Lessons Navy SEALs Learned from Their Training and Taught to Their Sons

ByEric Davis

feedback image
Total feedbacks:28
17
1
4
3
3
Looking forLessons Navy SEALs Learned from Their Training and Taught to Their Sons in PDF? Check out Scribid.com
Audiobook
Check out Audiobooks.com

Readers` Reviews

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
jean m
Good storyline i like how it was reflective of times and situations in past and present. It is also very true that we do not require expensive gifts to show our love for our children. I found the constant reminder that being out doors is a very positive learning curve for our children's futures.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
diablo943
This is the first review I have ever written. Normally I am the one who reads others reviews but never leaves one myself. This time I feel compelled to give my opinion because I am not a father or a male. I am female, newly married and trying to have kids. I know this book is entitled Raising Men and is geared towards fathers but I read it anyways.

I am giving it 5 stars because it doesn’t just to speak to men or how to raise sons . It is easy to apply most of what Eric says to raising daughters and/or being a great mother. Eric lays down a foundation on how to be a responsible parent and have a positive presence in your child’s life. He really puts emphasis on the fact that you, the adult, have to lead a good life first. You need to figure out what that is and start implementing it in your daily life. He uses the phrase “lead from the front” and really emphasizes the importance of being a responsible adult/parent and how to be present and engaged in your child’s life. He does this by sharing with you some of his own personal experiences and also adds in personal stories told by other highly respected special forces operators. One of the things I like most is at the end of each chapter. Eric asks you, the reader, questions about the content and principles discussed in that chapter. He gets your mind thinking about what you are or not doing as a parent and how you think you can improve on that. I find this technique very helpful because it makes it personal. He is engaging you to contemplate your own actions and how they affect the people you love.

I found the book to be very inspiring. Eric has motivated me to become the best version of myself now before I have kids and gave me some tools to be the best parent in the future.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
caryn winslow
Its ok, I heard and interview that Davis gave which was great. The book didn't seem to flow very well and was a bit of a tough read. The core message was good but I struggled a bit to keep reading it.
Fox 8: A Story :: The Final Battle for the Mediterranean, 1521-1580 :: The Classic Bestselling Account of the Sinking of the Titanic :: Final Battle (In Her Name, Book 6) :: The Painted Veil (Vintage Classics) by W. Somerset Maugham (2001-04-05)
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
justin singer
Whether you are raising men, girls or a family this book will impact you as a parent. As parents, we get so sidetracked by the outside world we lose focus on our most valuable treasures. This book really helps to remind you of your role, talents, and worth as a parent. Eric Davis has a way of putting things in perspective with his strong but humorous tone. Its a must read by all parents!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
sanjana prabala
AWESOME BOOK!!! I saw some critical reviews, mostly about the audio book narrator lol, but for those of you that WHINED at the profanity, and the SEAL training, YOU are what's wrong with society, and why your sons will grow up weak. WORDS offend you? Seriously? Great example you are setting, lets see how your kids grow up, having a parent who should be leading by example, but doesn't have the fortitude to handle words? WOW. Anyways, I am a former Marine, and raise my kids similar to Eric, I don't see any other way to raise em, but Eric did add some parental weaponry to my arsenal, thanks Eric! Keep up the good fight brother! Semper Fi!
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
fara sub7i
Beneath my reading level. I like the concept and ideas so I gave it 2 stars. I just wish the text was more sophisticated. Thank you sir for all you did for our country. I truly appreciate it. My criticism is solely from a consumer standpoint.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
megz4
A very good and well written book. I enjoyed reading it very much. I saw myself and my Dad in the stories. My Dad worked hard to provide for my mother and me, but when he had time he would take me fishing. These fishing outings are my most cherished times with my Dad. He would take my mother and me on some epic road trips for a couple of weeks that always included some fishing. My mother enjoyed fishing also. These are some of my cherished memories of growing up with my parents!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
antonia
I really enjoyed reading this book -- which is going to make writing a review very difficult. "To-do" or "self-help" books are NOT suppose to be page- turning enjoyable . From the Introduction on you are sucked into the stories, humor, and experiences of this father. Not everyone can be a Navy Seal , but here is a guide to being a Seal father. The author gives plenty of ideas and ways of teaching and connecting with your children that are invaluable and fun! There are a few " don't try this at home" moments but you will recognize them-- plus he gives you alternatives. The important factor is being present in your child's life, guiding and preparing them for life beyond you. It is a big world and negotiations are tricky , preparation is key. Read , follow and enjoy every moment of this book and being a father.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
rashmi ranjan
Where else would I ever find so much life experience, love, excellent philosophy, incredible family values, and practical wisdom for good parenting? Or even for living the best life that I can live? Wow!

If I take even half of what I've learned in this book, and put it to good use, I know my children will have twice the life I could have taught them to create for themselves without it.

From Team Building to "sugar cookies", to trust, integrity, and the true meaning of family -- Eric covers everything I would want to learn, explore, and understand as a parent within these pages.

