Jocko Podcast - 477: "There's No Freedom In The Facade. With Martial Artist and Mentor, Jason Wilson
Episode Date: February 12, 2025>Join Jocko Underground<Jason Wilson faced many challenges growing up-the types of challenges that make many men turn down the wrong path-the demonic path that destroys people and ruins their so...uls. But, Jason was able to break away from that path-and get on another path: the Righteous Path...and he has helped thousands of people do the same through his books: Cry Like a Man, Battle Cry, and his most recent book, The Man the Moment Demands: Master the Ten Characteristics of the Comprehensive Man. He is an author, the founder and director of The Cave of Adullam Transformational Academy, Star of the Lawrence Fishburne-produced documentary, called The Cave of Adullam, he is a lifelong martial artist, and he is a husband and father.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko Podcast number 477 with Echo Charles and me, Jocko Willink.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
They pulled my grandfather out of the vehicle and dragged him away as onlookers did nothing.
The men beat him so savagely that the bones in his face and head shattered.
They attacked him until the blood disguised him.
His swollen eye sockets and torn flesh took away his identity.
generations of hate came to bear on my grandfather until he was unrecognizable.
On Monday, July 4th, my brother Larry wasn't in his bed.
A mother's intuition can prove to be unnerving and discerning.
Mama tried to stay calm, but in her growing restlessness, she began calling around.
No one had seen him.
No one had heard from him.
He had vanished.
Larry's body was discovered by a couple of fishermen.
in the bell-isle shallows.
The scream of a mother whose child has been murdered
and thrown away like trash is enough to turn your blood cold.
There's nothing you can compare it to.
It begins in a place so deep it's difficult to reach
until it surges beyond physical, mental, and emotional limits.
Your heart explodes into a million pieces
and it feels as if the soul dies with it.
on November 6th, 1993, my mind was on my brother Keith.
A spattering of commercials flew across the screen, along with prime time shows and a random news update.
The report told of a body of a man found in an abandoned van on the east side.
That's Keith, I yelled, then fell to my knees crying inconsolably.
Keith had been kidnapped, tortured.
murdered I couldn't believe what I was hearing what I was feeling I had just spoken to him
I could hear his voice in my ears and see him sitting behind the wheel of his truck
doing business on his phone one more brother of mine dead someone's idle someone's
enemy and those right there are some excerpts from a book called the cry like a man
which is written by Jason Wilson.
As you can tell from those excerpts,
Jason Wilson faced many challenges growing up.
The types of challenges that make many men turn down the wrong path,
the demonic path that destroys people and ruins their souls.
But fortunately, Jason was able to break away from that path
and get on another path.
The righteous path.
And he's helped thousands of people do the same thing.
Through his books, Cry Like a Man, Battle Cry, and his most recent book, The Man of the Moment Demands Master the Ten Characteristics of the Comprehensive Man.
He's an author.
He's the founder and director of the Cave of Adelham Transformational Academy.
Transformational Academy.
He's the star of the Lawrence Fishburn produced documentary called,
the cave of a dullum and he's a lifelong martial artist and finally last but not least a husband
and a father and a man of faith and it's an honor to have him with us here tonight to share his experiences
and lessons learned jason thanks for joining us thanks brother uh very moving uh introduction yeah so but
thank you i'm honored to be here a long time coming yeah it was interesting as as you know when i saw
you back in the day when when your video started to get really popular and I started to see you
and I started thinking what's this guy's background where to come from and I didn't you know I kind of
made some assumptions but I didn't explore it too much and it wasn't until you were actually
scheduled to come here and I listened to you on Rogan and so I heard some I heard some of the
stories but again you know when you when you talk stories it's a little bit different than when you
when you actually write them down what happened.
And so reading your books, getting ready for this podcast, I would say it definitely,
I assumed you had been through some rough stuff.
And that's kind of how you were able to get on the path that you finally got to.
But it was, it's heavy.
It's heavy.
And, you know, it's funny before we hit record, we were both talking about how, you know,
dad's sometimes, you know, I was telling you a story about my son when I was, you know, being an idiot with my son.
Who knows what little tiny infraction he did as a six or seven year old kid.
And who knows what kind of idiotic punishment I doled out on him or talking to.
I gave him.
But my wife pulled me aside and she says, you know he's not a seal.
Right.
And I looked at her and I smiled because she was 100% right.
You know, here I was with a six or seven year old kid.
literally in my mind
thinking he should be acting and behaving
as a 27-year-old
member of a seal platoon
active duty, ready for deployment.
In my mind, that's what it's like,
this is attention and detail.
You can't forget that kind of thing.
She's like, he's six.
What is that cartoon baby boss?
What is it, the little
grown maid, boss baby, yeah.
I haven't seen that one.
You should watch it, you'll laugh
from what you just told me, yeah.
The end, and then, you know, the other thing is, as I was thinking about that, you know, you read your book and there's going to be things that happen to you.
It doesn't matter how old you are.
They don't, you know, you're going to have traumatic events happen to your life.
You're, whether you're ready for them or not, the world doesn't get.
The world's going to treat you like you're a active duty seal.
Like you've got all that resilience when you might not yet.
So, man, awesome for, I'm just glad we could climb.
finally make this work out and yeah.
Do you ever see, I think her name was Maria.
She had connected me with you 2016 when the video went viral.
Okay.
And you sent some rash guards through her.
Yeah, yeah.
My boys loved it.
I'm gonna see you the picture.
I still have it from 2016.
I think I have that picture.
Yeah, but thank you, man.
I mean, that was the first time of me like reaching out to you
and following you in many days.
You know, when you have experienced significant trauma,
there are many more than you.
you don't want to go.
You know, your brain, the trauma, time travels now.
You know, you don't think that you can make it because both of your brothers didn't.
And there was several videos.
Actually, I believe I saved in my phone of you that helped me get going a few mornings.
And I just wanted to thank you for that, man.
Yeah, it really is very difficult.
You know, as I've told this, talked about this before, I wrote this book over here.
It's called The Discipline Equals Freedom Field Manual.
and it was coming out in October of 2017.
And I was getting ready to do a tour.
I was going to New York, going to do the big,
I forget what they call it, but it's a big press tour.
And then I was going to go to a bunch of different cities
and do a bunch of book signings and all that kind of stuff.
And my best friend, Seth, he died in a parachute accident.
and, you know, just totally awful scenario.
But at one point, like right after it happened,
maybe two days later, I'm laying in my bed,
and it's around lunchtime.
And the book, this book that I had written had shown up,
and there was a stack of probably two cases of the book.
They're sitting on my desk.
And I'm laying in bed, and it was just, I was,
I was very, very distraught,
and I normally don't feel very distraught.
Normally I feel like I have a pretty good grip.
And for a moment, I really felt like I didn't have a good grip on things.
And I actually have a section in that book that I wrote about losing other friends.
And I thought to myself, wait, you need to go read your own book.
And I literally sat up, walked over, ripped the box open.
pulled one of those books out and I opened this section and I read it and it was it helped me so much
you know it was almost as if someone else had written it was almost as if it was but I was that
detached in that in that moment in time I was that distraught and I just felt very um you know like
the the the the woe is me type attitude why is this happening why is this happening to me
Why did he have to go now?
Had all those feelings.
And then I said, okay, and I opened up that book
and I read that section.
And I said, that's right, you know,
you should be so thankful that you got to know him.
You should be so thankful that you have memories of him.
You should be so, and I, that's the attitude that I took.
And you should live to honor him and remember him every day,
but don't dwell in the past.
Don't dwell on it.
So, yeah, it's, even though,
you know these these videos that you have and the books that you have can help so many people
because you don't there's no there's no google maps for life right at least at least you're not
pre-programmed you know someone's every once in a while i got to go hey man try this yes or hey look
over here or hey what think about this and that that can be so helpful we're constantly evolving
as men i tell men that i work with especially younger men don't put a cap on manhood we're constantly
evolving and growing. I'm not a grandfather yet, but when that happens, I'm going to lean into some
other men who are grandfathers to learn. But as soon as we put that cap on, we can't grow anymore.
And that's one of the things about us as men, we want to master every aspect of life. And to me,
it's always a blessing to be the student and to constantly learn. One of the worst positions to be in
is always the teacher. You know, I miss being a student and learning and growing. And I, I
I believe that's the blessing, one of the greatest blessings in life.
And when you remove that as a man, you can't grow anymore.
And so I lost my best friend in 2004,
dropped dead on a job that we had contracted.
I was a towel setter.
He was just sweeping the floor.
Big D was perfect shape.
One of only four men in Powerhouse Gym, Highland Park, Michigan,
who could press the 200-pound dumbbells.
Cyborg.
Cyborg.
He would rep 315, 20 reps.
on the bench.
And he was sweeping and thankfully I wasn't there.
But my best friend who contracted the job
and subbed me as the tile setter was there.
Daryl was sweeping and all of a sudden he just fell over.
And my friend is a former police officer.
He was trying to give him CPR.
He wouldn't revive, race to the hospital
and to see my best friend,
super like strong, massive physique.
lifeless. I was just like you, Jocko. I was, it was like the scene in the Matrix when Morpheus
thought Neo was dead. He was just looking at the screen like, this can't be true. When I lost my best
friend, I never got an argument with him, our entire friendship. I met him at Powerhouse. I said,
hey, I want to look like that guy. This is who I need to hang with. And he loved music. And so since I was
producing was a natural kindred there and he became like a big brother and I was very depressed for
I would say months man I would call his phone just to hear his voicemail because they hadn't turned
it off yet and so I definitely would like to read your book because I find myself in the gym
because he was my gym partner I stopped lifting weights man there was no reason to go and that's
when I realized it wasn't the weight training it was the camaraderie that we like
especially in martial arts, Jitsu, whatever,
it's the camaraderie that we really love.
And to lose that, man.
I remember I was trying to do, what it called,
the squats where you hold the dumbbell in front of you.
Goblet squats.
And I picked up the way that I could normally do fairly easy.
Got overwhelmed with emotion,
sat down on the bench and just wept bitterly thinking about Diro,
like he's not here anymore.
And I know if he was, if he could like be there in that moment, he would say, hey man, I'm good, but keep pushing through.
And I was able to work through that.
But thankfully, I'm a comprehensive man.
I don't, I don't fear men seeing me shed tears anymore.
I grew up where you had to wear the facade and you had to be tough.
You had to practice looking hard.
But I found that the majority of us as men, we repressed the anger, the truade.
trauma, then we became thugs, and I made an acronym for traumatized human unable to grieve.
And this is why you get bumped into, you're ready to fight, you can't process your emotions in
real time so that you can basically keep yourself an advantageous position.
And I, at that moment, I realized like, hey, Big D, you know, he's not here, but I wasn't
allowing myself to have new friends, man.
And I realized like, wait a minute, there's more men just like me who need men like me.
And I allowed myself to open up and have that.
But I definitely would want to get your book, man, because, you know, when you're always seeming like everyone's everything, you're like, man, you're like, man, who toes the tow truck?
You know what I mean?
And I had to learn first and foremost that it was God, for one, because with the heaviest things that I deal with, most of my friends.
We're like, dude, I can't take some of the trauma
You've been through J today, you know,
because everyone has their own problems.
But to realize that there are men around,
they may not be as big as the big tow truck that pulls me.
But they're there.
They're the guys that, hey, look, I can change the tire.
I can get your oil change.
I'm here for you.
And as men, we've got to be open for that support, man.
Yeah.
Let's get into this book a little bit.
bit just to kind of go into your background and growing up and stuff um so this is the book cry like a man
uh you say it was nineteen fifty three when my mother eda marie married a man named sinclair senior
a raging alcoholic who beat her when he needed an excuse to vent which was often there in fort lauderdale
floridae she gave birth to my two brothers sinclair junior and larry they were her emotional refuge
until they became also became targets of their father's impulsive anger through his physical abuse
would, though his physical abuse would come and go, usually with the contents of the bottle in his hand,
the mental wounds he inflicted sank deeper than his fists could ever hope to reach.
For nine long years, they endured his random cruelty.
So that's kind of how it started off.
Your mother eventually, and again, get this book.
It's a great book.
I'm going to kind of hit some of the wave tops.
Your mother eventually gets the courage to leave, files for divorce.
and then she met your dad, Oliver Wilson Jr.
They get married in 1967, moved to Detroit in December of that year.
She's, and so now you get your brothers.
And it seemed like they were a little bit kind of like opposites.
Is that an opposite?
So Larry was like a social butterfly.
Sinclair is like very serious and focused.
And then your mom gets pregnant with you.
1969 she gets pregnant with you the winner you're born in uh august 21st 1970 yes sir so and then you got
sinclair and again it's it's really cool to read the book uh you got sinclair who's smart he's
studying hard everyone thinks he's going to go and become uh you know the boardroom somewhere
he's going to be very successful larry on the other hand is into music he's playing music he's making
music. He's, you say he was fluting melody. Yes. Yes, he actually, uh, his high school, he went to
Central in Detroit, Michigan. He created the first marching band from what I was told. I did a lot
of research from writing that book. And I have a picture of him as the band major. And so Larry was
definitely, you know, everyone wanted to be around him, which is why the drug dealers at the time
wanted to use his influence to push drugs. And when he wanted to get out, there was no way out.
And I was interesting when I was writing that chapter about my brother's father, Sinclair
said I actually, he wished I would have told more because how evil he was.
Like I said, well, bro, I can't just, you know, spend the whole chapter on it.
But he told me that, I believe I shared it in there that his father would slap them
with the flat size of butcher knives at the dinner table.
Would randomly shoot his gun in the house.
And that's just from what my brother told me is just scratching the surface of
what he had to endure and Larry had to endure.
And so as a result of that, my brother had to deal with a lot of trauma, man.
