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Where Instinct Meets Discipline: My Unusual Journey Begins

Obsessions, Masters, and Missed Battles

From Fighting Dreams to Military Ambitions

What They Don’t Tell You About SEAL Recruitment

Surf, Scars, and the Spirit of Kung Fu
From Military Rejection to Elite Tactical Mastery
The ASVAB was a little daunting to me; I guess the whole process was just a taste of military life and mentality to come. I remember thinking I tanked it but was surprised to learn that I scored 80%, I believe. I think I would do even better now due to better mechanical aptitude but math was never easy for me past about the algebra level so some preparation there as well would have shown a higher score. But the Navy was more than happy with the results because I guess that 80% is a fairly good score, with most people, that go into the military at least, somewhere in the 50-60% range. I had some issues with my vision with a nearsightedness that was just outside SEAL standards and my age, 30, which was one year over the cutoff at 29. The Navy was willing to give me a waiver for both problems. Next stop, the physical.
What should have been a breeze, the easiest part of the process, ended up being my undoing, along with a lack of knowledge on my part. With what seemed like Teutonic efficiency, an illusion I assure you, the physical examination began. All was well until I got to the eye exam which included a color vision test. My parents knew from an early age that I had some color vision deficiency when I would call the green traffic light blue when I was a kid. I also had some issues with shades of green that could appear brown or yellow to me but I could tell red from green for the most part. I failed the bubble chart test with flying colors. This is the test most people are familiar that is comprised with random circular patterns of color that look like bubbles but for the normally color capable this pattern contains a readily discernible number. I don’t think I got one of them right. I was disqualified from attempting BUD/S training but the Navy still wanted me to drive a computer. Since I wanted to kill bad guys, I refused.
Then I found out from other military acquaintances that unlike the SEAL’s at the time (I believe this standard has changed as the Navy’s great wisdom realized how many good guys they were losing with this bullshit requirement since supposedly 80% of the male population has some level of color deficiency) the Army would waive the color deficiency if I could pass the so called red/green falant test, which most of you military guys will be familiar with. I did not know what that was but I knew I could tell red from green, for the most part, so back I went to try to become a Green Beret. All went well until the eye exam, once again. Of course I failed the “bubble chart” test (I don’t know what they actually call it) so I moved on to the “falant” test.
The administrator trotted out a little black box about the size of a shoe box that had three lights like Christmas tree lights recessed vertically within the box and it was wired to a controller that the administrator could use to change the light color and position between red, green and white and I had to be able to tell the color and position. Bear in mind that I am nearsighted and wore glasses at the time but you had to disclose if you were wearing contact lenses so I don’t know if that would have affected the outcome if I had been wearing contact lenses. Regardless I was told to remove my glasses and step back about 20 feet while the box was placed in front of me in a darkened room. With my glasses off the group of lights was just a solid blur with no hope of succeeding where I believe I would have had no issue if allowed to wear my glasses like I would on any normal fucking day which I conveyed to the lab-coat guy. He gave the perfunctory reply of “That’s just how we do it” and I was screwed once again. I left never to return again.
With a little more savvy I would have known that in the Marines everyone is infantry and they have probably the toughest boot camp of all the Armed Services. If I had done well I would have been given the opportunity to go Recon regardless of color vision. Oh, well, I guess it was just not meant to be for me and is just another example though of how my life could have been changed with slightly different choices.
I sought out training in the private sector and through a friend of my mom, of all people I began training with one of the worlds’ foremost combat weapons and tactics trainers; I met Max Joseph and TFTT. For the next two years I took every course TFTT had to offer. I did not really know what high speed was but they were definitely it; all of them former Special Operations military of one branch or another. Max himself is a Marine Recon, Ranger qualified, Scout/sniper instructor that specialized in counter-terrorism and diplomatic protection. I was working during this time doing private security for a hardcore punk rock band (Plenty of conflict resolution practice) and was just beginning as a climbing rigger for the entertainment industry setting up concerts. It was while rigging that I met an accomplished rock-climber and a brief high school interest in rock climbing was rekindled. Like everything I do, I jumped in with both feet and climbing became my exclusive focus for the next seven years.
Around 2003 I was running my own climbing guide service but after the Twin Towers fell the private contractor phenomenon was going on overseas and I wanted in on it. I re-established contact with TFTT which had evolved greatly into one of the foremost reactive training schools in the world. In fact Max Joseph’s operation was one of three original tactical shooting schools in the country along with John Chapman and Jeff Cooper. I have been training with Max and his cadre ever since, to the tune of over 3000 hours of documented training operations in combat weapons skills, small unit tactics and patrolling, combat field-craft, tracking, survival and VIP protection. Max once paid me the highest compliment when he said, “Doty, you would have made the perfect Special Operations soldier, you are good at a lot of different things”.
It is another long story but I missed my chance to work overseas with a couple of the top companies and I lost touch with the TFTT cadre as I refocused on Kung Fu with a vengeance.
I was fortunate enough to meet an expert tracker, mountain rescue team member, survival instructor and practitioner of native culture who was a student of the well known Tom Brown Jr. I learned much about tracking, survival, sweat lodge ceremony, living in harmony and reverence to the Mother. I helped him organize and run a wilderness survival school until his tragic death in the mid 90’s. The circumstances surrounding this part of my life are like something from a movie and I may not be able to safely discuss it here. I also have 15 years experience in mountaineering and rock climbing and guided privately for several years in the early 2000’s.
I have spent a lot of time wandering, training and honing my skills in different environments, most recently the desert of Arizona. I teach from my home in a well set up studio and intend to open a commercial studio sometime in the near future.
I mentioned a little bit previously about my dark side and hinted about forays into criminality; I hesitate a little to elaborate and have been mulling it over for awhile now. Some of the craziest stories have yet to be told. I have written in other pages about my times running around with the Punk rockers and some of the associated gangs. My exposure to that culture extended into other types, including hardcore bikers. My years living on the streets and abusing drugs led me, as well, into other pursuits to fuel the darkness.