Matt:

Hello friends.

Matt:

Welcome to the optimist podcast today.

Matt:

I'm your host, Matt drank on and today on the podcast we have Mr.

Matt:

Les McDaniel less.

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Here's a little background on him.

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He's an amazing human he's.

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48 years of age, 27 years married to his lovely wife.

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Heatherly four children and a bonus son-in-law.

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He's very competitive.

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I first met him at the front row dads event at one of our retreats

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He's also in the exchange community as facility.

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And less is such an incredible human being and this discussion we're going

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He is someone who's truly overcome many challenges.

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Some of those challenges, if you can imagine he was a boy growing up

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at all right there, uh, he is, uh, not as tall as the average human.

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So he grew up shorter, a little bit smaller with the name of last, but just

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No, there was opportunities with bullies and school and he Chronicles

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Also, his wife had a

Les:

stroke that was an incredibly challenging time in both their lives and

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how they came back together from that he Chronicles

Les:

Um, one thing that you should know about less.

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He's a very humble person.

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So he won't talk about himself with great accolades.

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And I will, I will gladly share a couple of his accolades

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He was involved in largest corporate real estate deals in

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This is back in Texas, a number of years ago.

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And so we had massive success in real estate.

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He also now, uh, is a coach now and I'll lead you to his website

Matt:

Last is just an amazing

Les:

human being.

Les:

He's a, he's a

Matt:

great person to listen to channel.

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Because he's got a great, a great heart for loving, caring about

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If you can name the problem, understand the solution.

Matt:

He likes to ask a lot of questions to get to understand exactly what it is

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When you're having cases.

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Make something of it.

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The less is someone doesn't sit still.

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He likes to continue to take positive action towards and whatever it is,

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He Chronicles his story today in the podcast.

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He's always open.

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He's always willing to be curious.

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So get ready and Buckley your seats in for a shallow dive.

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At first, it gets deep, fast in this discussion.

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This is a truly amazing human being.

Matt:

I love very much things, less McDaniel.

Matt:

Welcome.

Les:

Hello, and welcome to the eternal optimist podcast.

Les:

The show for optimists by optimist.

Les:

This is the show for people who see the good in the world and want to make

Les:

Each week, you'll hear inspiring stories that will get you thinking

Les:

Coach Matt drink on

Matt:

my friend Les McDaniel.

Matt:

Good morning.

Matt:

Less.

Les:

Good morning, sir.

Les:

How are you coping?

Matt:

We are fantastic today.

Matt:

It is great to have you on, I've been looking forward to this for some time.

Matt:

You're one of my favorite people in the universe.

Matt:

So no pressure.

Matt:

Uh, let's have a good time today.

Matt:

How the heck are you today?

Matt:

My friends,

Les:

I am.

Les:

I'm doing pretty well today.

Les:

You know, life is, life is just a, a wonderful rollercoaster ride that I enjoy.

Les:

I just, I I'm finding ways to find joy in almost all circumstances

Les:

Ah, ah, well,

Matt:

you're too kind.

Matt:

I'd love to dive a little bit deeper.

Matt:

Just kind of get right into it right away.

Matt:

When you say that you're finding joy and you're able to find

Matt:

What's an

Les:

example.

Les:

Oh my goodness.

Les:

There's so many different examples, but I think that we live in a world that

Les:

dualities it's good and bad or right versus wrong or joy versus sadness.

Les:

And there's this.

Les:

Struggle that I think that our world has, and that I'm dealing with in my

Les:

You know, I've just recently kind of discovered that some of the,

Les:

And yet there's, there's a, not a resistance in me to wanting to

Les:

her, her cancer, to really begin to dive into what that looks like.

Les:

Well, we're jumping right in aren't we, but, uh, I'll tell you that one of the, I

Les:

He has this saying that is all suffering is showing you, is

Les:

And the idea for me is very much that that is a deep rooted thing within me,

Les:

feel sad or I'm suffering and it's, and you can even be suffering in.

Les:

Honestly, but anytime I feel that what is really going on deep within

Les:

this idea of what life should be, as opposed to the reality that is present

Les:

You know, we have a lot of things going on, besides that we got, you know, my,

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And he's the last of my four kids to leave the nest, uh, this.

Les:

And there's this sense of excitement that comes along with

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So it's like, there's both of these things walking hand in hand at all times

Les:

It's always letting go of something in order to gain some.

Les:

And so I think the joy for me is living kind of as best as I can.

Les:

And, and in perfectly with an open hand, not with closed fist, tightly held so

Les:

that I think I should have, but just being open to what, what is ever next.

Les:

And, and it is, it is a, you know, it's literally like a roller

Les:

the top of that roller coaster and you start to grip onto the rail.

Les:

And then there's a sense of you finally, you get over that hump and the joy comes

Les:

your hands lift up in the air and feel that joy of that freedom, just that free

Les:

I know that every feels that way about it.

Matt:

So you went deep, fast, less.

Matt:

Uh, wow.

Matt:

I didn't even ask the question about what are the challenges

Matt:

You just went straight into one and, uh, thanks for sharing that with this.

Les:

That's where joy is.

Les:

So how else could I describe it?