It was unresolved, you know, could you imagine a father just beating your mother's senseless like a sack of meat, you know, and so much so.
So I remember my brother, I said, you don't want a family.
And because my brother's very attractive, the women like Sinclair.
And he says, I want to kill my father.
And the best way to do it is not continue his lineage.
That was so heavy for me when he said that.
And just to see that my brother was able to make he 70 years old now.
And I praise God for him because he's the one who feared for my life.
Because when Larry died, he said it felt like I was reincarnated.
Like Larry reincarnated in me, the attitude, the anger, everyone wanting to hang with me.
So Sinclair was the brother.
Music too.
Yeah, there you go.
That's a great one.
and he would take me to see a pastor at like seven years old just to get anointed every Wednesday
because he feared me.
He feared for my life.
And I've gotten some things and could have lost my life probably three or four times.
But Sinclair is the main reason I would say I'm where I am now.
His influence, he wasn't as preachy as he was one who modeled it.
But for what he's gone through, like intergenerational trauma is really real.
it gets in our DNA.
And my mother, all of her siblings,
after my grandfather's beating and lynching,
I would say four of them developed dementia.
You know, because the brain is it meant to hold on
to all of this anguish and distress and trauma.
And when it happens, you know, eventually you break down
and my mother had a mental breakdown twice.
And at that moment, I said,
man, I don't want to ever hold on to what I've been through.
I want to let this go so that I could,
stop this intergenerational trauma that has happened to our family.
Yeah, that's the feeling I got from the book.
And, and you know, I breeze through it.
But your grandfather, Estes, right?
Am I seen that?
Correctly.
So he was down in Florida.
Yes.
And was a black dude down in Florida in, what, 1935?
Yes.
And he sounded like he had a, sounded like he was pretty,
He sounds like he had an attitude, right?
He was not going to let people push him around.
He just wanted to be human.
Yeah, brother.
He just wanted to be treated like a man.
He wasn't the one that was standing in the colors only line.
When his family needed food, he would go in the white only line and make sure his family had the food they need.
He wouldn't, he wasn't scared to fish in areas where black men couldn't fish.
He would carry his sleut.
I think it was a 38 or a 32.
And he would get approached and he would pull his gun out.
He says, I'm a human.
This is, you know, this isn't just a little.
a place for you to fish. And because of that, it cost him his life. Actually, Colin Powell was a book
called The Golden 13. My great uncle was one of the first Black Navy, no, yeah, Navy men in history.
Yeah, the Golden 13, Colin Powell wrote it. And he tells the story of my grandfather's lynching in
that book. And to hear the racial terror, as he described it, after my grandfather's lynching,
the police came and wanted to make sure there would never be another.
Esther's right to rise up in our family.
And they would, they grabbed my uncle one day and literally drove him insane, drove him
around Florida, not trying to kill him, but just to make sure that he would be in a place
mentally where he would never try to be like my grandfather.
And as a result of that, man, that trauma stayed in our family.
It was almost like a secret that wasn't supposed to be shared until that book came out.
I didn't know about it.
And to have that type of history, you know, in my family, of course, is great, you know,
how these 13 black men studied to make the Navy.
But to hear and see what happened to my grandfather and the way it was told as a grown man.
So you didn't know about that grown up?
I never met him.
I never met my grandmother.
And your mother, your mother never told you were?
I mean, I met my grandmother on my mother's side, but my parents.
grandparents on my father's side my mother never shared it it was could you imagine how heavy that was
they were ostracized by their own black community because everyone was scared that it would happen to them
and so imagine growing up as a child in that type of environment your father gets beaten and lynched
by the police who's supposed to protect you and then they come back to get your uncle to drive him insane
to drive a point that we don't ever want this to happen again and my uncle is that's the
and aunties held that pain.
And, you know, I always wondered why my mother would always be nervous.
And I thought it was just because of Larry, you know, his murder when I was three years old,
but it traveled back to the deep south and being an outcast amongst your neighbors.
And it wasn't even your fault, you know.
And so growing up seeing your mother have a nervous breakdown on a liver room couch in your
20s. I didn't know what to do, man. You know, I'm just sitting there and this mama, I'm here for you.
She literally lost her mind in that moment and I had to admit her into a psych war.
I wonder how that, you know, had you known about your grandfather growing up, how that would have
impacted your life? You know, what kind of attitude would you have? How would that have impact
your attitude? Because I know, you know, I should hear and hear that story and you're like, oh,
someone did that to one of my, one of my relatives.
Yes.
You know, like that's a kind of anger that can be difficult to forgive.
Yeah, you know, I share that as well, you know, I could have easily been prejudice, you know.
But thankfully, I've had numerous friends and family who didn't look like me, different ethnicity, who proved that all people aren't the same.
and I remember many times my mother would be in need
and people of different backgrounds would come and support and help
and because I had that type of balance
my heart didn't go cold
even though my mother never forgived the men who did that
I was able to help her forgive the men who killed my brother
and her son which liberated her and what was deep man
now that I'm thinking about this, my mother never experienced peace until she got dementia,
until dementia caused her to forget. And finally, she had this space where, whoa, I could stay in a
moment. And because my brother was murdered when I was three, my mother's heart just checked out
for a moment. And if not for our neighbor supporting her, she wouldn't even, I mean,
A lady who used to babysit me had to come and wash my mom.
Larry was, she loved Larry.
Like, you know, she loved Sinclair as well.
But Larry was, you know, outgoing.
And when that happened, it just tore a hole in our family.
She said when I was three, I would run to the door, Larry, Larry, and it was never him.
And that's why we had to move.
And, but when she forgot, my mother became what I missed as a child because she,
She couldn't give me the affirmation.
She couldn't give me the affection.
And brother, I didn't realize I needed it or missed it
until I saw that I couldn't be affectionate to my own wife.
And my therapist was like, well, who, when you injured yourself young,
who would get the band-aid?
Who would put the peroxide on you?
And I said, well, I would.
My mother would just tell me where everything was.
And then my brother told me, yeah, she was checked out.
And so that not having that nurturing, that affection made it easier for me to try to conform into a thug.
I never could wear that suit.
It was too small for me, really.
I always had a big heart.
But in my community, you had to pick who you want to be with, you know, so that you can not survive,
but that you won't get rushed to beat down or always your stuff taken from you, man.
But yeah, so it's just an interesting journey.
but I've just learned, you know, when we can release it, man,
we really can find freedom there.
Yeah.
Getting into Larry a little bit, he got kicked out of the house
like his junior year, went down to Florida,
called up your dad and said, hey, can I get a chance?
Come back, and he comes back.
And then he, so he comes back and he gets a full ride scholarship.
He's back in Detroit.
He gets a full-ride scholarship to Florida A&M University,
and it's as a music major.
So he has talent, he has skills.
You write about in the book how your mom was finally like,
you see, this is my boy, you know, she's so proud of him.
And then, you know, like I opened up with the podcast,
he disappears for a couple days.
They find him in a lake.
You say here, the autopsy revealed that no water had entered Larry's lungs,
which meant he was dead before going into the river.
Larry was an expert to him on high school team.
So the thought of him drowning was absurd.
Rumors abounded that he was thrown from Bell Isle Bridge,
while his girlfriend would later say that he owed money to the guys in the caddy.
Our house felt different, emptier.
My brother Larry was gone, swallowed up by the stealthy but lethal undercurrents of Detroit,
notorious for rushing young men to their deaths.
Without the facts of his murder, closure was impossible.
The sun still rose in the morning and said at night,
but the abrupt end to his life kept the porch light perpetually burning.
Yeah, that's another strange thing like you were just talking about when you don't know what
happened to him, why it happened.
So your mother can never, I mean, even if she had a target of anger, you know, this group
or this gang or these people, but it's just nothing.
It was, we never knew my father.
He would gamble and he heard, you know, some stories when they would gamble.
and he never really shared it with my mother.
He told me one day, and I remember my mother would always compare,
like she put Larry on the pedestal, man, like he was perfect,
and so I always felt inferior, never good enough.
Till one day my father, I told him he was a barber,
he says, you know what, I'm going to come over after work.
He comes over, sits down in the living room, man,
and he says, it's time to tell the truth, Marie, talking to my mother.
And he said, Larry wasn't S-H-I-T.
He says, you know it and I know it.
He caused you a lot of hell, which is why we had to move him to Florida, which I never knew.
And then that night, it made my brother human, which was very special because I thought he was just perfect.
And Sinclair, my brother never really shared everything, but I knew something was wrong because he was so scared for me.
I'm like, well, wait a minute, now all of this is making sense.
And so although we never got closure to know that just like me, I made some decisions that could have cost me my life.
Thankful for God's grace, I'm here.
That's what happened to my brother.
And was interesting, the boys in the cave of Adelam, I baptized them when they professed that Christ is their savior.
I baptized them in the Belal rivers.
And I says, wow, these rivers that took my, excuse me.
these rivers that took my brother's life, I now give them eternal life through Christ.
And so the closure is in moving forward.
You know, it's like we may not know all the answers.
I don't even, the guys never were caught, but I know justice has been served somehow, you know.
but to see that I had all of his giftings and personality.
It's like a piece of him still lives on.
Yeah.
And then you had the other side of the spectrum was Sinclair.
So Sinclair, he goes off to Tuskegee University,
which we done a podcast on Booker D. Washington.
We read through the book, From Slavery, Outstanding.
and he comes home from Tuskegee and he is he finds Jesus down there.
He really found Jesus.
He said, you say here in the book,
their Bible studies, prayer alliances, church time and worship services centered around
their dearest confidant, the creator and ruler of the universe,
the one who laid down his life for Sinclair more than 2,000 years ago.
Their bond was immediate with the strength that only blood spilled on your behalf can provide.
When Sinclair finished the year at Tuskegee,
He brought his new best friend home with him.
The holy and radical spirit saturated everything he did.
He countered the norm, living the example of what a true man of the most high should be.
Instead of zodiac signs and naked women on his walls, he found refuge in church and his new friends there.
During an era of P-Funk and soul music, Sinclair blasted his room with church music,
Andre Crouch instead of the Funkadelic.
my mother would yell for him to turn down that Jesus music.
I jokingly asked her mom,
what's wrong with playing God's music loud?
She laughed unable to give me a good reason.
There was one name scrawled in stars across the ceiling of Sinclair's room.
The same stars shining brightly so many nights as I lay on his bed staring up at them,
a name like no other, Jesus.
So there's the other end of the spectrum.
And isn't it crazy that you can have two brothers abused
so viciously and they take two different paths.
Absolutely.
And it's important for parents to remember that.
Yes.
That your kids, I say this all the time.
Your kids aren't going to be who you want them to be.
They're going to be who they are.
Absolutely.
And you can nudge the course a little bit.
Yeah.
But you can't steer the train.
Yeah.
And I often say too, they don't listen to what we say.
They watch what we do.
And a lot of the challenges is getting out of us,
out of them what they learned from us.
And that's one of the greatest challenges as a parent, man.
And it was interesting.
My father played a major role as well when Larry died,
like in support of my mom and just financially funding the funeral.
I remember Sinclair's dad tried to get in the limousine with us.
And my father said,
my father was a very serious man.
He says, you get in this car, you will not live.
And my father, he was well respected.
and his word was bond in Detroit.
And I respected that stance as a father coming into such trauma and saying,
look, you're the cause of a lot of this, you know,
because Larry wanted the relationship so did my brothers.
And a lot of boys, we gravitate toward other father figures, drug dealers in my community,
and they become the mentor.
And that's what happens when the father isn't there, isn't active,
or is there and isn't a good man, isn't a good father.
And so my father came and he at that time,
my brother just bragged about my dad.
He knew a different side of my father than I knew,
but he would brag about my father and work ethic and care
and just how strong he was.
But to hear that story, I could imagine my father just,
he wasn't the one to be played with.
And for you not to pay a dime for your son's funeral,
And expect to ride with the family.
Mm-hmm.
He wasn't happening.
No, it didn't happen.
Now, your dad, this, you know, Larry's death caused disruption and you're with you between your mom and dad.
You already talked about your mom, the way that traumatized her.
And they end up getting divorced, 1976.
You say, had I known then that my life through the tangled weeds and overgrowth,
of disappointment would eventually be paired and pruned into garden into a garden of blessings
maybe it wouldn't have mattered so much but boys instinctively look to their makers their fathers for
answers and when there are none to be found this is what you were just saying when there are none to be
found they fill the void with what's available if only we could set our sights a little higher
we could see that our maker is with us from our very first step to our last breath so yeah
That's kind of the mode you get into.
Yeah.
And I remember when I was told by both of them, my father and my mother that they were getting
divorce.
I was six years old.
Didn't know why.
And my father was stoic.
He said, you know, I'm not going to be here, son, but I'll be able to visit you.
And as a child, we interpret.
We can't process yet.
Our brains aren't fully mature.
And I'm going to work with the cave of Adelham.
That's why I'm able to get out of them because I understand you don't.
understand. You're trying to interpret everything that's happening. So as the adult, I need to be
the mature one here. The brain doesn't mature until we 25. So here is my father. I saw no emotion,
but you're about to leave your son. What is that conveying to me? What messages are going through
my brain? Oh, he really never cared. This man isn't even crying. You just said that you're not going to
be here with me anymore. You didn't share it one tear. No empathy. And that's the problem when we've
allowed, I guess, the adjective of masculinity to define us as human men, that we're much more than
that, which is why I wrote that one that, you know, I got to be a protector and provider.
Like it's in us for us to be fighters and protectors. But what happens to the rest of my life?
