Duncan Trussell Family Hour - The many lives of TAIT FLETCHER
Episode Date: August 26, 2015Fighter, stuntman, actor, and entrepreneur, Tait Fletcher joins the DTFH and talks about his ascent from cat burglar to hero! Â This episode brought to you by CASPER.COM Â go to casper.com and use of...fer code FAMILY HOUR to get $50 off a great mattress.
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This episode of the DTFH is brought to you by Casper.com.
Go to Casper.com and use offer code FAMILYHOUR to get $50 off your first order.
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because your old mattress is covered with tears and jizz.
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Now!
Hello, my dear sweet friends.
It is I, Duncan Trussell, and I'm ashamed to start this podcast off with yet another
audio apology, but I got to apologize and I understand that apologizing too much is
a sign of weakness.
I know the history of the world.
I know that in the medieval times it was a common practice to drag on Sundays the apologizers
of the village into the town square and yank their pants down, exposing their pasty medieval
buttocks and to spend hours flogging them with branches and leather straps until rivulets
of medieval plague blood dribbled down into their lice-encrusted leg hair.
Wolves would be released from the pens surrounding the town square and the wolves would run to
the buttocks and lap at the briny medieval blood licking and licking and sometimes chewing
and the screams of the apologizers would rise up into the forest canopy and cursed owls would
fly to the homes of witches and lay devil eggs into the witches' chalices, which the
witches would then use to make the cows of the village stop producing milk and the babies
deformed.
I get it.
I don't mean to be the apologizing person, but I have to and this is it.
I look at this, what happened today in this episode is a sign from the podcasting gods
that it is time for me to move on.
I will admit that this particular problem, this issue, which is that when I was recording this
podcast I did not realize that I was recording into my, not into my wonderful, fancy,
sure microphones that are running into a fancy,
some fancy other shit, which I don't know the name of really because I'm not an audio engineer,
but rather what happened was that I recorded this entire podcast into the on-board mic of my laptop.
I want to blame it on the house.
I want to blame it on the room that the podcast studio is stationed in this ancient house
that is essentially in the middle of a concrete kennel.
I'm surrounded by dogs on all sides, hundreds and thousands of bang, flea-covered Los Angeles
mongrels rolling in the dust chasing the emaciated drought squirrels that sometimes fall out of
the tree because they're dehydrated.
I want to blame it on the fact that sometimes it feels as though the walls of the podcast studio
are cursed that behind the walls of the podcast studio are the obsidian carapaces of demonic
mantis creatures that emanate a shit heat that fills up the podcast studio.
I want to blame it on the sun and whatever terrible confluence of bad circumstance and
environmental disaster has created the super hot conditions of Los Angeles,
but their real blame has got to go to my right hand, which two hours prior to this podcast
in front of my own eyes scooped a large quantity of caramel cannabis infused marijuana.
Like a monkey scooping at banana cream, I watched it happen fast, quick.
Before I could do anything, my hand lifted the sweet THC infused sugary mass into my mouth
and my mouth betrayed me by chewing it and swallowing it, getting it into my stomach,
and the betrayal continued as my stomach removed the THC from the caramel and via my
circulatory system got that THC into the neuro receptors of my brain causing me to experience
a state of marijuana intoxication. This was mixed in with alpha brain and the combination of these
two things put me in a warm, mellow, happy, focused state. And yet because I was so comfortable
emotionally, I didn't pay attention to the fact that regardless of how many times I turned the dial
on my mixing board, the waveform on the audio program I used to record was not changing.
I decided, oh, I'm sure it's fine. Why would the, why would the waveform change if I adjust the volume
levels? And as a neophyte, lazy stoner audio engineer, what ended up happening is I recorded
what I consider to be a great podcast where Tate told me things that I'm going to think about for
a very long time to come. And yet the sound quality is degraded and diminished. And so you're
going to hear clicks, the clicking of the chairs on the wooden floor. The odds are also good that
you're going to hear droplets of sweat rolling down my esteemed guest's face and landing onto
my podcast table. You've got to understand how awful that is to have my friends drive through
LA traffic, which is what Tate did, to come into a podcast studio where they experience what it
must be to be one of those fat little hot dogs rolling in one of those stinky 7-eleven hot dog
distribution machines. It makes me feel terrible to look across in my guest as they're overheating
because they're in a room in a hundred-year-old house in the middle of a kennel that also seems
to be on the flight path of the Los Angeles Police Department's helicopter division.
And they're sweating. They're like crawfish in a boil pot. I feel like I'm staring at,
so it honestly is like watching someone in the last stages of their life. No one in the history
of interviewing ever said, if you want to get a great interview, put your guests in a superheated
room and surround them with howling, bang dogs in the flight path of militarized helicopters.
So I got to move. I just don't want to do the podcast in an office space. I feel like there's
something cool about folks coming over to your house. It makes it more intimate. In the meantime,
pray for me. Pray to all the angels in heaven and hell, whatever particular deity you happen to
worship. If you don't worship a deity, pray to the laws of logic and mathematics. Pray to whatever
super consistent, transcendent force you consider to be the place from which the universe emerges
from. And I guess I would say I try to keep my hand from shoving marijuana-infused cannabis
treats into my mouth before I do a podcast, but that would be the same thing as me saying I was
going to stop doing podcast, which I don't plan on doing for a very, very long time. Thank you
guys for bearing with me. I hope that you will make it through this podcast, even though the audio
quality is incredibly low grade. It's well worth it. Tate really blasts out some serious hardcore
truth bombs. And I think you're really going to enjoy it. He's a super cool guy, a fighter,
an actor, an entrepreneur. And he's one of the sweetest guys I know. And yet he lives inside a
very menacing, dangerous-looking physical form, which is pretty cool. So we're going to jump right
into that interview. But first, let's do some quick business. Today's episode of the Dunkin'
Trussell Family Hour podcast is brought to you by the Dream Lords over at Casper.com. Use
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which is what old mattresses that suck turn into. It's maintained its sweet, firm, wonderful
quality. Thanks to all of you who continue to use our Amazon portal. I don't mean to be a fearmonger
here, but I'm sure you've heard that gigantic trapdoor spiders have started burrowing underneath
the floor of many local chain grocery stores and electronics depots, which means that the next time
you go shopping, there is some 20 to 30% chance that the tile floor is going to open up faster than
the human I can see in a scaled armored, hairy, arachnid thing could yank you
underneath the store and slowly devour you over the course of several years. I wouldn't take that
risk. And aside from that, if you really want the experience of shopping one of these chain stores,
why don't you just fill a plastic bag up with your grandmother's farts and breathe into it
as you shop on Amazon from the safety and comfort of your own home. Just go through the portal
located at DuncanTrussell.com and they give us a percentage of anything that you buy. What have I
recently ordered from Amazon? Well, I'll tell you a comic book on communism, which I actually
pathetically have yet to finish. There's still 15 pages or so to go. So go to Amazon today,
but go through our portal. And a huge thanks to all of you who have been donating. This is
definitely not a necessary thing to do. And if you decide to do it, I am extremely grateful.
Some folks out there have actually set up a monthly donation plan, which is incredibly sweet of you.
If you don't feel like just throwing money in the direction of a podcast, we got an awesome shop
with a lot of cool t-shirts, festival banners, mugs and stickers. I just want to read this email I
got from somebody who wore one of our shirts to a music festival. Dear Duncan, I'll save you most
of the details, but I just want to let you know that at the Down Under Deep Dish Music Festival
in Lower Minnesota, I was approached by the most beautiful girl I'd ever seen in my life.
Eyes as blue as eggs laid from the ass of a braxis, hands soft and wide, lips like jellyfish
bladders. She took me to her tent and we made love for five hours until protoplasmic tendrils
that I was not aware that my body could even produce began extending from every part of my
body, wrapping around her until her and I fused into one glorious sinewy ball of ecstatic bliss.
We came so many times that the sound of our orgasms overpowered the sounds of the DJs and the
festival goers tore down our tents and devoured us and we are now part of their consciousness,
minds and bodies forever. Yes, I'm emailing to you from the Astral Plane for I have fused with
an entire music festival, all thanks to your reasonably priced, beautiful Ron Regi Enneagram
shirts which are located at your shop. I sure hope people will go buy some today. Love Moon Willow.
You got it Moon Willow, I know they're powerful shirts and I really appreciate the email.
Go check out the shop guys, get one of these orgas, get one of these shirts, you never know what can
happen. Also and finally, I'm going on a big tour of Australia, that's in November. These tickets
are moving faster than any other tickets that I've ever sold for any other tour so I hope you'll
consider getting those tickets in advance. I'm also going to be at the Laughing Skull in Atlanta
in October. Alright, that's it. Thanks for bearing with me. I love you guys. Today's guest is an actor,
stuntman, fighter and all around badass entrepreneur. You can find out everything you need to know about
him by going to TateGFletcher.com. Other links to reach him will be located at DunkinTrustle.com.
Everybody please welcome to the DTFH Tate Fletcher.
Tate Fletcher, welcome to the DunkinTrustle
family on our podcast. Howdy Krishna, I'm so glad you're here.
Me too. It's so exciting man. It's very exciting to me too because you like,
you just did something I consider to be heroic which is you came through LA traffic to get here.
It's a thing. It wasn't easy but when you get dedicated to a result,
there are no obstacles. There's just little occurrences you're going to have to surmount
in this life to get to the place where you need to go. Now, how often does that philosophy help you
when you want to rip somebody's fucking head off in LA traffic? You know, I did just offer,
it's very easy to say that. I did offer an invitation to two young gentlemen that were a Prius.
They'd cut off a bunch of people and then they were on the side shoulder of the exit and trying
to push in on everybody and then I backed off and let them in and then they're yelling to me,
I was the guy that let them in. I tried to wave them in and they're like, what, what? I was like,
come on, you guys should just follow me. I'm going to take you to a great party and they followed
for a while and I just rolled the window down and smiled. They got up on both sides of the car
and I was like, come on guys, really? And then they just kept driving straight when I got off.
