Jocko Podcast - 541: Skills, Struggle, and Responsibility. With Jimmy May.
Episode Date: May 20, 2026>Join Jocko Underground Full Episodes< Jimmy May returns to discuss life after the military, helping veterans transition, building stronger families, and teaching the next generation resilience ...and responsibility.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko Podcast number 541 with Echo Charles and me, Jocco Willink.
Good evening, echo.
Good evening.
The military provides more than a job.
It provides identity, community, structure, and purpose.
When those pillars are removed simultaneously, many veterans experience what researchers
call transition stress, a combination of identity, disruption, loss of community,
and uncertainty about the future.
Common challenges include translating military skills.
in a civilian resume language, navigating unwritten workplace norms that differ vastly from
military culture, finding community after leaving the tight-knit bonds of service, managing
mental health during a period of major life change. Understanding these challenges is the first
step toward overcoming them. The military to civilian transition is not an ending. It's a
redeployment. Your mission has changed, but your capacity for excellence has not.
And that right there is a quote from an article written about an organization called Beyond the Brotherhood.
And it was actually founded by one of my brothers from the teams who started his Navy career as an enlisted man on the path of becoming a Navy nuclear technician.
Oh, you're going to say that.
Hey, it was your career.
Thankfully, he found his way to college, ROTC, commissioning and the seal pipeline, made it through the seal pipeline, stationed at seal pipeline, stationed at Seal.
Team 2 followed by language school for Arabic, which he utilized when he joined task unit
bruiser in Ramadi, actually arriving the day that Mark Lee was killed. He was on the operation
when Mike Monsor was killed. He was wounded himself, a through and through miracle shot to the chest
that missed his body armor and thankfully also missed his heart, his lungs, his ribs, his arteries,
and his veins. And he went on to become a platoon commander.
at SEAL Team 3 where he worked for Seth Stone.
He was a troop commander.
He's Exo at Bud's deputy commander at Sieges Sodif.
Opposite Group 1.
He's been on this podcast before.
Episode 405.
So if you want to hear the details of his career and the teams,
you can have a listen to that.
But Jimmy May hasn't taken his foot off the gas since retiring.
And beyond the Brotherhood has continued to have a huge impact.
And that's not the only place that he's been making things happen.
And he's back with us again to share some of the...
his experiences and lessons learned.
Jimmy,
thanks for coming back, man.
Thanks for having you, brother.
You've been turning and burning as usual.
Yeah.
Although you take November and December off.
That's correct.
And July?
That's right.
That's legit.
Yeah, because, you know,
I missed most of my first two kids' lives
because I was gone 300 days a year in the teams.
You know what it's like.
And now I've got a second chance,
and I have, he'll be 12 this weekend.
and, you know, I just want to soak it all in.
And so having those months available because he's off a lot of school,
so we do a lot of cool things.
It's been so good.
So you got, speaking of family, you got your oldest daughter is about to.
She's about to finish.
She's graduating for medical school and Baylor.
So super proud of her.
She's been driving hard.
I mean, she was nine years old.
She told me she'd be a doctor and she never looked back.
You couldn't talk her out of it, huh?
You can't talk her out of nothing.
She's got a hard head.
She must get her from her mom.
That's what I'm thinking.
But no, she's super squared away.
She got married about two weeks ago.
Another doctor.
Great, great young man.
Just really happy for them.
And so she's about to do a residency in Alabama.
So really, like she's got a bright light ahead of her.
How long is residency?
Three years?
I think it's four years.
I think it depends on what you're choosing.
She wants to be general because she doesn't want to like get stuck at some, you know,
big campus where you got to like, you know, be in the city.
So she wants to kind of have a broader reach with things.
Chuck. And then what about your, what about your middle son?
Middle son, dude, you wouldn't recognize him. He, I saw him at the wedding and he was jacked. He's
right. I couldn't recognize him. I was like, who is it? How old is he? He's 21. I guess the,
the male stuff started flowing and he's fighting. I'm not tell you. Oh, he is?
Oh, yeah. He's fighting. He's training hard and he's about to finish the semester early and he's to start
vet school. So I just, he's got applications in, but I'm pretty confident he'll get he's been working
in the vet industry for a long time.
I think he's a, he's got stray days.
He's good.
Bro, when you're between the ages of perhaps maybe like 14 and 24,
you're on steroids, like for all practical purposes.
Like you are on, if you're that age right now and you're listening to me,
this is the best opportunity in your life to get jacked and strong.
Echo Charles.
Yeah.
Agree?
Yeah.
And yeah, good news about that is it goes beyond that as well, age wise.
But is that the peak time?
Did I get it right?
Yes, but it depends on for what.
So, I mean, look, I'm not going to make it about, you know, my knowledge on this topic.
But yes, in a way, chemically, yes, structurally maybe not.
You know, and if you're going for like big muscles, it extends more.
If you're going for performance, not so much.
But what's the peak performance time, 33 or something like that?
No, that's like muscularity and stuff like that.
They call it muscle maturity.
But no, performance is going to be probably around 25.
Give or take really yeah performance yeah really pure performance 25 is the peak yeah but I mean what about what about strength feats
same it depends on what you mean by strength so like even like pro like again this is a whole rabbit hole but even you saying like we just said an absolute word I forget what it was but you can't say it's not it's it ranges you see what I'm saying but even strength it's like what kind of strength power lifting
you know, it's probably think guys are big and they're older.
They'll like in the 30s.
Right, because structurally you need, you know, all this stuff or whatever, but like recovery
or like speed that's more younger guys.
Now, when you were at Buds working as an instructor, Jimmy, the young guys are having
a harder time, right?
Because they haven't quite like matured out.
Yes and no.
Like you look at Hellweek and on the backside of Hell Week, if guys are like 18 to 20,
those guys are wearing shoes the next day.
It's like their body just snaps back.
But like guys are like 24.
It still sounds young, but it takes a little while for them to mature.
Above 28, dude, I mean, you got to get a waiver to get into buds.
And we gave, I think we gave 11 waivers when I was the XO there.
Zero made it.
The body just doesn't heal fast enough.
So it's a young man's game for sure.
Damn, I didn't know that kind of stat right there.
And I know a couple guys I have got through.
I think AJ James, you know, that guy.
Yeah, yeah.
He still looks like he's like 23.
Dude, he's like 60.
Yeah.
I know.
He just doesn't, yeah, he just doesn't age.
But, you know, he went through it like 33 or something.
That guy who was like Abercrombian Fitch model.
Then he was like a pro-Moytai fighter.
And he decided to become a seal.
Like, I'm not making this up.
Yeah, no, he's a beast.
Drago was pretty old too going through.
I want to say Drago was like 31 or something like that.
Yeah.
Maybe.
Drago's Polish, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
So when I got my knee surgery, the doctor asked me, it seemingly randomly,
he said, are you Polish or Samoan?
And I said, no.
And he's like, okay.
And he just continued on.
I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, why?
It's like, because Polish people tend to heal way quicker
than normal people, and so do some moments.
He didn't say normal people.
That's not a doctor, but that's how he turned.
You know, then other people.
I did know Drago in the teams,
but I talked to him like two or three weeks ago.
He's helping us out with this swim.
We'll talk about the end, but just interesting,
where our paths crossed, I'm like,
I didn't remember before, you know.
Yeah, bro.
I know he's been on here.
I was so lucky to, because he did a platoon with him a team, too.
And we had such a freaking good time.
And then randomly he was the the Grom liaison in Baghdad and he did a bunch of stuff with
that those guys are heavy-handed but yeah they're great and he was you know he was there so
you know I show up in Baghdad and there's Drago it was like one of my brothers is already here
man I was so stoked but yeah Drago epic so and then you got your youngest boy and you were
just mentioned that and one of the things I've I've been you know watching you do is you've been
doing some LinkedIn posts about parenting.
Yeah, so I never had social media before, like most of us in the team.
So when I got ready to get out, I was like, hey, what should I?
Like, hey, if you're going to run a business, you need to kind of have a social media presence.
You should learn about it.
So I didn't know anything about it.
So I'm like, well, it's just right about something you want to do.
And so I started these dad drops because, you know, I really wanted to focus on my second
chance of getting to be a dad.
And I tell you, it's actually got a really big following.
It's pretty funny, and it's just stupid stuff we do together.
And, you know, there's always some kind of little takeaway.
And, yeah, he's just watching the man he's becoming.
I'm really proud of him, you know, he's like, he's got a lot of strengths that I didn't have.
And it's been really cool watching him grow.
And, you know, he'll listen to this.
He listens to a lot of the podcasts I'm on.
And you know him.
You know, yeah, yeah.
He always tries to grab you by the neck when you see him.
Yeah, no, it's as he should.
But watch yourself, boy, you sneak up on me.
It could be a problem.
Some of the things that you brought up, some of the topics, one of them is like, build it
yourself and this is actually in the warrior kid books like the kid wants it mark wants a new
bike yeah and uncle jake's like oh you can't get a new bike but we can get an old bike and we can
rebuild it and think of the value of that yeah compared to the value of oh you want a new bike here
you go i mean what's a new bike cost echo charles 100 bucks maybe 150 well yeah i mean at the bottom
end for sure maybe okay yeah i think when you're buying like when you're buying a seven-year-old
you're not getting a seven-year-old like a top-end bicycle i just got my son uh
BMX bike used off of like the offer up scenario and it was 150.
Oh, so I'm in the,
I'm in the game.
Oh, yeah.
You're talking about the used ones?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I mean, even a used BMX bikes is showing up kind of dope.
It showed up dope, yes.
How much is it new?
400.
Yeah.
It ranges.
Yeah, yeah.
But yeah, yeah, 400 for a new BMX bike is normal.
We actually did the exact same thing with the warrior.
We got the old bike that's a neighbor.
We had to replace the axle and he was like giving his pennies.
and it took us a while.
He, like, sanded it down.
And he did a great job with it.
And then we ended up, he ended up, someone gave him a bike later on.
And he'd outgrown that one.
So he went to sell it.
And I remember, you know, I'm selling an offer up.
Go ahead.
So I'm waiting.
And I'm watching the guy.
And the guy comes like, well, can you take less?
I'm like, bargain with him, you know.
And, you know, it's $25.
You're bargaining with like a, but he was like seven at the time, you know.
He's got it.
You know, you've seen his little straight face.
He's like, he looks at me.
I'm like, I was like, hold out for $25.
Did he get the 25 bones?
He got 25.
Hell yeah.
So that's a great lesson though.
And by the way, one of the things that I notice about these things is, and this is the same
thing I noticed about parenting is it applies to everything.
It applies to anyone you interact with.
Like if you want somebody to value something, you have them build it themselves, including,
oh, we got some project that we want to do and I've got a, my team is going to do it.
Why don't I let them build the plan?
Because then it's going to, they're going to take ownership of that plan and they're going
to value it more.
And it's just the good way to do it.
And another one you have is do the maintenance yourself.
Yeah, he's the Mada executive maintenance manager.
It's his title.
He gets $10 an hour.
Dude, the guy can clean weapons.
He scores away my spear guns.
I mean, rinses all the gear.
I just drop all the gear in the, you know, in the fridge or the garage or wherever we're at.
And he just like gets to work.
And, you know, a couple hours later, it's clean while I load for the next one.
So, yeah, there's an underlying theme here that I've talked about before,
which is like as much.
as you can treat your kid like an adult,
the better off it is.
And that's a classic example.
You're making him work, but you're paying him.
So he's recognizing that I can earn money.
I have value.
I can make things happen.
I have responsibilities.
If I don't do what I'm supposed to do,
I won't get the money.
Like these are really good lessons
that you can teach to someone.
Respect your elders.
Yeah, you know, we're from the South.
Yes, sir.
No, sir, it's how we roll here.
It's kind of weird in California
because they got pro,
and stuff.
But I'm like, hey, buddy, take your best guess.
And you make sure you say, sir, ma'am.
But no, we're pretty tight on that.
Like, he's a very respectful young man.
And, you know, he had a little scrape at school pretty recently.
We talked about the other day.
And, you know, the teachers were like, hey, he's been respectful and he owned it.
And it was a good walk away.
We can talk about it if you want.
It doesn't matter to me.
No, it's an interesting one.
And it's funny because, you know, we just had a, the podcast last week, we had a guy on that I grew
in the same town as me and I was a rebellious kid right and you you want to have your kids in my
opinion you want your kids to have the the level of respect but also have a little underlying of
questioning authority yeah you know like a little a little bit of questioning authority because
there's bad people there's adults that don't deserve respect and if you automatically think oh I this
person's older than me so they're better than me smarter than me no more than me I need to
listen to them well look there's places where that is actually going to get you in trouble
yeah uh so there's a there's a you got to teach them both those things at the same time and and learn
because yeah being respectful to people is is you know elders people that you're as you know it's funny
i i say like uh i treat when i was in the sale teams i treated the admiral the same as i treated
a new guy you know what i mean now now not if you were in a
When I was an E4 or an E5 and you were a new guy,
I can't make that claim.
But when I was older and it was a little bit more mature,
like it didn't matter who you were.
It's like, okay, you got something to say.
I'm listening to you.
That sounds like a good idea or it doesn't sound like a good idea.
And giving kids that ability to treat other human beings with respect,
but always be keeping in mind that you treat them with respect.
What's the thing that Matt has said?
Like treat them with respect but have a plan to kill him.
You don't have to quite go that far.
Yeah, yeah.
But treat them with respect.
But remember, people have their own agendas and people might not be, you know,
they might be doing nefarious things.
Dude, he's a deep thinker,
and he always asks really good questions.
I mean, you know, sometimes I don't even know the answer.
I'm like, bro, we're going to have to get on some chat, GPT,
and trying to figure this out.
But, you know, he asked deep, good questions,
and I'm really proud of him.
He doesn't make the kind of grades my first two kids make.
He's just not, doesn't have the same interest.
I hate to say that.
He just doesn't interest him as much.
But, man, he's always got these really good questions.
And he's a sharp kid.