Where are the other characteristics that make me whole? Like being a nurturer, some of the greatest
coaches are nurturers, farmers, you know? Where, what about the gentleman, you know, shiver.
isn't dead, that was a cold of honor for the medieval nights. How did we somehow get to the
place where it's pandering to women? Then when I discovered that the alpha male was a myth,
there is no battle between two wolves to see who lead the wolf pack, and that in a human sense
that the alphas are a married couple leading a family, so much is missed. So many men missed the moment
and we blow it. And now we have all these regrets because we didn't meet the moment, because we only
allowed ourselves to be the doers, the providers and protectors. What about the friend? What about
being fully there as the lover? What does that mean outside of sex for us? What about even
loving ourselves? So I don't even say self-love anymore because we can't even, we understand what
that mean as men. So I say self-maintenance. And now that, oh, it clicks because I know how to
maintain that we car. That we can do. Yeah, we can do that. Or even even though it's interesting
the word vulnerable. When I first went through the manuscript of this book, I start seeing the word
vulnerable a lot in the man the moment demands. And as I was praying, the Holy Spirit was like,
go look up that word like you looked up masculinity and helped men liberate even more. So again,
when I studied that masculinity is just attributes traditionally ascribed in men as strength, boldness,
and aggression. And I see that, you know, Harriet Tubman, mother Teresa, whomever,
They had to have masculine attributes at one moment.
But then when I look at the word vulnerability, like, is this what we want men to be vulnerable?
No, because you're susceptible to danger, harm or even death.
This is why it's so hard for men to embrace that word.
So what we're trying to teach men in warriors is to be emotionally open or transparent.
You know, don't repress your emotions because when you do, you increase your chances of dying from
all causes by 70%
that's insane
because we're repressing all of these feelings
because we want to appear strong perpetually
Yeah
Yeah distinction I often have to make
So I talk a lot about the fact that
You can't let your emotions drive
Your decision-making process right
And so I'll say that to people all the time
And then someone will you know ask a question
Or I'll find myself needing to make the point
And the way I describe it is I say
this doesn't mean that you remove emotions from the calculus you can't take them out of the calculus
they're there and if you don't account for them even if you know if you work for me and you just got
done with an 18 hour shift and I I barked at you because we were back ordered on something I yelled
at you and so now you're already a little bit mad and now I got to call you and say hey jason I need you
to come in to work again today if I don't account for your emotions and I go hey jason you got to be at
work at seven o'clock today, you're going to quit. But if I say, hey, Jason, listen, I know
I was sharp with you yesterday. We had a lot going on and it hasn't let up. We got a bunch of clients
that are coming in. We got a bunch of orders that we got to, can you come and help me out?
I really need you. I can put the calculus of your emotions and my emotions into the, into the,
to figure out how to behave. So it's important, you know, and I've heard you talk about that
and I read about it is like in your books,
emotion,
and I see it with your videos with the kids, right?
Hey,
you can be emotional right now
because you're,
we're safe right now.
Now,
you're out there on the street.
It's not the time to get emotional.
You're in a dangerous situation.
It's not the time to get emotional.
You've got to make a decision
what to do with your finances.
I really want that new Cadillac escalade, right?
That's an emotional decision.
That's an emotional decision.
And so we end up with $1,800.
a month payment on a car.
You need a Camry.
You need a Camry.
You just convicted me, man.
I was just looking at that truck this morning.
But to the emotional point, man, you know, I trained under a Vietnam vet,
Kajana Cheshawayo.
And he would use not bladed-edged weapons, but knives that were real knives without a blade,
just to get to the emotion.
Because a lot of times when we trained.
Well, like he dolemen.
down so they weren't sharp? Yeah, but you could still get cut, as you know. And so, which was
extreme. Yeah. Don't get me wrong. Um, but we learned a lot because he says, what's missing in
training is the emotions. So you can practice all the techniques in the world, but when it was really real,
that's when you see it go out the door so fast because you haven't trained in that environment. What's the
saying in Jiu-Jitsu, a punch a black belt, he turns into a brown belt, punch a brown belt,
he turns into a purple. Yeah, right on down the eyes. Yeah. And so,
What he would say, he would grab a knife, he says, if I come at you with this and you do this, you're dead.
That's all it takes.
So he trained us to embrace death.
You're not going to not get cut.
Even if your uncle was cooking barbecue, he should be able to cut you one time.
The problem with a lot of knife training, they are like you're not going to get cut.
He wanted us to face that.
Like, if he stabbed you, you embrace you, hold it in so he don't stab you anymore.
and then you deal with him.
And I appreciated that training because I'm able to take it off in life.
When my students have an emotional moment,
or we call a moment on the mat in the cave,
in that moment, let's release this, let's express what's going on.
Where is this really coming from?
Now, let's reset.
Because not just in life, in training, you can't hold onto that emotion.
So our principle is called let go of the blow.
If I'm fighting you and I hit you,
and your thoughts and emotions
are still on the fact that I hit you,
I'm hitting you again and again and again and again and again
and again.
So we have to practice letting go of the blow in training,
letting go of the choke,
letting go of the argument,
letting go of the offense
so that we can keep moving forward.
And that's why I love martial arts
and we were talking about so many black belts in the gym
but so many white belts in life.
It's meaningless if it can't apply to real life.
For me it is.
Yes, for sure.
You know, we have a concept called combat communication, which I learned under Kajana as well.
You see it in the UFC, you're fighting, or when guys grappling, you're trying to see what they know, what they respond to.
So I'm downloading.
Oh, he does this.
Okay, I shoot for you.
Oh, he does.
Okay, I see now.
Then you see his strengths and you see his weaknesses.
When I'm communicating with my wife, it's the same thing.
When she's talking, I'm downloading body language.
What is she saying?
Am I really hearing her heart?
Or am I just listening to respond?
And so how is it that you can choke someone out or tap someone out in a matter of seconds,
but you can't even check your own emotion so that you can communicate with your wife and your children?
How do you give the world your best and then come home and give your family the less?
And I learned that's another principle.
I learned we were training and fighting emotions to your point.
Just finished drywalling a bathroom because I'm about to towel and I'm tired coming in training.
and I come in and
Cajana says to me he says how you doing
young man I says I'm all right
I'm tired though he says really
he says you'll be fine
this was the worst day for me to tell him
I'm tired because instead of the class
being packed it was just me and one other student
so you know what that means
you got an hour and a half of
work nonstop
it was a trail of sweat up
and down the floor with us training
striking and everything
I learned in that moment
He's after class, I had more energy than I ever thought I would have because I was worn out.
After class, I put my clothes on.
He says, are you tired now?
I says, no.
He says, did you get what I was teaching you?
I said, yes.
He says, so when is the best time to be tired?
I said, when I'm at home, I'm about to go to sleep.
And so, again, to your point, I can't be tired when I need to be a fighter.
I can't be tired when I need to be a provider.
I can't be tired when my children are running to me when I get home from work
and they want my undivided attention.
I can't be tired when my wife says,
I didn't have a good day.
Do you have room to hear what happened?
And so as men, to be able to put that emotion to the side
and transfer these martial skills that we've learned into real life,
man, it evolves us as men.
And now we're like, whoa, it's more to life.
I'm evolving.
I'm not limited anymore.
But we have to then dig deeper to why we restrain that heart, the good in us.
And I have a lot of friends as well.
I told him I was coming on here who are ex-marines.
And they were like, whoa, I'm going to listen to that.
But they struggle with PTSD.
One of my best friends, Gabriel, every room he goes in, man.
He's casing everywhere, looking at interests,
Ex's house.
He hasn't let go of the trauma he's seen at war.
He also got shot in Detroit, that trauma.
And because of that, it's hard for him to really let go and love and drop that guard.
But I'm proud of him now, man.
He bought a Shih Tzu.
And this is funny.
He's a man's man walking a Shih Tzu.
And a guy yells to him, he says, man, you need a real dog.
and Gay responds, he says,
when you're a real dog, you only need a pet.
And I share that story, and man, the moment, demands
because as men, everything is about the look.
This little Shih Tzu has helped my best friend
alleviate so much trauma, emotional loss,
and he finds solace in this little dog,
gizmo that goes everywhere with him.
For me, I had
Rot Wallers,
you know,
German Shepherds,
bouviers.
I always wanted
a Conorcoe.
But at this stage
in my life,
all that I've been through,
I bought a Kava poo.
What's a Kavapoo?
King Charles,
y'all,
I feel like a scrubby.
Just the name Kovapoo.
I hope you show the way you guys look.
See, this is why men don't want those dogs.
But anyway,
but anyway,
A Kavapu is a King Charles Cavalier
and poodle.
mix.
Okay.
So you guys are funny.
What do you have, Echo, Charles?
My daughter.
What is it?
Yorkie.
Your daughter has a Yorkie.
Well, yeah.
We see.
You see?
You have a Yorkie.
I said that.
Yeah.
We have a York.
So what I needed, man, Echo was when I come home, I love like Big Breeze.
I do.
And I still feel you can play and, you know, have the cuddle time.
You see it.
with the, especially the bully breeds.
Shalom, the Kavapu, my dog,
he helps me unpack the compassion fatigue
that I have working with boys and men releasing theirs.
You know, so when I come home, he's running,
he's little, he's cute, he's colorily,
it does something to my body and my mind,
and it helps me feel better.
And so I've seen men,
could you probably could do it with a rot-wiler,
But for me in my life, I needed what Gabriel needed.
Something that's cuttily.
Gizmo.
Gizmo.
And Shalom, you know?
And what's the name of your Yorkie?
Your Yorkie?
Maya.
Maya.
Yeah, see?
Maya.
Well, actually, what he's saying is actually correct.
Where, I mean, I guess it depends on the dog's personality, right?
A lot of it, whatever?
Where, yeah, if you always have this big burly, like, hell yeah, badass dog.
Right, kind of is not compatible with kind of what you need sometimes, you know?
Yeah, for sure, man.
It's like, that's cool that he's like big badass or whatever right now,
but I just kind of want to cruise right now.
There you go.
That's real.
You know, I got a big, uh, my German Shepherd just died.
I know, man.
But I got a new one.
I got a new one.
And man, it was freaking awful when my German Shepherd died.
And, you know, you think, oh, and I, you know, my wife and I were like,
oh, we're not going to get another one.
And I said, I let my wife drive the train, you know, like, it's more on her.
You know, she spends all day every day with the dog.
I travel.
Dog's there.
I go to work, dogs there.
I go to the gym, dogs there.
She's with the dog all day, every day.
So I'm letting her kind of dictate, hey, you know, when you're ready, you know, whenever you
want, we'll get another one.
And then I came home two days after he died.
So the way you go to my house, open the back gate and there's a sliding glass door.
And every day I come home, I open the gate and there's his silhouette, the big ear sticking
sticking up.
And man, I came home after two days, I came home, that dog wasn't there.
I was like, darling.
And she goes, we can get another.
I said, all right, cool.
We went immediately.
We went out and got another one.
You posted that, man.
I pray for you, man, because I know, like, when you have a dog, man,
experience unconditional love like that, man.
And then they're gone.
And now your ritual of what you do in the mornings is different because he or she isn't
there.
Man, that's heavy weight.
Were you able to release?
Like, how did you?
I know you cried, all right?
How did you?
I mean, like, I'm not looking forward to that day with my dog.
Yeah, it was terrible.
I mean, you know, and you're there.
I mean, I was there when he took his last breath.
It's awful.
But, you know, he was filled with cancer.
And he wasn't going to, like, there was no, there was no,
he was just going to suffer.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean.
I was just, like I said, happy that I got to have him, happy I got to spend time with him,
happy that he took care of my family and guarded my wife and my kids for, you know, eight years.
And, you know, no, nobody snuck up to my house.
No mailman.
Echo Charles knows this.
No mailman, no Amazon delivery person, no creepers in the night.
No one would come to my house.
Yes, sir.
My house would be the last on your list of where you'd want to go.
and and find yourself because Odin is a big was a big awesome dog.
It was beautiful.
Well trained.
Perfect dog.
Just awesome.
And yeah,
it's just terrible.
And,
and you know,
I feel like there's a,
there's chemical that gets released when you're with your dog.
Was it oxytocin?
Yeah.
Oxytocin.
Oh,
absolutely.
In the dog and in you.
Yes.
Like when you pet a dog,
you feel good.
15 minutes,
I think.
If you can get 15.
minutes. My dog won't allow me to hold him that long, but yeah, they said, my psychotherapist told me that,
you know, and it's a major difference when Shalom was next to me on the couch, you know. I feel a lot
better, man, you know, and I'm five times or maybe ten times his size, but it's amazing how
comforting he is to me, you know, and I have the same, like, you know, Shalom isn't big,
but soon as someone come to the door, he's barking or in the vicinity, then I go get the guns, you
know if I have to. I don't need a big dawn. I love like, I had two German shepherds.
Oh, yeah. Brilliant, smart. The shedding was insane, but I love German shepherds, man.
Just keen and so loyal, you know, so when I saw that, he was beautiful. I said, man, I call,
I text Joe. I said, man, you know, I'm praying for Jocko. That's a major loss, man. And so
getting another one, did that help a lot with the grieving?
100%.
I see. Yeah. 100%.
Nicole, if you're listening.
Yeah, I'll tell you, like, if he wouldn't have died so suddenly,
we would have gotten another one and, you know,
had a transitional period where we had two dogs.
That's what I think we'll do in the future.
I got a real good friend, Pete, who's an old surfer guy, great guy,
and he has a German Shepherd.
He's had German Shepherd after German Shepherd.
I think he's had five of them, you know,
live in 10 to 15 years each.
And heartbreaking when you see, when his,
his dogs, the last one was named Rudy.
And when Rudy died, you know, he, I talked to Pete
and he said, you know, I, he goes, I got three months.
He goes, I do three months to grieve.
And he goes, then I'll go get another one.
And Rudy went everywhere, I mean, everywhere with Pete.