Les:

You know,

Matt:

Well, I think that a lot of people that might be a foreign concept of,

Matt:

This is something that has a potential for a lot of pain.

Matt:

It is a lot of pain.

Matt:

When you say your wife and you say cancer, you know, that certainly brings

Matt:

It feels painful.

Matt:

And even to even talk about that and your next statement afterwards is

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the joy in things, you know, I'd love to just back up for a second since

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it, man, but let's back up a second and I'd love to outline some of these

Matt:

What they've taught you and how you've gotten to this place where

Matt:

So could you back up for a second and share with us, what are some

Matt:

Let's kind of deconstruct what they've taught you and how you've maintained joy

Les:

throughout th I mean, it is a deep subject and, and I really I've

Les:

If you will.

Les:

For quite some time.

Les:

And it's so it's, it's really kind of hard, especially considering that

Les:

come into a group of guys that have just been really supportive of me,

Les:

That's another group of guys has been incredibly supportive to me.

Les:

My life has it.

Les:

Hasn't been a.

Les:

Cherries or whatever, whatever the great sayings are that it's always easy.

Les:

I've been very blessed, but it's blessed because of how I think I've

Les:

pursuit of how I want to see the world versus what maybe is really playing

Les:

I've never been.

Les:

Um, even as a kid, I should say I was never someone who

Les:

I was, I was born into this world, a runt named Leslie that's where, that's, where,

Matt:

that's, where it began right there.

Matt:

I mean,

Les:

you, you know, you are born and you're the smallest kid in your

Les:

gear you're on the first day of school, your teacher says Leslie

Les:

And then, you know, it's less, it's less and like less, as much better.

Les:

I mean, that's the complete opposite of more and, you know, big, it's not

Les:

that it created in me a deep curiosity around people and how to navigate

Les:

And so I learned how to befriend them.

Les:

I learned how to, how to connect.

Les:

Each and every person that was in my world and how to, how to survive and

Les:

Um, probably more out of, I was able to take the jokes first and foremost.

Les:

And then I learned how to start to create a world where I could make people laugh.

Les:

My teachers laugh.

Les:

I was kind of the class clown that they loved, but it also

Les:

You know, I had, I had some, uh, I've had many times where I was raised in

Les:

Very literally I really felt deep down in my soul that we were supposed to live

Les:

And at that time, that's all I really knew was this particular way

Les:

would ask questions and I would, and they were the, you know, basically.

Les:

W why is it that homeless guy coming to church with us?

Les:

And why isn't that homeless guy?

Les:

Our neighbor shouldn't we love him too.

Les:

And, or I would just try to understand people and why they would do

Les:

And, and I would know people that were, seemed really good on the outside,

Les:

That sounded like.

Les:

Yeah, but they, they kind of have to do certain things and

Les:

Well, that made me a target too.

Les:

You know, that made me a little bit of a target because I was always trying to

Les:

And, and when it felt like no

Matt:

less, if you could, if I could interrupt you for a sec, when you say

Matt:

where there was a bully or where you were a target, uh, something that maybe the

Matt:

Can you describe

Les:

that?

Les:

I'm trying to, let me see if I can go back in way back.

Matt:

And for those of you listening right now, Les, he is not that old.

Matt:

I believe less helped you.

Matt:

You're right.

Matt:

About 45 right now.

Matt:

I

Les:

believe I appreciate that.

Les:

48 48.

Les:

I don't know.

Les:

Let me see if I can go.

Les:

I haven't thought about one.

Les:

That goes way back.

Les:

You know, I, I, there were many times in my life where I found myself

Les:

I do have one, I do have one, you know, one of my good friends, one of my best

Les:

he thought it would really be a good idea to get in a fight with a guy who was a

Les:

And in the wonderful west Texas town of Abilene.

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You know, I was like, what in the world are you doing?

Les:

And so I knew what we were getting into.

Les:

I knew this guy, I knew who was going to be showing up to this fight.

Les:

And I'm like, I'm going to go with you and we're not going to end up fighting.

Les:

I showed up.

Les:

And, you know, I looked at the situation and I saw one guy over here who's, uh,

Les:

which was just like hilarious that he thought he was hiding it, several

Les:

And I, I just literally looked at all of these guys and I'm like, guys, here's the.

Les:

None of this is going to go down for the good for anyone.

Les:

You know, you, this got you, who's got your gun, you're gonna pull it out.

Les:

And then what you're going to, you're going to kill shoot.

Les:

And over what two guys who are just trying to settle this something that's

Les:

And the irony of it was is that I was both the friends of these guys that were

Les:

And I was also the friends with this other, my best friend, you know?

Les:

And

Matt:

how did the gang quasi gangsters take it when you said this?

Matt:

Like, what are they looking like

Les:

right now, when I appealed to reason, literally they, they were,

Les:

You know, I guess that makes sense.

Les:

Uh, in the end, there was some yelling, there was some screaming that

Les:

and nobody fought, nobody swung a punch in it and it looks that way.

Les:

And I would put myself in that place pretty regularly.

Les:

And in defense of not just the person, like my, it wasn't

Les:

It was about all of us in that moment.

Les:

And I mean, looking back it's like, that was just stupid.

Les:

Right?

