stops. And I'm like, oh, fuck, I'm not dead.
Starting point is 02:03:14 You know? And apparently, had I fallen off of two sides, I would have gone one story down where I fell off. I fell two stories, but I hit the edge of the first story on the way down and spun me around and threw my gear all over the place. That other edge, it was about at least 100 feet before there was anything that would stop me. So there's your frogman luck, right? You know, not good enough to not get hurt, but good enough not to die. So I'm laying on my back when I hit my camelback burst. So the guys look down and they see me laying there in a spreading pool of black liquid. And they're like okay coach is dead how do we get off this thing so I get my crap back together I'm
Starting point is 02:03:58 you know there's an animal pen next to me and whatever's in there it's like you know really pissed off I'm like oh crap this cow's gonna come on and stomp me this made it sticks you know and I'm laying in front of a big uncleared breezeway on this you know made of boulders and timber I'm like okay I can't stay here and wait for the backboard so I did a quick systems check and I got my shit together and made my way over so I could look up on the roof and make comms with the com guy up there and say, hey, look, I'm good, got my, you know, nods back on, but I can't move. My leg is jacked up. My back feels like there's someone poking me. I actually looked behind me. Like, oh, okay, no one's poking me. And my shoulder was jacked up
Starting point is 02:04:44 as well on my face because when I fell on that, my nods tried to poke my eyes. out but for some reason I you know because I want to be able to see so I would always wear clear eye pro under my nods which wasn't a common practice but because I had those Oakley's on I'm still able to see it with two eyes because it would have poked them right out and anyway so when they finished clearing down and you know pretty much everybody on target was right inside that breezeway but luckily they were just non-combatants so we were on the wrong damn target yeah So they met back me the next morning and that was the last mission.
Starting point is 02:05:25 So then a couple days I was back in the States and they had to do a, they cut a big meatball off of my leg and big hematoma. And then my shoulder didn't want to work. It would just impinge. It would come up here and just stop. I'm like, okay, what's up with that? And so they examine it, said slap tear and some other stuff going on in there. gonna have to operate.
Starting point is 02:05:50 We just found out that we're gonna be the guys going into Iraq and invasion. I'm like, ain't no operation. I'm not going to know for that. No, it ain't gonna happen. So I said, what else can we do? And what he did is he gave me,
Starting point is 02:06:06 the doc gave me a shot in my arm, Corazon, or some magic liquid, but immediate, it was like, ooh, not in pins anymore. Yeah, we are good. He's like, okay, I gave you that one so you can train, we'll give you another one right before you go out the door, but when you come back, we have to operate. Because you don't get, two is all you get on that one.
Starting point is 02:06:29 And I'm like, okay. So that allowed me to stay with the team and roll over and do our invasion stuff. And you got there, when did you get there? Like for the war to kick off? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Well, we were, okay, so everybody, all the conventional forces were down south. And we were way up north in Saudi Arabia, the northern Saudi Arabia.
Starting point is 02:06:53 So while everybody was rolling up, we were doing these deep penetrating missions to the WMD sites that Intel said might have this, that, or whatever. And we were hanging out pretty far. You know, it would have been, had a helo gone down, it had been days before anybody could have got to us, not an helicopter. And we had one real close call. We all got shot up pretty good. We were in 47s. And this little town, we came in, and I was in Dash 1, and I think we took half a dozen rounds through the fuselage. But then Dash 2 came in that same track, and they got all, yeah.
Starting point is 02:07:36 One of the air crew got actually shot in the head. He survived, but, you know, all our guys were clean. and so we went and did the WMD we took down the outside That was just mop level four Well we weren't we had the mop suits But you know Dash 1
Starting point is 02:07:55 Then where I was We were securing the outside area And then dash 2 was going to roll in They were mopped up And they you know they were like sitting there We're just watching the light show As everyone else came through the music watch Like how are we not dead
Starting point is 02:08:10 My bird the hydraulics got hit on the door. And so you know how that ramp comes down and goes, yeah, it went, pang! And everybody, you know, running off and the guy in front of me slips and falls on his ass and, you know, scoots off. And Mike laughing at him as I slip on my ass and scoot off the ramp. Hydraulic fluid everywhere. Like, you know, scooting like a dog with worms.
Starting point is 02:08:37 And then, yeah, went and ran, did our, did the whole deal, no problems. Well, that bird couldn't come back because the hydraulic fluid, it couldn't fix it. They had to just get it out of there. And then the second bird had the injured guy on it and was all shot up. And so they went back out to the desert. We had a flying spare and a QRF, two other 47s with us. So after we ran around and this is so deep in there, our time was limited on fuel. So we had to do what we did.
Starting point is 02:09:10 Turn out it was, it was a dry hole. Oh, yeah, thank God. And then we piled back in, you know, and we were able to get everybody on that flying spare and, you know, nut to butt on the, with the QRF, you know. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:09:26 Yeah. And so there's this, um, 47s have the two counter-rotating props, right? And there's a drive shaft that goes between. And then there's a cover that goes over that. Well, there was a big dent in that one. on my bird and if you were had it hit and gone in and mess with that drive shaft then the that's what keeps the rotors working together and they would just ate each other and would have
Starting point is 02:09:53 fallen out of the sky and it would have been a really really long night for well probably somebody else but um yeah as it was you know we had a bunch of little close calls like that um hitting a bunch of different targets you know um tracers of big guns anti aircraft stuff going between the rotor disc and the fuselage of the bird you know bro I've had some I've had some Huey Vietnam pilots on here both the Sea Wolves and then just regular army conventional like air assault guys and man what they did with those hewis is did they drove things like they were bumper cars at the freaking fair like there's going into LZs fire everywhere taking hits all over the
Starting point is 02:10:39 place just going in they don't give a shit, man. There was 5,000 Hueys sent to Vietnam. 3,200 of them were lost in combat. Damn. Those guys were next level, man.
Starting point is 02:10:55 And I'll tell you what's awesome. The sea wolf guys, well, the sea wolf guys, when you talk to the seals, and I've had some, you know, the Vietnam seals that have come on here, dude, those sea wolf guys were coming. Like, they were coming and they didn't care. And, like,
Starting point is 02:11:11 We had one guy out of here telling a story. They just stayed like, oh, we're running out of fuel. Cool. They just ran out of fuel and landed in a freaking rice patty and used ammo cans to transfer fuel from another bird that they brought in into the bird. Like, these guys were just freaking legit, man. Making shit happen.
Starting point is 02:11:30 But those birds, too, I think because they were less technologically reliant, they were just more durable. You know, it's like having like a brand, new freaking BMW right now versus having like a 1967 freaking I don't know man those Blackhawks are pretty resilient too my my oldest brother is a helicopter for army and he was actually spent a year in Afghanistan doing dust off stuff so it's like you know whenever there was a tick he was on his way you know yeah he went to pretty much all of them and I mean he had a hot LZ and ground
Starting point is 02:12:11 Force Commander saying, hey, we got guys down here. We need to get you down here. We need to get them out of here. And so he disobeyed Army doctrine, didn't wait for the gunship because the gunship couldn't make it, you know, as fast as he could. He got there. He looks around and goes, okay, and there's no traces over there. I think I can get in. So he came in hot.
Starting point is 02:12:32 Hell yeah. And got lit up. And as he's coming in, you know, the Army birds have the wheel is way up. on the tail. Navy birds is like halfway up because you don't have to, you know, turn them on aircraft carriers. So anyway, you can hit the ground pretty hard with that sucker because it'll save the little shock absorber, right? So he had to come in hot. Well, when they laid out the DZ, they laid it out at an angle. It was on angled turf. So when he hit that hard, it slammed his head into the, you know, the canopy, knocked him unconscious. Okay. When he came to, it was probably just a
Starting point is 02:13:08 couple of seconds, but hey, you know, didn't know he was in Afghanistan, didn't, you know, was like, you know, you're kind of, you know, as the system like reboots, and he's like, okay, you know, all right, we're good, but the bird didn't roll over, didn't ball up. They loaded a bunch of guys on there and flew out again with, you know, couldn't wait for the gunships at this point because they'd scorped the ground in front normally and then you fly out. And so he flies out and got everybody back. to base but when he got there where he was dead. And so they went from, you know, he was things,
Starting point is 02:13:45 when you disobey army doctrine, two things that happened. They give you a medal where they prosecute you. And he would have, he would have had another air medal for that one, but because you guys got hit on the way out and died, he knew at least one guy back there was, had jumped on to do CPR. And yeah, he got hit and, uh, and expired. on the five-minute, you know, flight home.
