The School of Greatness - Navy Seal's 3 Rules for Leadership, Overcoming Near Death Experiences & Breaking The Victim Mentality w/Jason Redman EP 1175
Episode Date: October 13, 2021Today’s guest is Retired U.S. Navy Lieutenant Jason Redman. He’s a sought-after speaker, leadership coach and best-selling author of the books, “The Trident: The Forging and Reforging of a Navy ...SEAL Leader” and “Overcome: Crush Adversity With the Leadership Techniques of America’s Toughest Warriors” He’s written a new book called the Pointman Planner which allows you set quarterly goals based off of Special Operations principles.In this episode we discuss Jason’s heroic story of being severely wounded and how his life changed forever, the three rules of leadership everyone should follow, the biggest lessons Jason learned as a Navy Seal and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1175Check out Jason's new book: https://getoffx.com/the-pointman-planner/View his website: www.jasonredman.comMel Robbins: The “Secret” Mindset Habit to Building Confidence and Overcoming Scarcity: https://link.chtbl.com/970-podDr. Joe Dispenza on Healing the Body and Transforming the Mind: https://link.chtbl.com/826-podMaster Your Mind and Defy the Odds with David Goggins: https://link.chtbl.com/715-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is episode number 1175 with retired U.S. Navy SEAL Jason Redman.
Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned
lifestyle entrepreneur, and each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome back, everyone.
Today's guest is retired U.S. Navy SEAL Lieutenant Jason Redman.
He's a sought-after speaker, leadership coach, and the best-selling author of the books
The Trident, The Forging and Reforging of a Navy SEAL Leader,
and Overcome, Crush Adversity with the Leadership Techniques of America's Toughest Warriors.
And he's written a new book called The Point Man Planner, which allows you to set quarterly goals
based off special operations principles. In this episode, we discuss Jason's heroic story of
becoming severely wounded, shot in the face, and nearly killed in Iraq,
and how he mentally prepared to overcome the challenge of his life changing forever.
How to not fall into a victim mentality when life gets really tough.
The three rules of leadership everyone should be following right now.
The biggest lessons he learned as a Navy SEAL and so much more.
I was so inspired by this. I really hope
you get a lot of value out of his story, his lessons, his principles. He's got so many great
frameworks that he learned as a Navy SEAL that he has applied to life, to marriage, to business,
to career, to being a parent, all these different strategies. So if you're inspired by this, make
sure to share this with someone that you think needs to hear it. Send it to someone that you
think wants some more inspiration, some strategies, some skills,
some tools to improve the quality of their life.
And also, if this is your first time here,
please subscribe over on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.
Leave us a review of the part of this episode
you enjoyed the most.
And I love this fan of the week is from Mal,
who said,
Lewis highlights all aspects of achieving success,
greatness, and more in this Can't Miss podcast.
The host and expert guests offer insightful advice and the information is so helpful to anyone that listens.
So big thank you to Mal for being the fan of the week and leaving a review over on Apple Podcasts.
We've got thousands and thousands of reviews and we'd love to see the responses of the impact that we are making here at Team Greatness on everyone who listens. So if you haven't left a review yet, make sure to do
that right now. Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Jason Redman.
Welcome back, everyone at the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest,
Jason Redman is in the house. My man. Yeah, what's up? Good to see you. Yeah,
great for having me. It's been fun chatting with you
before we got started here.
You have an incredible story
of a lot of different things you've overcome.
You've made a bunch of mistakes.
You redeemed yourself from some of these mistakes.
You went through a lot of personal injury
and you have this incredible story
where you got shot many times in war
and came out the other side with a positive attitude.
Whereas a lot of people who go through minor setbacks
have negative attitudes and stay in this victim mentality.
Can you share what happened that really transformed
your life with this injury and this accident that happened and how you decided
to not be a victim after it happened? Well, I think, and I love that you talk about that
because I talk a lot about America as becoming a victim mindset nation. We are becoming a nation
of individuals who are being convinced because of the color of your skin or your gender or your gender
persuasion or where you came from or any of this that you're a victim and that you cannot
help yourself, that somebody else has to help you, which I unequivocally don't believe in.
I believe in self-leadership.
And the problem is we have tens of millions of individuals who are successful, incredibly
successful that have broken those odds.
It's this lie and myth.
And I talk often about the victim versus the victor mindset.
So when you talk about that and being shot, I think we have to go further back because
there was a period of time where I went through in my life where I was a victim.
Really?
For how long?
It lasted about seven, six months.
Okay.
And it culminated with- While you were a Navy SEAL?
Yeah, absolutely.
It culminated with a leadership failure.
And we can get deeper into that.
But all I will say is when I made that failure, instead of owning it in the moment, I saw
myself as the victim.
I saw myself as being thrown under
the bus and it was unfair and like, I was great. And you know, how could they do this to me? And
just, it was a victim mindset. So that positive attitude came later as I grew and really became,
as I grew up, I I should say especially as a leader
and I think leaders and it's one of the things that I talk about now the power of positivity
and leadership is such a powerful thing and it's something that's that is needed I mean we're at a
deficit for leadership in this country and we are inundated with negativity you were just fed
nothing but negative energy from social media, from the media.
I mean, people around here.
Peers, yeah, yeah, family.
Everybody, I mean, look at the world right now
with COVID and civil unrest and all these things.
I mean, people are just negative.
So positivity as a leader is such a powerful thing,
but I did not see that when I was younger
and this journey of coming out of that leadership failure
and coming to learn slowly, step by step,
what it is to be an effective leader.
And one of those components was,
I'm gonna battle against this negativity,
which the negativity was against me.
The negativity was I had fellow SEALs
who didn't wanna work with me,
who didn't trust me because of some
of these leadership decisions that I had made in the past, didn't want to work with me, who didn't trust me because of some of these leadership decisions
that I had made in the past, the mistakes that I made,
and said, we don't trust you, we don't want to work with you.
But I had to continue to go through training and push against that
and earn back that trust and build my credibility
and build up my respect for these guys that I was supposed to be leading.
How do you build credibility if you've made a mistake a mistake or out of integrity or, you know,
hurt people or?
One day at a time.
Yeah.
By consistent, by leading yourself.
So I teach three rules of leadership.
Number one, 70% of leadership is how you lead yourself.
And these were the rules that I kind of created for myself
and what I wasn't doing in the past.
What were you doing before?
I was living the do as I say and not as I do.
Okay.
This is what you're supposed to do, but I'm not doing this.
Exactly.
And a lot of people, and this is a common problem everywhere with leadership, a lot of people confuse their ability to tell others what to do with leadership.
And oftentimes that's not leadership, that's just management.
Oftentimes it's bad management.
Right, right.
You know, but 70% of leadership is how well you lead yourself,
how well you build structure and discipline in your life,
how you set goals within your own life and accomplish those goals,
how you maintain positivity in the face of negativity in your own life.
And the amazing thing about that, if you live your life that way, in the immortal words
of one of the best leaders I ever had the honor to work with, people will follow you
if you give them a reason to.
Right.
That's 70% of self-leadership.
So all of that coming full circle to your first question, it was a really long journey of several years of coming to understand
that all these pieces came together to be effective leadership and have that mindset
of positivity. So when I got wounded, I was probably in the best position in my life to
go through that because I had just finished this other super hard journey. Of regaining,
of leading yourself, of gaining trust with the people around you that you lost trust with, of...
Dealing with some daily negativity.
Right.
Having to push back against that.
So how long were you working from, you know, the beginning of that to the injury? How long was that?
Two years.
Two years of trying to rebuild yourself internally and relationally with the people around you right
absolutely well I guess I should say 18 months maybe 20 yeah and then kind of
got back on an even field and felt that I'd come back in those last four months
of heavy combat operations and wow when I got severely injured at the end of
that deployment what's step number two he said three things so number one is
you have to lead
yourself and that's the foundational level of of leadership i tell people if anything is going
wrong frequently i'll go someplace and speak whether it's in you know the corporate sector
or whether it's in law enforcement or fire or wherever it is and people will come up to me and
they'll say hey man i'm having some problems with my team uh can you give me some advice you know
and i always i say yeah, yeah, no problem,
man. How well do you lead yourself? And you know, there's an issue if they go,
no, that's not what I'm talking about. Yeah. I'm talking about my team. And I'm like,
start to contract us. 70% of leadership, always go back to yourself first. How are you doing those
things? Structure, discipline, goal setting, positivity. Number two is how do you lead others?
And oftentimes people, oftentimes like we were talking about, a lot of people confuse our ability to tell people what to do as leadership.
And that's not really leadership.
That's just managing people.
And if you're just telling them what to do and expecting them to jump, if you have the, you know, I say you jump and you say how high mindset, you're not a leader, you're a dictator.
Good leadership of leading others is motivating and inspiring and providing the resources and the training and the guidance to be successful.
And then also holding people accountable within your team if they're not.
I mean, giving people right and left limits, but also trusting them, pushing the leadership down to them and letting them have those successes because they're part of your team. And all of us are working towards a common goal because at the end of the day, that's what leadership is.
So that's number two.
And number three is leading always.
You cannot pick and choose.
And number three is leading always. You cannot pick and choose. And this was the big mistake that I made as a young officer that almost ended my career, is I was picking and choosing what I wanted to lead. really damaging myself but oftentimes I also see it in a work slash major
adversity setting and that's where people start to break down I tell me my
major adversity there's a major crisis or chaos that has happened in your work
environment you know if it's if it's a sports analogy your team is getting
their ass kicked right and everybody is starting to feel sorry for themselves
and everybody's starting to turn inward.
And even though they haven't physically quit,
they are mentally quitting.
And they're just going through the motions.
And that is the moment that a leader
in those hardest moments,
in the storm, in the face of that,
has to step up and lead.
