Give me a mic check 12.
Speaker BMic check 12 sounds good.
Speaker AOkay, thank you.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker AHey, welcome to the to dad from dad podcast, a show where we sit down with dads and granddads and talk about what worked and what didn't, what we wish we'd done more of and less of what we thought was important but turned out to not be important and vice versa.
Speaker AAnd, you know, ultimately what we would go back and tell ourselves if we could.
Speaker AThanks for joining us, and today I'm glad to welcome our guest, David.
Speaker ADavid, welcome.
Speaker BGlad to be here, buddy.
Speaker AYeah, I always try to start by giving the folks some context of how we know each other.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo they're probably tired of hearing this because we've been recording a bunch here in Tyler.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ABut David in and his wife Katie.
Speaker AWe met, I believe, before kids were part of the picture in the young married's class Grace with Fred Pate and Scott Pierce that were there with us teaching, leading, and, you know, at one point in time, really kind of early on in kids in the equation, we were part of a community group together.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AAnd then the child care element of community group became a massive problem that we couldn't overcome.
Speaker AAnd, you know, we kind of just drifted our separate ways and the community group kind of broke up.
Speaker ABut the.
Speaker AThe whole time I was here have a lot of.
Speaker AOf common friends.
Speaker AAnd so you and I also went on a couple fishing trips together.
Speaker AAnd, you know, so we've spent a fair amount of time together, but not.
Speaker ANot super close, but feel like I know a lot about your family.
Speaker AWhitney keeps tabs on.
Speaker AOn.
Speaker AOn Katie and all that's going on in y' all lives, Yalls life.
Speaker AAnd, you know, one of the things that I know about you
Speaker Bis.
Speaker AAnd this is.
Speaker AThis is really one of the compelling things is you.
Speaker AYou have been a guy in my life that I've always really respected and looked up to, because when I think about walking with the Lord, you don't.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AYou are not just a Sunday morning walk with the Lord guy.
Speaker ALike, I have seen you and I hear about you with.
Speaker AWith the company that.
Speaker AThat you and Dave that you and Jimmy have together.
Speaker AI know that you guys live and breathe your faith into the business, and I know that you live and breathe your faith with your kids.
Speaker AAnd so I just think the world of you.
Speaker AAnd I wanted to see if we could get you on here and share some of that wisdom knowledge with the rest of the world.
Speaker BSo glad to be here.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker BReady?
Speaker AAll right, well, hey, before we jump in, let's just kind of set the stage.
Speaker ASo if you would tell us.
Speaker ATell us about, you know, what do you do?
Speaker ATell us about your wife, Katie.
Speaker ATell us about your kids, how old they are.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, maybe.
Speaker AMaybe, like, what phase of life you're in.
Speaker AIf you can put a phase, you know, put, Put a description to it, and then we'll kind of go from there.
Speaker BYeah, man.
Speaker BSo I'm.
Speaker BI'm David, obviously.
Speaker BMy wife is Katie.
Speaker BKatie and I have been married 16 years, which is.
Speaker BI mean, that flew by.
Speaker BCambry is 12, Lucas is 10, and Mason is 8.
Speaker BSo 12, 10, 8.
Speaker BThe phase of life we're in right now, man, I, I. I'm incredibly grateful that I'm not changing diapers or tying their shoes or wiping their butts.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo we're in this cool phase where we can have real relationships with our kids, but they're.
Speaker BThey're still dependent, but they're independent.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThat makes any sense.
Speaker BSo that's fun.
Speaker BChallenging, but.
Speaker BBut fun.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWe were joking about this on the very first episode that when you think about kind of the arc of parenthood, there's a time where they are not dependent or independent.
Speaker AIt's the in between.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's kind of the part where you can leave them alone.
Speaker AAnd you know that there's a high likelihood of survival.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut there's also a high likelihood of a house fire.
Speaker BTrue.
Speaker AOr a broken arm.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI've got boys, man.
Speaker BThat would happen pretty quick.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AWell.
Speaker BBut yeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou asked about our business, and so do want to dive into that.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe're home builders in Tyler, Texas.
Speaker BI get the privilege of building homes with a team.
Speaker BYou know, Jimmy's my business partner, but, man, it takes a team.
Speaker BIt really does.
Speaker BYou know, we.
Speaker BWe started off, Jimmy and I did building and, and drawing floor plans and selling our own real estate and all that st.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker BBut ultimately I say I'm a home builder, but.
Speaker BBut we have a team of people that are really putting this thing together, so that's a blast.
Speaker BAnd I love what I do every day.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker AYou know, I'm gonna ask Jimmy the same thing when he comes on, because you both had jobs before.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ASo one of the things if, if you would is just kind of walk us through your journey to starting a business.
Speaker ABut I also know that you guys both had jobs while you were starting the business before you decided to jump in full time.
Speaker ASo what did that run up look like?
Speaker BYou got to go all the way back to high school or maybe even middle school.
Speaker BLike, I love to do things with my hands.
Speaker BYou know, the Lord made me a tinkerer.
Speaker BYou know, I was always watching someone else build something or tear something apart.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, I'm going to do that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BUm, and so in high school, I had a buddy, and his dad was a framer, but he was a builder, so used to, at least old school, if you built a home, you did a lot of the things yourself.
Speaker BYou don't just sub it all out.
Speaker BYou would.
Speaker BYou would frame the house.
Speaker BYou would trim the house.
Speaker BIf you're in the county, you'd.
Speaker BYou know, you'd run your own electrical, you know, all that stuff.
Speaker BAnd so I would watch that guy, and I would.
Speaker BI would beg him for a job.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIn high school.
Speaker BAnd he kept telling me, no, no, no.
Speaker BAnd shortly after high school, I called him up again.
Speaker BI was like, man, I want to frame a home.
Speaker BAnd he was like, how about you go do drywall with my.
Speaker BWith my tape, bed and texture guy?
Speaker BAnd you can do that for a little while.
Speaker BAnd so I was like, okay, I'll try it out.
Speaker BYou know, we'll see what happens.
Speaker BWell, I did that for four months.
Speaker BI think it was a test, you know, and drywall is awful, by the way.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker BWell, at least the tape, bend, texture part of it.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker BIt's an art.
Speaker BAnd I don't have that skill.
Speaker BI do not.
Speaker BBut about four months later, he called me up, and he was like, hey, man, you ready to frame?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, yes.
Speaker BAnd he goes, okay, do you have a hammer?
Speaker BAnd I was like, do I have a hammer?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BYou know, that's the answer.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BMeet me, you know, on such and such job site in the morning.
Speaker BAnd so I'm scrambling around, and I'm looking, you know, for a hammer, and I find in my mom's kitchen drawer a little hammer, you know, no way.
Speaker BAnd I was like, this.
Speaker BIs this all I got?
Speaker BAnd so I bring my mom's kitchen hammer to the job site.
Speaker BAnd he looks at me.
Speaker BYou know, his name was Glenn Smith.
Speaker BGlenn's a great guy.
Speaker BAnd he looks at me, and he was like, that's your hammer?
Speaker BAnd I was like, yeah.
Speaker BHe goes, not anymore.
Speaker BAnd so he hands me his hammer.
Speaker BYou know, praise the Lord for other men in my life that I didn't have, but, you know, in a father, but.
Speaker BBut he handed me a hammer, and I started framing and I framed all through college.
Speaker BSo 030405.
Speaker BThe beginning of 06.
Speaker BI was a framer, and I learned a lot, worked hard.
Speaker BI still miss it.
Speaker BYou know, there's days where you didn't make a lot of money, but you worked really, really hard.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd you could turn around at the end of the day and feel tired, but you can see, you know, the fruit of your labor and go, man, that was awesome.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BUm, don't always see that today as much as I did then, but.
Speaker BBut that guy poured into me.
Speaker BI started framing, and then I knew at that point it was like, I'm gonna.
Speaker BI'm gonna build homes, just not with my hands forever.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo got a business degree from Easy Tyler and then applied to every production home builder in the state of Texas.
Speaker BPulte, Syntex, Grand Toll Brothers, you name it.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I really wanted to stay here.
Speaker BTyler was home, and I got a call from Perry Homes out of Houston.
Speaker BAnd then the same week, I got a phone call from Perry Hall Homes, now Perry Hall.
Speaker BYou know, I had sent in text or not text messages, but emails.
Speaker BI had knocked on the door.
Speaker BI had called, you know, a hundred times.
Speaker BI wanted that job.
Speaker BAnd so they finally offered me the job as a warranty manager.
Speaker BI went to work there as a warranty manager.
Speaker BI learned all the things you shouldn't do as a builder.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIf you're going to do it right.
Speaker BAnd then.
Speaker BAnd then eventually got the opportunity to build three homes as a building superintendent.
Speaker BStart to finish, start to finish.
Speaker BAnd they handed.
Speaker BThis is what they did.
Speaker BThey said, hey, here's a set of plans.
Speaker BGo get them.
Speaker ANo way.
Speaker BAnd I was like, man, I know how to frame.
Speaker BLike, I don't.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BI don't even know where to begin, but.
Speaker BBut figured it out.
Speaker BAnd sometimes that's the best way to learn, you know, You.
Speaker BYou.
Speaker BYou just have to figure it out.
Speaker BSometimes you look around, there's nobody standing there but you.
Speaker BSo you're going, here we go.
Speaker BYeah, I did that until about middle of 09.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd the housing market at 09 was awful.
Speaker BAnd so we lost my job.
Speaker BGot a job as a building.
Speaker BNot as a building, as a.
Speaker BAs a project manager in a commercial floor covering company.
Speaker BBut on the side, my heart was still going, man, I want to build.
Speaker BI want to build.
Speaker BAnd I would talk to Katie about it every night.
Speaker BI want to build.
Speaker BI want to build.
Speaker BAnd she would go, well, go do it.
Speaker BGo do it.
Speaker BAnd I was like, I don't.
Speaker BI don't have any Money.
Speaker BYou know, Katie, when we got married, we were in so much debt.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWe were looking at, you know, all the income and all the bills were going.
Speaker BThis isn't working.
Speaker BAnd so I just.
Speaker BNot, like I could just go out and start building.
Speaker BAnd plus, even if I did build a home, like, nobody's buying in 090 10.
