Finding Mastery with Dr. Michael Gervais - Lead Singer of Sum 41: Deryck Whibley on Conquering Addiction, Embracing Resilience, and Unlocking Creative Power
Episode Date: November 6, 2024How do we navigate all the changes that come with radical growth – the fortunes, the fame, social challenges…all while staying true to ourselves?Today’s guest is Deryck Whibley, lead si...nger and guitarist for the iconic punk rock band Sum 41. Over two decades, Sum 41 has sold over 15 million records, earned Grammy nominations, and won numerous awards, including a Juno for Group of the Year. Known for hits like "Fat Lip," "In Too Deep," and "Still Waiting," Deryck and his band have defined punk rock for a generation, and sold out arenas around the world. Beyond the stage, Deryck’s journey has been marked by psychological and emotional battles that includes both addiction the road to recovery—chronicled in his new book, Walking Disaster: My Life Through Heaven and Hell. This is a special conversation – we dive deep into how he uses his mind to create and how he is navigating the challenges of creating his next chapter. We also get an insider look at the untold stories behind Sum 41’s rise to stardom and what it takes to push boundaries - in a punk rock way._________________Subscribe to our Youtube Channel for more powerful conversations at the intersection of high performance, leadership, and meaning: https://www.youtube.com/c/FindingMasteryGet exclusive discounts and support our amazing sponsors! Go to: https://findingmastery.com/sponsors/Subscribe to the Finding Mastery newsletter for weekly high performance insights: https://www.findingmastery.com/newsletter Download Dr. Mike's Morning Mindset Routine! https://www.findingmastery.com/morningmindsetFollow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and X.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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pro today. How do we navigate all of the changes that come with radical growth, fortune, fame,
social challenges, all while staying true to ourselves. Welcome back, or welcome to the Finding Mastery
podcast. I am your host, Dr. Michael Gervais, by trade and training a high-performance psychologist.
Today's guest is Derek Wibley, lead singer and guitarist for the iconic punk rock band
Sum 41. Over two decades, Sum 41 has sold over 15 million records, earned Grammy nominations,
won numerous awards, including a June 04 Group of the Year. And you might know their music,
Fat Lip, In Too Deep, Still Waiting. They're awesome music that they have, and they really
captured a zeitgeist. Derek and his band have defined punk rock for a generation,
selling out arenas across the
world. Beyond the stage, Derek's journey has been marked by psychological and emotional
battles that include both addiction and the road to recovery, chronicled in his book,
Walking Disaster, My Life Through Heaven and Hell. So with that, let's jump right into
this incredible conversation with a legend, Derek Wibley.
Derek, I am really excited to have this conversation with you.
I grew up counterculture, off-access, really appreciating what you stand for and how you
lived your life in so many ways. like, I mean, the title of
your book is awesome. It really speaks to it. You've really gone for it in life. Yeah, I think
so. And that's the part that I hold like in the highest regard is really going for it. So first,
before we jump into it, thank you for coming in. And I just want to start, like, how are you doing?
I'm doing great.
Yeah.
You know, we're on a final tour on our final album with Sum 41, and it's just been going great.
This year has been the best year of Sum 41's career.
We've had more success with the new record at radio than we've ever had.
The tours are bigger.
The shows are bigger.
And I mean, just everything's been
great the reaction's been great to see the emotion in people in the audience has been different than
other shows like normally our tours are you know our shows are high energy high energy and the kids
are going crazy there's a lot of mosh pits but and that's still happening but you can just see
people's fit I see so many more smiles than than normal and it's just like the entire show these people like the audience is just
they're just filled with so much emotion but in a good way it's a positive emotion and it's just
like really enjoyable to be on stage and see that and and watch people's faces there's a law of
salience that's probably at play. And so what that means
is that, you know, when you buy like a new car, let's say you got like a Volkswagen VW bug,
go back, go back to like, maybe when you were a kid and there was a, that car that you just bought,
whatever it was. And then all of a sudden you look around, you're like, wow, there's a lot of them.
There's a lot of these things out here. So when you are in a certain vehicle,
then you tend to see that vehicle more often.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
When you're happy, you tend to see smiles more often.
Yeah, yeah, I could see that.
I mean, I tend to run positive most of the time.
I'm usually a pretty optimistic, positive, happy person.
And I always have been.
And my mom's the same way.
Even the rest of my family, a lot of people in my family,
my grandparents are the same way.
I grew up in a very happy household.
I can't wait to talk about this.
I mean, there's obviously a lot of,
there is darkness in life, obviously,
but I've always tended to focus on the positive i
guess naturally all right now you grew up in pretty tough ways you know the neighborhood that you
described was one of the lower income neighborhoods drugs were familiar part of your your younger
youth growing up yes Yes, yeah.
The way you described it in your book and the way I've understood you is like,
your narrative on top of the way you lived
doesn't quite match.
It's not that it doesn't match, it's yours.
But you can have another narrative quite easily,
which is like, look, life isn't fair.
Or like, I grew up and it was hard and I struggled.
But you look back and you say and even during that time you didn't have the idea that you were being pulled down
rather maybe the conditions were just difficult yeah i mean there's just there's two things i i
would think like growing up um like i said my mom was always really positive, always really close with my mom.
I had a stepdad for a while that came into my life when I was about two years old.
And my mom and him got married.
And I assumed and I was told that he was my real dad.
But he was a very dark person, abusive and just angry all the time.
There was nothing really that great about him.
BD?
Yeah.
I never really enjoyed being around him.
I always feared him.
And then they got divorced when I was about seven.
So once he was gone, I mean, all the darkness was gone.
And my mom was such a great, positive person,
and we became this little team at that point you know it was
just i loved that part of your story yeah that was like it was almost it's almost like i i
there was what's the right thing here for me there was like a craving for what you were describing
like oh okay so that heart i needed the hard thing to better understand
how to be really close to mom yeah and i don't know if needing is the right language there but
i know what you're saying though yeah it was cool the way that you frame that and i i recognize that
when like after something's difficult or hard it's like and then that thing resolves in some way
oh this is what it means oh this is this is, oh, this is great.
Well, I mean, you have to go through the dark and tough situations to know how great the
light and happy situations are. Is that a first principle for you?
It's just something that I've realized over time. I don't love being in those hard times,
but I love having gone through the hard times. My life has always
gotten better every time after something difficult. And when I'm in it, I always think
this is the worst thing. I wish I wasn't going through this. And then when I'm on the other
side of it, I look back and I go, wow, my life is actually better now today than it was
before the hard thing.
Can you illustrate that through a story
or an experience that you've had?
Okay, so the hardest thing I ever had to go through
was I had liver and kidney failure
from years of alcohol abuse.
And I ended up in the hospital.
And I was in the hospital for a month,
but then I was an outpatient for another few months.
