SEAL Tales: That Time We Took On the Navy’s Hunter-Killer Dolphins
It’s 1980. My UDT is tasked with a training op to assault a docked vessel from the open ocean. The trick? It’s guarded by Navy dolphins.
16 articles
It’s 1980. My UDT is tasked with a training op to assault a docked vessel from the open ocean. The trick? It’s guarded by Navy dolphins.
Through my father’s final moments, I learned profound lessons about life, death, and the enduring power of love, which have shaped my medical practice and understanding of the soul.
We launched for war in the dead of night, rucks strapped tight and nerves tighter—only to turn around midair and win a battle no one would ever hear about.
Winning is a conscious decision…it comes to those who have experienced failure, yet chosen to persevere.
Meet Dr. Robert Adams. He attacked medical school at age 36 after spending years in the SEAL Teams. Seeing a physician with a Trident, the Army snatched him up and he spent the next several years taking care of DELTA operators all over the world.
Strap in for a first hand look at Navy SEAL Hell Week with Colonel Bob Adams who finished UDT/SEAL training as class leader of BUD/S Class 81.
If you think being a Navy SEAL is tough, try cutting into one human being and successfully removing another without doing harm to either one.
A Vietnam War veteran with severe PTSD becomes the unlikely fishing buddy to a doctor who helps him realize his hidden pain and eventually guides him down the path needed to reclaim his life.
Navy SEAL Commander turned Delta Force Command Surgeon Dr. Bob Adams explains how he “crabbed” his way into the medical residency of his choice.
The widow of a Navy SEAL is, after his death, awarded over $200,000 and monthly
Former Navy SEAL, Dr. Robert Adams, talks about his time as a Delta Force Command Surgeon and what makes special operators “special”.
Former Navy SEAL and later Chief Surgeon for Delta Force, Bob Adams tells us that mistakes can teach us many things, including not repeating them.