But that does happen. But I feel like if you're invited to a party, you've got to just accept
whatever happens. Yeah, I think I know what you're saying. You're saying that you're going to murder
those two gentlemen. You don't know what's going to happen when you get out of the car.
But I want to avail myself to the experience. I'm an experiential guy and so it's just like
what's going to happen when you get out of the car. I mean, I feel like I have a lot of party
favors with which to offer my guests, however. You're a menacing guy. You're a very nice guy,
but you're a really like, let's just break it down. You have fought, you're a fighter,
you still fight. I haven't fought in a long time, but yeah, that was,
we were mad, I was still competing. Right. You have been a competitive fighter.
Since 2000, about? Yeah. And you now have transformed into an actor.
Yeah, yeah. You are on Breaking Bad. Yeah. Yeah, really a fortunate list of things.
And I keep seeing you in movies because I, whenever I'm watching, you're in good movies too.
That's what I say is fortunate because I look at friends of mine that have good resumes and I'm
like, God, I've never heard of that show that they were in or I've never heard of that one. And it's
like, like I've got a bunch of Marvel movies and the Lone Ranger, like there's a bunch of really
good stuff there, you know, the equalizer, John Wakin, things like that. And so I've been super
fortunate. Yeah. And you're, you're a, it's really like incredible to think of the weird life you've
had, man. You've had an odd life, haven't you? I was thinking about it many lifetimes, right?
Many lifetimes, but like, where were you born? Michigan, Alpina, Michigan up on the shore,
Lake Huron. And you kind of, didn't you kind of become a criminal a little bit?
A criminal for like maybe from the gate, like for like, I mean, since I was like 11 or 12,
since I first started exploring other people's homes when they weren't home.
Exploring. Do you weren't planning on robbing them? You were just exploring?
No, no, I was. I mean, we were looking for booze at that age, like we would go and steal booze
from people's houses and then it just escalated as, you know, time grew on and opportunities
came up and all that. How old, how old were you when you were doing that?
A kid, man. Like, you know, tell us, maybe my last entry into a house unwanted was
17 or 18, I guess. Hold on. So yeah, how do you make that decision for the first time?
I mean, it's exciting. You know, I just, I've always been attracted to exciting,
kind of adrenaline-infused activities, no matter how scary they were. I like doing it. I think,
I just read a book recently called The Rise of Superman, which is a fantastic book,
but he talks about it and there's a bunch of stunt guys that did a jump,
believe us, for one of the transforming movies. They jumped off the Sears Tower and there's like
five guys and they jumped in unison. I don't know if you saw the movie, but they're in wingsuits.
And so air, wind is really funny, especially in Chicago through buildings. Like if you're in a
city, if you're in a canyon, you can count on it to be a certain way, but it shifts and changes
drastically and quickly in buildings. And so they jumped off and they didn't know if they were
going to die or not or what was going to happen. They had to follow so closely to each other
that they had to have telekinesis, really, of knowing before, they couldn't, if they were going
to make a 90 degree turn, by the time they saw your foot twitched to show that you were going to
turn, it would be too late. They had to know four seconds before you were going to turn.
So they have, and there's five guys doing this, they all have to forecast each other.
And it's pretty phenomenal. But they, he said, you know, when, when people call us adrenaline
junkies, that's not really what it is. Cause like for me as a fighter and like all that,
and I heard Brendan Schaub talked about it and described it beautifully. Like most of those
guys that are in the sport are like nervous, scared. They have a lot of emotions, ups and downs,
and excited, everything before they fight. But you know, the thing is, is you're not after that
adrenaline, you're after that flow state that happens that ensues afterwards. And you have to
trigger it by doing something terrifying. And so you go into that thing and then norepinephrine
comes in and adrenaline comes in and oxytosis comes in and, and you begin to mutate time and
shorten it and you can distill it. And time slows down, you know, you get into a mutation and the
book goes into all of it beautifully. And it really gave an explanation for things that I'd
always felt that, that I was always drawn to and like why I was. And I thought, well, what a
misnomer that adrenaline junkie kind of thing is in a way because nobody likes that. That's a
kind of a terrifying experience. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. You're more into, yeah, you're a, you're a dopamine,
you're trying to squeeze that sweetness out of the synaptic vesicles and the way you do it is by
some kind of incredibly dangerous thing. But you're, so you're saying when you were breaking into houses,
it was more for the, for that state afterwards. It was totally for that when I was a kid,
ever since I was little, I was into that, like for forever. And so I love the, I love to throw
snowballs at cars when I'm a little kid and have, and then people chase you like I love all that.
Right. All the cops and robbers stuff. And I just, it just grew into my life. And then also,
you know, I made a living that way for a while. I mean, you know, I mean, there's someone to open
and. Did you ever get in trouble? Yeah, locked up a couple of times. My, my last significant thing
was a big charge, but, um, you know, and, and then I got acquitted to that. And, um, and then that
was the last time, you know, then, then I really, and that was when I was in my early 20s. And I
really was like, I've got, my life's got to change. I've got to have a shift in my life. And so I did
it. And that's when I started to get to it, to really kind of save my life in a lot of ways.
And, um, wait, how, before you get to that, how long were you in jail?
For that last charge, if this is okay to talk about, by the way, it's a long time ago.
I waited, I don't know. Maybe that last time before, like I did two court sentences and I, um,
was there maybe a month and a half or something before I was released. And then I got cleared
and off paper, like six months later or something. There was a guy I was with and
there's a bank that got robbed and all of that kind of thing. And so he had to cop to it and be
tried and sent. There's a bank that got robbed. Yeah. By who?
This guy that I was a buddy with. Okay. But you're all my friends, you know.
Okay. I see. So you were like, you're living like the Grand Theft Auto life.
Not quite like that, but it was, I mean, it had, it's colorful moments, you know.
What would you, well, can you give me an example? What's one? What would be the, what color?
It's just like, it's more desperate than that. I mean, it's more like, it's not like everybody's
just a gorilla in the streets. I mean, it looks like that, but it's like, you're hidden. You
know, I remember when I heard the first time I heard like a Dr. Dre album and I was like,
they're freely talking about this. Like, you know, because like that's your life. And you're like,
I know people that have fucking done horrific things to people and they're not writing a song
about it. I'm like, these guys are all fake. Like this is an error or something. Like I didn't
really get it, but like when you're selling dope, you're not singing songs about selling dope. You
know what I mean? Right. And so, you know, the thing is, is just like, how am I getting through
day to day? Like really, you know, we're all kind of, you know, there's a group of us and we're all
like really into drugs and into booze and like in that lifestyle and Michigan's kind of a poor
place in a lot of, I mean, it's like maybe the second or third poorest place in the world. I
think my hometown was up to like 24% unemployment a couple of years ago. And then those people
drop off unemployment and then they're just still unemployed. They just start, you can't
tell them as a number anymore because they're now just poor. And so there wasn't a lot of choices.
Like my family was a nice family. They did great. And but the whole surroundings is poverty, you
know? And so you can go on the merchant marine boats, you can join the army, you can be a criminal.
And that's kind of your choices in a way. Or you can go and try to work at a flower shop or this
that. But there's not a whole lot, you know, the United Auto workers at that time were doing well
for a little bit. But then even then they were cutting their punches to zero and like, and that's
kind of, you're in that kind of a thing, you know, where like in the early when I was a little,
little boy, like Flint was huge, like it blown up with General Motors. And then, and it was one of
the biggest cities in Michigan. And it's like a ghost town, like there's when those jobs go away,
you've just made a huge slum is what you've done. And so it's kind of like, you know, people are
like, there's bad areas, you know, like in LA, you go, what's the bad area? It's like, you kind of
get got anywhere here. Like it's, it's kind of like that. But like, there's places in Michigan
where it's kind of like, these are vacuous holes that you just don't, there's no reason to be there.
And so it's, you know, but that, you know, that's a crazy place to grow up man. Life's kind of what
make of it too. You know what I mean? It's like where you want to go with it and what you need to
escape. I'm interested in what is going through your mind on the fifth day of a month long prison
sentence. Oh man, I'm with five Mexican dudes in the fucking cell, and they're not speaking any
English. And it's, it's scary, you know, I'm a young guy and in the US Marshall's office and, you
know, while we're in holding, like everybody just got picked up. And there's a bunch of guys with
recidivism that are just, you know, that their parole officers have just put them back and,
and guys talking about the whole thing, you know, we're fucking rape you later tonight.
So that's real. All of that. That's real. The dude that one of the guys that was sent that said
that to me, this old shitty white trash biker, and he goes, he got, the way he violated his parole
is his parole, he didn't check in, like how hard is that? You just go check in. Right. And he didn't
go check in and he's out at this farmhouse and he's got a guy that I don't know if he thought
snitched on him or what happened, who's hanging in his barn, who he's skinning, who's alive. He's
in the process of taking it. Like, and I don't know if that's real or not. That's what they're
saying. Like, yeah, that's how he violated. So there's these kinds of people that I'm with. Then
there's the guys that in Colorado, this is up in Colorado. They call it Compton Springs and they
just got these nine dudes, they just got a shootout with the ATF and shot a couple guys in the face
and like there's all and they're happy as fuck. They were stoked. It's like they'd made it. They're
in federal prison. And really? Yeah, it was crazy. Why? Why? Because federal prison's better
somehow, I understand. No, I mean, just because they'd gotten a big thing. It's like there's a sense
but some guys like that they're made if they get into a spot like that, right?
That's nuts. I mean, and you know, it's the same thing you see. I see guys like
that get out after they've done five or six years and they come back to a neighborhood. It's like,
if you go, you know what, Abbot Kinney or something like that was like 10 years ago,
15 years ago, right? It's like, you're not like, you don't want your lady to walk around there
after dark or whatever. It's not, it's not safe. And now it's like mini skirts and high heels at
10 at night and it's no big deal. And so imagine you go and you're just, you're a gangbanger and you
go away for that time and come back. It's like, I totally understand the idea about you would be
a chronic recidivist because you're in a way not welcome back into your community where there used
to be something, everything's changed. You're not shit. Fuck off. And you are somebody in prison
and a lot of those guys find that there. I think they find a status or a caste system that they
can understand. But man, there you are. So there I am. And you're an intelligent guy. When I'm
going to leave, I don't know any of that stuff. And we got, I've been called for court before we
got called on the day that I got released. But I'm just trying to think like, how are you
rationalizing your life? You're not, you're not thinking that you're in a, I mean, for me,
and then there's a riot. There's a riot right when I got there. And so everybody's fucked up.