He makes me wish I could have learned all this 1st hand. I'm forever grateful for his sharing. This book is a one of a kind. Incredible perspective in these pages!!

I'm in awe of this book.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
landofcope
As a single father I struggle sometimes with how to address things with my Children and particularity my son. This book breaks down how to and why of being a father. It also helps you to see how the things we do as fathers affects our Children. IT was well worth the money and I would recommend to any dad or future dad. It is a great read. Raising Men: Lessons Navy SEALs Learned from Their Training and Taught to Their Sons
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
eko prasetyo
There is a statement that says, "Methods are many principles are few, methods may change principles never do." Eric Davis lays out some of those great principles for parenting and illustrates them well with illustration and stories.

A real challenge is to read the book with all of its vulgarity and relate that to raising children for proper behavior. Integrity means there is no disconnect between who we are, what we do, and what we expect of our children. I would hate to think that the author speaks to his wife and children as he does when he's around "the guys". "More is caught than taught" and children will see the disparity in what we say is proper and acceptable and how we then act and speak. Or talking about being drunk at times and then trying to teach his kids about self-control in regard to substance use/abuse.

The author has some great insight into raising kids with a mindset of persistence, hard work and personal responsibility.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
sophia sadoughi
So I was wondering after ordering this book how exactly a SEAL was going to be able to transfer that type of lifestyle and that kind of training to the arena of parenting. In the first chapter I have already underlined extensive parts of the author's writing. Here are a few that jump out to me: 1) when your child is age 0-2 it's like the conditioning phase of SEAL training. Well I have 4 kids...one is 6 months old and I have witnessed my wife going through her own personal "Hell Week" but it's lasted MONTHS. The author does an excellent job showing the comparisons between SEAL training and specifically the early stages of a child's life! 2) He writes about Dad's quitting on being a Dad. Not like walking out...nothing that obvious. Just the small things and the times when we all might check out due to being tired or selfish. He calls you out on that but then gently reminds us all that we pick up that failure and we move on because the fight for our sons is too important. I highly recommend this book to any parent!
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
bruno
I found the explicit language in this book unnecessary and didn't want to continue reading because of it. I suppose it's part of military "culture," but I'm not interested in raising men that ever use the kind of speech I read in the first few chapters.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
albert hoyt
This could have been good.
Everyone likes stories about elite, covert military stuff.
It makes us all dream that we could handle and would enjoy such a life.
And Eric Davis does have a few good insights.
But, alas, this book is mostly bragging and profanity.

Davis, in a book about parenting, actually congratulates himself and his ex-wife on how they raise their kids!
Really?
You shoulder two young kids with a broken marriage and you're proud of how well you handled it?
I mean, sure, in a book intended specifically for divorced parents, that would be fine.
But staying together is paramount in doing the best for your kids.

Then there's the vulgarity.
One of Davis' main points is how we need to model the behavior we want our kids to emulate.
Wouldn't keeping control of your language be part of that?
Yes, yes, I understand the guy is a Navy SEAL.
He's supposed to have a foul mouth, right? Grow up.
The profanity is not used cleverly, humorously, or in any other way effectively.
It's just a reflection of how Davis talks.
And that's not how I want my son to speak.

Davis' arrogance sort of ruins the book.
In one chapter he scolds dads who work too much.
In the next, he forgives himself for being gone a lot.
The guy was a SEAL, for crying out loud!
There are few careers that demand more of a man's heart, soul, and time!
So, please, don't preach about being there for your kids.

Furthermore, the book is just not well written.
The stories don't always work to demonstrate Davis' point.
The chapters are not very cohesive or focused.
Davis is a far better warfighter than writer.
And, frankly, I have my suspicions about his parenting.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
carolyn kriete
I've made many purchases on Audible, and this one I requested a refund on. I wanted to like it, but most of the book is spent talking about his time as a SEAL. I get it, you guys are tough. The narration was terrible. It honestly sounds like an evil spy or somebody getting off on some weird pornography. This book feels like it is partly a self-congratulatory pat on the back...no, self-congratulatory hand-job for how tough, gritty, and special the author is. If you need some bro-culture machismo in your life, this is the parenting book for you. However, if you are comfortable in your manhood and masculinity already, then I recommend reading a book with a higher meaning. This book is one of the new-age packaged self-help books aimed at the suburban man that reads Art of War for business owners/sales/entrepreneurs, and suddenly becomes a tactician and strategist. The narrator's voice...just so weird.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
rosaleen
This book is filled with language that is inappropriate for any man trying to talk to another man about being a good father. I don't care if that is how Seals talk, if one is trying to talk to me about being "good," stepping up, raising a "good son" to be a "good man," he best use decent language. I'm surprised at all the good reviews, as the man who wrote this has no self-discipline in his own writing; I cannot imagine what he lets himself speak if he allows himself to write this way. And I cannot imagine the words that must come out of his son's mouth. I can cuss with the best of them, especially when I have some kind of personal wreck. But to speak this way simply because one is too lazy to find decent yet strong words to use is simply, well, lazy. And inexcusable. And Amoral when you get right down to it. And isn't this book supposed to be about raising moral children? I didn't finish the book. I can cuss and be disrespectful all on my own; I don't need the author's help.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
keilee kramer
This book is truly an incredible adjunct to the many war like scenarios we all stand to encounter as parents (in the war of raising our children). First of all, I rarely find time for reading but managed to find the time to read every page. Eric does an excellent job describing interesting principles he learned as a navy seal and then applies them in the role you serve as a parent as pointman for your family. I always aspired to be a navy seal, however, life took me another direction. If ever you have wanted to elevate your thinking and life towards the ideal and reflect this image as a role model then this is a must have book. Thanks for your service,Eric! I will always remember to breathe in, breathe out, and keep swimming for my Liam, Briana and Ian.(read the book!)
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
phoenix360
I wouldn't normally read a book on parenting, but it was being featured at the library, and sounded like an interesting premise. As Mr. Davis says in the beginning, he chose to target sons for the book, but all his advice also pertains to how he raises his daughters. That being said, I would go further and say this book is an excellent resource for how we raise ourselves. An adult will get plenty out of this about being a good, decent, effective human.

