Episode Details
Back to EpisodesHow Service, Faith, And History Shape A Life Of Purpose
Description
History isn’t background noise here; it’s the compass. We open by connecting Cold War alliances to today’s fault lines, then ride along as David Kano—retired Navy Chief Hospital Corpsman—shares how “sailor first” shaped every step: enlisting three months before 9/11, stabilizing patients in Iraq’s trauma bays, and learning that prevention is power when you’re safeguarding a ship’s water, food, and heat stress programs.
From Okinawa to Al Asad, then outside the wire in Helmand as an IA, David pulls back the curtain on what high‑tempo service really asks of people. He explains why line corpsmen are the beating heart of battlefield care, how a carrier in Japan can be both the toughest and most rewarding tour, and what it takes to recalibrate in Rota, Spain where diplomacy, partnership, and patience share the stage with checklists. Making chief becomes a lesson in active communication, humility, and lifting others—anchors as identity, not ornament.
The conversation turns deeply personal with COVID, hospitalization, and the loss of a father in the same week—an inflection point that led to retirement and a new mission. David’s next chapter, Dave’s Transmissions, blends national security, economic opportunity, health affairs, education, history, and science into clear, practical writing guided by a simple credo: be good, fight evil, help people. Along the way, we trade rapid‑fire insights on parenting teenagers, choosing overseas orders, building resilience, and prioritizing in a world engineered for distraction.
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