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The Mental Frame & Specific Daily Actions to Succeed | Andy Stumpf

Andy Stumpf, former Navy SEAL and world-record wingsuit jumper, offers far more than just war stories in his book «Drown Proof». He presents a powerful weekly exercise that separates concerns from influence — one that immediately reshaped how one listener manages time, drama, and agency. But what happens when elite discipline meets the brutal reality of divorce, the isolation of civilian life, and the epidemic of veteran suicide? Stumpf tackles the daily micro-choices that compound into life trajectories, the mental reset that comes from risking everything at 120 mph, and the dark tunnels some people enter where the way they feel in a moment seems permanent.

Длительность видео: 2:55:11·Опубликовано 15 июн. 2026 г.·Язык видео: English
11–12 мин чтения·36,012 произнесённых словсжато до 2,216 слов (16x)·

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Ключевые выводы

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The sphere of influence is tiny — usually just yourself and your actions. Mapping concerns versus influence weekly can dramatically reduce wasted mental energy and restore a sense of agency.

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Consistently choosing the slightly harder option — making the bed, putting dishes away, taking the cold shower — builds the anterior mid-cingulate cortex, the brain's «tenacity structure», which predicts long-term success and healthy aging.

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High-consequence activities like wingsuit BASE jumping create a mental reset and clarity that can last months, but the same state can be accessed through art, jiu-jitsu, or any practice that forces full presence.

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Suicide in special operations communities now exceeds combat deaths. Many operators brought unaddressed trauma into service; isolation, alcohol, and the gap between self-image and reality can become lethal when left unspoken.

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Social media is a uniquely insidious addiction because it operates at low resolution — you remain aware you're wasting time and should stop, yet the platform keeps you scrolling without full absorption or the sobering wake-up of harder drugs.

Вкратце

True progress comes not from grand plans but from stacking small, slightly harder choices every single day — and recognizing that the thing you can control most reliably is yourself, not the external storm.


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The Circle of Influence Exercise

Mapping concerns versus influence weekly reveals how little you control — and empowers you.

Andy Stumpf describes a simple but transformative weekly practice: draw a line down a sheet of paper, label one column «concern» and the other «influence». List everything occupying your waking hours on the left. On the right, write down what you can actually control. Most people discover the left column sprawls across the page while the right holds a single entry: yourself. This imbalance exposes the core truth: you have no control over what happens to you, but absolute control over how you respond.

Huberman adopted this exercise immediately and reports it has remapped his unhealthy tendencies, giving him far more agency in daily life. The practice is especially powerful when sticky thoughts wake you at 3 a.m. — invariably, those thoughts live on the concern side. Recognizing that being scared or concerned about something does not impact its outcome frees energy to focus on the right-hand column: your thought process, your speech, your time management, your daily plan.

The algorithm of social media and the noise of modern life are designed to bloat the concern column. The exercise helps identify an unhealthy attachment to things you cannot change. Over time, it trains you to cross back into the sphere of influence — the only place where effort yields results.


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Stumpf on the Paradox of Social Media

Elite discipline still succumbs to scrolling — revealing the platform's insidious design.

The fact that you could recognize all of those things, you can both text each other back and forth and say «Man, this is awesome» about limited phone usage, and 60 days later you're back to the same behavior — that's all you need to know about the platforms.

Andy Stumpf


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Why Social Media Is the Perfect Addiction

Low-resolution engagement keeps you aware you're wasting time while you keep scrolling.

⚠️

Why Social Media Is the Perfect Addiction

Huberman proposes that social media is uniquely destructive because it operates at «low resolution» — it doesn't fully absorb you like alcohol or opioids, so you remain aware you should stop. You can still sort of tend to your kids, sort of be in a Zoom meeting, sort of exist. Because it never totally falls apart, the brain runs two tracks: compulsive use and simultaneous self-monitoring. This split prevents the sobering wake-up that comes from harder addictions, making the behavior stickier and harder to break.


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Micro-Discipline: The Toilet Paper Principle

🧻
Do it right the first time
Stumpf's kids stack empty toilet paper rolls into a pyramid rather than replace them. The principle: it always takes longer to do it wrong. Fold laundry now or dig through a pile later; make the bed or fight tangled sheets at night.
🛏️
Start the day with discipline
Admiral McRaven's bed-making speech resonated because it's not about the bed — it's about doing the small, unsexy thing first. One disciplined act leads to another, setting the tone for the entire day and creating momentum.
⚖️
Pick the harder choice
Every decision offers a slightly easier and slightly harder path. Choose the harder one more often. Over time, these micro-choices build a life of discipline and progress that no single act could create on its own.
🧠
Grow your tenacity structure
Neuroscience shows that the anterior mid-cingulate cortex — the brain's «tenacity structure» — grows when you do things you don't want to do. This region predicts successful dieting, long-term goal completion, and even longevity in «superagers».