But all in all, it was a year and a half of major recovery.
And it really felt like
because it was so long of recovery and it was so small, like the increments of getting better were
so small that it felt like I was never really getting better. And I thought that I maybe would
never get better. And that whole period, and there's a lot in there that was, you know, I came
out of the hospital with severe nerve
damage in my feet and it was just so much pain. I couldn't stand for more than a couple of seconds.
I couldn't put my feet on the ground without feeling like I was stepping on hot coals.
And I just, I didn't know if I was ever going to get better. The doctors didn't know what was
going to happen. There was just a wait and see. It could be permanent. It may go away we just didn't know how did you manage that that like
in that moment i i imagine that my psychology would have been pretty hard on myself like i
really fucked myself up here oh yeah it was i was so down on myself and so mad at myself yeah and
embarrassed and it was also very public i had gone down a really bad path in the public eye.
And then-
Did the world, sorry to interrupt you,
did the world know that you were strung out?
Well, the world could see that I was in bad shape.
You know, it was all just alcohol for me.
And, you know, you can really see that in people's faces
when you're, you know, I was horribly bloated and-
Puffy.
Yeah, puffy face.
Yeah. So the harduffy face. Yeah.
So the hard drugs came before that.
Way before that.
I stopped doing drugs when I was like early 20s.
I thought you were going to say like 16.
So you were in the throes of it, you know, as a teenager.
I never had a drug problem.
We dabbled with drugs, all of us.
Yeah.
For fun.
Like in your book, when you talked about the first party you went to
and you were with some older folks and some rock stars
and you and your younger friends were like, well, what do we do?
Yeah.
I want to come back to how you dealt with the resilient part of your story,
like how you work through the body damage stuff.
But go to this thing really quickly about you and your friends saying, what do we do
when we go to a party?
If they say drugs, because I think this is really cool.
This is something, there's a big insight here.
So we were about 16 years old and we had started hanging out with some famous Canadian rock
stars who seemed to take a liking to us.
We were in Sum 41.
I started this band in the end of 10th grade, basically.
And we had met some of our heroes by sneaking backstage
at one of their concerts.
You snuck backstage.
Yeah.
You were the one.
I snuck backstage and struck up a conversation.
And it turned into this singer of this band coming to our show to
check us out it was the very first some 41 show we ever played we'd only been some 41 for a couple
weeks and i convinced him to come to our show i mean i didn't really have to convince him i just
said hey we're playing this show would you come and he was like yeah i'll be there and i thought
yeah right and i was like well how you know um he said yeah put me on the list i was like, yeah, I'll be there. And I thought, yeah, right. And I was like, well, he said, yeah, put me on the list.
And I was like, what's a list?
I don't even know what that means.
And so I said that, I go, what's a list?
And he goes, here, here's my number.
Call me a couple days before the show and I'll come.
So I did, and he showed up.
And anyways, that started a friendship
with some of these other rock star friends of his
and the rest of some 41 guys
so we'd been hanging out with him a little bit mostly just he had let us come to some more shows
of his band and you know we weren't like friends yet but we're just kind of in his proximity a
little bit and he invited us to a party he said do you guys want to come my drummer's having this loft party and we were on our way on the train to his house you know how you didn't know what a list was
what what's a loft party okay yeah he was living he just moved into like some big loft okay you
know an apartment building and he was having a house that's exactly what it sounds like. Okay, good. He invited us down. We're on the train.
And we knew that those guys did drugs like ecstasy and coke and stuff like that.
And we didn't do anything like that.
We barely drank at that point.
In fact, I got my first drink from this guy at one of their shows that he had invited us to.
I'd never had alcohol before.
And he was just like, you guys want to do a shot?
It was before they were going on stage.
We're like, a shot of what?
And he goes, well, we're drinking Goldschlager.
And he goes, we always do a shot of Goldschlager before we go on.
And we thought, these guys are so rock star.
They're literally drinking gold.
There's flakes of gold in this.
The young mind.
Yeah.
They literally drink gold before
they go on stage like it's crazy and so we knew that we'd heard that they you know he mentioned
before that they party pretty hard and they do drugs and stuff like that so we were on the train
and we said to each other we're making a pact if they ask us to do any drugs we're all gonna say
no right it was like absolutely we're not doing ecstasy.
Ecstasy was rather new.
It wasn't brand new, but it wasn't as talked about.
It was not as common.
We were at this party, and almost immediately,
he looked at us and he goes, hey, you guys want to do some ecstasy?
And we all looked at each other, and we were remembering the pact
that we had with ourselves.
And we all looked each other in the eye and just went, yes.
Yes, we do.
As one does.
Yeah.
And the reason I really appreciate that story is because you had a plan.
And I think that that's pretty remarkable as a young person
that you rallied the team together.
Y'all agreed on something.
And there's something about how you work that comes forward in that story for me.
Is that there was a plan, there was a thought about how you wanted to do it.
You have the ability to think forward and use your imagination about what could be.
And even so much as like, well, what's a list?
How do I navigate that?
So you've got this ability to kind of plan in your mind.
And then you threw it all out.
You went with a gut, you went with a vibe, you went with something.
Even though you knew that this new drug called ecstasy, to you at least, was a big risk.
And you said, screw it, let's go.
And that was probably the influence of the the
rock star vibe that was happening you know at the party or whatever yeah we're hanging out with our
heroes um bands that we'd been listening to like i mean we were just in awe of this whole
scene that we were now of some being allowed into
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finding mastery. So, okay. So when you, when we just think about that story and there was a
connection to your, your, your friends, there was an agreement on a plan. There was your ability to
see the future and the way that you wanted it then there was the
abandonment of that future yeah for an experience for connection with other people a new group of
people and so all of that kind of not knowing you stepped into and so when when i think about your
life arc that feels like the first part of it had Had a plan, had some friends, had a plan,
and then abandoned that plan for an experience.
Does that seem accurate?
Yeah, I've never really thought about it like that
because especially back then,
you just kind of operate off instinct.
And to a certain degree,
even though we felt like this was not something
we should be doing i and i can speak
for myself you know we i wanted to be i wanted to be what those guys were from an earlier age even
before i even heard their bands like i was i grew up being obsessed with nirvana and guns and roses
and the doors and the sex pistolsols. And I wanted that life.
You know, I loved that Doors movie.
I loved the whole Jim Morrison story.
I remember, you know, you romanticize that stuff when you're really young.
You think it's so cool.
Like, look at all that chaos and all the wildness of all this stuff.
So that had already seeped into my subconscious already.
So when I'm now stepping into this world, it's almost like,
oh, here it is. Like this is actually happening. And you don't have a conscious thought where you
say, well, I always wanted to be like Jim Morrison and all those guys. It's just, it's somewhere in
your subconscious at this point. So your instincts just kind of go towards it. You know, you have
this thought, like, I know I shouldn't be doing this, but this is the
life that I've been dreaming of.
