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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This episode features DJ Shipley, a retired Navy SEAL who served for seventeen years, including time as a tier one operator. DJ shares his journey from childhood on Coronado through intense combat deployments, severe injuries, and ultimately transitioning to civilian life. (04:09) The discussion centers around DJ's systematic approach to mental health through physical action, covering his structured morning routines, workout protocols, and how he maintains peak performance despite multiple surgeries and setbacks. (44:00) The conversation also explores DJ's experience with emerging treatments for PTSD and trauma, including Ibogaine and DMT therapy, which he credits with saving his marriage and mental health.
DJ Shipley is a retired Navy SEAL who served for seventeen years, much of that time as a tier one operator within an elite special operations unit. Born and raised in the SEAL community on Coronado, DJ transitioned from a skateboarding teenager to joining the Navy at 17 following 9/11. He has survived multiple combat deployments, severe injuries including electrocution, and has become a leading advocate for veteran mental health through innovative treatments like Ibogaine therapy.
Andrew Huberman is a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine and host of the Huberman Lab Podcast. He focuses on translating neuroscience research into practical tools for everyday life, covering topics from sleep optimization to mental health and performance enhancement.
DJ maintains a 5AM wake-up regardless of when he went to sleep, whether it was 9PM or 2:30AM. (06:23) This practice aligns with neuroscience research showing that consistent wake times maximize growth hormone release and maintain healthy circadian rhythms. The key insight is that your brain and body adapt better to a predictable schedule than to variable sleep patterns, even if you occasionally get less total sleep.
DJ uses the analogy of physical posture under load to explain mental resilience. (139:19) Just as you can hold heavy weight when in proper physical position but struggle with light weight when compromised, your mental state determines how well you handle life's challenges. When you start your day optimized through morning routines, you can handle significant stress. But if you begin compromised by poor habits, minor setbacks feel overwhelming.
DJ learned to completely separate different areas of his life - blocking out family during operations and work during family time. (11:01) His 12-minute car ride routine involves switching mindsets entirely, rehearsing his family interactions before entering the house. This isn't coldness but rather intentional presence - being 100% focused on whoever needs him in that moment rather than being partially present everywhere.
The GBRS fitness test includes specific benchmarks: body weight bench press for reps, broad jump distances, and timed runs. (188:58) DJ emphasizes that vague goals like "get in shape" are useless. Instead, set concrete standards you can test anytime - if you can't perform at your benchmark on random Wednesday, you know exactly what needs work. This creates accountability and prevents gradual decline.
After years of traditional therapy and medications failing, DJ found that Ibogaine and DMT provided the breakthrough he needed. (149:48) His insight was that he had built such a strong psychological defense system as a SEAL that conventional approaches couldn't penetrate it. Sometimes healing requires tools powerful enough to break through the very resilience mechanisms that once served you, allowing you to rebuild from a healthier foundation.