That's where we lead always.
Yeah.
And it is in those hard moments.
It's when nothing is going right,
everybody's miserable, that you have to step up and lead.
And that's what's critical.
And that's, you know, I talk about that.
You know, in my case, I had that epiphany moment in that hospital bed.
And I realized.
So you got injured.
Tell us what happened, the story of you getting shot up.
Yeah.
What happened?
So we were at the end of our deployment in iraq in 2007 and and uh you've been a navy seal for how long now i've
been 15 years 15 years 15 years but two years as an officer so i had screwed up came back uh
actually a little more than that maybe three and a half years as an officer at that point but uh had screwed up came back super successful very uh combat heavy deployment in iraq in the summer of 2007 and
a lot of individuals who fought in iraq know that 0607 both in baghdad and in the anbar province
belugia ramadi some of our heaviest fighting was happening during that time. And we got there and it was almost every night we were going out conducting missions, multiple
firefights.
We lost several guys on that deployment.
We lost quite a few guys got wounded.
So a very intense deployment.
We took a lot of enemy off the battlefield and we captured a lot of mid-level and high-level insurgent al-Qaeda leaders.
So really, as a SEAL, and even to this day, my wife doesn't quite understand when I tell her that was the greatest deployment I was ever on.
Even though I ended up getting severely injured and almost killed, it still was everything that I ever set out to do as a SEAL.
And we were coming up on the end of the deployment.
We were literally one week from
going home. I had redeemed myself. I was getting ready to step up in the next level of leadership.
I was getting ready to screen for our next tier of SEAL team and gotten everything back on track.
And we had been hunting the number one leader for Al-Qaeda in the Anbar province
the entire deployment. A guy who had been responsible for the death of a fellow SEAL on the very first mission of our deployment.
Wow.
Petty Officer Clark Schwedler, responsible for the deaths of Marines and other coalition forces, ran IED cells, ran sniper cells.
Just a really violent guy.
really violent guy. And we'd been hunting him to no, um, to no avail and got word on September 12th that he was going to be in a specific time and location, um, in a place, uh, coincidentally
called Karma, Iraq. Um, so a place that we had been into many times and a very, uh, uh, enemy
centric location, very Al Qaeda heavy. Every time we went in there, we got into a gunfight-centric location, very al-Qaeda heavy.
Every time we went in there, we got into a gunfight.
So we knew that the stakes were high.
We also had been told that this al-Qaeda leader
had a very, rolled with a very heavy,
well-trained security detail,
that every one of his guys wore suicide vests
and they had to train if we got too close to him.
That as part of their defense,
they would clack themselves off to prevent us from getting to him that's crazy yes and you know high level of stress
when you're going in on a mission gosh and and you know where part of your training is or part of
your you know uh contingencies or talking through actions on target or don't allow yourself to get closer than 15 yards to the enemy if they're closing on
you headshots so needless to say pretty high stress at night as we launched on this mission
and there's uh you know interesting details as part of it i remember getting ready for that
mission and it happened pretty quickly i'll admit that it actually it happened so fast i didn't
think it was going to happen um i just you know know, we've done a lot. We had done a lot of missions at this
point and I just, it needed, there were some things related to this mission that I can't talk
about, but I'll just say that it had to go up the chain of command for some approval. So I just
didn't think it was going to happen. You didn't think the mission was going to happen? I didn't
think the mission was going to happen. So you guys weren't really prepared?
You were just kind of like, you're preparing for it?
Well, we were.
We were preparing, but I went to the gym.
Like, you know, the mission wasn't any different than a lot of the other missions we had done.
Right.
But I didn't think it was going to happen.
So guys were planning, but we weren't in full planning prep mode.
Yeah.
It was just kind of like, this could happen tonight.
Is our gear ready?
Is it all set up? Yeah. So I went to the gym i was working out and yeah one of our guys came in and said hey
man this mission is a go we're launching at like 1 a.m i was like okay roger that so when i was
gearing up to get ready you know we did our planning and then the last thing you do is get
your own personal gear and one of the things I never wore when we did
ground or more fast based operations if we were mobility and vehicles I would
wear my side plates for extra protection but when I was on the ground I wanted to
be lighter and be able to move faster so you know it's one of the things with
special operations you have a little bit of leeway what gear you wear and you
know personal preference and when you know, personal preference.
And when you're walking long distances
or climbing over walls or there's a good possibility
you may be fighting or wrestling with somebody,
I wanted to be lighter.
So that night, getting ready for that mission,
I remember jocking up and getting my gear on
and, like, this little voice was like,
where are your side plates?
And I'm like, yeah i mean no i
don't do that like i want to be light and uh and it was like wear your side plates and we weren't
going to be walking long distance on this night because the uh timing and the speed we were
landing what's called landing right on the x we were landing right on the target so i was like
okay i don't i don't know what that is,
but I'm going to wear them and I put them in.
And that's an important point I'll hit in a few minutes.
So we launched on that mission.
We took down the target and nothing happened.
I mean, massive amounts of like anxiety,
like, hey, if I, you know,
I definitely got the feeling like
if I'm going to be shot up, it's going to be tonight.
Really?
Which I guess I was right.
It just didn't happen initially.
Wow.
So we took down the initial target building and nobody was there.
We could tell that there had been activity there.
We could tell that somebody had been there recently.
We found a lot of anti-American, anti-coalition propaganda.
And then as we started digging deeper, we started to find weapons.
We started to find bomb making materials
and things like that.
And, excuse me.
And we thought that we were just gonna blow that stuff up
and we thought that was gonna be it.
So I was actually sitting on the porch with my guys,
just kind of waiting for our explosive ordinance guys
to blow that stuff.
And we thought that was going to be it.
So about that time, my boss came up to me and said,
hey, man, we got a whole bunch of activity on another house about 150 yards away.
We just watched five individuals flee out of there and run across the street into a field,
and they're hiding in the vegetation.
And we had seen that before.
field and they're hiding in the vegetation and we had seen that before you know if the if we had watched stuff like that the snipers watch them do that
snipers were up on the rooftops kind of watching everything around the target so
my boss said hey why don't you take your team let's let's walk these guys down
let's find out who they are what they know I said okay Roger that so we came
up from the south to the north in this field.
And at this point, we had an aircraft up overhead that was giving us some surveillance, watching what was happening.
And I remember asking them repeatedly, hey, do you see any weapons?
What are these guys doing?
And no, we're not seeing anything.
you know what are these guys doing and no we're not seeing anything so um but as i started to push into that vegetation and super thick you know and they were probably 50 yards in front of us at
this point or maybe even 100 yards in front of us this densely vegetated field was probably
100 yards thick and i remember like my spidey sense was going crazy and I um and I stopped and then I chalked
it up to fear right and I just said you know what man this is a high stress mission you know
you know the level of the enemy you know that's just fear just swallow it keep going let's keep
going according to we were doing everything according to our SOPs,
our standard operators.
Yeah, according to our training.
So how many people are with you?
So there were nine of us.
This is kind of an important part of the story.
So there were nine of us,
but as we started pushing through the vegetation,
they told us, the air asset up above said,
hey, you're going to miss these guys,
the way you're walking.
So you need to make a turn and kind of turn to about 45 degrees to the northeast to walk up on them.
When we did that, I had two new guys and one of our explosive ordnance guys on that left flank.
And somehow they did not hear that call.
So we made this turn and they kept going straight
and quickly realized it.
We stopped to link back up with them,
but at this point they had moved further up
and they were actually closer to the outer edge of the field.
The guy on my right flank, he was closer to the outer edge of the field,
so we said, okay, this is super dangerous.
We have two separate forces.
It's a really bad situation because if the enemy starts shooting, you now have two forces shooting at potentially what we call blue on blue. Two friendly forces shooting at each
other with an unknown enemy in the middle. So I said, okay, push out. I said, both you guys on
the left, push out to the left. On the right, we're going to push out to the right. We're going to move up to the north, and then we'll link back up,
and we'll push back in from the north to grab these guys.
So as we were moving out, I had now moved up closer to the front with my interpreter.
And so now there were six of us.
Those three were, you know, probably 150 yards away from us on the other side.
And our medic literally stepped on an enemy fighter.
Enemy fighter?
Enemy fighter.
What's that?
And an enemy, part of the security detail,
fighter, F-I-G-H-T-E-O.
He stepped on a person?
On a person.
He stepped on one of them?
So what we didn't know was that our leader
was in that house and that those five individuals that came out
were actually the last part of his security detail
that we estimate to be about 12 to 15 individuals.
The one you were trying to get was in that house.
Correct.
This was his protection.
Correct.
And they had set up an ambush line in that field
and we had walked up behind it.
Oh my gosh.
He stepped on one of them. He stepped on one of them.
He stepped on one of them and the guy rolled over and our medic initially immediately shot
him at this point.
And he was the last guy in the line.
So at this point, I'm now out front with my medic.
I'm sorry, with our interpreter and our other guys behind.
And our medic was the last guy.
But all of a sudden, the world erupted because when our medic shot that last guy but all of a sudden the world erupted
because when our medic shot that guy it tripped the ambush and the ambush went
live so our medic was initially shot, he was hit below the knee that severed both
bones dropped him and anchored him on that that corner one of our other guys
ran forward to grab him and was stitched up the
body two rounds in the leg and one in the arm but a big beast of a guy guy about your size who um
grabbed our medic and started dragging him back um he got shot a bunch too yeah and grabbed him
after being shot and still managed to drag himself and our medic back to the only point of cover
cover being something that'll stop bullets which was kind kind of like a big John Deere tractor tire about 15 yards back from the field with nothing else behind it, like literally thousands of yards of empty desert.
I was out front and started shooting and yelling because I also was thinking about our guys on the other side.
Are we shooting at them?