He's got, he might pull off straight days this year, but barely.
My other two were just, they just, they're,
Their little dopamine hit was like, thing, when they got good grades.
The youngest, he ain't that way.
Yeah.
Next one, let them come up with their own rules.
And again, I'm paraphrasing kind of the main theme of these posts that you do.
And you will describe a situation that you were in, describe what you did, how you handled it.
Sometimes you're like, oh, I screwed this up.
Sometimes you're like, oh, this got screwed up for me or I could have done it better.
But here's the lesson from the future.
and one of them was let him
let him come up with their own rules
and the debate you were having
is he wanted to stay up till 10 o'clock
and on a non-school night, right?
Yeah.
And again, a great example of
if you let someone come up with the rules,
they're so much more apt to be okay with those rules.
Yeah, he doesn't like being told what to do
so like when we were trying to make him go to bed
at a certain time, I was like, hey, time out.
Why don't you say what time you want to go to bed?
What time should you go to bed?
You tell me what makes sense.
And he would say it, and I'm like, okay, then I don't have to remind you anymore.
I'll tell you what to do, right?
Because if I do, I'm just going to start reducing it by 15 minutes every single time.
I have to bring it up.
So you're fully in bed by this time.
Is that correct?
He's like, yes, sir.
I'm like, okay.
So he sets this little alarm.
It's got this little like Indian guy singing.
It's pretty funny.
I was like, linga, linga, linga, linga, he's into that thing.
And so it goes off at like five minutes before he brushes his teeth.
He gets in bed.
Yeah, it's his rule is not mine.
You know, there's actually a term for what you're describing.
It's called psychological reaction.
And it is a natural human instinct to push back against things that we're told to do.
It's a natural thing, psychological reactants.
And once you realize that, you look back at your whole life and be like, oh, every time I tried to tell people what to do, they didn't like it.
And every time someone tried to tell me what to do, I didn't like it.
Now look, are there exceptions to that where you get a leadership vacuum when it's time to make a call?
Yeah, those things happen.
But with kids, for sure, every time you tell them to do it.
something, they usually don't want to do it.
Yeah.
And now everything is on, it's on a timeline.
He knows his timelines.
Like, we ride e-bikes to school.
I ride an e-bike everywhere.
You've seen me running around.
And it's like probably three or four miles.
But he leads.
So now he knows how to signal with his hands.
He knows.
So he learned how to ride a e-bike for me.
We're on helmet comms.
We're talking the whole time.
So, you know, if he's going to do something stupid,
at least I can try and slow him down.
Because I think a lot of these guys,
you see people doing stupid stuff on e-bikes.
I can't imagine what goes on in the
ERs with those things.
And it's like, you know, at least he learned right for me, I know,
before he gets out there with a bunch of his, you know,
half-developed brain buddies out there trying to do something crazy.
E-bikes are crazy right now in California.
Yeah, there is no rules.
I don't know what it's like in the rest of the country.
But look, we live in Southern California.
The weather is good 100% of the time.
And so kids now they have these vehicles, these e-bikes,
some of them can go 60 miles an hour.
Yeah.
and these kids rip on them too.
And like I will see, first of all, they have gangs.
Yeah.
They look like a motorcycle gang, except for their 11.
Yeah.
But there'll be 32 of them ripping wheelies all over the road, the sidewalks.
It's freaking crazy.
I gotta say, I kind of like it.
I do.
I kind of like it.
I don't know.
Dude, one of these little gangs were on skateboards came up,
two houses down from me jumping off my neighbor's roof, like making videos.
I'm like, dude, that's pretty gnarly, but I mean, yeah, the kids are getting after.
I wonder what's going to happen with the e-bike thing because I have seen,
there's been a couple kids killed around here in Southern California riding e-bikes.
But look, kids got killed on regular bikes too.
But kids, there's no rules.
There's just no rules.
They don't have any signaling devices.
So it's just like a kick-ass ultimate bike of all time.
It's one of those things that's super fun until they regulate it.
You know, it's like right now it's fun and they're going to probably put, you know,
governors on us and they're going to go that fast and there'll be some kind of like,
geo fence where you can ride them, you know, it's going to, they're going to, they'll suck
the fun out of it, but it'll also make it safer.
Yeah, that's kind of a bummer.
Not to be a downer, but a big part of the e-bike thing because there's a category, how you say
some go super fast, right?
And it's so it becomes a different category.
It's more like a motorcycle, but electric, you know.
And some kids with those high-end ones, they'll just go on the sidewalk and stuff like that.
And, you know, they're, you know, like, rebellious kids, but they're killed, you can kill, like, old people.
Like, there's, like, an old guy who's just walking, he's a substitute teacher.
He's just walking home and gets hit with it from one of these rebellious kids who's been kind of on the hook for his reckless driving and stuff like that.
And he's like, you know, he's a rebellious kid.
He continues doing it.
It hits this old man, kills them.
Oh, this happened for real?
Yeah, here in California.
Oh, done.
So it's like that kind of stuff.
I get the cool.
It does look cool.
But it's like, I don't know.
I don't mean to be the old man, but I don't want to die from these freaking kids who can't follow rules.
you see what I'm saying.
So that's happening as well.
So the regulation is not completely.
Yeah.
The thing that's such a bummer is,
is it gives kids so much mobility to go wherever,
you know,
when they're 13 or 14 years old
and being able to go to practice
and the thing and the stuff and the friend's house.
Like, now you can do it on a regular bike.
My son, who's an older kid now,
but he's like anti-ebikes.
Yeah, I could see that.
Yeah, I could see it.
I was at first two.
I was at first two.
Because he peddled everywhere.
Yeah, he will tell you, you know, uphill both ways the whole nine yards.
You know what I mean?
You know, like, okay, bro.
But he's, you know, that's the way it is.
Yeah, I have, we have a bunch of e-bikes, so I'm down for the e-bikes.
But I think they're going to break it up into categories with the laws.
In fact, I think it's already like that.
So if it's like one of these categories, these fast ones are like, okay, that's not an e-bike.
That's a motor cycle.
You see what I'm saying?
Then you have certain rules with that.
Certain like speed limit will be there.
The one I have has goes like 18 miles per hour.
Like you can.
Yeah,
but there's a little way you can unlock it to make it go faster.
Yeah,
okay,
the one that I bought for myself,
which my son kind of took.
And like he's,
you know,
that one can,
that one can go fast.
It can go like 30,
30 miles per hour,
which is,
I unlock mine so it goes faster,
but the thing is it's got those dorky dad baskets on it,
you know,
because I,
I shop off mine.
I got,
I got a school books on it.
So I got like my socks pulled up.
Like,
I looked like that dorky dad,
you know.
But so he don't know,
ride my bike, but it keeps him off it, but it's faster.
How fast is his one?
His goes 22.
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah, that's a e-bike.
That's like not crazy.
Yeah.
Whether he pedals or not.
Mine going up the hill, I got a pedal to get, I'll get up to 30-something.
Do you think that if you openly admit that you look like a dorky dad, that that means
you're not?
No, I know.
I know.
I mean, I'm not, I know.
I pull up the school with the baskets on the bike.
I know.
Yeah, send it.
Yeah.
I got a helmet on.
Hide my shame.
You were harassing.
me about my iPhone holster
which is funny
because I you know
I was surprised because I've been
wearing some kind of a
phone clip since I was the Admiral's Aid
in 2005
and I had a blackberry
had two blackberries
one like for the classified
stuff and one for unclass and like I
had to carry him and
they came with a little holster
blackberry so so listen
posted up with that we got him
We know we got him because he's been making excuses for like, I mean, I'm now on air for like,
oh,
five minutes.
It's one of those things where I don't even know what I would do with it if I didn't have.
Yeah.
You're right.
You're right.
You're right.
We'll get you some of them tall white socks to go with it.
Wait.
I already wear tall white socks.
We're in there.
Well, that's what I was asking.
I was trying to figure out like, hey, we know, I kind of admit that I look like a dork.
Oh, no, no.
You're 100% of dork.
There's no escaping it.
That's how.
And by the way, I do have, well, my wife has an e-bike and I drive it sometimes.
And it is not a cool.
It's not like a cool.
No, it's not the kind of.
Oh, like looking?
Yeah, you don't go, damn, that looks cool.
No, you go, that dude's a dork.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's a range, right?
Like some of them.
Yeah, that's true.
Next one.
Have excess capability before you need it.
Boy, this is a good lesson.
And, you know, what's interesting is one of the things we teach at Escalonfront is
don't try and build relationships when you need them.
You know, try and build relationships when you don't,
actually when you can give something someone.
Like that's when you want to build,
you know,
I don't want to run Jimmy and say like,
hey,
I need a favor.
You know,
I know I haven't talked to you much over the last six months that we've been
working together,
but I need something from you now.
Can you help me?
That's not,
that's not a good way to do it.
And your point was,
you know,
have excess capacity capability before you need it.
And I think the picture was snow chains,
going on a vehicle?
Yeah, yeah.
He and I were going out and we're going up to Mammoth for that big dump, you know,
and we had, I brought snow chains because that's what you do.
And man, you'd be shocked how many people didn't have snow chains.
I'd pull people out of the ditch and they got their kids in the car.
I'm like, bro, you're going to put your kids out here and you know he's got, what,
but 57 or 70 inches of snow dropped and you're going to show up here in that, you know,
Ford Festiva with no, with no chains.
It was just, I don't know.
I mean, I try to keep him prepared.
It's what we do, you know.
And it's just an important thing,
especially when you're head of a household,
you're head of a family.
And that's what we're prepping him to be, you know.
Yeah.
Reverence for life,
even for a possum.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So there's a bunch of little critters around SoCal, you know,
and we had a possum that was eating our avocado.
So I tasked the young man with,
kept capturing it.
So he needed a live trap,
so he caught it.
So it wasn't a capture kill operation?
It was not captured.
Well, it was a capture detain.
I believe what we have to call it.
Yeah.
They kind of give you the wink, wink when they know it.
Anyway, so he caught it.
I'm like, what do you want to do with this thing, buddy?
You don't want to kill it?
Or he's like, well, is there someplace we can take it?
And you guys know the Famosa slew down here?
That's like our possum release zone.
I was like, well, we can take it to the zone.
I'm like, yeah, let's do it.
And it was pretty cool.
They let have them go out there and, you know, just we hunt.
You know, we kill deer, but we eat it.
We kill fish.
And it's just we don't just kill for no reason.
And I think that the food chain is healthy and important,
but there's no reason to kill someone if you don't need to.
Yeah, reverence for life.
This was a good one.
Press tracks are free.
So basically your boy had a dead man's gun.
What we say, what we call on the SEAL teams,
a dead man's gone, which means he didn't have a round in the chamber,
pulled the trigger, and it just went click and didn't go bang.
And that's a huge violation in the SEAL teams.
It's not a safety violation.
But it's like a, it's like a mortal sin, you know.
You are really going to catch some shit if you have a dead man's gone on the range.
Yeah, you might end up taped up or happy hat.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, you know, second place in a gunfight is no place to be, you know.
Actually, I've lost a few gunfights in my career, unfortunately.
And, you know, it's just a helpless feeling.
I think goes click and the other person looks at you and what's going to happen, you know.
So that's never happened to me in real life.
But when he did that, I was, I had to, like, impress upon him how important.
that was that he knows the condition of his weapon.
I mean, as a professional, when you pick up a weapon, you should be well trained, and you
should be professional with that weapon, and proficient at least.
And the fact that he did not understand the condition of his weapon was a problem for me.
So I didn't punish him too hard, but I don't think the young man will have any more dead man's guns.
Yeah, and I think that was one of the main points that you made was like you could have told him,
you could have, you could have preemptively saved him the embarrassment, but you did.
Didn't and you know this is something I call letting people brush up against the guardrails and failure and it's a beautiful thing to make a mistake on the range
Yeah that you will then never make again in your life and and so that's real positive actually we just had a guy on the podcast
I got the guy I grew up with and he got into
An incident where he pulled a gun on someone like they were in a fight and he pulled a gun on someone
Shot the guy once shot the guy twice like in the gut
the guy kept coming
he aimed the weapon at the guy's head
and it malfunctioned
wow
yeah and so he didn't kill him
the fight kind of I forget the rest of the story
but they broke up and when they went to court
the other individuals had instigated it
yeah and so he didn't get in trouble
the lawyer was like hey if I restore
what state was this in Connecticut
wow the judge the judge said
you know this was self-defense
and he was like he said his lawyer
spoke and he goes okay I'm dismissing this
and then the lawyer the judge
looked at him and said hey
you better go in the military
immediately he was like yes
and he went the Marine Corps but
if he would have known the condition of his weapon
or he would have known an immediate action drill
he probably would have killed that guy
which for him would have been bad
but um well if it malfunctioned after two shots then it's probably
that's not a condition issue right
that's like true but he didn't have an immediate
action drill yeah he didn't know what to do
And yeah, so.
Well, you used to let me fail all the time in the teams, man.
I'd do something.
You were running trade at, and I was floundering.
I remember this one-off.
We were just, it was just mayhem.
You guys killed all of our guys.
And then you were just like, what are you going to do?
I'm like, I don't know.
I'm trying to carry somebody.
Put some down, have someone else carry it.
You were just like bugging me.
And I was like, I didn't have any answers.
You just let me fail.
And then I remember I failed so hard that I learned a lot, learned a lot.
Probably the biggest failure you let me have was when you asked me,
This was actually real world.
I came back from Op and I didn't know where we were.
You were like, show me on the map and I couldn't do it.
And you just sat there while I figured it out.
It was, I know you knew.
You just sat there and let me figure it out.
And I remember I was so ashamed.
I was like, to this day, I always know where I am.
And my son knows that story.
You know, we walk out if he can't find the car.
I'm like, you can't know where you are.
You know.
Yeah, that's a bad way to learn that lesson.
And, you know, it's probably one of those things
that I looked at and was like, I wonder if he's, you know, I wouldn't want you to roll out into
Ramadi not knowing where you are.
