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Transition Drill

Transition Drill

De: Paul Pantani
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Transition Drill Podcast: explores identity, leadership, and life after service through long-form conversations with military veterans, police, fire, and first responders navigating career transition, purpose, and reinvention. Tactical Transition Tips: practical guidance for those preparing for career change, organized by transition timelines The Mindset Debrief: short-form reflections on accountability, discipline, self-leadership, and personal responsibility for people navigating life.Paul Pantani Ciencias Sociales
Episodios
  • 241. Injuries Forced his Retirement: Firefighter Engineer Paramedic. Next is Airline Pilot. Brian Yount
    Mar 30 2026

    In episode 241 of the of Transition Drill Podcast explores career setbacks, identity, and resilience for first responders navigating promotion, purpose, and long-term fulfillment. You’ll hear Brian Yount on being passed over for promotion, the internal battle that followed, and what it takes to keep showing up with professionalism and perspective.


    Brian Yount spent nearly 27 years in the fire service, retiring as a fire engineer and paramedic. His career didn’t follow the clean upward trajectory many expect. He worked for years in an informal leadership role, often serving as the steady presence between firefighters and captains, leading from the middle rather than from rank. Despite repeatedly testing well and even ranking at the top, he was passed over for promotion under the “rule of three,” a moment that tested not just his patience but his identity.


    He walks through what it actually feels like to come back to work the next day after a setback like that. Sitting at the table with people who know you got passed over. Facing leadership. Watching someone else step into the role you believed you earned. And then making a decision. Either let it define the rest of your career or get back to work and control what you can.


    Brian didn’t start out wanting this path. He grew up in Southern California, unsure of his direction, earning a degree in Russian and even serving in the Army Reserve before finding his way into the fire service. It wasn’t until he witnessed paramedics respond to a family emergency involving his grandfather that something clicked. That moment shifted everything and gave him clarity on what the job really meant.


    He talks about the grind of getting hired in the 1990s, putting himself through the fire academy, working unpaid as an auxiliary firefighter, and finding ways to build experience when opportunities were limited. He also shares how becoming a paramedic became the turning point that made him competitive.


    This conversation isn’t about titles or promotions. It’s about how you carry yourself when things don’t go your way, how you redefine success when the path changes, and how you continue to lead, even when no one formally gives you the position.


    CONNECT WITH THE PODCAST:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paulpantani/

    WEBSITE: https://www.transitiondrillpodcast.com

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulpantani/


    SIGN-UP FOR THE NEWSLETTER:

    https://transitiondrillpodcast.com/home#about


    QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS:

    paul@transitiondrillpodcast.com


    SPONSORS:

    GRND Collective

    Get 15% off your purchase

    Link: https://thegrndcollective.com/

    Promo Code: TRANSITION15


    Blue Line Roasting

    Get 10% off your purchase

    Link: https://bluelineroasting.com

    Promocode: Transition10


    Frontline Optics

    Get 10% off your purchase

    Link: https://frontlineoptics.com

    Promocode: Transition10

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    1 h y 42 m
  • Avoid the Comfort Zone in Civilian Transition | Your Next Objective
    Mar 26 2026

    Your Next Objective podcast: Round 4, offers practical guidance and career readiness for military members, law enforcement, firefighters, organized based on how far out your transition is. In this episode: Stop Protecting Your Ego and Start Protecting Your Future


    You've built your entire career on being the person who moves toward the pressure. You're the one who figures things out when everyone else hesitates. Because of that, when someone tells you not to get comfortable, it probably doesn't land. You're not lazy, and you're certainly not avoiding hard work.


    But there’s a subtle trap that high performers in uniform often fall into. Over time, your expertise starts to feel like control. You know the rules, you understand your value, and you operate within a system that rewards your specific skills. The problem is that this familiarity can become a cage. If your identity is tied entirely to a role that won't last forever, you're taking a massive strategic risk. True growth doesn't happen when you're the expert; it happens in the uncomfortable space where you're willing to be a beginner again.


