Locked In with Ian Bick - VETERAN Hooked On HUFFING | Josh Austin
Episode Date: June 4, 2023After experiencing trauma in the military, Josh Austin starts abusing inhalants. Discharged from the service and trying to put his life together, Josh's addiction brings him down a path of destruction... causing him to lose everything. Listen to Josh's story of addiction, PTSD and struggle unfold and see how he is able to turn his life around.Connect with Josh Austin:Email: defeatedpodcast2152020@gmail.com Connect with Ian Bick: https://www.ianbick.com/Subscribe to our membership program on YouTube to get early access to interviews, see behind the scenes photos & more:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRvVklIft6DMelVW18M0oBw/joinPowered by Q29 Productions, LLC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You said this place was steps from the water.
We just haven't found the steps yet.
How much did we save?
Enough.
Enough to get lost!
Or you could book a stay with Hilton.
Welcome to your oceanfront room.
Just steps from the water.
The Hilton sale is on now.
Book on Hilton.com or the Hilton app
and save up to 20% to get the stay you expected.
When you want savings, not surprises.
It matters where you stay.
Hilton, for the stay.
Own it all.
Pay off your home, travel for life, drive a Ferrari.
In celebration of the world premiere of the Monopoly
Big Board Buckslot machine by Aristocrat Gaming,
Yamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel is giving one person a $1.6 million dream package.
The biggest prize in Yamava's history.
Club Serrano members can earn daily instant prizes
and secure a spot in the finale May 29th.
Don't pass go and own it all. Only at Yamava,
celebrating its 40th anniversary.
You win?
Details at Yamava.com must be 21-20.
Please gamble responsibly.
Monopoly is a trademark of Hasbro.
Hasbro is not a sponsor of this promotion.
On this week's episode of Lockton with Ian Bick, I interviewed Josh Austin, a military veteran who struggled with PTSD and addiction after coming out of the service.
Thank you guys for tuning into Lockton with Ian Bick, and I hope you enjoy the show.
Before we jump into today's interview, just a couple quick announcements for you guys.
If you guys could take a second and complete the survey in the description, if you're listening to this on YouTube or on our audio streaming platforms, click on that link to the survey.
It helps us make our show better, gets feedback from you guys, what you want to hear, what you want to see more of, maybe even what you want to see less of.
So when you guys get a second, just complete that interview for us. Also, on our YouTube channel, we are now offering an exclusive membership for $4.99 a month.
You could get access to interviews days in advance before they drop. You could see behind-the-scenes photos with our guests, and you can also interact with me personally.
I take the time to run all of my social media accounts.
So whenever you see us liking, commenting, whatever, that's me responding to you.
All right, guys, thank you for tuning into Lockton with Ian Bick.
Thank you for all the love and support you've been showing us.
As always, remember to like, comment, subscribe, share.
And thank you guys for tuning in to Lockton with Ian Bick.
Josh, welcome to Lockton with Ian Bick, man.
You're another Connecticut guy.
I am, yes, yeah.
Thank you for coming on the show.
and you were just saying you've listened to every episode of Locked in.
So, you know, it's cool to have the tables reverse for you.
And now you're a guest on the show.
Yeah, when I reached out to you, I was driving back from North Carolina saying some goodbyes, final goodbyes to some people.
And I just, I was driving and watching it at the same time.
And I was like, I'll message him.
And like, not expecting a response.
And I was like, you know, he responded.
And so I was like, oh, I'll just send him what I want to say, see how it goes.
And you're our second guest besides my dad, who.
hasn't been to prison before but has like a unique story, a unique perspective. You were in the
military and your path kind of unravels from there. But let's start at the beginning. Where are you
from originally and how did you grow up? So I was born in Pennsylvania. I only stayed there
about a year, Erie. And my mom moved to North Carolina when I was about two. That's where I grew up.
I grew up in a little small town called Belmont, North Carolina. It's literally 30 seconds from
Charlotte just right across the bridge. And when I tell my story, I used to, I say that I thought I grew up
in what I thought to be a normal home. And it seemed normal to me. My dad was an Nova Road truck driver.
He dropped out of high school, probably 16, 17. That's all he knew. He got a CDL's at 18 at that point.
And he would leave on Sunday nights and he wouldn't get home until Fridays. So that was normal.
That's all I knew. He, you know, he was a great man. He taught me a lot of things, but he wasn't there.
And my mom, she was a stay-at-home mom, but at the same time she was in and out of working, some jobs, it was weird.
And these events were between 8 and 12.
And she got a major back surgery at some point.
And now I know she was on those oxycontins.
And I didn't know what I was witnessing.
I would see her on the couch, just nodding out, cigarette burns on the couch.
She'd go very irate sometimes.
just out of nowhere.
And I didn't know what I was seeing.
I was just confused.
And it didn't seem normal at that point.
And so I was embarrassed to have anyone over at the house.
The house stunk.
It was messy.
It was disgusting.
Like, I didn't clean.
My sister didn't clean.
My mom wasn't cleaning.
And we had a couple dogs.
And we were nasty people.
And was it, what would you say, lower class, middle class?
We fluctuated between extremely poor.
For example, there were times we didn't have hot,
water and we didn't we got food out of the food pantry at the local church that was stale and then we
had periods of time that I feel like we were upper middle class my dad started his own trucking
company and bought two kin-kenworth trucks that were valued probably at that time four or five hundred
thousand in the in the mid-90s and he was able to just get that I don't even know what happened
do you think he did something like illegal or anything no I found out a lot of stuff moving forward
you know my I guess before my dad died he got to notice years later that my mom didn't pay any of the
taxes to the IRS and at this point it wasn't a criminal situation it was just we're taking everything
from you as much as we can and but he wasn't aware my dad wasn't book smart he didn't have a high
school education but he was a hard worker he worked for us we never went without the essentials and
my mom was going through an addiction that I wasn't that I didn't know she was hiding it he
wasn't there. You know, it was easy to hide. And at some point, she started drinking alcohol as well on,
on the oxies, which is a no-no. And things really started to go kind of dark for me at like 12 or 13.
My mom was, I think, like, she was in and out of rehab, but I didn't know what was going on.
I walked into the bathroom one day and there was blood everywhere and my mom was cutting herself.
Oh, wow. And that was shocking. I, like, you mentioned 12 years old seeing someone that you loved
in blood. And I just shut the door.
quick and what was going through your mind like the second you saw that i i i mean it's hard to answer
that question now because i am 34 and i i feel differently i have different up or different uh education
but as a 12 year old kid i was terrified i thought someone was dead and it was my mom and um she you know
when i opened the door she looked up surprised razor cutting and i went and got my dad and my dad came
man, I said, dad, you just need to go to the bathroom. And I didn't even know what to describe what I was
seen. And he opened the door and, you know, he obviously was very shocked. And she went in periods of
psychiatric units and, you know, it was very sad at times because she was locked out of the house.
And my dad said, under no circumstances, let her back in. And that's hard to do at 12, you know,
because you don't know what's going on. So do you have no relationship with her at this point?
Now or then? No, then. Like, as,
this was all occurring. No, she was very, she was very inconsistent. She, uh, people came,
we went to Christian school, uh, the youth pastor would come pick us up. Uh, they would come pick us up
for church. I mean, basketball practice. Everything that I needed to do, I was dependent on someone else.
She just, we didn't even ask her. Like, I mean, she was high one day driving and hit one of the
curbs and blew a tire out and I had to change it, you know, 11, 12 years old. And I'm not strong
enough at that point to do that, but, you know, I had to do it. You know, that's traumatic in itself.
And she's screaming at the top of her life. And she's screaming at the top of her.
lungs and you know it's like you don't understand as a child what's going on and so we we had somewhat
of a relationship like there were periods of times when she was sober it was okay um and she would work
she worked as a bookkeeper for a while uh in belmont for a long time and but what she was doing she was
drinking jimping in her in her cup you know she became a functioning alcoholic and um and so
the cutting thing happened which was one of my first memories that i can like traumatic memories
that I can remember.
And then my parents, my mom and my dad
set me down at the table and said,
Josh, we need to tell you something
and you're not going to understand this,
but we need you to pack a bag
and you're going to have to go live with your grandma.
Like tomorrow.
I'm 12 or 13 years old.
I'm very immature at almost every step of the way.
So, you know, I was wetting the bed until 11th.
Like that was my situation.
Okay.
And like, when you're,
meet. Why am I going to go live with my grandma? And then they dropped the first truth bomb on me that I
had ever been told in my life, which started the trust issues. My mom said, your dad is not your real dad.
Wow. Really? Their last name was Davis. My last name is Austin. It never occurred to me in school.
My sister was Davis. I was Austin. And at 13, do you think about your last name? I didn't. I was a carefree guy.
and I said, I didn't even know what to say.
He was the only person I knew.
And I said, okay, well, so I don't understand why I got to go to my grandmas.
And they said, well, your dad is in prison.
Your biological father's in prison.
And he is trying to sue for custody of you from prison.
Wow.
I don't know if that was possible.
Do you know what he was in prison for at that time?
I do.
He was arrested and convicted of raping three young girls.
Holy shit.
And so this is where the situation got very confusing for me at 13 years old.
I didn't know what rape was.
Okay.
They just said that he didn't tell me rape.
They just said he did something very bad and he's in prison.
So as a 13 year old, like, okay, if someone does something,
he murdered something.
Like, in my mind, it's murder.
Yeah.
And, and so I, I said, okay, I'll go pack the bag.
And they never brought the conversation up again, ever.
I never went anywhere. And so then I knew my parents had a file cabinet, and I went in the file cabinet.
I don't know why. I just went through the paperwork in there. And what I found out that was my mom was on some type of registered list as a victim, that if he was to die in prison or to be released or to escape, that she would be notified.