Sitting in the front of his Volkswagen bus,
Pete would go out and surf for two hours.
He'd sit there and watch him.
Wow.
Just a great dog.
But he would take three months.
So I kind of had that in my mind a little bit.
When Odin died, I thought, you know what, three months, you know, we'll grieve through this.
But, man, and my wife was heartbroken, you know, because it's all day, every day with her.
And she's just a sweet, the sweetest woman.
So, you know, that was, she was heartbroken.
And a couple days went by.
And I was looking at her.
She just, just looks so heartbroken.
And I thought, maybe I'll just bring it up.
And I said, how about we?
She goes, let's get another dog.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Yeah, thank God.
So we got a little guy right now.
That's awesome.
My son, man.
He was at the gym with you or something.
Yeah, that's cool, man.
I told my wife, you know, she says,
I want another one after Shalom.
So you say that now, but, you know, our hearts probably,
we would need another puppy.
And by that time, we'll be, hopefully gives us 15 years.
I'm 55 now.
So by that time, the next puppy.
Be the last.
Boy, yeah, we'll go out together.
Yeah, me.
Yeah, man.
Oh, yeah.
So going back to you a little bit here.
So Sinclair ends up moving to Texas.
Yeah.
And like you mentioned, you're looking to fill the void right now.
This is, I think, where martial arts come in, right?
Yes.
So you get Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Jim Kelly.
You get Black Belt magazine.
You find Ninjitsu.
Yes.
This is full 80s activity.
Straight 80s.
straight 80s activity right here.
Ninja 2.
Echoes in the game over here.
He had to throwing stars.
You got some shirkies?
What were those shoes called?
What were the little shoes?
Tabbies, I think.
They called Tabbies.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you can like scale up the trees.
They call tabbies.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I had someone else.
I did too.
Yeah.
I had everything.
Yeah, man.
Dang.
Oh, yeah.
So there's got to be,
there's some intrinsic male thing, right?
You being in Hawaii.
me being in New England
you being in Detroit
like for everyone to at least
go oh yeah ninjitsu
in the 80s
we're all looking at that thing going
there's something cool about that
as a young man
there's something cool about that
oh yeah man when they would throw the
the mask on and they would do the
symbols before training
oh that's right oh man and I had
found one local instructor
who allegedly knew ninjitsu
but then I come to find out no one
at that time in Detroit
new ninjitsu and so that's when i shifted from out of that but i love the being stealth and
hidden and uh the mastery of weaponry and um yeah ninjitsu was uh just definitely the all 80s dominant
yeah into the ninja and what was the other revenge of the ninja what's name is show uh
shokushugi i think that was his name he was in uh ninja assassin he was the
Yeah, he was the main, uh,
Sinsay or teacher.
Shokashugi, I believe that was his name.
See, I can tell you, I made the, you know, mentally,
in my mind, it was like, okay, what's a ninja doing?
He's out there, like, sneaking around killing people, right?
It was very easy for me to figure out when I was, like,
eight years old or whatever, going, okay,
that's what they used to be called a ninja.
And now they're a green beret or a Navy seal or a Marine recon.
You know, I thought, okay, this is like a modern,
day ninja.
Yes.
So I was able to make that little transition in my head.
Oh, like you're talking about weapons?
Cool.
They give you weapons.
What's a modern weapon?
It's not a bow and arrow anymore.
It's not a,
a bow staff.
It's an M16.
So I kind of made that transition.
So did you find places to train?
Did you get to train?
Were you learned the moves from, did you order videos from,
what was the big video company?
There was a videos in like Black Belt magazine.
Panther videos,
Yes, Panther videos.
I just called it.
Yes, yes, yes.
You could learn some stuff.
See, back then we had the video stores on the corner.
Oh.
So we could go rent them, you know.
So I never had the, or we would go rent the videos and we would practice.
But it was nothing like having a teacher.
And so when 1990 came, that's when I found like judo.
Okay, so you're in.
It was just, it was completely different than what I was taught because it was physical.
It was touching.
was no deaf touch or poking your eyes out.
It was, you know, you're going to sweat leaving here after class.
But it was interesting.
My journey also took me to Aiki Bujutsu under Katsumi, who was from Japan.
And he shared a story about the ninjas.
He said that they were farmers first.
I don't know how accurate this is, but he shared that the Shuriken or the Ninja Star
actually was the part when you would like teal the soil,
it break up the soil.
And it broke off one day.
and it's alleged the farmer grabbed and threw it out of frustration and it stuck somewhere.
It's like, whoa.
And so, I mean, easy to believe.
I don't know how accurate is, but he shared that they were farmers and that's how they started.
Do you ever hear about Capoeetta?
Capoeira.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
But Capoeira, I heard that it was made to look like dancing because the slaves weren't allowed to train.
Didn't I tell you that?
Did you tell me that?
Yes, sir.
I think Jeff Higgs told me that, bro, and he's actually a Capoeira guy.
Well, I had to study it and do a report on it.
college for capoeira okay yeah I think I told you as your doctor in capoea hey look it is what it is
but maybe Jeff Higgs told you but I told you that too I remember telling it see Jeff Higgs is it
Jeff Higgs the only person in life ever to go from Brazilian jihitsu to Capua yeah he started in a
Brazilian nijitsu and he still does it but he he went into Capuetta and then so is this in high
school time period what right after well so it's interesting so when I was 12 years old that's
when I started seeking ninjitsu.
At that time in my life, a year later, my best friend Kelly, which I share also and
cry like a man, she was shot and killed.
We were in eighth grade.
And we had conflict with the neighboring school.
Just real quick.
Yeah.
It's like during class.
Yeah, absolutely.
Kid pulls out a little 25 automatic.
And he was just showing it off.
Has an accident.
It's church.
Yeah.
And that's what happened.
It shot Kelly in the head.
And this was a close friend of mine.
And so think of back in 19.
84, we had no counselors, no therapists, and we had to try to resolve this ourselves.
So I remember going home, my mother again, another loss brought up a memory of Larry.
She's sitting there watching the news. This is the number one story in Detroit.
And I'm in the backyard. No one's talking to me, man. All I had was ninjitsu.
I grabbed my shurikins and ninja stars and just started throwing them at the privacy fence
in the trees, just trying to release what I just saw.
because when it happened
we thought it was a fight because
all the kids out of the classroom ran
down to our class
my friend Gabriel the ex-marine
he stands in a doorway head back
and I said what's wrong what happened
who's fighting he says no one's fighting
Jay Kelly just got shot
so I went down to the room
and the teachers was just trying to control
the entire like environment
but to see Kelly in this
pool of blood
just on the floor and then
you see the paramedics trying to revive her and then leaving the school and her mother
we're walking out of the school our parents are waiting terrified and you see Kelly's mother
banging her head on her stern wheel because the news found out before the paramedics could get
there I never forgot that moment and for me martial arts was a release again my father was in the same
city but wasn't very active in my life. He worked a lot, you know. And so it was my outlet. It was,
you know, if I could put on a ninja suit just for a moment in the backyard and train, it was
my escape from more trauma, more heartbreak, more loss. And with no counseling and no one
understanding the father wound or, you know, trauma, just want to give you medication.
Yeah.
Yeah, one of the things that I think, because our country, the best country in the world,
but one of the problems when you have a country like ours is that we take all these different cultures and bring them together.
And when you bring a bunch of cultures together, sometimes some things get lost, sometimes some things get saved.
But one thing that I've noticed is that in other cultures, they have a, they have a protocol.
to deal with death.
Yes, sir.
So like, oh, we're going to, someone dies.
Little kid, adult, grandparent, whatever.
We have a protocol that we're going to go through.
Everyone's going to go, we're going to say these prayers.
We're going to go to this place.
We're going to go through this ceremony.
We're going to get done with that ceremony.
We're going to go get together.
You know, you pick your culture and they have a protocol because humans are going to die.
And so over time, people go, okay, so someone dies.
This is what we're going to do.
We're going to say these prayers.
We're going to go to this place.
We're going to celebrate in this way.
And in America, like when Kelly dies, there's no protocol for you.
You're a little kid in the backyard with a ninja star going, what do I do?
And I think that's a very troubling thing.
And look, we have enclaves where a church will have a protocol or a ceremony that you can go through.
but even that is a lot less clear than it used to be 100 years ago.
Yeah.
You know, now the kid, he went to the church for the one ceremony,
but he missed the other two.
And no one tells him like, oh, yeah, it's okay.
Yeah, you're going to cry.
Of course, you're going to feel bad.
Yep, we're crying too.
They don't see that.
No one goes, so it's problematic.
You know, even like bereavement time you get from work,
that time is used planning the funeral.
Mm-hmm.
So you never really get an opportunity to grieve.
Yeah.
In the Bible, you had 30 days to grieve or longer.
But now with everything on the go, moving, social media, phones, and busyness,
and not too many of us want to sit still with what we are going through or what we've been through.
And then we wonder why we hit the wall when we have nowhere to run, you know?
And so that's a very good observation.
You're absolutely right about that.
It's there's no room to grieve or to like, hey, I'm not feeling good today, you know.
when we ask how are you doing, it's like saying hello
instead of really sincerely like, hey, no, bro, how are you really doing?
You know, and I'm here, I'm present.
I got time, let's talk.
You know, I'll listen to you.
And it's amazing when you get men together, you know, isolated
and give them a safe space to say, hey, we can put down the armor now.
Let's deal with what really happened to us.
Men open up and break down because, you know,
one of the engineers who recorded the audio book,
beautiful brother, man, children on the spectrum.
And he was sharing with me that he was watching his son
just trying to do something that we take for granted every day
as normal, brush his teeth.
And he saw his son struggling just to accomplish it.
And he broke down.
And I said, wow, I'm thinking about men like him
who drive the work every day.
And that's their life.
And they have to fake it and smile and act like everything's okay.
I'm good, bro.
And they're hurting.
And I gave him the space just to talk and it just lifted so much from them.
And that's what our culture is missing.
Like I tell men all the time, we can't get rid of our masculine attributes.
Now we're in the deficit there.
All I'm advising like, look, let's experience life more, brothers.
You're not tired of living.
you're tired of not living.
And if you're only a provider and protector,
that means your whole life is performance-based.
So when I can no longer provide,
I feel that I'm no longer of any good.
This is why when you see an elderly couple out,
the woman is able to move around freely,
but the man is walking on a crutch or a cane
can barely move because his existence was enduring instead of being.
And that's what I want to offer,
men, especially my friend Gabriel, he says, Jason, you got to help the vets and men
that were military because, again, when you're over there, he was telling me we're playing
basketball.
And in this moment, you have this, like, peace.
Then the ball goes off to the side and you see a AK-47 or, not AK-14, it's an AR-15.
You're reminded of war.
And you go back and it's constantly this reminder and you really can't release it.
He said, so now your whole mind is geared to stay in fight or flight.
And then when you come home, you're still stuck.
And so for him to share that with me and how just him even reading some of my books,
helped him to process what he's repressed and why it's so difficult for him to release anger
and he's always combative.
I said, you're still holding on to the past, as you said earlier.
But if you don't give a man the freedom to feel, like no man is fearless.
I forgot the one soldier who ran in the midst of gunfire
to save a little Afghan girl.
He said it wasn't courage, it was love.
He says, my love for that little girl birthed a courage.
He says, I got to have fear because without fear,
there is no room for courage.
He said, if I'm not scared of losing anything,
where does courage exist?
He said, so it was love that motivated me
to run and save that little girl.
In that moment, he had the freedom to feel.
So many of our boys, regardless of ethnicity, we're programming them to be fearless, but what happens when they should respect it?
Meaning, you probably shouldn't drink that because you know what you were told.
There's probably something in there because of this party.
Or I had a kid who wanted to join the cave, beautiful young kid.
He knew he shouldn't have been at a party where it was a rival gang.
Okay?
These kids were jealous of them.
He went anyway.
I get a call Monday morning.
He shot and killed.
Beautiful.
He didn't have an opportunity to feel fear because he would have been perceived as pusillanimous if he wouldn't have went.
And so this is the need for comprehensive men.
Men who are strong but sensitive, courageous but compassionate, who can meet the moment and say,
hey, look here, I want you to make a decision based off of trying to be fearless.
I want you to make the best decision based off of what's why.
wise. What will leave you in an advantageous position? But when we tell boys from childhood,
don't cry, no pain, no gain, we know that's not a universal principle. If we own the football
team and our star quarterback towards Achilles, we wouldn't let him go back out and play, right?
So it has its place. What's the other popular misleading mantra? Everything in moderation.
Well, it takes less than an ounce of cyanide to kill us.
we got to be careful because as men we're programmed to only be one way and that's to keep going.
And as a result, our sons are only seeing a portion of what it truly means to be a man.
And that's authentically human.
Yeah.
Yeah, a few years ago, the big toxic masculinity kind of people were using this.
And I ended up that somebody asked me to talk about it and write about it.
I wrote an article, but what I said was if you take any trait, male or female, masculine
or feminine, and you take it to an extreme, it's going to be a problem.
If you take, look, do you want your kid to be assertive?
Of course you do.
Do you want them to be hyper aggressive?
No, you don't want that.
Do you want your kid to be generous?
Of course you do.
Do you want your kid to be giving everything away and get taken advantage of?
Of course not.
So, you know, and I ended up saying in the thing, some of these masculine traits, I was like, and yeah, these are, these are traditionally masculine traits and my daughters all have them and I want them to have them, you know, want my daughters. Now, do I want my daughter to be a psycho? No, I want me to be aggressive, yes, you know, but not crazy.
I can guarantee just looking at this table, your daughter has definitely have some masculine attributes. But what's deep, man, is when you really look at those two words, so if I'm a nurturer, does that make me feminine?
Yeah, no.
It doesn't make sense.
No, it doesn't make sense.