Speaker BIt's just not working.
Speaker BAnd so, um, one day she came and she was like, hey, listen, you keep talking about building.
Speaker BLike, I need you to either do something about it or stop talking about it.
Speaker ADang, dude.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd you're going, all right, I don't want to be that guy.
Speaker BNobody wants to be that guy.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BYou know, so.
Speaker BSo I.
Speaker BWe did something called Driving for Dollars.
Speaker BSo I drove around the medical district here, and I was like, I'm gonna build a duplex.
Speaker BI'm gonna rent it.
Speaker BI'm gonna build it.
Speaker BIt's gonna be great.
Speaker BI didn't know anything about renting.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut I built that duplex.
Speaker BAnd along the way, I met Jimmy, my business partner, and he, he was actually leasing an older home in the.
Speaker BIn the neighborhood to some friends of ours in church, or our friends were going to see if they could potentially rent it.
Speaker BAnd I met Jimmy and we kind of hit it off.
Speaker BInvited him to church a few times.
Speaker BAnd then ultimately, you know, I told.
Speaker BI. I wound up teaching him everything I knew about the building business.
Speaker BAnd he taught me everything he knew about leasing homes because he knew, he knew that business very well.
Speaker BWe courted each other for a long time, and we eventually, you know, started a legit construction company, a business.
Speaker BAnd that's.
Speaker BGolly, that was in 2012, so 14 years ago.
Speaker ANow, wait a second.
Speaker AWas that when cider was built?
Speaker BCider didn't officially start until 2017.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BBut we were building parallel, right?
Speaker BHands on, side by side.
Speaker AThat's right.
Speaker BWhile we were employed, I was.
Speaker BI had a full time job and he was.
Speaker BHe was kind of managing the field work.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWhile I was managing the schedule and the.
Speaker BAnd the books.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABecause you.
Speaker AYou didn't stop working.
Speaker AI remember the tile.
Speaker AIt was something tile.
Speaker BSome wind tile.
Speaker AYeah, wind tile.
Speaker AI remember you were working at wind tile for those first few years.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo then you guys started cider and, you know, the nature.
Speaker AThe nature of building homes is.
Speaker AYou know, I was actually kind of talking to Jimmy last night.
Speaker AI mean, you guys have probably.
Speaker AHe was trying to do the math, but, I mean, you all have probably
Speaker Bbuilt 500 homes yeah, it might be south of that.
Speaker BIt might be 4, 4 50.
Speaker BA lot.
Speaker BIt's a bunch.
Speaker BYeah, it's a bunch.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd at this point in life, I mean, you guys are, you know, speculatively buying large tracks.
Speaker AYou guys are doing, like, turnkey development, so coordinating dirt work, platting the.
Speaker APlatting the subdivision, handling all of the zoning and permitting and the master planning, all the way to, you know, designing floor plans and, you know, what do they call them?
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe elevations?
Speaker ALike the architecture?
Speaker AI mean, stem to stern.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AI mean, you guys.
Speaker AYou guys do everything from clearing the trees to hand in somebody the keys to the front door.
Speaker BThat's it.
Speaker BYou got it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThat's incredible.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt's been a good journey, man.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe've learned a lot along the way.
Speaker BWe're not perfect at it, but we, you know, we talk about, even with our team, we're going to continue to strive for excellence.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd everything that we do, and I think that.
Speaker BI think it shows I'm an achiever by nature.
Speaker BI want to.
Speaker BI want to go fast.
Speaker BI want to go hard.
Speaker BI want to win big.
Speaker BYou know, doesn't always happen like that.
Speaker BBut the reality is, man, we're going to do it, and we're going to do it with excellence.
Speaker AYou know, it's funny, knowing Jimmy, I'll tell you, if I had to buy a house from.
Speaker AAnybody buying a house that Jimmy was involved in building is the one.
Speaker ABecause I'm going to talk about this with him.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut Jimmy cannot do something that is not 100% the correct way.
Speaker ALike he's physically incapable.
Speaker AYou know, I love him for that.
Speaker BIt'll eat him up.
Speaker AIt just eats him alive, you know, But.
Speaker ABut for me, that's exactly what you want in a home builder, for sure.
Speaker ASo your comment about striving for excellence, like, you guys do an incredible job of producing, like, high quality, affordable floor plans and in nicely planned neighborhoods.
Speaker AI mean, I've driven through a lot of the neighborhoods.
Speaker AIt's phenomenal.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah, that's cool, man.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThanks for saying that.
Speaker BAppreciate it.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AOkay, so let's see what we want to talk about first here.
Speaker AI guess let's get into a couple heavy things.
Speaker ASo could we talk about maybe your upbringing and maybe some of your story there about the.
Speaker AYour dad and then some of the father figures, and then we'll.
Speaker AWe'll just kind of go from there.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI'm 42.
Speaker BThat's crazy.
Speaker BAnd I've lived a lot of life, you know, and it Went by really, really quick.
Speaker BAnd, and that's.
Speaker BLord willing, we got a lot of.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo my mom, she, she grew up in a pretty unstable, unstable household.
Speaker BAnd so she was trying to get out quick and so started dating and got married at 17 and then had me when she was 20.
Speaker BAnd you know, when you're 17 or even 20, you're not.
Speaker BPriorities are different.
Speaker BYou're not thinking the way that you would as a 35 year old.
Speaker BBut she was doing the best she could.
Speaker BAnd so she married my father.
Speaker BAnd my father wasn't ready to be a dad.
Speaker BAnd before I was the age of one, he left.
Speaker BAnd I don't even remember seeing the guy.
Speaker BLike, I don't.
Speaker BI have zero memory of what he was or who he was.
Speaker BAnd my mom doesn't talk a lot about what happened, but he left.
Speaker BAnd, and I do remember a time from.
Speaker BIt was somewhere around three.
Speaker BYou know, you start having those, those really weird but fundamental memories early on.
Speaker BYou can kind of start piecing them together.
Speaker BBut I remember being at the wedding of her, her next husband, right.
Speaker BAnd I called him dad.
Speaker BHe, he was a Hispanic guy, ex, convicted, um, had a, had a pretty bad rap sheet.
Speaker BNot a great dude at all.
Speaker BAlcoholic.
Speaker BSo from three to 10, I watched.
Speaker BHe taught me a lot.
Speaker BHe taught me respect, number one.
Speaker BLike he, it was, yes sir, yes ma', am, please.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BIt was, there's no yaz or huh, you're going to tuck in your shirt, you're going to, you know, not going to wear your hat in the house.
Speaker BIt was straight up respect.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd if you didn't get it, you're gonna feel the wrath.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo he was an alcoholic, super abusive, you know, I can remember being, you know, 8, 9, 10 and having to call the police and you know, because he's beating the heck out of my mom, you know, and, and then I got a stepbrother out of the deal or half brother.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BAnd he, he favored him.
Speaker BAnd so then the abuse kind of turned towards me a little bit and got.
Speaker BGot physical a lot.
Speaker BAnd so my mom put up with that until she couldn't anymore.
Speaker BAnd, and then I, I watched my brother, you know, when, when they divorced, I watched my brother kind of.
Speaker BHe's.
Speaker BHe was three at the time and he needed a dad.
Speaker BI did too for that matter.
Speaker BBut, um.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, he had visitations and his dad was just not a good dude.
Speaker BAnd both of our fathers are deceased now.
Speaker BBut, but about the time I was 11, my mom started dating again and at 12, she, she married, remarried.
Speaker BWell, this is like dad number three for me.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd you're going to.
Speaker BI don't, I don't think this is going to work.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BWell, not only that, I'm, I'm just, I don't have the patience for it.
Speaker BAnd so I had, in my mind, I'm going, I just, If, If I could just find my real father, I think everything would be better the way it's supposed to be.
Speaker BAnd so I kept telling my mom that I was like, I'm gonna go find my real dad.
Speaker BI'm gonna go find my real dad.
Speaker BAnd so some way, somehow we, we found not him, but his mother.
Speaker BAnd we got in touch with her and she helped me purchase a plane ticket to fly to Florida.
Speaker BAnd so I jumped on a.
Speaker BOn a plane at 13 by myself and flew to Florida, found the dude.
Speaker BAnd you know, everything that I was idolizing and romanticizing and that, that my father would be just wasn't.
Speaker BAnd he was already married again, and he had a, a daughter, and I was just an interruption to their lives.
Speaker BAnd so came back home disappointed and defeated, angry and, and, and hateful of my, of my new stepfather.
Speaker BSo I'm going, man, I'm.
Speaker BI don't want to have anything to do with you or anything or anybody else for that matter.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd so from, from 13 to, to really 21, I lived pretty sinful and broken life.
Speaker BAngry.
Speaker BAnd my second stepdad, the one I have a half brother with, he.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BHe taught me how to steal, which is kind of crazy.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BLike, I would, I would ride around with him on Saturdays and we would pick up like, lawnmowers out of this warehouse, you know, from other guys.
Speaker BAnd, and he would put in the back of the truck and then we would go, like, resell it.
Speaker BAnd so I thought that was kind of normal.
Speaker BI say all this stuff to say like, man, you don't realize what you've missed from your father until you have to become one.
Speaker BDoes that make sense?
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker BLike, I, I had, I was just.
Speaker BThis is just normal life.
Speaker BBut then when you start dating or, or you get married or, or you become a father, you go, oh, man, I'm very ill equipped here.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd all the things that I've learned, I need to unlearn.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd go learn somewhere else.
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut again, you know, in the midst of all that, you just go, this is just normal life.
Speaker BIt's no big deal.
Speaker BAnd, and I would even have say.
Speaker BPeople say, I'm.
Speaker BMan, I feel Sorry for you don't have a dad.
Speaker BAnd I'd go, it's just normal.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it is until it's not.
Speaker BUntil you realize what you're missing.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BYeah, that's a.
Speaker BThat's an abbreviated version, but that's.
Speaker BThat's my.
Speaker BMy childhood.
Speaker AIt's funny you say kind of what you just said about It's.
Speaker AIt's normal.
Speaker AI. I can kind of get in my own head about how, yeah, traumatic my childhood was.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut what's funny is I didn't think.
Speaker AI didn't think about it like that when I was a kid.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIt was just my childhood, you know?