Les:

It was like, why would you show up to a gang fight where there are

Matt:

I mean, maybe you're you're, you're young, you're in high school.

Matt:

You, you have this idealism.

Matt:

You want to stand up for people to stand up for the little guys, stand up for your

Matt:

So you had this huge heart and you want to do good.

Matt:

Let's keep moving.

Matt:

So you go through high school.

Matt:

We, we, I get a sense of who you are as a human.

Matt:

Uh, you've got a huge heart.

Matt:

Are some of the challenges that are coming in the next decade of

Les:

I mean, twenties, you know, I was a good Christian kid.

Les:

I'd kind of conformed a lot of things.

Les:

You know, I was, I was this kid who had actually, when I, and I

Les:

And so I've been married 27 years now or almost 20.

Les:

So.

Les:

I had an amazing world with her, but, and we were very involved in

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And literally I remember knocking on some of the people's doors when they wouldn't

Les:

having this kind of gentle conversation about don't forsake the assembly

Les:

That's pretty hilarious and conservative, but, but still within me was this reading

Les:

And as I started to do that, we started to work with people that were.

Les:

But at the same time my wife was pregnant.

Les:

We had a pregnant drug addict who moved in with us and we helped her, you know,

Les:

and just, just being there for helping her get into a house at one point.

Les:

And you know, all of it was, it was good and it was meaningful.

Les:

There was all the, a lot of things around that that were just unique

Les:

was not necessarily always the way that I thought, or should it be.

Les:

Uh, versus the reality, which was that, you know, you, when you

Les:

Like you hope it doesn't mean that they're going to flip a switch and all

Les:

to the way that we think that I think it should look what social standards

Les:

And it was just, that was one of the many conversations that I've had over the years

Les:

And learning how to love people and realizing that some of their choices don't

Les:

of products of our, of our upbringing, of our circumstances and that it's not easy.

Les:

And that, and in that it, it started to well up in me, like, what does

Les:

What does it mean to love our neighbors, to love our enemies?

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Like, what does this, what does all this mean to really begin to love people no

Les:

And I, and I was radical in some ways about that and very defensive of those

Les:

And it's just such a deep thing for me that that, uh, has been a problem in my

Les:

to be in, in many ways, looked at like that those who are underrepresented.

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And I don't like that because I, I, my family and, you know, it, it would be

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I want to love this other person.

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That's out here on the fringes and bring them into our home.

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And my parents be like, well, we don't want them here for

Les:

That's not what.

Les:

And it's not that they aren't loving or wanting to be that for those

Les:

breaks them out of their mold of what it's supposed to, they have created,

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And it's always messy, you know, the way it has been for many once in my life.

Les:

And it drove me to actually go back and get my masters of divinity at

Les:

so tired of feeling like I was this odd ball and how I was viewing things.

Les:

That was good.

Les:

And amazing and empowering.

Les:

And at the same time, it just created a, uh, in many ways, a greater

Les:

cause it, it literally was like, yes, we are supposed to live this way.

Les:

Or we have the opportunity to live this way.

Les:

It's not the way we were supposed to.

Les:

We can be those who provide that in the world.

Matt:

Sounds to me like you are in this time in your life and your twenties,

Matt:

And I say still because you still have it today too.

Matt:

Like, this is, this is the core theme of you is love.

Matt:

Is.

Matt:

And even when this ideal of love is something that others around you that

Matt:

see it, the exact same frame, you're willing to be uncomfortable because

Matt:

And this presented challenges because others don't see it, the same frame that.

Les:

And, and I'm, I'm just willing to be curious.

Les:

I mean, I think, I think I've just, I don't know who it was

Les:

That there's nothing that I can do to shape God, to change God or to change

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call this source that, that has of all things, this thing that does what it does.

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And I can't break that.

Les:

And, and the more that I, I felt free to do that, the more, it, it

Les:

It just is what it made me feel like, because I curiosity often made,

Les:

the, you know, we, we, as humans, we want to be, we want to believe.

Les:

We want that space of feeling like we belong somewhere.

Les:

And when, when we start building that belonging around belief systems

Les:

changing, it creates a little bit of uncertainty that we don't want.

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We want to be certain about this afterlife thing or whatever it might be.

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And we're willing to forgo even happiness now, which is the most

Les:

For an eternity in heaven, for lack of a better word, this is sounding awful,

Les:

everything is spiritual my book, but I don't mean to be religious in this.

Les:

This is life like that.

Les:

The essence of life is, is fundamentally grounded in our ability to understand

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And when we start to think that there is some way for us to capture a secure.

Les:

In some form of understanding of God or defining God or a defining community

Les:

ourselves and others from what it truly means to be human, to be truly

Les:

I mean, we do this in all sorts of ways.

Les:

I mean, look at the west compared to the east, you know, we call the east

Les:

dogmatically entrepreneurial driven to success and driven to these other things.

Les:

These are all related to this very question of, you know, what

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And, and when we are, the more we separate ourselves into the mindset of creating

Les:

around certain practices, the more we start to create a world that separates.

Les:

From the fullness that of joy that we really want to experience.

Les:

I'll give you one example of one more example.

Les:

Like when I want to, when I seek security and I build up walls around myself

Les:

you know, all these things, the first thing that I have to do is I have to set

Les:

I need to arm myself and I need to find ways to get.

