#228 David Rutherford - Navy SEAL & CIA Contractor
In 2005, he launched his motivational performance company, Froglogic Concepts, to initially help children develop resilience and confidence. In 2008, David was recruited to work for the CIA as a curriculum and training specialist for two years. He then went on to become operational for the agency as a security threat and protection specialist. After hanging up his kit in 2011, he kick-started Froglogic Concepts again. For over a decade, David and his Froglogic message have reached over 50 million people worldwide as a top motivational speaker, performance coach, podcast host, and author. Some of his notable successes include his role as a motivational performance coach for the 2018 NCAA World Series champions, the Oregon State Beavers baseball team, and the World Series Champion Boston Red Sox.
He is currently working with a top asset management firm with over $200 billion under management as part of their advisor consulting group. He also continues to work with top college and professional athletes and teams.
David’s passion to help people has also been focused on supporting veterans’ charities. For the past decade, he has assisted seven different veterans’ charities to raise awareness, money, and support for struggling vets. For the past two years, David, Jana, and Chris have been developing the Operator Syndrome Foundation. Due to the continued increase in SOF veteran suicides, they decided to start their own charity to target the specific needs of individuals and their unique medical and mental health issues.
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David Rutherford Links:
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IG - https://www.instagram.com/teamfroglogic
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Froglogic Institute - https://www.froglogicinstitute.com
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Transcript
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Speaker 6 David Rutherford, my best friend, welcome to the show.
Speaker 5 Sean, my best friend, thank you for having me. It's an honor to be here.
Speaker 6
Honor is all mine. Honor is all mine.
Been a long time coming, man.
Speaker 5 Difficult to quantify that time, isn't it?
Speaker 6 Well, lots happened in that time, and, you know, we'll cover most of it. But
Speaker 6 I just want to say, man,
Speaker 6 I love you so much, and our lives
Speaker 6 have been so intertwined since about 2002.
Speaker 6 And,
Speaker 6 I mean,
Speaker 6 you put me through SQT,
Speaker 6 we contracted together at CIA,
Speaker 6 you introduced me to my wife, you married us. We've got a lot of history together.
Speaker 6 We've got a lot of history.
Speaker 6 And you're just such a huge part
Speaker 6 in me and my family's lives. And
Speaker 6
our families have become close. And I love Johnna so much and your girls.
And
Speaker 6 I'm just really thankful that you're here, man.
Speaker 5 I appreciate that.
Speaker 5 The feeling is mutual for sure and in deep, deep ways.
Speaker 6
And you're the first guest in the new studio. Number one.
I was really hoping that would happen.
Speaker 6 But and now it's here. So, you ready?
Speaker 5 Yes, sir.
Speaker 6 Let's do it. Everybody starts off with an introduction.
Speaker 6 Dave Rutherford, founder of FrogLogic Concepts, a motivational training company with clients like Bank of America, UBS, and Merrill Lynch.
Speaker 6 You expanded into sports and supported Oregon State Baseball's 2018 College World Series win and developed a leadership program for the Boston Red Sox and Mookie Betts MVP quest.
Speaker 6 Former D1 lacrosse player at Penn State, former Navy SEAL, served eight years in Naval Special Warfare, including a combat deployment to Afghanistan in 2002.
Speaker 6 CIA contractor who deployed multiple times to high-threat zones like Afghanistan and Pakistan. Author of two children's books and one adult book on self-confidence.
Speaker 6
Hosted the David Rutherford Show under the Clay and Travis, Clay Travis, and Buck Sexton Network. Husband to Jana, father of four teenage girls.
You run a charity focused on operator syndrome.
Speaker 6 And most importantly, you're a devout Christian.
Speaker 6 And like I said, this
Speaker 6 is the most personal interview I'll ever do. And
Speaker 6
once again, it's just a real honor to have you here to be the first guest in the new studio. But most importantly, man, like I said, I just love you so much.
And our lives are so intertwined. And
Speaker 6 this is going to be big.
Speaker 5 I love you too.
Speaker 6 Everybody starts out with a gift.
Speaker 5
You got any guesses? Yeah. What do you got? Yeah, I want some full-blown THC gummies.
I don't want the legal in 50 states. I want the legit ones.
Speaker 6 you'll get the legit ones after, but those are the legit vigilance elite gummy bears made in the USA, legal in all 50 states, unfortunately, for you. But
Speaker 6 you can take those on the plane back to Florida, give them to your girls.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 these things are going in my studio right up right next to my desk, man.
Speaker 6 Right on there.
Speaker 5 Thank you so much. I appreciate that.
Speaker 6 You're welcome. And I got one other gift for you.
Speaker 6 I personally picked this one.
Speaker 5 Oh, my God.
Speaker 6 Nobody's gotten this yet.
Speaker 5 Oh, dude.
Speaker 5 Oh, you're kidding me.
Speaker 6 That is the Sig Sauer 211 GTO.
Speaker 6 It's Sig Sauer's 2011. It's been a long time coming, and
Speaker 6 I love that thing.
Speaker 5 The weight is perfect.
Speaker 6
Nine millimeter comes with her updated optic. Oh, my God.
21 in the magazine, plus one in the pipe, so 22 rounds. Wow.
Maybe we can break that bad boy in today.
Speaker 5
I think we should. I think we should.
We should definitely. Can we do the upside down one?
Speaker 6 We can do whatever you want.
Speaker 5
This is beautiful. Thank you, man.
You're welcome. You're welcome.
This is absolutely just a phenomenal gif.
Speaker 5 Yeah. I need this down in Florida because Florida Man's down there.
Speaker 5 The Florida man.
Speaker 5
This is beautiful. Thank you.
Have you ever been the Florida Man?
Speaker 5 You know, I've, I've, there's been one or two stories where you could have, you could have called me Florida Man for sure. Yeah, like, yeah, for sure.
Speaker 5 Um, would you mind if
Speaker 5
I gave you a gift too? Yeah. Yeah.
I love gifts. All right.
Speaker 6 Um, it's my love language.
Speaker 5 For sure.
Speaker 5 I just,
Speaker 5 you know, sitting in this chair is
Speaker 5 one, just the magnitude
Speaker 5 of what you've brought to the industry and what you've brought to so many people in this chair and what you've given them and what you
Speaker 5 have given so many other people, their families and their stories that will live for eternity.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 as you said, our lives have been so intertwined that I wanted to give you something that
Speaker 5 had a representation of that and so
Speaker 5 thank you so much
Speaker 5 this piece
Speaker 5 so
Speaker 5 my daughter Blair
Speaker 5 did most of all the pastel work and then I drew the operator
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 6 up here
Speaker 5 this is supposed to be your daughter looking over the horizon where peace is down into the space where
Speaker 5 I think all of us are always trying to get which is to clear out some of that white light that Christ gives us in the midst of hell
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 you know, I remember being in the teams,
Speaker 5 they always would say, all right, in case of glass,
Speaker 5 in case of war, break the glass.
Speaker 5 And so I put a little plaque on the bottom that said,
Speaker 5 because of war, the soul is broken glass.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
our journey has gotten us to this. And I think there's some peace in our lives finally.
And it's through our families and through our children and through our faith.
Speaker 5 And so I want to present this to you, brother.
Speaker 5 I love it.
Speaker 6
Cool. I love it.
Man.
Speaker 5
That's beautiful. Yeah.
If you notice, he's got a little vigilance
Speaker 5 little V tattoo
Speaker 5 on his arm.
Speaker 6 Man, that's really special.
Speaker 5 Thank you.
Speaker 6 Thank you. Thank you.
Speaker 5 You're welcome.
Speaker 6 Whose handprints?
Speaker 5 Ah, that's Blair's.
Speaker 5 Because it's that touch in the darkness that we're always searching for, that grounding effect of somebody that can get us through that.
Speaker 5 Man, I love this. Yeah, man.
Speaker 6 Look damn good here in the studio.
Speaker 5 That's what I was hoping you'd say for sure.
Speaker 6 Thank you. You're welcome.
Speaker 5 My pleasure.
Speaker 6 Should we kick it off with a prayer?
Speaker 5 I think so. You want to lead? No, that's all you, man.
Speaker 5 This is your house that you built. And I love when you pray over me and with me.
Speaker 6 All right, let's do it. Amen.
Speaker 6 Jesus,
Speaker 6
I just want to thank you for the opportunity to interview my best friend. It took a long time for me to talk him into doing this.
And
Speaker 6 i just i just want to thank you for the opportunity and and also if i could just ask that that whatever comes out of this interview and and it's going to get heavy i know it will but we just want to bring hope to the world and show that there's a way out of the the downward spiral after after you leave service and
Speaker 6 We also want to just, we want it to help even farther than that.
Speaker 6 We want this to bring hope to
Speaker 6
kids, adults, anybody that's struggling. There's a lot of struggles that Dave has gone through in his life, and he just, he always finds the way out.
And
Speaker 6 I want to use that, use Dave's journey to show everybody that there's a way out. And so please just, please just be with us during this interview and
Speaker 6 keep us in line. Make sure we're honoring you
Speaker 6
and spreading the message. In Jesus' name, amen.
Amen.
Speaker 5 Thank you, brother.
Speaker 6
All right, we got one more thing, and then we're getting into it. Okay.
So, I've got a Patreon. You got a Patreon too, don't you?
Speaker 5 I do, yeah.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6 so,
Speaker 6 Patreon's been with us since the very beginning. Actually, before the show even started, when we started it in the attic, then we moved to the garage
Speaker 6 in town.
Speaker 6
And now we're out here in this beautiful studio. And they're the reason that I get to sit here with you and that we were able to do this.
And so
Speaker 6 it's turned into quite a community. And
Speaker 6
one of the things I do is I offer them the opportunity to ask each and every guest a question. I haven't read this one.
The team wouldn't let me read it.
Speaker 6 So this is from Gregory Lawton.
Speaker 5 Dave,
Speaker 6 with all the trouble Sean has gotten you into over the years,
Speaker 6 how is it that you remain friends?
Speaker 5 Oh man, that's a great question, Greg.
Speaker 5 You're a unique person,
Speaker 5 and that was something that I've always been attracted to. I've always
Speaker 5 wanted and inspired to surround myself against people that went against the grain or were different.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
you've always been that person from the first time I met you. And those wild eyes that you had when you were 19 years old, man.
And there's just something different about you. And
Speaker 5 then when we reconnected in 2010 and just on and on and on. And the more,
Speaker 5 the closer that
Speaker 5 you've allowed me to get to you,
Speaker 5 the more
Speaker 5 I want to be closer to you.
Speaker 5 You know, you're the closest thing I have to a brother without being my blood. And
Speaker 5 so
Speaker 5 if you were like, hey,
Speaker 5
let's go, you know, drive these motorcycles through that bar. Let's, let's go do this or let's do that.
I'd be like, all right, let's go. You know, and I just,
Speaker 5 it's easy to
Speaker 5 be your friend.
Speaker 5 And it's, it's, it's
Speaker 5 the hard stuff is
Speaker 5 wanting to be more in your life, wanting to be with you every day. And, you know, thankfully that, you know, we talk regularly and
Speaker 5
you listen and you share with me and you help me. And I think when you have that, it's just you're willing to go to hell and back.
Or in our case, hopefully we'll get to heaven with each other.
Speaker 6 I hope so too, man. Yeah, man.
Speaker 6 You know, Dave, I just, I just want to say thank you, man. And kind of touched on it before when we took our little walk.
Speaker 6 But, you know, when I left, say, contracting, nobody would give me the fucking time of day, man. Nobody would.
Speaker 6 And I never really understood it.
Speaker 6 But you were always trying to connect me to people or support what I did.
Speaker 6 And I just feel like I never
Speaker 6 gave you the credit or or appreciated it to the full capacity.
Speaker 6 And back then,
Speaker 6 I didn't realize how important
Speaker 6 connections were and what you were doing. But, you know,
Speaker 6
as life has moved on, I am very in tune with that. And I know what you were trying to do now.
I didn't know at the time, but I did know. I know now.
Speaker 6 And I just want to say thank you, man.
Speaker 5 You're welcome.
Speaker 5 It's just, it was, it's been,
Speaker 5 like I said, it's just been an honor, you know, watching you grow and watching you become who you are and the impact that you're having on this world. And I just knew it was going to happen.
Speaker 5 There's just, like I said, there's just something different about you.
Speaker 6 A lot of history.
Speaker 5 Poof.
Speaker 6 Fought together,
Speaker 6 fought each other
Speaker 6 several times.
Speaker 6
Introduced me to my wife. married us.
You've mentored me. And
Speaker 6 it's going to be a fucking crazy interview, man.
Speaker 5 Yeah, it is.
Speaker 6 But
Speaker 6 so I want you to think of this as your legacy piece.
Speaker 5 Thank you.
Speaker 6 Your wife, your daughters, their kids, their kids' kids.
Speaker 6
This is it. This is your life story.
Thank you. So we always start off with, where'd you grow up?
Speaker 5 Man, I grew up in this beautiful little beach town in Southeast Florida called Boca Ratone, the Mouth of of the Rat.
Speaker 5
Yeah. The Mouth of the Rat.
The Mouth of the Rat. We moved there.
Speaker 5 I was born in Pompano and my parents had moved down from Michiga a couple of years prior and born in 72 and they moved to Boca in 73. And it was a dream.
Speaker 5 It was like, I don't even know, 15, 16, 17,000 people in Boca at the time.
Speaker 5
It was that small. Yeah.
It was teeny.
Speaker 6 Boy, how that town has changed.
Speaker 5 I'm I'm telling you what.
Speaker 5
There was nothing past Military Trail, like nothing. And it was wonderful.
It was the most idyllic place to grow up.
Speaker 5 And I mean, I remember by the time I'm four or five years old,
Speaker 5 my longest, oldest friend, Richie, you know, we're riding bikes down to the beach and back. And, you know, we're going over to Tommaso's Pizzeria and meeting my other friend, Mark Plermo, over there.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
it was just, you just lived on our old BMX bikes and we played sports at the local community center. And it was just, it was amazing.
It was really amazing.
Speaker 5 So it was a just a phenomenal place to grow up.
Speaker 6 Brothers?
Speaker 5 Older brother, Eric. Yeah.
Speaker 5
Really a special human being. Yeah, just an amazing, amazing guy.
You know, he was my, my idol, my hero. I think he was the person
Speaker 5 that really pulled out the artist out of me.
Speaker 5 You know, you don't, you don't know if, who you are, what talents you have when you're little.
Speaker 5 And my brother's five years older than me. And I just have these vivid memories of
Speaker 5
sitting around. and just drawing with him.
You know, and I'd, I'd draw my little army men and my X-Wing fighters and he'd draw these cool animals and, you know, like lions.
Speaker 5 And, and he just had this gift and it was, it was really special. Um, you know, he was just an amazing, amazing guy for me, uh, you know, up until a point where kind of his life kind of changed.
Speaker 6 So how about your parents? What do they do?
Speaker 5 So my father was an attorney. Um, you know, it's funny after
Speaker 5 they,
Speaker 5 when they graduated Michigan, you know, my dad, my mom was pregnant. My dad had a job already, you know, worked at a factory, went to law school,
Speaker 5
both at the same time. They had a newborn kid.
They were just kids themselves. They're, you know, 22, 21, 22 years old.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, it was either my, my dad's parents had moved out to California and my mom's parents had moved to South Florida. And my dad got hired by a firm in LA and hired by a firm in Miami.
Speaker 5
And my parents, my mom was just like, I don't want to go out to California. You know, there's too much going on out there.
Some of their friends from college had gone out there and struggled.
Speaker 5 And so they moved to Florida. And,
Speaker 5 you know, my dad was in the grind. You know, he was a new hire.
Speaker 5 And so when they decided to leave that and move to Boca, my dad, with a few other guys, started his own little law firm.
Speaker 5 And he was like, I think the story is like, he was one of 19 lawyers in the Boca Bar, you know, and it was, I mean, this place was teeny.
Speaker 5
And my mom was amazing. You know, she was a big time tennis player.
So, you know,
Speaker 5 every day in the summers, I'm, I'm going to the tennis courts with my mom and, you know, she's trying to make me love the game. And I'm throwing my racket and I want to play.
Speaker 5 And, but like, I just, I was, just followed her around everywhere. And, and,
Speaker 5 you know, I remember going to the beach club you know not what it is now it used to be just this teeny little thing over on a1a
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 you know going and eating those creamsicles right the the orange creamsicles and swimming races that and my brother would win and it just grew up on the beach and kind of chill and They were pretty incredible parents.
Speaker 5
They are still incredible parents. Both of them are 80 now and still live in Boca.
And like I said, was, it was a wonderful experience. You know, my dad worked his butt off.
Speaker 5 You know, he was for when he was trying to build the firm, he was a seven days a week guy. I remember as a kid, we would,
Speaker 5 you know, most dads are taking their kid and they're going to the field or, you know, throwing baseballs or t-ball.
Speaker 5 My dad's taking me to his office and, where he's working on his cases and he's like, here, take this dictaphone and play with that.
Speaker 5 You know, I'm sitting there recording stupid messages and crawling underneath his desk. And then afterwards we'd go do something fun, you know, and, but I just,
Speaker 5 it was, it was special because they really cared about their community. That was, I think,
Speaker 5 of all the things
Speaker 5
about them as a couple that really made the biggest impact for me was how much they loved where they were from. They loved their community.
And, you know, my mom was in the junior league.
Speaker 5 She's one of the founders of Boca.
Speaker 5 You know, my dad, God, he was big in the United Way. He was on the hospital board.
Speaker 5
They ended up starting all kinds of different charities in Boca Raton. And they really loved the community.
And I grew up with that. And it was, I was proud.
I was really proud to be from Boca Raton.
Speaker 5 I was proud of my parents. You know, I remember My dad, when we got a little bit older, he started making a little bit more money.
Speaker 5 He belonged to his first golf club and poor guy would be like, hey, let's go play golf. And I'd go because I love to drive the golf carts, right?
Speaker 5 And so I just do donuts on a golf cart. And then I'd whack or whatever and chuck my club in the whatever.
Speaker 5 But he would always, in those moments, that's when my dad, who's a...
Speaker 5 very intense cerebral guy.
Speaker 5
He's an intellect. My mom's the athlete, right? She was a won a couple state championships in tennis when she was a little girl and, you know, really talented athlete.
My dad was the intellect.
Speaker 5 And we would get on out in the golf course and he would, you know, say things to me like, David, you should be a Renaissance man.
Speaker 5
And I'd be like, I don't know what that means, but sounds kind of cool. Yeah, that sounds good.
Well, I'll be a Renaissance man. And, or he'd say like, you know, always be your own boss.
Speaker 5
And I had no idea what that meant. Or he'd be like, you know, integrity's everything.
You know, and he would, he would give me these, these
Speaker 5 lessons constantly. I mean, I remember when I was probably six, seven or eight or something like that, we would, on Sundays, he would break out a chessboard and
Speaker 5 he'd set up the chessboard and, you know, he'd put some cassette tape in, some jazz or, you know, a guy named Filonius Monk. And I'd be like, what the hell is this?
Speaker 5 You know, and, and then we'd play chess. And then after after that, he'd flip on 60 Minutes and we would watch 60 Minutes.
Speaker 5 And he would always say the world's a bigger place than you can imagine. And it's important to understand what's out there.
Speaker 5 And I think the combination of that,
Speaker 5 that
Speaker 5
wisdom, like be a Renaissance man, but go explore the world really kind of settled in. And it was, it played a big role in my young adult life.
And so they were.
Speaker 6 I think it still plays a big role in your life.
Speaker 5 I've never stopped. Like that was the defining influence, I think, was to pursue
Speaker 5 that kind of mentality to look at the world in that capacity.
Speaker 6 Were you competitive as a kid?
Speaker 5 Oh,
Speaker 5 dude.
Speaker 6 You're competitive now.
Speaker 5
I lived. Real competitive.
I lived, eat, sleep, and breathe sports. That was it.
That was my thing. And it was, you know, flag football, T-ball, soccer, tennis camp,
Speaker 5 anything that I could compete on a team with. And I just gravitated towards it.
Speaker 5 And, you know, that ended up really,
Speaker 5 really saving me in multiple ways
Speaker 5 in my childhood for sure was that
Speaker 5 escaping into those sports and kind of getting lost and into some of the other things that emerged in my childhood.
Speaker 6 Saving you from what?
Speaker 5 My life was about perfect, really perfect until I was about eight or nine years old.
Speaker 5
And then my brother, around 13 or 14 and 14, started changing. When he was 13 or 14.
When he was 13,
Speaker 5 something changed in him and the household started to change. I mean, and I was just like, Oh, I guess he's just a teenager.
Speaker 5 I don't know, you know, and and and he was an athlete too, and big football player, ended up being, you know, captain of his high school football team and all that. And,
Speaker 5 and, but the house changed, and it really, um,
Speaker 5 when he was 15 is when it, it, it kind of, I don't want, I don't want to say it shattered kind of the
Speaker 5 bubble that that we were living in, but it certainly, it certainly cracked for sure.
Speaker 5 At 15, he came out to my parents as gay.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 you got to imagine this was 1982
Speaker 5 and kind of the height of the AIDS epidemic. You know, there was a real,
Speaker 5 I don't know, maybe animosity or bigotry. I don't know what the appropriate, but, you know, I think most people were just afraid of homosexuality.
Speaker 5 And they thought if you, stood next to a gay person, then you're gay or you were friends with someone.
Speaker 5 And I think
Speaker 5 he was really in this predicament in this small town,
Speaker 5 came out to my parents. And my parents didn't handle it as best as they could have.
Speaker 5 They're from
Speaker 5
Michigan. My mom's from Muskegon.
My dad was from Detroit.
Speaker 5 you know, very conservative growing up. And all of a sudden, your, you know, your 15-year-old son tells you they're gay, what are you supposed to do? And how are you supposed to act?
Speaker 5
Because there's no playbook for that. I mean, now I think it's so much different.
It's so much more accepted and supported, which is wonderful to see, you know, and
Speaker 5 people being able to live their lives in that capacity without, you know, without any type of attacking or like there used to be. I mean, it was, it was pretty harsh back in the day for sure.
Speaker 5 And, and so for him to come out and then my parents not being able to know how to embrace it or to get behind him to help him to help navigate, I mean, to live in this space. And in fact,
Speaker 5 they kind of pushed back on it in a pretty heavy way.
Speaker 5 In order, I think their initial concept was to kind of to protect me. And so they really.
Speaker 5 kind of mandated that Eric didn't tell me and didn't kind of live, wasn't able to live openly as gay.
Speaker 5 And as a result of that i think he spiraled pretty deeply and you know next thing you know he was partying pretty hard and and really pushing the envelope and going down to fort lauderdale and also remember this is the age of of you know south florida in the 80s was cocaine epidemic that's right that's right and and
Speaker 5 he
Speaker 5 got consumed in that abyss of where he was and didn't know how to break out and didn't have, you know, had a few people, I think, in high school that were quiet and supported him of
Speaker 5 this person, Sean, and then eventually this woman, Catherine, who he's still friends with today, he admits, at a drama. He was into theater and
Speaker 5 very
Speaker 5 wanted to go
Speaker 5 to theater school and college and wanted to pursue the arts in that capacity too. He's very artistic as well.
Speaker 6 How did the household change? What changed?
Speaker 5 The arguments, the yelling,
Speaker 5
his state of mind. It was just, you know, one minute I had my brother there and then the next he was gone.
And so it was almost... You felt like he was gone.
Yeah.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 Why did you feel like he was gone? Did you understand?
Speaker 5 No.
Speaker 6 At eight?
Speaker 5 No.
Speaker 5 Well, I didn't know then, but 15 is when it really exploded, is where just the fighting that they would get into and, you know, he wouldn't come home on weekends or wouldn't his grades would struggle or he and my dad would just go toe to toe over and over and over and over
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 just screaming and
Speaker 5 I just
Speaker 5 was like what the hell is going on and unfortunately for me I blamed him which was incredibly difficult you know now after you know our relationship struggled for several decades many decades as a result of just
Speaker 5 me being like, why can't you, you know, why can't you get squared away? Why can't you fix this? Why can't you bring calm back to our house? And
Speaker 5 without knowing that it was really about his own frustration and the lie, he was being forced to live somewhat.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, for me and him, it almost became non-existent. There was no relationship anymore.
Speaker 6 At what age did that happen? At 15?
Speaker 5 He was 15 and I was 10.
Speaker 6 You were 10 years old? Yeah.
Speaker 5 yeah
Speaker 5 have you guys ever mended that i think we were trying we're really trying a lot harder i think the me going through my divorce was a moment he really stepped in and was there for me in a in a big way and so since then we've really really tried to um
Speaker 5 work through it. And I also think, you know, the age of my parents now
Speaker 5
is another time, you know, when you're, it's like, whoa, they're at the space. And, you know, he lives in New York City with his partner, James.
And,
Speaker 5 you know, that's, there's a gap and they have very busy, very focused lives. And, you know, he's in the event business and James is a very successful in the fashion business and that's their life.
Speaker 5
And so, you know, as my parents have gotten older, it's like, hey, man, I need your help. Because, you know, we live just, we live about two minutes away from him.
And he's been wonderful.
Speaker 5 And so I think now we're really starting to realize he's, he's really, he matured a lot faster than I was because, you know, after he left home at 18, he moved out to California.
Speaker 5
He essentially didn't come home. He was done.
He was, you know, he had moved out. And
Speaker 5 the thing that really, I think, triggered
Speaker 5 his journey in a deep, deep way was when he finally got sober.
Speaker 5 And he's been sober almost 40 40 years now.
Speaker 6 And 40 years?
Speaker 5 Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5 He just turned 57, and I think he was like 22 or something, like 22, I think.
Speaker 6 Wow.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5
and so he's been working on himself. And imagine being in the fashion industry.
And he wanted to be a model when he was a kid. You know, it's crazy.
I did some child modeling when I was a kid.
Speaker 5 And you did child modeling?
Speaker 6 Yeah, dude.
Speaker 5 For whom?
Speaker 5 Burger King, Skippy Peanut Butter. Burger King? Yeah.
Speaker 6 Hold on, I gotta hear this shit.
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Speaker 5 Yeah, yeah, crazy story, man.
Speaker 5 How the fuck did you get into bottling? Dude, me and my buddy, Chris, were riding their bikes in our neighborhood.
Speaker 5 I drove by and this woman in this Cadillac, a Mary Kay Cadillac, screams out, come here, honey, get over here. And, and I'm like, like, what do you want?
Speaker 5 You know, and so we go over and she goes, have you ever thought about modeling before?
Speaker 6 And I'm like, could you imagine if that happened today?
Speaker 5 No,
Speaker 5 you're going to jail, right?
Speaker 5 And, and
Speaker 5 I was like, I don't know what you're talking about. She's like, where do you live, honey?
Speaker 5 And so I, you know, rode the bike and she drove her car and came over and asked my mom, you know, I think your son would do pretty good in the modeling industry.
Speaker 5 I'm doing this fashion show at the Boca Hotel. You know, do you think he'll want to be in it? And my mom's like, yep.
Speaker 5 And next thing you know, I'm walking this runway. I don't even know how
Speaker 5
dude, it was crazy. It was crazy because then that led to, I got this, she introduced me to an agent down in Miami.
Next thing you know, I got on it, went on all these calls.
Speaker 5
I started getting these commercials. I'm going down.
I mean, my sixth grade year, I think I missed 80 plus days of school going to my modeling and doing, are you serious? It was crazy.
Speaker 5 And for me, initially, it was awesome because I got out of school. I hated school, right? I'd be back in time for sports, for practice, and I was making pretty good money.
Speaker 5
So any Star Wars action figure I wanted or G.I. Joe, I could get it.
So we'd drive down. It was hilarious.
Speaker 5
She'd pick me up from school. You know, we'd go to McDonald's and then we'd drive down.
I'd usually fall asleep. I'd go do, she'd drop me off at some studio in Miami.
Speaker 5
I'd shoot, you know, a print job or something and for Burdines or something like that. And, or go do a Burger King commercial.
And my favorite one was Skippy Peanut Butter.
Speaker 5 I met Annette Funicello from the old Mickey Mouse Club. That was cool.
Speaker 5
And then we'd come home and we'd always stop. And initially we'd stop at toy stores.
And I loved action figures, right?
Speaker 5 And then, or she'd stop at, eventually, then it became the
Speaker 5
Army Surplus store. There was one in Fort Lauderdale.
And when I started, you know, becoming fascinated with John Wayne and war movies, probably I was like eight or nine years old.
Speaker 5 And then I'd, you know, I'd stop and I'd get a ninja outfit or some throwing stars. And, you know, back then you could only get them in these
Speaker 5 Army surplus stores.
Speaker 5 It got to a point one time I was the closest I got to really kind of
Speaker 5 being really successful was I was in the final there was a movie called Cocoon back in the day and
Speaker 5 I got to the final is me and the kid who actually moved went in the movie and he got the role and you know went you know shot this huge movie and you know it was about like alien forces and stuff and you know it was it was uh cool but right after that it it became you know i became a preteen and a teen and it became uncomfortable at that point.
Speaker 5 And I didn't want to do it. I just.
Speaker 6 Why did it become uncomfortable?
Speaker 5 I felt like I was missing out on my friends and hanging out with them. And
Speaker 5
I just, I didn't like it. I got frustrated with it.
You know, even though, you know, you're making money, like I'd rather. you know, be in school, get out of school, go to practice, play in my teams.
Speaker 5 And it was, it was problematic. Then also, like, when you go on and anybody who's been in any component of the industry, like there's nothing glamorous about it.
Speaker 5 You know, you're sitting and they pin your clothes and you have to sit still for five hours while they shoot all the shoots and get all the shots they want.
Speaker 5
And, and I just got to the point, I was like, mom, I hate this. I don't want to do it anymore.
And, and then that was it. And so I stopped.
Speaker 5 But yeah, that was right around probably 14, 13, 14 is when I was like, I'm done. But it was incredible because,
Speaker 5 you know, we went through a
Speaker 5 really, my dad's law firm kind of imploded when I was graduating, when I was a senior in school. And so out of nowhere, I ended up, I wanted to do a fifth year of high school.
Speaker 5 And so all that money I had saved up was, I was able to pay for a portion of that experience. And so,
Speaker 5 you know, it goes back to that idea that you go through these things at certain times and you're not sure what it's going to mean or
Speaker 5 how it's going to affect you, but it's going to affect you. And I think
Speaker 5
understanding that the lesson isn't immediate, like that's when that stuff started, in particular with my brother. You know, that was, I didn't understand what was going on.
I didn't,
Speaker 5
I didn't. I didn't get it.
I didn't understand why he didn't want to be around me. And as a result of that, that's when I really
Speaker 5 leaned in and started to realize that i wasn't going to get what normal brothers give each other and so i had to go find it
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 probably around i was like 13 14 where i kind of figured that out and so i really developed strong intense relationships with my friends and you know richie was one uh chris and in in in middle school and high school, another Chris and in high school.
Speaker 5
And these, they became my brothers. And that was meaningful for me because I just, I didn't have a sibling.
You know, once he left in 85, he was gone.
Speaker 5 And he'd come home occasionally, but it wasn't like, oh, hey, Eric, let's go hang out and do things. And,
Speaker 5 and then, yeah, so it was, it was, uh,
Speaker 5 you know, you're in one minute, you're in this
Speaker 5 idyllic world. And then the next, there's chaos around you.
Speaker 5 And so for me, the way I managed that was I just dove into into my athletics and really was like this is it this is what's gonna save me and so it was essentially football and lacrosse became everything to me especially football why do you think you and your brother Eric haven't mended things up 100% by by now
Speaker 5 that's a great question over 40 years ago yeah
Speaker 6 do you hold resentment
Speaker 5 no Not anymore. I think once John has been amazing, I just, for me, it was like, what did I do?
Speaker 5 You know, I think that was what it was for many, many years. I mean, and listen, we couldn't be more diametrically different, right?
Speaker 5
Right. You know, he's in the fashion industry.
I was a Navy SEAL, right? He's gay. I'm not.
Right.
Speaker 5 He, you know, is an activist.
Speaker 5 And, you know, I'm.
Speaker 5 I do almost a political show for, you know, the, the, the right. And so I think that separation,
Speaker 5
and then, you know, obviously when I went into college, I did not mature. My emotional intelligence was pretty shiny.
We can talk about that.
Speaker 5 But, and then in the teams, it was, it was even more complicated because I, you know, I was in San Diego most, almost the whole time and he was up in L.A.
Speaker 5 And I think we saw each other in the seven years I was in San Diego. I think we saw each other six times.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5
you know, he never once came to visit me. I was always driving up there.
And, you know, the one time he was in San Diego, which was a kind of crazy story with
Speaker 5
Charlie and Rick. And it was a Super Bowl thing that went haywire.
Maybe that's for a different show. But
Speaker 5 right now? Yeah. Oh, God.
Speaker 5 This is definitely a right turn right now.
Speaker 5 It was Super Bowl in San Diego.
Speaker 5 What was it?
Speaker 5 2002.
Speaker 6 Are you talking Charlie Melton? Yeah.
Speaker 5 Oh, boy. And Rick Slater.
Speaker 6 Oh, boy.
Speaker 5 And so you're good.
Speaker 5 You wanted the whole story? Yeah, man.
Speaker 5 I had
Speaker 5 the combat deployment happened that summer
Speaker 5 was really struggling from that. Really struggling, period.
Speaker 5 Came, went home over Christmas, got engaged, came back.
Speaker 5
And my brother is an event planner. He's one of the biggest.
He works for one of the biggest companies in the world. And he is the man.
Speaker 5
Like he put like, if there's a New York premiere for F1 to Brad Pittman, he did that. You know, he ran the whole thing.
Like he's amazing at what he does. He's, he's got so many gifts.
Speaker 5 And so he was an event planner back then and he was working for the NFL Experience.
Speaker 5
And so he called me and he's like, hey, man, we're going to be in town. And these are like massive black tie parties.
And they were going to have it on Miramar Air Base, right? Kind of fuse it in.
Speaker 5 The war had just been going on for a year and they wanted to commingle and it was in San Diego. And
Speaker 5 so he's like, hey, do you want to go to this thing? And I'm like, yes, I do.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I forget when he,
Speaker 5 this was like, I think he called me that.
Speaker 5
It was almost that Friday. And Charlie and I had started a bender that Friday.
And I think it was Saturday night. We drank pretty much all through the night.
Next morning, woke up, started going.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I don't know how Rick came over and I'm like, hey, man, you want to go? And he's like, yep.
Speaker 5 And next thing you know, it was the three of us. So, I mean, Charlie's 6'5, 6'6, 265, 270, right? Rick was 6'3 to,
Speaker 5 you know, 235 and me. And
Speaker 5 we go to this thing and we actually actually put a button-down shirt on, and we go in, and we go, we're early, we go on base, we go right to the bar and just start getting after it, right?
Speaker 5 Getting after it. Well,
Speaker 5 you know, I'm, I'm, the guy is always kind of trying to stir the pot. And so I'm looking around, I see these guys over here, and I walk up and say, hey, how you guys doing? What's up?
Speaker 5 And you want to have a drink with us? And like, yeah, come over. And,
Speaker 5 and, uh, this guy, I'm talking to him, and then he, he, he runs small venues, like little stadiums, like little soccer stadiums or whatever.
Speaker 5 And I forget where he ran them, but and then he had his head of security guy there with him.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I'm talking to him, the other security guy was over with Charlie and Rick at the bar. And the guy tells me, oh, yeah, he's a Vietnam vet.
And I was like, no, that's awesome. That's really cool.
Speaker 5
And he's like, are you guys in? Like, yeah, we're in the Navy. And he's like, oh, okay.
And he's like, you know,
Speaker 5
he was a Navy SEAL in Vietnam. And we're like, I'm like, get out of here.
Are you kidding me? I was like, yeah. So I immediately go right over to the bar.
Speaker 5
I'm like, hey, dude, I heard you're a SEAL and you were in Vietnam. He's like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I was like, oh,
Speaker 5 what buds class were you in? And he was like, wow, it's, you know, it's top secret. And so, and so it starts, right?
Speaker 5 And I'm like, oh, it was, oh, man, that's cool.
Speaker 5 I go, I go, so tell me, you know, some stories, you know, and I was like, and these guys weren't in it yet because I didn't want to, I had to build it up, right? And this was back in
Speaker 5 the different days of my, what fascinated me, right?
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 he ends up telling me all these stories, how he did the secret stuff in the Laos and Cambodia. And I'm just like, this is really cool.
Speaker 5 But then I ask him a couple of quantifying questions, you know, and
Speaker 5
like, do you know Rudy Bosch? And that's right when Survivor was on. So it was the biggest TV show.
Rudy's a legend, right? He's one of the most famous Navy SEALs ever.
Speaker 5
And he's like, nope, never heard of him. I was like, okay, cool.
I was like, hey, come over and meet my buddies, you know, and it's like, you know, I want to tell them about your stuff.
Speaker 5 So I brought them over. They're three sheets that'll win.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I come over and I'm like, hey, you know, and I start telling him, and
Speaker 5 Rick. looks over and he goes, do you know Master Chief Gallagher? Another legend, team two legend in the teams, like the man, right? I got a chance to meet him at one of the reunions down at
Speaker 5 Chief Watson Patches has this little marina down by the
Speaker 5 museum and got to meet Master Chief Gallagher. They were also, it was the coolest thing ever, these Vietnam guys just sitting around shooting the shit.
Speaker 5 And he's like, no, I've never heard of him, you know, and Rick's like.
Speaker 5
get over here, you know, pulls him in, gets in his face and is like, you know, you're, you're fucking lying right now. And we know you're lying.
So you're going to drink until I tell you, you can go.
Speaker 5
And so we're just, you know, Charlie's just like, boom, boom, boom. And then, you know, then he's, you know, then I forget who it was.
He like, finally is like, I'm out of here and like bolts.
Speaker 5
And the guy, like, they disappear. And so now we're laughing and just, you know, slamming.
Next thing I know,
Speaker 5 I go over and
Speaker 5 I'm I don't know I got a cigar or something I don't know how and I see my brother beelining towards me and he looks pissed and he's got some person some woman with him and he comes and he's like get over here and so they take me behind the curtains they're like did you this woman like did you threaten these people who paid money to go here with your drunk friends you got to get out of here right now and i'm like i didn't do what you know and eric's like just shaking his head like you idiot what are you doing to me?
Speaker 5 Right? This is my job. You just threatened somebody, and I'm like, I didn't say, you know, and we come out, and the Marine MPs are there,
Speaker 5 and there's like 10 of them, right? Because they heard there was SEALs, right? And they're always, they're going to overwhelm in force. And so they're like, all right, gents, you, you, and you.
Speaker 5 And the three of us got escorted off Miramar base and
Speaker 5 barely got away with almost destroying
Speaker 5 my brother's, you know, his event. So yeah, that was,
Speaker 5 but anyways, going back to
Speaker 5 the relationship.
Speaker 5 I don't, I'm,
Speaker 5 you know how you get into those moments where you're not sure what the solution is.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 you kind of dig into
Speaker 5 a state of mind or you dig in more so into a state of emotion. And you lock that emotion in, whether you're protecting yourself or you're trying to
Speaker 5 rationalize your behavior because it doesn't feel right,
Speaker 5 but you don't want to back down because of how hurt you've been or how wrong you are.
Speaker 5 or whatever the context for your shame.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I suppose I couldn't get out of that.
Speaker 5 I suppose I was probably. You felt shabby.
Speaker 5 Yeah, as I got older for sure.
Speaker 6 What did you feel shame about?
Speaker 5
That I wasn't there for him. That I couldn't help him.
That nobody gave me the opportunity to
Speaker 5
be like, you know, Eric, I don't care if you're gay. You're still my brother.
I love you. How can I help you?
Speaker 5
I mean, there were several times. I mean, I didn't even, he didn't even tell me until I was in college and he was older.
Like, we sat down one time. He's like, you know, I'm gay, right?
Speaker 5 And I was like, I didn't know, but I assumed. And I had gotten into a couple fights with my friends who had said something when I was in high school and I was older.
Speaker 5 Like, well, yeah, at least my brother's not gay or whatever that is. And, and, you know, got into it a couple of times with friends as a result of it.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, that shame of not being able to support him, not being able to be there for him. And then, you know, over a while,
Speaker 5 because I wanted his love, you know, I wanted a relationship. I just, I didn't, I didn't know,
Speaker 5 I didn't know how to process the entirety of those emotions in a way that
Speaker 5 what if what you're freed from those that shackle of shame
Speaker 5 what would you say to him right now oh that i love him dearly and that i'm proud of him and that i admire him and that i'm grateful that we're close you know we were just up in new york and i had an event up there for my firm and we decided this was after we'd spent a week in in maine with all of jonna's family her immediate family was like 18 of us right
Speaker 5 Wonderful, amazing people, and I'll talk about them later. But, and so I had this event, and so Jonna was, well, why don't we go to New York and see, you know, Eric and James?
Speaker 5 And I was like, yes, absolutely. And
Speaker 5
he's just so good with the kids and so caring for us. And he gives us so much.
And this is a guy that's moving at a thousand miles an hour. I mean, he's putting on, you know,
Speaker 5 or spending million dollars on these premiers and he's running the the whole thing and so constantly grinding.
Speaker 5
But he makes the time and he comes and he goes to lunch with us and he has dinner with us. And so we were able to celebrate my birthday dinner up there.
And
Speaker 5 just, I think it's the presence that
Speaker 5 I think I want more of, just to be with him, near him, and just so we can sit in that
Speaker 5
long space to try and fill it in. I think.
And so I love him. And just, I'm looking forward to
Speaker 5
our relationship growing stronger and stronger and stronger. And particularly just being in a space where we can rely on each other.
That would be, that would be, you know, the dream.
Speaker 6 I hope that happens, man.
Speaker 5 Yeah, me too.
Speaker 6 Let's move on.
Speaker 5 All right.
Speaker 6 What got you interested in the military?
Speaker 5 Oh, my God.
Speaker 6 Actually, you went to school first.
Speaker 5 I did.
Speaker 5 Four years of college.
Speaker 5 The jump from 17 to 23 or 22
Speaker 5 was
Speaker 5 really intense. It's where my world really collapsed for the second time.
Speaker 5
You know, my dream had always been to play. Division I football.
Like that was, I was the guy. I went to, you know, quarterback camps up in Indiana every summer.
Speaker 5
I, University of Michigan football camp. I, you know, I loved it.
I just, everything about the game for me is, is, just makes sense. I love the camaraderie.
I love the tactics.
Speaker 5
I love the arduousness of it. I love the pain that you feel.
I love the
Speaker 5 competition of it, right?
Speaker 5 The grittier team wins, the closer team wins. And that's really, I think,
Speaker 5 what shaped who I am fundamentally the most was that that sense of camaraderie that exists within a close team.
Speaker 5 And so, but my senior year,
Speaker 5 we went 0-10. We didn't win a damn game.
