In January I started reading a book that would change my perspective on nearly everything. The first recommendation inside the cover comes from Playboy Magazine and says you wont want to put the book down.
Playboy was right.
The book is about a group of highly trained counter terrorists in a unit called SFOD-D – or Delta Force for short. I found out about them through a documentary on the guys involved in Black Hawk Down. One of the Army Rangers they interviewed said he had been shot in the leg and, along with what was left of his unit, he was trapped in an alley with enemy forces closing in. He was in a dead panic. Then he saw a member of Delta Force come around the corner.
The Ranger looked into the documentary camera and said, “When I saw him, I knew everything was going to be okay. Those guys are like Jedi Warriors.”
The Delta operator grabbed him by the collar, drug him down the alley, kicked in a door, secured the room and led the unit in holding their ground until backup came (which was a long time).
I instantly wanted to know everything I could about the guys that could make panicking Rangers calm down.
Inside Delta Force tells their story.
I’m not a big military buff, but this book struck me as powerful because you see in it why the Delta Force is the so powerfully effective.
They are most highly trained surgical attack force in the world. They have finances and equipment available that make them the best outfitted warriors on earth. They are physiologically superior to most people you’ll ever meet. But none of those things are what makes the men in SFOD-D superior warriors.
There’s something there that is beyond physicality, training and equipment.
After reading the first-hand account of Inside Delta Force, I am convinced a single Delta Force operator could probably infiltrate and dismantle an entire terrorist organization using nothing but a spork.
These guys have a resolve that is unimaginable for most of us. A desire to keep going that comes from so deep in them that it changes their perspective on everything. And that is what makes them capable of doing things that no one else on earth can.
They want to. They need to. And so they push themselves past what most of us would consider to be normal, or even possible.
I can’t recommend this book enough. Buy it. Learn from it. Let it challenge your views of discipline, perseverance and will. Because the fact of the matter is, we could all use a little intestinal fortitude.