And I probably didn't really even think of it.
And then you, whatever came back from an op and was like, do you know where you were?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's, you know, very lucky for my career was working in training cell as a young
seal and, like, recognized the importance of that.
I remember the first time I ever asked an officer.
I remember who the officer was.
We're out on land nav.
or they were out on a patrol
and he's behind his point man
and we were up in
we're up by Big Bear
doing like patrolling
and I said hey
you know hey LT get out your map
and you got out his map and I was like
I said you see that mountain over there
and it was the most
beautifully articulated
terrain feature
in the world it was so obvious
and I go find show me that
show me that Noel on the map
and bro he looked down and
he started looking at the map and his first guess was like three kilometers off and I'm like
bro you don't know where you are and he's like so yeah it's uh most important thing to know on the
battlefield is where you are but it applies to so many different parts of life yeah you're you
savage me on that you straight up went through like okay so if someone went down you got to call
Cass I know you're not the OIC but you were the next guy what are you going to do you're going to call
it you're like you just let everybody down like you really you didn't let me have to hook you know
and I'm glad you did that because you're you're going to do that you're
that was a pretty important lesson I learned.
I'm glad I learned it early.
Sure.
Well, speaking of that, one of the things you have is passing on skills.
Like, man, you did say something, I don't remember the exact quote,
but you said something like, skills don't deteriorate, skills don't disappear.
And I was like, well, there's a lot of skills that do actually deteriorate.
They do go away.
But when you pass on those skills, this is one thing that you kind of get for free that you can give to other people,
the skills that you have if you invest some time in them.
And a cool thing about that is that,
you know, I'm not talking about just what I know, but everybody's got skills, you know,
and maybe you can play the guitar, maybe you can draw things. I don't know, stuff that I can't do,
but these are things you can pass down to your kids. Maybe you know a language. These are things
that they can have forever. And it's part of your legacy and setting your kids up for success.
And I think it's, my first two, I have to say, I didn't think this much about being a dad.
But now that I'm older, I really am focused on trying to do the best job I can, which is how it should be,
you know, I'm not distracted by all the things I was in my youth.
And when I think about that, I'm like, what do I have to offer?
And I try to freely give him whatever I can.
Yeah, well, I think one of the things that I didn't really recognize until I had kids
was the inability for kids to recognize what skills actually are.
And there's a couple examples of this.
Number one being, and I put this in way of the warrior kid, it's in there.
But you know my oldest daughter came home from school one day.
Oh, I'm stupid.
I'm like, why do you think you're stupid?
She's like, well, I don't know my times tables.
And I was like, oh, well, how much have you studied?
And she looked at me like, what do you mean studied?
And she thought you should just know how to, you should just know how to, uh, know your timestables, something you're born with.
And so she literally thought she should just know them or, you know, she should look at them one time.
And now the other kids know them.
So I taught her how to make flashcards and she learned how to study.
but guess what
there's so many fighting
like a lot of people think
oh yeah you just you kind of know how to fight
no you don't know how to fight
shooting you just don't know how to shoot
you know you watch the movies and you see people
they just pick up a gun and shoot people
yeah at with a pistol
at 20 yards although I was watching a TV show
the other day my walk got home
and my wife was watching something
and this dude
miss like there's like a guy with an assault rifle
who's shooting and and this guy has
a drop on him with a pistol.
Yeah.
And takes three or four shots.
Oh, and shot his buddy.
That guy?
He didn't hit the guy that was the main threat.
And I'm like, bro, that's like, you got a red dot on there?
Bro, chill out.
Get a breath and freaking drill this dude.
But whatever it is, you know, even the basic sports, you know, hockey, basketball, soccer, whatever sport, man, if your kid practices it, they will be better.
And this is something I know you kind of like working your kid through to get him a little familiar with Jiu-Jitsu when I show up.
It's more fun.
It's more fun when you know what you're doing.
It's more fun.
You got a little bit of that skill.
Well, you know, during COVID here in California, they shut down all the schools.
They shut down churches and schools left over like, left open like liquor stores and dispensaries.
It was kind of an interesting paradigm they decided to do here.
Anyway, they shut down the school, the public schools.
And so I was like, I'm not joking.
That's actually true.
know why I live in California too.
It was like funny that you just said that and we just kind of carried on with the conversation.
Yeah.
It was like full insanity.
Yes.
It was full insanity.
We're going to shut down this mom and pop, you know, hardware store that, uh, it's been here for
hundred years.
That's been here for a hundred years that, that nine people go in a day.
Yeah.
That one shut down.
But Home Depot with all these people going in there.
Yeah.
That one's staying open.
Yeah.
Well, why?
Because that one stayed open.
Like, yeah.
It made no sense.
It was total insane way.
And what's the, what's the, what's the rational behind a strip club?
Like, if anything.
Were strip clubs open?
Yeah.
I heard they were open.
I didn't go.
But I heard there were open.
I knew it.
I could see your face.
I'm like, I'm trapped.
But no, they didn't shut those things down.
I'm like, what?
How did they not shut down strip clubs?
I don't, I'm sure it was like, it was probably like, I don't know.
I can only imagine.
It was probably like, hey, this is a required business or something.
Because why wouldn't you shut down liquor stores or marijuana dispensaries?
I don't know, but they weren't.
But anyway.
They shut down to school.
And so we did the homeschool thing for a while.
And dude, I'm not dumb.
I tried, but I'm not a professional educator.
Like, I really did.
I'd, like, go over the whole curriculum I was supposed to go through.
And then I'd even add something cool.
Like, we're going to change a tire or something, you know?
Like, I tried to throw something else in there and teach him.
He was falling behind.
And so we got a slot for him at Rock Academy, which is like a Christian private school here.
This is the best thing we ever did.
But the first, when he first got in there, he came home and he's like,
dad I'm dumb. I'm like oh buddy you're not dumb and you're like you're not dumb I'm like you're not
dumb I'm right I'm like listen it's my fault I didn't do a good job but also the public schools
are behind the private school so they thought about rolling him back some teacher there she was so sweet
took him under his wing under her wing she straight up did like you know lunchtime and dude he he
struggled for that first year and then next thing you know he's doing he's getting good grades but
that summer was key and like the warrior kid book with the flashcards we did that we did this I called
ahead on like, hey, what's the next year stuff we're doing? And we did like, we got ready on
capitals ahead of time. We got on the multiplication table. Everything we needed. He went in
ready the next year. Now he doesn't think he's dumb. And I was just, you know, it was interesting.
He's just, he's not dumb. And it just broke my heart for him to hear him say that. Yeah.
And really, we just didn't have him prepped right. After that, we, you know, he's doing great now.
And that is something that will catch kids all the same way it caught my daughter. The same way it caught
your son is like and it happens you know I'm not good at this I'm not good at that the first
time they go play baseball the first time they go play soccer and they've never done it before
guess what you're going to suck and by the way this is true and there's there's a there's a
there's like a point in in things that you have to get past to see what it's going to be like
surfing like if you don't stand up and ride the glass on a surfboard that that might take you
that might take you one session but it might take you five or six six six
sessions might take you two or three sessions just to stand up. Some people don't even stand up the first time
they go surfing. And then so do you like it? No, I don't like it. It's it actually sucks. I'm in cold
water. I'm falling down. I can't breathe right. Like I don't want to ever want to do this again.
In jiu jihitsu, I always say you have to train jihitsu until you submit someone for real.
Like if you train jih Tzu until you submit someone for real, the entire journey up until that
point is pretty much miserable. You're like, yeah, this, I'm terrible. This sucks. I don't
like it. And there's so many different things that if you have to get enough of the skill
that you can actually enjoy the activity before you decide whether you don't want to do it or not.
And, you know, Jiu-Jitsu is, it's a perfect example because when I was just intrigued, I showed up,
I was a good wrestler. I had a background. I was getting whooped. I'm like, what the hell is
happening? Like, I didn't even know I had to tap and they're like, you want to want to tap. I'm like,
I don't think so. Like, oh, my God, you have to do a suit tap. Like, they're just being cool.
I just had no idea.
And then actually that happened again when I met you in Ramadi and you're like,
you want to go roll?
I'm like, yeah.
And then I'm like, what is this?
Because I think I was like a blue belt by that time.
So I kind of had some time on earth and on the mat.
And it was a level I was not prepared for at that time.
Yeah.
That's the jiu-jitsu.
But record for kids and adults, by the way, because a lot of times adults avoid things
because they try it one time.
And they go, I don't like this.
I'm not good.
I'm not good at this.
No one's good when they start.
Like very few people are good at something.
I would say one out of every 100 people are kind of good at something like, like,
Jiu Jitsu.
Like sometimes you roll with someone, you go, this person is never really trained before,
but they're going to be, Jiu Jitsu is a tricky one.
Jiu Jitsu is kind of,
maybe like shooting.
Some people have,
they're naturally, probably three out of every hundred people,
like they're going to be,
they're just naturally good shots, right?
And then there's three people that are naturally going to suck
And it's going to take a lot of work
And occasionally those kids get dropped like from training
Yeah
But most of the time those three kids that aren't that great
They'll have to practice a little bit more
But they'll get up to speed and then the rest of everyone's just kind of in the in the middle of the bell curve
Like you're yeah you're I had a hard time learning pistol
I did I was jumpy it took me a while to get it but I eventually got it you know I didn't have to get rolled or anything
I was I was on the range with some people that
are not too
not to
firearms familiar
and again
I was watching him
as like bro people are like shaking
and like
just
I probably
I mean I wouldn't do this for real
but I would feel pretty confident
pretty confident about just attacking them
even if they had a gun
you know what I mean like I think I could take them
like if I saw some of these folks on a range
and I was like oh bro I got this
Like you give me a hundred bucks.
I'll take this full down right now.
Because it's not,
because if you don't have that natural skill
and you've never done it before, bro, you're going to have problems.
So one of the things that made the executive,
we'll talk about that later, I know,
but like I do a lot of shooting ranges with people.
And I have Canadians down here that never touched a gun.
And man,
they're literally shaking when they do it.
And you can see them like,
they just can't stop.
And it's like, hey, guys, it's a shovel.
You pick it up.
It does what it says.
It does exactly what you can't do anything else.
It only does what you do.
And if you, you know, the big three safety rules, you keep those things in mind, we can, like, go.
And usually by the end, they're pretty good.
I've had guys trying to load the magazines the wrong way, like putting the bullets in the wrong way.
But by the end, I'm not joking.
But by the end, you know, I had this Canadian group and they were like, wow, we thought guns were bad.
But actually, if everyone was trained by you, it would be okay.
I'm like, yeah.
You know, it's just people just don't know.
And they just, they freak out, man.
That's crazy.
So pass on skills.
Learn skills and pass them on.
By the way, learn skills and pass them on.
There's little things that you can learn how to do.
And by the way, this is a good for your neurological health
is to continue to learn new things.
So learn skills, pass them on.
The last one I want to talk about that I noted
was defeating learned helplessness.
And this, I don't know,
do you know much about learned helplessness
and what it is?
I heard that from Mark Schaefer.
And the problem was people were just like they would see something and it would just be like, oh, it's too hard.
And instead of trying to fix it themselves and then this learned how, I haven't heard it anywhere else except for them.
So there's an experiment.
It's a kind of a famous experiment or whatever, not famous, but it's an experiment that gets done.
And you take a classroom of people or whatever, 20 or 30 people and you divide them into two groups and they have problems to solve.
and one group, the first, let's say, five problems are relatively easy,
and the other group, the first five problems are impossible.
And so they go, okay, they give them the first problem,
and like one group's like, oh, they get it,
and the second group can't get it.
Then they give them the second problem, third problem, fourth problem.
And then on the sixth problem,
they give them like a medium-level issue or medium-level problem.
The people that have gotten all these other ones done,
And by the way, they know that they got it done
and they also can tell that the other people
couldn't get it done because they're like,
you know, put your pens down when you're done
and the other people are still trying to figure it out.
Well, the people that had achieved repeatedly,
they get this medium-level problem.
And the people that have been defeated,
they can't get it.
And this is very common.
It's kind of like that, you know,
when you have two, they would take two mice
and you put them in a, to fight each other.
Yeah.
And the winning mouse has,
has like an 80% chance of beating the next mouse
because it just gets confident.
And then it starts walking around just being like,
oh, I can kick ass.
So the idea of learned helplessness is a real thing.
And where this plays in
is when you go and swoop in to solve problems for your kids.
Yeah.
And they think they can't do anything themselves.
What was the example?
Do you remember the example you used in this?
The one that comes of mind,
I don't know what I can't remember specifically,
but he high-centered his four-wheel.
It was before I got him a dirt, but I got a four-wheeler.
And he's like, we're on column.
He's like, hey, dad, you help me get this?
I'm like, sure.
I grow up.
I'm like, hey, so what I think you should do?
He's like, dad, you can lift this.
I'm like, well, I know I can.
He goes, you're going to help me?
I'm like, I am helping you.
I'm telling you, which I want you to lean forward and try and rock,
then hit the throttle.
And it took a while.
And he had some tears going.
He was frustrated.
He's mad at me, you know, he's like, I know, you could just take this.
I'm like, I am helping you right now.
And later on I heard him and his friend was at our house and they were like,
oh, let's get your dad to help.
And he's like, dad won't help us.
Dad won't help us.
We got to figure it out on our own.
I was kind of laughing.
I'm like, that's right.
That's exactly right, dude.
That's where it should be.
Awesome.
Well, check those out.
LinkedIn.
You do these posts like, I don't know, like maybe once a week or once every other
week, you do something.
And you got a bunch of other stuff on there, but I thought those were interesting,
not only from a leadership of your family, but of everyone.
Yeah, I think I would like to see parents take ownership of their home in a way I didn't for my first two kids.
And now it's just such an important thing.
And it's one of the most rewarding things in my life is to get to be part of his life.
And, you know, I still work to help my older kids.
They're fiercely independent, you know.
Like, I'm proud of them.
But I didn't get to do a lot with them.