Speaker 5 In fact,
Speaker 5 my last game against our arch rivals, and I can't believe I'm openly talking about this on your show, but I think we got beat like 64-0.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 they knocked me out of the game twice, like hit me so hard on a blind side, cracked my helmet open.
Speaker 5 And I mean, it was, you know, the culmination of my whole childhood focus on football, you know, came collapsing down in an 0-in-10 season.
Speaker 5 And that really put me into a panic.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it was
Speaker 5
a guy at school at St. Andrews who his name was Gary Niels.
He's one of the most, probably one of the most significant influences I've had in my as a young man. He was a
Speaker 5 the
Speaker 5 MVP of the 1977 NCAA Division I lacrosse championship.
Speaker 5 He was a goalie from Maryland and he had come down from a school up north and he was my assistant lacrosse coach and he was the, you know, the dean of students.
Speaker 5 And I just looked up to him and I think he had brought it up to me. It was just like, listen, there's this thing called the postgraduate year.
Speaker 5 And a lot of guys up in the northeast, you can do this fifth year of school.
Speaker 5 You grow older, you get stronger, you play another year sports, you get another year high school, and then you go to a better school or bigger school. And so I brought this up.
Speaker 5 My parents were like, Do you want to do this? And I was like, Yeah, if I can, if it gives me an opportunity to be able to play in college.
Speaker 5 And so I applied to like six different schools up in, you know, from New Jersey up to New England and ended up getting accepted at Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut.
Speaker 5 And it was fantastic because the quarterback,
Speaker 5 you know, he was like, yep, love you coming up. We're going to throw the ball 45 times a game.
Speaker 5
Absolutely awesome. And it was amazing.
And also, too, because in the spring, we had won a state championship in lacrosse. And I was, you know, the top player in the team.
I ended up being the...
Speaker 5 Florida representative to the national all-star game for lacrosse. Now, just to clarify it, that was not a big deal back then because Florida had like 18 teams, right?
Speaker 5 And I remember I was on the West team and there was nine MIDI lines, right? And I was a midfielder and I was on the ninth MIDI line with the guy from California and the guy from Colorado.
Speaker 5 So, you know, it wasn't that big of a deal, but it was still, I was able to take that accolade, transfer into this next evolution of my athletic career, which was to go to Choat.
Speaker 5 And I remember showing up in August
Speaker 5
and I was so excited. I was like, this is my shot.
I'm going to go to this great school. I'm going to get it, you know, recruited by a D1 school.
It's going to be amazing.
Speaker 5
And I remember showing up first day and we're doing our tests and strength stuff. And I look over at this guy next to me and I said, hey, how you doing? I'm David.
What's your name? He's like, Mike.
Speaker 5 And he's like, I'm like, what position do you play? And he's like, quarterback. And I go, he goes, what position do you play? And I go, quarterback.
Speaker 5
And this dude had recruited two of us and we both showed up. And so everything was shot in that moment.
And it's like,
Speaker 5
dude, coach, you just told me I was the guy. That's why I came to the school.
That's why we're paying this insane amount of money to go to the school so I can come here and throw the ball. And
Speaker 5 I don't know what it was.
Speaker 5 We had a really solid team, a lot of great guys, you know, Kirby and
Speaker 5 we had like nine postgraduates and Brian Lonsinger was our captain and all these amazing human beings, really special guys.
Speaker 5 And so Mike and I looked at each other and said, hey, do you want to go for it? And he's like, yeah. And so we just split time the whole year and we went undefeated.
Speaker 5 We were one of the best teams at that time in Choate's entire like 112 year history. And we were beating teams by like 50.
Speaker 5
And We won the championship of that big school and it was incredible. And I was riding this huge high and was getting some looks and was getting some smaller colleges.
And
Speaker 5 then
Speaker 5 lacrosse came. I played basketball and then played lacrosse and we run a championship in lacrosse too.
Speaker 5
But no big D1 offers came in other than for lacrosse. And it was one for UMass and then one for Penn State.
And the reason I got the Penn State offer was, again, because of Gary Niels.
Speaker 5 He had sent a letter to Glenn Thiel, who was the head coach at Penn State and said, hey, you know, this guy's not from
Speaker 5
Philly. He's not from Long Island.
He's not from Maryland, upstate New York, you know, but he's a really good athlete. And if you give him a shot,
Speaker 5
he'll make you proud. And so he put his reputation on the line for me.
And I went on a recruiting trip to UMass and I went on a recruiting trip to Penn State. and it wasn't even a choice.
Speaker 5 And so I chose to go to Penn State and
Speaker 5 it was
Speaker 5 a funny start because when I showed up, my whole intention was I was going to try and walk on the football team. I had created this illusion that I could play at Penn State, right?
Speaker 5 From the time I was a little kid, when I was little, little, it was like, all right, you know, go to University of Michigan, win the Heisman, then go play for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Speaker 5 You know, you're a kid and you just,
Speaker 5 you're, it's not like it is today where there's max preps and there's every single stat and they rank everybody's five-star, blue chips, four-star, three, like wasn't like that.
Speaker 5
And so I had conjured up this illusion that I was a lot better than I actually was. And so I said, all right, I'm going to go to Penn State and I'm going to walk on.
And I'll, you know, I showed up.
Speaker 5
We showed up in like August. And my roommate was still one of my closest friends to this day, Mike O'Keefe, who I just love dearly.
He was like a godsend that he was my roommate.
Speaker 5 He was an all-American from Baltimore. And
Speaker 5 we were in freshman study hall class
Speaker 5
and it was all the athletes. And he's like, hey, man, I think you need to go tell the new freshman quarterback you're going to take his job.
And I was like, yeah, man, where is he?
Speaker 5
And there was this dude in the front row that was the biggest human being I've ever seen. And it was a guy named Carrie Collins.
And Carrie was the number one recruited quarterback in the country.
Speaker 5 And he was like 6'5, 255, and an 80-yard ball. And
Speaker 5 he was just, I've never seen anything like it. And
Speaker 5 kind of in that moment, my whole world shattered because the illusion that I had created of who I thought I was
Speaker 5
was untrue. You know, I was six foot, 160 pounds, soaking wet.
I did have a strong arm and probably I could have handled the
Speaker 5 complexity of a D1 program, but I physically, I was just, I was nowhere. You know, I might have been a decent D3 quarterback, maybe.
Speaker 5 And so all of that dream that, you know, that 10 plus years of wanting to play football in college just collapsed. It just went away.
Speaker 5 And immediately I started to collapse emotionally. How so?
Speaker 5 I, because the alternative was to,
Speaker 5 you know, all right, I've got this opportunity as a lacrosse player. I'm going to move in and I'm, you know, I'm going to be really good there.
Speaker 5 But like I said, my roommate was an all-american from baltimore like our freshman class these these people were phenomenal players from towson there was grant and brian and mike and and hank and and you know jt like mike buzza my other close close friend and it's and there's a cool story about mike and mike they actually came to my bud's graduation um like mike buzza was on the 119 all-world team from Philly.
Speaker 5
And these guys, they could do things with their stick. I just couldn't even dream of.
And so
Speaker 5 I had a little bit earlier started as a as a way to manage kind of my frustrations and my fears because my fears really began to emerge when that whole stuff started going down with Eric. I think
Speaker 5 my insecurity really began to blossom in those times.
Speaker 5
And I became afraid of a lot of things, you know, during those years and afraid of failure for sure. Afraid my, you know, I was afraid I didn't measure up.
I was afraid of death. Right.
Speaker 5
You know, I, it was weird. You know, at 13, 14, all of a sudden I become fascinated with, you know, my favorite movie was Apocalypse Now and the Deer Hunter.
And so
Speaker 5 it wasn't, those weren't your typical war movies. You know, Rambo was going on at the same time and Commando and all that, but I was more attracted to those very intense stories of
Speaker 5
how war affected people. And, you know, there was this other show that came on.
I forget what year it was, but it was called The Day After. And it was about nuclear holocaust.
Speaker 5 And, you know, that was my salvation. I would, to escape when I was home in the chaos of the house, I'd go into my dad's den and we had that little cable thing with the little box.
Speaker 5 And I'd just close the doors and I would sit and I would just watch TV and movies for hours and hours. And I was drawn to these very intense stories about
Speaker 5 the collapse of the human spirit. And I think that
Speaker 5
provoked a deep fear for me that that was possible and feasible. I was watching it in real time with my brother.
I watched it when my dad's firm collapsed.
Speaker 5
I was, you know, feeling the effects, you know, that 0-10 season. Like, I wasn't who I thought I was.
And so I think everything, the foundation began to
Speaker 5 fracture and those, that insecurity and that fear emerged significantly.
Speaker 5 And so fast forward in my freshman year, we show up and
Speaker 5
kind of at CHOTE, I kind of defaulted into this almost an alternate personality to protect myself from that fear. And I'd gotten the nickname at CHOTE.
They called me psycho. and I'd do dumb stuff.
Speaker 5 I remember I streaked a bunch of like these functions. I would get hammered, you know, in the middle of the night with my friend Chris and Mike and
Speaker 5 just tried to project myself as a lot stronger than I was.
Speaker 5 And so in the fall of
Speaker 5 91,
Speaker 5 I
Speaker 5 kind of collapsed pretty rapidly and started drinking a ton, like a ton, not even not a little bit like blackout drunk every time I went out.
Speaker 5 And, you know, and started, you know, smoking a ton. And
Speaker 5 I mean, I, by the end of my first semester, I think I had like a 1.2 grade point average of 1.3. Like I collapsed and couldn't find my footing.
Speaker 5 And it just kept getting worse and worse and worse.
Speaker 5 And by my, you know, my sophomore year, I was still on the team. I'd gotten eligible through sophomore into the fall
Speaker 5
and was trying my hard, but I just wasn't connecting. It wasn't hitting me.
Like I felt inept. I felt unqualified.
I felt
Speaker 5 I was scared that I would never, no matter what I could do, would be as good as these guys. And so I gave myself this out that I
Speaker 5 had,
Speaker 5 someone had given me this, this guy, my team had given me the nickname Elvis, right in like fallball freshman year. And so Elvis became this moniker and it became this alter ego for me, this
Speaker 5
personality that I could hide behind. And as the party guy and the eccentric.
And
Speaker 5 right around the same time, I discovered my real passion for art.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, some of the first artists I really found, you know, I've always been, I was always, because I was taking, I was an art major with a minor in poetry and some other minors, you know, sociology, philosophy, and all that.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I tell people that and they're like, what did you say? You know, and I didn't, that was the only other thing I was good at, right? I was good at sports and I was good at art.
Speaker 5 And so I'll be an art major because what else am I going to do? And
Speaker 5 had a couple of cool classes that really allowed me to explore
Speaker 5 the depths of what art looked like.
Speaker 5 And I remember I discovered, you know, Van Gogh and, you know, you learn, take five seconds to, you know, I took a bunch of art history classes and you learn about Van Gogh and his relationship with Gauguin and the change of Impressionism and what he battled psychologically.
Speaker 5 And then I found.
Speaker 5 you know, Charles Bukowski as a poet. And, you know, and
Speaker 5 that was revolutionary for me, this guy who had essentially lived on Skid Row for, you know, four decades and wrote these beautiful poems that just resonated with me.
Speaker 5 Music like Miles Davis. And when you understand the complexity of who Miles Davis was, you know, I'm just now all of a sudden I'm being sucked into this.
Speaker 5 And then, you know, of course, there was Jim Morrison in the doors. And then there was.
Speaker 5
Hunter Thompson. I remember reading Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
It was like, I was just like, oh my, this is it. This is who I want to be.
Speaker 5 And, and then, really, I had an English, like a lit class and part of a section or poetry class and part of the section was on the beat authors
Speaker 5
from the 30s, 40s, and 50s, really that blossomed in the 1950s, Alan Ginsburg and William S. Burroughs.
And
Speaker 5 the one that really, the seminal work that I think really changed my
Speaker 5 impression of where I wanted to go or what I wanted to be was Jack Kerouac's on the road.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I read that and I was like,
Speaker 5 that's what I need to do. Like, none of this is making sense for me anymore.
Speaker 5 I'm not an athlete anymore. And I can't recover that no matter how much I pretend.
Speaker 5 And I'm not a student. Like,
Speaker 5
I couldn't handle that or chose not to handle, I should say. I could handle, but I chose not to handle it.
And I tried to encapsulate all these different
Speaker 5 ideas of these artists, because I really believe that to be a great artist, I had to be that eccentric
Speaker 5 wild man, you know, the
Speaker 5 guy who stands on the bars and can drink, you know, you know, 10 pints of Guinness in a bottle of wild turkey and who
Speaker 5 smoked, you know, cigarette after cigarette or swisher suite after swisher suite and and I really
Speaker 5 allowed myself to
Speaker 5 be consumed with that
Speaker 5 now the I think the positive aspect of it is that that's where I really started writing That's where I really started drawing and I really started painting. And I got to explore what that was like.
Speaker 5 And, you know, the one thing about art is that when you're in hell,
Speaker 5 if you can put it on paper or you can put it on a wall or you can
Speaker 5
somehow get it out of you, it makes it somewhat tolerable. And that's what I did.
And I remember in my sophomore year, we lived in this old house.
Speaker 5 And there was a, you know, a bunch of us that lived in this house.
Speaker 5
JJ and Grant and Brian and my friend Tony Gronsky, who I love. There's got another part of the story about him.
And And I lived in the basement, like this moldy, nasty, horrible basement.
Speaker 5 And, you know, I'd come home and, you know, when all the bars would shut down,
Speaker 5
every fraternity would kick me out. And I would, because I'd just walk into a fraternity and be like, Elvis.
And I'd, you know, drink everything they have and go to the next house. And
Speaker 5 I would come home and I would have a bottle of bushmills and I'd open that bushmills and I would paint on the walls and I'd, you know, paint these insane pictures of the angst and the frustration and the pain that I was suffering from.
Speaker 5 And I'd write just poem after poem after poem.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that
Speaker 5 began to take hold of me in a pretty significant way to where,
Speaker 5 you know, the thing is
Speaker 5 there's there's a an allure to these titans of art, right? There's something that sucks you into them. There's something that's
Speaker 5 romantic about that life.
Speaker 5 When
Speaker 5 you think about Jackson Pollack or you think about Andy Warhol or you think about some brilliant musician,
Speaker 5 Jimi Hendrix,
Speaker 5 and you watch what they do, what they can create.
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 it alters your consciousness, right? It opens perspective. And so, as I was in this
Speaker 5 profound
Speaker 5 transition in my life, I didn't know how to find a foundational cornerstone, if you will. I didn't know what that was.
Speaker 5 And so, I started, the depression started setting in pretty significantly, and I couldn't shake it no matter what I did. I just drank more, you know,
Speaker 5 and it just got worse and worse and worse.
Speaker 5 And then it was my
Speaker 5 summer, but what was interesting is I averaged like a 1-8 during the regular school year. And then I averaged like a 4-1 or 4-2 in summer school, right?
Speaker 5 Cause, and I always joke that it's because I was from Florida, I couldn't handle the cold, right? And
Speaker 5
in Penn State, but in the summer, so the summer, there's this crazy thing called Arts Festival. It's a really beautiful thing.
It was my favorite part about Penn State.
Speaker 5 And Mike and I were up there and I was living
Speaker 5
near some other, these female friends of mine who were on the lacrosse team. And it was Chrissy and Alyssa and Megan and wonderful.
And Chrissy and I were super close.
Speaker 5 And she was kind of a deadhead artist. And
Speaker 5 she and I would just talk about these people endlessly. We would just go get a coffee or drink and we would just talk about this stuff.
Speaker 5
Well, that summer I met somebody and I had a little short relationship and then kind of ended it. And that was was it.
And then the fall began. And at this time, it was my junior year.
And
Speaker 5
we were living in this place called Stonehenge. And that was just the name of it.
And
Speaker 5 it was me,
Speaker 5 Mike,
Speaker 5 Buzza, Billy,
Speaker 5 Schoons,
Speaker 5 Brian, and Grant. And I lived, me and O'Keefe and Schoons lived in the top and I lived in this little hole up front and
Speaker 5 had these just by then was really struggling. and
Speaker 5 remember being at a party in the fall it was cold it was really cold
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 i had left the party
Speaker 5 was pretty pretty not inebriated
Speaker 5 and walked outside and there was a snowfall on the ground and and this girl who i had seen kind of came up to me and she was, I guess, at the party and I hadn't seen her.
Speaker 5 And she came up to me and she goes, Ellis, I want to talk to you.
Speaker 5 And so she came out, and we're in the street. And she goes, Do you know where I've been? Now, mind you, Penn State is,
Speaker 5 you know, 65,000 kids, right? I mean, it's a massive school. And you can never see anybody, see him once and never see him again sometimes.
Speaker 5 And she came up to me and she goes, Do you have any idea where I've been? And I said, No, I don't.
Speaker 5 And she goes,
Speaker 5 You got me pregnant.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I left school and I was going to have the baby but I had a miscarriage and I lost the baby
Speaker 5 and so you know I'm sitting
Speaker 5 how am I processing this and what do I do how old are you I want to say I was probably 21 20 21
Speaker 5 yeah probably 21
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 don't know what to say and I guess I just look you know why didn't you tell me
Speaker 5 and she looked at me and she said, because I didn't want you to have anything to do with the kid.
Speaker 5 And that was kind of the lowest moment that I'd had.
Speaker 6 Why did she not want you to have anything to do with the kid?
Speaker 5
Because I was out of control. I wasn't trustworthy.
I wasn't, didn't have integrity. I was a mess with alcohol and drugs.
I was...
Speaker 6 What kind of drugs?
Speaker 5 Mostly just pot. You know,
Speaker 5
I was nervous about cocaine. I'd had a couple friends who had OD'd and, you know, my brother had battled that a little bit.
And,
Speaker 5
and so I was nervous. So I never got, went down that, but, you know, some psychedelics.
I was, you know, definitely letergic acid and mushrooms.
Speaker 5 And because, you know, you get into that world and you're like, oh, this is going to make me a better artist.
Speaker 5 And you believe that, right? You read all the stories about Ken Kesey and Timothy Leary and, you know, the Merry Pranksters. And you're like, all right, that's where I want to be.
Speaker 5
There's a perfection in that, there's a freedom. But the truth is, there is no freedom.
What happens, you always end up devolving into hell with it, and it's just the natural progression.
Speaker 5 And so, after she told me, and
Speaker 5 she was, I don't remember how it ended because I was kind of in shock. And so, at that point, I
Speaker 5 left the party, went back to Stonehenge, went up into my little hole and cubby, and
Speaker 5 drank the rest of my bottle of bushmills and broke out my shotgun and put a shell in it and was seriously contemplating shooting myself at that point.
Speaker 6 Holy shit.
Speaker 6 I didn't know that about you.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it's like everything slows down.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, you're trying to, at least I was trying to,
Speaker 5 I was trying to figure out what was worth it. Like, why should I, why shouldn't I just end it? If this person felt I was so,
Speaker 5 such a, a, a lowly human being that she wanted me to have nothing to do with it. in any way, shape, or form, not even the consideration to want to give me the option, right? Because of my character.
Speaker 5 Like, where do you come back from that?
Speaker 5 And I, I just remember just, just weeping in my room, just like, just, just trying to work up the courage, right, to pull, pull that, that trigger. And
Speaker 5 God
Speaker 5 brought Michael Keefe home
Speaker 5
and he heard the music and he came up and he just started banging on the door. And he's like, Vis, Vis, let's go, man.
Come home. Come downstairs.
Vis. Because he, out of everybody,
Speaker 5 he
Speaker 5 really helped me the most.
Speaker 5 Like he saw it devolve day by day, month by month, week, you know, year by year.
Speaker 5
And he was always there. He was always the guy.
Like, come on, Vis, let's go. We're going to, you know, a lacrosse party.
Speaker 5 And I think right after that is when I finally got kicked off the team, my junior year.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
he just banging on the door. Vis, this, come out.
Come here, buddy. Come on, man.
Come downstairs. Come hang with us.
Speaker 5
And that was it. That was, that was the thing, his voice that made me get up, kind of.
shake it off and and I went out and went downstairs and kind of just sat there just trying to process it all.
Speaker 6 Did he know?
Speaker 5 I think he suspected it.
Speaker 6 You never told him?
Speaker 5 I did. I told him later.
Speaker 6 What did he say?
Speaker 5 He said, I kind of felt like that was coming.
Speaker 5 He's like, there's been more times than just that. I've worried about you.
Speaker 5 Like I said, man, because he's.
Speaker 5 It wasn't the first time I'd thought about it for sure, but not in that way, not in the place where I was like, I want to, I'm going to do this because
Speaker 5 I don't deserve to be here.
Speaker 5 And that was the other thing. It was weird is like to get to a place where
Speaker 5
you can't see all the good in your life because all you can do is sit in the hell of like what you're not doing right. And you can't see beyond it.
Like you have these blinders up.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it's almost like a weird filter. You see the world through this, you know, infinite
Speaker 5 layers of negativity.
Speaker 5 You You know,
Speaker 5 I call it the negative insurgency, right?
Speaker 5 It's that thing that just hunts you and hunts you and does not let you go. No matter where you try and move, where you try and escape, however you try and do it, it just hunts you.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 you can't see it. You don't know why it's happening, where it's coming from, and you're too afraid to look at yourself.
Speaker 6 How did you
Speaker 6 So if you said you were going to leave school to be a dad, I mean, how did you rectify that situation? With
Speaker 5 I didn't even get to that point. You didn't? No, I didn't know.
Speaker 5
I didn't know she was pregnant. I didn't know what was.
I didn't even like it was just she showed up. Hey, I was pregnant.
I was going to have a kid. You weren't going to be a part of it.
Speaker 5 That's what you wanted to tell me.
Speaker 6 So, she had already had the miscarriage? Yeah.
Speaker 5 And come back to school.
Speaker 5 Shit. Yeah.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 So I was,
Speaker 5 and then that just continued it, and it just got worse and worse. And I think that year, I forget, it was something like almost 90 straight days of being intoxicated.
Speaker 5 Yeah, it was just, it just didn't end. I just didn't want it to end.
Speaker 5 I mean, I'd wake up, pour myself a glass of jack or, you know, hit the bong or whatever it was, just to numb, just to stay numb as much as I could.
Speaker 5 Damn, man. Yeah.
Speaker 6 How'd you get over that?
Speaker 5 God,
Speaker 5 it's the
Speaker 5 only
Speaker 5 answer that I can give because it was in mid-April 1995.
Speaker 6 Did you have a relationship with God at that time?
Speaker 5 Nothing.
Speaker 6 So looking back, are you saying it was God or you found God at that point?
Speaker 5 No, I just
Speaker 5 looking back. But I know that was the first moment where it was like
Speaker 5 God
Speaker 5
kind of came in and was a presence in my life. I had gotten so bad my senior year, I was essentially off the team.
I was living by myself, completely isolated.
Speaker 5 That's the other thing, like the desire to continue to isolate and isolate and isolate.
Speaker 5 And that's what people with these types of challenges, depression, and anxiety and fear, and you know, that's what it is in pain, the presence of pain.
Speaker 5 Like you want to be isolated and you're ashamed of it. And
Speaker 5 I'd gotten to that place
Speaker 5 where
Speaker 5
I didn't want anybody to see me. And it was April and I knew I was in trouble.
And I woke up one Sunday and
Speaker 5 I was not,
Speaker 5 I mean, you've, you've seen my places before. I'm not exactly the most
Speaker 5 squared away. I'm a bit of a
Speaker 5 tornado.
Speaker 6 You definitely don't have OCD. Yeah.
Speaker 6 I'm sure.
Speaker 5 I know. I'm definitely the artist, right?
Speaker 5 And so I got, I woke up and i looked over and there was a pile of clothes in the corner and i was like all right i gotta go i'd been wearing the same jeans for a couple weeks and it's like all right i gotta go do laundromat and and i drove out to this laundromat just off campus not far from where this had happened it was an old crosse house that people used to live at and
Speaker 5 and uh was in this laundromat and And I used to take, you know, my, a sketchbook with me or one of my poetry books. And and I'd in those moments I'd try and reflect and I'd try and find
Speaker 5 something that positive right I try and quantify the pain in some type of prose or a drawing or a sketch or something and I showed up and I just sat there and there was nothing just nothing I was just sitting there watching that laundry go round and round and round
Speaker 5 and then just like that
Speaker 5 something hit me it was like you got to change your life right now
Speaker 5
And it was overwhelming. Like it was, it was like a hit.
It was, I felt a movement. I'm like, okay, what is it? What do I do? And,
Speaker 5 and,
Speaker 5 you know, being a lawyer's kid, it's like, write out all your pros and cons, son, you know, and look at it, you know, intellectually. And so I'm like, all right.
Speaker 5 So I wrote out the pros of staying in school and the pros of leaving school and the pros, cons of staying in school and the cons of leaving school. And none of it was good.
Speaker 5 Like I didn't have anything to think about or do or nothing.
Speaker 5
And then I got hit immediately with a thought. And it was because of Tony Gronsky from Scranton PA.
And Tony, when I was a freshman, they lived, he and his roommate Marlon lived next to me.
Speaker 5
And we became friends with Tony. He's just a great guy, amazing, total Scranton guy, but funny as hell and had these little sayings he'd say.
And we just loved him him and we adopted him.
Speaker 5
And he was just, but he was older than us. He'd been in Army Reserves and he was squared away.
And as a freshman, he had given me a book about Navy SEALs in Vietnam.
Speaker 5 And I remember I read, and I didn't know about SEALs.
Speaker 5 And when I was a kid, it was always Green Berets and Rangers, right? John Wayne,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 Apocalypse Now and The Deer Hunter. I mean,
Speaker 5
those movies were, I mean, I had tiger stripe camo, you know, stuff when I was a kid. And it was because of those things.
It was like, man, I admired that.
Speaker 5
I'd always admired what they were and what they could do. And then he gave me this book.
I put it down. I never thought about it.
And then in that moment, it was like, that's it.
Speaker 5 Because when the whole thing, the whole context of the book was about these,
Speaker 5 I mean, you know, these guys that were in Vietnam doing these missions out in the middle of nowhere with a few guys and
Speaker 5 they would accomplish things that were crazy. And
Speaker 5 I was like, that's it. Because at that point,
Speaker 5
my fear had utterly consumed me. I was afraid of everything.
I was afraid of, I couldn't even try anything. I was just afraid.
And self-confidence was completely shattered. Like I had none.
Speaker 5 I didn't believe in myself at all in any way.
Speaker 5
And then I had been kicked off the team. So I had no support.
And even though Mike and Buzz and all those guys were wonderful to me, they were always there.
Speaker 5 Brian Schwartz, I mean, Grant Yoder, these men, they were always there. They always cared about me.
Speaker 5
And, but I was off the team. And so I was alone.
And
Speaker 5 so I said, all right, well, I'm going to be able to repair all of this by going in the Navy and becoming a SEAL.
Speaker 5 And that was it. That was the decision in that moment.
Speaker 6 Had you ever had contact with her since she met you in the street?
Speaker 5 No.
Speaker 6 How often do you think about that?
Speaker 5 I'd been able to suppress it for quite a while.
Speaker 5 And then obviously having children. And then having daughters, that brought it back up, having daughters now.
Speaker 5 Yeah, Yeah, it's it's a
Speaker 5 everything is more intense about all of my relationships that I've been through
Speaker 5
now that I have daughters. And I think about how I behaved and I think about how I acted.
And
Speaker 5 I think that really kind of
Speaker 5 really shifted my approach to relationships after that as well too.
Speaker 5 I think it it
Speaker 5 it added a component of of
Speaker 5 not being able to recognize when when relationships weren't healthy anymore and staying in them probably too long, which became a
Speaker 5 pretty regular thing for me for the rest of my time until I met Jonna.
Speaker 5 So,
Speaker 5 yeah,
Speaker 5 it comes up for sure, and definitely in preparation for this.
Speaker 5 I mean, obviously, you know, to try and encapsulate those pivotal moments, they're not typically the best moments of your life, and that was certainly one of them.
Speaker 6 What advice would you have for somebody that age that has
Speaker 6 gotten somebody pregnant,
Speaker 6 had a miscarriage?
Speaker 6 How do they get through that?
Speaker 5 I think the biggest thing is to lean on people that you can count on, who will give you the truth, who will talk truth to you. I think also faith is a big thing, right? I didn't have anything.
Speaker 5 I didn't have anybody to turn to.
Speaker 5
I didn't know where to go. I didn't know where to rehabilitate.
I was a shame.
Speaker 5 And I think, you know, one thing that is
Speaker 5 pretty inevitable for young people is
Speaker 5 there's an intimacy that's, you know, that's where the overwhelming component of your passion comes from. And as you're a young person, is in those emerging intimate moments with people that you're...
Speaker 5 you're just you know infatuated with or you're bonded physically to
Speaker 5 And I think, unfortunately, people just don't think and they get encapsulated in the moment. And next thing you know, someone gets pregnant.
Speaker 5 And I think a lot of people, obviously, we, we know the numbers of abortion are astronomical.
Speaker 5 And I think it, you know, there are also a lot of people that I know that have pushed through and had
Speaker 5 children, right? They were together and they got pregnant and then they got married. And, you know,
Speaker 5 intimate parts of my immediate family understand that deeply, right? And,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 so I, I think what I would say to people is, is,
Speaker 5 um, you know, don't be afraid to ask for help because it's such an impending, imposing
Speaker 5 idea that, you know, you did something wrong or you weren't good enough or something happened.
Speaker 5 And I think both for the female, the woman who's involved in that, especially to seek out people that are, they can talk to and then also the young man, because that's, I think a lot of times that, that kind of, there's a, a myth that young men
Speaker 5 don't have the capacity to process that stuff or, and many times they don't for whatever lack of emotional intelligence maybe, or, or it's just fear, right? And so,
Speaker 5 you know, those are those moments where that fear and that pain, you have to,
Speaker 5 you have to move into it. Like you have to be willing to
Speaker 5 recognize that you're going to learn something deeply from it. And if you really invest in understanding it,
Speaker 5 you can
Speaker 5 begin to rely on that deeper level faith as well, too, which
Speaker 5 I wish I had.
Speaker 6
You know, another piece of advice that I want to get from you is, you know, we talk a lot about veteran suicide. You've lost a lot of friends.
I've lost a lot of friends.
Speaker 6 We've We've lost mutual friends, a lot of them.
Speaker 6 You know, but on top of, you know, the veteran suicide epidemic, I mean, today's youth, with everything that they deal with, with
Speaker 6 predators, with blackmail, with
Speaker 6 social media, with
Speaker 6 the
Speaker 6 self-esteem problems and trying to belong in school and with all the confusion that goes on today. I mean, teen suicide is at...
Speaker 6 I don't know the statistics, but I do know it's at an all-time high.
Speaker 5 After COVID, girls' teenage suicide increased by 50%.
Speaker 6 And your wife, Johnna, you know, dealt with a suicide with her ex-husband. And,
Speaker 6 you know, what, but specifically for teenagers,
Speaker 6 what advice do you have for somebody that's riding the line?
Speaker 5 I think the biggest thing is to know that you're loved.
Speaker 5 Because in those moments, you don't.
Speaker 5 It's not that you,
Speaker 5 I don't think it's that they don't believe that they're loved, but they can't reciprocate. Or it would be better for them to be gone.
Speaker 5 I could,
Speaker 5
I'm the problem, so I could help my family or my friends. They would have a better life if I was just gone.
And then it's the other is like, I can't handle this anymore.
Speaker 5
I don't want to fight this anymore. It's too overwhelming.
I'm exhausted. I don't have any options.
Speaker 5 And I think that's the challenge. And I think, you know, the insecurities of young people really as an emergence of the de socialization that took place, right?
Speaker 5 You know, when I first started working with kids in 2006, the statistic was like 13-year-old kids, boys were connected something like four to six hours a day.
Speaker 5 It was, you know, whether it was gaming or whatever. And then girls, it was a little higher, maybe five to seven or eight, something like that.
Speaker 5 And then now,
Speaker 5 you know, kids are connected for 13, 14 hours a day. They're on their phones or they're immersed in streaming and they're, they're in that space where it's,
Speaker 5 they, they,
Speaker 5 They're not given the opportunity to process these emotions across from somebody and across from somebody that they trust, that will sit and listen, that will maybe not give advice, but say,
Speaker 5 I can't snap my fingers and make this go away. But what we can do is we can work together to get you back to a place where
Speaker 5 you can gain that foundation, find that cornerstone.
Speaker 5 And that cornerstone is the key to the whole thing, right? The cornerstone of Christ. Because if you know at a minimum that
Speaker 5 he died for us,
Speaker 5 he died for our sins, then you begin to contemplate, all right,
Speaker 5 the sin of self-loathing,
Speaker 5 the sin of, you know, of not believing that you're good enough or you're capable enough or that life will change.
Speaker 5 You know,
Speaker 5 you think about some people that are
Speaker 5 just trapped in in in trauma whether it's generational trauma of the dysfunction of family or it's you know whatever circumstances they are and and and you know obviously i think it's it's it's ridiculous to assume that that
Speaker 5 youth trauma is encapsulated in people that are economically in a struggle in fact i i think you know i've i've seen many
Speaker 5 people that are
Speaker 5 not wealthy or even, you know, or even have an abundance, if you will, but they love on each other and they have very strong family dynamics and those, that sense that, you know, you've got each other's back, even in the midst of there's the natural squabbling that takes place among siblings or parents or whatever that are trying to parent you.
Speaker 5 I think, you know, those bonds, those are the, those bonds are what chain us to that cornerstone.
Speaker 5
And that's, that's, that's the, the mixture. That's what connects us.
That's what creates, if you will, almost the net that saves us and the free fall that we move into are those bonds, right?
Speaker 5 And so that's the key, you know, is to get involved in conversations and to have meaningful conversations with each other.
Speaker 5 Those first moments where, you know, you start to say, I'm ugly, I'll never be popular, or
Speaker 5 I'm not good enough to be the top, you know,
Speaker 5 I don't fit in with anybody or I'm a little different. All these things that, you know, once you get on that
Speaker 5 infinite wheel of despair, it's very difficult to jump off or even to slow the wheel down. And I believe that
Speaker 5 human interaction is the way to do that. It's been that way for as long as
Speaker 5 human beings have been interacting and sharing stories with each other in their tribes.
Speaker 5 You know, that's why when people come into the seat and they sit across from you and they share these stories, there's a reason why so many millions of people have been affected, billion now,
Speaker 5 is because those stories, they connect with them, they touch them, in particular when they hear, you know, what they imagine to be
Speaker 5 immortals or people who are operating at some
Speaker 5 higher level of
Speaker 5 strength or whatever that might be. And they come in and they show their vulnerability and they show their struggles, right? It connects you to them.
Speaker 5
And I think that's what we need more of. We need more dialogue.
We need more sincerity, empathy within each other. And that's not to say we have to become
Speaker 5 weak.
Speaker 5 by any measure. It actually takes more courage and more strength to sit down across from somebody that you care deeply and say, what's what's really going on with you? I want to know.
Speaker 5 I can't promise you I can solve this in the next hour. And I think so many people,
Speaker 5 when we become isolated in our own thoughts, we cease to see other people in their pain and respect it.
Speaker 5 And I think that's a critical thing for us to do. And it really takes that little bit of like, hey, you good?
Speaker 5 I mean, I think about it all the time.
Speaker 5 And I think about it it with Dave Hall.
Speaker 5
I mean, I got a call from Chris and said, hey, man, Dave's struggling. And I called him up.
I'm like, how you doing? He's like, I'm good. I just got out of rehab and I'm going to go do Smyahuaska.
Speaker 5 And I think I'm good. And I was like, okay, hey, man.
Speaker 5
You know, come down to Florida, come stay with me for a month. And I've got this great program that Dr.
Free is running out
Speaker 5
in Methodists and Houston. And I was like, I'll pay for it.
I'll raise the money. I'll get you there.
Speaker 5 It's like, well, I'm going to go back to home in North Florida for like a week and then I'll call you. And I was like, okay.
Speaker 5 And then I immediately hear he's killed himself. And it's like, why didn't I drive up? Or why didn't I go?
Speaker 5 And that's the other half of it for those that are left behind.
Speaker 5
You know, that process. So suicide is not something that we should cower from.
It's not something that shouldn't be talked about. It's not something that shouldn't be discussed openly.
Speaker 5 I mean, it's a massive component of existence, right? The human soul is fragile.
Speaker 5 And the result of a fragile soul is the self-loathing that moves into wanting to inflict pain to end that pain, to end that existence.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, it's just,
Speaker 5
I would tell kids, you know, lean into somebody who loves you. Don't be afraid to tell.
And then, and then to sit down with somebody that's got some wisdom on them and
Speaker 5 talk about,
Speaker 5 one of the things that John and I are going to start working on here in a little bit as
Speaker 5 a course that we're going to put out under the Frog Logic Institute about suicide.
Speaker 6 You know, I think another thing, just to add to that, is, you know,
Speaker 6 especially for young people, you know, who don't have a lot of life experiences,
Speaker 6 you know,
Speaker 6 life comes in phases and
Speaker 6
phase always comes to an end. You don't know how long it's going to be.
Maybe you have a shitty childhood. Maybe you got shitty parents, shitty siblings,
Speaker 6 bad friends,
Speaker 6 bad decisions.
Speaker 6 But if you're willing to change,
Speaker 6 life just, it comes in phases. And it will always turn.
Speaker 6
The wheel just keeps going. It'll always turn.
And so
Speaker 6 just know there are better days ahead.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 There are better days ahead.
Speaker 5 Hope.
Speaker 6 But
Speaker 6
let's take a break. Yeah, man.
Let's go break in that new SIG.
Speaker 5 Done. All right.
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Speaker 6
All right, Dave, we're back from the break. Getting ready to get into your naval special warfare career.
So
Speaker 6 we left off at
Speaker 6 Downward Spiral in College,
Speaker 6 Apocalypse Now movies, The Deer Hunter. You got interested.
Speaker 6 Where do we go from here?
Speaker 5 Well, it was after that moment, I remember, I mean, it's a pretty shocking thing to call home and say, mom, dad, thank you for just spending, you know, tens of thousands of dollars on my education.
Speaker 5
Oh, by the way, I'm done. I'm not finishing.
I'm walking away. And my brother had walked away too.
And this, we come from a family.
Speaker 5 I think there's 17 people in our family that have graduated from the University of Michigan. You know, my grandfather had gone to Dartmouth.
Speaker 5 You know, my cousin was undergrad at Brown and a graduate at Columbia, you know, one of the top people in the entire world, in the literature world. He's a senior editor at large for Random House.
Speaker 5 His name's David Ebershoff.
Speaker 6 He's a lot of pride in education.
Speaker 5 And education and
Speaker 5 maximizing those capabilities. And so I, I, you know, that was, I was petrified because the first, the first person
Speaker 5 I really needed
Speaker 5
to get confirmation from was my father was to say, hey, will you support this? Will you get behind this? And I was scared. And I think I waited a couple of days.
And then finally,
Speaker 5 I had to call him. And,
Speaker 5 you know, he, typical fashion, he maintained his control and was just like, all right, if this is absolutely what you have to do and what you want to do, why don't you come home? And,
Speaker 5 you know, we'll go from there.
Speaker 5 And packed up my stuff and drove home from Penn State. And
Speaker 5 it was May of 95
Speaker 5 and got home. And it was different this time
Speaker 5 than the last four years of coming home and
Speaker 5 going down to South Beach with
Speaker 5 my other close friend Mark and hanging out down there and just
Speaker 5 not
Speaker 5 thinking at all about what my future was going to look like, just more of
Speaker 5 what I was trying to numb myself against.
Speaker 5 And I got home and
Speaker 5
over those four years, one of the beautiful things that took place during that time was my father and my relationship blew up. Like it emerged.
I'll never forget one of those, my sophomore year.
Speaker 5
He knew I was struggling. He too struggled.
He got kicked out of Michigan his sophomore year. The only person, I think, in Michigan history to be expelled for intellectual drifting, they called it.
Speaker 6 Intellectual drifting.
Speaker 5 Intellectual drifting.
Speaker 5 And on his way out, he got confirmation from whoever was, you know, kicking him out saying, hey, if I go to this other community college or other school and I get straight A's and have a 4.0, will you let me in?
Speaker 5
And the guy's like, there's no way. Yeah, absolutely.
So he goes and he
Speaker 5 goes through summer school and goes and gets a 4.0. And one of the interesting things he talks about is that summer he read all of the great works of literature.
Speaker 5 Like he made a list of the top works of literature from Henny Meanway to Steinbeck to, you know, Everett to Keats to Whitman, all of them. And he read all of them.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 he had come up during my sophomore year when I was living in the basement. And
Speaker 5 he came back one night. My mom went to the Netney Lion Inn, and he came back with me and we sat and we drank bushmills together.
Speaker 5 And it was the first time he explained that situation and how he had wanted to move to New York and be a writer and pursue his art because that's where the art comes from in our family.
Speaker 5 It comes from my father. My father was an artist growing up.
Speaker 5 He had a tough childhood.
Speaker 5 His mom had a stroke when he was four years old.
Speaker 5
And that changed his life, or eight years old. I think it was eight years old.
And it changed his life because his mom was then handicapped from them on.
Speaker 5 And my grandfather, Robert Bruce Rutherford, you know, had to take care of her, work a full job, and then my dad and his sister.
Speaker 5
And I think somewhere in there, he kind of got lost in his own mind too. And that art emerged in him.
And so he had these dreams of moving to New York and being a famous author, famous novelist. And
Speaker 5 he sat down with me and told me that story. And it was like the first time he had ever been proud of me intellectually.
Speaker 5 Because even though I I wasn't going to class much, I was still reading Nietzsche, Camus.
Speaker 5 I was learning about art history and the Medici families and Venice and
Speaker 5 the emergence of
Speaker 5
all different types of philosophy. I took multiple philosophy classes, multiple psychology classes.
You know, you're in the humanities. And I just started to consume those other works.
And
Speaker 5
it was in that moment where I felt a bond with us. And that was pivotal because even though I was not behaving, I wasn't proud of what I was doing.
I wasn't proud of where I was going.
Speaker 5
He still loved me. And he was like giving me the space to figure it out is later what he told me.
And so fast forward, I get home.
Speaker 5 And I'm walking away from the thing that I thought was all my dad wanted me to be, which was an intellect.
Speaker 5 That's the way I would gain his pride in me, that he would be able to one day look at me and said, you know, son, I'm proud of you for graduating and, you know, going to law school and coming to work.
Speaker 5 Although he never once asked, you know, hey, I'd love for you to come and work with me as an attorney. Never once, never pushed me in any direction one way or the other.
Speaker 5 And in fact, restrained himself a lot, knowing that I think I had created this false illusion of who I was athletically. And he allowed that space for me.
