BRENT GLEESON: SEAL training is 18 months
long.
We talk about discipline, we talk about trust,
accountability, mental fortitude.
Very, very high attrition rate.
For my class only about 10 percent ultimately
graduated of the original class.
But the first six months of that 18 month
training pipeline is called BUDS, which stands
for Basic Underwater Demolition SEAL.
And the first three weeks of BUDS are leading
up the Hell Week.
And those three weeks are no joke either.
They're just as bad as Hell Week, but you
get to sleep a couple of hours a night.
But then Hell Week is where you're going to
weed out the rest of your class.
By the end of Hell Week 80 percent of your
class is gone.
Hell Week starts on a Sunday, ends on a Friday
afternoon, and the great thing about that
Sunday is the class will report to one of
the main classrooms with only a couple required
items in their possession and we don't allow
them to know when Hell Week will commence,
when breakout starts.
And it's pure chaos.
Guys will quit minutes into breakout.
And so the anguish, the anxiety is just killing
you.
It's a fascinating thing to watch.
Not a fascinating thing to be a part of.
So that afternoon our class leader, who's
the highest ranking officer in the class,
he read us – one of the things he did to
motivate us was to read us the speech, the
St. Crispin's Day speech from William Shakespeare's
Henry V. And a great excerpt that many people
know from that speech is, ""We few, we happy
few, we band of brothers.
For he today that sheds his blood with me
shall be my brother.""
ERIC GREITENS: If there was a single question
that you can ask someone to measure how resilient
they're going to be, you ask them what are
you responsible for.
And what you find is that even in the most
difficult situations when you look at stories
of people who have been prisoners of war,
for example.
People who survive said I'm going to take
control of my thoughts, or I'm going to take
control of the way that I breathe.
There are certain things even though my freedom
has been taken away from me that my ability
to eat where I live.
All of these things have been taken away from
me.
I'm still going to control something.
And when you focus on actually taking control
of something and what happens is your circle
of control begins to widen and people begin
to see that even in the face of hardship and
difficulty, there's a way for them to build
power and live a purposeful life.
DAVID GOGGINS: People always ask me how do
you build mental toughness.
Mental toughness also has these classes out
here.
A class on mental toughness.
Positive thinking, visualization, all these
different techniques—mental toughness is
a lifestyle.
It's something that you live every single
day of your life.
When I was growing up I was a lazy kid.
I was a lazy kid and everyone goes how did
you get to where you're at today?
How did you get to where you're running 200
miles at one time in 39 hours being so disciplined.
It started off honestly with recognizing that
my bedroom was dirty.
My bed wasn't made.
I lived a sloppy life.
So I took very small increments in my life.
I started making my bed.
I started cleaning my room.
I started doing things, coming outside of
my lazy ways to become better.
And through a period of time your brain doesn't
like it, but it starts to realize this is
a new way of thinking.
We are now doing things that we are uncomfortable
doing.
We are doing things that we don't want to
do.
So the brain starts to slowly grow.
And let's say you don't like to get up early
in the morning time to go run.
I hated it.
I still hate it.
You do that.
You live uncomfortable to gain growth.
You have to have friction in your life to
gain growth.
And the only way to do that is to make yourself
uncomfortable and get to the point where instead
of running from the things you don't want
to do, you actually face them and start to
gain more and more growth in your life.
GREITENS: Everybody has to deal with hardship.
Everybody has to deal with struggle and there's
this great quotation from Hemmingway.
""The world is a hard place,"" he said.
""And the world breaks everyone,"" he said.
""And many are strong at the broken places.""
Now people often remember this phrase strong
at the broken places but it's also important
to remember his qualifier – many.
Not all are strong at the broken places.
And some people when they confront hardship
actually end up in a place where they're helpless.
Some people are broken by suffering.
Some people are actually really hurt by pain
in such a way that they can't move forward.
But it's also the case that some people deal
with hardship and become heroic.
GOGGINS: I work out hard every day because
I know the first thing in the morning what
I do is I clean my room, I clean my house,
I go for a run, I work out.
I want to win the war in the morning, because
the second I leave my house, the second you
look at your phone, the second you turn your
TV on you're in a battle.
If you do it, if you do something you don't
want to do every morning, you're already giving
yourself the proper self-talk.