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The Flow State and Its Long Tail

Wingsuiting and other high-consequence activities reset mental clarity for months afterward.

For Stumpf, wingsuit BASE jumping was never about danger for danger's sake. One minute before stepping off a cliff, every concern — bills, arguments, career worries — evaporates. For the next 90 seconds, only the immediate 3 seconds matter. That razor focus, that «beautiful place» of total presence, was something he first experienced on SEAL operations and unknowingly lost when he left the military. The static of everyday life became overwhelming.

What surprised him most was the long tail: a single two-week trip to Switzerland, jumping daily, would leave him mentally dialed for six months. He was a better father, a more patient husband, sharper in business. It wasn't the adrenaline high; it was a recalibration of time perception and mental clarity. Huberman notes that Rick Rubin and other creatives report a similar post-flow calm after intense creative work — a state for which neuroscience has no formal name.

Stumpf found other activities — jiu-jitsu, for instance — that could replicate some of that reset, though never quite as powerfully. He ultimately quit wingsuiting when the risk-reward calculus shifted: friends died, his access to drop zones dwindled in Montana, and he realized he could no longer maintain the currency and competency required. The lesson: the activity itself is less important than finding something that pulls you fully into the present and leaves you anchored for weeks afterward.


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The Hardest Thing He's Ever Done

A two-year contentious divorce eclipsed every physical and operational hardship Stumpf faced.

People assume being a SEAL is the hardest thing Stumpf has endured. It's not. His nearly two-year divorce was soul-crushing in a way combat and training never were. The military never forced him to question whether he was a good enough person to continue existing. The divorce did. He lost contact with his oldest son for 18 months — calls ignored, letters unanswered, parking-lot encounters met with his son burning out without acknowledgment.

Every tool in «Drown Proof» — the concern-versus-influence exercise, controlling self-talk, breaking time into the shortest possible chunks — became essential for survival. He withheld details out of respect for his ex-wife's privacy and because he has a platform and she does not. But he's open about the outcome: staying the course eventually restored his relationship with his son, now closer than ever. The takeaway is that the battles no one sees, the ones that gut your sense of self-worth, are often far harder than the ones that earn medals.

Huberman, who grew up in a high-conflict divorce, resonated deeply with this section of the book. He realized how hard it must have been for his own parents — a perspective that took decades to develop. Stumpf's candor about this chapter demolishes the myth that elite performers are immune to the struggles that break ordinary people. They're not. They just have tools — and sometimes those tools are barely enough.


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Suicide in the Teams: A Silent Epidemic

Green Berets have lost more to suicide than combat since 2001; SEALs are likely close.

Green Beret suicide deaths vs. combat deaths since 2001
More suicide deaths than combat deaths
Stumpf estimates the SEAL community is close to the same grim threshold.
Common factors in veteran suicide
Isolation, alcohol, unaddressed pre-service trauma, gap between self-image and others' perception
Many operators brought trauma into service; military experience layered on top without resolution.
Stumpf's friend Dave
Multiple Ibogaine treatments, still struggled with alcohol, died by suicide
Dave held himself to a standard he could no longer meet; the gap destroyed him.

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Dave's Story and the Gap Between Self and Perception

A top-tier operator's private journals revealed self-loathing no one else could see.

Dave was the standard for what a SEAL should be. If you met his expectations, you earned silent approval; if you fell short, his tongue was a whip. He served at an elite JSOC command for a decade, often alone in adversarial countries, and later taught selection candidates. From the outside, he was the archetype. Behind closed doors, he was collapsing under the weight of his own expectations.

Stumpf read Dave's journals after his death. The gap between how Dave saw himself and how others saw him was staggering. Dave was isolated, battling alcohol addiction, and unable to share the depth of his struggle. He tried Ibogaine treatment multiple times — even facilitated it for others — but it didn't work for him. The journals revealed a man who couldn't reconcile his internal reality with the standard he demanded of himself. That dissonance, paired with isolation and alcohol, led to a gun in his mouth at his family home in Florida.