Speaker 5 So I come home and I remember and he said to me, he goes, would you give me two weeks before you go to the recruiter?
Speaker 5 And I'm like,
Speaker 5
what do you mean? For what? I want to go. I want to get this started immediately.
He goes, because I didn't want to think about it. Like I didn't want to linger in it.
I didn't want to learn.
Speaker 5 And, you know, and he goes, will you just give me two weeks? And for the first time, over two weeks, my dad would come home early and we would spend all afternoon and evening discussing it.
Speaker 5 And we would talk and he'd be like, Why do you want to do this? What about this is going to fill whatever holes inside of you?
Speaker 5 What are you going to learn from this?
Speaker 5
Do you, are you aware? I mean, you have these fears. Are you aware you're going to have to face these fears? You're going to have to, in ways you can't fathom.
Are you aware it could
Speaker 5 irrevocable change you forever in your life? And we had these really intense, deep conversations about life.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I was convincing. And he got to the point where he's like, okay, then I just want you to do one more thing for me.
And then I'll, I'll, you know, I'll support you unconditionally in this.
Speaker 5 And I was like, what's that? And he goes, you're going to need to go talk to Bud Miller.
Speaker 5 And I was like,
Speaker 5 I got nervous at that point. So Bud Miller, my best, one of my best friends in high school was Chris Miller, phenomenal guy, amazing, amazing friend to me.
Speaker 5 His father was a Vietnam veteran and had a couple of tours, was a Marine Corps officer, and
Speaker 5 was bigger than life, right? He was the CEO of a major company called Arvida back then, which they built much of Southeast Florida. He was the CEO.
Speaker 5
He was the chairman of, you know, our school board at our prep school we went to. And he just commanded attention.
I always had this amazing affinity for him.
Speaker 5
So I'd, you know, spend the night and very, very juxtaposed to my father. My father was not that guy, right? He was quiet and listened.
And I mean, he's an attorney and he was empathetic.
Speaker 5 And he was, he was, he was.
Speaker 6 You say that like all attorneys are quiet and empathetic.
Speaker 5
Apparently that's not the case. But the way I grew up, I watched the nobility of the way my father, he was in estate planning.
And I mean, you think about it,
Speaker 5
what happens in estate planning, it's the worst moment of your life. Someone's died.
And my dad would guide people through this. And he would sit down and be like, he'd be like, you know, David,
Speaker 5 think about what I do and how I help people in those moments. Because I'd be like, dad, why aren't you like big time trial attorney or,
Speaker 5
you know, why aren't you going out? And he says, you know, I tried trial attorney. I hated it.
I didn't like it. A lot of it is not what it seems.
You know, it's kind of a charade, if you will.
Speaker 5 But in estate planning, I can help people in the greatest crisis of their life.
Speaker 5 You know, and that influence, combined with my mom and the dedication to charity and what she did in the community, like that really was a model for me.
Speaker 5 I mean, it was a phenomenal example for me to exist in.
Speaker 5 And anyway, so he's like, all right, we're going to go talk to Bud.
Speaker 6 I was like, okay.
Speaker 5
So he called and arranged it. And I remember going over to Bud and walk in and Bud was a big crown drinker, crown on the rocks, man, just crown, crown.
And we go outside.
Speaker 5
They lived in this nice neighborhood. And we go outside and he's like, come outside.
And he pours me a crown on the rocks. And he's like, drink it.
I'm like, okay.
Speaker 5 And he says, so you want to go to war, huh?
Speaker 5 And for the next
Speaker 5 several hours,
Speaker 5
he told me about some of his, the intimacy of what it was like for him in Vietnam. And it was rattling.
It was the first time I'd ever had anybody talk to me in that way.
Speaker 5
I'd never had, I mean, nobody, we had people in our family. a couple of generations before that had served were part of Roosevelt's cabinet.
You know,
Speaker 5 we A couple of my great uncles were generals and stuff. But since my grandfather's, nobody had served.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that was
Speaker 5 an eye-opening experience, to say the least. And he
Speaker 5 shared with me about a time he, he, he would not, the famous stories of tunnel rats, right?
Speaker 5 He would never make any of his guys go in the tunnel. He would go in the tunnel instead of his men.
Speaker 5 And one of the times the tunnel collapsed on him and his he essentially was you know suffocating and his men had to dig him out and and you know you hear that and then you hear about the story of of men and his underneath his command dying in his arms multiple times and
Speaker 5 and it made it real or more real more tangible it still wasn't real yet right obviously but it made it real like it made me really think
Speaker 5 Whoa,
Speaker 5 is this what I want to do?
Speaker 5 Can I handle that? Like, what will it do to me? Is it going to change? Because my greatest fear from the beginning was that if I go into the teams, I'll lose that piece of myself that's the artists.
Speaker 5 Right. And I didn't want that to happen.
Speaker 5
You know, you, I'd read enough stories about J.D. Salinger and, you know, Hemingway and these other people that had seen combat and how it changed them permanently.
And now, luckily,
Speaker 5 maybe not, luckily, it's not the word, I think, fortunately for those men, that pain was converted into really beautiful art and so I was nervous like maybe if what I saw or what I went through that would be erased in me and so
Speaker 5 I had that in mind and when I went to the recruiter uh man i was probably i had long hair huge sideburns a nasty goatee i was probably about 225 pounds out of shape and i walked into in del ray where it is and i said uh hey how you doing He's like, may I help you?
Speaker 5 And I was like, yeah, I want to be a Navy SEAL. He's like, I bet you do.
Speaker 5 And he sat me in that chair and put on that cassette tape called Be Someone Special.
Speaker 5
And it's funny, man. I just watched it.
You can find it on YouTube. And it's, you know, guys.
Speaker 5 fast roping into a target and assaulting it and planting a bomb and it blowing up and snipers taking guys out outside. And then it moves into this, the story of buds.
Speaker 5 And it, and that was the first time I'd ever, because back then there wasn't anything, right? There's a couple books from Vietnam. There was Rogue Warrior and that was it and the Charlie Sheen movie.
Speaker 5 And, and
Speaker 5 none of that encapsulated what it was.
Speaker 5 For me,
Speaker 5
that video was the first time I got a window into the intensity of it. And I was like, yeah, that's it.
That's what I need. That's what I want.
And he's like, okay, sign right here.
Speaker 5
And I said, well, I can't. My dad made me promise I'd take it home and show him, you know, big contract.
I take it home to my dad. And he reads through.
He goes, he goes, it is what it is.
Speaker 5 You know, you go in,
Speaker 5
they own you. And I was like, okay, that, that, that works.
That's fine. That's what I want.
So I signed, was at MEPS. And, you know, in June 23rd, I think of 1995, I was at boot camp.
Speaker 6 So what was it that really drew you in?
Speaker 5 I think it was the redemption that I imagined I would feel if I could face death and not collapse.
Speaker 5 I think if I could stand next to somebody who entrusted their lives with me and I had the strength to do that, that somehow all of my fear would go away.
Speaker 6 Did it, did, was there any aspect of
Speaker 6
I mean, your athletic career came crashing down. Your academic career came crashing down.
You had a miscarriage with a woman. I mean,
Speaker 6 it's a fucking tough spot for a guy, what, 21?
Speaker 5 I was 22 because I had done the fifth year of high school. So I was
Speaker 6 22 years old. I mean, a lot of failures.
Speaker 6 Is there any aspect of this that you, that, that, that,
Speaker 6 I mean, did you want to make your parents proud? Did you want to
Speaker 5 you
Speaker 6 so, for example, for me, you know,
Speaker 6 when I looked at it,
Speaker 6 it was a way to be the best,
Speaker 6 the very best.
Speaker 6 It's something that was actually attainable.
Speaker 6
You were in control. All you have to do is not quit and perform.
There's no size requirements. You're too small, you're too big, you're too skinny, you're too...
There is none of that.
Speaker 6 And so
Speaker 6 it's a way to,
Speaker 6 you see what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 Yeah, it mitigates all the other.
Speaker 6 It's a way to be the best at something, to make people proud of you and, and, and, and,
Speaker 6
and it's all within your, your grasp. You can actually see it happening because it's all on you.
There's no fucking scouts. There's none of that.
Speaker 5 I, I don't know if I,
Speaker 5 I mean, obviously there's a part of that because, you know, I had always been really good at all the things that I had tried and then I was a failure.
Speaker 5 So yeah, there's a part of wanting to be a part of something elite for sure.
Speaker 5 But it was more, I just didn't want to be afraid anymore.
Speaker 5 And I thought that was going to do it. Like I would be surrounded by the strongest men there were.
Speaker 5 And if I hung, then
Speaker 5 they would look at me and they'd be like, yeah, he's good to go. And that would, I could release that sensation that I was afraid of not being able to perform, of
Speaker 5 not being able to measure up. And I think so there's a part of that in there, but it was much more contained in my own mind and my own perceptions.
Speaker 6 What about killing?
Speaker 6 No. Did you think about killing?
Speaker 5 No.
Speaker 6 Did you want to kill?
Speaker 5
Yeah, I mean, not in the way where it was at the forefront of my thoughts at all. Like that wasn't it as like, oh, I'm going to go in and I'm going to kill people.
That wasn't it at all.
Speaker 5 And I think a lot of that,
Speaker 5 because I think,
Speaker 5 I mean, if you look at the 80s and then, you know, in the early 90s, the movies that were personifying, you know, mass level killing and from a
Speaker 5
male perspective and that power and that comes with it. I don't know.
I mean, I don't know if that was the thing that was enticing me at all.
Speaker 5 I mean, obviously, the more you go down into the program, the more that becomes more significant because when you realize that, well, that's what this whole thing's about.
Speaker 5 Like it was interesting. It took me a long time.
Speaker 5 When I remember when I first got out, especially when I started working with kids, I would, you know, any kid that was saying, hey, I want to go in the Teams or somewhere.
Speaker 5 And I would sit and talk to him.
Speaker 5 and i i would never ask that question and then uh a little bit later our friend dan sorello taco um i talked to him because he was really influencing a lot of people when he first got out when he was running that crossfit gym and he's put like i think it's like 27 guys have come through him and gone in and succeeded so
Speaker 5 I asked him, I was like, you know,
Speaker 5 what do you ask these guys? And he goes, well, the first question I ask is, do you want to go kill people?
Speaker 5 And he's like, because that's the whole thing.
Speaker 5 And I was like, holy cow.
Speaker 5 But at that time, no, that wasn't. It was more just about filling the hole that fear had created in me.
Speaker 6 How did it feel to sign up?
Speaker 5
Like I was gaining control of my life. Like I moved an inch forward.
You know, like I finally like, oh man, that's big. That's an adult decision.
That's, that's, I'm leaving, I'm leaving the
Speaker 5
the protective nest of of Boca Ratone and college. And you know, I'm I'm now it's real.
I have to go figure it out.
Speaker 6 Why do you think
Speaker 6 I mean I hate to put it like this, but I don't know any other way.
Speaker 6 I was this I was the same as everybody else that I served with, including you.
Speaker 6 What is it that draws
Speaker 6 people to killing?
Speaker 6 Why are young men that are so interested
Speaker 6 in special operations, being a SEAL, being a Green Beret, being a Ranger, being a Marine Grunt, being a Marsock guy,
Speaker 6 what is the fascination with
Speaker 6 taking someone's life? Have you delve into that at all?
Speaker 5 Yeah, I mean, obviously.
Speaker 5 we have some mutual friends that have an exorbitant amount of confirmed kills, right? And talking with them in those capacities,
Speaker 5 you,
Speaker 5 I mean, some of them,
Speaker 5
they would describe it as, well, I got really good at it. I was really good at it.
And I enjoyed it.
Speaker 5 You know, because you're able to, I think as you mature in the process and that reprogramming really really takes hold
Speaker 5 that becomes the objective because at first it's like can I hang in buds right can I hang in how week and then once you beyond that then it changes completely then the focus begins where it's like oh no that's it's not about hanging at all it's about how good you're going to integrate with this group of men to go do that job that's it and all the other shit is just fluff it's just just distraction right
Speaker 6 i just i just i just don't under i mean and i think about it with myself like why did i mean because that it is what it is
Speaker 6 you go in and you want to kill another human being i think eventually for me it was right off the bat really i just had a craving i wanted i wanted to
Speaker 6 I wanted to legally kill somebody.
Speaker 6 A bad guy. Yeah.
Speaker 5 can, I think I've, I mean, I've, obviously you have those discussions in the midst of it.
Speaker 5 And, and I think it's so integrated into your, like the, the evolution of your consciousness, how you see yourself in the community, that that plays a major role in it. Right.
Speaker 5 And that becomes almost the criteria, right, of your service. And I think that, that,
Speaker 5 that overwhelms
Speaker 5
naturally as it should, because it's not a game. You're not playing a game.
Like there's no game about any of it from the day you first walk out into Coronado and you show up. Like there's no game.
Speaker 5
It's not a fucking game. And that, so if it's not a game, well, what's this about? And very quickly, you know, through your instructor staff constantly telling you.
this is what it is.
Speaker 5
This is what it's about. This is what it is.
And then as you get closer and closer, but for me, going in and,
Speaker 5 you know, I got to,
Speaker 5 you know, I went through boot camp and then spent a little bit of time in Great Lakes and then went to Bethesda Naval Hospital and in a transitional wait period before my buds class started.
Speaker 5
Like, I wasn't thinking about any of that stuff. I was just thinking about, all right, am I in shape enough? Yeah, I should be all right.
It should be good.
Speaker 5
You know, this shouldn't be, because again, there were no videos. There were no books.
You had no idea what to expect. It's like, yeah, I got this.
I'm a D1 athlete. I'll be fine.
Speaker 5 And it wasn't like, oh, I need to mentally prepare for this cataclysmic shift in the way I'm going to look at life and death. Now, it was about the death component for me.
Speaker 5
That was definitely there, but it wasn't the reverse of that. It wasn't like, oh, I'm going to deliver death.
It wasn't that
Speaker 5 for me at all, not until much later. And then, and then, you know, but initially it was just like,
Speaker 5 contemplate, but for me, I felt like every day I was just trying to hang on because, you know, my pathway was just not
Speaker 5 conducive for as it would be for it, or as it was for many other people. So
Speaker 6 how was it checking in the buds?
Speaker 5 It was nuts.
Speaker 5
I remember I drove cross country with my friend Brian, who had been in boot camp. Brian and John, they were both 18 in boot camp.
And we made it, you know, all good.
Speaker 5 We were in the the same, you know, state flags division. And, and, uh,
Speaker 5 like, I was the RPOC and they were the two watch leaders and all that. And, and, uh, which I couldn't even believe that.
Speaker 5
That was just mind-blowing to me that, you know, four months before, I'm, you know, on mushrooms in state college. And now I'm in charge of this thing.
And it's just like, what is happening? And,
Speaker 5 and,
Speaker 5 you know, but then we went to Bethesda and they started training hard. Like, and I was just like, I was still going up to Penn State on weekends and hanging out.
Speaker 5 And so then drove across country with Brian, went to Thanksgiving in Arizona and then saw my cousins. And then we checked, then we drove straight to Coronado and it was like a Sunday night.
Speaker 5
And I remember like, let's go check in. And he's like, no, let's, this is stupid.
We're not, no, let's come back tomorrow morning. First thing when everybody, I was like, dude, we're here.
Speaker 5
Let's check in. Let's get in the barracks.
Let's start.
Speaker 5
And so we go in and I go on that quarter deck. And I'm like, hey, you know, Seaman Rutherford reporting for duty type stuff.
And the quarterdeck watch was looking at me like I was nuts.
Speaker 5 Like, what are you doing here on a Sunday night? Like, idiot, you know, and I was like, hey, man, we're here to check in. He's like,
Speaker 5 why don't you go somewhere else? You know, and, and, uh,
Speaker 5
And I'm like, hey, man, we're here to check. He's like, I got to wake up the watch.
I was like, okay, well, wake him up. You know, I had no idea.
So he wakes up
Speaker 5 the chief that was asleep in that little place behind that quarter deck.
Speaker 5 And this dude comes out like a bull in a china shop and starts screaming at us, drops us down, banging him out, beating the snot out of us, right? We get a little beat down.
Speaker 5
You know, this thing's going on. I'm like.
arms shaken, back swayed, like, oh my God, he's screaming at me. I'm going to make this my personal mission to make you quit in the next, you know, 48 hours.
Speaker 5 And I'm like,
Speaker 5
holy shit, this is buds. I hadn't even signed my name in.
And then I got nervous. That was like, uh-oh, this is going to be hard.
And then it started. And, you know, it was like overwhelming.
Speaker 5 What class were you? I started in 205.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I made it about,
Speaker 5 I think, three weeks.
Speaker 5 And the soft sand just crushed me.
Speaker 5 And my ITBs flared so bad, I couldn't bend my knees anymore. They just, they just locked out.
Speaker 5 And I go into medical and they're like, all right, we're going to drop you. And I was like, wait, what?
Speaker 5 And I had come under the die fair program because there was so short of medics in the teams at the time that they gave this special
Speaker 5 program that if you signed up under this program, you'd go straight to boot and straight to Buds, no,
Speaker 5
no A school, right? Straight to Buds. And then if you graduated Buds, then you would go to 18 Delta and get your Corpsman qual.
I was like, sweet.
Speaker 5 I was like, if I have any detour, if I go to any other command, the wheels could fall off immediately. So I wanted to just get straight there.
Speaker 6 18 Delta, for anybody that's listening, it's a
Speaker 6 medic.
Speaker 5 Yeah, J Selm C, Joint Special Operations Combat Medicorse.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 so I was,
Speaker 5 now I'm like, oh my God, the medic is telling, the doc is telling me he's going to drop me. I'm like, oh, my God, I just got here.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 somebody was like, no, let's just roll him. And so they gave me a roll from 205 into 206.
Speaker 6
Let's rewind a little bit. Yeah.
Let's talk about 1-1 day.
Speaker 5
I didn't get the 1-1 day. This was an endoc.
This was an endoc. Oh, shit.
I didn't even get the 1-1 day. And that's when I was like, that's why was, I was scared.
Speaker 5
And there was great guys in this class. I mean, class 205 was just, I remember the officer was just incredible.
The OIC was like hard charging guy.
Speaker 5
And I was like, man, I really, and then I'm out of that class like that. Like you couldn't even think.
And
Speaker 5
so they rolled me into 206. And now this time I'm like, all right, that's not happening.
So it's, you know, two months in between. There were six classes back then.
And there was two months.
Speaker 5 So I'd go through the day. And then after work every day in the barracks, I'd go for beach runs every day just to work on my legs, just to get stronger.
Speaker 5 And as we, as 206 started in dock, I was, I was like, oh, I know what I'm going to do. I'm going to be a road guard.
Speaker 5 Because road guards, even though you're sprinting and getting crossing the silver strand and all that, road guards would get to eat first. So you'd get to digest your food longer, right?
Speaker 5 so you get in the chow haul you eat first and then you'd get you could actually sit and chill before ever because if you're in your regular boat cruise one day boat crew one goes in first next day boat crew 13 the smurf crew goes in first right and you never know and if you're the last boat crew to go and you only got 40 minutes to eat you know you're finishing your food you're getting in line and next thing you know five minutes later you're at the ctt at the combat train tank puking your food because you only had four minutes to eat your food, right?
Speaker 5 And I was like, Road Guard.
Speaker 5
So the extra training, Road Guard. So I class up day one was unbelievable.
It was the coolest thing. We had a great class, a bunch of amazing guys in there,
Speaker 5 really just tough guys.
Speaker 5 And it was interesting. That was the first time.
Speaker 5 They had a film crew that was going to be with that crew
Speaker 5
and do a little bit of filming of them and do a special. I forget what TV show it was on, but was this the Discovery Channel? No, that was later.
That was when I was an instructor.
Speaker 5 They did that one.
Speaker 6 Wait, were you on that?
Speaker 5 All those guys, no, because I was a SQT instructor, but all those guys came into our class. Like, I had those were, I think that was like my first class I had as an SQT instructor.
Speaker 5 So 206
Speaker 5 starts week one, awesome. I'm having, like, it's, I'm like, sweet, I'm going.
Speaker 5
And end of that first week, wake up Friday, my feet are killing me. I feel swollen.
My heels are killing me.
Speaker 5
I tell my boat crew leader, he's like, you know, just get through today. So I get through.
I tell my
Speaker 5 boat crew leader, he's like, hey, why don't you just run over to medical and just check it out?
Speaker 5 And so I go over to medical and they're like, all right, we'll send you across the street, go across the street, get x-rays. And I had stress fractures in both tibias and phibias.
Speaker 5 So
Speaker 5 that was just like
Speaker 5 devastating.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I'm like, what do I do?
Speaker 5
And well, my, our OIC was like, well, on Monday, go in to medical and to talk to the doc. So I, you know, got on my start uniform.
I go in and he's like, that's it. We're going to nonverbal DOR.
Speaker 5 You're dropped from training because you're broken. You're not going to, you're done.
Speaker 5
And imagine, you know, it's not even, not even a year since I left and now I'm over, it's over. And for me, it wasn't, I was, wasn't going to A school.
I was going to a ship as an undesignated E3.
Speaker 5 So I was going to be in the bowels of a ship chipping paint until I could figure out an A school or whatever.
Speaker 5 And so I was just shattered. And
Speaker 5 the doc's like, all right, go over to the base training officer. Go tell them what's up.
Speaker 5 So I go over to the base training officer and the grinder was, I think it was like first phase, second phase, BTO, and then the quarter deck.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I walk in and I'm standing at attention, you know, stiff and just like on the precipice of just melting down. And he was like, all right, Rutherford, what's going on? I go, sir.
Speaker 5 And he's like, hey, man, stop the sir stuff.
Speaker 5 At ease, you better just talk to me like, and tell me what's going on. And
Speaker 5 i was flabbergasted i was like i don't know what's happening i don't know why this is happening to me i i tried to get in shape i've been working hard try to get my legs ready and i've never had anything like this before i played you know as a d1 athlete and
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 he's like all right wait here so he walks out He's gone for five minutes or so or whatever, comes back in and he says, well,
Speaker 5 it appears that you got a little buds angel on your shoulder um someone seems to think that if uh you could get healthy you might make a decent frog man someday so do you want a single roll or a double roll
Speaker 5 and i'm like
Speaker 5 like i didn't even know what to say he's like you better tell me what you want or otherwise you know this is over quick and i i was like and smart me i'm like i'll take a double roll
Speaker 5 dumbest thing i could have ever done in my life right why is that it's It's just too much time. I mean, four months is just way too much time
Speaker 5 because it starts to grind on you where all your friends are moving on and moving forward and you're just sitting in the same spot. But you're going in, you're getting, you know, I mean,
Speaker 5
you know, in between those phases, it wasn't like a regular day, but you're still doing two, three workouts a day. You're still swimming a ton.
You're still, you know, running the chow.
Speaker 5 You're still doing it, but you're not going anywhere. And
Speaker 5 that was hard. That was a really difficult time.
Speaker 5 I was grateful because I had a friend, Mark, who had been to Buds a couple times before, and he was like an E5, E6,
Speaker 5
and he had a place off, off, off base that he would let me sleep at. And like, he figured out how to finagle it so I could go sleep there.
And,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 it was just hard.
Speaker 5 I got into, you know, that was when I started drinking a little bit and partying, you know, with the guys who were waiting to class up or whatever, or guys that I knew that were in classes.
Speaker 5 I knew a ton of dudes that were in 207
Speaker 5 and would hang out as they were moving forward, or my 205 or six buddies. And
Speaker 5 it just was, it was a long time and really started doubting myself again.
Speaker 5 And then thankfully, I made it to getting classed classed up with 208, and that was a life-saving thing.
Speaker 5 The guys that I went through 208 with were
Speaker 5 just incredible human beings. Tom, Gary,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 just
Speaker 5 Jeff,
Speaker 5 Mark,
Speaker 5 Rob.
Speaker 5
I mean, my boat crew going through Hell Week was... They were just titans of men.
I mean, all of them went on to elite level careers, really just
Speaker 5
performing at the highest. And these were the guys that I was in a boat crew with.
And it was phenomenal. And it just, it was, it was awesome.
Speaker 5 I'm not going to say it was easy because that's not, it was not easy, right?
Speaker 5 Struggled with everything a little bit, you know, drown proofing and not tying and all your typical things.
Speaker 5
But it was. It was all great because they were so motivated.
My boat crew leader was a guy named Adam Smith, who was the Admiral's son.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, the one time I got close to wanting to quit was it was in Hell Week on Wednesday night. And
Speaker 6 when was it?
Speaker 5 We had,
Speaker 5 first off, when we started, like it was, it was, it was bizarre. It was like an omen, right? It was the Friday before the Sunday.
Speaker 5 We were all lined up on a grinder and Admiral Smith came in and went down the line and inspected the boat crews or whatever. And he came to ours and he's standing in front of his his son.
Speaker 5
And his other brother was a SEAL too. And he's, he looks at us and goes, sir, you know, is your boat crew ready? Yes, sir.
You know, the whole thing, oh yeah, sir.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
it was just a cool moment between a father and a son. And I was really proud to be with these guys.
I mean, they were,
Speaker 5
they were so strong, like so strong and so capable. And you like felt, you know, that feeling.
You feel stronger with them, like you can do more.
Speaker 5 And he looked around and he said uh looked at the instructors he said all right guys uh all right instructor staff uh i would like you to to take it easy on this boat crew for me
Speaker 5 essentially just like
Speaker 5 light them up yeah light them up i i did
Speaker 5 we did
Speaker 5 uh what do you call it two steel piers
Speaker 5 We did like in breakout, we lost two guys, quit immediately, and they didn't reorder our boat crew for almost like 24 hours we only had five guys
Speaker 5 um and they just leaned into us and and and
Speaker 5 nobody broke and it was just incredible like everybody got stronger and stronger and stronger and
Speaker 5 like bing remember bing man was just
Speaker 5 He was just like, had that look, just angry, like always just pissed. You and he remind me a lot of each other.
Speaker 5 and but like nothing was going to break him and he'd just look at you and you'd want to like do more like get your hands under the boat or under the log or whatever it was and they were all and then rob was always just smiling you know
Speaker 5 and just you you just you work but it was wednesday night we had done uh um
Speaker 5 we had done
Speaker 5 boat passage and it was it was an El Niño year.
Speaker 6 What's boat passage?
Speaker 5 Well, where you paddle out past, you dump the boats, flip them back in and come out, right? Surf passage, I guess.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
it was an El Niño, and so it was like 20, 25 foot waves. It was the biggest surf in 10 years that California had seen.
And the instructors were like,
Speaker 5 send them out, right?
Speaker 5 And when you talk about a
Speaker 5
yard sale, there were boats and chem lights and dudes in water for like a mile spread out wild. It was people were getting nuts.
And
Speaker 5
we had a couple of guys in our boat crew that surfed. So I grew up surfing, and Adam had surfed, and some other guys.
And so we just got lucky, we timed the set, and we got out.
Speaker 5 And we're out there and we're like, all right, how do we hide our chem lights so we don't have to go back in, right? And then, you know, you're Adam's like, nope, let's go, flip it over.
Speaker 5 And so we're going in.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 I was three-man portside
Speaker 5
and we're going. And I think, you know, I think, all right, we're timing set.
And that boat just starts going up and up and up and up.
Speaker 5 And that wave just went like that and just threw the boat once it was breaking. And I remember being, I don't know, 20 feet in the air or whatever it was.
Speaker 5 And Rob was
Speaker 5
like 10 feet below me. You know, guys are in the air.
Remember, don't lose your paddle. Don't lose.
Speaker 5 All I could think about was not that I'm going to hit, fall on my buddies beneath me, or the boat's going to land on me or drive.
Speaker 5 All I could think was about, don't let go of my paddle, don't let go of my paddle. And we hit, and obviously the train wreck, the next following sets hit you.
Speaker 5 And I remember coming up and like, I'm going to die right now.
Speaker 5 It was so big and so aggressive and so, it was chaos.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 you couldn't see anybody's chem light because, you know, you got those old K-pox that are strangling you in your
Speaker 5
helmet. And you just like, don't lose.
All I could think, don't lose my paddle. Like, I didn't even think start swimming in shore.
Right.
Speaker 5 And finally, you know,
Speaker 5 figured out, got into shore. And
Speaker 5 at that, apparently at that point, one of the senior instructors had been like, maybe we ought to not send him out there anymore. Right.
Speaker 5
You know, because dudes were just quitting, quitting, quitting, quitting. And finally, we got together.
They brought us in. They stopped.
And then we went down and did chief speech
Speaker 5 and at chief's beach they do this thing
Speaker 5 and it's uh
Speaker 5 they build this big bonfire right and you sit around on the edge of the bonfire and the way it worked they made it sound this was before i think right after mid-rats
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 the one of the instructors like all right here's how to work you guys come up you tell the funniest story you've ever told in your life
Speaker 5 and then you stay up as long as the next person's story isn't funnier than yours, right?
Speaker 5 And so
Speaker 5 I was like, oh, this is going to be awesome, right? Because I can, I've got some funny stories. So
Speaker 5
it started and they were good. And some dudes would last two guys.
Now, when you're there, when you're in the line, you're just far enough away from the flame
Speaker 5 where you can't really get. feel it like you might like a window blow and you feel a little bit but you're still wet and you're you know you're just jackhammering the whole thing.
Speaker 5
And, but if you, you're there next, you're right in front of the fire next to the instructor. So I'm like, that's it.
If I can stay up there, tell this best story I've ever told in my life,
Speaker 5 it, you know, that'll,
Speaker 5
that'll be it. And so it was my turn.
And there were some dudes that were hilarious in that class. I mean,
Speaker 5
hilarious people, like funny as hell. And so it's my turn.
I get up and I tell this funny story about
Speaker 5 a big band wolf mask, a disco ball,
Speaker 5
and a girl I knew in college. Right.
And it was like everybody's laughing. Like it's laughing their brains out.
Speaker 5
And, of course, I extended the story. So it's like a 20-minute story.
So now I'm starting to feel dry. It kills.
Speaker 5
The instructors are laughing. My hands are starting to dry.
I'm starting to dry off in my face. I stopped shaking for the first time since Sunday night.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I think I went like five or six dudes.
Speaker 5
And so in that moment, like now my boots dried. I could feel my feet for the first time.
And I got comfortable. And I forgot where I was.
And then a dude got up and told, you know, hilarious study.
Speaker 5
Everybody was laughing. And the instructor.
looks over at me and goes, what are you laughing at, Rutherford? And I'm like, huh? And he's like, go hit the surf
Speaker 5 and i run i you know that did it like that's i hit that freezing cold surf and it's and it broke me and i was like i can't go back out there like i can't do it so i hit the surf i'm jackhammering again then something happened next thing you know uh an instructor was pissed at us made us surf tortured we're in there getting surfed and they're just screaming at us and the waves are huge and i'm holding arms with adam and and i and I look and I was like, dude, I'm done.
Speaker 5
I'm going to quit. I can't do this.
There's no way. I can't go to combat.
I can't, I don't have what it takes for this. I can't even stay mentally engaged, you know, when I'm dry.
Speaker 5 How am I going to go to calm? And it just spiraled. And
Speaker 5 God bless that man.
Speaker 5 He saved my career. He was like, dude.
Speaker 5
Don't, you know, don't quit. He's like, wait until you're done with this.
And then then we'll quit.
Speaker 5
And I'll never forget, like right after that, he'd like, he'd talk to him, said, just get through this. And then if you want to quit, I'll let you quit.
And right after that,
Speaker 5
Braveheart had come out around then sometime. I forget when it was.
But our, one of our senior officers, he's one of the
Speaker 5 toughest, best dudes I've ever met in my life, this guy, Tom.
Speaker 5 He screams, freedom.
Speaker 5
And the whole class like got, got hard. And then we just powered through it and made it through.
And
Speaker 5 I was on top of the world. Like, I was like, I just went through the hardest thing of my entire life
Speaker 5
with these men. And they didn't quit.
And they didn't let me quit. I was finally, I was like, this is where I want to be.
And that was a powerful moment for me.
Speaker 6 Who was your first call after Hell Week?
Speaker 5
I think I don't remember. I don't know.
It might, I don't know. It could have been my parents, could have been my girlfriend at the time.
Speaker 5 Um,
Speaker 5
you know, I was just like, make sure you pick me up as soon as they let me go first tomorrow morning. Cause it was like an idiot.
You know, everybody else like stayed in the barrack and didn't move.
Speaker 5
I got picked up. We went down to PB.
We ate breakfast with a couple other dudes who had already through, and then we started drinking.
Speaker 5 And so by like noon, after hell week, I was already starting to drink and just like, you know, all now I'm hard as nails. This is what frogmen do, you know, and that was the culture of the time.
Speaker 5 This is pre-9-11. And I think that was really
Speaker 5
what began to manifest as that culture. Like, I'm a freedom fighting, rooting, tooting, barrel-chested, fighting, fucking frogman.
And I'm going to, you know, go harder than everybody else. And
Speaker 5
that started to come in. And I think a lot of that was from my insecurity coming back in a new way this time.
It was more about
Speaker 5 how am I going to live up to these guys? How am I going to, how am I going to measure up? Because what I saw and what I was witnessing is people were just hard.
Speaker 5 I remember some dudes, it seemed like even in the worst, they seemed like they weren't phased by it or not that they weren't phased, but that it wasn't going to bug, they weren't, it wasn't going to bug them.
Speaker 5
And that was like powerful. There was a guy who I really became close with.
His name is Henry. And
Speaker 5 Henry was the, it was an E5, was a senior meta for our class. And he was kind of shorter and what didn't have like a SEAL build.
Speaker 5
And he'd been a rescue swimmer in the Navy. And, and those, those instructors would beat the hell out of him, like just for fun, just because you don't look like a Navy.
Your uniform's disheveled.
Speaker 5 You're a piece of shit. And they would just beat that poor dude.
Speaker 5 And I remember he would go over, you know, to report injuries or, you know, we've got this many guy quit, this many injuries, this is what our class count is, and go report to each phase every morning and every afternoon.
Speaker 5 And so he would come over to the cage in the pit and he'd be like, all right, all right, I need a swim buddy to go over there. And fucking dudes would like scatter, right?
Speaker 5 Because nobody wanted, because they knew he was going to take a beatdown.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
so finally, I'd be like, yeah, I'll go with you because I was going to be a medic. I admired him.
He took heavies.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
every time we'd go over there, we would, he would just, they just liked to beat on him. They wanted him to quit.
And like, I remember on the dirty name, because he was short.
Speaker 5 He was like five, five, six, five, seven, maybe.
Speaker 5 And the dirty name just crushed him, right? The one for, if you're listening, you jump up on one little stump and then you got to.
Speaker 5 clear like a six foot pole and then up to a nine foot pole and there's probably like three to four feet in between them and and if you're short you just have to wing it like all in, like to go for it.
Speaker 5
I remember being on the Oak Course one day, watching him. And O Course, I always liked the Oak Course.
That was like my relax, my only time I got to relax because I love the Oak Course.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
he was stuck, he was just smoked because they'd smoked them already a couple of times. And he was on that dirty name for like an hour or however long we were there.
They just do it again.
Speaker 5 do it again, do it again.
Speaker 5 And later we found out he actually cracked a couple couple ribs and he never quit he never whined he never turned himself into medical nothing and and so that that's the caliber of men you're around and i was like
Speaker 5 am i that hard am i that tough do i have enough but you i you know that the whole mindset of iron sharpens hard that's true And I learned that then with those men in 208.
Speaker 6 How was the rest of Buds?
Speaker 5 Horrible.
Speaker 6 What were your hang-ups?
Speaker 5
I have dive face. I failed pool comp.
My only thing I ever failed.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
that was... Tried Pool Comp.
Pool Comp is,
Speaker 5 for simple terms, how weak in the pool, right? It's where you're fast-tracked
Speaker 5 into
Speaker 5 open circuit diving. You have Twin 80s on your back.
Speaker 5 Day one, first, you know, hour in pool on Monday, you're doing buddy breathing with these old school
Speaker 5
hose intake. You're doing it above and below.
And then day two, you're doing
Speaker 5
ditch and dawn. You take your gear off a specific way.
Everything has, the straps are perfect. There's a sequence.
Speaker 5 Everything in
Speaker 5 the teams has a sequence and soft, especially, because you have to be able to replicate it under dress.
Speaker 5 And so that meticulousness is really the, if you can master that meticulousness, I think buds becomes, it makes makes more sense to people.
Speaker 5 Well, I was never a meticulous guy, so, but that week I was doing good.
Speaker 5 I was, my, my swim buddy was this guy, John, good, good guy, a little bit younger than me, but arb charger. And we did great all the way through
Speaker 5 the, the week.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that Friday,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 We got up to it and it was pool comp and pool comp is you start on the side of the pool, combat training tank, twin 80s on, flippers on, jump in, go down on the lines on the bottom, you get on your hands and knees and you walk on your hands and knees back and forth across the nine foot.
Speaker 5 And then the instructors come down and simulate four different types of problem sets. First is a surf fit, mask ripped off, fins ripped off.
Speaker 5 Next one is, I think, an inhalation or an exhalation problem, right? Turn off your J-valve, turn off your air, you know,
Speaker 5 mess up your
Speaker 5 Then third one is a ditch and dawn, right? Put that, your equipment back on.
Speaker 5
And then the fourth is the whammy knot, where they just completely take your hose, stand on your head, and tuck them in the back of your manifold. And then you have to get those.
And
Speaker 5 for some reason, I don't know.
Speaker 5 I was dealing with some pretty heavy stuff with my girlfriend at the time,
Speaker 5 struggling, was fatigued, was tired.
Speaker 5 You know, all the typical things that everybody faces every day. But you don't, those are the things like guys don't necessarily talk about in buds, right? It's like you leave the command
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 you can, if you leave, and if you can live off base or whatever, but like there's an aftermath of the day, like a psychological recuperation that takes place. And, and
Speaker 5 sometimes if you don't have that in check, you're not recovering properly. You're not getting, you know, you're not ready or prepared for the next day in the argument.
Speaker 5 By then, I mean, I, I, I had been there
Speaker 5
a long time. I've been coming up on a year.
I'd already been at Buds. And
Speaker 5 Friday, I was like, all right, I'm, I'm good as long as I don't get Instructor Watson, as long as I don't get him, Adam Watson, man, the red-headed devil, dude.
Speaker 5
As long as I don't get Watson, I'm good. And I go up, it's my turn, Rutherford on the deck.
I turn around. Guess who's sitting right at there?
Speaker 5 Dude, I was up in, I want to say it was like 12 seconds. First surf hit came down on top of me, fins off, bounded me off thing.
Speaker 5 You know, I'm like, I'm going signal and I'm going up and come up. I feel fine, you know, just freaked out.
Speaker 5 And then he, you know, comes up, Rutherford, fail.
Speaker 5
And so then you get another one that day. I failed that one on a twisted strap or something or no, sequence.
I did a sequence backward, failed on that one.
Speaker 5
Remediation all weekend where you're practicing with your buddies. And then Monday hits and you're right back in the pool.
Failed the third one. You get four attempts.
Speaker 5
And then the fourth one, I got in. I was like, I got this.
I did everything great. Came up.
I feel fine. And it was one of the officers of
Speaker 5
second phase. And it's like, sorry, Rutherford, twisted strap.
I think my chest strap was twisted and failed. You're out.
You're old.
Speaker 5 And they remember they took us and they put, there was like seven of us that failed. And we had to sit at one end of the pool while everybody else who had passed was down here and they were moving on.
Speaker 5
And that was it. And I had failed.
And I was, so I was at a 208.
Speaker 5 And that, again, was
Speaker 5 just devastating. because you start to feel it, right? You start to feel the wear and tear.
Speaker 5 You start to feel it in your shoulders and your hips and your feet are screwed and your hands are aching all the time. And you feel it and it builds up.
Speaker 5 And then to fail, to be a failure now, to fail in an evolution
Speaker 5 was really difficult for me.
Speaker 5
Thankfully, again, I had those seven guys. Henry was one of them.
Larry, Chris, a couple other guys, John, they were part, and we got in that
Speaker 5 in-between.
Speaker 5 And, you know, for my
Speaker 5 penance,
Speaker 5 just almost like every day or every other day,
Speaker 5
we would go to the combat train tank. And guess what we would practice? Pool comp.
Pool comp.
Speaker 5 So for two months,
Speaker 5 waiting for class 209 to come up, I would practice pool comp.
Speaker 5 And needless to say,
Speaker 5
209 came up, got in 209. I was the first guy in the water.
I was up and
Speaker 5 passed, Rutherford passed. I was like, yes, done.
Speaker 5
And then some guy, one of the students had a had a problem. They shut it down training.
And I was like the only guy that had passed that day. And so I'm like, all right, sweet.
Speaker 5 And that night I went out and to
Speaker 5
in PB and I was like, yeah, I'm going to go. I'm going to, I made it.
I'm partying. I go out and I walk into this Irish bar in PB.
Speaker 5
And I walk in and it was like, you know, in blue or animal house, the music stops. Everybody looks over and it's like 10 instructors are sitting there.
And I'm like,
Speaker 5 And they're like, get over here now.
Speaker 5
And I came over. I was like, drinks on me, you know, by everybody.
bought everybody a beer and they were cool. And these
Speaker 5 two instructors in particular, one's name was Brian and one's name was Keith.
Speaker 5
And I sat down with them and I remember the first time an instructor had ever talked to me. Because you show up, they're like these gods.
They're these things that are larger than life.
Speaker 5 And, you know, Instructor Ashleman, Instructor Decker, and, you know, these just pipe hitters of, I mean, you know, Master Chief Danny Chalker was our command master chief.
Speaker 5 He was a plank owner of SEAL Team 6. And, you know, the head of PTR
Speaker 5 was,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 Warren Officer Reworks, who was also a plank owner of SEAL Team 6. And so, you know, these are the men, you know, Chief Audis and all these guys that like you,
Speaker 5
they're not human. And so they're unattainable.
And you're like, when do I get to feel that? And that night was the first time
Speaker 5 Brian and Keith sat me down. And I'll never forget, I asked both of them, I said, well, you know,
Speaker 5 like, how do you,
Speaker 5
like, what, how would you describe what it's like? And they're like, it's a lifestyle. And I was like, I don't understand.
They're like, it's 24-7.
Speaker 5 If you want to be a good frogman, you have to be committed to this 24-7.
Speaker 5
Every day you're thinking about this. Everything else in your life, you have to put aside.
You cannot let anything move into your, you know, your, your, your, the forefront of your consciousness.
Speaker 5 You have to be 100% dedicated. And, and that was amazing for me because I was, and then I asked them both.
Speaker 5 I remember asking
Speaker 5 Brian first, I go, well, you know,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 what advice would you give me? He goes, learn how to flip it on and off. I was like, what do that mean? It's like, learn how to take the pain.
