


ANDY STUMPF HOW TO
How to find a healthy way to express your emotions.Why we shouldn’t detach from our emotions.The motivational words he says to his kids every morning.How he uses the morning drive to school as contained ‘dad time’.How his background experience with his own father and the Navy SEALs influenced him as a father.The difference in the way he fathers his sons and daughters.Andy’s advice for guys who do have an outlet like base-jumping in their lives.How base jumping calms him down and makes him a happier person for months.Why base jumping is so much more dangerous than skydiving.What inspired him to fly more than 18 miles in a wingsuit.Andy medically retired on the last day of June 2013. He was pipelined straight through the SEAL program and served just one month shy of 17 years. He trained like a madman and passed the BUD/s training. He brought home a waiver to his parents to leave school early and enlist in the military. The SEAL dream never faded and he didn’t have a plan B. He read books and watched movies about the SEALs and was drawn in by the combination of intrigue and challenge.Īs Andy grew older, he developed his comfort level in the water as a junior life guard and a water polo player. It was also during that time that he dreamed of becoming a Navy SEAL. Andy began to learn the value of hard work when he started working for his dad at the age of eleven.

His mom worked in the administrative field and his father owned a masonry company. He grew up in a beach town in a solid middle-class family. Listen to his amazing story-from the Navy SEALs, to base jumper, to father-and how he keeps his cool through it all!Īndy Stumpf considers his background to be incredibly average. Andy is an avid base jumper who holds the world record for having flown more than 18 miles in a wing suit. He is now a sought after public speaker and the host of the Cleared Hot podcast. How can you gain ultimate mastery of your emotional state?Īndy Stumpf is a former Navy SEAL who executed hundreds of combat operations all over the world. Emotions like fear and anger lead to shortsightedness and poor decision-making.