Speaker AAnd if I'm really honest with myself, even as complicated and traumatic as problems I had to deal with, there were, there are way worse situations out there, you know?
Speaker AI don't know where I'm going with that, David.
Speaker AI'm just.
Speaker AYou're.
Speaker AI think you're spot on.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AHere's one question, because you probably.
Speaker AWell, how do you feel like that, seeing the divorce and the absentee kind of father thing?
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AI know the answer to this question, but I mean, you are incredibly committed to Katie.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker AIn the same way that I am incredibly committed to Whitney.
Speaker ABecause I saw what divorce did and it's not ever even a question or a thought that this isn't going to work.
Speaker AThere's no scenario where this doesn't work, 100%.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut one of the things I wrestle with is.
Speaker AOr.
Speaker AOr not wrestle, maybe have to contend with is kind of, am I over correcting on.
Speaker AOn some things?
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ADo you?
Speaker ADo you ever.
Speaker AKind of.
Speaker AAnd here's why I say this.
Speaker ASorry, I'm talking a lot here, but you are who you are because of everything that happened to you up to this moment, right now, for sure.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd your resilience, your tenacity, just.
Speaker AI mean, everything about who you are and your success might be different if you hadn't been through everything you'd been through.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo on one hand, you wouldn't change that.
Speaker AYou wouldn't change that.
Speaker AIt's where you are.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut on the other hand, you wouldn't wish that on your kids.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so what I find myself struggling with is I am incredibly independent, I'm incredibly tenacious and resilient and.
Speaker AAnd very passionate, committed because of everything I went through.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker AHow do I make sure that I'm not like, over correcting with my kids so that they're, you know, soft, weak, lazy, not committed, not passionate about anything?
Speaker ABecause they live this incredibly comfortable, cushy life.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ADoes that, does that make sense?
Speaker B100%.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI think there's a couple of things there.
Speaker BYou know, number one, when you grow up the way you and I did, you got a couple of choices.
Speaker BYou, you either repeat the cycle and use it as an excuse.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOr you go, I ain't going to be that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThat's not going to be me.
Speaker BAnd that was me.
Speaker BLike, I, I watched, you know, debt collectors call the house and I watched my parents struggle for all kinds of stuff.
Speaker BYou know, and, and, and the diversity.
Speaker BIn my mind, I'm going, I'm going to make a commitment to myself right now.
Speaker BI'm not going to go into debt.
Speaker BI'm not going to divorce.
Speaker BI'm going to be the best father that I never had.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd, and I have to be real careful with that because it, that's.
Speaker BThose are all good things, but I can, I can make those God things.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BReal quick.
Speaker BWhere it, it is, it is the crux of my being like, that is what I'm here for.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so I will over prioritize being a.
Speaker BNot failing as a father, not failing as, As a husband.
Speaker BSo much so that I don't, I don't really get to enjoy what, what being a good father and a good husband really should be.
Speaker BI'm tough on my kids.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, incredibly tough.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd praise the Lord, I have a wife that can gently remind me that.
Speaker BThat a lot of that comes from my raisin.
Speaker BAnd, and that they're.
Speaker BThey're good kids and they're not gonna, they're not gonna be or experience what I did.
Speaker BBut that's what, that's where it stems from.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike there's a fear of failure.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd, and you go, okay, that's either going to lead to a lack of commitment or it's going to lead to.
Speaker BI'm going to push and make sure that I do everything possible that.
Speaker BTo keep that from happening again.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNow, you know, that's me putting faith in myself instead of the Lord, but, but it's a real struggle.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI mean, I hear what you're saying.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOne of the things that has kind of come out of that is.
Speaker AI don't mean this, this is going to sound kind of twisted, but like making sure to create an environment.
Speaker AAnd I know that you guys do this too, but almost manufacturing difficulty for your kids and manufacturing sounds like it's like manipulative in some way.
Speaker ABut I think one of the things that Whitney and I have settled on is resiliency, like, you know, from.
Speaker AFrom our childhoods was.
Speaker AWas really kind of born out of dealing with difficult things that we didn't have any control over.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ABut to foster that same resiliency in our own kids, we can put them in very safe and controlled situations that can challenge them, that they can fail, that.
Speaker AThat they can compete at something and lose.
Speaker AYou know, what.
Speaker AWhat have you guys done with your kids to, like, you know, make sure that they're one.
Speaker AOne.
Speaker AOne thing that we try to say in our household is that we.
Speaker AWe do hard things.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker AWe can do hard things, Right?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut what.
Speaker AHow does that.
Speaker AHow do you guys do that?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo we do.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe also do hard things and we allow our kids.
Speaker BI think, I think, first of all, I don't.
Speaker BI'm with you.
Speaker BI do want to recreate some sort of struggle for them, but I'll never be able to create it the way that I had it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI also believe that each and every one of us was.
Speaker BWas created on purpose, for a purpose.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd my kids will have to struggle in a way that I've never had to struggle.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's true.
Speaker BAnd I don't want to downplay that because they're in a situation where we're providing more than I ever could have even imagined for them, but that's going to produce its own struggle.
Speaker BI think it's my job to shepherd them in that way and not rescue more than anything else.
Speaker BIt's just not rescue.
Speaker BNow, obviously, if they're threatened, I'm going to go to the rescue, but I'm going to allow them to fail.
Speaker BAnd failure is a word in my vocabulary that I've tried to.
Speaker BTo ward out as much as possible.
Speaker BI, I hate failure.
Speaker BI want to.
Speaker BI. I put achievement almost above everything else.
Speaker BBut I was listening to John Maxwell one time and he was talking about failing is good.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou know, there's a.
Speaker BThere's a movie out there that says failure is not an option.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BIt's not, because we're all going to fail.
Speaker BBut the reality is, is like, what are you going to do when you fail?
Speaker BI want my kids to be able to fail, but fail forward.
Speaker BYou know, you can.
Speaker BYou can fail backwards and go, okay, I'm.
Speaker BI fail and I'm going to blame.
Speaker BI'm going to shift.
Speaker BI'm going to make excuses.
Speaker BBut, man, if you learn something from it, failure is actually really, really good.
Speaker BAnd so we're we're teaching our kiddos, like, even, even our boys, like, I left just a little while ago, my house, and we.
Speaker BThey have a chore chart and they hate it.
Speaker BThey absolutely hate it.
Speaker BBut what kind of a dad would I be if I didn't teach them that?
Speaker BLike, hey, there's.
Speaker BNumber one, I'm going to expose you to all the things that have to be done around this house, whether you do it or someone else does it.
Speaker BLike, I want you to know these are all the things.
Speaker BBut then number two, like, I'm going to give them the opportunity to do those things and do it poorly.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo they're, they're.
Speaker BAnd it's, it's nothing major, but like, they know when they come home from school, they don't do anything at all until they do their list.
Speaker BAnd their list is pretty extensive.
Speaker BI mean, we make them clean their own lunchbox.
Speaker BYou know, they're making their lunch for the next day, they're taking out the trash.
Speaker BI make them read for 10 minutes.
Speaker BI make them feed and feed them while their dog, you know, like.
Speaker BAnd these are, these are small things, but at the same time it's like, man, they're, they're going to grow up and they're going to see that like, number one, hard work is just, it's just normal.
Speaker BBut number two, like, overcoming adversity even in amongst an affluent household is, is going to happen.
Speaker BAnd when, and if they get an opportunity to, to overcome that, I'm going to let them do it.
Speaker BEven in, even in sports, man, we, there's times where they're getting fouled and I want to jump up and, you know, try to, to rescue them from that or whatever it is.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BAnd, and they're coming and they're throwing a fit and they're, they're really.
Speaker BWhat they're doing is they're asking me to rescue them and I'm going, man, I'm sorry.
Speaker BThat's tough.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo we're, we're, you know, we, we do look for opportunities to either manufacture or at least allow them to fail in some, some capacity to, to, to strive.
Speaker BAnd maybe it's not exactly the same way that we, we did, you and I growing up, but, but it, like you said, it's, it's in a safe environment.
Speaker BWe're, we're not gonna, we're not gonna coddle or protect.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, we.
Speaker AIt's kind of funny, it's so contrarian, I feel like, to the world today, but it's almost like.
Speaker AAnd this is so cliche to say, but trying to get our kids to understand that, like, it's okay to not be okay.
Speaker AAnd that's cliche to say, but really what I mean by that is, like, our oldest is.
Speaker AIs.
Speaker AIs deals with just.
Speaker AShe's very anxious.
Speaker AShe worries.
Speaker AShe worries about, you know, what people think she worries about.
Speaker AShe's easily embarrassed.
Speaker AYou know, she just has a lot of kind of like, social anxiety about stuff like that.
Speaker AAnd it's kind of like, you know, what she wants to hear is, I'm okay.
Speaker AEverything's okay.
Speaker AAnd it's.
Speaker AIt's kind of this.
Speaker AIt seems super counterproductive, but it's kind of like you.
Speaker AYou're not okay right now, but you will be okay.
Speaker AYeah, like, this is survivable, but, you know, just kind of coaching them through, like, yeah, this.
Speaker AThis really sucks.
Speaker AThere is nothing.
Speaker AMaybe there's something I could do to make this go away right now, but that's not.
Speaker AThat's not the most edifying thing for you long term.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker AYou know, this is survivable.
Speaker AAnd it's okay that you're not okay.
Speaker AYou'll get okay.
Speaker AYou know, it's just a weird place to be as a parent.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think, man, when Kenna grows up.
Speaker BYou're talking about Kenna?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWhen K grows up, you know, my prayer for her would just be that she would see those tough times and then look back and go, man, like, I'm so much stronger because I was able to.
Speaker BTo power through that.
Speaker BMaybe not on my own will, but even with just the Lord, like, I don't think it's fair for us to take away anyone's struggle, really.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause on the backside, man, you.
Speaker BYou really, really grow in the.
Speaker BIn the uncomfortable moments.
Speaker BAnd so I pray the same thing for my kiddos, too.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ASo the next thing is.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI don't know how to ask this question, but I'm gonna just be very blunt, because as I.
Speaker AYou and I talked about this already, but as I reflected and I.
Speaker AYou talk as much or as little about this as you are comfortable.