Derek, what you're speaking is so rich because you programmed exactly from all of the little
micro thoughts like, look at Jim.
Oh my God, maybe one day.
Yeah.
That's what I want.
Like, I don't know
call it a thousand times a day absolutely since you were a young kid very young and yeah and and
you know i wasn't sure how deep you want to go into all that you know how the mind works the
subconscious and you you like you said you you know you program yourself yeah and how much we
operate from our subconscious right how do you do that now
purposely how do you what are the thoughts that you spend most of your time with now
well i do a lot of meditation okay a lot of gratitude practice um i do i have an eye on
the future but i'm much more in the present I don't spend much time in memory lane
I think of the past fondly but like I said I don't really live there I'm very like we just did our
last US show about a week ago and I I forget that that we were just on tour because we're doing this
now you know like I'm on a book tour now and yeah yeah yeah it's once that show was done it was like
okay where am I tomorrow you know I'm not really thinking about we. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Once that show was done, it was like, okay, where am I tomorrow?
I'm not really thinking about, we just played our last show in the US today.
I'm like, what's happening tomorrow?
What time is my flight?
Okay, cool.
And where am I?
It's all about tomorrow.
You don't abandon your history or your stories.
No, like I said, I think of the past fondly.
And I remember it vividly.
I think this is another process that you work from. And one of the reasons thatly right i can i remember it vividly i think this is another process that
you work from and one of the reasons that you're probably alive today is that the way that you
think about your future you i'm sorry the way that you think about your history is that you're able
to see it in a way that serves you well and the fondly is the word here is that you're not looking
back like man i screwed up they were screwed up why that you're not looking back like, man, I screwed up. They were screwed up.
Why me?
You're not doing that type of psychology.
You're doing something different, which is like, it was hard.
And I am who I am today.
Yeah, I think I'm thankful for all of it.
I really am.
I think, like I said, when I'm in those moments, when I was in that year and a half of recovery,
coming out of the hospital of liver failure and nerve damage, and I had so many issues,
I couldn't even play guitar.
I couldn't form sentences.
When I went to pick up a guitar again, because I thought, I can't walk, I can't do anything,
I'm sort of bedridden.
Well, at least I have my guitar.
And I grabbed it, and I couldn't even form a chord.
I was like, to just get my hand and then to switch it to another chord, it was literally learning guitar
all over again. And that's when I really broke down. I had really just the shame, the embarrassment,
the anger, the sadness, the guilt, the blame that I put on myself,
all of that hit so hard and it stuck for so long
that no one would enjoy that period.
You're never going to, in that moment, say,
I'm really glad this is happening.
But I can sit here today and say,
I'm so thankful that I went through that.
Why?
I would never take that away.
I'm glad. Why? Why are you you thankful my life is so much better like hard times create stronger people
and i feel so much stronger and better having gone through that i'm just so glad it's over
and i don't want to go through it again how are you stronger mentally Mentally, physically. I look at these things as like, and it can be physical or mental,
but I look at these things as like the gift of injury,
where you go through something.
Let's just say I have injuries.
I have a herniated disc, and it's acted up before.
And every time it does, it's really painful.
Or I'll have other injuries in my
ankle or my knee or something like that. And I do the physio. And what I mean by the gift of injury
is, is that you go in and you build up all those muscles stronger than they were before on all the
surrounding muscles to be stronger than you ever were. So it's almost like, and if you didn't have
those injuries, you wouldn't work on those things. You would just be fine and you wouldn't even think of it.
So I've become physically stronger in every way
because I have to work on all that stuff.
Mentally stronger because I have to work on all that stuff.
I don't want to drink again.
I'm 10 years sober.
Huge congrats.
You have to just work on this stuff.
And it's a day in day out work daily
process for sure what do you know your triggers so i drank for 17 years total of my life in 15
years of that i never felt a pull towards it i never felt an addiction towards it i was always
we partied hard our band was always known as a hard partying band. We grew up, like I said,
loving The Doors and Motley Crue and Guns N' Roses. And we just thought, that's what you do
when you make it. And that's what we did. And we had a great time. And we always just thought it
was fun. Now, the last two years of my drinking, I started self-medicating for this back pain I was
talking about and my injuries. and we were on tour and it
was the beginning of an album coming out and I re-injured my back and it was really bad and I
thought I I know what this is if I go home to recover it's like a six-month recovery and our
album is about to come out and the only way to promote the album is to go out on tour so what I
would notice is you know we'd always have drinks sort of at the end of the night, right?
Maybe a drink or two before the shows.
We never really got drunk before the shows.
But I'd always notice that after like a couple drinks, my back pain felt a lot better.
Pop a couple Advil.
I'm like, I don't feel anything.
So I started saying, you know what?
I can get through this tour.
If I just kind of ward off the pain with some Advil and some Jack Daniels and I'll be fine yeah and
I'll deal with it you know at the end right because we were such a and still are this rolling machine
of a band right you just go into it's just cycle after cycle you go on tour for 18 months you come
home you make an album for six to eight months and then you're back on the road for 18 months
and it just repeats and repeats and repeats and that's what we've been doing for 20-something years.
Yeah, and just for folks that might not,
I'm not sure who these people would be that might not know your music,
who are your people?
What do you mean, my people?
Like, I recognize your music because I grew up in the surf culture, right?
From Southern California, Pennywise.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, it was kind of a staple here.
But who is your community
who are the people that have the connection to what you're saying and how you're presenting
you know your lyrics and music yeah you know i don't really know i mean you know we have our
fan base that's what i mean like who how do you describe why they're attracted to you who are they
i don't know. That's interesting.
I've never really thought about why people like our band
or what they like about it.
I don't know.
I mean, music's so...
I've come to realize music is very primal.
We think we have these conscious decisions.
Well, I like this because of that.
I like this band because I like what their lyrics are,
or whatever it is.
But now that I've had two kids, and by six, eight months old,
both of them, I'll watch them react to music that's being played.
And sometimes they do react, and sometimes they don't.
They actually have a taste.
But there'll be some music that comes on in the background
where they just drop what they're doing,
and they could be on the couch, and they can barely walk walk and they sort of scurry off the couch and they have
to go to the speaker and they start dancing because there's something that's primal about it
and i've come to realize that and i used to think as a musician oh you know you write
a good song and that's why people like it or whatever but i think music is way deeper than
that and it's it's something that hits us inside and we can't even explain it.
Very cool.
It's like candy to hear it from you,
because you've lived it, you're a creator of it.
And here you point to the primal piece.
Is it primal when you're creating
or is it more intellectual and technical?
For me, I operate better when I just write music and just let it come out.
I have tried to game the system and get intellectual about it
and try to think about things, and that's when I don't do as well.