Now, I don't know what that necessarily means today. She never, we've never talked about this because I felt like something traumatic may have happened to her.
and because she's my mom, I don't want to have that conversation.
That's not something I want to say to her.
And so I pulled the papers out and I started to read what the transcripts from the court.
And this is all when you're 13 years old.
13, yeah, maybe 12.
I say 13, but yeah.
And so I start reading these transcripts.
And, you know, I have no understanding of legal jargon or, you know, prosecution or defense.
Like, I don't know.
Like, I've seen Judge Judy, right?
Like, that's comedy.
And what year is this, just to put it into perspective?
I'm born in 88, so 13, that's 2001.
Okay.
So June, somewhere around there.
And so I pull these papers out and I start reading them and I start seeing the word rape.
I've heard the word rape before, but it just didn't, they didn't tell me rape, you know.
So I knew that was a sexual offense.
And I saw the ages of the girls.
And I saw their testimony.
They all identified him in a car, a certain.
car. None of the girls knew each other. And reading that as a 13 year, I wish I could read it today.
But reading it as a 13 year old, it seemed like, hmm, looks like you did it. Right. And they didn't
tell me he did it. They didn't tell me he didn't. They just said, this is what's happening.
How much time was he serving to? He was, I think he got 56 years. And he was eligible for parole
when I was 46. So because of the fact that he was like petitioning to reclaim custody or whatever?
That was his initial sentence. He was, and I can't honestly remember exactly what the judge said,
but this was, it was sodomy, it was forcible rape. I mean, I might not be saying the actual
legal term, but it was very graphic what these girls accused him of. But he was trying to reclaim custody
of you or claim something from... His name was on my birth certificate and what he was.
trying to do was get his parents to get some type of power over me. So that affected your mom saying,
hey, I want you to go stay with your grandparents? Yeah, they kind of wanted me to disappear because they
didn't know. I think now knowing the legal system, a little that I do, I don't even think that was
possible. Like, no judge in their right mind would say, yeah, take this kid, 13 year old from his
parents, all he knows, and take them to Pennsylvania where he knows no one. Right. But my parents weren't
educated, right? They didn't know. They didn't know if the police were just going to show up with a van.
And I don't know what was said to them. I never had this conversation with them. I've never had
a lot of these conversations with them. Because there's nothing to accomplish at this point.
So what happens next? You go live at your gram? No, I don't go anywhere. It gets brought back up.
You stay there. Yeah, I stay there. I put the files back in the paperwork. And my mom says,
says, hey, listen, he wants to call you. Dennis wants to call you. How do you feel about that?
And again, they haven't told me what he did. Okay.
and I said, I don't know.
I don't know him any, from anyone from a bottle of ketchup.
And he was like, well, she's like, would you, will you at least try to talk to him?
Maybe this will get him to calm down.
And I was like, 13, right?
What do you want me to talk to him about?
I don't know this man.
My dad is my dad.
Like, I love him.
And I know what he's accused of at this point.
In the first conversation, I get that call.
This is Albine Prison, A, L-B-B-I-O-N prison in Erie County.
or whatever. I think that's what it was called. And he said, this is a prisoner, whatever it was.
You accept the collect called, Dennis Austin. Sure. And so I say hello. And he's like, hey, son.
I'm like, hey, son. I'm like, hello. He was like, how are you? I said, I guess I'm okay.
And he said, I really miss you. He's being weird. He's never seen you before, right?
Yeah, so my mom left when I was one. And she, and again, a lot of things I don't know.
she doesn't seem to want to talk about it.
And again, I don't want to talk about it.
Because I have a, we used to joke with my mom.
She said she was enlisted in the Air Force.
And we said, oh, you're AWOL, you're AWOL.
You know?
And when I got a little older, 16 or 17,
we were making a joke at the kitchen table one day.
And I said, you know, why were you AWOL from the Air Force?
And she said, because I didn't abort you.
She got pregnant while she was enlisted to be in the Air Force.
And she just got tired of our jokes.
So she was in the Air Force?
She had me at 21.
Wow.
Well, she wasn't, and she was enlisted.
She was ready to go to Lackland or whatever it was to boot camp.
Yeah.
And she wound up getting pregnant.
And once that happens, you're a no-go.
So how does the call go with your dad this first time?
Very awkward.
But I'm 13.
I feel like I have an obligation.
He's presented to me as my biological father.
I don't know exactly what that means, but obviously it's important.
And so I had casual conversation with him.
He was like, you know, what do you like?
I said, I love WWF, Stone Cold Steve Austin, Xbox, DeGyner.
I started, like, when he got that out of me, you know, I started talking about the things I
enjoyed, you know, and PlayStation and games, and then I sort of felt connected to him.
You know, it was manipulation, okay?
And it wasn't a long phone call.
It was, I don't know, it was 10 minutes or less.
And he said, well, can I call you back?
And I said, okay, I don't care.
But then I kind of felt like my dad was upset.
my real dad, my dad, my dad, who was raising me.
Like a little jealousy or something.
I don't know if he was.
I don't think he was.
I just felt like I was disrespecting him.
Like, but they told me to talk to him.
Like, they ask me, you know when you ask your kid,
hey, do you want to do this?
And they say no and you ask him four more times.
Like, sometimes you're just going to say yes.
And that's what I did.
And I didn't realize, you know, I don't know,
my dad, my dad raised me, took me as his own.
Yeah.
And we never had the conversation.
A lot of my story, I never had the conversation.
And it's okay.
But then I started to sneak and write them.
We had dial up, right, AOL, and I googled the prison.
I was savvy enough to find his prison number at that point.
It was still some type of online system.
And so I wrote them.
And behind my parents' back, didn't tell them.
And I went to the washroom one day, and there's some hornets.
And I stuck my arm up, and I got stung like nine times from these hornets.
And so I just wrote them, hey, you know, this is really weird.
I don't know who you are.
I read what you're accused of,
and I feel like you should tell me about that.
I said, also, FYI, I got stung by nine hornets.
Hear back from you soon.
And so I put it in the mailbox, snuck it down there.
Like, I didn't want them to know.
I felt like I was like, you know, like hurting them, you know?
I was just curious now.
You brought this in my life.
And I felt like, okay, I want to be curious about this.
And so evidently he gets the letter, reads it.
And he writes back.
however my parents intercept the letter
and my parents sit me back down at the kitchen table
and said Josh did you write Dennis
I'm a liar as a kid right I think we all are sometimes
I said no I didn't write I don't nope didn't write them
and he said well how did he know about the nine hornet stings on your arm
and I've always been a denied till I die kind of guy
like I'm up until four years ago
I got drunk and pissed the bed and with my wife
and I denied I got drunk yeah
so you know what I'm saying so I'm good with the story
And I was busted, but I kept trying.
And they were like, son, we're not mad.
Just what was your thought process?
And I said, I don't know.
You told me about this man.
And then I read his stuff and that he's accused of some horrible crimes.
And even in an early age, I thought, is that passed down to me?
Yeah.
Do I have some type of sexual deviation?
You know, it wasn't as well known then, but now you read it.
Some of that stuff is believed to be passed down genetically.
Were you worried about that?
like at that age were you thinking about that?
No, I never had a girlfriend.
My first girlfriend was my wife.
Really?
You know, and so I never had sex.
I was 270 pounds.
Very probably insecure with yourself?
Yeah, I was fat.
I was a 40 in the waist.
And, you know, I played basketball, so I was very athletic, even though I was very overweight.
I was just so big.
In Christian school at 6'2, 270, you are the biggest guy, unless you're playing for Oak Hill
or, like, you know, teams at Carmel O'Neill.
any go to, you know, or things like that.
So you're the odd one now?
Well, I was popular because I was good at the basketball game.
So did you have, like, friends?
I did, yeah.
I had friends, male friends.
But I never had never had a single interest from a female ever.
Not one, not even like someone that would have been like in my mind below my likings.
Do you think that like affected you mentally to want to like maybe go into the military or
go into finance or whatever because you wanted to like, you know, get that?
No.
I was raised.
in a Christian home.
And my faith is really strong.
It's always been very strong,
even though I haven't lived it out.
Even as of recently, I've made some mistakes.
And, but the thing is, is I really,
I was taught to value women at that point.
And, you know, having sex before marriage just wasn't really,
not that it, if anyone wants to do it, go for it.
But honestly, there's a lot of consequences that can come from that.
And that's what I recognized.
It was, it wasn't just sex.
it was, you know, like, it's this girl, she doesn't know, you know, she's not, maybe not emotionally
ready for this. And I know I'm not, you're not ready for that, 17, 16, 18, really. I mean, it happens,
but it's okay. And so, no, that wasn't the reason for the military. But with Dennis, the way that
kind of story ended is I admitted to it. And then he wrote me a birthday card and I opened the card.
This is where the relationship ended. It said, do you want to see a naked chick on the
front of the card. Now, keep in mind, my parents have still not told me what he's done.
Okay. I haven't asked, it's sex conversation with your parents at 13. And I open, I'm,
I'm opening the card, like, and it's a chicken. A chicken. Like a chick, like a baby chick.
Like, do you want to see a naked chick? And it was hand drawn and made, it was nice. I mean,
it was, he was, evidently, he was an artist. But considering, even if you were just accused and not
actually guilty of, from what I understand, sodomy, forcible rape, kidnapping, and, you know,
things against girls that were 16 or less. I think the youngest being 11. And I'm with the same page
with you. Like, that is the only thing unforgivable. Like, I will not help anyone that I, you know,
in that situation. And so my point was, is if you're accused of this, then maybe you should not
joke like that. Even if you're innocent. Like, you know, like, let's remove.
remove all appearances of culpability in that type of that ideology. I don't think it's curable.