Les:

To maintain that security.

Les:

That's not, that's not security.

Les:

That that means I'm insecure.

Les:

It means that I have to have all these things in order to be okay.

Les:

And so it's the very thing that when we create that security that we think we

Les:

are embracing the fullness of insecurity because now we don't want to lose it.

Les:

Where is that holding on tight to the things that we, that we

Les:

That's suffering.

Les:

We create it's minor and it may be luxuriously suffering.

Les:

It may be all sorts of things, but it's still suffering because we have

Matt:

Well, I'm following everything and I'm jumping from

Matt:

And I'm trying to figure out, you know, how I'm suffering

Matt:

I don't want to lose.

Matt:

Right.

Matt:

Uh, and, uh, but I don't have all the, you know, the, the heavy artillery

Matt:

So part of me wants to have a divergent thought here, but I'm not sure how to

Matt:

I feel like if love is what you're seeking, are you telling me that

Matt:

And that is something that, because we're seeking love, we're suffering.

Matt:

I

Les:

think that I think it's a, it's more long and, and I'm thinking in an

Les:

the only way to really capture the full essence of something is in extremes.

Les:

If I have a stranglehold on my wife and I won't let her out of my sight and I

Les:

Is that meaning if I, if I'm, if I'm so bent on being it, being secure in my, my

Les:

when I can be trusting and I can let that go and I can let my wife be who she is

Les:

to see eye to eye on every single thing that's going on in my world, but still be

Les:

our differences, or maybe because of our differences and allow that to flourish,

Les:

We experienced this in front row dads, you know, it's this idea

Les:

And it's our ability to sit with one another, despite our

Les:

Now, imagine if we started to raise up I ideas or ideologies around front

Les:

The moment that we start doing that is the moment that we actually start

Les:

And, or we're in, we're starting to huddle around certain

Les:

And we're always trying to create boxes around that so that we can find ways

Les:

being, and that's not free, that's not loving, it's loving is, is the

Matt:

So let me reign it back in here to summarize what I've just feel that

Matt:

And being open to what's happening next and the whatever's coming yes.

Matt:

And be inclusive with that.

Matt:

Love can take any form, you know, and I, I appreciate the way that

Matt:

Cause love to look this way to some person over here.

Matt:

It could be, uh, you know, being very close and, and having that the, the

Matt:

the time, it can be very tight like that, or it can be very open and what

Matt:

It can be any way.

Matt:

For anyone.

Matt:

So it's it's curiosity.

Matt:

It's yes.

Les:

So just to differentiate a little bit on that is that I think that the idea of

Les:

and we have to place our identity in it, and it actually keeps someone else

Les:

I wouldn't call that the definition of love.

Les:

In fact, that's what we would call abuse and most, most relationship.

Les:

When we, when it's now the texting back and forth and the, you know, the intimacy

Les:

But it's when we start having a stranglehold on something, when we

Les:

and the, and the, and the way that somebody else does and lives this life.

Les:

That we, it gets on the edge of first and foremost, not loving ourselves

Les:

not able to love ourselves or see ourselves outside of something that

Les:

And it keeps us from truly expressing that fullness of what it means to, to be.

Les:

Forgiveness caring for one another in compassion.

Les:

And I think we just have to be careful in our world of, and this is why we have

Les:

Matt, is that, you know, we, we have this idea that it has to be, everything

Les:

And then everybody has their definition of what that looks like.

Les:

And that's not very loving and we can see that play out.

Les:

And the way things happened on January 6th of what was it, 20, which happens to

Les:

But you know what, at the Capitol where, where people are raising up and ready

Les:

about that, that's built on ideologies belief systems as though we know.

Les:

And there's just this level, there's this place in our world where we, we begin

Les:

everything and we don't have all the answers and that it's going to be messy.

Les:

And my marriage is going to have ups and downs.

Les:

We're going to fight and then we need to forgive and then we need to have intimacy.

Les:

And then we need to, you know, and we have this cycle of things.

Les:

And over time that begins to that's freedom.

Les:

It's the freedom for it to go to all the different places.

Les:

It needs to go in order for it to continue to grow and be, and,

Les:

I mean, I think you would probably agree with.

Les:

I want my wife to be happy.

Les:

And if I ever am in the reason why she is not truly able to find joy

Les:

her in any way, at least for me, I want, I want her to be free from me.

Les:

I want her to be free to be able to leave.

Les:

And it's in that where the excitement and joy of life comes.

Les:

That's the rollercoaster ride.

Les:

It's the, I don't know if this is going to be able to be.

Les:

It's the uncertainty of is this, is this gonna go off the rails?

Les:

That's where true life happens.

Les:

It's in that tension between the, what, you know, the good and the bad.

Matt:

So in that tension between the good and the bad, where love

Matt:

happen, what you are sharing in your message overall, is that in that space?

Matt:

Of that duality.

Matt:

That's where life is.

Matt:

That's where the true joy can be found.

Matt:

And there's going to be sadness too.

Matt:

You're going to have both, there's no middle ground that we should be seeking.

Matt:

We should be able to accept that joy or that sadness and live

Les:

life with love.