And so I'm so grateful for my second chance, honestly.
No, it's pretty amazing that your other two kids are so awesome.
And it's kind of like, bro, I guess you didn't do too bad.
No, no, no, no, no.
It's not that.
Think about it this way.
My first two did awesome without much help for me.
And now I'm helping this one.
And there's some pressure.
I'm like, what's going to happen if they don't do awesome?
Is this, am I the common denominator?
So I got some kind of weird pressure that I try not to put on them, but I definitely feel it.
Because the first two did awesome and without me.
And now I'm like, you know what I mean?
Bro, you better.
No pressure on that.
Hey, if you're listening to this right now,
kid, Riker's like, no, don't worry about it. You just do, you just do a good job, man.
You're going to be awesome. Let's talk a little work activity. So you got Mayday executive.
He's kind of like our team building exercises, pressure situations, unifying a crew. Tell us about it.
Yeah, so it started off. I went to business school and I was like, oh, I guess I can do consulting.
So I started doing consulting and they're like, hey, can you do an icebreaker? And then it just turned
into straight out adventures. And that's what I'm doing now. And it's been a blast.
know, for me, I get to be part of someone's biggest thing they've wanted to do in their whole life.
And so it's not always companies. It's a lot of YPO. It's young president organization,
a lot of EO, but also it's a lot of companies that want to do business development. And so they just
come up, they'll dream something up crazy. You know, like they want to go shoot a 200 pound fish.
So they want to go crash a car or learn J-turns pit maneuvers or, you know, blow something up.
I'm like, okay. Like, they'll usually be like, what do you mean? Okay. I'm like, yeah,
just let me do some math. I'll come up with a number and we'll figure it out. And usually
they're kind of beside themselves. I'm like, yeah, we can make it happen. And then we do it. And I don't have any
advertising. I don't have anything going on like that, but I'm booked through February right now of next year.
And it's just super busy. I got a lot of repeat offender customers. And man, it's just been a really
fulfilling thing because little things that we don't think about, you know, it's just a big deal to some people.
You know, I had a job where we were going spear fishing. And these guys, they were just like seven dudes,
executives, always wanted to try it. I'm like, yeah, I guess.
Gotcha. So we take them out and we know, before we pull up on this, it's a floating kelp paddy.
So we're like, I don't know, like 50 miles out to sea. And we throw us hook in the water and
man, we hook up to this Mako shark. It was cool. And it wasn't, I don't know, it was not big.
It was three, five feet, something like that. Anyway, it comes up. We get it right to the edge of
boat. And then that thing spits the hook. And I'm like, that is the perfect scenario.
Everyone got to see the shark and none of us have to mess with that tooth monster, right?
So then I'm like, let's go check for fish. So I jump in and I look up what they do and he's
looking at me. I'm like, I was like, hey, it's getting the water. He's like, well, there's
a shark in there. I'm like, you saw it. It's not big. Get in the water. So the dude like,
gets in the water. We swim up. We check no fish. I'm like, this is a disaster. We haven't
seen any fish yet today. This whole thing is just sucks. We get on the boat. The dude gets out and he's
like, I just got in the water with a known shark. And I'm like, you did? That is what happened.
That's actually factual. And what I learned from that was.
was like, you know what, everyone has the things that are overcoming.
I didn't think much of it.
You probably wouldn't have thought much of it.
But, you know, for him, that was a really big deal.
And it was really cool for me to get to be part of that.
You know, I think for, I remember the guy's name, you know, because I just could see
the light in his eyes.
And I was like, that's what we do every week.
If we come over, we overcome somewhere, we're jumping out of a plane or we're doing
something out of a helicopter or whatever they want them to do.
And I get to be part of that.
And it's been a really, I don't know, it's been just a joyful thing, you know, it's cool.
Yeah, that's awesome.
I was there's a documentary out right now and it's called the dark wizard and it's about a guy named Dean Potter who is a rock climber base jumper free solo guy and at one point and he Alex Honnold was coming up behind him he's a little bit younger and this guy Dean Potter like wasn't quite as skilled as Alex Honnold was and I'm
Alex Honnold is just kind of kind of doing things that this guy wants to do and Alex
Arnold is just kind of doing them.
And so he's feeling a lot of pressure.
And at one point he kind of signs up and he started doing this thing that he called free
base, which is free solo climbing.
So no ropes, but wearing a base rig.
Like a little tiny base rig.
So if he fell, he had a chance of being able to pull.
But not a whole lot safer.
Not a whole lot safer.
But, you know, when you're 2,000 feet up in Yosemite, then, you know, if you think you're not going to make it, you can kick off, you know, track away and hopefully it'd be all right.
So that was his plan.
And he had this one, this one climb scheduled.
So you've been to Yosemite?
I have.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he's planning to do this like top part of L cap.
He's going to do this little repel down, traverse across and then climb up.
maybe 700 feet, something like that.
Yeah.
And if you haven't seen L. Cap, it's a scary big rock.
It's three thousand straight up vertical.
It's what, it's what Alex Honnold climbed and in Free Solo.
And yeah, when you look at it from the ground, it's totally insane.
That's why, you know, that's to me is the greatest human physical act voluntary that's ever been known.
Because I think people have done more extreme things involuntarily, like the baton death.
March or there's a bunch of them you could go through but for as far as just volunteering
Roger and up to do something I think that's it so he's planning to do this with the base
rig and they were at odds with Yosemite because base jumping's illegal and they said listen
you're not allowed to wear you're not allowed to wear a base rig you can't you can't
base jump you can't have a base rig when you climb and so he kind of just they're like well
you got the film crew here you're going to climb this with a base rig you're not
allowed to wear a base rig, what are you going to do? And he sends it. But when you watch it,
you, the look, and I think you and me will be like more familiar with the look of the same guy
getting in the water with the shark, like, I do not want to be doing this right now. And you can
kind of see it. And it's really, it was really hard for me to watch. I was like, dude, he does not want to
be doing this right now. He does not want to. And he's doing without the base rig. Yeah, no base rig.
He's free climbing it. He's free. He's free. So.
Yeah, with no base rig and bro.
I mean Alex Honnold, when you watch him climb,
you're just like, you're feeling when you're watching Alex Honnold climb,
my feeling when I watch Alex Honnold climb is he's got this.
Like that's literally when you watch him, you're just like, he's got this.
And even when you talk to him, like he was on this podcast, you know,
you can see that he's just very, um, um, methodical and logical and he's got this, you know.
And if you get the feeling that if you said,
hey, do this and you assess it and be like,
I'm not capable of doing that, or I am,
and I can do it, and so I'll send it.
And you get, you're watching, I'm like,
dude, this guy does not want to be doing this.
And the dude, it's a great, great documentary.
It's called the Dark Wizard.
But when your life isn't a stake,
overcoming those things, like is a really positive thing,
which is exactly what you're talking about.
And that's what you do with these groups.
And what I like about it is,
it's a, it allows,
There's a vulnerability there within a team.
People see each other at a moment of weakness.
They get to see each other step up, power through.
Maybe they see people's limitations.
And you know, there's nothing wrong with that.
You know, there's nothing wrong with that.
You know, there's nothing wrong.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
We had a guy that freaked out in the water.
Like, he had a little water in a snorkel, you know, little things uncomfortable.
And you're in the middle of the ocean.
It looks like you're up high.
And he just panicked.
And I was like, hey man.
I grabbed him, drug him to the boat.
And we kind of got up on the thing.
And I was like, wow.
happened. He's like, well, I'd water in my snorkel. I'm like, there's always going to be water
in your snorkel. There's always going to be all these little things. And I think that's been
kind of my teaching points with spearfish. And it's like, hey, all these little things are
going to bug you. But you've got a mission to do and you have to focus on that and kind of tune all
those things out. And just know they're going to be there. They're always going to be there.
Incidentally, he lost my spear gun, which was a, that's a bummer. I didn't, I didn't, I didn't,
beat them up for that. I was like, hey, I'm glad you're safe. You know, yeah. Yeah. They don't float.
The other thing is, the more you do something, the more comfortable you get with it.
And you're going to have water in your snorkel, and people are going to ask you hard questions at your board meeting.
And your employees are going to get mad about.
It's like, these are things you have to get used to.
You have to get conditioned to.
You have to get that stress management so you can overcome it and figuring out.
You know, that's when you figure out, that's one thing you figure out in the water, man.
And I think Buds does a good job of either showing this to you and you figure it out or you,
You don't figure it out and you don't make it.
If you freaking panic in the water, you're not going to make it through buds.
Do you think that's accurate?
Oh, that's absolutely accurate.
Okay.
Yeah.
Because there's, I mean, during pool comp, you definitely don't have any air.
You're out of air.
Like, they grab you and they swing you around and you don't have an air left.
And there's nothing and you just, you have to relax and solve the problem.
Because as soon as you start thinking about, oh, my gosh, we're not out of air.
Then you just missed a step and you're going to fail anyway.
And I think that's an important thing that really sets our people, our guys apart in the teams is that.
That water aspect is nasty, man.
It was actually the hardest thing.
Yep.
You cannot panic.
And then it's not a very, it's not a very far stretch to get to, oh, I'm getting shot at.
I cannot panic.
Oh, I'm jumping out of an airplane.
I cannot panic.
Oh, I'm confused about what's happening right now.
I cannot panic.
That becomes the nature of it.
And I'll tell you what, there's been a couple times.
There's one time on a swim.
I was on a swim and I almost pulled my UDT life jacket.
Just massive waves.
It was in Coronado and I was, you know, caught a wave trying to come back in.
And I caught the first wave and was a little bit like got, I got like all flustered and discombobulated and went deep.
And when I came up, I was like, oh, I was like, oh, that's boom.
And I got hit with something else.
And all of a sudden I'm down there and I'm like, oh, wait a second.
I haven't taken a breath in quite some time,
and I was already tired.
And this could be bad.
And I started, like, thinking,
am I going to pull my UDT life jacket right now?
But the cool thing is I was like, no,
you're just going to relax and you're just going to float.
You have your wetsuit on.
You're going to be okay.
But that, and then there's been probably two,
maybe three times surfing where I had to detach a little bit and go,
all right,
you got to relax right now because you don't know which way is up you got to freaking chill you
don't have any air but panicking he's not going to help the situation that's probably happened two or
three times for me surfing yeah and you know i see it a lot of times during the week and what's cool
is i'll see people panic and if i can get them right back in that same situation like hey listen
calm down come back to me you know we we were doing a pit maneuvers with cars and i had this lady
and she just i mean she just couldn't relax she was like she nailed that car like so hard
And then, of course, if you hit it in the wrong spot, it goes up into the engine, up into the compartment where the people are at.
And, you know, she just got out and she's like, I just can't do this.
And I'm like, all right, come over here.
I was like, breathe.
Check this out.
And we had to watch another couple.
Then we had her do like a practice approach or two.
And then she nailed it, you know?
And it was just so cool to see.
And you could just see her be like, oh, what was I so worried about?
And I'm like, it's because you just didn't have any experience.
And now you got it.
You're good.
And watching people go through those kind of things.
It's just a powerful thing.
So I love my job.
I love it.
I do it every week.
And, you know, I always tell people like, if I say I'm going to do it, I'm the world's
worst negotiator.
I'm going to do it.
So whether that's like, I'll give you a price prior to say I'm going to do it.
We're going to do it, you know.
So we'll figure it out.
The crunching sound that cars make where they hit is, is such an interesting sound.
And it's almost like a visceral sound.
When people hear it for the first time, when you hear the crunching and folding of metal
Yeah, it freaks people out.
And, you know, the other thing is when they get in that car, I got to tear all the airbags out
because you can't get hit with an airbag.
An airbag opens at 200 miles an hour.
You get hit with that thing, it's no bueno.
And there's a lot of them.
There's not just like one in the front.
There's like in the seats behind you.
There's like side curtain.
So I'm like cutting.
So when you get in this car, the inside looks like tatter.
Like it does not look like like what you used to see.
And so people get in this thing and they're like, what is this?
And then I got like metal bolted on the front like Mad Max because I can kind of make these cars last a little bit more.
So it's an exciting.
thing when people see it and then they get in there and then they start bumping around and
because we just have this, we don't want to like actually make contact at first. And once I
start, I force people start doing that, it kind of opens up the aperture a bit. You know,
after a driving school, we go home with the worst drivers ever. You know what I mean? I'm sure
there's a little bit of that that goes on. It's a good thing too. When I would teach in all my kids
to drive, I would bring them down to the Marine Corps base and there's a big giant parking lot
and I would just make my kids drive to the limit of a Dodge Caravan.
I remember that thing.
Like,
tires would be smoking,
brakes would be burning.
But the thing is,
then when you go back and you drive normal,
like you're just so much better.
Anytime you can up the intensity of a situation,
people get used to that higher intensity.
And now you come back to normal.
It's like,
oh,
that's why we shark tank people in like MMA training.
You're going to be in this shark tank
and it's going to be.
be absolutely freaking awful. And then you go to a normal fight and you're like, oh, okay.
There's not going to be another person and then another person and another person. I can handle
this. Well, dude, I had these cars dropped off for an event I was doing. So I have all these cars
dropped off. And I had someone to help me take them up because you got to drive them like a mile
down this dirt road. And then I had one coming the next day. I didn't have anyone to help me do it.
So I'm like, all right. So Riker and I go up there and I've got like my e-bike. And I'm going to,
my plan is to drive it up there and then drive the e-bike back and get the.
You know, anyway, I look at him.
I'm like, hey, you drive this?
He goes, yes, sir.
I'm like, you sure?
He's like, yes, sir.
I'm like, show me.
So we sat and we drove down the dirt road all the way there.
I'm like, pretend a car's coming in front of you.
And I was like, it's coming now.
And like, he pulls over.
I'm like, okay, good.
Drive us back.
We drove us back.
I'm like, follow me.
And we just drove it down there and he set it up.
And then he was like, dad, can, do you know how to drift?
I'm like, yes, sir, I do.