And so I never responded again. I sent it to my mom. I said, listen, I'm sorry for writing.
This card makes me uncomfortable. I read his file. I know what he did. Please don't let this man contact
me again. And that was it. I never heard from him again. Now, do you end up finishing high school
too? Yeah, I did. I graduated at 17. And that was the next kind of traumatic event in my life,
but not as traumatic. I was working at McDonald's as 16 years old, and my parents were on the verge of
getting a divorce, but they, again, they like to sit me down.
A lot of sit downs on the family. So I appreciate it now, right? They were at least honest with me,
and I didn't have to like figure it out. Yeah, they did the best they can. And my mom and dad said,
listen, son, we're getting a divorce. We're broke, and we can't help you with college.
And so I'm working at McDonald's. I'm the fry guy.
I'm flipping fries all day.
265, 270.
It's 9 degrees on that station.
And I got these Hispanic people yelling at me, you know, and like, do this, do that.
I'm working for 7.25 an hour.
And I was like, okay, what do you mean?
You can't help me with college.
You can't like, cosign.
Like nothing.
He was like, no.
He said, we can't help you with anything.
He said, we're not going to charge your rent, but you've got to figure it out.
And so I was like, I will, nothing wrong with McDonald's, right?
One and four people have.
But at the same time, I said, this is not.
not for me. I was never driven or motivated career-wise at that point. You know, kind of like you were in
high school, I was very lazy. I was making Bs and Cs until my dad took me off the basketball team,
and then I was making straight A's. And so I was like, you know, I don't want to work at McDonald's
forever. Like that was my future in my mind, like McDonald's fries. And so I had a friend,
his name was Thompson, another senior. I graduated early because I transferred from Christian private
school to public school and I was way ahead of there to I tested out of everything that they need. I only
went a half a day from 8 to 12 or whatever it was. And so Thompson's like, hey, I'm joining the Army
and what are you doing? I said, I'm working at McDonald's, man. And he's like, you really want to do
that? I said, no. I said, I'm eating a big and tasty, a fry in a caramel Sunday with extra
caramel every single day. Like, I'm going to be 300 pounds. And I'm only six foot two. Like,
I don't spread out good. And he said, he said, he's a big and he said,
said, well, won't you come talk to this recruiter with me? And I was like, man, I ain't made out for
the, I'm not, I'm not like that. And he said, just come talk to me. They gave me $20,000 to join cash.
And you joined? That's a million dollars. That's college, right? And so I went and talked to this recruiter.
I'm going to say his name because I don't like him anymore. Jimmy Holler, Sergeant First
Class, Jimmy Holler, Belmont North Carolina. And he was a very nice guy, very salesman, right?
At 17, you could be sold into anything. 16, actually. And that's when I started.
of the conversation. I turned 17. And he said, I can't legally let you join until you're 17. And
he said, also, we have a weight problem. He said, you're 265, you're six foot two. I can get six
foot two and a quarter without your shoes on if you stand up straight. But the most you can weigh at 18 is
194 if you don't tape out well. And so they taped me and they said, okay, you need 25 pounds
to lose before we can even talk about joining. And he encouraged a needing disorder.
not in the sense that maybe a traditional person would think,
but he said, this is what you need to do.
He said, go home, eat one hamburger patty,
one square of ketchup, one square of mayonnaise or mustard.
That's it.
And after that, at 3.30, you run until it's dark.
And you don't stop.
If you have to crawl, you don't stop.
And I was committed.
You know what?
I didn't want to work at McDonald's.
And no one in my family had been to college.
We were poor.
We had crap.
never bought a house. No good cause. Nothing. Nothing. Like, I didn't care about possessions, but I was
embarrassed. I got off the school bus. There was a nicer house down the street with a pool. I would get off
there and pretend to walk there and then walk back to my house because I was so embarrassed of the life I had.
And that's got to be tough as a kid at that age just to be aware of what you have compared to others
and just to have that sit with you. I'm 17 years old walking two miles home from school because
I was embarrassed to ride the bus because my parents couldn't buy me a driver's license.
Are people teasing you at all? Are you getting bullied?
Well, yes, at first. I had it happened in the sixth grade.
I was expelled from the entire public school system, and that's how I got in a Christian school.
And over something, I really didn't even have much to do with.
We were sitting at the lunch table playing the game, like, hey, you think you can beat this dude up.
And you beat the guy up?
Well, no, no, I didn't beat anybody up.
We were just raising hands.
And I was sixth grade, and so was everybody else.
And we were like, we were at the football team.
And we were like, hey, you think you could beat this guy up.
Yeah, we could beat this guy up.
And then this other guy was like a truck.
you think you can beat this guy up and only one guy raised his hand.
I'm like, no, I'm on football team.
Like, I'm a big guy.
I'm bigger than him and he just runs me over.
And so he said, hey, Keith, sit down for a second.
And he said, Anthony just said he could beat you up.
And this is like my fur like flash, like, this is like a prison thing in my mind.
He's like, you think you can beat me up?
And this kid beat the crap out of him just for saying it.
He, his eye gets knocked out of his socket.
He's bleeding.
eighth grader on a sixth grader. He's bleeding everywhere. I thought he was dead. And they call the
police, obviously, the ambulance. And I don't think I'm in trouble, right? Like, we're just, he's in
trouble. He's the one that did the violence, right? They call me in and say, they said, we talked to
everyone at the table and they said, you were the one, I don't even know fight club was out there.
You were the, they didn't say that, but if that movie wasn't out yet, you were the one organizing
this fight, these fights. Fights, I said, we were just playing games. I said, I can't control what
that guy did. And they said, this is unacceptable. This kid's in the hospital. He has like brain
hemorrhagen or whatever. Like he didn't die, but they said, you are never, you're not allowed
back in the Gaston County public school system. And they called my parents and my parents were like,
well, what do we do with him? Like, you mean he can't ever come back? No, he can never come back.
He's a danger to the other students. I got a bad rap on that. That's wild. But I was big, right?
You know, I was intimidating. I had this face that can sometimes be intimidating. I didn't show much
emotion at that point. And at that point, I was very aggressive, you know, in regards to my attitude and
anger. Do you end up losing the weight to get into the military? Yeah, that's the eating. So it took me
12 days and I lost 27 pounds. In 12 days. I got down to under 240. And at that point, I was taping out.
It's like some David Gagons story right here. It's my favorite guy in the world. I patterned everything I did
after that after him. I'm not, I'm not David Gaggins, but I've run a thousand marathons. Yeah. And so you get into
the military, where are you stationed?
Well, I still had, I got down to like 235.
I was legally allowed to join, but I still had to lose another 30 pounds before they would
ship me out.
I went to your favorite place, Oklahoma, you know, Oklahoma City.
The training.
Didn't even know there was a prison there.
Yeah.
Until I started watching.
And what a shitty place.
And I joined up as field artillery because they told me, hey, it's a combat job,
but you'll never be on the front lines.
You got your $20,000 to join, and we'll pay for your master's, or bachelor's,
and doctorate if you want it.
but you got to do eight years.
Okay, eight years, whatever, that's fine.
That's nothing.
Like, do that on my head, you know?
Like, I'm an order-taking kind of guy at that point.
Like, shave, I'm on time.
I never had any problems.
Go to Fort Sill, get there about 221,
and I was in shape.
I was running a seven-and-a-half-minute mile,
which is B group runners.
And at some point about,
I was in Oset, which is 16 weeks a week one.
That was the last class to do that.
Some people go to boot camp and some would go to AIT.
You know, in AIT, you were like a real soldier at that point.
You could have a phone and do what you needed to do.
But in Osset, you got treated like trash for 16 weeks, yelled at like, that was your first day for 16 weeks.
And so I got there, I excelled.
I got down to 6, 15 minute miles and I fell in love with running.
Running was the first thing that I recognized.
I never done drugs, alcohol, nothing, no pill, nothing, never appealed to me.
And running, though, was a drug.
I got really good at it.
And that was something I never thought.
I tried to join the baseball team,
but because I couldn't run a 630 mile,
you were allowed to join,
but every practice you had to run it again.
Yeah, I used to hate running.
I was a terrible.
I did like a 12-minute mile.
It was bad.
Right.
So I just said, no, I ain't doing this after practice every day,
you know?
And then, again, I got really hooked into the,
not the fitness, but just the running.
Because the running was a mental escape.
I was losing this weight
at such a fast pace and, you know, I could see it.
But, you know, sometimes you can't see it.
I could see it.
Clothes weren't fitting.
No one was like saying, oh, you look good now.
You know, it was just I saw it.
I saw the results and that was all that mattered.
Get the Fort Sill.
I do that 16 weeks of that.
And, you know, I had a couple injuries in there, but it never stopped being air drums
ruptured, got pneumonia.
And they're training you to shoot.
You're doing all that kind of.
Yeah, I'm just learning how to basic, your basic rifle skills at this point.
point, again, I'm not a soldier. In my mind, I'm not trying to be a soldier. I just want my college
paid for. And they told me, artillery, you shoot bombs from miles away and you don't even see an enemy.
Well, I should have been a little smarter. We're in Iraq with buildings that we can't have
collateral damage anymore. You know, like, maybe we're not going to use that field artillery like
you was saying. And then they came up with an ex-caliber round that they could literally within one inch.
They could kill you and not me.
you know and so I loved it it was so a skill that I learned it was cool manly and you did that for eight
years uh no I that's I I did that for 16 weeks out of Fort Sill I got sent back to Fort Bragg
North Carolina and within and he told me that my unit had just got back and I wasn't going to
deploy at least for three years that was probably a lie I'm guessing oh yeah that's why they give me 20
grand no one gives you money for nothing right yeah and and so I get out I'm 18 at that point
and I get to the unit and it was fun.