Speaker 5 and the intensity and flip the switch on the emotional aspect of it and then turn it on when you need to
Speaker 5 excuse me and
Speaker 5 i go oh well you know he'd been in like 15 years or so and i think he's with like 12 or so and i go well how do you do that and he's like i don't know i still haven't figured it out
Speaker 5 and then the next day showed up and i worked the pool deck and and every instructor that was in that like beat me down through the whole time the whole class the class so i think i must have done like a thousand push-ups that day and i don't even know how many count bodybuilders, but it was worth every second that I'd made it through that.
Speaker 5
So that was cool. And then I, and then I was, you know, officially with 209 and ended up finishing with 209, which was, which was definitely hard.
And those guys were amazing, just
Speaker 5 wonderful,
Speaker 5 you know, Doug Liam Landry,
Speaker 5 Mike, all these incredible guys in that platoon, Mark.
Speaker 5 Just
Speaker 5 they again, it's like these are,
Speaker 5 if you want to
Speaker 5 create a reflect, a positive reflection that you can aspire to, surround yourself around really motivated, ambitious young men. And that's what it was for me.
Speaker 6 How did it feel for you to graduate?
Speaker 5
Beyond a relief. I mean, at that point, it was February 97.
I started in November 95 and I finished in February 97.
Speaker 5 So it was over a year.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I remember being on the island just hanging on by a thread, you know, but I finished and it was, it was done.
Speaker 5 And it wasn't, I wasn't,
Speaker 5 I didn't feel immeasurably confident. I didn't feel like I was on top of the world.
Speaker 5 at all.
Speaker 5 I felt like, wow, that was really, really hard.
Speaker 5 and I knew it was going to get harder and I was like oh
Speaker 5 like
Speaker 5 am I going to be ready for this am I going to like how am I going to do
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 and so it wasn't it wasn't as much of a woohoo kind of feeling you know as much it was like okay what's next and and am I ready can I can I go into whatever the next thing was so what year is this it was February 1997 97 yeah
Speaker 6 Where do you go from there?
Speaker 5 This is where the beauty.
Speaker 5 Let me just backtrack one little statement. The guy who had saved my career at the beginning in
Speaker 5 206 was Warrant Officer Rewarts. He was the one who told the, and I didn't find this out until much later in my career.
Speaker 5 He was the one who had told the base training officer that if Rutherford is healthy, he might make a decent
Speaker 5 frogman someday. And the reason he said that, because every time I'd be overwhelmed by that doubt, by that fear, which was still
Speaker 5 palpable every day in me,
Speaker 5 I figured out a way, because I'd always been the motivator in all my teams, whether I was quarterback or captain of a team or whatever it was, I always...
Speaker 5 felt like that was a huge component of that responsibility to lift up your your your teammates, right?
Speaker 5 And so what I would do to distract my own sense of fear, I would find a guy that was struggling and then I'd try and motivate him. I'd direct my own,
Speaker 5 I'd compart
Speaker 5 my own anguish to try and lift somebody else to keep me distracted from my own inability. And so he had witnessed that and was like, all right.
Speaker 5 Then, you know, and that's what he saved my career for sure.
Speaker 5 So you graduate, I graduate buds, and because I was in this DIFAR program, this medic program, we didn't immediately go check on board a team and then start back then there was no SQT as it is in its current form or even when I was in CASUT, you used to go to a team and each team ran its own training.
Speaker 5 That was your probationary training called SEAL Tactical Training. And so like I wasn't even assigned to a team yet.
Speaker 5 I was at TDY and I went to team five and I was there, you know, cleaning the shitters on a daily basis in the mastered arms shack. And I was picking up cigarette butts by the platoon huts.
Speaker 5
And I was, you know, they didn't even give us equipment to do PT in or anything. I remember it was middle of winter and we were doing ocean swims or bay swims.
And I was like hyping out.
Speaker 5
We did a bay swim from the bridge around. I was hyping out and the XO like had to push me up onto the beach.
And he's like, go do some jumping jacks.
Speaker 5 And then I finished it because they didn't have any wetsuits to give me or I wasn't worthy of a wetsuit and and so for these four months I'm in limbo and I'm just cleaning shitters and like I'm a new guy but I'm worse than a new guy because I'm not checked on board team five I'm just there temporary duty until jump school so I do that made it through that I was tough that was a tough tough one there was the the the mastered arms guy hated me just because I started getting a little chip on my shoulder at that time because I was like, wait a minute, we just made it through buds.
Speaker 5
And now because of this medic thing, like I'm in limbo and I got to clean shitters for four months. And like, it started getting on my nerves a little bit.
And,
Speaker 5
you know, we're partying hard. And so I like that distracts you.
And you're like, you're not, again, I'm not moving forward in my career. Like, I have buddies that graduated 2005.
Speaker 5
They're already in a platoon workup, right? They're already moving forward. They're doing the job.
And now I'm in TDY again. So
Speaker 5
that was really frustrating, but we ended up going to jump school. That was fun.
We all went over there. We had a blast.
Speaker 5 You know, jump school's a joke, but it's, it's, I, what I like about it, though, is I love the way the army is able to put mass people through a program and do it pretty well.
Speaker 5 You know, I respected the black hat guys.
Speaker 5 And, you know, I mean, obviously the, the extensiveness of the, I mean, you're just graduating, but, you know, you know, do pull-ups and you can just do pull-ups forever.
Speaker 5
But I like the way they ran their program. It was my first introduction to Army.
Then from there, I go right into 18 Delta, and that was
Speaker 5 July of 97.
Speaker 5 And that's where things like really were like, whoa, this is serious stuff.
Speaker 5 And 18 Delta began.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 When did you
Speaker 6 get your trident?
Speaker 5
It was, so 18 Delta was supposed to be six months. I was there eight months.
So that was July
Speaker 5 when we were in New York, New York, August through November. And then we had to take the civilian paramedic qualification.
Speaker 5 So I showed up.
Speaker 5 I failed the
Speaker 5
cardiology part of that. So I had to stay longer.
So I graduated 18 18 Delta in January of 98, drove across country back. I got SEAL Team 1,
Speaker 5 checked on board SEAL Team 1 in February of 98.
Speaker 5
So I finally had a team, stoked, ready to go, get me in STT. Nope.
I go back to work in the mastered arm shack, cleaning shitters again. After 18 Delta? After 18 Delta.
Yep.
Speaker 5 Why?
Speaker 5 I don't know.
Speaker 5
I don't know. It's not like it's a team one.
It's not like you're going to complain.
Speaker 5 You know,
Speaker 5 that's where you're going. You're working.
Speaker 5
They don't need you in medical. They don't need you in training cell.
So you got to wait to go through STT. That's not until the summer.
So you're going to work in a mastered arms check.
Speaker 5 I remember I got there and I went in and it was, it was a BM1 coupe.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I remember I came in one day and I was like, all right, I'm motivated. motivated.
And I gave him like four or five chits, right?
Speaker 5
And these chit, one was sniper school, free-for-all school, comm school. Like, I put them all in.
I was like, hey, you know,
Speaker 5
you know, petty officer Rutherford, here's my chits. I want to go to these schools.
And I'll never forget. He's sitting there and he looks at it.
He goes, oh, this is a good one, man.
Speaker 5
You know, I went to sniper school after my like third platoon. And he rips it up and he drops it and he goes, I'm going to put it in the circular file cabinet right here.
And then,
Speaker 5
oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, this, this looks a commscle.
I'd be, oh, that'd be funny. He goes, yeah, yeah.
He goes right there. He puts it in and it just rips them up.
Speaker 5
He goes, hey, why don't you go out to the grinder and clean the grinder? There's some trucks out there that need to get cleaned. Why don't you go do that? And that was it.
And
Speaker 5 it was like, again, like,
Speaker 5 really?
Speaker 5 Dude, I just got out of like the top medical training program in all special operations, you know, spent a month in New York City
Speaker 5 in the ERs and on the ambulances. I mean, we, we, we saw hundreds and hundreds of patients and,
Speaker 5 you know, had my first person die on me, you know, it was like, it was October 31st.
Speaker 5
We thought it was going to be an insane night and show up difficulty breathing, walk in, it says a room. half the size of this, an apartment.
And there's this firefighter working this guy.
Speaker 5
And I was with these two experienced paramedics. They're like, All right, Rook, get on a guy.
And so, I worked this guy for 45 minutes. And then they're like, All right, he's dead.
Stop working him.
Speaker 6 And I'm the first time you'd seen death.
Speaker 5
Yeah, that was it. That was the first time.
How'd you handle that?
Speaker 5 Um,
Speaker 5 the hardest part for me was
Speaker 5 I felt like I performed what I needed to perform.
Speaker 5 Like, I went through the whole code that you learn,
Speaker 5 you know.
Speaker 5 But when you stop, it's it's abrupt it's not what you thought like
Speaker 5 in a movie there's there's a solemnness or there's whatever you know at a funeral you're not you don't you're not intimate with the the the the transition right you're not it's none of that it's like
Speaker 5 and now i'm in the middle of it and i'm never getting the guy's on the ground and his wife and his son and his girlfriend are standing at his head and like
Speaker 5
you're the senior medic dude, and he's on the phone with the doc. And he looks up and he goes, He goes, All right, that's it, Rook.
Caught it. It's called the doc called it.
Speaker 5
And I'm still going, and I'm like this. And I'm like, and the other guy's at his feet.
And he's holding his cup of coffee, right? His New York cup of coffee. And he's like, Hey man,
Speaker 5 stop.
Speaker 5
He's like, Pick up all your shit. Let's go.
And I'm looking up here at them, and I'm looking over here. And I'm looking at this dead guy.
Speaker 5 And that was, that was tough, like, because you saw the pain immediately in them.
Speaker 5 And it, it just,
Speaker 5
and it was, it was, it became almost like he was just a piece of meat at that point. And I was like, hey, I'm hungry.
Let's go pick up your shit.
Speaker 5
And as we're working, getting up, the cops come in from outside. And I'm like, and I'm like, well, what about him? Like, it's not our problem, man.
That's the cops' problem now.
Speaker 5 And I was just like,
Speaker 5 holy shit.
Speaker 5 And like the whole rest of the night, I was just
Speaker 5 like, what just happened?
Speaker 5 And there was a, that was the thing that really was challenging for me because I chose to be a medic because I thought that that was the thing that was going to enable me to hold the artist in me.
Speaker 5 It gets the empathy. So if I become a medic and I can save people's lives,
Speaker 5 if I ever have
Speaker 5 the opportunity to take someone's lives, it'll counterbalance it. So I wanted that.
Speaker 5 And I also felt like that was something that would be good because it's a component of that service that makes me feel good, right?
Speaker 5 When you're a good medic,
Speaker 5 your team needs you and they rely on you. And there's a part of that that's just important.
Speaker 5
And so, like, that was the thing for me. Like, if I'm going to be like, that'll, I can earn my way as a medic and be able to stand amongst great men if I'm a good medic.
And so,
Speaker 5 that's that, you know, that's what I tried to do.
Speaker 5
But that was the first one. Yeah, that was the first challenging one.
Yeah.
Speaker 6 So when did you get your try to?
Speaker 5 There's the great question.
Speaker 5
That summer went through STT, and this was the first time they combined both coasts. Because what had happened before was at a team, you'd show up.
Every team was different.
Speaker 5
Every team had a different cycle of when they'd start STT. You'd go through this three-month course.
It was a probationary period. Then you come out and you test out.
Speaker 5 You go to every, you know, the dive locker, the air locker, armory,
Speaker 5 you know, first lieutenant, all these groups, and you test out your knowledge base on all those, you know, the, there's the blanket and they flip the blanket and every, there's 10 different weapons or whatever, five, seven different weapons, and you have to reassemble and under time and I have to assemble a dragger and then break it down and the airline all these tasks and you pass that then you go to your chief's board and then you get awarded your trident that's the way it was working well every team was doing it different like you go to one team and they'd fast track it like team five you show up They immediately put you in SDT and then you go do it and then you come back and you test and boom, trident right into a platoon.
Speaker 5
Other teams, your probationary period would be longer. And so everything was kind of out of whack and there was no continuity.
there was no pipeline,
Speaker 5 and it was problematic. And people were complaining because you know, part of that getting your tried in is your special duty pays, all this.
Speaker 5 And so, they combined STT to get everybody, all the teams, all these guys. So, it was like 72 of us in this group, and it was so much fun.
Speaker 5 That's one of the most fun I ever had in the teams was those three months. It was,
Speaker 5 I met so many amazing guys, Jerry and Nick, and
Speaker 5 I mean, just endless amounts of people, big Mike Bearden, and he was the first team guy from my thing that ended up dying.
Speaker 5 He burned in on a parachute accident right after STT, not much long after.
Speaker 5
But like these, it was just fun. Like everything about it was the training was fun.
The guys were fun. We had a blast.
And that was good.
Speaker 5 So I felt like I was getting going, finished that, checked back on in back at one,
Speaker 5 took my boards, passed my ports, went in my chief's board and just got crushed in my chief's board.
Speaker 5 And that was, that was heavy because like, you know, you're always looking for a chief's approval. You're always looking for
Speaker 5 them like, ad boy, good job, way to go. And, you know, team one had some.
Speaker 5
I mean, there was still a guy from Vietnam when I was there, a master chief. And then another senior chief that I think had 13 platoons at that time.
And these guys were like, they ran the show.
Speaker 5 And so I went into that chief's board and you're sitting in a chair or, you know,
Speaker 5
folding chair. And there's, you know, I think eight chiefs staring at you.
And they just lit me up. You know,
Speaker 5 you, why couldn't you make it through buds straight through? Why'd you quit college? You're a quitter, aren't you? Why are you a problem? And they just lit me up and I did not perform well.
Speaker 5 I was just like,
Speaker 5 you know, and then they give you these, if, if this, if you were around and this happened and you saw someone do this, would you report them and all this stuff?
Speaker 5
And, and it was just, I, you know, I was not sure of myself. I was, I was stunned that they were attacking me because I quit college.
And like, they just got me. Like, they got under me.
Speaker 6 And any insecurity you had, they brought it.
Speaker 5
And at that point, I was doing better, a lot better, but I was still nervous. I was still, because now I'm at a team and team won.
And there were some just pipe hitters at that team.
Speaker 5
And, and, and after STT, I went to work in the, in the training, in training cell. I was a support corpsman on trips.
And my boss was Derek, amazing dude, brilliant.
Speaker 5 And then, then there were these other guys who were a couple guys who were on the Patilla, who was at the Patilla air raid in Panama.
Speaker 5 There was another guy who would end up, this guy Wally, who has ended up being my first platoon chief, who had, you know, he had been in combat before.
Speaker 5 And, and like, there was this Master Chief Will Geile from a damn neck guy, Matt Bourgeois, Dan Sorrell, it's where I first met Dan, Matt Lennig, Chris Good. Like,
Speaker 5 team one was full of, like, they were these impressive, like, just
Speaker 5
frogmen. That's the best way.
They were frogmen. And so,
Speaker 5 like, do this. And now I'm, I, that was a place where I was like, all right, here's an opportunity for me to learn because I was going on these travel, these training trips with platoons.
Speaker 5 And so I was like, all right, this is where I can redeem myself after that miserable board.
Speaker 5 And so I was like, what can I do? How can I help? Like, first one out, last one there. What can I do? And some of them started to really kind of,
Speaker 5
I'm not going to say mentor me, but they were, they noticed. And so so they would start letting me sit around and listen and they would teach me.
And so that was really cool.
Speaker 5 And then I got assigned to a platoon and we were starting January, whatever, back from break or whatever it was. And it was hotel platoon.
Speaker 5
And I remember we started, I still didn't have my trident, right? There was four new guys in the platoon, five new guys, one, one JO, junior officer. Everybody had their trident.
Everybody's there.
Speaker 5
And I didn't have my trident. So I went to my senior.
I'm like, hey, man, you know, what's up? And he's like, oh, don't worry about it. It's like two months into it, training, almost three months.
Speaker 5 Finally, I go up to
Speaker 5 my senior chief and I'm like, you know, hey, man,
Speaker 5 can I get a trident?
Speaker 5 And he's like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, let me go in.
Speaker 5 Apparently, he went into the command master chief and said, hey, is there a reason why you guys haven't haven't given Rutherford his trident yet? And he
Speaker 5 apparently he said, oh, I totally forgot about it. Yeah, give it to him.
Speaker 5 What? Yeah.
Speaker 5 Wow. Yeah.
Speaker 5 Now,
Speaker 5 I remember when that happened, I mean, that's about as angry as you can get, right?
Speaker 5 But, you know, as I got older and moved down along in my career and out of the team significantly, and you just go back to, well, maybe there was something I wasn't doing.
Speaker 5 Maybe I wasn't what they had hoped I would be, or maybe I was letting them down.
Speaker 5 And it felt like there was mixed messages coming.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 but yeah, that was a sobering experience for sure. That really,
Speaker 5 really,
Speaker 5 that was, uh, that was hard to go through. But I got it and thus started the
Speaker 5 how did they give it to you? Oh, he just he just like there was a pinning at team one
Speaker 5 and it was like the guys that were behind me that had come up who were in a platoon and there was a big pinning. Everybody was there, came out and had a great CO at the time.
Speaker 5
Guy was just the stuff, former damn neck guy. He would go on ops.
Like, I remember when I was.
Speaker 6 How do they pin you?
Speaker 5 Uh, on the back, we went out back grinder on the berm, went out the back.
Speaker 5
Actually, we're on a grinder. I forget there's like six, there's a picture of one of the chiefs hosing us down out there.
So I think there was six of us. Santov come up, he puts it on,
Speaker 5 and then everybody in the team came by and just drilled me as hard as they could in my chest.
Speaker 5 And it must have been 25, 35, 30 guys.
Speaker 5 They hit me so hard my trident bent. And then one of the
Speaker 5 pins in the back broke off in my chest.
Speaker 5 But it was the happiest day of my life.
Speaker 6 So, what I'm trying to get at here is
Speaker 6
the backs are off on the pin. Those three pins.
I think there's three, right?
Speaker 5 There's three, yeah.
Speaker 6 They
Speaker 6 mash it into your chest. It's called blood wing.
Speaker 5
Blood wings. What? Blood wings.
Blood wings. That's right.
Speaker 5 Full-blown, as hard as they could hit. And And in my platoon,
Speaker 5
like they lit me up. They hit me as hard as they could possibly hit me.
Like, I had a black and blue mark on my chest for a week plus. Just destroyed me.
Speaker 5 It was, in my opinion, it was one of the greatest traditions there was in the teams that I guess is no longer there.
Speaker 6 It's not there anymore?
Speaker 5 No, I don't think so.
Speaker 6 Buddha Shame.
Speaker 5 It is.
Speaker 6 Buddha Shame.
Speaker 5 I remember at SQT, we actually used to have to hide it.
Speaker 5 Yeah, we would hide it.
Speaker 5 Yeah, there'd be the big ceremony, the Naval Special Warfare Center, you know, Captain would come in, pin everybody.
Speaker 5 No one was there. We'd do it in the bays over at
Speaker 5
SQT, the bays. We'd do it in there.
And then afterward, we'd have everybody line up outside medical, and they'd come in one at a time, and we'd all just, just drill them in there. So
Speaker 5 we ended up trying to keep it going.
Speaker 6 Yeah, I remember your buddy Rick Slater punched me through a door when I had mine pinned on.
Speaker 6 Right through the fucking bathroom door.
Speaker 5 Rick.
Speaker 6 Well, I mean, how did that, I mean, how did that feel? What did that feel like to call your dad and tell him I got it?
Speaker 5 So my parents had flown out
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 we went up.
Speaker 5
They used to stay up in Laguna and so they were like, hey, come up. And so we went up there.
We stayed up at this hotel in Laguna on the beach. And
Speaker 5 my grandfather had passed away a few years before or when i was out there
Speaker 5 really automatic man obviously and i had gone up to his house they had lived up in pals verde's and i'd gone up and checked on the house a couple times and and
Speaker 5 took one of his handkerchiefs my my grandfather always had a handkerchief with him always just and would always be right there with it like true old school and usually would have it monogrammed and so i got a monogram handkerchief of my grandfather and i i took that trident and I put it in a handkerchief.
Speaker 5 And I remember being in the, we'd gone to dinner and we got back in the room.
Speaker 5 And I
Speaker 5
said, you know, dad, the only thing I've ever wanted from you is for you to be proud of me. And I pulled it out and I gave it and he unwrapped it.
And, you know, it was a pretty heavy moment.
Speaker 5 So, yeah. And he said, I've always been proud of you, son.
Speaker 5 So, yeah, it was good.
Speaker 6 That's awesome, man.
Speaker 6 So, you're in.
Speaker 5 I guess. I felt like I was in.
Speaker 5 I felt like I was in, for sure.
Speaker 6 Where do you go from here?
Speaker 5 A year and a half of absolute madness.
Speaker 5 Like,
Speaker 5 again, this is pre-9-11.
Speaker 5 We were,
Speaker 5 you know, team one, Southeast Asia platoon, and
Speaker 5 it was just full tilt. Like we, they called it, we call ourselves Hotel Hell.
Speaker 5 And I designed this, you know, our patch, and it was this
Speaker 5 H, which was on fire. And then, you know, the team, the one behind it, and it was a black patch.
Speaker 5 And I think, I think out of the 16 of us, I think like 10 dudes got the tattoo on them, you know, and we were, we were crazy, absolutely out of our minds. It was more fun
Speaker 5 than anything I've ever even experienced in my life. I mean, we had my OIC,
Speaker 5 shotgun Jewett, Wild Bill Jewett, was, you know, I'd been in 206 with him. He'd made it all the way through buds with stress fractures, never did anything, like just a bad, hard dude.
Speaker 5
And he was our platoon lad. He was wild.
He was a wild man.
Speaker 5 Our chief was Wally Graves,
Speaker 5 one of the most influential men of my entire life.
Speaker 5 Like grew up in Florida, dad was a doctor, so kind of similar, you know, real smart, sophisticated, was a reader, you know, had that little eccentricity, but was hard, man,
Speaker 5 and could hang and was brilliant and was a phenomenal medic and always pushed me to elevate my game, you know, and then didn't put up with my shit because at that point I started getting a little cocky and started getting a little, little, a little overzealous, shall we say?
Speaker 5 You know,
Speaker 6 what were you guys doing over there?
Speaker 5 I mean,
Speaker 5 when we first deployed,
Speaker 5
we went over and it was going to be nothing. We were just doing JSATs.
We were just going, we spent almost a month in the Philippines, almost a month in Thailand. We had the Korean SEALs come to Guam.
Speaker 5
We were working at Guam. And then we did this one cool thing.
We did like
Speaker 5
a nuclear surveillance stuff in Australia. We went down to Australia and that was kind of fun.
That was around the Olympic time and stuff.
Speaker 6 Nuclear surveillance? Yeah.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 What is that?
Speaker 5 We used to have these devices where you could detect nuclear material.
Speaker 5
And we were in charge of doing it on the water because it was a big hardener. Sydney.
Sydney Harbor was a massive harbor.
Speaker 5 So, you know, we would drive around in these boats with these devices and you could detect and we would train, and they would have, you know, small little,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5
controlled pieces of nuclear material that they would hide. And we would try and figure out.
We did all LoPro and fishing boats and stuff. And, you know, that was kind of cool for sure.
Speaker 5 But the other stuff was just mayhem.
Speaker 5 Absolute mayhem.
Speaker 6 Bar fights, women.
Speaker 5 You name it.
Speaker 5
Typical in six crews. It was ridiculous.
I mean, it was, I don't know how,
Speaker 5
first, I don't know how anybody didn't die. I mean, the amount of alcohol we consume.
The other is, I don't know, I mean, there were some definite divorces that came out of that. I'm sure.
Speaker 5 But it was, but that was the culture at the time.
Speaker 5 You know, and so part of it was you're frustrated, but there's nothing going on.
Speaker 5
And that was kind of the culture. Oh, well, we might as well go have fun.
I mean, we were training. We were training the Thais and the Filipinos.
Speaker 5 And, you know, we're doing stuff, but it's not like, oh, we're getting ready to go to war. It was a completely different mindset.
Speaker 6 Were you disappointed?
Speaker 5 Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 6 When did that kick in?
Speaker 5 The disappointment. The weight on the trident that
Speaker 5 started to really get to me. I didn't, like, I didn't understand.
Speaker 5 And then for off, well, I should probably back up. Like, because of the medic stuff, every time my career would get going, there'd be a derailment of the medical requirement.
Speaker 5 Like, I'd have to go do medical, do medical, as everybody else was going. Like when I, in my first platoon, there were guys that were in their second platoon that graduated buds after me.
Speaker 5 So here I am, like, and not just, I think like a couple classes too, some of them.
Speaker 5
And so that was frustrating, you know, that I'm always behind. And I was like, man, because all you want to do is just get after it.
You just want to go do the job. And so for me, it just, I was like,
Speaker 5
the needs of the Navy were a lot, it was a lot more for me alone. Now, other guys have had wonderful experiences.
They were straight through. They got right to it.
They did amazing. They thrived.
Speaker 5 And maybe that was part of
Speaker 5 that.
Speaker 5 inner insecurity that was emerging that
Speaker 5 or maybe it was arrogance or I'm not sure
Speaker 5 but it was frustrating all of it like I was just like is this it is this like
Speaker 5 I've I've I you know left the
Speaker 5 college and that whole life and now
Speaker 5 but this was so that was you know
Speaker 5 May of 95 and this is
Speaker 5 February of of 2000
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 I'm like right back in this this lifestyle lifestyle of
Speaker 5 living hard and
Speaker 5 getting after it.
Speaker 5 I mean,
Speaker 5 it just, it was like no one, no one, we are, we took so much pride that nobody could out party us, that nobody could out. Like, I remember being in
Speaker 5
Fort Chaffee, Arkansas. You know, we used to go out there to that beautiful range and we show up.
And
Speaker 5
like first night, I think we, we, we left the bar at five in the morning. We drank, we drank them out of of tequila, we drank them out of vodka.
I mean, like, it was.
Speaker 5 Why do you think that the
Speaker 6 SEAL culture is,
Speaker 6 at least back then, because it's the same when I was in,
Speaker 6 you know, and
Speaker 6 why is it so,
Speaker 6 why is the culture the way it is? Bar fights, booze, womanizing.
Speaker 5 I think the further away from combat you get, the more complacent the organization becomes. And I think the combat that the teams had engaged in in Vietnam,
Speaker 5 with not only with, you know, the regular operations, but with MAC v Saog, it was just,
Speaker 5 was so intense. And I think coming back from that, it was, it was difficult.
Speaker 5 Now, I'm sure if you talk to the guys that were in Desert Storm, you know, they did, there's a couple, they did some cool, really cool things.
Speaker 5 You know, Panama, obviously, Grenada, I think there were some guys, we lost some guys in that. Remember the parachute, guys, from drowned in there, but it wasn't consistent.
Speaker 5
There were some guys going in Bosnia, Kosovo. There was some stuff.
A buddy of mine, Andy, had done a cool blowing up a bridge over there.
Speaker 5 But it was so in between. Like, there was,
Speaker 5 you weren't, it wasn't for sure. Like, if I remember if you got to go do a shipboarding in team three, like you were a god, like you were a combat god.
Speaker 5 You know, if you had, anybody had fired their weapon, it's like, oh my God. And so I I think what do you do?
Speaker 5
You supplant that desire, because like you had asked about in the beginning, the desire to go do the job. And the job is to go kill the bad guys, right? That's it.
That's the job.
Speaker 5 If you condense everything down and distill it down to what our job is, is to go get rid of the enemy. That's the job.
Speaker 5 Whether it's through, you know, developing your own intelligence packages, reconnaissance, you know, it's assaults, it's CQB. I mean, all of it revolves around killing the enemy.
Speaker 5 And when that doesn't take place,
Speaker 5 I mean, famously,
Speaker 5 that CO at Team One, I remember some guys, another team had gone down to TJ and gotten in trouble,
Speaker 5 which happens for sure.
Speaker 5 TJ is just a bizarre place, man. I had a girl die on me in TJ before, too.
Speaker 5
What? Yeah. Yeah.
I had gone down there, I'd gotten back from 18 Delta. I was at Team 1 and TD, you know, in the Master of Arms.
We went down to TJ for the day,
Speaker 5 my girlfriend and I, and we were walking down Revolution. And I looked up and there's this girl on the ground, another girl over top of her, like begging for help.
Speaker 5
I literally had a face mask in my bag come up. I go, what's up? She's like, she just claps.
She just collapsed. And I ended up working this poor girl for 45 minutes on the ground.
Speaker 5 and she ended up dying.
Speaker 5
Apparently, at that time, they were serving methyl alcohol for shots. And this girl had like a heart condition, and it triggered the heart condition, and she died.
And so,
Speaker 5 like,
Speaker 5 I think
Speaker 5 someone had gone down, gotten in trouble. And I remember the team one
Speaker 5 CO had made a comment, like, we'd gotten. our ass chewed by the master chief and he came out and he's like, hey,
Speaker 5 you know, I understand you can't feed a tiger milk, so don't be dumb.
Speaker 5 That was
Speaker 5 his guidance.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I think that was
Speaker 5 the mentality.
Speaker 5
You spend all day, every day training, training, training, preparing for war, preparing for war. That has a profound psychological impact on the human mind, period.
I don't care.
Speaker 5 And especially with the proficiency with which our organization does it, the unit, I,
Speaker 5 again, and all to all my Green Beret brothers and Ranger brothers and Marine brothers, Marsock brothers and AFSOC, I love you all. All I know is my training.
Speaker 5 And so I'm going to always lean towards that being, you know, the most difficult. And when you begin to analyze our training and how it breaks down, I mean, you had Commander Geary in this chair.
Speaker 5 You understood the way, the sophistication of how we address the psychological change of a young man's mind to becoming whatever it is you were before.
Speaker 5
I had one kid whose parents were in jail when he was a little kid. Another kid grew up gangbanging.
Another kid grew up from Arkansas with a GD.
Speaker 5 Another kid had a master's in English lit, you know, the whole spectrum of people, they come in with this willingness to engage in the culture. And it's really a culture of death, right?
Speaker 5 I just learned about that term last November through my therapist. It's It's like this is a culture of death, and so you have to be willing to move through that eye, through that gate, right?
Speaker 5 That psychological gate, that everything that you had known before that time, you almost have to like press pause or to delete it or to bury it in the recesses of your consciousness.
Speaker 5 And then you pass through that gate, and then everything out there is the cultivation of that culture,
Speaker 5 right? To become comfortable in a culture of death. And so, when you have that wheel spinning and there's no end result taking place, I think
Speaker 5 the wheels end up
Speaker 5 accelerating to a place where
Speaker 5 people lose
Speaker 5 their sense of purpose. And I think that's what took place.
Speaker 5
during those times. Now, not all guys.
I mean,
Speaker 5
there's a guy in our platoon, Double G, love him dearly. I mean, he had children at the time.
He was a devout Christian.
Speaker 5 You know, he was the first Christian I ever saw in the teams who was openly practicing.
Speaker 6 There are not very many,
Speaker 6 not very many people that don't fall into that.
Speaker 5 Not at all. And, and I remember.
Speaker 6 I would say it's 1% or less.
Speaker 5
I don't know. I think it's gotten bigger.
I think it's grown. Maybe now.
Speaker 6 I'm just talking about when you and I were.
Speaker 5
No, there was almost nothing. Like it was almost frowned upon.
I mean, we would, because he wouldn't steam, he wouldn't party when everything.
Speaker 5 And I remember I always loved Double G because he had the most interesting life.
Speaker 5
He had had all different kinds of jobs. He'd worked like a crab fisherman, oil rig.
He was homeless for a while. And he was the most confident, quiet guy there was.
Speaker 5
And I'd be like, come on, Double G, let's, you know, in Thailand, let's go to TQ2, man. And he'd be like, no, thanks, man.
I'm going to stay home. I'm going to read my Bible.
I'm like,
Speaker 5 why?
Speaker 5 You know, and
Speaker 5 we lived next to each other in, in Guam, and I would, you know,
Speaker 5 why?
Speaker 5
Because I hadn't, didn't have religion in my life. I didn't have that experience.
My parents were not religious people.
Speaker 5
We didn't go to church, you know, nothing. So I didn't have a base of faith in me whatsoever.
And Double G was the first person I saw it. And he was competent.
Speaker 5 And he was, you know, he wasn't.
Speaker 5
the team guy. He was the frogman.
And I was just like, whoa, I was like, that's intense. But I completely got wrapped up into the other thing.
Speaker 5 Cause, you know, one of the things that really, I think, emerged out of that, those times was, you know, the intensity with which you can bring violence to call.
Speaker 5 Like, that's the key, right? The whole context in the teams is like the violence, the premise of being the violence of action.
Speaker 5 If you're, if you can be violent like that, like that's a standard of your reputation.
Speaker 5 And I remember, and I, dude, if
Speaker 5
I was not that kid, didn't know how to fight. I mean, there were twice in college, I got knocked out.
One time I went to visit Chris Miller at Denison and I got beat up by a one-arm midget.
Speaker 5 You know, some kid that was like 5'5, whose arm was in a sling, knocked me out because I thought I was so tough, like it just knocked me and I fell down the hill, broke my nose.
Speaker 5
You know, I was just not that. I wasn't tough.
I didn't know how to be tough. I didn't know what tough was.
Speaker 5
And so you get get in, you're surrounded by these dudes that are just animals, man. And they're, they're all tough.
And so it's like, all right, I got to be tough.
Speaker 5 I got to, I got to get into bar fights and I got to drink a lot and I got to
Speaker 5 train hard and I got to, you know, I got to steam all night and train hard all day. And I, and you, you are sucked into that.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I think that there's a requirement about it that's, that's a necessity. Like you want that.
You're trying to, but it's very difficult.
Speaker 5 The management of that, because how human beings respond to that type of imprinting is not always 100% predictable, especially when you have there's a proponent of there's a
Speaker 5 presence of sociopathology that's existent, right? That's who they're recruiting. They want people that have these types of tendencies that can be
Speaker 5 programmed or manipulated into this space where violence
Speaker 5 holds a premium
Speaker 5 your personality.
Speaker 5 And we do that very well, very well.
Speaker 5 And so I think without war going on, where else are you able to disseminate?
Speaker 5 You come off four or three straight weeks on a training trip, you're shooting guns all day, you're kicking doors, you're blowing stuff up, and you come home and what do you do? Like,
Speaker 5 oh, I'm going to go to Bible class or I'm going to just like go to the beach and relax. No, it's like, let's go.
Speaker 5 You know, let's go down to Fibber McGee's or let's go down, you know, to Mission Beach or let's go down to the gaslight and let's just see how many fights we can get in. Right.
Speaker 5 And that's the thing.
Speaker 5 And that's tough. Like you're having to manage this expectation.
Speaker 5 And that's
Speaker 5 for me, I didn't, I didn't have the confidence to pull back and be like, you know, I don't want to do that. I was like, I got to keep this facade up.
Speaker 5 I got to keep this insecure.
Speaker 5 I got to hide this insecurity that I'm not as tough as these other guys. And so
Speaker 5 I did my best to try and represent myself as that guy and really tried to push the envelope.
Speaker 6 Well, Dave, let's take a break. When we come back, we'll get into your first combat deployment.
Speaker 5 Sounds good.
Speaker 6 All right, Dave, back from the break. I know it's getting ready to get heavy here.
Speaker 6 Yeah, but let's move into your first combat deployment in the SEAL teams, first and only combat deployment in the SEAL teams before CIA contracting.
Speaker 6 Where do you go?
Speaker 5 Well, when I got back from the deployment to Southeast Asia,
Speaker 5 was
Speaker 5 like ready for that to be done, ready to move in, got assigned to the next platoon immediately, a wonderful guy named Mike Higgs.
Speaker 5 Love this guy. He was an instructor of mine
Speaker 5 in
Speaker 5 Buds. And my LPO.
Speaker 5
was another instructor of mine. Gillespie was his last name.
And he was like a titan of a guy. And I just was like, all right, this is going to be awesome.
Speaker 5
This is going to be serious and focused, and we're going to kill it. Not that I didn't enjoy all the other stuff, it's just it kind of got away from us.
And so now it's like, all right, reset.
Speaker 5 And all of a sudden, guess what? I have to go get my paramedic recertification done.
Speaker 5 And so instead of going back to New York, what we did was we would go to San Antonio
Speaker 5 and we would work on the ambulances and then the ERs there.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I was kind of excited about it because I was a little bit more mature. I really had learned a tremendous amount.
When you, I mean, firefighters and EMTs, God bless them.
Speaker 5 Nobody understands the magnitude of what they endure on a regular basis.
Speaker 5
They just, they are on the front lines of human sorrow. And I have so much respect for them and what they do.
And it's just just awesome.
Speaker 5 So I went out there, was going through the University of Texas, San Antonio, their emergency med program, and it was awesome. We were learning a ton.
Speaker 5 And then about midway through, I got a call from my LPO basically saying, hey, Rutt, I'm sorry. I hate to inform you,
Speaker 5
but SEAL Team One has decided to let you go. And now you're an instructor over at the Naval Special Warfare Center.
You're going to be an SQT instructor.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it's difficult to encapsulate the pain of that one.
Speaker 5 I mean, I know I say I'm saying that a lot, but this one was the most, the most devastating for sure. This one was the one that almost broke my spirit completely.
Speaker 5
Because here I am on the precipice of going into this great platoon, great group guys. I'm not a new guy.
I've got some time. You know, I'm getting my legs.
I'm feeling good.
Speaker 5 I've gone through some great courses
Speaker 5 and I'm ready to go. And then all of a sudden, the command master chief at Team One was like, no, we're putting you at SQT because the Naval Special Warfare Center made out a call countrywide.
Speaker 5
We need two medics to become, because we're short medics. We need two medics who will be junior medics at SQT.
And so for whatever reason, the same guy who kept my trot up from me
Speaker 5 shit canned me and sent me over. So I had a few months left in San Antonio, which devolved into a pretty dark place.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, had some good people with me. JT was awesome with me and
Speaker 5 JD was there and they really were supportive. And
Speaker 5 I got through it, but it was not good. And so when I transitioned and went over to SQT,
Speaker 5 I was in the absolute wrong space, headspace you should be in when you become, when you're given the opportunity to be an instructor.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I just felt so jaded. I had the worst chip on my shoulder that I had in the entire time in the community.
And it was horrific. And I just showed up, and I think it was April of
Speaker 5 that would have been 2000,
Speaker 5 April 2001
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 did not care. I was living down in Mission Beach with my buddy Chris, who had been in my sister platoon
Speaker 5 at Team One, who,
Speaker 5
you know, one of the Savage brothers. And he and I were just going off in PB and Mission Beach.
And he was really struggling. And that's one
Speaker 5 one relationship I wished I had
Speaker 5 been better to help him through what he was going through, because he was going through something similar, that letdown of the experience and the over
Speaker 5 the saturation of partying.
Speaker 5 And it was just a horrible time.
Speaker 5 It was just not healthy in any way. And
Speaker 5 I'll never forget. I had
Speaker 5 gone out.
Speaker 5
I forget how long. I'd been there like a month or so.
And I'd gone out on a Sunday night. There was this little bar in Mission Beach.
I forget what it was called, but I was a regular there.
Speaker 5
And I went there one Sunday night. He had to be in work next morning, 5 a.m.
It didn't matter. And
Speaker 5 got hammered. And
Speaker 5
there was the Ombach rugby team had come in there partying. That's where they, that was their local bar.
And they were a huge rugby team. Rugby was really big in San Diego.
Speaker 5 I was sitting at the bar and one of the guys were playing pool and they like sprayed beer on his bike, spit beer on his buddy, and it went all over me. And so I, you know, turned around.
Speaker 5 I got my Navy watch cap and my wife beater and my, you know, Dickie's pants and my Doc Martins and I think, you know, my one or two tattoos and think I'm a tough guy. And I turn around.
Speaker 5 I'm like, you know, what's your problem, man? You know, total.
Speaker 5
The dude was amazing. He was like, I'm sorry.
You know, it didn't mean to. Can I buy you a beer? And I'm like, no, man, you can't buy me a beer.
And he's just like, hey, I'm really sorry.
Speaker 5
We're just having fun. And I was like, you know, F you, man.
And I wouldn't let it go.
Speaker 5 And finally, like, before I know it, I'm surrounded, you know, two dudes both sides, this guy, and this guy just tees off and just hits me so hard in the nose and my nose just goes off to the side.
Speaker 5 And then they just start, you know, just waylaying me. And now I'm like, all right, I'm in trouble now.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 my nose started just pouring blood out. And so I was like, all right, how am I going to get out of this?
Speaker 5 So I just like flailed up and I just exhaled and I exhaled around and I just covered them all with blood from my nose.
Speaker 5 And they're all like, and so I like bolted out the side door, ran a couple blocks back, like got out a bat and late on this stuff. And I'm like calling all my, you know, the instructors.
Speaker 5
And I knew a bunch of the team one guys were instructors. And I, hey, man, I just got jumped.
I need you to come down. And they're like, hey, Ruth, go to sleep, man.
Sleep it off, bro.
Speaker 5
I'm like, hey, right. And they just kept.
And so I went back and I remember I was hiding in the bushes and I was going to jump these guys when they got out. And I ended up passing out in the bushes.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 the next day, I went in and hung over, nose-busted,
Speaker 5 bloodshot eyes, and I'm supposed to teach.
Speaker 5 My boss, Senior Chief Bruce Cunningham,
Speaker 5 got pissed and was really pissed. And
Speaker 5 there have been a couple other comments and complaints about my performance. And
Speaker 5 so he called me in and my warrant, Mike Liu, was in there and he lit me up and was like, that's it, dude.
Speaker 5 I'm sending you to Captain's Mass. And I'm like, whoa,
Speaker 5 what do you mean? He's like, dude, this is...
Speaker 5 You don't deserve that trident.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
that was the heart, like one of the hardest moments because I'm like, I knew I was messed up. I knew I was a problem and I was being called out for it.
And I couldn't, I couldn't admit it.
Speaker 5 And he was just like, you know, I don't,
Speaker 5
it's not up to you where you go. I don't care.
You want to be in a platoon. I know that, but this is where you're at.
I need you here. I need you to do your damn job.
Speaker 5 So I'm going to send you Cabin's mess.
Speaker 5 And I was like, I was like, can i just explain to you he's like no he's like put it in writing and and give it to me and so i went back and that night i wrote out you know this long story of how
Speaker 5 all through my career every time medical would send me off and disrupt the sequence or flow of my career for this medic thing
Speaker 5 and i gave it to him and he called me and he goes is this real and i was like yeah you can you can check it is and he goes
Speaker 5 okay i'm not going to send you to cabins mass but i'm i'm going to give you one more chance
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 if you don't change you're out i'm going to pull your trite i'm going to kick you out of the navy you're gone and i was like all right and and i go but you know what do you want me to do here he's like what do you mean i go i'm a one platoon wonder
Speaker 5
I don't know anything. I can't teach these kids.