Like it is crazy. And so I've never been in any situation like that before. And I didn't know
really how to take it. So you just kind of stay close to people that are nice to you. You're even
more careful around them. And, you know, keep your back to the wall. And, and it's really,
you know, blacks are hanging out with the blacks and the whites are hanging out with the whites.
And there's this guy Walker Knight, he was, he befriended me as this big, tall black dude.
And he was super dope, man. And, and, and he's like, Hey, dude, this is the guy that you need to
hook up with when you get inside. Like, because when we were all picked up by the FBI, and then
we're in the US Marsh Office for a couple of days, and we get put in England. And, and, you know,
he kind of made introduction to make it like an easier way. I got, and I don't know how that all
would have played out had I been there a long time. Like, I don't know a lot about it. It's not
like I spent months and years there, but it's crazy. It's a different world, man. It's a different
world. And your moment to moment, everybody says that, oh, how can they go, how'd you survive this
in your life? How'd you survive that in your life? And it's like, you don't think that way. All you
think is like, I've got one foot in front of the other, and I'm just aware. And I'm, you get hyper
aware, right? You get hyper aware, and you're just moving through time and space, you don't reflect
on it and be like, how am I going to get through this? It's just like, it is happening so rapidly.
Right. Then you better be in it. And it became like that was the first time that I did a stick
fight that really dawned on me and kind of coalesced and distilled into that of like,
you need to be hyper present in your life all the time. And this was like a couple years later
that I had that opportunity. But I'm like, when a stick is swinging by your head,
you're either awake and aware and conscious all the time, or you're unconscious because you've
gotten clumped, you know, and that becomes the thing is like, you start to become hyper present.
And that was the first time like, I felt like this is a flow I can control. Before I was like,
I'm just going to go do some crazy shit. But like that, I was like, I can put myself in these
situations. And so then ever since then, pardon me, I really looked at how do I put myself in
scary situations that are in some way that aren't illegal or that are like in a, you know,
controlled kind of environment. But even like a scary situation for me could be like to get up
and do stand up, right? How are you going to learn your language? Are you going to like throw
yourself into the unknown and doing that thing? And so, you know, making myself uncomfortable.
And what I didn't understand at that time, and what I understand it to be today is that I'm
addressing my ego in a way and kind of, you know, curtailing that omniscient kind of feeling
that is really unrealistic and kind of grandiose and going, I'm a part of this whole thing,
this whole cellular thing that I don't really understand. And I'm just going to try to play
my part. And then you go, okay, I'm going to, I'm going to help as many people as I can. Or I'm
going to, you know, like, well, that's where I'm interested. I'm interested in when did that,
wait, were you always like that? Did you always have a spiritual side?
I was pretty empathetic. And I was always looking for a spiritual thing. Like I'd
studied since I was little, like I was lost in books since I was a kid, right mythology. I would
read a lot. Then I read a lot of the early American authors and really got in like to
Emerson and Thoreau and all that kind of thing, you know, John Locke and
and like when I was young, when I was 10, 11, 12, like my mind was just I needed to be elsewhere.
And so those were things then like, like ethics and shit, like, and then I started the first
fiction I read was like Louis Lamour books, like, oh, yeah, Western, you know, and I was like,
I was like, well, those are guys you could look up to those are guys that like,
they stand for something. And like, all that kind of stuff started to really matter to me. And then
when I started hanging out with these guys, these are the guys I'm loyal to and that like, you know,
and then I demanded standards, like, which is interesting, and then tell you just said that,
I didn't think that but like, I demanded standards in my life standards of my friends
behavior, you know, like we're friends because you're not a lot of things and because you are
for a lot of things, you know, it's like, I look at that too, like, you know, with like,
the original guys really that were around like you and me and Ari and Joey,
and Joe and when you look at that, like, we're more advanced in life, we're further down the
road, like we're not in our 20s, you know, and, but all of those guys are all fantastic people
that have all been found the modicum of happiness and success and are still on a
track that's going higher and higher and evolving all the time. And it's like,
it's really something about like having that figured out, I think, I think that you get into
a position where things are clicking and you're like, Oh, this is the way like,
it's like Eddie Bravo would talk to me about it. And he'd be like, you know, you want to get
yourself on the same vibration as the universe. Right. And that's through appreciation. And so
like all these things and like a lot of these spiritual practices kind of coalesced, I guess,
in my mid 30s. And I go, I go, this is, this is how you want to start moving. And then you want
to start moving in a way that's going to give the greatest good to the most people. And I used to
hide with like a, like a false humility in a way or something like that where it's like,
where I didn't deserve it, or I didn't want it, or I just look at my shoes and be like,
I'm grateful for this. And I'm not a fucking, I'm not in prison. I'm not dead. I'm not a
junkie. I'm not like, or whatever. And, but even at that, I tell the story sometimes. And
it's crazy. Like I've been sober for a long time now, like since that time really. And
it's, I don't drink, I don't do any drugs. And, and I was sitting and I was thinking about I was
at this retreat and I was with all these people and a retreat. No, just like a thing, you know,
and I was like, um, I was like, I'm just as capable as anybody, you know, and a friend of mine
right before that conversation had said, I, uh, he goes, you know, feelings are facts. A lot of
people are saying, you know, your feelings are facts and all that kind of stuff. And he says,
my feelings are facts. It's valuable. It's who I am. And it's how I see the world and how I perceive
it and whatever. And I was thinking about that. And then this guy started speaking and listening
to that. And I was like, I'm just as capable as anybody here. And, um, and this was just a few
years ago. And I thought, that's weird. Like I've never had that thought before. I've never felt
that way before. Not ever. Yeah. Right. And so then I started thinking about it. And I go, you know,
I was figured like the way I, my narrative for myself was if there's a race, I'm going to be
last. Yes. You know, and then I learned when there's an actual race, I was like, like maybe
sixth grade or something. And you're like, you're going to run a mile in gym class or whatever
it is. And I was like, I learned I was tough. I was like, I'll finish and I won't be killed.
Like, and then, and then at that time I started, you know, uh, defending myself in the playgrounds
on the streets at party. Like, and so I started, I was like, I might get beat down, but I'm tough.
At least I'm not going to quit. Right. This is when you were a kid. When I was a little kid. Yes.
And, um, and, and then, you know, I look at it and I'm like, I kind of always felt that way.
And then I started looking at it and I go, okay, and I do a lot of writing and journaling and kind
of reflecting on my life and looking at, uh, you know, here's taking stock in your life and what it
is. And I do that like every year. And I started thinking about the last time I've done it. I go,
you know, even when you're in that position where, you know, before all the madness happened,
you're still a leader. Like people are still looking up to you. You're, you know, articulate.
You, you're thoughtful. You read a lot. You've got a lot of information that other people don't
have. Like I was advanced in a lot of different ways. And, uh, I was like, that's interesting.
And then I go, and then after all that, it's like, I, I get hired at a place and then I'm running a
whole crew of guys and then I'm running a couple of different clubs and then like, I'm like escalated
quickly and I joined Jiu-Jitsu and I'm the best guy in the room. And then I'm one of the best guys.
So you're saying, you're saying all this is somehow tied into all this is a thought, right?
That I'm having at this moment. And I'm thinking all this stuff and I'm going through my life and
I'm thinking about that. And I'm like, and then, you know, you're an ultimate fighter and you're
fighting the UFC or like I was undefeated fighter for a bunch of fights. And then, um, and then I'm
acting, I'm in films and then I fucking own a bunch of nightclubs and then I'm like running a
coffee company and then I got like, and all this shit. And I'm like, and, but I'm the guy that's
not going to finish the race and is my narrative, right? And I went back to my friend and I go,
humans aren't facts. And I go, that's what the fuck they mean, right? The way I feel about
myself and I'm proceeding myself is delusional. Yeah. And then at that time, it was like, I was
like able to go, okay, it's important to have a realistic view of who this is inside.
Because here you are, a person who is at all this great success from what you just described,
not only that, but you also have the great redemption story, which is that you pulled
yourself out of a trajectory that could have led to complete obliteration. So you have that going
to, which is a very mythological, very archetype, you know, it's really cool. So you have that thing
going and yet still, no matter what the universe is showing you, which is like, look, I've given you
this and this and this and this, you've accomplished all this, you're still thinking to yourself,
kind of a piece of shit. Right. That to me is such an interesting aspect of humans. From doing this
podcast, I've really noticed that that's like an omnipresent thing where, and just from meeting
people out here and I'll let you run into people out here who have the most ridiculous success,
or they're the most incredibly beautiful, or they're the most whatever it is. And yet still,
they cannot accept the fact that they deserve it. Right. They just think it was an accident.
They think it was a fluke that it's going to go away. Any good thing that comes is going to go away
that the other shoes about to drop. Dude, that's how I live my life, Duncan. I was like, things
were good right now, but and any more, man, I go think and then when I tell everybody, anybody
that comes to me for counsel or anything, I'm like, you've been okay, you've been carried your whole
life. You've always been fed. You always had a place to live. People have always loved you,
even if you didn't deserve it, whatever. What is to make you think if you've had 30 years of success
like that, that tomorrow's going to be any different. It's only going to get better. You know, and the
more goodness that you put out, the more goodness come and all that stuff. And so any more I look
at and go, yeah, my life's pretty good right now, my bank account's pretty good right now, all that.