I didn't do, they were a little more stricter with underage drinking at that point.
I never drank, ever.
I drank every once in a while, but not out of control.
But I stayed in the barracks and just stayed like a good,
I didn't go to the strip clubs, I didn't go, like everyone goes to the strip clubs,
tattoos and buys the car for 24.99% interest.
And I was just, at that point, I wanted to break at least one generational curse that I knew
and that was finances that if I ever had a family,
one day that they were not, they were going to work for what they got, but they weren't going to
struggle. You know, they were going to learn the value. And so I had to save all my money, every pity
that I was there. I ate at the freaking comments or the, the chow hall, which was disgusting,
nine times out of ten, but it was free. You know, I used, I used their clothes. I used their shoes.
I mean, I became this like, not the cheapskate, but, you know, I, I wouldn't buy anything.
Well, you had a mission. Like, you knew you wanted to go to college. This was just, like,
a means to an end. Like, you needed to, this was a stepping stone.
Right. So I'm about 19 at this point. We get the warning order that we're going to Iraq, and I'm panicking at this point. Like, I can't do that, right? I go to like this bar, I go to Barr, Charlie. I'm crying on the sidewalk in my uniform, like emotionally a wreck, because I'm going to war. And not only am I going to war is they're reclassing me as infantry. Infantry. No choice. This is what you're doing. Half of our unit got to Statefield artillery, and the other half of us went to Mississippi. And I went to,
through Levin Bravo training, which I should have went to Benning, but they didn't want to send me to
the real one. And so I went there, and then I also became a medic, and then I went through this
advanced rifle. I went through all these, learn these, all these skills. I could, if you had a sucking
chest wound, I could fix you. If I needed to drain your chest, I could do it. And I say I could
do it. They put me through a six-week class, and I was doing things that, you know, charge nurses
are probably not allowed to do.
Did you ever get comfortable, like in the military?
Oh, yeah.
So I got really hooked into the running, like I said,
and then my platoon sergeant, which I ended up hating
and trying to kill in Iraq,
invited me to come on the Army Marathon team.
Now, it wasn't a starter,
but to do on the Army Marathon team,
you have to average a 345 marathon.
And that's a Boston Marathon pace.
And I was running 650.
miles for 19 miles. I was a beast. I mean, I was a hundred and ninety pounds. Just, I was so angry at
life. Like, you know, like David Goggins, what he said? He's just, he got tired of looking at that
fat motherfucker in the mirror, right? I got tired of looking the poor guy. And I just, I kept running.
Like, I would, in the morning you had to do company PT. And that was, depending on your skill level,
the fat people got to do, had to do more, you know, and the people that were in shape did less,
but faster. So I would do like four or five miles and we would do it in 24 minutes. And this whole time
you're just thinking about getting out of the military and going to college. That's it. Right. Right. I'm
just doing my time. I, you know, I tried to explore going to college while I was in there, but I just didn't
have time and I wasn't driven. So what year do you get out of the military? Uh, I, my active duty ended in
2012. And you go right to college? Uh, yes. Yeah. What college do you go to? I went to the
University of Phoenix in Charlotte, and I got my bachelor's degree in business management, finance.
And from there you go to Liberty University. I went to seminary. And I was initially going to
Quintapac and rolled there, started classes there, and I had this shift in mind frame that my
talents were supposed to be used in a different manner. And that I, you know, I kind of skip through
the Iraq part. But I truly believe that I went through a lot of the things that I went through
to help the next man that is going through the same things.
And I had no Josh to help me through Army coming back from Iraq, marriage,
you know, things that, you know, college, I got my master's degree in a year, 11 months.
And, you know, and so I wanted someone, I wanted to be that person for someone
to walk them through what normal looks like now.
Did you have like a lot of, I guess you would say PTSD from Iraq coming back?
Yeah, my first three weeks in country, we had a suicide bomber attack that killed a lot of people.
And I don't try to be graphic about it, but I had brain material or something in my mouth.
It was that traumatic.
And when I got there, this is how naive I was, I thought I was just going to work.
I didn't realize I was going to the Sunni death triangle where the Sunnis, the Shiites and the Kurds.
And this isn't like, if me and you get into a fight, the police might be called.
know, if I kill you, you're just going to kill someone in my family. That's how they do it. They don't
call the police over there, you know, there's tribal. And it's not westernized at all. And when I got there,
first thing I remember out the country was the smell. You get to Kuwait first, and they keep you there for
three weeks because Kuwait's a little hotter. And they put your gear on. And you got to walk a mile
to the freaking chow hall, even though it's like a golden corral. It's amazing. And that was what really
messed me up about Iraq, too, is that I got to Kuwait, and this place was beautiful. There was putt,
There was movies.
There was, like I said, there was four chow halls that were golden corral style,
like any style food you wanted.
Phones, Starbucks, Pizza Hut, like everything you wanted.
Bathroom, showers.
I was living in nice tents.
And then after that three weeks, they were like, call my name and they're like,
okay, you're going to buy up, which is Baghdad International Airport.
And not like an airport you're thinking, but where Saddam was, his palaces.
And I'm like, that's going to be gravy, man.
like I get on the helicopter and the first time on a helicopter I'm like just cool shit feel
badass right and uh I get there same setup and now we're in tents though it's tense with
aces in them a little different accommodations but food food is the same golden corral style child chow and
that was my favorite place to eat as a kid so that was like why I say that and uh internet
PlayStation Xbox I was like dang man I stay here for my whole eight years and then they called out a few
names and mine was the next name and they said we need you go sit
on the tarmac and you're going to your base. I'm like, sure, let's go. You know, and I get there,
and this is a different experience this time. I fly from biop. It's night. I lay in gravel for six
hours waiting for this helicopter. Like, what the hell? It was like, hurry up and wait, you know.
And I get there. This helicopter literally just lands out of nowhere, no lights. I mean, I heard it,
but it was just so fast. They get in, they're screaming at you to get in, and I've got 150 pounds
of gear on. You know, I'm only 190 pounds.
and I get in and I'm like, hey, where we, don't, don't talk to us.
They don't, like, shut up.
Don't say anything.
Oh, okay.
You know, all right, this must be the Army.
I'm a private, you know, know, no my role.
And then we get, we fly about 30 minutes in the pitch black.
No lights on the helicopters blackout.
What I learned is that, that their bucket list item there was to blow those helicopters
out of the sky.
They would rather blow a helicopter out than kill me.
They'd kill me in the process.
But if they had a soldier on the ground or a helicopter in the sky,
the air, they want that. Black Hawk down kind of deal. That was their thing. And I didn't know what kind of,
I didn't know what I was going. I was just expecting the same hotel kind of style set up. And I wasn't like
that at all. Oh, no, I got a JSS Copper. And JSS Copper was no bigger than a football field track.
Like the whole setup, you know, the track and the field. And we had these 25, 30 foot T walls,
Jersey barrier kind of looking things. And then we had three or four 30 foot towers above them.
And I'm like, where am I at?
And we get there, I get off the plane.
They don't even, they don't even let you get off.
They make you jump out and the, the helicopter's gone.
They're not allowed to stay less than five seconds on the plane or on the ground now because they're a target.
And so I got to, you know, I jump out.
First Sergeant says, hey, welcome to JSS Copper, where this platoon you're replacing us.
Their 10th Mountain is who I replaced, which is, you know, right up here.
And First Sergeant, we walked in.
He said, you see that PVC pipe?
Yeah, he said, that's where you take a piss.
what?
Like, wait me, that's where...
Is this a joke?
Like, no, literally, that's where you take a piss.
Don't piss on the gravel because it stinks.
And then he took us to these wood boxes
and he said, you see these boxes in those bags?
That's where you defecate.
And I said, in a bag?
And he said, yeah, if you fuck up,
you're gonna go, you're gonna burn it at the end of the night.
Just to us all.
And how long do you spend out in this area?
Well, for the first six, three, three,
three weeks, two weeks, I was miserable. We did 12 hours on, 12 hours off of Tower Guard. And me and my
friend Beach, which was my best bud ever, and we sat in these towers for 12 hours each and weren't
allowed to sit, no books, no, no nothing. We mean, we had those, those original iPods at that
point. That's 2009 that I'm there, early 2009. And the first Tower Guard is fun, because you know what,
I can't write to be in a cell or something. Maybe you, maybe you talk to this guy and I knew Beach,
and we learned everything about each other.
I mean, we talked for 12 hours for about three days
and then we had nothing left to say to each other.
Like, we were sick of each other.
I don't care where you're from anymore.
Like, don't talk to me.
It's just, you're miserable.
It's 125 degrees outside.
And then in that concrete box, it's 140.
And you got 150 pounds of battle rattle.
I can't imagine that's crazy.
And you're not allowed to sit down.
Yeah.
You know, people are falling asleep
and I don't think it's obviously not going to be carried out at this point.
But like in World War II,
if you fell asleep on the job,
you could be executed.
Still on the books, but they treat it as it is a bad deal.
And what I didn't know at JSS Copper that I was out in the middle of nowhere.
And I tell people, is it, you know, most people have heard of Restrepo.
There's a, there's a base in Kandahar in Afghanistan, Restrepo.
And it's just on an outpost out and there's only 30, 40 of us out there,
you know, 50 at the max at one time. And we have to have, we have to have six,
people in these towers at all times, 24-7. And then we had to have four vehicles, 20 people going on
patrol for 16 hours a day, roving patrol. Are you seeing any action at all? Like, are you involved in
action directly? The first three weeks is when the suicide bomber attack happened. And yes, I was,
I was present there. And again, being so naive about what what the danger was. And,
Levi, he was from Belmont just like me. He was no different than me. He just had a couple,
he had a year or so of college. But officers that come out of college, you know, they get some
responsibility, but they don't know anything. They're an officer. They're in charge, but they got
the book smarts. And in that event, specifically in that event, that was May 21st, 2009.