Starting point is 02:14:11 So instead of prosecution, he just called it even, you know, it's like, okay, yeah, you tried, you didn't, you know, had there been some success there, apparently. And I'm probably screwing the story up a little bit, but, I mean, it broke his neck. You know, so he had, and then he just kind of, you know, dealt with it. And, yeah, he actually, like last year, just got it all cleaned out. They had to go in there and fuse his neck and take out, you know, the disc. that was pressing on stuff because he was going numb. You know, but yeah, again, he was taught by the, you know, Army Vietnam, you know,
Starting point is 02:14:48 helo pilots back in the day. And he grew up on, on Huey's. That was his first platform. That'd be interesting. You have to ask him which one is more. Which one would do better going into a hot LZ? I mean, I get, I'm, it has to be the Black Hawk. But then again, too, those Hueys, man, they're little and probably like you can,
Starting point is 02:15:08 get in there quick and but then again the black hawf has better armor on like critical components yeah like the the pilot yeah the pilot titanium c yeah and like the brains of the i'm sure the brains of a black hawk are and the critical components of a black hawk i bet you they have better armor and some redundancy as well yeah yeah but anyway that's i do know i was talking to on this podcast i was talking about a hughy pilot and he was like yeah you know the thing is our birds only cost like $200,000. He's like, those Blackhawks,
Starting point is 02:15:41 they must cost like a million dollars. It costs like 20 something million dollars. So that's why when one of those things goes down, people freak out. They were just great, you know, just go carts with the freaking, the Hewis. Did you,
Starting point is 02:15:57 you must have been on the Jessica Lynch then, too, if you were there with that crew. How'd that go down? That was, we got Intel, we were working on, you know, a target, you know, that we're going to hit that night. This comes in and goes, okay, we'll put that on hold.
Starting point is 02:16:14 And they flew us from where we were to a forward operating base. And we sat there and got Intel that was like, you know, they'd found, you know, that the certain three-letter agencies had contacts with, you know, locals. And they'd gone in and sent them in with, rigged with cameras so they could, you know, identify the last guy they sent in rolled up there and you know walked up the stairs top of the stairs is a big bust of uh saddam and gold he turned right and went down four four doors and there she was like all right proof of life man we are going so um we got all set up and then uh they had the ground assault force it was going to take them like two hours to get there you know through barrack you
Starting point is 02:17:00 You know, all that stuff. 99 Rangers and some snipers and some of our guys. And initially we were supposed to be on the gaff. And last minute, they, oh, wow, we've got an extra 60. All right, cool. So, well, I got on that one. And we just been shot up, you know, on the 47, a couple of night before. So with this one, the doors are open.
Starting point is 02:17:21 You're like, all right, I can shoot back now because that's the big thing about a 47. It's like, you just got to sit there and take it, you know. But now it's like, no, okay. I got guns up, plate pressed forward. We're gonna get this. Feels good anyways. Yeah, yeah. And, yeah, as we were getting on, we were like sitting against us, you know, if we die
Starting point is 02:17:41 tonight, that's, it's worth it. Yeah. You know, because you know, there's an American out there and, you know, she'd been reported as fighting to the last round. And no of that really came through, but, you know, whatever, she was in a car crash and it messed her up really bad. And they never claimed that they had her, you know. She was a prisoner of war, but yeah, this cute little blonde girl that they, you know, whatever hell Iraqis are going to do.
Starting point is 02:18:09 Anyway, so we roll in there and as we're flying in, we had coordinated with the Marines at the, at the bridge, it was a bridge just outside of town and they were going to do a little salt there. So that was going on. We coordinated with them as like a, you know, decoy. And as we're flying in, look over there and you see just these tracers doing this. you know, going towards each other. And we get the D.C.'s clear. I'm like, okay. Can somebody tell them?
Starting point is 02:18:41 But that was at the bridge. That was like, you know, almost a mile away, I think. And they rolled in, the initial breach team, dropped in on the little birds, and they put snipers on the roof. There's a seven-sory hospital. And we came in, landed in the little driveway courtyard thing behind a wall.
Starting point is 02:19:00 And just ran up there. And as I'm running through this, I'm like, hey, I've seen this on TV. You know, it's exactly the same. And we can get up there and turn right and clear down. And there's the room she's supposed to be. And she's not there. I'm like, oh, not a dry hole. Come on.
Starting point is 02:19:16 So we finished clearing that wing. And, you know, there's shitters at the end there. And I bust it all out and, you know, looked, nothing. And so as we're, all right, clear the other way. Because the staircase came up like in the middle of the wing. So you had that one side than the other. Right. So as he came back, they're bringing up this doctor who spoke English. He's like, oh, Jesse, yeah, I'll take you see Jesse. No problem. Blah, blah, blah, blah. You know?
Starting point is 02:19:40 And so one of our guys had him by the scruff of the neck with a pistol in the back of his head. And I was left side point man. And there was all these big windows all the way down. And I really, really, really wanted to like check my six. But that wasn't my job. You know, so I'm like, boom, you know, set it forward and going, okay, relying on your number two. and we get there, door was open, through the doctor, and just anybody wanted to be shooting, they'd shoot him. And then we entered like normal, clear, no problems. And then she'd been, like, laid down on the bed,
Starting point is 02:20:16 and she kind of sat up, and I was right at the foot of the bed. I'm like, Jessica, Jessica Lynch. And she looked at me with the biggest, scaredest eyes I've ever seen on a human, and she was scared of me. and that like took me I was like oh shit you know I said her name a couple of times she was just non-responsive just scared as hell more guys were coming in and I hadn't shot anybody yet so I I left I got back out in the hallway figured you know that was my best chance of getting that fight
Starting point is 02:20:46 anyway so got to the other end ended up in the shitter again same shitter on the other end right cleared that and that's we got thin and so I held there and uh they they they brought the medical bird in, brought the dock up, packaged her up, and flew her out. And we found her in six minutes, and she was flying away in 16 minutes. For a good. Yeah, it was good.
Starting point is 02:21:11 And then when we back, cleared down, cleared the lobby was full of civilians. And then the basement, basically, there was a big sand table down there. And I'm like, what the hell is this? I'm like, well, there had been 300, Saddam, Fetian, you know, resistant, whatever the hell, you know, bad guys that went to go fight the Marines at the bridge. Damn.
Starting point is 02:21:37 Had that not happened? Yeah. It'd been a different story. Yeah. Yeah. Damn. Freaking awesome. And then, so what happened after that, would be wrapped up that deployment?
Starting point is 02:21:48 Yeah. We hit a bunch of other places, you know, looking for WMD. We hit Abu Ghab looking for Spiker. You know, he was still missing at the time. So we did a lot of that kind of stuff. And then came home. And when I came home, that's when I had to make some decisions because I was banged up.
Starting point is 02:22:17 I was in bad shape. You know, my shoulders were all frozen. This one needed an operation. and I knew I was going to have to go under the knife. And I was at 18 years. I was like, well, if I'm going to retire at 20, I don't want to retire in the East Coast. I mean, if you liked the East Coast, great, but I'm a West Coast guy, so I wanted to find a job out here. So we made the deal, and I came to work at Warcom, said goodbye at everybody, sold the house.
Starting point is 02:22:48 You know, I've been married to my wife. about six years at that point and um yeah packed up everything and and came out here and got a job at warcom testing guns and ammo and um you know scopes and stuff yeah which is it was good yeah um you know got to be part of the scar program and you know helped develop that which is which was awesome um and you know just kind what was your role in the scar i was the naval special Warfare representative for the SCAR program. How many representatives were there? Well, was there one from every special operations unit?
Starting point is 02:23:30 Yeah, yeah. And then you had the Marines were just observing. And so you had the Army Special Forces, Rangers, Air Force, they were all part of this thing because they're all part of SOCOM, right? And yeah, so everybody put their two cents in. and I'm actually, you know, kind of responsible that there was a scar heavy because the scar light was supposed to replace the M4.
Starting point is 02:24:01 And normally what you do is you take the, you know, you show up with all these different guns and they narrow them down to the best two, the closest two, and then you take that, there's money involved in there where you test those against each other. Well, the scar, the FN model, was the only one that didn't have a buffer tube.
Starting point is 02:24:19 and as you know, water doesn't compress. So if it's full of water and we're shooting from the water line, the gun's either going to give you one shot or it's going to blow up in your face. So I said, guys, you know, rather than, you know, if we can just do this, you know, one, because the program manager had heard me talking, he's like, hey, if we can narrow us down to one,
Starting point is 02:24:41 then we can move on to the next phase, which was the 762 version, right? And I got agreement. and we uh so basically the fact that they all had buffer tubes just eliminated every other rifle every other one had a at a buffer tube on it and you know it's like well that's not gonna work for it's not optimal for us this would be better um and so they they took that money and they put it into the next phase and then it was up and running when they closed down the the scar light and they because it didn't make enough of a leap forward,
Starting point is 02:25:19 but because the 762 version was much better than the M14. Got it. They were like, oh, okay. So the scar light doesn't exist right now? Hey, I think you can buy one on the civilian market, but nobody, yeah. And that's because it didn't have enough advantages over the M4? Yeah.
