Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1340: Fatherhood, Parenting, Home Schooling & Religion with Ben & Jessa Greenfield
Episode Date: July 20, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin talk with Ben & Jessa Greenfield on the subjects of parenthood, home schooling and much more. How Ben’s hitting his muscle-building potential. (4:04) The paradox...ical effect of what/when you eat on your gut for elite athletes. (9:10) Jessa’s famous sourdough bread. (12:20) The Greenfield’s are NOT helicopter parents. (13:10) Ben’s definition of attachment theory, how the way you are raised affects your relationships & MORE. (15:44) The importance of traditions and the greatest challenges faced, as a couple, by the way they were raised. (26:20) The idea of love and logic parenting. (32:35) Raising your children to have virtue and make their own mistakes. (39:45) How fatherhood has been devalued in modern societies. (47:25) Religion, the foundation that holds communities together. (53:45) From a scientific standpoint, what are the values of having a spiritual practice? (57:48) Why science doesn’t work if you have morality attached to it. (1:04:30) Busting the myths surrounding homeschooling/unschooling. (1:09:28) The value of saving/investing. (1:17:58) Speculating on the future of education. (1:23:19) Featured Guest/People Mentioned Ben Greenfield Fitness (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Ben Greenfield Boundless Book Jordan B. Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Arthur C. Brooks (@arthurbrooks) Twitter Related Links/Products Mentioned July Promotion: MAPS Strong ½ off!! **Promo code “STRONG50” at checkout** How Blood Flow Restriction Training Works Jessa's World-Famous Sourdough Bread The 5 Love Languages: The Secret to Love that Lasts – Book by Gary Chapman Abide Love and Logic Institute, Inc Father Absence Statistics Bishop Barron Presents | Arthur Brooks: Love Your Enemies Practicing gratitude may help lower blood pressure The Ultimate Guide To Unschooling: Top Tips To Create Free-Thinking, Resilient, Creative Young Humans Who Can Thrive In A Modern World. Go Greenfields Tuttle Twins Book Series
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, UP with your hosts.
Saldas Defano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pumped the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment Podcast,
we interview one of our very, very good friends, Ben Greenfield,
the great Ben Greenfield, and his wife, Jessa.
We have the luxury of knowing these people quite well, they're good friends of ours.
We were on the Ben Greenfield podcast years ago when mine pump was in its infancy and just
hit it off right out the gates.
He's a very, very smart guy.
One of the original, I guess biohackers, knows a lot about health and fitness,
but one thing that struck us was how involved him and his wife were with their children. They're
very, very involved parents, and they seem to have a great family dynamic. So we had them on the
show to talk all about parenting, fatherhood.
We talked about homeschooling, they both homeschooled their children
and we talked about how their religion plays a role in raising their children.
Now Ben Greenfield is also an author and his book, Boundless,
talks a little bit about parenthood. It's a great book.
You can check it out at boundlessbook.com.
And of course, you can find Ben Greenfield,
all over social media and his podcast
is the Ben Greenfield podcast.
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I asked you the software, Ben, I want to ask you again,
because the last time I saw you, you were like a good 15 pounds
of lean body mass smaller.
Yeah, so that's the size of everybody.
At least, you look jacked right now.
I think it's the shirt. No, it's not, dude.
It's not, you know I'm pretty sure.
You know, I'm kind of getting out of here.
You put on some serious muscle.
Yeah. Recently, what are you doing differently?
What's going on? Duck at home for 10-a-bikes.
Map 10-a-bikes.
I did the Russian kettlebell start, so I spent the first half of COVID training for that.
So it had ton of kettlebells.
How'd you like that?
A ton of overhead farmers' walks, it's snatches, Turkish get-ups, and I would just keep
ordering heavier and heavier kettlebells.
Now, I love it.
And I wanted to do RKC2,
but they keep moving it with the pandemic farther
in the future.
So every time I get excited about the snatch test again,
it just gets thrown a little bit farther down the road.
And then I did a lot of BFR training,
a lot of BFR training.
Like three times a week,
two failure, full body, BFR training.
Well, my kids actually got a lot of really
good meat sponsors for their podcast, like Bell Campo and Butcher Box. And then this
guy named Ty Lopez, who partnered up with Joel Salaton, he's got a farm now. So they're
sending my podcast meat for that. And so we have a ton of me, we have a ton of organ meats. I started doing about
12 of those ancestral supplements, organ capsules like heart liver, kidney, what else they got
lung, they got brain, so a ton of liver and liver organ meats, kettlebells, BFR training. And
then I'm still doing a lot of BPC and TB500. Vanable.
Between.
Yeah.
Vanable.
Did you see the 3PO?
Did it feel like your body was craving to grow
because it seemed like you just put it on?
Do you feel like you were holding it back?
And you feel better with more muscle mass?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Well, it's telling Adam, especially going
into the winter when you don't want to be cold and frail
week. I don't want to be the first one that the wolves of the bears get and
But in all seriousness, I like to maintain a little bit of extra muscle
But my all the guys in my family are so lean. It's hard. You do have to eat a lot really and
For me probably with my one week link if I have one week link. It's gut
I have to be careful when I'm eating a lot to really select my foods.
You know, like we were talking about,
I'm doing no fog maps, no legumes, no pre-botic fibers,
very few probiotics, so I'm pretty much doing like meat,
tubers, fish, bone broth, organ meats,
some berries, still doing a little bit of like
a good clean protein powder with some colostrum
and things like that in the mornings, but yeah, just a lot of nutrient-dense super clean food, but it is hard to eat a lot.
I imagine you're, I mean, we have a similar bone structure, some are height. I would think that you
have to be north of 4,500 calories to maintain or... Yeah, I think 4,500 from here, I now would be
tops. I think I'm going like 3,500 to 4,500. Well, 3,500 is not bad there. I've found once I started over for this.
This little lady next to me right here,
she just keeps shabbing through my face
and I just ate it like a good boy.
I can't keep it going.
Well, you're both obviously a picture of health.
I think you guys represent what you talk about
pretty darn well.
So that's pretty cool.
Do you notice any changes in performance
because with more muscle mass because you are, most of the time I've known you like to really do things like obstacle course racing,
hanging off things and is it make it more challenging because you're heavy or just a strength
offset that.
We were talking about the doctor this morning because we're going over to a clinic after
this to get just some work done and the doctor asked me what hurts and I paused them.
It's nothing.
Like I feel great because,
and you hit on something there,
I'm not racing anymore.
And that's probably a big part,
that's a big part of the weight gain too,
is I went from running, you know,
sometimes 23 miles away.
I'm running maybe,
so my running right now is when I go check the mail,
I sometimes run up from the mailbox,
so I'm running like a mile a week right now,
and then we play a little bit of family tennis.
We do family tennis, usually a couple of nights a week.
And so a lot less chronic cardio, a lot less running.
I was even trying to transfer a triathlon last year.
So a lot less swimming, a lot less cycling, and just basically a lot of kettlebell and a
lot of BFR.
The thing about resistance training that I like so much, and one of the reasons why I
think it's the perfect exercise prescription for the modern for modern life is that it's pro tissue, whereas lots of cardiovascular activity tends to
be, you know, anti tissue, as your body tries to become more efficient and become better
at this kind of long-direction, high oxidative stress type of activity, resistance training
done properly, just for longevity.
Not saying you shouldn't do any cardiovascular activity, but resistance training just, it's better for longevity. You just feel better.
It's a totally different feeling. I think, honestly, as simple and non-complex as it sounds,
I think lifting heavy weights, walking a shit ton, and then playing some sport that forces you
to sprint every once in a while, is just like, that's the perfect patch.
I would think that's it,
it's just about everything from a physiological standpoint.
I would 100% agree.
Back to the gut health thing,
I've read studies that show that athletes
in hard training individuals suffer from gut health issues
at a much higher rate than the average person,
which kind of sounds contradictory, right?
If you're a hard training person, you work out a lot,
you're probably very health conscious.
Really, you think it is?
This is what the study shows.
I think it's...
I can tell you what I think it is.
And it's paradoxical because they have found,
I believe it's the pharmaceutical to bacterial ratio
in elite athletes tends to be more favorually oriented
towards metabolic efficiency,
towards harnessing energy
from carbohydrates more efficiently.
And there was even an outside magazine article, I think it was last year, about whether or
not people would start getting fecal microbiota transplants from elite athletes like get the
same gut biota as an athlete.
But the biome aside, we know, and we've known for a long time, an exercise physiology, that gut permeability
increases when blood flow is directed away from the gut, all the more so during high-intensity
interval training, all the more so during high-intensity interval training or exercise in general
in the heat.
This is why even, like, back when I was racing Ironman years ago, I would always use colostrum.
I would load with colostrum for a couple weeks going into a race just because of the research
that also shows that that limits that amount
of gut permeability onset.
Just seal those junctions.
Furthermore, we're not going near.
I'd be profan or adivil or any end-said during a race
or after because when you combine that increased gut
permeability with something that's mildly toxic
to the liver and the kidneys, it's a recipe.
You essentially simulate rabdo with that type of error.
And then you combine that with probably toxic shock.
Different eating behaviors too, right?
When you're an athlete, you tend to like get down on meals
on a whole other level than somebody who's just a sedentary
like sometimes you're eating when you still have blood
from a directed to your extremities.
Always.
You're encouraged to eat right after a workout.
