Creates art podcast interview.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Joshua Caraballo.
Speaker:Hello friend.
Speaker:This is Timothy Kimo.
Speaker:Brian, your head instigator with create art podcast, where I bring
Speaker:my over 30 years of experience in the arts and education world to
Speaker:help you tame your inner critic.
Speaker:In this episode, I'm going to be talking with Dr.
Speaker:Joshua Caraballo, who is an industrial organizational psychologist, currently
Speaker:residing in Denver, Colorado.
Speaker:Now his career trajectory has centered on the themes of inspirational
Speaker:storytelling and applied science for the sake of human betterment,
Speaker:especially for those who have been historically marginalized and oppressed.
Speaker:Joshua has a deep passion for For the human flourishing, awe
Speaker:inspiring experience in nature and anything involving cats.
Speaker:Now you may be asking yourself, hey Tim, how do you get these guests on the show?
Speaker:Well, what I do Is I subscribe to a service called pod match.
Speaker:And what that does is that matches me with other people that are
Speaker:interested in the same things that I'm interested in, namely for me, the arts.
Speaker:And that's how I ran into Dr.
Speaker:Joshua Caraballo.
Speaker:He reached out to me and heard the show and thought it would be a great
Speaker:idea for him to be on the show.
Speaker:And he has a new book out that you're going to hear a lot about.
Speaker:And that new book is called I'm not dead yet, how I turned my misfortunes
Speaker:into strengths and links to Dr.
Speaker:Carabello's website and how to get the book will be in the show notes.
Speaker:So make sure you look out for those.
Speaker:Now, the sound quality on this interview is not 100%, so I'm going to
Speaker:let you know that ahead of time here.
Speaker:So if you hear any squelches or any weird things like that,
Speaker:that's what's going on there.
Speaker:Just using a new service, which is called Squadcast.
Speaker:And I've used it in the past and gotten decent results with it.
Speaker:This time was not 100 percent perfect, but I thought instead of rerecording
Speaker:everything, it was important to get this conversation going.
Speaker:To you, because there's a lot of great tidbits in here that you're going to want
Speaker:to write down and you're going to want to go ahead and get the book as well.
Speaker:So without further ado, here's my interview with Dr.
Speaker:Joshua Caraballo.
Speaker:Folks, I have the privilege of having Dr.
Speaker:Joshua here with me today.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Joshua, you're out there in Colorado.
Speaker:How is it?
Speaker:Oh
Speaker:my goodness.
Speaker:It, the weather is so beautiful this week.
Speaker:Um, anyone that knows about Colorado weather.
Speaker:Denver specifically is where I'm at, uh, will know that the weather here
Speaker:changes drastically, uh, sometimes day to day to day, hour to hour.
Speaker:So this week is one of those weeks where I'm taking a big, Breath of
Speaker:fresh air and saying, wow, I'm so happy that the weather is just, I would
Speaker:use the word perfect, but it's almost perfect because nothing is perfect.
Speaker:Been out to Denver myself.
Speaker:Oh gosh.
Speaker:It's been 10, 000 and 12 hours out there.
Speaker:And I got to tell you, the air out there, it tastes like metal to me.
Speaker:Anyways, there's a big independent bookstore downtown.
Speaker:I forget the name of it.
Speaker:The art scene there in Denver is top notch.
Speaker:Thank you
Speaker:so much,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:I'm originally from South Florida, so it's a big difference between Denver
Speaker:and South Florida for several reasons.
Speaker:But yeah, the art scene here is tremendous.
Speaker:So I always say, or at least I have been saying for the last three years that I've
Speaker:been here, It's the best decision I've ever made, and I tell everybody, although
Speaker:other Denverites here probably don't want me to do this because we're getting a
Speaker:little crowded here, but uh, you should definitely come visit, and if you really
Speaker:love it here, come and live, because it's, it's just so amazing to be around the
Speaker:mountains and the outdoors, there's so many people that truly appreciate that,
Speaker:and it, it does so well for our art.
Speaker:As like being outside
Speaker:and it's really inspiring being out there.
Speaker:I, like I said, it's been over a decade since I've been there, but I know when
Speaker:I was there, went to the bookstore, went around town, saw the mountains and how can
Speaker:you not have a good time out in Denver?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I think that bookstore is called the tattered cover.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Such an amazing bookstore.
Speaker:There's also another one in Boulder called the Boulder Bookstore.
Speaker:Very easy to remember.
Speaker:And it's nondescript when you see it.
Speaker:It doesn't say Boulder Bookstore.
Speaker:It just says bookstore at the front, but it is gigantic.
Speaker:It's three stories.
Speaker:It is a dream to be inside.
Speaker:So again, if anybody ever visits, please make it a point to go to that bookstore.
Speaker:You will be so surprised.
Speaker:And if you go out and visit, you automatically have a friend with Dr.
Speaker:Gott.
Speaker:So that's right, I'm talking to him and let him show you around town.
Speaker:And I'll definitely, when I come out to Denver, don't know when I'll knock
Speaker:on your door and be like, Hey, let's go around, let's go to the Tatters bookstore.
Speaker:Let's get right into the yard here.
Speaker:Now I do know, and it just full transparency.
Speaker:I have not read it yet.
Speaker:But you have a book called, I'm not dead yet.
Speaker:I want to talk about that title first and foremost, because when I saw that I'm
Speaker:of an age and it made me think of Monty Python's Holy Grail where, you know, um,
Speaker:I'm going to tell you that this book is not about Monty Python, Holy Grail.
Speaker:So can you tell me a little bit about what, why that title?
Speaker:It's very eye catching, but why that title?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:First, I didn't realize this when I was looking at or thinking about
Speaker:different titles for the book, but I was definitely thinking about
Speaker:Monty Python, Holy, the Holy Grail.
Speaker:That is one of my favorite movies ever.
Speaker:And that line, With the old man or older gentleman, if you will,
Speaker:who is just say, I'm not dead yet.
Speaker:I'm still alive.
Speaker:It just it stayed with me and I I saw that when I was young and I just thought
Speaker:it was One of the most hilarious things I had ever seen in my life So the title
Speaker:actually I can't say it comes from that, but it definitely I was informed early
Speaker:on in my life with Performance the way people express themselves, especially
Speaker:through mass media And even in more localized, like theater productions, et
Speaker:cetera, has always gravitated towards me and that informs everything that I do.
Speaker:And that's, that's the type of artist that I am, a performance artist.
Speaker:And we can talk more about that, but back to the name of the book,
Speaker:I've been through a lot in my life.
Speaker:I've faced a lot of adversities, and although I consider myself to
Speaker:be young ish, I'm 47 years old.
Speaker:People might think, why are you even thinking about death?
Speaker:But I've lived a life where I've had to think about death for quite some
Speaker:time in a lot of different ways.
Speaker:So when I turned 18 years old, I was diagnosed with Hodgkin's Lymphoma,
Speaker:and I was in stage four, and for those who don't really know about stages of
Speaker:cancer, stage four is usually the very last stage, where it metastasizes,
Speaker:if I'm saying that word correctly.