You're already giving yourself the proper
dialogue to attack the people that don't like
you, to attack your insecurities, to attack
what the world's going to give you.
So self-talk comes from belief in yourself.
So I realize for me to find growth I had to
face all of these different things that made
me very, very uncomfortable.
One thing I faced was running.
JESSE ITZLER: I was running this race as part
of a six person relay team with friends and
he was running the entire race by himself.
GOGGINS: Where you run around a one mile track
for 24 hours to see how many miles you can
get.
ITZLER: And the run was unsupported so you
have to bring your own supplies.
So we had, we overdid it a little bit.
We had a tent and we had masseuses and food.
I mean we were ready for like in case we had
to stay there a week.
And he had a folding chair, a bottle of water
and a bag of crackers.
And I just thought to myself like who is this
guy.
I've never seen anything like it.
GOGGINS: Around mile 30 I started feeling
my shins starting to get extremely sore and
I started to develop stress fractures, shin
splints.
I started feeling the metatarsals in my feet
starting to break at around mile 50.
By mile 70 I was totally destroyed.
All I could think about was how can I get
out of this chair.
I have 30 miles to go.
And everything I had gone through I realized
that the human mind if you can put it in a
very quiet, calm place and get it to calm
down and not be so spastic that you could
possibly make this work out for you.
How bad are you really.
ITZLER: He weighed probably 260 pounds which
is quite large for an ultra runner.
He had broken all the small bones in both
of his feet and had kidney damage and he finished
the race.
GOGGINS: Once the mind knows you're not going
to quit something it's going to try to find
more.
It's going to give you more.
Once it realizes you're not going to take
the path of least resistance.
You're going to stay here until it's done.
My mind and my body and my spirit became one
for the first time ever.
I'd overcome so many obstacles in my life
and this was the final crucible for me and
I got through it.
And at the end of this race was such clarity
to me.
ITZLER: So when it was done I Googled him
and he had a fascinating life story and I
decided literally to cold call him.
And I flew out and met with him and after
sitting with him for a couple of minutes I
realized that I could learn so much from a
guy like this and what makes him tick and
various buckets in my life would be so much
better if a little bit of what he had rubbed
off on me.
I asked him to come live with my family and
I for a month.
The first day that SEAL came to live with
me he asked me to do – he said how many
pull-ups can you do?
And I'm not great at pull-ups.
I did about eight, just getting over the bar
eight.
And he said all right, take 30 seconds and
do it again.
So 30 seconds later I got up on the bar and
I did six struggling.
And he said all right, one more time.
We waited 30 seconds and I barely got three
or four and I was done.
I mean couldn't move my arms done.
And he said all right, we're not leaving here
until you do a hundred more.
And I thought there's no – well we're going
to be here for quite a long time because there's
no way that I could do a hundred.
But I ended up doing it one at a time and
he showed me, proved to me right there that
there was so much more.
We're all capable of so much more than we
think we are.
He would say that when you're mind is telling
you you're done, you're really only 40 percent
done.
GOGGINS: The 40 percent rule is something
I designed also when I was growing up.
I realized when I was almost 300 pounds that
I could have lived the rest of my life being
a 300 pound person never knowing what was
truly inside of me.
I could have been happy with that person.
I was living at about 40 percent.
Maybe not even 40 percent.
ITZLER: And he had a motto, ""If it doesn't
suck, we don't do it.""
And that was his way of every day forcing
us to get uncomfortable, to figure out what
our baseline was and what our comfort level
was and just turning it upside down.
GOGGINS: When our brain starts to go through
suffering.
When our brain starts to go through pain or
starts to go through insecurities, when we
start to feel uncomfortable with ourself,
our brain gives us a way out.
And that way out is usually quitting or taking
the easier route.
If we're able to look at ourselves and face
whatever we're running from you start to gain
more percent on top of that 40.
You start to realize okay, you start to slowly
take that governor off your brain.
ITZLER: The 40 percent rule, maybe it's give
or take a little, but look at a marathon.
Most people hit the wall in a marathon at
mile anywhere from 16 to 20.
Ninety-nine percent of the people in this
country that run marathons finish and they
all, predominantly all of them go through
this hit the wall.
So where does that extra 50 or 60 percent
or whatever the number is come from?