Les:

And this is where the challenge comes in seeking the middle ground is

Les:

How can we fall into this place of recognizing the, the, I don't knows

Les:

everything we think we know, you know, I, man, I, you know, I'm trying to.

Les:

Practical example.

Les:

And yet it gets really hairy, which is part of the challenge of being that I've

Matt:

It sounds like it.

Matt:

Cause you've gone pretty deep.

Les:

Yeah, no, I mean, I do.

Les:

I've told you, I don't, I don't, I don't know how to swim in shallow waters.

Les:

I really have struggled with that.

Matt:

Well, let's, let's bring it back to something you shared.

Matt:

That was very, I mean, potential for a great emotion in the very beginning.

Matt:

I mean, it kind of got me welled up thinking about the first thing that

Matt:

you were talking about this challenge of finding out your wife has cancer

Matt:

Now we'd never talked about before.

Matt:

I'd love to, if you're comfortable with it, I'd love to kind of dive into that.

Matt:

What are we facing right now with that?

Matt:

What's the challenge and what's, what's it teaching an analysts

Les:

on the one hand, I have to recognize that, you know, it's not

Les:

And so when I say this and I'm talking about.

Les:

There are some very real emotions that she may not be in the same

Les:

She's got challenges.

Les:

And yet she's got some comforts around that, that I don't have.

Les:

So, you know, my, my way of dealing with this is, is honestly to just be listening.

Les:

And I know that she has struggled deeply with this.

Les:

And thankfully, this is not a death sentence.

Les:

This is chronic myeloid.

Les:

Leukemia is something that is very treatable.

Les:

It's a bone marrow situation where.

Les:

Can make all sorts of pain and inflammation occur.

Les:

And so she's just been in a lot of pain.

Les:

And this is after in 2016, having had a stroke.

Les:

And so she's no, we are together.

Les:

We are no strangers to suffering.

Les:

She has had her share of the one who's dealt with it mostly physically, and which

Les:

But when it comes to how this has played out is.

Les:

Which is a funny thing to say as well after the stroke we saw what

Les:

We saw how life's curriculum transition for us into what

Les:

And it drew us closer.

Les:

It's helped her appreciate the, um, the goodness of life in ways that.

Les:

I think a lot of people miss when they, when everything seems to be easy,

Les:

going well, she is incredibly driven by health herself and always has been.

Les:

And I mean, I remember when she woke up from the stroke, for example, the first

Les:

What was the question of, what did I do?

Les:

She had a stroke and her first questions are, what did I do wrong?

Les:

And I think that we live in a world where there's this perception that we have to

Les:

And that there's some particular right way to live life.

Les:

And that when we experience something that is like suffering or consequences

Les:

wrong rather than just understanding that life, life just has kind of got

Matt:

When she asks you that question, I

Les:

just, I just got up and hugged her and was just thrilled to hear her voice

Les:

It was like five in the morning.

Les:

And so I think there was just an appreciation.

Les:

So I just told her, man, you did nothing wrong.

Les:

You have no idea why this is occurred and we're going to figure it out and

Les:

And we did, and it was a journey.

Les:

And it's the same thing now, you know, so there's a lot of, a lot

Les:

And there is no right path and you can always change your path.

Les:

You can always decide to do a different type of treatment.

Les:

And, and so she wants to, I think, but that comes, that's

Les:

And there's this stigma of suffering and this stigma.

Les:

Prices and things that happen in our world that our news makes.

Les:

So, I mean, really think about how much the media makes such a big deal

Les:

in our world to the nth degree, because for the sake of entertainment,

Les:

And it's fear of dying.

Les:

It's fear of sickness, it's fear of suffering and all these things,

Les:

those things, they tell us what we're supposed to believe about them.

Les:

They tell us what the outcomes are supposed.

Les:

And when you're in it, though, you have to start shutting those voices off and

Les:

You know, did I do something wrong?

Les:

Is there something more to this that's going on?

Les:

Is there something about this that there's a lesson in?

Les:

And so we've just been seeking those lessons and they're, they're not easy.

Les:

And some days, you know, it's miserable and other days it's, it's incredible.

Les:

Last night had an incredible joyful moment.

Les:

In terms of just talking about how, how, like every single experience

Les:

represent health for her and, and her sickness represents our own sickness.

Les:

When we start to get outside of our individual selves, when we stop, we

Les:

Right.

Les:

That I get to do no matter what, at all costs I succeed, I will win.

Les:

I will.

Les:

All the things that we sometimes get focused on in the west that very masculine

Les:

And we need both of those things.

Les:

And so she represents for us that nurturing side.

Les:

Yeah, I am now living into the nurturing for her caring for, and that's not

Les:

And in that moment, when I'm healthy, she's able to highlight that and

Les:

how you are currently expressing your health and your journey.

Les:

And it's in that full picture that she doesn't feel alone, that she

Les:

that she feels, and I feel supported because I get to support her and him.

Les:

It's that expression of, of our oneness as, as humans, that when we can begin

Les:

whole human being and a whole oneness, something beyond human being is where we

Matt:

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Matt:

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Matt:

Well less, you've gone, uh, as expected.

Matt:

You've gotten super deep.

Matt:

I think we're way down here in the Mariana's trench.