It's not about masculinity or femininity, but humanity.
Like, can I operate finally as a human being?
And that's what I'm fighting for.
And I tell men, especially they'll say, well, what if my wife or the girl takes advantage of me being emotionally open?
I said, man, you're fortunate now because now if she's your girlfriend, you don't marry her.
Because she's not mature enough for a comprehensive man.
If she's your wife, you need to go to counseling.
Like, look, we need to have, you know, this marriage is both of us, okay?
And I told, you know Mel Robbins, right?
I think I do know.
Yeah, she's a very popular podcast.
Yeah.
Just beautiful.
I mean, I don't know her personally, but I know where she is.
And so we were talking, and I shared, you know, from a psychological standpoint, what does it do to us if we're out with our wives and they're addressed as our better have?
she said I never thought about that
you know and we started laughing
and said what if I gave you a honeydo list
or what have you had a dog house
and she just said
and so as men this is like
why would I get married and it seems
one-sided and then you wonder
why majority of us don't go get checkups
at doctors and it's like
so I'm supposed to
I want to live longer
to work longer and give you everything
and I don't experience it no way
And so as men, we're in a similar place where we now have to fight for our right to feel, to be human, to be accepted for more than just fighting and providing.
Like, look how many men in my era wanted to be chefs.
But yet the mantra was a woman's place is in the kitchen.
And now that industry is dominated by men.
Look how many men wanted to be nurses and not doctors.
but because at that time, women were only nurses and all the men were doctors, they didn't want to be perceived as being weak.
So they didn't pursue their passion of service in that career.
And that's what happens to us.
Even like the samurai, I love using this example of how they love the cherry blossom tree.
These men, you know, they poetry and art, but yet you never tested their masculinity because they would kill you.
but they knew the importance of being comprehensive.
Like, I can't stay in samurai mode, my brother.
I have to look at these flowers.
It's good for my brain, my mind.
I want to act.
I want to love.
That way when it's time to kill, I can be fully committed to it.
But if you're constantly and fight a flight, you're burnt out.
You're going to overreact every time.
Because that's your gear.
You're stuck in the first gear of manhood.
You're in the gear where you're meant to get from stop to start.
We can't live there and that's why our clutches are burning out.
I'm like, man, let's go to second and third gear manhood.
You're a nurture man.
Your daughter needs you to be kind right now or softer.
You got it in you.
It doesn't make you look weak.
And when men finally grasp that, they're like, man, I like being here now.
You know, we died by suicide almost as four times as likely as women.
again we're not we're tired of not living and that's the thing so the only way we can get there is like look
we got to stretch ourselves like i share a story in uh this book about hoist gracie when he came before
it was you know all that you know this stuff you know striking but what did he do he woke everyone up
so you had to either evolve or be eliminated that's all i'm saying about manhood if you're only
going to be masculine, you're only going to provide
and protect, you won't be able
to make it and fully experience this
life. You know, learn your
ground games. Yeah, do stand up. What's the
saying, what 90% of the fights end on the ground?
100% start standing.
That's true. So, all right? Both things are true.
So, hey, learn how
to strike, but also, you know,
learn jiu-jitsu. Be
comprehensive as a man and as a fighter
and you experience life. And that's
the journey I'm on. I'm still growing
I would love to be more romantic with my wife, you know.
I'm still working through that part in my heart where I was programmed by the men in my life to never show your emotions to her.
And then when you have a little discord in marriage, you know, our wives are good at saying things that can trigger us and hurt you and stick with you.
And so I'm thankful I'm a verbal processor because I no longer go to bed with resentment.
I can share those things, but now it's about believing her intent wasn't to hurt.
hurt me and moving past that so that I can stay in the moment and don't ruin it and love her
because nothing is really promised anymore. But when I was able to master that side, now the
arguments don't last. Now there's no silence in our home. We realize that's what middle school
is doing. Let's communicate because we're not promised and we know we're not trying to hurt
each other, you know. So, but yeah, man. Yeah, we're going to get into that comprehensive, man.
minute. Hey, you were doing martial arts cool. You also got into football. And you end, you know,
you say here, you know, you went to try out. I expected my friend to do well, but I surprised everyone
with my athleticism. As it turns out, I was good, very good. We both made the team and I was assigned
to the starting receiver position. It was the first time I can remember feeling as if I knew who I was,
I was a football player. So now you're in the game. Fast forward a little bit in the book. You go through
practices you start playing games your progression you get to a big game it could it couldn't get any
better than this i felt as if the world was watching the ball spiraled effortlessly you're obviously
about to catch a big uh point in the game it hit my enormous shoulder pads and bounced off as the
clock ran out i stood motionless for a second as the game buzzer sounded in shock that i dropped such a
makeable catch we lost we lost because of me when i looked up the excruesion
Disappointment and disbelief written on the faces of my teammates were mocked by the celebration
Exploding on the opposite side of the field I felt lifeless as I climbed the bleachers a lessen humility
I could have used sooner
It wasn't ego, it wasn't vanity was pure lack of self-esteem that drove me to pretend I was bigger than I actually was
Bigger bad or tougher all the things that go with being a stereotypical male
They drilled they're drilled into us from the day we're born filling the mold
The metal backbone of steel designed to withstand the pressure the threat of human
tears and lost virility.
And of all the games, and of all the games for my father to attend, this had to be the one.
I heard you dropped a touchdown pass was the first thing out of his mouth.
Not great catch in the first quarter or that block on 57 was legit.
Just the same predictable negativity that refused to see the good in me.
I didn't respond what was there to say.
And you actually figured,
I think he figured this out right in the book
that he said to you, I heard.
So he was at the gate, he showed up.
He didn't see you play.
He didn't even see it.
That's how late he was.
That was the last play of the game.
My man, duh.
But at the time, you know,
of course those words were heard of son
who, you know, your dad is your idol.
But I didn't realize Jocko
until I was writing that.
And then I realized like, whoa,
I'm my dad.
Dad to my daughter.
And I went into, she was getting ready for school, man.
I went into the room, overwhelmed with emotions, dropped to my knees before her and
says, I'm sorry.
And she says, Dad, what's wrong?
I said, well, no, I was too harsh to you growing up.
I never looked into your life.
I wasn't affectionate enough.
I wasn't there for you.
And I'm sorry.
As a good daughter, she's just trying to make it better.
When, no, Dad, you were just, you know, overprotective.
You want to make sure I'm good.
said, no, I was wrong, and I'm going to tell you why. And I talked about my father, always being so
harsh and mean-spirited, and I learned that behavior and passed it to her. And it took years to even
get what we are for me to undo my harshness. Even we were just, recently, my wife had surgery
and my daughter comes in the room because I couldn't sleep in the bed because my wife needed to
be almost like on the incline.
And so Lexus was sleeping in the room with her.
So she comes into our guest bedroom with me.
We had a heart-to-heart conversation.
And she started crying and I heard my little daughter,
the one that I was too hard to hear.
And I recalled the time, and I had to share this with her to liberate her.
I said, you know, I want to go back in time a little bit to undo something.
She was in middle school.
She was getting out of my work van, and she accidentally slammed her finger into the door.
And I look at her face because I'm in a driver's seat and she's emotionless.
I get out, open the door, I'm like, oh, baby, okay?
But no affection in it.
I realize, again, my mother didn't give it to me because of what happened to Larry,
and I couldn't give it to her in my father's harshness.
And I said, Lexi, I want to let you know something that.
that dad was again reminded her too hard on you you didn't need disciplined dad you needed a father
when you knew that you were the apple of his eye and not the worm and the fruit and she cried
and i just hugged her and it was that moment i realized like man and this is what i want to liberate men
from when we blow one moment we don't have to keep blowing the others like let's let's let's
let's be the right man in this moment.
Like, who do I need to be right now?
And at 4 in the morning that day, my daughter needed a compassionate, empathetic, and loving dad,
the one whose heart was shut off when he was raising her.
And just to give her that freedom and then to undo more intergenerational trauma and to stop,
like, okay, we're going to move even more now because I'm going to be more affectionate.
it to you. And that's what that story, when I realized that, that started my journey to becoming
a better father, more comprehensive and more present and aware of what my children need.
Yeah. Yeah, that idea of actually taking ownership of mistakes that you made and I did a podcast
with my middle daughter. And I had to take ownership of all kinds of things. And I'll give you one
example, which everyone is so clear how jacked up this was. So my daughter, I got at the time I had two
daughters, one son. Now I have three daughters. But at the time I had two daughters, one son. My oldest
daughter, she was, you know, like a ballerina. And when the way her body is, when you lift her up,
you ever pick up a bird, dead bird? Yes. And it's like their bones are literally hollow because
that's how they can fly. My oldest daughter is like that, like just super light. And you're like,
She's very flexible super light.
My middle daughter, Rana, she was a different type of human.
She had this extra like density to her.
When you lifted her up, she felt heavy.
And for me, as a dad that likes fighting and wrestling and strength, I was very proud of it.
And so when my friends would come over, you know, she's a little six-year-old girl,
I'd say, hey, lift up my older daughter.
And they'd lift her up.
And I go, now lift up her.
And they'd lift her up and I go, feel how heavy she is.
It's a little girl.
You know, six, seven, eight year old girl.
Feel how heavy she is.
And I didn't think, again, I can't be any more proud.
I was so proud that this girl had this genetic mutation,
which it turns out she does have a genetic mutation.
Like she got a body scan and she's off the chart for, like, the density of her body.
Wow.
I actually
I got a copy of the scan
I sent it to Rogan
Rogan tells this story about
Who's the fighter
Cuban guy
Can't think his name about Romero
Romero yeah
About Romero
Yeah
And he tells this story
How they took him into the doctor
And he had like
They did an x-ray of him
Or a MRI of him
And they're like
Where did you find this guy
His eye tendons are three times larger
Than a normal person
This guy's a mutant
And so I said that little thing to Rogan
I said hey
dude like my daughter's a mutant she's a mutant but but it also made me feel like see I'm I'm
vindicated because I was right dude I just like you are different but man I just didn't recognize
that's how that's how as much as you know I like oh you know I talk about leadership and I'm
you got to really understand yourself and you got to understand other people's perspective here
I was the dad can't care anymore and love my daughters anymore and here I am just
basically saying to a little girl you're heavy
which is the worst thing a little girl can hear.
And luckily she's a resilient kid and she, you know, recognized and she carried on.
But, you know, she, so when she's now she's in high school and she's cutting weight because she's a wrestler and everything became about, what is it, body image, right?
So she had to go through that pain of being food obsessed.
So she's measuring her food and she's only eating a certain.
amount of calories. And what's crazy is after she was on the podcast, we were sitting around
and we were like looking at old videos. And there was a video of her. And I'm like making a video
on my phone. It's just a family video. And she's making a milk, protein shake in our house. And she's
got the measuring cup out as she's putting milk in there. And I, you know, I look at her and I go, hey,
you know, you don't need to measure the milk. I mean, you don't need a measuring cup for that.
And she looks over her shoulder and she goes, oh, no, dad, I just want to know.
exactly how much I'm getting. And at the time, I, in a time, I actually thought to myself,
wow, what a squared away young lady. What a, what a disciplined young girl. What a disciplined
young woman. And, and now we looked back on it. And that was obsessive behavior. She was measuring,
you know, she was weighing her pieces of bread. Wow. The bread says 22 grams. She measured it.
Oh, this one's 24. Cut off two grams. So she's going through all that. And what,
what do I think?
I'm so ignorant.
I'm thinking,
oh,
well,
she's just a highly disciplined person.
And that's the kind of thing.
You know,
my point in saying this is,
I got to look back and say,
no,
well, you know,
she should have known better.
No,
this is me.
This is,
we make mistakes.
Look,
there's,
I would say there's no guidebook
for being a parent.
There's actually probably thousands
of guidelines for parents.
But, man,
that's like saying a guidebook
for making art.
Like,
you can get some indicators
when you read some book because there's millions of books about parenting but you're going to have a unique it's like i would say about interacting with other people like you could be a carpenter right you got to learn how to use the tools you got to learn how to use the saw you got to learn how to use the sandpaper you got to learn how to use all the different tools but then you got to remember that there's different types of wood there's pine which is super soft but then there's ipe which is super hard and you got to then use that tool differently got to get different plaited
and you got to actually use the tool differently.
But then you also have to remember
that every single piece of pine is different.
And they have a knot that you gotta work around,
you gotta work that thing a little bit different.
And that IPE, you go hard at that eBay,
but there's a little soft spot
that if you go too hard, you're gonna ruin the whole thing.
And that's what, that's the true,
that's what, not just kids, but people.
You know, people are like that.
That's why I'm in a leadership position,
you can't just say, oh,
when I'm in a leadership position,
I do this.
when I'm in a leadership position,
I think about these things
and I use these various tools
and I apply these pressures
and I look for the feedback
from the human that I'm interacting with.
Just like that piece of wood,
you know, it's getting a little,
get this little soft right here.
I get lighten up a little bit.
So it's good that you can look back
and take ownership,
which as you said,
it's liberating when you go,
yep, that was on me.
I should,
I was,
You know, even when I was telling that story about like my wife telling me,
hey, your son, your six-year-old son is not an active duty machine gunner in a seal
platoon.
Hey, it's like, yep, that's, you're right.
I'm wrong.
And I'm a 20, whatever I was, 28-year-old guy or something like that.
Actually, no, I was older than that.
I was like 35.
Oh, what an idiot.
But, you know, here I am, 35-year-old man.
Yeah.
I don't, not there.
still working on it still making mistakes made mistake today made mistake tomorrow make
mistake the next day we got to have that open mind and that ability to say yep that's actually
i can see that as a hundred percent on me i made this mistake i won't let that happen again
trying to get better i tell our boys mistakes are our greatest teachers they are indeed the only
worst one is the one we didn't learn from yeah yeah that's good man i know she was happy to have
that conversation with you your daughter oh yeah yeah no it's like
She's such a great, and the feedback from so many people,
so many women that listen to that.