Starting point is 02:25:37 That they were just like, well, we're not going to change everything for this. It was too much to change. I mean, you know, the thing about the sky's, How'd you like it? Oh, I thought it's great gun. I mean, we did as much as we could. You know, there's only so much so much you can do in testing, you know, and we tested the hell out of it.
Starting point is 02:25:55 And we identified issues, and we corrected those issues. And so it was, it was a good platform. When it got downrange, one of the biggest takeups when you field something is that new equipment training. And so when the best. Belgians put this new space-aged, you know, polymer coating on there that would last, you know, shelf life for 10 years. But you got to clean it really good before you shoot it the first time. And you know, Frogmen.
Starting point is 02:26:27 They looked at it. It went, because it's not like cosmolane. It's not like this big gooey stuff. Because I looked in and it looks clean. And they took it out and they shot it. And that stuff turns to shellac. And it causes malfunctions. And that was the big thing right out of the base.
Starting point is 02:26:40 That thing's a scar heavy too. That was a scar heavy. Yeah. Because that's the one that actually made it to our guys. Yeah. But, I mean, a lot of that's been fixed. I mean, you know, the scars, it's a good solid gun. I guess the new SIG M7 or whatever that's going to, that's kind of going to take its place.
Starting point is 02:27:01 I guess I don't know. I'm so far out of the loop at this point. We did the best we could at the time. And, you know, we made a less than eight-pound gun that was modern 762. And we really didn't have that, you know, at the time. There was the SR-25, the Mark 11s, but they weren't, they weren't everywhere. This is just, you know, going to be the every man's gun. Then, so you do this kind of acquisitions and weapons testing and all, and that was a big deal.
Starting point is 02:27:30 I mean, that freaking scar was like you'd hear about it every, it seemed like every day we'd hear about what was happening with the scar. Because everyone's freaking got their, you know, I'll talk about two cents, man. We'd had billions of dollars if we could have collected everyone's teeth. cents. It was coming in. Yeah. Up down and across. And we were just doing what we could with, you know, working within, you know, corporations as well as the big Navy machine, so-com machine, you know, getting money testing, whatever. What's the like efficiency level of the bureaucracy of that? Well, you know, now having seen a little bit in the private sector, it's actually pretty good because you still have that military you know protocol stuff whereas in the private sector you
Starting point is 02:28:15 don't have that so yeah you never know um but yeah it was frustrating to me coming from you know the command where you just think something up and go hey let's buy five of them see what happens you know and you know cots commercial off the shelf yeah just buy what's what exists now maybe talk to the guy modify a little bit and then let's take it to work and see what happens but that's that's not the way it's done at the Navy level. Yeah, definitely not at the giant, like, force-wide systems level. Because there's all kinds of stuff that we were able to get away with Cots for a while,
Starting point is 02:28:50 and then you got to get caught up, you've got to get something that's going to work for everybody and it's going to be integrate with everybody. So, yeah. Yeah, which makes sense. It does make sense. You know, everybody's got to be able to talk to each other, get in spare parts, and okay, yeah, but that's not where I was.
Starting point is 02:29:05 I was the guy that, you know, rubber meets the road. Let's go do this, you know. I explosively tested Humvee armor and that saved some guys lives. So, you know, it was a good place for me to be, for me to be at the time because I was a physical wreck. Yeah. I tell guys now it's like, hey, you know, when you're an asset to your team, you know, stick it out, man, you know, be an asset. When you can't be an asset and you start being more of a liability, it's time to move on. And that was what really sent me from there.
Starting point is 02:29:40 Otherwise, I'd have to spend more time at the command. I just would have. But that wasn't in the cards because my knees were starting to, all this stuff was just starting to just show up, you know. Yeah. It's showing up uninvited. Dude, yeah. But right as I retired, I would skip ahead just a little bit to as I retired, I met this guy named Joe Hippenip and Steel ultimate human performance.
Starting point is 02:30:08 And he basically showed me how to mobilize again, you know, to open all this up, you know. And I spent a year working with him. And I got, and he was paid for by the, I think the Navy SEAL Foundation or somebody. And I was like, no, dude, this is, this is awesome. And got everything opened up again. I could stand. And like I'd been working with the regular PT for like six months and no improvement. And 30 minutes of working with Joe, I was like, I walked out of there going, holy crap.
Starting point is 02:30:45 Like, God, it's extra room in my shoulders. Well, different, it stretches. Okay. And he's kind of unorthodox, but man, you feel it. Was it like, okay. Have you heard of active release therapy? Was it that kind of thing? Yeah, he does that where it's like, you know, you find that spot that's hot and you press on it.
Starting point is 02:31:03 it and you know your pain scale is you know one to 10 10 being the worst and one being nothing you go to like a six or a seven you can press to an eight you know and as you press on it you it feels like you're he's letting up but he's not the muscles just kind of it'll flutter and just and it's kind of let's go and it's like okay and you know and then just through the stretching and opening that up getting that new blood in there and that that changed everything for me um And then I started, I'd been doing kettlebells prior to a lot of good functional strength there, but I was still training like I was 25 and I'd just getting hurt. And then, you know, still eating like I'm 25.
Starting point is 02:31:46 So I was 20 pounds overweight and just, you know, and I was thinking, okay, yeah, you know, I'm still gutting through this and did that for a long time. And then about, oh, two years ago, I found this guy called the Knees Overtoes guy, Ben Patrick. Oh, yeah. started doing his stuff. Oh my God, next level. Now it's like, all right, I can do more stuff.
Starting point is 02:32:10 And then earlier this year, Virginia High Performance through the Navy SEAL Foundation, those guys, I went and did their month program. Did you do the one that's here in 10? Yeah, I'm a plank owner on that one. That's awesome. Yeah, if you haven't done it, dude, get in there. I'm going to let the guys that need it bad, you know, get in there.
Starting point is 02:32:29 You know, I'm still doing pretty good. So, but, yeah, I've heard nothing but awesome reports. Yeah, they open things up now physically to workouts a day. They teach you about nutrition and then they go on the cognitive stuff because, I mean, you know, we've taken some hits. Okay. When you're a breacher at Damnack, you take about a thousand minimum safe distance explosive exposures per year. I was down. I was a breacher there for seven years.
Starting point is 02:33:00 Okay. Now, my brain scan is clean, but I still have a few symptoms. I, like, faces. I don't, man, I've known you for years. I'm not going to free at you. But even guys that, you know, if I've made a long time, you know, so I went there for the grand opening. I'm just getting an elevator, and I see this guy.
Starting point is 02:33:24 I'm like, I know you from somewhere. It's Keith Davis. Okay? And he's like, yeah, coach. We're on Gold Squadron together. And I'm like, oh, yeah. And that used to really drive me nuts. And I, you know, but through working with them, you can't change that.
Starting point is 02:33:41 Okay. No, and Keith's like, he's, man. Joseph, like, he's not a guy that's changed a lot. He looks, I went to buzz with him. He looks exactly the same as he did that. Yeah. And he's tried at zero one. He's, you know, he's like, he's kind of a big deal these days.
Starting point is 02:33:56 And I was like, oh. Oh, yeah, okay. Like, damn. Anyway, but so that's, that's my big symptom there. As I lose that, those faces and names, that's my biggest thing. Other than that, I'm pretty clean. You know, and it used to like make me, you know, get, you know, this, I should have known that, you know, I'd be pissed off at myself. But now that I understand that, there, I've taken a few hits.
Starting point is 02:34:24 And there is that. It's like, I'm lucky that it's not something that, you know, I'm, you know, raging and hitting people or going, you know, off the rails. None of that happens. And when I identify that coming up, I can just breathe through it. It's no problem. We're all good. You know, yeah.
Starting point is 02:34:44 Yeah, and that's, you know, you hear like the guys that were in the NFL or they, and they say, you know, they're all banged up now. And they're like, what would you do again? And they're like, hell, yeah. Yeah, like that's... Had I known this, you know, this is now available to the guys that are still doing the job. Yeah. So, you know, I tell them, hey, you use it. You know, I mean, keep being good, you know, stay in that fight for as long as you can't. I would have stayed longer.
