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Passionate About Inspiring Others

Most men are tired. Not weak. Not broken. Just running inefficient systems.

Mind-Body Engineering is a precision program designed to build men who perform at optimal levels around the clock—physically, mentally, and strategically.

This is not motivation.
This is engineering.

Over nine weeks, you will be trained in the same principles that make Delta Operators comparable to elite endurance and strength athletes. Nutrition protocols that fuel performance, recovery, and longevity. Not trends. Not guesswork. Proven inputs that sustain extreme output.

You will learn stress management the way Delta is trained—by medical doctors and psychiatrists who understand how humans function under lethal pressure. Operators are not fearless. They are regulated. Conditioned. Built to think clearly when others collapse.

You will be trained in self-hypnosis, neurolinguistic programming, and the mental architectures required to dominate chaos—decision-making, emotional control, focus, timing, execution. The same internal tools used by elite operators and high-level entrepreneurs.

You will also learn how universal laws actually work—and how to apply them deliberately for momentum, leverage, and sustained success.

This is not theory.
This is lived experience.

I live in three countries—the United States, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
I own and operate multiple international businesses.
I travel the world. I answer to no boss.
At 63 years old, I am in excellent health and peak operational condition.

This program is nine weeks. Twenty hours total. Conducted live via Zoom. Direct access. No fluff.

And it comes with a guarantee.

I change your life—or you get your money back.

If you’re ready to stop managing exhaustion and start engineering dominance, message me now.

  • "This course was life-changing in a lasting way and in a way that I was unable to find in the previous 40 years of searching."

  • "Dale Comstock brings a résumé to the world of online coaching that makes Grant Cardone and Tony Robbins look like beginners."

  • "I can honestly say without hesitation that working with Dale has been the most meaningful and impactful professional decision that I have ever made!"

  • "Today I'm officially 30 pounds lighter than I was 5 weeks ago!"

  • "The training goes way beyond the physical aspects but also includes new ways of breaking down performance walls and eating paradigms for breakfast."

  • "I have worked with many of the world’s best coaches but Dr. Dale Comstock is in a league all of his own. "

  • "I have been on a leadership and personal growth journey, and you are by far the most  rewarding to date."

  • ​" Dale is a teacher that withholds no secrets. It takes someone who has been everywhere and done it all to demystify life!"

DALE COMSTOCK

The Architecture of Human Performance

Most people know me as a former Delta Force Operator.

Others know me as a Green Beret, combat veteran, entrepreneur, television personality, security consultant, author, or coach.

But none of those titles explain who I am or why I do what I do.

To understand that, you have to go back to a young military kid who never quite fit in.

I was born on May 21, 1963, at Madigan Army Hospital on Fort Lewis, Washington. My father was a career Army soldier. My mother met him while he was stationed in Germany. Together they built a life rooted in service, sacrifice, and family.

My childhood was spent moving from military base to military base across the United States and Europe. Military culture was all I knew. Duty, discipline, service, accountability, and resilience were not concepts. They were simply life.

Everything changed when my father retired from the Army.

For the first time, I found myself surrounded by civilian culture. I felt out of place. I had attended four high schools in four years, often arriving in the middle of the school year. Academically I struggled. Not because I lacked intelligence, but because I struggled to sit still and conform to a system that never seemed designed for someone like me.

Sports became my refuge.

Football, baseball, weightlifting, running, boxing and physical competition became the places where I felt alive. Yet much of my youth was spent alone. I was often the new kid, the outsider, the loner.

What I did not realize at the time was that those years of isolation would become one of the greatest gifts of my life.

When you spend enough time alone, you begin learning how to think for yourself.

At fifteen years old, while playing baseball in Germany, I accidentally discovered something that would shape the rest of my life.

The night before an important game, I mentally rehearsed every detail of my performance. I imagined success. I imagined confidence. I imagined myself performing flawlessly.

The next day I played the best game of my life.

I had unknowingly discovered the power of subconscious programming.

I would spend the next forty years proving it worked.

At seventeen, I joined the United States Army.

I entered the 82nd Airborne Division and quickly gravitated toward elite military organizations. I served in the Long Range Reconnaissance Platoon before attempting selection for the Army's most elite special operations unit.