Are you talking about lyrics or notes?
Anything.
Just writing music in general.
If I sit down and think about, well, what would be a really great song?
What's in a great song?
And I'm going to try to write a great song. It just, that never works. So how does it work for you? It just comes
out. It's a lot of times when you're not even thinking about writing a song, you're like, oh
man, I got this thing coming to me. I'm like, I got to like sing it into my phone or grab a guitar.
And, you know, if you're at home, great. I got guitars all over the place. Sometimes you're
driving, you know know and you got
an idea so they come in the middle of nowhere a lot of times too for me and i think a lot of people
are different because some people say you should just write all the time write something every day
and just keep that muscle going yeah i don't work as well when i do that i've tried doing that
i feel like i start getting stale like everything just kind of I get bored of it and I'm not enjoying the writing.
Whereas I find for me that I like the album cycle of 18 months or so
where I don't write anything.
I'm on tour.
I'm just playing music for people and I'm enjoying that process.
Then I come home and I go, okay, I'm going to make an album.
I sit down and I just have all this creativity
that's just been waiting to come out.
And I just write music for weeks to a few months.
How long does it take to recover once you're done with tour?
For the longest time and for most of our career,
the day that I get home from the tour is the day I start writing.
Yeah, that's what it sounded like what you said.
I've been fortunate to spend some time with some artists.
And when they get done with tour, they're like flat out exhausted.
It sounds like you're doing something different, that you're managing your energy cycles where you have energy at the end of the tour.
I usually come home pretty inspired from what we've just done and what I've just witnessed.
Open that up. I think most people want what you just said, but don't know how to do it.
I get inspired and excited from the work, from doing the work. And that's the accomplishment to me. And of course, you want it to do well. But I learned a while ago, and again, this is from experience.
I don't necessarily call it age because I think you can have the experience in a short
amount of time.
You can be younger with a lot of experience.
You can be older with, it's just the amount of experience that you have accumulated.
For me, I've come to a place where I only focus on the controllables.
And I want to focus, like you can't control the outcome, but I can control my output.
And that's where I put all my focus.
And that's the accomplishment to me.
To you, so output is a controllable.
What, when you double click on that, what are the things that are more specific that
lead to a high output?
Well, for me, I love what I do, so that makes things easier.
But I like to just put all my effort into things,
which is why I'm making this record and this tour the final one,
because I have other interests and things I would like to explore.
And I don't necessarily know what that is yet,
but I know because of the way I work and I'm so all in that I can't do Sum 41 and something else.
So I want to focus on this tour, making this the best tour we've ever done. And when it's over,
I'm going to find something else that I find fulfilling and throw myself into that.
I'm so inspired by that thought.
I feel like I'm doing seven things reasonably well.
And that's how that usually works. I want to do three exceptionally well.
But I don't know if I have the courage that you're talking about right now,
which is to say no to some things that are good.
They're really good.
I find meaning and purpose and enjoyment in it.
But spread thin, I know that there's a different level of art
that I can get to in my life and I'm not.
I think there's always good ideas.
There's always good things you could be doing.
There's always a bunch of stuff that is kind of cool. I think if you really want to master something, you have to
dive in and focus on it. That's my, at least that's how I know I operate.
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for 20% off. When you think of the path of mastery, or when you think of mastery,
I just kind of introduced the idea of a path, but when you think of mastery, where else do you go? What else comes or surrounds that concept for you?
To me, mastery would be hard work and repetition.
I think it's about the more work you do when nobody's watching
will lead you to mastery when everybody's watching.
Simply put, I would say don't practice until you get it right.
Practice until you can't get it wrong.
Yeah, that's a cool idea.
That's how I operate.
Is it more of a destination or a process?
Oh, I think, obviously, like I said,
you want what you do to do well, right?
But you can really only focus on what you can control.
And you can't control, especially when you're in something
that deals with public consumption.
They're going to choose what they want to choose,
and there's other things that they might choose.
You can't control other people to like what you put out.
So you can really only focus on the process
and what you put into it,
and you can really only hope for the best.
Okay, so when you're creating,
how much in your heart or in your mind
are you thinking about the end user
versus how to stitch note one and two together?
Well, the way I write music has always been about live performance.
We've always been such a live band.
And in the early days, those first four or five,
maybe even the first six records, I hated making the records
because I hated being in the studio.
I hated writing songs.
I just wanted to be back out on stage performing.
So making records was the necessary evil to just get back out on the road.
You could have been a cover band, but that was not.
I don't think that would have really gotten us into arenas though.
But that's not what, no, that's not what you really wanted.
You don't want to just play music.
No.
You wanted to create and share.
I do.
So I always would say I hated the process of writing music, but I loved having, being
the guy that wrote the songs. Oh, that's so interesting. But I hated the torture of writing music, but I loved being the guy that wrote the songs.
Oh, that's so interesting.
But I hated the torture of getting them to the finish line.
But once they were done, I was like, fuck yeah, I wrote that.
Which of the most popular songs do you look back at
and be like, that was cool?
I look back at the whole catalog of music for the most part,
and I still like it all.
I mean, there are some songs, obviously,
where I can go back and listen and go, man, maybe that, not that one so much, but, um,
and maybe not full albums as much, but the songs that we play live and the songs that everybody
knows or the songs that went to radio and stuff like that, I still love playing all those songs.
I really appreciate what you just said because I did a deep dive into Beethoven to try to understand his psychology one of the greats
I don't know if you would oh, absolutely. Yeah, and come to find out he had this radical fear of
Other people's opinions so much so that he went deaf. I know you've got tinnitus
I have a little bit myself, but he went deaf or was going deaf
And he did two things that I think I would love
for you to respond to, to see how you navigate these types of experiences. So as he was going
deaf, he had this, this philosophy that I can't let anyone know somebody like me, somebody as
extraordinary as in music as me is losing their sound, their hearing. So he pretended like he was aloof.
He pretended like he was in this, what he would call his raptus, his creative genius orbit.
Sure.
And, but actually he couldn't hear what the person was saying to him.
So that was part one. And then part two, when it become became so bad, he, he had to go away.
And so he went and found himself a bit you know a recluse
and that is actually in that dark place if you will that he had to drop out of society
and he drank more than any human should probably drink that when he was out there is where he came
up with bum bum bum bum and kind of changed you know uh his I think, from that point forward, number five.
And it's actually, I don't know if you know this,
but that bum, bum, bum, bum was him, maybe the folklore of it,
banging on his piano because he couldn't hear the notes that he was making
and he was frustrated.
And he went, wait, what was that?