Speaker:I'm a doctor, but not that kind of doctor.
Speaker:I'm an, I'm an industrial organizational psychologist, a little bit different.
Speaker:But, That was the first time that I ever had to square away
Speaker:with the possibility of dying.
Speaker:Especially when it came back a second time.
Speaker:I went through the first time about six months of chemotherapy, and then two
Speaker:months later, As should happen, another scan is done just to see what's going
Speaker:on, and all of my cancer was in my chest.
Speaker:So I had one tumor the size of a football, the other one was the size
Speaker:of a golf ball, and in the book I talk about how it's interesting and
Speaker:a little bit funny how doctors use these analogies that come from sports.
Speaker:In some ways it's fitting, and in some ways it's like, I don't know, I don't
Speaker:know how much of the game I want to be involved in right now, especially when
Speaker:it has to do with a football in my chest.
Speaker:But there's a litany of other things that I've experienced, but I could just
Speaker:focus on those two things for the moment.
Speaker:This changed my life as well, as you could probably imagine, especially
Speaker:when I found out two months later that the cancer had come back.
Speaker:It was very aggressive, and when I was first given treatment, I was
Speaker:told that there was like a 95 percent chance that everything would work out.
Speaker:I would be in remission and life would move on.
Speaker:I was a young man.
Speaker:I was 18 years old.
Speaker:Don't worry about it.
Speaker:That's not what happened to me.
Speaker:And because of all of those things and the way that it happened, I knew in my heart
Speaker:of hearts, I don't feel this way now, as a preface, but during that time I knew in my
Speaker:heart of hearts that God was punishing me.
Speaker:Now why do I say that?
Speaker:I happened to grow up in a Jehovah's Witness household and I was told at a
Speaker:very young age that being gay was wrong.
Speaker:And if you ever acted on that, That you would not be able to live through
Speaker:the Great Tribulation or Armageddon, as it's sometimes referred to as.
Speaker:And as silly as that might sound to some people, when you are being
Speaker:brought up in your formative years in a religious household, and that's
Speaker:all you know, you truly believe that.
Speaker:And, I probably knew that I was gay before I even knew what sex was because it wasn't
Speaker:about sex, it was, and that's the other thing, when people reduce a gay man's
Speaker:life or being queer, generally speaking, to the sexual act, it just, it boggles
Speaker:my mind because we're human beings, obviously, and there's so much else than
Speaker:sex that exists as part of our experience here in life and being queer people.
Speaker:Just, I'll leave that for what it's worth.
Speaker:But I knew that I was gay because I knew there was an attraction that I had and
Speaker:there was beauty, and artists know this.
Speaker:That is separate than sex.
Speaker:The beauty that we see in the world, like with a tree, is not because, and forgive
Speaker:me for just going there and being silly, we don't want to have sex with a tree.
Speaker:We find that the beauty of that tree is so amazing that it touches our heart.
Speaker:It flows through our blood.
Speaker:That's being gay to me.
Speaker:That's how I saw the males form.
Speaker:Other males in my life had this sort of spiritual connection to and that's
Speaker:the best way that I can explain that and how I knew that I was gay but that
Speaker:was the conundrum because as a young person and then understanding even not
Speaker:knowing how to put a label on I am gay I just knew that there was an attraction
Speaker:to this male form but I also knew that was wrong and I it was wrong because it
Speaker:was taught to me and sasphoric to the age of 18 it makes sense to me that I
Speaker:thought that this was God's punishment.
Speaker:for everything that I had tried so hard to get rid of in my life.
Speaker:But I realized something, the more I tried to get rid of it, the harder it
Speaker:became to get rid of, because I was actually trying to get rid of myself.
Speaker:I was trying to get rid of who I am instead of accepting that,
Speaker:loving that, and embracing that.
Speaker:I do not say all of these things, and this is one of the things I always
Speaker:like to say when I talk about my past.
Speaker:This is not to disparage religious people.
Speaker:This is not to disparage my family.
Speaker:I understand that when they brought me up, they did it out of love that
Speaker:when they decided to become Jehovah's witnesses, regardless of how I feel
Speaker:or how it's affected me, they did it because they felt it was the best
Speaker:thing in their life, the structure and community and religiosity and spirituality
Speaker:that religion gave my parents.
Speaker:met their needs and provided them with something that they felt was great.
Speaker:And because of that, they decided that they wanted to
Speaker:share that with their family.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:I don't fault them for that.
Speaker:What I do understand now is that sometimes the very thing that people see as a potion
Speaker:for themselves that they drink and think is wonderful can be a poison for others.
Speaker:And that's exactly what had happened to me.
Speaker:I don't think it's about pointing fingers.
Speaker:I think it's about making it right for myself, reversing the damage that has
Speaker:been done, which I will probably have to keep doing for the rest of my life.
Speaker:Although I feel like a good portion of that is now behind me.
Speaker:Learning how to love myself, learning what my relationship with God is,
Speaker:learning how to renegotiate all the relationships in my life with people who
Speaker:think that I should not be on this earth.
Speaker:Sometimes that means cutting them off, sometimes that means like figuring out
Speaker:some sort of semblance of how to love each other regardless of those differences.
Speaker:And everything in between and all of that is so beautiful and all of it has
Speaker:informed my art, which I think is great
Speaker:that, that my God, that's awesome.
Speaker:I just want to reach through the screen and give you a big hug after that, because
Speaker:that you're, you're talking my life, honestly, because I came up with similar,
Speaker:very religious upbringing came out as bisexual when I was in the air force.
Speaker:And this wasn't a time.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Military, don't ask, don't tell.
Speaker:Luckily, I, uh, ran into a, uh, group of people that became my
Speaker:adopted family, my family of choice.
Speaker:And now I'm, I've been married now for, uh, 11 years, uh, to my wife.
Speaker:We've got kids.
Speaker:I always remember my parents telling me, We're doing the best with what we have.
Speaker:And this is what we can offer you.
Speaker:And I'm just trying to do the best with my kiddos.
Speaker:And offer what I have for them.
Speaker:Just opening up doors for them.
Speaker:A Lines.
Speaker:And all that.
Speaker:So enough about me.
Speaker:Let's talk about you.
Speaker:Cause I I'm there with you, man.
Speaker:You mentioned performance art and I'm a theater kid.
Speaker:So I've done a lot of performance art myself.
Speaker:Yeah, I was in theater in high school.
Speaker:So that probably explains a lot about my choices, but with performance art for
Speaker:you, a lot of people don't understand what the deal is with performance arts.
Speaker:They.
Speaker:We have the flash mobs and people scratch their head and
Speaker:go, why are they doing that?
Speaker:Describe the way and the meeting with your performance art.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a great question.
Speaker:Thank you for asking it.
Speaker:I say performance art, but I'm a theater person as well.
Speaker:So let me start there.
Speaker:Those are my foundations.
Speaker:But the reason why I use the term performance art is because
Speaker:you can't always do theater.
Speaker:It's hard.