And I'm like, there is not one thing to make me think that this won't be fucking twice as good
next year. There you go. And that's so dope to get into that kind of decision. That's a new thing
for me, bro. That's a new that's a big decision. And it's it's interesting. I mean, I know you've
never come in from a mini Cooper up to a Mercedes. I mean, come on. Yeah, I know. And I mean, I have
not quite, I can do the pull up that you're talking about from time to time. But I'm more often than
not, it's hard for me to do that. Like I have to consistently tell myself, this is okay, you can be
successful, you don't have to be someone who's not successful. But it's not like, it's hard to
accept. And it's, it's, to me, that's been one of the one of the great teachings in my life is
like, well, look at this, no matter how much love comes to me, and whatever form that it comes,
my tendency is a negative and negative. Yeah. And that that that's a wild interesting. And I
don't know if that's for human, because I know some guys, like, I don't think Joe is like that.
Right. I don't think he has that like that. I know people that think I'm fucking crazy. Like,
I tell them that story, and they're like, you, like, it doesn't even make sense that that is
something that is inside me. It's a universal ghost that wants everybody. And to the point
where I'm suspicious, sometimes when I see someone who's like, acting incredibly confident, sometimes
I wonder to myself, is this just a, are you just putting on a show? But here's, you know, the
whole thing, like feelings are not fact. Right. If you really do an analysis of what you are,
if I look into myself, right? And quite often what I come up with is that there are feelings that
are in a field of awareness. And the where field of awareness is a thing outside of definition,
which means that the feelings come after this initial be I'm aware of my feelings. This is
what they call the watcher, the observer, the ottman. Yeah, that seems to be what we really
are is this thing that in the Bhagavad Gita, when it's, they call it the soul, a lot of people
call it the soul, but in the Bhagavad Gita, when they're describing it, they say it was never born,
has never died, it does not come into being, it does not cease to be, it cannot be burnt by fire,
withered by the wind. Is this like they say sometimes the unknowable and unnameable? That's
yeah, right. The Dallas would speak of it's like you can't look at yourself without it,
you know, without a mirror, you can't turn around and look at yourself. This is the observer,
the observer self. And that thing really doesn't care about how definitions or it doesn't really
care. Everything precedes this initial state, right? So to me, what it, what that means is,
and this is something that I kind of gets echoed by Jean-Paul Sartre when he talks about,
you should definitely check out if you haven't already, but he talks about if we take a paper
cutter, right? The paper cutter is just a fucking paper cutter. It doesn't have to decide what it's
going to be. The paper cutter didn't have to go to college, it doesn't have to define itself,
it doesn't have to listen to certain kinds of music and wear cool clothes and it doesn't have to do
it. It's just a paper cutter, a human. We have to tell ourselves what we are. We have to decide,
this is what I am. I am whatever it is you want to be and that's why it's called a human being,
because we're, we're the being, we're in the process of being a thing and we're always outputting.
We always have to put out this thing that we are and Sartre said, that's hell. That's hell. We're
all in hell. He was a dark motherfucker, but he's like, we're all in hell. There's no way out of it.
Your ultimate emptiness, you can only make up what you are from moment to moment, but you know
the whole thing is a big charade. That's Sartre. But then if you read Camus, Camus' response to
that kind of dark existentialism was, yeah, except, yeah, and that thing, exactly, that's it. And the
fact that I am the one who makes the ultimate decision to smile in the face of oblivion, that
makes me more powerful than the gods. And so that moment of decision making that you're talking about
I'm really interested in that when you realize you're not going to get an emotional
backup for when you decide that you're okay. You're, you're not going to get your emotions
aren't right away going to be like, oh yeah, you are a great person. You're nothing. You gotta train
yourself. It's discipline. So everything comes to discipline and awareness, I believe. Right? Yes.
What we're talking about with that, like it takes so long to, it does, it, you know, everybody
thinks they're enlightened or that they have a higher consciousness. And it's like, what I'm
seeing more and more is it's like there's, there's slivers of awareness. And if you're unaware,
you're unaware that there's even more things to be aware of. Right. You just, you're, you know, and so
and if you can't reflect and go, here's where I was unaware, here's where I just became aware of,
like, because your confidence is so messed up that you have to just put on errors, as you say, you
know, it's like, then you're never aware. Also, you're just pretending to be aware all the time.
And those are the people that I go, oh, it's hard to be around that person. Yeah. And that's why I,
like, I'm so excited about going, I can control my universe by, you know, all the people that I get
to be around. And I get to choose that. You get to choose, and you, before you choose the people
you get to be around, you can just make this decision. Sure. Which is, I'm cool. You can just
decide. It's a, it's a really, it's a scary thing when you realize. And that's the thing people don't
like. Yes. Because there's an accountability and a responsibility to say, I am a plumber. You know,
they're like, instead, they're like, I don't know if I'm good enough to be a plumber. Can I pass the
plumbing test? Like, or, you know, or something creative. I'm a writer. Like, now you got to
shake your own tree. I mean, as a fighter, I'm a fighter. You got to shake your own tree, get
your own sponsorships, find your own fight. Like, that's a lot to do. Like, you're not getting a
paycheck at the end of the week from that job, you know, as an actor. I'm already on my last job
every time I work. It's like, I'm already looking for my next job because I'm about to be unemployed.
And so like, you know, but I've been in that position. I get comfortable with that because
I've been shaking my own tree for a long time. And so it's kind of like, I can live in that
space. I don't need to have that check at the end of the week to have comfort and go, oh, my phone
bill will get paid. But don't, don't you think like all, but all the, all the, it seems like there's
a direct core, I mean, this is where you get the cliche secret bullshit, but it is kind of true,
which is that I have the moment you decide manifestation, when you decide you're okay.
Like you just make, you realize, like here's the, like, you know, the third, you know about
Buddhism, the temptations of Buddha. So you know, the third temptation when the Buddha was about to
get enlightenment, you know what that is? So Mara, I'm sorry guys, I talk about this too much,
but Mara, the Lord of death appears to the Buddha. He's already tempted him twice. The first temptation
is by throwing fireballs at him or just all these terrible things. And the Buddha laughs and the
fireballs turn into flower petals, but that's supposed to represent overcoming the fear of your
own annihilation or death or whatever. And then the second temptation he, Mara, sends to the Buddha
his daughters and a lot of people, this can be, any of this can be interpreted in any way you want,
but his daughters, some people say that represents worldliness or living in the world of pleasure.
That's what I used to think. And there's a, other people say, no, actually the daughters of Mara
are letting go of your attachment to when you start waking up to getting prideful over it,
to like getting like puffed up and like, oh, I'm such a holy man or something. There's a lot of
things, but the third one, man, that's my favorite one, which is that finally Mara, the Lord of,
it's really not the Lord of death, it just represents the king of the world, represents the world.
But Mara says to the Buddha, this is the third one. And theoretically these are in, in order of
difficulty, you know, this is his last ditch attempt to keep the Buddha from getting enlightened.
The third one was a question, why do you deserve to be the Buddha? And the answer was that the Buddha
took his finger and touched it to the earth and then enlightenment. And that's always been a mysterious
moment for me because I think, what does that mean? And I've asked different people, everyone's
got their own interpretation. But to me, it's that realization that you have to make the fucking
decision. You just decide, you just decide now, regardless of your success, regardless if you
have a ton of success or none at all, you just make the crazy decision at the second. I deserve love.
I'm a good person. I'm okay. I'm okay. You have to make the decision yourself.
That goes into all the things like, I mean, this sounds like super ethereal talk that we're having,
but it's like, that is like meat and potatoes stuff of like, like, okay, so your boyfriend
doesn't treat you very well. He gets drunk and sometimes he calls you a bitch or he stays out too
late. It's not his problem. That's not his fault. That's how he is showing up. What is it about you
that would stay around for that? Why is it that you think that that's what you deserve?
And so like, these things to me, those these kinds of lessons are fascinating to me because
they come up in life everywhere. Like, when you ask yourself that, but people don't want the decision,
I didn't want the decision, rather, of being accountable to my decisions. So it's easier for
you to tell me, Hey, where do you want to have lunch? Right? Because I don't want to say what I want.
You know what I mean? I don't want to be a people pleaser in that way. And so like, we all live
this fucking crazy nebulous of of going, well, I wonder what he thinks that I should be like,
and then I'm going to try to be like, and it's like, it's the craziness. It's crazy. I was reading
the thing about computers. And there's a, I can't remember, it's a clever bot or something about
these bots, right? And mimics human. Yes. And so you're talking to them. And yeah, there's a great
thing on radio lab. And, and you can ask them any questions, they put them online, and then people
could ask questions. And the idea was, if you would write in hello to the computer, then it would
know the one word hello. And then how are you today? Then it would know a succession of sentences
based upon your interaction with it, then they put it online, and everybody started asking.
So then pretty soon, it has four billion things that it knows or whatever. So you could actually
write in questions and go, Hey, um, why am I sad? And they're being answered. So they're doing this
online and they're going, so why am I sad clever bot? And the answer comes back because, and that's
based on like, a conversation that it had with another person, like, so you're talking to ghosts.
So yeah, and, and it's then there must be more. Why am I sad? Because you stay in the same place
for too long is the answer. And I thought, what a brilliant answer. But that's just the answer
that one guy had. But it's like, you get into these things where you're like, brilliant, where you
talk about the humanism of machines and like, where we go into that. And like, what, I mean, it begs a
lot of, because you stay in the same place too long. And it doesn't have to be a geographic place
either. It's just, well, that's you, you end up in this made me question my whole life. I'm like,
every decision like, Oh my God, it's a, it's this is the, and what am I hanging on to? Like,
it goes back to where you're talking about my attachments. Well, right. Yeah. And when you
start realizing that, I think it's beautiful that it's built into the universe that you can be imprisoned
in a certain thought structure or ego pattern or paradigm and live your whole life beaten down,
cowled by the world, trying to please everybody. And at any moment that you want to, you can
instantaneously free yourself from 80% of what's obstructing you, which is just the way you look
at yourself. It's always there for you. It's so cool. It's like a prison, like imagine a prison
where ever with no roof, with no ceiling, no prison with no ceiling, very high walls, no ceiling,
but all the prisoners had the ability to levitate if they wanted to. They just had to do it, you
know, and every once in a while you'd see a prisoner go shooting up through the fucking ceiling.
