LETTER 1 Your Frontline
Walker,
You told me you cleared your house last week. You got up around 0300, grabbed a pistol, and went from room to room, closet to closet, crevice to crevice, checking .and#160;.and#160;. for what, you werenandrsquo;t sure.
Nobody was in the house, of course.
Youandrsquo;ve been doing that a couple of times a month. Youandrsquo;ve been waking up in puddles of sweat. It would be temptingandmdash;very temptingandmdash;to imagine that youandrsquo;re just having bad dreams. It would be even more tempting to slap a medical diagnosis on whatandrsquo;s going on and to let some doctor pump you full of pills.
But you are my friend, and itandrsquo;s not some nightmare memory of war thatandrsquo;s really the problem, and you know it.
The problems at night may have a little to do with the past, but they have a lot more to do with what you are choosing to do in the present.
Youandrsquo;re home now, and for the first time in your life, you donandrsquo;t know what youandrsquo;re aiming at. You tried the concrete business. It went well for a while and then blew up.
Before, youandrsquo;d been a Navy SEAL. You were one of the worldandrsquo;s elite commandos. You rolled out of bed every day with a sense of purpose, a meaningful mission in front of you, and a team around you. You could walk with your head held high. Now youandrsquo;ve been diagnosed with a disorder, youandrsquo;re unemployed, youandrsquo;re surrounded by friends like the marine who is talking about andldquo;painting the ceiling with his brains,andrdquo; and all the while youandrsquo;re passing the weekends with your cooler full of beer. You didnandrsquo;t call me until youandrsquo;d been arrested, and now youandrsquo;re looking at the prospect of having your kids come visit you in jail.
So what do you do?
and#160;
As a Navy SEAL, you understood the word andldquo;frontlineandrdquo; to mean the place where you met the enemy.
The frontline was where battles were fought and fates decided. The frontline was a place of fear, struggle, and suffering. It was also a place where victories were won, where friendships of a lifetime were forged in hardship. It was a place where we lived with a sense of purpose.
But andldquo;frontlineandrdquo; isnandrsquo;t just a military term. You have a frontline in your life now. In fact, everyone has a place where they encounter fear, where they struggle, suffer, and face hardship. We all have battles to fight.
And itandrsquo;s often in those battles that we are most alive: itandrsquo;s on the frontlines of our lives that we earn wisdom, create joy, forge friendships, discover happiness, find love, and do purposeful work. If you want to win any meaningful kind of victory, youandrsquo;ll have to fight for it.
and#160;
We did a lot of hard stuff together. We also had a lot of fun. Thisandrsquo;ll be the same. You have a lot more to do than read a letter: you have to raise two children (with a third on the way), find direction in your life, support your family. You have some day-after-day, hard-sweating work in front of you. My hope is that if I put some of these thoughts on paper, theyandrsquo;ll help you on this new frontline.
And before we start, I want you to know that you are one of the best people Iandrsquo;ve ever known. Iandrsquo;m not telling you that to blow smoke or to puff you up if youandrsquo;re reading this late at night and are feeling down. Iandrsquo;m telling you because I love you, and if somebody has a better heart or a deeper devotion to friends and family than you, I havenandrsquo;t met him. You inspired me when we were in training, and youandrsquo;ve motivated me to write down these thoughts. Your wife is lucky to have you as a husband, your kids are lucky to have you as a father, and I am lucky to have you as a friend.
Iandrsquo;m disappointed that you arenandrsquo;t living as fully as you can. Iandrsquo;m disappointed that all of your giftsandmdash;your tough energy, your street-smart, solid intelligence, your kind heart, your vision, your belief in the power of other peopleandmdash;have been lying fallow for too long. The world is a poorer place because you arenandrsquo;t fully in it.
The world needs what you have to offer. But because youandrsquo;ve been wrestling with these demons and have been churned and turned and knocked around by your own painandmdash;by the resistance that youandrsquo;ve put in your own pathandmdash;weandrsquo;re all weaker for it. And that, my friend, is bull. Youandrsquo;re capable of more than youandrsquo;re living right now.
Iandrsquo;m hoping that as we knock these letters back and forth, theyandrsquo;ll help you turn the pain you experience into the strength, wisdom, and joy you deserve.
