Jocko Podcast - 548: The Importance of Morale and How to Develop It.
Episode Date: July 8, 2026>Join Jocko Underground Full Episodes< The military review US Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, again, November 1960Drawing from rarely discussed military journal...s written during the Cold War, Jocko and Echo explore the timeless principles behind morale, trust, courage, and why some leaders inspire extraordinary effort while others don't.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocco Podcast number 548 with Echo Charles and me.
Joccoe Willink.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
So I was reading through some material.
I've been looking, trying to get a sense of the leadership during the Cold War.
And because everything was just so focused on nuclear war, they were so concerned about it.
And I came upon some articles from the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
They have a publication, or they had a publication called Military.
review and this is from November of 1960 and so it's obviously it's post-world
War II it's it's post-Korea but clearly prior to Vietnam and this is a time when
everyone thought the next war was going to be a big nuclear war so it's interesting
you see some of that focus in there but but there was a couple articles that I
thought were worth going into reviewing a little bit just because they
have lessons that apply to any situation,
whether it's conventional war, nuclear war,
or non-combat scenarios where you interact with people,
right, people you work with, people you live with,
people that you have to lead.
So some good information here, let's get into it.
This is the Military Review, US Army Command and General Staff
College Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, again, November 1960.
And some of the articles, interestingly,
The first article, and it's called guerrilla warfare in Ukraine.
That's the start off right there.
It had Lerps and Nuclear Target Acquisition.
So that's that's Rangers, early Rangers, pre-Rangers, long-range reconnaissance,
and nuclear target acquisition.
The next article is the Petersburg crater and nuclear weapons.
I mean, this thing is just, they're really concerned about it.
The armed might of red China.
the mutual weapons development program.
There's just a lot of these things.
But then it gets into some,
some things that I found a little bit more interesting.
There's an article called The View from the Bottom.
And we're going to start with that one.
And there's another one called the morale of the soldier in war.
So the view from the bottom,
written by someone named Elihu Rose,
who was an Air Force reservist, second lieutenant.
And he's also ended up being a big, like,
real estate magnet in New York, but this is, I think this is prior to him doing all that.
So this first article is called View from the Bottom and that perspective being like,
what does it look like?
What does it look like for the troops?
It says here, in accomplishing his mission, the commander avails himself of all the apparatus
of war that modern armies possess, but his arsenal also contains one weapon, which is unique,
which none may bring into being but himself.
This weapon is morale.
Not the morale inspired by Ma's apple pie or some vague call to patriotism, but rather that
rare spiritual bond between the commander and those it is his privilege to command.
I never thought too much about the uniqueness that each individual leader brings to the table.
No two leaders are alike.
Well, at least they're not exactly alike.
They might be similar, but they're not alike.
Certainly, commanders have been successful without this very personal approach.
And in the moment of truth, it is, of course, strategic and tactical ability for which there is no substitute.
I was kind of surprised he said that.
There's nothing more important than strategic and tactical ability.
But I'll tell you, I don't know.
You know, the people with the stronger morale sometimes achieve victory regardless.
But in every battle, no matter how well planned, there remain the variable.
and unknown quantities those times when men are called upon to produce that extra effort
which escapes definition. If the commander is to practice his art on the highest level,
he must call forth this effort by the very projection of himself.
I know this goes into, we did a podcast a while back, not too long ago, but we talked about
T.E. Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia. And he had this thing that he said that you could learn
nine-tenths of what you need to know to be a combat leader you could learn in the books
and in the schools and in the field training but there was what he called the irrational tenth
this other extra little bit that you can't really teach someone now I think you can teach some of it
but that's what this is talking about in my opinion the art at the highest level you have to
bring to yourself. You have to bring yourself. Changes in warfare. The years, and he goes into an example,
I'm not going to read the whole example. It's about Sheridan in the Shannon Doha campaign. But he says,
changes in warfare. The years following the Civil War saw changes in technique and doctrine that
altered the very fabric of warfare as it is, as it had been practiced up to that time.
Image of the commander, like theatrical audiences, the military formation must be a
by way of the mass personality.
The commander's success in establishing rapport will thus depend upon the image of himself
he is able to create in the large number rather than on the personal impression he conveys to the
comparative few.
There is no formula for image.
It varies as people themselves vary.
Some commanders, for example, have used crude language in establishing the personality of a
regular guy.
While others have attempted the same thing with a startling lack of success.
So this idea that, you know, this image that the leader creates is in some ways more important because that image goes out to everyone than like a personal impression you put on to a few people.
It's an interesting, it's an interesting take that the way you appear to the troops is more important than the way you appear to just a few of your subpoena.
direct subordinate leaders and the interesting thing about this is and you're going to hear
this you hear this and you go oh so you're supposed to like fake an image and like what are you doing
that's kind of seems kind of fake but as he goes into it he's and he kind of mentions it here
you can try and portray an image but if it's not real and the term that they use nowadays in the
world is authentic if you try to put out an inauthentic image a quote unquote image of yourself
people are going to pick up on it and it's not going to work.
An order of the day or a spirited phrase spoken on the eve of battle might carry with it
all the grandeur of Nelson's signal at Trafalgar, but often the same words from a different mouth
fall flat.
The lone word nuts was spoken by General McCallif at Bastogne has entered the history
books not because of its simplicity or magnificence, magnificent, but
because whatever qualities it had, it apparently had them just at the right time and from the right person.
That's when the Germans said, hey, we got you surrounded.
Would you like to surrender?
You can surrender at this time.
They wrote him this long message, and he just wrote back nuts.
Considering the many ways by which this emotional relationship can be established, the one common denominator is the concept of recognition.
This is being able to see you.
During World War II, field marshal Sir William Slim once addressed some troops saying,
I was in the ranks myself once.
And in those days, I was always being shoved around by people I never saw.
And about whose sanity, I had the gravest doubts.
Well, I want you to know what I look like, not because I think I'm any oil painting,
but because I think you ought to know the bloke issuing the orders,
then you'll know who to blame for them.
Interesting.
You're coming right out and telling the boys.
Like, hey, I didn't even get to see the leaders when I was in World War I.
I'm going to let you see me.
You know who I am.
Today, such a thought hardly seems unusual, but it represents a remarkable step forward since the first World War when senior officers were not always so accessible.
Field Marshal Montgomery states in his memoirs that during his entire service as a junior officer on the Western Front, he never once saw the British Army commander's general French.
Or Hague.
God, that would piss a brother off.
That would piss a brother off right there.
I had,
I had legit people come and visit me on deployment.
And it was like, okay, cool.
You know what I mean?
We had General Brown, the four-star Socom commander,
fly into Ramadi.
See what up.
The Commodore came out.
We had a, the CGESOTF commander came down.
People wanted to make sure they knew what was happening.
Yeah.
I can't imagine just going through World WW1.
People are getting slaughtered and you never see the leaders at the front.
How the hell do those guys know what's going on?
How do they appreciate the suffering?
How do they appreciate the tactics that are being used and not being effective?
You don't.
You got to get out there.
And it's not just so that you can understand better what's happening,
but it's so the troops can see you and know you different time.
People are a lot more accepting of orders in that day than we are now.
By World War II, the rule that a commander should be known by his men had become axiom.
The satisfactory state of morale existing on the eve of Normandy invasion was undoubtedly due in large measure to the continual troop inspections carried out by all the senior commanders.
These clearly indicated to the troops the interest and concern of their leaders,
and proved well worth the enormous expenditure of time.
A recently, so World War II, now you have, you know, good interaction with the troops.
The leaders are down there.
They're inspecting or asking questions or finding out.
And the troops feel that.
As opposed to just, hey, go over the top and go get mowed down by a machine gun.
A recently published history of Major General Frank D. Merrill's Marauders relates a minor incident,
which nevertheless emphasizes this aspect of troop psychology.
A body of troops approached General Stillwell's headquarters
after an arduous 140-mile march,
anticipating the honor of exchanging salutes with their theater commander.
Stillwell's failure to appear was doubtless an oversight,
but it was noted by the troops,
and in the words of one of them,
the chance for an inexpensive gesture
that would have repaid him in the days to come.
so these guys march 140 miles and and general still well by and they you know they even say hey but it's
probably by accident some oversight like someone didn't tell them well the guys are here whatever
but man that hurts nothing is more damaging to the morale of combat troops than the impression
that a critical event in their lives is regarded with indifference by the very leaders responsible
for their safety careful that and it's a bit
You know, the thing is that you have to remember
when you're in a leadership position,
it doesn't seem like a big deal to you,
but it's a big deal to them.
So to you is, oh, you know, the troops,
I don't need to go out there.
They don't think that much of me.
No, no, no.
Whether you think that or not,
you need to get out there.
You need to go grip and grin with the troops.
Yeah.
This is an interesting section.
