Words from the Wise Podcast

Getting Fired As Squad Leader Was The Lesson

1 h 8 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Getting Fired As Squad Leader Was The Lesson

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2459480/fan_mail/new] She wanted overseas orders and got Camp Lejeune. She wanted aviation and landed in engineering utilities. And somehow, that’s exactly why this conversation works: it’s an honest look at how a young Marine turns disappointment into direction without losing her edge. We’re joined by Ashley Smith aka "Smitty", one of my former NJROTC cadets, calling in from Marine Corps schoolhouse as a water purification specialist. We talk about switching schools, finding the right NJROTC program, getting reset in rank, and learning to earn trust the slow way through standards, boards, and showing up when it counts. If you care about leadership development, military mentorship, and what it actually takes to stand out without burning bridges, you’ll hear the real stuff, not the highlight reel. Smitty also breaks down Marine Corps boot camp takeaways you can use right now: why running endurance matters more than you think, how breathing can make or break your pace, and why mobility and functional strength are not optional when you’re trying to stay healthy. We get into the mental side too, including the hard lesson that sometimes the best leaders get pulled from leadership roles so they can learn followership, patience, and discipline. From there we zoom out into Marine Corps career planning: promotions, retention, pride in “unsexy” jobs that keep units alive in the field, and her long-term goal of doing 20 years with a possible drill instructor tour and maybe ROTC instruction down the road. If you’ve ever questioned your path, this one will help you tighten your plan and keep moving. Subscribe for more conversations like this, share it with a future recruit or a former cadet, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What part of the transition from student leader to service member do you want us to talk about next? https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/ [https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/]

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83 episodios

Portada del episodio What If Discipline Beats Motivation Every Time

What If Discipline Beats Motivation Every Time

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2459480/fan_mail/new] Coaching sounds simple until you try to turn it into a real post-military career. Ronnie Netter comes back on the mic to talk with us about life after service, finding a calling, and what it looks like to take years of Navy mentorship and translate it into civilian coaching, leadership development, and consulting without feeling fake or salesy. We get straight into the hard parts: coaching is sales, time has a price, and veterans often struggle with charging for something we used to give away for free. We break down why locking in stable income first can protect your family and your peace, then let you build a coaching business on your terms. We also talk about skipping the “smooze” culture, using content marketing on YouTube and podcasts to become easy to find, and playing the long game by building proof that your leadership works outside the military. From there we go deep on motivation vs discipline, setting standards, and why accountability systems do not matter if the commitment is missing. We also cover coaching civilians with the right awareness of workplace dynamics, HR realities, and legal boundaries, plus practical moves like starting a business, thinking about branding, using Navy COOL wisely, and proving credibility through your work not just certifications. If you’re a veteran, service member, or leader building a coaching path after military transition, hit play and take notes. Subscribe, share this with someone planning retirement, and leave a review with the biggest lesson you’re taking from the conversation. https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/ [https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/]

Ayer1 h 19 min
Portada del episodio Getting Fired As Squad Leader Was The Lesson

Getting Fired As Squad Leader Was The Lesson

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2459480/fan_mail/new] She wanted overseas orders and got Camp Lejeune. She wanted aviation and landed in engineering utilities. And somehow, that’s exactly why this conversation works: it’s an honest look at how a young Marine turns disappointment into direction without losing her edge. We’re joined by Ashley Smith aka "Smitty", one of my former NJROTC cadets, calling in from Marine Corps schoolhouse as a water purification specialist. We talk about switching schools, finding the right NJROTC program, getting reset in rank, and learning to earn trust the slow way through standards, boards, and showing up when it counts. If you care about leadership development, military mentorship, and what it actually takes to stand out without burning bridges, you’ll hear the real stuff, not the highlight reel. Smitty also breaks down Marine Corps boot camp takeaways you can use right now: why running endurance matters more than you think, how breathing can make or break your pace, and why mobility and functional strength are not optional when you’re trying to stay healthy. We get into the mental side too, including the hard lesson that sometimes the best leaders get pulled from leadership roles so they can learn followership, patience, and discipline. From there we zoom out into Marine Corps career planning: promotions, retention, pride in “unsexy” jobs that keep units alive in the field, and her long-term goal of doing 20 years with a possible drill instructor tour and maybe ROTC instruction down the road. If you’ve ever questioned your path, this one will help you tighten your plan and keep moving. Subscribe for more conversations like this, share it with a future recruit or a former cadet, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What part of the transition from student leader to service member do you want us to talk about next? https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/ [https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/]

