- Former Navy SEAL commander Jocko Willink completed six months of Navy SEAL training when he was 19 years old.
- He commanded SEAL Team 3, Task Unit Bruiser, the most highly decorated US special-operations unit of the Iraq War for nearly two decades.
- Willink walked away from training with one important lesson: Don't quit.
On the outside, basic Navy SEAL training appears to whip trainees into shape and prep soldiers for tough situations. But according to retired SEAL Jocko Willink, "they don't train you at all."
Instead, trainees are simply told: "If you don't like it, quit," Willink told Business Insider's Rich Feloni on an episode of our podcast "Success! How I Did It." After six months of physically and mentally demanding SEAL training, Willink said he learned one major lesson: Don't quit.
Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL or BUD/S training is designed to push trainees to their limits. Willink said 80% of people leave the program. It's no easy task to constantly strain your body and mind in harsh conditions, and it certainly wasn't easy for Willink, who entered BUD/S training at 19 years old.
"There's very limited amount of training in basic SEAL training," Willink said. "They don't say, 'OK, listen. When you start to get to a point in your mind where you're feeling tired, what you need to do is calm your breath, relax your inner mindset.' They don't say that to you. They're, like, 'If you don't like it, quit.' And so a lot of people quit, and other people don't quit."
Listen to the full podcast episode here:
BUD/S training is broken up into three phases: eight weeks of physical conditioning, eight weeks of diving, and nine weeks land warfare. The first phase of training is the toughest with a "Hell Week" at the halfway mark. Two-thirds or more trainees call it quits during phase 1, according to the SEALS website. After completing BUD/S, the remaining trainees endure three weeks of basic parachute training.
"It's fun," Willink said. "Everyone makes a big deal about it, the big SEAL training. It's push-ups, pull-ups, dips, ropes, climbs, swims, and runs. And you don't sleep a lot. You are exhausted and people do get sick."
Despite countless hours conditioning, diving, and land training, Willink did not quit. He said BUD/S was not a life-changing experience for him, like it is for some people. "It's, like, 'Yeah, we're going to be cold, wet, miserable, and we're going to keep going. Next question.'"
After completing BUD/S training, Willink went on to serve as the commander of the most highly decorated unit of the Iraq War, SEAL Team 3, Task Unit Bruiser - the same team as Chris Kyle of "American Sniper" - for nearly two decades before retiring in 2010.