Distinguishing trademarks.
Many commanders have found
that distinguishing trade barks have aided in establishing both recognition and rapport.
The custom probably is as old as warfare itself.
A sprig of broom worn in the helmet of Jeffrey of Anjou gave the name Plantagenei to an entire line of English kings.
So a sprig of bloom is like a little yellowish flower and this guy wore it in his
helmet and then they called that whole line of English kings plantinage which is which is like the
latin name for that flower so one guy's kind of personal trademark named a whole lineage of kings
in world war two the site of general patent's ivory handled revolver became so well known that he
is reputed to have told a soldier if i were seen without this gun no one would know me i might as well
just go without my pants.
But the use of the trademark is not without its pitfalls.
It must be judicious or it will be degraded into a caricature.
Field Marshal Montgomery's use of a double-badged tankers beret is a classic example of
the more successful military signature.
This is Monty.
He wore the tankers beret.
His memoirs make clear the deliberation with which he,
he set out to find an appropriate symbol,
first using an Australian hat,
then changing to a tank beret,
and later adding an extra cap device
as a final distinctive touch.
In his own words,
he set out to be not only a master,
but a mascot.
And that's interesting.
So everyone,
when you picture Montgomery,
you picture him in that beret,
I guess he was wearing this Australian hat,
you know,
with a big rim on it or brim on it,
And it kept blowing off in the desert and one of the tankers gave him a beret said you know you wear this it won't fall off won't get blown off and so he started wearing that and then he put two
insignias on it one was the signy of being a general the other one is the insignia of the tank
symbol which is illegal
It's against the rules you're not allowed to do that you're not allowed to have this you know it's against military regulations
But he's the freaking general so he did it and he gave him a little you know a little bit of extra
Yeah.
So people do that sometimes.
They do a little something.
Oh, yeah.
Remember the Hulk's mustache?
The Hulk's.
Oh, yeah, the Hulk.
Admiral Richards.
Yeah, yeah.
Admiral Richards' mustache.
That was kind of, it was maybe not 100% within regulations.
Now, we know, look, when he came on here and he had the massive handlebar mustache, you know, which is, again, that's Hulk all day.
But even when I met him, he had a muscle.
stash that was, you know, like I said, barely within regulations, if not just straight up,
not within regulations, but it's the Hulk.
Yeah, he's the admiral.
What are you going to say like, hey, you're not within regs?
No, you're the admiral.
Yeah.
So is it kind of like that to a degree where certain exceptions can be made depending on the person
and there will say, I don't know, reputation or performance or whatever?
Yeah, yeah.
I would say that is accurate.
Yeah.
You know, I had probably the closest,
I don't know what the closest thing I would have had to this,
but one thing I did,
I used to brief in my first deployment.
I did a little bit in my second deployment,
was I had a baseball bat.
So have you ever heard of MWR, morale, welfare, and recreation?
It's like a, it's like a portion in the military.
They have in the Navy, in the Marine Corps,
they have MWR.
So they're the people that set up baseball games.
and you know set up trips to go to Disneyland and like to do all this kind of stuff so for
whatever reason in Baghdad mwr had sent like baseball bats and gloves and we weren't
playing baseball but there's nowhere to play baseball but we had this so we had these
bats and so the first deployment this is 2003 like there wasn't much established
infrastructure in Iraq at the time.
And so we would brief, we had an old kind of compound Camp Jenny Posey.
And, you know, there's some old buildings on there.
And where we ate our food in this crappy old building is also where we briefed the troops.
And since we ate food in there, there was some MWR stuff in there, including these baseball
bats.
Well, I didn't have, you know, a laser pointer, you know, back in the day.
So I just briefed with a baseball bat
And so eventually we had like the briefing bat
And you know I'd be standing there
And it's a good way to get in the character too
By the way
The baseball bat now hey everyone knows like
All right Jocco's briefing some shit
Like this is what we're doing
And so the briefing bat
And then when we when we got into Tasking to Brouser
I definitely used a bat
During workup
When we got on deployment
I used it less but briefing bat
No there's something
It's a thing
Yeah
There's some videos of me with the briefing bat too by the way
Pretty legit.
But, you know, it's kind of this little trademark.
Now, I didn't carry it out in the field, you know,
but then again, I also wasn't a field marshal.
You know, I didn't need to be, everyone knew me.
Wasn't that big of a deal.
Also, too, with those types of things, sometimes,
there's some actual, like, function in it.
So, like, you know, like when you had the briefing bat.
And you use the word character,
getting into character,
but it's like almost even to a functional degree
where it kind of helps you,
like, what do you call, like embody the role that you're in.
Yeah.
See what I'm saying?
Like, you know, I told you before we started recording.
I was watching a few good men the other day.
Yesterday, it would be exact.
But he had a bat.
Tom Cruise, right?
Oh, okay.
Caffee or whatever his name is.
He had a bat.
But he's like, where's my bat?
I think better with my bat.
So when he's doing it, he had like a bat, you know?
That was like his thing, where I remember that's, I've seen that movie many times.
seen that movie many times. That always struck me as true. Where if it's like when you have
something, like you ever, and this is kind of like a meme nowadays, but it's absolutely true when
you're on the phone, you know, back in the day when you're talking on the phone and you're like
doing the most random like things. But if you have something in your hand, you're doing, you know,
like I would doodle, I would doodle on the wall or something like this. You didn't, don't even
really realize you're doing it until you're done. But if you have something in your hand,
it like helps you, I don't know with the flow of like your role for some reason.
Well, yeah, there's a whole like theory behind that.
You know, they give kids little things to fidget with.
Yeah, like fidget, yeah.
Fidget spinners.
Fidget spinner, yeah.
Because they think better when they're supposedly doing something like that.
Yeah, yeah.
So I'd say there's something to it.
But, you know, I use that term kind of as a joke, like getting into character.
Right.
Kind of a joke.
But it's also, it became a pattern of like, oh, everyone's like, okay,
Jock was getting ready to brief.
Right.
He's picking up the bat.
Yeah.
It's time to time like he's not playing around.
Yeah.
It just primes the environment.
Yeah.
I had something like that too with, uh,
I had like a stick or something I used to use when I was in training cell at team one or something like that.
I had something because I when I use, when I use that statement, get into character.
It wasn't it wasn't the first.
Have I used it before?
I can't remember what it was.
I'll think about it.
Get into character.
Um, carrying on here.
So he wanted to be a, not just a master, but a mascot, which is, which is a weird way of saying it, but at the same time, it makes sense, right?
Like, we're going to rally behind the mascot.
We always think of mascots in America as being, you know, whatever, these big fluffy animals and whatnot.
But if you have a badass mascot, remember that the San Diego Aztecs had like the Aztec dude that would just get wild.
Yeah, fully.
Yeah, that's not a fluffy mascot.
Yeah.
It's like a badass mascot.
So this is the same type of thing.
Carrying on, although the essence of morale is emotion,
General Montgomery analyzed it intellectually,
first recognizing the need, then fulfilling it,
that his personality is also particularly well suited to this approach
in no way detracts from the basic soundness of his attitude.
And the restoration of morale to the shattered 8th Army
on the eve of the battles of Alam Haifa and Alameen
will rank as one of the finest military.
achievements but however you're going to go into this there's some pitfalls any
discussion of this aspect of common personality must inevitably come to general
george s patten jr upon his upon his death general patent was elevated to that
semi-legendary status which makes any objective evaluation a risky undertaking so this is
1960 this is only like 15 years after patent died and he's saying it's funny he says
semi-legendary status. No, full legendary status. His admirers claim that his meticulous and
somewhat theatrical military dress helped achieve a great rapport with his men. His detractors
ridicule it as pointless affectation and claim less effective results. As in most such cases,
the truth probably lies somewhere in between. When questioned about,
about when questioned by a friend about his fancy regalia Patton replied I want the men of
the third army to know where I am and that I that I risk the same dangers they do a
little fancy dress is added to help maintain the leadership and fighting spirit I desire
I can see there's a little bit of when you're dressed a little bit different you can
stand out more right you know we we covered in the Korean War the
the guy Lee that put a freaking orange marker panel on himself,
so his guys would know where he was.
Navy Cross, by the way.
But that makes sense.
That being said, the ultimate success of his program
might be open to closer questioning.
General Omar N. Bradley, for one,
has written that certain chapters of Patton's career
were failures in this respect.
General Bradley points out that in Africa,
at least, Patton, quote,
failed to grasp the psychology of the combat soldier.
He irritated by flaunting the pageantry of his command.
That's a different take, right?
It's an understandable take.
I can totally understand that take.
There was this great story, my buddy at Team 2.
I wasn't there for this, but they were at the range.