Starting point is 02:35:13 The next generation is going to be a lot more durable over the long haul because their nutrition's better. Their PT is better. Like you said, man, we were doing bodybuilding or triathlon. Like there was a bodybuilding group of guys. There was like a triathlon group of guys. And no one was doing anything that really made like true sense. And then, you know, as the things moved along, you know, by the time we got around 2000, 2000, right around as the war was kicking off, people started recognizing that we could actually be smarter about this stuff, that there was better ways to work out, that there was better ways to eat.
Starting point is 02:35:53 Like we start. And now, and now I think the final people. is like there's better ways to train where for instance is it really necessary to take a thousand breaches a year probably not at minimum safe distance you know there's a lot of things that we could do you know you know I would I always think about being like an RSO on Carl Gustav Day you know it's like oh hey let's go out there I'm take a task unit worth of guys out there and everyone's gonna shoot a Carl G and I'm there's three of us RSOs so I'm gonna suck start freaking
Starting point is 02:36:25 You got to eat, yeah. You got to eat the majority. You're like, well, I got a little headache this evening, you know? And so being smarter about that stuff, I think these guys, their durability, their longevity is going to be, is going to be better than ours. Yeah, and technology and recovery. That's a big thing. As I get older, it's like, okay, I can still do a lot of stuff now, but I can do it
Starting point is 02:36:46 once and then I got to lay down for a bit, you know, whereas when you're young, yeah, bounce bite back. I was introduced to this thing called a shift wave. And you have to look it up. I don't know all the science behind it. It looks like a lawn chair with a bunch of discs in it that vibrate to a certain, you know, they're tunable. And I sit on this thing and... Can I tune mine to Metallica?
Starting point is 02:37:12 Well, it does a little biofeedback thing. So you could listen to Metallica if you wanted to and just, but it goes off your breathing and you're, you know, it reads all that stuff. And, yeah, I've been using it. It's kind of like an active meditation. You put on the headphones and it kind of walks you through, they're breathing in, breathing out, and it, you know, you sync with the, with the vibrations. And, I mean, you know, they can they can basically duplicate your brain waves in sleep. Okay. This is what the doc was telling me.
Starting point is 02:37:43 It was like, oh, wow, that's be kind of cool. And they built in this lawn chair so it's, you could fly it away. It's a lawn chair with a like a little pelican case that goes with it. and I've been using the thing for about five months now. So you like half one in your house? Yeah, yeah. They gave you one. They gave me one to say, hey, man.
Starting point is 02:38:03 Because I'm talking to this clinical psychiatrist in Tulane University, right? And anyway, he shows me this thing. It's like, I'm kind of new age. My wife, she's awesome. You know, she finds this stuff, you know, grounding. We've got a grounding sheet on the bed. There you go. I go barefoot, like, all the time.
Starting point is 02:38:27 And I'm being in the technology with the smart watch and the aura ring and all that stuff that monitors, all this stuff. And when he saw that, I was like, huh. And I've got that information, that record. So it was like, okay, sit on this thing and, you know, just play around with it and we'll see how things go. And let me tell you, it's eye-opening. You get on this thing and it's weird. It's, you know, but it shakes you, you know, and then it'll just stop. And then you still feel like you're buzzing, you know.
Starting point is 02:38:59 It's really cool. And there's a bunch of different, you know, settings that you can do and, you know, frequencies. It's badass, you know. I mean, look into it, but it's pretty cool. What's it called? It's called a shift wave. Shift wave. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:39:15 You're going to check it out. Maybe you have to get in the shift wave. Yeah. Hey, if you want to try it. to my house. I take a little ride on it, you know, and see what's up. It, uh, it shakes you, like, you know, when you're like skydiving, you get out and everything's like, you know, everything's going, you know, the, it feels kind of like that, but, uh, and you can adjust how much, how much, you know, if you're, you know, tone it down, I crank that thing up all the time. Uh, what about ice?
Starting point is 02:39:41 Are you doing ice and sauna or anything like that? I've got a far infrared sauna at the house, and that is the key. And I, my wife's talking about getting the, uh, uh, the coal plunge. I'm like, well, before we spend a bunch of money on that one, because that's just not. The sauna is like uncomfortable slowly, but it's warm. And, you know, yeah, that ice plunge thing is like, all right. Maybe.
Starting point is 02:40:05 Let's try with the tub at first, you know. But my wife, she's a, she's hypnototherapist. And, you know, she does guided meditations, you know. She's got crystals in your house. Oh, yeah. Just full on. Yeah. We're getting.
Starting point is 02:40:17 Crystals. Oh, you know. Dreamcatchers. Incense and smudge pots and, yeah, yeah. He gets her all the bad energy and, you know, she's, she's, um, where'd you find her? Okay, so well, I was it, damn neck. I went to go work with the, uh, the special boat service over there and, uh,
Starting point is 02:40:37 so she's a Brit. She's Brett. You know my wife's a Brit. No, I didn't know that. I'm gonna have to link them up, but no freaking crystals in my house, bro. She can come hang in, she can come get my ice bath. It's, it's all good. Oh yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:40:49 Maybe we'll try. You can come over sitting in a shift wave. We'll do some shift wave and our wives can drink tea. Exactly. Yeah, I know. But yeah, she's got her own practice and she does guided meditations on YouTube. So she's guided by Corey, you know. And she's just kids' meditations and stuff like that.
Starting point is 02:41:10 So she's doing a lot of good stuff. And, you know, the left brain, right brain stuff. You know, I'm really left brain, logical. And she's so right brain. just open to everything. And I think it makes us a good mix, you know. And that's, yeah. What was the name of her YouTube channel?
Starting point is 02:41:30 Yeah, it's guided by Corey. Guided by Corey. Yeah, C-O-R-Y is her name. Does she talking an ASR-M, is that the right word? A-S-M-R-M-R-U-N-A-S-M-R. You know what that is? Yeah. Does she have that voice?
Starting point is 02:41:41 She's British. Come on, man. I mean, she's exotic straight away. Like, oh, wow, you know. Yeah, and she's doing some other stuff where there's just like, it's really quiet and just makes noise. She's just getting into that ASMR type. That's the thing, dude. That's the thing.
Starting point is 02:41:56 And then she'll just like quietly, you know, give you a little boost, you know, like lower your shoulder. You know, all that. Yeah. And, yeah, so she's got a couple of, you know, things set up like that. So she's, you know, she's always looking for that next thing to be able to bring, you know, I mean, bring peace and surrender to the soul. Yeah, to the soul, to anybody who needs it, you know. In the game. Everybody needs it, you know, what the hell?
Starting point is 02:42:26 Right on. But before you retired, you did some time, what, at Unit 3? We went out there for a bit. Yeah, backing up. I was working at Warcom and I'm working for three. retired seal master chiefs and they're like you should put your warrant package in you should put your warrant package in and I'm like dude if I deal with you shut up and so I did and they picked me up first time yeah of course I'm like okay and that came with a one year
Starting point is 02:42:53 unaccompanied yeah you're gonna pay for it off to yeah and and but I was up for orders anyway they could have said I could have declined you know the warrant and and they would have sent me anyway but anyway where I met my wife at when I was at the command. So we did like maybe, you know, three-month deployments. She'd never done a six-month deployment. So now we're gone for a year. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:43:16 So, yeah, people are off the ceiling and go, okay, honey. How does crystals work out, I mean? Yeah. They probably helped out a lot for her mental state, you know, while I was gone. And, of course, you know, you know this. Every time you leave town, that's when the car breaks and, you know, everything goes wrong. Yeah. But yeah, so she was thrown into the straight into the fire at that point.
Starting point is 02:43:40 And I went over and did my warrant officer stuff over there. I was the training officer and the combat systems officer. And whenever they needed something done, that's the warrant's job. You know, nobody knows what a warrant officer does. But we just fill in all the cracks, you know. Yeah. Yeah, you and I were running around Warcom at the same time because I was the free of the aid. Yeah, you were the aid.
Starting point is 02:44:03 And I was. So we'd high five each other. in the hallway and you'd laugh at me going you freaking dork. How many coins you got in your pocket there, Jock? Yeah. Thank God it was for Admiral McGuire because he was just a great dude. But yeah, not fun. But you'd be like, oh, I'm going back to freaking blow shit up again
Starting point is 02:44:23 and shoot more guns. And I'd be like, cool, I'm going to write a freaking thank you note to Ambassador so-and-so. Go make these copies. Yeah, go make these copies. And then you closed out your career. as a as a buds instructor. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:44:38 So when you're a team guy, the last place you want to go is buds, because you might miss something, you know. And that was the last place I went. And I'd been overseas for a year and then made the deals. Like I'm just gonna go back to to Buds for a couple of years and then go to a team. That's the deal I made with the, the, the retailer.
