• Why toughing out is barely the answer
    Jan 7 2025
    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit livingintheus.substack.com

    What if everything was set against you from the beginning?

    Hi, everyone-

    Ever wonder if certain things are just dead-set against you from the start?

    It certainly looks like it when we’re dealing with an impossible colleague, boss, coworker, partner, spouse, flawed system, medical system, and even government.

    And when that happens, I’m always thinking:

    * I guess I’ll just have to put on ‘a good attitude.’

    * What was that manifestation system that that book said again?

    * This system sucks. They should fix their problems. Not me.

    * “Mind over matter,” “Mind over matter,” “Mind over matter,”

    * Never mind. It’s over. It doesn’t matter. Now:

    How do I get out of this hell?

    This week, I’ve dug up an archival message from a Navy Seal and Admiral who deconstructs how one Navy cohort deals with the notoriously bone-breaking and soul-crushing Hell Week—the baseline physical test the US Navy uses to select the nation’s toughest.

    According to some:

    “Hell Week is considered to be the hardest military training in the world. It is a week of continuous military training during which most classes sleep for a total of two to five hours over the course of the entire week.” -Eric Greitens

    “The instructors used our suffering to pick and peel away our layers, not to find the fittest athletes … That’s something the quitters didn’t understand until it was too late.” -David Goggins

    “Hell Week involves waking soldiers up to gunfire on a Sunday and forcing them to exercise, jump in cold water, and go without sleep until Friday.” -David Goggins

    “Lined up on the beach during suset, Hell Week students get to say goodnight to the sun and hello to the drop in temperature each night.” -Chris Sajnog

    “A Navy Seal told me that most guys trying to be a Navy SEAL don’t make it through Hell week because they’re dreaming for it to be over.” -Jon Gordon

    Sounds like a miserable time. But I don’t think you need to just be going through physical adversity to be going through Hell Week.

    Hell Week is the on-and-on-ness of any thankless state. Hell Week is the visible invisibility of growing old. Hell Week is the unrecognized lump in your throat when your kids, grandkids, parents move away to places you’d be lucky to visit once every year or two. Hell Week is losing the job you don’t even love. Hell Week is wanting the freedom to call the shots so badly that even freedom refuses the call. Hell Week is being ridiculed for what you believe in by people you trusted.

    Hell Week, if anything, is … human week.

    This is why, in between wiping the kids’ milk off the floor and wondering when I’m going to hear back from my doctor this week, I put on the headphones and thumb through hours of research. And that’s when I learned that there is a different approach to going through ‘Hell Week,’ according to Admiral William McRaven’s message.

    In this episode:

    * “It is six days of no sleep … a muddy bog that tests …”

    * “My training class [was] looking to weed out the weak of mind …”

    * “The mud consumed each man until … “

    * “The instructors told us that we could all leave the mud—if just five men quit.”

    * “There were still eight hours to go before the sun rose … And then, …”

    What I found from his account is that, to my surprise, toughing it out and a bunch of mindset stuff just isn’t going to do it.

    There’s something else. Something else that makes the sunrise come sooner.

    Scroll up to download and listen to this episode. Or,

    Scroll down to read the transcript.

    Thanks for being here,

    -Thalia

    PS: If you want to catch up on similar themes from the archives, here are a couple as a refresh.

    SEASON 2, EPISODE 4

    Toughing it out isn’t the answer, says Hell Week

    (Music: Silhouettes by Tobias Voigt. License Code: 8IDBGGC5WXLDYLAU)

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    2 mins
  • Your unimprisoned life is words away
    Dec 10 2024
    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit livingintheus.substack.com

    Hi, everyone-

    Sometimes the problem with life, is the question of how to get out of a situation.

    * A job. An impossible coworker.

    * A divorce. A silent treatment. A fight.

    * A passive-agressive relationship.

    * A situation that never improves.

    * Or simply the general feeling of being behind in just about everything.

    Though most people have smiles plastered on their faces around Christmas—I mean, how could you not, when thoughts of heart-warming chocolate drinks and cleansing snow abound—inside, sometimes there’s just something that is still … OFF. Something that each of us are still prisoners of.

    This week, I’ve dug up a special archival speech-to-text letter from someone who actually was a Prisoner of War.

    I wanted to know:

    What does one have to really say to oneself, to turn a situation from: prisoner for life … to Life, Unimprisoned.

    Let’s find out. You can either:

    * Scroll up to download and listen to this episode. Or,

    * Scroll down to read the transcript.

    Thanks for being here,

    -Thalia

    PS: If you want to catch up on similar themes from last season, here are a couple as a refresh.

    SEASON 2, EPISODE 3

    The freeing Christmas words of a prisoner

    (Music: Silhouettes by Tobias Voigt. License Code: 8IDBGGC5WXLDYLAU)

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    1 min
  • Is service the secret to freedom?
    Nov 12 2024
    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit livingintheus.substack.com

    Is being under-oath really freedom? Secret Service Oaths and the Kennedy assassination explain …

    Hi, everyone-

    I spent a ton of time this week to really think about what freedom means. When I came to America, the whole slogan of ‘freedom of speech’ sounded good. It sounds really good, actually. But that’s not the whole story, isn’t it?

    * Would someone who’s made a vow to a partner be free?

    * Would a parent who served their child day and night ever be free?

    * Would a grandparent who now has to face assisted living be free?

    * Would an unknown with a dream be free of their dream’s demands?

    * Would secret service under oath to protect their country ever be free? Especially if they have to protect the very people they loathe?

    Freedom is one of those things that we just could never understand enough. Including in the last half of our lives. Which is why, this week, I’m taking a closer look at:

    The Secret Service Oath of Office

    This is the vow secret service officers take before serving their country, the president, the vice president, and former presidents. These are the men and women in black who, in the movies, look like they run the world—when in reality it’s the world that tend to run them over.

    Let’s find out their take on service and oath, what freedom means to them, and what really happened when all were tested during the Kennedy motorcade assassination.

    *Listener discretion is advised.

    Let’s get started!

    SEASON 2, EPISODE 2

    Is service the secret to freedom?

    * “We flew up to the Air Force base and got there shortly after the baby was born. But there was a problem with the baby … With his lungs.”

    * “Previous to that, generally in public they didn’t really show really any emotion. It wasn’t so obvious that they were so in love. But after that …”

    * “And all of a sudden, I heard this explosive noise over my right shoulder in the rear.”

    * “I saw the President grab at his throat …”

    * “She was trying to grasp some of those materials that came out of the president’s head. And she did manage to get a hold of some of them. And had it in her hands.”

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    2 mins