This is a peacetime.
teams peacetime army and they're out of range with a seal platoon actually i think it was like seal
snipers and they're out there everyone's dressed different jeans you know hunting camo
mismatch camo civilian clothes a whole nine yards and they're out there shooting different ranges
you know different um weapons systems and this guy that army an army dude pulls up like an army
commander pulls up and he said he he was extremely explaining that the guy had
camouflage paint on because they were in some kind of an exercise but it was
like perfectly just like on the front of his face you know what I mean it's like
just like the front of his face had cammy paint on not his neck is totally
exposed his hands are exposed so it's the mirror like hey on when we're in the field
we wear camouflage paint go ahead and put this on even though he probably wasn't in the
field at all and then the funny
part was the guy comes up and he's like hey what what what unit is this and as my buddy is about to
answer this this I think he was a colonel uh or at least a lieutenant colonel as he's about to say
oh you know we're we're the seal team and right as he gets done saying that one of the guys on the
fiery line shouts out like gopher at 50 yards and all the weapons like like scope in on this
freaking gopher and unleash hell on this gopher and kill it
And then he said that the Army colonel was just like, uh,
Roger that, carry on and just like left.
But I'll never, that image of a guy with just cammy paint, you know, just on,
on his face.
It's kind of like I did the, I've talked about the guys from Blackwater coming through my camp,
Camp Jenny Posey once again, you know, now we're kind of like, you know, battle hardened.
You know, we've been in Iraq for a few months, so we're just big combat vets.
But we were, you know, we've done a bunch of operations.
at this point. I'm being a little bit sarcastic, but we had done a lot of operations. We've been
there for a few months and, you know, we were used to what we were doing. And these guys from
Blackwater came up to kind of check in with us, a couple of them were ex seals, et cetera. And
you're looking at their gear and you're just like thinking, oh, these guys don't, these guys don't
really know what they're doing right now. The gear's all brand new. It's placed in weird positions.
It doesn't really make 100% a sense. How are you going to draw your, your pistol when it's
on your leg when you're in a vehicle like all these little things and you think well this is
this is probably not good so anytime and then there's times where you know like you're all just um
you've been in the field for a while and then you see some pogue or remph that's just all squared away
and occasionally they give people shit you know hey you're your your uniform is looking dirty it's
like we're not we're not responding to that so I can see what they're saying here I can see you know
if Patton's run around with his with his ivory handled pistols and he's got his pantaloon pants on bro
and I'm out here in the bush in the field you know there's two ways to take that and again if your
attitude is like patent's cool you're probably like hell yeah there is if your attitude's patent's bad
you're probably like oh what if what a freaking piece of shit out here he's not in the bush he's not
in the in the shit like we are depending on what colored lens you're
looking at him through.
Yeah.
And by the way, if you're winning and things are going well,
probably looking at them through a good lens.
If you're losing, you're probably looking at it
through a bad lens.
Yeah, yeah.
So carrying on, this simple observation illustrates
the pitfalls of this device.
Troops like to see a smartly turned out uniform,
but it contrasts with the filth of combat fatigues
and confidence might easily turn to resentment
when such a comparison is at hand.
The timeless psychology,
of the combat soldier was described by Shakespeare 300 years ago,
and this is a little Shakespeare activity.
But I remember when the fight was done,
when I was dry with rage and extreme toil,
breathless and faint,
leaning upon my sword,
came there a certain lord,
neat and trimly dressed,
fresh as a bridegroom.
For he made me mad to see him shine so brisk
and smell so sweet,
and talk of guns and drums and wounds,
God save the mark.
That's from Henry the 4th.
He also says he talked,
there's another part of this word of that little soliloquy
where he says he talks, sounded like a gentle woman.
So there's a fine line, bro.
There's a fine line.
Dress and behavior.
On the other hand, commanders who have used
the one of the boys approach are by no means a new,
phenomenon general grant for example rarely wore anything more formal than a
private's blouse and old rough and ready Zachary Taylor carried the process to
its ultimate conclusion by omitting the military uniform entirely more recently
General Stillwell and British General Ord Wingate were both of this school
the two men so similar in many respects reflected their distaste for all military
formality by casually adapting of by casual adaptation of the prescribed uniform still well carefully cultivated
the appearance of quote the plain old soldier and in any field usually avoided displaying any insignia
of rank in time his battered old campaign hat became to be well known as general mccarthur's
corncob pipe you know what's funny as i saw uh on social media was on on on on on
X. There was a picture of General Millie, who was the just recently gone and Eisenhower. And
like Eisenhower had two rows of ribbons, just a plain looking just basic uniform. And then General
Millie had just a giant rack of ribbons looking like a Mexican general, as we used to call
them. It's kind of interesting. Yeah. Windgate's mark of individual.
The actuality took the form of an ancient sun helmet, vaguely reminiscent of Kipling's India,
and he added to the effect by wearing a patriarchal beard.
Such affectations of dress and behavior, whether conscious or not, helped make these two generals very real to their men.
But this particular approach still holds great risk.
It requires not only a very special personality, but complete sincerity as well.
here let actors beware for the troops are quick to recognize any sham and mark it as hypocritical
condensation so oh sorry condensension condescension there we go not not beads of water condescension
so there you go if you're trying to fake this not going to work the troops are going to see right
through that here's the conclusions the human heart is then the starting point
in all matters pertaining to war.
The best masters are those who know men best.
The man of today and the man of history.
Let us then study man in battle for is really he who fights.
And quote, these are words of Colonel DePeake.
Were written in 1870s, a period when warfare was in scientific revolution
and when all military verities were being reexamined.
we are once again at a time when technical emphasis threatens to obscure some of the basic truths of men in battle.
Basic truths by definition are those that transcend local considerations.
Thus, principles governing the emotional state of a man armed with a musket are equally valid for the same man armed with a rocket.
I like that.
The basic truths transcend local considerations.
They just are what they are.
But morale stemming as it does from emotion is a vague and inconsistent thing.
Above all, it is a personal thing and therein lies the commander's opportunity.
The response of the troops to the projection of the commander's personality is his own secret weapon
and he must develop his proficiency with it just as a marksman develops aim.
Field Marshal Montgomery has written that the spirit of the warrior is the greatest
single factor in war.
The commander must recognize the obligation this places upon him.
And as he mobilizes the man, he must also mobilize the spirit.
So that's, you know, when this thing kicked off and it said that the tactics and strategy
were most important.
But Montgomery says, no, there's something more important.
Morale.
I agree with him.
I agree with him.
And this, this theme of morale,
has carried on this next article,
which is called the morale of the soldier in war.
And this is digested from a copyrighted article
by Brigadier Sir John Smith
in the Army Quarterly and Defense Journal.
This is obviously a British guy.
Great Britain, Great Britain, April 1960.
Kick this thing off.
What makes one man, to quote Kipling,
hold on when there is nothing in him
and another man in the same circumstances
decide to quit.
What makes one unit in a brigade attack
so go steadily forward in the face of heavy fire
and another unit next to it
come to a standstill or go the other way.
Those are interesting, aren't they?
Like, we've seen it, I seen it.
Some dudes will keep going, other dudes are going to quit.
Imagine seeing a brigade, a battalion
flee. We had battalions of Iraqi soldiers leave, leave the battle space. It can happen. What makes some men
who have previously been courageous soldiers suddenly show cowardice? Why do men who have shown themselves
steadfast under shell fire lie at the bottom of a trench when the unit is ordered to advance?
So there's examples. He's talking about guys that, oh, they've been good to go, good to go, good to go.
All of a sudden they break. All of a sudden.
a guy who's been steadfast all of a sudden we get told to advance and they're staying in the bottom
of the trench why does a parachutist who has been trained to jump suddenly refused to do so
why does a very fit man break down under certain physical ordeals and a man of far inferior
physique overcome them and finally does modern war and possibly future war with nuclear weapons
demand a different kind of morale just as it must demand a different kind of true
training and conduct, perhaps I might pose an answer to this question right away.
I think the old lesson we have learned with regard to morale in war over the ages still hold
good.
If only we will understand and apply them correctly.
So courage is courage.
The unknown and unexperienced are always frightening to human beings, whether they are in
civy suits or in uniform and whether the new weapons are bows and arrows,
knights and armors, tanks, gas, or high explosives, or nuclear shells.
Unknown and unexperienced.
This is Mikey and the Dragons.
Things that we haven't done yet are always so much, they always produce so much fear
than things that you've done before.
That's why you've got to go.
Get in there.
Go forward.
New weapons, of course, demand new tactics, which in themselves may put a greater strain
on morale.
But by and large, all the old factors remain.
instance the morale of a company probably would be more shaken if an operation on the northwest
frontier of India they had left behind them a wounded officer and a half a dozen wounded men
and then come along the next morning and seen the horrible results than if those same men had
been blown to bits by some new form of nuclear shell yeah next section is called expendable
courage so first I would like to propound some of what
I believe to be fundamental truths which lie at the bottom of this problem.