So we had a little fun with it after that.
But, you know, once he proved to me he could do it and he got over that initial, you know, he pulled it off.
It's been kind of cool.
Yeah.
Anytime you can get people familiar things, teach him a skill.
But then also when you can elevate the training scenarios to be harder and more demanding than what they're going to face in real life.
Like when you get somebody out spearfishing at 70 feet on a breath hold and shooting at an animal that's going by him and trying to get control of that thing.
And then they get to go back to a boardroom
and they got to present something like,
you're going to take some good positive lessons away from that.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
I had one of these executives shot a 130-pound bluefin tuna.
So since coming by him at, I don't know, 40 miles an hour.
And this thing came in.
And man, he shot that thing.
I was so excited for him.
He was a little overwhelmed.
He got up.
He was like, it was a lot.
But I don't know, man.
He immediately booked two more trips with me.
He's like, we're doing this again.
So I'm taking them out here in about a month.
Yeah, sick. Hey, you also got this thing, this invention. Yeah, this is kind of a new thing. So my,
my little brother, I mean, he finished high school like 17. He hated school. He just didn't make good
grades, but he's super, he wicked smat. And he, man, he came up with this little, it's this little
thing that you put on a, on a cell phone tower between the wire and where it's called the, the
splice of the tower, the tower pieces. It's such a simple thing. And I've showed it to you. When you look
out of you're like, why wouldn't you do it this way? It's obviously the superior way to do it.
Anyway, we got that move and we got the patent done in November and so we're working on that.
And, you know, I'm just kind of working ops for that piece. It's a really cool way to do it.
It'll make the whole industry safer because now you've got guys hanging off, you know,
three, four hundred feet up in the air and they're got like trying to tape this, this cable
and like put this little loop in it on the top and bottom. Well, now you can just lay it,
the cable pilot on it and just pull it right up. And it's about 25%
percent faster, less time up on the tower is safer.
And so I think it's only a matter of time before Ansi and OSHA start getting a hold of this
thing.
But it's going real well.
And I'm proud of my brother for coming up with it.
And I'm just kind of like helping set all the business pieces in motion.
Yeah, we work with a lot of construction companies and power companies.
So all my linemen out there that are out there, check this thing out.
The website is, what's the website?
It's, um, www.
Mayday.
Solutions.
There's no.
com or anything.
What's the thing called?
The cable pilot.
The cable pilot.
And again, it just helps you route those cables around the splice plate.
So it's not, the cables also aren't now rubbing up against the spice plate or the splice plate getting all chafed and stuff like that.
So, yep, that's cool.
I'm looking forward to that.
I know I tried to be an investor, but I think you denied me for some reason.
We didn't deny you.
I talked to the boys about it yesterday.
They were like, they were like, I'd be cool to have Jock involved, but I don't think we need it.
Don't need it.
There you go.
We're going to edit.
Will you edit that out of the podcast where I told all the linemen company in America?
You can look at this thing?
You can pull that out?
All right.
Let's get to Beyond the Brotherhood.
So, because it's been a lot of really great stuff going on there.
And, you know, first of all, just refresh us on why you started it.
Okay.
So Beyond the Brotherhood is, that's the major mission in my life, aside from my son and, you know, my kids and, you know, and Cat.
But Beyond the Brotherhood is.
started within four months of my retirement, four of my teammates killed themselves, two of which
I knew really well. I knew Bobby Murrayers pretty well. And then Mike Day, you probably knew Mike. He was
older guy. Anyway, I just didn't know. I was kind of beside myself, you know? I'm like, you've got
all these people essentially getting rich off the seal ethos, whether they're, you know, I mean,
I'm not going to talk bad about people, but the actors or the movies they're making. And these people
are getting rich. And the guys that actually built that ethos that they're capitalizing on are
suffering and struggling and killing themselves. And, you know, with Bobby, I spent all weekend with
Bobby before, the weekend before. And then it happened on Monday. And I didn't know what to do.
Like, my best friend Bow and I went back over our conversations and it just didn't seem, we didn't
know what to do. And so I couldn't even spell 501c3, but I'm like, we're going to do it.
So we just started this up. And with the goal, was like, hey, let's, you know, screen and select,
maybe still as a character for the next mission in life.
And just to give them a chance, because these guys are getting out and they don't know what to do.
You know, I didn't have social media.
Luckily, I went to business school, so I had kind of a little bit of a network.
But they don't know what they don't know.
And they get out and they're like, I'll do executive protection.
And it's like, these guys have made it to the pinnacle of warriorhood.
And you know what?
The same traits that took them to get there are going to help them in business.
And there's going to help them in other walks of life that they don't have to carry a gun for people all the time.
and that was something that we wanted to really start with.
So I didn't know where to start, but I just started.
And so the plan was to take in three to five people that first year.
And we screened them.
We took in 23.
I couldn't, I didn't know the demand was going to be like that.
I ran out of money.
I had to shut down admissions.
And then we had to like build a pipeline because now I'm like, okay, this isn't just like,
hey, bro, what do you want to do?
I got enough people where I have to make a pipeline.
So we kind of built a pipeline.
I brought Sean Murphy on.
He's been on your podcast.
And so we started building this whole thing out.
And the next year we opened up and we took in 22 before we ran out of money again.
And, you know, I'm like, okay, we got to throttle this.
We can't.
I mean, it's important that we do it.
And, you know, I cut my pay down to the very minimum the board would allow.
You say, just real quick, when you say take someone in, just kind of explain what that means a little bit.
Okay.
So we start with the screening process.
So we will ask one superior, one peer, and three subordinates.
And those lenses should align.
and if they don't, that just tells us we got to pull the string, you know, like everyone should
see you up and down the chain the same kind of person you are. The person above you shouldn't
think you're the super nice guy and squared away. And the people beneath you shouldn't be like,
no, he's a dick. We see that all the time. It shouldn't be that way. You should be the same person
across the board. We've already talked about that today, actually. So we screen them once they get in,
the first thing we do is we give him a personality assessment. And that personality assessment is
not just like, hey, you're a ESTJ. It's like, hey, here's a, here's a, there's a,
Oh, sit down with, you know, the guy that made it and we're going to go over this assessment and make sure that open up your aperture about what you might want to do.
Then we've got, you know, a medical aspect of it because a lot of guys come in.
They're on, you know, I mean, in the teams, you know, you get shot or you get a ding on you.
Like, hey, here's some white pills. Take these. Take a shot. Get back on the line. And we're happy to do it because we don't want to get pulled off the line.
And so at the end of your career, you're on all sorts of stuff. You know, I was on every N-Sid because I had fake hips.
I couldn't even walk.
I couldn't sleep.
And so I was on Nsids and then guy, that's a non-stirital anti-inflammatory.
So like Mobic, stuff like that.
And then I was dabbling in opiates because it was just, I couldn't sleep without it.
And so I can see that spiral.
And a lot of these guys, they're on stuff to make them sleep, stuff to make them stay awake.
And so we get them off all that.
And I'm on nothing anymore.
Like I actually, they use CBD to bridge a gap for me and now I'm off of everything.
I don't even take that.
So we have to get them healthy again.
If they need time to reconnect with their families,
We're gone 300 days a year.
Jaco, you worked till your last day in the Navy.
I know you did.
I'm like, what are you doing here?
Shouldn't you be doing some VA stuff?
And you're like, I'll just got to finish this.
I'm like, you know.
And a lot of guys are like that.
They don't take the time for themselves.
And so we kind of help them with their VA claims.
We help them get their CRSC combat-related service connected,
which means you get tax-free on not your disability,
but on your retirement.
These are big things for guys who don't, you know,
your retirement, you can't necessarily raise a family and live on that.
that on the backside. And so then after that we start introducing him to a mentor. So someone in the
business world, a non-team guy, someone that can be like, hey, that thing you said is is aggressively
stupid to say. You don't say that in a freaking boardroom, right? So like someone that will like,
you know, understand how to like coach them to greatness. And then we give them one opportunity
at a time. Hey, try this. Try the steel industry. Hey, give the shot over here in the insurance
industry. And then we just start kind of like getting them started until it doesn't work the
first time all the time. You know, sometimes, but I would say usually it takes two or three before we
find them a niche that's important. You know, of all of our guys, we've got like 60-something guys now,
not a single suicide from the highest, the highest probability guys of doing that. And why I say
highest probabilities, because the guys that kill themselves, they're not the turds. They're the
guys that we put on the line over and over. Who goes to combat over and over? Your best guy. Where do
you put your best guys? Right up front. You know, they're the ones eating the blast. They're the one right up
in front getting shot at first. And these are the guys who have got the most damage and that we
need to care for the most. And so I knew that I couldn't like, I wasn't going to be able to cast a
net and just help everybody at once. But I'm like, what we're going to do is we're going to focus
our shots where they count, which is on those guys who are most at risk, which is on those best
high character guys. And so that's what we do. And it's worked out really cool because to my
partners, the people that are hiring, they're mentoring. They know what we got. When they start
seeing these guys, they're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, you got more of them. I'm like, well, I can't
mass produce them, but they're screened, they're selected. And now let's say you get a job as you
want to be in realty. And so we, you know, we set you up in real estate. We'll set you up with
a team. We'll set you up with a mentor. We'll get your real estate license. We'll get all of,
because it costs money. You can't just like show up and be like, hello, I'm a realtor today.
There's like little things you have to, we'll take care of all that for you. We'll set you up and get
you on a path. So it's, it's no one size fits none. Some people want to be entrepreneurs. We help
them find money to get started. There's lots of different ways to do it. They've got search funds that
will hire our guys and our guys will go out and they'll spend a year looking for a job, looking for a
company to buy, and then they'll buy it, they'll get a 25% stake. And so now they'll build this
company and the goal is within five years to sell it. Within Beyond the Brotherhood, all of our guys,
our team guys running it. You know, Drew Forsberg is our executive director. He's going to get poached.
That's what happened to Sean Murphy. Sean Murphy was phenomenal. I tell you what, I had a spiritual
Hiroshima when he told me he's like, hey, they got this, they made this offer. I looked at the offer.
I'm like, I can't match that. And he's like, well, I mean, I don't want to leave you high and dry.
I'm like, you need to do this for your family, Sean. This is a good thing for you. Like, I'm going to
go be sad for a while until I figure out what to do. But you need to do this for your family.
And so, you know. And shout out to a University of Health and Performance. My friend Matt has
down there running that thing. And Sean Murphy, great fit for that. And what they're doing, by the way,
is also a really positive thing, trying to take care of veterans.
and get them into a new life
when they get done with their military career.
So it's a great fit for Sean.
And yeah, like you said, it's painful for you,
but it's better for him and great for his family
and it's going to be great for the University of Health and Performance.
It is, and actually they're looking to hire some more guys,
and I think that Sean is laying the groundwork there.
And Sean didn't quit.
Before he stepped down, I'm like, hey, buddy,
I need you to number one, prep Drew, number two, come on the board.
he's like yes so he came on and now he's he's still contributing still working but he that was a call
he had to make for his family so anyway what all that was to say the guys are working for us and they
get poached and that's good you know it took me a while to eat swallow that jagged pill that you know what
we're going to lose guys but this is just a stepping stone because we don't pay them what they're worth
in the market we just can't afford it we're a non-profit and we're trying to like put every single penny
we can towards the boys that's what we do so the guys know that so they're going to get poached
and that's okay because we got guys coming behind them
and these guys aren't going to leave me high and dry
they're going to train and train the next generation
and we'll get this flywheel moving.
The last time you were on,
did we talk about like the,
what happened with the whole board,
the old board and all that?
No, no, we talked a little bit about it,
but, you know, I'd full respect to those guys,
you know, what they wanted out of BTB was not what I wanted
and, you know, a couple board meetings in a row,
I was like, hey, you know what?
if that's what you want this to be, then you need to like change a mission statement because
I'm going to execute this mission statement. We screen and select maybe stills the character of the
next mission or you should fire me. And, you know, about the third board meeting, they're like,
hey, we see what you're doing. It's not. It's good. It's not what we want to mind. So we all
quit. And when they stepped down, I felt like a gut punch. I didn't know what to do. I was like,
these are guys I respect. These are guys that are friends of mine. And they don't,
want to support this. And it was a jagged pill to swallow. It took me about a week to figure out what
to do. And then I had like a tombstone moment. Like you know in tombstone when they're just,
they're going to pin down and there's shooting at him and he just goes like, no, no. Like that's,
I was at MIT doing a job for some folks, uh, the ROM crew. And, uh, when I, I just walked out
and I called you first. The first number I called. I'm like, hey, buddy, I need some help. And
you're like, I don't have time to talk about it. The answer is yes. That's what you said to me.
You said, call me tomorrow.
I'm like, all right.
So, one, you were in.
And then I called Steve Gatina.
And then I called Gio.
And then I called Greg McClelland.
Everyone said yes.
Everyone jumped on board.
And now, man, it's just, it's been growing exponentially under this.
Just y'all's leadership is amazing.
And yeah, I remember that conversation.
Yeah, I do too.
I think I was actually driving to trade.
You're like, hey, I got to talk to you.
I need a favor.
I'm like, I don't have time right now.
But the answer is.
Yes, call me tomorrow when we have time.
That's freaking friendship dues, you know?
When your brothers calls you, you got to just step up.
And sometimes you don't really know what you're stepping up for.
But if it's your friend and you know they do it for you, well, then the answer is yes.
Let's do this thing.
Okay, can you now tell me what the thing is?
Yeah.
I didn't know.
But so that's awesome.
There's also, and so you got Drew stepped up and Drew's a stud.
Yeah, so Sean and I are kind of similar personalities.
Drew is completely 180 for me.
He is very analytical, very data-driven, very much an integrator, whereas I'm more of like a visionary.
And that's exactly what we needed.
Like I, you know, I was sick over Sean leaving, but, you know, God had a plan.
And Drew is delivered in spades.
The guy is so organized, all the things that I wasn't, he is.
And he's just really helped us get to the next level.