These kids aren't going to respect me. I can't go in there.
I don't have five platoons.
Speaker 5 I don't have this I haven't ever been anywhere I haven't done anything I'm an elite at you know drinking but I can't teach I don't know how to teach
Speaker 5 and I go what do you want me to do
Speaker 5 he goes
Speaker 5 well what do you
Speaker 5 what can you what can you do what do you think you're good at And I just say, I don't know, I guess I can motivate people. And he goes, then that's all I want you to do.
Speaker 5 I want you to figure out how to teach medical, but I want you to figure out how to motivate because medical was the first week.
Speaker 5 And he goes, we'll teach you the rest.
Speaker 5 If you do what we ask you to do, you're always on time, you're always early, you do everything we ask,
Speaker 5 we'll teach you how to become an instructor. And that moment changed my life forever
Speaker 5 because he believed in me
Speaker 5 and really kind of took me under his wing and had,
Speaker 5 you you know, all these unbelievable guys at SQT,
Speaker 5 these guys that I revered, former Team 1 guys and from other places too,
Speaker 5 Anadano and Touche and all these guys, Carlos.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I learned how to teach. And that was one of the most rewarding things I've ever experienced.
Because
Speaker 5 you have these essentially, and by then they had consolidated STT into SQT it was now a 34-week program you went to buds then you went to SQT and you and it was a pipeline and they had fixed all the nonsense and so you came to this program and it's like all right you have a the primed you know
Speaker 5 individual that's ready to do what you tell them to do. Like, hey, I want you to go run through that brick wall and they'll do it.
Speaker 5 You mean you had sensation and buds, like you're just like,
Speaker 5 unleash me, let me go. But what is SQT designed? It's designed to reinstill your own individual ability to think creatively, to become a commando, and to advance your skill sets more.
Speaker 5
But I didn't, I didn't know how to do that. I didn't know how to teach.
And
Speaker 5
I really leaned into these guys and watched. I went to everyone's class.
I tried to be a part of everything they did. I saw how people taught.
I'd have Bruce critique me. I'd have Matt critique me.
Speaker 5 I had Chris critique me. All these men would, I'd be like, what do I need to improve? What do I need to tweak this and this and tweak this? And, oh, and when you do this.
Speaker 5 And I, and, and they taught me how to not only teach medical, but I, you know, taught LAN nav and I taught,
Speaker 5 you know, weapons and foreign weapons. And
Speaker 5 I taught
Speaker 5 explosives.
Speaker 5 I remember DJ's dad came out me and this other instructor andy which was i love andy was such a great guy and he was in charge of demo and i was like hey can i learn with you and don came out and was like this demo god and taught us demo and
Speaker 5 it was like this
Speaker 5 it was a way of experiencing the teams i had never experienced before because there's a a responsibility you have with these these young men to get them ready to go into a platoon.
Speaker 5 And like, if you don't show show up at a platoon, I mean, they don't play around like gone, like you're out if you can't perform in a platoon, and so that's your responsibility.
Speaker 5 But I never felt that when I was going through, I thought it was just another checkoff, right? Get to the next thing.
Speaker 5 But now it's like, no, we have to teach these men how to be men and how to think and how to be legit commandos.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it was awesome, it was so amazing, especially going out to Nyland.
Speaker 5 And I remember
Speaker 5 just the impact. And it got to a point where
Speaker 5
Bruce put me in charge of all the down man sequences and all the FTX and all this. So I got to create the down man scenarios.
I got to run them. And it was amazing.
Speaker 5
And we just started having a bunch of guys come through. Like really, a lot of the Red Wings guys came through.
Some of the guys
Speaker 5
in Extortion 17 came through. All in all, when I was there, about about 257 guys came through.
I went through. I know.
We'll get there in a second. That's after.
Speaker 5 So
Speaker 5 it was that summer, 9-11 happens.
Speaker 5 I'm in a dive soup course.
Speaker 5
We finished dive soup, you know, going through the whole thing. That Friday, we went out to Nyland.
And that Saturday, we started IADS.
Speaker 5 And I'll never forget, I used to give like these hooyah speeches before we'd start IATS because it's a seminal component. If you learn to do this, you'll be okay.
Speaker 5
Like this is the thing that distinguishes you. If you can shoot, move, and communicate, and you can do it well with your teammates.
This is what establishes your credibility.
Speaker 5 And I remember this time, and I'd do a little, you know, I'd get fired up. And
Speaker 5 I remember this time, I was like, all right, gents, you know, look to your left, look to your right, look behind you, because there's a probability that some of these people will not be here in the future because we're going to war.
Speaker 5
And that's when everything changed. It was palpable.
The whole community changed. Everything changed.
Everybody's attitude changed. It was serious now.
Speaker 5 And I really tried to lean into that and tried to
Speaker 5
experience that. And it was an amazing feeling.
Like it really, you felt,
Speaker 5
you felt what you had hoped you would feel by serving and then serving at that level. Now it was real.
Like now it was important.
Speaker 5 Not that it wasn't important. It just it wasn't.
Speaker 6 Makes it more real.
Speaker 5 It makes it more real because people are going to go to war, right? I mean,
Speaker 5
Damnik was on the ground by the end of October. You know, Team 3 was there not long after that.
You had Avsock. And I mean, it was, it was on.
They were going. And
Speaker 5 I'll never forget, I ran into
Speaker 5 a guy I'd known at Team 1 Christian
Speaker 5 and he was at a training command but he was all kidded up on on the MFIP side I was like what are you all kidded up for he's like dude I'm I got in a team one platoon that's going over next and in the spring and I was like get out of here and he's like yeah man he goes dude there's a they're doing an augment platoon called the mobility platoon And I was like, what's that?
Speaker 5 It's like, it'll be like a mobile platoon. They're going to dust off the DPVs, the different patrol vehicles.
Speaker 5 And they're going to use these things and they need I think it was like nine guys or no 13 spot no there were nine spots for this augment platoon he goes you ought to throw your name in there
Speaker 5 they need a medic and I was like holy cow so I immediately went to Bruce and Mike and I begged them to put my name in the hat I begged them I said listen I've been crushing myself You know, at that time, we were writing all the new curriculum.
Speaker 5 I mean, we were just working around.
Speaker 5 Like, I was there all the time.
Speaker 5
And I was like, could you please, please just give me this opportunity. Just put my name in the hat for this, please.
I probably won't give it, but would you please let me try this?
Speaker 5 And they stewed on it for a bit and
Speaker 5
they put my name in the hat. And that went over to Will Guile.
Master Chief Guile was the command master chief of Spec War Center and Captain Smithers was the captain.
Speaker 5
And 13 dudes put their name in for that. And it got to Master Chief.
He sat on it for
Speaker 5
a few, like a few days. And then it went to the captain.
And then the captain sat on it. And it was down to a couple dudes.
And they gave it to me. And that's what did it.
Speaker 5 And so I was able to, in February of 2002,
Speaker 5 depart
Speaker 5 SQT, go TDY over to SEAL Team 1 to augment this DPV platoon. And that's when it began.
Speaker 6 How did that feel?
Speaker 5 Like my first big win.
Speaker 5 Like I had
Speaker 5 gotten to a place where my performance
Speaker 5 was indicative of
Speaker 5 something I could be proud of. And that warranted
Speaker 5
like an attaboy. Like, here you go.
You know,
Speaker 5
you did a good job. We're going to fight for you.
And Bruce did. And Mike, they really fought for me.
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 it was incredible and the next thing i know i'm out at an island and i'm staring at this desert patrol vehicle and mind you i didn't even know how to change my oil like i didn't like i was as non-mechanical person as there's ever been
Speaker 5 and now
Speaker 5 like the whole thing is mobility and
Speaker 5 luckily um there was a guy, Larry, who was our LPO, who was fantastic and just amazing.
Speaker 5 And then I was in some guys I had gone through training with, some team one guys that were phenomenal, Monty, Bill.
Speaker 6 So
Speaker 6 this is a
Speaker 6 mixed match, mixed bag of nuts platoon that they pieced together.
Speaker 5 Podge Podge, yep, of guys.
Speaker 5 We had some younger guys.
Speaker 6 Did anybody have any combat experience?
Speaker 5 No.
Speaker 5 No, not at all. Yeah.
Speaker 6 So how, I mean, so if you guys were training, I mean, how did they come up with the curriculum for a training pipeline when nobody has any experience?
Speaker 5 There was a master chief who had been in charge of SQT, who had actually been in the platoon, the Damneck platoon, when they built these things for desert.
Speaker 5 the first desert storm because that those vehicles were the first vehicles into kuwait and so they had gotten all this success. And there's some photos of them back then.
Speaker 5 So they brought these things out of mothballs and they got these guys. Well, these they put them together and they sent those guys over.
Speaker 5
And they actually went to Afghanistan for a little bit with the vehicles. And then we, I went over first.
I volunteered to go over first at Advon.
Speaker 5 Went into
Speaker 5 where were we? We were in Kuwait. And
Speaker 5 that's when
Speaker 5 I saw the first guys that were coming back and listening to what they were going through. And there was a guy that had
Speaker 5 been on a pep billet, I think with the Aussies or with the Brits.
Speaker 5 And he had, there was, it was when Mike Spann had gotten killed.
Speaker 5
Ground branch guy had been killed at this prison. And then there was this prison uprising.
They killed him and they sent in, I forget, it was either Aussie, but
Speaker 5
there was a SEAL in there who ended up dropping bombs, danger close, on the roof. And he won like their Distinguished Knights Cross or something like that.
It was a team guy. I'm so upset.
Speaker 5 I've forgotten his name right now, but I'm a little, little fatigued.
Speaker 5 But I met him and I was like, oh my God.
Speaker 5
Like, you could just see it on him. Like, he had just been to combat.
And I was like, whoa, this is intense. And so in Kuwait, we trained for about 70 days.
They came back for
Speaker 5 half that, taught us, trained us, boned us up, got us dialed in, and we're like, all right, we're out of here. You guys got a month left.
Speaker 5 And as it turned out, it was like for every hour we drove out in the desert, it was like eight hours wrenching.
Speaker 5 And it was just,
Speaker 5 I mean, it was the most ultimate crash course that you could ever receive on a vehicle. You know, I remember Larry, who
Speaker 5 had been in Boats Guys over at Damnik Damnik and was just like,
Speaker 5
here's a carburetor. Take this apart and put it back together.
And I'm like,
Speaker 5
I don't, I don't know. He's like, figure it out.
And, and so we just,
Speaker 5
we came up with SOPs and maneuvering and driving. And, and I love driving.
I mean, that was my thing. I loved driving that vehicle.
Speaker 5
It was just, you know, I mean, you're going 90 miles an hour at night, nods on, 50 cal buff. It was just like, you're like, okay, this is, this is Frogman stuff.
This is cool.
Speaker 5 And then
Speaker 5 we got the call and the anime, we, we left and we, we flew into Bagram, the anime.
Speaker 6 How did it feel when you landed in Bagram?
Speaker 5 Awesome.
Speaker 5 You know, the, the C-17 corkscrew all the way down,
Speaker 5 like everybody's on nods.
Speaker 5
You know, vehicles out. Everybody's efficient, moving great.
It's like, oh, man, this is it. Like, this is cool.
Speaker 5
You're expecting like the, they're going to overrun the gates because you'd heard about Tor Bora. You'd heard about Roberts Ridge.
You'd heard.
Speaker 5 And then for me, the, the hardest one was Matt Bourgeois.
Speaker 5 You know, Matt got blown up at Tarnak Farms where Osama bin Laden was when he was at Damnik and left kids and a wife.
Speaker 5 And he was one of the one of the nicest guys when I was a new guy at Team One and Training Cell who would actually spend some time with me. And
Speaker 5 that was the first palpable sensation of death that kind of got me. And so it provoked a pretty substantial fear of getting blown up.
Speaker 5 Because when we landed at that time, there was... a rough estimate of about 25 million landmines in Afghanistan.
Speaker 5 And we were driving around in those DPVs, which were essentially sand racers with, you know, a little bit stronger transmissions and some racing components.
Speaker 5
And, you know, slick, the thing was like 2,800, 3,000. And then you put almost 2,000 pounds of gear on it.
And,
Speaker 5 you know, it was not all four-wheel drive. And so when we got there,
Speaker 5 you know, there's, there was two paved roads in all of Afghanistan. And then
Speaker 5
just everything was off-roading. And we were in these vehicles that were great at off-roading.
So,
Speaker 5 yeah,
Speaker 5 that was the first,
Speaker 5 you know, the first week to where, like, all right, I think all of us, me included, I was kind of the intel rep. And it's like, I was expecting a stack of
Speaker 5 folders of targets, right?
Speaker 5
Here's all your HVTs. Here, pick whichever one.
Go get this guy. Go get the Taliban.
Go get Al-Qaeda.
Speaker 5 And everybody was still
Speaker 5 just,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5
you could taste revenge in your mouth because of 9-11. It was still in you.
You still had it.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 now, you know,
Speaker 5 there had been some team guys that had gotten hit. And
Speaker 5 it was like, all right, let's get after it.
Speaker 5 But it wasn't like that. It seemed unorganized, you know, going into the talk because
Speaker 5 it wasn't wasn't
Speaker 5 what I later understood, you know, the agency was running the war and JSOC was doing the heavy lifting
Speaker 5 and they weren't quite sure how to employ us
Speaker 5 outside of that. And so it kind of felt like, all right, well, what do we do? Where do we go? I remember we did this.
Speaker 5 shakeout patrol of the vehicles up across the valley under the other side of Bagram and we go up and we get in in this building. We actually like got stuck on this little finger.
Speaker 5
And, you know, they don't maneuver well. They don't have great tournament.
And I remember we're in the rear vehicle and
Speaker 5 I forget who was in the turret, but someone's like, you know, look left. Look, and right next to me, there's like three or four Afghans with AKs
Speaker 5
just looking at me. And it was that hate.
You know, that first time you look, someone looks at you with hate and you know, that dude hates me.
Speaker 5 If If that dude could shoot me right now, he would shoot me in my face, no problem.
Speaker 5
And I was like, we're literally sitting ducks in these vehicles. We can't maneuver.
I was like, can you get a shot? And dude, you can't even turn the 50 cal, right?
Speaker 5 And it's just like, well, this is different. This is not what I had in my mind.
Speaker 5 And I think
Speaker 5
it was. strange because I wasn't, there was no clear direction.
There was no clear answers. There was no clear, you guys go do this, go do this.
And so we kind of had to figure it out.
Speaker 5 I remember it was the SF guys.
Speaker 5 There was
Speaker 5
the reserve unit from, I think, Carolina. I think it was, I forget what 19th group or something.
I forget what their unit name was. But I ran into these guys and they were amazing.
Speaker 5
They had jingle trucks that they were using. They had motorcycles.
They were doing low-pro stuff.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 they had figured it kind of out because there were, I guess, one or two of those guys that had actually been in Afghanistan as young Green Berets during the Russia-Afghan war, and they had trained the Muhajdin fighters to fight against the Russians.
Speaker 5
So these guys knew like... a bunch of skill sets that we didn't know.
Like we didn't have, we were still running off kind of SOPs from Desert Storm.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
they were phenomenal. They were great to work with.
They were very informative.
Speaker 5 One guy gave me this book called The Bear Trap, which was the history of the Russian-Afghan war and how devastating it was for the Russians because, I mean, you know, fight the Afghans in their backyard is tough.
Speaker 5
It's hard. They're really tenacious.
I mean, Afghanistan's where empires go to die. And
Speaker 5 I was like, this is a lot different than what I thought it would be, that we would just be dominating.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it was almost like they wanted us out of Bagram. And so after, I think it was about a month, we did a couple patrols and stuff, but nothing substantial.
Speaker 5
They moved us down to Kandahar. And that's where things kind of shifted.
It was like kind of end of June. We moved down to Kandahar.
And at that time, it was
Speaker 5 only SF, only SOF units, foreign and us. And then there was like a couple Army units and then the CBs and then like Army Corps engineers that were, I mean, there was no indoor showers.
Speaker 5
There was no indoor chow haul. I mean, it was still pretty raw.
And I was like, all right, this is a place we'll be good. Because the terrain was a lot better.
It was less mountainous.
Speaker 5
It was more wide open. So I was like, this is where we'll be able to employ the vehicles.
Because the other SEAL platoon that was in with us, they didn't have vehicles.
Speaker 5 Like we entered the country, we had no vehicles. And so how are you going to run missions when you don't have any vehicles? And
Speaker 5 that was another thing that I was just like,
Speaker 5 wait a minute, how do we not have just like basic Humvees? And we actually ended up borrowing some troop carriers from the Canadians off, the Kansoff guys.
Speaker 5 And so we started to do some missions at that time.
Speaker 6 What was the first mission?
Speaker 5 First big one was a joint mission to go in the De Rau River Valley.
Speaker 5 We were going to snatch a couple senior Taliban guys because that's where all the poppy production and that's kind of where they were hiding out or that was the estimation.
Speaker 5
That's what we, the intel we got. And we would drive in big joint op SF, agency, us.
I think we had five vehicles, one agency vehicles and six
Speaker 5 you know, SF vehicles, like huge, huge joint op.
Speaker 5 And they were, we had put in a reconnaissance team. There was a little village where they thought the guys were.
Speaker 5 And then what we thought is that when the op started, they would flee into this valley because we had put a recon team up here. And they were, they would run in here and hide.
Speaker 5 And then we would just go pursue them and get them there if we didn't get them there. And so
Speaker 5 we drove from Kandahar out to the Day Row River Valley. And
Speaker 5 it was like, it took, I mean, I think we drove for like three straight days, like just constant drive. And Like, you know, and at night you're crawling and you get into that big accordion.
Speaker 5 And I remember we were behind, I was always rear security, so I ate more dust than that. I think I still got some Afghan ship flake in my ears somewhere from that one, right?
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 we, I remember us getting, setting up, night was coming, then H hour, and I'll never forget.
Speaker 5 We were going in and they had launched first because they were going to stage and hit the compound.
Speaker 5 And then we were going to to drag through if there was anybody leaving. And
Speaker 5 we hit and there was a vehicle coming out after HR had gone. And we didn't have an interpreter.
Speaker 5
We didn't have, you know, it was just a bunch of cowboys, right? And I remember we stopped the vehicle. Everybody exfield stopped.
And
Speaker 5 Joe Burns, God bless him, man,
Speaker 5 stopped and like, opened, fired across, you know, the
Speaker 5 thing. And we're like, and everybody's like,
Speaker 5 is someone shooting? What are you doing?
Speaker 5 And someone's like, why'd you shoot? And he's like,
Speaker 5 that's my interpretation to stop the fuck the goddamn vehicle.
Speaker 5 He's like, get out, get out. And we wrapped those dudes up and zip-tied them and put them in the back and kept going.
Speaker 5 And SF team hit that compound, took a couple dies. And it was crazy because that was the first official story that CNN had come out with, Christiana Anampur,
Speaker 5 saying
Speaker 5
that we assaulted a wedding, that we took down a wedding. That was the first time that that had happened.
You know, and it was like we were just going after innocent Afghans in a wedding, you know.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 so we went through, they did their thing, and we went to go retrieve the guys on the recon. And
Speaker 5 that was,
Speaker 5
you know, we got them down. They were, they were pretty jacked up because of the heat and they were running out of water.
And I remember that was an interesting experience
Speaker 5 because it's like
Speaker 5 we'd been up for so many days.
Speaker 5 You know, it's funny, I was with
Speaker 5 Dan Luna and Monty and we got to this, the place where the valley and they're like.
Speaker 5 All right, you three go out there and clear up the valley. You know, and those valleys, it's just massive and
Speaker 5 take the EOD guy with you.
Speaker 5 you know and it's like it's there's so many places that you could get shot and you're just you're delirious because you've been up for four straight days maybe you gotten a couple hours of sleep or and we're walking and i remember with dan
Speaker 5 god bless him man i started like hallucinating a little bit and i was see i remember seeing like a pink bunny rabbit in like a little little hole in the in the side.
Speaker 5 I'm like, hey, man, do you see that bunny rabbit? He's like, dude, don't say that.
Speaker 5
And we're sitting there and they're like, it's clear. There's nothing.
There's nobody back here.
Speaker 5
And I remember this, all of a sudden we look up right across about 100 meters up on this little plateau. This Afghan guy comes out.
He's got a donkey and he's like barking. He's like,
Speaker 5
you know, and we can't understand him. So I jump up and I'm like, freeze, don't move.
And he backs away from the ledge and I go hauling up. And
Speaker 5
I get up and I'm like holding on to him. I'm like, don't fucking move, get on the ground, get on the ground.
And he can't understand a lick of what I'm saying, and he's just backing away.
Speaker 5 And like, I wasn't sure what it was in the donkey or feet, you know, I didn't seem armed. And I'm just like, and so I'm just like, you know, I go, boom, and I'm like, get on the ground, like, fire.
Speaker 5 Next thing, another dude starts firing from, I'm like, cease, fire. So, you know, I'm like, I didn't, I didn't think, I was like, okay, I'll just like scare him.
Speaker 5 And that's the dumbest thing I could have ever done.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 the dude just turn, splits, and just like goes up the mountain like a billy goat.
Speaker 5 And I remember one of our chiefs was just screaming, detain him, detain him. And so
Speaker 5
Monty came up and we tried and like we couldn't. Like he was, it was like a goat, like a billy goat.
And he just disappeared. And we finally got the guys back and
Speaker 5 they're like, well, what do we do now? And they're like, let's get out of here. And so we, we drove out.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it just, it kept just spiraling. Like it didn't make sense.
Speaker 5
We had to drive all the way back. We drove through this one village where there was like men 18 to 45 wearing black turbans.
And they essentially, like, we'd kind of got in a log jam.
Speaker 5 And I remember Double G was in a turret
Speaker 5 and this Afghan guy was like, you know.
Speaker 5 like pull off your sunglasses and double g drops them and goes like this and he points to his ak and he's like get out of here Essentially like, get out or we're going to.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I was like, why aren't we like grabbing these guys, detaining them, you know, figuring out how to get an interpreter out there, figuring what's out, what's up?
Speaker 5 Because it was obviously, there were no women around, no children around, no nothing.
Speaker 5
But nothing happened. Like nobody made that call.
We were like, all right, let's just get back to base.
Speaker 5 And one of the things, the guys that had really given me a ton of insight were the Aussies, because they had these lorries that they could do long-range reconnaissance in it.
Speaker 5 And I remember up in Bagram, they would come in and they looked like they had just gotten into it. And I finally went up, I'm like, hey, you know, what do you guys, are you getting into it?
Speaker 5 And they're like, yeah, every time we go out, we get into it. I'm like, well, how does it work? And they're like, man, they sent us out to, you know, East Bump, whatever over here.
Speaker 5
What we do is we figure out where the routes, the passage routes through the valleys are. We drop little OP teams and we watch for a week.
We see where they're all kind of congregate and meet up.
Speaker 5
And then we just go drive and park our cars right in the middle of their villages and wait for someone to shoot at us. And then we just get in firefights.
And so they were getting into all the time.
Speaker 5 I'm like,
Speaker 5
well, let's do that. You know, we let's just go camp out and see if someone picks a fight with us.
And so we leave there and on the way out,
Speaker 5 there's this, you know, car or this moped next to us. And
Speaker 5 I'm like, that dude, because an SF guy had had a, like, you know, when the kids come out, you're like, oh, get the kids, you give them Skittles and stuff. Well, one, I think an ODA team had done that.
Speaker 5 Well, a kid had dropped a grenade in the navigator's seat and like killed this guy.
Speaker 5 And so I had this, you know, I'd rigged up a gun on my steering column and, you know, pointing my gun at kids who were picking up rocks and because they'd throw rocks at us sometimes. And
Speaker 5 I'm like,
Speaker 5
all right, I'm, someone shoot that guy. And it was Master Chief Crampton from Team One.
It was like, no, Rutt, no one's going to shoot him. It's just a couple of kids on him.
Speaker 5 I'm like, all right, can I run him over? And he's like, no, you're not running over. And I'm like,
Speaker 5
they're gaining intel on us. Let's wrap them.
And I said, no, just let's go. And
Speaker 5 he was right the whole time. Well, anyways, we make this turn and there's this little hooch with this dish gun on it, this, you know, massive anti-aircraft gun.
Speaker 5 And we turn and these guys are, the columns going down tree line towards this little hooch. Well, they run, and dude gets in the hooch
Speaker 5
and starts getting on the disco. So, I think this guy's going to turn and train and just light up the whole thing.
So, I haul ass out into this agricultural field to get an angle with R50 cow.
Speaker 5 And this other guy comes screaming, going, like, don't go, don't go, don't go.
Speaker 5 And, and he's like, like, and Master Chief's like, stop the vehicle right now, right? So, I stopped the vehicle, and I had driven us into a minefield.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I'm looking at him. He's looking at me and he's like, dude, do not move the vehicle.
We're going to get somebody out of the car. They're going to back you up along your tracks.
Speaker 5
So we get out and we come up. We go over the hill.
We come into this 30-foot crater of a Russian anti-tank mine. We make our EOD walk.
Speaker 5 you know, for two hours on this road, not even a road, but a packed thing because we thought the whole thing was mined and end up getting back to Kandahar.
Speaker 5 And so that was the first, the first mission.
Speaker 5 And I was like,
Speaker 5 holy cow, like this is what it's going to be every time.
Speaker 5 I was like, all right,
Speaker 5 this is going to be intense. This is going to be kind of cool.
Speaker 5 But it didn't turn out that way.
Speaker 5 They ended up giving us a little sliver of area that we could exploit down by Spinbull Dock, where you've been before, because we had gotten some information that there was a safe house there, because that's where all the weapons were coming across from
Speaker 5
Quetta, where Mula Omar had his tribe, right, that they were. And so all the stuff was coming across there.
And then right below that was the desert of death.
Speaker 5
So we're like, all right, we've got these DPVs. Let's go down.
Let's exploit that area. Let's go set up.
We put in a couple missions to go set up an urban reconnaissance that got shut down.
Speaker 5 We did a couple, like a couple ops where we drove in there.
Speaker 5 ROIC
Speaker 5 got sick or something or wasn't, you know, dealing with the heat or whatever it was. And so we had to cancel those and come back early.
Speaker 5 But that's all that was going on.
Speaker 5 Like there was nothing. And we couldn't understand.
Speaker 5 Because we kept putting in for op orders and kept saying, hey, let us do this. And
Speaker 5 it just wasn't going the way we thought it was gonna go like here we are in afghanistan we kind of know we're the enemy i mean we did a three-day recon one time
Speaker 5 and put eyes on this like t-section valley and we'd seen heard training we'd seen like i had seen on binos like a ceremony of people getting like these black turbans like it was definitely a talban village it's unbelievable and that was actually a pivotal moment for me because I remember on our third night and me and Larry would take the late night shift.
Speaker 5
Everybody was running out of water. I mean, I took in 22 quarts of water.
All the other guys had like 20. They were running out of water first thing the third day.
Speaker 5 We weren't getting picked up till that night. So I'm like, what happens if we run out of water? And then there's a sandstorm or where are we going to go?
Speaker 5 And, and so I remember that what really started like, what do we do? Like, how do we solve this? And,
Speaker 5 and that night, night, that last night was the first night I'd ever prayed.
Speaker 5
And that was the first time. I mean, you, you've been out there, you out in the middle of nowhere in Afghanistan.
There's no lights, tons of stars. And it's surreal.
Speaker 5 Like, you're like, I'm around the other side of the world in this place where this culture,
Speaker 5 you know, are basically
Speaker 5 you know, trapped in the 15th century and tribalism,
Speaker 5 but yet they they were able to participate and orchestrate the most significant attack
Speaker 5
in U.S. history.
And we're out here hunting them down. It just was surreal to me.
And we were in this predicament. And it was the first time I was like, you know, I felt kind of compelled to ask God.
Speaker 5 I was like, hey, can you,
Speaker 5 if you're there,
Speaker 5 can you help? Can you get us out of this? And
Speaker 5 that next night, came in, got picked up, and we dropped another OP team off, but a goat herder had walked into the one, the OP team that was across the way from us, and they had zip-tied the guy and sat on him for a while and then cut him loose when they got loose.
Speaker 5 Well, that guy went right down. So when our other OP that was at the end of the T section where they could watch where the training was, they got compromised immediately.
Speaker 5
So we were getting spun up to go out. get in but the the helopilots the tf 160 guys are the greatest pilots, hands down.
I mean, these men are unbelievable in what they do.
Speaker 5 Their courage, their ability to fly those things are, they're absolutely the best of the best. And they went in, grabbed those guys and got out and nothing happened.
Speaker 5
But immediately we put in or after action, then a follow-on op order. Let's, we, we want to just drive into that village and let's just light them up.
Let's go.
Speaker 5 Let's take down that whole compound complex. And, and it got shut down and
Speaker 5 nothing came from it and so at that point I was just like
Speaker 5 you know what are we doing why why are we here and I remember right around then there was this thing called the loyal loyal the loyal jurga and they brought all of the warlords from all the different regions they shut all operations down and they got this thing to install Karzai as the president and like so that just shut operations for, I don't even know, seemed like a couple weeks, maybe.
Speaker 5 And that was it. And I was just like, all right,
Speaker 5 this is going to be it.
Speaker 5 And then
Speaker 5 everything changed on August 18th and 19th.
Speaker 6 What happened on August 18th and 19th?
Speaker 5 We
Speaker 5 had
Speaker 5
started a relationship with the Cansoft guys. And they were wonderful.
I just, those guys are the most professional guys. They're amazing.
Speaker 5 They actually had this great software that was our pilots were using that could map the earth.
Speaker 5 Because, you know, back then the mapping systems of what was there, I mean, we were running off 30-year-old Russian maps and stuff. I mean, it was, it was poor.
Speaker 5 And so they were really beneficial. Well, they reached out about a few days prior and like, hey.
Speaker 5
Let's do a join op. We got an HVT because they were a tier one unit.
We've got an HVT. we're going to go, you guys be our cordon force, right? You,
Speaker 5
you know, come in, you'll get the perimeter of the compound for squirters, and let's roll. And so we were like, absolutely awesome, tier one unit.
They probably have great intel.
Speaker 5 Because one of the things we were realizing is that the
Speaker 5
sharing of intelligence was not flowing the way. I had imagined that I was told.
My first platoon, I was the Intel rep.
Speaker 5 This group, I was the Intel guy and nothing that I had ever been taught was happening right there was no Intel shop that you can go in and people would be like this is going on this is going on this is going on
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 so we rehearsed and got ready get out plan and the idea was what we would fly in 47s
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 the main unit would hit
Speaker 5
assault the compound with JTF-2. They'd have a couple team guys as assistants in the internal.
Our task unit commander would be in there with them.
Speaker 5
And then we'd have four teams of four on the corners of this house. And so I got in with one of those teams.
So we launched, we're going in, we come down. So it's compounds here, right?
Speaker 5 Over here was this ag fields, ag fields all around it. um some kind of trees along a pathway more compound and so we landed here and we got off and our job was to get to this corner
Speaker 5 of the compound. And then there'd be one here, one here, and then one on the far side.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I remember
Speaker 5
this time, like it was there, like my heart was pumping because this was, this was a takedown. It was a snatch.
And it's like, all right, this is frogman stuff. This is cool.
And I was,
Speaker 5 I was the only medic in the external team of all these four teams.
Speaker 5
And so that's a lot of pressure, right? It's like, all right, you're the guy. And now there were medics inside, but outside.
And I remember getting off the thing,
Speaker 5 patrolling a little bit to the corner, and I heard cracks, and it was gunfire. And I
Speaker 5 jumped down in the prone like, like you're taught, gunfire and snaps and you jump.
Speaker 5
And I remember I'm kind of trying to figure out my night vision, my helmet and my back, my med bag and all this stuff. And I'm trying to look.
And
Speaker 5 I remember, God bless a man, Eric Schellenberger, who's now passed,
Speaker 5 leans over and he goes, he goes, Rutt,
Speaker 5
what are you doing? Like, dude, you didn't hear those gunshots? He goes, bro. And he had been in combat before.
He'd been a Marine prior too.
Speaker 5
And he's like, that was like 50 feet over our head. They weren't even in our direction.
And I was like, oh, okay. So I got up and I'm like, okay.
And I'm like, all right, go.
Speaker 5 Now I'm like going and my one knot is fogging up. And
Speaker 5 I,
Speaker 5 and I'm like, all right, relax, calm down, like, do your job, hold your corner. And we had the external commander, Mike,
Speaker 5 amazing guy, great officer,
Speaker 5
sitting there. And Heath was our comm guy.
And then
Speaker 5
it was me, Shelly, Heath, and Mike. And he's running the SR.
Well, meanwhile, there are these Hilos over top, and they're calling in, hey, we've got squirters. They got out of the building.
Speaker 5
And you can hear internal. They're clearing and clear, clear, doing the whole thing.
And we're getting word that one of the Hilos where we were, here's compound, we're on this corner, corner.
Speaker 5 And this Hilo is hovering here
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 has this he says i've got a couple guys pinned down out here you know get out here you know because he's sitting there loitering burning fuel and he's calling and they're not done with the total securing of of the main compound and so This guy's like, hey, man, like, you can hear him just like hovering in this area.
Speaker 5 And it's loud as hell.
Speaker 5 You could still kind of communicate over here. We're probably, I want to say 200 maybe meters away maybe maybe 150 175
Speaker 5 and finally they get a call from inside hey we're secure and then mike's like well we're gonna go grab these guys so we we consolidated
Speaker 5 the three groups they had a little powwow hey how are we gonna do this because he was in ag fields right like huge not a huge but six seven foot ag that it was in and you know the ag fields are rutted and this guy's hanging over he's like hey, get out here.
Speaker 5 I'm, I'm, you know, my fuel, I need to get off station, and I feel vulnerable.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 so it's decided that we're going to basically get online and we're going to walk through the target, old school, you know, basic tactics and approach, and especially in the ag fields, right?
Speaker 5 So it was this team was on this four,
Speaker 5 then it was our four, and it was, I'm pretty sure it was it was
Speaker 5 I want to say it was
Speaker 5 Heath no Mike Heath Shelly me then it was Larry
Speaker 5 John Beltran
Speaker 5 Monty and Darren and so we started walking
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that was scary because you know you're walking walking and the guy's
Speaker 5
the guy you heard over the radio, I've got a guy. You don't know if he's got a weapon, got grenades, got anything.
And you're walking right into him.
Speaker 6 I mean, can you see? No.
Speaker 6 What's the terrain like?
Speaker 5
I mean, it's, it's ag fields that are rutted, so for ag for irrigation. So you're kind of stumbling and it's, you know, the first section was kind of open and then you hit.
the stuff that's head high.
Speaker 5
And so you're trying to adjust the depth to see through the fields and where the the Hilo. And then the Hilo, you get so close.
Now you can't hear anything. You couldn't hear comms between each other.
Speaker 5
It had just overwhelmed. And I remember Heath's comms kind of had gone down.
So I had stepped in to help with the comms to the Hilo and he's relaying information. This is where they are.
Speaker 5 They're right underneath my rotor wash. Come over here right now.
Speaker 5
And I'm trying to relay it. You can't really hear anything.
And it's just chaos.
Speaker 5
And, but we're going, like, we're gonna go. This is the mission.
If these were the squirters, the guys, and they're pinned down, that's the mission. So, we're going, we're going.
Speaker 5 And we get into it, and
Speaker 5
we kind of clear out, and they're kind of chopped down now. There's a little clearance, but then there's another thing where you can't see.
And I, all of a sudden, I'm walking and I step on something,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 it did not feel small, it was big.
Speaker 5
And immediately I adjust one nod. I look down.
I draw down and I just start mule kicking whatever was underneath me as hard as I could. And I adjust, and it's a dude.
Speaker 5
And now I'm like, I'm trying to sweep for gun. Helicopter's over.
I start calling to Shelly because I was, you're on, you're on this walk forward. I'm here.
I step on it. I kind of turn to here
Speaker 5 and I'm kicking it and I'm going, Shelly, Shelly.
Speaker 5 And then Shelly comes over and I'm like, hey, hold.
Speaker 5
And I'm like, and then I'm trying to pass over the radio. I got someone.
I got someone. And obviously you can't hear anything because the Gila is right over us.
Speaker 5 And so I'm sitting there and I'm just waiting for the dude to, you know, pull a grenade and just let that thing go.
Speaker 5 And I'm like,
Speaker 5 hey, you got him, you got him. And we were trying to work something out.
Speaker 5 And then
Speaker 5 as soon as we're here,
Speaker 5
we're on front. I turn here.
I look up and I see Muzzle Flash right in front of us.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
in that moment, I'm like, all right, the other guy is out there. He's opening up.
So I immediately call contact front, scream at contact front,
Speaker 5 drop down,
Speaker 5 get in a prone,
Speaker 5
engage, you know, go through MAG. Shelly engages.
I think a couple other guys down the line engage. I couldn't see or hear Larry, Tommy,
Speaker 5 Monty, or Darren. I couldn't see them because the scrub or what was ever.
Speaker 5 And I go in, I get out a grenade, and I'm prepping a grenade, and I look at Shelly and I go, should I throw it? Should I throw it? He's like, no.
Speaker 5
And I'm like, all right. And then all of a sudden, ceasefire comes out.
I'm like, cease fire, cease fire. So it goes out.
Meanwhile, the helicopter had moved off behind us.
Speaker 5 So there's a second of like, what just happened? What, what went down?
Speaker 5 And I remember
Speaker 5 immediately, that's when you heard man down.
Speaker 5 And there was a man down call.
Speaker 5
And I'm the only medic. And And I'm not, I don't know where the man down is.
I don't know where it is. So
Speaker 5 I'm trying to get comms, but the rotor's still behind us. So you can't hear uncomms still.
Speaker 5 And so what I do
Speaker 5 is
Speaker 5 I immediately start going down this line. And I made it probably down
Speaker 5
to Heath and the other guys. And I'm like, is there a man down? They're like, there's nobody injured down here.
There's nobody. So I was like, it's got to be the other side.
So I came back
Speaker 5 and I was like, all right, I'm going to go check the Hilo. So I
Speaker 5 made a diagonal and I went back and I came through with the Iron Cross to give a bona fides. And there's dudes in a half moon out and it was the air crew.
Speaker 5
And I came out and I said, do you have the downed man? And, you know, Halleck is still spinning. You're screaming.
No, we don't know where he is. We don't know where he is.
And so I'm like, all right.
Speaker 5 So then I turned and I went back up.
Speaker 5 And this time I got back up to Heath, but then I heard, I could hear now something, and these guys were calling out. So I walked forward off to here,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 Larry had been shot, Tommy had been shot,
Speaker 5 Monty had been shot, and Darren hadn't, was fine.
Speaker 5 Monty had taken around in his Magwell
Speaker 5
right here. So he's holding his gun.
It hit his magwell.
Speaker 5
And had his magwell not been there, his plate stopped. It would have gone right through his stomach into his spine.
Probably would have bled out right there.
Speaker 5 Tommy took around
Speaker 5 in his upper quad, his upper leg through
Speaker 5 and through,
Speaker 5 femur fracture,
Speaker 5 femoral artery. tear
Speaker 5 was in a lot of pain
Speaker 5 and Larry had taken around right through the front part of his shin and blown out the back of his calf
Speaker 5 and so I'm like meanwhile I was like we need more guys we need more guys so more guys got up we I got Larry put him on my shoulder and I hopped him over got him on the helo because the helo was then the plan was the helos on station would then fly us right on the other side of the compound kind of up the hill and we would have actual medics on a medevac birds on station, right?
Speaker 5 With, and I remember that I thought there was going to be a dock on, like a trauma dock on, and a medic and an army medic.
Speaker 5 And so I got Larry to the thing, came back out, and it had taken,
Speaker 5 I think there was like six dudes trying to carry. Tommy, John Beltrand, because he's a big dude, right?
Speaker 5 And just manhand him, all kit and all so we got on the helo and i and i was i looked around i was like all right i got to get these guys to the helo because we got to get them out of here because
Speaker 5 tommy was was not good like he was he was already struggling
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 i was like you guys good can i go and they're like yep go for it we're good so i jumped on the helo all my shit
Speaker 5
got on and then just the helo lift off and i'm trying to triage the guys. Like, and there was a sniper weapon that a guy had hot on there.
There was comm shit hanging down. And so it was like a chaos.
Speaker 5
And I'm trying. And I got Larry had gotten a tourniquet on himself.
And so I just went over, checked tourniquet, checked bleeding, check his breathing. Like, I'm good.
Speaker 5
Then I went over and Tommy had gotten a tourniquet on, but it wasn't good. It wasn't high enough.
So I put another one on,
Speaker 5 got it deep as high as I could, strapped that down.
Speaker 5 And I'm like, how you doing? He's like, I'm in a lot of pain.
Speaker 5
It's not good. And I was like, are you dealing with it? And he's like, it's not good.
So I was like, all right, how much blood has he lost? He's definitely got a femur hit, right, a femoral bleed.
Speaker 5 So before I knew it, we sat down. Like we were like up and then down.
Speaker 5 And I look out and about
Speaker 5 35 meters, 40 meters away was the 47 spinning. And I'm waiting for a team of guys to come over with stretchers and we'd get the guys on and
Speaker 5 we'd, we'd all, we'd ferry them over. And so
Speaker 5 one dude runs out and has got a stretcher and I'm like, oh shit.
Speaker 5
So and then another, it was that an air crew guy and then I didn't know it was a medic, but it was a medic. They came over.
They put Tommy on the stretcher. I got Larry and we hopped over.
Speaker 5 Like I carry him over.
Speaker 5 We got him in the back and I'm looking around waiting for this team to to come out
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 there was nobody it was just us and so i'm like oh and so now i'm i'm tired i'm exhausted i'm i'm i'm feeling overwhelmed for sure
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 i
Speaker 5 was like all right what do i do next i was like triage go a you know go through it t compact you know t triple c tactical combat casualty care what do i do is is bleeding secure is their airway secure right or is there circulation?
Speaker 5 You know, are they good? And,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 I was like barking orders, but was not making a lot of sense. Finally, the
Speaker 5
crew chief grabs me and shakes me. And he's like, dude, I'm like, and meanwhile, rotor's going, you can't hear anything.
He's like, dude, are you all right? And I'm like, what do you mean?
Speaker 5 He goes, that's a medic. He's on your team.
Speaker 5 Use him.
Speaker 5 And then I was like, okay.
Speaker 5
So then I went over to him. I told him, this is what we got.
This is what I've seen.
Speaker 5
I haven't done great body sweeps. I haven't, I'm not sure if there's other wounds that they don't know.
I haven't gone under their kit yet. He's like, okay.
Speaker 5 So he starts and I go,
Speaker 5
where, and I go up to the front of the thing of the, and I'm looking for, I thought there'd be like four big med bags, like trauma bags. There was nothing.