I believe courage to be expendable.
Interesting.
This isn't a similar take to David Hackworth.
And he's got his whole thing that he wrote about and about face of people's cups getting filled up.
And everyone's got a different size cup.
But eventually, some people got a really, really big cup.
But if it gets filled up, it doesn't matter anymore.
You see that in the Pacific.
the what's it a mini series the Pacific you see some hard dudes that are hard and they
break you see it in in band of brothers as well guys that are totally good to go performing exceptionally
totally courageous and then they break and they're done and and obviously you see some people that
don't have much of a cup at all and they just immediately kind of turn into cowards but some dudes you see
they're hard and they they turn into cowards at a certain junction that can't take anymore so this kind
of tracks with that I believe courage to be
expendable. Nearly all of us have courage to a greater or lesser degree, just as we all have
possessed certain natural powers of physical, mental, and nervous stamina. And all these qualities
very greatly between one man and another. Such qualities can be built up by training,
discipline, and other means, but they can also be weakened and eventually drained completely
under certain conditions. What happens, when that happens, either opportunity must be given
for the empty vessel to be refilled
or that particular man
becomes a liability to his comrades.
It's kind of interesting
because he's using the opposite,
the opposite, like, metaphor
than Hackworth uses.
Hackworth uses it's a fill,
it's a cup that's getting filled up.
This, and that's like the combat stress.
It's filling up, filling up, filling up,
it overflows.
This guy's talking about the,
what you have to, you know,
you have a vessel that's filled with courage
and it's draining, draining,
like a little battery.
Yeah, like a little battery,
a little battery, little energy.
I have never been able to understand how, for instance,
the right Reverend J.L. Wilson, Bishop of Singapore,
captured by the Japanese in 1942,
which stood the appalling tortures afflicted upon him
by the brutal Japanese.
Every man has his breaking point,
but they never reached the bishops.
This guy was tortured.
This guy, Wilson, we should do some more,
do a program about it or something,
but not only was he tortured and didn't break,
but he also converted some of his Japanese, like, captors.
Legit
Some men have a horror of heights
But are otherwise brave soldiers
Some are brave in company
But become nervous and vacillating
With left on their own
Almost everyone has his own particular weakness
I have known grown men
Who were immensely brave under shell fire
But who shuddered at the thought
Of a bayonet assault
Others were just the reverse
The very thought that they had to hold a position
under heavy shell fire almost sent them around the bend,
but they would all advance bravely to close with the enemy.
That's kind of interesting.
You know what I've noticed in my years in the MMA world is like some dudes,
they really like grappling and they don't like getting hit.
And some dudes really don't mind getting hit,
but they don't like being held down.
Yeah.
It's very bizarre.
Yeah.
How much, you know, you'll get a guy that, you know, a legit MMA guy, legit.
And if you kind of let them take their own course, they're just going to work on their grappling today.
Yeah.
Or, no, I'm just going to, I'm just going to spar today.
Right.
Just going to strike today.
And they'll always lean towards that because they really don't like that thing.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
That's.
And I think we know this concept.
subconsciously or whatever, it still feels like a little bit slippery and unknown, that your mental state is very comparable to your physical state. And you know, like you'll say like, okay, go to the, what I call it, like mind mechanic, right? If there's something wrong with your mind, you go, you know, like it's an actual tangible thing. Even though it doesn't feel tangible, right? So that what you're talking about makes complete sense. So like, what do you mean that your mind state, your memory?
your mental state is reflected.
I understand what you're saying.
Okay, so like if you have a weakness mentally,
like what you're talking about, right?
Let's say, let's say claustrophobia,
hypothetically, with somebody's weakness.
Otherwise, it's just good to go, we'll say.
But when you get in a certain position
with your, both, you know, double snow angel
or something like this,
it's like literally like your brain malfunctions.
Like it literally doesn't have the capacity
to deal with it.
That's hard to quantify, you know?
Like by, as opposed to like a physical capability,
let's say, you know, somebody has a weak bench press, we'll say.
But every other lift is super strong, dead lift squat, everything, even pulls super strong.
But his bench is very weak.
And he gets in a position where he has to push something.
He fails.
Everyone else is doing good, but this guy fails.
It's kind of like, well, that makes sense.
He has a weak bench press.
You see what I'm saying?
So it makes complete sense.
But mentally it doesn't because you can't see it.
It's less like tangible.
You see what I'm saying?
but it's literally the same thing.
So even though you can't, it's harder to identify because it's all in your head, like,
you know, in some like jumbled up mush in your head, but it's distinct the same way.
So yeah, you get a guy who's like brave, like in every situation.
He's just brave, like down to do it, down for the team, down, like 100% good to go in
great shape, right?
And he's in, let's say, I don't know, a truck or something.
And then like a rat comes and he just freaking loses it.
That doesn't sound like some rare thing.
That's something like, oh, yeah, I could, I could.
Yeah.
I think I heard something like that or I seen in a movie, you know, like guys are scared of snakes or something like this, right?
Meanwhile, he just got freaking shot with a machine gun and got hit, by the way, and he's still here kind of thing.
You know, he's like, no, no, I'm not leaving my unit.
Like, bro, that's bravery that you can't even fathom when you're not in the, you know, you know, is what I'm saying?
But then a rat sends you freaking running.
Like, it doesn't make sense.
Yeah.
I was like, yeah, bro, because the brain of your mind is like that and everybody's different.
Like the scared of heights thing?
Right, I've seen people just not down for heights.
And I never was scared of heights ever.
And it didn't compute.
I was like, bro, you're just kind of being a pus right now.
But then certain things where I can literally feel myself,
I'm like, I consciously should not be scared of this right now.
Like what?
Closophobia.
Like certain claustrophobia fucking elements.
You know what I'm saying?
Just a little backstory for everyone here.
But I used I used to train with Echo Charles and he would tap from claustrophobia.
I would get basically side control, right?
Yeah.
I would get like a side control position, get control of his arms where he really couldn't move.
And he would just freaking tap, which is not honestly, it's not really acceptable.
Yeah.
No, it's not.
I believe that too.
Do you still, have you ever seen videos about guys doing cave diving?
Yes.
Do you hate those?
Yes.
I feel, literally feel that like, yeah, the spilunking, right?
Yeah.
I'll watch the ones where it's more of a story, so they don't replay actual footage,
but it's a story of like how guys get stuck.
And they're there for like 19 hours, just freaking upside down with their hands like
freaking stuck in the cave.
And then they die.
I'm like, bro, that's like the worst way to die in life.
Like, I can't even think of something worse than that.
So yeah, brother.
And so anyway, the point weird, well, I wonder what like the major gratification of getting through, you know, getting, doing that.
Yeah.
You know, you can see, you can see kind of getting the, the rush of kind of flying, you know, if you're going to base jump or something like that.
You're going to, oh, okay, I understand the rush of that.
I wonder what the rush of like compressing your body and going through a long tunnel.
Yeah.
I wonder what the extreme gratification is.
Maybe it just over is it overcoming that that that fear? I would I would imagine this is what I believe I don't know at the end of the day
But I don't think put it this way I think the fear that fear that claustrophobia fear just applies a lot less to some people
And so I don't think it has anything to do with the claustrophobia and overcoming that I don't think it is I think it's just like
Exploring terrain in that way because you know like a regular cave person like they go to these crazy crystal caves and like they just love it you know or these people who are
you know, they go diving, like free diving or scuba diving or something like this, you know.
In the caves.
In the caves, that's a different one, but just in, let's just say in general, right?
People who are just scuba people.
They're going to the Caribbean.
They're going to Hawaii.
They're going to freaking South Africa.
They're going to everywhere because it's just, that's their jam, you know.
What do they like about it?
And I think it's just like that exploratory curiosity and wonder, you know, kind of a thing.
How much of is, how much of it is you're in an ecosystem where there's a hierarchy?
and in order to climb that hierarchy,
you just got to keep kind of doing like more rad shit,
partnership.
I could see that to be the case.
That would make complete sense.
There's a great documentary out right now
called The Dark Wizard.
And it's about climbing.
And it's really crazy to watch.
But you can see that people are in an ecosystem
where it's like, oh, I got to prove myself.
I got to climb the hierarchy.
hierarchy in this ecosystem, which by the way, no one cares about.
I mean, outside that.
This is what's always hard to explain to people.
Outside the little ecosystem that you're in, no one cares.
It's funny.
I was talking to someone the other day.
When you, actually, I was talking to Noah.
And when you talk to someone that doesn't know jujitsu, like, they think you do karate.
Like that's what they think.
They're just thinking like, oh, you do like the karate.
Okay, cool.
Like that's what they think.
That's what people that don't know it are just, oh, yeah, you do karate.