So, I mean, you see the products.
My board meetings were nowhere near as good as his.
His are tight, you know.
I'm just really proud of the job he's doing and happy to have him.
So you got 60 plus fellows have gone through.
They're getting placed in all kinds of different businesses, all kinds of different things.
You got, like you got guys, like you said, already said in real estate, people that are doing, you know, 15, 20, 25 deals a year.
Real estate agents like already.
In a bad market.
Yeah.
in a crap market with a freaking 7.5% interest rate, by the way.
And you're talking about Aaron Pena, by the way, the great Aaron Pena.
That dude was one of my first class guys. You know Aaron. And man, he's coming over here.
He's stepped up big time for BTB. He puts on his own fundraisers. He's like, he gives back as fast as he can.
He's another guy I call. I'm like, hey, I need a, I don't even finish my sentence. He's like, I'm in.
I'm like, okay. So, yeah.
You can got a guy running for a Senate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Adam Schwarzie.
Swarzy.
Yes, sir.
Running for Senate in Minnesota.
There's a lot of problems in Minnesota here.
So it seems like there could be a couple things that could get straightened out of there.
There are.
And, and you know, Adam is a guy that we stood beside.
So we talked about it, you know, they, they ended up, they took his trident from him.
And the reason why is because he was trying to run for Congress when he was still active duty.
And he's like, okay, well, so he had to withdraw that.
And that's why they took it.
And so he's since had it reinstated, but the dude is a heart of gold.
He's working hard.
And I think that his heart's in the right place from Minnesota.
I would love to see term limits come through on these people.
He's going to be a new fresh guy.
And you know, it's like when you're a new guy, you're fired up.
You're in there.
You want to do good.
Man, these guys who are in there for 30, 40 years, I just don't think they have that same fire.
Oh, no.
You know what?
They do have fat bank accounts after 30 or 40 years.
Ridiculous.
Somehow they have the fattest bank accounts.
bro, that that corruption up there.
And by the way, now they're picking apart California too.
And it's as bad if not worse.
It's as bad if not worse.
It's just heinous.
Oh, actually, you know, Nick Shirley was up there.
And then they just made a law right here called Nick Shirley law,
which means he's not allowed to do that here.
They're like, you're not allowed to expose our corruption.
It's totally insane, man.
I don't know, man.
Is there a way to spin that another way?
I don't get it.
No, there's no.
We don't want you to hear to expose the.
disgusting.
The thing is,
you know,
our forefathers in America
got taxed on tea
and said,
you know what?
No, they had a tombstone motor.
No.
We're not going to pay tax on tea.
This is our thing.
You can't tax us on this.
We're going to fight,
and we're going to fight.
We're going to have a revolution.
We're going to fight a war
because you're trying to tax us.
If you think about what is happening
with the taxpayer's money,
in this country right now.
It is absolutely disgusting.
Yeah.
And look, we're in a,
maybe it's because we're in a good spot
as far as quality of life goes in America.
But A, are we really?
And B, the founders of America,
they were people that were in good spots themselves.
That's one of the few revolutions
in the history of the world
where the revolutionaries actually had something to lose.
Most of the time revolution takes place
because, you know, I have nothing.
I don't own anything.
I'm hungry and I'm going to go kill people
until I get what I want.
That's what happens most revolutions.
This revolution here in America,
a lot of the people that signed the Declaration of Independence,
they were people that had land,
people that had money,
people that had companies and businesses,
and they risked it all because they wanted freedom.
And they also didn't want to pay tax on this dumbass
to this king, right?
Why are we paying a tax to it?
King, are you kidding me? So now here we are. And, you know, we get swamped with taxes in California.
And you look around and you say, oh, you know, I guess, you know, okay, maybe someone's a really
positive thinker and they're an optimistic person. They say, you know, I don't mind paying taxes
because, you know, the kids need education and got to take care of the public schools. And I like
to have a paved road and we're playing for the fire department and we're paying for law enforcement
to protect us. And, and so, okay, you know, I can pay some money.
And then you start seeing where that money is going.
Yeah.
And it's not going to the police.
It's not going to law enforcement.
It's not going to the fire departments.
It's going to the things that are not just maybe things that I wouldn't consider important to me,
but things that I would actually consider to be the antithesis of where our money should be spent.
I just saw something before we rolled in here today that,
California, the state of California has spent $160 million to give iPads to prisoners.
Okay, I want my $160 million back.
I do not.
If you are in jail, you do not get an iPad.
I'm not buying you an iPad and neither should anybody else.
So, and that's one little item, that's one like if that's happening,
Yeah, and now you hear about some of this hospice care scams like it's it's gonna be it's good there's a reckoning coming
You know, it's kind of it's it's interesting you know organized crime when I grew up on the East Coast
Organized crime when I was a kid it was a real thing good parallel it was a real thing it was a real it was a real it was a real thing and it was deep
And there's some a number of things that happened that really disrupted it number one they made laws you know they made
laws that the RICO laws where you know if you got rolled up as Jimmy May but you were connected
to me and you were a low level street guy you would still end up getting 30 years or 40 years or
50 years so guess what Jimmy May goes you know what I'll tell you about my boss and that's what
they did so that really hurt the organized crime but then the other huge part of it is just the
electronic accounting like you can't hide money like you used to be able to and so now
That's what we're seeing.
That's why a guy like Nick Shirley,
you know,
his original leads were like,
wait,
wait a second,
where's this money going?
Wait,
how many,
why is there a 700% increase in autism treatment in Minnesota?
In three years?
Wait,
does that make sense?
So the technology is starting to reveal
all these things that have been hidden in the past.
So I think just like organized crime has a much harder time being organized crime.
I mean,
it's not even close to what it was in the 40s,
50,
70s, 80s is kind of when it got cleaned up.
That was a huge business.
Billions of billions of dollars in organized crime.
Billions.
And now, but it got stopped because of technology and law enforcement, laws got changed.
So now there's laws being passed and not, I'm talking about the Nick Shirley,
you're not allowed in California to expose things.
But there's other laws that are being passed anti-fraud laws.
Those things come on board.
Plus, we have technology.
and plus taxpayers going, look, man,
I'm an American, I'm feeling pretty.
You know, I got my house, you know,
I got my house and I pay my mortgage
and I got two cars and I'm pretty happy about that
and I understand I've got to pay taxes.
That's kind of a pretty general American attitude.
Not all of us think that all taxation is theft 100%.
Not all of us think that.
Some of us do.
Some people go, oh, you know what?
I don't mind paying a little bit
because, you know, I got a fire department
and want to take care of my law enforcement,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
But at a certain point, they go, wait a second,
I'm paying for what?
For iPads, for people that are in prison?
Why am I paying for iPads for people that are in prison?
Why am I paying for a hospice hospital that exists in a motel somewhere
where there's supposed to be 70 people there and there's zero?
Why am I paying for that?
And it's just going to go, and by the way, in California,
we also have the high-speed rail.
Yeah, a high-speed rail, right?
That's a real thing.
That's billions of dollars.
Billions of dollars for something that is, first of all, dumb.
It's just dumb.
And second of all, there's no progress, and it's behind, and it's billions of dollars over budget.
At a certain point that American blood will say, you know what?
I'm not paying this shit anymore.
So hopefully, you know, we'll just elect some people that will straighten it out.
Yeah.
I don't know.
And I don't even, a lot of people don't even trust the elections anymore.
I've definitely am skeptical.
You know, I don't know.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, and, you know, they had a really good idea.
I think it's a good idea.
They were like, hey, we'll put these solar panels to cover up this whole canal.
And you know, it's real estate.
And it's a good idea.
But everyone's like, there's no way you're going to pull this off.
You can't even build, you know, a train.
How are you going to pull this off?
Like, we're not going to give it.
if the government has lost credibility here.
Oh, a ton of credibility.
I mean, well, already what we already talked about today,
how much credibility does the government get
when they were, you know,
shutting down schools and keeping liquor stores open?
What?
What are you talking about?
What is wrong with you?
Why did you do that?
And the whole thing, the six foot of spacing and the,
put the mask on your face,
all those things, all those things.
And you know what?
It'd be one thing.
it would be totally different if someone said,
hey, you know what, we didn't really know.
I didn't really know.
Like I thought that the put cloth on your face
was going to make a difference.
Turns out it wasn't, hey, I'm sorry, I was wrong.
Hey, the schools, we didn't know,
and we just shut them down.
And, you know, I was wrong.
No one said that.
Yeah.
No one has taken any ownership of any of it.
And so it's very disturbing.
You know, the SEAL teams had,
I was running an opposite group one when this went down.
And they were like, hey, what do we do?
And I remember I looked at the calendar and like,
you got to be ready for like other operations downrange.
And I looked at it.
I'm like, okay, we can take three weeks off and not disrupt anything.
And so let's just take a knee for three weeks and see,
because I don't know, I don't know tell you.
So the boss said, okay, we'll take a knee for three weeks.
Then three weeks, I'm like, we've had a bunch of guys get it.
Everyone's fine in five days.
These guys are young and strong.
The best thing we could do is probably have a big chicken pox party for COVID
and be over with.
You'll have SEAL teams back online in five days,
but I know we can underwrite that,
so let's just train.
And we did.
And we know.
That's what we ended up doing.
Good job.
You got my vote.
You got my job.
I'm not running for anything,
but I would vote for you, Jock.
Check.
Some of the things that you do beyond the Brotherhood
are kind of a little bit of a reflection
of what you do at May Day executive,
meaning you got Apex Assultor,
what goes down with that?
Yeah, so you helped us with Apex Assalter.
It was huge.
That was our best fundraiser ever.
Thank you, Jocco.
Basically, when I started, I don't know how to raise money.
I don't know how to ask people for money.
I'm terrible at it.
And so I decided I would just do like a May Day executive event,
and I'd do a couple of them a year,
and that's how I would fund BTB.
So we started off doing these things,
and then the idea for Apex Assalter got launched from my friends at Limitless,
Charles Yarber and Ken McElroy.
They're like big-time investors that had me come up there
and do a job for them for something.
And they're like, hey, let's bus this,
picks a salter and do you think you get jaco to help? I'm like, I'm pretty sure I can get
jaco to help. Let me ask them. And so it turned out we did we did some like pit maneuvers
and j turns. We had half the group. Initially I was going to sell 12 slots. We end up selling 24.
And so I split it half and half. So we did, you know, half the people up on the top shooting
a range and the bottom, the bottom half doing like car crashing. And they flip flopped.
They got to meet you, have a conversation with you. And then the last day, this was actually
super cool a company called DNI which is a it's a Delaware nation industries they are they
they do government contracts their leadership was down here and those two guys at the end I was
like hey thank you guys we raise more money they've ever raised you know we're at 240,000
we're going to be able to clear almost everybody off of our queue that we couldn't bring in and
one of those guys named Lance is like how much more you need I'm like well it costs us about
20k per guy and we got five guys left you was 100k hey
he's like asked for him.
I'm like, I don't know.
I asked me.
No, no, come here.
I got it.
He got it like, hey, in this room, let's do this.
I'll go up 10.
And man, we got 100K and we got to clear a whole queue for that year.
And I don't know.
Good job, Lance.
He just jumped up and did it and showed me how to do it.
I still can't do it like he did.
But it was pretty cool.
So that was our most effective fundraiser ever to this point.
And you were a big part of it.
So thank you, Junk for doing that.
Always.
And then what's the difference between the apex assault and triple
S. So triple S is hosted by one of our board members, Geo, you know Geococlatorian. He just gives us this
amazing place. It's going to be in November this year. It's up near Pismo Beach. And just in them there,
it's just beautiful lavender farm. And he just opens it up for us. Like if you rented this thing out,
it'd be like 56 grand a day. And just great accommodations. We get up there. We do this. So it changes
every year. This year we did Humvee driving. We did some shooting on night vision.
And then we did some, like, escape from restraint.
So we taught people how to pick locks and how to pick, how to pick handcuffs and stuff.
And we kind of had a big competition.
And it's pretty cool, man.
It's a super fun event.
And it's been a, it was our flagship until Apex.
And Apex, you know, eclipsed it, which is good.
And I don't know how, you know, how long we can keep doing events to do that,
but they keep in bigger and bigger.
And I know we've got a big one coming up this year.
The big one coming up this year, meaning the New York City swim.
Yes, sir.
So let's get into that.
Yeah, so I met this guy named Bill Brown, and he's done it seven years in a row.
He's a former team guy, and now he's a lawyer in New York.
And he's just a really passionate dude.
And that guy has run this swim on his own for years.
And, you know, I met him, and he was like, hey, I know what beyond the brotherhood is.
He's like, this kind of grassroots thing is what I want to support this year.
And I'm like, okay, what are we doing?
We're going to swim in New York.
And so he's like, I need you to help me run it.
So I'm doing it.
And so I'm doing it through Mayday.
And so I'm helping help him to set it up.
The permitting process was a mess.
I mean, New York is a hard place to get stuff done.
We ended up not being able to swim into New York.
So we're going to swim around the Statue of Liberty and then back into New Jersey.
So we're going, it's a three and a half mile swim.
You're with the current.
So it's going to be, you know, but it's still legit.
And you swim out.
You better hope that Mar-Opps guy gets the current, right?
You're right.
I had, so I'm at team two
And we got this big
ORE
We're off the carrier
We got all these missions going
It's my platoon and my Paltune is basically
Echo Charles
You're getting graded for deployment
Operational readiness
Exercise
Yeah so
My squad squad two
Always gets the raw deal by the way
But so I'm squad two
So we're gonna
We're gonna launch off of a carrier
in the helicopter, we're going to fast rope onto a sub
where we pre-stage our boats.
We're going on the sub.
We're going to surface the sub,
launch the boats, drive to the island,
Viacos Island, do a, I think it was a pilot recovery there,
and then drive to marry up with some other ship.
On a little inflatable boat in the middle of the ocean.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, the Zodiacs were we taking.
And so there's a guy there.
A guy who's a friend of mine, a really good dude, like a very experience.
