Episode Details
Back to EpisodesZachary Garner on Survival, Service, and High-Stakes Endurance After Near Death
Season 2026
Episode 17
Published 2Β months, 2Β weeks ago
Description
A stiff knee looked like a minor problem. Two days later, it was swelling toward the size of a basketball. Then doctors opened it and found an infection eating him from the inside out. Zachary Garner is a Green Beret, firefighter, and ultra-endurance athlete, and this episode is built around visible stakes: brutal deployments, a catastrophic Ironman crash, traumatic brain injury, seizures, and a fight with flesh-eating bacteria that spread from hip to ankle, into his bloodstream, bones, pelvis, and heart. He was told it could end fast. He was moved to Mass General, spent time in the ICU, had two strokes, and coded twice. Zachary breaks down what kept him moving forward: discomfort as training, purpose as a stabilizer, loyalty as a standard, and service as the operating system. You'll leave with disciplined rules you can apply when you're stuck, overwhelmed, or looking for excuses. Things You Will Learn:
- How to use purpose as a coping mechanism when quitting starts to feel logical.
- How to normalize discomfort so you don't fold under pressure.
- How loyalty and service create structure when civilian life feels flat after high-intensity environments.
- Do-It-For-Them Anchor: keeps endurance and resilience steady when motivation drops.
- Discomfort Reps: builds mental toughness through repeated, controlled exposure to discomfort.
- Service-First Operating System: aligns discipline, responsibility, and daily actions to a clear purpose.