I mean it's their brain saying I'm done, I
don't want to continue, but their will saying
you know what – let me get to the finish
line.
So we all have that will.
It's just a matter of how do we apply it to
not just with the once a year marathon, but
to our daily lives.
GOGGINS: And usually whatever's in front of
you isn't as big as you make it out to be.
We start to make these very small things enormous
because we allow our minds to take control
and go away from us.
We have to regain control of our mind.
JAMIE WHEAL: The Navy SEALs are probably right
there on the cutting edge of deploying advanced
technology to accelerate their performance
in the field and to accelerate their performance
in forming and leading teams.
There are probably three major areas in their
bodies and brains they focus on.
The first is neuroelectric activity so what
is happening in our brainwave states as we
go into stressful situations.
Our heart rate and the quality of our cardiac
rhythm.
So not just how many beats a minute are our
hearts beating under stress, but literally
what is the quality.
Is it anabolic meaning healthy and positive,
or catabolic meaning unhealthy and destructive
in my cardiac rhythm?
And then even galvanic skin response.
So how much is my system under stress or strain
and sweating kind of the same metrics that
are used in lie detector tests, polygraphs
and those kinds of things.
And they actually have very robust vests filled
with sensors that will allow teams to go through
operations and have commanders being able
to see on a laptop up to 50 operators at once
and being able to monitor all of their activities
in the field, see who's fallen down, see what
their core body temperature is.
See a host of biometrics in their mind gym
which is unique and specific to dev group,
which is more popularly known as SEAL Team
Six, but their official name is Special Warfare
Development Group.
Those guys also have an entire center built
called the mind gym and it's dedicated to
deeper dives for training and recovery.
And amidst all the other tools that we've
just discussed, they are also making use of
sensory deprivation as a recovery and learning
aid.
And sensory deprivation tanks which are usually
sort of – they look like giant egg-shaped
pods and they're filled with basically lukewarm
sort of super salty bathwater that's very
buoyant.
So you go into them and you close the hatch
and you're floating in pitch black darkness
with no reference points.
What dev group is doing now is they're adding
in twenty-first century biometrics into that
experience.
And so they are adding audio and visual feedback
as well as biometrics.
So again, brainwaves and heart rate variability.
And they're able to steer operators into an
optimum state of physiological and neurological
relaxation and then introducing new content.
One of the examples that they shared with
us was the learning of foreign languages.
In the past that's been a minimum of a six
month cycle time.
And so you take highly trained operators and
you have them sitting on the bench learning
a foreign language before being deployed.
That's incredibly inefficient.
By combining these sensory deprivation tanks
with next generation biofeedback these guys
have been able to reduce a six month cycle
time in learning a foreign language down to
six weeks.
So that's basically cutting it in a quarter.
GLEESON: One of the interesting evolutions
that the individual and the class goes through
in the early stages of SEAL training is it
goes from an individual sport where you're
trying to be one of those small percentage
of people that graduate very quickly to a
team sport where you're learning to work together
as a team.
You're learning to have that team community,
that bond and that shared sense of purpose,
those shared values, that team ability so
to speak to put the team before yourself.
The most important element of our culture
is team.
We refer to the naval special warfare community
as the teams.
We refer to each other as team guys.
That is part of our culture.
It is team first and nothing else.
And people who don't embody that mindset obviously
don't make it very far through training.
And that applies to any organization, really
any relationship.
Marriage, for example, is not a 50-50 thing.
It's a 100 percent thing if you want it to
be successful.
And in a business organization that will thrive
and will grow you have that level of trust,
that level of team minded approach to every
single thing you do.
People do not stay isolated and siloed in
their lane, in their bunker.
They cross barriers.
They collaborate.
They build organically cross-functional teams
that allow the organization to be agile, to
be dynamic, to be collaborative, to be communicative.
Those are the organizations that are resilient,
that grow, that maintain a healthy financial
status, and it's an easy correlation to draw
between the SEAL teams and our importance
of teamwork and trust to fulfill our vision
just as it is to any organization that wants
to compete and thrive in the twenty-first
century.
GOGGINS: We're all going through a battle
in our mind.
A warrior is not a person that carries a gun.
The biggest war you're ever going through
is right between your own ears.
It's in your mind.
We're all going through a war in our mind
and we have to callous our mind to fight that
war and to win that war.