You're like, well, I've been training jiu-jitsu for 15 years.
And they're like, oh, you do karate.
Oh, like, can you break boards?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You got to get outside that ecosystem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When was that last Tuesday?
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah, yeah.
I kind of briefly talked to him about that, too.
We went out to sushi right after.
And you could tell, I don't know, this was my impression.
You could tell he was kind of holding on to it a little bit.
You know, there's like, you know, like all the benefits.
And I started to go into the, the ecosystem is maybe more important than it is.
Look, I'm not saying I agree with them.
There's all kinds of benefits.
Crazy.
Right.
That was my whole point.
But once you're outside of it.
Yeah.
This ecosystem no one cares about.
So see even how you're, and this is kind of how it went.
Do it just to a small degree.
See how you're explaining it to me, right?
And you're kind of explaining it, you know, on air and all this other stuff.
So it almost can come off sometimes.
Like, it's like it doesn't matter.
Right.
Yeah.
But I was like, which I think you're in the same boat where I'm like, no, bro, I'm with you.
I'm down for the ecosystem.
Don't get that part wrong.
I'm just saying for the big picture.
It's like, bro, besides us and everyone like us, nobody cares.
You see what I'm saying?
But just me saying nobody cares kind of was the part.
That's like, no, but it's all good.
I was like, you know, so it was more like that.
And it was just a fun conversation.
You know, I think that that ties into as well is, you know, when people have a hard time transitioning out of the military.
Yeah.
It's the exact same thing.
Right.
Because no one feels like, bro.
the ecosystem in the military is like oh you you were at this place you did this you were at this
combat you got this award you filled this role like there's all these little little ways to
rise in the hierarchy both the both the paper hierarchy of like here's your rank and also just the
the tribal hierarchy of like I did this thing and you can you know you're constantly go everyone's
trying to grind and then you get out and it's like oh you know like people look at me and they're
like oh you're in the army you know what I mean you're an army guy yeah and
I was like, well, I was actually in the Navy.
Oh, so you're on a boat.
Well, I was actually in the SEAL teams.
Oh, what's that?
I was a commander.
Oh, so you're like a green beret.
Well, yeah, pretty much.
You know what I mean?
Like, they don't care.
And then they say, oh, yeah, I knew a guy that was a green bray too.
And you're like, oh, cool.
You know, no one cares.
Right.
No one cares about the little details of your little ecosystem that you are so wrapped up in.
And it's got to be really difficult, you know, when you, the higher you were in that ecosystem,
When you get out and no one cares, everyone's like, oh, cool.
Like, there's people, there's plenty of people.
I'm sitting here talking to one of them right now.
Like, you tell me the difference between, like, a master chief and an admiral.
You don't know the difference.
You know what I mean?
Like, tell me the difference between a command sergeant major and a battalion commander
and a squadron commander and, you know, you're like, yeah, and a freaking, a platoon sergeant,
To you, to you, they're all just like, oh, you were in the army.
Yeah.
Basically, that's what it's like.
And there's so many things that are like that.
It's like, oh, so you're in the army, that's cool, you know, and oh, you do karate.
Oh, that's cool.
You know, if you're a freaking, uh, what's, oh, ultra marathoner, people like, oh, you run.
You know what I mean?
Like, oh, you run for a long time.
Yeah.
Or, hey, dude, I'm a, I'm a freaking backcountry bow hunter.
It's like, oh, so you, you, you know, you shoot bow an arrow.
Yeah.
You know?
Like it's just no one my son has a bow and arrow by the way exactly he's a bow hunter
Yeah, you know and basically he's a bow hunter he shot a squirrel you know what I mean
That's what that's what that's what people are so when you're in your little ecosystem you think it's so freaking
Important that's so true and it just it's not you know I had that conversation with my oldest daughter was in college and she was like everyone's getting the in the in the interns at the big tech companies and all this stuff and I was like hey
She's like I want to get in this you know she wanted to get one too and I was like bro just come more
It's like, yeah, but everyone's, and I was like, no, no, that's just an ecosystem.
No one cares.
Yeah.
No one cares what your grades are.
No one cares what.
And, you know, there's a small percentage of people that care what college you went to, but,
but actually that's not that big either.
Like, especially the people that went to that college, they'll be like, oh, you went to the
same college as me.
You know, we're, we're a little bit better than everyone else.
But no one really actually believes that outside of that ecosystem.
Yeah.
Outside of the ecosystem, we don't care, because I know people that were, are idiots that
went to Harvard. I know the people that idiots that went to Stanford, you like, oh, so you tell
me, oh, you went to college. Okay, cool, whatever. I don't care. Your little ecosystem doesn't matter
to me. So you got to pay attention to that ecosystem activity. And you also got to recognize that
once you get out of that thing, no one cares. Yeah. And be okay with it. I mean, that's kind of the thing.
Because, you know, when people, when people realize, hey, no one cares and they get, they get mad, you know,
which is understandable, but it's not helpful, you know, to do that. Right. You're so right.
I know that like a private is not that high, right, of a rank, private.
And then what is, I don't, I don't even know what a private is in.
Is that army?
Yeah.
Okay.
So private and then what, colonel we'll say?
Yeah, yeah, sure.
Pretty high, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Like, I know that that colonel's freaking high, I think.
And private is not high, right?
But I don't know how, how much higher.
I just know, okay, that's how, you know, kind of a thing.
Like, me and you will know, like, oh, this guy's like a one month, one month.
White belt and this guy is a black belt
Like you know 12 year black belt he's 25 years old and and a competitor right?
We know the discrepancy between that but they both just do karate
Yeah they just both do karate one guy just started one guy's been doing it for a while like good congratulations you know
What does it take your black belt how many months is it take to get your black belt you know what I mean? Oh no you know what you'll hear is like oh yeah my neighbor their daughter became a black belt she's four or whatever she's nine
You're like, oh, she's like you.
She's a black belt.
You know, you should fight her sometime.
Yeah.
And you could literally sit that person down, that person that says that and explain to them.
And they'll be like, oh, wow.
And they're going to leave and they're going to forget it.
They don't care about it.
It's the same, same.
They're like, cool, karate kid.
Same same.
Same, same all day.
It's so true.
You got to watch out for that kind of thing.
You got to watch out.
Because what you got to watch out for is next thing you know, you're crawling into a freaking
cave underwater in order to climb a hierarchy that no one.
cares about.
Yeah.
No one cares about me.
Like if I met someone that told me they were a damn, a cave diver, I would have no
reference at all, you know, none, you know, it just, okay, cool.
Yeah.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And in fact, a lot of people would just not, it seems bad, but this is just a complete
natural, like, thing.
Most people would be like, I don't think you should do that.
Really.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, so.
And they're kind of right.
That's what I'm saying.
Like, okay, so here's what I start to get in trouble with, too, with you sometimes and with Noah as well, where I'm like, implying that, hey, you training every day, like, kind of has diminishing returns after about Purple Belt.
All right, now we're fighting.
See what I'm saying, though?
So anyway.
Where do you come up with that?
Jiu-jitsu aside, but let's say back to the spilunking, right?
Or the cave diving.
It's kind of like you could say, okay, that's, you know, that's.
cool and everything and challenge yourself.
Heck yeah, like that's a good thing or whatever.
But bro, like what you're doing is like it's,
it's probably not even that smart to do because of the risk.
And like you could probably be committing to other things
that would be more, you know, conducive to like your life goals
and the people around you and all this other stuff.
And like how you said, they'd probably be kind of right.
At least to a degree for you're saying.
But it's like that with kind of everything.
After a certain amount of time, it's kind of like,
you're kind of diminishing returns after a while.
You see what I'm saying?
It goes for everything.
Even like something as fundamental as health, right?
When you have health.
But at some point, your health gets good enough that you can live a capable life or whatever,
but now you're over-indexing on health.
So you fail to live your life, you know, kind of a thing.
Yeah, I guess that would take it to a real extreme.
Exactly.
And look, I don't want to get into a 45-minute debate, but let's face it.
Train in Jiu-Jitsu.
Yeah.
Even when you are Purple Belt and above,
training jit-to has a multitude of benefits that are way good training five times a week,
even when you've been training for 25, 30 years.
Yeah, I understand.
But what I'm saying is the benefits that you're talking about,
if they're tip-top benefits are going to be more and more subjective as you pass a certain point.
I don't know what the point is.
Maybe it's Purple Belt, maybe it's Brown Belt, maybe it's Black Belt,
Maybe it's freaking like the first year, regardless of what bell?
I don't know.
But I'll tell you this right now.
If you over index on a single like thing, there's going to be a point where you got diminishing
returns.
And other people who are not in that ecosystem are going to feel this, whether they're
right or not, they're going to be like, hey, maybe you're kind of wasting your time to a degree.