Itandrsquo;s all about resilience.
and#160;
Resilience is the virtue that enables people to move through hardship and become better. No one escapes pain, fear, and suffering. Yet from pain can come wisdom, from fear can come courage, from suffering can come strengthandmdash;if we have the virtue of resilience.
People have known this for thousands of years. But today a lot of this ancient wisdom goes unheeded.
In my work with other veterans who have overcome injuries and lossandmdash;the loss of limbs, the loss of comrades, the loss of purposeandmdash;I have heard one thing over and over again: their moments of darkness often led, in time, to their days of greatest growth.
You can be tough on civilians, on people who andldquo;donandrsquo;t understandandrdquo; what youandrsquo;ve been through. But the battlefield isnandrsquo;t the only place where people suffer. Hardship hits in a million places. And there are a lot of people, including your neighbors, who have suffered more than any soldier, and theyandrsquo;ve done so with none of your training, with no unit around them, with no hospital to care for them, and sometimes with no community to support them.
And when those people reflect on their suffering, they often uncover a similar truth: that struggle helped them to build deep reservoirs of strength.
Not all growth happens this way. But a great deal of it does come when we put our shoulder into whatandrsquo;s painful. We choose to, or have to, step beyond the margins of our past experience and do something hard and new.
and#160;
Of course fear does not automatically lead to courage. Injury does not necessarily lead to insight. Hardship will not automatically make us better.
Pain can break us or make us wiser. Suffering can destroy us or make us stronger. Fear can cripple us, or it can make us more courageous.
It is resilience that makes the difference.
When people try to help other people, they often promise that they have andldquo;new secretsandrdquo; based on some revolutionary trick or the andldquo;latest scientific research.andrdquo; Itandrsquo;s true that current science has confirmed centuries-old insights into resilience. But I donandrsquo;t have any such promises. In fact, the only thing I can promise you is that these letters will be imperfect.
Some of what Iandrsquo;ll share with you are old insights, often from people who lived in another time altogether. Iandrsquo;ll also share a few stories from my own battles and from the great teachers and role models I met along the way. The insights are often old because resilience is a virtue as old as human existence. Since the beginning of recorded history, people have recognized it as essential to human flourishing. For at least three thousand years, people have been thinking and learning about how we become resilientandmdash;how we make ourselves, our children, our families, our units, and our communities stronger and wiser as we move through pain and hardship.
A lot of this, then, will strike you as common sense. But thatandrsquo;s the nature of common sense: itandrsquo;s built from ideas that have stood timeandrsquo;s test. These ideas are accessible to all of us, and they live from one generation to the next.
and#160;
What worked for us in the SEAL teams, what works for Olympic athletes, what worked for the Greeks two thousand five hundred years agoandmdash;much of it is the same stuff, directed at the same human questions. How do you focus your mind, control your stress, and excel under pressure? How do you work through fear and build courage? How do you overcome defeat and rise above obstacles? How do you adapt to adversity?
These are universal questions. Everyone has to answer them. We answer them with practical wisdom, and that wisdom surrounds us. It is embedded in our language, our art, our literature, our philosophy, our history, our religion. But in an age of distraction, weandrsquo;ve lost touch with practical wisdom. Our wealth of common sense fails to become common practice.
Two thousand five hundred years ago, a soldier-poet wrote this:
Even in our sleep, pain that cannot forget
falls drop by drop upon the heart,
and in our own despite, against our will,
comes wisdom to us by the awful grace of God.
andmdash;Aeschylus
Aeschylus was an Athenian soldier who fought at the battle of Marathon. At Marathon, he and his fellow citizensandmdash;the elite troops of their dayandmdash;repelled the greatest foreign invasion that Greece had ever seen. When Aeschylus wrote about painandmdash;the hard life of a soldier, or the anguish of those he leaves behindandmdash;he wrote from experience. Listen to these words he put into the mouth of a Greek soldier just returned from ten years of war:
Our beds right up against the enemy walls.
Rain from the sky, dew from the ground soaking us perpetually,
rotting our clothes, filling our hair with vermin.
I could tell you stories of winter so cold it killed the birds in the air.