I had no reason to believe I would be selected.

Yet I was.

The same mental techniques I had unknowingly discovered as a teenager became tools I used during some of the most demanding military assessments in the world.

Later, during Delta Force Operator Training, I nearly failed a critical firearms program. Once again, I returned to visualization, mental rehearsal, subconscious conditioning, and performance engineering.

The result was the same.

Transformation.

Over the next twenty years, I served in some of the most elite military units in the world, participating in operations that spanned multiple continents and conflicts.

I served in Grenada.

Panama.

Desert Shield.

Desert Storm.

Somalia.

Afghanistan

Iraq 2

And numerous other operations throughout my military career.

I eventually served as a Delta Force Operator, later becoming a Green Beret Team Sergeant in 3rd Special Forces Group.

Throughout those years I accumulated experiences that few people ever encounter.

Combat.

Leadership.

Loss.

Victory.

Failure.

Injury.

Adversity.

And most importantly, an intimate understanding of human performance under pressure.

I learned something critical.

The body rarely fails first.

The mind fails first.

And when the mind is properly conditioned, human beings are capable of extraordinary things.

After retiring from the military, I entered the business world.

Like many veterans, I quickly discovered that success in combat does not automatically translate into success in business.

I built companies.

I lost companies.

I trusted the wrong people.

I experienced betrayal.

I learned difficult lessons about leadership, partnerships, and human nature.

One company grew into a highly successful security consulting business serving the nuclear industry before eventually being acquired by a major corporation.

Another venture ended with a business partner taking millions while my family received virtually nothing.

Those experiences taught me lessons no classroom ever could.

Success leaves clues.

Failure leaves instructions.

Both are valuable.

Following 9/11, I spent nearly a decade supporting the Global War on Terror as a paramilitary contractor and advisor, conducting operations throughout Afghanistan, Iraq, and other regions of the world.

I later entered the entertainment industry, appearing on television and working with major media organizations.

I walked through Hollywood.

Met celebrities.

Worked on productions.

Experienced the lifestyle many people dream about.

And discovered it wasn't what I wanted.

What I wanted was purpose.

Not attention.

Not fame.

Purpose.

That search eventually led me around the world.

I worked in Africa.

Asia.

The Middle East.

Europe.

Latin America.

I advised billionaires.

Protected executives.

Recovered kidnapped individuals.

Built security companies.

Helped families in crisis.

Supported humanitarian efforts.

And continued studying the one subject that fascinated me more than anything else:

Human potential.

Eventually I settled in Indonesia, where my wife and I built successful businesses and a life together.

Like millions of others, COVID devastated much of what we had built.

But adversity has always been my greatest teacher.

Every setback reinforced the same lesson:

The greatest asset any person possesses is not money, status, influence, education, or talent.

It is their ability to adapt.

Over the years I earned degrees in education, business, organizational security management, and natural health.

But the greatest education I ever received came from life itself.

Combat.

Business.

Fatherhood.

Marriage.

Leadership.

Failure.

Recovery.

Reinvention.

Today I call what I teach Psycho-Soma Engineering.

It is not theory.

It is not motivation.

It is not positive thinking.

It is a system built from decades of testing human performance under conditions where failure carried real consequences.

The foundation is simple:

The mind influences the body.

The body influences performance.

Performance shapes outcomes.

Outcomes shape identity.

Identity shapes destiny.

Most people spend their lives reacting to circumstances.

My mission is to teach people how to consciously engineer them.

I am not interested in creating followers.

I am interested in creating sovereign individuals.

Men and women who can think independently.

Lead themselves.

Control stress.

Master their biology.

Leverage technology.

Build meaningful lives.

And become architects of their future rather than victims of their environment.

That is why Psycho-Soma Engineering exists.

It is the culmination of sixty-plus years of life experience, four decades of studying performance, and a lifetime spent answering one question:

What makes ordinary people capable of extraordinary things?

The answer is not talent.

It is not luck.

It is not genetics.

It is learning how to consciously align the mind, body, and mission toward a single purpose.

That is what I discovered as a teenager.

That is what carried me through Delta Force.

That is what carried me through combat.

That is what carried me through business.

And that is what I now teach others.

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