Starting point is 02:45:02 So I roll back, third phase training office, and I didn't have to do any of the admin stuff that I was supposed to because we had an admin guy. We had a retiring OSC who did everything. I was like, dude, that's the way. So that freed me up. So I would just split my time on the island with the master chief and the lieutenant. And we got out there and just I spent most of my time, which kind of matched up with the weapons guys.
Starting point is 02:45:33 And so I did line coach. I didn't teach any classes, but I was still doing a warrant officer stuff, so I get pulled off of the range to go deal with VIPs and whatever else. But I was learning how to teach at that point. And then when 25 rolled around, just prior to, you know, my 25 years, I had this really cool idea. Admiral had a cool idea about anchor teams, and he was going to send me to Bangladesh for four years.
Starting point is 02:46:04 like you know what look at the time 25 years we're done and he's like our you know old CB you know was like you sure because you know once you submit those papers you can't take them back I'm like yeah I'm good that would that's not me I do everything then the Navy I can't do this I've got two daughters at home and they're preteens it was not a good time for for that and he goes okay want a job So I rolled out of there and I rolled into the instructor position and, you know, we started off. And we started immediately making changes. There weren't enough seals to be buds instructors at the time.
Starting point is 02:46:52 Okay. They want them out, you know, doing seal stuff. So they decided to do contract buds instructors. And the first batch was done like a year before I retired. So Gordon Evans, I don't know if you know. He was at Team 5 for a long time. He and I were the guys, he and Nick's White, were the instructors at, for weapons. And because we were there, we were just there, the idea was like, I can be there for five years.
Starting point is 02:47:22 And then we'll have enough guys and we'll just back for you and send you on your way. So you're like wearing a blue and gold full on? Oh yeah. Blue and gold, eight point cover. Boy Scout shorts, the whole nine yards. What did they call, what the students call you, just instructor? Mr. Coach Yolo.
Starting point is 02:47:39 Mr. Coach, okay. Yeah. Yeah, and it was, we wanted to make that difference between us because when I stepped up to a guy on the line, I didn't want him thinking, oh, crap, this guy's going to hammer me. I want him to think, oh, it's coach.
Starting point is 02:47:52 He's going to help me. All right. So I was never the heavy. You know, now if guys kept on screwing up, I'd get, oh, hey, so what could you do right about now that would make you never want to do that ever again. Get wet. Oh, good idea. You know, go hit the dip tank, you know. Um, but yeah, so we took this, um, up until then, if you had somebody who knew how to teach weapons, guys learned more.
Starting point is 02:48:19 If you didn't and you guys were only there for two years. So you had a good shooter, you know, and that'd be great. If you had somebody who wasn't that good. So you were kind of relying on how good the class could be, right? You, the class was guiding the schedule and how far can we get the class? And we changed that. We're like, nope, we're going to reverse engineer this. And on this day, you will be here. On this day, you will be here on this day. And we started writing stuff down and trying stuff. It was like a big laboratory on how to shoot. And so, you know, Gordy and I, we wrote things down. We tried new stuff. If it worked, we kept it. If it didn't, you know, And we just modified, we started calling the sacred scrolls,
Starting point is 02:49:00 it was basically the dailies, you know. And then that grew into, okay, here's the things you want to be looking for. So when we taught the new instructors, like on this day, this is what they're going to be doing wrong. Okay, and so be looking for it. And this is the corrections that we want to start. And every day built on itself, we would teach them the night before after dinner.
Starting point is 02:49:22 Then they would dry fire for 45 minutes to an hour and get some sleep. And then the next morning, we go to the range. And they would warm up and then do what would they learn the night before, have lunch, come back for a range in the afternoon, again, more. Second range there. And then they'd come back, eat dinner, and then back in the classroom for the next thing that was going. And we pushed that along and we built this system. Whereas like when we went through training, some guys could shoot and some guys couldn't.
Starting point is 02:49:56 No, everybody can shoot. I can teach you to shoot as long as you listen to what I'm saying and do it. Okay, if you're going to fight me. Okay, there's only so much I can do. I can't crawl into your head and control you. I was talking to some young guys and I was basically saying, hey, there's some people, like you take 100 people. There's going to be a person, maybe one or two people. They're not going to be able to shoot a pistol well.
Starting point is 02:50:22 Now, very seldom will you get someone that literally like isn't going to be able to pass. How often would somebody not be able to, like, get dropped from buds for Pistol? How often did that happen? I think it probably happened in the 13 years I was there, maybe eight times. Okay. So it's pretty rare that someone gets struck, but probably a lot more guys would get rolled. We would roll them. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:50:45 We'd roll them, and then they would come back and if they still couldn't do it. And we designed a remediation for them so that when they weren't on the island. And initially it was like, you know, you fail pistol, you're off the island. I was like, well, no, let's keep them around. Oh, yeah. You know, and they'd shoot more. And so week one was, or weapons one, and then we'd leave the island and demo would come in.
Starting point is 02:51:07 They'd do arts and crafts with explosives for a week. And then we'd come back and teach them combat shooting. Well, halfway through the combat shooting was their last attempt. So they've got all those extra trigger squeezes. So most of the time they would make. And if they couldn't, then the next time they came through, they would. So. Occasionally.
Starting point is 02:51:25 When a guy, one of those eight, people. What are they doing? What does it look like to you? Okay. If I tell a guy, hey, you're doing it. It's not like, hey, don't do that. I'm like, no, I'm going to show you physically. If I'll put my hands on you and say, no, hold the gun like this, squeeze it like this. I can use all the techniques I could. But if you can't do that, if you're not applying what I teach you, and then there's the guys that are great when there's no stress, but just the stress of that stopwatch was enough to just blow their mind. And they're great when they're not under stress. Well, that's not the job you're applying for your guys. It's not going to be a good team
Starting point is 02:52:07 guy. That ain't going to work out. This is the least amount of stress we could possibly give you. It's a stopwatch. Okay. Nobody's shooting back at you. No one's yelling at you. Just get up there and perform. And so I would tell them, it's like, look, we're looking for that guy who can compartmentalize, who can take all those noises in his head and put them aside and just get to work. You know, just do the job. Don't listen to the, you know, because everybody's got that noise in their head
Starting point is 02:52:33 that's, you know, overthinking. And, you know, you could tell by the guy's target whether he was an overthinker or whether he was just sloppy, you know. Overthinkers, when we started giving them time drills, their shot groups got better just because they didn't have enough time to overthink. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:52:50 You know, and those guys were pretty easy. easy to correct. The guys that were like really good, you know, when there was no time limit, and then you give them the time limit and they start going, you know, nuts, you know, and everything would open up. It's like, okay, those guys are just trying to, they're racing the clock. It's like, no, no, and I give them techniques, and they would work. And then you teach guys how to move and shoot and how to use cover and how to transition from your rifle to your pistol and there's all this stuff that we're getting unbuds. I mean, you know, I got, I picked up the gun off of the bench and shot it at the round target and then
Starting point is 02:53:28 put it back down again and that was the training that we got in Buds. So guys are leaving buds and initially in the first couple years, the new guys were showing up to the team and out shooting the old guys. Because they didn't have any, you know, they had fewer training scars. Yeah. You know, and we had driven them to this. And, you know, we were still, still working that and it was still, it's still working now. Um, they're not. focused more on combat shooting earlier and they've moved the qual courses to later on in training so that's changed up a little bit but apparently that's there's some uh having some good results um as well right on it so you wrapped up with that you retired in 2010 after you got done with your
Starting point is 02:54:11 bud's career um then you rolled right into doing that contract and you did that for like for yeah 13 years 13 years yeah yeah um i train you know you know guys i did platoons with their kids came through and you know it was that was rewarding i would like you know maybe i'm gonna take a picture of them and just randomly hey what's your dad's phone number you know and just send a a random picture you know it's like ha ha taking care of your boy you know um but yeah it was uh you know yeah we learned a lot and i and i taught pretty much everybody who's uh an operative rating seal now. If you went through buds in the last 13 years, you probably remember my name. Coach Yolo is kind of hard to forget. Actually, 16 years because I was a warrant officer for a three.
Starting point is 02:54:57 So it was 16 years total that I was working there. And it wasn't the best job I ever had in my life, but I'd give it second best. You know, tough to be being an assater, but teaching people how to do the job, man. That's awesome. And then, and so now you're done with that. And we kind of already talked about what you're doing now, but just, just so we've got, what's the website that you, what's your website? Yeah. Sorry. Practical? Practical firearms instruction.