Speaker:It's hard to get into, it's hard to maintain, it's highly, let me just put
Speaker:it, it's very difficult to get in, um, and it's definitely, it's definitely
Speaker:very difficult to make a living, just like a lot of other types of art, right,
Speaker:and I really wish it was the opposite.
Speaker:But my heart will always be in the theater.
Speaker:When I was really young, I'd say four, five, six, I, before,
Speaker:and this is before, obviously, I knew what theater was, acting,
Speaker:performance art, any of those things.
Speaker:For more information, visit www.
Speaker:FEMA.
Speaker:gov As a natural inclination as to who I was and what I wanted to do, I obviously
Speaker:during that time I was reading the Bible a lot and the Bible stories were being
Speaker:read to me, and so I decided to enact the Bible stories for my parents and
Speaker:I would do it for their anniversary.
Speaker:We were not allowed to celebrate any holidays or like birthdays, but one
Speaker:of the things that we did celebrate.
Speaker:Every year was my parents anniversary.
Speaker:I know that sounds counterintuitive to some who may not know about
Speaker:you being a jobless witness, but just take my word for it.
Speaker:That was the one thing we were allowed to do and we embraced it.
Speaker:Every year, I so much looked forward to preparing myself to
Speaker:do a role in front of my parents.
Speaker:And sometimes I would incorporate my brother or my cousins.
Speaker:But that was something, again, that nobody told me I needed to do.
Speaker:Nobody pushed me in that direction.
Speaker:It was just something that was inside of me.
Speaker:And that means a lot to me.
Speaker:So regardless of how far I get away in life, like during my nine to five or
Speaker:all the other things that I've done, getting a doctoral degree, nothing
Speaker:has made me feel totally fulfilled and whole, like performance art and theater.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:I realize that's who I am as part of my identity and will never go away.
Speaker:One of the most memorable sort of performances that I put on as
Speaker:a youngster is actually in the book where I performed Jezebel.
Speaker:I don't know if anyone knows Jezebel.
Speaker:About the story of Jezebel, but she gets pushed down from the top of a tower
Speaker:and gets eaten by dogs at the bottom.
Speaker:There's a lot more to the story, but that's pretty much the takeaway.
Speaker:And the thing that remains with people the most, the shocking,
Speaker:the shock value, if you will.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And although there are like stories, I'm sorry, there are learning
Speaker:lessons to all the biblical stories.
Speaker:When I was doing this.
Speaker:I felt like there was something inside of me that was not only wanting to tell
Speaker:the story, but also help people see the value of what that story was about.
Speaker:And so what, what I think is so great about the theater and
Speaker:performance art, generally speaking, is that it helps communities come
Speaker:together, just like the movies.
Speaker:But I think the theater does this even more and it makes us really
Speaker:contemplate why we exist and why we treat people the way that we do.
Speaker:All the good, the bad, the indifferent, everything.
Speaker:And there is nothing like it in the world.
Speaker:It is also a spiritual connection to me.
Speaker:So now that I'm not so much religious, I find the theater and performance
Speaker:art to be my religion, if you will.
Speaker:If I'm, if I can call it that,
Speaker:but definitely
Speaker:my spirituality.
Speaker:That's awesome to hear.
Speaker:And with arts, we were talking earlier about John Coltrane and he's my favorite
Speaker:jazz artist and a lot of his stuff, especially in his later years, very
Speaker:spiritual when, when you're dealing with the spirituality in arts, how do you
Speaker:find that difference than religious?
Speaker:How is that spirituality different?
Speaker:Yeah, there are plenty of ways that it is different.
Speaker:And please don't take this as a dodge to your question.
Speaker:In my mind, I think, for me, I look at the connections.
Speaker:Again, I'm happy to talk about the differences, because
Speaker:I know there are several.
Speaker:But the reason why I look at those connections is because
Speaker:there are obvious differences.
Speaker:Like praying to God, and in this day and age, what that has been used
Speaker:for as a weapon against Marginalized individuals, as an example, can spark
Speaker:or create this sort of animosity towards religion as generally speaking.
Speaker:And so just speaking about it can turn people away because it's just like, Oh no,
Speaker:we're not going to talk about religion.
Speaker:It's just too, it's like politics, those sorts of things.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You're in art for the most part, you're not praying to God.
Speaker:You're not singing songs in a congregation as an example.
Speaker:But the reason why I say there's so many commonalities.
Speaker:Also is because what I have found so profound in my life and what
Speaker:I as an artist is looking at the ways that we are all connected.
Speaker:I love the philosophy of looking at the universe and seeing how everything is
Speaker:connected in some way, shape or form.
Speaker:And I want to be careful because there are exceptions to everything.
Speaker:It's not an all or nothing sort of thinking.
Speaker:Somebody who's gone through something traumatic in their life.
Speaker:Like when I had cancer, as an example, or a woman who was abused, et cetera,
Speaker:all those atrocities that exist, I hesitate to say that the universe
Speaker:is connected everything and that this was all happening for a reason.
Speaker:That's when I draw the line and I say, there are exceptions to everything.
Speaker:It's not a panacea to talk about everything in our lives.
Speaker:It's more or less like.
Speaker:When you feel the spiritual connection, that's what I mean.
Speaker:It's like, it's feeling like the universe is giving you a sign or a symbol or, or
Speaker:some, and you can call that religious.
Speaker:You can call that spiritual.
Speaker:You can call that the universe.
Speaker:You can call it God.
Speaker:You can call it art, whatever you want, but I have had the privilege, if you
Speaker:will, to be in congregations for the first 18 years of my life and to feel.
Speaker:Inside with my heart, what it feels like to have this solidarity with
Speaker:a bunch of other people who are praying and singing and talking and
Speaker:congregating all on the same page, that's the community that was built.
Speaker:And although the community also had ways of pushing people away like myself,
Speaker:those commonalities is what I see as the things that I want to extract.
Speaker:And the very same things that are offered in communities like theater and in arts.
Speaker:And especially for those who may be struggling and trying
Speaker:to find their community.
Speaker:Right now, I joined a choir this year, early this year.
Speaker:And again, I lump that under performance art.
Speaker:Because singing, It's such a wonderful feeling, but that's another community
Speaker:where I'm accepted, I go in, and I feel that same spiritual feeling
Speaker:that I felt many years ago, where I was like, wow, this is amazing.
Speaker:It's also important because it helps me to understand why people do what they do.
Speaker:It's easy to step aside and say, those people They're weird.
Speaker:They're all, they're talking about living forever on a different planet and they're
Speaker:doing this and they're doing that.
Speaker:Come on.
Speaker:There's no hell.
Speaker:There's no heaven.
Speaker:They're weird.
Speaker:They're stupid.
Speaker:All that kind of stuff.
Speaker:But there's a good reason why they get together.
Speaker:They have their good justifications.
Speaker:There aren't any good justifications for disparaging other people, but I see that.
Speaker:That's why I look at those commonalities and it's not to ignore
Speaker:the hatred and the negativity.
Speaker:It's to say, how can I learn from that?
Speaker:And extract that, and the arts happen to offer another venue to
Speaker:feel those very same feelings.