So I was really worried about a blue on blue.
Thankfully, our senior guy in that group was smart and got
those guys sucked down and was like, do not shoot.
So it became us and this at that time, unknown enemy force.
But they had two PKM machine guns, which is a large belt
fed machine gun that shoots big bullets. In the vegetation. Just like unloading.
Yeah. Because you couldn't see them. They were probably five yards back. All you could see is
the muzzle flash. That's crazy. Yeah. How far away from you was it? Oh, I mean, it's I was bullets.
I could literally I've been shot at before, but never like that. I mean, literally I had bullets.
I could feel the pressure of bullets going by me. You can you can a big bullet like that.
It's actually, you know, that's what when when a bullet cracks, it's actually a sonic crack.
It's the sound of the bullet breaking the sound barrier. But it's pushing this air out of the way.
And you could feel it when it goes by you.
It's like an angry bee, I guess, flying
or something like that is how I've described it.
Wow.
So how far away from the gun were you?
45 feet.
45 feet, wow.
Yeah.
So, and immediately I was stitched across the body armor
and I took two rounds in the left elbow but I only thought it
wasn't one I didn't know it was two until later but I thought my arm had been shot off you thought
it was gone just because of the pain or you just you couldn't feel it I couldn't feel it it was so
instant too it's just like so you know when you hit your funny bone, it felt like that amplified by like a thousand.
It felt like I had been struck by a lightning bolt.
It was like an 800-pound gorilla hit me in the elbow with a bat, and then I was struck by a lightning bolt that traveled up my arm and slammed me in the back of the head,
and then I couldn't feel my arm.
Oh, my gosh.
So I remember reaching over, and I guess it caught on my gear, but when I reached over, I couldn't feel it. I felt nothing, so I thought my arm had been shot. Oh, my gosh. So I remember reaching over, and I guess it caught on my gear.
But when I reached over, I couldn't feel it.
I felt nothing, so I thought my arm had been shot.
Oh, my gosh.
But I'm taking all this gunfire, so I kept shooting and yelling at our guys.
And at this point then, both guns turned on me.
And I took rounds off my helmet.
I took rounds off my gun.
I took my left night vision tube was shot off.
And I turned to move back to where the guys were towards that tractor tire.
And that's when I caught a round from behind that hit me right in front of the ear.
It traveled through my face, exited the right side of my nose, took off most of my nose.
It blew out my right cheekbone. My cheekbone kicked it outited the right side of my nose, took off most of my nose. It blew out my right cheekbone, broke my cheekbone, kicked it out to the right, vaporized the
orbital floor, broke all the bones above the eye, broke the head of my jaw and shattered
my jaw to my chin.
It's like a moment.
And it knocked me out.
One bullet did that?
One bullet.
Holy cow.
And the guy saw me go down and thought I was dead,
thought I'd been hit in the head.
I mean, technically I had, but thankfully not in the brain.
Yeah.
But I was unconscious, I don't know, we don't know how long,
five to ten minutes.
And so at this point, this gunfight is happening directly over me.
The guys are shooting, the enemy's shooting back,
and I'm unconscious on the ground as bullets are flying directly over me. The guys are shooting, the enemy's shooting back, and I'm unconscious on the ground
as bullets are flying directly over me.
So when I came to, I was laying flat on my back
and definitely out of it.
I know you've had your bell rung really good.
I didn't get shot in the head, but yeah.
I mean, the impact, yeah. I there's, it takes. I didn't get shot in the head, but yeah. I mean, I've been.
Yeah.
I mean, the impact.
Yeah.
And I mean, where it takes a couple of minutes to like get clarity back to the world and
like, where am I?
What happened?
And, and that's kind of where I was at and I could still hear shooting and like, okay,
what's going on?
Okay.
And the biggest thing I was like, I'm really messed up.
Like that's where I'm at.
You knew, your arm.
I thought my arm was gone.
I think my head is blown up. Yeah. Yeah. So I was like. You could really messed up. Like, that's what I'm doing. You knew. Your arm, I thought my arm was gone. I think my head is blown up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I was like, I'm severely messed up.
And then I actually remember reaching up to my face.
Oh, no.
And feeling the hole in my face.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
And was like.
You felt the hole.
You were like, oh, man.
I've been shot in the face.
You're like, I can feel the bone in there and the teeth sticking out.
And oh, my God.
So.
So. bone in there and the teeth sticking out and oh my god so um so and then i was literally watching the um the tracer go over me so um the bullets or the so machine guns every fifth round has
phosphorus mixed in with the gunpowder so if you watch the movie where you see it looks like laser
beams coming out of the gun that's tracer fire machine guns use that every fifth round it's like a sighting thing and you know i just aim my laser going right over you yeah
literally like eight inches over me so that was kind of my first cognizant thought don't move
don't don't sit up don't move yeah you're dead yeah important safety tip wow you know if you
ever wake up and you hear gun firing you see laser beams don't sit up. I did. You're welcome.
And then my second thought was,
man, I am like really messed up.
Like I don't have a lot of time.
I was trying to get my,
I was still thinking that my arm had been shot off.
So I was like, I got to get a tourniquet on my arm because we train that way.
Like you have to save yourself first.
Yes.
Kind of like self-leadership.
Absolutely. You know, but I couldn't't I couldn't get my tourniquet and I knew I was losing a lot of blood so I remember there was kind of a lowland
fire and I yelled out to my team leader how long to the medevac and he was like
red I think at that point they realized I was still alive so and he yelled out
five minutes Wow which was a lie so. So, and he yelled out five minutes.
Wow.
Which was a lie.
So you're like, I could die in five minutes, yeah.
Yeah, but I, and I was,
and because I was losing a lot of blood
and I was just focusing on,
so interestingly enough, in the beginning I was kind of
thinking about like the gunfight
and like what we were doing
and what our assets were and like
I was still in I don't know
work mode if you will like okay
how are we addressing the gunfight where's the medevac
you know we need to call in a fire mission all this
but I was out of the fight I mean
my team
leader took over i owe my life to him and uh and he did an amazing job he he came forward and grabbed
me at some point and dragged me back um but at some point my thoughts shifted to i'm dying i'm
gonna save my life well i i actually thought that was, I realized that I was probably not going to make it.
I came to grips with that decision.
And it made me, and I'll be honest, at first it made me angry.
It made me angry that I was in charge and I had led us into this situation.
So that made me angry.
It made me angry that the enemy would get the satisfaction in knowing that they had killed a SEAL.
That made me angry.
Wow.
And then my thoughts drifted to my family.
So it's September 13th at this point,
and we were real big into Halloween, my wife and the kids.
And at that point, my son was eight,
my older daughter was five five and the youngest was two
and we had already taught me i was supposed to be home you know in a week two weeks well our first
wave of guys were going home in a week i was in the second wave yeah so two weeks i should have
been home and we were talking about halloween and everything i remember thinking like i'm not gonna
i'm not gonna be there for halloween this year and i'm not gonna be there for christmas
oh i'm not gonna raise my son and then i thought about i'm not going to be there for Christmas. I'm not going to raise my son.
And then I thought about I'm not going to walk my daughters down the aisle.
And that's like hard.
And at that point, I called out to God and I said, I need help.
Like I need strength to come home and like that.
So like miracle moment, but I suddenly had strength. And I don't know how long from that moment until the end of the gunfight. But over that period of time,
guys continued to fight. My team leader got a tourniquet on me and we ended up calling in
what we call fire missions, rounds from an aircraft, munitions, basically.
To give you some time.
Yeah, to take the enemy out, which that fire mission was the closest fire mission ever brought in the Iraq War.
We literally called rounds directly on our position, which the aircraft didn't want to do.
They were like, we will kill you guys.
And my team leader was like, hey, man gonna be anybody left so you know bring it Wow
so what he just try to not do it within a hundred yards where you're at her yeah
he just he did certain things and very smart on him how he basically called
those rounds in but I remember literally watching those rounds impact in front of
us and boy gosh as it took the enemy out.
That's crazy.
And then all I focused on was stay awake.
Stay alive.
Yeah.
Stay awake to sleep.
And that's what I and I wanted to.
I've never felt a fatigue like that.
So tired, right?
Yeah.
And I lost, the doctors asked me, I lost 40% of my blood volume.
And they said it's a miracle you survived.
They said your fitness was, you know,
they said your fitness was the only thing that kept you alive. I think the big man helped.
Wow.
But, but yeah, that when they loaded us, so the three of us got loaded onto the helicopter,
and I guess I should back up. So when the helicopter came in, it landed about 75 yards away.
And my team leader tried to drag me.
And I was like, stop, that like seriously hurts.
Oh my gosh, it dragged you from like your neck collar
or something and like, oh my, oh, your face hanging off.
Oh, and here's the other thing I wanted to say.
So I took a round when, two things happened
when I was laying on the ground
before we called in those rounds
and before my team leader came and got me.
For whatever reason, I took my helmet off.
I don't know why.
I mean, like, I mean, you know, here, let me take this life-saving piece of equipment off got me um for whatever reason i took my helmet off oh i don't know why i mean like i mean you
know here let me take this life-saving piece of equipment off and set it next to me but i did
and it took a round through it um so my helmet um we have a drawing this no bad days skull drawing
that we use that people love that it shows all the damage of a friend of mine that's an artist
drew it after the uh right after i was brought to the hospital. They did a CAT scan and created a 3D model of my skull to figure out how to put me back together.
And it literally looks like somebody took an ax and hit me in the face.
The amount of damage starts up here, goes down here, and there's just this giant hole.
You know, the bone is kicked out of here.
So he drew this, but he drew the hole in my helmet in the skull which gives it this cool look but the
other thing but thankfully you took your helmet thankfully I took it off for whatever reason I
don't know why so the helmet got shot you said it did while I was laying on the ground when you took
it off I also took a round in the right side when you were laying down yes on the right side plate
so I'd go through the plate or it hit it, which is still painful.