Starting point is 02:55:29 Dot com. And on there, you know, I do individuals. I'll do groups, whatever, you know, and it's just a matter of scheduling these days because I've gotten pretty busy, you know. I mean, I've been back to Tennessee and Massachusetts. It's working with the Smith and Westing guys trying to get this, you know, the initial pistol offering from Lipsies, you know. In fact, I'm going there, what, day after tomorrow. Nice. For the grand opening. They're moving a lot of their manufacturing stuff down to Tennessee from Massachusetts. Yeah. Well, there's a reason for that. Pay attention, Massachusetts. Come on, people. Yeah. Be business friendly out there. That's my recommendation. And you're at you have an Instagram, too, which is at practice. Firearms instruction. Yeah, I think so. I don't see I did all this stuff just kind of on the side that when I had a day job and I just kind of I didn't really look at this stuff. But you know now, you know, this is becoming my day job. I'm having to make that adjustment. So yeah, you know, you got a lot you got a ton of knowledge, you know, 30 years in NSW and a lot of that really focused specifically on shooting. So for you to not share that knowledge seems like it would be a
Starting point is 02:56:47 bad thing to do and for you to be able to take look there's it's a beautiful time that you can someone like you can can share your information with anybody that wants it i mean that's awesome and and then of course there's like you said there's more advanced things if people want to hire you to come out but if they can't hire you come out because they don't have the money or don't have the time cool there's the information so yeah or i mean tactical hive dot com or just put in tactical hive on youtube and something will come up you just got to search our backlog and you know i'll teach you how to hold a gun, how to, you know, point shoot and, you know, just give you gear ideas, you know, and we've been thinking about this for a long time. So I've shifted this because, you know,
Starting point is 02:57:27 some of the stuff I was doing was low-vis, so we learned to, you know, go concealed and all that. And that's what people are going to be doing. And what you're going to learn from me is, you know, how to use it. But there's a priority of training here. Okay. So number one for training. is being able to employ the gun, clearing your garment and getting the gun into action. And then the next thing is correcting malfunctions. Okay, I don't care about changing magazines because you're going to pull that thing. If you get a click instead of a bang, you've got to be able to fix it like right now. Get those reps in.
Starting point is 02:58:06 And then we'll start talking about other stuff, you know. So employing the gun first and, you know, and then worrying about to correct a mile functions and then we'll go on to all the other ancillary stuff but those are the two things that's what's going to matter right in the moment right and when we talk about gear the gear has to work okay number one it has to be portable because you can have something that goes bang every time but it weighs 10 pounds guess what you know that that mark 23 it's an awesome pistol but you are not carrying that you know on a daily basis so portability is number one okay reliability is number two accuracy is a far third because most of the, you know, statistically, most of your encounters are going to be
Starting point is 02:58:55 at close range and you're going to be point shoot. You're be focused on that target and you're just going to point that gun out there and start squeezing. Now, if you've done that with two eyes open and you understand how to aim with two eyes open, and I can teach you how to do that too, that's not heart. That'll give you a good, you know, a good starting point. Good foundation for sure. Yeah. You're going to start with that combat first. And if you want to branch out and do other stuff, fine. But so, you know, portability first, reliability, and then worry about accuracy. And, you know, you know, capacity as a gun. I mean, depends. You know, you have different threat levels. So I carry a different gun depending on what my
Starting point is 02:59:40 perceived threat level is, you know, anyway, from a little seven-shot, uh, 22 Magnum, you know, revolver, Smith and Duff, Smith and Lesson to, you know, 38 to, you know, little subcontact nine mill to a, you know, up to a, like a Glock 19 or a, uh, oh, Sig 320, you know, so, yeah, and that's all depends on what your threat level, your perceived threat level is going to be. And then you learn how to deal with each. one of you dress to the gun a little bit, you know, all these little things that come up. But because I've been thinking about these things for so long, you know, it's now, you know,
Starting point is 03:00:21 and I know how to transfer that information to other people, I will give it all to you on YouTube. I want everybody who, whether you have money or not, to be able to understand this stuff. And if you already have a way that's working for you, I'm not going to say you're wrong, you know, because if I give you something that's different from the way you train, then you're going to have to understand. You're going to have to retrain. Yeah, you're going to have to invest time. Untrained and then retrain, yeah.
Starting point is 03:00:50 Yeah. It's a thing, man. Muscle memory, muscles don't have memory yet, but all your nerves get myelinated every time you do something. And if you do it the same, it's, yeah, those pathways, you know, those neural pathways get insulated and you start moving, you know, a whole lot faster and smoother and you don't have to think about it as much. But that comes with reps and it comes so I mean I'll get in that with guys you know I can talk about it on YouTube but then you got to go
Starting point is 03:01:19 find it if you want to come find me then you know we'll go to the range and I'll well I'll fix you it's a pain in the ass in California because you know California is so ungun friendly so I mean we travel to other states I don't like to travel very much I kind of like my my wife and my kids my grandkids shock waiver yeah yeah yeah yeah the burning sage the shift wave yeah the sage burning you know all that stuff man it's all good um yeah so that's what i'm doing now um you know at the moment we'll see what happens with um with uh how well people respond to the gun stuff and you know the watch band thing i think it's going to be a million dollar idea you know because it's not going to be very expensive but it's going to be really cool so commando bands you know want one you
Starting point is 03:02:10 i already want one i'll give you a prototype right on i'm ready for the commando band right on uh does that get us up to speed then we good yeah man i think so that's that's up to today man here we are now and then i run into you getting gas uh yeah hey dude you're not working for the navy anymore you should come on my podcast like man that now's the right time to do it I suppose. Right on. Carrie, you got any questions? No questions.
Starting point is 03:02:38 I just, I'm a big fan of what you're doing, removing that barrier for gun owners, especially new gun owners, getting them up to speed. That's awesome, man. I want nothing more than a carbine, or a carbine pistol now. What was that word?
Starting point is 03:02:55 Is that a pistol caliber carbine? The PCC. So that in the Commando Band, that's like my Christmas wish list. Yeah. Hell yeah. Right on. You got any closing thoughts?
Starting point is 03:03:08 Dude, I just want to thank you for allowing me to come up here. I've been, you know, I'm a big fan. Honestly, you know, Jaco, you're doing stuff that matters. You know, you're bringing information to people that, you know, maybe no one knows about. You know, you interview guys, you're a good interview, and people want to come and share their story. And I enjoy just listening. I mean, obviously it's not, there's no like time limit here because, you know, just keep going, you know, start, you know, but awesome.
Starting point is 03:03:42 This has been really, really good. And I just want to thank you for that, man. Right, oh, bro. Well, thanks for coming on, man. It's awesome to see you and catch up and get your experiences, get your lessons learned. And like I said, man, thanks for setting a great example for me as a young, new guy. I definitely needed it. And, you know, thanks for your service to the Navy, to the T.
Starting point is 03:04:03 and to the country, man. Thank you for making me feel old, man. Hey, that's not me. Thanks for all. Roger that, man. And with that, Mark Coach, Coachiollo has left the building. Good to see Coach, man. Still getting after it.
Starting point is 03:04:25 Still getting after all these years. And what I was, look, obviously awesome to hear about his experiences and just a great dude but I like the fact that he went just talking about the health and wellness part of his journey at one juncture he's sort of like done you know what I mean he's like oh I got to this point this many deployments this much time I was done broken and now back in the game all the way back in the game yeah man and that that stretching piece I feel that man because like my whole upper body, you know, feels like a clinched fist sometimes, you know?
Starting point is 03:05:06 And God, I feel that like cracking and stuff. You've got to stay on top of that stuff. Yeah. And what I like about it is, it's not too late. I don't know where you are right now. I don't know what's happening. What's happening in your world. But you might be feeling like, oh, it's too late.
Starting point is 03:05:22 Oh, I can't do this anymore. I know this goes back to a conversation I had it with Bert Soren. I was talking about overhead squats. I hurt my arm. Freaking Dean hurt. my arm, Dean Lister, you bastard. It hurt my arm, doing a showing a move, and I couldn't overhead squat for, for months, like 10 months.