And if you've got some systemic
inflammation going on, which is going to happen, especially after an intense workout, and then
on top of it, you're consuming a quote-unquote easily digestible food like a shake, which is,
you know, it's even more, it's probably even more likely to pass through your gut than solid foods.
So that combination over time, I feel like it's the perfect storm.
I agree with your theory on that.
But I do notice that if I, because I'm sensitive to gut stuff, my gut issues something I'm
always kind of dealing with.
When my training is through the roof is when I need to be the most careful.
So it makes perfect sense. I think nearly every athlete should be on something
that's going to alter the opening,
that zonulin protein, the activity that zonulin protein
that makes the gut more permeable.
So whether that is a colostrum or lignite
or anything like that is gonna help
to keep that tight junction closed,
I think that just about any athlete should be
on a really good enzyme complex, especially for any fat or protein
rich meals. And finally, they should have a giant slice of your sourdough bread, babe,
every night with some grass-fed butter, salt, and honey on it. And that would solve all
the world's woes. Now, I'm assuming that that's real sourdough. It is.
The gluten is all, I guess, out, right?
What happens to the process?
It's somewhat out.
It basically predigests the gluten.
So gluten isn't gone.
It's just gone through the starter and it eats the gluten
and digest it.
So when you eat it, you actually don't have to do all,
your stomach does all the hard work of breaking gluten
down.
It's already partially broken down.
Now, how long have, oh, probably, if you, if you have COX disease, you're still going to
pay it to the back of the toilet seat, if you have.
Yeah, I would. Yeah, I would.
Thank you for the easy work.
I appreciate that. No, so how long does it take to make a real sourdough at home?
At least 24 hours.
Okay, so it's a process.
Yeah, but it's mostly just waiting.
Okay.
It's not that hard.
People, I think the hardest thing is keeping it alive.
Mm, yeah.
Now, what we talked about before you came on the show
when you had told us you would be in the area,
you had suggested it would be a good idea
to do a podcast on parenthood and raising children.
And I think you two...
I thought I said guns, vaccines, and abortion.
And abortion.
Yeah.
Abortion and the questionable gender
of track and field athletes.
Yeah, that's what many people would do.
That's terrible.
Let's just jump in on each of those.
Yeah, let's lose everybody.
Political affiliations, yeah.
Yeah, no, no, no.
No, no, no, no.
I talk about parenthood.
And I think you both are two of the most interesting people
on this particular topic.
We've been to your house,
just and spent the night there a while ago.
Oh, no, I didn't, but I definitely did.
Oh, you did?
But you were there at your delicious meals.
So, yeah, it was great.
You were both two of the most involved parents
that I've ever met with your children.
You're just, you're involved in almost every aspect
of what's going on.
You can call a helicopter.
Yeah, no. I was just gonna say, I thought you're involved in almost every aspect of what's going on. You can call us helicopter. No, I was just gonna say.
I got to be involved, I'm very different.
You guys don't feel that way.
Do you really, you don't feel like you're helicopter
and I can see you?
Oh my gosh, no.
I was gonna say, I don't feel like you.
If anything, anti-helicopter.
Yeah, I don't think you can see it.
No, what I mean by involved is you're literally present
and involved.
It's, you know, your kids aren't just good, you know,
you're present, you're involved with the whole process.
Definitely not helicopter.
I see your kids having a lot of freedom to fail
and to succeed kind of on their own.
So I think you guys are great people to talk to.
Plus you guys at home school,
what I think is an interesting topic.
I know right now, home schooling is exploding.
Oh yeah.
It's the fastest.
It sounds like the best way to do it right now.
Yeah. And Ben grew up when it wasn like the best way to do it right now. Yeah.
Well, and Ben grew up when it wasn't cool.
I grew up when I was in school.
When it was like-
You're heading your time, which I get hit the right button
because I would be so cool.
And I was homeschooled in the traditional manner.
You buy curriculum.
You know, back when I was homeschooled,
it was the Saxon math curriculum or the Usborn books
or any number of different.
You know, A Becca was not a very popular curriculum,
and you'd order typically, in many cases,
the same books from the same organization,
so you had your math, your reading, your writing,
your logic, your grammar, your social studies,
whatever, you'd order that all from us-born,
or from A-becko, or from SACSEN,
or from any of these folks who had then sent all the books
to your house.
Kind of like when you started semester in college,
and you got a bookstore together, your books,
and then you'd go through lessons plans with mom and set around the
kitchen table and everybody you know meet at the kitchen table at eight and we go through all the
books and occasionally there's some kind of a group activity with other homeschoolers in the afternoon.
Very traditional dyed in the wool homeschooling scenario and that is not what we do with our kids.
Really? I want to start there actually. You, I feel like we've gotten to know each other
really well in the last, what has it been?
Three, almost four years?
It's been four years?
It's been four years.
Four years.
Yeah.
And, you know, I consider you a good friend of ours.
And I'd say that the thing that I probably know the least
amount is really your childhood.
And like, you're upbringing.
I feel like I've gotten pieces of it through the years,
but I really like to like dive into that,
your relationship with your parents,
what it was like when you were a kid.
And that I think will...
Well, that has such a strong influence on how you parent.
I think that's a great place to start
and influence not only in the way you parent,
but also in the way you partner,
Jess and I have even been digging into this a little bit in terms of our relationship and the attachment theory in terms of whether you were given
a lot of attention when you were young, in terms of whether you were left to defend for
yourself, in terms of how much you've been to.
So I'm not very good at explaining attachment there, and I'm going to totally bastardize
it.
But essentially, some people are born and grow up with anxious attachment
where they really look to other people for verification, for compliments, for words of
affirmation, and for things that make them feel as though they're okay.
They don't have to be anxious about everything.
Mom and dad are giving them verbal approval and saying, good job, and they grow up really
digging that kind of approval and almost needing it and still needing it from a partner when they're married or they're with a partner.
And then there's another one that's more of like, it's almost the opposite of attachment.
Do you remember what it's called, babe?
Or the opposite anxiety?
Avoidance.
So avoidance would be, I want to be left alone.
I was maybe left to be
very independent and I love my independence and I want my independence and I don't want a partner
who's in my face all the time and I'm very self-sufficient and independent and that person would not
necessarily be the person who needs many words of affirmation. And there's this whole idea of the
five love languages, you know, words of affirmation or quality time or gifts or certain things that really mean a lot
to your partner when you express those to your partner.
And for example, I kind of skew a little bit towards anxiety attachment and just kind of
skews a little bit towards avoidance attachment.
And so in our relationship, one thing that I found myself doing for years was, I'd worry
if she was okay.
When I'm making coffee in the kitchen, I look up and she's in the kitchen,
and I can't quite tell if she's smiling
or if she looks like she got up
and she's in a good mood.
I'll be, you okay, babe?
It's like, yeah, I'm okay.
You sure?
I can't, you sure you okay?
And you mean things.
I'm gonna cut you.
But the other more, Jess is like,
I'm okay, damn it.
And for me, what we've realized is that because my love language is words of affirmation,
if Jess wakes up and she says something like, gosh, I'm still thinking about how great
that stake was that you could class nine, or that coffee smells amazing, you make such
good coffee, or something like that.
I feel zero need to ask her if she's okay.
That's all me projecting me on her.
So it's really interesting.
And so kind of a rabbit hole from what you were saying about how the way that you are
raised affects the way that you parents.
And it also affects the way that you interact with your spouse to a certain extent.
Now how do you think the way you were raised made you skew towards that type of attachment?
I was kind of noodling on this because my mom, I really depended on her for approval.
I really looked to her for you're doing a good job.
You're good, you're great, and gosh darn it people like you.
I think that I looked to her a lot for compliments.
And so I still grew up looking to women in my life,
such as my wife, for those same type of compliments.
Yet I married someone who's very like Tom Boyish,
more, more of the avoidance there,
who's, who's, wouldn't, wouldn't necessarily think of,
unless we had a conversation about it,
oh, like compliment this person.
Cause for her and we were talking about this,
it almost feels like you were like...
It feels unauthentic.
Like, inauthentic.
It sounds terrible, but I'm like,
I just don't, like,
compliments do not come to my mind at all.
Like, I mean, it's not that I don't think it,
it's just, I don't voicing it,
it just feels weird to me.
Yeah.
And plus the fact that Jess and I met,
and well, we met in second grade Sunday school,
but we really got to know each other well in college,
and we're very competitive.
We had triathlon, she raised track and fields.
We've, you know, sand volleyball, everything.
We've always been a very competitive couple.
And so part of it, too, is like when she compliments me,
it's almost like it rubs against our
eye-night tendency to compete with one another and to try and one up each other.
Unless she beats you range, she's like, you did a good job. Oh yeah. I'm wired up to be an
achiever. If I take a personality profile, I'm achiever, perfectionist, and Jessa is more
people-pleaser type B and
You know one of the ways that I'll compete with her is if I see her out in the porch drinking a glass of wine Just like you know lounging at whatever 6 p.m. And I I come up and it's like an hour before dinner or whatever
I see her out there, you know
I I will literally say well
I've got about an hour of work still and about 30 emails. I still got a finish
So I'll be up from the
office in about an hour so I'll see you then I'm gonna get some work done.
I'm like I'll literally find myself.
Right.
Just because we're still competitive with each other so you guys are actually the
reverse of Katrina and I very very similar so I can totally relate to the feeling
and authentic to just say compliments to say them.