He was a prior enlisted guy and was very senior as an enlisted guy and then became an
officer and we're good friends.
And he's a freaking stud.
And he's like, hey, he goes, hey man, listen, like the currents here always go, you know,
south and north.
So insert down here and extract.
So insert way down here south of the island.
And then you can hit it.
and then you can get recovered to go north.
And I go, I go, is that the way, oh, he's like, yeah,
it's like the trade winds, the this, that.
And by the way, also on the East Coast, back in the day,
you only had, you only had, you only had,
on the West Coast, we had 55 horsepower motors.
Oh, yeah.
And on the East Coast, you have 35 horsepower motors.
In the West Coast, you know, you're in the Pacific,
you're in the, the ocean, you've got big giant waves,
you've got to have big giant motors.
And the West, the East Coast,
You're in the Atlantic, and again, there's obviously places, crazy waves over there, too.
But generally speaking, smaller.
So long story short, bro, the weather's horrible.
The submarine, who the submarine, this was freaking awesome.
We're in the helicopter and there's waves breaking over the submarine.
We're supposed to fast rope on.
And the air crewman guy, he's like, he's like, hey, the sub wants to know if you guys can get on board.
and and I look at the guy and I go,
I go tell the Cobb, the chief of the boat.
I go, tell the Cobb, if he can open that hatch,
we're coming on board.
And he's like, I hear him like, see him like yelling.
He goes, the cop says he'll do it.
I'm like, cool, we're coming.
So did you go right to the top of the mast
on the on the submarine?
No, it was, it was, but it was bad, dude.
It was like gnarly.
There was water all coming into the freaking hatch
that was open and everything.
But we fast up on there.
And then we are on the sub for 12 hours
and then we get launched.
and the weather got worse
and the weather,
the wind and waves
were just glowed straight in our face.
We actually ran out of gas.
We had to stop.
I had to like,
I had to go,
you know what?
We have to go to the Puerto Rico,
whatever unit it was down there.
Unit four,
unit three,
no, unit four maybe?
They're shut down now.
Yeah, well,
whatever it was,
I was like,
hey, we have to go and get more gas
because we were burning double the fuel.
So we pulled in,
like snuck up,
filled our stuff with gas,
reinserted,
got the,
and then did the same thing going to recover our boat.
We barely made it.
It was freaking heinous.
So my point in saying this is,
I hope your maritime gurus get the current right.
Otherwise, it's going to be a long-ass three-and-a-half-mile swim, boys.
I tell you what, Bill's nailed it every year,
so it's three-and-a-half-mile swim.
It is going to be a long swim,
but it's broken up.
As you go around the Statue of Liberty,
there'll be a barge out there,
and you'll climb up that barge,
and then you'll knock out 100-push,
and in 22 pull-ups. And then once we get a full head count, we'll jump in, take off to the
next barge, which is on the other side of Ellis Island, do the same thing. And then after that,
we're going to enter back into right, it's called North Cove, which is near Empty Sky Memorial
in New Jersey. And it's super cool. We'll get up there. We'll knock out your last set of pull-ups
and push-ups. And then we'll have a bunch of American flags for folks. And then you'll march back
down to the hotel. And we'll have a little reception that evening. But it's such a cool thing.
There'll be 50 slots for team guys, and then we've got a lot of police and first responders.
There's going to be 300 total swimmers.
And then, I don't know, there's some, I mean, Dakota Myers is going to come.
I'm pretty stoked about that.
There's some other, yeah, I mean, just living legend.
But he just made it through Battalion Recon school.
Like, what a stud.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What do you say to that guy when he shows up at your training pipeline?
I say, get some.
I mean, yeah.
Yeah, what do you say?
You're like, thank you for being here.
What do you want me to do?
Yeah.
Because I think there's something where if you have a CMH, when you show up at a base,
you can't demand like a band or something, can't you?
There's something like that.
Maybe.
I don't see Dakota doing that.
No.
Dakota's the best.
Dude, this is freaking awesome.
Yeah, that was, that's badass that he's going to be there.
Yeah, and I think, you know, this is probably, this will be our biggest fundraiser ever,
and it's really exciting for me to see, you know, BTB move.
I mean, every year you're pushing against this wall.
you don't feel like anything's moving and then you turn around behind you and you can see like
hey we've gone a long way and uh this is just you know we've doubled every single year as far as like
our intake and we've had to grow our staff because you can't take in more people until you've got the
capacity for it so we're growing in our capacity right now so we can try and bring in more guys
and we're not going to sacrifice quality you know it's it's everyone doesn't get to play and that's
okay you know we take the best guys that's that's we want to do want to do that for these guys so
yeah the screening process that you set up is awesome because
You know, listen, everyone, I think correctly so, gives a nod of respect to people that have been in the military, right?
Okay, this guy served his country.
They deserve a nod of respect and a heightened expectation, right?
If someone's, oh, I was in the Marine Corps, I was in the Army, or I was in the Navy, or I was in the Air Force.
Like, okay, so that means you've been through some hard training, you know, you've had to be disciplined, you've had to follow rules.
you've had to show initiative.
Like there's a bunch of credit that people get,
but that doesn't mean that every guy that has been in the military
or has been in special operations or has been in the SEAL teams
is going to be a good fit for an organization
or really good fit for the world outside of the military.
It's a thing.
So the way that you've been screening guys
and the success that they've had shows that it's a great process.
And even the depth of going one person senior, one peer,
and three people subordinate,
that's even the most screening that I've heard.
You know, like, hey, and by the way,
you can look at someone's record
and you can assess what they were like
and you or me can look at someone's record
and learn a little bit more,
but there's still, man,
there's still all kinds of little nuances
to your service that paint,
might paint a different picture of who you really,
who you really were.
So the fact that you all are doing that is,
what I think is what is,
making it so effective. And then on top of that, the training that you give them and the insight
that you give them and the mentorship that they get from, not just from Seals, more importantly,
getting mentorship from people that are in the industry that they want to go into.
Yeah, and they've been powerful as they've come into these industries, you know, and this has
been like a really passionate investment of mine of like my time. And, you know, I've met some really
great guys I didn't know before. And, you know, I mean, before I came here, we had a guy that
came into some trouble and, you know, me and his boss, and we sat down with him.
We went over a plan and we set up a plan for him.
And he's a friend of mine.
I respect the guy.
He screwed something up.
But you know what?
We're going to have his back and we're going to pull him through because he's a man
of character.
Just like what happened to Brad Geary, you know, if you don't know who Brad Geary is, he's a phenomenal
seal that basically somebody died in Bud's class when he was a commanding officer and they tried
to pin it all on him.
And he really wasn't true.
There was a lot of other things.
I was on the investigation team.
I know what went down.
And, you know, we took him in at a time when, you know, he was at a low spot.
And, you know, he's really thriving now.
He's got a book coming out.
He's a big time, you know, just a good man, five kids, Christian man, just someone that we all respect.
We talked about it before.
And he'll be at the swim, too.
He'll be representing BTB.
He speaks way better than I do.
Yeah, no, he's great.
And he's very articulate, a great guy.
So the 300 the swimmers
What's the deal?
They have to raise money themselves.
Yeah.
So how's it work?
Explain that.
So each swimmer when they register,
they're going to have to raise $2,000.
And so that's,
they can find someone to sponsor them.
And but usually they come up with a lot more.
Like I think last year,
the swimmers raised $850,000.
That's a,
that would be game changing for BTB.
We've never had,
we've never raised that much in a year.
We're a small organization.
So the bar is set at 850.
Yeah.
I think that's cool, but I think raising the bar to a milly.
You with me?
Echo Charles, can I throw out some slang?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That sounds good.
I think if they can do $8.50, then getting to a million would be freaking epic and set a good bar.
And then being able to help out so many more guys would just be epic.
And there's some other angles to this that we can get to that milly if you're going to set that bar, Jocko.
And I know when you set a bar, we get there.
You know, we could, we're looking for sponsors to help us with things.
There's lots of things that we got to pay for that if someone wanted to sponsor it would help us out a ton.
All these, we got to buy 300 buoys because these guys got to pull swim buoys.
You know, if you have a company that can make them or that wants to, you know, to buy them for us,
maybe we can put your logos on them, whatever it is you want to do.
I think Jock Fuel has that one.
Okay.
JoccoFuel signed up for that one.
We've got an after party we need to do.
We've got awnings we've got to put up.
I mean, coolers.
I think Jock Fuel is going to handle it.
You said you'll handle the refreshments.
Yeah.
But, you know, so thank you for putting your money where your mouth.
You've always done this, and people don't realize that how much you get back to seal community,
not just us, but to a lot of different organizations.
I know it because I know you, but thank you for doing that because this is a very important cause.
And the fact that these guys are killed, we had another guy die last week.
Another guy killed himself.
That's freaking awful.
Yeah.
Not from BTB, but another former seal.
No, I know.
It's, I saw it.
And, yeah, it's just, it's terrible.
And, you know, like I always tell people,
and I know that you feel the same way,
but, you know, like the teams gave us everything.
And so, like, the teams gave me everything that I have.
It was from the teams.
The thought process that I have, just everything.
You know, my family.
I wouldn't have met my wife if it wasn't for,
it wouldn't have my kids if it wasn't for, you know, nothing.
And so the teams gave us everything.
And so we try and get back as much as we can,
and especially with an organization like BTB,
where it's we're trying to take care of the guys or you know and i'm old enough now that i don't know
i don't know as many guys that are still in as you do uh but these are guys that when you when you
meet them you're like oh yeah it's team guy like you know there's generation people talk about
like the generational differences i hangar i go hang around with young team guys and it's like oh
yeah i remember exactly like we could i could just show up here at 23 years old and you wouldn't be
to tell the difference between being a guy that's freaking 23 years old that's currently in the team.
It's like, oh, yeah, they're just, they're just team guys.
And so when they get out, guess what?
They need some help.
And that's what BTB does.
So, yeah, man, it's freaking awesome.
It's going to be an awesome event.
It's going to be awesome to watch you raise a million dollars.
Yeah, we're going to do it, man.
We're going to hype it up.
Yeah, thank you so much.
And, you know, I just actually, I'm so grateful for, you know,
not just you guys, the whole board, the work that you guys do. I mean, I don't know anything about
this stuff. I've been out of the teams for three years. So I'm just like, you know, learning how to do
things as we do it. And I'm just grateful for the help that you've given us. I'm just grateful for,
you know, we have ups and downs, but generally the trajectory is up. And, you know, one of the
greatest and best things in my life is, you know, my fiance cat. And she has really been a force
for good in my life. And I'm just really grateful for you,
And I wanted to say thank you for the help and the support you've given me on this along the way.
Because she ain't look for credit.
She's like your wife.
She keeps her mouth shut.
And she just silently supports me whether I can't fix the printer or I can't make, you know, stuff work or I'm about to do something stupid.
She's the first to know.
And so I'm just really grateful for her influence in my life.
So I wanted to make sure I gave a shout out to her.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She likes, I guess, to be behind the scenes like my wife.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My wife, people used to say, oh, is your wife going to come on the podcast?
And I'd be like, nope.
Yeah.
And well, you know, did you ask her?
Yep.
Well, why aren't you a good leader?
Can't you convince her?
Nope.
In fact, I asked her one time, I said, hey, listen, what if I write questions for you?
Yeah.
You tell me the answers or write the answers and I'll just read them on the podcast because
people have questions for you.
And she's like, I don't really want to do that.
I'm like, okay.
I like when you do her English accent, though, that makes me laugh.
I don't like to do that.
I don't like that kind of thing.
I don't like to do that.
And I'm like, okay, cool.
So, yeah, props to the lady.
Awesome. Does that get us up to speed? That where we're at?
I think it does. I don't think we missed anything, but I don't know. I'm always interested in the
Echo's angle on things, you know. We were making fun of them earlier because last time I was on
the show, we were here for like, I don't know, hour and a half before he realized like, wait,
you're Jimmy May. I'm like, yeah, bro. We've been rolling together for years and you just
didn't put two and two together. It's pretty funny. I'm trying to remember it correctly. Like,
I knew your name was Jimmy Me. That's the thing. I knew your first and last name.
Yeah.
And then I knew of Jimmy May, the team guy legend dude.
And just, I don't know, subconsciously, that's just two different people.
You know what I'm just talking about Jimmy May, Jimmy May at different times.
And I'm thinking about other, you know, and yeah, it all came together.
It's an interesting thing because we might have talked about it.
But for some reason, when I say your name Jimmy, like when I reference you, I always say Jimmy May.
I never just say Jimmy.
Maybe it's because it's too common of a name.
But I always say, oh, yeah, you know, Jimmy, like, oh, Jimmy May is common.
coming out or I saw Jimmy May or you know whatever that's what I would say so I would be talking
some story about the teams I'd be like oh yeah do well Jimmy May did this or Jimmy May said that
or whatever but then he's rolling with you and doesn't recognize that the other his guy
didn't rolling with you I did not know your last thing I remember it's all coming yeah so you probably
just knew it was Jimmy yeah and then what halfway through the first time he came on I said
Jimmy May you're oh shit I was lost I was like what are you talking about dude we've known
teacher for years.
Yeah.
I was like,
brother,
that was you the whole time.
Okay.
All right.
Cool.
Do I have any more questions?
Yeah,
as a matter of fact.
Thank you.
Let's go back,
rewind a little bit,
May Day executive.
So you said you do like all kinds of stuff.
All kinds of stuff,
man.
So like,
let's say you had a potential client or whatever.
And they were like,
hey, I want to do,
I don't know,
X, Y,
Z, something that you've never done before.
You're like, hey,
hell yeah,
let's figure that out.
And you'll not.
I would be like,
hey, I need a minute.
Let me make a phone call
because there's someone in the teams that can do this stuff.
Like, and lots of, I did a land navigation for a group about three or four weeks ago.
I just called the guy that runs land now for SQT.
I'm like, hey, man, you line me out on this.
And because we know how to do it, I just, you know, we need, four points are.