Speaker ABut when I was thinking about you driving up here, what kept coming to my mind was this concept of being angry at God.
Speaker AAnd, you know, you hear in.
Speaker AIn Christian apologetics, you hear a lot.
Speaker AIf God is so good, then why does he let bad things happen to people?
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AAnd in the last four or five years, you have had a lot of.
Speaker AI mean, I hate to say bad things, but.
Speaker ABut you.
Speaker AYou have had A lot of, like, tribulation.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker ATrials.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd here's what's incredible.
Speaker AAnd I, I, I'm, I'm sure that you've struggled with at some point, but one of the things I really want you to talk about is, like, of all the people I know, you're one of the ones that, if, if I were you, I don't know how I would have been able to keep my head above water and not just be angry with God.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo would you just maybe share with us kind of some of what's gone on in your life over the last few years and maybe how you've leaned into God rather than pushing away?
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI have to start by just saying, man, I love the Lord with all my heart, and that'll never change.
Speaker BI love the Lord, and that's just not something I say.
Speaker BI mean, that's who I am.
Speaker BIt's an identity.
Speaker BBut, you know, Katie and I took a trip to Costa Rica and one time, and we were like, hey, let's, let's venture into Nicaragua.
Speaker BIt's a neighboring country, and it'll be a blast.
Speaker BYou know, there's volcanoes over there.
Speaker BAnd so we, we did that.
Speaker BAnd, and when we came back, I started feeling a little weird.
Speaker BAnd actually, it was really weird because I didn't feel, I didn't start feeling weird until about 30 days after I was back in the States.
Speaker BAnd so vertigo, this weird sharp pain, you know, in my abdomen.
Speaker BAnd when I'd stand up, I would either pass out or, or nearly pass out.
Speaker BAnd this, this lasted for about three months.
Speaker BI laid in bed for three months, didn't go to, didn't go to work.
Speaker BAnd, and what's interesting is when you're conscious of what's going on around you, but you can't physically take presence in any of that.
Speaker BThere's a quality of life that's just not worth living anymore.
Speaker BYeah, so that, that's, that's the first thing.
Speaker BNow, the Lord redeemed me of that.
Speaker BAnd, and I actually, I made a deal with him.
Speaker BI don't know if you're supposed to make deals with the Lord or not, but I did.
Speaker BI got up, you know, when in the midst of my sickness, I got up to the best of my ability.
Speaker BI got up and went on the back porch and I opened my Bible and I was like, you know, first, I'd already committed my life to the Lord, but, and had been walking with the lord for probably 10 years at that moment.
Speaker BBut, but I said, lord, if you'll if you'll heal me, man, I'll live for you all the days of my life.
Speaker BAnd not just, not just live, but really live.
Speaker BAnd I'll on my, all my, my skills, my talents, my treasures, my gifts, whatever it is, they're all yours.
Speaker BIt's all yours.
Speaker BAnd, and, and he delivered me from that.
Speaker BSo I got well, praise the Lord.
Speaker BAnd we struggled through some debt as well, paying off homes and, and again, I'm an achiever.
Speaker BAnd so I decided, man, we're gonna, we're gonna pay off all our debt.
Speaker BAnd we did that.
Speaker BDave Ramsey.
Speaker BThanks Shout out.
Speaker BAnd then we paid off our home and then man, we were flying high.
Speaker BI was going, man, this is good.
Speaker BI'm going to keep going.
Speaker BAnd we did.
Speaker BAnd the Lord reminded me like, man, I'm still your provider, not you, I'm your provider.
Speaker BAnd okay.
Speaker BAnd then we had some sickness in the family.
Speaker BSo Katie's got a sister named Hannah and Hannah has they, she got engaged and then married really quick.
Speaker BAnd right after they got married, they got pregnant and lost a baby about six days after, after the birth.
Speaker BAnd that was tough for Hannah.
Speaker BIt's tough for, for Katie, my wife.
Speaker BAnd it's tough for me because I'm going like, I don't, I don't know how to deal with this.
Speaker BI don't know how to be a supportive husband.
Speaker BI've never been down this road.
Speaker BBut, and then, and then just about six weeks, maybe eight weeks after Melena passed away, Stephen, my brother in law found out he had leukemia.
Speaker BAnd so we, now we're walking through that and that, you know, we never really saw, I never saw illness like this.
Speaker BBut he's, he's in hospitals, he's going through full body radiation and every kind of chemo immunotherapy.
Speaker BHe wound up doing a bone marrow transplant.
Speaker BAnd, but, but he was on his deathbed, man, he was, he's looking pretty rough.
Speaker BAnd, and, but in, in all this time, we're again, we love the Lord, but you're going, what in the world's going on here?
Speaker BLike we're sold out for you.
Speaker BWe're doing all the things we're given.
Speaker BYou know, we're, we're spending our time, we're telling people about the Lord and we're living a lifestyle that proves that.
Speaker BBut like it seems like something's going on here.
Speaker BShortly after that, Katie, this is 2021.
Speaker BKatie, my wife is diagnosed with breast cancer.
Speaker BYeah, she, she comes home from birthday, a birthday party, her birthday party finds A lump.
Speaker BAnd she goes, hey, come, come check this out.
Speaker BAnd I was like, all right, yeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd then I feel the lump and, and I'm going, man, this is not good.
Speaker BAnd so we, she goes in next, next couple weeks waiting on biopsies and things like that were pretty challenging.
Speaker BWe're worried.
Speaker BAnd then we're going, ah, it's nothing, it's fine.
Speaker BAnd then came back.
Speaker BIt's, it's breast cancer.
Speaker BSo we go through this and I'm scared to death.
Speaker BI'm going number one.
Speaker BLike, I got three kids and I cannot do this by myself.
Speaker BYeah, I'm not equipped.
Speaker BI'm a good dad because I get to go out and work and be away from my kids for a little while and then come back home and love the heck out of them.
Speaker BSo being a full time dad, I just going, I don't think I can do that.
Speaker BAnd so we're surrendering to the Lord again and going, man, like, I don't know what's going on here, but I need, need some help.
Speaker BShe went through double mastectomy and, and they tested everything and they said, hey, you're, you're good, you're cancer free.
Speaker BJust going to keep an eye on you.
Speaker BBut we think we're fine.
Speaker BSo fast forward about two and a half years, and Katie's mom had felt kind of this slump in her abdomen.
Speaker BKind of ignored it for a little while, but then finally went in and turns out she had ovarian cancer.
Speaker BAnd it was aggressive.
Speaker BAnd they said, you know, maybe eight months maybe.
Speaker BWe're going, holy cow.
Speaker BSo we're watching her mom and we're spending as much time as we possibly can.
Speaker BAnd again, as a, as a father and as a husband, you know, I'm trying to figure out what to do here.
Speaker BYou know, one of the best marriage advice that we got in counseling before we got married was man to be a constant student of your spouse.
Speaker BI'll talk a little bit more about that, you know, later with kids, because it's, it applies there too.
Speaker BBut, but I'm, I'm just studying Katie and I'm going, how's she responding?
Speaker BWhat does she need?
Speaker BHow can I, how can I be a.
Speaker BThe husband that she needs for me right now, even if I don't know how to be?
Speaker BAnd so her mom is about a week from passing and Katie finds another lump on in her.
Speaker BAnd we go get tested and we found out about a week before Katie's mom passed away that Katie's cancer had returned.
Speaker BAnd we're going to.
Speaker BI, at this point, you talk about, you talked about, how do you go through adversity and not become angry with, With God?
Speaker BWell, now I'm angry.
Speaker BYeah, I am.
Speaker BWe pulled into a parking lot.
Speaker BIt was Katie and I.
Speaker BAnd I. I started thinking and praying, and I said, lord, why don't you come on down here and let's talk?
Speaker BI mean, I was ready to fight.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou know, if Jacob could fight, I could fight, too.
Speaker BBut, and, and, and this is, this is going to blow your mind.
Speaker BSo I'd gotten to the point in my prayer life where I would get up early in the morning and I would open the word and I would pray and I would read.
Speaker BAnd, and, and the Lord just started kind of giving me a word at a time.
Speaker BAnd, and I don't.
Speaker BI don't really know how to hear from the Lord, but I do know, like, I can.
Speaker BIf you'll just give me one word, I'll run with that.
Speaker BJust give me one word, right?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd so he gave me a word, and it was surrender.
Speaker BAnd I didn't really know what it meant at the time, but, you know, for, for about six months, that was the word.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BSo I said, like, well, I'll just pray.
Speaker BI'll pray that.
Speaker BSo I would get up early in the morning and I would say, lord, today I surrender my life back to you.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BNot just with words, but, like, my whole body, man, I, I surrender my life back to you, Lord, today.
Speaker BCider builders.
Speaker BMan, I. I surrender my business back to you today, Father.
Speaker BI, I, I surrender my wife, Katie to you and my kids to you.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I said this prayer for six, eight months.
Speaker BAnd then I was reminded in that parking lot when I was talking to God, telling to come on down and let's fight.
Speaker BHe goes, wait, wait, wait.
Speaker BFor the last six months, you've been saying, I surrender, Katie.
Speaker BLike, did you surrender?
Speaker BYeah, because you don't fight people that you surrender your, you know, your life over to.
Speaker BAnd some.
Speaker BAnd I was just.
Speaker BMan, I fell apart.
Speaker BI was going, you know what?
Speaker BAnd this is where faith is really lived out.
Speaker BYou can't just say, I love the Lord and surrender and then get the opportunity to do so and then be mad about it.
Speaker BIt's like saying, I want to be a millionaire.
Speaker BAnd then all of a sudden, you're a millionaire, and then you're going, what in the world?
Speaker BThis about this?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BNo, I couldn't do that.
Speaker BAnd so it was a challenge.
Speaker BBut so for.
Speaker BSo Katie's mom Passed away.
Speaker BAnd then now we're going through the full blown, the full meal deal.
Speaker BSo we go to UT Southwestern.
Speaker BThey decide, hey, we're gonna.
Speaker BWe're gonna give you the, the.
Speaker BThe worst kind of chemo you can get.
Speaker BAnd then afterwards, we're going to put you through radiation.