And then kind of put it
into a piece so what do you do when you feel unsettled about some part of your life but people
are asking to see that he was unsettled about his hearing yeah and people were asking him to respond
but he couldn't hear it so he was faking it yeah what how do you navigate that part of your life i think for me i only ever
do what i feel comfortable with like so i don't do anything if for anybody else if people are
expecting something from me and maybe that's just because i grew up loving punk rock music and i'm
just like i just do what i want to do so i so there's a lyric that I wanted to just share with you. And I think
this highlights exactly what you just said, but I want to get the tone of what you just said,
but here's the lyric. I don't want to waste my time. Do you know where I'm going? Yeah. I don't
want to waste my time, become another casualty of society. I'll never fall in line, become another
victim of your conformity and back down yeah when i read that i was like
oh god that speaks to me yeah a lot and so can you open up a little bit of your philosophy of
punk music about that way of living and then and then also maybe kind of use it in the context of
of this lyric there's this age-old question it. It's like, what is punk? What is punk to you? The amount of times I've been asked that.
And there's elements to it that I think,
obviously there's like an aesthetic
that people associate with punk.
But I think for me, it's always just been an attitude.
It's a mindset.
That's the way I've looked at it,
is that I think I was attracted to it
because of the, I'm going to do it on my own.
I am my own boss, and I don't care about what anyone has to say.
I don't even have to be that great at being a musician or anything
and still touch people and still affect people.
It's that you can do it too.
Don't listen to authority that's that you can do it too like don't listen to
authority that tells you you can't do something or you're not good enough and that's that's what
that lyric meant to me I don't want to waste my time and become another casualty of society to me
it was all about that it was just like I want to do what I'm I want to. And I'm not going to listen to what people tell me I should do or I'm supposed
to do that just fits in to what they think is acceptable. So we're reading it kind of cold,
right? And it's a little sterile. And you said punk is an attitude. I go, yeah, I hear that.
I feel that. And then when you are about about now let's go right into that moment where
a lyric this lyric let's just say is going to come out of you yeah and you use the word mindset
okay so what is the mindset that precedes you being able to contour the way that that this
sterile lyric on paper is going to come out. Can you talk about mindset?
And can you talk about what is a mindset, first and foremost?
And then what is the mindset to help you deliver
what you really want to deliver?
That's kind of a tough question.
How do you define mindset?
Because everyone defines things differently.
Like we were talking before about subconscious.
I feel like it comes from your subconscious.
It comes from your programs, whether it's the programs you've programmed yourself
or the things you've grown up with or however you just get to where you are
in your own mindset.
And for me, at that time of writing Fat Lip and those lyrics,
my mindset was a couple of things. One was, so that was the last song that we wrote for that
record. I was under a lot of pressure to write songs at that point because we were putting out
a record and we had deadlines and I was just trying to write stuff quickly. So I wasn't really
thinking too much about anything.
And especially in those days, I didn't really think about anything.
I was just writing music, whatever came out.
And I always used to say, whatever a song is about,
like whatever those lyrics are recorded,
or whatever lyrics that are recorded for that song,
that's just what I was thinking in that moment.
If I had written that song three hours later or on another day,
it might be about something completely different. And that's just where I was thinking in that moment. If I had written that song three hours later or on another day, it might be about something completely different.
And that's just where I was at at that moment.
And I mean, I think that that song, Fat Lip,
sums up what Sum 41 was all about in that moment.
Fat Lip was like our mission statement.
It's just, this is who we are.
This is what we're all about
we're about fun we're about not caring about what our parents want us to do because we were
teenagers we just got out of high school yeah and our parents did not want us to go into music
they wanted us to become just they wanted us to go to college and just get a regular job and just
you had a 52% in school.
So college, there was a great line in your book.
You're like, I did it.
I got a 52%.
I passed.
I just barely passed.
That's all I needed to get.
Because my mom, she struggled so hard.
She had me when she was 17, and she dropped out of school
when she was in 10th grade to raise me.
And then she married somebody who wasn't great,
and then she left him and had to figure out, okay, now I got to take care of this kid and myself.
And we, we moved a lot in every, every time we moved was like a step up, but she struggled a
lot for a lot of years and had to go back to school in her mid twenties, um, back to high school and also still have a job.
And then she eventually went to nursing school and became a nurse
and got a good job.
And like I said, every step was a step up.
But she did not want me to quit school and go down that similar path.
Your mom had a spidey sense about Greg.
Yes.
And I don't know if you're comfortable talking about this part of your life, but...
Well, I wrote about it.
Yeah, so...
I don't mind talking about it.
Writing and talking might be different.
It is.
It is different.
I mean, all of it's hard, I mean, to be honest.
But that's why we're here, right?
Where we go through the hard things intentionally, because you get stronger on the other end.
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I was really inspired that not only how you wrote it,
but the fact that you did write it because you didn't have to pull that forward.
No, and I wasn't sure that I was going to.
When I started writing the book,
I didn't know what I was going to write about.
I didn't even really know what the story was.
I actually thought my story was kind of boring.
And I thought, why am I going to write a book?
And I sat there the first day and I was like, my story was boring.
Yeah.
I really thought that because I was like, I didn't have a list of like stories that
I was going to hit and moments.
And I remember the past, like I said, but I don't live in the past.
So yes, I can go recall those memories, but they're not just like top of mind.
I'm like, oh yeah, I'm going to talk about this.
Oh yeah, I'm going to talk about that.
And so I'm thinking, I don't know what I'm going to write about.
And this thing hit me where I thought, for one,
I thought my story was boring because I read a lot of those books
either in high school or even while we were on tour.
And a lot of those books are, those kind of books are even more
popular now. I read Motley Crue's The Dirt, Tommy Lee's book, Nikki Sixx's book, you know,
Ozzy Osbourne's book, Slash's book, Joe Perry's book, Steven Tyler's book.
And I'm just thinking like, now those are books.
Like, those are wild stories.
I got nothing on this.
My story is so boring compared to this.
I'm just a guy who wrote some songs and, you know, had some success.
Cool, I guess. But is it a book? I don't know. And then all of a sudden I had this thought of,
well, yeah, you know what? Like you don't have a book like those guys. So don't try to make
yourself sound cool. Just write the story. And if it's boring, it's boring. But it's your life, so just write your life.
Like I said, I had this one rule of like,
don't try to make yourself sound cool.
And that just freed me up to just write the story honestly.
And as I got through the story
and I start getting to moments like our ex-manager Greg,
I pause and I'm like, oh, am know, am I going to really go there?
And I thought, I can't tell this stuff. This is something I thought I would bury forever and just,
you know, I don't even think about it because I had buried it for so long. And I thought, well,
you know what? It's probably good for me to get it out on the page. And if I don't like it, I'll
just take it out. But it's probably good for me to just write out on the page. And if I don't like it, I'll just take it out. But it's
probably good for me to just write it out because I've never really dealt with what happened between
him and I. And as I wrote it all out and I get on the other end of it, which, you know, he was
our manager. He was in my life for nine years. So he's with us through all our first four albums from 16 to 25 years old he's a huge part
of the whole thing and when i got done writing that section which is a few chapters um i thought
well how do i take that out it's it's so intertwined with everything all the good and bad yeah very So I thought I'd be lying if I took all that bad stuff out.