Speaker:So I can replace religiosity with community in the arts,
Speaker:and I can still feel fulfilled.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:My wife and I, we just went to go see at a dinner theater,
Speaker:Murder on the Aquarium Express.
Speaker:I've never seen play and that community that you're talking about, so we're like
Speaker:sitting right next to people almost on labs and some of the actors, so some of
Speaker:the servers or the demo, uh, one of the people that committed murder with us.
Speaker:Serving us.
Speaker:So it was that instance, Hey, we're all here.
Speaker:We're all enjoying it.
Speaker:We're all being entertained and enjoying what's happening there.
Speaker:And live theater, I'm going to toot my horn with live
Speaker:theater until the day I die.
Speaker:There is nothing like it.
Speaker:You can go see a movie, you can whatever, but seeing that live theater really
Speaker:connects you with the person next to you because you're sitting there
Speaker:and you're enjoying the same thing.
Speaker:With your books that has come out, I'm not dead yet.
Speaker:Again, I'm thinking, I can't get Monty Python out of my head, so
Speaker:forgive me on that, but I know for myself, when I've published for, self
Speaker:published for, books of poetry, and
Speaker:for me, and it's been that number of years since I've done that, but
Speaker:for me, I let my vulnerability go to about, I don't know, maybe 75 percent
Speaker:that for you, how was it publishing that book, telling your story, talking
Speaker:about the cancer and the upbringing?
Speaker:Did you feel, uh, you know, naked to the world and, Oh my God, people
Speaker:are going to read this or where did you save a little bit for yourself?
Speaker:No, it was hard.
Speaker:It was really hard.
Speaker:This was at times very grueling for me.
Speaker:And just to give you a preview, because I don't want to give everything away,
Speaker:but I was sexually abused when I was young by a cousin, a female cousin.
Speaker:I ended up abusing drugs and alcohol for quite some time.
Speaker:It was part of that deleterious cycle, if you will, where I
Speaker:just started destroying myself.
Speaker:I didn't care about myself, I didn't care about the world, and
Speaker:I actually ended up in prison.
Speaker:And so what I just revealed to you is very personal, right?
Speaker:It's wow, that's a lot.
Speaker:And I still haven't given you everything, but that's the major stuff in my life.
Speaker:And the reason why I say that is not so people can feel bad about for me.
Speaker:It's to show you the point that you're making here.
Speaker:It's that yes, in order to spill all that out for the world.
Speaker:To see you have to be vulnerable and if there's a such thing
Speaker:as 150 maybe I would use that
Speaker:But i'd say any type of vulnerability you're 75 Even if somebody does 10 I
Speaker:think that's what art is all about.
Speaker:It's about being vulnerable so that other people in the world Can connect to that
Speaker:when you're looking at a character on the stage or in the movies or Even if you're
Speaker:looking at a work of art What makes it profound is when you can see yourself or
Speaker:circumstances in your life, past, present, or otherwise, that come through, and it
Speaker:says something to you that stays with you.
Speaker:That's what makes it so profound.
Speaker:And there are so many people out there that are struggling that may not have
Speaker:gone through similar things as me, but may be thinking to themselves, I
Speaker:don't know, this is a lot, like how This, this is just too much for me.
Speaker:And I always feel like if I can go through all of those things and be okay.
Speaker:Cause no, I'm not trying to pretend like I'm perfect.
Speaker:I'll always have something to work on to become better, but I'm, I'm
Speaker:here and I'm not dead yet, right?
Speaker:It's like, if I can do that, then the smaller things in life, it
Speaker:doesn't mean they're less important.
Speaker:But they're doable, right?
Speaker:If you're not dying from cancer, if you're not in prison, being told that
Speaker:you're gonna die, get raped and killed there, because it's such a horrible
Speaker:place to be that there's a lot of people that are looking out to just destroy
Speaker:you as a person, I think it's okay.
Speaker:If I can get through those situations, then I can get through a bad day at work.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:And sometimes I even forget, even though I've been through so much in my life.
Speaker:Sometimes I need that friendly, friendly reminder.
Speaker:Sometimes I give it to myself and I surround myself with people who are
Speaker:also very loving and supportive, which is, I know a privilege that I have, but
Speaker:sometimes they help to remind me as well.
Speaker:And they're very loving about that.
Speaker:And they say, you're very upset.
Speaker:Now you have a lot going on in your life, but this is nothing.
Speaker:This is okay.
Speaker:And I love that.
Speaker:Sorry if I got a little bit off track with your original question, but it's yeah.
Speaker:When I first started.
Speaker:Looking into writing this book, it was a few years ago and I, I got to the
Speaker:part of a few different parts that I was trying to write and I just had to
Speaker:stop because I started crying so much I couldn't even see in front of me.
Speaker:And what it was doing was it was reopening some of these wounds
Speaker:and I realized I'm not sure if this is the the right time for me.
Speaker:So let me process some more.
Speaker:Let me talk to some more therapists.
Speaker:Let me, you know, live my life and I'll, I'll come back to this.
Speaker:But I always knew something just like everything else in my life.
Speaker:If something keeps repeating itself and keeps coming back to me, that is
Speaker:a sign from the universe as far as I'm concerned that I need to do this.
Speaker:And my, and the book, my memoir was one of those things.
Speaker:And then I moved to Denver almost three years ago and I don't know.
Speaker:I can't tell you.
Speaker:I wish I could say it was the mountains that did it.
Speaker:I don't know for sure But moving here did something where it clicked it
Speaker:could have been time Maybe I needed those three extra years, whatever it
Speaker:was, but then I became ready to write this thing and it took me Let me see.
Speaker:It was like 4 14 months to write it and It just flowed.
Speaker:I still cried a bit.
Speaker:I thought you know, there's still some things there will always be that way
Speaker:but I wasn't, it didn't stop me in my tracks where I could not complete my art.
Speaker:And I call this art, although it's based in reality, but it's
Speaker:still like, it's recounting all of these situations from the past.
Speaker:So there's an art form too, where you have to pick and choose what details
Speaker:you use and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:So short answer is yes, it was very hard.
Speaker:No, that's perfect.
Speaker:I'm just, I need to go get this book like tomorrow.
Speaker:That's all there because I am fully invested in it so much.
Speaker:I was invested in it before just from the title, but now just hearing you talk about
Speaker:it, you had mentioned your, your day job, organizational psychologist and all that.
Speaker:Myself, I'm a program manager.
Speaker:I deal with financial wellness for the federal government.
Speaker:Probably not.
Speaker:Artistic, and I'm putting that in huge, yeah, it's totally artistic, Joelmo.
Speaker:With your 9 to 5 and your artistic practice, how do you reconcile the two?
Speaker:How do you gain that inspiration to go ahead and do the art after 9 to 5?
Speaker:Yeah, what a great question.
Speaker:I think it's just being real with myself.
Speaker:We spent a good portion of our lives and I say we, but I really mean me.
Speaker:And I'm sure there's other people who feel similarly, but especially
Speaker:given my age, as I had mentioned, being 47, growing up in a world
Speaker:where we're taught, Oh, you're a man.
Speaker:You're supposed to act a certain way.