At the funeral, everyone asked the same haunting question: «What could we have done?» No one ever says they did enough. Stumpf doesn't know what more could have been done. Millions of dollars flow into veteran suicide prevention programs; peer networks rally around anyone showing signs of crisis. Yet the problem persists. He suspects that many operators bring a «full seabag of trauma» into service, and when you layer on operational stress without addressing the foundation, the structure eventually fails.


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Navigating Suicidality: Theories and Tools

Suicidality may stem from the illusion that the present moment is permanent.

THE TUNNEL
Irrational decision, rational to them
People who take their own lives arrive at an irrational decision that feels like the only rational option. Huberman theorizes they may enter a tunnel where the way they feel in a given moment seems permanent — they cannot imagine it ever changing. Recognizing that this is a perceptual distortion, not reality, could be a critical intervention point.
THE BUFFER
Foggy goggles and external trust
Stumpf shares an anecdote about telling a struggling friend: «Your goggles are foggy. You cannot trust anything you think or see about yourself for the next six months. You can only trust these three people.» The friend accepted that his perception was distorted and survived. The lesson: when someone is in crisis, they may need to outsource judgment entirely to trusted others until clarity returns.

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The Price of Success and Defining Enough

Winning at the highest level often means losing connection, presence, and peace.

💡

The Price of Success and Defining Enough

Stumpf and Huberman agree: many people at the top 1% of their fields are profoundly unhappy. From the outside, they have everything — money, fame, accomplishment. Inside, they have nothing. They sacrificed holidays, relationships, and life experiences to reach a goal, only to discover the summit is lonely and cold. Stumpf would rather see someone fall slightly short of a massive goal and remain happy, fulfilled, and connected than achieve everything and be miserable. The challenge is that no one can tell you where that line is — you have to discover it through experience, ideally before you've burned everything else to the ground.


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What Stumpf Is Excited About Now

He has no idea what's next — and that's the most exciting part.

Stumpf owns a Black Rifle Coffee shop in Kalispell, Montana, hosts a podcast, travels the world with his wife as she coaches jiu-jitsu, and recently published his first book. None of these pursuits would have appeared on any list he could have made when leaving the SEALs. He's worked as a strength coach, a charter jet pilot, a professional skydiver and BASE jumper, and a public speaker. He has no idea what comes next — and he's more excited about that uncertainty than any specific target.

He's learned that white-knuckling a rigid plan is less effective than relaxing into readiness. His litmus test for new opportunities is simple: Do I naturally do this in my life? Would I enjoy this regardless of the paycheck? If either answer is no, it's an easy no. He's old enough now to know he has the tools to handle whatever comes, and that confidence has opened more doors than any amount of forcing ever did. For someone who spent years in crisis mode, wondering if he could pay the mortgage, this shift from survival to discernment represents a decade of hard-won growth.


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Люди

Andy Stumpf
Former Navy SEAL, world-record wingsuit jumper, podcast host, author of «Drown Proof»
guest
Andrew Huberman
Professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology, Stanford School of Medicine
host
Chad Wright
Endurance athlete and former SEAL
mentioned
Dave
Former SEAL team operator, friend of Stumpf, died by suicide
mentioned
Joe Parvizi
Neurosurgeon at Stanford
mentioned
Jocko Willink
Former SEAL, mentioned in context of heat/cold protocol
mentioned
Rick Rubin
Music producer, cited for post-flow state insights
mentioned
Morgan Housel
Author of books on money and psychology
mentioned

Глоссарий
Anterior mid-cingulate cortexA brain region that grows when you do things you don't want to do; it predicts success in long-term goals, dieting, and is a hallmark of «superagers» who maintain cognitive function into old age.
Sphere of influence vs. sphere of concernA framework for mapping what you can control (influence — typically just yourself) versus what occupies your mental energy but lies outside your control (concern — usually much larger).
Flow stateA psychological state of total immersion and focus in an activity, often accompanied by loss of self-consciousness and distorted time perception.
BASE jumpingParachuting from a fixed object (Building, Antenna, Span, Earth) rather than an aircraft; typically involves one parachute and very low altitude, making it high-consequence.
WingsuitA specialized jumpsuit with fabric wings between the arms and legs, allowing a skydiver or BASE jumper to glide horizontally at speeds up to 120 mph before deploying a parachute.
IbogaineA psychoactive substance derived from the iboga plant, used in some treatment programs to interrupt addiction to opioids, alcohol, and other substances; not recreationally pleasant and carries medical risks.

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