Matt:

We're in the deepest waters known to humankind right now.

Matt:

Uh, I'd love to bring it back up.

Matt:

Let's let's come back up to, uh, to, to the level just a

Matt:

And I love to ask you about, as you're finding all these challenges with all your

Matt:

uh, and now recently the cancer, how are you responding, reacting, leading as.

Matt:

And this time, I mean, how do you keep up, you know, the face or the attitude

Les:

I'm real.

Les:

I mean, when it sucks, it sucks.

Les:

And when I make mistakes as a result of being caught up in my own emotion

Les:

And I, I, I really do believe that we exist for the purposes of creating a

Les:

Colors of chaos and mixing them on the pallet of life for the purpose

Les:

And it's that essence of love and forgiveness that creates

Les:

And the chaos is like the chaos is the colors is a real key to this.

Les:

When we are having those cattle moments, it's an opportunity

Les:

I get stuck in it.

Les:

And I drown in the pink colors, but to really be able to find ways

Les:

It's like a seed falls from a tree and dies so that it can

Les:

Another tree and fire burns up things.

Les:

And then in its place, it is the thing, the fertilizer for the next thing to grow.

Les:

And that's the that's what is nature.

Les:

And we have within us, we have that with.

Matt:

I want to highlight something you just shared here for our audience.

Matt:

And I took a note here when we're having chaos, make something of it.

Matt:

Uh, I love that.

Matt:

I think that that's, that's amazing.

Matt:

So whenever things are getting thrown at you a hundred miles an hour and they're

Matt:

challenging thing, or it's the easiest thing, whatever it is, it's thrown at

Les:

something.

Les:

And, and I'll.

Les:

And so I'm going to get real about myself right now, because I think that that's

Les:

Sometimes I, I get it all the time and it's honestly, one of the things

Les:

I'm not saying it in a special way.

Les:

I I've asked.

Les:

I've been.

Les:

God and source or whatever, to remove the way that I think about

Les:

Like, let me just be a white 48 year old middle-class male

Les:

I don't care.

Les:

It would go either direction.

Les:

Just, just make it simple for me so that I can just cling to something

Les:

And it puts me in a place where I feel I have felt alone.

Les:

It is, it has created trauma from me from a perspective of being in business

Les:

someone who, who really wants to push the limits of love and, and open the

Les:

And I have often felt like.

Les:

Very alone and all that.

Les:

And, uh, some of my own traumas and the challenges that I

Les:

I mean, sometimes, you know, the way I see the world drives her insane

Les:

So let me tell you a story and, you know, blah, blah, blah.

Les:

I mean, I am learning to embrace this side of me in a way that has been challenging.

Les:

I think that there are a ton of people in our world who desire to be able to

Les:

they've been put in and the core of my being, that's what I want so desperately.

Les:

And yet I also am afraid.

Les:

I'm afraid of continually standing outside, looking in on people who

Les:

And look right and successful and, and all these things.

Les:

And I'm afraid that I can't make a living doing it.

Les:

And I'm afraid that all, like all those things still play out in my own.

Les:

I mean, th this is the reason that I exist.

Les:

I exist for the purpose.

Les:

I believe of just of, of showing people that they can be free to be who they are.

Les:

And that means that the most limiting belief that someone

Les:

And it is true for me too.

Les:

And others have, have maybe seen a bigger picture.

Les:

That truth or that belief that some of us have, uh, about whatever it is,

Les:

I just want to be able to help people expand that picture in such a way

Les:

of life experience, more joy, not to get caught in the lines of dogma.

Les:

That simply say, if you are suffering, if you are poor, if you are broken,

Les:

I want to help people to see the chaos that they're feeling and help

Les:

the life that they want from that, because that is so valid and so

Matt:

You want to help them.

Matt:

You exist to show people they can be free.

Matt:

You want to help them see that they can be free of this.

Matt:

They can be in chaos and be free of those shacks.

Matt:

What are you doing yourself to free yourself from this?

Matt:

Cause it seems like something that you definitely struggled with yourself.

Matt:

How are you freeing yourself?

Matt:

Or what's the process you're using to work on freeing yourself less?

Les:

Well, curiosity continues to be my key for one.

Les:

It is working with people and coaches and other plant-based substances

Les:

I'm just willing to go down any path that is available that is represented by love.

Les:

Like the only we'll call it law.

Les:

Dogma, if you will, is that it has to, it, it has to be.

Les:

It has to be with an intent of, of something bigger than myself and,

Les:

they are someone who's not just, I'm not just hiring them to fill their

Les:

recognize that they are in this for the greater good of all, when I can

Les:

And I can start to listen to other people's stories.

Les:

Th then literally the name of my company is epic fusion.

Les:

It's where our stories become fused together.

Les:

And when stories are fused together, when my suffering is fused with

Les:

feels lighter and energetically, it puts off light, literal light.

Les:

It helps other people begin to see their story as valid and good

Les:

And so when we can do that with one another and what I do that

Les:

It's why I'm a part of front row dads, because when I'm with you guys, All of

Les:

where I'm at with my kids and being about to be an empty nester, it's in service

Les:

It's allowing me to help other dads realize that this thing that they feel

Les:

them, them to find incredible joy and love and grow closer to their kids rather

Les:

to manipulate and control the situation for their own, for them to feel like,

Les:

No man.