Yeah.
So you'm saying whether it be.
I could say you could get there.
Now this, are we pulling like,
world champions out of the equation like someone that's that's what they do like they're just a
jihitsu guy yeah are we pulling them out of the equation they're out of the equation yeah they're the
exception because they're because that's their profession that's their jobs they're doing every day
but yeah for someone that's yeah I guess you could go with someone that is not you know earning a living
or being a world champion at a certain point's like well because you could make the argument with me
like hey dude why don't you play guitar more you know you're pretty good at jiu jitzu now
Yeah, why don't you get better at guitar?
Yeah, I could, I could, I could admit that there might be some truth to that.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, exactly right.
And I'm, I'm with you, but that again, you're talking about within the hierarchy, something
or the ecosystem, sorry.
So you're saying.
So yeah, when you're in the ecosystem, but it's 100% worth it.
Like right, you're in the ecosystem, but your family's leaving you because you spend too
much, you just time, well, it's worth it in the ecosystem.
You know what I'm saying?
It can be like that.
I'm not saying it's always like that.
Well, that's an example, but it's kind of a facetious example for jiu-jitsu,
but like in the seal teams, that's 100% going on.
A lot of stuff.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, you're the business guy.
You want to climb the corporate ladder in an ecosystem that no one gives a shit.
VP of whatever.
You're like, bro, we don't know about any of that.
We don't care about any of that.
What are you doing?
You work a lot?
Cool.
It's true.
But I'm the, I'm the free.
Yeah, I've been.
Pee of such and such.
This has been my goal since I was a kid.
Yeah.
Nobody cares.
I'm gonna, I got this much money last year.
You're like, okay.
What did you do with it?
What are you doing with it?
Because I don't, 100% sure.
I'm not 100% sure what, what's happening over there.
Yeah.
I'm very, but this is on contradictory.
Actually, what I'm about to say.
I got to hesitate though.
At the end of the day, I got to hesitate to start like having those types of opinions because
everybody's an individual and they kind of choose their own mission like in life and with any
mission especially if you get to like a significant amount of success no matter what it is it's
like there's going to be some sacrifice you know yeah yeah and it's easy to point out the
little things that got sacrificed and say hey maybe you should have thought those things were
more important regardless of what it is you know regardless of yeah I think it's good I think
you're right but also I think it's good to keep in mind as an off ramp right like the day that
you don't get the promotion that you want at work and you're all crazy
rushed, man, just like go to anywhere else.
And no one cares about the fact that you didn't get promoted.
And you can carry on and you can enter a new ecosystem.
Yeah.
You know, so it's okay.
Right.
Going to be all right.
So.
But yes, to answer your question, I think, yeah, I think those are all factors in the
motivation to go diving into caves and stuff.
But you see what I'm saying.
My original point was like people have weaknesses and this manual that you're
reading is they chose that word, a weakness. Did you hear Cowboy Soroni telling that story about
on Rogan? Yeah, yeah, about diving. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah. I was giving me anxiety. Just listening to it. And my
younger brother's a diver and he's the one who told me about that conversation. But there's a huge,
huge galactic difference between a diver and a free diver and a cave diver. Oh, yeah. Those are,
those are just, but a free diver is going to have way more of an accurate.
kind of perspective when you hear something like that you know so it's like yeah if he's gonna if he
hears a story like that he's gonna understand like way more really how heavy that is you know oh yeah
cowboys erode dude just out there just you would have a fight coming up and he would just be like
just doing wild shit yeah especially the diving stuff because just you know what he what's you're
saying say the water's the great uh equal
Equalizer.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, what I used to say is if you're in the water, it's a real world op.
Yeah.
Because the water will kill you.
It doesn't care.
It doesn't care.
There's no like training timeout.
No, you're drowning.
You're dying.
That's what's happening.
Yeah.
So props.
All right.
Going back to this, fears.
Speaking of fears, common fears.
The raw material, therefore, which has to be made into fighting soldiers is a collection
of individuals with varying hopes and fears and idiosyncrasies.
And when the natural.
of all of them when under fire is probably to get into some hole and stay there until it's all over
So that's our natural instinct shooting starts I'm gonna get in a hole and stay there although as I've said all men have natural military assets and varying degrees
They also have certain common fears the greatest of these are death and mutilation perhaps the second is more universal fear than the first
Certainly among young men although most soldiers naturally fear death and they may see it all around them it is curious
how they nearly all think that it will not happen to them.
I was very struck by this on one occasion when, as a young officer,
I found myself pinned down on a hillside in France,
where a British platoon had been caught by a machine gun in enfilade and wiped out to a man.
I thought perhaps I might give comfort to some of the relatives if I wrote them
to tell them that their boy died bravely and quickly.
While searching among their effects for addresses,
I found several unfinished letters to the folks at home.
And they all expressed a firm belief that whatever happened to anyone else,
they would come through it all right.
This is going back to Dean Ladd, U.S. Marine Corps, going into Tarawa.
They're the most halacious brief.
He's telling us about the brief.
They're going in.
There's machine gun nest.
There's enemy dug in.
They've been preparing for 18 months.
They have to cross this reef.
They're going to be naked on the.
beach it's gonna be a nightmare and I ask him were you scared he's like no all
that stuff happens to the other guy that's end quote right there he didn't wasn't
scared that's gonna happen to the other guy most people even highly trained
soldiers fear the unknown although sometimes the fear of the devil you know is
greater than the devil you do not the divisions that were subjected to the first
German gas attack in France in 1915 threw down their arms and fled in panic
that must have been a truly terrifying ordeal for the troops who were quite
unsuspecting and completely unprotected against such a weapon.
But the ordeal of the troops who had to counterattack a few days later, knowing that they would
be gassed.
And what the gas casualties looked like was every bit as bad.
Our first tanks were terrifying to the Germans and what a pity it was that we used them
in such a piecemeal way.
The jungle is particularly frightening to the untrained man as indeed is the craggy
mountainside, particularly when people by the hardy and generally invisible
frontier tribesmen. Victory, of course, is a great morale raiser, and troops can stand far greater
ordeals in victory and pursuit than they will in defeat and withdraw. That was why Lord Montgomery
was so wise never to launch a major attack until the odds were in his favor. He managed to give
the Eighth Army a diet of unbroken victory in such and on such fair their achievements became
progressively greater and talking of the diet the British soldier unlike the Japanese does not
fight well on short rations static conditions such as the trench warfare of World War I are apt to be
very trying indeed to morale especially if the enemy has artillery superiority the British soldier
particularly likes movement and of course air superiority so that idea of stacking up victories
You know, I remember Jordan Peterson talking about like rats.
You put rats in a pipe in a tunnel.
And if a rat, they like fight each other.
And the winning rat is, you know, something like 80% going to win his next fight.
And the losing rat is 80% going to lose their next fight.
They just get used to getting their ass beat.
So getting that momentum going, real positive thing for the morale.
That's why when people ask me when people have like a company or something or,
military unit or police unit and they're having morale issues.
I'm like,
get some small wins, man.
They can't be totally insignificant.
They can't be like a joke,
but you rack up a couple small wins.
I'm starting to win a little bit.
Same thing with your kids.
Your kids has a hard time with something.
That's why you don't want to put your kids up a level in jiu-jitsu
or up a weight class in wrestling.
They're getting their ass beat.
This shit ain't fun.
Their morale goes down.
If they're the stronger kid,
maybe a little bit older.
And look,
the actual numbers,
is 80, 20.
You want them winning 80% of time
and losing 20% of the time,
which is just something to keep in mind.
You're not going to be able to pull it off guaranteed.
But if your kid is winning 100% of the time,
maybe bump them up a level.
You know, in the soccer, whatever,
the soccer group or the hockey team.
If they're winning 100% of the time,
maybe bump them up a level.
But if they're winning 40, 50% of the time,
keep them there.
Let them win 80% of the time.
They get to 90% of the time,
you can bump them up.
But winning, as I used to tell my wife and my kids,
I would say, all right, we're going to this tournament today.
You know, you try and win this thing.
And my wife would say, no, you just want to have fun out there.
And I'd say, winning is fun.
That's even true in like small stuff.
Like you ever try to learn, you know, as a quote unquote grown person,
grown man, you ever try to learn like something completely new?
Yeah.
And you look into it and you start, you know, I don't know,
You can look up, let's say, a tutorial on the internet or something like this.
And you try it and you're like, oh, shoot, you kind of get that first step.
You're like, oh, frick, I can kind of do this.
And you're down for that next step.
As opposed to you try to do it.
They, you know, they demonstrate it.
And you know, it's your time.
You know, you try to do it.
And you don't get it.
You're like, bro, I can't do this is dumb actually.
You know, it's not for me.
Like, you literally feel as an adult.
Like you feel that.