So I actually, and I love, uh, the five love languages, I recommend that to anybody in a
relationship. I think it brought so much insight to Katrina and I and, and how we navigate.
We've been together for 10 years. So of course, we've learned a ton about each other.
And I, I can never, uh, I can never compliment enough, um, for her.
And so I'm always trying to practice things
that feel authentic and real,
that it provides that for her.
Something that I've done that's helped that is,
I just make a point,
I try and do this at least once a month
where I get her flowers and write a card.
And if I sit down, is that her language is receiving a gift?
Actually gifts aren't affirmation, it's the card
that really matters. The flowers is like the message of the day.
Yeah, the flowers is a bonus.
She likes them in the house and they're pretty.
The card is what means everything to her.
And she would rather, and this was hard for me.
When we first started dating, I was the shower with gifts
because that's my thing.
So I mean, it bought her all these nights,
clothes all the time.
Because the way that you thought was, well, of course,
of course she's gonna love to get gifts.
I love to get gifts.
She's got a lot of it.
Yeah, it's really interesting.
It's not the language or partners.
No, and I actually think this is like one of the biggest
things where people miss in their relationship
because, and no one is really guilty
because you feel like you're trying.
I remember when we had that, this first, you know,
paradigm-shouting moment in our relationship
because she had felt like I wasn't giving her that love.
And I remember like, going, literally last week,
I just dropped like $500 on new loo outfits.
I can pull the receipt.
Right.
And I'm thinking of myself like, you know,
I stopped in my day, I thought about her,
I went and bought her all this stuff
and I brought it home for no reason, no holiday.
Like how is that not showing love?
But it took me a while to make that connection that
I could do that all day long, and she still not feel loved because I'm constantly
speaking my language and not hers.
And now Ben, I think, go ahead. One thing that comes to mind, I realize I haven't even
answered your question about my childhood yet. So, but one thing that comes to mind regarding
that whole idea of gifts as being a language of love is I also think that that can lead to a certain form of lazy parenting, meaning that
in many cases we feel as though we're doing a good job as parents, if we take our kids
to some expensive steakhouse and then the next day a trip to the zoo, an arcade, and a movie,
and we were just trying to make every moment epic,
or every moment extremely valuable with cash,
with money, when, in fact, I think that time
and traditions trump that big time.
Like, I can tell you, if you have breakfast
for dinner on Tuesday night where dad makes eggs
and waffles every Tuesday night for eight years of their childhood, they're going to remember
that more than any random trip to Vegas where you can get $1,000 on the whole family at
dinner at a Japanese restaurant.
Or if they've got every single Christmas, they're doing the 24-day Advent calendar and
getting a little chocolate and
doing a little bit of reading each morning for this 24 days building and building and
building to Christmas every single year. When they grow up and you ask them about Christmas,
they're probably going to talk about that tradition and that memorable habit that's
a part of the family, then they will, that one year they got the huffy,
the shiny, huffy bike that they'd always wanted.
I found out my kids just building things with them
was everything.
Like, you know, taking them to,
like I knew my son was into tetherball,
and so we just, like his gift for Christmas
was all of us were gonna put this together
and like make it from scratch and everything,
and then, you know, they're bike ramp ramp and all this just that vested time that everybody shares
together it makes that thing more valuable to them it has you know some kind of relevance
and we all had an experience we shared together it doesn't if that time is repeated and regularly
scheduled I think that's where you start to build families and legacies and even this concept that grandparents matter because they become part of passing on those stories.
Totally traditions.
And I think that having family rituals, and that's a huge part of our parenting.
Like our family dinners, the song we sing before Sunday dinner, the type of journaling we do in the morning, the type of journaling we do in the evening, as a family, the bedtime music,
the trips to the tennis court,
the six different card games that we play nearly every night
of the week, our kids find dependency and trust
and safety in that, but furthermore,
we're not raising our children,
we're raising our grandchildren,
our reserve children, our reserve grandchildren,
the type of traditions that we instill in our children now.
Those are the things that go on and become a special
dependable part of family, no matter where.
If I get uprooted and I got to move to a new state
and get a new job or whatever, we can still
play our Sunday night test.
Did you both get that growing up?
I got a lot of that growing up.
She did.
I've learned everything about the value of tradition
from my wife because my family was,
my family was Christmas morning.
What do you guys want to do for dinner tonight?
Should we get some subway sandwiches
or find a turkey that we forgot to pull out
for these or whatever? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no Was that just normal to you and it wasn't a big deal or did you ever go through a phase where you had
animosity towards your parents because of maybe how you were raised so
Pleasantly
Agnostic like I just I didn't even know right how you're normal until I met Jessa and I thought it was super
Yeah, most people you might she's like oh we've got our annual trip to the coast
We do it this time every single year my trip. When you actually do the same place,
they're from here, or you know,
this is the color of the plates that we use on Christmas.
And these, this is what the name tags look like
for Thanksgiving.
And this is the exact Easter egg hunt that we do every Easter.
And for me, it's just...
Now you push back against that?
I didn't push back against it,
but it was just super weird for me. I got never, and oh my goodness, pinched me now. I am so lucky marrying
a girl who actually knew about the importance of traditions, because our kids are like,
they're so stable at home, because they, there's so much they can depend on every day of the week,
you know, predictable environments, remove a lot of fear and anxiety.
So I wanna hear from Justin,
because when you have the difference like this,
and I know Katrina and I have this,
there's always some sort of resistance somewhere,
what has been the greatest challenge for you with him
because of the way he was raised
that you guys have had to work through together?
You know, it wasn't like the crit,
like doing the same thing at Christmas,
or Easter you know,
Easter or whatever or having those traditions around certain holidays. It was honestly more of
the tradition in the daily routines. Oh yeah. Because like I grew up in a family, my dad, he was a
farmer, he raised cattle, he came home at five o'clock every night, we had dinner at six o'clock,
everybody came together, and then we enjoyed maybe a half hour TV show with popcorn.
You know, there is always tradition built into the day.
And so for very, very long.
And she married me where I'm like, I'm on a plane to Abu Dhabi to race a triathlon.
I'm on the back working, you know, 10 to noon, three to five, eight to 11 p.m. at a gym,
and then coming home, trying to build an online business to 2 a.m. it is all over the
map, because I grew up with a dad who literally would hold the same job for like a year and
then go start a new company and then sell that and buy a franchise and then go and buy
some old ambulances and start to do ambulancing.
Like my dad was all over the map.
So she grew up in a very dependable,
traditional, consistent, farmer type of environment,
whereas I grew up with a dad who was just all over
the map in terms of entrepreneurship.
So that was a, that was a,
because I could see how the annual traditions,
it's like we're being...
That's understandable. Yeah, Ben can be like, the annual traditions, it's like we're being...
It's understandable.
Yeah, Ben can be like, yeah, okay, fine.
We'll do this later.
We'll do this later on.
Every day, it's like, this is what we do in the morning.
This is what we do at night.
Yeah.
I could see how that would be, you know, kind of chill.
It took me a long time.
And now, like, I can't, like, the date is not feel right unless we have our family dinner
with our card game.
With me playing ukulele or guitar to the boys afterwards.
With our, you know,
we do self-examination and purpose at the end of the day.
So at the end of the day, we say, in our journals,
what good have I done today and what could I have done better today?
So we learn from both our successes and our failures
and what is one way that I lived out my life's purpose
because I've taught my children from a very early age
to have a strong purpose statement, you know,
to have their icky guide, to have their plan de Vida,
the thing that rips them out of bed in the morning,
that gives them a lens through which they see
a lot of the boxes that they might be checking during the day.
In the end, ultimately, how is this helping you
to fulfill your purpose?
And then in the morning, same thing,
right now we meet as a family out in the sun, on the deck,
we've got a five minute meditation app
that we go through called a bide
that walks us through like a little verse from scripture
and a prayer, then we all write down one thing
we're grateful for and one person we can pray for
or help that day.
And all these little things, they rubbed me the wrong way
at first.
I just, to me, it felt like being just like an old,
buddy, dutty TV show family from the, you know, 50s or early leave it to be, and now
Like it it is the most magical part of the day these little tricks. They're a request in these specific songs from you now like some ACD series
They then a little bit of a place, but they're they're really into epic movie soundtracks, which I can't play. Oh, yeah.
But in order to, I took them into a recording studio
for Christmas gift from mom,
and they really like the greatest showman,
which has a lot of really epic songs.
Oh, right.
We recorded a whole album from mom recording studio,
and then they also really like super heart
felt like praise and worship songs.
Oh, yeah. Because of the very into like praise and worship songs. So, because of the very, the very into like praise and worship.
So, it's usually like that kind of stuff
or sometimes it's just like an old school hand,
like amazing grace.
Well, so I'm listening to all this.
By the way, it sounds amazing.
And speaking to these rituals or traditions,
this is how cultures are created.
Absolutely.
And one thing about humans is when you look at things
that last for thousands and thousands of years,
that's because we've found significant value.
And otherwise it wouldn't last, right?
This is part of evolution.
People who are into science, who understand evolution
from a biological sense, you also need
to understand evolution from a cultural and practical sense and behaviors
and practices and cultures.
We often take them for granted because they've been around for thousands of years and we tend
to look at them and be like, well, that's stupid.
Why do we have to do it that way?