Oh, I knew it.
I knew I had been hit.
Like when I got my body armor back, I was like, I immediately pulled it out.
And sure enough, you can see where the round impacted the plate and ricocheted off.
But that would have probably killed me.
Ended you.
Because it would have gone through and taken out my kidney probably
would have blown through my spine um so i you know i don't know what plates wow so how many
did it actually how many rounds hit you in the body like so three in the body eight in the body
armor that were awesome body armor is a lifesaver yeah absolutely and uh and when they loaded us on the helicopter
um several years later i got to meet the crew that medevac oh my gosh and they thought we
didn't make it like when they dropped us off they these guys are dead yep and uh and they told me
um they they told me the story of that night. And it was amazing. They said that, one, that helicopter was only configured to carry two wounded guys.
And it was TF-160, basically the Navy SEALs of helicopter pilots.
So they were our medevac crew that night.
And those guys are awesome.
I owe my life to them.
They had a flight medic on board who worked feverishly to save all of us while they were flying the rotors off to get us to Baghdad.
But they couldn't close the door
because there were three of us instead of two.
And we were all bleeding so bad,
they said that it was creating this mist of blood.
Oh my gosh.
So when they landed and got us out,
like they realized they were all coated.
They were just soaked in blood
because it had like literally created-
Sprayed everywhere, yeah.
Everywhere.
And they said it took months to get all the blood out
from every dial and knob.
Oh my gosh.
So they were like, thought about us all the time
and they never knew if we survived.
And it was only years later that I tried to track them down.
A friend of mine that was part of the 160th
managed to dial back, find out who was in charge
during that time and who would have flown that mission.
And pretty cool, I got to meet them and thank them.
That's amazing, man.
Wow.
So were you unconscious during this time?
Did you wake up?
Were you in and out?
So I was adamant at the hospital
that I never lost consciousness.
They were like, the doctors were like, you're kidding me.
And I was like, nope, never lost consciousness.
And then my guys got home and like,
dude, you were in and out of consciousness
from the moment you were shot.
So, but what's interesting,
like your brain doesn't realize that you've passed out.
You know, you just come to and there are gaps.
And there's some things to this day I don't remember.
There was a point in the gunfight that they had pulled me back to the tire.
And at one point, they're shooting and they're dealing with the enemy.
And one of our guys, our medic, was like, I'm going to throw a grenade.
And I guess I sat up.
And I had worked in a
jungle warfare team when i was younger and there's a there's a uh and and you never throw
grenades into vegetation because there's a high chance they will hit a branch and bounce back at
you so uh super dangerous don't do it and uh i guess whatever reason those lessons were in my
brain because i immediately sat up and was like, don't you throw that grenade.
You're going to kill all of us.
Put that away.
And then I laid back down.
And to this day, and I actually wasn't told that story until years after the gunfight.
We happened to be sitting around one night drinking and catching up.
And he was like, do you remember this?
Wow.
No, man.
No memory at all.
So in and out of consciousness.
No, no, man.
No memory at all.
So in and out of consciousness.
And later the gaps got filled in, the gaps from the helicopters, the gaps from my team.
So how did you, I mean, how do you overcome this devastation?
I mean, physical devastation, emotional trauma, loss.
You know, you're unable to be fit for service now.
How did you, when you kind of come through in the hospital, I guess, what happens next?
So in the beginning,
so in the very beginning, I'll tell you, it was elation.
Like I was so happy to be alive.
I'm here. I'm alive. Yes.
I'm going to see my family.
Exactly. And I was just so thankful to be alive.
I remember like when I first came to my commanding officer was there and the master chief was there.
And, and I, so the first thing I really remember is one, I tried to talk and I couldn't, I was just
pushing air, which was really weird. And I remember the nurse said, Lieutenant, you've been shot in the face.
You are trached. You're wired shut. You're not going to be able to talk. I was like, okay.
So I motioned and they brought me a piece of pen and paper. And I asked, my first questions were,
are the guys okay? I said, has my wife been notified? And do I still look pretty?
And that's, I don't know, man.
It's that positive.
I think it was all those lessons had come back together.
Like I did not care what happened in that moment.
I wanted to know that they were okay.
The guys were okay.
Like nobody had died.
And that my wife was aware.
And then I was just trying to be funny.
And so that was kind of the first thought.
And then it was just elation.
And I was on super heavy drugs, which i've never done drugs so sure um so but as that timeline
progressed by the time 96 hours later from the time i was wounded i was in bethesda which is a
testament to our medevac system like in four days i went went from Baghdad to Balad
where they treat head injuries and they stabilize me.
And then they moved me to Germany
where they had more stabilization surgeries.
And then they flew me to Bethesda, Maryland.
So that was 96 hours I was back.
Back in the US?
Yep.
Wow, so did they do,
did they stitch you up in the first day
or they just kind of like putting gauze over it?
How did they?
No, no, they stitched me. I mean, yeah, mean yeah they had to stop you know all the bleeding and stabilize
and then they do reconstructive surgery later like okay yeah so they've got to repair the damage and
stabilize you and then all the reconstruction happens later and that's where the elations
start to wore off and several things happen one i remember laying in bed in bethesda um and the
first thing like many of us when something bad happens replaying it in your mind and like i've
done something different if i had done that if i had moved left if i had moved right and i was
really kind of kicking myself and then finally i was just like dude stop like one nothing you can
do about it nothing you can do about it like and and two you did things according to how we've trained
like so put that out of your mind and and you need to move forward um but I remember the the
second point of really reality setting in was my sister was getting married and we were supposed to go to the Virgin
Islands for the wedding in October. And I remember the nurse coming in and I said, hey,
how long is it going to take to put me back together? Because one, I need to get back to
my guys. Two, I got to go to my sister's wedding. And yeah, and she was like, she was just
incredulous, like looking at me like, it's going to take years to put you back together.
You're done.
And that was like such a shock to me.
I know.
And depressing.
And I remember thinking to myself like, so my special operations career is over.
I'm going to be permanently disfigured and I'm going to be forever disabled.
Wow. Because they were also talking to me about amputating my arm.
Amputating it.
It took two rounds.
Because I had no use of, yeah, at this point they knew I had taken two rounds
and it effectively destroyed my elbow.
The first round hit me in the base of the humerus and just shattered my humerus and
the second round hit me on the inside of the elbow which shattered both heads of the ulnar
radius. Oh man. my humerus and the second round hit me on the inside of the elbow which shattered both heads of the ulnar radius so and i had no use of my left hand um they were you know pretty extensive
nerve damage so the doctors were talking about amputating and the only reason i still have an arm
is the head of orthopedics at bethesda at that time was a former SEAL. And he said to me,
I'm gonna do everything I can to save you.
And I think if anybody else,
they would have taken my hand.
Really?
And he was like, I'm gonna do whatever it takes.
And he did.
And that, I mean, amazing.
And that journey was incredible.
But I remember feeling depressed,
like where do I go from here?
But this is where this journey of failure, redemption, really coming to understand what it is a leader finally, not finally, but kind of came to a intersection.
One last thing that kind of made me come to this pinnacle or this intersection was about all that time I had somebody else come into the room and they were having a conversation with me and then I started to drift off.
But I was hearing what they were saying and they started having a conversation thinking I was asleep.
Like you had already passed out or yeah.
About how overwhelming the hospital was and how terrible it was for all these wounded warriors and how, you know, they were never going to be the same.
They were going to be broken.
It was a victim mindset.
And I was hearing it and they left.
They were kind of walking out as they were having this conversation.
When my wife came back in, like the more I thought about it, the angrier I got.
Like I woke up and was just angry.
When she came back in, I wrote to her and I said, never again.
I said, that is not going to happen again.
Nobody's going to come in this room and feel sorry for me.
And this was where like this moment occurred where i was like this is bigger than you like this is you've been you've been for two years you've been walking this path of lead yourself
lead others lead always and and around me um in that hospital were wounded um other wounded guys
guys that have been shot up guys missing limbs limbs, you know, individuals burned. In the room next to me, there was a young army kid who had a penetrating brain
trauma. So he had a severe traumatic brain injury. And his wife, I remember watching his wife and
they had a brand new baby and she was dealing with this husband who no longer could cognitively
function. And, and I thought to myself, dude, like, this sucks,
but like, you've been through worse.
You've been through buds, you've been through ranger school,
you've been through the hardest journey you've ever been through,
this leadership failure and fought back.
And now you need to live everything that you've talked about.
Like, you have to, these guys look up to us,
and I already knew it.
I had guys that wanted to come into the room and meet me.
And this was, I recognized, this is what leading all.
You can lead from any position, even a hospital bed.
And all it is, is choosing positivity in the face of negativity.
And it was in that moment, and that's what I tell everybody.
In this life, the greatest gift you have as a human is choice.
You have a choice.
Nobody makes you a victim.
Nobody holds a gun to your head and tells you, well, it's not fair and I can't do it because of X, Y, or Z.
That's BS.
There may be more adversity or obstacles in your path, but you control whether you get up and drive forward or not.
And that is the power of choice.
That is the power of positivity to drive forward despite whatever adversity stands in your path and and
that was kind of the epiphany moment and when my wife walked back in I was like
never again nobody's allowed to come in my room with that mindset and I refuse
to have it and and and I wrote out that sign and it said attention to all who
enter here if you're coming in this room with sadness or sorrow don't bother the wounds that i received i got in a job that i love doing it for people i
love defending the freedom of the country that i deeply love i will make a full recovery what is
full that is the absolute utmost physically i have the ability to recover and then i'm going to push
that about 20 further through sheer mental tenacity this room you're about to enter is
a room of fun optimism and intense rapid regrowth If you're not prepared for that, go elsewhere.