Starting point is 03:05:46 I could not lock out my arm. Like, I could do a pull-up, but I couldn't go all the way down. So I could do everything, you know, after a little bit of time, I could do a pull-up. After a little time, I could do, you know, an overhead press, but I just couldn't lock it out. But an overhead squat, I couldn't do. So by the time it finally healed What I had to do is I was like okay I'm gonna do overhead squats I'm gonna try it oh I can lock it out okay that's feeling good
Starting point is 03:06:11 But my mobility was so bad that I couldn't do it with like any weight at all So I said all right well PVC pipe Let's let's go and I'll do p when when this happened I was using the frame of the squat rack to keep my to keep the PVC pipe directly over my head like not and I would just start it going all right this week I'll go you know 50% down next week I'll go 60% down 80% down finally got their mobility back then I started adding then I started doing it with the bar then I started doing it with you know 25 so just slowly build it back up and what I told bert was there's a moment where you think oh this movement is now gone this is something that I'm not
Starting point is 03:06:59 able to do anymore. Because I could have said that like oh well hell it's really hard for me feels uncomfortable or hurts maybe that I shouldn't do them anymore and that's the wrong answer. You need to put your ego in check and say okay time to rebuild that movement. Time to get this movement back. Do not submit to time and age. Don't submit. It's a fight. But keep fighting. Do what you got to do to get back. And what's incredible is the human being, the human body will adapt and it will make progress. This has been proven over and over again. This is just coach is another guy that's come out and said, I was done, didn't have any mobility my shoulders, sore all day, broken here, this is hurt. And then he put protocols into place. He
Starting point is 03:07:44 started doing the proper maintenance. He started cleaning up the food, cleaning up the workouts, doing the right things, getting the stretching done. And now he's back in the game. So that's what we're doing. That's what we're doing. And it's great to hear, coach, great dude. And thanks to him for coming on. And by the way, one thing you can do with this, deaf reset, right? This is a good way to get yourself back on the path. The path.
Starting point is 03:08:11 And you know, you and I were talking about the path yesterday. Because we're talking, you and I, a few other people, we were talking about the, what happens in people's lives. What little turns they make, what little decisions they make, what little moves they make. And let's face it. Every decision you make is going to have an impact. And if you take that little decision to eat a donut versus the little decision to eat a piece of beef turkey and you start multiplying those and compounding those out, they change who you are.
Starting point is 03:08:48 If you make a little decision that I'm going to sleep in today versus the little decision that, you know what, I'm just going to get up and push through this workout and you multiply that over time, These are two different people. These are two different human beings in six months. In six months. In six months. That transformation can take place. And then what else happens? What else happens?
Starting point is 03:09:12 What else goes on when you start making one bad decision? You're talking about drinking, actually. You know, we were not hanging out. And you were talking about, you know, basically, if you were drinking, things were going to go down. If you weren't drinking, things were going to get better. You're like, hey, I might not get in, I might not have a chaos night tonight.
Starting point is 03:09:34 I might not take some big giant step back tonight if I have a few drinks. But in the next three times of drinking, something's going to happen and I'm going in the wrong direction. Otherwise, you just put that and be like, okay, I'm not doing that anymore, which is the decision you made. I'm not doing that anymore. And all of a sudden, now my life's not going backwards. My life's going forward. The trajectory of your life changes. And that's what this is.
Starting point is 03:09:59 To me, it's so important to think about our lives and the trajectory of our lives. Because that's, what's the meaning of trajectory? It's where we're going. It's what it is, where we're going. Is our trajectory going up or is our trajectory going down? And every little decision that you make either elevates it or it starts to bring it down.
Starting point is 03:10:24 So keep that in mind. That's the, that's Def Reset, right? Def Reset is an opportunity to say, say, okay, for the next 30 days, I know I'm going up. My trajectory will be going up. And that is going to put that trajectory on a pace and in a direction that if you look about six months, you look up in a year, you're a different person. That's what we're doing.
Starting point is 03:10:46 And it comes down to that PVC pipe decision, right? Some people are more afraid of taking that step back of picking up that PVC pipe than they are of letting go of the overhead squat for the rest of their lives. They'd rather let that go and never do it again than have to subordinate that ego, pick up that PVC pipe and start from square one. And that's where that decision gets made. And there are PVC pipes all over life. All over your life.
Starting point is 03:11:19 Where you look at that thing and you subordinate that ego, pick up that PVC pipes. Python, start at square one again. That little step. And you start to build. And that's where you start to get the momentum, get that trajectory, get back on the path. So, Def Reset, it's, we're doing it in January. But you got to prep for it now. We posted some videos.
Starting point is 03:11:41 I posted a little podcast about it. Just get, start to prepare for it. Workouts and fitness, Jason Kalipa is going to be guiding those things. Leadership with Eschlam Front. I'm going to give some, some discipline directives. And then Jock Fuel. We're all doing it together. TheDeafreset.com.
Starting point is 03:12:01 Go check it out. And by the way, JoccoFuel, get yourself ready for it. Get the junk food out of your house. Get the freaking Doritos out of your house. Get the chocolate chip cookies out of your house. Get mold cookies. That's what we're doing. So joccofuel.com, get your greens.
Starting point is 03:12:19 Get your creatine. Creatine is so good for you. It's good for your mind. It's good for your body. Get these. things so that you're ready you can kick this thing off right you're gonna have you're gonna be working hard during death reset so get yourself some joint warfare some super crore just you guys know what we're doing joccofuel dot combe go get the fuel that you need you can
Starting point is 03:12:42 also get it at wawa you can get a vitamin shop g and c military commiss aphers haffes haniford dash stores in marykheim wakfurt shop right h eb down in tejas mire up in the midwest harris teeter lifetime fitness shields small gyms all over the place I know we have Victory MMA and fitness. We're here. Guess what we sell Jocko Fuel. If you want to sell JoccoFuel at your gym, email JF Sales at joccofuel.com. If you're going to a gym and you want them to Jocko Fuel,
Starting point is 03:13:10 give them that information so they can make it happen. So that's what we're starting off with some joccofuel.com. Also origin, usa.com. American made clothing, freedom that you put on your body. Liberty that you wear. That's what we're doing at Origin USA. Anti-slavery, anti-communism, anti-suffering, anti-destruction of the earth. That's what we're doing at OriginUSA.com.
Starting point is 03:13:45 You know what they do with the dye and the chemicals that they use in China? When they're done processing, they dump it in the river, goes into the ocean, kills everything. they're they're disgusting it's disgusting and all these big freaking liars in the fashion industry with their with their little uh virtue signaling talking about how they're for the environment they're not they're buying that they're literally paying for the destruction that's what they're they're liars they're they're scum so don't help them by buying their shit by American Made by OriginUSA.com.
Starting point is 03:14:27 That's what we're doing, Jiu Jitsu gear. Because if you're not training Jiu Jitsu, you're missing out. You're missing out 100%. Jiujitsu, workout gear, hunt gear, T-shirts, jeans, boots,
Starting point is 03:14:40 that's what we're doing. We're saving freedom, origin, USA.com. We also talked a lot about the path today. And you can get your discipline equals freedom gear, representing on the path at jaco store that's jocco store.com t-shirts rash guards hats just going with the script you're going with the echo charles with the script representing on the
Starting point is 03:15:03 path going with the script got to hold it down for the wine you're just holding down for the hawaiian that's what we're doing that's what we're doing if you were going to say something that was your own let's say let's say you had the creative liberties sure just to get crazy what would you should be saying about jogger store right now fire one off right now let's see where you're at This is a test. This is a test. So there's something that happens to you deep inside when you throw on anything with the X flag. This X flag that's on my left arm right here. As soon as I put on a shirt that has that X flag on it, something inside of my brain changes.
Starting point is 03:15:41 My eyebrows drop a little bit. My chin lowers. My shoulders come back a little bit. I am ready to go into what I'm about to do when I throw on any. piece of clothing with the X flag on it. I don't know what it is, but that's what happens to me. And I see that with other people too. I've been in the, we've been in the airport and we've seen a deaf core flag, you know, a deaf flag on a shirt in the wild, and that person is ready to get after it. And they come up and they say what's up, and they talk about how they're on the
Starting point is 03:16:11 path and how they're in the game. And we go and we do work. And that's what I like to see. There's a, you see got just, it just got left in the dust. He's been saying the same. shit for the last five years and you rolled in I put you on the spot a little bit sure but you were ready yeah you know why you had the Def Corps flag off you were like what oh you want me to talk some you want to say what's up I'll tell you what's up it's the truth okay dog coming in hot you will fill it and if you if you want if you want a deaf shirt a new Def shirt every month we've also got the shirt Locker that's a subscription service and Echo Charles just going crazy on the designs just
Starting point is 03:16:50 awesome designs and a lot of good reception from the troopers in the game too and every event we're at now there's there's kind of a segmentation of the get after it just great shirts and then you see that shirt locker shirt and it stands out and there's a whole group of people who are in the game on the shirt locker shirts and we see them and we say what's up and recognize them check check it out joggle store.com check out primalbeef.com Colorado Crows Craftbeef.com. You need steak in your life. You and I had steak last night.
Starting point is 03:17:26 We did. Matter of fact, that was some good steak. But I'll tell you what, I could tell it wasn't the best steak. It wasn't Colorado craft beef. It wasn't primal beef. It was normal steak. Look, it's a rabbi. I'm not turning down a rabbi.