And most prisoners be like, one in a million chance. Nobody can do that. He works so fucking
you know, but we can all do it. Except this isn't this, you know, that's one of the things about
being an actor for me is that everybody says that when I'm a little kid for forever or being a
fighter can't be in the UFC. Right. Can't do that. Right. Yeah. So I start thinking about all that
shit and I go, you know, it is, I mean, numbers wise, nobody's wrong when they say it's one in a
million or whatever the fucking number, these statistic fucking people put out like, fuck
a statistic, because my name is Tate Fletcher. You know what I mean? And it's like, and I won't
quit. That's what I know about me. And so you know, who, you know, who, you know, who are those
900 and 99, you know, like all the people right up to the one in a million, those are all people
that gave up. They don't give up. It'll occur. But something even better will occur, even if that
doesn't occur, you're on the road, you get, then that's the thing is you have to choose a desert.
It's like in like the Prophet or any, any kind of book, like when you read the alchemist, it's
like, he has to choose it. It's not about getting to the pyramids. Yeah. It's his like, things take
him and distract him along the way. They're even better to grow his soul as a human. But what is
that cheesy quote in the very beginning of Gladiator? I'm sorry, you guys, but I always think
about it where they're riding into battle and he says, if we die today, we will drink in Valhalla
It wasn't Valhalla, it was somewhere, whatever, but it was, it's the warrior's
thought, warrior's creed, creed, which is, which is like, there is no reward on earth
that can equal the glory of dying, fighting for your life. That's the glory, right? And there's no
for your, not even your life, for your flag, for an idea of what this flag is and what it represents
of your family and your kids and your hopes and your grandfathers and everything, right? Or I mean,
when I say your life, I mean, I mean, fighting to peel back the entropy that has kept you trapped
in your, the thing that's keeping you alive. Really? I hear people talk about, I fight for
a living, like we're doing this for a living, we just watched the fights yesterday on, on television
and, and that guy was like, Hey man, this is our job, you know, and so thanks for supporting
the sort of saying to the fans, but I'm like, it's, it's not man. Like, I mean, it is, but it's
not like it, to me, that's like a muted idea of what it is. You're fighting to release all those
things and go, who am I now under these strictest, harshest conditions that I can come up with in
America. Um, what, I mean, that's a huge statement since I'm just gonna say, well, dude, you know,
there's home or whatever, but like, you're putting yourself in a really highly advanced, you mean,
to be in a physical fight, to fight in the EOC, to fight in, you're crushing yourself. So when you
do that, you're, you're, I mean, you're in an elongated state of discomfort for months and years
to be able to train yourself, to be able to do that thing. And, and there's an uncovering and
a discovering of yourself within that. But if you lose the fight, you still won, right? You have
been given the, the great teachings of being, and I sat there and had my friends fight. He was
one of my best friends, Isaac Valley flag, and he was getting beat down by this guy. And it was
before Isaac got in the EOC. And I was like, this is fucking bad. He got, he got caught bad,
knocked out. The guy mounted him, he's beating him. Isaac keeps moving enough to defend himself,
gives him his back. Like it was all bad. It got clipped again. And then by the second round, he was,
I think maybe he made it to the second or third round, but I'm like, and I was reflecting on the
way home, his long draft home. And I was like, that was a fucking bad deal. And, but then I had
flashes of the guy's corner on the other side. And I was like, they're happy. There's nothing.
I'm like, it's not a bad fight or a good fight. There's just a fight. Right. And, and depending
where I'm sitting, my perspective is what makes it good or bad. I'm like, there's no good or bad.
This is just a fight and experience. And what a fucking, a bunch of gratitude that you can have
that you're able to be a part of that thing. And, and like what you're saying, you know,
I had lunch with this chick earlier today and that came up, you know, she's like, well, the world
is empty and meaningless. You know, and I go, absolutely. And I said, how the fuck, and like
what you were saying earlier, what a great opportunity. Because that means everybody would
always say, you live in a fantasy land, man, you need to fucking just buckle down, get a job, dude,
whatever, whatever their status quo is, who all, all of those fuckers email me and send me shit on,
on Facebook to the point where I got to block them because there's too dumb. How did you do
this, man? I got two kids, I went to church, I got the job, I went to college, I fucking hate myself
and my, this is horrible. And I'm like, you listened to all the shit that didn't make sense
from people that were failing at the very same construct they were giving you to live. I mean,
you know what I mean? And it's like, that's what happens generally. But like,
she says, so it's, it's meaningless or whatever, whatever. I'm like, what an awesome opportunity
to give it whatever meaning you want. Yeah, I live in a fantasy. Come check it out. You know what
I mean? Make it whatever you want it to be, because that's what it can be. And that's the
beautiful part about it. I mean, there's no way that it makes sense, dude. Like, I was supposed
to go and go to college and do a great thing. I became a drug addict with bad alcohol problem
and, and the whole thing and a bunch of run ins here and there. But it's like when you had cancer,
and you're like, you know, you're a cancer survivor, Duncan, congratulations. You're a great,
you're a cancer survivor. Fuck yourself. Like that, that discredits everything else that I am,
that I really am. This is just the thing that happened. And that's kind of how I view that
stuff. It's like, there's a lot to surmount and all that kind of stuff. But that's not me. That's
nothing about me. It's a stranger to me. And it's a stranger to anybody that knows me. It's almost
like that's like really like that's crazy. So I've lived that life. I've lived the life of recovery.
I've lived the life as a professional athlete, lived the life as an athlete, all those things. And
the thing is, is like, I'll just try. Like that's my whole mantra is I need you to try. Like I want
everybody to try. I want everybody to win. Because I think all that is possible. And I don't think
there's any separation or or dissimilarity between us, you know, like the skin of me or a dude making
a pot in India is no different than even the pot. It's like we're all made up of the same carbon
and the same kind of energies that warm us and cool us and propel us through this life. And
and so like whatever this, I think that's maybe what the Catholics or a Christian would think of
as the Holy Spirit is like the thread that we absorb our souls together. And is this this unified
kind of God shield that is all of us that we all come from and go back into this this pool of souls
that is of is is is the one. Well, this is in that thing that you're talking about. I was just
listening to a lecture by the founder of the Hare Krishna is talking about this very thing. He's
got those fucking people at the airport. Am I right though? I like it when I like running into
listen, I tell you, I'd rather run their book. I'd rather the which one I don't know the one that
goes and it culminates with yeah, you eat me because that's a grotesque part of getting energy.
And then you become a vegetarian because you're more enlightened. And then when you get to the
highest point of spirit, you can absorb all your nourishment through the air. That's not the Hare
Krishna. No, I don't think that's the Hare Krishna. So they do definitely have some serious
flaws because there is the what they're based on is a type of yoga called bhakti yoga. And so is
that a thing that stimulates DMT in their brain? Is that a thing like there's like a lot of
yoga poses that they would talk about if you get good at this and you're practicing this for years
and years and years that these will cause psychedelic states? Well, it's I think it's
even more powerful than that in the sense that it's what you just said, which is we're all part of
this one pool of existence. All energies are all connected and make up this one super entity
composed of all things. The step that they take is they say that entity that that some total of
all things, which is called I almost pronounce of it, it's called a sinka sinka betta tatva
simultaneous simultaneous oneness and difference. So that thing that some total of all things is
God and bhakti yoga is the practice of falling in love with everything. So you now recognize,
isn't that cool? You but that's not owned by the Hare Krishna. See that's a very old
right. But they you know, the but the Hare Krishna's or Prabhupada, the guy who brought it here
was very, very good at talking about what that what the implications of all that is. And so it's
the idea that all this stuff out here, all this out here, every single thing around you is just
God energy. And I think the name is called maybe prakriti as the name they have, you know, Hindu
isms rat, they have a lot of cool terms for it. So all this God energy. And so the dimension that
we're in right now is marked by ignorance. That's a quality. That's the quality. That makes sense.
That's the quality of this dimension, because we have all forgotten. Most people have forgotten
without knowing. We are without knowing. We're ignorant of the fact that we're surrounded by God.
Except for the arrogant ones. They're like, I don't know how I got this ball in. I know.
Yeah, right. How can you possibly know? Like, and why is it so hard to go? This is the greatest
mystery ever. And I'm a part of it. Wild. I hope when I die, that's where I always hope
she says, little boy, I was chasing death since I was a little kid, little boy, little seven, eight.
And I was like, I can't wait to die. Because I was just sure that when I died, I'd be fucking
omniscient. Like, I would there would be a snap of the fingers, and I would be flooded with knowledge
of all my questions answered, all the huge realization and oneness. Like, I knew that
as a little boy. And it's crazy, like little kids, you mess with little kids, man. And if you could
get them comfortable in talking, they're amazing, though, creatures. Yes. There's a great, I used to
always put kitchen soup for the soul by my toilet. Yeah. And I know it's funny. And I would read it.
And there's one story in there. And it was this guy, they had a baby and they are getting ready
to take the baby home to the hospital. And they had a daughter that was like, five or six or whatever.
It was like, let me be with the baby. We're in the hospital, I want to get home,
let me be with the baby. And they're like, there's the jealousy thing, or like,
they didn't know really what's going on. They get home, they set up the crib, and they put the
baby in the baby room with the crib. And she's like, Hey, can I, I need to see the baby. Can I
see the baby? Yeah, be quiet, don't wake her up and go in and see the baby. And they're kind of peeking
through the crack in the door, and watching, and the little girl goes up and she says, Hey,
she says, tell me what God looks like, because I'm starting to forget. And it's like, and that's
like a crazy fucking idea. And a crazy idea. Like, I know, like, I have a memory that predates my
birth, right? Like I have a, and I don't know if that's a, some machination of my, of my own,
you know, illustration of my greatness or whatever. It's kind of weird,
arrogance that like, I predate, like, I have a memory and a vision of this time when I'm floating
in blackness and space, and that, that I existed. And I thought it was strange that I'm coming down
to these people to be in their home, you know, like kind of thing, like really odd. And, and then I
talked, the more I say that, like I talked to other people that have similar experiences sometimes,
you know, it's only odd from the POV of this culture, from the POV of a large percentage of
humans on the planet. That's just, yeah, that's normal. Yeah. I mean, you're going to get like,
the Dawkins school and the, uh, Richard Dawkins. That's a great idea for a new cover band like
Richard Dawkins. It's like people got this replace Dawkins lyrics with Richard Dawkins.
