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Brown Claims No Courage Exists Without Vulnerability After Fort Bragg Study

Diary of a CEO · Most Replayed Moment: Brené Brown on Vulnerability, Self Esteem and The Four Skillsets Of Courage · June 5, 2026
Diary of a CEO
Diary of a CEO
Most Replayed Moment: Brené Brown on Vulnerability, Self Esteem and The Four Skillsets Of Courage
"Give me a single example of courage in your life. One example that you've witnessed or you yourself have done. One example of courage that did not require uncertainty, risk, or emotional exposure? No one could answer it. Finally, a young soldier stood up and said, 'Three tours.' There is no courage without vulnerability."
Vulnerability researcher Brené Brown revealed findings from fieldwork with Special Forces at Fort Bragg, where she challenged soldiers to name a single act of courage that didn't require vulnerability. None could. She replicated the experiment the following week with the Seattle Seahawks NFL team with identical results, cementing her thesis that courage and vulnerability are inseparable.

About this episode

In this episode, host Stephen Bartlett interviews vulnerability researcher and author Brené Brown for an in-depth conversation about courage, trust, and emotional armor. Brown, whose work spans 25 years and has now been tested on 165,000 people across 45 countries, reveals what she calls the most important finding of her career: that armor, not fear, is what prevents people from living bravely. The conversation centers on Brown's field research with U.S. Special Forces at Fort Bragg and the Seattle Seahawks, where she challenged participants to name a single act of courage that didn't require vulnerability—none could. Brown argues that joy, not grief or fear, is the most vulnerable human emotion, with many people rehearsing tragedy to avoid disappointment. She introduces her marble jar theory of trust, explaining how trust is built through small daily moments rather than grand gestures, and describes the four teachable skills of courage: values clarity, vulnerability navigation, trust building, and resilience. The discussion takes a personal turn as Brown admits she has not overcome her tendency to catastrophize and seeks control when afraid, particularly with her children. She describes midlife as a developmental ultimatum where the universe demands people shed childhood survival armor or face consequences. Bartlett challenges Brown on whether vulnerability is always advisable, raising concerns about marginalized groups and those with trauma histories, to which Brown responds that timing and context matter—vulnerability should be slowly stacked with trust, never weaponized as a litmus test. The episode closes with Brown emphasizing that emotional disengagement in relationships causes more ragged damage than even infidelity, leaving partners questioning their own judgment.

Key takeaways

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