Wow.
And we signed it, the management.
That's cool.
And it took on a life of its own.
I put it on the door, or I had my wife put it on the door, and I said, nobody's allowed in the room until they read this.
and never having any idea of the impact
that it would have on others. Cause I'll be honest in the moment,
I really kind of wrote it for myself.
Like, hey man, here's my new mission statement
that I'm going to live by.
And it became that.
And that's something I talked to a lot of people about
is having a mission statement that guides you
in the dark times, having that light in the darkness,
because there were some
hard moments over the next four years. Uh, and especially in the first couple of years where
like crying my eyes out, like this sucks, I'm in pain. Like I'm never going to be back, put back
together. At one point, um, the nose I have now is the third nose they built. The first two failed
at one point they had to cut all the tissue out and I just had this hole in my face.
I felt like a skeleton.
Oh man, that's hard.
But that sign kept me on track.
This is who I am.
This is what I stand for.
You're the overcome guy.
Like, let's go set that example, lead always.
It, you know, this is how you, this is who, how you,
this is how we do it.
Right.
So that's what I tell people.
That is the power of choice.
That is choosing positivity in the face of negativity.
And the thing is, when you do it for yourself,
you never know the ripple effects it's going to have on the others around you
because that sign has now gone on to motivate millions, millions of people.
I mean, it earned me an invitation to the White House to meet President Bush.
It has been written about in
other books, Secretary Robert
Gates wrote about it in his book
First Lady Michelle Obama wrote about it
not once but twice in her book
it moved her so much
Wounded Warriors to this day write me
I didn't keep it
President Bush signed it and we had it framed
and it hangs in the Wounded Ward
at Walter Reed to this day.
Really?
Yep.
That's cool.
So that's the power of choice.
So anybody who's like, I don't know if I can do this or if I, you know, well, you're
a Navy SEAL or this or that, that's BS.
You, you, you, in this life, you can lay on the X and be a victim or you can just get
up and be a victor.
And it doesn't guarantee success.
It doesn't guarantee that there's not going to be pain.
It doesn't guarantee that it's not going to be hard.
It's going to be.
But you will be better for it.
And that's how you lead.
And that's how you drive forward.
And that's how you make a difference.
Right.
I mean, why do you think people get into a victim mentality in the first place why don't you think
that they learned this earlier on and stay in that positive mindset i think part of the current
victim mindset we have in the nation is we are not um i mean if you go back to the beginning of
america and probably life 200 years ago life was hard hard. Yeah. Like, you know, if you wanted to eat, if you wanted sustenance, you pretty much had to
go out and, you know, either have a farm or you worked some hard physical labor to get
these things done.
And that made people a lot heartier and more resilient.
And now in this day and age, we don't have that anymore.
We're so blessed, especially here in America, in this country, to coming out of World War II forward to really, and don't get me wrong, there are some poor areas of the country, there's no doubt.
But, I mean, if you've been around the world and you've been to some third world and seen poverty at its highest level, it doesn't compare to here.
Right.
And I think, unfortunately, part of that byproduct is we have individuals that are not
as resilient. Sports is a good place sometimes to build resiliency when we don't have the physical
labor aspect of what we had in the past. The military does it. There are some other places,
but really at the end of the day, it has to be pushed by the individual or maybe the family or
the upbringing. And if that doesn't happen, I think it leads it to,
A, not being as resilient,
which leads it to another problem where you have political leaders
and people of influence that will say,
well, the reason you can't make it is because, you know,
you grew up on the wrong side of the track.
So you're the wrong gender, race, creed, color, religion, whatever it is.
And people buy it.
And they say, oh, man, you're right. Because I'm this color, because I'm this race, creed, color, religion, whatever it is. And people buy it. And they say,
oh man, you're right because I'm this color, because I'm this race or creed or religion or
whatever, you know, sexual orientation. But it's just not true. There's a level of resiliency that
comes with choosing to drive forward. And if it was true, then nobody would be able to get ahead
that comes from that persuasion and that's not true there are
tens of millions of incredibly successful amazing people who are who are black and white and and
female and and muslim and whatever it is whatever demographic that we want to try and paint on
somebody and say you can't get ahead so i think that's part of the problem so we need to build a
more resilient people and help them to get this idea that
sometimes nobody's gonna come save you but you,
but it starts with you.
And you have to be the one that gets up
and starts to drive forward.
What would you say would be the biggest lessons
you learned from being a SEAL then,
that just about life in general,
from your entire time there?
So I summarize that in one phrase, get off the X.
Get off the X. Yeah. So, and the X is any point of attack, any point of crisis, any, and that now
that's one of the big things I talk about to companies and individuals, it is the sticking
point. In SEAL training and special operations lingo, the X was the point of the attack. It was the ambush point. So for one side of my career, I had trained to try and put the enemy on
the X. And that X is a specific point that usually we pick ahead of time that will channelize
them into an area that it makes it very difficult for them to get out of. And then we rain as much firepower and explosives to try and, A, destroy their will to fight,
and B, destroy them or equipment or whatever else.
And what I had learned also was if you're ever on the X, you have to get off the X as quickly as possible.
Because the longer you sit on it, the harder it is to get out of and ambush.
it the harder it is to get out of an ambush so 2007 my gunfight we survived because my teammates fought back and we were able to get off that x i mean it took a little while we had to use the air
assets my teammates fought back but that's what enabled me to be successful out of that gunfight
when we got to the hospital or when I got to the hospital,
I kind of realized that I had stepped out of one ambush
into another ambush.
An emotional, psychological ambush.
Absolutely, and this journey that I was facing.
And I remember when the doctors were telling me,
we're thinking about amputating your arm
and it's gonna take years to put you together.
I felt like, man, it's no longer the bombs
and bullets of battle, it's the bombs and bullets of life. And everybody gets hit by those
bombs and bullets. So it took a couple of years for that all to come into clarity, but it made
me realize everybody gets ambushed in life. Everyone. And everybody gets stuck on that X.
And that X is insidious. It's like quicksand.
And the more you want to feel sorry for yourself and that's what happens when people get on the X,
three things happen. Number one, we will look back at what we've lost and we waste a lot of time at,
well, you know, I mean a little bit like I did. Well, what if I had moved this way? Or what if
I had moved that way? Or what if I had moved that way?
Or I want back my life before I got wounded because it was so much better.
And we waste a lot of time doing that.
We also look forward.
Well, I was supposed to be this.
Or I was supposed to be that.
Or this was supposed to be my most successful year.
Or, you know, I was going to play in the NFL.
This was my launch point.
And we get bitter about that.
And then the last one is we look for someone or something to blame you know it was their fault they did this or they didn't
do this and that that is the victim mindset that pins us to the x and and what happens is I mean
in a gunfight you literally can physically die but in life i watch people who mentally and emotionally die yes and they and they
and and i write this in the book overcome that there are people who that life ambush that hits
them becomes the excuse for everything in their life for decades and they become lesser individuals
than they ever were before like alcohol alcohol, drugs, whatever it is,
every bad behavior is justified
because of what happened to them.
And they just lay on the X
and they're just a dead person walking.
So when you made that conscious decision
to make that sign
and kind of create a mission statement
for yourself to recover in a more positive state,
what shifted for you and what shifted for the people around you
that you weren't claiming to be a victim?
Yeah, I mean, it was just nothing but positivity.
And don't get me wrong, I had hard times.
I mean, there were definitely days that were hard.
I mean, it was not blue skies and rainbows every day,
but it is a choice.
It doesn't mean that it's a choice to keep driving
forward. And my wife, who I call the long haired admiral, is amazing. But I, yeah, she's trying to
raise three young kids. And really, I felt like this fourth kid, because you know, who was cleaning
my wounds, you know, who was grinding up my medicine, who was feeding me through, you know, grinding up food so that I could eat through a stomach tube?
It was my wife.
I was in a wheelchair when they brought me home.
I had all this metal and hardware, you know, helping me clean this trach that I wore for seven months and two days.
So the last thing I was going to do was add additional stress to her by complaining or by, you know, and not only that, I want to set the example to my kids.
Like, hey, bad things happen to good people.
But by complaining and being negative, you are not helping the situation in any way whatsoever.
And this is something I talk to people about in this idea of leading always.
When it sucks the worst, nobody needs to hear about it because all you're doing is pulling
others down and and that's and it is a virus it is a cancer when it occurs because usually when
a team is at a point in time where people are starting to turn inward and feel sorry and eat
themselves you're at a tipping point and this is when a great leader can step up and step out of
his own misery
to try and lead others forward
to push you in the right direction,
or you will fall in the other direction.
And that's, I wanted to show my kids and others
that I wasn't gonna be that guy.
I was gonna continue to drive forward no matter what.
That's powerful.
Lead yourself, lead others, lead always.
For those who are looking to accomplish their goals,
but they feel stuck in life,
what would you say were the strategies of the SEALs
in accomplishing your goals at the highest level?
What are some of the things that you guys did
strategy-wise to make that happen? Structure and discipline. So muscle memory would be the biggest one, which is now many of the things that you guys did strategy-wise to make that happen?
Structure and discipline.
So muscle memory would be the biggest one,
which is now many of the things that I teach in both Overcome and in my Point Man for Life program.
And it was something that I was missing.
I felt like I was missing when I left the military.
And I think a lot of military members feel the same way.
The SEAL teams are incredibly effective at what we do for a lot of reasons.
One of the reasons is selection.
And that selection is there's a lot of things you have to do to qualify
just to get to SEAL training.
A lot of people don't realize how smart SEALs have to be.
So there's a level of intelligence.
There's a level of physical ability.