Richard Dawkins. I think we need people like that. For what purpose? Well, I think that he helps me
because people like him and Hitchens, who say things like, and I'll misquote it, but when they
say things like, uh, something like lack of evidence, there's a great atheist quote. The guy
that wrote the God delusion, right? Yeah. And then, and then we like, so, so I used to get really,
Hitchens was beautiful. I get annoyed with atheists sometimes and skeptics, but then if I stop being
annoyed and, and really take what they're saying and try to apply it to my life, I get annoyed
on semantics though of it, of like, you're not really, if you're an atheist, I mean, and correct
me if I'm wrong, you're more learned on this than I am for sure. But like, if you're an atheist,
you're, the same coin is a believer. The very same, you're just the other, you're the taker.
Well, no, I think they would say absolutely not. I would say that because a believer is saying,
I know Jesus Christ is the way and the light or whatever and no way to have an accept through
him type thing, right? And the atheists would say, I know there's no God and they just turned dirt
and you're back into dust. I don't, I don't think all of them say there's no God. They just say,
let's keep things where we can prove it with evidence.
So that's a lot of agnostic then. That's without knowledge of what that would be, right? And that's
kind of where I feel like I'm at. If those are the correct definitions, I don't know. I'm open to
whatever, but like, there's no way that we humans know. Well, I mean, I, the way I look at it is,
okay, fine. On one level, no God, all atoms, that's it. Right. Fine. Got it. Believe it.
I know it's true. And thank God, people like you are analyzing the universe at this level only
without getting obstructed by some kind of philosophical metaphysical bullshit. Because
thanks to you, there's radiation therapy that cured my cancer that, you know, there's like,
there's great, great. I didn't know the doctrines made radiation. Well, no, but, but the scientific
But that's the other fallacy, though, isn't it? The, the, well, there's either science or there's
God. Well, that's bullshit. That's what people that have an agenda do. And they separate those two
things. And I think they're the same thing. There's a bunch of different, again, it's, there's no one
way of looking at it. A lot of people like Crowley, who I love, who's like one of the Alistair. Yeah,
he's a great occultist. His, one of his great sayings was our method is science, our aim is
religion. So his approach to it was we will use this, we'll use empiricism, we will, we will use
only only, we will only use what can be proven, we will use, we will be very strict in our data
gathering. And the results of our experiments, we will be very strict in noting what happens
and not up, not pretend something happened that didn't, because that's how we'll get to the truth.
So it's, there's a lot of different ways of looking at it. But the way I see it is this.
When I, I cannot deny the fact that when I pray, especially gratitude related prayers, if I just
start saying thank you to some kind of super intelligence in the universe, and I start doing
that regularly, I get happier, synchronicities happen more. The most powerful prayer in the
world is thank you. Amazing things happen. And I can't deny that evidence. Even if I was to write
down, but then you can easily argue that also and say, well, yeah, you're controlling your brain
and the patterns in your mind and the sentences into the neurons to go ahead, but I don't care.
I don't care. I just want results. So to me, it's like, if, if you want to get caught up
in whether or not by saying these words, yeah, go ahead. Like I put a thing out and it was like
reasons people rape people and three check marks, right? Like
short dressed or whatever, you know, the skippy clothing, flirtation, because I'm a rapist and
like the third box is the only box. Like it's, like it's, and then, and I put that because I saw it,
I thought it was funny and I was like, how, you know, like what a cogent idea. Like, of course,
like it's only a rape. Like it's, that's what it is. It's a sickness in that kind of a way.
And it's not any of these other things and anybody else that tries to do any kind of
a signaling on a victim is a scumbag and whatever. And then there's all these conversations about
it underneath that I never even look at, right? Because I'm like, bitch, I'm not here to argue
on the god damn internet. You don't believe how much shit I got going on in my life. I'm sorry
that you have all that. I've got this one guy. You must make a t-shirt. You got to make a t-shirt
that says, bitch, I'm not here to argue on the internet. I got shit to do. I would wear on the
back. I would wear that all the time. So good. Um, yeah, I'm not here to argue on the internet
either. And I'm not here to like, so like, I'm really in agreement with that. Like, I'm just here
for the function and performance of it. If it's this, if it's that, like, whatever. Yeah, I don't
think Jesus, I'm with it. Cool. Yeah. And this is, I think it's a, all atheists must perform the
experiment. Uh, if they want to approach this stuff, they must perform the experiment of spending a
nice month or a year, do all the actions. However long they think it takes to like,
perform an experiment, spend some time. Because without that, there's no, there's no,
there's no real like thoughtful looking at the other side of it to go, okay, no, I know all
about this. To think that you know all that, like contempt that there's a great quote contempt prior
to invent, there's a, there's a principle, which is a bar against any information. Um, and, and
against that will win any argument. And that is contempt prior to investigation or leave a man
and everlasting ignorance, right? Wow. And that's huge, right? But how often we all get that? And
until we really dive into it then, it's like, you don't know anything. You've got some ideas about
Christianity or you've got some ideas about being Harry, but unless you live that shit and really
go, okay, I'm going to listen to all the greatest thinkers in this thing. And then I'm going to do
all the actions that they do on a daily basis with the discipline. You might not really know
what the fuck you're talking about. You can't write. That's the thing. And it's an intentional,
I believe you're intentionally cutting yourself off from that level of things, because you don't
want to deal with it right now. Maybe you're not here to deal with that shit right now. Maybe
you're just here to deal with other stuff that like atoms or mitosis or the splitting atoms or
all the wonderful things that are making the world so incredible. Maybe that's where you're
focused. Those new silicone breasts that come out that are so soft, they're like real. I thought
they already had those. So good they have them. Well, there you go. That's all thanks to people who
are godless. No, it is evil sinners. No, I'm completely and fully into the church of heresy.
I mean, like all that, like any, you just got to question all these things, man. And then be nice
and kind. The thing that I have a problem with like some of those guys is they get, it's like
Nietzsche is like, he's such a negative Nelly, you know what I mean? It's like, you get into these
things where it's just like, you're just sad. And so like, is your sadness and you not ever
dealing with how your dad treated you or whatever? Is that coloring your whole narrative that is your
philosophy now? Yeah. You know, and like the Dawkins or the like, if you're going to take that route,
man, smile a lot and be super kind and put your hand out and hug a lot of people because that
shit is important. They don't want to. They're angry. And you know, man, I feel bad for them. It's
like, that is why you get cancer. There was a thing called the age of, do you know the age of faith?
Have you ever heard of that term? I have. So I just, you know, I'm, I'm a, I love reading,
but the older I get, I think the dumber I get. So I've actually, I think, even worse, man,
I've been curious about communism. So I ordered a comic book breakdown of Karl Marx. So it's breaking
down all the philosophies that made Karl Marx and it's showing the different periods in human
history. It's great. And it's actually Nixon to learn about history. It's actually pretty well done.
At least you get a little bit. That's what I feel. At least I'll get a little bit, but
it did say that the, the, you know, there was a time period in human history during the time of
the great inquisition where talking like this, the way we're talking right now would get you
murdered by crazy people who believed in a very specific kind of God. But really these crazy
people, they didn't maybe so much believe in God. They just figured out a way to get a lot of power
by tricking dumb people into believing in an invisible thing. And because of that,
they put a fucking, the brakes on human discovery for a nice long time.
Well, we're still happy. Well, if you look at ISIS in America, but if you, if you look at what's
happening with ISIS, imagine that's a version of this very same thing, which is religious
fundamentalists using their religion as an excuse to oppress people and to hold up the
paradigm they need. First thing, I was having a great conversation with a friend the other day,
a group of people and I'm talking about like the little parents or something like that.
And then one of them started laughing and pointing at another one and she says,
what? She goes, remember when you said you read that? She goes, I did read that.
And she goes, oh, tell them how you read it. And so I go, well, how'd you read it? And she says,
Wikipedia, which was like, I thought that's so good. It's like a comic book. But anyway,
the whole thing about ISIS too, you know, like, when you respond to gossip or negativity or
whatever, like, like a troll on Twitter or something or whatever, that makes him bigger.
Oh, now he's on. Yeah, kind of thing. And so like, I wonder, like, I don't know the scope,
but I know like a woman that I really love that's a Medevac pilot and there's fucking horrible
shit that's happening in Northern Iraq right now. The fucking awful thing. The shirt that I'm wearing,
my cousin is a Navy seal and he got shot and he's in recovery right now. And I didn't even know
we were at war last spring, right? Like type of shit. Like we're in gunfights all the time.
Tim Kennedy is in fun, like he's in service and he is out there protecting people as a top notch
ranger because there's fucking bad people doing bad shit. The other side of that is like, we've
decimated Iraq and we're into this position and ISIS is what 20,000 people deep or something
like that. I don't know. It's not a whole bunch of guys. And the more we pay attention to that,
I'm like, what is this distraction about also? I kind of also think that because we don't send
troops there. We have minimal forces there that it's like we're mired into feet in that way. It's
kind of like going into Vietnam, which is a false flag event. And like, like, I just wonder
on the scope of history, like where we have, so my point is we have psychopaths, is everybody that's
in power anywhere, whether it's for a corporation or our government, are they all psychopaths?
Because there is like something that's happening here where people are playing with people's lives.
They're not for all the patriotism and everything that every fucking politician and they're all
voting against sending troops to where it would make an area safer and make less people die.