Speaker BSo she had eight rounds of chemo, 33 rounds of radiation, and then now she, She's.
Speaker BShe takes a shot every 28 days.
Speaker BAnd a really expensive pill that suppresses any kind of free radical cells in the bone marrow if it's ever there, and then one that suppressed the pituitary gland because hers was hormonal.
Speaker BAnd so we basically want to try to get rid of the hormones.
Speaker BAnd so she's through all that now, and I feel like we're finally kind of breathing and living life again.
Speaker BBut I look back and I say, man, I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy.
Speaker BI would not.
Speaker BBut I was telling Jimmy the other day, I was like, man, I. I think I took a, like a 10, maybe 15 year shortcut in my faith.
Speaker BLike, I would have gotten here.
Speaker BYeah, but.
Speaker BBut you don't know how good the Lord is until you've had the opportunity to.
Speaker BTo allow him to prove it.
Speaker BAnd, and when your back's against the wall and you've done everything, you've white knuckles your way through life, you grab the steering wheel and you're just going, and.
Speaker BAnd it's still not working.
Speaker BAt some point you got to go, all right, I'm out, Lord.
Speaker BLike, I don't know what's going on.
Speaker BAnd so the level of real surrender that, that we had to do.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd then looking on the backside, man, our kids got to watch us go through trials that most kids their age would never have to watch, like, and then come out on the backside and go, oh, we're good.
Speaker BSo sometimes, man, I think our trials that the Lord allows us to go through, number one, if we never.
Speaker BIf we never go through a trial, then we don't know how good God is in.
Speaker BIn the rescuing and portion of that.
Speaker BNumber two, sometimes our trials aren't even about us.
Speaker BSometimes about the people that are watching us.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I'm.
Speaker BI mean, I might be cursing God going, what in the heck are you doing?
Speaker BAnd he goes, it's never been about you.
Speaker BIt's not about you.
Speaker BIt's always been about me, about him.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut I watch my kids now and, like, when crazy things come up that they should be freaking out about, they're going, oh, it's just Another trial.
Speaker BIt's no big deal.
Speaker BAnd so, man, like, I, I, I have, I've done all the stages of grief and I've been mad and I've been angry and I've been sad and, and then, you know, you get back to, to kind of normal now.
Speaker BBut I'd say that there's not much that can rattle me much anymore.
Speaker BI'm going.
Speaker BAnd today's a good day.
Speaker BI'm not guaranteed even the next breath.
Speaker BSo today, what am I going to do with it?
Speaker BI'm just gonna, I'm going to figure out, you know, I told you earlier, I think every one of us has been created on purpose, for a purpose moment.
Speaker BWhat's my purpose?
Speaker BNot even my overarching purpose, but like, what's my purpose right now?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BEven in this podcast with you, ma'.
Speaker BAm.
Speaker BWhat?
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BWhat's my purpose?
Speaker BAnd so if I can figure out a way to live that out in its fullest, then I'm going, man, whatever tomorrow brings, that's fine.
Speaker BBut today, man, it's great.
Speaker BYeah,
Speaker Aman.
Speaker AI'm kind of trying to remember.
Speaker AIt's funny, my mom had two open heart surgeries, two or three open heart doubled, and then a quadruple bypass and, and then had some congestive heart failure and all of this.
Speaker ABut all of the majority of that stuff happened before the breast cancer came back.
Speaker AThe majority of that stuff happened before I was probably seven years old.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AAnd I remember, I don't remember much, although I remember a couple conversations.
Speaker AAnd I didn't know it at the time, but like before mom was going in to have heart surgery, it was, you know, as a four or five, six year old kid, mom was effectively telling me goodbye, you know, because she didn't know that she was going to come out of heart surgery.
Speaker ANow, look, as a six year old, I have no idea what's going on, you know, but that kind of, I'm, I'm curious if, if you're okay talking about it, but like, what has the communication cadence looked like with the kids about what's going on?
Speaker ABecause fatherhood in general, there's no playbook.
Speaker ABut dealing with what you guys have dealt with is like, is like, you know, there really is no playbook.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo how did you guys handle that?
Speaker AI mean, and you know, maybe just to be more blunt, like, you know, okay, the cancer's come back.
Speaker AYou know, do you sit the kids down and have a family meeting and say, mom's got cancer again, you know?
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AAnd then when you come up with the treatment plan.
Speaker AYou know, do you sit the kids down and say, okay, we got a treatment plan?
Speaker AWhat mom has to.
Speaker AWhat does that look like?
Speaker AOr how did y' all do it?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd so I don't think we had a plan other than knowing, like, in our family, we don't hide much.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BReally, we don't hide anything.
Speaker BLike, even when Katie and I argue, like, man, we're.
Speaker BWe're all out in the open, and we're not hiding any of that.
Speaker BAnd so it just came natural for us to just be extremely honest.
Speaker BI don't know how good that was or not, but I do know that the Lord really probably protected our kiddos to.
Speaker BTo know how.
Speaker BHow bad it really was.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut we would.
Speaker BWe would say, hey, man.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd we did.
Speaker BWe sat them down.
Speaker BWe're like, hey, Mom's cancer's back.
Speaker BThis next year is going to be tough.
Speaker BWe need you guys to.
Speaker BTo help us bond together as a family.
Speaker BThere's going to be things that you're going to be exposed to.
Speaker BThere's gonna be things that we're going to ask you to do that you've probably never done before.
Speaker BBut we need you to understand this is what families do.
Speaker BAnd we.
Speaker BWe bond together.
Speaker BWe help each other out.
Speaker BWe do hard things, and we're not guaranteed tomorrow, but we're going to fight like crazy.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd there was.
Speaker BMan, we.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe all cried.
Speaker BWe all cried together, you know, we.
Speaker BAnd they.
Speaker BI think, you know, Mason, he's eight now.
Speaker BHe was.
Speaker BHe was six at the time.
Speaker BAnd he.
Speaker BHe's my.
Speaker BHe's my fireball, man.
Speaker BHe lives life to its fullest.
Speaker BThere's not much that he's not emotional really, at all.
Speaker BMy middle.
Speaker BHe's way more emotional.
Speaker BBut Cambry, she understood a little bit more.
Speaker BAnd so, Cam.
Speaker BShe felt the magnitude and the heaviness of what was going on and understood the real possibilities that mom may or may not make it.
Speaker BBut at the same time, like, man, and we talked about this earlier, like, man, I could rescue them from that, but is that wise?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I can.
Speaker BI can deflect and I can hide, but if something does happen, like, I still have to.
Speaker BWe still have to go through that.
Speaker BSo, like, let's not rescue our kids.
Speaker BLet's just.
Speaker BLet's be honest, and then let's tell them where our hope is.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it ain't in me.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI can fix a lot of things, but cancer ain't one of them.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo, man, we would.
Speaker BWe would Pray together as a family.
Speaker BEvery night we'd pray.
Speaker BYou know, they would know and understand that, like, Dad's gonna go to every single doctor visit, radiation, chemo, follow ups, you name it, Dad's gonna be there.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo they're gonna spend a lot of time with grandma, you know, and they were cool with that.
Speaker BAnd they understood.
Speaker BThey knew if, if we weren't present or if mom wasn't feeling good, she was on, you know, hovering over the toilet, throwing up.
Speaker BIt's because that's the, that's the season that we're in and, and we're gonna, we're gonna make sure that we bond together as a family.
Speaker BTo, to make this as.
Speaker BAs easy as we possibly can, but.
Speaker BBut to not.
Speaker BNot be rescued or not be sheltered from it.
Speaker BSo it's funny, and I think we'll see the net result of, of how that affected them later.
Speaker BBut right now it's like, oh, that's old hat.
Speaker BYou know, it's almost like when you're going through something that's the biggest thing you got going on and you think, this is never going to go away.
Speaker BAnd then you fast forward, you're going like, wait a minute, what did we do?
Speaker BMan, that was kind of a blur.
Speaker BI don't even remember it anymore.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker BAnd you have to be careful because those, those hills and valleys where you'll.
Speaker BIf you're not careful, you'll go, I'm good.
Speaker BThat could never happen again.
Speaker BYou don't want to get to that point.
Speaker BThere needs to be a righteous fear of what may come.
Speaker BBut that same time, like, we don't want to hang our hat on, you know, this is the end all be all for us too.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWhat, what would you say?
Speaker AYou know, like, if, if somebody is listening to this who has.
Speaker AIs currently struggling with kind of that.
Speaker AWhy, God?
Speaker AWhy.
Speaker AWhy is this going on?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause the, the, you know, it's, it's.
Speaker AWhy are you doing this to me?
Speaker AThat's the, that's, that's the anger, right?
Speaker ASure.
Speaker AAnd I know you, you know, you, you talked about the, the surrender, which, by the way, was very convicting to me.
Speaker ABut, you know, like, if you, if somebody walked in the door right now and they were like, dude, I'm just, I'm mad at God and I don't understand what's going on.
Speaker AWhat would you, what would you tell them?
Speaker BYeah, you know, with my kids, I. I've got this thing on my mirror where I say, and I have to teach it because I'm Not a great, not a great dad.
Speaker BI lose my temper a lot.
Speaker BBut first I've got a pause and then I've got to connect.
Speaker BAnd then we correct and then we celebrate.
Speaker BYou know, we go through those, those things.
Speaker BAnd so first, for an emotional person like that, I'd say, man, tell me more, man, I, I feel you.
Speaker BI've been there.
Speaker BBut the reality is, it's like our ways are not the Lord's ways.
Speaker BSo for us to get to the point where we're going to say why, we would never understand.
Speaker BYeah, but number two, coming from a guy that's been there, I would say, why not?
Speaker BBecause on the backside I see and I'll never know the depth or understanding of what, what transpired not only in my own life, but in the people around us that watched us go through trials.
Speaker BI'll never understand the full fruit of that until we get to heaven, probably.
Speaker BBut, but what I do know personally is, you know, now I'm going, lord, I, I'm grateful for the trials.
Speaker BI'm, I, I, I, I don't invite it, but I'm, I'm okay.
Speaker BBecause when it comes, I know something good's going to come from the back end.
Speaker BSpiritual growth and maturity, knowing and understanding that like, today isn't the end all be all for me, that I can place my hope and faith in him and him alone, that it is better on the backside.