Because for guys, it's kind of like fear, right?
Like, when's the last time you were afraid?
I mean, for my son, when he's driving, you know?
Yeah.
So, I mean, yeah.
When's the last time you were personally afraid for your own safety?
2019.
You can have to think about it.
Since it's been five years.
Yeah.
Five years.
Echo Charles.
No.
I don't know.
Can't even remember.
for for females they they they'll go oh yeah two days ago I was at this I was at the
supermarket and I walked outside and there was like you know my car did the street light had
gone off like that's very common for for them to go through that it's the same thing with body
image look boys get it you know oh I'm a little bit skinny I'm a little bit chubby I'm a
little bit short I'm a little bit whatever boys will get that a little bit girls get that so much
worse you know girls get that so much worse and so when when my daughter was telling those
It was a lot of people a lot of people reached out and just said hey it's so good to hear
Someone talking about that and a father and daughter talking about it because dads we don't realize that
for sure man you know as a dad we look at our daughter and go dude you're you're you're you're
gonna be able to squat so much no girl is fired up to squat a lot with the nine years old
There's not one this there's not one and here I am all fire
up. Think of this little powerhouse.
So, got to be careful of those things. Yeah, man, I mean,
I'm going to keep, I'm going to use that, man. I didn't realize, you know,
we have to think about it, but it's their daily experience.
You know, often talk with men as well, like, what if, as insecure as many men are,
what if we had to wear makeup before we put on, we had to put on makeup before we left
the house every day? What if that was our life and how much pressure is on our women and
our daughters that who they really are they're taught so young that it's not good enough and uh i need to
dig there a little more dig deeper and um i'm definitely going to use what you just said about fear i
i take that for granted and i remember man this is good i'm glad you said that i had uh
wanted to create like a VR virtual reality training for the cave and i had to go through this training
and one of the sessions was being in the body of a woman.
So you put the headset on and you were a woman for, I think it was like 15 minutes.
To see all the sexual advances in the way they're treated in society by men was appalling.
When I took that headset off, and this was not to really talk about that,
I had no interest in learning about VR.
You know, I wanted to, like, I need to do it.
do something to help my men change this.
Because women shouldn't have to go through life like that.
And we have no clue.
So I thank you for bringing that to my attention because you're right.
I mean, with my wife, you know, like how many times is she scared out by herself?
You know, she doesn't have a CPL.
You know, I do.
I carry.
But, you know, at home alone, you know, I mean.
Better get yourself a different kind of dog.
No, she can shoot guns.
In the house, she just can't shoot.
She can't shoot them on the streets, but we're set at home for it.
Any area of the house you come in, you know, it's a problem, you know.
And I teach them not to use the sites either, how to shoot without sites.
Awesome.
Yeah, but thank you for sharing that, brother.
That's sobering.
I need to be more sensitive to that.
Fast forward a little bit.
You know, look, you suffered this stuff with Kelly.
play the football thing and you start to change you start to and I've got in my notes here I
put in quotes grow up right because really you ain't growing up at all really you're growing
down that's what it seems like around start 13 you start growing down right you don't grow up
and you become someone a little bit different you start you start DJing you got that musical
kind of blessing you're a popular DJ you say this the alteration of my conduct was
alarming. And again, I'm fast forwarded him. And as I changed my friends did as well, the maestro.
So this is you. This is your, you're a popular DJ and you have a band. We call it a
rap group. You have a rap group. It's maestro and chaos. And by the way, everyone, if you
Google on YouTube, chaos and maestro, you can go watch, you can go watch your music.
I only found one actual video, but there's a bunch of songs on there. Yes. But the one video,
there's one full like it's a produced video.
Yes.
And you're the DJ and chaos is rapping.
And it's 1989 time frame and it sounds very much period.
It's a very much a period piece.
Yes, it is.
And so that's what you're doing.
You got all this stuff going on.
So it's now Maestro, the dominant centerpiece of some of the best Detroit parties
was now drinking 40 ounce beers and acting recklessly.
How could someone so young,
feel so old. I was treating my mother audaciously, talking back or all together ignoring her as I
paraded around acting like the man of the house when my stepfather tried to intervene. My mom wouldn't
allow it. She refused to let Mr. Crum, this is your mom's new husband. She refused to let Mr. Crum
disciplined me and by doing so did more harm than good. It only enabled me to continue down a path
of destruction. Eventually, this resulted in a wedge developed between my mom and my stepdad,
affecting their relationship.
My grades continue to drop.
But with the crutch of college, nowhere in my future,
I completed just enough schoolwork to keep me from failing.
My inspiration was music.
My lust was for sex.
My love was for money.
Yeah.
That don't end well.
No, it doesn't.
And thankfully, I avoided many death traps, you know, along that way.
Mr. Crum was really a good man
taught me how to play
two sports, football and baseball.
He was the one that would throw the ball with me,
you know, catch and teach me routes
and how to catch a baseball
while my father was at work
and here it is me not respecting him.
I remember one time him and my mother
got an argument. This was the reason for their divorce.
I grabbed a shotgun and basically told him
stopped yelling at my mother
and he never came back.
I can't really disagree with him.
Oh yeah, no, he shouldn't.
Teenager with a shotgun.
How are you going to sleep?
Yeah, no.
And at his funeral, I chose to give, you know, what is it, two-minute remarks.
And I got up there, and as I was, I first hear everyone testify about how great he was as a man of God,
a deacon in the church and mentor to so many people and servant.
I'm like, wow, this man was in my house.
When I get up to speak and I start sharing, God was like, you know how you always wanted a father?
I was like, in my head, I'm like, yeah, he says, that's him in that casket.
I sent them to you.
I heard your prayer.
I knew what you longed for.
But you wanted the man that wasn't there so much that you missed the man that was.
when I said I couldn't hold it together
I lost it at that moment at the podium
because so many young boys
you got great men as stepfathers in your life
and it's natural to want your father around
but you're praying for a man that can really care
and I had one man
he was a great man
like he cooked dinner for my mom
before he went to work afternoons at Chrysler
and I blew that work ethic strong work ethic
Christian man
kind dangerous
and because of my anger
toward my father's absence
I blew a blessing that was there
and so so many of us again missed the moment
like if I could go back
I would embrace that completely
you know and I missed that man
but I owed him that honor of sharing who he really was to me.
And I owed him those tears at that podium.
He deserved every tear that dropped that day because he was a good man to me.
In the meantime, you meet with one of your dad's friends,
and he tells you you have a brother in Detroit.
named Keith.
You two were purposely kept apart.
Keith knows about you and really wants to meet you.
So your dad had another kid around the same age, right?
It's not funny.
It's funny now, but that's who my mom believed
he had stepped out on their marriage with
was Keith's mother.
You guys get together.
You guys meet in a parking lot, a drugstore,
and you can tell right away.
he's rich and he ain't getting rich from uh he's not working on wall street so he's in the drug
scene um dealing drugs and he he keeps you out of it yes for the most part to the best of his
ability like there's opportunity obviously if he was a bad person he would wrap you right into it
so was interesting he lost his brother as well from a different father same he had the same mother as his
brother but a different father. His brother was a star athlete similar to Larry, very influential.
Guys were jealous because he, I think he was a freshman starting on varsity. They shot and killed
him at the park. So Keith at that moment said, you know, I don't want to lose another one.
And my lifestyle, although he was a millionaire and he was the real deal, which is why he died
the way he did. He wasn't one to play with. He said, I didn't want you to.
had at life. And so as much as I beg to sell drugs with him and to be a part of that family,
he refused to allow it. I mean, Jocko, he had, I mean, $100,000 watches in 89 and 90. Okay, I remember
one time he sued the city of Detroit for raiding one of his houses illegally for a million
dollars he blew it all in Vegas just to prove a point and that's how much money he had and
I'm thankful because my cousins on his side wanted me to be down wanted him and jkoo should bring him
in these guys they were they were it was you know here it is my hero he's my idol that's why
I titled the chapter that he was my idol but God saw how dangerous that could have been for me
And so when I met him, imagine you're losing your brother, Larry, your other brother Sinclair is in Texas,
but now you have another brother like, man, maybe this could work.
And so I was just excited.
And then again, drug dealers were like heroes in my community.
Like, man, he getting paid.
He's a man, regardless of how many people lives are lost because of what they sell.
They revered.
and I never looked at the danger side until
and I hope I'm not going ahead of what you're reading.
Got an altercation.
Here, Gabriel again, my ex-Marine friend.
We're watching him.
Our boys are making sure that the guy he's fighting boys don't jump in.
So imagine the crew of guys on one side, another crew another,
and then my friend fighting their guy.
So Gabriel was, you know, he was fighting,
and basically beat the guy down.
We thinking it's over.
We leave part ways.
I get in my car and leave,
but the guys who were with them
and the guy he beat up
got in the car and found my car.
So we're thinking they want to fight again.
I pulled over in the gas station willingly.
All right, what's up?
This time they had guns.
One of them getting the back seat
and I'm driving.
My friend Gary is here
and my friend Nate who's no longer with us.
backseat and the guy comes and puts a gun to my head and says take us to Gabe house now so I got my
hands on the stern wheel I'm like I'm sorry but I can't do that like I'm talking to the police
I said I can't do that because Gabe family is my family and everyone acts tough into you feel
that cold piece of steel on your head and that's when you know you got a real friend and
Gabe has shown himself many times for me.
So the guy gets out the backseat and has a discussion with two of his friends like,
we're just going to sit there.
So I look at Gary and the guy comes around and hits Gary in the face with the gun because he was just angry.
And now the other two guys are out talking and I'm looking Nate is cool.
And the guy who punched me, I forgot about that.
He was so weak.
He had a free shot and he was elevated and I just blink.
that's how lightweight he was
so my plan was to hit the gas
grab him his shirt
and drag him down
the street
which is shaffer in Detroit
so when I looked
I hit the gas grab him
and the guy turned and shot the back window out
the guy braced himself
in between the gas tanks
which is why I couldn't drag him
I'm thankfully I didn't
because I probably would have went I would have went to jail
okay you see how that could have turned out
and I called Keefe
paging him actually
this was when beepers were popular
were you born then
I'm just messing with you
so I'm paging him
and we had a code
that I would page
911
yeah something was wrong
it was our code was 94
or 74 I can't recall
he never answered the whole weekend
like this is strange
that was God
because he was out of town
and he didn't have his pager
he comes back in town
calls me, hey, what's going on? What's happened? I just see all your pages. I tell them what happened.
I said, well, look, let's just go by and shoot their house up. I know where they stay.
That was gangster enough of me. Again, I never was a thug. It was like Tupac said,
I ain't a killer, but don't push me. That was me. I never wanted to really go deep off,
and I had enough wisdom to say, that's going to lead to his life, and I don't want that life.
my brother's response at that moment,
let me know that
either he wasn't going to live long or I wasn't.
He said, no, let's not shoot up their house.
Let's go inside, kidnap them, torture him, and then kill him.
Next level activities.
And so I said, all right, all right, cool.
This was my response.
That escalated from a drive-by.
I said, all right, cool.
I'm going to call you soon as I get the location.
I know and I already told him I knew where it was.
He said, all right, don't forget, call me.
He was on me. He said, so where are they?
They don't mess with my brother. Where are there?
I said, well, I'm trying to look at the house.
I thought it was.
So I got out of that.
But I knew I'm like, okay, this is next level.
This isn't just a fight.
And so my idol then became a wake-up call.
I loved them dearly, but I knew it was a lifestyle I couldn't,
I shouldn't desire.
And so at that point, I became the little brother was saying, can you get out?
How do you get out?
And right before, well, I wanted to get ahead of you, but yeah.
As this is happening too, and again, I mentioned chaos and maestro, but this little section of your respect, I finally had it.
Chaos and Maestro's first single and video dropped.
Meestro on the Flex.
By the way, available on YouTube at this time.
You said.
It's true is.
Was a 1989 hit in Detroit and several Midwestern cities
and garnered an award for number one video
on the box, a pay-per-view cable network
for the most weeks at the top.
So you were, and again, I watched the video,
this is 1989, this was like right in theme
with everything that was going on.
Good song, you know, like legit, okay.
You guys definitely had some things to,
you had some potential.
Clearly, you guys had some potential.
Public enemy, we became friends with Chuck D
and he let us open up for him for two concerts, man.
Dang.
He was in one.
We have two videos online.
Actually, he was in the second one.
And so we were just right there.
You were right there.
I remember one time I walked in McDonald's when that video just dropped.
And it was a school, Shrine was the high school.
Their cheerleading team was in McDonald's.
I walk in and just happened to have the same coat and hat I had on in the video.
So I'm walking to get a meal
And I hear girls
Ha ha ha and I stopped
And it was like myestro
And I just ate it all of love
I just I enjoyed it
So yeah we
That was a very special time in our lives
And to Keith's point was funny
We were we weren't
At the time there were a lot of hip hop
That promoted violence and drugs
We were more on the
We were a positive hip hop
Conscious black
community group, all right? So my brother would joke with me all the time. He says, man, I can't even
get no sex because your music too positive. I tell the girls, you know, my brother's maestro, they
want to act all deep now with me. So that was his little running joke. He said, I can't even get
nothing from these girls because of you, but that was a great time in our life. And being with
public enemy, you know, they were very conscious rap. And Chuck D. was just,
just a phenomenal guy.
His grandmother actually stayed, I think, five or six blocks for me.
So when he would come in town, it was an honor for me to take him over there and just to be around someone I looked up to.
Yeah, so it was very special time.