You know, Lieutenant Levi and three other people that I barely knew. And I think another 13 men,
women and children lost their lives that day. And after an AAR review, which is an
after action review, military does that after everything, you know, successes or failures.
There came out some, they came out with some very alarming, not just negligent, but willful acts
of, I don't know, it looked intentional. And this captain had just come out of the army
and he had just been kicked out of another unit for not being safe.
And they took our captain away, which was he was a really good,
he was a band's man captain.
Like, he was a guy.
He didn't let the rank go to his head.
And we knew about this guy before he got there.
And what happened is, is when you're in Iraq or you're in war,
you don't set a pattern for anything.
You don't want anybody to pick up on anything that you're doing.
And, you know, because I wasn't in leadership, I just did what I was told.
got my 50 cow together. I put it together and put it on the top of the Humvee and I hated life.
I went on patrol. It was 15 minutes to MSR Tampa, which is their main road with no lines,
no directions, no organization. And we'd end up going to these small little towns, these farm towns
off of the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. Do you think that incident affected your future drug use?
I used the very same day for the first time in my life. After that incident happened.
Yeah, and my therapist at the vet center, after going through years of therapy, for years when I came back, I thought I was just crazy, I was delusional, I was seeing things.
I knew how smart I was, but smart people don't see things.
And there was a situation where a kid lost his life, and I started to see.
Wishing you could be there live for the big game, soaking up the atmosphere in the crowd.
But too often, life gets busy.
Or the price holds you back.
Priceline is here to help you make it happy.
With millions of deals on flights, hotels, and rental cars,
you can go see the game live.
Don't just dream about the trip.
Book it with Price Line.
Download the Priceline app or visitpriceline.com.
Actual prices may vary, limited time offer.
What's the difference between butter
and butter made from real California dairy?
It's the real California farm families behind it.
people, real care, real intention. Why? Because real matters. So whether you're pouring milk,
melting cheese, or just grabbing one more spoonful of yogurt, keep it real, look for the seal,
real California milk by real California farm families. See that kid. When I looked at my kids,
I saw that kid. When I saw a book bag, I saw that kid. And that started messing with me because I
thought I was going insane. And my wife, I loved my wife. She was beautiful out of my league.
And, you know, we met, I met her on Facebook. I flew a mutual friend. And when you've been in
Iraq for so long, they give you two weeks of R&R. You guys met after? No, no, I was in Iraq.
So you met, you got married while you're in the service? No, I waited. Well, like six months.
But, so I was going to go to Las Vegas on my two weeks leave because I just turned 21. And I could
legally drink and I want to do drugs. Like I wanted to try stuff. Prostitute maybe. Like I was ready to
go. You're not the breaking homage. What's that rum springer? Like I was ready to try it.
Yeah, you were to grew up that religious boy and now you wanted to break free. Like, okay,
let me decide. You know, like it's not that bad. You know how like Larry says, uh, what he said in your
podcast he was talking about, you know, um, may nothing wrong with drugs. Now I don't feel that way,
but at the end of day, maybe it should be legal. Maybe it wouldn't put fentanyl and stuff if it was
legal. What was that first drug you tried after that? Duster. Duster. What is Duster?
also computer cleaner. It's, you get it at Walmart and you spray, it just air comes out.
And that gets you high? It's like crack from what I was told. Never done crack, but when I would
go speak at in a meetings, they would say, that's crack, bud. And what happened was my therapist told me,
he said that, you know, the science behind the thing is I broke my back there in an injury,
L4 and L5. And I also had a TBI that went undiagnosed from my hitting my head. It was in my
emotional cortex. I found out here in Wappinger Falls nine years later. And it started to make
piece a lot of things together in my life. Between that and the traumatic experiences as a child, too.
Well, the injuries were physical injuries from Iraq. I had never experienced an injury in my, you know,
I had a couple concussions from football, but I quit after the second. Well, the mental, I guess you could say.
Yeah, the way it can explain to me now is that when you live in extreme fear for long periods of time,
that it literally rewires your brain.
And I understand that today to be true
because now I can't do crowds.
I can do now, but when I came back, I couldn't do crowds.
I couldn't do fireworks.
The first time I heard fireworks, I fell on the ground.
Back has to be against the wall.
I didn't trust anybody.
There were issues where, I mean,
I never was physically violent with my wife.
But at times, I was having flashbacks
of having hand-to-hand combat with someone
I was on top of her about to hit her.
And my wife was 5, 6, 6, 2, 25, and I mean, and I'm 6-2-2-25, fairly in shape at that point and could have done some damage.
How often are you doing drugs while you're still in the service?
Just in Iraq.
And what happened was I did.
Just that one time?
I did that one day.
And just as most addicts will describe to you, I fell in love with that.
And what that drug did to me was it accomplished what I needed to do first try.
it made me pass out and I didn't have to have have the thoughts in my brain. I didn't have to see these people. I didn't have to, you know, there were situations where I had to be violent with women and children in regards to throwing them on the ground because it's dark in there. The roof is only six foot two. I'm six foot four with a helmet and boots on. It's scary. The dust and it's chaotic. And you're not trying, I'm not trying to not be a human because I'm a very good person. So this was like your break away from all of that? Right. So the day that the suicide bomb
attack, I was introduced to the candor. He came in my room and I was like crying and he was like,
what the hell's wrong with you? Like, suck it up. Like if they see this, they're going to kick you out.
And at that point, there was a really negative stigma about mental illness. They didn't want any
crazies having a gun, you know, even though I was 20 years old. And, you know, they were asking me
to take a life. You know, I always told people, you know, the Army does a wonderful job teaching you how to
take a life. But what they don't teach you is how to deal with it. Now, when you got home,
were you addicted full-blown or it was it just like a thing that you had tried a few times and you were okay it got
progressively worse than iraq i tried it that first time fell in love my brain cut off i passed out and then
i started to hallucinate which i loved and so i made these small little deals with myself while i was in
iraq i'll only do it on this day i'll only do it um if something bad happens i just made all these
stupid deals that I broke them all. And I was eventually doing it while I was on patrol. And in,
like, the outdoor market, you know, I was literally huffing with a gun in my hand. So you're putting,
like, your patrolmen with you in danger, too. Right. The first time I got in trouble in the military
for that is I would volunteer for radio watch, even though it was hot as crap in these, no ACs, 1151's,
doors are 500 pounds. You can't open the windows because bullets will come in, right? And so I would always
volunteer for radio watch because I know I could go back and huff. I was like okay I can get away with
it here and I would huff and I didn't listen to radio people could have been like getting blown up I had no
idea and and that developed I ended up getting four article 15s which is punishment and in the army
and what that can look like is depending on the severity and the frequency of these article 15s they
have company and field grades and the last one I got was the worst one this is where I had to go see
the brain ranger, and they were contemplating dishonorably discharging me. Because I had done,
I've been, I've been demoted four times. I went from E4, corporal to E nothing four times. And I was
putting my other, my brothers in, in danger, honestly. They didn't blame me for what we were going
through. But again, I was, you know, I was selfish. And, and so the last time they found me
face down on the floor and the talk is where all the, like the communications are.
and I had just huffed it and put it back on the shelf
and then tried to run back to the computer.
I'd made this game, like, how far could I run?
You know, I could only make it like four feet
before I like, boom, passed out.
Yeah. Busted head, staples.
I needed staples.
And they were like, you've been huffing again,
but this time they couldn't find the can.
It wasn't in my hand.
And again, remember that lying?
I'll stick with the same story forever.
I don't care if you show me proof at that point.
And there was just no help for you.
Like no one's giving you help?
Well, yeah, there was no help.
There was, there is a cover up that's going on at that point with the duster.
And again, that's a, that's a whole other story.
But there were a lot of military service members dying from the duster in the country
because alcohol and drugs were not as prevalent as informal wars.
And this was an, this is, to get sand out, this is a widely accessible item.
And it makes you hire, I mean, I've never tried anything else to compare it.
But I don't, couldn't imagine.
wanting to do anything else. So you get home, you finish college, are you still doing this while
you're going to college, going to classes? In 2010, I had, when I came back, I came back in February
2010, I had one, I got, I was going back and forth to Walmart in Charlotte and getting three or four cans
at a time, making that work. And then I made the worst decision in my life and had the bright idea that
I got tired of driving back and forth to Walmart. And so I decided to sit in the parking lot and
do it. Well, what that ended up looking like was four consecutive days sitting in.
in a Pontiac solstice convertible, you know, crunched up in the passenger seat so I didn't get a DUI.
I pissed shit on myself, no eating, no drinking, and I did about 65 cans consecutively.
This is when you got back.
Within 45 days of coming back.
My PTSD issues were starting to onset.
They weren't severe yet, but the hallucinations were bothersome.
Could you have OD'd from this stuff?
I did in 2020.
I died.
here in Fishkill.
That is insane.
Yeah, so my dad, I broke my phone.
The stuff gets really cold.
You can't see it, but the can froze to my hand and almost lost my hand.
I had third degree tissue burns.
I had it in my genital areas, my legs could I pass out.
And Wappinger's Falls here thought about cutting my hand off.
And they revived you.
Well, this was a different scenario, but I went on a suicide mission and they couldn't revive me.
There's no narcan for Duster.
It's called Sudden Huffing Syndrome.
So how are you able to function through college to get a degree in everything while this is going on?
I stopped from 2010 to 2016.
Just randomly you were able to go cold turkey?
There's no addictive properties in the sense of withdrawals or cravings.
Now, I do have cravings now when it's cold outside because that's when I relapsed
and I can taste the bitter agent in there.
They put one to deter you from doing it.
Yeah.