    In this episode of Your Next Objective (formerly Tactical Transition Tips), we’re diving into why your current "comfort" might be your biggest liability. We explore the "imposter paradox" and why feeling like a fraud in a new environment is actually a sign of building resilience. Whether you're hanging up the uniform next month or next decade, you have to close the gap between the value you bring and your ability to explain it to a world that doesn't speak your language.


    Tactical Tips for Your Timeline

    Close Range Group (Transitioning within a year): Never Stop Learning. You need to focus on translation learning by taking your tactical experience and figuring out how to turn it into actual business value for the civilian sector.

    Medium Range Group (Transitioning in 3 to 5 years): Find New Challenges. This is the time to seek out non-tactical projects or administrative roles that stress-test your identity outside of your primary job functions.

    Long Range Group (Transitioning in a decade or more): Always Be the Newbie. Cultivate intellectual humility by intentionally putting yourself in situations where your rank or position means nothing so you can decouple your ego from your job.


    The world outside doesn't care about your past mastery as much as it cares about your current ability to adapt. Don't wait until the uniform is gone to realize you've stayed in one place for too long.


    CONNECT WITH THE PODCAST:

    IG: https://www.instagram.com/paulpantani/

    IG: https://www.instagram.com/yournextobjectivepodcast/


    SIGN-UP FOR THE NEWSLETTER:

    https://transitiondrillpodcast.com/home#about


    QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS:

    paul@transitiondrillpodcast.com


    FOLLOW THE PODCAST

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0QNNRKmxkBPJ2w58yghYnn?si=bde9a24e14ac4b76

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-standard-within/id1882237502

    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thestandardwithinpodcast


    SPONSORS:

    Blue Line Roasting

    Get 10% off your purchase

    Link: https://bluelineroasting.com

    Promocode: Transition10


    Frontline Optics

    Get 10% off your purchase

    Link: https://frontlineoptics.com

    Promocode: Transition10


    Más Menos
    21 m
  • You Know Better. So Why Aren’t You Doing It? | The Standard Within
    Mar 25 2026

    This The Standard Within episode is a short-form reflection on personal accountability, discipline, and self-leadership for people navigating pressure, responsibility, and growth. In this episode, we focus on: you can say you do it or you can show you do it.


    In this episode of The Standard Within, the focus is on a hard truth that gets missed all the time: acknowledging what’s right isn’t the same as living it. It’s easy to hear an idea about accountability, discipline, mindfulness, self-leadership, or personal growth and instantly connect with it. You agree with it. You respect it. Maybe you even repeat it to yourself. But agreement doesn’t require action, and that’s where a lot of people get stuck.


    This episode gets into the gap between knowing and doing. Between recognizing a high standard and actually building your life around it. Because real change doesn’t show up when the idea sounds good. It shows up in your habits, your decisions, your follow-through, and the way you operate when you’re tired, busy, frustrated, or tempted to take the easier route.


    If you’re a business professional, leader, entrepreneur, or just someone trying to become more consistent, more grounded, and more honest with yourself, this episode speaks directly to that tension. It looks at why self-awareness alone doesn’t create behavior change, why talking about growth can sometimes feel like progress when it isn’t, and how the disconnect between your values and your actions quietly chips away at self-trust.

    This is an episode about accountability, mindset, behavior change, discipline, alignment, and mindfulness in real life. Not in theory. Not in perfect conditions. In the everyday moments that actually define you.


    Because at some point, the question stops being whether you understand the standard. The real question is whether your life shows evidence of it.


    Share this episode with someone who could benefit from the information.


    CONNECT WITH THE PODCAST:

    IG: https://www.instagram.com/paulpantani/

    IG: https://www.instagram.com/thestandardwithinpodcast/


    QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS:

    thestandardwithinpodcast@gmail.com


    FOLLOW THE PODCAST

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0QNNRKmxkBPJ2w58yghYnn?si=bde9a24e14ac4b76

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-standard-within/id1882237502

    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thestandardwithinpodcast

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    14 m
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