Speaker BBut, but the reality is, you know, I can relate.
Speaker BIf you're mad, man, be mad.
Speaker BAnd the Lord never said you couldn't be like, be upset for sure.
Speaker BBut we should also have this righteous respect for him and know that his ways are just not ours.
Speaker BAnd that like, if he's, if he's allowing you to go through a trial, whether you believe it or not, and it's for his glory and you're good.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd I would say just be patient and wait.
Speaker BWait upon the Lord.
Speaker BWait, wait, wait.
Speaker BAnd that's not easy to do.
Speaker BNobody wants to wait.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut, but you know, James chapter one says, consider it pure joy.
Speaker BMy dear brothers and sisters, when trials of any kind come your way, because it's an opportunity for your faith to be test.
Speaker BCheck this out.
Speaker BFor your endurance to grow.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWell, why in the world we need endurance?
Speaker BYeah, because we know we're gonna, we're gonna have another trial.
Speaker BYeah, dude.
Speaker BYes, the trial sucks.
Speaker BBut if we don't go through this trial, it's not if, but when the next trial is coming, you want to be prepared for that.
Speaker BThis is the only Way to be prepared is to go through this one and then the next one and then the next one.
Speaker BAnd so I would say, just, man, have faith, have hope, be.
Speaker BBe upset, but let it be a season and a second, and then get back to knowing that the Lord is good.
Speaker BYeah,
Speaker Athis is kind of random, but you're talking about James.
Speaker AAnd, you know, through trials and tribulations comes steadfastness.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's how you get.
Speaker ASteadfastness is through trial and tribulation.
Speaker ALike, there's really no other way to get there, you know, but something that's been just.
Speaker AThis is kind of random, but something that's been rolling around in my mind is I had a guy on the podcast, Ty, Ty.
Speaker AAnd I have a lot of, like, philosophical conversations, stoic conversations, whatever.
Speaker AAnd we got into this conversation a year or two ago, and Ty hit me with this.
Speaker AHe said, you know, if you're trying to eliminate suffering in your life, you will always be unsuccessful.
Speaker AAnd he said, now you have the choice of some of your suffering.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo an example would be dieting, being healthy, working out.
Speaker AI would classify that as suffering.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AGoing to the gym and working out, not eating an entire bag of Doritos.
Speaker AYou know, that takes.
Speaker ANow, look, I'm.
Speaker AI. I don't want to.
Speaker AYou know, I'm not trying to make this comical or funny, but that is an element of suffering.
Speaker ALiving, Living a healthy lifestyle, taking care of your body takes an element of kind of self sacrifice.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo you can delay your suffering by eating whatever you want, not working out.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut what that will end up in is the suffering is still coming.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker ABut it's going to come later and you're going to have a whole bunch of different problems.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ADiabetes, heart disease, heart attack, whatever.
Speaker AAnd it just really kind of clicked a switch in my mind, which is.
Speaker AHere's kind of tying it together is when I.
Speaker AWhen I reframed that and I said, you know, I don't always enjoy going to the gym in the morning, but I count that suffering as joy.
Speaker ABecause in a loose kind of frame of mind, all of the suffering that I can endure today, hopefully, is suffering that I don't have to endure later.
Speaker ANow I may still suffer tremendously later.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ADoes that even make sense, dude?
Speaker B100.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AIt's just.
Speaker AYou kind of get to choose your suffering in life, you know?
Speaker BWell, that's what I was talking about earlier.
Speaker BYou know, failure is not an option.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, we're gonna fail yeah, it's just gonna happen.
Speaker BWe're.
Speaker BWe're going to suffer and we can run from it.
Speaker BI think the Lord calls us to a righteous life, you know, a moral standard, so that we can reduce that suffering.
Speaker BBut there's some self inflicted suffering for sure.
Speaker BYou know, we call those natural consequences in our home.
Speaker BBut then there's some that the Lord just allows us to take on.
Speaker BAnd that's the one that I think that James is really talking about, man.
Speaker BThere, There are times that the Lord allows you to suffer.
Speaker BWe've just learned how to suffer.
Speaker AWell, yeah, yeah, yeah, I said this, I've said this a couple times.
Speaker ABut another thing that really stood out to me was this thought of, you know, it's very possible that the worst, the worst thing that ever happens to you can be the best thing that ever happens to you.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd I think that's the James, the James concept.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike in the moment, this is the worst thing that could possibly happen to you.
Speaker ABut we don't understand the way, we don't understand the world and the timeline of events and the way that God does.
Speaker AAnd the worst thing that happens to you today could be the, the best thing that ever happens to you in your life.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAll right, I want to go back to the being a student of your spouse piece.
Speaker AYeah, let's talk about that a little bit.
Speaker AAnd then how that translates into kids too.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd I, I'll never forget it.
Speaker BAnd I'll.
Speaker BThis will be a.
Speaker BJust something that we practice forever.
Speaker BBut you know, I, Because of the way I grew up, I, and, and it was a selfish mentality.
Speaker BI thought that things would, you know, that Katie was there to make me happy.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, you read books like, you know, the Five Love Languages, Gary Chapman and, and you learn her love language.
Speaker BAnd you're going, all right, this is it.
Speaker BI got it.
Speaker BI've nailed it.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd then, and then, and then all of a sudden she's.
Speaker BKatie's into new things.
Speaker BAnd, and what's interesting is as a young man growing up as well, trying to figure out just how to be a husband, it annoyed me.
Speaker BAlmost made me mad or jealous.
Speaker BI'm like, why are you, are you running?
Speaker BWhat are you.
Speaker BWhat do you mean?
Speaker BYou're running and you're running without me.
Speaker BSo, like, are you trying to get away from me?
Speaker BLike, what's going on?
Speaker BOh, you're reading books now?
Speaker BThat's so weird.
Speaker BAnd so I'm like, you know, it was almost this, like, every time she Would change or do something new or have new interest.
Speaker BIt would almost offend me.
Speaker BThat was my own insecurity.
Speaker BBut the reality is, is like, and Katie, she's just like me and you.
Speaker BWe, we have, we have different likes and interests, and life changes whether we want it to or not.
Speaker BSometimes that's external.
Speaker BBut love.
Speaker BLanguages change, too.
Speaker BYou know, when, when, when you're young and in love and you're married, you know, just a couple of years, you know, you.
Speaker BHer, Her.
Speaker BI can remember her.
Speaker BOne of her gifts or her love language was gift giving.
Speaker BAnd I'm an awful gift giver, by the way.
Speaker BI hate gifts.
Speaker BDon't get me a gift.
Speaker BI don't want to give you a gift.
Speaker ASame here, dude.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker BBut I did it.
Speaker BAnd, and, and, and against my will, I did it.
Speaker BI loved her, and so I.
Speaker BThat's why I did it.
Speaker BBut when kids come along, the gifts kind of fall by the wayside.
Speaker BShe could care less, and she's going to.
Speaker BI need acts of service and some quality time, you know, take care of these kids now.
Speaker BThat.
Speaker BThat's how you can love me.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd so I, I've learned the hard way of, you know, of really watching Katie because I love her and going, oh, man, you're into tennis now.
Speaker BThat's super cool.
Speaker BTell me more about that.
Speaker BAnd really trying to be supportive in that way, because, man, if I, if I love her and support her, even in the changes, the reciprocation is, Is so worth it.
Speaker BLike, and it's not why I do it, but it's like, man, she's, she's excited about anything that I'm excited about, and it's not for any reason other than, number one, she loves me.
Speaker BBut number two, like, I'm not, I'm not trying to downplay her new likes or interests, but.
Speaker BSo I've kind of mastered that.
Speaker BI feel pretty good about.
Speaker BOur marriage is rock steady, super cool.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut now I'm.
Speaker BI'm applying the same principles and practices with our kiddos.
Speaker BSo number one, I've got three kids, and they're all very different.
Speaker BAnd as a dad, I want to be able to go, all right, here's the recipe that I figured out that works, and I want to apply it across the board with all three kids, and it just doesn't work.
Speaker BAnd that's the most frustrating.
Speaker BIt's like trying to pretend to be three different men.
Speaker BI'm like, I just can't do it right now.
Speaker BWith the Lord's will and patience for me, he's taught me how to be a student of my kiddos individually.
Speaker BAnd what is Lucas specifically into?
Speaker BAnd even though what worked yesterday doesn't work today, I can get mad or upset about it, or I can meet him like I was talking about earlier and go, all right, let me connect with him before I correct.
Speaker BLet me try to really figure out, even though his anger makes me angry and his frustrations make me frustrated, somebody's got to pause and then connect and go and tell me more about what's going on.
Speaker BOh, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BThat would make me upset, too.
Speaker BAnd then.
Speaker BAnd then talk about regulating emotions and not letting those emotions turn into behaviors or physical patterns, but they.
Speaker BThey just change.
Speaker BSo, like, you know, Cambry is my firstborn rule follower.
Speaker BShe wants to please.
Speaker BI don't have to correct her pretty much ever.
Speaker BEmotional Lucas is my emotional one.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BHe's caught in between the baby and the.
Speaker BAnd the.
Speaker BThe oldest.
Speaker BAnd so when I correct him, the.
Speaker BThe first response is.
Speaker BIs an emotional response, you know, often even disrespect.
Speaker BAnd that gets me.
Speaker BBut I'm.
Speaker BBut I have to.
Speaker BI have two choices.
Speaker BI can.
Speaker BI can try to will them into who I want them to be, or I can watch and be a good shepherd and go, you know what?
Speaker BIt's not the way I would do it.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I've.
Speaker BAnd there's some lines here that you're crossing, and I'm just going to gently kind of get you back over into where you need to be.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut I would be a bad father if I go, no, you're going to do it the way that I do it, the way that I say you're going to do it.
Speaker BYou're going to play basketball whether you want to or not.
Speaker BYou know, I want my kids to.
Speaker BTo be active.
Speaker BUm, but, like, man, me forcing something that I like on them, as much as it hurts, it's not about me.
Speaker BIt's about them.
Speaker BAnd so I love them enough to be a student of them.
Speaker BYeah, Yeah,
Speaker AI wrote it down here.
Speaker AI want to just.