And so like all I needed was 30 to 45 seconds.
If you took it away from me for that long,
I would come back to smart Josh,
not going to do that shit.
But the thing is, it's such a short high.
You just go back to back every 10 seconds, every 10 seconds.
I'm surprised you're able to take a break from that long period of time
and then go back into it.
What do you do when you finish college?
Well, I was working at the Hartford Insurance in Charlotte,
you know, not making great money,
but I didn't have a bachelor's degree and that was their,
requirement to be underwriter. And at this point, me and my wife, I was about to kill our neighbor
because my PTSD was literally going out out of this world. He was banging on the walls. And so I just,
my wife was eight or nine months pregnant at that time. I said, packed the shit up. There'll be a
realtor here Friday. I paid cash for the house. I said, we'll sell it. I'll just leave.
And we moved to New York. I transferred with the company. And I worked remote, which was a bad
decision. I had a lot of accountability, but I became, I've always been an extrovert.
but not wanting to be.
And because I was in the Army, I was in leadership at times.
And I, you know, I was put, I was always athletic or I could shoot well.
Like, I was always used in some type of form of leadership.
And so I always had to be outgoing.
But I didn't want to.
And so we moved to New York.
We moved to Patterson, New York.
We moved in with our in-laws.
Her parents?
Her parents.
Yeah.
Just until we could find a house because it was such a, we moved in two weeks.
And this is 2016?
2016.
We moved up February, 2016.
And you're, what, 30 years old, about, or 29?
Yeah, somewhere around, yeah, somewhere around there.
30.
Yeah, yeah.
No, well, way younger than that.
2016, what was seven years ago?
So 27, yeah.
27, okay.
And so I get there, and I had no job.
I was making about $21 an hour at the Hartford as a customer service rep.
And I couldn't buy a house here for that.
I didn't even, I was a victim of credit fraud while I was overseas.
One of my family members went from hospital to hospital and used my credit.
So I found that out by Fort Stewart trying to get a phone.
And they were like, hey, we need a thousand dollar deposit.
So what do you mean? They're like, stop fucking with us.
Like if you have really bad credit, you know,
if you have really good credit, you know.
And so I found out that it was a family member.
When I got to New York, that's kind of where that started to develop.
And I had two options.
I was either, I either had to get a lawyer and sue them and file charges against them.
Or what the lawyer said was that I was good at negotiating
and that it was going to take years.
But I could call and negotiate $50,000 on a quarter on a dollar.
and it was my mom.
You know, surprise, right?
Your mom was the one that did that.
Right, and went to different hospitals.
On my credit report today, I just bought my house.
They said, you have to acknowledge that you're a Melissa Perry, Austin.
And I said, listen, I'm not transgender.
You know, do I look like a Melissa?
Like, I'm not identifying as a woman.
Yeah.
And they said, it's still on your record.
We need to be able to come after that person if you don't pay your mortgage.
And I said, you know, it's not me.
And they said, just sign the paperwork, you know.
You're going to pay cash for the house anyway.
just sign it. Like, okay. So what job do you get into then? Well, that was interesting. I quit the
Hartford because I knew it wasn't going to be enough. I drive to Brewster right there at Acme. I walk into
that grocery store and there's a Chase Bank. I have no contacts here except her family. I have my
resume. And this is the first time in my life I'm going to take initiative and kind of be confident.
I walk in. I say, hey, I need to talk to the teller. I say, hey, I need to speak to the manager.
My name's Josh. And they said, well, what do you need? I said, well, I'm new to the area. I'm looking for a job. I wanted to
give them my resume. And they said, we're not hiring. And I said, okay, that's fine. I fully expected
that. This is not the traditional form of employment. I said, but what I do like to do is I want to
give her the application, whoever it is. And if you do hire, remember that I came in here and did this
anyways. She comes out, and she's very nice, very pleasant. Yeah, we're not hiring. You know,
I just graduated college. I moved here with my family. I'm really looking for a better job.
I love finances and sure enough I get a call the next day from the vice president of Chase Bank and says hey Josh I'm such and such do you mind coming down back to Brewster here and interview him with me and I said for what like I'm thinking tell her I got no experience he's like we want to make you a licensed relationship manager and I was like I was like I don't even know what that is but okay let's go but why just based off here all you had at the time was military in a bachelor's degree yeah finance yeah and I was like I was like I don't even know what that is but okay let's go but why just based off here all you had at the time was military in a bachelor's degree yeah in finance yeah
And so when I got there, he was like, hey, you know, nice to meet you in person.
He said, I heard about what you did.
And he said, you are the type of person that we're looking for.
You have an initiative that I'm not going to have to tell you to do anything here.
And so we're actually not hiring.
But after I heard what you did, I would like to open a position for you.
Now, this isn't going to be as easy as just accepting.
And I say, okay, he said, this is a license relationship manager.
This is Wall Street stuff.
And he says, how smart do you think you are?
I said, I don't know, I'm pretty smart.
Burn billions of brain cells, and I'm still good.
You know, joking, like, being serious, but you don't know what I'm talking about.
Yeah.
And he said, okay, well, listen, we're going to do this for you.
We're going to put you through a 16-week program.
You're going to go to White Plains, and you're going to sit in a class for 20 other people,
and you're going to get all your license, your Series 6, all your financial license to be on Wall Street and sell investments and be a financial advisor.
And, like, my eyes lit up because I was like, money, right?
money was always important to me, but in the wrong ways.
And so it's over a 70% fail rate to pass all three tests on the first time.
20 people in the class, only three of us passed every single test on the same time.
But at that point, I was using actively.
You got back to using again.
Yeah, 2016 was the first time.
It was August, July when I started at Chase.
What triggered you to use again?
I bought a house in Danbury that I literally had to gut the entire thing.
and I was doing this in cash.
And I am very dogmatic about debt.
And I was running out of money.
And I had a daughter and I had a baby
that was about to be born at Sleepy Hollow, New York.
And no insurance.
And I was going to, I learned the game.
Like they send you a $25,000 bill.
You tell them, I don't have insurance.
They send you a five and you're done.
You know, it was a cheaper way to do it at that point.
And I had not been, I had not been like any medic,
I had not been seen by the VA for anything yet, nothing.
And so I got caught in white planes, those big brown buildings down there, that was my office.
And I went to the bathroom. I went downstairs. I go to Uno's every day to eat for some reason.
Unos, what a classic. Yeah. And one day I got done with Unos, and I'm a history buff. I walk down,
there's like a World War II Nazi, not Nazi memorial, but a Jewish memorial. And I was reading the names. And I turned around.
There's a CVS behind me. It's hot. So I walked in. And I don't know what I did. I just gravitated towards the stationary aisle,
Like, not, like, I didn't need anything.
And I saw the can and I said, wow, this would be great.
I remember how fun that was in Iraq.
I forgot about it's in February, 2010 in Walmart.
And I went back to my office in this building as a licensed relationship manager,
students, go to the bathroom and I start huffing in the bathroom.
That's crazy.
And it just took off just right where I was at.
How much money were you making at this new job?
So Chase was the worst paying job.
They actually got me for cheap.
The salary was 40.
I got a $1,200 bonus a month, which was taxed at 39%, which was crap.
And then I got significant bonuses depending on how much investments I sold.
Okay.
Well, at this point, I wasn't, even though I passed all my tests at the same time,
I stayed in the White Plains Walmart parking lot the night before my test at 3 a.m.
and got high till 5 and set at least 15 alarm clocks.
so I didn't miss these tests.
So this is when it all starts going downhill.
Like your life's coming together,
but it's going downhill simultaneously.
The PTSD has completely fallen off.
I feel like I'm crazy.
The initial, the White Plains is the CBS issue.
I went to work on a Friday,
and my family knew nothing was wrong.
I didn't come home until Monday.
No calls.
They called every jail, every, like the first guest was Josh
might be in jail.
He's kind of crazy sometimes, you know,
or he was murdered.
Like, they literally called every hospital in New York.
Is this when your wife starts to realize
what you're doing? She didn't even know. No one knew what I was doing. They, they, they, they, they,
I had never even been to New York before. This was my first time in, in white plains, right? That was New York
to me. So when does this all start to blow up? Like, you were getting it together. You're trying to do
well, but you're still doing the drugs. But when does it like explode? I mean, it, it, it, it,
up into 2020 is when the worst relapse ever happened in my life. And up until that point,
uh, after the first three relapses, I couldn't fool my family anymore. Um, I've always
they always told me that I was charismatic and that I could talk my way out of anything and that
I was able to talk them out of a problem. And because it wasn't a real drug, they just said,
okay, no problem. Go to I'm arms acres or go to MCCA. I went to MCCA. I went to all these places,
you know, and just it got them off my back. You're not getting the help. You need them.
No, no, I'm not, but I'm getting caught at work. And because I'm successful at work at that point,
they're just overlooking it. So your boss is walking in, you're huffing in the back?
I fell on the floor in the bathroom and he heard the alarm.
That's what he went over there.
He's like, what's going on?
And the thing that saved me for the most time is, one, I was a good liar.
The second thing was that no one knew what I was doing.
No one knows what duster is.
You know, whippets.
If I say whip it, sometimes people know what that is.
I've heard the name Wuppets before.
You know, but huffing the canned air is a whole different ballgame, you know.
And he caught me in the bathroom.
He said, what are you doing?
And I'm so disoriented.
I said, man, it was hot outside.
I just fell.
And he said, so you fell aside.
Is that what your story is?
I said, yeah, fell aside.
And he said, all right, go back to your office.
And I thought I was fired.
I had a friend, him, Ron, here in Mayopac,
and he was like, dude, I just heard what happened.
And he was like, what's wrong with you?
You got problems, man.
And I said, yeah, I got problems for sure.