So especially back in those, like I would say the playing field is somewhat more even now because, you know, someone could just make YouTube videos and you could get out there.
But back in those days, like if you had a connection, like public enemy, they were at the height when we met them.
Absolutely. Yeah, and Flav with Flav. And then this is before they had signed Ice Cube. And I knew all
about that. Chuck had told me before like what they're working. I'm like, that's going to be
crazy. But you're right. It was just different than and just to be in a car with a rapper that
large, no social media and he's iconic without that. Man, it was just a great time.
Great times. Yeah. Let me fast forward a little bit because this happens. The truck collided.
with the medium you're driving the truck collided with the medium and went airborne flipping twice
i had a surreal view of the world through the windshield tipping end over end i braced for impact like a
juggernaut the truck crashed to the ground with metal bending glass shattering and its passenger
still breathing the soundtrack came back accelerating the speed of life i heard the high-pitched squeal
of an ambulance siren that was faint at first but gradually got louder the world is right side up again
and I was back on my on on my back on an EMT's stretcher.
I remembered all the times I'd stared up at the name Jesus
in glowing stars on Sinclair's ceiling.
Instantly, I knew who it was speaking to me.
I recognized him.
So that again, get the book,
because there's so many details of this story.
You have the car crash.
Keith gets killed.
We mentioned, we talked about in the beginning,
but Keith is killed.
you also find out you're going to be a dad.
Yeah.
Because I didn't miss the part where you met Nicole.
Right.
But you know what was deep about the car crash.
What made it really interesting was that a friend of mine who was in the NBA,
well, he was number one draft pick that year.
His mother was like a spiritual mom to me.
She told him not to drive the truck because he was rapping.
And I had to go to the studio to get some music.
Oh, yeah.
This is also like the Detroit Pistons are our national champions in this time.
Yeah.
This is just chaos for you.
Yeah, this is crazy.
Yeah. And so.
Meistero chaos.
So imagine driving this truck, not knowing that someone said that you were going to get an accident in it.
Then when it happens, you're in, you're in ER, you're on a, what is it called this?
Gurney.
Gurney.
Yep.
Your best friend comes in.
He's the number one draft pick, so everyone's going crazy because he's in the hospital.
But he's not happy.
He's literally, like, frantic, like, Jay, you okay.
You know, you got to listen.
I'm like, listen, man, calm down.
They only have me on this for precautionary reasons.
She said, that's not why I'm acting this way.
My mother told me this was going to happen to you.
You got to stop running from God.
That's what made that accident very deep for me.
It was a message.
And right after that, I got another one as well.
But Nicole, I just met Nicole.
He actually introduced, I share his name.
He's cool.
Chris Weber.
Okay.
Yeah.
And so we were real close.
And I appreciate Chris because during that time,
he would pay for pastors to come down from Flint or wherever to come meet with me
because he knew God had this strong calling on my life.
And he wanted to make sure I was around the right people.
He introduced me to Nicole.
We were looking for furniture for our apartment.
Nicole has a twin sister.
And I said, man, I want to introduce you to her.
No one can talk to them at Michigan.
And so Nicole, to this day, she denied she wasn't trying to burst my bubble.
But she looks at me.
She says, you look very familiar, and everyone in Detroit knew me.
I said, well, it's probably from chaos and maestro.
I'm kind of famous.
You know what she said?
She was like, no, that's not it.
And I'm like, it just burst my bubble.
But at that moment, that's when I knew she was the one for me, you know, and I pursued it.
But Chris is the reason he made that connection, man.
And so I appreciate Chris, his mother and their family for.
You know, just wanting me to be on a different path at that time in my life.
So you got all that, you found out you're going to be a debt.
Yes.
And this is a great part of the story.
Again, get the book, but you have a job.
You're working at a trucking company.
You're unloading, offload and stuff.
And you're talking to God saying, like, why am I here?
What are you doing for me?
What have you done for me lately?
Exactly.
And you end up getting injured.
by, what was it?
I was on a high low, yeah.
And I went to unload the pallet truck
like I would do every night.
And I was actually, I was talking to Nicole.
And Nicole was trying to encourage me,
you know, like, don't get upset.
I'm like, if God is real,
why am I working all these hours?
My talent, again, I couldn't do music anymore
because my daughter needed insurance.
So I'm working at Coca-Cola at the time.
And she says, you know, don't get upset.
I said, you know what?
God isn't real.
Because I was studying Egypt,
Egyptology and other religions and studies as well, metaphysics as well.
And I said the only Jesus.
Bro, you're lucky you only got the high-bow.
You know what I said?
I said the only Jesus coming, only sun coming through the sky is the sun god rock,
because I was real heavy in Egyptology.
And I hung the phone up.
I said, God ain't real.
For the first time in Coca-Cola history at that location,
I was driving, went to go on the bed of the truck,
and I couldn't get on like,
going on so I was back up hit the plate that you know goes over into the bed and I
couldn't get on I was unaware that the truck was moving the driver didn't talk to
brakes so when I went backed up and hit it again the truck moved away half of my
high low got on it but I was still leaving the deck I mean the what is it called the platform
platform yeah my high low drops down I fall off two herniated discs as a result and what I
I knew it was God because when the truck was coming back, my forks dropped down to stop the bed from crushing me.
Then a friend of mine at the time worked with me, Jimmy Snail jumped on and stopped everything.
And at that moment, Jocko, I looked up.
Remember, I knew he was calling me, but I was running.
And I looked up at the moon, the stars, and I said, you know what?
I surrender.
I'm done.
I'm done doing it my way.
And I will follow you.
and after that my entire life change for the better
and you know I was saying some of us change when we feel
some of us change when we see the light
people like me change when we feel the heat
so that's what it took he knew it took that adversity
that crucible to get out of me and get out of his way
your um your your hip-hop friends
kind of started to make fun of you a little bit and that kind of ended that at least part of that
and again get the book there's so there's so much stuff in here I want but I want to close out
the book with this this section that you say right here you say faith my faith was undeniable
to everyone around me and when my commitment to that faith was challenged it was made all the more
real I'd stopped drinking and cursing I had nailed my old self to the cross
drew me deeper into a dialogue with Yah about the direction I was going.
But great strides are sometimes met with equal resistance and newfound philosophies
will be subject to probing questions.
Some you'll be able to answer, some you won't.
Like me, you'll have two choices.
Move forward or go backward.
Advance or retreat.
There is no middle ground when serving Ya.
You are either with him or against him.
So again, the book continues.
And with some blessings, more blessings, incredible blessings.
Your son Jason is born and also some incredible struggles.
You know, your wife went through miscarriages, the death of your father, your mom as well after suffering through dementia.
You have to get the book to hear those stories.
And you learn to deal with these various types of blessings.
Yes.
Through emotional resiliency, through faith, through tears.
And that's the title of the book, right?
Cry like a man.
Wait, did you have the title of the book?
Did you know that that was the direction
that you were heading in when you started it?
Absolutely.
I had studied some of the work of Dr. William Frey.
Biochemists, he had discovered that tears from emotional stress or trauma
not only contain 98% water, but also stress hormones
that actually get discreeted from the body when we cry.
And that's why we feel better typically after we had a good cry.
Like people say, I need a good cry.
Because you're actually releasing stress hormones.
So think about the millions of men who are programmed to be stoic.
or fearless, can't cry, won't cry.
And I tell men all the time, you're crying, you're just crying the wrong way.
Addiction, abuse, you know, struggling with trauma issues, you know, not being the dad that you desire, but being the dad that you had when you were a child that you vowed you never be.
Suicidal ideations, you name it.
struggles with pornography.
So men are crying, and that's why I subtitle is
fighting for freedom from emotional incarceration
because so many of us have willingly walked into our own jail cells
and turned our hearts off from the world
because we no longer want to be impassively dismissed
when we have a moment of feeling or being human.
So we say, all right, cool, I'm going to just stay here
and be safe for myself.
And as a result, you will never receive the man I was
created to be. You will only get the provider and protector. Everything else you will never have.
And so that's why I titled that. And it was, you know, it was at the time of saying that you would
never hear in 2018 cry, men crying. And so I knew it was something that, uh, the most high
wanted me to do and to stretch me, especially during the era when men weren't talking about
being emotional, expressing ourselves beyond just being strong. And,
then, excuse me, and then to see the response from that so many men saying,
brother, I needed this so bad.
I remember after the Rogan show, a podcast, a wrestler came up to me from,
was it Romania?
I can't remember.
I was in the gym working out, man.
And he comes, I knew he was a wrestler.
I just knew it.
He comes over to me.
His eyes are bloodshot red.
So I didn't know what to expect.
I'm like, where is this going?
And he says, Mr. Wilson.
and he reaches out and grabs both of my biceps.
He said, I just heard the Rogan interview and just dropped his head.
And paused, looked at me, hugged me, and walked away.
I actually text Joe that and it was encouraging him.
I know he hears it a lot, but in that moment to see that this message is received by men all over the globe,
men who are tired of the facade.
There is no freedom in the facade.
The freedom lies in just allowing yourself to be human
and be able to meet the moment, whatever's needed.
And to give a man that freedom
and then to see men transform,
it makes all of my struggle,
all that I've been through, the adversity,
the thoughts in my head that, you know,
the negative thoughts, you know, that come.
It's still worth it.
Keep fighting.
My knees would hurt and I got to get down on them and teach the kids.
It's worth it because that young boy will remember this moment.
And he would probably, I know what he would do, but with these principles, whatever it is.
And if he stays grounded in these or rooted in these, he would change his world.
And that's all we really need.
I don't need someone to change the entire world.
Can you change your world?
I say that all the time, people.
Man, you worry about your world.
Exactly.
Like get your world.
Help one other, help one kid.
You know, help one kid out there.
Help one dad.
Help one mom.
Single mom.
Like, what can you do?
How can you help that one kid?
And you're doing the right thing.
That's it, man.
If we can grasp that, man.
You know, again, if you put all of these little worlds together, now you're covering more area.
And, anyway, I love social media.
It's a great platform to reach people.
But at the same time, I believe so many of us have been deceived that it's actually
reaching people.
you know instead of reaching people where they are you there it's just you're getting the message out
but that real interpersonal work being right there that's where I thrive and desire like give me
a room with 20 men or 50 boys and let's really do this real work you know I tell men all the time
they come up to me man I love your work thank you I said do you have my book or any of my books
They said, well, no, I'm going to get one.
I said, man, my videos just scratched the surface.
You're talking two minutes versus 60,000, I mean 60,000 words.
Go deeper, dive deeper.
And men and say, I want to escape emotional incarceration.
How do I become a comprehensive man?
Run to the areas in your life that cause you to feel emotions that you run from.
The sadness, the sorrow, the fear of losing someone.
It could be a parent, aging parent, a niece and nephew that has a disability.
Wherever you go, which makes you feel, what I would say, unmasculine emotions, run there.
Because this world, I don't believe, has yet experienced the nurturing love of a man.
Because ours is different.
I believe when this world feels that, because it's a strength, it's stability, it's peace.
It's love and it feels different from women when we come in and nurture.
It's calming.
So imagine men learning worldwide how to be comprehensive more than just fighters and warriors and providers, but yet men who can meet every moment in life.
Man, this and their worlds would change and as a byproduct, this world would change.
And that's what keeps me going is like the testimonies, this is.
stories even when you reached out in 2016, even when you set the pallet of protein, and even now,
you know, running into Joe and talking conversations with him outside of who we are in the
public eye and what we do. That's where the real work is done. And that's why I love being there
in the midst of it. Like I remember I was at a meeting the top nonprofits in the city of Detroit.
and they're all brainstorming on how to help black boys.
This is the topic.
And I'm sitting at this table and I'm looking at all these CEOs.
And I was a CEO, but I wasn't.
You know, I was a direct service provider.
I wanted to be right there with the kids.
And I'm sitting at this table.
And like, wait a minute.
In Highland Park, Michigan, I got a group of boys waiting on me to come teach them.
And I'm sitting here at this table.
trying to figure out how to help boys.
This was the first time I cried in a public setting like that.
And I got up from the table.
I said, I'm sorry, I can't be here no more.
I say, I appreciate this.
This is like the Pentagon and generals are strategizing over what needs to be done.
I don't need that.
Give me the ammunition and drop me off where the problem is.
I left that meeting with the suits and went to Island Park area right outside of Detroit.
Do you know my boys had clinked the entire classroom, swept the floor, was seated in a circle still?
These same kids, they said had ADHD.
Now could sit still for 30 minutes to an hour if I asked them.
That's where the work was.
That's where I wanted to be.
I respect everyone who gets the funding and got to get the ammunition.
and of course, you know, however it looks
even on the military side.
You're a seal.
You're dropped where the problem is.
I'm wired the same way.
I don't want to, I don't have,
because it's like the commercial
where the sink, the water is running
in the restroom and everyone's looking at the sink
and talking.
Then someone just randomly comes up
and turn the water off.
Then everyone leaves.
We talk too much.
We do.
too much talking. No strategizing. Everyone is hyper-emotional. That's why we're losing. That's why I'm
thankful. I learned how to master and rule my emotions. I don't get lost in them. I respect them.
They have to be my slave more than ever on my master. And so I just want to be in the thick of it.
I don't care about the fame, the being in the public eye. You can cut all of that off, man.
just drop me where the problem is and let me do what I do.
And if more of us can do that, there's more jocos, more echoes.
Things that really change, brother, I'm telling you.
So many mornings, I look at your watch on Instagram.
I'm like, there's no way this guy.
And I talked to Joe, he was like, Jason, this guy does this by this time.
He's in the water to swim.
I said, what?
And I'm telling me, I look at that watch.