And I don't, everything I do, I try to do honestly.
I love that statement.
I believe you too.
And he was also, just to be clear for the listener,
he was the person that gave you his number.
You were the little kid.
16-year-old, yeah.
Came in, 16-year-old, bright-eyed, like, what happens backstage?
Yeah.
And he's like, hey, kid, here's my number.
Here's my phone number.
I'll show up at your show.
Yeah.
Which, at the time, I was like, this guy's the coolest guy on the planet.
He's my idol.
He's my hero.
I love this band.
I have his records.
He's famous.
And he's taking an interest's my hero. I love this band. I have his records. He's famous. And he's taking an interest
in my band. And when did you start to realize that he was actually taking an interest in you?
Well, like I said, we were taking a lot of drugs, you know, going to raves and all of us were,
you know, we'd start, we went down that path of doing ecstasy and he
introduced us to going to raves in the 90s and we're going to more parties and we just started
hanging out with that toronto canadian rock star scene we became accepted you know all of us some
41 guys and you know as the years went on we just became closer and closer. And I also was getting to a point where I, around 17 years old,
I wasn't really getting along with my parents.
My mom had, she wasn't married, but she was living with somebody,
which was, you know, my sort of pseudo new stepdad.
And we weren't getting along very well.
And I was spending less and less time at home.
And I was couch surfing a lot and staying at Greg's house quite a bit.
Our friendship just grew and grew and grew.
And I couldn't deny that I'd never met anybody like him.
Maybe there was a bit of, I was in awe of the whole thing,
that I'm hanging out so much with this rock star and he's my idol
and all that kind of stuff. so much with this rock star and he's my idol and
all that kind of stuff. But we, we had this great connection and he was teaching me how to write
songs better and introducing me to everything culturally and just all the things that you would
learn from say your, say a father figure, how to shave and how to tie a tie and do all the,
you know, just things that you do at those ages.
You know, all of a sudden I'm like, hey, I'm starting to get facial hair.
What do I do?
And he's like, well, I'll teach you how to shave.
So, you know, we just had this bond.
And over time I started to realize that, you know,
he seemed to be interested in me physically and sexually,
and it kind of devolved into that sort of relationship for I don't know how long,
but within a few months of it, I just felt like, you know, okay,
it was a little bit of an experiment. I'm not really that interested. But he was more, you know, now that we've started this, this has to continue.
We're not stopping this now.
You don't just start and stop.
I will say it is hard to talk about.
How are you navigating this conversation right now?
You're watching somebody try to process this all for the first time.
Because the first step was writing about it.
The next step was putting it out to the public.
And now the next step is talking about it for the first time.
So this is all new to me.
And what are the emotions that you're navigating as you're doing it trying to understand it you know i don't want to
i don't want to say something um you want to be careful with your words because i don't
want to mischaracterize something or or i don't know just say it the wrong way you know um again your
commitment to honesty yeah exactly right i want it to be right and you're not trying to protect
your image or protect him no no if there is anything that i feel like my subconscious goes
to protect it is him for some reason and i catch myself going in my internally going why are you
still trying to protect him?
Because that's what I did for so long.
Do you, in your mind, do you frame him as being an abuser?
And a child abuser?
I never did.
I've never said that.
I don't say that in the book.
I don't, I hadn't come to a place of labeling it.
All I could do in the book was just talk about what happened.
I'm going to tell the truth, and the reader can decide for themselves
what they think it is.
I've never felt like I knew what it was.
And in the book, I think there's so much there,
and I've been saying in a lot of interviews,
I've said it the best that I can say in the book.
It's best to read the book rather than me stumble through it
because it's still hard for me book rather than me stumble through it because it's
still hard for me to process and put into words. Yeah. I'm more interested in how you're navigating
it than the actual facts of it. Sure. When I read it just for, for clarity, that clearly looks like
a predatorial grooming process. And when you said no, he flexed another tactic to pull you back in.
And like, it's really confusing as a kid.
And that's what the abuse is.
I was going to say, it's still confusing.
Yeah, and that's what abuse is.
And so cool, man, to keep processing it, to keep working through it.
You will find it.
I think each time you wrestle with it, there's a little more clarity.
I think so, yeah.
There's a little more clarity.
But I'm in awe of your courage and watching you try to find the right way to do it now.
I think most of us are so overwhelmed by emotions, overwhelmed by what people think of us, we never get close to the truth.
And I'm watching you go, it's really cool. Yeah.
It's difficult for sure. But like we've been talking about, I think
I don't like to run away from difficult things. I have those moments where I pull back and I go,
you know what? I always come back to this thing. The thing that's the hardest thing to do is probably the most important thing you can do.
So I always remind myself that.
Whenever I start pulling back, I'm like,
no, you're pulling back because this is the most important thing you can do.
So just do it.
And that's a feeling.
You're talking about an emotion at that point.
We had a legend on Gabby Reese.
So she was in good volleyball player and then world-class model.
And she said,
you will get taken down by the thing that you're willing to do anything for.
Does that make sense to you?
Yeah. I mean, to a certain degree, I guess, you know, I,
I don't know necessarily know what I like I would say to that, I guess, you know, I don't necessarily know what I would say to that.
I don't know.
Let's stay on the emotion piece.
When you feel an emotion and you're retracting and recoiling from it, how do you do the gymnastics to come back in to that hard emotion, to that complicated mental thing that you're trying to sort out? For me, when things are difficult or when I'm having these emotions,
I really try to not act from emotion.
I always try to take a step back and just say,
okay, let's think about this for a second.
What am I feeling?
Why am I feeling it?
And what are my best options to deal with this?
Do you float above and watch it?
Yeah, a little bit. I try to take like an outside perspective and and look at myself you know another great tactic or trick
whatever you want to call it is i'm sure i don't know if you how many people i don't know how
popular this is uh it's not something i learned till not that long ago but like the solomon paradox
you know where you can give other people much better advice than you give yourself.
You can see it so clearly.
So I try to do that.
Pull yourself out and give that person advice, not yourself.
Like what would you tell somebody who's going through this thing?
And all of a sudden you're like, oh, well, I would say this and this and this.
And you go, well, okay, then I just gave myself some pretty good advice there. Finding Mastery is brought to you by
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You mentioned earlier mindfulness and gratitude practice. Mindfulness or meditation practices will help you be able to pull and watch and observe without being sucked into the full drama of it.
But not detach, but observe from a different perspective to also feel, but just to have a different viewpoint.