Speaker AI've never heard this before, so I want you to expand a little bit on this.
Speaker APause.
Speaker AConnect.
Speaker ACorrect.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ACelebrate.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIs that.
Speaker ATell it.
Speaker ATell me more about that.
Speaker ALike, is that.
Speaker AWhen do you use that?
Speaker AAnd specifically, like, the pause and the connect and the correct pieces kind of sound like I can understand there mentally.
Speaker ABut yeah, the celebrate piece, like, you know, how do you tie that all together?
Speaker BYeah, like I said, Cambry is firstborn rule follower.
Speaker BShe's easy to.
Speaker BTo parent and And Mason, even though he's a spitball, like, if, if I, if I get on him, he's.
Speaker BHe's coachable and correctable.
Speaker BSo all of this pause and connect and correct and celebrate really stems around Lucas.
Speaker BI love him to death.
Speaker BHe's.
Speaker BHis name is David Lucas.
Speaker BSo she's named after me.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYour namesake.
Speaker BOh, my gosh.
Speaker BAnd so he's, he is so much like me, but so different that the things that make him upset are the things that make me upset.
Speaker BAnd we can, man, we can amp each other up, but I'm the adult.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so, man, I will never quit on Lucas.
Speaker BI love him with all of my heart, even whenever it's tough.
Speaker BAnd that's what I would say to most dads is like, man, when it's tough, just don't quit.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BDon't be a quitter.
Speaker BLike, you don't have to do it perfect, but do not quit.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo I'm not quitting on him, but I, I, I know this about me.
Speaker BLike, if he disrespect is probably my, is what gets me riled up more than anything else.
Speaker BDon't disrespect me.
Speaker BDon't disrespect my wife.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd when I see the way he talks with a tone and with the fire in his eyes towards my wife, towards Katie, I'm going to.
Speaker BI'm fixing to hang you up by your toenails.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd it's going to be bad news for you for a long, long time.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, I, I have some moments that I'm not proud of.
Speaker BWhere I've lost.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BMy ever loving mind.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd, and I have to apologize to him about that.
Speaker BAnd, and, and really not even apologize.
Speaker BI've got to earn his trust back because I've lost trust with him.
Speaker BAnd so just in my quiet time, in my prayers, I was going, lord, I.
Speaker BAgain, I surrender Lucas to you.
Speaker BBut I've got to figure out something different here.
Speaker BYou know, what can I do?
Speaker BAnd I'm not perfect at it by any means, but I, but I am perfecting the craft of.
Speaker BFirst and foremost, when he gets emotional, I get emotional.
Speaker BAnd so I'm going to just pause.
Speaker BEven though I want to go rip his head off and tell him he's kicked out of the family, the reality is none of that's good.
Speaker BAnd so I'm going to, I want to run in there and fix this problem, but I'm actually going to run the other way for a second.
Speaker BI'm going to breathe, and I'm going to think about what I'm about to say, and more times than not, I'm not saying anything.
Speaker BI'm just going.
Speaker BI'm going to go be present with him for a second.
Speaker BAm I going to say anything?
Speaker BI'm just going to be present.
Speaker BAnd he knows when I enter the room, he's going, oh, man, something's about to go down.
Speaker BAnd so I can either yell and holler and scream, or I can get physical, or I can just be present.
Speaker BAnd so I'm pausing just to be present.
Speaker BAnd then I'm getting down on eye level, and I'm going, hey, Luke, what's going on, man?
Speaker BAnd if he's not ready, if he's still emotional, then I'll give him some space, but I'm not.
Speaker BI'm not going to not address it.
Speaker BAnd so there are times where he's still emotional and he's still yelling and screaming and hollering, but, like, eventually he'll cool down and I'll go back and I'll say, tell me what's going on.
Speaker BWell, then he'll tell me what's going on.
Speaker BAnd it's the pilliest things.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou know, Mason took something and ran over him, and now he makes this.
Speaker BThis big.
Speaker BThis bigger to do than it really is.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I'm going, you know what, man?
Speaker BI've been there.
Speaker BThat does suck.
Speaker BAnd I hate it, too.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd it makes me mad.
Speaker BDoes it make you mad?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BMake you want to hurt him?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI know that feeling.
Speaker BSo, man, I'm right there with you.
Speaker BBut, man, think about this.
Speaker BIf everybody in the world, every time they got mad or sad or angry or whatever the emotion is, they took action.
Speaker BAnd actually, you know, that.
Speaker BThat.
Speaker BThat determined their behavior, either verbally or physically or whatever it is.
Speaker BIf everybody acted on their emotions, man, we'd be in a bad, bad spot.
Speaker BNone of it.
Speaker BAnd this is our family, man.
Speaker BWe want peace in our family.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean it's going to be perfect.
Speaker BWe want peace.
Speaker BAnd so I'm starting to try to rational with him.
Speaker BAnd so he's.
Speaker BHe's 10, you know, it's hard to rationalize with somebody that's 10.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut I can do that a lot better after I've connected than I can while he's still emotional.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker BSo I'm.
Speaker BI've connected now.
Speaker BI've corrected.
Speaker BAnd then I'm going, hey, can you.
Speaker BCan you.
Speaker BAnd I try something.
Speaker BThe next time that you.
Speaker BYou Start to feel that anger towards me or your mom or your brother, sister, whatever it is.
Speaker BCan you pause?
Speaker BJust take a pause?
Speaker BLike, and that's.
Speaker BAnd it doesn't have to be, like, in the same room.
Speaker BYou can go, and you can still be upset, but.
Speaker BBut instead of acting on it immediately, can.
Speaker BCan we pause?
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd he'll.
Speaker BI'll.
Speaker BI'll get about a 50 commitment out of him.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I would say even though he commits 50%, he probably practices 10.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBut, man, what.
Speaker BWhat gets praised gets repeated.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd when I praise him for something, he's going, oh, man, I did something good.
Speaker BAnd I love that feeling.
Speaker BI'm gonna go do it again.
Speaker BAnd so I try my best to.
Speaker BTo just.
Speaker BTo just encourage and praise him for the.
Speaker BIt may not even be 10, might be 1%.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd I live for the 1%.
Speaker BI live for him.
Speaker BI can't.
Speaker BAnd I. I have to look for it because sometimes it's not there, but I have to go, lord, show me where he's winning so that I can encourage that, so that it's repeatable over and over and over again.
Speaker BSo, yeah, that's.
Speaker BThat's where that came from.
Speaker BAnd it's.
Speaker BAgain, I'm not.
Speaker BNot perfect at it, but it's.
Speaker BIt's a practice.
Speaker BI have to.
Speaker BSometimes I have to write it down and put it in my pocket.
Speaker BSometimes it's.
Speaker BIt's written on the mirror in front of my bathroom sink so that I don't forget it.
Speaker ASo is that Celebrate peace?
Speaker AIs that something that, you know, like, I'm kind of reminded of in parenting?
Speaker AA lot of times you.
Speaker AWe forget this, but you should work as equally hard at catching them doing things right as you do catching them doing things wrong.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ASo when you think about the celebrate piece, you know, so you sit down, you connect with them, you.
Speaker AYou say, hey, next time can we try this?
Speaker AThe, the responsibility, though, on you is that you're attentive and you're paying attention because you've got to be present and engaged enough that you can see when he demonstrates what you've asked him to do.
Speaker ABecause that's when the celebration piece comes in.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIs that right?
Speaker BThat is right.
Speaker BAnd it's going to be different for every kid.
Speaker BSo you have to be a student of your kid to know what celebration even looks like.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BI can go get him a new toy.
Speaker BAnd he's going, of course I love a new toy.
Speaker BBut, man, his.
Speaker BHis love language is words of affirmation.
Speaker BWhen I affirm him, all of a sudden, he's not, he's not insecure anymore.
Speaker BHe's, he's.
Speaker BWe want our kids, we want to raise secure, independent kids that, that know that, that, that they can overcome anything.
Speaker BBut the reality is if they're insecure, then there's a lot of weaknesses and emotional responses there.
Speaker BBut like for Lucas specifically, the, the celebration is, is encouragement and words of affirmation.
Speaker BNow we, we will, we might, you know, we might.
Speaker BHey, you do that 10 times, we're gonna, we're gonna go somewhere big.
Speaker BWe're gonna do something.
Speaker BBut the reality is, man, he just wants to, he just wants me to affirm him.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think we all do, man.
Speaker BI'm, I, I'm a 42 year old man still looking for my dad to affirm me.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI read a book one time that said, man, we, we're all walking around with these, these signs, these invisible signs around our neck that says, I want to feel important.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BMake me feel important, you know?
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAll right, well, let's, let's wrap with.
Speaker AI got one more question for you and I'll, I'll maybe ask it in a couple ways, but just to get the frame of, frame of mind, right?
Speaker ASo think about the phase you're in today, but think about the couple of phases before.
Speaker ASo maybe, maybe back when Katie was pregnant, maybe you had a newborn or a toddler and Katie was pregnant or, or maybe all three kids were born, but they were still really young.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo some of those phases, when you, when you think back, what is something that you used to think was really important, but knowing what you know today is not nearly as important as you thought it was and, or whichever one you want to answer what is something that you didn't think was important, that looking back now you realize like that was.
Speaker AI should have done more of that.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BAgain, I don't know if this is the way the, the Lord wired me or if, if this is a product of my raising, but I, I, I desperately want to not fail.
Speaker BI'm an achiever.
Speaker BI, I don't want to fail.
Speaker BAnd I spent a large portion of my married life and, and with my kiddos trying to be perfect, you know, trying to be the dad that I didn't, that I didn't have.
Speaker BAnd I made that an idol.
Speaker BYou know, I, I'm going, man, I'm gonna get this right and I'm gonna, I'm gonna to a fault.
Speaker BAnd it made it, it made it not fun for My kids or my wife, for that matter.
Speaker BAnd so I.
Speaker BThat's not nearly as important as I thought, like, allowing myself the opportunity to.
Speaker BTo not be perfect, to.
Speaker BTo not be hard on myself and try to correct it, to not try to raise perfect kids.
Speaker BYou know, I. I put all those things on a pedestal and I. I thought those were important, but they're really not.
