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The Rich Roll Podcast

Navy SEAL Rich Diviney On The Attributes That Drive Optimal Performance

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement, Society & Culture

4.8 • 12.9K Ratings

🗓️ 4 January 2021

⏱️ 147 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

It’s hard to predict success in the real world. But there’s a reason why some people thrive — even when things get hard. But what exactly is that reason? Today’s guest became obsessed with better understanding what differentiates those who prevail from those who fail. What he discovered would forever change the game. Rich Diviney is a former Navy SEAL Commander who served up 13 overseas deployments over 21 years as an active member and officer of the armed forces’ most elite, secretive group. A group that shall remain unnamed—but one I suspect you might quickly surmise. Throughout his career, Rich was intimately involved in a specialized SEAL selection process, which whittled a group of hundreds of extraordinary SpecOps candidates down to a handful of the most elite performers. Oddly, which candidates washed out and which succeeded was often wildly unpredictable. Some could have all the right skills and still fail. Others more easily dismissible would ironically prove to be top performers. The seemingly objective criteria weren’t telling him what he most needed to know: who would succeed in one of the world’s toughest military assignments? Over time, Rich began to see that beneath obvious skills are hidden drivers of performance,surprising core attributes—including cunning, adaptability, courage, even narcissism—that determine how resilient or perseverant we are, how situationally aware and how conscientious. This epiphany evolved into a SpecOps training program called MindGym—the first of its kind scientifically devised to help elite soldiers perform faster, longer, and better in all environments—especially high-stress ones. In his new book, The Attributes: 25 Hidden Drivers of Optimal Performance, Rich defines and examines these various attributes to explain how we perform as individuals and as part of a team. As you may suspect, his military methodology is equally applicable to our personal and professional lives. Understanding the valence of one’s attributes not only promotes greater self-awareness, it provides a guiding rubric to train the characteristics that predict optimal performance in any situation—from parenting and sports to business and relationships. Diviney currently works as a speaker, facilitator, and consultant with the Chapman & Co. Leadership Institute and Simon Sinek Inc. He’s taught leadership and optimal performance to more than five thousand business, athletic, and military leaders from organizations such as American Airlines, Meijer Inc., the San Francisco 49ers, Pegasystems, Zoom, and Deloitte. Today he breaks it all down. This conversation continues our annual tradition of welcoming the new year with a Navy SEAL—and the bankable life advice you need to embrace 2021 correct. A must-listen for anyone looking for deeper self-understanding, this is an incredibly powerful primer on how your attributes determine life outcomes—and how you can train said disposition to create more optimal performance in all areas of your life. READ MORE: bit.ly/richroll571 WATCH: bit.ly/richdiviney571 I can think of no better conversation to harken in 2021. May it change your personal game. Because the new year is now upon is. And it requires everything we’ve got to give. Peace + Plants, Rich Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You don't get to call yourself a leader.

0:03.1

We often conflate being in charge with leader.

0:06.2

Other people designate you a leader, which means leadership is a behavior, not a position.

0:10.8

You can be in charge, but other people decide whether or not you are their leader.

0:15.6

One of the most important attributes that we can all focus on in 2021 is open-mindedness.

0:21.2

The closed mind is not driven, because the closed mind is certain, and certain minds aren't

0:25.8

curious, and they're not seeking what's next. They want seeking what could be.

0:30.4

And if 2020 taught us anything is that we don't know.

0:33.8

We don't know what's coming down the pike.

0:36.0

But we are all here.

0:37.3

We're all operating.

0:39.0

We're all in our lives.

0:40.8

Admittedly, some of us might be in worse positions than we were at the beginning of 2020,

0:45.8

but sometimes you get thrown down the hill.

0:47.8

And when you stand up and dust yourself off, you're like, oh my gosh, I'm way further

0:51.2

down than I was before.

0:52.2

I got to climb again.

0:53.5

But the fact is you can do it.

0:55.2

I think if we are effectively able to understand and dissect the lessons 2020 taught each one

1:01.8

of us individually, we are all in a position where we can crush 2021.

1:06.7

I really believe that.

1:07.7

I really do.

...

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