Speaker:When you feel negative emotions, you're supposed to control those
Speaker:things, especially in the workplace.
Speaker:And I've come to this place in my life and, and psychology has been
Speaker:very helpful in helping me get there.
Speaker:Where I've been able to process a lot more things in real time and not feel
Speaker:like I'm doing something bad or wrong or that is socially unacceptable.
Speaker:And part of that is just being really, not only true to myself, which means
Speaker:that you have to know yourself, but also being assertive with those around me to
Speaker:let them know what my needs are as well.
Speaker:Now, I'm not perfect at this, but examples of this are when I'm frustrated at work.
Speaker:And I'm unable to process that during that time.
Speaker:And sometimes you can't because you have to keep moving.
Speaker:You have to do your work, but what ends up happening is that it culminates.
Speaker:I think a lot of people understand that you're not, you shouldn't really bottle
Speaker:up your feelings, but we do it anyway.
Speaker:And the confounding effects of that are tremendous.
Speaker:The release of that, when you're able to, is very important.
Speaker:And so, I feel very privileged that I work for a company where, and I have
Speaker:people that I'm surrounded with at work and at home, where I'm able to
Speaker:process, for the most part, in real time.
Speaker:When something is bothering me, I say, I need to get this off my chest.
Speaker:And so I find those safe spaces.
Speaker:I also happen to be in charge of a department.
Speaker:So that's what I mean when I say I'm privileged in that way
Speaker:because I get to set the tone.
Speaker:And I've also been on a lot of other situations where the boss, if you
Speaker:will, although I don't consider myself a boss, but the person in charge just
Speaker:did not give those opportunities.
Speaker:So what happens when that's the case?
Speaker:Mindfulness breathing exercises, which are taught to actors from, for the most
Speaker:part, Early on when you're training has something has been something
Speaker:that has been very helpful for me And again, sometimes I just forget oh
Speaker:my gosh I I haven't done breathing.
Speaker:I haven't done any mindfulness and I need it because i'm like i'm all over
Speaker:the place and My heart is racing.
Speaker:I also suffer from anxiety.
Speaker:So But it makes sense after everything i've been through in my life that I
Speaker:overthink everything and so It's very important for me to bring myself to
Speaker:a place where I'm able to calm myself because that's how I'm able to get in
Speaker:touch with my feelings, get in touch with myself, and then be compassionate.
Speaker:I think that's very important.
Speaker:Now, even with all those tools that we have at our disposal, we're still going
Speaker:to be very busy working a nine to five and then doing some sort of artistic thing.
Speaker:Right after this podcast, believe it or not, I'm a glutton for I will
Speaker:be going into rehearsals for a play and yeah, I can't do this every day.
Speaker:I need to be careful I need a lot of self care during this time.
Speaker:And the other thing that I won't do is back to back plays Because I will need
Speaker:to take a break after this That all goes back to people who are listening to this
Speaker:would be like, what does that mean to me?
Speaker:What it means for you is that you need to be in tune with who you are,
Speaker:understand where your threshold is.
Speaker:And sometimes that takes a little bit of touching ghost.
Speaker:You know, you're experimenting with that and then you seal it.
Speaker:But if you're not in tune with who you are, you won't even know it.
Speaker:If you spent your entire life ignoring.
Speaker:the signs that your body, your mind, your spirit have been giving you, and maybe
Speaker:even the universe, for whatever reasons, and I'm one of those people, that's why
Speaker:I say that, then you're not going to be able to know when the time is right for
Speaker:you to pivot, to stop, to keep going, etc.
Speaker:And that's really important.
Speaker:I, I, I can really relate to that because, because my nine to fives
Speaker:were in what's called the resilience.
Speaker:Everything that you're saying there, I'm like, man, I hear this
Speaker:all the time, day in and day out.
Speaker:But I think for the artist, and when you said actors get this breathing training
Speaker:and checking in with their bodies.
Speaker:I'm just thinking about all the other artists out there, like musicians
Speaker:that don't get the training, but an actor does, and thank God I
Speaker:got that training a long time ago.
Speaker:Being resilient and being kind to yourself.
Speaker:I recently had an interview where I was being in, I was actually on the other
Speaker:side of the microphone being interviewed and, and the interviewer asked me
Speaker:something to the effect of what, People, what do people not know about you?
Speaker:And I said to him, I'm not kind to myself.
Speaker:I'm the type a I'm like, I'm not busy enough and don't give myself enough rest,
Speaker:but I'm learning, especially with my day job and just being a, uh, better artists
Speaker:than I was when I was 18, when I was starting writing poetry, doing theater.
Speaker:At the ripe old age of 51.
Speaker:So you got a couple of years to go, but I'm learning that.
Speaker:And I probably started when I was 45, uh, 47 learning you need to take care
Speaker:of yourself, whether it be for your family, for your job, I'm an artist.
Speaker:I always introduce myself as I'm husband, father, artist.
Speaker:And that's how I keep all in, in perspective for myself.
Speaker:Learning to take care of myself as an artist is tough to do because we,
Speaker:and it sounds like to me, you have a lot of ideas going through your head
Speaker:that you would love to see either on the stage, on the page or sing for us.
Speaker:I think that's a huge point.
Speaker:We all need to take advantage of with organizational psychology.
Speaker:How does that teach us how to be resilient?
Speaker:Bring in that nine to five.
Speaker:Into our artistic practice.
Speaker:How does that teach us?
Speaker:I love this question because going back to that synergistic mindset, I
Speaker:love how psychology is informed my art and my art has informed psychology.
Speaker:And there, there's a subset of IO psychology and psychology,
Speaker:generally speaking, that's called positive psychology.
Speaker:And what I'd like to say is number one, the first thing that you
Speaker:learn about positive psychology is that it is not about ignoring
Speaker:negativity is not Pollyanna.
Speaker:It is about acknowledging negativity in your life, but
Speaker:choosing not to focus on that.
Speaker:So you, Let yourself be in that.
Speaker:Did Nietzsche say this, something about if you look into the abyss long enough
Speaker:you become the abyss, something like that?
Speaker:I love that, although I probably messed up the quote.
Speaker:And, the reason why is because, allow yourself to process like I had
Speaker:said before, negative emotions allow yourself to be there for as long
Speaker:as you need to, but then move on.
Speaker:And what that means is Processing time looks like for people is going
Speaker:to be different across the board.
Speaker:So I might get really angry about something that takes me days to
Speaker:get over because maybe it triggers something that happened in my
Speaker:childhood, whereas somebody else will be over it and just five minutes.
Speaker:And so it's not about comparing, contrasting during their time.
Speaker:It's about understanding, again, who you are and why you're having
Speaker:to take five days or whatever it is to process something.
Speaker:And then being okay with that.
Speaker:And then moving on and learning from it.
Speaker:And then one of those models that I really appreciated and I started to
Speaker:institute in my own life is called PERMA.
Speaker:And PERMA is P E R M A.
Speaker:I can go over the acronyms really quickly here.
Speaker:And what I like to do is tie it to running.