Everybody's been doing it so long.
Maybe we even view it as oppressive or whatever, but the realities that exist because humans
have found it tremendously valuable and oftentimes in ways that you don't even fully understand
because it's been around for so long.
But as I'm listening to this, and I think, again,
what you guys are doing is extremely valuable.
I also know that you have two 12 year old boys.
They're about to become teenagers.
And like all kids, I'm sure they give some pushback sometimes.
I mean, I don't think there's any perfect person
out there, let alone perfect kid.
What do you do when your kid says,
I don't wanna do the thing we did.
Or what is it that they give pushback?
Yeah, what are the things?
Like, how do you handle that?
Well, first of all, and I think maybe it was when
we recorded in Tahoe, we talked a little bit
about on one of the previous podcasts
that we recorded together,
about this idea of love and logic style parenting.
Yeah.
Educating your children on the consequences of their decision, then as much as possible,
allowing them to make the decision, am I going to eat gluten?
Am I going to look at pornography?
Am I going to smoke a cigarette?
Any of these things, you teach your children about the impact on the brain, the impact on
the body, the potential societal implications, and then you let them make the decision and
deal with the consequences, right?
Maybe poor performance at school the next day because they punished three cupcakes at
their friend's birthday party.
I'd rather them learn that way than me say no cupcakes and then feel like.
I actually took a whole course. There's a free course right now online, Love and Logic.
And one of the things that they say on that, so powerful, so they give the example, here's
an easy example. You're going out, you're going out somewhere, it's cold. And you tell
you're, you tell you, hey, make sure you grab your jacket. I don't want to wear a jacket,
right? So the old school way would be like, get your jacket, put it on. You're going to
the Love and Logic way would be like, okay, don't worry. And then when you go out and they're freezing and there's, oh my god, it's cold, you empathize with be like, get your jacket, put it on, you're gonna, the love and logic way would be like, okay, don't worry, then when you go out and they're freezing
and there's, oh my God, it's cold, you empathize with them.
I'm not sure.
I know.
Yeah, that really sucks, or whatever.
It's cool.
And they learn from that, and the way that they sell it,
which I think is brilliant, is if they learn those lessons now,
then they don't have to learn in the hard way later on
when it's like getting drunk driving or, you know,
things that have real serious consequences.
So, yeah, and take the course, I really think it's valuable.
It is, and there are two other considerations here with the style of parenting.
A, it only works if you're a really good example.
You can't tell your kids, oh, you can use the phone and the television and the video game
platform as much as you'd like. You know, might hurt your eyes a little bit, you might not the phone and the television and the video game platform as much as you'd like.
You know, might hurt your eyes a little bit,
you might not sleep that well tonight.
But if you say that, and then every night after work,
you're plopped in front of Netflix for two hours,
then that's what your kids are gonna have is a good,
like in the Greenfield house, if there's downtime,
90% of the time I'm holding a musical instrument
or I have a book in my face.
Right, I am not on my phone, I'm not playing a video game,
I'm not parked in front of a screen.
So when my kids have downtime,
like their go-to thought pattern is not,
where's my eye touch?
Or I'm gonna go hunt downstairs and you too on the MacBook.
Then the other thing, and this is new for me,
is that I think that sometimes that side of parenting
can lead almost too much to you,
wanting your kids to like you.
You know, or as Jordan Peterson would say, don't do things that would make your kids dislike you.
Don't do things that would make your kids hate you.
Sometimes I think we can take that in too far the opposite direction.
I don't want my child to ever feel as though they were deprived or as though I told them
they had to do something because we use this whole love and logic.
Don't ever make your kids angry type of approach.
But for example, I have decided that even though
for the longest time I've been writing out little workouts
for River and Terran to do.
So you guys you gotta do 60 pound pet sandbag
one time around the obstacle course
and you do this three times this week
or your workout today is five goblet squats, five push ups, dead hang for max time and you can do you do this three times this week or your workout today is five goblets, squats, five pushups, you know, dead hang for max time and you're gonna do five
rounds of that.
I was not being a good father, I was not being a good leader, I was not being a good king
in terms of basically me almost parenting through check boxes and giving my kids little assignments
that they could or could not do but great if you've done it versus me literally
bringing them out with me and sacrificing
my podcast time or audiobook time
or my favorite Spotify artist time
to just go inside my own head for a workout
instead take them with me and have them suffer
in a way that they kinda sorta don't watch
suffer you can tell along with me because let's face it.
I think a 5am paper route like I had when I was a kid,
like if my parents would have told me
that oh, you could or could not do that's up to you,
but because they said you need a job
and we have a paper job, so go work, make money.
I think that's character building.
And so I think that you sometimes have to get to a point
where you are telling your,
you put your foot down you're saying,
yo, this is gonna be good for you.
Let's go out to the garage.
We're gonna sweat for a half hour. It's not, it's not do you wanna come for you. Let's go out to the garage. We're gonna sweat for a half hour.
It's not, it's not, do you wanna come with me?
It's, we're going out.
We're going out.
And also it's just coming along side or kid
and doing something with them, rather than.
I just tell you.
Yeah, that versus telling them,
because it's not, you're sacrificing your time,
which is a display of love towards that person.
And so really, I think in all of this love has to be seen
in everything that you do for your child
because they won't have trust for you
if you aren't displaying that to them regularly.
And that's in putting them to bed
and not just saying, goodnight, see you in the morning,
it's putting them to bed,
you know, making sure they have everything they need
and maybe they need that prayer or that song
or that ritual.
Oh my gosh, that's awesome.
It's literally just like taking your time and giving to them.
I 100% agree.
So what do you do when you're, like, do you have an example of time
when your, when your boys was like, I don't want to do that,
journaling today.
I'm not going to do it or I don't care about that right now
or whatever.
I don't feel like I've ever, and this sounds crazy
to probably people.
We don't receive a lot of pushback from our boys
in that way.
I haven't seen that.
No, we don't.
They're not perfect.
Like, you know, because they are, they're unschooling,
they each have their own little MacBook,
and sometimes they'll have, you know,
like they take one course called Mathnasium,
where they have an online math tutor,
and sometimes they've got little homework assignments.
And, you know, I was finding with the increasing frequency,
I walk into them and you could tell,
they were switching browser windows really nice.
That's like, show that they were here on task.
And where my mind goes is, I can tell them,
hey, you're hiding something from dad
and taking your computer away from the week you're grounded.
But what I said to both of them in two separate conversations,
because sometimes you wanna be careful
not to embarrass one kid in front of the other
or make one feel like they're wrong, those right?
So I took them aside and I said, look, I'm not stupid.
I can tell when I walk into the room,
when you're on your computer
and you're quickly switching browser windows,
that you're doing something that you feel
might not be the best use of your time
or that I might disapprove of.
I told them, look, I don't care.
It's your time.
It's your life.
It's up to you whether or not you want to waste your life or squander your education or
spend time on some silly cartoon website versus applying yourself and doing what it is that's
going to make you a better person in the moment.
But my one request is that you not hide it from me.
You don't have to be embarrassed. If you have a certain website you're visiting,
you wanna visit, go for it, do it.
Just don't feel like you have to hide it from me
because you're not getting trouble.
All you're doing is you're ruining your own life
and that's up to you.
Just please don't hide it from me.
And so those are the type of conversations that I have.
It's like Cartoon Network is ruining my life.
I'm sorry.
Well, so here's the other thing too
that sometimes I worry about.
My son is about to turn 15, my daughter's 10,
so kind of close in age to your boys.
And obviously, I'm a fitness and health person, right?
And I've seen this before.
I've seen this before where I had a family member
whose dad was an herbalist and super into health and whatnot.
And the kids had to eat everything was healthy.
They didn't get all the processed foods
that everybody got and when it was their birthday,
they didn't get the normal cake.
They got the super crunchy, whatever cake with no sugar.
And what ended up happening to both of them
is the second they got out of the house,
they went super far.
Tracking up, right?
They felt like sells to each other.
Like a ride cracker for their breath.
Yeah, they went super far in the opposite direction.
And so sometimes I get or I've also seen where parents are super into fitness to where the
kid maybe feels like it's a bit tyrannical.
And so they have the bad relationship with fitness.
And then when they get out of the house, and they're on their own,
I never wanna work out type of deal.
What do you do to ensure that either that doesn't happen
or if it does happen that they end up coming back
to the right thing?
Well, I don't know, here's my feelings on that,
is my own personal journey myself,
is my parents didn't force fitness or food
or anything on me really.
And I was allowed to come to that in my own time.
Now I think my parents instilled in me like an understanding of this is good for you, this is not good for you.
You should maybe be active and not sedentary.
You know, they instilled those virtues in me, but they didn't force them upon me.
And so I call it, we're not raising dogs,
we're raising spiritual beings.
You know, you're not raising your kids to do this
and obey and this and that.
You're raising them to have a spirit and be able to make
a decision and have virtue.
And so to me, I really feel that if you are a
teaching or kid anything, if it's not done in the heart of London, they don't understand that you love them and that's why you're teaching
this to them is because you care about them, then it's going to have, it's going to kind
of hit tin and just bounce off.
I think the independence that comes with adolescence, which were of course increasingly going
to experience as our kids,
growing to teenage your hood, dictates that a child
will want to do the opposite of what their parent
is doing to assert their own independence.
That's just the way that things are.
And so I fully expect it.