See what I'm saying?
And so that's that those roots just go deep, you know.
Check.
Winning is fun.
Back to the book.
Factors affecting morale.
Would a nuclear war demand higher morale than, for instance, facing a gas attack, a tank
attack, or deadly machine gun, a bayonet charge, or the flamethrower?
I don't think so.
These are all extremely unpleasant things.
I like the way says.
All extremely unpleasant.
Yes.
Flamethrower, bayonet charge, deadly machine gun and nuclear attack.
those are all extremely unpleasant.
And much more trying than some men than they are to others.
Modern war does, of course, demand greater dispersion,
which in turn demands a higher standard of junior leadership.
And, of course, good leadership in any type of warfare is one of the greatest morale
raisers of all.
These are some of the factors which must influence us in selecting and training our modern
fighting man.
We need good leaders and brave, fit, and well-trained.
Men. We should try to nurse young soldiers into action under the most favorable conditions,
as did that wise commander Bill Slim when he was preparing to lead his 14th Army back into Burma in
1943. Our troops should be well-weaponed, well-equipped, and well-fed. And when it comes to
battle, we must not take the pitcher too often to the well. Remember always, remembering always
that courage is expendable.
It's interesting.
I got very, very lucky in my military career
in that I got, what do they say?
I got nursed as a young soldier into action.
Like very nice escalation.
It wasn't like day one.
I had a nice, including even training.
Like the training escalates.
It gets harder and harder and more and more intense.
And then eventually combat,
I start a very mellow combat,
which is the way,
which is very, again, very lucky.
And if you can do that with your troops, do that.
However, although we may know the ideals at which we want to aim,
people's opinions differ as to how we should attain them.
We do not know how different men will react to certain stresses and ordeals
until they actually have to endure them.
And even when we know our men well,
even when we know our men well and have trained them to the best of our ability,
they are still only human beings in uniform with the unusual human unpredictability.
With the usual, sorry, with the usual human unpredictability.
And this is what's, you know, going through basic seal training.
A lot of it, there's no freaking purpose whatsoever other than just to make sure you're not going to quit.
And that's it.
And like they're going to throw all kinds of stress at you.
But when you can handle all that stress, bro, it's debilitating.
You're getting injured.
That's what's happening.
You're getting injured while you're going through, let's say, hell week.
but it's a pretty good predictor that you're not going to give up.
It's not perfect, but it's a pretty good predictor.
Back to the book.
And always, we come back to the underlying truth that the law is in the circumstances.
For example, a week's tour of duty in the frontline trenches in World War I could either be either a very great ordeal or merely a somewhat anxious and uncomfortable experience dependent upon.
where on the front you were but in the bad parts a unit's tour of duty should have
been about three days and nights at most sometimes that could be arranged but often
this was particularly true in the early days the circumstances simply did not
permit and then good men became so drained of their courage and their mental and
physical stamina that they took a long time to recover the same thing happened
of course in the Royal Air Force pilots who were allowed to take part in too many
dangerous missions without a break reached a condition when they became a danger to themselves
and to their associates again so important you run that engine in the red if you keep
running the red it's going to it's going to blow out it's not going to be usable anymore
well you can run it in the red for a day what three days here run it in the red for three
days get you got to take that thing off the line you got to pay attention to your people pay attention
your people if you run them to the red and keep running them they're going to break many
books have been written about the ordeals of British prisoners of war in Japanese hands.
They were always in a state of semi-starvation and most of them were also suffering some
kind of tropical disease.
They were brutally ill-treated and grossly overworked and the percentage of deaths among them
was dreadfully high.
They had practically no news from home and little from the outside world.
The marvel is that so many survived.
Another example of unpredictability of human beings was in the type of men who survived these
conditions and those who gave up and died in many cases the fine athlete of excellent physique
went down and the most unexpected types came through but by the end of their years of captivity the
survivors had been drained of almost everything save courage and that is why the rehabilitation has in so
many cases been a long business i have tried to pose some of the problems which have to be overcome and
order to produce highly trained soldiers in good morale and to keep their morale high in conditions
of continuous strain and danger. What are the acknowledged aids, so to speak, in the attainment
of these ideals? Love of country, love of family, religion, tradition, pride of regiment,
and pride in oneself have all been great factors in morale. Belief in victory is another one.
And this feeling of complete confidence in success has never been endangered,
engendered, sorry, more than by two of Britain's greatest commanders, Lord Nelson and Lord Montgomery.
A high standard of individual training is also a very great morale raiser.
Isn't it interesting, all these things, you start stacking these things up.
And when you know people that have these things in their life, just in normal life,
like the life is better.
Life is better when you have this pride, this love of your family, religion, religion, tradition, pride in your unit, pride in your company, pride in your team.
Discipline. When you have these things in regular life, your life is better.
There was, for instance, a very little basic difference between the British and Indian troops who resisted the Japanese invasion of Burma in 1942 and those who finally retook Burma two and a half years later.
Had our Burma troops in 1942 been employed in the desert, as they as had been intended,
they would have done very well, but plunged into an entirely unfamiliar environment of jungle warfare
for which they had neither training, equipment, nor transport, and opposed as they were
by highly trained Japanese divisions, their own inferiority soon became apparent to themselves
just as it did to the Japanese.
And when it did in addition they were faced with a superior air force then you had a set of circumstances
Which could have rapidly reduced the confidence and morale of any troops in the world
But you get off on the wrong foot
That always stings when you get off on the wrong foot
Like when the other team scores first or you get swept like something happens
When you get off on the wrong foot man that that momentum
swings and what is momentum momentum is basically morale but again the law was in the
circumstances not in the men at that particular stage of the war there were no other
troops to send next section discipline one of the great aides to morale is of course a
high standard of discipline both individual and unit discipline and in the past one of
the chief methods of its attainment was barrack square drill
The chief protagonists of this have always been the guards.
I remember very well the first occasion on which I saw the guards in action.
It was Christmas, 1914, and the place was Givinci in northern France, which in the previous
10 days had been captured and recaptured several times.
At that moment, the Germans were firmly in position of Gavinci and the high ground, and
the high ground, and we had been bundled down into the valley where we were preparing.
to spend a miserable Christmas in wet and muddy trenches.
I had been detailed to guide a French battalion in a night assault on the position,
but finding uncut wire and the hill feature very strongly held,
the battalion commander had wisely decided the task was impossible.
But at that period of this extraordinary war,
all ground lost had to be recaptured, regardless of its value and regardless of losses.
We then heard that a guard,
Brigade was going to counterattack their starting point being our own front line trenches
So imagine that you're in this trench they tell you hey you're gonna attack this high ground German position
And then your leader goes hey you know what it's impossible not gonna happen so you go okay cool we don't have to attack that position
And then another unit shows up the guards and they get told hey we're gonna attack that German position
You're gonna leave from where these guys that wouldn't do it are the conditions were cheerless it was a
bitterly cold day and snow was threatening.
Gavinci was an exceedingly strong and commanding position and there was not nearly enough
artillery support available to give the attack more than an outside chance of success.
I wondered what the guards would make of such a situation and I watched their calm,
precise and thorough preparations with interest.
When zero hour struck, the attack started, all hell was let loose.
The hefty sergeant to whom I had given a leg up over the parapet was back in the trench before he had gone a yard with a bullet through the leg
But the leading companies shook out at the double and then move forward at a steady walk as though they had been on parade ground
Dude the only men who stumbled or fell were the casualties
I thought of Marsiel boss Bouquet's remark on the charge of the light brigade
It is wonderful but it is not warm
But it was war.
They were getting there and their great traditions discipline and barrack square drill were paying off.
The attack was not a complete success, but I felt that no other troops in the world could have done what the guards did that day.
This episode made a lasting impression on me.
So there you go.
Close it out with this.
There has been a tendency in some quarters to consider discipline.
blimpish and barrack square drill out of date and there is no doubt that the latter does not now
conform to any of the movements required of modern forces in the field nevertheless the more
unpleasant and frightening war becomes the more important it is for the will to be stiffened by
individual discipline and by discipline and high morale of the unit the question is how can this best
be done i do not pretend to know all the answers
I have just tried to present the problem and make some suggestions.
But of one thing I am quite sure, you cannot expect men, however well trained and equipped they may be,
to produce their highest endeavors in conditions of difficulty and danger without some ennobling thought to inspire them.
Looking back at some of the aides I quoted earlier, there are all ideas in the mind of the soldier.
Love of country, religion, tradition, and pride.
of regiment so there you go things change but things stay the same and so much you know so much of it
depends on leadership and and what the troops see and how they react to what they see and also the
training that they've been led through by the leaders the leadership sets up it sets up the morale
leadership establishes the discipline leadership sets the example
And I think what is important to remember that you are in a leadership position right now.