I come back and I go, where are the bags?
Speaker 5 He goes, this is it. And where's yours? And I go, it's right here.
Speaker 5
He goes, he goes, you do him, right, Larry, and I'll do him. And I was like, okay.
So I went out and I
Speaker 5 checked his tourniquet, made sure he was good, made sure he was with it. He was doing good.
Speaker 5 And so I wanted to elevate and isolate so his, his, his tibby and phibia, which was shattered, didn't just start cutting into that, his,
Speaker 6 artery. Yeah, they got shot right here.
Speaker 5
Right here, yeah, Larry. And that his like peptideal artery didn't get nicked or whatever.
Like I had to, so I got a water box.
Speaker 5
I bandaged the back of his calf, put it on that, elevated it, and made him comfortable. And I said, Are you good? And he's like, Yeah.
So then I did full sweeps. He's like, I'm not hit anywhere else.
Speaker 5
I'm good. Everything.
And I'm like, okay.
Speaker 5
So then by that time, I had gone over. And this dude already, he was prepping a line.
He'd done the sweeps. He's like, he doesn't have any more shots.
He's lost a lot of blood. His pupils aren't good.
Speaker 5 He's probably going into hypovolemic shock.
Speaker 5 And at that moment, I realized we're 45 minutes away from Kandahar.
Speaker 5 And I was like, holy fuck, Tommy's going to die. John's going to die.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that was the hardest minute right there. I was like, oh my God, what am I doing?
Speaker 5 Is this, are we going to, and the guy's like, hey, dude, just do what I tell you to do. I was like, okay.
Speaker 5
And so helped him get the IV, got the IV, just amazing medic, unbelievable dude. Like he was just on the point.
The whole thing was amazing.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 so then I got
Speaker 5 John.
Speaker 5
situated, comfortable. I was like, you good? And he's like, yeah, I'm in a lot of pain.
But you could tell he was, his leg at that point was probably this big.
Speaker 5 I mean, he was, he was definitely in hypovolemic shock.
Speaker 5 It's hard to see in the lights on the thing, but he was, it just did not look good.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
so the guy was like, he's like, give me something for pain, please. Give me.
And I was like, hey, man, what do you want to do? He's in a lot of pain, really hurting.
Speaker 5 He's like, I'm nervous because he's in hypolemic shock. If I give him a lollipop, you know, morphine or fentanyl lollipop, it could put him into respiratory distress.
Speaker 5
And I'm not sure I want to do that. And so we took off and we started going.
And I'm just kind of lying with John
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5
just trying to be like, you're good. You're going to make it.
We've got you. This guy's got you.
We got an IV. You're good.
We're going to get you back. We're almost there.
Speaker 5
And you could just see him. He was going in and out.
And I'm like, here it comes. Like, this is the moment where this guy's, my friend, is going to die in my arms.
Speaker 5 And thinking, you know, I didn't think back to,
Speaker 5 you know, what Bud Miller had said, but now I'm in this moment.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
he, we gave, we ended up giving him the lollipop. That really helped him.
It slowed his heart rate down, but it didn't, it slowed the. blood pumping down.
Speaker 5
And so it was like, then we started packing his wound. He was packing.
And like, he's, do this medic again. I can't.
Speaker 5 John Beltran would have died that day if it not have been for this guy, for sure. And it was just, it was the,
Speaker 5 maybe he was the angel that needed to be there for me or whatever it was, but that, that dude was amazing.
Speaker 5 So we got back and by the time we got back to, we landed on.
Speaker 5
in Canahar and there was a full medical team waiting. They came running out.
They grabbed them both. I mean, they were amazing.
I mean, it was a whole thing and immediately got them in,
Speaker 5 got them into, you know, there's a surgeon there.
Speaker 5 And it was unbelievable. And it was like, okay.
Speaker 5
Meanwhile, I have no idea what's going back on the target, what's happening, no, nothing. All I know is we've got it back.
They're not going to die unless you know they die in surgery.
Speaker 5 And certainly it was a possibility for John.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 he,
Speaker 5
it was, they were, everybody was amazing. Like everything just, it was operating.
It was like, oh, wow, this is really cool.
Speaker 5 And immediately I went into a debrief and some sat, I forget what chief I sat down with, but immediately tell me the story, top, bottom one. So I gave him the debrief.
Speaker 5 And they're like, all right, dude, you're done. Go back to.
Speaker 5
the hooch and just chill. We'll come get you in a minute if we need you.
And so I
Speaker 5
didn't want to leave, but they're like, get out, go, get out of here. We got it.
These guys just need their health, their care. And I was like, okay.
Speaker 5 So I got my shit and I went back. And
Speaker 5 I remember I got a cigarette and I was sitting just outside, just trying to process what had just happened.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I was just like, thank God they're not dead. I just thank God that they didn't die.
And
Speaker 5 just smoking a cigarette. Well,
Speaker 5 sun was coming up, and immediately
Speaker 5 Humvees came in. It was
Speaker 5 guys from the raid, the other group.
Speaker 5 And Darren came out, and I was sitting there and gave him a cigarette. And we're having a cigarette, and he goes, Hey, did you hear what happened?
Speaker 5 And I said, no.
Speaker 5 What happened?
Speaker 5 And he said, the doc dug 5.56
Speaker 5 out of John's leg and Larry's leg.
Speaker 5 I'm like, what?
Speaker 5 He's like, yeah, he dug 556 frag out of his leg.
Speaker 5 And in that moment,
Speaker 5 my life changed
Speaker 5 for a long, long time
Speaker 5 because
Speaker 5 immediately I had the sensation that I was the guy who had shot them.
Speaker 5 Shit.
Speaker 5 How did you know?
Speaker 5 I just felt it.
Speaker 5 I just felt it. Like when I had spun around to contact,
Speaker 5 maybe I spun too much.
Speaker 5 And I, and because what had ended up happening was,
Speaker 5 and this, I got this from Darren because Darren had taken shots at a squirter.
Speaker 5 And I'm like, wait a minute, what do you mean you shot? It's like, yeah, he's like, I took some shots at a guy that was running away, the other guy. And I'm like, well,
Speaker 5 and and so as we talked it out
Speaker 5 it immediately kind of flushed out in my mind where as we were walking through
Speaker 5 when I stopped with with Shelly on the guy
Speaker 5 they kept advancing
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 What I think happened is they they began advancing a little on an angle.
Speaker 5 And so Darren got out to here,
Speaker 5 saw a guy running away here, maybe the other guy that they had pinned down, because the helicopter had moved off sight.
Speaker 5 And Darren took a couple shots at this guy. And I think that's what I saw.
Speaker 5 And so when I dropped into the prone, instead of being straight eye line, I think I was on an angle. And my round hit Larry's leg,
Speaker 5 hit Larry's shin, hit Tommy's leg, and hit Monty
Speaker 5 in the Magwell. Holy shit.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 Now,
Speaker 5 none of that
Speaker 5 was said. Nobody came to me over the next few weeks.
Speaker 5
Nothing happened. There was an investigation that took place, but nobody like pulled me off the set and said, hey, Rutt, man, we think this is what happened.
Nothing.
Speaker 5 We kind of had to stand down for a few days. I think we did one thing after that, but we ended up
Speaker 5 leaving Cantahore on September 10th of 2002.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I remember both feeling relieved that we were leaving, but also
Speaker 5 an incredible weight that
Speaker 5 eventually that was all going to come out.
Speaker 5 In some way, I didn't know how or why or anything,
Speaker 5 and that I was going to have to face what that meant for me and my reputation,
Speaker 5 but even more so that, you know, the idea that maybe I had shot my own guys
Speaker 5 and what I was going to have to live with with that.
Speaker 5 So
Speaker 5 when we landed in Bahrain,
Speaker 5 those few weeks was
Speaker 5 really difficult.
Speaker 5 I was completely isolated. I truly tried to
Speaker 5 distract myself, obviously, with
Speaker 5 lotaboos,
Speaker 5 you know, almost got in some trouble with Tage
Speaker 5 and just tried to run from it. And meanwhile, people are like, hey, man, what happened out there? You know, did you save those guys' lives? Tell me the story and all that.
Speaker 5 And I was like, nothing happened. And didn't want to say it, didn't want to talk about it.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 then redeployed home. And I'll never forget, redeploying home, just shame, just a level of shame
Speaker 5 that was just like a cloud that just followed me everywhere I was going. And we got in the middle of the night, North Island, you know, team one, come out the door.
Speaker 5 It's, you know, one, two in the morning, one, 12, 30, 1, 2 in the morning. You know, there's dudes with their wives and their kids and
Speaker 5 everybody takes off and there's nobody there for me.
Speaker 5
I didn't have any place to stay. I didn't have anywhere to go.
And then a buddy might have been like, hey, dude, I'm going to go take off with my friends. You can go stay at my pad if you want.
Speaker 5 And it was Andy.
Speaker 5 And so I went down into IB.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 he was, you know, I think it was like 234 crawls, crawl steps away from
Speaker 5 the shithole bar down in IB. And so got down there, went in that bar and drank myself into oblivion.
Speaker 5 And then
Speaker 5 a day or two later, got on a plane and was in South Florida for leave, post-deployment leave. Shit, Dave.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 Did it ever come out officially?
Speaker 5 They did another investigation when I had gotten back. And
Speaker 5 I remember
Speaker 5
because they had wanted me to. do the brief in medical.
Like we had another, I got back in November and class started and that might have been your class or it was a class right after that. And
Speaker 5 I remember telling the story
Speaker 5 almost like I was like, it was almost like a confession of my ineptitude. It was a confession of my
Speaker 5 unworthiness, you know,
Speaker 5 and that somehow I was in this, it was like like
Speaker 5 my penance almost.
Speaker 5
There was no pride in it. There was no excitement in it.
There was no, I wasn't,
Speaker 5 I wasn't, I felt ashamed completely. And then I think it was either before or after Christmas,
Speaker 5 I had heard from Mike Lou that there was an investigation that had come down and it had been determined it was inconclusive.
Speaker 5 How they were shot or who shot them.
Speaker 5 They just couldn't determine that specifically.
Speaker 5 And some of, you know, I would imagine that some people might go, well,
Speaker 5
you know, you don't know. Like, there was no definitive, like, you don't know if you did it or you didn't.
And
Speaker 5 there's just, it's just,
Speaker 5 I always just believed I did.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that sent me into a spiral that's almost destroyed me again.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 How are those guys now?
Speaker 5 Larry's wife, I want to say
Speaker 5 200
Speaker 5
six or seven around that time. It was a lot of blur.
Those next three years, four years were pretty blurry.
Speaker 5 Um,
Speaker 5 I used to call him in the middle of the night and begging for his forgiveness and crying. And
Speaker 5 you know, whether I was hammered on alcohol or cocaine or whatever it was,
Speaker 5
just begging him to forgive me. And finally, she was like, you know, rut, you can't call anymore.
Don't call again. So I haven't spoken to him since then.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 John Beltran overdosed
Speaker 5 last fall
Speaker 5 and is dead.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 he battled a lot of demons after that injury. He was never able to really get back to full duty.
Speaker 5 He
Speaker 5 got hooked on pain meds and became a pretty substantial addict on and off for
Speaker 5 20 years.
Speaker 5 Was married, had kids and lost that, marriage, everything.
Speaker 5 And, you know, what's crazy is he would call me for years every August 18th, 19th.
Speaker 5 And he'd be like, hey, Rudd, man, how you doing?
Speaker 5 Are you good? And
Speaker 5 for years, I would not pick up because I was ashamed. And then,
Speaker 5 you know, finally I'd pick up. And I remember one year, I forget what it year was,
Speaker 5 but I just started weeping. He's like, why are you crying? I was like, man, I ruined your life.
Speaker 5 You know, I took your dream of being a team guy away from you because I fucked up.
Speaker 5 And I'll never forget. He's like, man, you you saved my life.
Speaker 5 He goes, I'd be dead if you didn't act.
Speaker 5
He goes, war's hell, man. It's confusing.
It's crazy. But if you hadn't have done that, I'd be dead.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I was never able to rationalize that as an acceptable component of
Speaker 5 my life, my existence, until I started, until I met Johnna.
Speaker 5 But last fall, when I got a call from one of my other closest friends, Johnny Sotello, who was very close with John, and Scotty Wertz, and,
Speaker 5 you know, he's middle of the night, typical call, he's like, hey, man, Johnny's dead. He just overdosed.
Speaker 5 And that was devastating because, you know, I would have been,
Speaker 5 I just wish I could have allowed his forgiveness to seep in, and then I, for some way, shape, or form, could have helped him,
Speaker 5 could have helped him rebuild his life or something. And so
Speaker 5 that's going to be with me.
Speaker 6 Damn, Dave.
Speaker 6 You know, I know that was a big
Speaker 6 I know you've battled that for a long time.
Speaker 6 How are you doing now?
Speaker 5 I mean, it's definitely cathartic to be able to speak speak it openly. I think there's probably
Speaker 5 six or seven people,
Speaker 5 you know, friends of mine from the community and when I was at Blackwater, the agency, and,
Speaker 5 you know, they've been amazing supporters and always say the same. You don't know if you shot them.
Speaker 5 You know, you still were in there with them. You still helped them.
Speaker 5
You know, and they've always been even you. You've always been just, I mean, I remember the first one I told you and you were just like, man, you can't let that pull you down.
And,
Speaker 5 you know, you made a gesture to me not long after that that was,
Speaker 5 you sent me something and, you know, I have it buried in my closet. And
Speaker 5 every now and then, you know, it'll be stumbling through and I'll see it and I'll just remember the support that I've been given and people who care and
Speaker 5 know what how devastating that's been for me. And
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 the thing
Speaker 5 that you always want from when I was a little kid was just
Speaker 5 not to let your teammates down.
Speaker 5 So I think,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 I'll get an opportunity,
Speaker 5 you know, to
Speaker 5 hug him and to say, I'm sorry again, and I'm sure him being him be like, Right,
Speaker 5 it's good, man. You're all right.
Speaker 5 You know, and if Larry's out there,
Speaker 5 I'm sure, because he had said the same thing a few times too. It's like, man, it's okay.
Speaker 5 Don't worry about it.
Speaker 5 You know, there's a strange
Speaker 5 thing in our world.
Speaker 5 You know, your whole
Speaker 5 reputation is built on what's what's going to happen under fire
Speaker 5 you know everything and
Speaker 5 you know that
Speaker 5 few hours
Speaker 5 contorted my entire perception of of what I could do and what I was worth
Speaker 5 for the next
Speaker 5 decade plus
Speaker 5 and warped my interpretation of who I am and
Speaker 5 whether I could do it or, you know,
Speaker 5 I shut every
Speaker 5 dream down within the community rapidly after that.
Speaker 5 You know, I'd wanted to potentially screen, you know, but there was no way I could.
Speaker 5 I was like, I'm going to
Speaker 5 put my name in the hat and
Speaker 5
someone's going to hear it and they'll be like, you know, fuck that guy. He's not worth it here.
He can't handle himself out there. And,
Speaker 5 you know, and then it was like, all right, well, how do I redeem myself? And, all right, well, maybe I'll just get back in another platoon and
Speaker 5 maybe go to Iraq or whatever. And, and
Speaker 5 then I was like, man, how do I live with it every day? And every, you know, I finally, and it was crazy because the detailer, when I got back,
Speaker 5
I had in court. I'd asked, hey, that was my second deployment.
You know, it was a combat deployment. Can I put my name into screen?
Speaker 5
There was a screening in November and, you know, my bosses had hacked off. The master chief at Team One had agreed he would put me in.
But, you know, then I'm like, man,
Speaker 5 there's no way
Speaker 5 somebody knows. Somebody's going to say, hell no, we don't want him over here.
Speaker 5 And so, you know, then it was like, all right, hey, how do I get in my other platoon? And the details are like, you're not going anywhere. You just took a little combat vacation for
Speaker 5 February to to October from SQT
Speaker 5 you're going back to SQT you're giving me that time back
Speaker 5 then you're only an 18 delta short course corpsman then I'm going to send you to the long course because we need long course IDC medics in the teams
Speaker 5 and then once you're for back from Fort Bragg, then I'll let you go to a regular, you're going to go back to a regular platoon and you're going to do another regular platoon.
Speaker 5 And then maybe you can screen after that.
Speaker 5 And so, I, it was
Speaker 5 even if,
Speaker 5 even if I, any of that had seemed like
Speaker 5 a pathway to salvation for, I just never believed I could ever recuperate my reputation in the teams. There would always be somebody somewhere who knew that I had shot my own guys,
Speaker 5 so I got out
Speaker 6 Looking back,
Speaker 6 what do you think you could have done differently to hide
Speaker 5 PID?
Speaker 5 If there's anything I can say to anybody who carries a gun for a living,
Speaker 5 positively identify what you're going to shoot at.
Speaker 5 If you don't...
Speaker 5 And it's crazy.
Speaker 5 I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 5
I I mean, I've gone through this scenario thousands of times in my mind. I've evaluated my training.
Did I execute the training with which I was trained?
Speaker 5 You know, I think about all those hundreds of hyads at night at Nyland,
Speaker 5 you know, in the night, contact front, you know, drop, open fire, peel left, peel right. Like,
Speaker 5 I think I did what I was taught, but I also know I wasn't sure.
Speaker 5 Like, I didn't have a dude in my sight with a gun I reacted to muzzle flash
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 you know I don't
Speaker 5 so
Speaker 5 it's it's that
Speaker 5 I think you know that's the key and that's the difference between I think
Speaker 5
I say all this and I explain all this as a sensation. Like this was, the lesson was my own humility, maybe.
The lesson was my
Speaker 5
being more meticulous, being more methodical, being more focused, being more whatever it is. But that's not the lesson.
The lesson for me is
Speaker 5 this was
Speaker 5 a deployment.
Speaker 5 Remember when you asked me, why'd you go and did you want to kill people?
Speaker 5 And it was more about that confrontation of death and how i would react and what i would do
Speaker 5 and so that recon where i prayed and i felt the presence of god for the first time in my life immediately after that god started testing my resolve was i going to maintain my faith there was even an occurrence where we had gone out and done this long-range recon
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 mind you, when we were living in Canahar, we were in these GP tents, horrible, 120 degrees out, Afghan dust, everything. And I would sit in my bunk here and across from me would be Monty and JC, John.
Speaker 5 And every day that we'd be in there, they would sit and have Bible study together.
Speaker 5 And every day I would watch them and think to myself, what are they doing?
Speaker 5 How do they do this?
Speaker 5 How do they connect to God or to Jesus or whatever that means in this moment? Like, why? Why are they doing that? And I didn't understand it.
Speaker 5 I didn't understand why it was so moving to me to watch them. And they would share Psalms and they would, or,
Speaker 5 you know, all types of verses from gospel to the Old Testament.
Speaker 5 And they would talk and they'd have a Bible study together. And I would sit there and just perplexed and like, why? What is it doing for you?
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 like, after that recon, I was like,
Speaker 5 pray.
Speaker 5
And I felt something. And then a couple of weeks later, we were doing this op and we were out in the DPVs.
Nothing happened. We got picked up.
We came back. We were in the backs of the helicopters.
Speaker 5
We hit the flight line. We came down and we set up on a flight line.
Well,
Speaker 5 before
Speaker 5 one,
Speaker 5 a guy had,
Speaker 5 you know, gotten on
Speaker 5 this, the helo had coming off he had forgotten to clear his mark 19 you know the belft grenade launcher on the on the front passenger of the dpv and so we got on like there and i'm sitting there and he had gotten sick
Speaker 5 on
Speaker 5 the the vehicle from the fumes in the back and puked all over and so i got my video camera typical douchebag and i'm like ha ha ha new guy's puking and he can't hold his whatever and ha ha ha and just get down in vehicle and our senior is like hey man let's go they'll they'll be right behind him so we pulled out we left and we came around this fuel truck on a flight line go around that and we're going to get back and he's like hey man where are they let's go back and i was like all right so we back up come around go back around the fuel truck and the fuel truck front cab is smoking
Speaker 5 and i'm like that's weird so we come out and come up and larry's just sitting just shaking his head like this and
Speaker 5 jc's got down like this and and
Speaker 5 i'm like what's going on? And
Speaker 5 he had accidentally, when he cleared it, sent one flying, sent an egg. And right when we had come around the back, it had hit the cab, gone through the front of the cab.
Speaker 5 And because of the metal plate on the driver's seat, it hit that. It detonated in the cab.
Speaker 5 Had it been a foot up, it would have gone through the seat, through the back, hit the fuel tank, exploded the fuel tank. We would have been covered in fuel.
Speaker 5 And I'm like, oh my God,
Speaker 5 why am I not dead?
Speaker 5 And then a few weeks later, that experience happened.
Speaker 5 Why aren't they dead?
Speaker 5 And so now I'm in this battle of trying to make sense of what I'm supposed to take away from this deployment. Not, oh, you're dialed in.
Speaker 5
You're a team guy. You're a real frogman now.
You're strong and you're capable and
Speaker 5 you've got conviction and you can face things. It's more of
Speaker 5 God's trying to tell me something about my life and what he wants me to do.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I wasn't, I didn't know how to evaluate that. I didn't know where to begin.
And over that Christmas break, I'd met somebody
Speaker 5 and was like all right let's get married that'll that'll take me away from this it'll give me and it was an excuse it was a passionate romance that happened quickly it seemed like it was a fit and so fast forward i asked her to marry me in short amount of time
Speaker 5 And I was like, this is it. I'm getting out in June when my second enlistment's up and I'm moving back to Florida.
Speaker 5 I'm going to get married and I'm going to have a normal life, and I'm going to figure out whatever I'm supposed to figure out.
Speaker 5 And that began
Speaker 5 a
Speaker 5 very arduous, difficult
Speaker 5 couple years, three years.
Speaker 5 And kind of the
Speaker 5 there's a couple major points. One was Passion of the Christ came out in February of
Speaker 5 04.
Speaker 5 I remember going to it.
Speaker 5 Meanwhile, I've never read the Bible. I've never studied the Bible, nothing.
Speaker 5 And I go to this movie and from the first word that Jim Coviziel spoke, and
Speaker 5 your interview with him is one of my favorite of all time.
Speaker 5 I was weeping uncontrollably, like broken down. And then the whole, from
Speaker 5 the moment he's, they bring him in and they start beating him all the way through the crucifixion, I was uncontrollable. And it didn't stop.
Speaker 5
I continued in this uncontrollable weeping for hours and hours afterwards. And then finally I kind of calmed down.
There was a knock on the door
Speaker 5 and in came this box.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I was like, she's like, who's that from? I was like, I don't know. And it said, you know, JC up top.
And I opened it up and it was from John. And it was a gift.
Speaker 5 It was our platoon plaque and it was a bottle of Patrone because he had felt so much shame and horrible that
Speaker 5 it happened, that I possibly could have died.
Speaker 5
And he had come up to me. He's like, man, I'm so sorry.
I was like, hey, dude, don't worry about it. Just, you know, he's like, what can I do?
Speaker 5 And I was like, in the future, give me a bottle of tequila. We're even, it happens.
Speaker 5
I know you didn't want to. I know you didn't need to.
I know you didn't have to do that. And so like, here I'm consoling this guy who I'm witness to praying every day.
Speaker 5 The day I see passion, the clutch sends me this thing. Then I start thinking about why.
Speaker 6 Initials, JC. That's right.
Speaker 5 And that was the fight now I'm in.
Speaker 5 I felt like God was trying to communicate with me, but I was so ashamed of who I was and what I was that I couldn't do it.
Speaker 5 And that that was where things were ugly because she quickly realized this was not a healthy relationship.
Speaker 5
She decided that we're done. And kind of right at that time is when I got an opportunity.
I went to work for Blackwater in the fall of 04.
Speaker 5 Let's stop. Yeah.
Speaker 6 Let's go back.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 For starters, I just want to say
Speaker 6 there's been a lot of vulnerability in that chair. And a lot of
Speaker 6 humiliating
Speaker 6 confessions.
Speaker 6 I think what you just
Speaker 6 did
Speaker 6 is the hardest thing I've seen anybody
Speaker 6 articulate.
Speaker 5 Thank you.
Speaker 6 Proud of you.
Speaker 5 Thank you.
Speaker 6 Love you.
Speaker 5 Love you too.
Speaker 6 What would you have done different
Speaker 6 after the incident when it comes to your relationship with these guys?
Speaker 5 I should have gotten more involved in wanting to know how the investigation took place,
Speaker 5 what other people thought, what they saw.
Speaker 5 Like, it was almost like nobody would speak about it, especially to me. I think other guys probably talked about it.
Speaker 5 But
Speaker 5 I almost just got isolated.
Speaker 5 And so that would have been much better for me and to go and to engage in it immediately. I think I shouldn't have gone home when I got home.
Speaker 5 I should have, when I got to Bahrain, I should have sought out
Speaker 5 a pastor or chaplain or my chief or senior chief or someone
Speaker 5 and said, I'm struggling. I need some help.
Speaker 5 But that just wasn't a thing then.
Speaker 5 There was nothing.
Speaker 5 And when we got home, it's like,
Speaker 5 see, in 30 days, and there was no support. And so I came to Florida and I'll never forget, man, I, my best friend's younger brother had a bachelor party and we went down to Key West for this thing.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I just was inebriated for days on end and just
Speaker 5
couldn't communicate, couldn't talk, was detached, distant. So I wish I had done more to re-engage in a conversation.
Again, I just keep going back to that reality. Like
Speaker 5
you're you're not going to process this at an individual level. It's too immense.
And that's the component within the human condition.
Speaker 5 That's this intensity of pain. And when you have overwhelming pain, it elicits
Speaker 5 the deepest fears you have about your own insecurities, your own ineptitude, your own, you know, these fears, they overwhelm you. They begin to control you.
Speaker 5 And the only way you can diminish those is to engage with people that can help you deconstruct those fears, pull them apart, take one piece, rationalize that one piece in a way that you can
Speaker 5 comprehend and handle.
Speaker 5 And I think that's a really intense thing, right? It's like, but
Speaker 5 I turned 30 in Afghanistan.
Speaker 5 And I certainly wasn't 30 emotionally in any way.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I think,
Speaker 5
you know, that's just the thing. You have to be able to go and engage.
You have to do this. And I wish I had done that more with every one of those guys.
Speaker 5 And I've pulled so away from all of those, I've lost touch pretty much with
Speaker 5 everybody that was a part of that platoon.
Speaker 5 the other platoons that was there, people that were affiliated, people that were,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 that were at sqt with me i kind of pulled away from them you know the only person i really tried to stay in touch with was bruce
Speaker 5 um
Speaker 5 you know he ended up contracting ran into him but i'd call him and try and talk to him and stay in touch with him try to start a little business with him and
Speaker 5 you know he ended up going through some challenges and ended up drinking himself to death.
Speaker 5 And so I think that was kind of the person that I had always hoped would give me the attaboy that would kind of
Speaker 5 replace that shame with some, some estimation of
Speaker 5
acceptance and maybe even a little forgiveness. You know, I think that's the thing we're all ultimately looking for.
We're looking for forgiveness, right?
Speaker 5 We're looking for someone that who loves us deeply to look at you and say, it's okay,
Speaker 5 things happen.
Speaker 5 We understand. And that's why my battle and my pursuit of Christ for the next 10 years was so substantial and so difficult because I didn't know how to ask Christ for forgiveness.
Speaker 5 I didn't know where to go for forgiveness.
Speaker 5 And it wasn't like there weren't people that were
Speaker 5 gracious and supportive, but
Speaker 5 it wasn't until really 06
Speaker 5 where I went to church for the first time, really ever on my own. And it was a guy, a mentor of mine named George Andrews, Reverend George Andrews, who
Speaker 5 was the first person that I was like, what does it mean to have faith?
Speaker 5 And that's kind of really where I started to heal.
Speaker 6 How do you feel now that you've shared that? Your deepest?
Speaker 5 I mean, it's
Speaker 5 nerve-wracking. It's scary.
Speaker 5
It's scary. I mean, I've got to walk out of this room.
You know, this episode will drop.
Speaker 5 And, you know,
Speaker 5 I give a hundred speeches a year.
Speaker 5
Last year I was in front of almost 4,500 people. I've got my own show now.
Again,
Speaker 5 I,
Speaker 5 you know, I'm.
Speaker 5 I'm public. You know, what's going to happen to my kids? Are their parents going to tell their friends? Are they going to be ashamed?
Speaker 5 You know, I know my wife is not because she knows the story and has been overwhelmingly the person who's benefited me most for processing that because she's had to process her own sense of shame at a high degree.
Speaker 5 And so,
Speaker 5
you know, but you don't know. You don't know how the world's going to react.
But what I do know is that
Speaker 5 I know that Christ loves me no matter what.
Speaker 5 I know
Speaker 5 John had forgiven me.
Speaker 5 I know Larry had said he'd forgiven me.
Speaker 5
And I know other friends of mine that, you know, are part of the community and the adjacent communities have said, man, it's okay. Like, you don't need to carry that burden for your whole life.
So,
Speaker 5 yeah.
Speaker 6 Well, you got a lot of respect for me for doing it.
Speaker 5 Thank you.
Speaker 6 I think you're going to feel a lot better.
Speaker 5 I think so. I mean,
Speaker 5 you know, we've talked about it.
Speaker 5 I mean, we've talked about it extensively and we talked about it in the lead up to this. And
Speaker 5 I don't think there'd be anybody else.
Speaker 5 I could do it with, you know, in this capacity. You know, it's hard because,
Speaker 5 you know, there's a measurement of success
Speaker 5 that
Speaker 5 I think the public has, or a measurement of interpretation of how they interpret success of our community. And that's, you know, these massive stories.
Speaker 5 I mean, you hear about these missions and these things that these guys get engagements and all this. And like, you know, there's, it's not like they're,
Speaker 5
um, they're not building themselves up, their bravado. I think sometimes people have a tendency to look for that and people will embellish certain stories.
And obviously, that's
Speaker 5 always a challenge in anybody that's public or whatever. But,
Speaker 5 you know.
Speaker 5
This has been that thing. It's like, hey, this is the reality of my combat experience.
I don't have any,
Speaker 5 you know, grand firefights. I don't have any,
Speaker 5
I don't have any like, oh, you saved the day. I don't, I don't, I don't have any of that.
So I have that, that, that incident has encapsulated the space and spectrum. Now, I chased,
Speaker 5 I chased
Speaker 5
redemption for years. That's why I went to Blackwater.
That's why I went to the agency. I thought some moment, some time I would have a moment where I could redeem myself.
Speaker 5 And, you know, there's been some things I've gotten, I was able to do that were
Speaker 5 positive and healthy and all that, but you know,
Speaker 5 it
Speaker 5
doesn't make that ever go away. So, what you have to do is you just have to address it.
You have to live with it. You have to recognize that it's a piece of your life.
It's not all of you.
Speaker 5 And I think, you know, that has taken me
Speaker 5 20 plus years to figure out.
Speaker 6 phases of life, man.
Speaker 5 Yeah, man.
Speaker 6 I think this is that moment.
Speaker 5 It certainly feels like it.
Speaker 5 Good.
Speaker 6 Let's take a break.
Speaker 6
All right, Dave. We're back from the break.
Hopefully, we can lighten it up here a little bit.
Speaker 5 Me too.
Speaker 6 But I do, I just want to, I just want to say again, man, I know that took a lot of courage to get that vulnerable and to talk about that. And,
Speaker 6 you know,
Speaker 5 however people judge you from here on out, I mean,
Speaker 6
you're a fucking great person. Thank you.
And that's all that really matters.
Speaker 5 Thank you. I appreciate that.
Speaker 6 You're welcome.
Speaker 6 So then you go to work at Blackwater.
Speaker 5 That was a hell of a story right there.
Speaker 5 My fiancé had basically said, no, we're not getting married. And then I was working for a domestic security company out of Grand Rapids, Michigan called DK Security.
Speaker 5 I was selling camera systems to strip malls.
Speaker 5 And I was, and the whole pretense, I went to work for this guy, and he was a great guy. John Kendall was his name, really amazing guy, Vietnam vet, U.S.
Speaker 5 Marshal, was partnered with an FBI guy, but John was really amazing guy. My, my uncle, Dave from Grand Rapids, had known him, gotten me the interview and gotten the job.
Speaker 5 really put a lot of confidence.
Speaker 5 But the whole thing was like they were going to let me start a division that I could start bidding on contracts overseas in Iraq and Afghanistan, which was where the money was, right?
Speaker 5 You know, and, and so I had recruited like six guys, two guys to come and help start it and launch it.
Speaker 5 And there was a couple and figured out, I never forget he was like, well, why don't you write up a business plan for me? And, and I'm like, well, what's a business plan?
Speaker 5 And he's like, you'll figure it out. Just so I go down to like Office Depot and get business plan pro writers plus,
Speaker 5 you know, and it's like this thing. And it's like, oh, you know, what's your EBITDA? And what's your, and I'm like, I have no idea.
Speaker 5 So I went page by page, step by step, insurance, you know, Lloyd's of London, figured this and wrote this 34 page, and like a month later, dropped it on his desk because I would go up there once a month.
Speaker 5 And he's like, what's this? And I go, this is my business plan for being starting contract work overseas because it's incredibly lucrative. And I think we could kill it.
Speaker 5 And he's like, okay, I'll get back to you. And
Speaker 5 in the fall, uh i was not doing good i was i was struggling still really really trying like when i first got out of the teams there was a stretch um
Speaker 5 in in august i got out in june end of june 03 but in august i had a 21 day stretch where i was vomiting and diarrhea and like it just was i couldn't i was just sick really sick
Speaker 5
and nobody could figure out what it was Nobody, and I just think it was the stress. It was maybe a parasite.
It was something, whatever. And I was a mess.
And
Speaker 5 the first person to really help me begin to heal
Speaker 5 was a woman named Maggie. And
Speaker 5
Maggie was a woman, she was a healer, a masseuse. She's amazing.
And I had met her when I got home from that deployment. I couldn't turn my neck.
My neck was so jacked up.
Speaker 5 And she had helped my mom, who was a tennis player, her scapula had frozen and she had released it and was a wonderful person, amazing.
Speaker 5
So she had put me on her table for like four hours and finally I could move my neck for the first time in months. So I got out.
I'm a mess. My mom's like, you're not okay.
Speaker 5
And I'm like, yeah, no, no shit. And she's like, well, you ought to see Maggie.
You ought to work with Maggie. And I was, I was like, I can't afford her.
She's incredibly expensive, right?
Speaker 5
And, but it was phenomenal. She goes, well, she's got a son.
Why don't you, you know, work
Speaker 5 her, her son wants to learn how to play football and lacrosse, you know, why don't you barter? So I called her up and I said, hey, would you be interested? And, and she's like, absolutely.
Speaker 5
So we trade. I started working with her son.
I think he was 12 years old and they're single mom, whole thing, rough upbringing, dad, not in a pitcher. And
Speaker 5
And she would heal me and I'd get on the table. We'd probably meet once every two months and I would be on that table for four hours.
And that started the process.
Speaker 5
My body and my nervous system, that was the beginning of me trying to figure out. But, you know, by the next year, I'm miserable in the job.
And,
Speaker 5 you know, this very kind, nice young woman that I was with, she was just like, I can't do this. And I was like, all right.
Speaker 5 And then it was something like that day or two later, my buddy Joe, Master Angelo, who I'd gone through training with, I was at Team One with, my first platoon with, you know, old Chochi. And
Speaker 5
he called and he's like, he's like, Rutt, I was like, what's up? He's like, hey, man, I need a guy. You, me, maritime interdiction program overseas.
I need to know right now. And I was like,
Speaker 6 I'm in. Typical team.
Speaker 5
Yeah, typical team. I go, I'm in.
I'm in. When are we leaving? Tomorrow.
Yeah. No, it was, he's like, you got to be at Blackwater on Tuesday.
I'm like, the shooting school?
Speaker 5 He's like, it's not a shooting school anymore. And, and,
Speaker 5 and then goes, and then on Friday, we're leaving for Azerbaijan. And I'm like,
Speaker 5
what's Azerbaijan? And he's like, it's a country north of Iran. Don't worry about it.
Meet you in, you know, and so I was like, hey, I'm taking off.
Speaker 5
You know, I go and I come, we go over to Azerbaijan and we started this project. And it's actually in the first part of Eric's book.
He talks about this project that we built.
Speaker 5 And it was essentially we took over the FID mission because SOF couldn't do it anymore because the Optempa was so huge in Afghanistan and Iraq at the time.
Speaker 6 So FID for the audience is basically U.S. forces training indigenous forces on tactics.
Speaker 5 Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 5
So we went over there, started, did a week, then in February, March, went over for 60 days. We redesigned their bases.
Like I geeked out on that stuff. I love, you know, designing things.
Speaker 5
So redesigned their pool. We did like a mobile shoot house, their ranges.
We brought them boats, motors, and we built a maritime interdiction program from scratch in Azerbaijan. And it was me, Joe.
Speaker 5
We had this kooky old. old team guy initially, but then we got this wonderful, amazing guy named Hugh Middleton, who was a former Damnik team one guy, brilliant guy.
And it was the three of us.
Speaker 5 And we built this program.
Speaker 5 And I'll, you know, I remember the summer like the final FTX was to put these guys in Zodiacs on one of their cutters board it right at dusk and then board it you know at night and that was it and like we accomplished the task and you know about the day before we were able to go into that FTX we had finished retrofitting their pool and this was like this old 1950 Spetsnot space from the from the communist days of Russia when it was a province and we do the pool, and we're like, All right, we're gonna have a hoo-yah day.
Speaker 5
And there was a hook and climb. And we're like, everybody, go get your wetsuits and meet us out here.
We're gonna do this. And like, an hour and a half later, we're like, hey, where is everybody?
Speaker 5
Let's go. And we've got this interpreter and whatever.
And they come out. And I'm like, all right, you guys ready? Here's the drill.
We do it.
Speaker 5
And then we're going to just jump in, swim, climb up, jump out like a relay. Joe's sitting up on top of the thing.
He's right here. I ready? Go.
They jump in the water. They couldn't swim.
Speaker 5 Oh, shit. So the day before, we're supposed to go board underway, and we'd already sent them out in the Caspian in the middle of the night doing basic, you know, maritime navigation trills.
Speaker 5 No one knew how to swim, right? Because they said they had all been to Turkish buds. And I was just like, oh my God, they don't know how to swim.
Speaker 5
I'm like, I'm like, Hugh, they're going to miss the ladder. They're going to get...
foreign fatigue. They're going to go on a drink and they're dead.
We're going to kill people.
Speaker 5 We're going to go to jail in Azerbaijan. And,
Speaker 5
you know, it had been a wild ride. Azerbaijan's a trippy place, man.
I mean, it was, it's really, really wild.
Speaker 5
And I had struggled there for the first couple because of the breakup and that had failed and everything else. But then I, I kind of snapped in and I got in shape.
And Joe, Joe was a,
Speaker 5
I think it was like a blue belt or purple belt at the time. And he's like, we're going to train.
And so we would leave the thing and go to the national training site.
Speaker 5
And he would just beat the piss out of me every Tuesday and Thursday. And I didn't know what I I was doing, but he would just pound on me.
And we had this great relation. We lived in the Hyatt.
Speaker 5 It was just bizarre. Like I called it the last outpost because that's where all the deals of the stands are done, right? Because one week you're in the Hyatt and it's all the Americans.
Speaker 5
Then the next week, it's all the Russians. Then the next week, it's all the Arabs.
And it's just like this cycle of peculiar place. It's like the cantina in Star Wars, right? And
Speaker 5
so we find out they can't swim. And so Hugh looks at us like, well, you guys are going to be the safety swimmers.
And we're like, wait, what?
Speaker 5 Like, you're going to jump overboard, save the guy, and then we'll get that.
Speaker 5
They did it flawlessly. They did it great.
So I remember Gary Jackson, who was the CEO at the time, was like, hey, great job. You guys will always have a job at Blackwater.
You're good.
Speaker 5 And then like two weeks later, I got a call and I was full time.
Speaker 5
It was awesome. I was making six figures full time.
We were getting ready to do another one, like a FID out in PACOM. And like, this, like, this was it.
Speaker 5
And we were going to be the FID guys and write curriculum and all this. And I was like, this is awesome.
And I got my life back. And,
Speaker 5
and I got a call two weeks later from the head of training, Big Jim. And he's like, hey, man, we just had to fire you.
That contract's out. But if you want to go to Afghanistan, we got a gig for you.
Speaker 5 So that September, I found myself in Afghanistan.
Speaker 5
And I was working on the Afghan counter-drug commandos. No shit.
Yeah.
Speaker 6 I didn't know any of this stuff. Yep.
Speaker 6 How was that?
Speaker 5 Eye-opening, enlightening. That was the first time I started to really suspect
Speaker 5 there was
Speaker 5
alternative motives going on in Afghanistan. On our part? Yeah.
What kind?
Speaker 5 We were training the most
Speaker 5 the most
Speaker 5 incapable group of people to try and be commandos to take down the drug dealers. Mind you, at this time, Afghanistan's GDP, about 90% of it came from the sale of raw opium.
Speaker 5 And they had three major points that they would distribute over the Uzbek border in the north through Herat and Iran and then down through Quetta into Pakistan, right?
Speaker 5
Mind you, Karzai's brother was the third biggest drug dealer in Afghanistan. And I found all this out from the DEA.
We were working the DEA fast teams.
Speaker 5
These guys were the old cocaine cowboy days down in Columbia back in the 80s and stuff. And they were, they were awesome.
I love those guys, man. It was so fun.
But
Speaker 5
we would train these guys, me and Joe, and a couple other dudes. And it was horrible.
And then, so I got the opportunity to go on a couple ops with them. And,
Speaker 5 you know, still struggling in my own place and like I'm trying to still find that redemption.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I remember we hit one target up
Speaker 5
north and it was just empty. There was no one there but kids, right? Afghan compound, full of kids, women, and a couple dudes.
We spread them up and I remember like, there's no one here.
Speaker 5
There's no opium here. There's no nut.
This is bizarre.
Speaker 5 But I do remember that the kids, it was the first time that the destitution, the morale,
Speaker 5 the
Speaker 5 abysmal nature of a future possibility for those kids hit me.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that was
Speaker 5 the birth of frog logic in that moment was
Speaker 5 like, oh my God, maybe there's something that I can effectuate greater change in life with than through the barrel of a gun
Speaker 5
in my own pursuit of redemption. Maybe I can redeem myself by helping kids.
And then I did another one, which was another fiasco. And I began to realize that
Speaker 5 we're not doing anything with drugs. We're not, this is just a sham.
Speaker 5 It's just spending of money to do all, to portray that, you know, the American military or contractors, whatever, trying to, we're making an impact on the drug distribution. And
Speaker 5 I remember we did this
Speaker 5 trip. Our country league
Speaker 5
TL needed me and Joe to provide security. We got on this Hilo, went all the way up to Mazar Shari and got dropped off and he went off with these other kind of guys and came back.