You just don't know.
And I was just waiting for them to come tap me on the shoulder.
and as having all these financial license,
I mean, you can't have,
you can't have any criminal record.
You can't fail drug test.
You have to have tip top credit.
They run financials on you
to make sure that you don't leverage yourself
in a way that would lead you to bad financial recommendations.
When does like your wife leave out of this?
Not until 2018.
She's socially leaving in 2018.
She's like, I'm done.
Like, I can't do this?
No, I relapsed again very badly.
You know, I relapsed probably about seven.
seven times from 2016 to 2018, all involving Danbury police officers. And the thing is,
this is not illegal to do what I did. I was very smart. I knew it wasn't illegal. It wasn't even
considered public intoxication because it didn't meet the definition. And I sat in the passenger seat
of the vehicle. So they couldn't, they said, I was so high, they would say, hey, go to the hospital.
We're going to make this a pain for you. And then I found out they couldn't do anything. And I was
like, F you. And then one guy was like, I'm a veteran. Like, come on, dude. I found a dude. I found a
dead behind, like the Walgreens on Main Street just a week ago, please don't do this to me.
Like, I literally found someone dead doing the same thing. He's like, please just go to the hospital.
And so I would go back and forth to Danbury Hospital, you know, and go, they would sit
me, put me in the behavioral unit. And I learned the game really quick. At that point, I had,
I had got my master's degree. I had some psychology degrees in there. And I mean, all I needed to do
was pass a couple tests to be an actual psychologist therapist, like legit at Danbury
hospital. And so I knew the rules. I knew they couldn't keep me. I didn't threaten to kill myself.
And some abuse is not a real problem. And it's not like New York where they have Kendra's law.
Like there's a lot of things that they just couldn't do. And they couldn't bluff me. And they would
make me sit there all day. But I knew my rights. And so I just waited. I said, all right.
They said, well, we're not letting you go unless someone picks you up. All right. I'll sit here all
night then. And so that was the, that was from 2016 and 2018. My wife said finally enough,
this is, this is, you're done. And that's when I finally.
only went to 90-day program. I've done a couple 30-day programs. I went to Montrose. I did the VA here
in Montrose. I did 70 days there. I did a bunch of different programs. But none of that will
worked at all. I wasn't a participant in the recovery. You just went to go. I knew if I did 30 days.
When I got back, all would be well. Go back to work. Let's bring the money back in. And you're good.
Are you making like enough money to live off of at these jobs? At that point, I was making about 80, 90,000.
but then Key Bank recruited me.
All I did was going there to make a professional connection between two banks.
And so the manager was from Yugoslavia, and she said, hey, we're really hiring a license
manager.
She said, what are you making over there in the grocery store?
And I hated it.
Like, it's grocery store clients.
Like, they're not the same.
Like, when I worked in Manhattan off of Liberty Street, like, those guys were something else.
You know, like, that was a challenge.
You know, getting someone to give you millions of dollars, you know, that could disappear is hard, right?
Like, they're accepting that this money might disappear, you know, or it could.
And so it was a three or four meaning transaction, which I loved.
It was like, you know, it was like I was working it.
That was my thing.
Like, I could see it progressing.
I could see the eyes, their eyes light up.
So that's where you're able to make, like, the bulkier money from when he went to Key Bank?
Yeah, they doubled my salary and gave me a lot more bonuses.
And then I end up being the branch man.
manager of Jefferson Valley, Mayapac. I got that a weird way. They want me to sell debt. And that was
really the end of the job. I couldn't sell debt. It was just against my, I don't tell people they
shouldn't. I just, it was against my morals and values to sell something I'm not going to use.
Now, how do you end up getting into legal troubles? Like, when's the first time you, like,
break the law or get into, like, a little bit of a mess? That was on February the 9th of 2020.
I relapsed after 14 months the day before.
And I went to coup and went drinking,
starting to went drinking with my friend,
my army buddy with two girls.
And I was married at the time.
But we were disconnecting,
but I was so disgusted with this chick that was there.
I wasn't even interested.
I felt asleep at the bar
because it had been six years since I drank
and one Long Island took me out.
And so that was Sunday night.
I was watching some basketball game.
And I got up at 11 o'clock,
said, man, I'm going to get high. Like, I want to do this. I went over to Walgreens on Main Street,
and they actually had my fate. Like, this is how messed up I am. I have a favorite brand. It's the black
label, or the black top. There's green, black, blue, and they all taste a little different. They're
all disgusting, but that one hit me differently. Yeah. And I went there. Someone always sees me in there.
Like, I had, at that time, I just had a, I was very frugal paying cash for cars. I had like a, just a
2016 Nissan Centro was my wife's car. But you're still working at the time? Yeah, and I just got awarded
over, you know, almost $200,000 from the VA from a case I won with them. They, the, the army actually
was held liable for torture, mental torture. They made me do things like walk through minefields and
like, this is all verified. Like, no one at the age of 29 gets 100% disability rating and hundreds
of thousands of dollars in back pay. So you go into this Walgreens. What do you do?
do. I just go and get everything off the, it's 11 o'clock. I go get everything off the shelf.
You steal it? No, no, I paid for it. It's only $4 a can. And I have, I have no debt and I'm making
$15,000 a month, you know. And where does it go wrong? Well, what's the problem? Well, the problem is,
I was an idiot and I just should have went home. And, and people would see me doing things in the car
and call the police. And you get arrested for this? No, it's not illegal. They couldn't arrest me.
And so what the cops would do at first, they would say, hey, listen, either go to the hospital or we're going to have a
problem. And I was, I had, you know, I had these financial license. I didn't want to get a
misdemeanor. I didn't want to get anything. And that was another reason that appealed to me is it
didn't show up on a drug test. And so, you know, there's about seven or eight incidents with the
police in Danbury within like days of each other. Okay. I got arrested on February the night.
I went to Walmart to get high all day. It was going to be an all day episode. And so for whatever
happened. I walked into Walmart and I walk out and I was an idiot and I started huffing before I got to the car
and I passed out into, I don't know what she, if she sees this, I would love to meet her because of the
ending of the story. I don't even know what she looks like. All I know is I fell into a woman,
a young woman with a baby. And the next thing I know, I, my jaw is broken in four places. I am
pushed up against a car, taser prongs in me, handcuffed and the cops are just beating the shit
out of me. Like, I'm out cold. My jaw is, my bone is literally sticking out of my chin, okay?
And they're pissed at this time. Like, they're like, like, I fought them. Like, I got the best
of one of them and the rest of them got me. And, uh, and so they, they, they weren't nice at all, like,
being violent with me, even after I, like, I was so high in feeling any pain, so it was okay.
But they slammed me in the car. I hit my head. They take me to the Danbury Police Station.
I just built myself right out there. I mean, it's only $25,000.
our bail. But this was a charge. What was the actual charge? A felony robbery in the first degree.
So this could affect your whole job at this point? Oh, you cannot hold license with a felony.
So are you worried? Like, what's your mind? It hadn't hit in yet. I didn't know what I got arrested for.
I asked, when I asked the cop what I got arrested for, he told me to shut the fuck up. I was like, what?
Like, what I get arrested for? You know, like, he wouldn't tell me, you know? He said, we already read those rights to you.
whatever bro and so i go they put me in denberry jail and they're like we're going to strip you out
blah blah blah and i said i'm paying my what's my what's my bail like i'm paying it right now
and i said here's my debit card he's like i'm out and then they made like i paid my whole bail it was
$25,000 which was only $2,700 whatever it was and they made me call my friend down there and he
had to still put up a truck for collateral so i didn't know what was going on i knew this had to be
somewhat serious but again they didn't give me any papers they didn't
tell me anything. These cops were just like ignoring me. I never saw a cell. I was in that,
been to Danbury Police, you walk in, there's like a little cage and you get your picture taken,
and then they give you the opportunity to make a call right there. Yeah. And they were like,
you should just wait to see a judge that'll lower your bail. And I'm like, I'm not fucking staying here.
Like, I want to go get back high. You know, that's my thoughts. And so I'm walking out of the
police station. Some lieutenant says, listen, he said, I heard you're a veteran. I heard you
in Iraq. I heard you have some combat stuff. He said, listen, you're not a bad guy. I already know who you
are. He's like, accept help. I'll get you out of this. And I looked at him and I said,
fuck you. Like, I don't give a shit about your help. I said, your cop just beat the shit out of me,
not knowing my jaw was broken. Like, I couldn't even talk barely. And he said, listen,
here's my card. Think about it. And so I was like, my friend Eric came and got me. He's like,
man, what the fuck is wrong with you, man? Like, are you going to kill yourself? I said,
probably. You know, I just got felonies. I got two felonies. It was, I don't
know if it was assault on a police officer. It was something resisting arrest. I mean, there was a lot
of stuff going on. The only misdemeanor was breach of peace. And what was like the outcome? Did you get
convicted of this? Do you solve it? What happens? Because I went to Teen Challenge and went all these
rehabs, the victim said that I had truly changed my life and that I shouldn't be punished for the rest of my
life for an mental illness that I didn't have treated. Was that your breaking point to get clean at that point,
this whole incident? That was my rock bottom. And not only was it rock bottom, it had a trap door.
And you lost your wife, you lost your family. Did you lose your job too at that point?