I'm fully prepared for River and Terran
to be the anti-gymrat, or the person who prides himself
upon maybe having a little bit of pooch
and being a member of the chess club and playing a lot of piano, just because dad is son
fitness, and I don't want to, like, that's not cool.
But not that I'm saying that adolescents, I think sometimes it's used as a crutch for
or an excuse to go into full rebellion, but I think some amount of asserting ones independence
and sometimes asserting ones independence by trying to do the opposite of what their parent may have done is
understandable. But for me personally, like, I think that you always kind of experienced that prodigal son-esque moment where you
where you come back and you realize the value like my dad used to give me books that I absolutely did not want to read. I mean like
Christian apologetics and you know sermons by CS Lewis and just all this stuff. I was just like, why do I want to read. I mean, like, Christian apologetics and sermons by CS Lewis,
just all this stuff.
I was just like, why don't I want to read this just like,
you know, the way I think about Asatini,
just Jesus-free drivel and you know,
just this random religious philosophy,
like I want to be reading about, you know,
I got, I loved fantasy fiction and I loved space fiction.
I got, that's the kind of stuff I wanted to read.
But now, coming full circle, like when I've got downtime,
and I feel like I really want to feed my spirit
and feed my soul and challenge myself intellectually,
I mean, that's what I'm reading.
I'm reading John Piper and CS Lewis and Doug Wilson,
and all these these deep,
logical, philosophical books on religion,
or on apologetics, and all of a sudden, I'm like,
oh geez, I'm doing exactly what my dad did.
I'm like, my dad, all of a sudden. It took me 30 years to see the value in that,
but all of a sudden I'm like, oh, I'm actually,
I'm growing my spiritual muscles now,
I understand what that was about.
Yeah, but I came to that place.
So I think you show your kids what's important,
and then at a certain point you just,
you trust God that they're going to,
if you've exposed them to the right type of things,
eventually make the right decisions,
even though they'll probably go
and through that independence.
It's the hardest thing to do as a parent.
That's gotta be the hardest thing,
because you know what they're gonna do.
You see the pitfalls and you just gotta let them do it.
That's really, really hard.
But you know what's really cool is,
I've seen my parents go through that
and see their daughter take really hard nose dives and do really stupid crap.
How did you rebel?
I was a really...
I... I like to teeter on the edge, but I never fully won.
She was she rebelled by marrying me.
Yeah, I basically did.
Did any of you guys...
No, did any of you guys have siblings that rebel?
They're with the complete opposite. Like, did you guys... Yeah, did any of you guys have siblings that rebel or went the complete opposite?
Like did you guys, yeah, I think I'm out of magic. Everybody's got a little bit of a black sheep and every family
Absolutely, but at what I what I was saying is I'm like I got to witness my parents walk through that and go through the fire of that
I lived through that with them and so to see that they're how they react into that and how they walked through that it was just
Honestly with a lot of faith and a lot of prayer and that's all you can do at that point because they are their own person and at some point
You do have to let them you gotta let them go and just you know
Yeah, you got you gotta let them go rest and promises basically
Here's what I think and here's why I think that idea, like, whatever they say, 99% of the time,
you're going to spend with your child is done with
by the time they're 18, so you better just make every minute
count and live every moment with your kid
as if you were going to be in your deathbed that night.
And everything has to be happening.
And I think that that's a, it's based on a flawed theory.
If you have built up traditions,
if you have built up rituals,
if you have built up an environment
where parents are honored and grandparents are honored,
and children are honored,
then you create a scenario where,
when your kids are 18,
they wanna keep coming back for more.
When they've flown the nest and they've started
their own family,
they still wanna keep coming back to their original family
or including their parents and their extended family
and their rituals and routines and traditions
because the entire family is built upon
these deep rooted traditions.
And so, I think that even though a lot of kids
are gonna have times when they go their own way,
our job as parents is to create this safe nest,
full of traditions, and habits, and rituals,
and routines, and dependency, and routines, and dependency,
and trust that just makes them
wanna keep coming back for more as they age,
and then take you when you're old
as a parent into their home.
Because I think that's another big issue
with parenting, with the value of parents,
and with the honor of being a father
and a mother right now in culture, is A,
we hide away old people.
We hide away old people because we don't want to care for them, we don't want to give them the time,
we don't want to give the attention. And then, and I mean, this is probably, this probably delves
into the politics that I know you guys love to talk about so much. We kill a whole bunch of little
people. Like, yeah, 40 million of them. And so when we say, okay, we care about babies,
but you know, there's several tens of millions
that we're willing to kill for convenience to say each year.
And then we care about parents,
but when they get old and it's inconvenient,
you got like, change their diaper
and they stink a little bit, we're gonna hide them away.
Right, so I think on both ends of the spectrum,
there are some issues that cause us to a certain extent
to devalue parents, to devalue children.
Well, there's one, I'll move away from the third rail there there are some issues that cause us to a certain extent to devalue parents, to devalue children.
Well, I'll move away from the third rail there a little bit, but I'll move to one that's a little bit
much less of a third rail, but sometimes is also, I think is a big one,
is that I think fatherhood has been totally devalued in modern societies.
We just had this conversation.
Look, you watch TV shows and how they display the father.
Gosh, modern family, right?
He's an idiot, he's a bumbling whatever.
He doesn't really do much, he has no value.
He's like the jester, he's a clown.
And, and so here's what I think the problem is.
And we run into a lot of this, like in the health space,
anti-aging, longevity, Peter Pan syndrome, right?
Like I'm gonna be a boy and have fun and go to,
you know, like, time myself to be.
I'm gonna go to Spartan races and triathlons
and get the, you know, stem cell injections in my dick
and do all this, like, cowboy, Peter Pan.
I'm gonna be a boy forever type of shit.
When, in fact, living like that,
having all the biohacking toys, having the workouts,
you know, being the buddy
because you really want your kids to like you
and then the clown and the jester,
not that there can't be some light playful aspect
to being a father, but I think too many dads
are not freaking like kings, true leaders, fathers,
strong rocks that the family can depend upon.
And you know, another part of that too
is just, you know just welfare parenting, right?
So many single parent households with mothers,
government steps in and takes the role of the father.
So dads a lot of times they don't even need to be a dad,
right, because somebody else is going to care for it.
Well, a lot of boys running around.
Yeah, and a lot of the old cultures,
I talked earlier about how things exist for thousands of years
oftentimes, because we find lots of value.
When you go to the lot of these old cultures
It's a it's almost like a way to brag when you're a father with a lot of kids like when men talk to each other
So how many kids you have I have three kids? Well, I have four like wow you know, that's awesome
Whatever it's the opposite in our culture if you are you know
You tell a guy a buddy of yours that you have three kids and they'll respond with like,
oh, God.
That sucks.
That's so true.
Yeah, well, well, I'm gonna, I got my Corvette
and I get to bang hot chicks all the time
and that sucks that you have to, you know,
do that kind of stuff and they laugh about it or whatever.
It's crazy that we don't prize that anymore.
And by the way, you can disagree all you want.
The statistics are clear.
Their crystal clear children raised without fathers
are many, many times more likely to end up
in all the terrible situations.
Everything from prison to drug abuse to suicide,
we are in a, it's like a pandemic of fatherless societies.
It's really, really sad.
And this comes, because you were asking about my childhood,
my father was somewhat absent,
meaning he was not a very high quality time.
You know, lots of hugs type of dad.
He was off running businesses, starting businesses.
Very, he's naturally quiet, naturally introspective,
naturally good at being an introvert
and kind of off doing his own thing.
Like I tend to be pulled towards his father
with the same way, always locked away in the office, always working or using work as an escape.
So coming down to me and this idea of you're not raising your children, you're raising your
grandchildren, I have come to the realization a very strong way over the past year or so that if I
don't break that cycle, if I continue to, you know, parent through checkboxes, whatever, you know,
River and Terry, here's your work out here's your work, I was this,
is that dad's headed out to LA for eight days,
I'll be back and check it on you guys
and make sure everything's, you know, going well.
And if I am not a fully present father,
if I am not a leader, if I'm not the king of my household,
then it's going to show my children the example of the father
that a greenfield father is, and then they go forth and do probably something very similar to what I did.
Mary a really strong woman, because just as an amazingly strong woman, she's super independent,
self-sufficient, even a little bit of that avoidance syndrome versus the attachment syndrome
that I have.
So she can operate on her own, just fine.
And it's very easy for me to let her wear the pants
in the family, to let her be the leader.
And so I can be a little boy, you know, off,
you know, pulling on a speedo to go swimming Hawaii
in a triathlon, well, she's at home holding down the fort.
And, you know, the question I've increasingly
been asking myself is, is that what a greenfield father
should be known for?
Should a greenfield father be known for being a playful
little boy off having great adventures
married to a really strong woman, so the kids are taking care of it home, or should a
Greenfield father be a leader, be a king, be someone who really takes their children under
their wings and trains them and spends quality time with them, and sometimes has them suffer
along with him and really, really teaches them how to be a man.
And I would say that I think the latter is far more valuable than your kids liking you because
you're just like the clown around the house.
That's a very powerful realization.
Now have you found moments recently where you were about to take off and go to something
and then you stopped yourself and you go cancel your flight or canceled your trip and said
I'm staying home.
I mean, have you had moments like that in this last year where, because you're right, when
you have something so deep that it's generations, your father, your grandfather, that that
should so deeply rooted that that's always going to be default for you.