There's a level of, obviously, resiliency that has to come into this and then we put everybody through this meat grinder
called seal training that eliminates anybody that doesn't have that ability and then once we get
you know once you get to the seal team it's how we train and build teams and it's forged through
tremendous adversity because our training even once you get to a team
is designed to be very hard I mean some people would say almost sadistic in the way we would
train we would look for what is the absolute worst case scenario we can think of and then how do we
amplify that just a little more to make it even more to make it even worse and then train from
that and then train from that. And then train from that.
And it was grueling and painful. And sometimes we got guys killed in training.
You try to reduce the level of risk, but we also recognize that in order to be ready for combat, we have to train at the highest level.
So, and in order to do that, it was a lot of repetition.
And crawl, walk, run was the mentality and it was not these
big goals of hey um i'm going to take down this entire town like you know right off the bat
because that's really complicated that starts to get into all kinds of very complicated things it
was how do i take down a single room and we walk as we flow through it and then that became well
How do I take two rooms? How do I take three rooms? How do I take a house?
How do I take a compound of three houses? How do I take a village?
so it was a quorum crawl walk run mentality all the time and
And then structure and discipline in the way we trained everything Everything was built up that way from shooting. You know,
oftentimes I was a marksmanship instructor and I've trained some other people to shoot. And
they're always, they're a little funny because the very first thing to do when I train anybody
to shoot is you shoot at the, you know, at the three yard line. A little black dot and we're
shooting at the three yard line. And they're like, hey man, this is stupid. I'm like, no,
were shooting at the three yard line and they're like hey man this is stupid i'm like no you're not you're learning and the repetition that you need to effectively pull your weapon out
and and get a positive sight picture trigger squeeze release that round second sight picture
and follow through so that we can do that over and over and over again until you know at that
whatever point you know you're shooting from 50 100 yards or more. So all of that comes together to create small victories
and repetition, structure, and discipline
that all come together to be successful.
How does someone create that for themselves
when they're not in the military?
Or not on the sports team.
When I left, so what I began to realize,
so Overcome, when I wrote The Trident,
which was my first book, it was just the story. It's a story, it's my story of a young punk kid
who did well enough to become an officer or a leader and then totally failed because of ego
and arrogance, got a second chance and then redeemed himself and then got failed because of ego and arrogance, got a second chance, and then redeemed himself
and then got wounded and kind of realized
there was another level of leadership.
And when people would read that, people would say,
how'd you do that?
And I couldn't definitively answer that question.
So Overcome became, I mean, it took,
Overcome came out in, I think, five years after I wrote the Trident because it took that long to kind of think about what enabled that.
And a lot of that had to do with when I got out of the military, I missed that structure and discipline.
I missed, you know, a lot of people don't understand that the military is sometimes a really simple existence, especially when you're deployed.
Like when you're in the combat zone,
it's a very simple existence.
You eat, you sleep, you work out,
and then you train and conduct missions.
And you worry about the guys around you.
And the real world's really complicated.
There's all these distractions.
There's no one that gives you the guidance.
No one hands you a mission and says hey
man this is what you're doing today you got to figure out your own mission exactly and uh as i
got out i realized that that i had to figure out my own mission and all these things were not there
so i started with okay so how was i successful coming out of these injuries? Because that's what everybody wanted to see.
How were you so positive?
How did you write that sign on the door?
How did you lessen a year and a half after your injuries, launch a nonprofit?
How did you later create your own speaking company and all these things?
And I realized that I was super balanced as a leader when I was wounded.
When you were wounded? When I was wounded. I wasn't when I was wounded. When you were wounded?
When I was wounded.
I wasn't prior to being wounded.
Really?
Not when I had the leadership failure.
And at other points in crisis in my life, I realized I wasn't as balanced.
I think I saw one of your videos recently talking about the key to successful leadership is balance.
It is.
I believe it.
But balance is a misnomer too, because it's not
like, well, I put 20% in this bucket, in this bucket, in this bucket. I teach five, I teach
something called the Pentagon and peak performance. So five key areas that a leader should be balanced
in. The foundational level is physical leadership. And it's something that I've come to find that all of us, as we get older, have a tendency to let slide.
We do the opposite of probably what we should be doing.
It's going harder.
Yeah, because as we get older, we're breaking down.
We need to take care of ourselves better than we do when we're younger, where your body is so much more resilient.
And that's why I tell people, as a leader, you need a lot of energy.
You need to be able to think clearly.
You need sound mind in everything that you're doing.
So that foundational level of physical leadership
is critical to what you're doing.
And that consists of sleep, nutrition, and fitness.
So those three components.
And my physical leadership saved my life
when I was wounded.
Now for most people, hopefully you're never at that level,
but in some ways right now you look at today,
COVID is kind of a strange thing,
but for the most part,
it is individuals who are not healthy
that are having the greatest problems.
Right.
And those with a stronger immune system seem to be doing better.
Absolutely.
And it's like that with other diseases.
Right, right.
So once again, physical leadership to have the energy and the ability, we manage stress better.
So that's the foundational level.
Number two was mental leadership.
was mental leadership.
And when I became a junior officer and I was super arrogant,
I really thought I knew everything.
And I didn't challenge my beliefs.
I didn't question my own capabilities.
You know, do as I say, not as I do.
I didn't do things to get out of my comfort zone.
And those are the things that make up mental leadership, constantly educating ourselves, constantly challenging our beliefs.
We're in a day and age where it's dangerous, in my opinion, because social media feeds you the
information that you like to see. And so many people don't go seek out, they don't challenge
that belief system
of what they're being fed.
So it only furthers their belief
in things that may or may not be true,
but because you keep clicking on that line of thought,
you're being fed all that information.
The news is no different, the media.
People watch what they like to see,
and it's very biased in this day and age.
So mental leadership is constantly
challenging your beliefs it's it's doing your due diligence to find out what is what's really true
and how does it play into who i am and what i'm trying to do it's it's getting outside of your
comfort zone it's it's finding the individuals who are where you want to be and and identifying
them as mentors so you can be better so that you're not
surrounding yourself with individuals who are pulling you away from where you want to go.
Right. Number three, and this is the biggest one of my weakest point, and that's something I found
about the Pentagon. Most people have one area that they're super strong naturally, and then they have
an area where they're super weak. And my weakest area was emotional leadership.
And emotional leadership is our ability to maintain,
as a leader, it's critical to be even keeled.
We're not too hot.
We're not too cold.
We're not too excited.
We're not too angry.
Because people can count on you with that consistency.
They know as a leader, I can come to you and tell you bad news and you're gonna take it well.
And I can come in and tell you amazing news
and you're not gonna burn it down drinking
and be an idiot.
You gotta ride that balance.
And I really struggled with that
because I was an emotional roller coaster when I was younger
and I came to realize that that really damaged my credibility as a leader.
Yes, yes.
And it's also choosing that positivity in the face of negativity.
Nobody wants that leader that is just an emotional train wreck, you know, or a negative Nelly.
They want that leader who they can count on, that's positive, that's going to push you forward.
They also don't want that leader that's something I call a leadership wrecking ball.
A leader who they're all about the result, but they leave a path of destruction behind them.
They'll crush you and their path to get things done. And that, in my opinion, is weak emotional
leadership also. As a leader,'ve got to think about the others.
The health of others, yes.
And then the last part of emotional leadership is managing our mouths.
Our mouth?
Our mouth.
Yes.
Yeah, because so many people.
So true.
So many people, and I was guilty of this, and I'm not impervious to this.
Like I said, this is my weakest area, but I'm really aware of myself now.
Because when we let that zinger fly, 90% of the time, it doesn't do anything to further what we're trying to accomplish as a leader.
All it does is massages our ego.
Well, I was angry in the moment, so I wanted to say this.
I see this in relationships all the time.
Husband and wife that let these angers fly. It does nothing to further that situation in a positive way.
President Trump was an example of someone who,
I mean, he would tweet these things out that I was just like,
what does that really accomplish for you? Right. Other than maybe making you feel good to attack
people who disagreed with. And that's, that's part of being a leader also. Right. That people
are going to disagree with you. So what, you know, if you have conviction in who you are,
it's just going to happen. I mean, in this world. Yeah. Another Navy SEAL that I had on,
It's just going to happen, I mean, in this world. Yeah, another Navy SEAL that I had on,
Chad Wright said,
"'Your tongue is like a rudder in a boat.
"'It's like, whatever you speak,
"'it's gonna start guiding you in that direction
"'or influencing you in certain directions in your life.
"'So make sure you really use your words correctly
"'based on where you wanna go.'"
Kind of back to the no negativity.
If you're negative, it's gonna affect you
and take you down a negative path in your life.
Feeling that way emotionally,
you're going to attract negative people.
So you made that decision in that moment
to speak differently, use words differently,
which I think was powerful.
Yeah.
Okay, so that was three.
Number four?
Social leadership.
Social leadership.
How do we build the rings of influence around us?
So and I break that down into four rings of influence.
The outermost ring is our work relationships.
The innermost ring is a lot of times our work acquaintances slash friends.
The third ring is our close friends.
And then that bullseye is our immediate family.
And in Western culture, there's a tendency
to put a whole lot of time and effort into the two outermost rings, our work relationships and
our work friends and acquaintances. And we have a tendency to take for granted our close friends
and our family. And we think they'll always be there for us. But when a major crisis comes,
when you're on the X, that may or may not be true because that's when everything is being pressure tested.
And if you haven't put the time and effort into your immediate family, then oftentimes it will break.
And Jimmy Hatch, a friend of mine, described it like this.
We all ride on trains in this life.
I rode on the SEAL train.
You rode on the football train.
And we never know. All of us hope that someday we'll get to wherever we want to get off. For
some of us, it's the end of the tracks. For others, there's a specific stop they want to get off on.