I'm like just that one post
I don't think you have a caption
but that image says
get up
do something
and that's what we need
is like it's too much talking
don't lead by intimidation
lead by example
and I'm not the one to talk
I'm here because of the message
liberating men
and of course they have this conversation
with you but we're wired to say
you know there's fruit
from what you
do don't I don't need to talk about what I do look at my fruit like the Messiah says you will
know them by their fruit and that's what I ask people to judge me on nothing else my words mean
nothing let me show you what I do as you made the transition from you know maestro and running around
and you were doing production and you had hits.
And next thing you know, I mean, at least looking at it from the outside,
next thing you know, you're doing tile and you're running a tile business.
How did you square that?
How did your ego square that up?
There's a lot of people that can't make that transition.
I think that transition from the hopes and dreams of one thing to the reality of life.
Some people don't make it through that.
That's a good question.
I would say responsibility.
My daughter meant the world to me.
There's no way on earth I'm going to allow a dream to turn into a nightmare to her.
You know, I had to do what I needed to do.
I had to be the man in that moment.
My daughter needed provision.
My wife needed provision.
She actually made more than me when I first started, Nicole.
But she didn't need my money.
She needed my presence as a leader.
and the head of the home.
So it was easy for me to shift because
I'm about getting the job done.
You know, music wasn't making money.
It was a desire.
I could still do it on the side.
But when you got a house and two cars, a wife, a daughter,
insurance, and you're not foolish,
and you're matured, like, and I say,
I'm pretty good at this towel stuff.
And I did really well.
I actually started making more money
than the mentors I had in the trade.
um athletes from the pistons would call and i would towel their home so i was always being taken care of
as long as i was willing to be responsible and do what was needed where did you get the notion to
start the cave came from a desire uh again i'll you know go back to ninjitsu 12 year old in the backyard
me and echo yes with our stars um always wanting a man i could have an allegiance to
someone who wouldn't who would challenge me but not condemn me who would also show me the spiritual
things and mentor me into manhood and i i never had that you know no matter how many jims or dojoes
i went into and i i saw that the pursuit the pursuit was vain and nothing could answer this longing
that's where the cave came from when i saw a misguided boy specifically african americans in my
community needing help. And I went on the scared straight programs where you take boys who are in
trouble to prisons and hopefully they get scared straight or the boot camp programs as well. And
it was interesting, you don't even see, you'll be hard pressed to find one these days. Because how can
you help a kid overcome trauma by retramatizing him? And so that's when God showed me,
our boys didn't need to be scared straight. They needed to be healed. They didn't need more
discipline, they needed more love. And so that's what birthed the cave of Adelham. It started as all
discipline, because that's how I was wired. And then it turned into a space because I knew like,
wait a minute, how is it that you have a 0.8 GPA? Like not even a 1.0. And you don't have a learning
disability. This isn't making sense to me. So then I discovered, wait a minute, these kids have
significant trauma. And then when you do more research, kids who experience significant trauma will
exude ADHD symptoms. It makes all the sense in the world. If a child has to sleep outside because
there's constant trauma or stress in their home, how good are they going to be academically
if they're sleeping outside at night? It doesn't, it's not going to work. So when I gave them
that safe space jaco, the cave turned into, of course, now martial arts wasn't the focus.
it was a byproduct.
You would learn how to defend yourself
if you learn how to deal
with the war within yourself.
So I said, you cannot defend
what hasn't been disciplined.
I said, because if I can do this,
faint and you move, you're going to lose.
Let's deal with why you're moving.
When I found the why
and helped them resolve that,
that group in Highland Park,
all of them graduated,
and many of them were in danger
of not passing.
And so that's where it birthed from.
And then biblically, the cave of Adelam is where David ran, you know, David and Goliath, where he ran from King Saul, who was jealous of him.
And he hid in this cave.
And it was in the town of Adelam.
It wasn't a random cave.
And 400 of his family came to him.
And these men who came to him distressed in debt and discontented left that cave as mighty men of valor.
So I'm like, okay, well, wait a minute.
That's all it says in the scriptures.
And I'm like, well, something had to have happened for them to come out of that emotional and mental state to be called men of valor.
And I stayed in that cave.
I wanted to learn more like what, what happened?
They already were warriors.
David already had defeated Goliath.
These men were already bad.
What they needed was a safe space for men to come together, these strong warriors to talk and the brotherhood, the camaraderie, and to let go of the burdens of what they were dealing with.
And when they were finally able to release and leave that cave, that's what my boys do.
I let them go and come as they please.
I say, you'll never see a door at the mouth of a cave.
You're always welcome and you can leave when you need.
Your goal is to come here to be strengthened and to be sent back out to war.
And that's where it came from.
It was a desire to give them what I wanted.
When I'm talking to them, I pray in every moment, every time, like, God, give me the answer.
This is different.
This is different.
he always responds and as long as my heart is giving them what I longed for.
I put myself in their shoes like, I remember when I didn't know my identity and when I had
fear of failure, what did I want to hear? And I share it, the patience. I didn't want my father
cussing me out every time I made a mistake like he would. No, why did you make the mistake,
son? Well, because I'm scared. Why are you scared? Well, um, because, um,
Because I'm trying to impress my father.
Why are you trying to impress your father?
Because I feel that I can never please him.
Then I bring the dad on the mat.
So it's beautiful, man, because you get to dig deep in real time.
And now you're teaching these boys how to process.
And then in the process, you're stopping intergenerational trauma
because you're helping the dad to heal.
Because he's crying and sitting on the side.
And I said, you're good.
he was like, that's me.
What he struggled with, I struggle with.
I can just hide it.
He can't hide it.
And so now, Joko, these fathers is funny.
I didn't say we're going to have a cave of a dullum for men.
These men said, you're going to have a cave of a deli for me.
And so we combine, you know, Jiu-Jitsu, of course, you see that.
We start with judo to teach boys how to fall.
And the analogy is if you can fall or fail and get back up, you'll make it.
And so as you know with judo, if you're tense and you fall, you feel it a lot more.
It's like the drunk driver.
He survives after a crash, but everyone else dies because everyone else is stiff and scared.
He's drunk so he doesn't even know.
So I'm teaching boys like, look, life is going to throw you.
But if you know how to fall and you're calm, you're going to rise again.
Then when you're down, now we got to go to Jiu-Jitsu because now when you're down,
you're going to start experiencing thoughts.
negativity, what happens when depression tries to take your back and tap you out? We have a saying also that
never let anyone that doesn't love you take your back. And so we all stay and stay, keep them in front of you,
keep them in front of you. Then we also have a saying, act like the mats of 400 degrees because you
still have to rise. Now if it's competition, Jiu-Jitsu or in the gym, cool. But out there, you got to
get up. Because if you stay down, now comes friends. Now the depression, the fear, the insecurity,
stomping you out. Now you got to rise.
And that's when we... Yeah. So now
we work on the Muay Thai and boxing
and then take down the fence and they got to put it
all together before they can graduate.
But the Jiujitsu is very
it's beautiful to see and I love it because
you can't fake it.
It's going to expose who you are
and the struggle
is so needed.
It humbles you
instantly because you're not going to win
or I tell the kids like you just
learning you didn't lose your no one wins every day it's not going to happen in this life what did you learn
did you download everything that happened where you calm did you practice the techniques the way we
taught in drilling and then it's the choking you know life will come choke you did you put yourself
in position to get choked what happens when you're doing everything right and it comes that way
how do you respond the classroom the focus when we work on striking everything who's the most
important person in the room in the classroom they'll say the teacher said why are your friends
distracting you and then we're going training with with the hands and the midst and the focus
midst and I fain off to their left just to get their attention over there I say I'm the problem
focus on me and that's one of the videos that went viral I was swinging a club at one of my
students and he kept jumping.
I'm like, you think this is the problem.
It's like Cajana taught us. He says, see
this knife here? If I drop it
on the table, can it hurt you?
No. Why are you
jumping at this? I'm the problem.
Teach my voice. You're focused
on the wrong thing.
This is the distraction.
What in your life is a distraction
causing you to jump and you're not dealing with the problem?
The problem is your focus.
Either your trauma unresolved.
The friends you're around.
pulling you away. It's not the homework. It's probably your phone. It's probably the PlayStation.
You're distracted. It's not this. It's this. Deal with that. So the principles, they take it.
And as a result, what is it? Over 78% of our students improve their grade point average without
tutoring. Awesome. Yeah. And so it's a great thing to see, man. And that's where it all came from a passion
to give them what I wanted.
Yeah, and then one of those,
a bunch of those videos ended up,
you know, for lack of a better way of saying it,
going viral.
I remember seeing them.
And I think, as I think about it now,
there's a reason, you know,
the reason that it went viral is people on,
people are watching it going,
number one,
I think I might need that.
I think I need someone to talk to me like that right now,
you know?
And also, oh, look at the response that this is getting from this kid.
And you can see a kid in a minute long video or a two minute long video.
You can see them transform in a legitimate way to overcome some kind of an obstacle.
And so recognizing that we have the ability to overcome and how we're interacting with people,
those things end up going, you know, like you said, going viral and people became very aware of it.
you end up doing the movie.
How'd that come about?
Lawrence, well, the first producer
reached out was Roy Bank and
he and Lawrence
had connected and he had
showed Lawrence Fishburn
the viral video.
The first one in 2016.
Then Lawrence started watching
other videos and he was like
we have to get this out
because the ride of passage is missing
for boys in general.
Remember I was talking about like when people die and you don't have a protocol?
Say it.
Protocol for, hey, you're a man now.
Yeah.
That's why so many grown men and there's nothing wrong with gaming.
I think that's cool.
But the men who are stuck in the basement, I'm talking a different type of man where he is lost in life.
They're not playing the game.
They're living the game.
There you go.
Yeah.
That's why that happens.
There is no public acknowledgement and the way he's treated after this ceremony that you are now a man and we will treat you like that.
but more so than you just being given this
you're going to be tested to make sure you know it and you are it
and so Lawrence
he jumped in like with both feet
and just was fully moved by the work
and we produced a documentary on it
directed by Laura Chekaway
very powerful we won all the awards at Tribeca Film Festival
and it was just it was an amazing moment there
I remember at the premiere
just to see we had all of our students fly there.
We got them all there.
And the standing ovation, I think, was like five minutes after the film went off.
And to see your work on the screen like that, it's just a beautiful moment.
And never forget it.
And actually, first time meeting Lawrence in person, because I always been a morphist.
Lawrence Fishburn fan as an actor.
But when the Matrix came out, you know, I said,
man, I wish Morpheus was my dad.
You know, I would put myself in Nio's place, you know.
And I actually created a curriculum off of The Matrix, the movie, and especially one scene.
And so when we met, I went to his house, and it was funny, he had on all black, like Morpheus.
And we're just talking like regular men.
He was like, man, I'm so excited.
You hear no one ever comes to my house like this.
So imagine an iconic actor like Lawrence Fishburn
cooking dinner for you
And you're in the kitchen
He's cooking salmon and I said look bro
You can't let me least clean up or something
So we're just talking
And it was like a dream come true
And then what was even greater
Was to have like a brotherhood
Meaning I get to talk to Lawrence
Larry Fishburn
The man
We had similars with our mom
our mother's health and mental health
and just the childhood
not having our fathers around
and just to see that it was
real and authentic and that
he really wanted to get the message out
and I finally had met someone
I looked up to for so long
was really cool man
and I'll never forget that time and moment
and just truly a great time in my life
yeah yeah
so the movie
comes out after that you write and publish a book called battle cry you write in a book you wrote a book
called the man the moment demands and i think we're going to get into those books on another podcast
so we'll we'll cut this one for today uh in the meantime on the internet you can obviously you can get your
book your new book the man the moment demands people can find you on the interwebs mr
Jason Wilson.com.
And then on Instagram,
you are Mr. Jason O. Wilson.
That's also on Twitter.
Facebook, Jason Wilson.
And then your YouTube is Mr. Jason O. Wilson.
You also, for the charity nonprofit,
it's the yunion.org.
Yes, but now.
It's pronounced union, but I want to make.
The Y is silent.
The Y is silent, just so people know what to type in.
It's the Y, the letter Y, and then union.org.
And that's also, you can also follow them on social media.
It's at Cave 313, Detroit.
Detroit all day.
Yeah.
At Cave 313 on Twitter and at Cave 313 on Instagram, at Cave 313 on Facebook, YouTube.
So awesome stuff and we'll dive back into the rest of your story on the next podcast.
In the meantime, also you can check out joccofuel.com.
We've been drinking some jocco fuel.
How's that taste?
Really good, man.
Amazing.
There you go.
I endorse this.
This is really good.
And working with kids just to see the sugar, no sugar.
No, no sugar.
And no artificial sweeteners.
Because you could say, oh, no sugar, but it's sweetened with a bunch of chemicals that
are just as bad, if not worse, for your kids.
But even the carbs are low, man.
That's why.
Because it doesn't have sugar, but it's got natural sweeteners in it.
We figured out how to make the natural sweet.
This is my second one.
Whoever's watching.
This is really good, you know.
Check out joccofuel.com.
Check out origin, USA.com.
If you need geese for your jihitsu training, American-made geese.
Check those out.
Rash cards.
We know we sent some rash cards out to the cave.
I mean, I also pumped seeing those kids, man.
I just know how much it's impacting you.
It was just so awesome.
It's just so awesome to see that stuff.
And then Eschlonfront.com
where we're helping people with leadership.
And finally, jocco store.com.
Ego-Charles has his own little activities going on.
So we're in an outfit, sure.
This is a little system.
So that's what we're doing.
And thanks to everyone for listening in.
Thanks to our police and law enforcement out there holding the line.
Thanks to our military personnel.
And thanks to everyone that is out there trying to make
their little part of the world a little bit better.
Appreciate it.
Until next time, this is Jason and Jocko and Echo.
Out.
