reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Treat "impossible" as motivation. Embrace being an outsider, as they're the ones who change the world. When a broken system tells you you're wrong, keep pushing forward.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
What are you doing? Stop! You’re just running away because you’re scared. Who can I be for my own sake?

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
My mother always told me not to let others define me. Don't carry the burden of others' limited views on what you can achieve. Sometimes people will help you, sometimes they won't. In those moments, you have to take charge and break down barriers to reach your goals.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Be grateful and don't be afraid to cry or feel sad. Elizabeth Taylor's advice was to have a drink, put on lipstick, and keep going. Remember that everyone experiences sadness, and it's not a competition. We all have our own struggles, so it's important to be kind because a single act of kindness can have a big impact on someone's life.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Most of what you think and say are the opinions of other people, not exactly you. You must find out which of your thoughts and things that you say are actually you, representative of yourself as an integrated being. You can tell when you're saying something inauthentic by feeling out whether or not it makes you weak or strong.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Never let anyone take your power away from you. Your strength, purpose, and ability to inspire remain unchanged. Stay empowered regardless of circumstances.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Never give up on your greatness, even if someone tries to discourage you. Believe in yourself, even if others doubt you. Keep chasing your dreams and don't let anyone hold you back.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
You will face unimaginable tests and hardships that will make you feel weak and want to give up. Patience is crucial, even if you don't naturally possess it. Let it grow within you to its full potential. Each trial may be harder than the last, but remember, every hardship will be worth it. Patience is one of the best things you can learn to protect yourself and get through this world, even on your toughest days when you feel like you have nothing.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Nobody cares about the trials and tribulations of your weak lives.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I must be true to myself and embrace who I am, regardless of whether others agree or not. I strive to live a fulfilling life, not just exist. I refuse to let go of my aspirations and desires for a meaningful existence.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Embrace your reality and be true to yourself, even if it means not having romantic partners. Accepting who you are will bring you freedom.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Treat "impossible" as motivation. Embrace being an outsider, as they're the ones who change the world. When a broken system tells you you're wrong, keep pushing ahead.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Vultures and thieves surround you. Don’t let twisted thoughts consume you. Keep confronting the lies you create.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Life can be unfair, and you may face challenges that seem undeserved. In those moments, it's crucial to stay determined and keep pushing forward. Never give up, no matter the obstacles you encounter.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
If you're not the real you, the people who are looking for you can't find you. The secret to life is to just be yourself. There's only one you, and the way you make your mark, learn to believe in yourself, discover the people you're supposed to surround yourself with, and find the right career path is by being the real you.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Life isn't always fair, and you may face challenges you don't deserve. In those moments, it's crucial to keep your head down and keep fighting. Never give up.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
What you care about matters. Life is long, and it's important to focus on what truly matters to you.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I've met many celebrities, kings, queens, and popes, but I've come to realize that it's all just an illusion. What truly matters is the kind of person you are when no one is watching, how you speak to yourself in private. That's the person I want to get to know.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Don't mess with my beauty. Yes, you're cute, but I know my worth.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
As a woman, it's important to find a balance between being strong and being perceived as mean.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I will always stay committed and not hurt others emotionally. Mothers, please do your best in raising them.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Never let anyone take your joy. The speaker identifies as a "joyful warrior" and encourages listeners to protect their happiness. They suggest doing what one needs to do. The speaker also implies that living with purpose is a wonderful way to live.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Life is short, so try something new daily like dancing and connecting with the sea's silence. Rest your body, surprise old friends, exercise regularly, appreciate art, and try new things to change your life.

This Past Weekend

Sadie Hawkins | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #243
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Theo Von opens with a shift in mindset: life is happening for you, not to you, a line that eases the feeling of wind against him and reorients his day. He recalls autumn memories from a small town—Sadie Hawkins dances, the thrill of the matching shirts, acne and nervous crushes, and the way a kid’s first love could make him sweat like a waterfall. He tells of DJ John, the so‑called Christopher Columbus of sound, who rode a horse trailer into town with a towering speaker and turned funerals, weddings, and dances into showtime. He laments the fall air and moving leaves, the sense of magic that vanished in Los Angeles’ climate, a Groundhog Day rhythm he both jokes about and misses. He shares recent life details: yoga, a fever, and body imagery as he sweats and laughs through illness, then pivots to a Manscaped ad and a reminder that holidays are coming. A Patreon question about hacky jokes yields a definition: hacky = jokes you’ve heard a lot; authenticity comes from true, personal sensibilities. He reflects on early routines, Brad Pitt stories, and how jokes evolve with time. Thanksgiving plans bring him back to New Orleans and sweet potatoes, plus a memory of a neighborhood cat, Quagmire, and a wild childhood scene with sharp claws and odd rituals, all treated in his characteristic, rambunctious warmth. He notes Popeyes’ Maryland incident and critiques media hype, echoing Duncan Trussell’s garden metaphor about tending to what you can control. Nick Davis recounts the Logan Paul vs. KSI fight in a deadened arena, with a crowd split between boos and chants and a technically improving Logan, despite the split decision. The LSU victory and a wood mill worker’s burnout become threads for callers’ stories, from gypsies to quick questions about addiction and tough love. The show closes with empathy for those battling heavy issues and a reminder to act with confidence rather than stay stuck: you’re right where you need to be today, and you can still aim higher.