But sometimes there's a catastrophic event that occurs in our life and we get thrown off the
train. And those outermost rings don't get off with you because they're still on the train.
And it's not that they don't like you
or anything like that,
they're just still riding the football train
or the SEAL training, you're no longer on it.
But who gets off with you is your close friends and family.
And so often I have watched individuals
that get into a major crisis,
and you also know so many successful people
that have been super successful
but got to the end of their
career or even the end of their lives and said, why didn't I put more time into my family?
That's true.
So social leadership is making sure that we are investing in those relationships to be ready.
The key question I ask everybody is, will you be ready?
For what?
It doesn't matter. Will you be ready for that moment when it comes?
Because we don't know what that moment is.
So that balance enables us to be ready for almost anything.
Having a mindset of the next ambush is out on the horizon.
If I maintain balance, if I have a leadership mindset of being ready for it,
I'll be ready for it no matter what it is.
It doesn't mean it's going to hurt less,
but at least I'll be ready for
it to drive forward but it takes those things that's why i was so successful when i got wounded
i was balanced in those areas the last one is spiritual leadership and and for me faith played
a part of that but for others i tell them it's our ability to get outside of ourselves and have
perspective in this life that what you're going through we all live in our own
personal hell when we're in a crisis but spiritual leadership enables us to recognize that there are
a whole lot of other people out there going through much worse than you are and if you can do things
to get outside of yourself and and recognize there's a great big world out there that what you're going through is temporary.
Even though it's painful, super painful, you will get to the other side and be able to get beyond it.
And what I talk about is that if you're alive, man, it's a gift.
Yes.
It's a gift.
And it may be hard.
It may be tough.
But it's still a good day,
and it's up to you to drive forward and get off that act.
So I have a motto, no bad days.
Yeah.
You know, because I'm still here.
That's right, man, no bad days.
What do you think is the skills that we should learn to master more
to help us reach at the top of our field
our industry or to set us up to be prepared when that ambush comes so we
stay ready we don't have to get ready so I comes in my opinion it comes back to
four key things which I call the point man principles point man principles last
year I wrote a third a planner called the point man planner so point man principles last year i wrote a third a planner called the
point man planner and um and it came about because i got really sick um and while i was really sick
trying to they were trying to figure out what was wrong with me i had a parasite and a blood
disorder that attacked my central nervous system and i was super messed up i thought i was dying
to be honest.
And at one point I was like, man, I wish I had a point man,
like when I was in the SEAL teams to lead me out of some of these bad situations. And it made me think, well, why?
What made them so effective?
And when we were talking about what makes the SEALs effective,
like it became really clear to me that a really good point man,
a lot of SEALs live their life in this way and there's four principles and I think this is how anybody out
there can be effective and bring their game to the highest level number one
relentless belief in your mission and there's a lot of people who don't know
what their mission is they've never written it down they've never defined it
and and if you write down your mission it's got to be built on the foundation of your values and there's a lot of people that don't know what their values are
they'll tell you cliche things they'll say you know faith family finance fitness but when you
hear those things you're like dude you haven't been in church in two years yeah man jim i haven't
seen you in gym this year you know we just throw these things out there and and understanding
because whether you know what your values are not know what your values are or not they are driving you and they're
driving your decision right um so if one of your values maybe is uh fame or or recognition
that's okay you should be aware of it doesn't mean it's a negative thing unless,
you know, you're stabbing somebody else in the back to get it. But knowing that is important
because now you can build your mission in this life upon it. And because my mission now,
now that I'm out of the SEAL teams, it's about setting that example as a leader. I want people
to regard me as a point man for my own life, someone that they
want to learn from, someone that is a leader, that sets the example, that communicates well.
So that has become my new mission. Number two is a clearly defined destination and a set course.
So in the military, we always knew exactly where we were going. And in life, people often don't.
In life, people say, well, I wanna be rich,
or I want to be in better shape.
Well, those are not clearly defined things.
It's kind of like saying I wanna go west
if I needed to go someplace, you know?
So a clearly defined destination.
In the military, we use something called
the universal transverse Mercator system.
It's a grid system that covers the entire Earth, and it breaks it down into a…
Wow, it's the exact point.
Exactly, a one-meter square, almost the size of this table.
Yep.
That's crazy.
And the whole world.
Well, all the way, the North and South Poles become an issue.
Yeah, sure.
But yeah, all the way, almost to the North and South Poles.
Yes, where most of the people live.
Yes. Exactly, where most of the people live.
Exactly.
So when we identify a target, it's broken down usually all the way to that 10-digit grid, meaning a one-by-one meter square.
Wow, that's crazy. So a very clearly defined destination.
And that enables us to not have any deviation.
We're not going west.
We know exactly where we're going.
And then the second part of it is a clearly defined course.
And that course is a bearing on how we get there
or how we follow our compass to get there.
Most people may have one, but they don't have the other.
And you can't get to where you're going without having both.
They may have the destination but not know the how to get there.
That's right.
Because the course becomes the how to.
It becomes our waypoints.
I give the example of when I wanted to be a SEAL as a kid, I knew that was my destination.
That was a very clearly defined destination.
And the course was all the things that I had to do.
So I had to enlist in the Navy.
I had to get accepted.
I had to get a SEAL contract.
I had to physically pass the SEAL screening test.
I had to academically pass the ASVAB score with a high enough score to get picked up for SEALs.
I had to get a SEAL rating.
I had to graduate from my A school.
I had to get the SEAL training. I had to make it through SEAL training. I had to graduate from my A school. I had to get the SEAL training. I had to make it
through SEAL training. I had to make it through Hell Week. All these things were waypoints on
the course. So if people can break their goals down in this manner, and I break them down in
the point man planner quarterly, and then every day we make sure I do something called the rule
of three Ps, one physical, one personal, one professional.
Every day we're moving the needle just a little bit towards those goals.
That's how we stay on course.
Right.
Number four, or I'm sorry, number three of the point man principles is risk assessment and situational awareness.
So many people walk through life totally blind.
When we talk about, will you be ready?
They're not ready for the ambushes that are coming.
And oftentimes they never see them coming,
even though the signs were there.
So one, are we regularly doing risk assessments
of where we are in our life?
Are we still balanced?
Are we still taking? Are we still
taking care of ourselves, you know, both in the Pentagon and peak performance? Are we making sure
that our destination is front site focus, that we're on course, that we're hitting the waypoints
we should? So we're consistently doing a risk assessment. We're also looking for the indicators
that an ambush is on the horizon. Yes. And so many people don't.
So then they walk into these ambushes and they're like, oh my God, I never saw that coming.
Okay.
And number four, so it's risk assessment and situational awareness, right?
Yep.
And the fourth one?
Is an overcome mindset to get off the X as quickly as possible.
Overcome mindset.
Yeah.
So you can't prevent every ambush.
Most, I estimate that most people in this life
will go through five, at a minimum,
five major life ambushes.
And I define a major life ambush
as anything that will forever leave physical,
mental, emotional, or deep financial scars.
And you'll never fully recover from it you know
or let me rephrase that you will always carry the pain of that ambush you will always look back and
and you will think god that was painful like it hurts when we think about it and i tell people
that on the lower end of the scale it can be the ending of a relationship it can be the ending of a marriage job job personal failure
professional failure lawsuit bankruptcy the failure of a business it can be
life-threatening illness or injury life-threatening illness or injury to
someone you love it can be sexual trauma to you or someone you love and then at
the higher ends it starts to get into the loss of a loved one or one of the highest I've seen is the loss of a child. Oh yeah that's tough. So having a
mindset of readiness and knowing that unfortunately those things could happen
and I teach something called the REACT methodology so it's a it's a system to
use when these ambushes come. What's that system?
So REACT is an acronym for when an ambush comes,
the very first thing we have to do is recognize
that we are in a crisis.
And it goes back to what we were talking about
in the beginning, when you're on the X,
there's a natural tendency to procrastinate and deny
and look at the past or the future or blame.
It's hard to recognize, yeah. Then it's usually the hardest, and depending on the past or the future or it's hard to recognize yeah
it's usually the hardest and depending on the level of ambush and and I want to
make sure that people understand if you lose a child timeline is relative I
don't expect you to you know yes it's gonna take time to get off the action
losing a child but also recognizing that you're already thinking, I can't lay here
forever. Like I have to, um, some point get up. Yeah, exactly. So number one, recognizing you're
in a crisis or recognizing the reality is what I say. Um, number two is evaluate your assets.
So when we are hit by a life ambush, by any kind of crisis or catastrophic event, it's natural to feel totally overwhelmed in the moment because your world has just come to a grinding halt for whatever it is.
It's like you suddenly stepped into a raging storm.
You're in the darkness.
You're trying to figure out what's happening in this chaos with the wind howling and lightning and thunder and people beating on you.
And it's overwhelming.
And we tend to think, you know, there there's no hope there's nothing i can do it's all outside of my control but we
have to in that moment figure out how we control what we can and one of the first things we can do
is evaluate what assets do i have to bring to bear to this project? I also talk about it's like tools in our toolbox.
You know, so what can I either buy, borrow, use that I already have?
If it's a, you know, business crisis, it may be an accountant or an attorney
or maybe advisors or a board that, you know,
or maybe whoever that's helping you to get out of this crisis.
Maybe, you know, outsourcing someone that has specialties that help you deal with whatever problem you're in.
If it's a personal crisis, maybe it's a relationship crisis, so it could be a marriage counselor, a priest, or whatever it is.
Having those things, though, makes you suddenly say, okay, this is crisis, but I can deal with it.
Number three is assess possible options and outcomes.
And what usually tends to happen when we go, the slowest part is A, recognizing, B, starting to gather, hey, I have tools or what's in my inventory to deal with this.
And then there tends to be this tendency, if you will, to suddenly rush.