Les:

It's like, let's get this shit messy.

Les:

Let's understand that life is just messy.

Les:

And it's fun in that, that state.

Les:

I mean, there's a reason why we do things like the tough Mudder and run hard

Les:

Cause that's where, that's where the essence of life is for us.

Matt:

Yes.

Matt:

It feels like the environment you're creating or the environment you seek

Matt:

were a part of is an environment where, uh, curiosity is championed, uh, where

Matt:

Look a certain way.

Matt:

Open curious towards some vision, some purpose.

Matt:

And if the purpose is say, it's front row dads or the purposes, you know how you

Matt:

when we're in alignment and purpose and we're open and curious, we can find love.

Matt:

We can find,

Les:

yeah, it's my commitment is to be transparent in that endeavor is.

Les:

It is to own the fact that I am esoteric and be proud of the fact that I bring

Les:

the fact that I'm struggling to do it, that it's messy, that I'm, I have my

Les:

You know, we're going into a, for a dad's event next week.

Les:

Right.

Les:

And I'm already setting the intention.

Les:

I mean, all the guys will not appreciate this if I literally do

Les:

Yeah, man.

Les:

My life is a struggle right now to allow for the fact not to not

Les:

That's going to show up and save the day of anybody or what, but no, it's just

Les:

that they're also going to be willing to do the same when the tendency is, as you

Les:

So the tendency or the.

Les:

The temptation I should say is to put on a facade, to put on a mask that

Les:

so that others may look up to me or think of me a certain way so that I

Les:

in my life that I think is important to me, the things that I'm clinging

Les:

I want to be open for my ego to be challenged.

Les:

I want to be open for my bullshit to be called.

Les:

I want to be, because I think it's, then that I, I can truly experience, love,

Les:

You'll you're never going to be able to look at me.

Les:

And when I run for president one day, that's not going to happen and pull

Les:

well, you did this when you were, and you did this and you did this, I'm

Les:

That's always been there.

Les:

There's never been a moment that it hasn't been there.

Les:

What else do you want to say?

Les:

I'm, I'm owning my stuff.

Les:

What are you hiding?

Les:

You know, that you feel like you need to point it out.

Les:

So that, that is where I want to be in my life.

Les:

Not just with throw dads, but in every aspect of my life.

Les:

And my suffering comes when I don't, when I'm not true to.

Les:

My suffering comes when I start to hold onto the things that I tried to protect

Matt:

myself with.

Matt:

What I'm hearing is if the future vision, what you're creating in your life, what

Matt:

is a place where they go ahead into their fears with openness, with curiosity,

Matt:

When they do that, they have the chance to be authentic.

Matt:

They have a chance to find love.

Matt:

And that is where, you know, this duality, this joy, the sadness,

Matt:

Whatever, whatever the duality is, that's where they can

Matt:

They can learn to love through it.

Matt:

Oh, and a quick, a service announcement front row, dads

Matt:

Just want you to know that everyone out there, you know, but back to it

Matt:

where, uh, openness curiosity that can help us get to a place of.

Matt:

And that's how you deal head on with challenges and fears, uh, is

Les:

in.

Les:

Yes.

Les:

There's a statement that I heard recently that if you can name the problem,

Les:

And I think that that's a real key to this is that when, when I CA when I go

Les:

name it out loud, I'm actually denying any opportunity for myself to succeed

Les:

I actually am limiting my ability.

Les:

To come to new outcomes in this world.

Les:

So I think that's a, I think that's a really important key for any of us that

Les:

And because then we start to uncover other ideas about what success looks like.

Les:

It becomes more of that relational aspect because it really literally, it's

Les:

That is the only way we actually understand our existing.

Les:

Th there is no existence without the rest and until we can be free

Les:

Well,

Matt:

let's name a problem, then let's do one quick exercise.

Matt:

Then we'll move.

Matt:

We'll wrap up with our last question.

Matt:

If you can name the problem, you can understand the solution.

Matt:

And let's say the problem for example is I'm a 48 year old, uh,

Matt:

And I have a wife who's been diagnosed with cancer, uh,

Matt:

Right.

Matt:

Is these life things, these challenges then help me

Les:

So in that moment, the solution comes down to.

Les:

There is, there is nothing to fix that, that in this cancer, that the,

Les:

to love my wife, unconditionally, that healing comes when I can help

Les:

That healing comes when it's not about the cancer at all, but it's about

Les:

Welcoming of all that life has.

Les:

And, and, and I don't do that by telling her, like, that sucks.

Les:

What I do that does not go well, does not go

Matt:

with yeah, it doesn't work well.

Matt:

When we try to coach our, our spouses a public service announcement.

Matt:

Yes.

Les:

I represent an unconditional dedication and commitment to her.

Les:

No matter what.

Les:

When, when she is in the throws of this is awful, life sucks.

Les:

I am angry.

Les:

I'm mad that I hurt.

Les:

Um, and I just go in there and I can hug her and I can love

Les:

And then in return, when I have days where I am like, this sucks that

Les:

And I'm angry that we have to spend our time and energy around

Les:

And she can look at me.

Les:

She goes, it's going to be.