It's hard to be aware of.
And I'm, I had the same similar type of thing is to go bury myself into work.
And so I have to always kind of check back in like, is this me kind of running
away without even realizing I'm running away? And you know, can I pass on this? I didn't have to
cancel I think because God bless COVID. But what I have done, one big change I have made is
and this has been really remarkable in the ways just transform my whole week, my approach to work,
my approach to productivity, my approach to procrastination, my approach to prioritization
is Sundays are full on family day.
I mean, no calls, no work, no, oh, you know, we missed a call on Monday, let's just shove
this one into Sunday, you got time this weekend, I'll ping you this week, and I would find
myself sometimes on Sunday, you know, three or four phone calls, planes and catch up work,
you know, just getting things done.
Sure. I don't find myself sometimes on Sunday, three or four phone calls, planes and catch up work, just getting things done.
Now knowing that Sunday is coming,
and that's a full on family day,
it really gives me hyper focus every other day of the week.
And then when Sunday's roll around,
not that I'm not spending quality time with my kids every day,
but that's been transformed if I have that one day
where it is nothing but family and faith focused.
I love that.
Now you've mentioned spirituality and faith a few times
and I've been on my own
and I've been public about my own recent spiritual journey.
I used to be very atheist
and then I became agnostic and more recently now
I've been pulled to the Christian religion quite a bit
and I've learned quite a bit of it
and there was a moment that I read,
Justin Adam, myself and Doug,
were invited to listen to Bishop Baron and Arthur Brooks speak.
And it was one of the most, Arthur Brooks is a,
I don't know if you know who Arthur Brooks is.
Yeah, I can speak very, very powerful effect.
It was actually one of the most genuine,
nice people I've ever met my entire life.
He's one of those people you meet every once in a while
that you immediately feel their energy
and you wanna give them a hug.
Just a great guy.
And he said something so powerful that literally,
Justin, Adam, and myself and Doug looked at each other
and looked away quickly because all of us were all
emotional.
We were all in the verge of tears.
I love that.
He said something very powerful.
And he said about the power of going to church with your children as a father.
And he said something, I'll never forget.
He said, here you are, if you're a good father,
I'm paraphrasing, he says it much better.
But here you are, a good father, your children see you
as the most powerful person in the world.
If you do a good job and you're a good parent,
your children will look at you as the ultimate role model.
And it's not totally not unusual for a kid,
especially a young kid, to think that they're dad.
You're the strongest person ever.
He's the strongest, most powerful, most whatever.
Which is not a bad thing, you're the protector of the family.
So they think, and I remember thinking that about my dad,
and he says, to go to church,
to see the most powerful man in your life, bend in
knee and and and and and praise and give great and give, you know, to someone else, basically
saying, I am this one thing's servant or this God's servant. He said, what a powerful
message all of a sat there like. Yeah. What a very powerful thing to show your child, you know? The perfect, the
perfect example of a father and a son is so when when you are a good father,
or you're a powerful father, you're a leader in your home, you're absolutely right. And
you show your kids that you still get down on Bended Knee that there's still something
that you fear, there's still something you honor, there's still something you have a great
deal of reverence around. And it is this, you know, this creator,
this greater power, this absolute truth.
I think that that also shows kids that there's even a, there's even a greater rock, there's
even a greater foundation.
And honestly, I just think the whole idea that there is an absolute truth, that there is
absolute morality, you know, in my opinion, that that's part of the strong fabric that
knits cultures together.
And that keeps morality from unraveling.
You're not shakeable.
You have to have the very idea of this country
when it started.
There was a period of time when anybody could come here.
No matter who you were, where you came from,
you were welcome, and you think to yourself,
how did that work?
You got all these different people,
and I've heard people say, oh, they're all Europeans,
they're all the same. It's stupid to say I've heard of my life because
they've been at two world wars with each other. They were very different.
They're Germans, Italians, Irish. They were all very, very, very different.
They all came here. How did they all get along? They all had an underlying
appreciation, respect, and belief in liberty and freedom.
So this is how they all got along.
So that when you say this absolute morality, the only way different people can ever work
together and still be very different is if they have one, they have this common thread
of something and that's what this absolute moralizes why when morality is subjective and not
objective, you run into a lot of different problems.
But the question I want to ask you,
you're very spiritual.
You've mentioned Jesus and God.
So obviously very strong Christian,
but you're also very analytical objective,
scientific-minded, individual.
So aside from the specifics that you find in Christianity
and in your religion religion from an objective scientific
standpoint.
What are the values of having a spiritual practice or a belief system?
Are there values because these days it seems like that.
There's constantly people are saying there's no value in that.
It's silly.
It's make believe.
Why do we even do it?
Obviously, it's existed in every culture.
Where is the reality?
Yeah, every culture forever has had some kind of a strong belief.
So there's obviously value, but from that standpoint, why is that important to have?
Right.
Well, there's two things to consider here.
The first is when you're talking about science and reducing everything to
scientism, if you want to call it, everything must be proven. There must be a reason for everything.
If you trace everything back to its ultimate origin, everything must be explainable.
And it's very difficult to be a respected authority in a field of something like fitness or nutrition, you know, as kind of like shallow sciences as those fields might be considered to be,
and to make statements that you want to be respected for,
when at the same time you have admitted that there comes a certain point
where when you've traced something back from tissue to cell to atom to molecule to quark to proton to electron and you know
stripped everything down to its tiniest tiniest component.
You know the tiniest little threat of existence, you will get to the point where you can either
say, well, you know, we're going to keep on digging because we're going to figure out what
came before this and what came before this and what came before this.
We can eventually explain the way everything be via science or you get to a certain point where you throw up your hands
and you say, I don't know, it's magic.
Something made like some higher power that I don't understand made this and I'm just
going to have the faith that that happened and resist the even the mild arrogance that
I might be able to explain away everything in the universe.
And that's tricky to be involved in a field
that depends upon science at the same time.
Essentially say the equivalent of,
yeah, I believe in unicorns and berries and fairy tales
and magic, but I'd rather live in a world of magic
where there's deep hope that there's a story written
for your life, that there's a big guy upstairs watching out for a buddy,
that this entire universe around us and all the wonder of it,
from, you know, from, you know, smoked clams and cannabis
to, you know, to sourdough bread and a good red wine
to, you know, psilocybin and dumbbells and every, like,
these are all wonderful, wonderful works of creation
that we can simply enjoy and not necessarily feel
that there's an extreme need to have to explain
away the science.
And so that's one part of really the difficulties,
gang to the point where you just say, yeah,
I believe in faith, I believe in magic.
So, you know, so, you know, judge me for it.
And then the other part of it, when it comes to the value of this, you know, we know that
there's a lot of data out there about how people who, who are church goers tend to have
reduced all cause risk and mortality.
Maybe that's the community.
Maybe it's the tiny, thimble, full glass of hermetic inducing red wine every Sunday.
Who knows?
But we know that for a fact, we know that gratitude lowers blood pressure, improved sleep, increases empathy, increases self-control.
We know that this self-examination practice
increases the amount of actual productivity impact
that you make with your life.
We know that having a purpose statement
actually is associated with higher profile
of mood state scores and greater happiness.
When you go down the list of all these spiritual disciplines
and you read wonderful books by guys like Richard Foster and David Wallace on all the spiritual disciplines,
gratitude, service, community, worship, solitude, purpose in life, silence, abstinence.
Yeah, that's a big...
Absence, everything you wind up with this list of things that ultimately have deep physical and physiological and psychological
which these people can't replace.
Right.
It's not because they had a scientific book telling them, even fasting, right?
Fasting did not originate from science, it originated from religion and...
It was a spiritual health, not for physical health, right?
That's what it was for.
Exactly. It was for spiritual health, not for physical health. That's what it was for. You know, it's fun. So for me, what kind of got me to move in this direction
was a few different things, but one of them
were some of the ideas that seemed to work so well
are not obvious.
For example, the idea that, and this comes from religion,
the idea that all people have are born with inalienable rights,
which is, you know, it's in our founding.
What a weird, radical, crazy idea.
Totally not obvious.
For most of human history, there were kings and queens
and peasants and slaves.
And nobody, nobody would come up with such an insane thing.
From a reasonable, logical standpoint,
you can look around at people and observe.
And obviously, that's not true.
We're all so different. We're all some people are born this way. So where did that come
from? And it came from religion. So that was one of the things that helped me move in
that direction. That is the gospel, right? Like God sent his son to die so that the burden
and all the shame and all the sin and all the shit that we are born with
and that we create and that we live with
every single day could be taken upon the back
of the extreme suffering and pain,
literally a God from the sky came down to take on.
And it says very clearly in the Bible,
which I consider to be a source of absolute truth
that that was not just done for like the Jews, not just done for the Gent that was not just done for, like the Jews,
not just done for the Gentiles,
not just done for the Asians,
not just done for the South Americans,
every single person, right?
The grocer, the slave, the free person.
You name it, everybody is on equal ground
when it comes to all of us.
And it's entirely not obvious and reasonable to think
that anybody would come up with that,
especially anybody with any kind of power.
Why would you give away?
So it's very interesting to me.
The ultimate act of humility.
Yeah, now I understand that it is improved
that there's a supernatural God, I get that.
But boy, how pragmatic it is, how effective it is
at helping create societies that we value,
boys that crazy.