Shawn Ryan Show

David Rutherford - Navy SEAL & CIA Contractor | SRS #228
Guests: David Rutherford
reSee.it Podcast Summary
David Rutherford’s story unfolds from a tight-knit Boca Raton upbringing into a life steeped in risk, discipline, faith, and relentless reinvention. He recalls growing up in a beach town that shaped his values: a father who built a small law practice through hard work and integrity, a mother who loved tennis and community, and an older brother, Eric, whose artistic talent and later struggles would anchor Dave’s sense of family and loyalty. Competitive sports and art defined his early years, but the family’s quiet shock when Eric came out as gay in the early 80s—amid a climate of fear around AIDS—forced painful conflicts that fractured trust and forced Dave to confront denial, blame, and guilt. He describes the ensuing chaos: Eric’s withdrawal, addiction, and estrangement; and a teenager’s perspective on responsibility that would haunt him for decades. That era taught him how fragile stability can be, how fast hope can fracture into fear, and how profoundly his identity would be tested as he sought purpose beyond the fear and performance that had defined him as a kid, athlete, and would-be artist. A pivotal shift comes in college, where Dave’s life again teeters on crisis. A relationship leads to pregnancy and a miscarriage; he learns he’s not ready to be a father or a husband in the way his family might expect. The emotional avalanche includes a near-suicide attempt after a devastating breakup, and a faltering sense of self that makes him question everything—athletics, academics, even loyalty to friends. He describes a dramatic turn: he walks away from Penn State, returns home to Florida, and begins to rebuild not by retreating but by leaning into mentors who push him toward a larger vision. His father’s quiet guidance—encouraging him to be a Renaissance man, to own integrity, to pursue a path that would fill the holes left by failure—frames his decision to seek something disciplined, dangerous, and redeeming. The search for identity, he says, ultimately leads him toward the Navy and the SEALs as a chance to confront fear head-on and to test whether he can endure, adapt, and lead under extreme pressure. Budding as a SEAL begins with brutal reality. He signs up for Buds, experiences 205 and then is rolled into 206, where a life-defining moment arrives: a harsh, transformative pool session that nearly breaks him, followed by a slow, painful climb toward 208 and finally 209. He describes the ritual trident pinning as a thunderous, communal moment of belonging that comes after months of doubt, pain, and near-quit moments. The first combat deployment—Southeast Asia and later Afghanistan—pushes him into a brutal, unpredictable theater where vehicles, terrain, and enemy tactics demand improvisation and nerve. He recounts dangerous patrols, joint operations with SF and agency teams, and a mission to snatch Taliban leaders that turns into a harrowing experience of chaos, miscommunication, and near-misses. In the aftermath, he carries a heavy sense of guilt about a weapon discharge that may have wounded colleagues, and a silence from leadership that compounds his self-blame. He wrestlingly questions whether his training, discipline, and moral compass were enough, while compartmentalizing the experience to survive emotionally and physically. The years that follow fracture into a long arc of reinvention. After a stint as an SQT instructor, a Blackwater assignment, and a string of deployments to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Dave confronts the moral ambiguities of the security industry, the limits of “kinetic” missions, and the human cost of constant conflict. A deep dive into his faith—driven by a near-fatal crash, a baptism, sweat lodges, and a community that refused to abandon him—becomes the thread that steadying his life. He builds Frog Logic, a youth-focused organization intended to restore self-confidence and resilience in kids through martial-arts-inspired missions and storytelling. He writes, speaks, and travels to share lessons learned from his failures and his triumphs, while acknowledging the ongoing tension between redemption and accountability. The personal arc includes a difficult divorce, the arrival of a second family, and a relationship with Janna that anchors him and gives him a new sense of purpose, trust, and tenderness. He credits Janna with teaching him to communicate, to be honest about his struggles, and to sustain a life that moves from violence and bravado toward stewardship, mentorship, and faith. In the final stretch, Dave frames a philosophy for living with fear and purpose: embrace vulnerability, seek truth in relationships, and lean into communities that hold you accountable. He emphasizes the importance of conversations, empathy, and service over isolation, urging young people to find a “cornerstone” in faith and in trusted mentors. He reflects on the cost of a career built around being the best at combat and acknowledges a lifelong struggle with guilt, shame, and the fear of letting others down. Yet through Frog Logic, family, and a growing spiritual practice, he argues for a life where resilience is not just about surviving danger but about using experience to uplift others. He closes with a practical, hopeful blueprint: stay curious, be willing to ask for help, build authentic relationships, and pursue a meaningful vocation that aligns with your deepest values. His message to his kids—and to anyone wrestling with purpose—is to embrace the unknown, cultivate self-confidence, and choose teams and missions that elevate the human spirit.
View Full Interactive Feed