Yeah, exactly. And I think doing the meditation and gratitude and, you know, just
whatever it is, even just, you know, with yoga or working out and just like working out those,
just working out your mind, really, it kind of leads you with through your subconscious,
I find like where things will hit you and you can just quickly kind of get through them.
And you don't even really notice.
There's lots of things that will happen or come up.
I mean, this stuff coming out, the book coming out, and headlines kind of went everywhere
this week about this situation with Greg Norrie and I.
And this is a really heavy week for me.
It's out to the public and a lot of people are talking about it.
And I know he's starting to talk about it.
And I think if I hadn't been doing all this meditation and working on myself for the past
while that I would probably be hit really hard this week.
But I'm just kind of like, it's going to be fine.
It's not cool, but it'll be fine.
What's not cool about it?
Like I said, it's just really heavy talking about this all the time.
Everybody asking me stuff about it.
I know obviously he's not happy about it.
But the truth is I'm not happy about it either.
I take no pleasure in coming out with the story
and having his whole life turned upside down,
his family having to go through this.
That was something I wrestled with for a long time.
I even went to a therapist about this
before I started writing it.
When I started realizing I'm going there and I was going to go down this path,
I thought, I can't go there because this is going to hurt too many people.
In his life, in his orbit, that was my first thought.
Your sensibilities about others, it's not something I would have guessed until sitting with you here like you have a
sensitivity to you about other people and a kindness about speaking the truth you are not like
brash with like whatever it takes man that's not you there's a sensitivity about how you conduct and shape your words to find the most
honest way to express what's happening inside of you or to you know pull your your history forward
i really appreciate how you're doing i imagine it's really hard for him to you know and so yeah
i'm sure it is and there's a big part there's a lot of times we forget some of the bad things, right?
You can forget how tough things were in the past.
And I always go back to, and sometimes people will say, no, don't go there.
When I say, you know, he was a really great guy too.
And they'll say, oh, don't say that.
Like he was, you know, look at all this other stuff.
And I go, yeah, but I can't deny, like, if I'm being honest,
Sum 41 wouldn't be where we are. We wouldn't be this band without him. And he had a lot of
great stuff. He taught me the structure of writing songs and pointed out how to, you know, he would
show me other great songs and say, now your songs, you have these moments that are good, but you just
have all these parts and
they just kind of go nowhere. And you've got this one really great part and then you just get off
and you never repeat it again. Look at this song who has, they've got a great chorus and there's
a structure, follow this kind of thing. And, you know, he just taught me all these things
and I started writing better songs and he was the one who helped get assigned and just, you know,
all these things, right? Like there was a lot of, he noticed a lot of good things.
I'd say once we, once the relationship turned
the way it did, went down more of a sexual path
and then we had success and our band went past his band.
I felt like there was, and I was also saying,
I don't want to do this. I don't want to do this i don't
want to have this kind of relationship i just want to have a professional and friendly relationship
and i was pulling back that made him angry and the fact that we had surpassed him i think made
him jealous of our success even though he's our manager there's a lot of layers to your point
and and things just got very dark for a long time. And you're still our manager, and you're still intertwined in everything.
And we still did four records together until it just got to a point where it was just so toxic
that we all collectively came to a decision to fire him as our manager.
You know, I just want to, one more time, honor the courage to speak truth.
And it's something that this is yesterday the
time of the recording was mental health day every day should be a mental yeah you know but it's
celebrated on the calendar once a year at least in the u.s it's a real treat to hear how honest
you are and the courage that sits right below that to speak to it so i want more of that for me i
want more of that for the listener i want more of that for the listener. I want more of that for all of us. There's a lot you can gain in life when you
really look at yourself, honestly. You can stand figuratively naked in the mirror and, because I
don't like to stand naked actually in the mirror, but figuratively in the mirror and look at all the things that either you're doing well or doing
or that you could do better. I know I benefit from that. And it's hard when you can get to a place
where a lot of the things or everything you do is really your fault, good and bad. There's always a
way you could have navigated yourself out of something. Like when you have that victim mentality of like,
well, this is bad in my life because of that.
I could say things in my past, my upbringing,
my abusive stepfather, whatever it is,
has made me a certain way
and I'm just like an angry person or something like that.
But it comes down to the controllables.
You can't control what people do or people say
or how people act, but you can control how you act and what you do with that
and after those situations.
What you just said is pointing to a very technical term called agency.
In psychology, that means that you have power to choose,
no matter what the circumstances are.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
One of the most inspiring kind of
writers in psychology was um and psychologist was victor frankel which i'm sure you're familiar with
survived the concentration camps and told how and he pointed to the same very things that you're
talking about which is like look when the conditions are deplorable you got to figure
out a way to understand purpose, to understand how to
make choices that line up for something bigger than you. And so as we round kind of the last
couple of questions here, like, have you thought deeply about your purpose? Like, why are you here?
Why is Derek here? What do you want to do with the rest of your life?
Well, I do think about what I want to do with the rest of my life. I don't really think about
what my purpose is and why I'm here. And in some ways, I feel like I naturally don't operate from
ego. And I feel like in some ways, saying that I have some purpose here on this earth for this, for something feels
somewhat that comes from an egotistical point of view of, you know, I just think we're all here.
I'm just here to, I want to enjoy life. I want to work hard and do things that I think are
honest, great for myself. And hopefully that can help others.
But with music, I've been helped so much with music.
And I hear that from other people.
And I don't know how much my music has touched people, because you never know.
You can just hope that it has brought some joy to people and people enjoy it but you do get the the adulation like oh my god you do get
that like you have some sense that i was just talking about this the other day is i wish that
i could get i still haven't gotten to a place and maybe this is because we spent so many years
opening for other bands and trying to prove ourselves, and we had so many ups and downs,
and we've been counted out so many times that I've always felt
that we're always trying to prove ourselves.
And on this final tour that we're doing, and these are sold-out big places,
and I'm backstage, and I have to remind myself that people came here
because they want to be here.
I don't have to go out and prove myself that we're a good band they like us already there's this idea in elite sport what which is
what got you here isn't going to get you there and so you know the vine that you've been swinging on
actually to get to the next vine we gotta we gotta let go and you know take a leap and it's scary
because if you're operating on a really high
level same with the athletes i'm referring to and to let go and to do it differently you don't
necessarily know it's going to work out and i hear you saying that right now that the model that got
you here was i'm going to show you and like you didn't believe in me yeah okay watch and i got
something to say and i'm gonna grind i'm gonna do it better and i'm gonna get it and so that chip on your shoulder mentality got you here and the thing that will
get you to the next iteration of how you shape your life is probably not going to be that chip
on your shoulder there's something else maybe i don't know no one does it alone we we need each other yeah and it's a very complicated
set of conditions when we're in a relationship where we're really trusting and relying on other
people to deliver against the the vision that we're sharing the promises that we're making to each other. And so bandmates,
teammates, partners in life, you know, there's that intimate connection between people. Yeah.