Speaker:Running, if I may, because I, I don't run as often as I used to, but running
Speaker:happens to be one of those activities that help me to tap into every facet of PERMA.
Speaker:And there are artistic endeavors that help me do the same, but I'm going to go
Speaker:to running because I've used it before, and it's easy for me to remember all
Speaker:the different ways that it's on PERMA.
Speaker:So the P in PERMA.
Speaker:Is positive emotion and positive emotion could be something like your
Speaker:favorite candy bar But what you have to be really careful about with positive
Speaker:emotion, whether it's sex candy bars or something other is that every?
Speaker:Positive emotion has a threshold if you have a cookie, it feels really
Speaker:good, especially your favorite cookie But maybe after the third or fourth
Speaker:cookie you start getting diminishing returns And so that's the p and
Speaker:when i'm running I feel really good.
Speaker:I may not feel good You Before I run because that's really hard.
Speaker:I'm like, I don't know.
Speaker:I'd rather watch tv But it feels good once I start and then it's then it hurts
Speaker:because like i'm doing something that's very rigorous And then in the middle of
Speaker:my run, sometimes i'll get this runner's high which feels really good again And
Speaker:then it goes back to oh this hurts.
Speaker:I oh man, when is this going to be over with?
Speaker:And then when i'm done I get another hit of dopamine because I just finished
Speaker:something and so There's the threshold.
Speaker:I can't run forever.
Speaker:I can only do about three miles You If I do more than that, I start to get
Speaker:really serious, diminishing returns.
Speaker:The P is a part of how you build flourishing and well being in your.
Speaker:The E is engagement.
Speaker:And in order to engage with the world around you, you need to
Speaker:understand what your strengths are.
Speaker:And then the idea behind.
Speaker:The E or engagement is that you try to forge ways in your life where you
Speaker:are creating things that actually help you with your strengths.
Speaker:One of my biggest strengths and anybody can take this assessment that's online.
Speaker:It's called the values and action assessment.
Speaker:It's free.
Speaker:So I'm not pitching you anything that would cost you money, but you'll
Speaker:have to give your email address.
Speaker:So maybe if you had one of those emails that you didn't mind giving
Speaker:out, what this does, there's a 32 or 34 different strengths.
Speaker:That have been validated in the research.
Speaker:Let me fast forward.
Speaker:Cause I don't want to make it all about the assessment, but my number one strength
Speaker:for years, cause you could take it every so often, every few years, just to see
Speaker:if your strengths have changed is the appreciation of beauty and excellence.
Speaker:And how wonderful is that?
Speaker:It makes so much sense to me.
Speaker:And so when I'm trying to forge engagement, I try very hard
Speaker:to incorporate whether I'm at work or otherwise, some sort of
Speaker:appreciation of beauty and excellence.
Speaker:That could be in a report.
Speaker:It could be in the mountains when I go hiking on weekends.
Speaker:It could be so many other things, but that's the E.
Speaker:The R is relationships and it can't just be any relationships.
Speaker:It has to be positive relationships.
Speaker:Oh, let me go back to the engagement for, I'm so sorry.
Speaker:Appreciation of beauty and excellence for me when I'm running is the
Speaker:appreciation of that I get to run outside.
Speaker:I only like to run outside.
Speaker:I don't like running on a treadmill.
Speaker:That's just my preference.
Speaker:And the reason why is because it's so beautiful, especially here in Denver.
Speaker:To run around outside the ours relationships and there has to be good
Speaker:positive relationships And it can happen many different ways, but for running
Speaker:it's building that community Just like in the arts where you have a running
Speaker:community, even if you run by yourself Because then you can go online and talk to
Speaker:people about, Oh, hey, what's your pace?
Speaker:What kind of, do you listen to music or do you not?
Speaker:All those little things you get to learn, even if it's not happening
Speaker:in real time with other people.
Speaker:Those are the relationships you forge.
Speaker:M is meaning and meaning is just that you need to live for more than yourself.
Speaker:So this could go back to the community.
Speaker:This could be something like my justification for running is for my
Speaker:partner so that I live a longer time.
Speaker:It can be for my parents who are aging and I just want to be there for them.
Speaker:All sorts of things, but it can't be for, for yourself.
Speaker:If you're engaging in meeting, it has to be for.
Speaker:for something other than that.
Speaker:That's where spirituality comes in as well.
Speaker:And then the A is Achievement.
Speaker:And this is, for running it's a no brainer.
Speaker:When I finish that run, I feel like I've achieved something.
Speaker:And in the arts, once you complete a project, that's the achievement.
Speaker:I'm sure people in their mind, I'm hoping, are already connecting it to their art.
Speaker:Running could be a form of art as well.
Speaker:It's a sport, right?
Speaker:Hopefully that's helpful.
Speaker:And there's many other things, but that's my favorite model to use, implement,
Speaker:and talk about and to help other people implement it in their lives as well.
Speaker:It works.
Speaker:The caveat here is you want to try to get something in your life.
Speaker:That hits on every aspect.
Speaker:It's not always possible.
Speaker:So even if you just get two or three, that's fine.
Speaker:The point is to just try things at the challenge yourself
Speaker:to hit on all the aspects
Speaker:of per
Speaker:month.
Speaker:I've hit almost all of them.
Speaker:Relationships is the thing that I'm working on the most.
Speaker:That's my weakest one.
Speaker:I can tell you that right now, but I'm listening to this going, and
Speaker:especially the achievement part at the end, it's getting that project
Speaker:on whatever it is, doesn't have to be perfect, but it's just, I did this.
Speaker:I made this.
Speaker:I've got art all over my wall, as you can see here, and it's not what it looks like.
Speaker:A fourth Corridor on crack painted it, and I'm okay with that.
Speaker:It's fun.
Speaker:It's in my office.
Speaker:Some of them have actually been shown in galleries.
Speaker:That's why they're in my office, because they haven't been bought.
Speaker:But I look at it, and I go, I did that.
Speaker:Most people that I know that I've worked with, they don't do art.
Speaker:They don't write books.
Speaker:They don't make music.
Speaker:It'll do podcasts, podcast guy says that achievement really, and I think sometimes
Speaker:when people are first getting into art, they focus maybe a little bit too much
Speaker:on that achievement versus the others because to me it feels, and I'm not a
Speaker:psychologist, nor do I play one on TV or on this podcast, but it seems to be like
Speaker:a lot of this builds upon each other.
Speaker:And then when you pay for achievement, if you've got your other jobs in a row or
Speaker:most in a decent spot, that achievement is going to be so much better at the end.
Speaker:I don't, I'm just going to see it or education.
Speaker:Yeah, no, I think that's absolutely right.
Speaker:And in some models, they elongated the perm model to say perm of Z.
Speaker:And just real quickly, that would be a vitality, but there's arguments out there
Speaker:that vitality could actually be lumped into some of the other elements of permo.
Speaker:And then there's arguments that say the opposite, that no, the V is important,
Speaker:an important addition to the model.
Speaker:So, at the end of the day, regardless of how you practice or what you think,
Speaker:if it's all aspects of PERMA V, etc.