And they're kind of committed to not winning or it seems weird, man. It's like we have a lack of
you don't want to win a fucking war. God Jesus, if you're a weapons manufacturer, the last thing
you want is to win a fucking war. And so like, well, that's what I say is like when we have psychopaths
in charge of things, it's like corporations. I rail against corporations all the time. I think
our government is just a shadow of corporations. I mean, I don't think that it's obvious. And
if you don't think that you're retarded, Jimmy Carter just said thinking it through Jimmy Carter.
There's a girl, I'll send it to you. There's Jimmy Carter just came out saying just breaking out eyes
like this is an oligarchy. We're in an oligarchy and we're all of our wonder his awareness come to
that when he was president. I don't know if it's like tied into the fact that he got
this cancer diagnosis. Yeah, it seems like that, man. But he was always kind of proud.
And they say he's one of the smartest guys ever to sit in the chair.
Yeah, man. And it is an oligarchy. And he's colored as a dummy.
Yeah, right. Jimmy Carter. What do they say? He loves jelly beans? Or was that Reagan?
Oh, yeah. He's the peanut guy, peanut farmer. That's it. Carter the peanut farmer.
It's weird, though. I mean, so when you look at that and you look at when we talk about spiritualism,
when you talk about like a transcendence is what we're all looking for, whether we know it or not.
I think that's what we want, right? And so I rail against these corporations. But corporations are
just things. They're tools. It's like a fucking gun or a microphone. It's just a tool. It's nothing.
As long as it's used with the conscience of humanity, right? But the problem is that there's
people that are maybe they're almost like Asperger-type people, like accountants are like
a lot of those guys think in a certain way. And so they'll not think about humanity so they can
think about our profit margin that's greater for stockholders or whatever. Here is the job.
And it's like at a certain point, if I'm a corporation, I am a corporation owner and
a few different ones, I want everybody to have health care. Like I did that before any of the
fucking Obama forced people to it made it worse for me when he did it made it more expensive.
But it's like I wanted everybody that works with me to like I want everybody to be taken care of
my friends. And if they get hurt, I'm going to pay out of my own pocket anyway. So let's make sure
everybody gets taken care of. You know what I mean? It's like and and so like that's what I mean
about corporations with humanity. You've got to have somebody steering it that has a conscience
and that has a loving kind of exposure to the world. And we don't have that at a certain point
anymore. And I don't know what happens because it's kind of maybe coupled with the idea that like
people that are liberals in their 20s and 30s become conservatives in their 40s 50s and whatever.
I don't think we ever had it. Like I don't know when we like the whole system and this is not
just because I briefly read a comic book on Karl Marx. He's read more than comic books folks.
But the whole system, the way the thing works is at least after having read this it does seem
to make sense. Please refute it if you can. But the idea is the person who owns the production
facility, whatever it may be, the person who has the capital. Right. Right. He uses that capital
to buy life energy from workers. Right. That's just the way it works. So I hire you and basically
what I'm doing is I'm saying if you will give me eight of your life energy, eight of your breathing
hours, I'm going to pay you $30 an hour. But I'm going to convert that $30 an hour into a profit
for me of $20 an hour. So or $60 an hour or whatever. Right. So what ends up happening there
is that the worker always gets the same amount of money per week. But the boss always gets more
and more and more and more and more and more and more money. And that has created the situation,
the inevitable situation where 1% of the people on earth have 90% or 99% of everything in the world
because the end result of that mixed in with inheritance laws is that all the stuff gets
sucked away and then it gets sucked out of the people and that's just the way it works.
Contracts are like, even if you have a doll or something and your doll sells well,
you get like a pittance for that, right? Right. But when you die, you know what your kids get?
What? Nothing. Like it's not even part of your estate. Like all that shit, like whatever you've
done, if you're getting royalties for something, that goes away on your dad. There you go. Yeah.
It's like, it's and the government does that in a big way. We're going through that with my dad.
It's fucked. But I mean, I like saying that. There's something that's bought and paid for you
on this track land. It's worth 50 grand when your dad bought it and now it's worth $300,000.
Hello my beautiful angels. We're going to take $150,000 for it on his death,
even though it's been paid for in full and like that's crazy. Yeah, it's crazy. And there's a lot
of different methods of gaming the system like that. And you know, there's got to be a middle
line there. You know, it doesn't have to all be like what, because like if you read,
that's it's scary what Marx wanted. There's like 10 things that he wanted. And it's
I consider it just fucked, man. It's like, you know, there's no,
no more private property, everything. It's not that man. It's that because like I really one,
one of the, one of the things I read that he said, which made a lot of sense. He's like,
a lot of you are upset when we say that we are against private property. But
most of you don't have private property. Just so you know, most of you don't own
shit. The majority of the world doesn't own shit. They're all renters. They don't own nothing.
Don't think you own anything because you don't want even right now. It's not a good time to
I'm ready. All right. But the point is who owns it? You know, like I'm renting this house.
My car is a lease. I don't own it. I own these microphones, my computer that that's mine. But
in general, most people don't own anything anyway. But Marx was saying,
you know, it seems like what he was saying, God forgive me for saying Marx was saying,
because who the fuck knows what he's saying? He said a billion things in a billion different
ways. Most of which contradictory and everything else. But one, but what he was advising is
all inheritance goes to the state. There's no tax. If you die, it all goes to the state.
All inheritance goes to the state. All property is absorbed by the state. We create worker armies,
which is me. You get like groups of people who are no longer
attached to their family. I feel like he's not very involved.
Marx. Well, I mean, he was a fucking genius and one third of the planet follows his philosophies.
But it's like China. So that's awesome. I hear from what I understand,
being a citizen of China is awesome. Well, we don't actually, I don't hear that. I hear that you
can go to work and gases you'll work with will melt your face off. You'll die young. If you're a
woman, you won't even be born. Well, yeah, there's no argument. No, there's no argument.
If you look at history, that that method does not seem to work very well. Yeah,
why I say not very evolved, it's like you can't take out the human component, right? And so all
men aren't created equal, regardless of what your daddy told you, right? That's just not,
it's not true. We're all born into different spots and places in our lives. Not just like,
I was born under whatever, like I'm George Bush's kid or something. It's like, that's not what I
mean. What I mean is like, we have different skills, talents and awareness. We're born with
maybe different awareness of consciousness. Of consciousness, right? Yeah. And so that being the
case, under a Marx, that person is going to be imprisoned or killed because he's going to be
troubled. A person that's of a higher elevation, because you're not going to be satisfied with
just being a worker in that kind of a concert. Well, they, I mean, that, yeah, that and a zillion
other things, which is like, what, you're going to fucking take away my family's property that's
been in their family forever. Like that. But the problem is this, man. So, okay, well, let's,
we won't do anything. Let's just let things keep going the way that they go. And if things keep
going the way that they go, then all that happens is the rich will continue to get more and more
and more and more and more and more and more and more. They will control all the politics,
if they don't already, they'll control all the politicians, if they don't already. So, so that,
so all that, all that ends up happening is the disparity between haves and has nots grows.
And inevitably, when that disparity gets to a certain level, which it isn't close to, at least
in this country, I mean, back when Marx was spewing all this stuff out, like they were sending
toddlers to go into factories to work. But you can already see it in other places. Like,
I was in Columbia last summer for a job and it's like the, the, the chasm between rich and poor
is profound. Right. It's like, it's perfect. And that only grows. And that's happening. And then I
go, Oh, because they're not so far ahead. I'm like, this is kind of where America's going. Like, you
can feel it. It's like, palpable. You're like, Oh, I can see the direction we're moving. Right. And
that's a big problem because we're moving into third world status, but it gets even worse when
you consider the fact that within the next 40 years, self-driving cars and AI and robotics are
going to, that's the movie I'm doing right now. Really? It's about AI and all that kind of stuff,
like in the future. It's crazy. AI taking people's jobs. Well, it's about AI. It's about the idea.
Like when I was telling you about the thing about the computer and the sad and all that,
why am I sad and all that computer answering? Yeah. He was saying, you know, they became so
much that if you were typing into computer, you were typing into computer and a bot was, was here
answering. And I'm asking you both questions. I'd be able to kind of tell who was the human and who
was the bot. Yeah. You know what I mean? Even if you're like, Oh, I don't have enough RAM to answer
that. Oh, that's cute human that's making up a thing or something or whatever. But like,
they said, so it started to become like 50, 50, where people would get it right or who was the
human who was the bot. And they go, which is kind of weird. And he goes, Oh, I thought maybe 51.
He goes, no, if it went to 51, 49, it'd be really bad because that would mean that the computer
was more human than the human. Yeah. That's called passing the Turing test. And that's like,
when they talk about singularity and stuff. That's on the way there. Yeah. Right. So,
but my, I don't know my thing, like, you know, Elon Musk, you just donated $10 million or whatever.
Yeah. That's, you can't fight it for one. I think that's weird that he did that because
there's no way that you can stop. You can't stop this ball of evolution that's going. You can't
stop it. You can't stop it. Adam Baum, like, even if people knew all of that, they go, we know this
is good. They, you can't stop it. You can't stop progression, which is a weird thing. He's got to
know that. Well, the problem for me isn't that like, it's, it's not the, the schism that we have
that's between rich and poor or whatever. The whole problem, the crux of it for me lies in
accountability of just like we're talking about, like I run from it in my own personal life. My
life gets sadder and worse. Right. I stand up for it and I own myself, then my life gets better.
So the same thing, thusly for our country or for our world, you know, to not speak in a
nationalistic way is that what we need is accountability. What we do not have is accountability.
You know, when we have corporations like Verizon or Bank of America that paid zero,
zero taxes last year was like $12 billion in profit. That's insanity. That is, that's a cancer.
That's a sickness. I had to have politicians then that are co-signing that to make that okay.
That's, that's a, that's fucking abhorrent. That's horrific. And so we have zero accountability
for that. So when, like, I don't know where your taxes are, but like last year or whatever,
I went through the 1% and I was like, fuck, yeah, I'll tell you what, it's not so great.