At that point, I had transitioned to, as an accountant at Western Connecticut Orthopedic
Surgical Center. And that's where I was using in the Port of John. And I was I was the senior
accountant for a, you know, outpatient facility. And yeah, at that point, I was holding a,
some license that pending charges weren't an issue, but I did have to report them. So rock bottom
you're at. Jalls broken in four places. How do you redeem yourself from then? How, after all this time,
why did you want to get your life back together? I realized that, I realized a lot of things in the
hospital in Fishkill after I died. I died in the Hampton Inn here in Fishkill or somewhere around
there. The guy said, bro, you're dead. You're purple. And that hit me real hard. And they told my wife,
was dead. And that was the kind of what started to make me think, you know, this, this is,
this is more than a problem. And so they walk me out. She turns white as a ghost. I mean,
they just told her I was dead. No, like, not maybe, but he's gone. And they called the more,
like, they literally called the truck in. And I woke up and just like Frankenstein and
no idea what happened. So I'm in that hospital in Fishkill, St. Francis or whatever it is.
I don't know. I don't remember any of these places I was at. And the doctor treats me like a real
asshole. And he can tell my jaw is broken, but he's like, I'm not helping you. He literally
treated Mike an addict. And I'm sitting in that. I got pictures. I'll show you later. But I was
sitting in that bed. And for the first time in my life, I acknowledged that I had a problem. And I didn't
just have a drug problem. You know, I had an addiction, I had a behavior problem. I had a eating
disorder. I was bulimic at that point. It was a way to control my stress. I learned it in the military.
And I had a bunch of issues and that my wife literally had no clue. No clue. I was just this
successful in the community, successful banker accountant. And no one knew. And in that,
I finally realized I had went from 220 pounds to 187 pounds, bone sticking out of my chin.
I had burn marks all over my body. I was in my underwriting. I was in my underwriting.
where she had took my shoes. I had two guards at the door because I had just ran from an ambulance
that day. And I said, I'm done. Like, you know, misdemeanors, even if you haven't been in the legal
system, you think that's overcomable, right? No criminal. I had a DUI when I was 18, just a stupid 18 thing,
never again. And I was like, all right, misdemeanors are okay. I can get, I can do that. I'm military.
The bet card works a lot. But when I, when I learned about my charges,
and what the cops wrote up and how vicious they said it was,
I knew this was the end of the road.
My life was going to look different.
And so I decided that I knew I was going to lose everything.
And that was okay.
And I surrendered.
And I was confident in myself that even if I lost everything,
that even with a felony, I could come back out here.
And I'm a great salesman.
I could go work and sell cars and be okay.
And you've been clean ever since?
Ever since you...
I've been clean since February 14th, 20th.
That's awesome.
And so I made that surrender and I made this promise to God.
I kind of came back to my faith.
I said, God, don't get me out of the.
I'm not asking you to get me out of these problems.
Don't, please don't.
I don't want my, don't, my wife doesn't have to stay.
I don't need my kids.
I don't need anything anymore.
God, I just want my mind back.
I just want to feel sane.
That's it, God.
I'll go to jail.
Just give me my mind back.
And if that's what it takes for me to go to prison, I'll do it.
Like I literally, I said this out loud.
And in that moment,
I felt a moment of peace.
Did you get it back to this day?
Do you feel like you're at peace now?
You know, it's a daily struggle.
I don't have any addiction issues anymore.
But what I do have is I do have mental illness and PTSD out.
I am 100% disabled permanently and totally for a PTSD for the things that I witnessed and
went through in the Army.
Do you actively talk to someone?
I do.
Yeah, I do.
I go to the vet centers, which are very, I go here in Dan Berry, right there.
they moved, but right there at exit five, that big brown building is where I've been going since
2016 until I moved to Waterford. And then I worked in West Haven for a little bit, and I started
going there. And I started doing EMDR treatment, which I was very anti-EMDR at first, because I could
never close my eyes. And that was the best treatment. I went to Kentucky for a CBT treatment where I had to
write my trauma out a hundred times in 70 days. And the therapist picked apart all of the different
is in the story. And what that helped me was to determine what the lies were, what the truths were.
Not the lies, like intentional, but like the exaggerations of what I saw or what I thought I saw.
And when I started doing the MDR treatment, I learned that the 34-year-old Josh cannot judge a 17-year-old
Josh. And what do you do now? What helps you stay grounded? What are you focused on?
I'm very heavily focused on recovery. I speak at meetings for the entire year of 2021 and most of
22, I spoke probably about 75 times at various faith-based functions in Connecticut,
some in New York here in LaGrangeville and other places. I started traveling to North Carolina,
and I kept doing it, but I was getting money, and they were paying me like $400 for 40 minutes
of talking. And money's always been an issue with me. Money's always been a indicator of my
sobriety and how well I'm doing. And so I started doing it for free because I started creeping back
into that mind frame, I must be something. Like, I must have done something right. And honestly,
it was nothing I did. I did surrender to rehab. And I went to rehab for 18 consecutive months
in patient and borderline a crack house in New Haven, you know, with men that I didn't connect with
until I decided I was one of them. Now, what's your message to someone that finds themselves
in a similar shoes as you? Maybe they were in the military and coming home or not even in the
military and falls down that path. What do you say to them? How do they make it through to the other side?
I think that, you know, a military person would really understand we have the soldiers creed. And one of the
sentences in the soldiers creed is I will never quit or I'll never leave a fallen comrade. You know,
I always maintain my arms. I always maintain my post. You know, all these different things that you
promise that you'll do. And what I learned in my life and what I would tell another veteran that is probably
in a similar situation is that if you're honest with yourself, you've broken 500 promises to
yourself. And it's become easier and easier to break the bigger ones. And what I would tell someone
is if they found themselves in my situation, I can't promise a similar outcome. I thought I was
going to prison. The Connecticut code said one to three years. The lawyer wasn't telling me,
like, I think what he was doing was even though he was going to play down the case. I think he was just
trying to make, keep me honest. And so what I would say is if you find yourself in the situation,
you know, faith is really the only thing that's helped me. I've tried every secular program
in the United States on the East Coast. I have paid $25,000 out of pocket to go to a luxury
Malibu rehab, you know, because I thought that's what, you know, a professional needed. And,
you know, everything didn't work. I was going to meetings. I, you know, I was going to this, that,
speaking, none of this worked, you know, and, and, you know, and, and, you know, and, and, and, you know, and,
that what changed in my life is when I took the knowledge I had my head and applied it to my heart.
And I accepted that I made some mistakes and I stopped beating myself up and that I truly did not
know how this was going to over how it was going to the outcome was going to be. And,
but I said no matter what God, it doesn't matter, I've committed to this process. And if that
looks like felonies, if that looks like prison time, I'm going to show other people that even with
these things, I can do it. So that that person that is is an addiction,
or maybe had just been introduced to the criminal justice system for the first time.
Yeah, it's scary.
Yeah, you messed up.
But you know what?
Do more than the court is going to tell you to do.
That's what the judge said.
He said, you've done 100 times more than what the court was going to tell you.
He said, the maximum I could have sentenced you was for three years,
and that is if you had aggravating factors or you had multiple different things.
And he said, I would have probably given you six months suspended or something.
And he said, but you know what?
You served 18 months in jail.
You know, New Haven Teen Challenge was no TV, no phone, no visitations, 5 a.m., 11 p.m., work.
And I did that for 15, 18 months.
And then I worked there for $140 a month as a therapist.
That's awesome.
And so that's when the judge said, you know, he said, you, it was all surreal.
I've heard, you know, people getting, like, lengthy sentences on YouTube and they say, like, they can't hear it anymore.
And when he's, the lawyer told me that even though the, the, the victim agreed to this outcome, that the judge had to agree, which I didn't understand. The prosecutor agreed. The victim agreed. Like, there's no crime, right? But no, so I was nervous. He said, I don't know what's going to happen. I figure like, he's not playing around. And you got a second chance. Right. He said, Mr. Austin. He said, he said, truly in the 40 years that I've been practicing law and, you know, as a lawyer and judging and whatever, you know, whatever. You know, whatever.
is he said i have never met someone ever that finds themselves in a situation like this and just doesn't
quit on life and make things worse and at this point i'm going in and out of what he's saying because i'm
i know where this is going to end and he said he said you know young man he said you know this has
nothing to do with your your veteran status this has nothing to do with your professional status
this has nothing to do with your reputation in the community this has everything to do that you are a
changed person and I believe it. I'm not expecting that. And he said, you know, he said,
you've earned a Nali per se, which I didn't know what that was. I was pissed once I found out
what it was, because my lawyer didn't tell me that. But that was a, that was an insurance policy
that I had to stay clean another 16 months, you know, that if I got into a, a trespassing
issue, that the state could bring back these charges and would.
because of another criminal, you know, criminal mischief, no matter how minor it was.
He, they said something to the effect if I got a stop sign ticket.
Like, I don't think that was true, but.
And so he said, you know, he said, you know, I want you to leave here.
And he said, I know what you're doing now.
I got the letter from Teen Challenge.
And he said, you're going to impact men.
And you're going to, you're going to, you're going to show and walk, walk through people, walk with people through the same system.
And I have, I have had, I've walked through with other people with very little knowledge of the criminal justice.
but knowing what I just did to navigate it.
And so I left that courthouse that day,
and I cried, I collapsed in the stairwell
because for the first time I saw real success in my work.
Up until then, I was just being used at Teen Challenge.
I was a commodity at that point.
You know, I was talent, and they don't get people with master's degrees,
and they don't get people that have teeth.
And, you know, like, when you get there,
it's either death, prison, like, you've lost all your brain, you know.
I'm one of the rarer guys that come in there.
And you, well, you've been able to make it through the other side.
I think you definitely have like a story of hope and a message of hope.
And there's so many people that I'm sure are in your position coming out of the military
or even if they haven't been to the military.
And they deal with addiction and struggle.
And, you know, a lot of people don't make it to that success aspect of it because they, you know, they end up dead.
You hear about that all the time.
So, you know, I really appreciate you coming on and sharing your story today.
and hopefully we can impact some lives with this with this story and you know it's a story of hope and
success in that so thanks for coming on locked in with ian bick and we wish you all the best thank you so much