Speaker:The point is really that what you were saying, it's not, if you're just
Speaker:fixated on one aspect, it's truly not going to give you as much well
Speaker:being and flourishing in your life.
Speaker:Then if you open that up to all the other aspects that exist, so I think
Speaker:that's really what the point is.
Speaker:It's just looking at things through a different lens.
Speaker:So you could say, what am I naturally gravitating towards is really
Speaker:good at doing like achievement.
Speaker:And then where are my opportunities for development?
Speaker:And maybe I just don't engage very much.
Speaker:And that's the part where I've worked a nine to five.
Speaker:Now I have this other, Job that I'm giving myself.
Speaker:How do I engage in this?
Speaker:And again, going back to what are your inner strengths and how do you make
Speaker:that kind of happen in front of you?
Speaker:It's easier said than done because it also takes a good understanding
Speaker:of what makes you tick, right?
Speaker:And we think we know ourselves because we were like, Oh yeah, I've been with
Speaker:myself for as long as I've been alive.
Speaker:I should know myself.
Speaker:But we tend to lie to ourselves a lot more often than we even realize.
Speaker:And on top of that, it's not only about the lies that we tell ourselves.
Speaker:It's the lies that are given to us out in the mass market and in the media.
Speaker:And I'm not talking about the political lies that are intentional to try to
Speaker:change us in some way, shape or form.
Speaker:I'm talking about the general sort of drumbeat of you must consume
Speaker:in order for your life to be.
Speaker:Good, you need more of this and that, and I fall into that trap, even
Speaker:knowing that I shouldn't, that I'm tied to my phone, as an example, and to
Speaker:technology, because it's intentionally trying to keep me that way, and it
Speaker:works, because as much as we know, we shouldn't be tied to all these things.
Speaker:We still are because that's the psychology that's being
Speaker:used against us, unfortunately.
Speaker:And so we'd have to work extra hard for that.
Speaker:And so how do we build in these moments in our life that cut out the extraneous noise
Speaker:and allow to live through our values?
Speaker:That's super important.
Speaker:But if you don't know what those values are, then you're lost
Speaker:and you don't know what to do.
Speaker:How do you validate something that you're not sure about?
Speaker:And TikTok is not going to tell you what your values are.
Speaker:I know I've been on TikTok for a couple of years now, it hasn't
Speaker:told me what my values are.
Speaker:Now, the algorithm is telling me what I'm interested in, supposedly, or
Speaker:what they think I'm interested in.
Speaker:It doesn't tell me what my values are.
Speaker:Maybe I need to start up a TikTok channel that does that.
Speaker:And one of the tools to do that, if you don't want to take an assessment
Speaker:as an example, is to ask the five whys.
Speaker:This is a simple thing.
Speaker:And they use the number five, but it could be more or less than that number.
Speaker:And it's simply treating yourself like a little kid.
Speaker:You say something like, I really love painting pastels.
Speaker:And when I do, I love painting mountains in pastels.
Speaker:Okay, great.
Speaker:So that's an interest, like something that you would find on social media
Speaker:that would confirm your interest because you think it's beautiful or whatever
Speaker:and that you find it fascinating.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:And then when you answer that question, why?
Speaker:Just like a little kid.
Speaker:Keep asking that question until you get to the underlying reason.
Speaker:That's a value.
Speaker:That's what's motivating you.
Speaker:And it's also really important because what happens the day that I can't
Speaker:run for whatever reason, which I hope never happens, knock on wood.
Speaker:As we get older, Sometimes it could be not because we can't do it from
Speaker:a physical standpoint, but it could be because interests change, we're
Speaker:getting older, whatever the case might be, we have children now.
Speaker:Once we get to the core of our values as to why we're so interested in things,
Speaker:it opens up doorways so that you don't have to do this one particular thing
Speaker:in pastels and it has to be a mountain.
Speaker:It could be that.
Speaker:But it could also be all these other things that hit on that
Speaker:very same underlying thing.
Speaker:That's so important for us to understand.
Speaker:That is, I, I remember when I first started writing poetry, it had to be four
Speaker:line stanzas, everything had to line.
Speaker:Yeah, because I learned it from, from church.
Speaker:You have the hymns that you're singing, four stanzas, four
Speaker:lines and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:And when I got deeper into my practice, I took grocery
Speaker:lists and said, that's a poem.
Speaker:And then I performed it in front of an audience.
Speaker:And
Speaker:what the hell this, they scratch their head.
Speaker:They didn't throw tomatoes at me.
Speaker:Thank God.
Speaker:Cause I bought all the tomatoes from the grocery store earlier,
Speaker:but he's reading his grocery list.
Speaker:Yes, I am.
Speaker:Enjoy.
Speaker:And it's been.
Speaker:It's so great to be able to do that.
Speaker:I write about a million things, but that was one of my favorite things to
Speaker:do is to break out of that mold and to explore, because in the world of
Speaker:the arts, if you're just even just looking at theater, it just that no,
Speaker:well, we're in it to explore musical theater, which I'm not a huge fan
Speaker:of, but that's what I'm able to do.
Speaker:And dramas and comedy, there's so much to explore.
Speaker:Why limit yourself just to.
Speaker:In the pastels of the mountains, in Colorado, in Denver.
Speaker:I love this because this brings me back to why I said performance art.
Speaker:If I can't do theater, I have to do a presentation at work
Speaker:more than likely at some point.
Speaker:Every quarter, there's going to be at least one, sometimes several.
Speaker:That's my performance.
Speaker:It's not the same, but it is the same.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:It's that's where that synergistic mindset comes back.
Speaker:And it says, I can memorize a monologue.
Speaker:I can actually create my own script here.
Speaker:It's going to be specific to my work.
Speaker:But this is my opportunity to do some semblance of what I
Speaker:find so exciting in my life.
Speaker:It's easier said than done.
Speaker:If I'm a painter, as an example, it's probably a little bit harder to
Speaker:find ways of painting, but maybe not.
Speaker:What's underlying the painting?
Speaker:Isn't the drawing itself?
Speaker:Is it maybe there's more tactile things that you could do at work that's going
Speaker:to satiate your need for being on top of that or being engaged in that until
Speaker:you're able to do that thing again.
Speaker:But as artists.
Speaker:We're doing this because it's in our blood, right?
Speaker:This is how we operate.
Speaker:This is how we thrive.
Speaker:And so I think it behooves us to take the time to understand the
Speaker:commonalities that exist so that we can recreate these moments.
Speaker:Uh, instead of taking it as like our lives are separated between our nine
Speaker:to five so that we can allow ourselves to do things that we really want to do.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Josh, what is next for you?
Speaker:Uh, we, we, we have this book out, are, are, are we looking at another
Speaker:book, uh, coming out anytime soon?
Speaker:You talked about doing the course and, uh, and, and, uh, doing a play,
Speaker:uh, do you have another book in you?
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:I have a few more books.
Speaker:Thanks.
Speaker:Thanks.
Speaker:I think at this point, it's me getting myself to sit down like I did
Speaker:before and dedicate the time for it.