We flew back and
Speaker 5 I remember it was like, hey, man, what was that all about? And he said, well, we just met with the warlord who's like, or the drug dealer up here. And I was like, well,
Speaker 5 did you, where is he? Why aren't we interrogating him? Why didn't we bring back? He's like, well,
Speaker 5
they got a deal going or something. Like he feeds us terrorists or whatever.
And you're like, wait, what? and then I found out this guy was pushing
Speaker 5 1600 pounds of opium across the Uzbek bridge every week or something every week it was insane it was insane it was nuts like how much opium was leaving the country then so I went over to the DEA guys I'm like well what's what's this look like street value what's in and it was Afghanistan was still supplying
Speaker 5
the world with opium for heroin they were still the number one distributor. And meanwhile, you're like, Talban isn't selling and all this.
And I was like, wait, this is all a lie.
Speaker 5 And that's when it really kind of hit me.
Speaker 5 And what was other bizarre, others, I picked up a last-minute job going out. They had said, hey, man, you did really good redesigning the bases and stuff and the training facilities in Azerbaijan.
Speaker 5
Do you want to do that? The side contract. for the Afghan border police where you design the training, the base, the whole thing.
And then, you know, you lead this this building project.
Speaker 5 And I thought I'd get paid more, and I didn't. And so here I am doing three jobs, getting paid for one as a contractor, not full-time.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I just, again, kind of got to that point where I was like, what am I doing with my life right now?
Speaker 5 This is not where I want to be. And out of that,
Speaker 5 this concept to work with kids emerged. And because at that point, that trip was the first time I really started reading the Bible.
Speaker 5 And I remember I read the New Testament through that trip. And
Speaker 5 that's when you really just, if the word, you let the word hit you,
Speaker 5
it can change you. And it did.
And that's the inspiration for wanting to, you know, essentially put the gun down and start working with kids. And so initially I was going to
Speaker 5 try and go work with Doctors Without Borders or
Speaker 5 a Red Cross or some organization that can go into these war-torn areas and I can help kids and then kind of work with kids on the side or just do something to help kids that have nothing.
Speaker 5 And you've been there, you've seen these kids have nothing. Essentially, by the time they're 13,
Speaker 5
the girls are essentially just receptacles for procreation. Little boys are raped.
I mean, it's just a brutal, brutal culture.
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 not all of them but they're a a heavy degree of them and
Speaker 5 that was the thing i was like all right but then you start to realize ngos they can't stand working with soft guys right because you're like are you effing idiot are you are you of an idiot you can't go out there and do that that's dumb you know and and they're like what do you mean we're helping people and you're like no and in fact you know a team guy nick check died
Speaker 5 in an operation at,
Speaker 5 I think it was Red Squadron that did it, where they went to go save a doctor. And he was a point man.
Speaker 5 And when they were going to hit the target, a guy came out, saw him, shot Nick going through the door.
Speaker 5 And Ed Byers went in and kind of saved the doc and protected him and received the Medal of Honor for that. So
Speaker 5 I was like, all right, I don't want to do that. That's not going to work.
Speaker 5 So I came home that Christmas and was really kind of like, all right, how do I do this?
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I'd read a couple different things. Three big things jumped at me.
Teenage obesity was out of control.
Speaker 5 And I'd found an article about a West Texas county that, you know, 13-year-olds were some exorbitant high percentage of those kids were morbidly obese.
Speaker 5 I found an article about girls' teenage suicide was on the rise for the first time in 20 plus years or whatever.
Speaker 5 And then the other one I found from a couple psychologists who were studying the effects on young children from hyperconnectivity. And they had coined this idea called internet withdrawal syndrome.
Speaker 5 And it was essentially the de-socialization of children who were hyperconnected and just lived on their screens. And these guys were kind of trendsetting in terms of the study.
Speaker 5
And as we now know, the effects on it are pulverizing, in particular post-COVID. I was like, well, I don't need to go overseas.
I can just help kids in America. And let me try that.
Speaker 5 So I came up with the idea, the name Frog Logic. And it's, you know, me paying tribute to the frogmen of the Navy.
Speaker 5 And what I thought I would do is I would fixate first on self-confidence because that was the thing,
Speaker 5 the main thing that I had to rehabilitate coming out of school. And that's what I thought that Buds and the training had done.
Speaker 5 It was it rehabilitates your self-confidence through these really unique evolutions and the ideas. And
Speaker 5 so so I wrote this, you know, teeny little kids book called Forging Self-Confidence. And
Speaker 5 I started my first like frog logic motivational training program at the local YMCA.
Speaker 5 And there was eight missions because I had looked at everything I could pull out of or extrapolate that I had learned in Buds. And it was this, like these 26 things.
Speaker 5 And I condensed those down to eight core ideas or missions.
Speaker 5 And I figured out how to, dude, meanwhile, you know, I'm just back from Afghanistan and I'm telling my dad, hey, I'm going to start a kid's training company.
Speaker 5 He's like, you know, I'm telling my friends, hey, I'm going to do this. And people are looking at me like,
Speaker 5 what are you talking about right now? What, what are you, and I'm like, no, I'm doing it. And the first guy that really believed in me was Jan Lennon.
Speaker 5 And Jan, I had gone to high school with, and he was an attorney, and he moved back to Florida and we ran each other at a bar. And I'm like, how you doing? And he's like, good.
Speaker 5 And so I said, hey, man, why don't you go interview with my dad and all this? But he was, he's like this guitar savant. And I said, hey, man, would you come over? I've got this idea.
Speaker 5
I wrote these songs that go with the missions and we can do it. And that'll get the kids moving and all this.
And he's like, and he's like, that sounds cool.
Speaker 5
And so he comes over and I read the lyrics and he just plays the song. And it was like, oh my God.
And next thing I know, I'm at his daughter's daughter's second grade class.
Speaker 5 I'm wearing my jungle boots, my tiger stripes and my, you know, I had frog logic polo and I'm, kids are doing push-ups and he's in his suit and tie playing the guitar. And
Speaker 5 it was awesome.
Speaker 5 And it was awesome because it wasn't that.
Speaker 5 And it was like, okay, this could work.
Speaker 5 This could make me feel better. This could give me some redemption.
Speaker 5
I did one more gig in CONUS, training regular Naval personnel, how to board ships. And at that point, I was done.
Like right after that, I had it fallen out.
Speaker 5
Someone had accused me of something. And I was just like, this is ridiculous.
I'm not doing this.
Speaker 5 And left and went full on with frog logic and working with kids. And that summer, I worked with a foster care home for boys.
Speaker 5 I started talking to a couple schools. And then in the fall, a guy named Kieran Kennedy in Canada from Ottawa, because I had started putting some stuff on the internet.
Speaker 5 And he found me and was like, hey, I want you to come up and work with my school. And if you come up, I'll introduce you to all these other schools and you can do your thing.
Speaker 5
And so from 2006, seven and into eight, I spoke to thousands of kids in North America. Wow.
I introduced frog logic to everybody.
Speaker 6 You are a teacher and a mentor.
Speaker 6 I mean, we kind of skipped over this because I thought we were going to chat about it after the Afghan deployment. But
Speaker 6 I remember being an SQT.
Speaker 6
You had a hell of a reputation. It was not bad.
But
Speaker 6 you were a cool motherfucker in all of our eyes.
Speaker 6 And the FTXs that you put together with the Moulage kits and all the medical stuff that we did, trying to put IVs in somebody going down the beach in the back of a pickup truck.
Speaker 6 I mean, it was challenging, and I learned a lot, and I still remember it to this day. And I also remember
Speaker 6
you probably don't remember this. I was at my friend's house, Kyle Paulson, who lived down in IB.
Kyle died,
Speaker 6 but
Speaker 6 he was renting a house with a couple people, and you showed up for one reason or another.
Speaker 6 I don't even think you knew us. I don't know if it was an accident, but you pulled up on your Harley.
Speaker 6
Drunk as a skunk. Maybe on some other stuff.
I don't know. But
Speaker 6 I think you had just ridden up from TJ.
Speaker 5 And I was like, fuck, man.
Speaker 6 That dude is fucking cool.
Speaker 6 I was like, he's a badass instructor. He's got a great energy.
Speaker 6 Overly confident, do not want to fuck with that dude. And
Speaker 6 yeah, it just stuck with me.
Speaker 6
It stuck with me forever. But I mean.
I appreciate it. And even afterwards, man,
Speaker 6 after.
Speaker 6 I had gotten out of the agency and we'll get to this stuff. But I mean, you really helped me.
Speaker 6 You mentored me. I remember going up to your office in that building in bokeh when i moved there and mapping my business out and all the different ideas and it was
Speaker 5 like i said ben you were the only person that gave me the time of day back then nobody else had time for me you're there's just something in your eyes man all the way back in those days i remember going to that that party remember coming back from tj with pat we'd gone down there and that's who it was right pat bablet that's right another crazy motherfucker he made me look is he still alive i think pat's it i think i'm not sure the last i heard he had owned a bar in cambodia where you could pay a hundred dollars and and shoot a water buffalo with an rpg
Speaker 5 but pat and i we'd drive down into tj man we'd go down and into an sneeze and what were you guys doing down there how bad did it get uh be honest
Speaker 5 remember i was in a rough place oh i know yeah so now i know i didn't, nobody knew that at the time.
Speaker 6 Nobody thought you were.
Speaker 5 Because I, I, you, you,
Speaker 5 you learn how to put the facade on, right? So people don't see how much pain you're in.
Speaker 5 And, and, and the way you do that in the teams, you just, you know, you put a little, a little bit of, sprinkle a little crazy on yourself.
Speaker 5 And that can, people have a tendency like, I'm not going to ask him what's going on.
Speaker 5 You know, and meanwhile, I'm hanging out with, I mean, absolute madmen, like, I mean, Scotty Wertz, I mean, me, Scotty, Johnny Sotello, I mean, we would, I mean, Pat Bablick, I mean,
Speaker 5
it was like full tilt every time I'd go out with dudes. So, you know, I, it was, it was hard.
There was a lot of, a lot of, uh, trying to numb myself from what was going on.
Speaker 5 Um, but, you know, I remember that party coming back and I remember you just were, I, the thing for me was I always had the most respect for the youngest guys
Speaker 5 because of Nick Hawks and Pete Scobel.
Speaker 5 They were like, I mean, Nikki was 18 in buds and I'll never forget a story. We were 208 and
Speaker 5 Mike McGrath was our OIC and he came out. Remember he used to like, after the end of the day, you'd get in the pit and like, all right, who has any questions, you know, gripes or concerns? Get it out.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
someone, you know, you get the junior officers like, oh, we got to be more squared away. And we got to, you know, and it's like the hoo-yah.
And I remember one day, Nikki raises his hand.
Speaker 5 He kind of saunters out in the middle and he goes,
Speaker 5 any of you fucking pricks don't feel like putting out, then just quit now, would you?
Speaker 5 And this little kid, like, he's buck 35, soaking wet. And in that moment, I was like, holy cow,
Speaker 5
just the strength at that age. I mean, at 18, I was a blithering idiot.
And to see young guys, and it's what? It's like 96, 97% dropout rate for guys under 19 or something like that.
Speaker 5
It's, it's abysmal. And you were one of those young guys.
I mean, dude, I remember the first time I saw you, I was like, This guy's like 15 years old. What is he doing here? I mean, literally.
Speaker 5 That's how I felt.
Speaker 5
And it's like, but you were just, you were feisty and tenace. You had that look like those other guys, and you weren't going to quit.
And, and you absorb things quickly. And so I, I respected that.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 but, you know, you're where I was, it's like, I don't,
Speaker 5 you just, you just drive on. And so, uh, you know, I think
Speaker 5 I'm trying to remember when we reconnected, you know, we reconnected.
Speaker 6 We reconnected what I'm, well, actually,
Speaker 6 we reconnected briefly, very briefly
Speaker 6 one reason or another I was in I went to Boca yeah I don't remember what the hell I was doing there but
Speaker 6 very briefly at your house yeah and then the real reconnect happened when we got when we really started to get close is after that safe house got hit that I was at. Oh my God.
Speaker 6
We were contracting for the agency and you stepped off the helicopter. But we'll get there.
Okay. We'll get there.
Speaker 6 So frog logic, you start that, you can write books, speaking, mentoring, all kinds of stuff.
Speaker 5 I had a security company called Trident Security Solutions.
Speaker 5 I was trying to design curriculum, three-dimensional curriculum with new technology because I thought I always hated PowerPoints because like you just recycle them, right?
Speaker 5 And then team guys, they'll just put a funny picture in and that's their addition to the curriculum, right? Or a funny video because videos were coming out. And I was like, this is ridiculous.
Speaker 5 So much.
Speaker 5 And I had this guy,
Speaker 5
another buddy from St. Andrews who was doing incredible stuff with three-dimensional design.
His name was Dave Garum.
Speaker 5 And I approached him and I said, hey, dude, I've got this idea to take all the IGs from the military. We'll start in the SEAL teams and we'll turn them into three-dimensional.
Speaker 5
So imagine your SIGSAUer. dissecting.
You can see the function of it, how it disciplines your M4,
Speaker 5 your night vision, all your equipment. And then the other thing is on this system, you press one button and translate it into other languages, you know, and it's all on your disc.
Speaker 5
Instead of, remember, you'd travel with the cruise box and every IG, you'd go everywhere with this huge box, a cruise box. So now it's like everything fits in the CD folder.
And
Speaker 5 we called it Trident Virtual Solutions TVS.
Speaker 5 And I remember we went out to Buds and pitched at Buds and all this. And I had no idea about
Speaker 5 the game or anything. And so that kind of failed miserably.
Speaker 5 But it was the kids stuff that really,
Speaker 5
really made me feel better. And then at that time, I met my ex-wife.
And we'd known each other for a long time. And she kind of grew up
Speaker 5 and together. And she's younger.
Speaker 5 I had kind of like, all right, I need to change my life, settle down, and this is it. And so it seemed like we met, and the opportune time is right after my last Blackwater thing.
Speaker 5 And so it's like, all right, my life's,
Speaker 5 holy cow, I got some control.
Speaker 5 I was getting in shape. I was, you know, I felt good about myself.
Speaker 5 And everything was going pretty well. And then
Speaker 5
the economy collapsed. And schools can't, don't have any money.
And I couldn't, you know, pay my rent. And
Speaker 5 I was like, oh, no, what are we going to do?
Speaker 5 And I think it was in spring of 08,
Speaker 5 a friend of mine reached out and was like, hey, dude, I've got a gig that I think you'll like.
Speaker 5
It's working with the agency and you'll be training case officers. Are you interested? And I was like, absolutely.
You know,
Speaker 5 yes, out of necessity, financially, for sure, but also to be able to go back and teach and then to be able to work with the agency was,
Speaker 5 I was like, this is going to be the coolest thing in the whole world.
Speaker 5 Like, finally, you know, these guys are, because by then you knew that I understood the power that they had to conduct operations and
Speaker 5
the control of information flow and the role that they had played, you know, and were playing at a high level. And so just jumped at that opportunity.
And so April of
Speaker 5 08 was my first course.
Speaker 5
And we ran this course on the Blackwater campus. It was not through Blackwater.
They were called the U.S. Training Center.
They had sold.
Speaker 5 Eric had had to sell from all the fiasco that he had gone through.
Speaker 5 I remember showing up and I was like, all right, this is going to be awesome.
Speaker 5 And the whole idea is that case officers were co-located on FOBS, regular case officers, not PMC, paramilitary case officers, but they were on FOBS now.
Speaker 5 And the kinetic nature and the Optempa was so insane that they were integrated with JSOC units and other
Speaker 5
regular tier three, tier two soft units. And they were like, information was being converted into actionable intelligence in real time.
And so these guys, like, you know,
Speaker 5 you know the deal, they're in the fob, they do a meet, they get intel that, you know, somebody, the buddy's, you know, brother's, sisters, cousins, aunt, uncle is in the town for the next four hours.
Speaker 5
He's a bomb maker. You give him the bag of cash.
Well, you know,
Speaker 5 it becomes like the country chief can make it actionable or even the base chief in some cases.
Speaker 5 And, and so these guys were then the task unit guy, the dev group guy, the Delta guy would be like, all right, you're getting in the bird with us and you're going to PID this guy because we don't know the case.
Speaker 5 We haven't worked and we're not doing it. And they would pull these young kids
Speaker 5 who had one week of
Speaker 5 pistol, one week of long rifle in the farm and they'd be operational with these guys. And so
Speaker 5 my assumption was my job was to was to turn them into operators. And I'll never forget, I show up first course, and Dave was the course lead.
Speaker 5 He was an SF guy, loved him from Baltimore, just total snapheart, had funny as hell, great dude. And then the guy from the agency, man, he looked like George Foreman.
Speaker 5
He was awesome, man, but he was just the coolest dude. And I was like, I'm working for a CIA.
And I was like, all right. And so first two days were medical and I taught that.
Speaker 5 And then we go into shooting and it's pistol on the course. I've got this female case officer and
Speaker 5 she points the gun and she shoots. And then we're out like two meters, three meters, whatever it was, you know, and
Speaker 5
single shot, single dot, and she misses the target. I was like, okay, let's do it again.
She misses again. And I was like, give me the run.
And I, you know, keyhole five-round rhythm drill.
Speaker 5
And I was like, it's not the gun. And she goes back and she misses again.
I'm like, what in the fuck is going on? What is this Jason born bullshit?
Speaker 5 You know, and I'm, I'm screaming at this poor like team guy asshole.
Speaker 5 And she starts tearing up, you know, and I'm like,
Speaker 5 there's no goddamn crying in combat, you know, and I'm just a complete asshole to this poor girl. And
Speaker 5 Dave's like, hey, hey,
Speaker 5 hey, man, why don't you go get some ammo? And I was like, I'll be right back, you know, and I'm walking away and this dude who's, I didn't met him yet.
Speaker 5 He just showed up and he's like, hey, man come here come over now it's like what's up and he's like
Speaker 5 hey you're you're team guy huh and i was like yeah he's like
Speaker 5 you're an instructor too right and i was like yeah and he's like okay he goes
Speaker 5 man if you keep that up like they're they're gonna ask you to leave at lunch and i'm like
Speaker 5 like what do you mean he's like yeah they don't play they're not operators they're not here to become operators he goes i've seen it i've seen team guys land overseas in Iraq, go into a brief, start
Speaker 5 spouting off, and then
Speaker 5
get right back on the bridge and go home in the same night. And I was like, holy cow.
And that was Tanto.
Speaker 5 No shit. Yeah.
Speaker 5
And that's where I met Chris. And it was the best advice I ever got.
And so that changed it. And what was amazing for me is I was with a really amazing group of guys.
Speaker 5 There was Brian, some other dudes, and
Speaker 5 John, who ended up being in Benghazi.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 Tanto was there. And
Speaker 5 I learned,
Speaker 5 all right, what can I learn from them? And so for two years, I got this incredible education because we'd have
Speaker 5 15 to 20 some case officers come through. And some people would have 27 years, you know,
Speaker 5 done all kinds of insane, amazing things.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I would identify somebody I really admired
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 I would say, hey, can I have breakfast with you? Can I have lunch with you? Can I have dinner? Do you want to get a beer afterwards? And I would just ask them, what do you do? And how does it work?
Speaker 5 And they taught me more about
Speaker 5
people than anybody had ever taught me because that's what they do for a living. They're the world's best interviewers.
and they're brilliant, you know, and they don't need to be Jason Bourne.
Speaker 5 All they have to do is be intellectual and sophisticated and understand the dynamics within the human condition, which cultivate different motivations, right?
Speaker 5
And if you can learn someone's motivations, you can extrapolate information. And that, I got this overwhelming education.
And it really transformed me. And it became something.
And
Speaker 5 I met this one incredible guy, Todd,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 we just became immediately close friends and former EOD guy and had been on
Speaker 5
mobile and was home because he had some infection in his ear from Afghanistan and lost his balance. And so he was teaching now.
And he was amazing. We became friends.
And I loved it. And I loved it.
Speaker 5 But my problem was, is like, I just really gotten engaged and was serious and had starting to plan a wedding. And I'm gone 15 days on, 15 days off, 15 days on from April till November, December.
Speaker 5 And that's really how my relationship started, right?
Speaker 5 And so I finished that
Speaker 5
that first year. She had said, hey, I don't want you to do this anymore.
And I was like, okay. So I went to work for another friend, actually, Jan Lennon.
Speaker 5 It was a mortgage marketing company out of the Boston area.
Speaker 5 And so now I'm, I'm, I'm, you know, one minute, I'm teaching case officers, you know, how to better integrate with JSOC units and learning and in the midst of it, you know, because it was 08.
Speaker 5 It was the height of everything going on.
Speaker 5
And now I'm like showing up at banks and trying to promote this marketing business. And I was, God bless him.
I mean, he was wonderful to me. Jeff's an amazing human being.
And he believed in me.
Speaker 5
And I was like, I'm going to support you, get you out of this. And, and I couldn't do it.
Like got married in November. And then by March, I was like, I'm done.
I'm going back.
Speaker 5 And so immediately started 09
Speaker 5 all through 09. And then in the beginning of the fall is when Todd was like, hey, man, do you want to deploy? Do you want to do this? Do you want to go mobile?
Speaker 5 And I was like, yeah, I do. I really do.
Speaker 5 I hadn't been deployed like that since 05.
Speaker 5
I felt like a hypocrite. I felt like I was saying things that I didn't really know.
I didn't know the operations of it. I was just, you know, I felt,
Speaker 5
I almost felt like I was a fraud. You know, really? Yeah.
It was, it was, again, that insecurity came out. Remember, I was still seeking the retribution.
I was still seeking
Speaker 5 the salvation of the experience.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I wanted to redeem myself. And I felt the only way I could redeem myself, I went downrange again and got involved in that.
Speaker 5 And I remember I was, he's like, all right, the head recruiter is going to be at the long distance range. And we're out there and we're doing just some sighting and stuff or whatever.
Speaker 5
And this truck pulls up. And all of a sudden, I hear this voice.
I'm like, I know that voice. And I turn around and it's
Speaker 5 a friend of mine that I had been in the teams with, I'd gone to the Paramac Refresher, and it's him. And he looks at me, he goes, what's up, Rut? He goes, so you want to go overseas, huh?
Speaker 5 And I was like, yep. And he's like, done.
Speaker 5 I'll get you in the training course. And
Speaker 5 that's it. And so that, like the next month, I went through the three-week training course.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 like you said, I remember
Speaker 5 one of my favorite part,
Speaker 5
there were a couple of my favorite parts when you did the interview with Tucker Carlson, but you talked about it. And I thought you did a tremendous service.
I thought it was tough. It was hard.
Speaker 5
The shooting was hard. Shooting package was hard.
The, you know, the surveillance stuff, the comm stuff. And I really enjoyed it.
Speaker 5 Met some great, had a couple of, you know, buddies, team guys, Yost was with me. And, and, uh, there was, I remember there was a ranger, Chris The Rock.
Speaker 5 And man, he was hard, just tough.
Speaker 6 And it was like, I still talk to Chris.
Speaker 5
Do you really? Yeah, he's doing good. Yeah, I've, every now and then I'll send him an email or something like that.
But
Speaker 5 he would just call me out because
Speaker 5 after Tanto had told me, like, hey, like, my whole mentality was like, I'm going to be Mr. Positive all the time, right?
Speaker 5
And I'm going to be that guy. That drove him nuts, man.
He would be like, you're so full of shit. He's like, shut up.
Speaker 5
I remember it was freezing cold in eastern Maryland at whatever that dude who did the CQD shit was. I forget what his name was.
And
Speaker 5 freezing outside. I'm like, this is awesome, man.
Speaker 5 And he's like, shut up.
Speaker 5 And he would just call me out.
Speaker 5 But he was like, he's the one who set the tempo.
Speaker 5 And so we went through it, passed that, and then got a date, a deployment date for January 2010
Speaker 5 and but that last class I did and this was the trippy thing that last class I did
Speaker 5 we had a woman come through
Speaker 5 that
Speaker 5 was a big deal she had been on the original bin Laden desk
Speaker 5
And they were grooming her for seventh floor, but she wanted to do a combat deployment. She wanted to go find Zarhawi.
And
Speaker 5 i remember she came through and i remember them telling me hey you know there's a lot of eyes on this i want you know they're like rut you're a good you're one of the best instructors really get behind her and explain not only what it is
Speaker 5 that she needs to be aware of with the units she's going to have at her disposal and around her but also really emphasize how
Speaker 5 positive
Speaker 5
the group, you know, GRS is going to be and how much they can assist her and what they can do. And I remember, you know, when we graduated, we went to dinner, me, her, and another junior CO.
And
Speaker 5 I remember just talking to her and
Speaker 5 was really
Speaker 5 emphatic about the dynamics of being downrange and the complexities of it and just was
Speaker 5 not forceful, not rude, not anything, but tried to be as adamant as I could about the importance of
Speaker 5 working together and really what that meant. And
Speaker 5 because I really didn't know the dynamic, I'd never been downraged operationally with the agency yet. And
Speaker 5 I remember graduated class, good luck, you know, God bless. And
Speaker 5
was on holiday in Colorado. We were coming home from that trip.
And I found out that that's when that uh double agent blew himself up at and was it it was skin right coast excuse me the coast
Speaker 5 and and eight uh grs and and case officers were killed and she was she was a part of that and you know they had
Speaker 5 you know struggled with
Speaker 5
the dynamics of the security profile for that because he was telling her like I have met with Zar Howie. I know where he is.
I've got the info.
Speaker 5
And so they kind of altered some protocols and he detonated himself. And I remember we lost some good guys.
Jeremy Weiss was fresh out of the teams and on GRS.
Speaker 5
Southside was one of the most respected guys in the whole program. And he died.
And then some of the case officers as well, too. And
Speaker 5 that was like, okay, welcome to go. Cause like the next week, I was on the bird over and landed in Afghanistan in January of 2010, right after that.
Speaker 6 And so when was your first trip?
Speaker 5 January 2010. Where? Lash.
Speaker 6 That's when we met.
Speaker 5 That's when we met. That was my first trip.
Speaker 5 Like I got off the plane, went over middle of the night, walked in, and this was my favorite part of, oh, you were my favorite part of that whole thing, but that's the next story.
Speaker 5 I walk in, and there's Evan Hafer.
Speaker 5 And he was a greeter. And
Speaker 5
he was just like, you know, Evan, he's just kind of like, he's always just kind of like chill. Right.
And I was just like, all right.
Speaker 5
And he's, you hungry? I was like, yeah, yeah. So we sat down and started eating.
Everybody else kind of took off and we just started talking.
Speaker 5 And one of the questions that I always ask people dating all the way back to Blackwater was, what's your plan? Like, how are you going to get out of this?
Speaker 5 How are you going to figure out how to put the gun down and move on with your life? And I was sincere. I was interested.
Speaker 5 And, you know, at that moment, the number one response was, I'm going to do about four years contract and save up enough, and then I'm going to open a bar. You know, that was, that was the answer.
Speaker 5
And I was like, that's such a bad answer. And I remember Evan was the first guy that had a whole idea.
all planned out how he was going to do it and what he was going to do. And I was fascinated.
Speaker 5 We talked for like six straight hours.
Speaker 6 Was it Black Rifle Coffee?
Speaker 5
No, no. It was he had, so one of his original ideas was to start a crowdsource funding for veterans startup companies.
It was brilliant. And
Speaker 5
he had some other tech ideas and gear stuff. And his mind is just fascinating once he starts talking about it.
And yeah, Black Rifle didn't emerge until a few years later. And,
Speaker 5
but we became really fast friends. And he was the one, this is what you got to think about.
This is what you got to do.
Speaker 5 And uh and then i know it was a couple days later i was on that helo and uh landed in lash
Speaker 6 let's hear your side
Speaker 5 so again
Speaker 6 did they tell you what you were walking into they didn't fucking tell you uh i mean remember the country teal who i liked a lot um
Speaker 5 race yes loved him i thought he was brilliant i thought he was great and he was kind of like, well, you're going to a site that's kind of been going through some stuff.
Speaker 5
They had to leave a safe house, but didn't get the story at all. And there's a new, you're moving into a new base that's being built.
And
Speaker 5
I was like, yeah, awesome, man. Cool.
Wherever. Fired up.
Let's go. And I remember taking a helo ride down there and we landed.
And I remember seeing the
Speaker 5 British footprint and then we landed off to the side, not near it or in it it or anything. I was like, where are we landing out here?
Speaker 5
And I came out and just trying to look around and it's still spinning. And I'm like, what's up? Where, you know, who's, you know, and I'm, and I'm loud or whatever.
And
Speaker 5 they're like, come on, you with us, get over here and get in the vehicle and got my, you know, my kit bag and put it in. And you were there, but I didn't know it was you.
Speaker 5
You know, and I remember we drove out. It was like into the other place and the lights came on.
And I was like, holy cow, I know you.
Speaker 5
And you're like, what's up, Rutt? And I was like, and you're like, and you said your name. And I was just like, holy cow.
I was like, what are you doing here, man?
Speaker 5 And you're like,
Speaker 5 you were just pissed.
Speaker 5 You were so limited.
Speaker 5
I was like, dude, like, you're my connection, man. You're the team guy.
I need a team guy.
Speaker 5 And you just could not speak.
Speaker 5 You were fired up. And that's what I remember was the introduction.
Speaker 6 I was pretty pissed.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 So, yeah, before you got there, just to fill up the audience,
Speaker 6 I just switched from Blackwater to SOC for a pay raise.
Speaker 6 This is my first deployment with SOC. Met Afe, met Evan,
Speaker 6 connected with him immediately great great great rapport and um
Speaker 6 he's like oh you're going to the site lash lash car guy i'm like okay go down there
Speaker 6 little bitty safe house you could hear the interpreters fucking each other in the middle of the night
Speaker 6 none of the
Speaker 6 agency blue badgers or the agency employees had ever been to combat zones at least to my knowledge especially the chief of base
Speaker 6 And we were doing all these meets. And at the time, Lashkar Gah, Hellman Province, was the hottest zone in the country.
Speaker 6 And we would go and we would meet these people.
Speaker 5 You know, we do our little SDR.
Speaker 6 For those that don't know, it's kind of like a counter-surveillance type route that you would take in.
Speaker 6 And, you know, the main thing working with agency doing that kind of a job is don't be time and place predictable.
Speaker 6 Well,
Speaker 6 Chief of Base was lazy,
Speaker 6 had no experience in a war zone. He's a Cold War guy.
Speaker 6 And I come down there
Speaker 6 and immediately start picking things apart, which still hadn't figured out. That's not how the agency works.
Speaker 6 They don't like constructive criticism, but I said it anyways because I knew some shit was going to happen.
Speaker 6 And I said, hey,
Speaker 6 in a morning brief, said, hey, we've already run this route three or four times, same time, same route.
Speaker 6
We're time and place predictable. We need to change things up.
Of course, they blow it off.
Speaker 6 I'm like, well,
Speaker 6 we're going to get fucking hit. We're in this little house, in this little compound.
Speaker 6 About 12 hours later, the gunfire starts.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 they,
Speaker 6 I can't, I think, I can't remember if it was Taliban or Al-Qaeda or who,
Speaker 6 but they had taken over a high-rise building in town.
Speaker 6
Local Afghan police were trying to take care of it. They just started chucking grenades down, shooting RPGs or bullets flying everywhere.
We couldn't get a good vantage point to shoot back.
Speaker 6 This went on for
Speaker 6 like 10 fucking hours. It It was insane.
Speaker 6
And we were pinned down. We couldn't get out.
So we started burning all the classified material.
Speaker 6 I remember the chief of base was hiding in a bathtub
Speaker 6 going, oh my God, we're going to die.
Speaker 5 We're going to die.
Speaker 6 And my buddy, do you remember Devo?
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 Devo yelled and looked in the bathroom like, what the fuck are you doing in there?
Speaker 5 Get up and get a fucking gun.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6
that, you know. So, anyways, we're burning all this shit.
The Brits actually had to come extract us out of there because we couldn't fucking get out.
Speaker 6 And so, they sent in this huge convoy,
Speaker 6 big show of force to come extract us out. Then they dump us in this shit old base that we're building with.
Speaker 5 No front gates, no nothing.
Speaker 6 Yeah, no front gates, no.
Speaker 5 140 local workers inside the wire every day. Yep.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6 so I'm fucking pissed.
Speaker 6 I'm like, how the, I'm like, how the fuck did I want it up here?
Speaker 6 I thought this was supposed to be better.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6
yeah, it was demoralized. It was demoralized because they weren't taking any constructive criticism.
We just got hit.
Speaker 6
Could have gotten killed. It actually came out later that they had pinpointed exactly what house we were in.
They
Speaker 6 over 100 fighters on the other side of the river, just about a click away, a kilometer away.
Speaker 6 And so they started doing drone passes to try to scatter them.
Speaker 6 It was nasty. And
Speaker 6 they told us we had reinforcements coming.
Speaker 6 So we go out, wait for the Hilos to come in. Did you come in with Race? Race was already there, I think.
Speaker 5 No.
Speaker 6 You came in with Race.
Speaker 5 Because he had to go. Yeah, me, Race, and Kay.
Speaker 6 And yeah, he comes down.
Speaker 5
I think Evan was with us too. No, Evan.
Later. He came a couple weeks later.
Speaker 6 He didn't come while I was there.
Speaker 5 Okay, you left, and then he came out until we got another guy.
Speaker 6 That's what it was. And
Speaker 6 the way I remember it, you jump off the helo and you start yelling.
Speaker 5 And I was like, what the fuck?
Speaker 6 Is that who I think it is?
Speaker 5 Rudd, is that you?
Speaker 5 Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5 Who is that?
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6 then I gave you the lowdown.
Speaker 5 And you're like, what the fuck is going on? When we're back.
Speaker 6 And you, yep, you had that
Speaker 6 super positive
Speaker 6 attitude. And I'm like, get that shit away from me.
Speaker 6
I don't want to fucking hear it. You're running around trying to set up oak horses in the fucking camp.
And I'm like, I'm not doing that shit.
Speaker 6 There's no fucking way.
Speaker 5 You go to bomb.
Speaker 5 The morale was, it was, it was abysmal. And the morale was bad through the whole
Speaker 5 community because of what had happened, Coast. And I was like, all right, how do we even operate when every
Speaker 5
that just happened? I'm at this place. Coast just, I'm like, this is a shit show, dude.
And I was like, all right, I could just start by just kind of lifting people up, man.
Speaker 5 And God, that did not work. It did.
Speaker 6 It did not work at all.
Speaker 5 It did not work at all.
Speaker 6 But funny story about that.
Speaker 6 I don't know if you were there yet or not, but
Speaker 6 that same chief of base, after this happened, he wanted to, he still continued to act like a hard ass.
Speaker 6 And there was all the, we had a cat problem.
Speaker 6 Lots of fucking stray cats everywhere, pissing shit and all over the place.
Speaker 5 He's like, hey, get rid of these fucking cats.
Speaker 6 And my buddy Scott goes out. And he puts these bricks in a pillowcase.
Speaker 6 And he walks up to the chief.
Speaker 6 He walks up to the chief of station.
Speaker 6
And he goes, hey, I got the solution to your cat problem. And he starts flinging this pillowcase around full of bricks.
And he just goes,
Speaker 6 slams these fucking, this pillowcase full of bricks on the concrete right in front of him. And his face, his face was just like,
Speaker 5 my god, I can't believe you did that.
Speaker 6 He goes, it's just fucking bricks.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 It was, dude, it was the funniest.
Speaker 6 That was, I think that might have been the only time I laughed that entire fucking deployment, other than when we got shit-faced off that bottle of Jack Daniels and whoever brought. Oh, my God.
Speaker 6 And I wound up falling on a hole and
Speaker 6 sleeping it off in there until
Speaker 6 Race comes over. He's looking at me.
Speaker 2 He's like, rough night last night.
Speaker 5 Dude, that was a good night, though.
Speaker 5 Because everybody everybody needed to blow off Wolf's theme, you know? Yeah. Do you remember the
Speaker 5 PMCO Jeremy and then his guy who looked like, were they there with
Speaker 5 Lee, who looked like
Speaker 5 the guy who was
Speaker 5 the cowboy?
Speaker 6 Looked like the Metal Gear Solid guy.
Speaker 5 The which one?
Speaker 6
The Metal Gear Solid guy. Yeah, yeah.
Snake or whatever the hell his name is.
Speaker 5 Those guys were, they cracked, like every time I'd need a sanity check, I'd go over to them.
Speaker 6 Oh, I wasn't doing it for you?
Speaker 5
No, dude, no, I'd be like, holy cow, dude. Like, he's about ready to bust a gasket, dude.
And nothing, like, and I'd come near you and you'd look at me and I'd be like, all right, I'm going to go,
Speaker 5 I'd go the other way, dude. Yeah.
Speaker 5 That was a, that was my. in doc like that was my first trip i didn't realize that was your first trip first trip and and
Speaker 5 like leaving that and getting home, I'm like,
Speaker 5 whoa.
Speaker 5 Me too. I was like, whoa, am I, can I do this again? And, and
Speaker 5 the next, the next
Speaker 5 post had just happened. Just happened.
Speaker 6 And I had mentioned that. I was like, this just happened.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5
It was, everything had gone wrong. And then I went into the place where it was the worst.
And, and nobody was, was, was,
Speaker 5 I think the morale was just at an all-time low at that point.
Speaker 6 What did you think of the agency overall, the entire experience?
Speaker 5 I think they,
Speaker 5 I mean, because I did another, I did a 90-dayer that summer, which was better there. It was a lot better.
Speaker 6 I didn't get much worse than
Speaker 5
the last. It couldn't have gone any worse, but we got a good TL who was good.
He worked with the guys a lot better. We had some guys doing good casework and it was good.
It was long.
Speaker 5 I mean, it was the summer and and last 90 days.
Speaker 6 Oh, you went back to last year.
Speaker 5 Oh, yeah, I did a 90-day or it was crazy because
Speaker 5 my ex was pregnant with our first,
Speaker 5 and this was the one I was like, after that, I was like, all right, this is the one I'm going to get shot or blown up on.
Speaker 5 And that was the summer I got saved. That was the summer I came to Christ.
Speaker 6 How did that happen?
Speaker 5 I had been working hard, reading a ton of the Bible, really trying to understand. And I think I got to the place
Speaker 5 where I don't know if I felt like I deserved Christ's love, but I know I was loved by Christ.
Speaker 5 And I wanted to make sure that if I died and my child was born, that my child would know that I was a Christian. And so I
Speaker 5 called little pastor at the church we went to in Del Rey. And It's like, hey, man,
Speaker 5
you know, giant beard, the whole thing, and like, I want to get baptized. And so I went in, got baptized, and then left right after that for 90 days.
And
Speaker 5 that was awesome because on that trip, I really leaned in to reading the Bible and really tried to understand it. And, you know,
Speaker 5 it was, it was a, a good, it was a better trip than that first one for sure. And so I, I began to.
Speaker 5 appreciate, I became friends.
Speaker 5 There was one guy that had been around a long time who had actually come through training a couple years before who was there, who I really liked, Robert, and he was wonderful to me and really was
Speaker 5 insightful and was
Speaker 5 understanding and was good. And so I think at that point, I was,
Speaker 5 the job was,
Speaker 5 was
Speaker 5 it was good, but it wasn't what I thought it was going to be. I thought it would be doing a lot more, you know, sneaking peek peek stuff and all kinds of stuff.
Speaker 5 But I remember that summer also too was when the Marja push began.
Speaker 5
And I remember we had a PMCO that had come out. He was a former, I think, colonel in the Marine Corps and his son was out there in a Marine Corps unit.
And they were doing overt daylight patrols.
Speaker 5 And a guy, a kid that was in front of his son had tripped an IED because they were just planting them every night. They'd walk walk through and blow these poor kids up.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I remember
Speaker 5 him
Speaker 5 and the pain in him and how frustrated he was with what the regular military was doing, what the mission was. And also that summer is where I began to understand
Speaker 5 the problems of
Speaker 5 that there was no genuine mission.
Speaker 5 It was just
Speaker 5 presence. And it was
Speaker 5 coming up with things to figure out how to do, just collection and whatever. And, you know, I think the
Speaker 5 JSOC guys were still doing great work. And some of the
Speaker 5 GB guys were doing great work. And, you know, but I
Speaker 5
was so new, it was difficult. It wasn't until the next appointment.
So I got home.
Speaker 5 first child was born and then about 30 days later is when i went started my second rotation i went to pakistan and that's where things got interesting how so it was just a different thing it was it was more of the the sneak and peek stuff it was low profile it was it was sketchy you know where we were and and
Speaker 5 it was real work like it felt like it was real work because you know we were you know in western pakistan Pesh. And,
Speaker 5 you know, there was a lot of stuff. That's where everybody kind of works things out and what, you know, all the stuff that's going on.
Speaker 5 And I met some really talented guys,
Speaker 5
really talented guys. That's when I met Max and I met some other guys.
And I'll never forget, you know, I'm still trying to portray, you know, Captain positivity.
Speaker 5
And I'll never forget, we're in the chat hall in the middle of the night and I couldn't sleep. And I go in there and Max is in a corner with a cup of coffee.
And I'm like, what's up, man?
Speaker 5 How you doing? And he goes,
Speaker 5 he's like, shut the fuck up.
Speaker 6 And I'm like, what?
Speaker 5 What's up? And he's like, I know you're not like this.
Speaker 5
I know you're not that motivated. I know you're not that happy.
So shut up. And I, and, and immediately became good friends.
And
Speaker 5 that was where, that was interesting. That was really, I don't know if you remember, remember the guy, the green beret who was in Karachi, who who they tried to rob him.
Speaker 5 And the guy on the motorbike turns around, points the gun at him, and he pulls out his pistol.
Speaker 6 He's Ray Davis.
Speaker 5 That's right.
Speaker 6 I got his book right over here.
Speaker 5
That's right. And that created an international incident.
And what I didn't know at the time, you know, that was the beginning of the lead up for the bin Laden raid had begun.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 that made operations really difficult because they were that just all hell came loose down on the thing. And, and so we, our profile really ramped up.
Speaker 5
And it was, I remember, you know, hey, we really got a lot more intel. They, we got to be aware.
We got to pay attention.
Speaker 5
And, and then I was there for like 60 some odd days, I think it was, left, came home. We moved with a newborn up to, up to, um, North Carolina.
North Carolina to Asheville, remember?
Speaker 5 Because you had just moved to Boca.
Speaker 5 And you're like, dude,
Speaker 5
where are you going? And I was like, I got to get out of this town, man. I can't be here.
And
Speaker 5 had moved up there in the hopes to find some mountain house and, you know, build a little range and just kind of have some peace. And
Speaker 5 then
Speaker 5 I remember the bin Laden raid happened.