The other part is this is that,
let's talk about science for a second.
Quantum physics is magic.
Let's talk about it.
Yeah, but listen, it kinda is.
The observer effects, it's unexplainable.
It is kind of magical.
But let's talk about science for a second.
Science is, I can easily make the argument
that it's one of the most valuable, powerful,
the scientific method's gotta be one of the most powerful
tools that we've ever come up with.
But here's the problem of science.
You mentioned scientist, scientist.
It has no morality, it's not supposed to.
Science doesn't work if you apply a morality to,
it's supposed to be purely objective. But if you don't
have people who have an idea of morality within themselves, here's what science turns into.
It turns into not should I, but can I? Is this possible? Okay, let's hybrid humans with gorillas
to see how strong they can get. Let's create, let's have children out of the womb because that's
convenient. You know what, all these monkey embryos.
Yeah, you know, eugenics, eugenics is an idea.
It's such a terrible idea, right?
That we need to get rid of the genetically bad people
to have a perfect race.
From a scientific standpoint, an objective for the collective,
it makes perfect sense.
At once, one science becomes absolute truth.
You are on a very slippery slope
towards an absence of morality,
because there is no consideration
of whether something is right or wrong,
just whether something is true or false.
And what's really interesting is a book
that I recently read.
It was when we were in,
actually, when the boys and I were in Dubai,
I think I was reading this book on the plane
and I sent you this book, Jess,
and I'm forgetting it's about how every single culture
has this one great God in the sky,
who actually is this source of truth
and is this source of right and wrong.
Many, many cultures have no idea who Jesus was,
a gospel, sacrifice, saying any of that stuff,
but they know there's this one God
who has created a deep truth and morality
that goes beyond, and it's gonna be nuts
that I can't remember.
I can't remember what the name of the book is,
but essentially what it comes down to is there is head knowing
and there is heart knowing.
Head knowing is science, right?
I know whether something is true or false.
I can use reasoning, I can use logic. I can explain away the observer
effect by maybe talking about how like particles would interact with the photon. There's got
to be a way to explain this. And then heart knowing is basically just, I just know because
I know. I know that I should not walk up on the street to the person holding a wonderful, aromatic loaf
of sourdough bread, hold a gun to their head,
pull the trigger and walk away with their bread
because I wanted it and that felt right to me.
Everybody knows in their heart, that's the heart now.
You know, you may not be able to explain,
but you know deep down inside
because you could try to explain it in a way.
You could say, oh, you did, because that makes you happy.
And that's, and morality comes from what makes you happy,
but did it make the other person happy from not?
Here's an interesting thought experiment along those lines.
It's like you asked somebody,
if you could go back in time and kill Hitler
when he was a baby, would you do it?
And some people might say, well, yeah,
I would save lots of people,
but if you really think about it, he's not Hitler yet.
He's a baby, he hasn't done anything yet. So your heart knows that would actually be wrong even though theoretically
I could prevent all this other, you know, stuff from happening. It's wisdom.
It's also very unrealistic.
You never actually write it.
But you okay, so so so obviously so fitness is my expertise. So I like to take things
to fitness because that's where I understand the most I would say. And there's a lot of
wisdom in fitness and I'll explain.
Often, so we do episodes called, uh,
quas, right, where people ask us questions and we answer those questions.
And there's a question that pops up all the time, which is,
if scientists invented a pill that made you fit lean and healthy, uh,
regardless of what you wait and what you did, uh, would that be a good thing?
Now, uh, for, for somebody who's been, who's took this seriously, understood this study, this
work with people for well over two decades, I have developed a level of wisdom with fitness
that is beyond the, you know, you get fit, you build muscle, you burn body fat.
And so when I hear that, I understand that, yeah, you'll get people who are lean, you know,
more muscle, mobile,
and that kind of stuff, but they're not gonna get
the true value that you get.
So the value is the kind.
The value is in the discipline and the abstinence
and the journey.
It's the journey, not the destination.
It's always the journey.
And so that's something that's totally different
from the reason and the logic,
because the science would say
the pill would solve everybody's problem.
But here's another example.
You have people who seem to have everything
that you think that you would want
from a logical standpoint, money, power, sex, drugs, fame,
and their suicide rate is through the roof.
What does that tell you?
I would take that pill daily, if it was on top of a mountain,
I had to climb up the mountain every morning
to get the pill, I'll take it. Exactly. So I wanna take a pill daily if it was on top of a mountain and I had to climb up the mountain every morning to get the pill, I'll take it.
Exactly.
So I wanna take a left turn here or whatever turn here
and ask you a little bit about homeschooling.
I know you guys are big homeschooling.
First, let's talk about Jess's shirt.
Did you watch Tiger King?
I did.
He did.
That's a great shirt.
I had to point that out.
I've only seen a couple.
Okay.
I don't even know what's here. Free jokes, Otik. Yeah, free jokes, Otik. I'm glad you, I had to point that out. I've only seen a couple. Okay, I don't know it's her.
Free, exotic.
Yeah, free, exotic.
I'm glad you don't know.
It's a total waste of your time.
So you mentioned unschooling, which is a form of homeschool.
I had friends who were big in the homeschooling world
and when I started training them, that's how I met them.
And I was very skeptical when they would tell me
about what they did.
They were unschoolers and I thought, oh boy, I hope their kid doesn't turn out.
Anyway, he turned out to be one of the best young men I've ever met.
I thought he would be lazy and he, oh, he just gonna play video games all day.
Now this kid is entrepreneur, start his own podcast.
He's become a personal trainer.
He's a go-getter, very, very balanced, well-adjusted young man.
There's no friends, he's depressed, he's depressed,
he's not that stuff, right?
Yeah, right.
No, that's tough.
Now, there's a lot of confusion and a lot of myth around,
or just incorrect knowledge or information
around homeschooling.
And along those lines, homeschooling is exploded,
not just recently, because of COVID,
but over the last 10 years, it's exploded a lot.
First off, why do you think that is?
Why do you think more and more parents,
and it's growing exponentially?
This is real now.
In fact, the public school system is actually
quite worried about the fact that more and more people
are homeschooling.
Why do you think it's exploded so much,
and then I do wanna get into unschooling
and what that means.
Okay, I actually, I have,
I post this question to one of my girlfriends
whose kids are in public school.
And I, during all of this stuff
in recent laws that have been passed in Washington,
and I said to her, I was like,
and I said, don't take this as offensive,
but I was like, how do you feel dropping your kid off
at the state every day and allowing them
to pour themselves into your child
rather than you pouring yourself into your child?
Like, that's a really honest question.
And I wasn't trying to be offensive or rude
but in say that you're doing it wrong,
I just really want to pour my values
and my, yeah, my values into my child
rather than allowing the state to pour their values
into all of our children.
I think that is, it's good that a parent would want to be
with their kids more and want more quality.
It's not about being with your kids more
with their kids, or want to be able to inst not about being with your kids more about your values.
You want to be able to instill more
of their families values into their children.
But I think that the human psychology of someone else
being able to educate a child
and you could drop them off and go to work
and fulfill your Basil's hierarchy
while somebody else says the work
actually would make homeschooling a less popular notion.
And so I think the reason that homeschooling a less popular notion. And so I think the reason that homeschooling has become more popular is multi-fectora,
but a big one is technology.
Yeah, it makes it easier.
No, I'm not working.
Like the ease of being able to find information, find teachers, find tutors, have that be scalable
and affordable, has made it so that you can homeschool anyone anywhere in the world and you can, I mean,
compare it even what you could do 20 years ago, have an amazing, amazing education for
your child.
And then I think that when you pair that with a little bit of social unrest, you know,
increasing school violence, increasing bullying, increasing amounts of depression and loneliness
and suicidal tendencies among children who are simply in an effed up social environments
in many cases in public school,
or even in some cases in private school type of situation,
dictates that I think a lot of parents are aware
that a school might not be the best place,
a traditional school might not be the best place
for their kids to be during the day.
And as that awareness grows, what I've seen are, I've seen a growth of homeschooling, but
I've seen this real shift towards the notion of creative free play, aka unschooling, aka find
out what your kids passions and interests are, find out what makes them truly excited
what they really want to study, what they're truly interested in,
then surround them with as many arts and crafts and tutors
and computer programs and games and activities
and museum tickets and everything
that they would need to be able to pursue that passion,
and then step back and just lightly guide them.
Make sure they've got somebody to drive them
to the place they want to be driven to
and they've got some cooking class
or make sure that they know how to log into the computer for some class they want to take online.
So lightly guide them and then just surround them and then the other important part of
unschooling.
And this is very similar to that love and logic approach, right?
Like use love and logic but also discipline.
So unschooled but also realized there are certain skills that your child is going to
highly benefit from having experienced in life, that they might
not know about yet when they're six or eight or ten years old.
You know, in the Val-Ravicon, great modern day thinker and philosopher, right?
You know, I love a lot of the work that he does.
He says there's essentially five key tools that a child needs to be able to excel in no
matter what career that they go into.
And those are reading, writing, right?
So, so being able to consume information at an efficient pace, writing,
be able to express thought clearly
on written in written form, on paper, or via keyboard,
arithmetic, being able to just do basic figuring,
whether it's geometry or building,
or woodworking, or anything that involves basic math skills,
and then finally, logic or computer programming, right? Which are technically synonymous, right, a logic or computer programming, right, which are technically
synonymous, right?