Speaker:And with this, uh, play that I'll be engaging in for at least the next month
Speaker:and a half, that'll take up the time.
Speaker:And then, yeah, we'll see, like I'm in no rush to get more books out, but I
Speaker:definitely do have them living within me.
Speaker:And I do know this, that Until the day I die, I dedicated, I have
Speaker:dedicated my life to being an artist.
Speaker:Performance art just happens to be the thing that I gravitate
Speaker:towards, but writing a book is also, like I said, a form of art.
Speaker:And I will continue to look for different ways that I could just continue being an
Speaker:artist and help people to be motivated and experience things that allow them to
Speaker:see that they're not alone in this world.
Speaker:Any bits of advice or anything that you wish you could have told yourself when
Speaker:you first recognized that you were an artist, that you're sitting here, uh,
Speaker:at the young age of 47, that you would like to know back when you were 18.
Speaker:Yeah, it's a great question.
Speaker:I think go ahead and have, go ahead and have your goals and aspirations.
Speaker:Go ahead and dream, reach for the stars, but be okay.
Speaker:With the realities that life doesn't always pan out exactly the way you wish
Speaker:or think it should and that's okay and Accepting that can be some of the most
Speaker:beautiful moments in your life Because again, whether you call it the universe or
Speaker:something else You being given something as a learning lesson that you can absorb
Speaker:and take with you And it may not be exactly what you wished it would be but
Speaker:it's what you have And it's probably more than a lot of other people wish they had.
Speaker:So that mindfulness comes into play where you're able to just look at
Speaker:what's happening in the moment in front of you and be appreciative of
Speaker:that, regardless of what you wish it could have been or should have been.
Speaker:That's awesome.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Josh, thank you so very much for being on the show.
Speaker:And just for being the genuine you, I can, yeah, we're doing this
Speaker:via video, but I'm just like, man.
Speaker:I need to go out and give this guy a big hug.
Speaker:Thank you very much.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:That's very kind of you.
Speaker:And it's been an honor and a pleasure to be here.
Speaker:Thank you so much for having me on the show.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:That's my interview with Dr.
Speaker:Joshua Caraballo.
Speaker:Want to thank him so much.
Speaker:For all the insight that he gave us in this interview,
Speaker:definitely check out his book.
Speaker:I'm not dead yet.
Speaker:And, uh, while you're looking at that book, go and watch
Speaker:Monty Python's Holy grail.
Speaker:You'll understand some of the inside jokes that we had in this interview,
Speaker:uh, after you're watching that.
Speaker:So something new that I'm doing here is, and that I'm trying out anyways,
Speaker:is a couple of affiliate links that I have for you to check out.
Speaker:The first one is with pod match.
Speaker:Now, if you're a podcaster looking for guests, or if you're thinking
Speaker:about becoming a podcaster and you're like, well, where am
Speaker:I going to get these guests?
Speaker:Like Tim gets, you can go to pod match.
Speaker:I have my affiliate link there, so definitely use my affiliate link
Speaker:when you join up with Podmatch.
Speaker:And if you are wanting to be a guest on podcasts, well, obviously you can reach
Speaker:out to me, Timothy at createartpodcast.
Speaker:com, or you can go into Podmatch and sign up for their service.
Speaker:And be a, a guest on a number of podcasts that are gonna be matched
Speaker:with you and with what you're interested in talking about.
Speaker:Now, if you like the website that you're seeing this podcast on and the
Speaker:website is create art podcast.com, I use what's called pod page and I
Speaker:have affiliate link there with them.
Speaker:Here's the secret folks.
Speaker:I don't know how to code websites.
Speaker:I kind of do, but I'm, I'm a little bit dangerous with it.
Speaker:So I let them go ahead and do my websites and they come out really good.
Speaker:I really enjoy them.
Speaker:There's a lot of tools in there that you can use.
Speaker:And, uh, one of the favorite tools that I like that.
Speaker:Unfortunately, not a lot of people are using is the voicemail tool so you
Speaker:can go to my website createartpodcast.
Speaker:com slash voicemail and you can leave me a voicemail and let me know how I'm
Speaker:doing, how you enjoyed the interview, any, anything that you want to put there.
Speaker:Definitely check out the website and check out the voicemail.
Speaker:Would definitely love to hear from you and all you got to do.
Speaker:Create our podcast.
Speaker:com slash voicemail, and you can be featured on this show.
Speaker:My last thing that I want to talk about is sharing the show.
Speaker:Now, definitely I would love it if you shared the show with your friends.
Speaker:If you want to give it a five star review or whatever review
Speaker:on your podcast app of choice, by all means, go ahead and do that.
Speaker:But the way I share the show is with pod beacon.
Speaker:Now pod beacon has technology in wristwatches.
Speaker:Well, I call them wristwatches.
Speaker:They also have key fobs and a number of other objects that you can use.
Speaker:And they're using NFC technology.
Speaker:So that way somebody can put their phone over your wristwatch.
Speaker:And it'll automatically take their phone right to your website
Speaker:where you want them to go.
Speaker:So if you have a podcast out there, definitely check that out for yourself.
Speaker:It's a great service.
Speaker:And I have an affiliate link for that as well.
Speaker:So if that's something that you're interested in, definitely
Speaker:check out the affiliate link and check out podcast beacon and all
Speaker:their wonderful objects, tools, wristwatches, key fobs, what have you.
Speaker:So that way you can share your podcast.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Enough of the affiliate links and all that kind of good stuff.
Speaker:I want to thank you for listening in to create our podcast.
Speaker:I do make this show for you and with you in mind.
Speaker:So if you have ideas.
Speaker:Thoughts, critiques, what have you, you can email me timothyatcreateartpodcast.
Speaker:com be happy to read what you, uh, would like to hear more of, or if
Speaker:you'd like to be a guest, definitely you can reach out to me through there.
Speaker:Again, if you're looking to do a lot of podcasts, try Podmatch.
Speaker:I think you'll really enjoy it.
Speaker:I do run a another podcast called find a podcast about, and you can find that
Speaker:at find a podcast about dot X, Y, Z.
Speaker:And it has all the same features that create our podcast does.
Speaker:You can leave voicemails there and reviews and all that kind of good stuff.
Speaker:But in find a podcast about what I do is I search through all the podcasts
Speaker:that I can find and bring you the ones that are the most binge worthy,
Speaker:thereby saving you a lot of time.
Speaker:And, you know, giving you a real personalized.
Speaker:Review of these podcasts that I think are very important.
Speaker:So check that out for yourself.
Speaker:Now, all this is made possible by TKB studios.
Speaker:And that is my podcast production company where I help people go through
Speaker:all the noise that's out there and cut through it and produce wonderful
Speaker:podcasts for you and your business.
Speaker:Your projects, what have you, I can help you out with that.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:That's all I have for you today.
Speaker:I hope this was enjoyable for you.
Speaker:I know it was, I know this conversation was really enjoyable for me.
Speaker:So now it's time for you to go out there, tame that inner critic,
Speaker:create more than you can see.
Speaker:Go out there, make some art for somebody you love yourself.
Speaker:I'll talk to you next time.