You are in a leadership position right now.
Whether you're the junior person at your company, whether you're the mother or father in a family, whether you're the oldest kid or the middle kid, or you're the junior guy in a position.
It doesn't really matter where you are.
You are in a leadership position and it's everything that you do.
And you have to pay attention to that.
You can't, you can't just lumber through life.
You have to lead.
And that's what I got for the military review, November 1960.
Listen, when it comes to discipline, we know that doing hard things.
Now, do I recommend cave diving?
Not really.
No, negative.
That's a hard thing, but I'm not recommending it.
We do know that other hard things, safer things.
Yes.
everything,
will give you
improved discipline,
mental and physical.
So that's why we're lifting.
We're not cave diving necessarily.
Hey,
if it's your thing,
cool.
Just be careful.
You're not getting sucked
into an ecosystem
because you might be.
But we're lifting.
We're working out.
We're training.
We're running.
We're doing jihitsu.
We're getting after it.
And we're getting after it.
Guess what?
Guess what?
Echo Charles.
You're going to need fuel.
You've got to need fuel.
Look at you.
You're going to need fuel.
We recommend strongly recommend Jocko Fuel, get some energy drinks.
Have you had that all the energy drinks are improved now.
Okay.
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So they're awesome.
I am very addicted to them.
Very addicted to them.
Also, we have the best protein.
Tasty protein, too.
Dessert.
Protein desserts.
I'm still on this Greek yogurt scenario.
The Greek,
yogurt recipe recipes Greek yogurt with with milk in it with protein powder in it
you can just you can have any kind of dessert you want like whatever whatever
weird you know fantasy you have about dessert you can make it happen chocolate chocolate
peanut butter chocolate mint strawberry banana coffee like you can do it you can do it
whatever fantasy you have you can do it and by the way if you get some of the
sugar-free chocolate chips and
Maybe, maybe if you really want to go hard
in the paint for dessert, throw some whipped cream on top.
So you got chocolate moose.
That's so good for you and so tasty.
We got joint warfare, time war.
We got everything that you need.
Creatine, we're on the path.
And that means we need the right fuel.
So check out joccofuel.com or go to any store, really,
that you want to go to.
I think we're in 50,000 different locations.
in America which is pretty amazing so you should be able to find it in your store if they
don't have it in your store ask them say hey we want that jaco fuel over here we're
trying to stay on the path and we'll get there so check out jaco fuel and speaking of
jihitsu you need some jih Tzu gear we have had a lot of people fight really hard
in this country against communism so we don't want to support communism so we like
to wear communist free jiu jihitsu clothing
communist free jiu-jitsu clothing with 100% free of communism no slavery involved we got
jiu-tugees we got rash guards I have you guys you know me I kind of like wear the same
thing every day so now I have just like my jiu-suitzoo I have the same what is it I have the same
rash guard with the black raptor camo yeah and I notice I like see videos and I'm like oh yeah
every single day I'm wearing the same thing yeah and it so it's kind of
the way we roll.
I don't have to think about it.
I'm just putting it on.
Wait, so you have multiple of them or you just choose to?
Oh yeah, I got like five of them.
Yeah, yeah, that's how.
Five of them.
So, Jiu-Jitsu, jeans, boots.
I did the, I did a speech at the kickoff
of the 250th anniversary of America.
I did that in Washington, D.C.
Yeah, I caught that speech.
Oh, good one, you know.
Appreciate it.
Did some good stuff on there for sure.
Well, just so you know, and so that we know.
I was 100% head to toe made in America origin I was wearing the black
denim pants they are jeans but the black is so black there's some I have to
get Pete to expand on it but the thread itself is black like the thread is black
so you we know you wash a pair of denim blue jeans they fade over time these black
jeans they don't fade it the thread is black it's not that is black so even though
They said, hey, they said, hey, you know, dress,
you know how you want to dress,
but we would prefer no jeans.
And I was like, well, we're getting in there with the jeans.
So I had origin boots on, origin jeans, black jeans,
which again, they're more like pants.
And then I had this new shirt that's just about to come out,
thanks to Amanda and Pete, but I think Amanda.
Amanda, like, found a blue shirt and FedExed it to me.
Because it looks sharp, man.
It's America.
I had a blue shirt on, you know what I'm saying?
And then I had a white origin t-shirt on underneath.
So I was head to toe, 100% American made.
Some origin drip.
Origin all day.
Because this is America.
And America, look, America was built by freedom.
That's what I said in the speech.
And when you buy something from origin, it's built by freedom.
It's not built by a slave.
It's not built by communism.
It's not built by the state.
It's not built by the bureaucracy.
It's built by freedom.
So go to origin, USA.
and support freedom support america 250 years of freedom this is what we're doing origin
usa.com check it out it's a miracle i think you said too yes it is indeed it is indeed yeah man
also jacqu's door if you want to represent discipline equals freedom and good is where you can get your
stuff i'm shirt some hoodies on there it's uh summertime so maybe not i mean there's still
hoodies, you know, get them if you want.
You live somewhere cold.
Or you want it for the fall or the winter?
Well, if you're in California, in California, you have to have a hoodie with you.
Yeah.
There's almost 90, I would say 97% of the time, you're going to need a hoodie at night.
You're going to need a hoodie at night.
That's just the way it is.
The semi-air desert, the temperature's high during the day, 75, 80 degrees, maybe even 82 degrees.
But at night, shh, going to drop.
Oh, yeah.
Could see the 50s during the summertime.
Well, the good news about that is like, yeah, sometimes it's 50s, for sure.
But sometimes it's 60s.
So I'm saying?
And you don't need that hoodie, hoodie.
So for that reason, we got a couple, I actually got a couple variations.
So the lightweight hoodie, I think we only have a few left, though.
With a lightweight hoodie, it's more of like a thicker T-shirt kind of scenario.
It's like a long-sleep t-shirt.
Then we got kind of a medium light, which is the quick flip.
That's a good one.
That one looks good, too.
you know for maybe a 60 degree scenario
and then you know
then we got the regular hoodie
so I'm saying it's not ultra heavy
but it's like you know
it'll protect yeah you're at the beach or something
you know with your family and stuff like that
sun goes down wind kicks up a little bit
you're saying so I see how
but and boom you're representing
discipline equals freedom all day
you'm saying all day and you can stay functional
temperature wise also uh some shorts on there
some hats on there um shirt locker
subscription
new design every month.
Don't forget about that.
You can check it out, see what it's all about.
It's all on Jocco store.
You just click on the top.
It'll take you to the page.
You'll find out everything you need to know on there.
Check.
It's pretty cool.
People seem to like it.
On Jocco store.
Check.
I like it.
Books.
We got Put Your Legs on by Rob Jones.
We got Need to Lead by Dave Burke.
I've written a bunch of books.
I've written a bunch of kids books.
Get those kids books for your neighbors.
They want to be on the path.
They just don't know it yet.
Help them get on the path.
Wave the Warrior Kid.
Go get some.
Colorado craft beef.com.
Get yourself some steak.
Eshlamfront.com.
Leadership.
You have leadership problems inside your organization?
Well, what we do is we teach leadership,
the principles of leadership, the skills of leadership.
We bring organizations together.
If you need help inside your organization,
go to eshlamfront.com.
Also check out extreme ownership.com.
This is where we teach our skills online.
Leadership is a skill that can be learned.
And you won't be bummed out.
You won't feel like Echo Charles felt
when he tried.
to do something and it didn't work and he said this is not for me we will show you that
leadership is for you go to extreme ownership.com and learn the skills of leadership if you want to
help out service members active and retired to help out their families gold star families check
out mark lee's mom mama leech got an amazing charity organization if you want to donate or you want
to get involved to go to america's mighty warriors dot org also check out heroes and horses dot org and
jimmy may's or organization beyond the brotherhood dot org he's got the swim coming up
in New York City.
So if you want to participate in the seal swim,
go to beyond the brotherhood.org.
Check that out.
Also check out warriors and need.org as well as stronghold rescue.org.
If you want to connect with us,
check out jocco.com.
And then on social media,
the great time consumer,
I'm at jocco, Willink echoes at echo Charles.
Just don't let it get a hold of you.
you really shouldn't it's evil thanks to our uniform personnel around the world right now
especially those who are currently in harm's way protecting us and our way of life here in
America also thanks to our police law enforcement firefighters paramedics EMTs dispatchers
correctional officers Border Patrol Secret Service as well as all other first responders
thanks for keeping us safe here at home and everyone else out there remember that one of the
greatest aids to morale is discipline discipline a high standard of discipline for you a high standard
of discipline for your team but remember that discipline that does not come easy it doesn't just show
up you have to make it show up you have to earn it and you do that by getting up every day
and getting after it and that's all we've got for tonight
And until next time, Zekko and Jocko.
Out.