I generally like most of the material put out there by the special forces community. It's a great improvement over the previous generation, which seemed to be long on bluster and short on anything else. What differentiates this book is that it's quite specific in detail, and has a solid mix of theory and practice. There are plenty of stories about SEAL life, but it's primarily an operations manual of sorts. Mr. Davis does a great job. I'll be buying his next book in hardcover, whatever the topic.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
gasser elsaqa
The lessons from this book have completely changed the way I approach raising my 2 boys. It has inspired me and my young children to live large and ask for more from ourselves. The life lessons are applicable to more than raising kids, Eric's approach to being a partner is exemplary. Can not recommend it any higher.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
rob mentzer
A lot of stories about how brutal navy seal training is and how cool it is to have the recognition of being one, with some ill-fitting correlations to parenting. For example; I am all for real consequences for your actions - smashing a game console and a skateboard and forcing a kid into cold water for not doing homework is just showing a kid that if someone has more power than you, you better do what they say or violence may follow. It is a imply disrespectful to a child when what you want to teach is for a child to be respectful and expect respect.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
leigh anne
This is a great book. Love the no nonsense approach in discussing what we as fathers need to be doing to raise America's next great generation of men. If you want to approach parenting as an important responsibility, and believe like I do that we owe it to our sons (and daughters) to thoughtfully instill the values they will need in order to become happy and productive citizens, then this book is an asset. (I also think that the narrator of the audio book does an outstanding job.)
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
mckenna beaman
Highly recommended! How to deal with bad coaches to discipline, the author covers it all. A refreshing approach after the Millennials disaster show the negative impact of helicopter parents. I am raising two strong and independent kids, and this book was very helpful.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
david l
I hope I would like this book with another reader. I've read several books by Navy Seals and have an audiobook by Mark Divine. All have been awesome. We have a 16 year old son, about 6'5' and a heck of an ice hockey player. I've read several books over the years about raising children and I've felt the books I've read have been very insightful in their guidance. Now that my son is becoming a man, I thought a book about raising men by a Navy Seal was the next logical step. But, the reader comes across to me as very sleazy. I've never thought of any Seal as sleazy. Come to think of it, Jesse V comes to mind.... Anyway, it may be a great book, but I cannot stand listening to the reader. He reads it like he is telling stories at some dive bar to a bunch of drunks at 4am.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
harout khatchadourian
Eric Davis does a terrific job connecting his military background with his experience of being a father. This book provides insight on what it is like preparing to and defending our country as part of our most elite fighting force, while simultaneously describing how those experiences apply to raising children. Reading Raising Men was both educational and enjoyable.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
jeab
In his narration Peter Berkrot lays it on so thick he makes it almost impossible to listen to this book.
More humility and less self promotion would have made this book more helpful. I suggest looking elsewhere.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
linda cuttone
Eric gives a breakdown of what he has done through his training as a navy seal to help with his parenting and what it takes to raise confident, caring children. I was up very surprised to read how Eric utilized his skill set and directed it towards his family in a positive way. I have already begun to implement most of the tips Eric lays out in this great book. If you have kids and are looking for all the advice you can it will only benefit you and your family to read this book.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jorel thomson
Eric Davis is someone who has been there, and done that. the lessons presented in this book were learned though years of blood, sweat, and tears. in a day, and age where "manliness" is on the decline, this book will help raise motivated, well adjusted, compassionate, kids. even if you do not have kids, this is an excellent book for anyone looking to be a better person. thank you Mr. Davis for your service !
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
andra
I truly loved this book!!! It has great lessons and nuggets of inspiration for all of us. Parenting is hard work and sometimes gaining another perspective is invaluable. My husband and I will be rereading this one over and over again! :)
Please RateLessons Navy SEALs Learned from Their Training and Taught to Their Sons
More information