Speaker ASo I know you're about to say something else, but I just gotta ask a kind of a clarifying question here.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI'm so glad that this came up because one of the things that I've been kind of worried about as I've been doing these conversations is I don't want people to ever walk away from this with the misrepresentation that any of us have it figured out.
Speaker AIn fact, I. I try really hard to make sure that we talk about what's not going well equally is what's going well.
Speaker ABut when you say, like, I made that an idol, I want to be, like, really clear with other dads out there.
Speaker ACan you help me understand?
Speaker ALike, for someone that has maybe never considered that but.
Speaker ABut is maybe struggling with it, how would that manifest itself?
Speaker ALike, what does it look like to idolize being the dad on the white horse?
Speaker AWhat can.
Speaker AI mean, can you.
Speaker AWhat is it like?
Speaker AHow would you catch yourself?
Speaker ACan you think of any.
Speaker AA time where you were like, yeah, what was it?
Speaker BSo as you and I are, we have three.
Speaker BThree real roles.
Speaker BIt's father, husband, leader, or husband, father leader.
Speaker BThat's not an option.
Speaker BDoesn't mean you're going to do it well, but that's not an option.
Speaker BBut because of my background, I'm going, no, I'm going to do it right and well and perfect.
Speaker BPart of.
Speaker BPart of being a husband and a father is providing, even financially.
Speaker BAnd, man, I. I put it on myself to.
Speaker BTo do that at all costs.
Speaker BI mean, I will.
Speaker BI'll lose sleep.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI won't eat.
Speaker BI will hustle.
Speaker BI mean, I.
Speaker BWhen I say idol, I mean, I placed it above any and everything else and I lost why I was doing it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BDoes that make sense?
Speaker BSo, like, I fell in love with the process of trying to provide when I forgot who I was providing for.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANo, yeah.
Speaker AThat's exactly what I was asking.
Speaker AYeah, you get, you know, you get more hung up in.
Speaker AIn the romanticism of being the provider and the dad, and you lose sight of being the dad.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ALike, it almost makes you.
Speaker AIt makes you less present in the most meaningful parts of Fulfilling those roles.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AGood.
Speaker AWell, I probably derailed you, but you were going to say something else.
Speaker AI don't know if you remember.
Speaker BThat was what's not important.
Speaker BWhat is important is a relationship.
Speaker BSo being present, man, I.
Speaker BThe second year of our marriage, I was working so much.
Speaker BI was trying to get a business off the ground.
Speaker BAnd I was, you know, I had a real full time job and, um, I was flipping homes.
Speaker BI was just, I was doing anything and everything.
Speaker BAnd I.
Speaker BAnd I can remember Katie coming and she's crying or upset and we're, we're arguing.
Speaker BI was like, what do you want from me?
Speaker BI mean, I'm going out.
Speaker BI'm doing this for you.
Speaker BAnd she's like, I just want you and you're going.
Speaker BWell, I can't be both.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut the reality is, it's like, man, she.
Speaker BPeople don't expect as much from us as we think they do.
Speaker BThat's number one.
Speaker BBut number two is like, the more time that I spend away from my body, my kiddos and my wife, the less of a relationship that I have with them, man.
Speaker BI have all of my life to make money, if that's what I want to do or to try to, you know, seek the approval of men.
Speaker BI think I have, I have an issue with that sometimes where I. I'm even raising my kids so that, so that other people can approve that I've done a good job.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut the reality is, man, they don't care about any of that.
Speaker BThey just want me to be present.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd we talk about all the time, you know, Love is spelled T I M E. You got to spend time with people if you truly want to love them and if you expect love in return.
Speaker BRelationships are hard and difficult.
Speaker BBut the reality is there's no shortcuts.
Speaker BYou have to spend time, and there's no amount of money or achievement that you can, that you can gain.
Speaker BThat would, that would take the place of that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd so that is important.
Speaker BI didn't think it was as important as it is.
Speaker BAnd as I'm getting older and as I'm running out of Runway, especially with Cambry, man, she'll be.
Speaker BShe'll be driving in two and a half years, and then, you know, another year and a half, two years after that, she'll be out of school.
Speaker BAnd you're going, man, what?
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BIt seemed like you were born yesterday.
Speaker BLike, I'm running out of time.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI can always go make money and I can always achieve things.
Speaker BBut like, man, I. I really have to focus on the relationship.
Speaker BAnd so that's the part that I didn't think was as important as it really is.
Speaker AMan, that's good.
Speaker AYeah, I.
Speaker ASomething that's really been resonating with me is just this concept of.
Speaker AAs I've interviewed folks with young kids and teenage kids and then empty nesters and then grandparents.
Speaker AOne thing I've been trying to figure out is what does it look like to create a.
Speaker AA youth environment, like a household environment, but then ultimately that creates stability so that your kids want to come back home when they leave.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ABecause, you know, we know a lot of families who seem at the surface to have good households and successful kids and all of these things, and then when they leave, there's not much of a relationship with the parents anymore.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AFor whatever reason, maybe they were pushed too hard or they were, you know what.
Speaker AWhatever.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd that's one of the things I'm really trying to focus on right now is like, man, what can I be doing so that my kids want to have a relationship with me when they leave?
Speaker A100%, you know, and this.
Speaker AThis saying that keeps coming back to me is, you know, love is spelled T, M, E. You have to make.
Speaker AIf you don't make time for your kids now, they won't make time for you later.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd that's just incredibly convicting for me.
Speaker AAnd that's kind of what I'm sitting with constantly, is I have to make time for them now if I expect them to make time for me later.
Speaker BAnd quality time.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOn top of that.
Speaker BSo I. I would.
Speaker BMan, I'm.
Speaker BI am deathly afraid that I've wasted a lot of time.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BNot spending time so that they want to spend time with me later.
Speaker BBut the reality is, like, I want to be present, but I want it to be quality as well.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo a lot of times I'm going, I'm doing this.
Speaker BI'm here, I'm here, I'm here.
Speaker BBut, man, if they don't.
Speaker BIf they don't value what you're doing while you're there, you're just there.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BIt doesn't really matter.
Speaker BAnd so I asked Katie the same thing the other day.
Speaker BI was like, hey, at the end of this life, and I ponder life a lot, but into this life, like, how are you going to know whether or not it was successful?
Speaker BWhat's going to be the key driver for you to go, yeah, that was a successful life.
Speaker BAnd she goes, man, if I'm 90 years old and my kids still want to come and hang out with me.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BI got a lot of catching up to do, man.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, hey, I know I said that was going to be the last question, but you just reminded me of something I want to make sure we talk about just real quick.
Speaker AThis has been fun to explore with a couple of the other dads.
Speaker AFamily vacation.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AYou guys do.
Speaker AWe're kind of similar in this.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe do big road trips.
Speaker AYou guys do big road trips.
Speaker AJust real quick.
Speaker AWhitney and I, I don't know that we'll ever figure out.
Speaker AMaybe it constantly changes as your kids progress, but one of the things that we kind of wrestle with is success, quote, unquote, successful family trips.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AAnd it's the balance of planning, but also space to be spontaneous.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ASo my question to you is really just like, could you just share with me what have you guys found to be successful when you do your family trips from a structure standpoint?
Speaker AYou know, do you.
Speaker ADo you guys have y' all figured out, like, for you guys what works really well and what doesn't work really well?
Speaker ALike, just whatever you want to say there?
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BNo, we're still figuring it out.
Speaker BAnd in.
Speaker BThe reality is that I'm going to go back to that saying and we got to be a constant student of my kiddos and my spouse because we're all changing.
Speaker BAnd what we did in our camping trips six years ago, it's not the same as what we did.
Speaker BAnd if it was, like, they wouldn't enjoy it.
Speaker BAnd so we're constantly, like, pushing the envelope and going, like, are they old enough to take that 10 mile hike?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BLet's.
Speaker BLet's just try and see, you know, and.
Speaker BAnd so we're, we're.
Speaker BWe're constantly trying to figure out what is new.
Speaker BNow there's things that we try and they go and we, we go, yeah, we're not doing that again.
Speaker BThat was awful.
Speaker BThat was.
Speaker BBut the reality is, is, man, and I'll say to you again, like, just don't quit.
Speaker BYeah, go, go.
Speaker BNumber one, you know, have a goal, go on family vacations.
Speaker BNumber two, make a plan.
Speaker BBut number three, freaking execute the plan.
Speaker BGo do the thing.
Speaker BAnd, and who cares if it fails?
Speaker BThe reality is, man, like, y' all are going to fail together.
Speaker BAnd there's going to be some good stuff that comes out of it, and there's going to be some not so good stuff.
Speaker BBut we're just trying our best to create memorable moments with our Kids, even if that's trials and adversity that were.
Speaker BThat are.
Speaker BThat are the most memorable at the time.
Speaker BBut it's going to come with the good and the bad.
Speaker BBut we hadn't figured it out.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut we're not quitters either.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIt's funny.
Speaker AI'll just kind of close with this.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AAs I think about my most memorable family, like vacations, it's almost the strongest memories in my mind.
Speaker AOr when something went terribly wrong.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker AAnd I don't mean that, like, in a traumatic way.
Speaker AI just mean if we went to Disney World for three days, I'm sure that in that 72 period hour period of time, I had a ton of fun.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut what I remember is like, I don't know, my mom tripping and falling on something and almost breaking her arm.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's funny just because then we had to figure out, like, where's the first aid station?
Speaker ALet's get mom doctored up and all of those things.
Speaker AAnd, you know, you just never know what your kids are going to hang on to.
Speaker ABut to your point, the trials, the adversity, it's.
Speaker AIt's the core memories that are important.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAll right, well, hey, as we wrap up, just to those of you that are listening, the number one thing you can do to support us right now is just share this content with other people that you think might benefit from it.
Speaker AIt's the whole reason we're doing this.
Speaker AWe're just trying to create a community where dads can get together and talk about life, what's working and what's not working.
Speaker AAnd the biggest way you can support us right now is just sharing this with people that you think might be interested.
Speaker ASo appreciate you listening, like, subscribe all those things on whatever platforms.
Speaker AAnd David, thank you so much for coming on, man.
Speaker BIt's been a pleasure.
Speaker BThanks for having me.
Speaker AAll right, brother.
Speaker ASee you.
Speaker ASee you, Sam.