Inside a Royal Navy Submarine Where Failure Isn’t an Option
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About this listen
Ep48: Martin Barmby AKA Barney
In this episode of Deck Tales, I talk to Barney — a former Royal Navy submariner with 22 years of service — to explore life beneath the waves and the mindset forged by submarines. From growing up immersed in military history to serving on diesel-electric and nuclear boats, Barney shares candid, often hilarious, and deeply human stories about leadership, resilience, and responsibility.
The conversation dives into everything from nicknames and Navy culture to the brutal realities of submarine life: limited showers, relentless watchkeeping, and the unbreakable bond between crewmates. Now in civilian life working at a power station, Barney reflects on how submarine values — accountability, teamwork, and never walking past a problem — still shape how he lives and works today.
⚓ Key Takeaways
Submarine service builds extreme accountability — mistakes aren’t personal, they’re fatal.
Leadership isn’t rank, it’s responsibility — especially when lives depend on you.
Nicknames, banter, and shared hardship create family, not just colleagues.
You can take the submariner out of the Navy, but not the Navy out of the submariner.
Resilience comes from service, purpose, and helping others — even after uniform life ends.
#royalnavy #submarine #electricianlife #submariner
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