Special Forces Commando to Buddhist Monk: Redefining Strength Under Pressure with Paul Cale
Sat Feb 07 2026
This man who has lived at both extremes of human experience, elite combat and deep spiritual discipline.
Paul Cale is a former Australian Special Forces commando, a black belt across eight martial arts, and the architect of the Australian Army’s modern combatives system. He completed five combat tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, served as a team leader in Australia’s elite counter-terror unit, and has spent decades training soldiers, police, elite athletes, and civilians in close-quarters combat and decision-making under pressure.
He also came to public attention after being labelled by media as “Australia’s deadliest soldier” following a life-and-death close-quarters incident in Afghanistan, a label he reflects on today with nuance, responsibility, and restraint.
But this conversation goes far deeper than combat.
For more than 40 years, Paul has studied Buddhism and is now on the path toward ordination as a Buddhist monk. In this episode, we explore how stillness, discipline, and spiritual practice reshaped his understanding of strength, control, aggression, and purpose.
We discuss:
• what Special Forces training really teaches about everyday pressure
• why some men freeze under stress while others act with clarity
• the difference between aggression and confidence
• how to control anger without suppressing it
• identity loss after intensity and how men rebuild without losing themselves
• practical ways to cultivate calm, discipline, and restraint in daily life
This is not a conversation about violence.
It’s a conversation about strength that is chosen, controlled, and sustained.
If you’re a man navigating pressure, responsibility, identity, or the demands of a long career, this episode will challenge how you define strength and success.
M26FIT Podcast, hosted by Magnus Olson.
Subscribe for more conversations on strength, longevity, and sustainable performance.
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This man who has lived at both extremes of human experience, elite combat and deep spiritual discipline. Paul Cale is a former Australian Special Forces commando, a black belt across eight martial arts, and the architect of the Australian Army’s modern combatives system. He completed five combat tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, served as a team leader in Australia’s elite counter-terror unit, and has spent decades training soldiers, police, elite athletes, and civilians in close-quarters combat and decision-making under pressure. He also came to public attention after being labelled by media as “Australia’s deadliest soldier” following a life-and-death close-quarters incident in Afghanistan, a label he reflects on today with nuance, responsibility, and restraint. But this conversation goes far deeper than combat. For more than 40 years, Paul has studied Buddhism and is now on the path toward ordination as a Buddhist monk. In this episode, we explore how stillness, discipline, and spiritual practice reshaped his understanding of strength, control, aggression, and purpose. We discuss: • what Special Forces training really teaches about everyday pressure • why some men freeze under stress while others act with clarity • the difference between aggression and confidence • how to control anger without suppressing it • identity loss after intensity and how men rebuild without losing themselves • practical ways to cultivate calm, discipline, and restraint in daily life This is not a conversation about violence. It’s a conversation about strength that is chosen, controlled, and sustained. If you’re a man navigating pressure, responsibility, identity, or the demands of a long career, this episode will challenge how you define strength and success. M26FIT Podcast, hosted by Magnus Olson. Subscribe for more conversations on strength, longevity, and sustainable performance.