Like, oh, my God, this sucks.
I want to get off the X, and I have these tools, so let me use these to get out of here as quickly as possible.
Right.
Okay.
And I tell people, you've got to slow down.
You've got to take a tactical pause.
In the military, we called it let the battlefield develop.
And look at all the outcomes. Yeah. All the outcomes. And also maybe there are things that are happening that you haven't seen yet. Behind the scenes. Yeah. So getting your team together,
whoever is helping you, whoever's part of this inventory, this is where we now assess
both the short-term and the long-term impact of the decisions that we're going to make. Okay.
And the C?
Choose and communicate.
So you choose the direction you're going to go and you communicate it to the people around you.
You're never on the X by yourself.
The X has its own gravitational pull, any kind of life ambush.
So if it's a personal ambush, your family, your your kids your friends get pulled on the x with you yeah it's a business ambush your team your
team believe it or not even your clients can get pulled on that's true with you so it's it's
important that we choose and then communicate because um frequently as a leader especially
when we're in a crisis sometimes we want to internalize and we don't want to,
even though everybody around us can see,
you're in a storm, man, you're on the edge.
But it's important to communicate
for three different reasons.
Number one, when we communicate,
we verbalize what we're gonna do.
And there's a level,
and there's that lead yourself level
of internal accountability.
When we say we're gonna do something,
now it's like, yes, this is what i'm doing number two it tells others and they're like oh my
god yes we have a plan this sucks let's go and that third component of that is hope it gives
people hope it's like a positive direction yes we have a plan this is where we're going and then the
last one is take action execute on that on that plan. There are so many people
who will go through this process and then they're waiting for the perfect moment.
And the perfect moment's never going to come. The time to act is now, you know,
imperfect action is better than waiting for this perfect plan. And it creates momentum. It gets you
off that X. And you may go from one X to the next, and that happens sometimes, but use that momentum to keep going instead of just sitting there. But what about
our world that it has no structure in general? A lot of people have no structure and no discipline.
What are ways we can develop it when we don't have a team? Maybe the family didn't give us
the structure we wanted. Maybe we're not in in the military how do we learn to develop discipline and structure ourselves start very small yeah so
this becomes the rule of three p's that i teach yes so daily goals so for me it goes big and it
comes back small but you can actually start small and build big you can go either way yes humans i
don't care who you are i don't care how lazy you are, we want to be productive.
People feel good when they're productive.
Yes.
I mean, even if it's completing a video game level, believe it or not, there's a level
of productivity to that.
Yes.
You went through something and completed it and you feel good about it.
Exactly.
But in order to do that, there has to be two things, structure and progress.
Then those two things come together. So we were talking about Bill
McRaven before we started in his book, Make Your Bed. Well, what is making your bed? Structure
and progress. You know, every day the structure is I'm going to make my bed. The progress is
you have, you know, completed this task and that comes together for success. Something as little as that, you come home at the end of the day,
your bed's made, you feel good about yourself, you completed something.
That's why I teach the rule of three Ps.
This creates balance also.
Do one thing physical.
Not everybody has to be a CrossFit athlete or the cover of muscle and fitness.
Everybody thinks that this is what I have to look like. No don't just be healthy man like it's good for you help
you even if that's going outside and walking for like 20 minutes yeah so one
thing physical one thing personal because as as especially in Western
culture we typically define our jobs with who we are. So that becomes our primary focus.
And usually the personal side of our lives gets put to the waypoint and we deal with it on a weekend or we just don't deal with it.
So do one thing personal.
You know, have dinner with your family, you know, take your wife out or spouse out or do your budget or clean out that closet.
Just take five minutes a day to clean out.
or do your budget or clean out that closet.
Just take five minutes a day to clean out.
Just move one thing out of that closet that's threatening to throw up all over your house
that you're afraid to open the door
every time you walk by.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, and then one thing professional.
And this isn't within the normal realm
of day-to-day activities.
It's what is something that's going to help you
or your business in the long run
that maybe you don't have the time to do every day
maybe it's an online course to get another qualification maybe it's i want to expand my
product line into this new thing but i don't have time to do it well you know what if i take 10
minutes to just work on what this is going to look at like every day that's structure and progress
i know you're familiar with this term.
The Japanese call it the Kaizen principle.
So small gains lead to big success.
Yes, yes, yes.
So that's how people do it.
I mean, we just start small.
Everybody wants...
We are a...
Instant gratification, now results.
And everybody stops when they can't, you know, look like,
when they can't be a millionaire,
look like the cover model
of muscle and fitness.
Yes.
And be,
you know,
Bill Gates all in,
all in,
you know.
In a day.
Yeah.
I love this,
man.
I love the,
the practicality of it.
I love the frameworks.
I love the inspiring stories
that you've had to learn
the hard way
many different times
to, to implement these strategies in your life.
Yeah, go ahead.
I was just, and Lewis, so, and that's a really important thing because I think people want to say, oh, well, you're a Navy SEAL.
Of course you can do these things.
Dude, I'm a nobody.
I'm five foot nothing.
I weigh a hundred and nothing.
My family was poor.
We came from nothing. nothing like all these things
have worked for me and they'll work for anyone right but you know the deal you just got to put
a little bit of the work you gotta show consistently man yeah i feel like everyone always asks me like
lewis how did you grow your show how did you do these things i go i've been showing up for eight
and a half years every week i haven't missed a a week. Keep showing up. I keep trying to get a little bit better. It's like, there's no, there's
no real like crazy hack. It's like, you got to keep showing up for yourself and other people will
show up for you. The more consistent you are, opportunities will come to you. You'll start to
feel better about yourself because you're showing up consistently for your bed, for your health,
for your professional, you know, your family, all these things, you'll start to feel better. Yeah. But you got to be consistent. It's so true.
You got an amazing book, man. It's called Overcome Crush Adversity with the Leadership Techniques
of America's Toughest Warriors. Make sure you guys check out the book. You got my guy,
Ed Milet, who's been on the show. John Paul DeGiorgio, who's been on the show. Steve Weatherford, who's my guy as well.
So you've had a lot of my friends on here endorse this.
And a very powerful message, book, and strategies in here.
So make sure you guys get the book.
Get it to some friends.
You also got the Point Man Planner, which I think is powerful,
which kind of gives people a daily framework on how to do this, right?
That's right.
So you can get the Point Man Planner. You can get this book Overcome over at jasonredman.com. It's also on Amazon and
bookstores like that. You're on social media. What are you using more, Twitter, Facebook,
or Instagram? Probably Instagram and Facebook, but I try to put out something positive every day.
My big thing, every Monday, I put out Monday Muster. And big thing every monday i put out monday muster and i
put that on all the socials and it's usually about a 10 to 12 minute just positive message of starting
your day and your and especially your week off right absolutely yeah so that's on my youtube
channels on youtube as well awesome so jason redmond um is it WW, is that right?
Or Jason Redman WW on social media
and jasonredman.com for your website.
We can get all the information about this stuff.
This is a question I ask everyone towards the end
called the three truths.
So I'd like you to imagine a hypothetical scenario.
It's your last day on earth many years away from now.
And you get to accomplish all your dreams and goals
and live the life you want to live for the rest of your life.
But for whatever reason, you've got to take all of your work,
your books, your messages,
like all the content you've put out in the world
has to go with you or go somewhere else.
But it's not here in the world.
And no one has access to your information anymore.
But you get to leave behind three lessons
that you would share with the world.
I call it three truths.
What would you say would be those three truths for you
to leave behind?
I would say...
I would say recognize in this life you have a choice.
You know, adversity is coming to all of us,
so choose positivity over negativity.
Or basically choose to be a victor, not a victim.
I would say get off the X.
You know, we're all going to hit these moments
where we're stuck of negativity.
And then focus on leading yourself.
That's, I think, the most critical thing.
Everything else will fall into play.
If you can do that effectively, I mean, yeah,
when I screwed up, that leader told me
and helped me get back on track.
One of my great leaders, hey, Jay,
people will follow you if you give them a reason to.
Ooh, yeah, you got to lead yourself.
Those are powerful, man.
I wanna acknowledge you, Jason,
for how you continue to show up for yourself
throughout your entire life,
from setbacks to injuries to probably years of frustration
after a lot of these things.
I know it's not easy from just minor injuries myself,
trying to come from those setbacks,
and to continue to show up and serve other wounded warriors to serve people that
are going through adversities to keep showing up for your brothers and seals
to continue to write and just put this message out there is really inspiring so
I acknowledge you for for for showing us that you don't have to be the biggest, fastest, strongest to make it to an elite level.
And you don't have to be the greatest to make a big impact on a lot of people.
So I acknowledge you for how you show up, man.
It's really inspiring.
Thank you.
My final question for you is what's your definition of greatness?
I think it's the legacy you leave behind.
On who is the most important to you is greatness.
And it doesn't have anything to do with money in my opinion.
I think it is the positive impact of the people around you and so the the final thing I
talked about in the appointment planner that I wrote about is something what I
call your your life's mission objective yeah also your legacy yeah and and mine
is that I hope that everybody I come in contact with will walk away and say that guy made me better in some way
some small way you know maybe and that's my goal I mean I'm living a second chance at life yeah so
many of my friends didn't get that chance and I'm definitely not perfect I mean I screw up at times
but that's my goal to get back on track. And hopefully that would be my greatness.
That would be my definition of greatness.
My man, Jason.
Thanks, man.
Appreciate you.
Yeah.
Thank you, man.
Absolutely.
I appreciate it.
Thank you so much for listening.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's
show with all the important links.
And also make sure to share this with a friend and subscribe over on Apple Podcasts as well. I really love
hearing feedback from you guys. So share a review over on Apple and let me know what part of this
episode resonated with you the most. And if no one's told you lately, I want to remind you that
you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.