Motivation Daily by Motiversity - NAVY SEAL DISCIPLINE (2025) - Powerful Motivational Speech | Jocko Willink

Episode Date: June 17, 2025

YOU OWE IT TO YOU IN 2025! Advice from the decorated, retired US Navy Seal Officer. One of the Best Motivational Speeches Ever Featuring Jocko Willink. Edited by Motiversity.Special thanks to:Chris Wi...lliamson: https://www.youtube.com/@ChrisWillxSpeakerJocko Willink:YouTube: http://bit.ly/2v5XxuKInstagram: http://bit.ly/2M7oLdwFacebook: http://bit.ly/2JVVaRxTwitter: http://bit.ly/2O9ARVPWebsite: http://bit.ly/2Z5CYLpMusicConfidential MX - Archangel, Without Breaking Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello listeners. Motivacity is excited to share that we have launched a new podcast called Morning Motivation by Motivore. If you are looking to start your day with positivity and the most uplifting motivational audio, this is the show for you. For today's episode of Motivation Daily by Motivority Podcast, we are sharing a recent episode from the Morning Motivation podcast. If you like it, go follow the show. New episodes are being released every week.
Starting point is 00:00:36 The link is in the description. Do you have any advice to men that are getting older and becoming chronically aware of that? Yeah, lift weights, do Jiu-Jitsu, go for runs, stretch out, eat good, stop drinking. It's pretty straightforward. If you don't use it, you're going to lose it. Every day that you don't do work, you're going to do work. you're going backwards. And it definitely will hurt you and it'll show up.
Starting point is 00:01:07 You can't get away with what you got away with when you were 23. It doesn't work. You have to stay ahead of it. When you're watching TV or you're looking at Instagram or you're going out for dinner on a date and you go to a movie, I'm not doing that. I'm reading a book. I'm getting ready for a podcast. I'm writing something. I'm preparing for something. I'm talking to a client. I'm designing something. I'm thinking about a new supplement. It's just a guy asked me the other day, are you working more now than you were when you were in the SEAL teams? And the answer is 100%. Yes, I'm working harder now. As I've said since day one, its motivation is a feeling that comes and goes. And it doesn't matter whether it's there or not. Discipline is infinitely more important. So no matter how you feel, get up and do what you're supposed to do. That's it. And that's discipline.
Starting point is 00:02:08 It's not motivation. If you only did what you were supposed to do when you were motivated to do it, that's leaving it the chance. But if you're disciplined, you go do what you're supposed to do. That's the way it works. Discipline equals freedom. That's it. I mean, if you have the discipline to get up and get the things done, you know the weekend where you really only had two things to do for the weekend? Whatever it was, you had to write this thing.
Starting point is 00:02:33 and you had to answer this other thing. And on Friday, you're like, I'll do it tomorrow and on Saturday. Like, I'll do it. And it's basically hanging over your head the whole weekend. Whereas if you've just done Friday afternoon, the whole weekend would have been a lot better. So just do the thing. Just shut up and go do what you're supposed to do.
Starting point is 00:03:00 What would you say are the commonalities between the best BJJ athletes and the best special forces operators that you've worked with? There's probably the big. commonality between the two is some kind of strange contrast between being extremely disciplined and being extremely creative so clearly if you're going to get good at Jiu Jitsu you got to be the you got to be disciplined enough to train all the time same thing with being in the military if you're going to be a good operator you have to have the discipline to push yourself in training but you can't be a person that you
Starting point is 00:03:36 know lean so hard towards a discipline structured life that you don't have any creativity because both in Jiu Jitsu and on the battlefield you want to you definitely want to have to be creative and figure out creative solutions and things that people haven't thought of and things that the enemy is not going to think of or that your opponent's not going to think of so you've got to find that person who has a good balance between discipline and kind of a wild freedom creativity that they can make adjustments if you have a mindset that's that's so highly disciplined so highly structured like I just said then you're not going to think creatively when there's a problem that needs to be solved
Starting point is 00:04:11 So you want to have people that don't mind the discipline and can actually access the discipline in a way that they can utilize it, but you don't want people to be trapped by discipline. And it's the same thing in Jiu-Jitsu. If you have someone that only knows how to do a certain move and they can't think creatively about other ways to employ that, it's not that they're not going to be good because they are going to be good. But they're going to reach limitations. And, you know, one of the interesting things in the SEAL teams is we didn't have, especially when I was coming up, we didn't have any doctrine whatsoever. There was no, there was no written doctrine of any kind. So everything that you learned was word of mouth.