Because I'm in the bottom end of that pool and that pool is fucking huge. Right. You make a
couple of $300,000 a year. Awesome. You know what, you're still kind of in the same place I was,
if I made 40 grand a year, it's not like a huge deal. The people that have the fucking money,
money, money, they're talking about the 0.01% of the 1% at the top have like something like
90% of it. It's not just like people say the 1% a lot, but when you put it into the scope and
contextually what it is, it's fucking crazy. And I pay the same taxes that those guys pay
that are making billions of dollars. And that is really insane. Oh, at like 50%, 48%.
Well, not only, but I mean monetarily. It's like, they, there's ways to hide those ones. You see
big buildings that are just empty all the time. You're like, I wonder how on Fifth Avenue they
keep that building. That's a skyscraper. Tax write up. What company needs a $50 million a year,
whatever that is, staying empty tax rate. Like, and so they come to a zero sum. And then they,
they accrue interest on the building as it appraises at a higher value each year. And then
they have something to borrow. Like that's fucking crazy. Well, there you go, man. I mean, you see
that is what you're describing there is the problem, which is that obviously that is happening that
way. Because the, what happens is the bosses get richer and richer and richer. They become that
0.01%. That's an insanity, right? But then they start controlling the, the governments of the
world. And then when they start controlling the governments of the world, then all that's going
to happen is things, the system is only going to be built to keep them in power and to keep
everyone else out. You're going to want to tax people as much as you can to keep them weak
and quiet, because you don't want them to get up to where you're at, right?
Because I want all prisoners, whether you're a prisoner that works at Walmart and it's too dumb
to know you're a prisoner or whether you're an actual prisoner that's behind bars. That like,
if I'm in power, that's what those people are looking for, right? But the thing is, is like,
when we talk about this God field or whatever, you know, this, this, this Bay of Souls that we
all come from and go to and exist within if we're aware enough. The thing is, is that we look,
or some people, it's easy to look. And I think there's a trick that gets played. It's like a
magic trick. It's like the same kind of magic trick, like I see somebody on TV and I'm like,
Oh my God, and then I see them in real life. And that's, and you're just in awe. And it's like,
they've done nothing except been broadcast somewhere. It's not, it's virtually nothing,
literally, right? It doesn't mean I'm more valuable or it doesn't mean anything. And so,
but the same kind of thinking goes into the thing when we see a duck covered in oil after an
Exxon Valdez spill or something like that. And we're like, huh, what, you know, or maybe even
if we look it, we're sad and we go clean up a couple bucks and work for Greenpeace, which
like almost nobody does, but the real guilt ridden that are like, I need to make a difference. And
you're not making a difference, but awesome that you want to try. I get it. And like,
when you go into that kind of thing, the idea that I can look at that and not care about it and not
be fucking just like, feel like bile come up is because I think that I'm not that duck.
Right? Yeah. And that's that I am the same in the same environment. That's, that's part of my
food source. That's all part of me. That's all. And I'm thinking that I'm separate from that.
You know, and it's like that vision that I keep having about like standing with a little boy at
the fucking edge of the ocean and him going, Daddy, what was it like when I could, when you
could swim? You guys used to swim. What does it feel like? Because we're at a place right now
where it's coming where we can't be the earth is belching up our secrets and our lies and our
despicable acts back onto us. And we're not able to function in this world. We're not able to eat
food that's healthy. And we're running from it in a way. And so like, at what point is it that,
I mean, there's no way we're headed for anywhere but destruction, right? The only thing we can
have is a spiritual revolution of some kind and a consciousness and you got to vote with your dollars.
That's the only way. Why do I pay fucking more money for a cup of coffee and go decide where I
want to go or for grass fed meat? Or why do I go farm to table and I give a big portion of K-man
coffee proceeds to them so that they can fight corporate domination over the farmlands because
I want small farmers to win. I need everybody to be sustainable. I need to go and support these
people. And fuck yeah, if your eggs are fucking $4 at the supermarket and the farmers are eight,
I'd rather buy them from the farmer and know that I'm going to get good health. You know what
I mean? Because that feeds my body, man. And so it's nourishment. Like most of us are eating
just to get through life and get through the day. But this is the nourishment of my soul,
it guides my mind, it guides my emotions, and it guides where I go through the day consciously.
And it's what I stand for. And yeah, that's worth a fucking couple more dollars. And so like,
that's the thing is like, the only way through is a change in our consciousness,
a spiritual change, and then a voting with our dollars. Like, how does that start the spiritual
change? I think through conversations like this, you know, what I think, you know, but if I'm
listening right now, one of my guys told me this, he goes, Hey, the spiritual way of life,
90% of it is having good manners when you don't want to. Hmm. Right? It's like,
I don't feel like having good manners and fuck you. And then everybody understands.
That's so great. Well, he's not really that way. He was in a bad mood or whatever. I don't want to
be forgiven for a bad mood. I want to have you not know I was in a bad mood. I want to be able
to be fucking loving and gracious in my inner changes with people all the time. So that's my
goal. So then I try to walk carefully. So then I become what they call God conscious, which is
I'm conscious of the God that's around all the time, because I'm conscious, which is another
word for aware of my steps and where I'm putting them, because it doesn't fucking matter very goddamn
much. If you got a brand new pair of bad ass fucking shell toe to D design, and you're just like,
my white new shoes, I'm out here pimping and silver Lake fucking awesome. And and I walk by and I'm
just texting on my phone and I step on your shoes and your shoes are all fucking dirty now. Now,
I didn't mean that. Right. I was just not aware. I was self absorbed. Right? Yeah. Does it make
your shoes less dirty that I didn't mean it? So living intentionally, this God consciousness has
become super interesting to me of like, I want to live with intention and have like, I have dominion
over where I put my goddamn feet. I just need to be thoughtful about it. Right. And so I think
that's the thing. I think it starts right there. We can all be more thoughtful everywhere. You
know, I used to think, what's my problem? My girlfriend, you know, why is that? I go, oh,
because I take her for granted, because I'm a selfish self absorbed guy. And what I mean by that
is like, like, it doesn't come out that way. People I don't think would characterize me that way.
But when I look at it and I look at the depths of it, I go, there's birds on me that need to be
brushed off. And I need to be polishing that constantly. How does that show up for me? It
shows up because I go, if I'm having a shitty day, I'll be like, I'll be short. I won't be as kind
as loving maybe a hug or this or that or whatever happens, whether it's with my mom or my friends
or whoever, because you know me. And you know, I'm not like that. Right. And so I take it for granted.
I don't have to have manners around those close. That's bullshit. Wow. Right. That's such an easy
thing to do. Who do we have the best manners with? Strangers. Right. The lady at the supermarket. I
feel good because I was like, Oh, how was your day today, Margaret? It's really nice. Thank you.
Yeah. No, I didn't need paper, not plastic. And you're super kind and nice and gracious. That
person, you get home. You're like, and she's like, Hey, how was your day? It's okay. Whatever. I don't
want to talk about it. What? That's rude. Anybody would characterize that as rude. Right. We accept
all this behavior from ourselves. Right. And I go, man, I need to be more conscious. I need to
raise my awareness. You know, and I think that's where it starts. I mean, I needed a spirituality
that I could sink my teeth into that I could walk on because people would talk about this stuff.
And it seems like he's ethereal wisps of error. They're just out of your reach that you get an
idea of. And it's like, where does it start? And I would, I would ask guys, and this guy told me
that man, he was 90% of the spiritual way of life is having manners when you don't feel like it. Love
it, man. Really beautiful, right? Tate, that's a great way to wrap up this podcast. Thank you for
coming, sir. Tell me, tell, tell, do a quick plug for us. Okay. Well, I'm a, I'm a pervader of
fine coffee beans. And, and I love it. And you can find us at cavemancoffee.com. And we do,
you know, we're very careful about where we get it from, who we work with, we work with one single
farm of guys that we know, Lacey is down right now in Columbia visiting the farm. And she also
works for a superstar that was the star of Mission Impossible. I can't remember. But like, so she's
doing all that kind of thing. And so she and Keith Dardeen and myself started this coffee
company, caveman coffee, you can check us out anywhere. The way was cerveza.com is a little
micro brew that me and another buddy started, which is dope. And you can find that on Instagram,
too. You can find me at Tate Fletcher, my name is TAIT. And I'm easy to find. And you can see
me in upcoming films, I guess. Awesome. Let's hear them. Which ones? The accountant,
Ben Affleck will be out soon. There's something called Blood Father with Mel Gibson. I'm in
Sicario with James Rowland, Vinicius Del Toro and Emily Blanc. Just a little thing in that,
but it's awesome. I hope it all comes out. I get to yell and Spanish fucking get these guys out
of the car and killing everybody. It's rad. And then we've got a TV show. There's a great new TV
show coming out on HBO called Westworld with Anthony Hopkins and Ed Harris. You're in that.
Yeah. Yeah. I've been working on that for the last three weeks. Wow. And that's all about AI and
about Westworld. I know it. I know what it's based on, man. Yeah. Fuck yeah. So doing that. And then
the next couple of days, I'm on a show called The Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., a Marvel TV series.
And so that'll be out probably in a couple of weeks, I don't know. I think that's it. And yeah.
It's great you're doing so good, man. You're an inspiration, Tate.
Man, it's a pleasure, dude. I feel so fortunate. And I really, like I say it all the time, I'll
say it to you right now. And it's super important to me that people know because you don't know
where anybody goes. But you make an impact. You make a huge impact on me. And I'm glad you're my
friend. And it's important. We have those people around that your heart feels full and you feel
risen up by. And you're definitely one of those guys. And it matters. It matters a lot. And I
thank you so much, man. Thanks for this inspiration. You're a super cool guy. I feel the same way,
Tate. Thanks, man. All right. Thanks for listening, everybody. A big thank you to Casper Mattresses.
Go to Casper.com. Use offer code Family Hour to get $50 off your order.
Thanks for using our Amazon portal. I hope you forgive me for the crappy sound quality
and that you could still enjoy that podcast. Much more coming this week and next week.
Stay tuned. I love you. Hare Krishna.