Bear Grylls Quote

Since I did Selection all those years ago, not much has really changed.The MOD (Ministry of Defence) website still states that 21 SAS soldiers need the following character traits: Physically and mentally robust. Self-confident. Self-disciplined. Able to work alone. Able to assimilate information and new skills.It makes me smile now to read those words. As Selection had progressed, those traits had been stamped into my being, and then during the three years I served with my squadron they became molded into my psyche.They are the same qualities I still value today.The details of the jobs I did once I passed Selection aren’t for sharing publicly, but they included some of the most extraordinary training that any man can be lucky enough to receive.I went on to be trained in demolitions, air and maritime insertions, foreign weapons, jungle survival, trauma medicine, Arabic, signals, high-speed and evasive driving, winter warfare, as well as escape and evasion survival for behind enemy lines.I went through an even more in-depth capture initiation program as part of becoming a combat-survival instructor, which was much longer and more intense than the hell we endured on Selection.We became proficient in covert night parachuting and unarmed combat, among many other skills--and along the way we had a whole host of misadventures. But what do I remember and value most?For me, it is the camaraderie, and the friendships--and of course Trucker, who is still one of my best friends on the planet.Some bonds are unbreakable.I will never forget the long yomps, the specialist training, and of course a particular mountain in the Brecon Beacons.But above all, I feel a quiet pride that for the rest of my days I can look myself in the mirror and know that once upon a time I was good enough.Good enough to call myself a member of the SAS.Some things don’t have a price tag.

Bear Grylls

Since I did Selection all those years ago, not much has really changed.The MOD (Ministry of Defence) website still states that 21 SAS soldiers need the following character traits: Physically and mentally robust. Self-confident. Self-disciplined. Able to work alone. Able to assimilate information and new skills.It makes me smile now to read those words. As Selection had progressed, those traits had been stamped into my being, and then during the three years I served with my squadron they became molded into my psyche.They are the same qualities I still value today.The details of the jobs I did once I passed Selection aren’t for sharing publicly, but they included some of the most extraordinary training that any man can be lucky enough to receive.I went on to be trained in demolitions, air and maritime insertions, foreign weapons, jungle survival, trauma medicine, Arabic, signals, high-speed and evasive driving, winter warfare, as well as escape and evasion survival for behind enemy lines.I went through an even more in-depth capture initiation program as part of becoming a combat-survival instructor, which was much longer and more intense than the hell we endured on Selection.We became proficient in covert night parachuting and unarmed combat, among many other skills--and along the way we had a whole host of misadventures. But what do I remember and value most?For me, it is the camaraderie, and the friendships--and of course Trucker, who is still one of my best friends on the planet.Some bonds are unbreakable.I will never forget the long yomps, the specialist training, and of course a particular mountain in the Brecon Beacons.But above all, I feel a quiet pride that for the rest of my days I can look myself in the mirror and know that once upon a time I was good enough.Good enough to call myself a member of the SAS.Some things don’t have a price tag.

Related Quotes

About Bear Grylls

Edward Michael "Bear" Grylls (; born 7 June 1974) is a British former SAS trooper who is a survival expert, adventurer, and television presenter. He first drew attention after embarking on a number of notable adventures, including several world records in hostile environments, and then became widely known for his television series Man vs. Wild (2006–2011). He is also involved in a number of wilderness survival television series in the UK and US, such as Running Wild with Bear Grylls and The Island with Bear Grylls. In July 2009, Grylls was appointed as The Scout Association’s youngest-ever Chief Scout of the United Kingdom and Overseas Territories at age 35, a post he has held for a second term since 2015 and in 2024 became the 2nd longest serving Chief Scout after Robert Baden-Powell.