Starting point is 00:04:53 You learned from the guys that went before you. And that meant if the guys that went before you weren't, didn't really know what they were doing, you're probably learning a bad way. And if you didn't think, if you didn't think objectively about it, then you might follow someone down a path that doesn't make any sense. So you ended up with a bunch of guys in the steel teams that were pretty open-minded and they could kind of look at problems and figure out how to solve them in the Army and the Marine Corps They have doctrine for just about everything This is how you do a raid. This is how you conduct an ambush
Starting point is 00:05:22 They had written doctrine for this so if you didn't know how you could just look at a book Which is actually a huge benefit for them because if I'm a new platoon commander and I don't know how to do an ambush I can just look at this book and I can learn how to do it So there's some huge benefits to not to having a very disciplined doctrine that you can follow. But that's one of the odd advantages of the seal teams is that since we didn't have any doctrine, we had to be a little bit more free thinking,
Starting point is 00:05:50 and that made us a little bit more adaptive in some situations. So it's just like anything else. Your strength can be your weakness, your weakness can be your strength, and you have to be aware if you're aware that it's a strength, and if you're aware that it can also be a weakness, and if you're aware that it's a weakness, and you're aware that it can also be a strength, then you can probably optimize the way that you're going to think,
Starting point is 00:06:12 which is pretty beneficial. A guy asked me the other day, are you working more now than you were when you were in the SEAL teams? And the answer is 100%. Yes, I'm working harder now. You know, I'm, well, I should say I'm working more because I'm working more time. No weekends, no evenings, really.
Starting point is 00:06:32 Luckily for me, I like what I do. You've managed to align what you want and what you want to want, they're now sitting on top of each other, right? Yeah, and I also don't do a lot of what I don't want to do. And my partner at Escalon Front Lafabin pointed this out to me like a year ago. He was doing some stuff that he didn't want to be doing. And, you know, he said, you know, I've got to do this.
Starting point is 00:06:57 And I've got to do this. I said, why are you doing that? And he said, what do you mean? I said, get someone else to do that. And then, you know, a week later, he's talking. He goes, you know, I was thinking about what you said, you're really good at not doing what you don't want to do. And I am good at doing, I am good at not doing what I don't want to do.
Starting point is 00:07:13 Do something that's hard and do it every day. That's one of the nice things about Jiu-Jitsu. You're going to get choked. You're going to be uncomfortable. You're going to get smashed. You're going to have to tap out. Your ego is going to get abused. Go do that.
Starting point is 00:07:27 Go do that. Go for a run. Lift. Just do hard stuff. And that's a good way to keep that, I guess, fresh. Look, look, if you take, take any idea and you take it to an extreme, then that idea is going to become bad. I mean, even the idea of extreme ownership, if you take it to an extreme where you're, as you pointed
Starting point is 00:07:49 out earlier, you're blaming yourself because your daughter got a disease or you're blaming yourself because your husband is abusing you. Like, there's a point where you think anything go too far. And, you know, yeah, take it to an extreme. It can be, it be, it be, you know, can become pretty silly or funny, depending on how you take it. But for the most part, you're going to run into challenges in life. And if you curl up into a ball and complain about it, that's not going to help you. And if you say, okay, cool, good. Here's some adjustments I can make to move forward.
Starting point is 00:08:24 That's going to be a better move than cowering.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.