But Jocko, your book, Discipline Equals Freedom, Field Manual MK1-MOD1, expanded edition, Discipline Equals Freedom.
It should be given to every young person in the world.
It should be translated into Tagalog.
Well, thank you, Dennis.
I appreciate it.
And I'm glad you like it.
In fact, one of the videos that I did make for PragerU was about this very thought of discipline equals freedom.
And the more discipline you have in your life, the more freedom you're going to end up with.
And I think we see that play all the time.
And I'm glad to get the word out to some people with this book.
You certainly should, because it's a service to humanity.
Just a random page, folks.
So it's a very...
Interesting layout.
They're black pages and white print.
And in big letters across two pages, do what makes you happy.
I hear people say this, and I get it.
In life, do what makes you happy.
And then you go on.
The problem comes when people decide to let that ethos drive their daily life.
When people try to do what makes them happy every day.
This is wrong.
Do not do it.
Lying in bed for another 37 minutes makes you happy.
Eating a donut will make you happy.
Watching another episode of some random television show will make you happy.
Scrolling through a social media page will make you happy.
Buying some shiny new product will make you happy.
These actions all result in short-term happiness.
The problem is they also result in long-term misery.
Do not go down that road.
Do what challenges you, etc., etc.
That's exactly right, because you recognize what I just talked about earlier this hour has been denied.
Human nature needs to be fought.
Yes, and you know, that's the thing.
The first part of that piece of do what makes you happy, look, when people talk about, hey, do a job that makes you happy.
I get that.
That's a long-term thing.
You know, I have a goal.
I want to be a doctor.
I want to be a builder.
I want to be a car owner.
I want to do something that makes me happy.
That's great.
You want to be around people that makes you happy.
Great.
I get that.
You want to form a group of friends that over your lifetime, you're going to grow and you're going to do things together, and that's going to make you happy.
I get that.
You want to live in a place that makes you happy.
I get that.
Those are big, strategic, long-term things that you have these goals.
But when people take that and they turn it to, hey, I'm going to do what's going to make me happy in the next 17 minutes, That's a definite problem, and it creates problems for people all the time.
And you're right, because human nature wants you to be comfortable right now, and you have to fight against that.
It wants you to eat the rest of that donut, you know, whatever.
2,000 years ago, if you had an opportunity to eat something, you better take it, because that opportunity might not come again for two or three days or four days or until you were able to hunt down another animal.
But nowadays, you can eat that donut now, and you can eat another one 30 seconds later.
And that causes problems.
So, yeah, there's a lot of things that we have to fight against in this modern world to keep us on the right path, for sure.
When did you come up with this?
Did you know this as a young person or did the Navy instill it in you?
You know, the Navy didn't instill it in me directly.
They didn't say, hey, if you have discipline, you'll end up with more freedom.
What happened was, I grew up.
And I realized that the more discipline that I had, and it definitely started with my job, you know, the harder I worked, look, I'm in the SEAL teams, I'm a young kid, I'm 19 years old, when I get to SEAL Team 1, and I want to do a good job, and I realized that the harder I worked, the more opportunity I got, the more responsibility I got, and the more freedom I got.
And so the harder I worked, the more discipline I have.
At work, the more freedom I had.
Well, then I started applying that to my life in the civilian world and the way I ran my finances and the way I ran my health.
And then I started realizing it doesn't only just apply to people as individuals.
It applies to whole organizations.
And if you have a field platoon and they're highly disciplined, you have a lot more freedom to maneuver that element around.