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Donald Shipley

Donald “DJ” Shipley is a former U.S. Navy SEAL and Naval Special Warfare Development Group operator who served 17 years before medically retiring in 2019. He is co-founder and Chief Training Officer of GBRS Group, a veteran-owned tactical training and services company, and is a frequent podcast/interview guest on military operations, combat, human performance, and veteran transition topics.

Former Special Operators Face Identity Loss More Than Combat Trauma

Retired Navy SEAL and former DEVGRU operator DJ Shipley argues that the deepest injury for many elite operators is not combat itself but the loss of the identity, brotherhood and purpose that made the rest of life subordinate. In a long interview with Chris Williamson, Shipley describes special operations as an all-consuming performance system built on risk, restraint and repetition, and retirement as the point where those habits kept running without a mission. His account links that rupture to addiction, family breakdown, suicidal intent and, eventually, psychedelic treatment and confession as the basis for recovery.

Chris WilliamsonJun 18, 202636 min read

A Psychedelic Reset Forced a Veteran to Face the Damage at Home

Former Navy SEAL DJ Shipley tells Chris Williamson that his collapse was not rooted in combat trauma but in childhood wounds, addiction and the damage he caused after leaving the military. Shipley argues that ibogaine and 5-MeO-DMT did what years of conventional therapy could not, breaking a suicidal and addictive pattern, but says the decisive test came afterward: returning home to a marriage he had nearly destroyed and trying to prove the change one day at a time.

Chris WilliamsonJun 16, 202613 min read

Fast Victory Requires Brutality Modern Publics Will Not Tolerate

Former Navy SEAL Donald Shipley argues that Western militaries can win wars quickly but are politically prevented from using the level of force that would require. In a conversation with Chris Williamson, Shipley says modern conflicts are prolonged by public intolerance for brutality, legal and tactical restrictions that adversaries do not share, and financial incentives around long wars. Asked how he would end a hypothetical Iran-style nuclear threat, he says the answer would be either overwhelming force or an elite raid to remove the leader, while crediting Donald Trump’s perceived willingness to act as a deterrent.

Chris WilliamsonJun 12, 20266 min read