Les:

And we enjoy, I love you for feeling that way, but it's going to be,

Les:

It's not in, it's not even in seeing cancer as the problem.

Les:

The problem is that I see cancer as a problem.

Les:

That's the problem.

Les:

The problem is that I began to think that it shouldn't be here.

Les:

And so when I can just begin to embrace it, this is what it's supposed to be.

Les:

And now how does, how does love express itself in this

Les:

Then I become a part of something that's the greater good for?

Les:

Not just, it's not about me because let's be honest.

Les:

If I, why else would I not want.

Les:

It's an inconvenience for me.

Les:

I mean, more than it's an inconvenience for me, because this is the only

Les:

It interferes with, if she's not feeling good because the cancer then

Les:

her anger or her sadness goes up, which means I have to be available.

Les:

And that interferes with my plans.

Les:

And I like, but if I can just let go of all that, if I can be open

Les:

be, and then be responsive in the moment, then it begins to be something

Les:

And it allows us to now be experienced love in a way that is whole.

Les:

And I can't, I can't say, you know, when we talk about oneness in marriage,

Les:

just that freedom to be able to love one another unconditionally,

Les:

And to allow the chaos to be the thing from which we birth new creation from.

Les:

And I will go back to that probably for the rest of my life.

Les:

It is such a key piece of, of life for us.

Les:

And I have, we have moments where we're like, yeah, I

Les:

But I think at the end of the day, with everything that we learned in everything

Les:

the things that we are growing in, like, she's, she'll tell you, she would not

Les:

What would we have?

Les:

What would we lose without.

Les:

What would we be missing in our relationship with ourselves, with

Les:

Yes,

Matt:

that brings up a great point.

Matt:

I mean, every challenge that happens is an opportunity for wherever rat to evolve,

Matt:

Uh, I love the thought here and I believe it's one of the tenants of

Matt:

thing that, you know, learn to love and appreciate the things that you don't want.

Matt:

And they'll have no more power over you and you can be present

Matt:

And I love everything you've said, uh, unless I'd love to a speaking of love.

Matt:

I love to build a bridge here to our last question.

Matt:

And I know we could go on for hours because we have before and we

Matt:

The last question I love to ask.

Matt:

I like to give you a runway on this one, just let me, maybe we

Matt:

If there were a piece of advice you have to, someone out there, someone

Matt:

endured, they're overcoming someone that wants to create an exciting future.

Matt:

Any piece of advice, any one specific piece of advice you'd love to offer.

Matt:

We'd love

Les:

to listen.

Les:

I think there are a lot of people who are really suffering.

Les:

Today who feel very alone in that suffering who feel isolated, who

Les:

And, and it's a lot of it because they they've got this idea of

Les:

And I think the question becomes is how can you see your suffering

Les:

How can you begin to ask the questions of what teaching does our entire.

Les:

World need today that can be taught as a result of what you were going

Les:

Because I think right there in that space is the place where your suffering

Les:

on suffering and want to, you know, become reclusive and, and cover up and

Les:

But we need that suffering.

Les:

We need you to share that story because when we, when your story becomes.

Les:

That's a part of my story.

Les:

Energetically creates light for the rest of us to begin to find more,

Les:

So, um, it's really about just how can you integrate your suffering

Matt:

Awesome.

Matt:

Uh, you did not disappoint today.

Matt:

You went so many places today, all back to the theme of love and being able to

Matt:

right now, not as a problem, but as an opportunity to lean closer into the people

Matt:

And I love the message today less.

Matt:

So one of the reason I love you, can you share a one last, I'm

Matt:

Connect with you.

Matt:

If they want to find you on any social media or website, how do people

Les:

find out more about less?

Les:

Sure.

Les:

Well, first and foremost, you can email me.

Les:

Don't put me on your spam emails.

Les:

If you're actually listening to this and like, oh, well there's

Les:

Now email me.

Les:

I mean less, which is with one S at epic fusion dot light.

Les:

That's epi.

Les:

Fusion F U S I O n.life, my website, which is about to blanch here, as soon as epic

Les:

out on all my social channels, which has less, is more life or less is more.life.

Les:

Uh, Facebook, I got a page, their Instagram, all those things less is

Les:

the affirmation of less is more to overcome being less in my life.

Matt:

I like that.

Matt:

Can you share with our audience, one thing just came to mind.

Matt:

Can you show their audience?

Matt:

What is your license plate look

Les:

like?

Les:

Ah, it says my license plate.

Les:

I can't, I can't show it to you, but it says love w N Z, which

Les:

I got love wins 30 years so that when I'm honking at you and screaming

Les:

you can look at my license plate and you can know that love wins.

Les:

So love me.

Matt:

Hopefully, not too many people are screaming at you.

Matt:

Uh, as soon as you go buy them that big truck.

Les:

Yeah.

Les:

That doesn't have it.

Les:

You know, love wins is the key.

Les:

That is it for all of us.

Les:

Awesome.

Matt:

Well, thank you so much less for, uh, taking the time

Matt:

And, uh, we love you much appreciated and, uh, look forward

Les:

Absolutely.

Les:

Thanks for listening to the eternal optimist podcast.

Les:

You can check the show notes for information about today's episode,