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- I'd be curious if the origin is really the Navy seals. I couldn't find in my brief searching any where else...

- I like John Wooden's saying "be quick but don't hurry". I mentioned that to a doctor who trained in the mid 20th century and he said that surgeons had a line "hurry, but don't rush"




Quick observations:

- several people here mention that they learned this phrase in the military

- the first written mention I could find is in a 1998 army report [0]

- the first Google Books hit for this phrase is from 1970 but this seems to be an error - the full text preview is from a different, recent book [1]

- Internet Archive has a lot of hits - but the earliest ones - except for the army report mentioned above - are from the 2000s (don't be fooled by wrong publishing dates in the metadata) [2]

- Google Ngram Viewer shows a brief appearance around 1980 (maybe a fluke) and then a steady rise in the 2000s [3].

- In one army magazine I saw an extended version: "slow is smooth, smooth is fast, fast is deadly" (which doesn't transfer that well to other professions)

[0] https://archive.org/details/DTIC_ADA357718/page/23/mode/2up?...

[1] https://www.google.de/books/edition/Span_of_Control/IYy_EAAA...

[2] https://archive.org/search?query=%22slow+is+smooth%22&sin=TX...

[3] https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=slow+is+smooth...


> surgeons had a line "hurry, but don't rush"

One that came to my mind when I was trying to help my step-daughter learn to drive:

"Be assertive, but don't be aggressive."


I told my child "Remember, they're all out to kill you."


I don’t have an authoritative source but a mentor of mine who was a navy seal has trotted out those exact words quite frequently over the years.


My brother got it from the Army. It’s pretty ubiquitous.




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