And to be in a band for a long time feels hard. It feels really tricky because of-
It's a marriage to a few different people.
Yeah. And you put all the public attention on it. You put the artistic integrity on it.
You put drugs and rock and roll and complicated relationships all surrounding.
So do you have any insights about how to do relationships well with people that you want to partner with?
Whether it's a teammate, somebody at home, or if we're speaking to the band member.
It's hard.
I mean, with our band, I think we all have a collective goal.
We all love what we do.
We love the music.
We all grew up together.
We all went to school together.
But that can also make things difficult because we operate a little bit like a family
where when you're that close, you're kind of like brothers.
I don't know how to put it. But when you're with your family, you can talk to each
other. You can be rude. You can be more rude with each other because you love each other that much,
and you know that you're going to come back to each other, right? You're not going to leave
each other. So brothers can fight a lot harder sometimes.
And I think that's how we've operated in the past.
I mean, at this point in our career, everything's all love and peace and respect and understanding.
We've gone through periods where we hated each other and weren't speaking and mad at each other for this and that.
Or some things were big things, some things were small things.
And dynamics have been great and bad you know when we started out out of high school we only had each
other we didn't have wives or girlfriends and all that kind of stuff or we all we only the only thing
we had was just this one goal was to succeed and to just you know be the best band that we could
so we had this gang mentality like you couldn't mess with any one of us or we're all going to jump in.
And we all had each other's back for the longest time.
And then as you get older and everybody has different needs
and different wants in life,
your life starts taking you in different directions
and we also start moving to different places
and we're not as connected anymore.
And with a band like us, who constantly toured,
never stopped working, we started to burn ourselves out,
and then tensions grew within the band.
So dynamics got really bad for a good while.
We've done everything that you could.
We've done the whole never speaking to each other again,
screaming matches backstage, fighting, not fist fighting,
but just screaming at each other,
saying all the things that you shouldn't say to each other,
going through group therapy together, all that kind of stuff.
Members quitting, members coming back.
It's all that kind of stuff.
And if there's a through line about how to do it well,
how to get to the place that you're at now,
what would you want the listener to know?
For me, and this is just, I can only really speak for myself,
is that I've always been a committed person.
I commit to everything that I do, and I committed to the band.
I commit to my marriage, and I ride through the ups and downs.
Like I said, I always know that nothing lasts forever.
Life is just a roller coaster.
You're always going to go up and down.
And I know when things are bad that the bigger picture is better than what the small
picture is right now so I always commit to it and I stick through it and I think some of the guys
in our band have left and come back and I can't speak to why they did that or what they were going through internally.
But, you know, I think at the end of the day,
really for a band,
it really comes down to the love of the music.
Very cool.
And you snuck in there that you're trying to be your best,
not the best.
Is that?
I didn't know I snuck that in there.
This is sort of how I operate, I guess.
Definitely me too.
I've never tried to be, and I've thought about this,
I've never thought about being the biggest or the best.
Sometimes I think that I should have.
I look back and I go, wow, I've accomplished every single dream I've ever had. Everything that I thought
about when I was 13, 14, 15 years old in high school, just dreaming all day, everything, all
the bands that I would dream about, all those things, I hit all those things. So if I have any
regrets, I just go to myself, why don't I dream bigger? Why didn't I dream to be the biggest band
on the planet?
Because it probably would have come true. I can't wait to see what you do next.
Yeah, I'm excited for it. I have no idea what it's going to be, but that's the exciting part.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm really looking. And if you do nothing, that's cool too. Like when I say nothing, I mean nothing public. I just really appreciate how you shaped your history, your current state,
and the way you think about the future. And I think that these golden handcuffs that many
people would relate to, like, I'm really good at this thing, but I don't know what to do
without that thing. And so I really respect that you're examining the golden handcuffs as well.
And maybe you don't see them as handcuffs, but this idea that you don't have to do just music.
Yeah.
Right?
Like it's a love vein for you,
but you don't have to just do that.
I just, I don't know what else is out there for me.
I don't know what my other interests are
because Sum 41 consumes my life.
And it's been great, but it's been 30 years.
And I feel like if I'm ever going to try to do something, I have to
just get rid of that out of my life so I can just see if the universe offers me anything else. I
don't know what it's going to be. And like you said, it may be nothing or nothing public, but
it could be something I do that where nobody's looking, you know, and it's fulfilling. I don't
know. That's cool. But I'm ready to see what is out there. I think opportunities will just,
I don't think they're going to be handed to me, but I think life presents opportunities.
And you're ready.
Yeah.
I think you're speaking to a lot of people in that. I'm doing this thing. I've made a living,
paying mortgage, I'm paying rents, like it's working out.
Man, I'm not sure I want to keep doing this.
Well, nothing good, I've realized in life that nothing good comes easy.
And the hard thing is the scary thing.
And everything's scary.
Change is scary. You know, change is scary.
So, you know, it's just, you just gotta,
you just have to do it because that, I mean,
I don't know how to explain it other than
that's just the way I operate.
You just, it's, the things that scare you the most
are the most important things you could do
what a great philosophy what a great philosophy what was your first tattoo my first tattoo was
this 41 that we got we all have it yeah here and uh i don't have a lot of tattoos like some of the
guys in the band do but yeah that was the first tattoo i think when we got our record deal we're
like let's go get a tattoo we Well, I'll get a 41.
And then the most meaningful one?
Oh, I think most of my tattoos are meaningful. My most recent is my son's name. And obviously
that's pretty meaningful, but yeah, I'm not, I'm like somebody who gets a tattoo like every
seven years, you know, like I don't have that many.
I was talking to an athlete and's in the nba and he
says um yeah you can't get a tattoo over you know the age of 30 it's not allowed yeah but you broke
that rule oh yeah well that's what i do is break rules i appreciate that and do you have anyone
any tats that you're like i'm not sure that this one should make the list necessarily because like
i said i don't really have too many tattoos.
Unless there's some hidden ones I forget about.
I forget about the ones back here a lot of times.
No, I don't really have anything that's bad.
You know, what's funny though is sometimes I'm like,
you know, I wonder if I would just get them all removed
and just start over.
Like if that's a thing, like just, yeah,
clean them all off and then get other ones.
That's cool, yeah. Blank slate. Yeah. All right, yeah, clean them all off and then get other ones. That's cool. Yeah.
Blank slate.
Yeah.
All right, man.
Thank you for your time, your sensitivity.
Thank you for the openness to explore, the courage to be able to find the right way and
the right words to speak truth.
It's inspiring.
Cool.
Well, thank you.
Thank you for your body of work as well.
Oh, thanks.
Yeah.
Really appreciate you.
Thank you.
This has been cool.
All right.
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