Speaker 5 And then right after that, because I, when I was up there, I had developed some videos and started because I was like, man, I can't keep, I don't know if I can keep doing this. Like,
Speaker 5
this isn't going to be healthy. It's definitely not healthy for my relationship.
It's definitely not healthy for me because I was still chasing something that really wasn't going to happen, right?
Speaker 5 You're not going to get into that. I mean, how many, how many GRS guys do you ever know that got into the huge firefight and the, you know, and the whole thing? And not a lot.
Speaker 5
And so, you know, it's all pretty low pro. And if you're good at what you do, it's nobody knows you're there and you do it subtly.
And that was the thing. And
Speaker 5 so I started like going, all right. And I remember right after the bin Laden raid, a person had called, contacted me through my website and was like, hey,
Speaker 5
do you want to do a speaking engagement for this Fortune 100 company? And I was like, absolutely. Yeah.
I'll in. And she's like, okay, it's about an hour talk.
How much do you charge?
Speaker 5
And I was so dumb, I was like, okay, a lot is a daily rate, right? And it was like $7.50 at the time or whatever. I was like, okay, I'm going big.
Like, this is a big company. I'm going big.
Speaker 5 I was like, $2,000
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5
I, I will, you hire me and I'll do whatever you want for 24 straight hours. Like, I'll do breakouts.
I'll do training. I'll do team building, whatever you want.
Speaker 5 And the lady stops.
Speaker 5
It was so funny. Her name was Darcy Boseos.
And she had been the
Speaker 5
agent. She'd been Oprah Winfrey's agent at one time.
And she worked a lot of the Bulls, the Chicago Bulls back in the 90s
Speaker 5
worked with her. And now she had, she plays speakers with, and she stops and she goes, Hey, listen, can I be frank with you? And I was like, Yeah.
And she goes,
Speaker 5 That's the dumbest number I've ever heard. And I was like, What do you mean? She goes, Just because you're a Navy SEAL, you should charge $5,000.
Speaker 5 And if you can actually speak and you're articulate, you should, you could charge 10.
Speaker 5 She goes, Here's what I'm going to do: I'm going to tell them
Speaker 5
6,000. I'm going to take 1,000 and give you 5,000.
And I was like,
Speaker 5 $5,000 for one speech?
Speaker 5
And I was like, oh my God. And I did that.
And then a week later, I redeployed back to Pakistan. And this time it was sketchy.
It was just,
Speaker 5 we felt like we were always on the defensive. It got so sketchy and pesh.
Speaker 5 You know, and there was one point,
Speaker 5 one thing that really kind of has stuck with me and what was really
Speaker 5 a pivotal moment for my
Speaker 5 beginning to lose faith in some of the institutions that I had held on a pedestal. And that was
Speaker 5 after the raid, obviously the doctor who had
Speaker 5 gone and
Speaker 5 led us, you know, found out it was him, he got wrapped up. And they were holding him in a jail in Pesh.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I don't know where it came from or what it started, but it kind of emerged that, all right, we're going to go,
Speaker 5 you know, storm this jail,
Speaker 5
break him out, take him with us, and get him out of Dodge and get him out of the country. And it got shut down.
And I don't know if that guy's still in jail. I don't know what's happened to him.
Speaker 5 I don't know. But that was
Speaker 5 painful.
Speaker 5 And that's when you start to realize, oh, oh there's a different way of doing things
Speaker 5 um
Speaker 5 and the rest of that point we ended up having to leave pesh uh get out i mean i remember we were coming they had asked me to develop a whole emergency plan like what do you do if we because they were we were getting like we had one group of guys get shut down brought you know at night checkpoint video
Speaker 5 TV show, TV cameras, they're sitting in their kit. So then there was like stories.
Speaker 5 I remember one story in the new paper that Blackwater assassins are in pesh and the only way you can kill them was with silver bullets and we had that up and like bizarre stuff, but it got heavy.
Speaker 5 It got sketchy.
Speaker 5 And we had incredible guys out there and they were, and so we ended up pulling out and reducing back to the consulate and we took off and went to Islamabad.
Speaker 5
spent the rest of the summer in Islamabad operating. And that was a whole different thing too.
Now it's like you're in a city doing it and it was a whole different game.
Speaker 5 And again, there was some amazing, amazing guys. There was this
Speaker 5
Green Beret medic who was just out there, but like he was dialed in. Like he had it down, Pat.
He knew how to drive low pro. He knew how to mingle in
Speaker 5 the city low pro.
Speaker 5
He was an animal in the gym. And like he, I was just like, and he was a brilliant medic.
And I was like, all right.
Speaker 5 and then I also met Randy Rhodes and the combat chassis and I just fell in love with that guy and you know he was hilarious and his look and take on the whole thing and he like kept me smiling and then Max and then I ended that
Speaker 5
finished that and then came home and then went back one more time in the fall. And that was the end of it for me.
What year did you stop contracting?
Speaker 5 November, November, I was September, October, November of 2011. Because I missed, I missed, I missed Blair's first birthday, and that was devastating.
Speaker 5
And I came home and my ex was just like, if, if you keep going, we're done. And I didn't want to lose my family and I didn't want to lose anything else.
So I hung it up,
Speaker 5 you know, and that was
Speaker 5 That was probably one of the hardest things I ever did, but
Speaker 5 because I never got redemption,
Speaker 5 but I was okay in my faith that like, okay, I'm, I'm going to go all in on this other thing, this, this trying to help people with frog logic and training and motivational coaching and stuff. And,
Speaker 5 you know, I'll never forget, like, I was home and I was praying hard on it, like, God, you know, give me something. What do I do? How do I, how do I move on?
Speaker 5 And out of nowhere, a guy who I had gone through training with back in the day, Kyle Kroeberger, had reached out, had seen my stuff online, and was like,
Speaker 5 hey, man,
Speaker 5
do you still speak to companies? And I was like, yeah, I do, as a matter of fact. And he's like, do you suck? And I was like, I don't think so.
I think I'm okay. And he was working for a
Speaker 5 mutual fund company called Pioneer Investments.
Speaker 5
And he's like, if you're any good, we use speakers all the time. If you're any good, I'll use you.
Then my buddy will use you.
Speaker 5
And that one, and I think I did something like 30 events that year, and that launched my speaking career where I didn't have to contract anymore. Wow.
Yeah.
Speaker 5 And that was the transition for my new life.
Speaker 6 We got a lot of friends that are still contracting.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 Some of them contracting over 20 years now. Yeah.
Speaker 6 And, you know, you get sucked into that money.
Speaker 5 It's about,
Speaker 6 what, maybe $250,000 on the low end, maybe, maybe $350,000 on the high end.
Speaker 5 You're killing yourself.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 What advice do you have
Speaker 6 for guys that are caught in that hamster wheel that want out,
Speaker 6
that feel trapped? Maybe they weren't smart with their money. They want out.
They want to rebuild their family.
Speaker 5 Humble yourself first
Speaker 5 and just give up the sensation you're chasing.
Speaker 5 You've done it enough.
Speaker 5 And just restart.
Speaker 5 The problem is the identity shift.
Speaker 5 You know, there's...
Speaker 5 You know, there's institutionalization, right?
Speaker 5
Is the term that people use. You do one thing for so long.
long, that's all you are. That's all you can ever become.
Speaker 5
You see it with inmates become institutionalized. You see it, military personnel, professional athletes suffer from it tremendously.
You know, you're a professional athlete.
Speaker 5 You start at four years old playing organized sports. 12, 13, you separate, you're put in a bubble, you're groomed, you know, then you go D1, then you go pro.
Speaker 5 And next thing you know, you're 24 or five years old. You've been going for 20 straight years.
Speaker 5 Your entire identity is encapsulated, and your performance on a field, on a court, on wherever, and it's over, and you don't know what to do.
Speaker 5 The same thing, carrying a gun for a living, like that's it. And it's a pretty substantial indoctrination, right? I mean, you've experienced it, you've seen it,
Speaker 5 you contracted for an extended period of time,
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 you
Speaker 5 get to that point, and
Speaker 5 it's all you know. It's all you think you can know.
Speaker 5 But
Speaker 5
there's a way out. And you start with humbling yourself and you start from scratch.
I mean, I remember when I first started speaking, I was horrible. I was horrible.
Speaker 5 And just raps and raps. And then I started to devise, when I was in Pakistan, I wrote my first adult book.
Speaker 5 And I took the core concept of that confidence, that self-confidence book and i turned it into an adult book and i didn't know what i was doing it was so funny i'd reach out to my cousin who's this you know he's written six novels you know they turned one into a movie one you know i mean he's a brilliant guy's top guy random and i would call him and i'd be like hey man writing this thing in this book it's like this cheesy self-help and he'd
Speaker 5 be like just write what you feel figure it out, edit it, and then put it out and see what happens and then adjust from there and do it again and do it again.
Speaker 5 And I think it's the fear of starting over for people and that loss of identity because we spend so much time, we invest so much pain and suffering into cultivating the personality that we believe that it's fixed within us.
Speaker 5
And that fixed personality is seems, it becomes almost a crutch, if you will. No, crutch is the wrong word.
It becomes a...
Speaker 5 almost like maybe a guiding rod for us, right? You're holding on so tightly to this thing. And even if you don't recognize that
Speaker 5 you're entrenched and you're not moving forward, but it's still you have this identity that
Speaker 5 has generated a value in yourself, a high degree of a value, right? If you're a Navy SEAL, that's an important identity. If you're an athlete, it's an important identity.
Speaker 5 If you are a lawyer, if you own a business, those are big identities.
Speaker 5 But when all of a sudden they're no longer viable for the development or the growth or your momentum forward, you have to let go of that. And you have to go wander the desert.
Speaker 5
And that's the hard thing for people to do. But that's how we grow.
That's how we grow in that pain, that humility, that suffering. And so that's what I recommend.
Speaker 5
I mean, I've talked to dozens of guys. Like for, you know, I was one of the first guys out there doing it.
I mean, I remember I started my first podcast in 2013, right? Called Navy SEAL Radio.
Speaker 5
And I was like one of the first guys out there doing it. And I was speaking and started working with sports teams and guys would get out and they'd call me.
I'm like, hey, Ruth,
Speaker 5 I think I want to try this speaking thing. Like, how do you do it?
Speaker 5
And I'd spend as much time as I could with them trying to just explain what I did and how I did it. And it's not perfect.
I mean, it wasn't great.
Speaker 5 Other guys have had a lot more success than I have, but
Speaker 5 it's really trying to coach them through that
Speaker 5 loss of self that they thought
Speaker 5 they needed forever in order to be able to create something new. And that's what I suggest to people.
Speaker 5 We go through changes constantly. And that's change is the hardest aspect of
Speaker 5
life, right? But we also know, in particular us, the greatest lessons that we do learn. We learn the hard way.
And so that's the only way. That's the way that Christ learned and taught us.
Speaker 5 And that's the way we have to learn. But you have to be humbled in that suffering.
Speaker 6 I want to bounce around a little bit here. Sure.
Speaker 6 Back when I found my faith. and Sedona
Speaker 6 after Dan died
Speaker 6 you and Jonna were there with me.
Speaker 6 And at that time, that was not on my radar at all. You almost
Speaker 6 kind of pushed it on me. And at the time, I was, you know,
Speaker 6
pretty fresh out of psychedelics. I was really into energy and all this other shit.
And
Speaker 6 I remember talking about frequencies.
Speaker 6 Do you remember this conversation?
Speaker 5 I also remember where you almost almost punched me at lunch.
Speaker 5 By the way, we still have to address this other one.
Speaker 6 We almost skipped over that portion, but we'll get there.
Speaker 5 Okay.
Speaker 6 But you had mentioned that
Speaker 6 something about
Speaker 6 when the sea was parted, they used the
Speaker 6 God, all three God frequencies. Do you remember this? Can you explain that? That was the first thing that anybody had ever told me that actually grabbed my attention.
Speaker 6 And then fast forward two or three days, and I had that experience
Speaker 6 up on the vortex.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 Maggie is the person who introduced me to that in my life.
Speaker 5 At that time, she was
Speaker 5 pretty connected to Native American culture.
Speaker 5 And if you understand anything about people that are ultra-connected to nature, that's what they're feeling. That's the sensation, right?
Speaker 5 The energy of a new dawn,
Speaker 5
of a lightning storm, a tornado, right? The static that comes with a hurricane or whatever it is. You feel all that.
And that's energy, right? Those are those frequencies changing.
Speaker 5 And they're changing on a level that's
Speaker 5 beyond our
Speaker 5 most of the time, beyond our perceptions, perceptions, right? Beyond our
Speaker 5 senses. And so, I think for me,
Speaker 5
the first time I had ever really understood is when she would put her hands on me and heal me. And I was like, you know, it was amazing.
It was under like everything about me felt better.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I also remember as I got deeper and deeper into my faith, I started to recognize that
Speaker 5 when you hear or read the different sermons and you think about that and and the one I think for me that really stands out is when they were on the sea and the sea becomes tumultuous and and you know they think they're going to drown and that their ship's going to sink and Peter and everybody's scared and what does Christ do he walks out on the water and he says, come to me, you know, and so his whole energy was different, right?
Speaker 5 He was calm, he was, he was not allowing nature to distract him for what his mission was, which was to instill a deeper faith in those men on that boat. And what did he do?
Speaker 5
He asked Peter to come out and to trust him, that faith in him. And he did.
And he walked out on water and then
Speaker 5 he went back to that consciousness, that human consciousness.
Speaker 5 And I remember
Speaker 5 I forget who exactly introduced me to the God frequencies.
Speaker 5 And I think when I would, oh, it was when I was in North Carolina.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 we have some friends that have a beautiful mountain house out there,
Speaker 5 really amazing people and been friends with them a long time.
Speaker 5 And they have a
Speaker 5 a labyrinth on their property.
Speaker 5 And I remember one of the times when John and I went up there when we were first together and we had someone come in, you know, put us in the labyrinth and kind of read our energy and
Speaker 5 and and there's there's a vibration everything has a vibration right any living thing there's energy moving it's it's electricity and i remember
Speaker 5 being introduced to that concept that god has his own particular energy and that's what shapes the universe and so if that energy is what comes through the word right
Speaker 5
and the word is what shaped, right? God spoke and all was created. God spoke and we were created.
God spoke, you know, and
Speaker 5 I think, you know, the metaphor of Adam and Eve and us,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 wanting to know more or wanting to get away from that frequency or that energy, you know, that's when that...
Speaker 5
self-consciousness emerged and that shame emerged. And then we left Eden, which was that purity of energy.
And so that was the place. And in North Carolina is one of those energy vortexes, supposedly.
Speaker 5 And then Sedona, there's another one out there too.
Speaker 5 And the idea is like there's certain places on the earth that vibrate more intensely than others. And
Speaker 5 there's, you know, maybe that's the earth emitting its own signal into the universe because the earth is connected to God and connected to the universe.
Speaker 5 And so if you can get in that, it can reshape and kind of reestablish reestablish the frequency in you. And I remember, you know,
Speaker 5 we were so excited to go out with you guys. And,
Speaker 5 you know, when you showed up, it was
Speaker 5
heavy, man. Things were changing for you rapidly.
And
Speaker 5 I just,
Speaker 5
like, I was in a really good place because of Johnna. I mean, it was.
a little challenging, obviously, because of COVID and what had happened and all that, but I felt strong.
Speaker 5 And I remember like, hey, man,
Speaker 5
I remember once we left the restaurant, we were out on the thing. It's like, listen, you just have to give into it.
You have to be able to feel it and not question it and just open your heart to it.
Speaker 5 And it'll hit you and it'll, it'll, it'll seed itself in you.
Speaker 5
And I think, you know, that's, that's what happened. You, you were now in the right time and space for it.
You were ready for it.
Speaker 6 And it happened.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 Let's move into that night that you almost killed me with a fucking dog.
Speaker 6 I mean, I had had a suicide attempt
Speaker 6 maybe a couple months before then.
Speaker 6 Called you.
Speaker 6 You were my first call.
Speaker 6 I mean, what was that like?
Speaker 5 The divorce was.
Speaker 5 Before we go to the divorce.
Speaker 6 What was that like when I called you?
Speaker 5 Oh, it was a gift.
Speaker 5
It was a real gift. Because a lot of guys don't call.
That shame of it. They don't want to talk about it.
They don't want to expose that they're in that space, right? It's like
Speaker 5 I'm not strong and I'm breaking down and I don't know what to do. And I actually made an attempt and
Speaker 5
there's just shame in it. But you called and gave me the opportunity to come.
And it was like, it was an honor to come over.
Speaker 5 And, you know, that was, I think, a real, a real, um,
Speaker 5 a real substantial
Speaker 5 evolution for you and I in particular, because it was like, that's the trust. Like, that's the thing I'd always,
Speaker 5 once we went through the divorce part and all that, like you were,
Speaker 5 you know, nobody, like you did, you had done that for me. You were there when I needed you.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 and, and you not only were that just there, like you were really there.
Speaker 5 And so it's like you called me and I was going to be there for you. And, and that's how you build that, those, that another level of trust, right? Everything's about trust.
Speaker 5 the whole thing, the whole thing. And if you get the opportunity to,
Speaker 5 to
Speaker 5 provide that to somebody, there's, it changes the whole thing. It changes everything.
Speaker 6 Now moving forward into that night,
Speaker 6 I don't remember why I came over.
Speaker 5 Yes.
Speaker 6 I was half in the bag.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 You had called and and I
Speaker 5
was kind of like blew it off like I'm good, man. I'm not doing anything.
And
Speaker 5 yeah.
Speaker 6 I remember coming over.
Speaker 6 This is pre-Johnna.
Speaker 5 Oh, yeah. This was.
Speaker 6 And.
Speaker 5 In the midst of the divorce.
Speaker 6
You handed me a letter. And I read the letter.
I don't remember what it said, but I remember I read it as a goodbye letter to your daughters.
Speaker 5 Pretty much.
Speaker 6 I remember looking at you.
Speaker 6 And I just slapped you in the face as hard as I could and told you to fucking snap out of it.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 And then I was enraged.
Speaker 6 Yeah, we were both enraged. Yeah.
Speaker 6 I think I about choked you out.
Speaker 5 You
Speaker 5
got on top of me and were just, you did like, there was, it was no hesitation. Like I was in shock.
And then you just kept coming.
Speaker 5 And then I was like, all right, I. like now you're going to feel my wrath and then we moved outside Remember that? Yeah, and the pool deck and the grass there.
Speaker 5 And that's where every pain, piece of pain
Speaker 5 that I had felt from that loss,
Speaker 5 you know, that, and I really
Speaker 5 believed that
Speaker 5 my kids were at stake and that I wasn't going to be able to be a...
Speaker 5 a father for them because it's just the nature of what I did and being on the road all the time And I was worried about their situation. And
Speaker 5 you were just like, we're going to, we're going to fight through this.
Speaker 5 And I remember like, you just, you just,
Speaker 5 you're a lot stronger than I thought you were. And you're just, and then you started like toying with me and you started playing with me.
Speaker 5 And I remember Gabe being there, like, almost like, hey, man, are you going to break this up? And he just sat there.
Speaker 5 And he's like, you're going to get a dose because you need a dose right now.
Speaker 5
And I just remember like everything I did, you could counter it or was just frustrating. And I couldn't think.
I couldn't. Like, I was just,
Speaker 5 I was breaking down again. Like, I was,
Speaker 5
I couldn't put together, I couldn't assemble. a state of mind that made sense.
It was illogical. It was irrational.
I was angry.
Speaker 5 I was afraid
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 I don't know how it happened, but I remember we switched around and I got
Speaker 5 I didn't I think I fish-eyed you. I fish hook you.
Speaker 6 The only thing I remember after that is you
Speaker 6 on top of me with my arms pinned to the ground with your knees and you had grabbed
Speaker 6
a dog bowl. Yeah.
A big fucking dog bowl.
Speaker 5 Yeah. Zulu's dog bowl.
Speaker 6 And you had it like this
Speaker 6
getting ready to come down on my head. And I just remember thinking, well, this is how it ends.
I get smashed in the face by a fucking dog bull by my best friend.
Speaker 6
And I think Gabe may be have stepped in at that point. Yeah.
I don't know what ended it. I can't remember.
Speaker 5 He came over and kind of like looked at me. And Gabe was not somebody I wanted to mess with at all.
Speaker 5 His silence was frightening because you knew the pain he was in. And And
Speaker 5 he ended it.
Speaker 5
You're up in that position and you realize like that was the moment of clarity. Like you weren't there.
You were there to help me.
Speaker 5 And through some bizarre
Speaker 5
reasoning, like you were helping me by beating on me. Like we were getting this out.
We were like getting purging this pain that you and I were both suffering from.
Speaker 5 But we were purging it on each other. And
Speaker 5
it just was exhausting. And then I remember it's like kind of snapping two.
And again, shame.
Speaker 5 Like, my God, what am I doing? Why are we doing this? I love you. You love me.
Speaker 5
And I think that was a big, another big, huge transition for us. It's weird.
It's like... Most people cultivate relationships in a slow, methodical,
Speaker 5 you know, give and take, this reciprocation of empathy in a meaningful way, but
Speaker 5 it's not the way we did it. And it was always intense.
Speaker 5 But I think that's why the trust became what it is today.
Speaker 5 And there's nobody, you know, almost nobody I trust more than you other than Jonna.
Speaker 5 And I, and because of those moments, because of what you've done for me, because of what you've done for my family, what you've done for my children, what you're doing for me right now,
Speaker 5 like you just, that
Speaker 5 that's what you seek that's what we want
Speaker 6 do you still have that letter i think i do
Speaker 5 yeah
Speaker 6 are you gonna watch this with your kids
Speaker 5 oh man
Speaker 6 if they ask me to what are you gonna say to them when they see this part
Speaker 5 I don't know, because
Speaker 5 I don't know what they'll ask. I don't know what they'll want to know.
Speaker 5 You know, my children are all brilliant,
Speaker 5 you know, and
Speaker 5 they've been through a lot.
Speaker 5 Both my biological children and John's biological children have been through a lot. And they're resilient and they're strong
Speaker 5 and they're intelligent and they're empathetic and they're beautiful. And
Speaker 5 I don't know if it's going to happen
Speaker 5 now
Speaker 5
or in a year or in 10 years. I don't know.
But my hope is that they do watch it. And if they have questions, they want to sit down.
I mean,
Speaker 5 it's tough, man, because,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 I have all this experience and all this life and all this.
Speaker 5 all these different stories I've gone through. And
Speaker 5 I want so desperately to share with them everything I've learned in order to prepare them for their adventure, for their voyage, for their quest of trying to find out the ultimate answer to the two most significant questions we can ask ourselves, which is who am I and why am I here?
Speaker 5
And so this is part of it. You know, my story is part of that.
And our story is part of that. And these stories hopefully will
Speaker 5 not shape them, but inform them.
Speaker 5 and then they
Speaker 5 they can begin to trust
Speaker 5 my intentions and what I want. I've been trying to teach them, you know, for a long time now.
Speaker 5 You know, I mean, I've been with
Speaker 5 Jonna coming up on eight years, and and
Speaker 5 you know, Chloe was 10,
Speaker 5 and Gracie was, she was six,
Speaker 5 and so a lot of almost a lot of their life. And
Speaker 6 you know, I
Speaker 6 you're doing a fantastic job.
Speaker 5 Thanks, man.
Speaker 5 You want to talk about fear?
Speaker 5 Like, that's the greatest fear there is.
Speaker 5 Is that my children are going to have to experience a world
Speaker 5 that's really hard.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 I pray that, you know, Christ is in their heart, and I pray that they
Speaker 5 have the intestinal fortitude
Speaker 5 to survive and to thrive in whatever adversity they face.
Speaker 5 And so that's what John and I are
Speaker 5 our main intention is to teach them.
Speaker 5 But it's hard. You know, it's hard.
Speaker 5
You know, I'm not perfect at all. I suffer from a lot of things.
I mean, it had gotten so bad
Speaker 5 for a few years that
Speaker 5 I finally,
Speaker 5 you know, had to start seeing somebody and how I could be a better parent,
Speaker 5 you know, and be more tolerant and be more patient. But, you know,
Speaker 5 now what we call operator syndrome, that's a real thing, man.
Speaker 5 And so
Speaker 5 trying to manage that and
Speaker 5 be an example of
Speaker 5 something to emulate, but something to learn from. You know,
Speaker 5 that's what I want.
Speaker 6 Well, I think
Speaker 6 when they do see this, because I'm sure they're going to watch it, I hope it's with you.
Speaker 5 But...
Speaker 6 I guarantee I'm to you one thing, they'll have a greater understanding of who their dad is and what his struggles are and why he is the way he is.
Speaker 5
I hope so. They will.
I'm praying it happens for sure.
Speaker 6 How did you meet Johnna?
Speaker 5 God's will.
Speaker 6 Was that a PTO meeting or some shit, wasn't it?
Speaker 5 No, it was crazy.
Speaker 6 Was at the school?
Speaker 5 It's at the school. Yeah.
Speaker 5 The divorce came and went, and I was in the midst of what was going on at TNQ with Marcus and the wizard. And
Speaker 5 that was devastating, just trying to push through in the midst of that and my losing my family and that collapsing. And
Speaker 5 I remember the divorce was finalized
Speaker 5 right before July. 4th of 2017.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, I was struggling financially. I'd kind of gotten waylaid with alimony and, you know, got out lawyered and
Speaker 5 was
Speaker 5 petrified that I wasn't going to be able to parent these two little girls by myself and just had a really significant breakdown.
Speaker 5 We went out to Colorado. My parents had a place out there and
Speaker 5 just kind of melted down. And
Speaker 5
my oldest was really struggling from the whole thing and was very confused. And she was young and didn't know what was going on.
And so a lot of like really
Speaker 5 challenging, worrisome behaviors were emerging out of her. I remember just like kind of collapsing and
Speaker 5
struggled, you know, and then started feeling a little bit better. And I had a great support group that really helped during that time.
I mean, David Corlew was amazing for me.
Speaker 5
Max was amazing. Mark Plermo was incredible.
Richie was amazing.
Speaker 5 You were good, you know, amazingly. I mean, shit,
Speaker 5 you were in it with me
Speaker 5 and had this great team. And my parents, my parents were
Speaker 5
unbelievable, unbelievable, amazing for me. And so it's like I got through it better than I'd ever gotten through anything.
You know, college, it was four years. Post.
Speaker 5 Teams, it was three years of misery. And then this,
Speaker 5
it was relatively compact. I mean, it was about a year and a half of pretty substantial misery.
And
Speaker 5 our
Speaker 5
relationship really began to struggle in 2013, 14 worse, 15 worse. By 16, it was essentially over.
And, you know, she wanted a separation and divorce.
Speaker 5 And then it was just, so that summer came through, the fall. And I remember.
Speaker 5 In the fall of 17, I had reached out to Maggie again and said, hey, Maggie, can we do a sweat lodge? And she had this remarkable guy named Jeff and had run sweat lodges.
Speaker 5 And I had done some with her son a couple of times before he ended up going through a ton of stuff, going in the military, going to Buds, and
Speaker 5 actually made it all the way to Damnik. And
Speaker 5 so I asked Maggie, hey, can we go through this, you know, this thing? And she was wonderful through that as a support too.
Speaker 5 And we did this sweat lodge with my close friend, Lex McMahon, amazing amazing human being former marine you know runs a fight promotion company south for just amazing you know met lex and and and this other guy that i had met
Speaker 5 doing
Speaker 5 you know training case officers who we had become very close
Speaker 5 and he was just a remarkable guy four years in combat just
Speaker 5 really amazing guy and i and kind of to back up
Speaker 5 kind of my low point was as the relationship was collapsing, um,
Speaker 5 in the spring, Bruce Cuttingham had drank himself to death.
Speaker 5
And that was devastating because I couldn't pull him out. I tried multiple times.
We could not pull him out of that.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 it was his funeral in October, and I'd gone to his funeral at Arlington.
Speaker 5 spoke at it
Speaker 5 and went and had lunch and then went over to the Naval Academy for Brian Hoke's funeral. It was in 209, then went over and was killed as a PMCO at the agency, was shot by a sniper.
Speaker 5
And so went over there and I reconnected with this friend and he was a mess. I was a mess.
And so
Speaker 5 fast forward the next fall, I reached out and I was like, hey, man, I want to come down and go do this sweat lodge. I'm really kind of broken and I want to know.
Speaker 5
And Lex was going through a ton himself. And I was like, you want to to do it? So we went in this sweat lodge up in Lake Worth.
And
Speaker 5
it was amazing. And it was the probably third one I'd done, but this one, like, it's called Warrior's Lodge.
And so there's 21 lava rocks they heat up and they put in this thing.
Speaker 5 And you get in and this guy leads through these prayers, these four sequence prayers. You tie these prayer beads and, you know, and you tie 100 pieces of tobacco in this red thing on this string.
Speaker 5 And then you put it above you. And man, I tied 100 prayers and they were like and almost all of them were like God
Speaker 5 please just let me find somebody I can love who will love me for who I am and help me help my children and help me get through this and
Speaker 5 we went into this thing and and by
Speaker 5 like hour two and a half three and my face is in the dirt and it's so high it feels like my eyes are melting and my skin's melting and this guy's saying these prayers and
Speaker 5 and you know I just break and I was like I got to get out I got to get out I got to get out and so I got out and my face is in the
Speaker 5 rain and I was in the mud and I'm sitting there and I'm just looking up at the sky and I'm just I'm broken
Speaker 5 and Lex I look over is next to me in the mud and then my other friend is next to him and then there's Maggie just sitting above us just looking at us.
Speaker 5 And I remember us just like, and she kind of smiled smiled at me and it was like, you're going to be okay now.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 after that, I was like, I got to change my mentality of this. I have to assess this differently.
Speaker 5 I have to look at life differently. I have to find, I have to be a better man.
Speaker 5 I can't keep carrying this stuff on and on and force other people to experience it, most especially these two little girls who need a father now in a broken home and so i was like all right kind of pulled myself together and and
Speaker 5 uh
Speaker 5 two months three months later
Speaker 5 i was supposed to go speak at this broward county sheriff's thing they canceled last minute i was like whatever and called another friend and who was participated at the girls school and was like hey do you want to go to this thing i was like i was first i was like hey you got a spot at your table he's like yeah come to it so i was like cool and so show up
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 and met her she like she was i got to the table early and i was just like why am i here what am i doing and there was a single everybody sat down a single seat and this woman walked up and sat down it was jonna and i was just like
Speaker 5 oh my god
Speaker 5 and i was
Speaker 5 like i don't know It was like Thunderbolt hit me and worked up enough courage at one point to go over and show my moves. And mind you, I had been married
Speaker 5
eight years, nine years. And I'm wearing jeans.
It was, it was denim and jean, a denim and diamonds or something. I'm wearing jeans and a jean shirt and a fedora.
And I had the long hair.
Speaker 5 And she's like, and I'm like,
Speaker 5 and I sit down next to her and I start, and she just comes back and it's like, you know, essentially like, who do you think you are?
Speaker 5
None of this is going to work with me. I don't know what you're doing.
And
Speaker 5
I just kept going. And she just was a snapper head back.
And I was like, oh my God.
Speaker 5 And we ended up going to an after place together afterwards. And it was, it was like, it was this,
Speaker 5 this like, oh my God, this person and the way she smiled and her eyes just like, they ripped through me. And
Speaker 5 I,
Speaker 5
the person we were with, she was like, you know, why don't you go home with him? Because like, she had babysitters. And I like, and I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let me drive you home.
Speaker 5
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And she's like, I don't know.
I was like, please, like, I'm good. She's like, he's fine.
Go ahead. And so
Speaker 5 drove her back and
Speaker 5
we're sitting outside. And I said, hey, is it cool? Can I have your number? I would, I would really like to, you know, see you again.
And she's like, yeah, all right. And so she gives it to me.
Speaker 5
And, and she got out and ran in. And that was, and I went back that that night, and she had left her jacket.
She made this cool jacket with her name Strollo on the back and sequence.
Speaker 5 And I was like, I sent her a pitch, picture of the jacket. I say,
Speaker 5 you're now, you definitely have to see me, or otherwise, I'm going to hold your jacket hostage.
Speaker 5 Dumb choice of words, right? Like, first text after this, like, horrible, but that's me. I was an idiot, right?
Speaker 5
And she's like, hostage. She's like, psycho.
And I was like, no, no, no, no.
Speaker 6 And she, she wrote that.
Speaker 5
She wouldn't call me, but that's essentially what she was implying in her return text. And so that next night, I called her and we talked for three hours.
And then I left that week to go on the road.
Speaker 5
I had a couple of speaking engagements. And every night we talked for three to four hours.
Following week, she agreed to go to this wine tasting. We went
Speaker 5 and it was just, oh my God. And it happened quickly and we were just talking and i've never met anybody that could talk and was interested in what my thoughts and the way i felt and
Speaker 5 you know and it wasn't she didn't want to hear about me working with the red socks or having a big podcast or being a speaker or writing books or she didn't give a shit about any of that stuff
Speaker 5 And she wanted to know who I was and what I had gone through.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
I was just blown away by her, but there was this mystery. There was something deeper that she wasn't sharing with me.
And she was a private person. And,
Speaker 5 you know, and I remember it was right after the Parkland shooting. And I had done an event where I had spoken to a guy who's in a,
Speaker 5 who was a financial advisor, his clients, and then He had kids that had gone.
Speaker 5 He reached out and he said, hey, would you come and speak to these five kids who are at parkland and try and help them through this and explain it to and i was like absolutely and
Speaker 5 and um
Speaker 5 and i said hey would you like to come with me to see this is what i really am passionate about doing and she's like okay
Speaker 5 and we went to this thing and i delivered the speech and we left and she was quiet and I was like, uh-oh, what's going on? You know, did I say something? Does she not dig this? What am I doing wrong?
Speaker 5 And we went back to my house and we went in to my bedroom and we sat down
Speaker 5 and she's like there's something I have to share with you and I was like what is it and she's like I want to let you know that my husband committed suicide
Speaker 5 and that's why I'm I'm a widow
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 I don't know what it was about that.
Speaker 5 I think, you know, some people would be intimidated by that or be,
Speaker 5 how do I react to that? How do I over-measure up? You know, how do I replace that? What do I do? And,
Speaker 5 you know, that's all a selfish way to look at it. But I,
Speaker 5 for me, it was a sign. It signified her strength
Speaker 5 that she was a person that could lose this amazing human being.
Speaker 5 You know, in the prime of his life, he was, you know, an assistant and personal trainer for one of the largest rock stars in the world.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 he just,
Speaker 5 through whatever reasons or whatever unknown, he just kind of went through this collapse while she was pregnant with their second child with Gracie.
Speaker 5 And she spoke with just not of anger or
Speaker 5 frustration or anything about him.
Speaker 5 But
Speaker 5 she spoke about reverence of the experience and what she'd learned. And so, you know, she became a widow at 29 years old with a four-year-old and a four-month-old, two-month-old.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 she didn't quit.
Speaker 5 She didn't break down. I mean, obviously, it was debilitating and unbelievably
Speaker 5 traumatic in every way, in every sense of the word.
Speaker 5 But
Speaker 5 she kept fighting and she fought for for those girls.
Speaker 5
And those two girls are just amazing human beings. They're such beautiful children and they're gracious.
And Chloe is like me. It's crazy.
She's so much like me, but she's not even my blood daughter.
Speaker 5 But she has, you know, got big energy and she's athletic and she's... you know, she's hilarious and she's got this beautiful laugh and she walks in the room and lights up.
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 and then Gracie is just
Speaker 5 she's just been touched you know
Speaker 5 and
Speaker 5 I'll never forget the first time we came together because we kept it a secret for months we didn't want to deal with what would happen at the school or we didn't want to you know because my
Speaker 5 divorce was already kind of known around this the school and it was you know it was
Speaker 5 you know I was the single guy I was the you know whatever people describe you as and you know and and
Speaker 5 our first time we i met the girls with her we went over to that same guy's house and
Speaker 5 um
Speaker 5 and it was easter
Speaker 5 and it was like
Speaker 5 and instantaneously falling in love with those children and her and it was like wow this is good it's gonna work and i had already like
Speaker 5 this one was like 11 days and I knew I wanted to be with her. Like, it was just,
Speaker 5 it was,
Speaker 5 I, you know, I, if,
Speaker 5 you know, it's,
Speaker 5 you don't want to say, you know, the, the old thing, my soulmate, but it was deeper than that. I found somebody whose soul was intact and was honest.
Speaker 5
She's the most honest person I've ever met in my life. And I needed that.
I needed truth. I needed truth desperately.
Real. Yeah.
Speaker 5 And so that began our relationship. And it came out of
Speaker 5 the recognition that our tragedies were not going to define us.
Speaker 5 And she proved that.
Speaker 6 I remember the first time I met her, Katie and I had dinner with you guys.
Speaker 6 And I remember the conversation afterwards.
Speaker 6 For the first time in my life, I'd seen you
Speaker 6 completely content
Speaker 6 and being yourself. Yeah.
Speaker 6 Your true self. That's right.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 She taught me how to do that because she does that
Speaker 5 every day.
Speaker 5 She is who she is.
Speaker 5 And I,
Speaker 5 you know, we all
Speaker 5
we want to be that. We aspire.
We have ambition for that.
Speaker 5 But for whatever reasons, whatever experiences, whatever trauma we carry or whatever it is, it's difficult to manifest that under duress and extenuating circumstances. But
Speaker 5 that's who she is. And she allowed me to discover that in myself.
Speaker 6 How did you propose to her?
Speaker 5 About a year later.
Speaker 5 Yeah, that was February 10th. And then the following year, and what's nuts is
Speaker 5 the anniversary of Tony's death is like a day later is when I asked her to marry me.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5 so many just other
Speaker 5
interesting things about those times. Scotty's death, Dave Hall at a funeral around those times.
And
Speaker 5 it never phased her.
Speaker 5 Like our first trip we took together was to Scotty's funeral.
Speaker 5 And like that was right around the same time.
Speaker 5 And
Speaker 5
yeah, and it was amazing. We did it at my parents' house, and all the girls were around.
And I got down on a knee, and
Speaker 5 I asked her to marry me.
Speaker 5 And it was
Speaker 5 unbelievable. She said, yeah.
Speaker 5
And I thought I'd never get married again. I thought there was no way I could do it.
I couldn't go through that again.
Speaker 5 And she made me want to.
Speaker 5 She made me want to be a better man,
Speaker 5 not just for her, but for her children, for my children, and for our family.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 It's worked out great so far.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 I mean, she's taught me
Speaker 5 that you're not defined by your failures.
Speaker 5 You're defined by what you do every day.
Speaker 5 You're not defined by the insecurities you feel. You're defined by how you persevere in them.
Speaker 5 You're not defined by your shortfalls, your ineptitude, your lack of intelligence, your whatever you think are your shortfalls.
Speaker 5 You're defined by how you make other people feel
Speaker 5 and doing the right thing.
Speaker 5 And that's where she comes from. You know, her parents, that's who they are.
Speaker 5
That's what they live up to. And her brothers and their families.
And that's, you know, that's where she comes from. She comes from Maine.
Speaker 5 And,
Speaker 5 you know, a teeny little town up in
Speaker 5 J Maine.
Speaker 6 Well, Dave, we're wrapping up the interview here.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 6 You got anything to say to your kids?
Speaker 5 Yeah, I do.
Speaker 5 Don't be afraid of the unknown. You know,
Speaker 5 that wisdom that my dad gave me, be a Renaissance man. Be Renaissance women.
Speaker 5 Seek out the challenges, the hard things.
Speaker 5 Live, figure out what you are inspired by, what your passion, what your meaning is, and
Speaker 5 where you want to go. And,
Speaker 5 you know,
Speaker 5 embrace your fear and have self-confidence and seek out great teams.
Speaker 5 And when you do that, you'll find your purpose
Speaker 5 and then live openly with purpose in your heart.
Speaker 5 And that's an important thing,
Speaker 5 how to do that.
Speaker 5 That's what all of my insecurities have led me to want to do.
Speaker 5 to teach other people how to do that, right? That's what it's inspired me to continue with frog logic and to work with the people I work with and to do what I do
Speaker 5 in the hopes that my children will say, hey, this is something that works and it's not coming from a made-up place.
Speaker 5 Like I didn't read
Speaker 5 some motivational book and be like, oh, this sounds cool.
Speaker 5 I'm going to try and do this. It all comes from
Speaker 5 the life I've lived and the life of my friends and what I've learned from you all and
Speaker 5 from the Dan Cerrillos and
Speaker 5 the other people in my life that are so impactful.
Speaker 6 Do you have anything you want to say to Jonna?
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 I love you and thank you.
Speaker 5 I would not be
Speaker 5 I would not have found,
Speaker 5 I would have not have rediscovered who I am without her.
Speaker 5 I would not be able to do what I do.
Speaker 5 I would not have the confidence to come in here and sit across from you and share as extensively as I have without her.
Speaker 5 She taught me how to communicate again. She taught me how to
Speaker 5 have strength again.
Speaker 5 what mattered with strength.
Speaker 5 She taught me how to love again. She taught me how to want to to heal, how to want to figure out how to improve and get better.
Speaker 5 You know, she
Speaker 5
helps me in every way, shape, or form. You know, she helps me run the business.
She helps me run my business with
Speaker 5
the asset management firm I work with. She helps me write curriculum.
She helps me
Speaker 5 everything in every aspect of my life. She's my
Speaker 5 ultimate best friend. She's my lover.
Speaker 5 And I think what I want to tell her is that
Speaker 5 I will always be with her.
Speaker 5 I will always love her. I will always try and be better for her.
Speaker 5 and that I'm not going anywhere and that
Speaker 5 I'm in.
Speaker 5 She gave me something when we first started together when she knew when she was willing to take the risk with me. And I promised her I would protect that with everything that I have as man.
Speaker 5 And I just want to reinforce that, that
Speaker 5 I'm going to do that.
Speaker 6 She's really brought out the best in you, man.
Speaker 5 Yeah, thank you.
Speaker 5
You're a lucky guy. I feel like it.
Yeah.
Speaker 5 Good.
Speaker 6 Well, Dave,
Speaker 6 I can't wait to see what the David Brotherford show
Speaker 6 brings in the future. And for anybody watching,
Speaker 6 it's awesome content.
Speaker 6 But most of all, man,
Speaker 6
thank you for being my friend. Thank you for introducing me to my wife.
Thank you for marrying us. Thank you for being a mentor.
Speaker 6 And I love you, dude.
Speaker 5
I love you too. You're welcome.
Thank you for
Speaker 5 being
Speaker 5 my best friend. And thank you for not beating the hell out of me too bad.
Speaker 5 And thank you for sharing this space that you've created that's making so much good in the world and
Speaker 5 for inspiring me to keep trying to do the same because that's
Speaker 5 worth it. That's worth everything we've gone through is to is to give back, to share what we've learned.
Speaker 6 You'll always be my best friend, man.
Speaker 5 Thank you. Say