Starting point is 03:17:40 Yeah. I mean, I'm going to get into it. I'll get into it. But now that I regularly eat primal beef and Colorado craft beef, Now that that's just part of the whole scene, you know, the normal rib-eyes, they don't do it anymore. Yeah, they just don't do it anymore. So check those out. Also, subscribe to the podcast.
Starting point is 03:18:03 Also, jaco underground.com. Also, YouTube channels, check them out. We got the Jocko podcast YouTube channel. We got the Jocco Fuel YouTube channel. We got the Origin USA YouTube channel. We got the Ashland Front YouTube channel. We've got all kinds of YouTube for you to watch. Psychological warfare, get that if you don't have it, I guess.
Starting point is 03:18:24 If you don't have it by now, you probably, I mean, your life is probably falling apart, you know, so sorry. But if you want to get your life back together, psychological warfare, wherever you can get an MP3, it's in there. Flipsidecanvas.com, Dakota Meyer, out there making cool stuff for you to hang on your wall and keep you on the path. Books, you know, I've written a bunch of books. Get them. The newest version of leadership strategy and tactics. Mod 2 is out. There's some key information, some key updates in there.
Starting point is 03:18:54 The extreme ownership leadership loop talk to you about how to make decisions. You and I were in a critical situation the other day. And you know what the first thing in the extreme ownership leadership loop is? What's the number one thing? What's time? Time. So you and I were a time critical situation. And we reviewed what had happened.
Starting point is 03:19:17 My entire thought process took place in less than one. one minute. You can tell that if you review what I did, the very first thing I thought of was time. This is I need to make a decision right now and that's exactly what I did. All in one minute. Right. A whole game changing scenario was unfolding. And in one minute, I already made a decision and was executing. Right. Like that's a thing. And we have receipts to confirm that. Yeah. Well, that's the thing. We went back and I was like, you know, we had a, we had a whole scenario that could have blown up, right? And then we kind of were debriefing it. And I was like, let me pull out the receipts on this. And sure enough, everything was done in one minute. And that's, that's the benefit
Starting point is 03:20:02 of running the loop habitually. Yep. Getting those reps in. You get quick with it. Yep. And it was just all boom, going down. And the time, the immediate decision was made. And then it was like, I was running the rest loop. Okay, how do we, how do we support what's happening? Right. How are we going to cover move? We need a simple plan right here. Like just went through it. That's what we do. Yep. And guess what?
Starting point is 03:20:23 All worked out kind of to 100% level. Kind of really worked out. 100. So that's what we're doing. Get that leadership strategy and tactics. The new one, the mod two of that field manual. And then I got a bunch of other kids books. The kids books, adult books.
Starting point is 03:20:41 Check out the kids books. Way of the Warrior Kid. One, two, three, four, and five. These are going to help the kids that you know. All of them. This is Christmas right here, by the way. Oh, yeah. This is what you do for Christmas.
Starting point is 03:20:51 This is what you do for every kid that you know. Oh, what do you do? What do you get for Christmas for a kid? You change their life. You change the trajectory of their life. That's what you do for Christmas for a kid. Warrior Kid box has the flag in it, has the book in it. This is what you do for kids.
Starting point is 03:21:08 There you go. Freaking Santa Carrie over there putting out ordered. My niece and nephew. Hell yeah. Got Warrior Kid stuff. They are Warrior Kids in the game now. And my brother-in-law, my sister and brother-in-law's garage hangs the warrior kid flag. They are in the game.
Starting point is 03:21:26 How old are they? Five and seven. How are they doing? Awesome. Focused. Focused. Little dude, my nephew, has to be benched in games because he scores too much. That's what's happening.
Starting point is 03:21:41 Bro. Yeah. That's what I'm saying. Little dude. You might want to get your kids these books and your neighbor's kids. Because wouldn't be nice if there's a fire at your house someday. and your neighbor who's nine years old comes over, breaks out a hose and puts out the fire
Starting point is 03:21:54 before it engulfs your house, be nice, wouldn't it? That's what a warrior kid's gonna do. You know what a normal kid's gonna do? Keep playing video games. That's what's gonna happen. Let's get the neighborhood watch going with the children. So there you go, warrior kids. Also, Escalonfront, we have a leadership consultancy.
Starting point is 03:22:13 We solve problems through leadership. That is what we do. We work with companies. We embed into companies and we help align the leadership around the principles that we utilized in combat, that we utilize inside of all these businesses that you hear us talk about, and that we've helped scores of other companies get increased profitability, get increased efficiency, and get improved relationships up and down and across their chain of command. This is what we do at Eshalamfront. So go to Eshalmfront.com if you need leadership consultants inside your organization. We also have some live events. You can check those out also at Eshlamfront.com.
Starting point is 03:23:03 We have an online training platform as well. It's at Extreme Ownership.com. This is where you can learn these principles that you can then apply to every aspect of your life. I don't care what you're doing right now. I don't care if you're a 22-year-old that's hunting for a job and you're making, you know, 80 bucks a week working in the school library. You still need a plan. You need to put things together.
Starting point is 03:23:34 You need to figure things out. You can utilize these leadership principles if you're that person or if you're the CEO of a giant company with 8,000 employees. We will teach you these principles. Extremeownership.com. That's what we're doing. Compli them across the board. Yes, sir. Also, Extreme Ownership Academy,
Starting point is 03:24:00 new course out, extreme ownership for middle management. A lot of demand for that one. Questions all the time about, hey, I'm a new leader or I'm just got promoted to a middle management position. What do I do? That course is going to do.
Starting point is 03:24:17 tell you. Yeah. And I guess I should have made that a little more clear. Yeah. It doesn't matter if you're the lowest person on the totem pole that just got hired or you're out looking for a job or you're the senior person at that organization or you're anyone in between. Go to extreme ownership.com. Learn the skill of leadership. Also, if you want to help service members active and retired, you want to help their families, gold star families check out. Mark Lee's mom, Mama Lee. She's got a charity organization. And if you want to donate or you want to get involved, go to America's mighty warriors.org. Also, we've got Heroes and Horses.org.
Starting point is 03:24:52 Help Micah Fink bring our veterans up into the mountains so they can find themselves. And then Jimmy May's organization beyond the brotherhood.org. And actually, Coach has done some stuff for them as well. So check that out. If you want to help veterans transition to the civilian sector, we appreciate it. If you want to connect with us on the algorithms, on the websites of the world,
Starting point is 03:25:18 well, let's remember what we've got for coach. Coaches, you can check out practical firearms instruction.com. You can check out tactical hive.com. And also he's on the Graham at Practical Firearms Instruction. And of course, Kerry is at Kerry Hilton. Straight up. We got it handled. We did.
Starting point is 03:25:40 Last time you sat in the chair. What was going on? You had an underscore in there. I had an underscore in there. Carrie underscore Helton. Shout out to Jack Daniel Hill. Just getting it done. No matter what else can you throw at that kid.
Starting point is 03:25:55 Bro, let's face it. If you got, let's face it, Carrie Helton, you want to talk about the trajectory of your life. When you had that underscore in there, bro, bro. Nothing was good. Nothing was going good. It was just like the whole world was kind of falling apart. 100%.
Starting point is 03:26:09 Then it's, You meet someone now. We have to talk about you on the podcast. We want to talk about how to connect with you. We just need to say at Kerry Helton. At Carrie Helton. We don't need to say underscore. Back up.
Starting point is 03:26:20 The trajectory is looking on. So check out at Carrie Helton. No underscore. And I'm at Jocko Willing. Just watch out for the algorithm. It's going to grab you. And it's going to try and kill you. Am I exaggerating?
Starting point is 03:26:38 I don't know. It's going to kill your time. I promise. you that and what are you you are your time so yep it's killing you watch out for it thanks once again to mark cochiolo uh for joining us just awesome to see you awesome to talk to you and awesome to share your story and it's it's awesome for guys like mark to be out here and communicate and and share his lessons and there's a lot of guys like mark in the shadows you know they're not going to be on social media they're not doing these kinds of things but they're out there they're out there
Starting point is 03:27:17 protecting america and thanks to all those folks that are out there right now doing this we don't see him we don't see them on on social media we don't see them you know um in the interwebs we don't see them why because they're out there doing god's work so thanks to all the folks in uniform around the world right now in harm's way to keep us free. And the same goes to our police and law enforcement, firefighters, paramedics, EMTs, dispatchers, correctional officers, border patrol, secret service, all first responders. Thank you all for going into harm's way every day to keep us safe here at home. And everyone else out there as coach taught countless seals over the years.
Starting point is 03:28:04 keep your eyes on that target because that's where it's happening and that's how you get things done and until next time this is act and until next time this is not echo this is carey and jocco out

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