And there's a bunch of logistics I didn't understand.
Yeah.
So I haven't had to say no.
Right.
Right.
Okay.
So that was the question.
Like, it's not like, you know, you go to certain restaurants and you say, hey, do you guys serve this?
And they say, no, we don't serve this.
But you know, I like that.
Mayday executive serves so far.
We served all that.
that they want to do.
Okay.
All right, solid.
Why you got something you want to do?
Well, actually, I like going to try to take my son shooting.
Oh, we can just do that way.
Right, that's what I was thinking.
I was like, oh, shoot, I need.
I'll set it up.
Yeah, yeah.
But, you know, my mind starts, you know, working on these types of things.
And if I got a shop that provides these services, I'm going to take you up on it.
You know what's interesting is that I think we started off with the whole that the dad thing.
Like, you and I've talked about this before, Jocko.
Like I would love, we talk about start a school.
And we'd like have the school that just grows kids to like actual learn things that are useful.
And anyway, I've been thinking about doing an event where it's just dads and their sons.
And I just, I don't, I'm trying to fig dial in the age group, you know, because not, not all nine year olds are equal.
I don't know.
You know, what can I do with them?
But I think it'd be cool to have like day one where it's like I train the dads because I don't want to be the guy.
I want to be front center.
I want the dad to train their kids.
So like day one, whether we're doing like land nav or we're shooting or whatever we're doing.
I train the dads, hey.
And then I'll be there just in case they got something that can't handle, you know,
and I'll run like the safety aspect of it.
And then have them, you know, camp out and do this stuff with their kids.
I just, I'm not trying to make money on it.
I think it's just something cool to like, be like, hey, look, you know, you're the man.
You need to take ownership of your family and let's do something special with your kids.
And I think it'd be a cool thing.
So I've been kicking the idea around.
I don't know if you guys have thoughts on it, but, you know, how old your boy?
No.
That's right in there, man.
Yeah, yeah.
And he shoots, I take him shooting stuff.
But it's just at the indoor range.
You know, he has a gun that he's kind of designated with.
Nothing explodes.
Nothing's on fire.
No, no, no, no.
Yeah.
When you start shooting through the windows of vehicles and stuff like that, bro, it's, we can do all that.
Well, he's down for all that kind of stuff.
As long as you start slow and don't just throw him into some weird thing to, like, shock the city.
You know how sometimes that's part of the training thing and you want to shock the system, bro.
Come on now.
I'm not going to do that to your camera.
I will.
He will not be down for that.
No, not at all.
But he's pretty sharp.
Ever since the Warrior Kid first book came out,
like I've been talking about the Warrior Kid Academy,
the Warrior Kid camps.
I think there's going to get a lot of traction
when the movie comes out.
The movie's coming out the day before Thanksgiving.
And it's such a good movie.
It's so good.
It's so, it's just awesome.
It's funny.
It's funny.
It's moving.
It's inspiration.
It's everything.
It's a big movie.
beautiful movie, but it's going to get kids and parents thinking about that warrior kid path,
you know, and I think there's...
Maybe I do a collab with you, bro.
Yeah.
I'm not here to try to, like, make money or anything.
I would love to work with you on it.
It's going to be...
It's going to be...
Yeah, I think, and, you know, I, even on that initial, we did a podcast 10 years ago
about what the Warrior Kid Academy would have.
Like, it's, and we could go back and pull that blueprint.
It's good.
It's a solid blueprint.
So, yeah, I think something like that is in my future.
and so yeah we'll see what happens there um people can find you on linkedin jimmy may
yes sir please hit me up on lincoln i'm i'm trying to grow that audience and uh yeah it's just
jimmy may and and then btb this is wwwb beyond the brotherhood dot org for mayday mayday is mayday
executive dot com yes sir and then if you need the cable pilot and i don't know if we'll talk about
if we're going to leave this in or not based on my ability to invest in the company.
If you want, if you need the cable pilot, if you're, look, if you're a lineman, you're out there,
uh, you're an energy company, you're delivering energy people and you need to do it more efficiently
and safer, then check out Mayday solutions.
Mayday dot solutions.
That's it.
There's no dot com.
It's mayday dot solutions.
And then finally, uh, the NYC seal swims.
dot com.
NYC seal swims.com.
We need to what we've already got a hundred or
120. 96 as of three days ago but I didn't check it before I came in.
Okay so that's going to sell out quick.
Yeah.
If you want to go up there and swim, you've got to get registered quick and then
help us raise a million dollars to help out all of our brothers in the teams.
That's what we got going on.
Jimmy.
Any closing thoughts, bro?
No, I know that when my brother hears this, he's going to let you invest
because my brother, Jeremy May.
He's a big fan.
He listens to all your stuff.
So you may have just got yourself in.
I hope so, bro.
There I am.
Otherwise,
echoes on the case.
He's going to edit it right out.
Well, you know what?
I do just have just a message of gratitude again.
I'm just so thankful,
Jaco,
for your continued friendship.
But even, you know,
without all the stuff you do now,
you've been a good friend to me a long time ago.
You came and fixed my sink when I,
I was on deployment and I had, you know, you just, you just been a good friend for a long time.
And, you know, I appreciate it.
And I appreciate the things you've put in front of me.
And, you know, I'm grateful for where I am in life.
Got a great woman, great kids.
And I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, grateful for the opportunity to be where I'm at.
So thank you guys.
Well, back at you, man.
Thanks for, thanks for coming on.
And again, I'm always here for you.
If you know that, you know, what I have is what you have.
that's because what you did for me,
what you did for the teams,
what you did for the country,
and what you're continuing to do right now
to help out our brothers
beyond the brotherhood of the teams.
It's having a huge impact.
And so I'm here for you, always.
Appreciate you, brother.
All right, man.
And with that, Jimmy May has left the building.
He's about to go get after it somewhere.
He's about to go make something happen.
He's about to go spearfish
after he crashes a car off of a club.
and blows it up and then he's going to shoot some guns at the car as he's falling down he
once he gets in the water he's going to spearfish a big giant shark tell you that's what we're
doing when you're doing things like that you need fuel we recommend jaco fuel hey we got hydration
we got go energy we got protein we got a new protein raspberry gelado okay raspberry gelato now listen
The term gelato, right?
Is that a term that I would use?
Jolato.
Have you ever heard me say Jolato before?
I'm pretty sure jolato is just ice cream,
a special fancy kind of ice cream.
Yeah, I think so.
Fancy's not really my scene.
Oh, right, right, right.
But in this particular case,
there's a reason behind this word.
Okay.
Because jolado is like a little extra,
it's a little extra ice cream activity.
All right.
So check it out.
We got raspberry gelato ready to drink protein.
Oh, ready to drink.
Yeah, it's RTG, RTD.
Okay.
Oh, now you're talking to you.
RTD.
Ready to drink.
Raspberry gelato.
We got a bunch of different flavors.
What's your favorite flavor?
Powdered milk.
Well, now the, it would be the peanut butter chocolate.
But recently I've been into the strawberry.
I know it sounds weird because it was kind of on the bottom of the list.
But here's the thing.
This is what I've been doing.
I've been doing that Greek yoga.
thing that coach Hannah Tata saw to do.
Yeah, yeah.
Um, and but I've been doing it with the strawberry thing.
You see what I'm saying?
And then I, you know how you go off on tangent?
So you know, making these weird strawberry smoothies with this and that and all kinds of
for me for my program there.
Strawberry, which I also do.
Strawberry and vanilla are morning flavors for the, for the Greek yogurt.
I could see it.
You can throw a couple blueberries in there.
You can throw a couple strawberries in there.
You're getting like, what was it, 20 grams of protein plus 22?
Like you've got 44 grams of protein boomer right out of the gate in the morning.
Yep, yes, sir.
Now in the, and you get a fresh, uh, uh, fruit scenario, right?
Sure.
That's a morning thing, right?
Afternoon evening.
Chocolate, chocolate peanut butter, chocolate mint,
put some, uh, some little sugar-free chocolate chips in there.
A handful of nuts.
Mixed nuts.
Okay.
And then, listen, if I'm being quite honest with you, shot of whipped cream.
You got yourself a dessert, straight up dessert.
Rocky Road scenario.
Yeah, Rocky Road scenario.
So that's what we got.
We got everything that you need at JoccoFuel.
Go to joccofuel.
Or go to your retailer.
Go to the store.
Go to the grocery store.
We probably have Janko Fuel in there.
If there's not, ask for it.
And we'll get it to you.
Also check out origin USA.com.
We got American-made goods.
We got American-made hoodies.
Jiu-Jit-Tugis, rash guards.
I just trained today.
I know that other people that are in this room
were not training today.
Is that because you don't have a rash guard?
Is that what's the reason?
No, no, no.
That specific modality of training, yes,
I did skip that particular mode of training today,
but I did other sports.
It's weird because Kerry came by.
Kdo.
Yep.
And he's like, oh, yeah, what's up?
And I go, you know, just here.
Training with Echo.
And he goes, oh, he's all surprised.
He's like, oh, Echo's here?
And I go, whoa, yeah, I'm training him with him.
And he goes, where is he?
And I go, well, he's here in spirit.
Thank you.
We got that training in.
And you had a spiritual rash guard, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Probably in your mind and your soul was covered.
But I was actually in the real world on the mats of justice.
Check out origin USA.com.
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Go get some.
Even in person, the only rashcards I use are origin rashcards.
And I do have a bunch of.
them not to mention a custom one because they go hard yeah well you should use them yeah
you're right you're right about that I'm not going to do that anyway also don't forget
about Jocco story discipline equals freedom as far as representation on the past shirts
hats hoodies other stuff other accessories we got these little cool silicon wristbands
I don't really wear that many wristbands but when I wear them I kind of feel a little
something what do they say just one equals freedom that's a good one yeah it's a good
flags are back in stock by the way good people need those flags yeah um also we did so the
short locker subscription situation new design every month people seem to like it i did go one step
further i've been mentioning it the one of the designs from the past a few years ago that people
really like and they and you can kind of tell because when you kind of have it on or whatever more
people than not than than usual say oh my god you know and they make a thing out of it so anyway
you for that break down.
It is released to the public already.
Look, you don't have the jump.
Like, by this time, you don't have the jump on it if you didn't sign up for the email.
See what I'm saying?
You have the email list or whatever where I let everybody know.
But I'm letting you know now.
You know what I'm saying?
You do run the risk of certain sizes being sold out or not.
Maybe, maybe not, but that's kind of the way it works.
But it's out.
Sugar-coated lies.
That's the one.
That's a good one.
It's out to the public.
It's on jocco store.com.
Right on.
Go get some.
Got a bunch of books.
Put your legs on by Rob,
Need to Lead by Dave Burke.
I've written a bunch of books,
a bunch of kids books, check them out.
Primalbeef.com.
If you need steak,
get some.
Colorado Craftbeef.com.
If you need steak, get some.
Also, we have echel on front.
We have a leadership consultancy.
We solve problems through leadership.
The next big event that we have
that's not sold out
is because we have battlefield coming out,
council's coming up, it's sold out.
We have the muster in San Diego,
July 8th through the 10th.
And this is a two-day leadership seminar training course.
Indctrination.
That's what's happening.
It is July 8th through the 10th.
If you want to come, go to eschlamfront.com and check the events.
And we will see you there.
Also, extreme ownership.com.
This is our online training academy.
You can check that out as well.
Also, you know, you can look at Ask Jocko on your,
application on your phone you can get something called ask jocco and it's a AI what's the word here
an AI simulation of my brain you know yeah sure and it will it's really good at it's it's meant for
leadership questions so check that out wherever you get your apps for your android or your
apple you can check that as well and if you want to help service members active and retired you want
to help their families you want to help gold star families check out mark lee's mom mama lee she's got an
amazing charity organization.
If you want to donate or you want to get involved, go to America's mighty warriors.org.
Check out heroes and horses.org.
And then you heard a bunch about Jimmy May's organization today, beyond the brotherhood.
org.
So check that out.
Hopefully you can go to swim or you can sponsor someone that's doing the swim.
So it would be incredible to be able to raise this type of money to put back into that organization.
Check out Warriors and Need as well.
Warriors and Need.org.
you heard from Ben Ingram last week.
He's trying to get these veterans
and have these skills and put him in the right spot.
Let's help him do that.
If you want to connect with Jimmy May,
go to LinkedIn and look for Jimmy May.
And you'll find him, give him a follow
or whatever it is you give someone on LinkedIn.
And then for Beyond the Brotherhood,
it's beyond thebrotherhood.org for Mayday.
It's Maydayexecutive.com.
And then if you need the cable pilot,
go to mayday.
Solutions and finally for the swim NYC Seals seals
Sealswims.com check that out if you want to connect with us
Check out jocco.com on social media and then on the uh or that's on the internet on the social media
I'm at jocco willinks echoes i'm at jocco willink there's no s on that no yes
echoes at echo charles just be careful because the reason that thing exists is not to inspire
you it isn't to educate you it isn't to improve your capabilities a human it is to take
your time and squander it so be careful thanks once again to Jimmy for coming on again
your loyalty is much appreciated to the country to the teams and to our brothers so thanks for
what you're doing a salute to all of our military personnel out there around the world
right now in harm's way protecting freedom and our way of life also thanks to our police law
enforcement firefighters paramedics EMTs dispatchers correctional officers border patrol secret service
as well as all other first responders thank you for protecting us here on the home front
and everyone else out there let's go back to this idea of skills right we talked about passing on
skills what skills do you have you know can you build stuff can you rewire
a house can you do a little bit of plumbing are you a fighter you know how to fight you know some
jizzi you know some boytai you know some boxing good shot you know some archery you're good at
communicating with other people you're good at leading what skills do you have what skills do you
need how can you build up your skill sets and maybe most important what skills can you actually pass
on and do you have that skill the skill of passing on skills
that might be the most important skill of all.
So go get after it.
Learn skills and pass them on.
And that's all I've got for tonight.
And until next time, this is Echo and Jocko.
Out.