Like logic slash computer programming, and then rhetoric slash persuasion.
If you can weave in, reading, writing, math, logic slash persuasion, or logic slash computer
programming, and rhetoric slash persuasion, then your child is really going to be set for
life.
And so we have 12 core subjects
that Washington State requires us
to show that our child has checked the box for.
They did chemistry this week.
Well, you're sure they learned how to make a ravioli,
right, and that counts as kitchen chemistry.
So we'll class for that as chemistry,
but then I'm also very careful to ensure that,
even if they, because there's some weeks,
they don't wanna take their online,
Mathnasium class.
They probably would not be doing logic puzzles right now if dad wasn't paying him five bucks
every time they successfully completed a really hard logic puzzle in this logic book that
I got for them.
So there are certain little things I nudge them towards that I know they aren't super interested
in, but that are going to serve them well in life.
And then everything else is a weekly family meeting.
What do you guys passionate about?
What do you want to learn?
One local assistant who helps to drive them around
and you get them to different activities.
One virtual assistant who kind of helps us keep track
of all their different passions and interests
and which block of the year are we going to kind of focus
on whatever woodworking and which block of the year.
We're going to focus on building the tree for it
and which block are we're going to do more wilderness survival
and plant foraging and we just keep running list
of all the things that are interested in
and then weave those in throughout the year and it's scary
because there is no model. There is no proven model. There's no one right way to
do it. And you want, you know, you you almost want like a set pattern habit or
routine because that's what we all grew up with with schooling. Once you realize it
doesn't have to be that way and that kids actually learn really well through
this concept of free creative play.
So that's what works really well.
So essentially, unschooling is no real
for a structure.
No curriculum, right?
And you know, here's a thing,
here's my argument in support of what you're saying.
I'm glad you explained that, and you did it so well.
Modern society is a lot of specialization.
You go to work and you're probably really good
at a couple of things, and that's how modern society works. You don't need to know everything or lots of little things.
You kind of need to be really good at one thing. And for anybody who's, I mean, anybody who has
kids, you know, when your kid is into something, like when my boy was four years old, you know,
he loved Thomas the train, the train set, the little trains. And there's
like, I don't know, 300 figurines, or maybe thousands, right? And so I saw that he was
really into it and he built the trains. So I bought him, he had to have at least a hundred
and something trains. He knew every single name, every, at four years old, there were two
trains that were twins. I could not tell the difference, he could.
It took me days to figure out how he was doing it.
And you know what it was?
It was the direction of the eyebrows
was slightly off on one or the other.
And it's because he was into it.
You know, the like little tiny sponges.
So what are you seeing unfolding with your kids right now?
What are you noticing?
Are you guys feeling like you can kind of predict
what they're gonna be into
or what they're gonna do when they get older by now?
Well, they've been saying what they wanna do
since they were like three or four.
They both love art and writing.
They love cooking.
They have a cooking podcast.
And even above like cooking and food prep,
they like to create art.
Both of their purpose statements are based around inspiring people to joy and adventure with their art and with their writing.
River does a little bit more of the writing.
Taron does a little bit more of the art and they really want to do a lot more
publishing of their own books. They want to live in Moscow, Idaho, 90 minutes from
our house, for all their nieces and nephews reside and they want to live down
there and make books and kind of have like a little coffee shop that they run during the day and
then write books, you know, in the evening or in their off time.
And that's what they want to do right now is to beat authors and own a coffee shop, which,
you know, that might change a year from now, they might want to be professional tennis players.
You know, you never know, but you just, you sit back and you just let them pursue their passions and resist
the urge to push them towards the stuff that you really thought you were going to be
gutted out because living vicariously through your children is so easy to do.
It's cruel.
How are you guys teaching them finances right now?
They've got these books called the Tuddle Twin Books that are a little bit more of kind of a libertarian,
conservative approach to the economy and the finances.
They go through each month with their,
actually, they're once a week right now
with their podcast producer and manager,
the financials, what they're bringing in from each affiliate,
what percentage the affiliates are.
Oh, great.
They go grocery shopping with mom and with our assistant
to help manage things like, you know,
finding deals and finding discounts.
Same thing on Amazon.
They leave the tip when we go to restaurants.
They're never playing card games.
They're in charge of keeping track of the numbers
and the digits.
And it's great, because it's all real life.
I mean, this is all stuff that you're gonna have to deal with.
Yeah, so do you guys allow them to be by whatever they want freely
or how does that work for them, saving and spending?
So in your time, they're actually pretty big singers.
Yeah, they're big and the same, but again, we are too.
Like we're just not, like we drive a Toyota Highlander
and Dodge pickup and we don't live very fancy,
flashy lifestyle.
You know, this shirt cost me 10 bucks from the thrift store
and Justin makes our furniture and like, we live pretty simple.
And so I think they just, they've never really grown up
being spend thrifts.
We don't live with a spirit of scarcity,
but we also just, we're not spent, we spent all our money
on random items.
But the understanding in our house is that if it's related
to education, especially if it's in the book,
no questions ask, I will buy it for them.
I will provide them anything that really fuels something that they want to learn about,
something they're passionate about.
If it's a nerf gun, if it's a Lego toy, whatever, then what they do is they send to my assistant
Marge, who does a lot of our shopping, what they would like, and they have their email
addresses.
She finds the best deal and she comes back
and tells us how much it is,
then they decide if they want to get it.
If they do, she then transfers from their bank accounts
where all their affiliate income from their podcast goes
where any money that they make,
gifts that they get for their birthday or Christmas
or whatever and she'll do a transfer
and so they know that when they bought that,
it gets transferred, it's purchasing our Amazon account,
but then the transfer occurs from their account
into our so they're covering it.
And they have the freedom to,
I mean, they decided to go on a crazy addiction
of nerf guns and buy them every day technically
could with their own money.
They could, they could do whatever they want
with their own money, but again,
like because they see mom, I mean,
they see me spending, this is almost too much,
they'll see me spending 10 minutes deliberating over,
which AA batteries to get on Amazon,
cause one packs like $2 cheaper.
So we're pretty aware of spending in our home.
So I think they're pretty used to just the value
of saving slash investing.
I haven't taken them through any investing courses
or anything like that yet, but. That's awesome. One thing that I've heard from people, this one's actually quite a disturbing
comment I'll get on homeschooling is they'll say things like, well, there's a lot of parents out
there that are really bad. The kids shouldn't be, you know, the parents, a lot of parents shouldn't
school their kids and they should go. And to me, this is always such a disturbing thing to hear
because of course there's bad parents out there.
But if you added it all up and you did the math and study,
I would trust a parent raising their kid
over the state raising your kid.
Mainly because parents usually care about their kids or or call up or collect it
I mean or like a homeschooling group like like there are ways that a parents can be involved in their children's education
And if they don't have the heart of a teacher or they're frankly a shitty teacher like there
There are ways that you can homeschool and not be
No, just as a wonderful teacher for arts or crafts or gardening
But she's not to teach the kids calculus
or science because she didn't learn that stuff in college.
She doesn't have a passion for it.
So that's a big part is whatever your kids are interested in, you find the person that's
going to be the best job teaching them that and might not be you.
And that's okay.
So a little speculation, do you, how do you think, what's going to happen with the current
education model now that formal education, the cost of it is, it's been exploding for years, far faster than inflation. Schools are now, you know,
either shutting down, not kids can't go there, so kids are at home or you have to go to
school and you have to wear a mask and do this whole thing, which can be very anxiety-inducing.
I'm sure in children, they don't know what's going on, or you have schools that are saying, hey, like Harvard, for example, said,
next year, all online, oh, by the way, it's still $50,000 a year, tuition, we're not changing the class.
Speculating, moving forward, do you think that we're witnessing the beginning of the end of the way that school has been administered
because of all these stresses now? And then of course, technology, making it so inexpensive to
transmit and receive information, what do you see moving forward with that?
I personally think a hundred years from now we're going to look back and laugh at about the past
60 years or so of education that we've tried to hang onto the threads of. That is all good stuff.
The agricultural revolution and the design of factory workers. And it's laughable.
I really don't anticipate that model sticking around much longer.
And who knows, we might be in the time right now during the COVID
pandemic, where it's a full on light bulb moment.
And people really do realize, oh shit,
I was paying $50,000 to go to Harvard.
And they've just admitted that everything that I'm getting
from there, I could literally be doing
from a beach in Thailand.
Well, simultaneously running a surf.
For pursuing, it will.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, crazy.
Well, you guys are, you're always a great guest band and I loved having you on, Jessa.
Thank you.
Yeah, this is great.
You guys are both very, very good people.
I love hearing about how you guys are at home and how everything's going on.
And I wish you guys continued blessings and success
with everything.
Yeah.
Thanks for letting us emerge from our little hole
and ask for a second about you, see people.
Well, you know you're always welcome.
I'll call that from under our eye.
You're always welcome on our podcast.
It's like a direct flight.
Yeah, yeah, I'm interested in you.
Excellent.
I just gotta get you guys up to Spoke Handsome time.
We're due. We're due for my new home. We haven't been there in a while, so. All right, guys, thanks. Yeah excellent. We just got to get you guys up to spoke hands of time. We're due. We're due. We're due. We're due. We're due. We're due.
We're due. We're due. We haven't been there in a while so all right guys thanks.
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