22 de may de 20261 h 8 min
Portada del episodio When Family Breaks Bad

When Family Breaks Bad

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2459480/fan_mail/new] A single phone call can be the difference between burning your life down and finally growing up. I’m Gary Wise, and I’m telling one of the most personal stories I’ve ever shared: my relationship with my little sister Kristina, from childhood closeness to years of conflict, and the grief that followed her death. I walk through my background as an adopted kid who moved constantly, the money stress that shaped our home, and the choices I made as a teenager that pushed me out of school and out of my parents’ house. Then the U.S. Navy becomes my reset button, but family problems don’t magically disappear just because you put on a uniform. When Kristina becomes a teen mom, the pressure on my parents explodes, and my own immaturity keeps turning every conflict into something bigger than it needs to be. The turning point comes when my sister steals and pawns my belongings while I’m home on leave. I’m angry enough to make a life-altering mistake, and my dad stops me with one sentence: a normal person calls the police. Later, I share what it’s like to get the 2013 Facebook post while boarding a flight, rush home, and say goodbye as Kristina is placed on life support after a drug overdose. We also talk about funeral costs, GoFundMe, and how my Navy Chiefs Mess stepped up when my family had nothing left. If you’ve lived through addiction in the family, complicated sibling relationships, grief, or the need for real boundaries, this one will hit close. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the lesson you took from the story. https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/ [https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/]

15 de may de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The Swim Call Stunt That Ended Up Building A Master Chief

The Swim Call Stunt That Ended Up Building A Master Chief

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2459480/fan_mail/new] One risky moment can break your body, and a single email can build your future. Jason Brown joins me to trace a Navy journey that starts with a teenager from Southern California who knows he needs a way out and a way up, then turns into a decades-long lesson in resilience, mentorship, and leadership under pressure. If you care about Navy career development, military mentorship, or what it really takes to grow into a senior enlisted leader, this conversation hits home fast. We talk about the unglamorous but decisive stuff: learning how advancement works when nobody teaches you, asking better questions, and finding mentors who share information instead of gatekeeping it. Jason breaks down how he chose the Navy, how he landed in the damage controlman community, and how boot camp taught him an early lesson about leadership and loneliness when peers turn on you the moment you’re responsible for them. Then the story turns hard. A swim call accident nearly ends his career, and the recovery tests his discipline, family life, and identity. From there we get into shipyard realities, big deck culture, and why some platforms push DC sailors to the edge. Jason also explains how a “sideways” move into the Chiefs mess as mess caterer became a career accelerant, plus what he learned serving at the Naval Academy in an environment built around constant learning and accountability. If you want practical takeaways on resilience, owning your decisions, using opportunities wisely, and leading from the deck plates, press play. Subscribe, share this with a sailor who needs it, and leave a review with the leadership lesson that stuck with you most. https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/ [https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/]

8 de may de 20262 h 6 min
Portada del episodio From Fireman To Master-At-Arms

From Fireman To Master-At-Arms

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2459480/fan_mail/new] The Navy rarely follows the plan you had at 17, and John Lukosus is living proof. We sit down as shipmates and walk through a career that starts in the engineering spaces as an undesignated fireman, then pivots hard into the Master-at-Arms world when family reality hits and the stakes suddenly feel personal. Along the way, we unpack what “watchstanding” really teaches you about leadership, why mentorship matters more than motivation speeches, and how one good chain of command can change the entire direction of a sailor’s life. From the post-9/11 force protection surge to harbor patrol, overseas naval security forces, and joint work with Air Force security forces in Japan, John explains how the MA mission expands and how the job can feel very different depending on the base, the SECO, and the expectations of CNIC inspections and FEP. He also shares one of those stories every veteran recognizes: a mission briefed as short and simple that turns into a long, uncomfortable adventure, including an embarked security assignment that becomes 87 days on a submarine. We also get honest about the cost, including EFMP complications, geographic separation, an IA to Guantanamo Bay, and the stress of leadership as you move from MA2 to MA1 to Chief and Senior Chief. Near the end, a medical emergency and heart surgery force a reset, but he fights back to stay mission-ready and takes one final run with USS Tripoli in Seventh Fleet before deciding to retire on his own terms. If you care about Navy leadership, veteran career transition, Master-at-Arms life, force protection, or how families shape military decisions, this one will stick with you. If the story helps you, subscribe, share it with a shipmate, and leave a review so more sailors and veterans can find these hard-earned lessons. What part of John’s path sounds most like your own? https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/ [https://www.wordsfromthewise.net/]

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