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This week marks one year out from the 2021 Paralympic Games in Tokyo, and Laura is deeply honored to welcome Gold Medal Paralympian, Brad Snyder, to the podcast today. A highly experienced competitive swimmer, Brad graduated from the US Naval Academy and was deployed to Iraq and later to Afghanistan as an Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Officer. After six months in Afghanistan, Brad sustained complete vision loss as a result of the explosion of an improvised explosive device (IED). What’s incredible about Brad is not what happened to him that fateful day, but as you will hear, how he responded to it.
Brad begins by detailing his start in swimming, the impact that becoming the swim team captain in college had upon him, and how he found himself in the role of an EOD Officer.
Episode Highlights:
Quotes:
“We’ve been water people my whole life.”
“It was so humbling to go to the pool for the first time and watch what competitive swimming was all about.”
“My bailiwick is leadership.”
“In the modern era, what we do predominantly is the mitigation of explosive hazards in support of military operations worldwide.”
“They were able to save my face, but they weren’t able to save my eyes, unfortunately…the good news is I walked away with my life.”
“I’m never going to be who I was, and that shouldn’t prevent me from being who I am.”
“So much of our frustration in our daily lives comes from a mismatch of expectation.”
“It felt nice to go back to doing something I was good at.”
“Statistically, I actually think my blind times may be as or faster than my able-bodied times.”
“I felt like I belonged…I felt fulfilled.”
“You have to be vulnerable. You have to learn how to make a mistake, but then vow not to do it again, and to learn something from it.”
“I love how you just keep challenging yourself.”
“We’re on the road to Tokyo full force.”
Links:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradsnyderusa/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/BradSnyderUSA
Brad’s book:
Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle is the Way:
5
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This week marks one year out from the 2021 Paralympic Games in Tokyo, and Laura is deeply honored to welcome Gold Medal Paralympian, Brad Snyder, to the podcast today. A highly experienced competitive swimmer, Brad graduated from the US Naval Academy and was deployed to Iraq and later to Afghanistan as an Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Officer. After six months in Afghanistan, Brad sustained complete vision loss as a result of the explosion of an improvised explosive device (IED). What’s incredible about Brad is not what happened to him that fateful day, but as you will hear, how he responded to it.
Brad begins by detailing his start in swimming, the impact that becoming the swim team captain in college had upon him, and how he found himself in the role of an EOD Officer.
Episode Highlights:
Quotes:
“We’ve been water people my whole life.”
“It was so humbling to go to the pool for the first time and watch what competitive swimming was all about.”
“My bailiwick is leadership.”
“In the modern era, what we do predominantly is the mitigation of explosive hazards in support of military operations worldwide.”
“They were able to save my face, but they weren’t able to save my eyes, unfortunately…the good news is I walked away with my life.”
“I’m never going to be who I was, and that shouldn’t prevent me from being who I am.”
“So much of our frustration in our daily lives comes from a mismatch of expectation.”
“It felt nice to go back to doing something I was good at.”
“Statistically, I actually think my blind times may be as or faster than my able-bodied times.”
“I felt like I belonged…I felt fulfilled.”
“You have to be vulnerable. You have to learn how to make a mistake, but then vow not to do it again, and to learn something from it.”
“I love how you just keep challenging yourself.”
“We’re on the road to Tokyo full force.”
Links:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradsnyderusa/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/BradSnyderUSA
Brad’s book:
Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle is the Way: