Shawn Ryan Show - #178 Ben Owen - Inside the Life of an Addict
Episode Date: March 3, 2025Ben Owen is an Army Infantry veteran, a father to eight children, graduate of the University of Alabama, and American Patriot. From startups to Fortune 500 companies, Ben has excelled in leadership, s...trategy, raising brand awareness and sales. He is the President of digital media and data intel company Black Rifle Co, co-founder of We Fight Monsters, and CEO of Flanders Fields, where his mission is to stand up as many Flanders owned clean living facilities as possible to get veterans clean and off the streets through volunteer missions in the United States and around the world. As a previously homeless and addicted veteran, Ben has seen some of the worst the world has to offer. In this episode, he shares his story of rising above the extraordinary hardships he’s faced in order to bring hope and help to as many people as he can. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner https://amac.us/srs https://meetfabric.com/shawn https://americanfinancing.net/srs | 866-781-8900 | NMLS 182334, www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://patriotmobile.com/srs | 972-PATRIOT This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/srs and get on your way to being your best self. https://helixsleep.com/srs https://rocketmoney.com/srs https://prizepicks.onelink.me/LME0/SRS https://blackbuffalo.com Ben Owen Links: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/therealbenowen/ LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/therealbenowen Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/p/Ben-Owen-100077606762984/ Black Rifle Co - https://www.blackrifle.company/ Flanders Fields - https://flandersfields.org/ We Fight Monsters - https://wefightmonsters.org/ Once American - https://onceamerican.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I know my team's getting ready to go down there and do that with you.
Yeah.
I'm going to take them to 1428 Wilburne Street, the house that used to be full of bullet holes.
There is a woman and her three children living in that house that just celebrated Christmas.
The women that used to sell dope out of that house, I've got them housed in another old trap house around the corner.
So I was nearing rock bottom and stole a bunch of dope from Creisha.
Do you know that?
Yeah, and I want to kid you did they.
You know, when the doctors told me that I was dying and I was really relieved because I was sick of living like that.
You know, I was really couldn't be more stoked about it.
I mean, I didn't want to die a junkie, but that's kind of where life it brought me.
This is where we house the females who were selling their bodies.
Those who would not submit they got dealt with harshly, very harshly.
I started using when I was 12 years old.
My life just started getting worse after that, constantly in and out of jail.
didn't beat on,
domestic violence,
Ben Owen.
Sean Ryan.
Welcome to the show, man.
Thank you, sir.
I've been really looking forward to this one.
I have too.
It's an absolute honor to be here.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well, it's an honor to have you,
and I love your hat.
Thank you.
4444 is my number.
Is it?
Oh, yeah.
So explain that to you.
I've heard 4444 is an angel number.
I don't know why.
It is.
So, long story.
but about, I think it's been about two years now.
Had basically had God like slapped me on the face in Sedona.
And I won't get into it because we'll be here all day.
But like, no shit.
He just like showed up three times back to back to back in my life.
And then I came home and I was telling,
I had called this guy Eddie Penny, who's a friend of mine.
We worked together in the SEAL teams very early on.
And then we reconnected through the show.
And when he came on, it's like the whole dynamic of my show kind of changed.
His journey to faith and how he found Christ was just, like, astounding.
And sent waves, like, throughout the listenership.
of the show.
And after he came on, it was like every person that came on the show talked about Jesus or their
belief in Christ or, you know what I mean?
Something like that.
Every single one for the longest time, I think it was over a year.
And, you know, I started putting it together and I was like, man.
And I released Eddie's episode on Christmas.
And then I have my own experience in Sedona.
where I had done psychedelics to get over some stuff.
We can get into that later.
But it kind of like, it didn't, psychedelics didn't like reignite my belief in Christ or anything like that,
but it made me realize there's something more out there.
And so I was searching all kinds of stuff looking at fucking crystals and you name it, man.
I was like trying to figure it out.
And then Sedona happened.
Long story short, this guy read my mind from front to back.
I read my mind.
Every thought in my head he articulated right to my face,
had never seen him before, nothing.
And then two more things happened right after that.
And came home called Eddie to tell him about it.
And he was talking about guardian angels
and all this other stuff.
And then I called this IT guy that used to work for me,
also a good friend and kind of a spiritual-type mentor in my new journey.
And those two had talked about the exact same thing back-to-back.
They don't know each other, also about Guardian Angels.
I thought we were talking about email blasts when I called.
His name was Adam.
His name is Adam.
and came home from lunch after that.
This was like a super powerful experience for me,
this whole timeline from Sedona.
And I called Eddie because I wanted to talk to him about what had happened.
And he's also a mentor of mine with this stuff.
Got back in my truck to go to work, looked at the clock, 444.
Looked at the, you know, miles left to empty, 444.
four hours and 44 minutes after I had the conversation with Adam,
because that call was scheduled at noon,
got to the studio, got with my head of social media,
I was like, hey, what does 4-4-4 mean?
This just happened to me.
We looked it up.
It said, your guardian angel wants you to know that he's watching over you.
And like I said, the conversation,
four hours and 44 minutes before that, was about,
that's awesome.
your guardian angel knows that you knew you before you were ever even born and all this other
stuff and so then i started like seeing that number everywhere like everywhere oh yeah
444 comments 444 likes 444 on the clock it was just it was just everywhere and
now like i've really through my journey are you
Christian?
Absolutely.
Through my journey, and my whole team's like really wrapped up in this,
like way better versed in this than I am.
And, you know, some of the guys you meant downstairs, like Darren, I mean, he knows
he grew up as a Jehovah's Witness, escaped all of that, but knows the Bible like
the back of his hand, so he's been a mentor of mine.
my old head of production
Elijah grew up Baptist
so all these guys like
who I never really
I can't say I didn't pay attention to them
but not in that aspect
of like really like
helped answer a lot of questions that I have
and any time I read something out of the Bible
they're always there to help me
and through my journey
I've really
I've really leaned into gut instinct
and I think that's where it's at.
Yes.
I'm convinced of that.
You cannot jump about.
And so...
And so now when I'm making tough decisions
or I want to know if I'm doing the right thing with the show
or whatever it is, man, a lot of it has to do with the show.
Like, you know, we get some pretty crazy interviews.
And like, for example, the last one was the last one.
the last one that really kind of
threw me off and I was like
am I like should be doing this?
I went to Romania and interviewed
Kaleen Georgescu about some corruption
that's going on there and I was like, man, I don't know
like am I doing the right thing here?
My gut tells me yes
but then you get in your head
and like
I'll start seeing the numbers man
they'll just start popping up everywhere right in front
of me and I
don't think I
know for me when i see that number or sequence you know 222-4-44-7-77 whatever it is um i know that that's like
yes sean yep your gut's right god winks i'm giving you i'm giving you the the confirmation
that you need to press forward with this and even then man i remember i did on the way to romania
we had a layover, I think, in New York.
And we had just released another super controversial interview with Sam Shoe made.
And everybody's called me.
Oh, you're a CIA, I said,
Oh, the comments on that were hilarious.
Dude.
And, but I was like, man, I really, like, that email was real.
We got the email, we checked.
And anyways, and it turned out, FBI came out and said,
Yeah, the email, they said, on the podcast.
Not the Sean Ryan show, but the email that's going around that was on the podcast was legitimate.
And that came out right before that layover.
And so I tweeted out on X, The Truth is Like a Lion, set it free, and it'll defend itself.
right after I sent that tweet,
this woman walks around the corner
and she's got this huge lion head
like this sparkly lion head
on her shirt.
And I was just like,
you can't, like there it is, man.
Like, you're on, Sean, just lean into your gut.
You're on the right path.
Quit with the bullshit noise outside.
Get out of your head.
Like, just lean into the gut.
instinct. And so anyways, now you come in here and you've got to had ATF 444. So I know this is going
to be a really good interview and now. I hope so. Very powerful. And I know it's going to change
a lot of lives. So once again, here it is. But what is the ATF 4444 to you? So the ATF
Trouble 4 was a GCPSU, Afghan Special Police Unit. And we evacuated, we tried to evacuate some of
them and failed, but we did get his brother to America, and he gave me the patch when we resettled
him in Houston.
Man, that's awesome.
Yeah.
So they were like the Tier 1 trained version of cops in Afghanistan.
Do you have any more of those patches?
The Triple Four?
Yeah.
I don't.
I don't.
We've been looking for some because I've lost this hat two or three times now and flipped
out about it.
And you found it?
Found it, yeah.
But I need to find some backup patches, so if I find one, I got you.
Well, I'll tell you what, I don't know if you looked around in here, but it's like a museum and a lot of guests.
I'm dumbfounded, honestly.
I thought I had a collection of some pretty cool shit.
It's all stuff from guests.
This is amazing.
So, you know, if you ever do decide to part from that, I'd be honored to frame that, put it in the studio.
And, yeah, this is like a museum, but I'm not asking.
So, and hey, what is the, we got busy down there with the photos.
What's that A-10 barrel?
So, you know, I've got a nonprofit called We Fight Monsters,
and a guy that we did a lot of stuff in the Afghan Evac with, General David Hicks,
he's got something like 3,600 hours in an A-10, and he gave me that barrel.
It's, if I remember correctly, from his Kandahar deployment, it's shot out,
which I think that was the most violent deployment he had.
So it's, it's ended some lives.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
So that is one of, I think, seven, they got seven barrels, right?
The GAU8.
I don't know.
I'm not an 8-10.
It's from the big all canon.
So when you call in Cass, that's what is shooting.
You'll have to connect me with him.
I'll do that.
I'll interview him.
You need to.
And then that's going to get framed and put over the, put in the new studio.
We're building a new studio.
Oh, yeah.
We brought you a humidor too.
We made it.
Seriously?
Yeah.
So it's down there in a box.
next to that barrel. We opened up a wood shop in Memphis to teach homeless vets woodworking and gang
members and anybody else coming off the streets. And so they made you a humidor out of black walnut
and curly maple that was grown or felled and milled in Memphis. Man, thank you. It's pretty cool.
That'll look good in here too. Yes, there will. But, well, Ben, we got a lot to talk about today
and I'm expecting this. Well, I shouldn't say I'm expecting, but I got a feeling that this is going to be a very
heavy, heartfelt interview, and I'm really excited to dive in here.
I am too.
Everybody starts with a introduction.
So, Ben Owen, you're an infantry veteran, a father of eight children, a graduate of the
University of Alabama, and an American patriot.
From Fortune 500 companies to startups, you've excelled in leadership, strategy, raising
brand awareness and sales.
When you're not working your day job at Black Rifle Co, not coffee,
you spend time in the North Georgia Mountains with your kids.
You're an experienced expert on data intelligence and digital media.
You founded Flanders Fields and We Fight Monsters with your wife, Jess,
and are dedicated to combating opiate and fentanyl addiction and sex trafficking in the Mid-South.
You're a recovering addict with a temetulous past,
including drug arrests and homelessness.
You've transformed your struggles
into a force for good
by leveraging experiences
from running safe houses
during the Afghanistan evacuation
to establishing sober living homes
in the U.S. by converting dope houses
into recovery spaces.
You work alongside agencies and street gangs
to embody hope and recovery
turning your once-periless path
into lifelines for others.
You're a busy man,
you're doing heavy lifting
in some of the most tough neighborhoods in America.
And once again, man, it really is truly an honor to have you here.
I'm really excited about this.
It's been a long time coming.
And so let's get started.
Let's do it.
But before we get two in the weeds, a couple things.
Here's my gift to you.
Vigilance League gummy bears made here in the USA.
They are not healthy.
there's all kinds of poison and food guys and sugar
and all kinds of shit you shouldn't be eating
but they do taste good.
Oh, they're delicious. Oh, God.
We'll send you some more when we get restocked.
And then, secondly, we have a Patreon account.
Patreon, there are top supporters.
It's a subscription account that our viewers and listeners can join.
And we've really built quite the community there.
and so a lot of these guys and ladies have been with me since the very beginning
and like we started this in the attic moved to this now we're building a studio that's
three and a half times bigger than this.
Congratulations.
Out in the woods.
Hell yeah.
And like with all the equipment upgrades and everything that we've been able to do, I credit
Patreon because that's who has been here the whole time.
And so one of the things I do is I allow them to, I give them the opportunity to ask each
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Ben, your transition from Army veteran to founder of We Fight Monsters is both inspiring and profound.
Many veterans struggle to find purpose after service, but you've channeled your warrior spirit into fighting one of society's darkest battles, human and narcotics trafficking.
Can you take us back to the moment when you knew this was your mission?
What was the turning point that made you and Jessica commit your lives to transform former?
drug houses into recovery homes and safe havens.
So I think there were really two pivotal moments, and one of them actually goes back into
active addiction, and we'll get into this much deeper later, but my last six months out there,
I did not want that life. I had been tired of it, and I had two options. I was going to get
sober, I was going to die, and I didn't want to die. And Jess and I used to pray a foxhole
prayer multiple times a day, and it wasn't something along the lines of God.
get us out of hell together and we'll come back for everybody left behind so in 2019 he did get us out of
hell together eventually i left first but uh later that year we were a few months sober at the time
and my best friend overdosed and died and um we hadn't yet been called back to memphis to keep our
into that promise but we did go back to memphis to bury him he had no family left so we raised
money using my social media presence to cremate them and have a service. And we gave the overage,
because we raised like four times what it actually cost. We gave the overage to the Shelby County Drug
Court. And something happened in our brains at that point in time. We realized that we can use
social media to get some cool stuff done. And it felt really good to be able to help people
that are still out there struggling with the demon that we had escaped. And then of
course as that progressed we did get called back to Memphis to save the ones we left behind and
once we started that dude he mentioned purpose in the very beginning of that and that's that's what
it comes down to um is i found my purpose i found my calling i found the reason god put me on this earth
and i have absolutely no doubt whatsoever that what we're doing today is what god wants me to do
for the rest of my life and so i hope that answers the question yeah yeah wow wow
Thank you.
All right.
So now we get into the weeds here.
So I want to do a life story on you,
talk about childhood all the way up to what you're doing nowadays,
all the pitfalls and the dark times.
I mean, that's kind of, that's my specialty here, you know.
And so where did you grow up?
Man, that's not really an easy answer.
that I've lived in 14 states. I lived in three states in first grade alone. I lived in three states
again in ninth grade. So I was born not far from here actually in Nashville. My devastation
at Fort Campbell. He was, I think, a first lieutenant, first to 506 back then. And I was a real
high-risk pregnancy. So when mom went into labor, they rushed her down to Nashville. I was born
here. But we left before I was even three months old.
I think Virginia next.
And then Fort Benning, my little brother was born there.
And we lived, I think, in Phoenix City, Alabama, just across the Chattahoochee from Fort Benning.
We may have lived in Columbus.
And then Dad left the Army not too long after my little brother was born.
I went to Pfizer Pharmaceuticals as a sales rep back in like...
Hold on.
Yep.
We're moving too fast.
How many brothers and sisters did you have?
Just one.
Just one?
Are you guys close?
We're not close.
But, you know, Cody has an awful lot of very well-founded resentment towards me for everything I did over the years,
demanding all of my parents' attention because I was such a pain in the ass.
And I think I probably, in a lot of ways, crushed his hopes and dreams for his life.
Now, he does a great job of hiding that resentment, but it's still there.
So, yeah, me and my brother are close.
I love him.
He's my little brother.
But even though he lives, you know, 20 minutes up the street from me, we don't see each other like every day or anything like that.
Man.
It's a lot better now that I'm clean.
You know, the longer I've been clean, the more he believes this time is real.
How long have you been clean?
A little over five years.
I've been off the streets for
we're closing on six years now
I had a couple of alcohol relapses
that first year
so my actual sober dates
October 4th of 2019
no kidding
yeah not a drop alcohol
no dope nothing
wow
I kick booze
it'll be three years
and this Valentine's Day
oh yeah man I'm awesome
I didn't know about you
thank you
yeah I've kicked
I've kicked a lot of addictions too
cocaine benzos
opiates.
I had no idea.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you get it.
Oh, yeah.
I get it.
And then booze was the last.
Yeah, I was looking.
The relapse that ended with the rest of my story, I actually started with Dahlmore.
No kidding.
I was a big Scotch fan.
That was just an alcoholic for a long time.
Really?
Until the dope entered the picture.
Yeah.
Me too.
Then I moved to Columbia.
and that's when the coach.
God, I'd be dead.
I almost did die.
A couple times.
Yeah, yeah, me too.
Cocaine was involved.
So, I'm curious, I get a lot of flack about having a bar in here because we talk a lot about sobriety.
You know, if you watched any of the interviews, you see that, you know, a lot of the guys that I bring on struggle with that.
Yep.
And then kicked it.
And, you know, but does that bother you?
Not in the least, dude.
Yeah.
I mean, it never has, really.
You're exposed to alcohol or where you go.
That's the way I feel.
It's everywhere.
And if you can't be comfortable sitting this close to your favorite single malt scotch in the world, you get a problem.
Yeah.
I feel like it's empowering.
I do too.
I agree completely.
And be able to overcome it.
Yeah.
When I kicked cocaine, I kept my last dime bag for years.
Just...
That's next level.
To overpower it.
I kept it in a drawer.
And I even, I mean, I even moved here with it.
Like, I kicked it...
I kicked cocaine in Florida, finally.
And I had a bunch of bags, but I kept one of them.
And, like, I just...
just, it was just like, I would look at it every day for years, like, wake up, hold it,
look at that dime bag of Coke. And it just, like, for me, it was like, I'm going to
fucking beat you today again. And when we moved, I brought it up here with me, and then I
eventually, like, you know what I wanted to do is I wanted to frame it. And I'm serious. I wanted
frame it and put it in the studio.
I get that.
To show, like, there it is.
That's the last egg.
I guess I actually can relate to that more than I thought I could when you first said it
because I used to do that with heroin.
When I was trying to quit, I would keep a little bit knowing it's there.
It's there.
If the withdrawal is going to be too much.
If today gets to be too much there, I can do it.
The problem, of course, was that I always did it.
You know, so I do get that.
Yeah. Well, back to childhood.
What kind of stuff were you into as a kid?
Dude, I had, like, the most idyllic childhood ever from my perspective and outside looking in.
I did Boy Scouts. You know, I tried to play sports to impress my dad, but I sucked at all of them.
I was really good at being an outdoors kid, you know, hunting, fishing, land nav, or or reintering, as we call it, in Scouts.
I did Scouts. My dad was our Scoutmaster until we moved to California, and Scouts got,
weird out there, so we stopped. But I was almost Eagle, whatever, was it, Star or Life, right,
the Eagle Scout. I loved anything and everything outdoors. I loved, you know, going on bike rides,
mountain biking, catching animals. That was like my obsession for a long time, was reptiles,
venomous snakes, you know, alligators, literally catching alligators. Are you serious?
How old were you when you were catching alligators?
I think the last one I caught, I was 18 or 19.
When did it start? How young?
Probably 11 or 12.
These were big alligators.
I mean, they're little.
We lived in Jackson, Mississippi, for seven years.
It was the longest stretch in childhood I ever lived in one place.
It was Rankin County, Mississippi, outside of Jackson.
On this big lake, man-made lake called the Ross Burnett Reservoir, and it was full of alligators and water moccasins.
and like it was the greatest place ever for a little boy to live, you know.
And so we moved there when I was seven.
How would you catch them?
Net.
I'd use a net and babies, you know.
Like I went doing a crocodile hunter and jump on with a town.
You ever have a mom come after you?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
But the funny thing is, my mom would go to bat for me with the neighborhood moms because I was...
I mean an alligator.
Oh, no.
So one time I did almost get eaten by a big all female.
They'll build these mounds of like a sale.
I almost got eaten.
Alligators aren't really that aggressive.
but it's scared the shit out of me.
They'll build a big old mound of vegetation,
and they use that to incubate their eggs, I guess.
Well, we found one, and we were stomping through it
trying to find babies, you know,
and the whole thing starts vibrating.
We're like, what the hell is going on?
And out shoots this 10, 11 foot long,
full-grown alligator that was, I guess,
had buried itself in this mound.
We thought it was a nest.
It was not a nest.
It was an actual giant alligator in the middle of it.
And we fell over, we're in the swamp,
and yeah, I thought I was going to,
die.
Holy shit.
I don't know if I ever
tell my mom
that story.
I remember my buddy
Bob Goodson
was with me
when it happened
and we thought
we were dead.
All bet.
All bet.
So were you
tight with your
brother back then?
We were very
different as kids.
You know, Cody
wanted to be an actor.
He wanted to play
basketball.
He was actually
decent at sports.
And I was just
wanting to play outside.
So yeah,
we hung out all the time.
I mean, we fought like
big brothers
and little brothers
do,
but nobody else
is going to
fuck him
I always stood up for him.
So, yeah, we were close growing up until we moved to California.
That's when things went sideways.
How old were you when you went to California?
I moved there when I was 14.
And so I was in Jackson, Mississippi, from age 7 to 14.
And, I mean, I had already lived, and I don't even know how many states prior to that.
So I had no stability.
I was constantly moving, constantly being the new kid, constantly reinventing myself, you know, learning how to make new friends.
And so I got really used to that.
And I was actually pretty good at it.
I still am.
But that seven-year stretch of being in one place,
like I built a life.
And that was half my life at that point I had spent there.
And so when we moved from Jackson to Orange County, California,
I snapped.
I just lost it.
I've always been an anxious person.
especially today, like more so than usual.
I am who I am today.
I'm a very anxious and stressed out person.
Back then, I think is when it really came to a...
I had discovered that girls are animals too,
and so my obsession switched from catching reptiles to females,
and I had a girlfriend that I'd been allowed to spend way too much time with
for a 14-year-old.
Like, I don't know how I convinced my parents to let me do this.
lost my virginity and everything.
And when we moved, I was just, like, that was the end of the world to me.
You know, nothing was ever going to be the same again.
It was all the, you know, listening to smashing pumpkins and nine-inch nails
and the world's going to fucking end because I lost my girlfriend and she's in Mississippi
and I'm in California.
And I just, I went nuts, dude.
I went completely nuts.
How so?
You name it.
Like, I went from, I was a straight-A student my entire life until I moved to California.
Not just straight-A student.
I mean, I was like an absolute nerd.
I was writing letters back and forth
of the president of Harvard from like 10 years old on Ford.
I wanted to be a cardiovascular surgeon.
I had led a clinical study at the University of Mississippi
at 13 years old that ended up getting published
in the journal neurology.
Like, I was an absolute nerd, right?
Goody T-shoes, never got in trouble.
Didn't give my parents any problems whatsoever.
Within a month,
to California. I'm still in alcohol, getting drunk, tried meth, tried coke, shrooms.
At 14. 14, yeah. Yeah, I actually spent my 15th birthday locked up against my will in California.
And that's, I mean, that's when things really started going downhill. So, you know, they
caught me with weed. I don't remember how it actually happened, but, and I never liked weed.
But it was just my way of acting out. I would have it, you know, and I got caught. And so
they flipped out like it was, you know, heroin that I was on.
It was my parents were very, what's the word I'm looking for?
Strict.
Very strict, straight and narrow kind of people, you know, like never done drugs, none of that.
And so they flipped the absolute hell out and sent me to rehab for weed when I'm 14 years old.
Well, I get in there and they make me talk to psychiatrist.
and I realized like I can just get dope in here
because I wanted to change the way I felt.
That was the crux of everything.
I did not like the way I felt,
and I wanted to do anything I could change it.
I've been drinking extremely heavily.
I'd been caught stealing alcohol.
I was taking open containers of alcohol to school
to high school in ninth grade with me,
and teachers there wouldn't do shit.
They're afraid of the students.
Like it was, the students literally ran that school.
So I started talking the psychiatrist at this rehab place.
And remember I was a nerd.
I'd read the DSM.
It was the DSM 4 back then, front to back.
I don't even know how many times.
What's that?
That's the, I think it stands for diagnostics and statistics manual.
It tells doctors how to diagnose diseases, including mental health.
Or particularly mental health.
You read that at what age?
I think the first time I heard it.
I was 12.
Like whenever the DSM 4 came out, I was reading it.
Because I wanted to impress my dad.
My whole life was spent trying to become my dad, or to please him.
make him happy. And this is not any fault of his. Like he was not an overbearing father. I had
perfect parents growing up. This was just, I'd internalized in my mind that my life only had
validity if my dad was proud of me, which he always was. So I started reading the DSM-4 because he
was selling to doctors as a, I think he was a regional manager with Pfizer by this point in time.
And he had a tremendous level of respect for docs. And so I wanted to become a doctor. And so I'd
read this thing front to back, memorize the whole damn thing.
I'm going to caveat this. I've killed a lot of brain cells since then.
So, like, I'm not that spark anymore, but I used to be.
I had a near photographic memory. So anyway, I go to the, remember I tell you, I got weaponized ADHD.
I go to, that is real.
I go to the psychiatrist, and I present myself as a textbook case of somebody with bipolar disorder.
I'm not bipolar, but they went ahead and diagnosed me.
They did diagnose the ADHD, which is real, and they put me on Ritalin.
And since I had read this manual and knew the things to say, I went back and kept going back to this doc at the rehab facility.
While in a drug rehab, I have gotten a doctor to prescribe me 120 milligrams of methylfiniday-to-day.
Ritalin, which is like super therapeutic, like way beyond what any kids should ever be on.
Needless to say, that created a lot of anxiety and paranoia and other symptoms.
And so now they're treating me for those symptoms.
So they've got me on Xanax, Valium.
I didn't even realize it back then, but I'm dependent on all of this shit.
And life at home had become pure hell because, you know, I'm trying to get out of this rehab.
And every time they let me go home, I do something crazy, like drink a bottle of rubbing alcohol and wake up in an ER with a catheter in and don't remember shit.
Like, I don't have any of it happened.
And so when I said my little brother has a lot of resentment, it's like that's why.
This started, and I'm taking all of my parents' attention from him.
And it was his dream come true to move to Southern California because he wanted to be an actor.
So he's in acting classes.
My parents are having to go pick me up out of gutters or have the police pick me up because I've run from the rehab facility.
Like it was just – and it came out of nowhere.
My poor parents, you know, just literally overnight this happened.
How would you get the booze?
Steal it.
You'd steal it?
I didn't.
And that's like the craziest part about this is I'm not a thief.
Even during my addiction, I was making the money.
I was blowing on dope.
But at 14, 15, I just did not care.
I did not.
I wanted to get in trouble.
I wanted somebody to catch me.
Man, we got a lot of parallels already.
Same here.
I didn't go to rehab, and I didn't get into drugs, but I got into alcohol, I think,
seventh or eighth grade.
Yeah, same here.
That was it.
Moved around all over the place.
The longest time I've ever spent somewhere seven years.
Oh, wow.
So, yeah, you get all of them.
Until now.
Until now.
How long have you been here?
Seven years.
But, yeah, we used to, I used to find bums and pick them up and have them to go buy the booze for me.
I've done that.
Yeah, real smart as a kid without a driver's license.
But, wow.
You had mentioned, I want to retrace a couple things here.
You had mentioned Boy Scouts got weird in California.
Yeah.
What was weird?
So my dad was always their scout master growing up,
and so we moved to California.
He got us back in scouts.
And I've been like through, you know, a little bitty tiger cub all the way up.
You know, the whole thing.
Dad's an Eagle Scout, ordered the arrow, Ranger qualified.
You know, he's super who-ho guy.
And so he puts us right back in the scout, so we get out there,
and we have our first camp out.
And when we get to this place where we're camping, they round all of us up.
And this was like right before I went nuts.
So I haven't gone nuts yet.
I'm still doing the anxiety and mental health stuff,
but I haven't started doing the drinking and all that.
But that was like two weeks later.
We get at the first camp out, and they ran everybody up,
and the scoutmaster, because dad's the assistant, because he's the new guy,
says something to the effect of.
And remember, campers, no scoutmasters in tents with boys
and no sharing sleeping bags this time.
And my dad looked at me and my brother was like, get in the fucking car.
We're going on.
That was the end of that.
Holy shit.
Yeah, it was very odd, very odd.
But you didn't have any, nothing happened to you.
Oh, God, no.
No, he got us a hell out of there.
We never went back.
Right on.
Never went back.
Yeah, I was also diagnosed ADHD, Ritalin, Adderall.
He had fourth grade.
Damn.
Yeah, fourth grade now.
That Ritalin fucked me up.
I really think it did, like, permanent damage to,
that's sort of the anxiety started really bad for me, was with the Ritalin.
Of course, it's my own fault.
I manipulated the doctor into giving me, like, three times with anybody.
my size should have been on.
But I have a repeating pattern of doing that,
manipulating circumstances,
and end up fucking myself in the end.
Yeah.
So it sounds like you were like a prodigy.
I was.
My parents, I think I honestly believed
I was going to cure cancer or AIDS someday.
You know?
And like that clinical trial that I led,
the methods we came up with and that are being used to this day
to diagnose things like Parkinson's and stuff.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
And you did this at 13?
13, 14, you know, with a neurologist at a University of Mississippi.
I took first place in the Mississippi State Science Fair that year.
How did you get, let's go through that.
How did you get in touch with the doc at Harvard?
My dad.
Oh, at Harvard.
I just wrote him a letter, dude.
I wrote the president of harder a letter when I was 10 and said, I wanted to be a cardiovascular surgeon.
He wrote me back and was like, that's awesome.
It's too early to decide what kind you want to be, but keep writing me and let's stay in touch, you know.
So I had an open line of cons with the president.
of Harvard at 10. I did the Duke tip thing where you take the SAT in eighth grade and scored like
a 1380 or 1400 or something. I was, I was a very smart kid. Wow. And I've definitely
spit in God's face with the amount of brain cells I killed, but it is what it is, you know.
But yeah, so my parents, like, I feel horrendous for them to this day. If I try to put myself
and their shoes now as a parent, and I have kids that age.
I have kids much older than that already.
I don't know how my dad kept his job.
I really don't.
I don't know how he stayed sane, because on top of that, he's dealing with my mom's physical health.
She's got a slew of autoimmune problems.
Like, I was just a really selfish little bastard, man.
I don't understand how they kept me.
Like, if I'd have been investigating ways to give up custody of this kid to the state,
somehow, you know, looking back on what I put them through, because it really did come out of nowhere.
There was no lead up to this. It was just, bam, Ben's insane.
Damn.
So I meant this rehab place in California, and I have...
Hold on, hold on. Let's go back.
Okay.
I want to talk about the medical, the paper that you wrote.
Oh, yeah.
So we had this, I was reading, I don't remember, one of my dad's medical journals, like Jammer or whatever it
was and read up on this phenomenon called the subcutaneous silent period. Now, remember, I've
killed a lot of brain cells, and this is 30 years ago, so I don't remember all of it, but basically
it is a silent period in your synapse and your nerve conduction. When you touch a painful
stimuli, your nerves actually go blank for a second, the signals to your muscle, telling your muscles
to contract. And what that is, it's a, before your brain can even process, I'm in pain.
your nerves have told your hand to let go.
So if you've ever reacted to something quicker
than your brain can actually process what's happening,
that's basically why it happens.
Well, I theorized that if this is true,
that in instances of diseases like a myotrophic lateral sclerosis
or Parkinson's or maybe Alzheimer's,
anything that affects cognitive function or nerves,
there might be a delay in that.
And, well, we found out that was true,
that there was a delay.
And so that was, it's been tons of research have been done since on this.
Like it's a whole field and I doubt I'm the first person that thought of it.
But I definitely did my own study and it definitely made it into the journal neurology.
My dad connected me with this neurologist.
I forget what drugs dad was selling for Pfizer at the time, but he knew the neurologist
University of Mississippi.
And this is back before the Pharma Act passed, I think, which means the Pharma Act is because
drug companies were essentially paying doctors.
to write their drugs, you know. And so this is back when you could still give docs tons of money.
And so I'm sure there was some grant involved. He's like, he can help my kid do this idea.
So he got me access to all these machines, electroencephalographs and stimulus, and I don't even
know what they're all called. I got to shock my mom. Like, she was one of my test subjects.
I had a couple of the neuro interns up there that were my test subjects. I mean, it was really cool.
Like, I had a great life ahead of me and just for no reason at all decided to pick.
this away.
Damn.
I mean, what was your parents' reaction when you get published at 13?
So it didn't actually get published until I was 14, maybe 15, and I was in custody in Utah when that happened.
Are you serious?
That's how quick it happened.
How did you find out that it got published?
I think they sent it to me.
I was, they sent me so, there's a Netflix special out right now about these facilities.
in Utah. Like, that's how bad they were. You know, these wilderness camps and Provo Mountain.
I think Paris Hilton went to one of them. Of course, we didn't know back then how bad they were.
What do you mean? They, like, beat the hell out of kids. The one I was at got shut down for breaking
some kids' arm. There were, like, sexual assaults that happened at some of them.
What happened to you?
So actually, at that one, the one of Utah, nothing. The one in California, that's not quite true.
I kept running away.
I don't want to be there.
I'd run away.
I'd go still some alcohol,
and eventually the cops would find me here.
One time my mom found me passed out in the middle of an intersection,
a very busy intersection,
and arranged in a son of Margarita.
Eventually, they got tired of me running
and kind of upped their game on keeping me inside.
And memory's a little fuzzy on this,
but somehow I ended up barricaded in a room with three female clients,
and they got real pissed about that.
And when they got in the room, they got me out
and put me in a five-point restraint room
like 14 years old and three grown-ass men
beat de shit out of me.
I mean, beat the ever-loving hell out of me.
And at the time, I felt like I deserved it, you know?
What did they beat you with?
Just open hands, slapping the shit out of me.
I don't remember any, like, objects or fists.
But, I mean, they beat shit, I mean.
I'm restrained.
I'm in a five-point restraint.
You know, I can't even lift my hands.
head.
So that sucked.
And it definitely gave me,
that's the word I'm looking for here.
I had some severe trauma associated with rehab.
And you can see how that might play into some problems later on in my life.
Yeah.
The end result of that was that they shipped me off to a residential treatment facility in Utah for 18 months.
And I, of course, being the outdoors kid.
that I was. I still had the love of all those things. They sent me to fucking paradise in my mind
if I could just get outside the fence. You know, there's like all sorts of reptiles and critters
I want to go catch. It was outside of Ogden, Utah, so near Great Salt Lake. And I was definitely
going to run. I mean, I knew how to survive out in the desert, and that was what I, in my mind,
that's what I was going to do. But the day I got there, I saw a track star.
that I had known from school in California,
it was also sent out there,
try to run.
And keep in mind, I can't run for shit.
Like, I'm not a runner.
And a three giant Mormon dudes tackled his ass,
and they shot him so full of Thorazine.
He didn't come out of the room.
They put him in for like a week.
So I was like, I'm not going to run from this one.
And so I got to work manipulating my circumstances again.
You know, I convinced another doctor
that I was very, very bipolar
and just needed to be medicated.
And then when they did that, I checked all the boxes and did all the stuff.
And ended up graduating from that place in nine months.
Wow.
But I was being medicated for a whole bunch of shit that wasn't even wrong with me,
which presents all sorts of new problems.
My judgment was fucked.
Obviously, the story of my brother's dreams of finishing acting school out there.
my dad had to take a demotion with Pfizer to get us out of there to get us out of California.
He moved us back to Alabama.
I think I was, I think I turned 16 right after they got me out.
And so I've been out front of my parents' roof for like a year at this point.
My brother didn't really even speak to me.
I do remember the day that I'd, I'd,
drank that bottle of rubbing alcohol, I guess the plan to send me to Utah was already in place
because the last thing I remember before I passed out and then woke up in a hospital as my
little brother going, hey, Ben, you ever been to Utah? So he's always been a little smart ass.
Jeez. Yeah. But. So what happened when you got out of there? Well, we moved to Alabama.
And it was weird. Do you remember? How old were you at this point? 16. Right about to turn
16. I may have turned 16. I don't quite
remember. You remember I mentioned the kid
that stepped on an alligator with me, Bo Goodson?
That was a Mississippi. We moved to Hoover,
Alabama, and
my first day at school, I run into
fucking Bo Goodson. The dudes, like,
they had moved, and we just ended up the same high
school together.
Which almost fucked me up really bad.
He gave me a bunch of Adderall that day.
I didn't know. Keep in mind, I haven't touched any dope
in a year because I've been locked up.
And I ended up throwing it
away. Thank God, because when I got
of school that day. My mom's like, let me share your wallet. And that's where it had it.
She just had a feeling, that mom gut instinct. Yeah. So for the rest of high school,
I was pretty good. Dad got offered a promotion back to regional manager that would have
required him to move to North Georgia, and he took it. And me being the petulant little unappreciative
child that I was reminded him, you promised me he wouldn't move me again, and told him I wasn't
going. Now if my 16-year-old had said that to me, I don't know how I would react, but it wouldn't
be the way my dad did. He, I don't know how it played out. I ended up moving on with my aunt
uncle. They didn't make me move to Georgia with him. If I'm being honest, dude, they were probably
just sick of me, my parents. They loved me, but they were probably really tired of me. I couldn't
have managed me.
So they let me move in with Aunt Sandy and Uncle Danny.
And so that was my junior year.
The summer between junior and senior year,
I went and spent in Georgia at my parents
and then went back.
And somehow at the end of that summer,
my mom and my aunt got into a pissing match about something.
I think maybe it's about my girlfriend.
And the end result was,
I got my own apartment for my senior year.
I don't know.
I didn't question it, right?
But I actually did everything I was supposed to do.
I would have graduated with honors, and I mean, I guess on paper I did, but I didn't get to walk at graduation because the month before I ended up, I got caught with how I call it school.
But, you know, I graduated with honors.
I got a scholarship to Auburn math scholarship.
and I had no desire to get a math degree.
Damn, so through all that, you still graduated with honors
and got a full-ride scholarship?
Yeah, well, I hadn't killed all the brain cells yet.
That was still to come.
So I get to Auburn, and remember, I'd stayed sober.
I did get caught without alcohol at school,
but that was the only time I drank.
It was like I got caught the one time I did it.
That may not be true.
I feel like it is, but it might not be.
I don't remember.
But once I got to Auburn, man, the brakes came off.
It was over with.
Getting drunk as shit every day.
I got so bad.
This is back in 2000.
And if you go get apple juice at the store,
they weren't plastic bottles.
They were still glass bottles.
I would pour it out and fill them with beer to take the class with me.
That's how bad I got that fast.
I was drinking, you know, two cases a day.
I got a job at Auburn that I was trying to work and trying to do classes.
I started ROTC.
Again, just trying to be like my dad, you know, he did ROTC at Auburn.
And so I sucked at PT.
Like, I hate running.
I was in terrible shape because I was drinking constantly.
And the drinking just kept escalating.
Like I was getting really close to drinking myself out of college.
Like guidance counselors had called me in.
And so my mom or my aunt won was like, well, he needs to go meet with the students of disabilities or whatever.
Because I was diagnosed bipolar and I'm still being medicated for it.
So I did that.
And they basically greenlit me to misbehave all I fucking wanted.
And they have to make reasonable accommodations for me.
It was a disaster.
I was such a manipulative little shit.
Just anything I could get that gave me an excuse to do what I wanted,
I was going to grab onto that and not let go, you know.
Were you drinking for the party?
Were you just drinking home?
I was just drinking if I was awake.
Literally started when I woke up because I'd get sick if I didn't.
I didn't realize it back then.
I was already physically dependent on alcohol.
Wow.
And, you know, like growing up,
not my parents drank, neither one of them had a problem.
I knew both of my mom's parents died alcoholics,
but it was never really beat into my head
the way it should have been that I was playing with a loaded gun.
And, I mean, it definitely got me early.
You know, like I was, and I wasn't even old enough to buy alcohol.
That was the crazy part.
You mentioned having homeless people go buy beer for it.
I definitely did that.
I was never without beer.
And it was just beer back then.
I didn't do a whole lot of drugs at Auburn other than recreationally.
That was back when Ecstasy was still X, whatever it is, now's not.
But making terrible decisions.
I ended up getting a girl who was in her mid-20s pregnant.
And my mom convinced her get an abortion, which fucked me out pretty good.
I don't know that I've ever told that story publicly.
You wanted to have it?
No, but I didn't want to kill it either.
If I'm being honest, this girl was on so much dope, though,
the chances that baby making it were very slim anyway.
She was heavy, heavy into all the drugs.
I was just drinking.
How'd you meet her?
Met her of cigar shop in downtown Auburn.
like six-foot-tall redhead
and we like the same music
and it just goes off to the races from there
how did your mom convince her do you know
I don't
I don't know I was so drunk
during that time period
and this is like probably
middle of 2001
but of course that
since that fucked me up it just gave me another excuse
to drink and you go with her
I don't remember
you don't remember
I don't remember I don't remember
I had a lot of blackouts
When did it dawn on you?
I guess I did go with her
My mom came too
Because I remember being in the parking lot
I didn't go inside
My mom went inside with her
My mom went inside with her
I just went back
And I mean that was the end of me and her
She was a fucking psychopath
Like
ruptured one of my eardrums
Beating hell out of me one time
She was just nuts
Just nuts
I have a pinched
for crazy women, I think.
That was a rough summer, though.
So it dawned on you in the parking lot.
What was happening?
I mean, I knew what was happening,
but, like, the totality of it hit me.
You know, I went back home
and drank myself into oblivion,
and she packed her shit and left,
and I was the last time I ever talked to her.
Does it still bother you?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
I love children.
I love them.
You know,
and to ever do anything to harm one?
I drank at that problem for 20 years after that.
Damn.
Yeah.
Damn.
I mean, that's kind of guilt.
I can't overcome.
And I've accepted.
I've come to terms with what happened.
But, you know, not to get into a political conversation like abortion always turns into,
but I killed my child, you know.
That's how I look at it.
And that's hard.
That's hard.
That's hard. That's hard to cope with.
I mean, I know you're not, I know you said it still bothers you, but, I mean, there's a lot of kids, you know, that are doing, there's a lot of women that have done that.
Yeah.
That probably feel a sense of regret.
What would your advice be?
Man, consider adoption.
Consider adoption.
Somebody out there will love that baby.
Somebody will. I promise you that. I adopted one of mine. I've got eight.
Only seven of them are actually biologically mine.
I do understand circumstances, and, you know, I do understand that that's a decision.
Some people feel they don't have a choice but to make.
I would, if I had it to do over again, I don't know that I would have chosen something different, though.
just because of how everything was and how everything has today.
I don't know.
I don't know.
That's a tough one, man.
That's a tough one.
How fast did that decision happen?
Very quickly.
Like, within a week of finding out she was pregnant.
You told your parents?
Yes, yes, I did.
I told my mom, that's how that happened.
And I was scared to death because, I mean, even though I was in ROTC,
like, I was still dependent on my parents, a lot of money, you know.
I had lost the scholarship because to keep the scholarship, I had to be a math major.
And I did not want a major in math.
I'm good at math.
I love math.
It's fun.
I like it because there's a clear answer to something.
You know, it's very definitive.
But I didn't want to work a job in that.
So I didn't have a scholarship.
So ROTC was like, that was, you know, I don't have to have my parents pay my bills.
They're going to pay it.
But I was actually wavered into ROTC.
Because when I was right before we left Mississippi, I tore my ACL playing football and never got it fixed.
So it was just a whole giant shit show, and it all went back to me trying to manipulate my circumstances.
How did your, I mean, how did your mom react when you told her?
Shock and disbelief. Shock and disbelief.
But at the same time, I don't think it surprised her.
and if you just listened to the last half hour of my story,
I don't think it's surprising anybody else.
It was not exactly known for making good decisions,
and most of the bad decisions I made revolved around alcohol and women at that point in time.
So it was bound to happen sooner or later.
How old were you?
19.
19 years old.
Damn.
So where do we go from here?
All right, Ben, we're back from the break.
All right.
He's got through some heavy stuff.
sounds like you
were right about at
I think you lost your scholarship.
Yeah, I had no longer had a scholarship
and I was working
still dependent on my parents.
I had his job at a service center.
I drove a 67 Camaro back then.
I've always loved old cars
and so I got a job at a
carry service center in Oklahoma, Alabama.
And
And it was the morning of September 11th, 2001.
I woke up peaking up blood.
I had drank a whole of my esophagus.
I was about to fail out of class a month into the semester, and I knew it.
I had been an RTC, but this is my second year.
And I was not good at it.
It was not good at getting up early because I was always hungover.
I was terrible at PT because I'm not good at running.
I don't have any ACL.
And anyway, I'm changing an alternator on a 73 Impala.
No, 73 Monte Carlo at Carey Service Center.
And I walk into the break room to get a doctor prepper because I cannot stop throwing up blood
and I just need something to calm my stomach down.
And carbonation has a weird way of doing that.
And I look at the TV and I see the second plane hit tower.
My dad's in New York.
when this happens.
And it's like the world just stopped.
Everything stopped.
We found out of debt is okay.
And I walked across the street to a recruiter
and told him I just want to go ahead and enlist.
There's a terrible idea.
I'm in no shape to join the Army, right?
But...
On 9-11.
On 9-11.
You want to enlist?
Well, I went to talk to recruiter because I didn't know legally how that worked.
I'm in ROTC in college right now.
I'm wavered for a torn ACL, and so I wanted to find out what it would look like if I enlisted.
And, of course, the place, you know, the next day was everybody went to go enlist.
And so they scheduled me for an ASVAB, and I just decided I'm rebranding myself.
Ben is no longer a college student, you know, that I was, I think, a mechanical or maybe chemical engineering
major at the time I'd change so many times. I'm going to go. I'm going to list. I'm going to go
the Army. And so they're going to be for NASDAB. I got a 99 on it. Still had most of my brain cells,
thank God. And I was an engineering student, so like all the math and stuff on it was like super
familiar to me. They found me a slot for 97 Bravo.
counterintelligence. It sounded super cool.
I was going to go spend, I think, 17 weeks in Fort Huachuca, Arizona.
I was going to get a security clearance.
I was going to get a $20,000 sign-in bonus.
And so, you know, I let my parents know, and the process drags out a little bit.
It's a few months that go by, and I go down to the Maxwell Air Force Base to do MEPs the first time.
And I'm there, and I meet this little Burnett from Dustin, Florida, and get fucking.
and trashed, right? And we hook up, and I show up to do MEPs the next day. It's still drunk.
Still drunk. And my whole life, my dad, I think, carried a chip on his shoulder that he was
ranger qualified, an infantry officer never deployed because he served during the Carter years.
I wouldn't say a chip on his shoulder. It was a regret he had. He always wanted to get to go do
cool guy stuff. And I didn't want that to happen, and I fully believe that war was going to be over
six weeks.
But, you know, in hindsight, looking at it now, like, holy God, I was dumb, right?
That was America's longest war, and we just walked away from it.
But at the time, I was convinced that if I didn't do something fast, I was going to miss out on
everything, and I only shot at impress with my dad after all these fuck-ups that I've got,
this is how I can finally redeem myself in my parents' eyes.
And I want to be abundantly clear this is not something my parents put on me.
They never made me feel like I was a disappointment.
They never made me feel like I had anything to prove.
I put all of this weight on myself that I had to please my parents,
and the only way I could do that is to become just like my dad.
I held this man on a pedestal my whole life.
I think a lot of little boys do that, you know,
but I maybe took it to an extreme.
Well, anyway, I'm telling, you know, we go through the duck walk,
the dude looks at your butt hole, you go there, check your feet,
you know all the shit you do at MEPs.
And I get at that last little room where I'm picking my MOS.
And I'm telling him about my dad.
And he's like, well, you know, there's an infantry slot open.
And my dumbass goes, yeah, do that, do that.
And so I'm listed as an 11 Bravo.
And that, you know, hindsight, I hate running.
Yet again, I'm doing something that.
that I'm not going to be good at or capable of trying to impress my dad.
What, you know, I can relate to you on this too.
The only reason I made it through Buds and became a seal
is because I wanted to impress my dad,
and he never did anything like that ever.
But what is it, I mean, do you think it's being the oldest child,
like you feel that pressure that you always need to impress your parents?
I've always put an inordinate amount of,
pressure on myself to perform always today i'm doing that right now actually like the lead up to this
you can ask jess i was terrified to come in here i'm always have just put a tremendous amount of
pressure on myself i think a lot of that is because i'm the oldest but it's also because i had so much
promise as a kid i had so much promise and my parents were so proud of me and they stopped looking at me
like that.
And you wanted it back?
I wanted it back.
I didn't want to be a piece of shit drunk, but I knew that's what I was.
And not just a piece of shit drunk, but one that put his mother in a position to have to kill her own grandchild.
And that just ate me alive.
And I would drink at that problem nonstop, you know.
all the way up to the time I swore in.
So I picked 11 Bravo spot.
Looking back.
Here's where it gets.
This is how retarded it was.
I was on mental health medication then.
I had no ACL, so when I got to MEPs, I lied about literally all of it.
No, I've never done drugs.
No, I've never been in drug rehab.
No, I've never broken them on.
Dude, I've broken like nine.
literally nine bonds and torn in two ligaments at that point in time.
I'm raging alcoholic, and I'm just at MEPs, drunk, telling them, nope, nope, nope, nope, no,
because they'd coached me.
My recruiter had done his job.
Now, he'd done his job to get me that 97 Bravo spot that would have got me a sign-in bonus,
and I probably would have done just fine if I had taken that slot.
But me, being me, I had to manipulate everything and try to finale my way in, because when we
looked at the beginning, he's like, well, I don't have any infantry spots that I forget what
the deal was.
So I decided to buck the plan again.
Sorry, you were asking.
No, I mean, I was going to say, I mean, looking back,
do you think that you even wanted to join the Army, let alone infantry,
going into a combat role?
Or was that just doing pressure of dad?
No, I did.
I did want it.
I did want.
I badly wanted it.
My whole life.
At the beginning, or did that become?
No, I had always wanted that.
I never wanted to do anything other than infantry my whole life.
And yeah, part of that is because I watched my dad and I looked up to him, but the other part is because the job itself.
I mean, fuck.
Why did you go to college?
Well, I wanted to finish and go in as an officer because that was what dad did.
And that was definitely, I wanted to do that because that was the example he said.
But I changed my mind because it was peacetime up until that day.
And I was like, well, I'll become a mechanical engineer.
I'll do chemical engineering and go to med school.
I don't know what the fuck I wanted, man.
I just wanted something.
I wanted to be something that I could be proud of
and that my parents would be proud of.
But after September 11th, I think I started channeling
a lot of my anger and rage that I felt at myself
at outward things, like the bad guys, the people that attacked America.
And I have to do something about this.
It's my duty as an American.
I mean, I come from, I don't know how many generations in a row served,
but pretty much all up, like back to the French Indian War
in the 1750s, or whatever that was.
My family served in every conflict this country's had.
And so I definitely felt a duty to do it.
But like with so many other things, I get to the finish line,
and I decide to fuck it up on my own, you know, and buck the plan.
So unless there's a lembrava, I get to,
to Fort Benning, and there's like a five-week wait or something at reception battalion. It was
ridiculous because of how many people are enlisting right then. Oh, and I'm going through
alcohol DTs. I was incredibly physically dependent on alcohol. Oh, and by the way, I DC'd all of my
mental health meds, which I may not have needed, but my body is now used to, and so I'm going
through the drawer from these things at the same time. And I don't have an ACL. So this is
why I kind of went some people say that Ben used to be an infantryman. Benin enlisted in the infantry.
All right. I get like, I don't know, 10 or 11 weeks into Osset at Fort Benning, and my knee
completely goes out. I can't tell anybody because I lied about it. So I'm acting like this is a new
injury, all right? I had vertical fractures on the outside of my tibia. And there's no cool
story that goes along with this. We were literally running PT doing the, you know, a little sideways
run, and it just, that was it. And so I get
to medical, they confirm you, you know, you broke your leg, you're going to get recycled.
I'm like, that's super terrible. That's awful. I don't want to do that. And I'm like, well,
that's what's about to happen. And they put me on crutches, I think, and it wasn't getting any
better. So I finally bring me back in and look at it again. And this time it's an actual doc,
not a PA that's looking at it. And she's like, you don't have an ACL, and that is not new.
And you better tell me, you know, what's going on here? And so I told her, she threatened me with a
jag referral for lying at MEPs.
So I end up discharged from the Army, honorably, but no benefits whatsoever.
Yet another example of if I had just stayed with the plan, I would be at Fort Wachuka
becoming a badass counterintelligence guy.
But instead, Ben wanted to do what Ben thought would impress his parents and ended up fucking
everything out.
So I enlist after 9-11 before the summer of 2002's up,
I'm walking off of Fort Benning in my civilian clothes,
carrying my bag, no phone,
depressed as hell, feeling like an absolute utter failure.
And I remember getting to a gas station just off post,
and the first thing it was by beer.
It went right back to it.
fast. You know, I hadn't had a drink in however many months that was, and I'm right back on it.
And at what point did you call your dad? So I called him, you know, they had pay phones in the
little barracks courtyard, the company area. And so my parents had a 1-800 number, and they
had for a very long time. I don't remember why. So I was able to call my parents pretty frequently,
but when they sent me to the return home unit or maybe I can't remember what it was called
usually you linger or languish in that thing for like six weeks because they're pissed at you
because either you're a quitter you lied you fuck something up you're getting kicked out and I wasn't
any of those things but I felt all of those things and somehow they cranked me out of there in one
day I was I was in and I was out the next day so I call my granddaddy my dad's dad
Korean War vet,
president of a community college,
and told him what happened.
He lived in Phoenix City at the time.
So he came and picked me up.
And I don't remember how I got back to Auburn,
but I just wanted to crawl in a hall and fucking die.
I was so ashamed of myself.
You know, and I carried that chip on my shoulder for a long time.
Looking back now, like, dude, I tried.
If I had just not lied about my injury and done what the waiver, because apparently ROTC doesn't talk to active duty, so they had no idea about the ACL.
ROTC knew all about it.
So, you know, I did my best.
I raised my right hand and swore in and then went and tried and fucking failed, like I had so many other things up to this point.
And it all came back to the same stuff over and over, me manipulating my circumstances, trying to get the outcome I think I want, rather than seeking, you know, what.
Maybe what God's will would be in those circumstances.
End up back at Auburn, and things escalated pretty quick after that.
Real quick.
When did your dad find out?
A matter of days or hours from when it happened.
You tell them?
Did your granddad tell him?
Yeah, I told them.
I don't remember the phone conversations at all.
I was blackout drunk.
but I mean, Dad obviously knew I had no ACL and also knew I was insane for enlisting and saying,
I wasn't on any medication and all the other things.
So I think he probably figured that was going to happen, right?
And so, you know, when they discharged me because it was due to a pre-existing, what do they call it,
E-PTS existing prior to service, I had to wait two years and have proof that I fixed it before I could re-enlist.
and so my plan, and obviously this got back to ROTC2 that this had happened,
so now they're pissed at me too.
My plan was to do the two years of college that I had left or whatever and then go back in,
which was ridiculous to think about because none of my actions lined up with that being my plan following this.
I went back to the apartment my parents had stopped paying for in Auburn.
and hold up alone with a ton of alcohol and firearms.
You a football fan?
No, I'm not.
I'm not either.
The reason I was asked is there's an Auburn player that lived diagonally above me,
who went to the NFL and was actually a pretty big deal now.
I'm not going to name him.
But I almost killed him by accident, drunk with a pistol in my apartment.
So Auburn Police Department came out and took all of my guns.
That was my first interaction.
action with the police, uh, since California.
They didn't charge me anything, but they put all my guns in a box and...
What were you doing with the gun?
So I had a party at my apartment.
I had a whole bunch of people who were drunk of shit, and I had this little Glock 26.
It was unloaded.
And I was sitting on, um, the island in my kitchen.
And I went to the bathroom or to give a beer or something.
I come back and I look at it and the triggers out.
And you know, on a Glock, when it's, when it's, when it's, when it's,
the triggers out. So I thought somebody could just cocked my gun and I went to decock it.
Somebody could put a fucking mag in it and chambered around.
So, yes, it was absolutely negligent discharge. I never should have pulled that trigger without checking the chamber.
But I wasn't like just drunk playing with the gun.
Except I was drunk playing with the gun. You know?
It's a miracle. I didn't kill anybody. The bullet went through my roof,
through his wall, and exited right next to his head on the couch.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, that was a...
miracle that nobody died i mean i got good i've gone to prison right time um i remember doing a lot of
lsd in shrooms over the next month or two um and basically had a uh psychotic break i guess i don't
know um ended up going back home to my parents that girl rachel that i'd met at mpsey
what do you mean a psychotic break uh my it was like a constant state of
panic. Like, if you've ever had a panic attack, you know, they'll last a few minutes, usually.
This lasted for four days, and no amount of alcohol would make it go away.
So, psychotic break is probably not the right word, but something happened. It was after
I ate 10 hits of acid two days. What got you under the acid?
Oddly enough, it was the kid that had the chambered the rent of that pistol.
I just wanted to change the way I felt that I would do anything I could. You know, I had
I had done acid previously in California.
But never to that extent.
Like, I just ate a ton of it.
And then we went picking germs.
I mean, I lived right across from the Auburn Veterinary College fields
where they have their llamas or alpacas or something.
We'd get pictures of them.
I've always been fascinated about psychedelics.
We could talk more about that.
But the timing, time frame on all this is a blur.
just because I was so fucked up, man.
Completely out of my mind,
like my apartment looked like a hoarder lived in it.
There was no carpet.
You could see nothing but beer cans.
And eventually, you know, I got evicted.
I don't remember that.
But somehow I ended up back in Georgia.
And somehow Rachel, that girl from Destin that I met a year prior,
ended up in Georgia at my parents with me.
I don't remember how that happened.
I don't remember how she got back home.
Do you talk to your parents about any of this stuff and try to fill in the blanks?
Some, yeah, some, definitely.
This part right here, I haven't.
I probably should.
I honestly haven't even thought about this time period of my life until today in a really long time.
I mean, I hate talking about the fact that I failed at being in the infantry.
I hate talking about the fact that I failed.
at being a college student.
You know, I hate talking.
My life is a constant series of failures up at this point.
So I haven't really put a whole lot of thought into it.
But there was, like, I remember I spent a whole lot of time down in Destin after I got out,
after I got back from Fort Benning.
I remember driving that 67 Camaro down to Destin a lot.
I remember drinking in Destin a lot.
So I really don't know how many of those games.
Perhaps my parents could fill in because I wasn't, we weren't talking during that time period, I don't think.
I think that they knew the wheels were falling off the bus, man.
You know, and my mom learned a long time ago sometimes she's got to love me from a distance to preserve her own mental health, which I can completely understand.
I was having a lot of health problems from my drinking, though.
I was throwing up a lot of blood.
I lost a whole lot of weight.
You hear about college kids floating kegs and drinking a lot of beer,
and that's very common.
But I was next level.
When I say I was drinking two or three cases a day,
I really mean that.
So like 72 beers in a day.
Yeah.
I would hazard a guess I was probably
walking around at a constant point two or point three blood alcohol content and as you'll hear in a
little bit my frame of reference for that's pretty good um i usually could tell what i was at um
it was bad though uh i wanted to die i really did um and i just i knew if i kept drinking i would
and so that that's what i was doing that was your plan that was the plan i was going to drink myself to
stuff.
Somehow I ended up back in Georgia at my parents' house.
My brother was there.
Some of his friends from high school were there.
And I guess I had just shown up at their house drunk as shit.
And I don't remember what happened, but I'm sure I picked a fight because I used to do that.
And my brother had had enough.
And my dad had enough.
And I don't remember what happened.
but I remember waking up in jail the next day with black eyes.
Like I had to hell beat out of me, and I was the one I went to jail.
Because I'm sure I was the instigator, you know.
So that's my first time going to jail.
They charged me with, I guess, two counts of domestic battery,
because it was my dad and my brother.
And then one count of felony terrorist threat,
because apparently I said some really dumb shit to the police.
They dropped those.
I had an order of no contact with my parents.
Oh, I had, I don't know if you've wondered this, but I'm drinking a very large amount of alcohol.
You're probably wondering how I was affording that.
Somehow I had gotten credit cards and had paid them just enough to where I had a $30,000 credit limit.
And I literally ran up like $20,000 in alcohol.
So I bonded myself out of jail with my credit card.
I don't even know if you could do that today.
Like, I think that would take cash.
I don't know.
I should know this.
Anyway, I bought myself out of jail, and I, you know, my parents had taken my car
because I got pulled over going like 120 miles an hour.
With dope and guns in the car, too.
I never got caught for that.
I just remember that.
Had that girl from Florida in the car with me, though.
Anyway, they'd taken my car and sold it.
after I get arrested for that, you know, I'm banned from going to my parents' house.
I've got an order of no contact with my parents, my brother, and my brother's friend.
And I somehow convinced a car dealership to sell me a vehicle and finance it.
A truck.
It was a 98 GMC 4x4.
And I convinced an apartment complex to lease me an apartment.
A nice one.
I had no income at all.
How old are you at this point?
21.
21 years old.
And of course, I had no way of paying for this apartment, so the clock was ticking.
And I'm still drinking like a fish.
I end up meeting this guy named Rod, I think, was his name, who did gutter cleaning in the apartments and he offered me a job.
Then he tried to pay me in meth.
which was weird, but I took it anyway.
And so now I'm addicted to meth,
squatting in an apartment with the vehicle I'm not paying for.
You know, a year prior, I had been at Fort Benning,
trying to become an infantryman.
And a year prior to that, I was in college, kicking ass.
And now I'm squatting and addicted to meth in a raging alcoholic.
Oh, and I'm out of bond.
Like, it just, it went south so fast where it felt like it did.
It's going south much faster as we can.
get more into this.
But somehow I even had Internet in this apartment and I somehow had a computer in this apartment.
I don't remember how I got these things, but I had them.
And I logged into, you remember AOL Instant Messenger?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
So I log into an old AIM account and my ex-girlfriend from when I was 12 and 13 and then again, 16 and 17 from Mississippi, messages me.
And the same one you were pissed off about that you had to leave to go to California.
One of the things we've been wanting to start on Patreon is deep dives into the guests.
We found Ben and Jess's story so inspiring that we actually created a mini doc out of what they're doing right now.
It's over on Patreon.
You guys can go check it out.
I've been wanting to do this for a long time and we finally have the team to be able to go
and produce these things, thanks to Patreon.
I've talked about this on almost every show.
I thank our patrons.
Without you guys, none of this would be possible.
I'm so excited to bring this to you guys.
I think you're gonna love it.
I know you're gonna love it.
And Ben, his story is so awesome.
Flipping the trap houses into halfway houses.
It's an amazing mini-documentary
on what they're doing right now.
Like I said, we found this story so inspiring.
We're gonna start doing this with
more and more guests that we have on the Sean Ryan show.
Head over to Patreon right now.
You can be the whole documentary.
No, same time frame, but it's a different girl.
Me and this girl, our name's Aaron.
You know, we've known each other since we were 12.
I went to the same church.
She actually wrote me letters when I was locked up in rehab in California and Utah.
She'd stayed in touch with my mom and had just been kind of like a constant positive influence over the years.
moved back to Alabama, 16 and 17. We dated long distance.
And anyway, she messages me on AIM.
And she's like, is this Ben? And I'll like, yeah.
She didn't believe me because apparently she'd been trying to message me and kept getting
one of my crazy girlfriends. And so I'm like, well, fuck to call me. So I pick up a phone
call her. And we talked for five minutes. And she's like, well, look, I'm married, but I'm about
to get divorced. But I don't you come up from North Carolina. And I'm sitting there thinking
in the back of my head, this bitch has no idea what she's getting.
into.
Because, like, she's a good little church girl, right?
And I ended up, my credit cards are all almost maxed out at this point, but the clock's
ticking.
Like, I'm about to be homeless.
And my truck's going to get repoed.
And so I get the truck, and I start driving to Charlotte, run out of gas.
My credit card's declined.
And I convinced somebody to fill my truck up with gas.
I may get to Charlotte.
Long story short, she's pregnant.
And I said that
What do you mean long story short
I went up there
I went up there
We spent two nights together
I get back down to Atlanta
I had
And what do you look like at this point
Absolute dog shit
Shaved head
It's cut everywhere
Because I tried to shave it with a
You know
A bick razor
I was thin as shit
Still a raging alcoholic
I looked like death warmed over
In fact
And meth
Meth
Yeah
And a meth
And a meth
dish. Now, she had no idea about the meth or the alcohol, any of that.
Even after you met her?
Even after I met her, she just thought I was skinny, you know?
You don't think she looked the other way. She could smell it on you?
Well, so she did, she knew, I was drinking. She was drinking too then, right?
So, like, that was acceptable because she didn't see what happens when they don't drink.
I get sick of shit. She also didn't see me drinking at 6 o'clock in the morning.
So I was able to hide it for a couple days.
Now I remember how I had the computer. I had gotten a job.
selling merchant services, credit card processing, over the phone to somebody.
And so somebody provided me a computer.
We had a deal go through, so I had a couple thousand dollars.
I went and spent that time up there and started with her, came back to my apartment,
and I'm trying to figure out how to afford everything, how to start rebuilding my life.
Hold on. What did you guys do up there? Just drank?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just locked yourself in the room?
Went to like a holiday inn.
And yeah, that's what we did.
And I go back to Atlanta.
And it lasted two days?
Two days.
That's it.
What ended it?
Well, I had to go back to Atlanta.
Oh, okay.
So what actually ended it was she said she's getting divorced.
Her husband didn't know that part yet.
He's about to because like three weeks after I get back to Atlanta, she realized she's pregnant.
And there's no way it's his because they've been sleeping in different rooms and blah, blah, blah.
So she has to tell him.
And then she has to tell me.
I may have misrepresented.
I'm not actually in the middle of a divorce, but I'm going to be now.
And I ended up moving to Charlotte, moved in with her and her sister.
I quit drinking cold turkey.
I quit meth the day I left Atlanta.
I've never liked meth ever.
I did it because it was there.
Well, mostly because God tried to pay me in meth, and I wanted at least something for my labor.
So anyway, I quit drinking called turkey, and it almost killed.
me, I got pancreatitis. I lost 40 pounds in a month, and then keep in mind, I'm already
pretty thin. I didn't have that to lose. And I almost died. They didn't know what was wrong
with me because I wasn't being truthful with any of the doctors about how much I drank.
And when I would try to be, they would discount. They're like, well, you're young. There's
no way you can drink that much, you know. And so, of course, I took that and banked that.
See, even the doctor says I can't drink that much, you know, just in case. I'm
want to start drinking again.
But I got sober, and I stayed that way.
Jackson, our oldest child, was born.
Aaron files for divorce, and I get a job in Charlotte after I heal up and I can eat and keep food down and I'm gaining weight again.
I get a job.
How long did that take?
I was bed-redden for 30 days.
It took about 30 days to get through that.
Yeah.
Well, it took about 60 to fully recover from it, all in.
But I couldn't get out of bed for 30 days.
And I didn't realize this then, but...
What does the girl think that you can't get out of bed in 30 days?
Well, she knew I had pancreatitis, and I'd gotten honest with her about the drinking, too.
Why did you quit drinking?
Because I knew I had a son coming.
So that cleaned you up?
That cleaned me up.
Yeah, you know.
I didn't want to be a piece of shit, and I don't want to die anymore.
I wanted to do right.
And she was supportive?
Oh, yeah.
She knew when we got together, you know,
because she'd been there through California and Utah.
She knew I had battled addiction.
And she knew I battled.
Well, she thought I was bipolar.
We all thought I was bipolar still at the time.
So she knew what she was getting into.
Why?
I mean, you're saying this is a good church girl.
Were you a project?
What was?
She was convinced from the time we met that we were meant to be together.
Why?
I don't know.
She never told you.
She just, I was her one.
I was her one.
And, you know, from my perspective, I'd had nothing but crazy psychos all the way up to this point.
And she, like, wants to have a family and cook me dinner and be sweet to me, and she doesn't, you know, get mad and hit me.
It was great from my perspective, too.
You know, it seemed great.
And so I quit drinking, and we got through that.
I got a job.
She had a job.
She was in school.
Now, are you talking to your parents at this point?
I didn't talk to them the whole time I was sick.
They didn't know where I was.
They just knew that apartment.
My mom came and saw me the night before I left and just sobbed
because I looked so bad.
When did the restraining order lift?
So that case got adjudicated.
They gave me diversion.
dropped the felony terrorist threat, and they gave me diversion, which I completed through
community service with the Red Cross in North Carolina. They let me move my probation up there.
So it got deleted. There's no criminal record associated with it. It's like it never happened.
As soon as I took that deal, the restraining order was lifted, but my parents and I had already
been talking because after I moved to Charlotte, I didn't know this, but Lauren, Aaron's sister,
had called my parents to say, you know, hey, just want you to know, Ben's here. He's
trying to get sober, he's alive.
Aaron's the girl.
Aaron's the girl, Lawrence, her sister.
So my parents knew where I was.
I didn't know they knew that,
but I thought I had just gone no contact.
And that was my plan.
I was going to go no contact
until I could come back with something saying,
here's what I've done.
You know, I'm not a piece of shit, see?
And so I was looking at getting back into school.
I was working this job.
This guy who did electronics recycling.
I mean, like paying me like $7 an hour or something ridiculous.
But as I'm watching the way this business operates,
I notice a lot of stuff goes in the dumpster that looks like it's like probably valuable,
like computer servers and hard disk drives and all sorts of stuff like this.
I started talking to them about it.
Come to find out the way their business operates, they do asset recovery.
So if you lease, let's say you lease these lights and these microphones from somebody.
Well, the person you lease you from is writing that off.
and then when it's done with, they're supposed to throw it away
or give it to an electronic recyclers.
So the guy's explaining to me all of the stuff is already paid for,
I don't give a shit, it's going on my dumpster.
And I was like, well, could I list it on eBay and take a cut of it?
And he's like, go ahead.
Your idea is dumb, but go ahead.
The idea was not dumb.
I started, like, printing mine.
It was going really well.
And my parents decided that I had been doing good enough to go back to college
and they were going to help.
We had a kid now.
And so I moved from...
How did they feel about the kid?
They were just overjoyed.
They were happy at first.
But the fact that it was with Aaron,
and my parents have known Aaron,
since she was a little girl.
They know Aaron's mom.
You know, like, they thought this is the turnaround
Ben needed.
And I did too.
I really did.
I think we all thought that the hopes were high.
Let's put it that way.
You know, Ben finally has some stability.
Had there ever been any more discussion
about the abortion?
Never came up.
Never since.
No.
I mean, I talked to Aaron a lot about it because it ate me alive, dude.
It ate me alive for a long time.
So you and your mom have not spoken about the abortion since it's happened, still to this day?
To this day.
Probably should.
It's one of those things that kind of blocked out until I started telling him a story, you know?
It's just, it hurts.
I can't go back and change that.
Do you think you'll talk about it now?
I think I need to.
I think I need to
I think I need it to a long fucking time ago too
how will you bring it up
oh I got a really good excuse now
hey mom
guess what I let slip on the Sean Ryan show
we should talk about this before it airs
uh
yeah
I know
so I guess it wasn't entirely true
we did talk about it once
and my mom told me that she went inside with Amber
and Amber was
much further along
then she would have been if it was mine.
Now, I don't know if my mom told me that to make me feel better
or to make herself feel better or if that's reality.
And I doubt very much that Amber's alive for me to track down and find out.
So I had forgotten that.
We did talk about that.
Have you ever tried to track her down?
No.
Oddly enough, that X that I went nuts over
hit me up on LinkedIn like two months ago.
Or I guess it was a year ago.
She said, hey, I'm getting divorced.
Dvorced, what are you doing?
I was like, I am not getting divorced, and you can get out of my fucking DMs.
I've had a few exes pull that and it'll pop up, tell me they're getting divorced.
Hell, even hearing.
Anyway, yeah, you can tell that abortion is silly except me.
It does, a lot.
I used to get drunk about that a lot.
But I think part of me was using it as an excuse.
It does bother me.
I can tell.
But I would take any excuse I could just to not have to be responsible for my behavior.
And I think we run into that with a lot of addicts and alcoholics,
especially in a veteran community.
And that's maybe a controversial topic.
But I think in society's efforts to understand,
especially what combat vets have gone through,
We might have incentivized some of them to adopt a victim mentality.
I'm not going to disagree with that.
I've talked about it several times on here.
Well, and I think for most people, that would be okay.
But when you're dealing with an addict or an alcoholic,
victims don't recover.
Victims die.
And that's a stark truth.
And so I don't know what the answer is to that.
And that's a rabbit hole I just took us on.
But it's a fact, man.
You know, when we're trying to get, anyway.
Keep going.
We're trying to get vets who are battling alcoholism and addiction out of the gutter
and to take responsibility for their lives.
I'm going to preface this with, I don't know what the answer is,
but I do know what part of the problem is.
And we have all of these veteran-specific recovery groups,
these veteran-specific rehabs.
These are great.
Somebody's getting paid out the ass to make that.
And the only way they stay open is if they keep convincing vets,
they're going to recover different and keep getting vets into their programs.
veterans, especially combat veterans, do need special treatment when it comes to certain things.
You know, when you're talking about combat trauma, moral injury, yeah, yeah, that is something very niche.
You need specific help from veterans with that.
But when we're talking about alcoholism and addiction, bro, you recover just like everybody else does.
The same 12 steps that have worked for 90 years are going to work for you too.
You just got to work them.
And not everybody has to go through 12 steps.
Plenty of people get sober without that stuff.
But it's the ones that think that they're in the room as we call it terminally unique.
and it is terminal.
If you think you're special and different
than another addict or alcoholic,
the chances of you being able to lean on their experience,
strength, and hope to get better,
it's cut infinitesimally small
because you're nullifying their experience
and thinking it can't help you
just because they don't have
some of the other experiences you have.
And I don't know that I'm the right guy
to take that conversation with masses
because I'm barely even a veteran.
I'm definitely not a combat veteran.
I'm just speaking from experience.
We've seen this time and again
with vets that
want to hold on to that
what makes them special and they are special
they're less than 1% of the population
they're special but when it comes to getting off dope
or putting down a bottle no you can't be
special in that regard
yeah
we just had a conversation about this last night
on our Patreon
live chat and was with a firefighter
and you know I think
I don't think
I know
I mean
being a seal is something I did.
Contracting for the agency is something I did.
Being a firefighter is something you did.
Being a cop is something you did.
But, you know, when being a combat vet is something you did.
It doesn't define who the fuck you are.
That's not you.
That's something you did.
And so many of us, me included, you know, I did it.
You wrap that up into your identity.
The line gets barred.
And understandably so.
But it's still there.
And it's still a massive impediment to vets that are trying to get sober.
They've got to shred that or shed the victim mentality.
And it's hard.
It's hard to tell somebody that.
We're into it trafficking survivors, too.
The same mentality and the same incentivization to maintain victimhood gets pushed on them.
It gets pushed.
I think they think they can't do anything else.
I don't think it's just victim mentality.
Now, there is definitely the victim mentality.
I see it all the time.
You see it all the time.
I think there's a lot of commonalities with the stuff that go into that.
But probably with trafficking victims as well, I don't have as much insight into that.
But, you get, because it's not just a job.
You know, it's a lifestyle.
It's a culture.
It's a 24-7-365 job.
Yep.
And your identity becomes wrapped up in that.
You lose sight of who you really are.
And then when you wrap your identity up into that
and you allow it to become part of you.
When that roll is over, you lose your entire sense of who you are.
Exactly.
And people get wrapped up in it.
They can't set that down.
and go, this is something I did, now it's time to move on.
Yeah.
It's the war's over.
You're too old to go back.
It's done.
So you can't keep living like you're living, like you're going back.
Or going to fight another fire, or going to solve another crime, or going to fight another crime.
You got to treat it just like any other life.
I think a lot of the same with trafficking victims.
You know, that is, that's a lifestyle.
Yep.
That is a lifestyle of sex, parties, all that kind of stuff, you know.
And you just can't carry that with you.
And people think it's impossible.
A lot of people think it's, you know, I'll never, I don't, you know,
how are these skills going to transfer over?
They're not going to fucking transfer.
You mean you don't get to shoot people?
to face every day anymore?
Yeah.
They're not going to transfer over.
But you have to find who you are.
You have to find who you are.
You have to develop, you know, new hobbies.
100%.
New interests.
And, I mean, look, me coming out of the SEAL teams
or me coming out of contracting for the CIA,
I sure a shit didn't think I'd be sitting here podcasting.
But, you know, and that's what I did.
you know i i i went into tactics and then i didn't like teaching tactics i just
was the thing i did and then and then i threw a bunch of trying a bunch of different things
you know and i didn't like this didn't like this i kind of like this let me try it again let me
try it again and then it changes man you you have to you have to be willing to like put that
shit behind you and think of it is that was a segment of my life that's not who i am that's over
now let's move on to the next thing and it takes time you can't just make that decision you know
immediately and go oh now i'm going to be i want to do this it takes time to figure out who the
fuck you are and what you like doing and what new interests are and you have to be open to accept those
new interests to develop who you're going to become rather than living with who you were or who
you thought you were.
Well, that's what I was that. That's who you thought you were.
And even back to the firstborn, you know, impressing the parents thing, I mean, that was a huge
burden on me for a long time. And like, it's just this, it's this pressure. And, I mean,
it wasn't who I was, man.
But we do it to ourselves, though.
We do it to ourselves.
It's a self-imposed prison.
Yeah.
And once you realize that, you're free to redefine, you know, to identify, to find that thing that gives you purpose.
How do you say his last name, Fetis, Chris Fetis?
Fetis.
Fetis.
You and him had a great conversation about that, about finding purpose and life after any of those roles that used to identify who we are, you know?
And that's really what it comes down to.
And I've noticed that to be especially true for vets.
So while I just had a rant about trying to get vets sober,
I've got something positive to add to that.
You take a veteran who is struggling with alcoholism or addiction,
and you find them purpose.
Bro, they're going to change the world.
I mean, fast, too.
You've just got to help them find that purpose.
Let's move on.
All right.
So, we're in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Aaron has had Jackson, my oldest job.
I'm sober.
I'm working.
I've started up this side hustle on eBay that's going,
pretty good. And my parents decide that, you know, since Ben's a father now and is getting married,
Ben needs a college degree. And I was very excited to hear that. I don't know why my parents
decided to show back up for me the way that they did, because I never in a million years could
have expected this from them, but they put us in a house in Huntsville, Alabama, and basically
made sure all of our basic needs were covered.
And I took out student lawns, and Aaron and I both went to college.
School went really well.
I was working during school.
I was kicking ass.
I think I had like a 3.8 GPA.
I'd switch to business because engineering, you know, with everything I had going on just
wasn't going to happen.
I needed to graduate quick and get a job.
And yet again, I decided to follow.
my dad's footsteps, surprise, surprise, and set my eyes on a job with Pfizer.
Because I loved the life he'd been able to provide for us, you know, even though I didn't appreciate it at a time.
So I wanted to go following his footsteps at Pfizer.
Kick an ass in business school, my granddad, the one that picked me out from Fort Benning,
was, oddly enough, battling a myotrophic lateral sclerosis, Lou Geary's disease, and was nearing the end.
of his life with that. You know, it's always terminal. And it's very rare for somebody to get
it at his age. He was in the 70s. And my grandmother, his wife of 50 years, had Alzheimer's,
and they were both getting close to the end. That was one of the reasons we moved back to Alabama
was to be close to them. Now, I've always been extremely close to both of them, my grandparents.
I mean, they were probably my two favorite people ever. And Grenadie died. He did get to meet Jackson.
And I started drinking again.
And really what I did was kind of fucked up.
I said I was going to quit for a year.
Let's walk it all the way back.
You started drinking again.
Right after your grandpa's death.
Yep.
Let's just walk through that decision-making process.
There really is.
not a decision-making process involved in this one.
You're sober for a year at this point?
I was sober for a year.
And I told Aaron and Lauren back in Charlotte that I was going to quit drinking for a year.
This year has passed and now I have an excuse.
My favorite person on earth just died.
A normal person can drink over that.
I'm a normal person now.
You see, I put the alcohol down for a year voluntarily.
That makes me normal.
That was the fucked up thinking I was using.
And I knew full well in the back of my mind I was not going to be able to maintain.
Where did you go?
It's a gas station right up street.
And I started drinking again.
And oddly enough, I did hold it together.
I mean, I was making all my classes.
My kid was all taken care of.
My yard was perfectly manicured at the house my parents were paying for.
I was making it.
I was working two jobs sometimes.
Over the breaks, I would work 12-hour shifts,
seven days a week for 30 days straight in a factory,
making good money.
But drinking.
And my parents found out, I guess Aaron had told them,
or maybe they found a beer bottle or something on all that,
and just raised holy hell over the fact that I was drinking again.
And I broke it down, like, I don't see what the problem is.
I'm look at all of what I'm doing despite the fact that I'm drinking.
Like, what's the big deal?
Obviously, my parents know what the big deal is.
I'm a raging alcoholic.
It doesn't matter what I'm able to maintain.
I'm only going to maintain that until I can't.
And the day when I can't is going to come.
It always does.
Aaron ends up getting pregnant again.
We're still in college.
So Jacob's on the way.
And we had a huge blow up about my drinking.
And so my petty response to that was like, fine, I'll quit for two years this time.
And that's what I did.
And so I put it back down.
And Jacob was born and life was great.
I was going to college.
I was doing really good.
And then I get sick again.
Like the pancreatitis had came back when I quit drinking or something.
We couldn't figure it out.
The doctors couldn't figure out.
I lose a shitload of weight.
I end up going over to my parents' house in Georgia,
and they take me to some specialists over there who figures out,
I have literally pickled my gallbladder.
I drank an organ out of my body.
So they removed the gallbladder in 2005,
and then realize I'd done a lot of other damage to my GI tract
with drinking all the times.
I've been throwing up blood,
and so they do another operation called a Nissen procedure,
which is supposed to be for reflux,
but they were trying to undo damage I'd done.
I was supposedly the youngest person in the state of Alabama
to ever have that surgery done.
But I'd stopped drinking.
I had two abdominal surgeries, which are extremely painful.
And so they had me on a lot of pain pills,
which I don't know that I was addicted to them, but I sure loved them.
And I was taken, like, as prescribed, you know,
I wouldn't take an extra,
but I definitely developed a taste for opiates during this time period.
I end up graduate in college and get hired on at Pfizer as a sales rep.
They moved us to Memphis.
That's how I ended up in Memphis.
The drinking culture at Pfizer are really anywhere in corporate America.
It's not a great place for an incognito alcoholic to be.
And I was not doing meetings.
I just stopped drinking, right?
So, you know, it was just a matter of time, and it started pretty fast, right back to drinking every day, right back to drinking at 6 o'clock in the morning, to the point that they figured it out at Pfizer training and put me out on short-term disability for being an alcoholic.
I'm like, that seems retarded.
The way this works at Pfizer at the time, if you're on short-term disability, you still get paid and you're not allowed to work at all.
And I thought that was the dumbest thing I've ever heard my life.
I was excited to be working.
I came out of Pfizer training with one of the highest test scores ever.
They hired me to sell pain management meds and an inhaled insulin that ended up bombing a couple of years later.
But I excelled in the training.
Like all that medical love had come back.
I've got a job explaining to doctors, the pharmacokinetics of different drugs, and it was awesome.
I wanted to work, and they wouldn't let me because I had this drinking problem.
And we've just moved to Memphis.
We're in a new city.
We don't know anybody.
And I did get to work a little bit out in the field and do my actual job before the chips all came,
falling down on this shit.
and I end up getting, I want to say alcoholic psychosis, but it was worse than that,
Wernicki Korsakov's.
It's supposed to be permanent brain damage from the amount I was drinking.
And it was so bad that the neurologist that was telling us about this told Aaron that she needed to start taking videos of me and the kids
so that I would remember them because pretty soon I'm not.
my brain is turning into Swiss cheese from the amount of alcohol I'm consuming.
And that if I ever drink again, I'm going to die.
And I refused to accept that.
I backed off on my drinking because I was having very bad memory problems, very bad.
Like it was frightening, scared and shit on me.
Like I did believe the doctors that I might have the memory thing.
I didn't believe I was going to die if I drink again.
This was in early 2007.
I'm not wanting to accept I'm an alcoholic.
You know, outside looking in, bro, you were 25 years old or whatever I was,
and you drink an organ out of your body.
Like, that's a clue, you know.
If you're any age and you drink until you're puking up blood,
you're not a person that should drink.
So outside looking at, I think the whole world knows Ben's a raging alcoholic.
Everybody but Ben accepts this.
and I was still obsessed with the fact that, no, I'm just, I'm a real man, I can drink.
And we ended up at my parents' house.
It's Easter Sunday at 2007.
And they tried to do an intervention with me.
And I wanted absolutely nothing to do with that at all.
You know, I've got two kids in the house.
I'd gotten off disability at this point and had been in the field.
absolutely kicking ass, like overselling quotas left and right,
setting sales records.
Like, I deserve a goddamn drink.
Y'all can fuck off.
You know, I'm off to a hotter start than my dad was.
This is the way I'm looking at this.
And so I left the house real pissed off.
And I hit Scottsboro, Alabama, going about 130, and a car flipped.
Single car accident.
I was buckled, and my seat broke on the,
second or third flip and I went out the rear windshield going over 100 miles an hour.
And I remember flying, you know, through the air and like I had time to cognitively think I need
to make sure I land on my feet. And right about that time, my face hit the grass and the median.
I had roadburn all over my head. I bounced, flipped end over in several times.
I ended up breaking my pelvis in three places,
which if you're not familiar with pelvic fractures,
it's extremely dangerous.
All your organs sit in your pelvis.
My left leg, the one that I'd screwed up in the Army
and in football, was completely demolished.
Half of my tibia is now bone filler.
They had to reconstruct the tibial plateau, plates in there.
That's a few other broken bombs.
That was it for me.
I got sober that day.
And it would have stayed it if I had just done, this is 2007.
If I had done in 2007 what they've been telling me to do since 1997,
which would go to fucking meetings.
Like, you're not special.
This is a problem lots of people have.
You go to these meetings that make you better.
If I'd have been willing to do that, I'd have stayed sober for me.
It's your Sunday, 2007.
And me and you wouldn't be sitting here right now.
I decided to leave Pfizer.
I was going to do everything other than go to meetings, though.
I was not going to drink.
I even quit cigarettes.
I quit every mental health medication.
They had me on.
I was drunk on a wreck the car.
I was also on Clonopin, which was prescribed to me.
I was also on Xanax, which is prescribed.
Why I'm on both of those at the same time is beyond me.
I'm on like 100 milligrams of Adderall a day.
Like, I'm on all the dope.
State trooper saw how fucked up I was.
It was like, pretty sure you're taking some stuff you're not supposed to,
but I'm not charging you.
You know, and I was like, that's it.
God just winked at me.
I'm taking it.
I'm taking it, and I'm fixing my life.
So I quit smoking cigarettes.
I quit all the meds.
And I got sober.
I decided to leave Fajer because the drinking holder was too bad.
And as good as I was doing there, I should be making a lot more money.
And so I started looking into getting a job in medical device sales.
And that ended up being exactly what I did.
job selling medical devices. I interviewed for several. One was in women's health space. One was
in trauma selling the exact plate that was in my leg. And then cardiac is where I found my passion.
So not a cardiovascular surgeon, but I'm getting to sell cardiac devices in the cath lab,
cardiologist, an electrophysiologist. I'm getting to nerd out on all this cool stuff.
And I was making money hand over fist. I think I made like 2.30 that year at 25,
26 years old. Like, I was doing really good.
And then we had a company-wide meeting in Chicago.
And I hadn't, like, Pfizer does all these functions.
It's impossible to not be around everybody being drunk when you work at pharmaceutical company.
Medical advice is a little different.
Territories are much more spread out.
And so I hadn't been exposed to that.
We had the meeting in Chicago and realized, I'm in the same fucking environment.
I was a Pfizer.
Except it's even worse.
They were, like, harassing me for not drinking.
And I ended up getting into it with our VP of sales pretty big, pretty bad.
And I was like, I can't stay here.
And that was just as well because they started telling us to commit Medicare fraud.
Change billing codes so they would cover our devices and some other stuff that I knew it's extremely illegal.
I asked a question and they terminated me, which is fine because I wanted that to happen anyway.
Now, a few years later, they ended up getting fined, I think, $21 million by the Office of the Inspector General
for exactly what I asked a question about.
So whatever.
What was the question?
Is it not Medicare fraud to change this diagnosis from palpitations to conduction delay unspecified,
knowing full well that yes, they mean the same thing, but Medicare will only pay for
conduction delay unspecified, not palpitations?
And I sent that in an email with those exact words.
They knew I was firing shots at it.
Like, I'm telling you, I know you are breaking federal law right now, and I'm not going to do it.
And I want you to reply to this email and tell me in writing that you want me to do it.
Two of us sent that email.
My buddy actually was the whistleblower that got a few million dollars when they got fined.
I went back to that little side hustle I had because I wanted to start my own business.
I wanted to be self-employed.
This is the only way in my mind I could stay sober the way Ben had to stay sober,
which is I need to just work for myself and create my own culture at my job.
And so I ended up making a lot of eBay listings of some computer and server gear that I'd had laying around.
But it's dawning on me.
Like I just went from making a lot of money to zero income.
My wife is a stay-at-home mom.
I have two kids.
You know, I'm a t-ball coach.
I'm Cub Scout leader.
Like, I got a lot of responsibilities and no money coming in.
So I'm going through my garage, like, trying to figure out what can I do, what can I do?
What can I do?
and there's a broken flat screen TV in my garage.
I was like, I'm going to find a screen and fix that thing and sell it.
Because this is back when like a 37-inch TV was $2,000 or whatever they were.
Now, get on eBay, and there's literally no screens for these TVs anywhere.
I'm like, well, that's weird.
There's no aftermarket parts available.
Me being me, always thinking of a hustle,
I took the TV apart and listed all the parts on eBay for sale.
It was working because I knew they worked.
The only thing was wrong with that TV is the screen was broken.
Wake up the next day and there's $400 in my PayPal account.
I had sold every part out of that TV that was basically from a dumpster overnight.
And so I went to a TV parts place in Memphis or a TV repair shop in Memphis
and asked them if I could buy a broken screen TV from them.
And they were like, why would you want to do that?
And I told them, they're like, we need a new source for parts.
That's a great idea.
Next thing I know I'm buying broken TVs from every repair shop in Memphis.
I'm running ads on Craigslist and buy on broken TVs.
I started this business in my garage in 2009.
That's when everything fell apart with the medical device companies, 2009.
And by 2011, I had a 7,500 square foot warehouse and a dozen employees.
Wow.
It grew quick, man.
I had my first website built.
I got on Shopify in 2010.
or maybe 2009, they had like 34 employees and were ruining space from somebody else.
They didn't have their own office back then.
You know, Shopify is massive now.
And so I stayed sober that whole time.
I didn't even start smoking cigarettes again.
I'm off all the mental health meds and I've realized there's nothing wrong with my brain.
I'm just a high-stress person that does have ADHD and high anxiety sometimes.
But everything was going really good.
My dad, well, let me back up.
We had Lily. Aaron wanted to try again for a girl. And so we got her, Lily. And Aaron is not great at taking medication on schedule. So birth control being one of those. A year after Lily was born, we had twin boys. So three kids in here. But I don't care. I mean, I'm making good money. Like everything is going to good. I'm excited. My dad ended up getting cut from Pfizer a couple of years before that.
and he'd gone into business as one of his old buddies.
And I guess they were having some financial strain.
They moved into the house next door to us.
My dad actually works for me briefly.
And I don't remember exactly when it was in 2011,
but some stuff happened between my parents.
And I don't want to get into it.
But the hall holding my parents on a pedestal thing kind of got ripped away.
You don't want to go into it.
Let's put it this way.
They came real close to getting divorced,
and I saw a different side of a lot of things that fucked me up to my core.
And both of them?
Yeah.
And I didn't have anybody talk to about that.
that I didn't know who to go to.
I didn't know how to deal with it.
And I ended up drinking.
What yours is?
2011.
And the really bad part about that is that nothing bad happened.
It went okay.
And so me and Aaron decided that, you know, maybe I wasn't an alcoholic after all,
because she'd missed drinking.
You know, Aaron's not an alcoholic.
call it like she was a social drinker and she missed it the next six months you know i'm i'm enjoying
my single malt scotch and smoking cigars and making crazy money at this tv parts business you know i'm
on top of the world dude um and then i want to say it was like november december of 2011
and a leg starts acting up, the one that I got the plate in.
And it swells up, and it's like just nasty, gnarly looking.
I ended up having a methacillin resistant staff infection that had recurred.
Now, this had happened before.
It came back, and it was really, really bad.
Like, they were talking about potentially I was going to be an above-knee amputee if it moved anymore,
and I'm freaking the fuck out.
They got me on a lot of pain medication, and I'm drinking again, you know, and that's not a good combination.
I wasn't abusing the pain medication, but I have a really high tolerance to opiates, and we've already established I'm bad about manipulating doctors.
And so I convinced my doctor that I needed a lot more than I needed.
and so I was physically addicted to prescribed pain pills.
Which ones?
Percocet.
At first.
Perkissette at first.
Speaking of above-kne amputations, I actually had an amputee living on my couch at this point.
He had come back from Iraq, lost the leg, and ended up addicted to oxycodone prescribed by the VA.
We'd given him a job, got him off.
of our couch and moved him into the house next door to us.
My parents had moved out.
And he had been clean, like, he went through rehab,
and he's rebuilding his life.
And I'm being an absolute asshole at work.
And I realize it's these fucking pain pills.
And so I flushed him down the toilet,
and he saw me do it, and he looked like I was a crazy person.
I was like, what?
I literally just cussed out a guy that spent $90,000 with me
in the last 18 months.
I can't do this and he goes
He just laughed
And then it hit me
I am physically addicted to these things
And I'm about to find out what it means to be dope sick
And sure shit I did
About eight hours later I could not move
And then comes Sergeant Deaton
With a little blue pill
That he'd gotten from the VA
And that was the first time I ever took
One of the 30 milligram roxy's
And I was better like that
I say better
I was addicted to something
much, much stronger.
So it started out with the prescribed pain pill habit,
and it progressed to somebody else's prescription,
and then it progressed even worse than that.
To what?
So I went back and forth with the pain pill addiction
for probably all of 2012.
And it made me realize this drinking problem is getting worse, quickly.
And so I went to rehab.
Detox, anyway, in Georgia.
On her own accord?
Oh, yeah, I wanted it, you know.
But I still had this air of entitlement about me.
You know, I own a business.
I've housed a homeless veteran.
I give them a job.
You know, I only drink single-blancic.
I'm boozy.
And so I had to go to this expensive-ass place where Steve Ravonne and Bert Reynolds got cleaned.
And I wasn't going to file it on insurance either because I also have started up black rifle and brush-fire tactical and these other tax.
Tactical e-commerce brands.
I don't want my name.
I don't anybody know it.
I'm an alcoholic.
You'd already started all these other companies.
2012, yeah, I started those up on Shopify.
This is before Shopify said you can't sell guns on here.
So what was Black Rifle Co?
But it was a gun e-commerce.
So not actual firearms, just parts, accessories, and ammunition.
Most of it was drop-shipped.
We would warehouse some of it and ship it out in just like their damn TV parts.
And what was the other company?
Brushfire attack.
We had several of them.
We had two testicles, tactical, which was hilarious.
What did they sell?
It was all the same.
Every brand sold the same stuff.
I was playing with branding to see which one I can get to go viral.
So basically you just created a business model out of the electronics industry and brought that into firearms.
Yeah, 100%.
And the progression happened.
Sorry, I was so stuck on telling you about the drugs and alcohol.
I forgot that part.
at retech, that was the name of the TV Parts Company.
And it was doing really well, but I don't give a shit about TVs.
I love firearms.
I was trying to figure out how to spend this into firearms or muscle cars
or something that I'm passionate about.
And so I discovered drop shipping.
How many companies were you running?
Like five at any given time.
But they were all running out of the same thing.
And the way I look at it, so even though they're different entities,
the business model is very similar for all of them.
Now, tactical and TV parts are different
because the TV parts, you're having to buy truckloads
of broken televisions, literal, you know,
53-foot truckloads. A lot of labor
goes into testing and stripping.
But then after that, it's just pulling parts off
of shelves, sticking in a box and ship them to the right
person. That second half is identical
for the gun parts.
Pull a part off the shelf, stick in a box,
make sure it gets the right person. So I'm able
to use the same labor as far
as the fulfillment side goes.
And we'd learned about drop shipping
in the TV parts because you can
drop-ship electronics.
That's where you're selling something
you don't even have.
You're buying it wholesale
from a third-party warehouse
who then ships it directly
to your customer.
It's super convenient
and you take the margin, right?
And so we'd gotten into that
some on the electronic side of things.
And then that was what we built,
black rifle, brush-fire,
triple T, all of those brands around
was the drop-shipping model.
And it was really, I was just wanting to see
it on the branding side.
And it was weird.
All the products are the same,
all the staff is the same,
but there were like diehard customers of Triple T
that would get in arguments on social media with customers
from black, like it was hilarious.
It's all me.
Like, what are you going on?
Anyway, and it was weird
because I'd make prices higher on one
and lower on the other and watch it.
I don't know.
It was fun.
It was a game to me.
But it weren't really well for a long time.
Until like mid-2012, the drinkums getting out of hand.
And I was like, I'm going to pay cash out of pocket
to go to this boogey place in Georgia where Bert and all
get sober. I'm there six days.
How well are you doing? Are you a millionaire?
I had gotten a buyout offer that was over two million.
I did not take it. I should have. I should have.
I had over a million in inventory. Well over a million in inventory.
I bought a 68 GTO, restored it with the kids. It's, uh, it converted it to electronic fuel
injection. It ran like a scalded dog, man. We had it cammed out.
It was such a badass car.
How were you of being a dad?
How was I with being a dad?
So my kids had never, at this point, never seen me drunk, not once.
Never seen me smoke a cigarette.
I'm still coaching tea ball.
I'm coaching soccer.
I'm leading Cub Scouts.
I don't sleep much.
Back then, I would be good on four or five hours, you know.
So I was like dad of the damn year.
Not just to my kids, but to other kids in the neighborhood, too.
Like, I was doing great outside looking in.
You know, Aaron knew the reality.
I was really, really struggling.
So you're running five companies.
Yeah.
You got how many kids?
Four kids?
I had five at this point.
Five kids, the husband, Teeball coach, Cubs Couts.
And going to church every Sunday.
And going to church every Sunday.
It had a massive drinking problem.
Yeah.
So when would you fit in the drinking?
At night, all the time.
Do you think your kids never saw you drunk or they actually never?
saw you drunk. They actually never saw me drunk up at this point. They never did.
So when would you do it? All the time. But here's the thing. I would, I would converse just like this without flurring or anything legally drunk. So I take that back. They saw me drunk. They ever saw me act drunk.
I was drinking all the time, but they wouldn't necessarily see me like they'd ever see me with a beer. I was drinking scotch.
and I was going through two bottles of McAllen 12 a day at this point.
And it was getting bad fast.
So there were like...
How's your wife?
Does your wife know this?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And she knows it's getting out of hand again.
What's she saying to you?
Like begging me to go get help.
Begging me to go to rehab.
Can we please tell your parents?
Can we please call your parents?
Can we please tell your parents?
So hold on.
You're telling me your kids never saw you drunk.
You could converse without slurring.
You're basically...
a high-functioning drunk,
where at the same token, you're telling me
that Aaron is begging you to go to rehab
because it's getting bad.
So these are like,
contradicting.
So after the kids go to bed,
there is no more speaking about slurring.
I'm blacked out, like plastered after the kids go to bed.
I also can't get out of my bed in the morning without drinking,
because if I do, I'm puking up bile.
So I have to have a drink just to get out of bed.
But once I have that first drink,
I'm just as normal as I am right now
until I have too much
which doesn't usually have
until the kids go to bed
I do want to clarify
the only reason the kids never saw me
sloppy is because Aaron shielded them
from a lot of this. The woman deserves a fucking medal.
Like she hid
so much of this which is a double-edged sword
because in a couple of years it's going to
catch them really off guard when I start
getting in trouble.
But she never let them see that.
So they were very
sheltered and shielded from it.
So even though it was happening,
they never saw it.
But, I mean, I was pretty...
And you're on opiates.
Those were often on.
The infection came back
two or three times.
2011, 12, and 13.
And each time that it comes back,
it's going to get worse.
The drinking is an immediate problem
because I'm puking up blood again.
And so we finally
did tell my parents,
My mom came and got me, and she took me to this place in Georgia.
And I was supposed to stay there for six weeks, the whole thing.
I'm going to do medical detox and stay for rehab, you know.
And I've been to plenty of rehabs already at this point.
Like, I skipped a few in here by accident.
Before Aaron.
This is going to be the first time I've gone since I had kids.
Six days in Aaron calls in business.
is falling apart. Nobody is able to run it without me there, which is 100% my fault. I did not build a
business that could exist in my absence, and I knew that. And part of it was fear because I was a
control freak, and part of it was I was too busy drinking than teaching somebody to run it in my
absence. So I leave detox. I completed detox. I leave without going to the rehab, which I knew was a bad
idea, but I also didn't have a choice.
All right, I guess I had a choice.
I just made the wrong one.
I left.
I went back to work.
And three days later, I walked into the ER at Vabseast, puking out blood, talking probably
more slurred.
But according to them, I set the Tennessee Ambulatory State Record, Tennessee State Record,
Tennessee state record for ambulatory BAC.
I blew a 0.46, denying I'd been drinking.
And I almost bled to death.
Jeez.
They were very afraid I had given myself something called esophageal varices,
which is pretty much always fatal.
You literally hemorrhage from your esophagus from drinking and die.
I lost a lot of blood, nine days in the ICU.
And I try.
my best to get a handle on the drinking after that by not just not drinking i still wasn't going to go to
meetings you know i don't need that shit um the infection came back i mean my health was
absolute trash you know my inducible liver enzymes like triple the upper limits of normal i had some
other blood work way off and so the infection came back back on the damn pain pills and deaton
has moved back to maine so i'm my connection with the rocks he's is gone uh
I had an employee that I had recently hired who was out on bond for drug charges.
And I obviously before I hired them, asked what and why and all that.
And I decided to give this guy a shot.
None of my employees knew how bad things were with me, or how bad they had gotten into pain pills.
Obviously, they knew the drinking had gotten really bad because I was passed out in my office and shit.
But I'd hid the pain pill thing from pretty well.
So as long as they weren't smelling alcohol, they thought everything was good with Ben.
I ended up buying pain pills off this dude
and it gets really expensive
like I can't keep sneaking this much money out without Aaron noticing
and he
ended up getting me heroin one day
and I hate needles
which sounds crazy because I'm covered in tattoos
I've gotten these since being clean
And the first time he got it, I snorted it, and I did not get the feeling I wanted from it.
And he shot me up.
And then later that day, I shot myself up.
And within a week, I had a $600-day heroin habit.
He shot you up.
How did that conversation go?
I was like, I fucking hate needles.
You got to show me how to do this.
And he got my hand where I don't even have veins anymore.
I used to have huge veins.
And he shot me up.
And so that progressed very, very quickly.
What did that feel like?
You want to give you an honest answer?
Yeah.
I felt like getting a hug from God.
Like the most peaceful thing I've ever felt in my entire life.
Instantly.
Instantly.
That void that I always have inside me that I've been trying to fill
since I was 13 years old, that emptiness,
it was gone in an instant.
It was gone.
It was warm.
It just, it was euphoria.
And I didn't need anything else after that.
I had arrived.
And the entire journey, getting to this point,
I had been trying to find ways to change the way I felt.
And for the first time of my entire life,
I didn't want to change the way I felt after I hit that.
I was hooked immediately.
That was, it was right around Halloween of 2013.
And Aaron knew something was wrong.
She knew something was wrong.
She didn't know what.
Andrew ended up getting arrested again,
and so I had to go meet the dope man to get my own heroin,
because obviously I'm physically addicted.
I can't afford to be sick.
And that's what took me to South Memphis.
Old man Stan, this old 70-some-odd-year-old black dude
sells heroin in South Memphis.
And so I'm making, you know, two, three trips a day out there to buy dope.
Because I kept telling myself, this is going to be the last time.
How'd you meet him?
Andrew took me to meet him right before he'd gotten arrested again.
So I'd already met Stan now.
Now I'm, you know, I'm approved to go to the dope man by myself.
What's the neighborhood like?
Oh, it's Altshirehood.
If you've watched any of my videos online, that's South Memphis, man.
But this guy's making $600 a day just off you.
Just off me.
He was living large.
Living large.
So just to give you some context on South Memphis, the infant mortality rate is higher than most or many third world nations.
Um, it's one of the deadliest zip codes in the state of Tennessee, which is one of the deadliest cities in America.
Statistically, young men in South Memphis are, and this one breaks my heart, they're more likely to be dead or incarcerated than they are to have a job of being school.
Jeez.
Now, I didn't know any of this when I first started going out there, and actually I hated South Memphis for the longest time because of what it was doing to me.
I wasn't looking at what I was doing to it.
You just touched on it.
I'm pumping that much money a day into the dope economy out there.
You know, I have harmed that community with the amount of money I spent out there with bad people.
And I kept telling myself, like, this is it.
I'm going to stop.
And that's what I'm going.
It's like $200,000 a year.
Stan told somebody he made $200,000.
And it didn't last year.
Just off you.
Just off me.
Just off me.
It didn't last year.
Last 10 months this time.
I hated myself.
I hated everything about myself.
I wanted to die.
But more than that, I wanted to get sober and be there for my kids.
And so I'd punish myself.
I had enough money.
I could have bought ounces of heroin at a time.
I was going through like two, three grams a day.
I could have bought ounces at a time.
And instead, I'm making three trips getting a gram at a time every day.
Like the...
I can't believe it took me as long as it did for.
me to get pulled over.
Like a white guy driving, you know, a brand new Tahoe or a brand new F-150 or brand new, or not
brand-new, but a 68 GTO, multiple times a day.
Like, it's very clear what I'm going out there to do, you know.
And, but I wouldn't buy a bunch of ones because I kept telling myself, this is it, I'm going to quit,
this is it, I'm going to quit, I'm going to taper off, I'm going to taper off.
It's just insanity took over my thinking.
Why did you want to quit?
Why did I want to quit?
Yeah.
I never wanted to be able to begin with.
That one time I got that hug from God and I was hooked, never had that feeling again.
Never felt that good again, but I couldn't stop doing it.
But it was taking me away from my kids because I'm spending an hour and a half a day or more driving.
So hold on, hold on.
So the initial, I've never done heroin, the initial high is like the best high you could ever imagine.
And then it never happens again.
Never happens again.
Well, you constantly have to increase the amount of dope you're doing.
You can get pretty close to it again, or you can get it again.
But it's taking more and more dope.
The more dope you're adding, like, the chances you're going to kill yourself keeps climbing.
You know what I mean?
And so I got the point where I was shooting a gram at a time sometimes.
I mean, that's like, I don't know how I never OD'd.
You never OD?
Never.
I've always had a really weirdly high tolerance.
tolerance to things.
So.
Well, I don't know if I'd say that.
drank your gallbladder out.
Yeah.
Yeah, that I did.
But I wanted to stop because it controlled every aspect of my life.
I couldn't even sleep without getting dope sick.
Did your wife know?
Well, it started in Halloween.
She figured it out.
End of June.
How did she figure it?
She found a box of syringes in the garage.
I was not very good at hiding things.
She'd known something was up.
I mean, like, our business is falling apart.
I bounced payroll.
That's never happened.
I look like soon coming out of a concentration camp.
I looked like death.
I weighed like 130 pounds maybe, you know.
And I'm not drinking.
So she knows it's not that.
She knew something was up.
She found that box of rigs that day and lost it on me.
I've never seen her that upset my whole life.
And it broke my heart.
I didn't ever want it to come to that, you know.
But it did.
And the 4th of July, she took the kids and left me, 2014.
And I hopped in the GTO and went to where I go for comfort, South Memphis.
And I'd waited just to punish myself until I was good and dope sick.
I wanted myself to suffer.
I had this sick self-hatred because of the situation I created.
Where did she go?
To her dad's down in Mississippi.
And I'm going, I don't know, 70, 80 miles an hour down east parkway in Memphis, and I ran a red light.
And I tee-bond an F-350.
and I spun and hit a light pole
and the inside of the car burst into flames.
I'm pinned underneath the steering wheel.
My face hit the steering wheel so hard that my teeth,
I had to pull my lip off of my teeth,
like they'd gone all the way through it.
I've got bones sticking under my foot,
and I'm engulfed in flames.
I had a fire extinguisher
in the car for that exact scenario
should it ever happened and I deployed it
nothing happened
and I threw it out the window
which I guess alerted somebody
that was out there that hey there's
a live person still on that vehicle
and this panhandler
that I'd been given money to for like the last two
three weeks every time I drove by
runs over and gets me out of the car
and runs over and gets
I had cash in the pasture seat and he brought it to me
like smoking
bills.
My pistol permit
and my USA debit cards were
in my pocket with my driver's license and all that.
They melted.
In my wallet, they melted. I didn't have a burn on my
body. Wow. And
nobody else saw this almost, dude.
But he definitely was there. Like, yeah, I've always
had people like, I was an angel. I'm like, I don't
know. Because
he gave me the money. I had it
in my hand and I started
with bones sticking out of my feet.
There's rounds
popping off in the back seat of my car
because it's in flames and it was full of
ammo. And I'm trying to hobble
down the street to make it to the dope man's house
because I'm like a mile away.
The ambulance gets there, they tackle me,
take me to the hospital.
You're trying to get heroin still after that.
I'm still dopesick.
Look, this is the thing. If you've never been
dope sick, you don't understand it. You will do
literally anything you have to do
to prevent it. It is the most terrifying
experience that human being can go through.
both mentally and physically, but especially mentally.
It's bad.
It's just, when I think about that day,
I understand women who sell their bodies to feed their addiction.
I'm trying to walk down the street with my car and flames
and bones sticking out of my foot to get my fix, you know.
I ended up getting a $35,000 insurance check
for the GTO.
All the evidence of everything bad had been doing burned in the car.
So I got no trouble that day.
I went home, got another vehicle,
and I burned that $35,000 in nine days.
One of the ways, you know, my business was running into the ground.
Aaron and I had a massive firearms collection.
Massive.
You know, tons of awesome stuff.
Some Title II stuff, subguns, suppressors.
And I'd started pawning my guns.
so that I could maintain my habit and try to keep the business from folding.
And so when I got that check, I went and got a lot of guns out of hawk, got them back.
And obviously, I bought a lot of drugs, too.
Jeez.
Aaron came back from her dad's after I totaled the car, but left again because I wasn't.
I wasn't getting any better, you know?
and I was trying everything I could to taper off of the heroin
and do it on my own and um you know I go to the firing range is one of the
things I used to like to do to try to blow off steam and so I think it was July 28th
I burned out of money mostly and I go to the warehouse with a added a little
fire range behind my
house with or inside the warehouse it was long um I had a subgun two suppressors like an
a R and an AK maybe and maybe a handgun then I went blow off some steam and I waited until I was
dope sick again because I refused to buy heroin until I was sick because I'm trying to taper
myself off of it and so I'm trying to you know it's it's insane the way I was to but in my head
and my fucked up thinking it made sense and so I'm on my way home
I went and got dope
and I wouldn't let myself use it until I made it home
as part of the punishment that I was doing to myself
a mile from home
and I get lit up by the cops
and I'm in a beat-up pickup truck with six grams of dope
a machine gun and two silencers
and you would have thought they pulled over Pablo Escobar
the traffic stop
moves from this gas station to my house
because they feel they have calls to search my home
they think I'm selling machine guns
I'm running guns and dope for the cartel
one of the detectives came over and told me
they'd talk to Fort Campbell and they know I'm a disgruntled veteran
and I stole all of this
what are you fucking talking about?
Like the receipts are the shits of my house.
I'm sick as hell handcuffed the back of the car.
Our little cove, I had a house on the golf course.
outside looking and I was doing great.
A little Cove had 30-some-odd vehicles in it
from five different agencies before this was over.
I had the DEA, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation,
Shelby County, Memphis Police, and the ATF.
I had to show the ATF how to read their own paperwork
for my form, whatever it was,
from my tax stamps, from the suppressors and the subgun.
And this goes on like 12 hours.
I mean, it's hot as fuck.
I'm in the middle of asphalt coves, sitting in a cop car with no AC, handcuffed, dope sick,
watching them come out of my house, taking my entire life savings in the form of firearms from me.
One of the guys with organized crime units there told me early on in the day when this happened,
it's like, if you're telling me the truth, and these are your guns, and this is your dope,
we're going to work something out.
And 12 hours later, they finally realized,
I'm not Pablo Escobar.
Those are my guns.
I legally hit every one of them,
and I've never been in trouble of my life.
So they take me down to this place off of Shelby Drive in Memphis.
We're like, all right, here's the deal.
You know, we took all the shit from your house.
You're not getting guns back.
53 firearms I took from the house.
You're going to snitch.
You're going to go buy drugs,
and we're going to watch everything.
You're going to wear a wire or something.
You're going to give us some drug dealers.
I was like, sure.
And sure of shit, they took the handcuffs off and gave me my keys to my pickup drug.
So I had no intentions of following through and snitching on anybody.
I never wanted to go to South Memphis again.
I get in my truck, I crank it, and I shut the door, and I feel something.
And I know immediately what it is.
They have left dope in my vehicle.
And so my decision to never go to South Memphis
getting changed right then and there.
I went right back to South Memphis.
I bought more dope.
But I'm not going to use it until I get home.
It's now 9, 10, maybe 11 o'clock at night.
I'm in the exact same spot I was earlier in the day
and blue lights were behind me.
I get pulled over twice in the same day
with the same amount of dope.
This time they do take me to jail.
And they hit me with, I don't even remember how many counts.
It was absurd, like just wild.
Possession with intent to manufacture, sell and distribute for crack cocaine, for heroin,
six possession of a firearm ring in the commission of a dangerous felony.
All in all, there were like 14 felony counts that they had gotten me on,
which is ridiculous, like, if I'm actually being honest,
because I didn't commit a felony.
I wasn't selling drugs.
There is no dangerous felony.
Whatever.
I had drugs and guns.
I'm not supposed to do that, I know.
But I think my life's over at this point.
They took me to jail, obviously.
I had to call Aaron, obviously.
She filed for divorce.
I think on her 10th anniversary while I was in jail,
which I had that coming.
I had destroyed that poor woman's life, you know.
They end up my dealer, old man Stan, comes and bonds me out
because I had spent so much with him, he's convinced I'm going to continue to.
Somehow they mixed up paperwork in jail and they let me out
when they hadn't brought all the charges on the other case against me.
And so I bonded out of jail and immediately had a felony warrant.
for the first traffic stop.
Apparently they only booked me in on the second one
and forgot to add the first one.
So they add those on and put out a felony warrant for me.
And so I go on the run.
I moved into a trap house with some guys
I had literally just met that night in South Memphis.
What's the trap house?
The trap house is a house where narcotics and women are bald and sold.
It's, you know, a trap, just spot.
It is the single source of every bit of pain and suffering in any neighborhood they exist in.
It's hell.
That's what it is.
It's hell.
I had nowhere else to go.
At a warrant, I couldn't go home.
My wife didn't want anything to do with me.
I had no idea what my kids knew or didn't know because, like I said, we'd hidden all of this from them.
Daddy getting arrested is going to...
I don't even know how to have that conversation with them.
I'd go into Heidi, basically.
It's a dope boy.
Then obviously all the dope boys in South Memphis knew how much money I'd been spending,
and they all wanted to know me.
So I was welcomed with open arms out there.
And the one that ran Melrose Street,
I'll actually say his name because he's dead now, Rodney Cotton.
He used to go by a name Fat Boy, or Hot Roddron.
He kind of took me in
because he was convinced I was going to teach him
how to run businesses.
I don't know what he had in mind,
but basically put me to work in security
at a trap house out there,
which was odd because I'm the only white guy in the hood
and I'm deciding who can and cannot get into the trap.
This went on for a few weeks.
What did you see inside the trap houses?
Everything you can imagine.
What was that mean?
I've witnessed murder.
I've witnessed attempted rapes.
I've witnessed overdoses.
I've witnessed people do unimaginable things
that even with my background experience
can't wrap my mind around for a head of dope crack in particular.
Like what?
you won't want to air it if I tell you.
I've seen people do the most deep-based,
dehumanizing things you can ever imagine
because their addiction commanded them to.
They had become complete and total slaves to a substance.
And in turn, complete and total slaves
to whoever controls that substance.
I didn't know the true depths of human depravity
until I was out there,
until I lived in it and saw it.
And all of my hope and faith and humanity died on that street.
My hope for having a future died on that street.
I was going to kill myself out there.
I was interrupted and then ended up in handcuffs to gun.
How were you going to do it?
With a knife.
I was just going to cut my own way I could do it.
Because I refused to touch heroin after I got arrested.
I would not go back to it.
I was still smoking crack, but I refused to touch heroin.
And I was afraid that if I tried to overdose,
because once you've shot up heroin, there's no other way to kill yourself.
It's an embrace from God.
Like, it's a painless way to go.
My fear was that because my tolerance is so high, I would try to kill myself,
and I wouldn't, and I would end up addicted again.
And I would rather die than have that happen.
And so I was going to cut my throat with K-bar.
How long were you in and out of those?
Five years.
I get this this is you spent five years on that shit in trap house in and out in and out but there my
my whole story is punctuated with highs and lows where everything looks great I went homeless for
five years I wasn't running from that warrant for five years but all in I was battling
south Memphis for five years that run stopped when they found me on that warrant um and you know
we were talking about godwinks I feel like this was a
missed Godlink on my behalf.
But maybe not, because if I'd taken it, I wouldn't be sitting here with you today.
Veterans Court refused to take my case.
I did serve long enough to be eligible for Veterans Court,
so even though I don't get like VA benefits out, I was eligible for that.
They wouldn't take my case because the gun charges.
They were convinced the feds are going to come after me.
Now, I knew that wasn't the case because I legally owned the guns,
and I wasn't actually selling drugs.
So I had faith that justice would prevail.
But the drug court judge heard about my case and decided to take a chance on me.
And he told me that if I would sign up for his program, he would send me to rehab and he'd pay for it.
And I jumped at it.
And so after spending two months out there in the traps, that run, I was actually excited.
I thought, you know, things are going to be better.
And he sent me to rehab.
I spent 54 days in there.
And, like, I was serious about it.
I wanted to be clean.
I did not want to go back to that life at all.
I graduated the rehab program and got off to a fairly good start on drug court.
I think I got released back into the free world early November.
And I made contact with Aaron.
I wanted to get back into kids' lives.
I mean, because this just hit them completely out of the blue,
like they didn't see any of this coming, you know?
So from July to November, there have been very minimal interaction with my kids.
They didn't know what the fuck was going on.
Or I don't know what they knew.
Let's move it that way.
And, you know, Aaron had filed for divorce.
Her attorney told her it would help her if she got a restraining order against me.
And so she did that.
and they served me with it in the middle of drug court in front of everybody on my birthday.
Like, that was humiliating.
Mostly because I've never laid a finger on her.
I've never threatened any of them.
I've never made her be afraid of me or the kids or any of that,
but she had to attest that I've done all of those things on this piece of paper.
So I did what any good addict would do, and I went and got high over that.
Now, when they released me from rehab, they court ordered me into reboot.
which is a halfway house in Memphis, sober spelled backwards.
And one of the biggest trolls in a sober living house is you can't get high.
And I did that.
And so I knew I was about to go back to jail.
So right back to South Memphis, I went.
I just went on the run.
And then I actually had a conversation with Aaron that her attorney did that without her knowledge or something.
I don't remember what it was.
And I started realizing how bad I fucked up by going on the run.
and getting high again.
I wouldn't turn myself in.
And sure enough, I mean, obviously I went to jail, you know,
but the drug court judge was,
he's going to give me another chance.
Like, he sees this a lot.
He expected it, blah, blah, blah.
I was banned from that halfway house.
And they were like,
we're just going to leave you in jail
until we figure out what to do with you.
Because you can't go home.
You can't go back to the halfway house.
You know, we don't know what to do with you.
And so I spent my birthday,
or not my birthday, I spent Thanksgiving in jail.
They kept me, God, they probably kept me a month that time with no bond.
Like, there's no hope of getting out.
You get out when the judge says you can get out.
And I'm pissed the judge off at this point because he took a chance on me.
Even though we expected it to happen, he's mad.
They finally let me out December 17th, and I'll never forget this, that day in court
because the jail backs up to the courthouse.
It's literally like underneath the court kind of.
So they took me into the courtroom from jail.
And this guy named Brian Owens comes up to me and asks me,
he's like, he tired of living like this, dude?
I was like, yeah, I'm really tired of living like this.
And he looked me in an eye for a minute.
He's like, you know you don't have to.
And I don't know why that simple yet incredibly profound statement
hit me like a ton of bricks, dude.
Like I started bawling like in the middle of court.
Like it was weird, you know, but it just hit me.
So because I could tell by the way he said it, this guy that I'm just now meeting for the first time,
in the way he said that, I could tell he's been where I was.
He literally where I was, come to find out later, he had been standing on the other side of that wall.
Years ago as a client in drug court, and today he works for that court.
But I could tell this guy knew something.
He knew a way out of this, you know.
And he told me that I was, he was going to get me out of jail that day.
and then he wanted me to meet him at a Narcotics Anonymous meeting that night.
Now, I'd been to N.A. back in California, but I just used it as a place to pick up chicks.
I didn't pay any attention.
But I would do whatever I had to do to get Brian to get me out of jail.
And I would do whatever I had to do to not live that way anymore.
And I meant it.
Like with every fiber of my being, I meant that shit.
I was dead set on, I'm going to do this.
And so he got me out of jail.
I found out after I left the jail that day that the judge was dead serious when he said,
I can't go home and I can't go to the halfway house.
But they forgot to figure out what to do with me.
So I had to figure that out, which I'm sure was 100% intentional, right?
They wanted to see what I was going to do.
So now I'm a free man, and it's the middle of December right before Christmas, and I have nowhere to go.
I'm on the streets.
Am I going to fuck up or am I going to do right?
And I think that's what they're trying to figure out.
And I did right.
I got with my dad and got into an extended stay motel.
I went to an in-A meeting the first time I ever saw her.
And I was serious by doing it.
And I decided I wanted to try to fix things with Aaron.
She's a mother of five of my kids and divorcing her.
It was something that could not wrap my mind around.
No matter how bad she wanted to, you know,
she spent all those years thinking I was the one for her,
knowing the problems that I had,
and here we are with the problems front center,
what are we going to do?
I had that conversation with her we decided to run.
reconcile. And so I think it was Christmas
Eve of 2014. I moved back into the house
with her and the kids. Which in hindsight,
it's a terrible idea.
Did you blame her for the restraining order?
Were you upset about that?
I was upset about it. It was very, I was hurt more than anything.
I didn't blame her for the relapse. I will never
blame anybody else for that.
Yeah, I make my own decisions.
And when I choose to go get high about something that's on me, not them.
When we went to court through the restraining workers, the way they do these things,
they'll issue it just based on the word of the woman.
And that's good.
I'm glad they do that.
And then you have a hearing about it to decide if it's going to stand or get tossed out.
And when we sat down in the courtroom, they start asking Aaron all these questions,
like, when did Mr. Owen strike you?
When did he do this?
And she's like, no, none of that ever happened.
and the judge was basically like, well, then you can't have a restraining order.
What are we doing?
And so it just got, like, what I was afraid of was that Aaron was going to lie and say I had, you know, put my hands on or something, which nothing like that ever happened about marriage.
Were you sharing needles?
No.
No.
Never not once.
In fact, I, this is one of the reasons I was able to hide it so well.
I was the worst person I knew.
I didn't have friends.
Do you think you put your family in danger?
Yeah, I definitely put them in danger.
There's no doubt about that.
So how could you blame her?
I don't, yeah, I don't blame her at all.
In fact, hindsight being 2020, I wish she hadn't let me move back in.
You know, I had no business being around my kids right then at all, or her.
You know, I didn't deserve to be sleeping in that house that we had worked to pay for together.
A thousand things could have gone wrong.
Something must have gone wrong.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't handle guilt.
Well, never have.
I drink at guilt.
I always have.
And I don't think things were meant to work out to me in there.
Too much damage had been done.
And it was a terrifying thing to try to accept that.
Because you start trying to think how am I going to raise a family
with her, you know.
With the exception of this 10-month period,
all things considered I've been a pretty stellar dad,
you know, outside looking in.
You know that that's not true
because you've heard all the fucked up stuff that I was doing,
but I was still telling myself the lie
that I wanted the world to see.
And I'm trying to figure out,
how am I going to raise these kids in a broken home now?
What's going to happen with my cases?
looking at a lot of present time if I fucked up drug court and and so much damage had been
done to the relationship with Aaron and I and I just I don't think there was any
fixing it I don't think there was what happened I moved out in February and I think
it was working program got a sponsor started working step
It was taking recovery seriously, like very seriously.
So you weren't drinking?
No, well, so drug court, from the day I signed to drug court, they drug test you randomly.
And one of the tests they do now is called an ethanol glucorinide test that tests for alcohol metabolites going back 80 hours.
And thank God they do, because if they weren't doing that, I'd have been drinking like a motherfucker,
thinking I'm going to cheat the test, you know?
So yeah, I stayed sober from November.
God, almost until the next November.
A whole lot of happen in that gap.
I know everybody out there has to be
just as frustrated as I am
when it comes to the BS and the rhetoric
that the mainstream media continuously tries to force feed us.
And I also know how frustrating it can be
to try to find some type of a reliable news source.
It's getting really hard to find the truth
and what's going on in the country and in the world.
And so one thing we've done here at Sean Ryan Show is we are developing our newsletter.
And the first contributor to the newsletter that we have is a woman, former CIA Targeter.
Some of you may know her as Sarah Adams, call sign super bad.
She made two different appearances here on the Sean Ryan Show.
And some of the stuff that she has uncovered and broke on this show is just absolutely mind-blank.
And so I've asked her if she would contribute to the newsletter and give us a weekly intelligence brief.
So it's going to be all things terrorists, how terrorists are coming up through the southern border,
how they're entering the country, how they're traveling, what these different terrorist organizations
throughout the world are up to.
And here's the best part.
The newsletter is actually free.
We're not going to spam you.
It's about one newsletter a week, maybe two if we release two shows.
the only other thing that's going to be in there besides the Intel brief is if we have a new product or something like that.
But like I said, it's a free CIA intelligence brief.
Sign up.
Links in the description or in the comments.
We'll see you in the newsletter.
All right, Ben, we're back from the break.
So we are at Aaron?
Aaron.
Yeah.
Aaron left with the kids.
Aaron left for the kids. This is like the end of 2014. We decided to reconcile.
So hold on. Let me recap, because we had about an hour break there for lunch. So you moved in
Christmas time. Yes. Now it's February. Aaron takes off. You did not start drinking again. What
happened? Why'd she leave? So actually, I left. You left? I left. I left. And I think it was February, March.
I just realized that, well, I've been trying to avoid this because I only want to put my business out there, but it's unavoidable.
So Aaron had an affair, right?
And I knew this when I moved back in December, and it happened while I was in jail.
And if I'm being completely honest, I can't blame her.
I mean, I ran her life into the ground.
I had not physically touched her in a year.
You know, everything was falling apart, and she didn't think there was any chance we were ever going to work out anyway.
So I don't blame her for that, but it is part of what played into my decision to move out.
Did you ever have infidelity with her?
No, no.
Through all that shit?
Through all that shit, I did not.
Wow.
Would not have expected that.
Well, I don't think she expected it either, but it is the reality.
So you couldn't forgive her for that?
I thought I could, but no.
I definitely could not.
I definitely could not.
How did you find out?
I just knew, and finally she admitted it.
just part of me new.
You know, something seemed off.
Did you know him?
Oh, yeah.
Friend?
Employee.
An employee?
Yeah.
Are they still together?
Oh, God, no.
I don't even know if they ever even saw each other again.
Yeah.
So in the middle of all this,
we'll be back up to December.
Well, hold on.
How did you handle that?
Because you're sober.
I'm sober, and,
uh, well,
I'm just going to own it.
I was still a manipulative ass at the time,
and the only thing standing in between me
and living in my home with my children
was the judge telling me she didn't want me there.
So the way I handled it was basically to tell her,
look, we can work through this.
You just got to let me come home.
You know, and part of me...
So you knew before you went home.
I knew before I went home.
That was the ammo I used to get her to tell the judge
let me come back to my house.
Now, part of those necessity,
I have to have a place to live.
this extended stay wasn't going to work.
I missed my kids.
I was sober.
I wanted to rebuild my life.
And I wanted to rebuild my business and fix my marriage.
I did genuinely want all of those things.
Did you still love her before you moved back in?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I've known this woman since I was 12.
She birthed.
Yeah, like 100%.
Looked like a little uncertainty there.
It was different.
It was a different kind of love, you know.
Like, I've still got love in my heart for Aaron to this day, and I always will.
but not the kind that is required to be married to somebody.
You know what I mean?
And so I moved back in,
and my understanding was that all the bullshit that come out
from either of our side had come out.
And it was all out in the open.
And I got a phone call on New Year's Eve from my landlord,
or my landlord's attorney.
Now, keep in mind, I haven't paid a rent on my warehouse in six months
because I was too busy spending my money on heroin or being in jail
or running for warrants to handle things.
So my understanding was that my warehouse had been seized
and my assets and belongings of that warehouse no longer belonged to me.
And Aaron confirmed that was the case.
Well, I get this phone called New Year's Eve
from my landlord's attorney asking me
if we had decided not to get my inventory out of the warehouse.
Now, keep in mind, I had over a million dollars in inventory
in this warehouse. So come to find out, he had not seized any of my stuff and just wanted me to
move my business out and let him have his warehouse back. The problem was I had until midnight,
New Year's Eve of 2014. And I didn't find this out until the day of. My parents and my wife
had known for months that this was the case and that my business was not done. It was, in fact,
sitting there waiting on me to pick it up and move it somewhere else and simply
turn it back on. I went ballistic. Um, you know, smashed my phone. Uh, I may have broken my hand
punching a brick wall. I mean, I snap, dude. That was it. Like, from that point forward,
I, I have accepted this is not, there's too much resentment. A couple that with the fact that I don't
even know how I'm going to deal with with the infidelity. Like, it's, I just can't do this. All right.
And I didn't know what to do because I still had to have a place to live.
And so I just tried to tough it out, man.
I spent a lot of time with my kids.
What did you do with your kids?
When?
When you went back?
You said you spent a lot of time with your kids.
Yeah, so there's a part.
What was that like?
I've been rebuilding bonds, dude.
Kids are resilient.
How old are your kids at this point?
Oh, they were, I want to say 9, 10.
Let's see.
This would have been December 2014.
Jacob would have been nine, Jackson would have been 10,
Lily and the Twins were 3-3 and 4, almost 4, and 5.
We just kind of picked up right back we left off.
Watching nature shows together, going hiking,
there's a IH park.
Was there a lot of relationship you had to rebuild trust
and the fact that you're going to be there?
It was dicey for a few days.
That's it?
Because when I was living in that extended stay,
Aaron could tell that something had changed in me, and then I was trying to stay clean,
and the kids came and stayed with me some of that extended to stay.
So we had gotten most of the real rough part out of the way.
I've always been very close to my kids.
What was the rough part?
Just the uncomfortability, like them staying with me and crying at bedtime, wanting to go see Mommy, you know.
But they had a lot of questions.
They really didn't.
They really didn't.
They didn't want to know why you were in there?
And the extended stay?
Yeah.
Well, they did.
And that was the rough part.
It was explaining to him,
mom and dad are getting divorced.
And that was, like, just the hardest thing
I've ever had to tell my kids.
Did they have any inclination that, I mean,
you were gone for, I think you said, 10 months?
I was addicted to heroin for 10 months before the arrest.
I was home for most of that.
I would make my runs to the, you know,
dope track, get my dope.
But then you were living at the trap houses.
So that wasn't 10 months.
That was four months I was out there this run in the traps.
And so I don't really know how to explain it.
We just kind of picked right up where we left off.
It was strange.
How did you tell your kids you get divorced?
I didn't.
Aaron did.
And then Christmas Eve, we told them, never mind we're not.
Like, Merry Christmas.
And, you know, we had a real happy Christmas.
Everything was great.
But the New Year's Eve came, and I found that out about the business.
And it was just the totality.
It was too much.
And I also knew that, like, as far as my part went, like, I'm not saying she did all the damage.
I'd done tons of damage.
She was all my fault to begin with.
So I owned that.
And I knew in the back of my head that she might think she can get over all this, but she's never going to trust me again.
I have destroyed our lives.
Our life savings invested in a firearms collection has been stolen by the police.
I'll never get them back.
That one, I actually sued the state of Tennessee trying to get those back.
lost because I took too long to file it.
But, you know, the business we had poured blood, sweat, and tears into that my kids had sacrificed hours and hours of time with me.
I ran that into the ground.
Like, so I'm not sitting here trying to say it's because of the infideliator.
It's because of the warehouse.
It was the totality of all of these things.
We destroyed that marriage.
And so I spent a lot of time with the kids January and February.
And part of that was because I wanted to spend time with my kids.
Part of this is because I want to get to fuck away from the house.
I wanted to be away from her.
I was so mad.
And, you know, I don't know if you've ever done 12-step recovery,
but in the rooms, they always say resentments are the number one offender.
Resentment is the most common thing that sends people back on a relapse.
And I was taking my recovery pretty seriously at this point in time.
So I was trying to avoid resentments, which meant avoiding her in the house.
So we spent a lot of time out in the woods, a lot of time fishing as Mark,
his march rolled around, a lot of time hiking.
And I started hanging out with this other guy in Drug Court named Thomas,
who loved fishing too, and we'd go fishing all the time.
We'd go shooting together, his parents lived on a bunch of land.
And, you know, before long, I had opened up to Thomas about what was going on at home.
He's like, probably just come stay up here, man.
And so I was kicking that idea around about going to stay with Thomas,
because he lived up in Millington near the Navy base.
We were in Lakeland, which is the suburb of Memphis at the time, in the house that I bought when I got the job of Pfizer.
I mean, we hadn't moved.
And my other best friend at the time was this little kid named Brandon Kelly.
I call him a kid.
He had some endocrine problems and literally looked like he was a child, like 14 years old.
He was really 25, but I met him in jail.
I actually met him and Thomas both in jail.
All three of us were on drug court.
And so we just started hanging out a bunch.
And then, you know, getting into early spring, Narcotics Anonymous does a lot of functions,
or they'll do outings, like events for just people in recovery can go hang out at things that normally
happen in Memphis.
It's just a group of people that aren't doing drugs.
You know, it goes to these things.
And so I started hanging out with those, with that crowd that's going to the stuff all around Memphis.
And I had found an NA home group with Brandon Kelly.
it was his home group and that's where I met Jess.
I had actually met her back in January at that Brian Owens guy,
his wife or girlfriend at the time was celebrating her sober birthday,
and I met Jess at that birthday, but we didn't really talk much.
Like we'd played trivia crack back and forth, you know,
and text it a little bit, but nothing weird.
But like I can tell, like, she's somebody that enjoys spend the time around.
And so when the events picked back up in spring, you know,
I found myself around her more and more.
And then one day she invited me and her boyfriend at the time
to go to the Clinton Tarantino Movie Fest
that were having to drive in.
And I went and he no-showed
and we'd watch like four or five Clinton Tarantino movies.
And then the next day, she invites me to go fishing with her.
And I was like, well, hell of you.
You know what I'm thinking.
out at Shelby Forest, the Mississippi River, middle of nowhere.
I get out there.
Not only does she not have fishing rides,
she has brought her 10-year-old daughter with her.
And I was like, oh, God, you know, what the hell's happening?
So as an aside, to this day, I have not gone fishing with Jess.
To this day, we're going to fix that at some point.
But we ended up hiking her at Shelby Forest.
And this is weird because I've lived in Memphis for almost...
Yes, what's going on here?
She was fishing the whole time.
Yes, she was.
It worked.
It worked.
I never knew Shelby Forest existed.
I've been in Memphis 10 years, and I never saw this place.
As much as I love the outdoors, it was mind-blowing to me.
It's this huge, like hundreds of acres of woods and hills and mountains and lakes and it's on the Mississippi.
So we, me, Jess, and her daughter, who was 10, I'm meeting for the first time, are out there hiking for the entire day.
Hours.
Catching, I caught a cotton.
mouth water moccasin, like blew her mind, you know, catching turtles.
Like, it was just, we had a fucking blast out there.
And I didn't want it to stop.
I didn't want to stop.
I had not been that happy in the company of another human being and as long as I
could remember.
Like, I finally felt a connection with somebody.
And this was just as purely as friends.
But from that day forward, and that was, I do remember the date.
It was April 20th of 2015.
just and I became inseparable.
Wherever I went, she went, wherever she went, I went.
And like, it just people were starting calling us the NA Power Cup.
We're not even together.
I'm still married, you know.
But I realized because of the way I felt around her that I, my biggest fear leaving Aaron,
will I ever have anybody that I can be comfortable around again?
Will anybody put up with me because, well, we've been talking for several hours,
know I'm kind of a lot to deal with, right? So I had this fear that I wouldn't find love again,
and I've got a terrifying fear of being alone, too. So I wasn't convinced that, like, Jess is who I'm
going to go be in love with. It just convinced me that I am able to be happy in the presence of
somebody else. And so when I decided I was going to move out and move him with Thomas and take
him up on that offer, Jess went with me. Now, we're still just friends, you know. We're literally
sleeping in the same bed and still just friends.
which I know sounds crazy.
I tried to kiss her one time.
She cried.
That was interesting.
The next day she kissed me,
and then, you know, from there on, things were physical.
But this is, like, months went in that gap.
So then, you know, I told Aaron, like,
let's go ahead and do this divorce.
I'm moving on, which is what she had told me to do to begin with.
And so she was like, okay, yeah.
Neither of us wanted it, but it's what needs to happen, that kind of thing.
and um jess and i pretty much moved into thomas's house and started building the life together uh like
we were going to start brush fire and black rifle and retech in a garage behind his house we're going
to start the businesses back over and we did we were like we actually did and we're running an econ
business out of his garage july i think comes around and you know jess had met all the kids at this
point. All the kids love her. Her daughter loved me. Now, we haven't told Aaron that we're
an item. And so that was a big land mine we were waiting on. And it ended about like you can
imagine it would. Actually, I don't know how it would land. I mean, you guys are divorced.
So, she cheated on you? Well, we're not divorced yet. We're not divorced yet. We're not divorced yet.
I mean, there's a lot of history there. There is a lot of history. So I could, I could see it being a
relief.
Well, I mean, there's got to be a lot of weight being your spouse through that time.
And I make terrible decisions around the way.
Okay.
All right.
So I'm just going to preface that.
All right.
We've come a long way since then.
I've grown a lot as a human being.
I was still sleeping with Aaron.
And so when she found out I was sleeping with Jess, she sat Jess down and said, hey, just so you're aware, I'm still sleeping with him too.
and Jess acted like she didn't care, but in reality, it ripped her guts out.
I'm out. Let's switch seats.
Oh, okay.
Jess, welcome to the show.
Thank you.
So a couple questions before we get into the sleeping debacle here.
Why did you cry when he tried to kiss you?
I honestly have no idea.
I think I'm not very big on physical affection, I guess.
I know that sounds weird.
My family is, like my dad's part is Japanese, so I wasn't raised with a whole lot of physical affection,
and I think it caught me off guard, and I wasn't quite sure if I wanted it or not,
because I knew he had a wife, and, like, I knew he had five kids,
and I was like, I don't know, I don't know if I want five kids.
and I didn't know what I wanted at that point.
You're a former addict, too?
Yes.
How long have you been sober?
A little more than Ben.
It's like five and a half years.
My clean date is June 1st, 2019.
What did you see in Ben that made you fall in love with him?
Were you aware of his past?
I wasn't aware of all of it.
But, you know, I had my own past, so I wasn't totally worried about that.
I think what really attracted me to him was I love nature and I love music.
And I love smart people because I've always wanted to be like really smart and I don't
really see myself like that.
But he was.
And like, as you've heard in his story, he's extremely intelligent.
And it's very hard to find somebody that is that intelligent and nerd-like who,
also listens to metal and, you know, likes nature and hiking.
And I found all of that in Ben.
Andy was funny.
He made me laugh.
Like, if you can make me laugh, that's a big plus.
Is there a, how do I say this?
Is there a certain level of comfortability knowing that the person that you're
falling in love with is also an addict?
Wow, that's a good question.
there was a little, I was comfortable in knowing that I wouldn't be judged for who I was.
And I think there was comfortability there because I was, I was raised by an addict, like my mom's a crack addict, was.
So, but at the same time, I know how, how bad it can get, how much of a train wreck, all of that can turn into.
So it was, it was comforting knowing that I had somebody that could understand.
in me, but it was also terrifying at the same time.
I mean, reason I'm asking, I didn't, I mean, my addictions weren't like these.
But, you know, my wife is going to be 16 years sober this year.
That's awesome.
And we kind of talked about my Coke addiction, drinking, benzos, opiates, all that shit.
When I met her, I'd found out.
you know, that she was sober because she wouldn't have a drink at dinner.
And I remember the first, I remember when I hit me, I had asked her, I said,
I hated when people ask me what my hobbies are, because I don't have any fucking hobbies
other than work, drugs, booze, and women.
And I just asked her, how did she find what her new hobbies were?
and she kind of went on and told me, you know, like, well, that's a tough question.
And it takes some time.
And she was so transparent.
I just knew what we had was real and that I didn't have to hide anything.
I could be fully transparent with somebody.
And that's probably the first time of my life I could do that.
Is that kind of how it works?
Yeah.
Pretty much, yeah.
It's, and it was the same thing with Ben.
Like, I was able to be completely transparent.
I'm a very open book anyway, but there's certain things that I won't.
But with him, I just, it was like we were just connected instantly.
Like, I just knew that's who I was supposed to be with for the rest of my life.
So what happened when he found out he was sleeping with Aaron still?
He was actually blackout drunk at that point.
And this was like right into the first of our relationship.
So I didn't know what to do.
I'm newly clean at this time, the first time since I was 13.
And I didn't want to mess that up.
I wasn't really sure what I was supposed to be doing with him, blackout drunk.
And I didn't know he had been drinking at this point.
I had found like a vodka bottle in the truck.
Like I was going to the store and found this, came back home, confronted him about it.
and if you know Ben, like if he's drunk, he will never admit it.
He'll be slurring and still not admitting that he drank.
So I called Aaron once it got so bad that he was blackout drunk and he wouldn't wake up.
And I was, I was freaking out.
So I called Aaron because she had moved into her own place at this point.
I was like, please come to the house.
I don't know what to do with him because she's been married, you know,
she's been with him for so long.
She knew how to deal with this.
So she came over and,
we're smoking a cigarette outside and she's like just so you know or she said are you sleeping with ben
she's like i know you're sleeping together in the same bed i mean are you sleeping with ben and i just
felt this weight because i didn't want to say yes uh but i knew it was better to tell the truth i was
like yes we are sleeping together she's like oh because he's sleeping with me too and dude i like every
just everything in me got ripped out like i felt like i was going to die and the thing about me i'll
never let anybody know if i'm hurt like i got this this protection wall and i was like ah guys suck
and that's all i said like i just i just totally nonchalant i did not let her know it bugged me
in the least but inside i was fucking dying and you know i was you know
We go back in to Ben and she checks on them and I'm living in her house and their house at this point.
And, you know, she's got the kids in her own little apartment and she leaves.
She's like, he's going to be fine.
Let him sleep it off.
And that was it.
And she left.
And it was just, so I'm like sitting there and I stay up all night because I'm afraid it's going to die on me.
I'm afraid something bad's going to happen because my mom had overdosed and it was.
we thought she was asleep.
And she was actually dead.
So to this day, I still have a horrible fear of people.
Your mom overdosed?
Yes.
You found your mom dead?
I was two houses down.
And my sister came and got me and was like, Mom's dead.
So I ran over the two houses away and saw her.
And they had had her on the floor at that point.
But ever since then, I was terrified when I see people sleeping for too long.
So I was afraid he was going to die on me.
So I literally stayed up all night, mad as fuck at him.
Like, I wanted to kill him.
But at the same time, I loved him so much that I just sat up and watched him all night.
Like, I'm sure it was sobbing half of the night because I couldn't believe that he had been cheating on me with his wife.
I mean, like, how bad does that sound?
It was a bad time.
How did you confront him?
So the next day when he finally came to, and he drinks so much that even when he comes to, he's still kind of drunk.
I was like, so I had a conversation with Aaron, and he wasn't expecting what I said.
I was like, she said y'all are still sleeping together.
And I think he denied it, I think, for a good little bit until I was like, dude, I mean, come on.
She's her wife.
It's, I understand.
I really didn't understand because I've never understood infidelity.
I don't, I don't at all.
So it really hurt and it hurt that he was denying it.
And I think I finally just came out, just fucking say it, just fucking tell me what happened.
And he admitted it.
And, you know, like Aaron was texting him just nonstop.
About what?
About us.
Was there jealousy?
Oh, I'm sure there was.
I mean, you know, he's been her person since they were 12.
And now this junkie bitch comes in the picture and just takes him away.
You know, so there's a lot of hatred.
There's a lot of animosity.
And now I'm living in her house even, which that was the wrong thing to do.
That was very bad judgment on our part.
And, yeah, so she's, I mean, they're still married at this point.
They don't get actually legally divorced until like a year later, so maybe even two years later.
So there was a lot of anger.
I'm sorry, my mouth is so dry right now.
So how did you, I mean, where did it go from there?
How did you get over that?
I did.
Well, and this will go into Ben's story a little bit.
There's another woman in the mix.
And this one was way fucking worse than Aaron.
So now, so then all my anger went from Aaron to this other girl.
So, you know, I understood he was with Aaron for years.
They were married.
You know, they'd been friends since they were 12.
I was just some chicky met in N.A.
So I, even though I was very angry that he lied about it and that he wasn't forthcoming in our relationship,
I did understand it.
I got it.
this other chick though that was who's the next one um i don't funny enough it was another
girl that he met in n a ben jen was just jumping for a little while there just us three but
there was a point in time just us three ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha oh my hey man there there was a point
where it was all three of us at one time like he was seeing her he was seeing me he
seeing this other chick and
I actually found out
about the other chick after he goes
to jail, I hear a knock at the door.
I had found out that I'm
pregnant with Ben's kid like
six weeks before
this and Ben goes to jail. He had had another
relapse. I hear knock at the door
and I open it. There's nobody
there but there's a like this manila
envelope about this big and I opened it. I was like,
what the fuck is this? I thought someone was trying to sell some
shit. So I open it and it's just
pages, pages of emails of him and this other chick. And on the front of the envelope, it says,
Hi, my name is Jeremy. I believe that you would like to know that your boyfriend is fucking my
wife. And that's what it says on the front. So now I'm going through these emails. I'm pregnant
with his kid, and he's in jail for a relapse. I'm reading all these emails. Like, some of them
are raunchy as fuck. Like, this was a nasty,
bitch. And I just, and then all my aggression kind of leaves from the errand thing. And now I just
want to kill this bitch and kill him. So it was a bad whirlwind for a minute there.
Why did you, why did you, why did you say with him?
Well, one, I was pregnant. So I remember he called from jail, and this is before he even
knew that I knew anything. And I'd threatened to have an abortion because I was like, well,
you're fucking Aaron, you're fucking this chick. Why would I keep this child? Like, why would we start
a family together? I thought you loved me. And, you know, clearly I'm just like sobbing on the phone
and he's denying it at first. And I read him some of the emails. You can't deny it anymore.
And I just, I loved him. I really had just such a deep amount of love for him that I just,
I was like, maybe we can work through it.
And I had seen my mom and my dad work through insurmountable type of the things that they have gone through.
Like my dad was not an alcoholic, nothing, my mom was.
And the things that I had seen them work through and make it through, I guess that was my model that I lived by, that I went by.
And I was just like, you know, people can work things out.
Of course, right then, I wanted to kill him.
I wanted to slit his throat right then.
But, you know, later on, I started thinking about it,
and I was like, we're going to have a kid together, and I wanted to,
I knew I loved him.
I knew he was the one that God made for me.
I knew I was supposed to be with him.
And I was like, I'm just going to make it work.
We're going to make something work.
I mean, I'm not saying you made the wrong decision.
You guys obviously seemed very happy today,
and you're very successful in what you guys are doing together.
but, I mean, weren't you worried about, you know, with his history?
I was terrified.
I was absolutely terrified.
Weren't you worried about not just being hurt more, but subjecting your daughter to this?
How old was your daughter?
Yeah, so she was 10.
His oldest was 10, my oldest is 10.
And the kids got along great, too.
so I was terrified about, I wasn't too worried about Maddie.
He's so good with kids, so he's really good with Maddie as my oldest,
and he was so good to her.
I had never seen a, Maddie's father is an addict as well.
And he was not a good father.
He was not a good man.
He was a good man, but the addiction took over,
and there's a lot of bad stuff that Maddie had to and do it.
So when Ben came into the picture, there's a happiness there.
Like he was actually a father to her and she loved him.
And I wasn't so much worried about Maddie.
I was worried about getting hurt again.
I was worried about the trust issue because I knew I would never be able to trust him again.
And that was actually the problem for years.
I didn't trust him.
And actually, because that girl was someone that he met in N.A.
And we knew everybody, like, everybody knew us as the N.A. power couple, you know.
So when everybody found out that he cheated on me with another bitch from N.A., like, I was mortified.
Did you know her?
I had never met her, luckily.
What about your own addictions? I mean, sober for less than a year at this point?
Yes. Or I had just graduated for, or graduated, I had just gotten a year clean, I believe, like probably a month.
before this happened. So I was one year clean. The first year I'd had cleaned since I was 13 years old.
Were you concerned that this would trigger your own addictions again? Absolutely. Yeah. And...
Did it? Um, so I didn't go back to heroin. But I remember the night that I found out,
I had downed a bottle of NyQuil, knowing I was pregnant. And knowing that it might hurt my child,
I just wanted to not be alive at that point.
And addicts were selfish.
And even though I had a year clean, I was still very much a selfish addict.
And I got a bottle of NyQuil.
And half of me didn't want to keep this baby.
Like half of me, I was like, maybe it's just better if I'm just going to drink this bottle on
NyQuil and let nature take its course.
And he was in jail anyway.
Nobody could stop me.
And like when I found out, I called Thomas.
Thomas denied it.
I called Brian Owens.
Brian Owen says he didn't know anything about it.
I'll later find out that, like, all the guys knew.
You know, the guy code, you don't say anything.
And I don't have girlfriends.
I don't like women.
They don't like me.
All my friends were guys.
So not only was I betrayed by him, I was betrayed by all of our friends.
And that's how I felt.
So, like, I just felt like the whole world had shit on me.
And I just down that bottle of NyQuil and fell asleep.
but I didn't do anything after that.
Like, I woke up and I was like, what the fuck did I just do?
And that was it.
I was good after that.
I didn't do any drugs or anything.
What about the manipulation?
I mean, my best friend died of heroin.
Worked with him.
I was still, worked with him at C.
I have talked about him a bunch of times on this show,
but he could be very manipulative.
It was an extremely intelligent person.
And I've been around.
a lot of addiction, you know, injectables, all the stuff.
And it seems like the worst they get, the more manipulative they get.
And so when you found them drinking, when you found them lying about who he's sleeping with,
there's more than one.
I mean, is that, I'm sure you're manipulative too, you know, at least in your past.
And so, I mean, do you guys realize how, do you even realize that you're manipulating people?
Or is it just come?
Sometimes.
Of course, I had a great lesson in manipulation because my mom was on crack, and that's what crack ads do.
So I had it very early on, you know, she taught me how to steal, you know, stuff like that.
So that's natural for me.
It was normal, which actually helped because I could see through his bullshit a lot.
because I could just see things that I saw in my mom.
And I really, I tried so hard to not be like my mom that I tried not to manipulate people.
I tried to do the opposite.
Even though I was an addict, I would try not to do stuff like that,
even though, you know, in the end, I was full-blown crackhead and it did happen.
But especially with Ben, too, he's so intelligent.
It's so easy for him to manipulate.
people. And I'm sure there were times when we were manipulating that we didn't even think of it like
that. Were you concerned that he was manipulating you? I mean, yeah, there was definitely concern in that.
And I knew he was, you know, because he was like, you know, you're going to have the baby. And,
you know, he would bring all these things up that I didn't have a very happy childhood, you know,
obviously from what I just told you. But he did. He did have a perfect childhood. And
I think he kept throwing out there, you know, we can do this and we can have this baby and we can get married and you see I make money.
We can have a big house and I see you work your ass off.
We can do this.
We can do this together.
And I think that was his way of, I guess, manipulating me into staying and working it out.
And at the time, I wanted to slit his throat.
But I'm very happy that I did stay.
And I'm glad that that little manipulation did stick a little bit.
How long did it take for you to get over all this?
and 100% trust?
A hundred percent trust.
Probably when we moved to Georgia,
I think I went to Georgia June 1st,
2019, my first day clean.
And I think that's when I'd just let everything go.
Up until that point, like,
I would still think of the emails
and, like, the thought of some things,
I'd want two-kil-minute's sleep,
and I would actually think about it sometimes.
but once we moved away from Memphis and like literally had to leave everything behind with just
the clothes on our backs and a $700 truck with stolen plates, I was like, okay, I really am
starting my life over with this man and I can't have to forgive. And I've learned this my whole
life. You know, God teaches forgiveness. And I knew that if I was going to continue my life with him,
I would have to forgive him before
before God would allow anything good to happen.
I was going to have to forgive him.
And so I just decided it's time.
It's time to forgive him.
And that was it.
Why did you guys move to Atlanta?
We moved to, well, it's like an hour north of Atlanta.
It's a little city called Coming.
And, well, we moved to stay alive.
That was at the very,
The worst part of our addiction right then, and we knew if we didn't leave Memphis, if we didn't leave right at that minute, we were going to die.
He actually left a week before I did.
I didn't know if I was ready yet.
And if you leave or you say you're going to stop doing drugs before you're ready, it's not going to stick.
So wait a minute.
So there was more after the night wall.
There was more after the night wall.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sorry.
That I meant until he got back.
until we relapsed for the first time, you know, together.
Oh, and also, like, I was pregnant when all of this happened.
Once I had my child, I always have to have C-sections.
So they put me on pain pills.
I never got off of them.
I just kept taking them.
I had so much resentment and hatred for him that I just stayed on pain pills.
And, like, three weeks after I had James, our first,
I get a call from Shelby County that he's in jail and he got caught with crack right in front of the trap house like three weeks after my C-section.
I could barely move, you know.
Breastfeeding had this huge ass scar.
I was an asthmatic, so I was dealing with an asthma attack at the same time.
So all of that just I never stopped taking my pills.
I was like, fuck it, he's going to go get high.
I'm going to stay high.
And so I just kept taking pain bills.
So you didn't relapse together?
We did later.
And it was bad.
And we tried to keep each other sane and good that there would be periods.
I tell everybody, it's just like a roller coaster.
I would be high.
He would be clean.
Or he would be drunk and then I would finally be okay.
And then he started getting, and this is like, you know, years in the making.
We get thrown out of him and Aaron's house.
They foreclose on it.
We end up getting a much bigger house, and I'm a workaholic just like him.
I'm like a machine.
I don't talk.
I just work.
So we were making money, just swimming in money.
And the whole time, he's buying my pills, because obviously the doctor has cut me off.
You know, I don't need C-section pills anymore.
And so I'm like, you know, I'm getting sick if I don't have these pills.
and I'm getting them from my sister.
I'm getting them from anybody I can.
And every once in a while in Memphis,
there will be a drought and you can't find pills.
And I was so sick, and he can't stand to see me sick.
So he was like, we both know,
because I was on heroin before I even met him.
We know if you can't find pills, you go get heroin.
And it's a lot cheaper to begin with anyway.
So he went and got me heroin.
I think that lasted about a week or two
that I was just doing, but no, probably about a week, a week at most.
And he was like, you know what, fuck it, I'm going on heroin too.
So then we were both on heroin.
And it's just straight downhill from there.
Were his five kids living with you guys?
So they would be back and forth.
They were with Aaron most of the time.
But, you know, they would come visit.
Like, we had this big house.
Like, she had a little apartment.
And I think because we're workaholics,
We made so much money.
We were able to afford this big house.
And so there's room for all the kids.
You know, all together with my kid and his kids.
There were six kids.
Seven kids.
Shit, because I had James, seven kids.
And there was room for all of them.
And so they would come over there a lot.
And it was a big, nice house.
They loved being over there.
And I think at first nobody really,
nobody really understood the totality of how deep in it we were in.
Because we made it look good.
You know, we kept the businesses going.
And for me, you know, lots of people, they think heroin junkies,
they think of people, you know, just passing out in their chairs with the needle in their arm.
That wasn't me at all.
I guess from watching my mom all of those years, I have to be in control.
I cannot be so out of it that I don't know what's going on.
So I would snort heroin and it would give me superpowers.
Like I was like super mom.
We would clean.
I would make brownies.
We would go feed the ducks.
I was organizing everything.
I was getting all my work done.
I was doing all the emails.
I was dealing with customers.
Like, nobody would have even thought that I was on drugs.
I just looked like Superwoman 24-7 until I got dope sick, until I ran out of dope.
And then, like, my hair hurt, my skin hurt, everything.
I couldn't move.
And that's when people started noticing maybe they're back on drugs.
And then, you know, money, money wasn't even an issue.
Like, you know, most people, you know, something's going on because they're running out of money.
And we just didn't do that yet.
We would eventually, and we would eventually get kicked out of that house because crack became more important.
And this is, I mean, we're talking about probably a five-year span that I'm kind of going over right now.
So how does a, how do the pills dry up in a city?
I don't really know. Ben actually probably knows more, but I think they just bring in so much,
and they sell so much, and maybe some get seized. You know, you'll see the big seizures they have,
and sometimes those seizures were drugs that were meant for Memphis. And then they just, I guess,
the supply kind of runs out.
How did the crack come into play?
So Ben was on crack before I even knew him.
And, you know, when we first met, I'm very transparent about everything.
And, you know, I told him my mom is a crackhead.
And I was told him I never wanted to do crack.
I never wanted to end up like my mom.
My mom is also a raging alcoholic, a very violent one.
So I stayed away from alcohol.
To this day, I hate alcohol.
I don't want anything to do with it.
And so those two things I always stayed away from.
And then one day, we couldn't.
find heroin. And I was just so, so sick. I was dog sick. I just, I couldn't move, but we could
find crack. And I think Ben had already had some. There was one day that I, he was sick and I was not
sick. So I go down to South Memphis to go try to find more heroin so I can make him better
when he wakes up because he was just rolling around in his sleep and he was sweating and it was
just it was bad. So I was like, let me go down and I can, I can wake them up with some heroin and
make them better. Well, I waited there for three hours. There was no heroin. All they had was
crack. I was like, well, I remember he used to do crack back in the day. Maybe crack will make
him feel better. So I got like a 30 rocket crack, brought it home to him. And he was upset that
there was no heroin because he knew he would still be sick. But he was happy that I brought him
crack. So he was doing crack after that. And I think probably about two, three weeks after that,
you know, the crack had already been established. He had been doing that. So when I couldn't find
heroin, about two, three weeks later, he was like, well, I got this crack, but that's a bad
idea. And I think I remember, I was holding the pipe in my hand. I was like, how bad of an idea
is this? He was like, that's the worst decision you will ever make. And I was like,
pocket and I lit it. And that was the end of everything. That was all I wanted for the next
year and a half. Year and a half. Mm-hmm. You have to feel like it was about a year and a half.
What is crack? So it's cocaine and baking soda and water. Those are essentially the three
ingredients and they're cooked together, which you would think, you know, like cocaine, big deal, it's
cocaine and you just add some bacon soda and some water. You don't think it would be a big difference,
but I guess there's, you know, snorting it, shooting it, smoking it, all three different routes,
but all three very different feelings that you get from it. And smoking crack, as I found out,
was the one thing that, like after that first hit, that was it. That destroyed me. Like,
that is all I wanted. I didn't want my kids.
I didn't want my husband.
We had gotten married in between that.
There's a lot we skipped.
But I just wanted crack.
That was it.
That was everything.
It took everything we had.
What did you like so much about it?
I guess the feeling.
And for somebody that's never smoked crack, you can't even really describe it.
There's something called the bell ringer.
And when you first hit crack for the very first time, or at least the very first few times,
There's something they call the bell ringer.
And it's almost like you hear a bell in your head.
And it's, I can't, in words, I cannot describe it.
But that is what you chase every other time you're doing it.
You were chasing for that bell ringer.
You want that first feeling again.
Kind of like how Ben described the heroin.
But there's so much worse.
Like it's just, it consumes every bit of you.
It just takes you.
Where were your kids when you guys are doing this?
I think for the most part they were at Aaron's house.
They would come every once in a while.
We would never let them see anything.
Of course, James lived with us because he was ours.
He wasn't errands.
So he lived with us during it.
And he was one and a half, two years old.
He had no idea what that was, what we were doing.
We did not do it in front of it.
him at first when we were living in that house, we went and do it in front of him until the
very end. And I do, I think I've blocked out some parts and things will come back to me sometimes.
And I remember the movie Boss Baby when I hear the theme music for that.
And like our four-year-old plays it now and it still brings me back to that big house.
And we'd be in our room and he was obsessed with Boss Baby.
and I just remember sitting on the bed with him.
He was watching TV, and I was just sitting next to him smoking crack.
I made sure to blow the smoke in the other direction.
Like that did anything good.
But I do remember that.
I did smoke in front of James,
I think only because he was one and a half two years old,
and he had no idea what it was.
But, you know, I look at it now,
and I just think, like, what fucking damage I could have done?
Like, could he have gotten?
could that smoke have messed him up, you know?
And it just, it hurts to know some of the shit that we put him through.
And I haven't even got into, like, the really deep shit that we put him through.
And I'll probably let Ben talk about that.
But that's, that boy went through it.
He didn't know it because he was only two.
What is some of the shit?
So when we got kicked out of the house, and it was, there's a rapper called Young Doll.
He's a Memphis rapper, very famous.
He just got murdered a couple, like a year ago, two years ago.
His mother was the one that rented the house to us.
We didn't know this at the time.
So when we get kicked out, they didn't do anything legal.
It's like three huge linebackers just boom, boom, boom, y'all haven't paid your rent.
So they come in and throw all their shit out.
Like literally everything we own, everything we have acquired through years and years of nothing but work
is thrown on the front
porch or on the front lawn
and this is a gated community
so like rich people live here
like it was a nice fucking house
and so we have all these people like
you know what's going on
and so they know we have kids
so that looks bad to begin with
but so we move out of this nice
ass house
and I think that same day
our good Tahoe
our good Tahoe
shits the bed
and we have to find a new vehicle.
And so we had no vehicle.
We got kicked out of the house.
All we could do is rent a U-Haul,
which we didn't even have money to do.
My dad had to buy that U-Haul.
And we just shove what we can into the U-Haul.
There's only two seats, one for me and one for Ben.
James is sitting in a car seat, like right in the middle.
He's not strapped in.
There's nowhere to put them.
And we just drop them off at my dad's house
because what are two addicts going to do
when they get kicked out of their house with nothing.
You go back and you go get high, and that's what we did.
So I knew my dad's house was a safe place for him.
So we took him to my dad's house.
My dad, I think, is in denial a lot about what was going on.
And I'm not terribly close to my dad.
You know, we don't just talk and gab on the phone every day.
And, you know, he had to deal with my mom for so many years.
He knew something was going on.
He knew I'd been an addiction for most of my life.
And I think he just didn't want to ask questions.
He was just like, just leave James here.
Y'all go do whatever.
And we did.
And we went and started, we just lived in the trap house for like weeks at a time.
And when I started, in Madison, too, like Madison's 10 years old.
Wait, 10.
Madison's like 14 at this point.
I got to think, 13, 13, I think.
And she goes to my dad's house, too,
because I don't want them to see any of this
because of, you know, the shit I saw when I was little,
I don't want them to see any of this.
So Maddie does stay with my dad for the most part.
You know, James is two, so I can't leave them with my dad all the time.
So we'll have, like, little shifts.
Well, first five days we got kicked out,
we went straight to the dope house,
and we stayed there for five days straight.
We did not leave.
we just smoke crack for five days.
And they knew us there because we had always had so much money
that they're like, yeah, we'll front you that, we'll front you that, we'll front you that.
We didn't even have money.
I think Ben ends up selling the Tahoe that shit the bed, like for parts or something
or just as a chunk of junk and got a little bit of money that got us some more crack.
And before we knew, we're just going back and forth, going to see James and Maddie.
and coming back to the trap house.
And, you know, my dad's, he's got a life.
He's got a job.
So we'll have James with us.
And we would never take him into the trap house.
Because I was always, they had a lot of drive-bys.
Like if you look at this house, there was just riddled with bullet holes, bullet holes everywhere.
So I was always afraid if I brought him into the trap that we would have a drive-by and he would get shot.
So we would go, we would go get her dope and we'd go.
drive. We would just drive around in the Tahoe. James would be in the back seat and his car seat.
And we would just smoke crack. I would be in the front seat. Ben would be driving and we'd just drive
around Memphis smoking crack. And our friends were all prostitutes. And if we didn't have enough
money, they had money because they were turning tricks so they could get more crack. So, you know,
they'd hop on in the truck
and we'd all smoke crack together
and we'd go to different traps together
so it would, me, Ben, James
and like three or four prostitutes
hanging out in the Sahoe or whatever it was
I think we, in the U-Haul at first
and then we end up finding the $700 truck
that we managed to buy
and sorry, I'm jumping around
all over the place I think
How do you know where all the trap houses?
Just kind of word of mouth
Ben showed me the first one in South Memphis, which is the one he used to frequent before we were even together.
And then, you know, we were, we made money. Do boys like money. So even though we were the only white people out there, they loved us. They brought us in like family. And also, you don't want to be outside a trap house if you're white. One, it's an eyesore. Like the cops know if that's a house on that street and there's two white.
folks outside the window, you know, everybody knows what's going on. So me and Ben had this thing
and we would walk up and we'd knock on the window and go back door. And that meant we're here,
go open the back door to let the white folks in. And the back door was barricaded. It had a pole or
like a two by four on three different levels, maybe it was two different levels, to keep the cops
or buy them a little bit of time for when the cops kicked in the door. So we'd say back door and
we'd walk in and that was it.
And we'd stay in there for a little while because they don't want white folks going in
and out of the place.
So we would sit in there for hours.
And in those hours, we would see the prostitutes come in, the other dope boys come in.
So you would meet, we would network.
It was like drug networking.
So we'd meet the other dope boys.
We'd meet the other prostitutes who would, you know, introduce us to other dope boys or, you know,
other, it was just like a, it's a big drug networking system.
Did you see any of the stuff going on inside the trap house that Ben was talking about earlier?
So Ben was, we did see a lot of bad stuff together.
I did not see a murder happen.
Luckily, he did.
But, you know, we were held at gunpoint together on multiple occasions.
We were kidnapped together on one occasion with James.
All of those started in the trap house.
You know, we would...
Why were you kidnapped?
So we owed a dope boy a lot of money.
How much?
A couple of grand.
I can't remember exactly how much it was.
I know it was a couple of grand, though.
And everybody knew that we sold firearms parts.
We didn't sell the firearm, but we sold parts for the firearms.
you know, around the gangsters, that's real, you know, that's real cool.
Everybody loves that.
So everybody wanted to be friends with us.
Everybody was, you know, happy to have Ben and Jess over, you know,
oh, they can give you shit for your AR and they can get you tannerite.
And so everybody was very free with their fronts,
with their letting us borrow drugs to pay them back later.
And this one guy just did it a little too much and we didn't have the money to pay them back.
So we kind of actually ran from this guy for a little while because some of those guys are like really nuts about their money.
They want their money.
And I didn't know what they were going to do to us, what they were going to do to my two-year-old.
So we kind of ran for a little while.
And there's a lady named Vicky.
And we knew Vicki from the streets.
And she had just gotten or she had had like a little apartment on another side of town.
I knew we wouldn't be around anybody.
and they let us move in for a little bit.
That didn't last very long.
And we called the same dope boy
because when you want crack, you want crack.
Like you don't care if you're going to get shot.
You want to hit that crack.
So we called him again.
We were like, are you please just for us.
Just like one more time.
And he comes there and he picks us up
and he gives us some crack.
and it's me, our little two-year-old James and Ben, and we're in the back seat.
He gives us a crack, and we smoke it, and we just drive around for a little bit,
and he doesn't take us back to Vicki's house.
It was a very nice kidnapping, I will say that, because he had kids of his own.
So I know that he didn't want to hurt James or anything like that.
He just wanted his fucking money.
So he's like, we're not going back to that house.
Y'all are coming with us.
and so me and Ben are like
what the fuck? Like we're in the
back seat just like
mouthing to each other what the fuck is going on
so and he
does in fact
take us to his mom's house
I'm guessing maybe that's where he was staying
at that point and
he takes us to his mom's house
in
Raleigh
or freight Raleigh
and we go and we have to stay
the night and it's just like this
little tiny room with mattresses on the floor. And they're like smoking so much weed. Like there's so
much smoke in this room. I can barely see my hand. I don't want anything to do with weed at this
point. Like all I'm almost crack. But I'm not trying to ask for anything. I'm just trying to get my kid
out of there. But I know that I can't say anything. And I'm afraid that if I do say,
will you please not smoke so much around my kid? I'm afraid that, you know, you don't know what these
guys are going to do. So I just had to sit there with my mouth fucking shut and just act like
everything was okay. And I was just like, James, are you having fun? You know, and I just had to keep
that smile on and I had to make it seem like we were just having a sleepover. And me and Ben were
fucking scared shitless about what the fuck was about to happen next. And we stay the night there.
You know, they smoke. He makes a couple of serves and his girlfriend stays in the room to make sure
we don't leave. And we do fall asleep there. We wake up the next morning and they take us out of
his mom's house and we're just driving around again. And the whole time, me and Ben are like just
feigning for crack. We just want crack so bad. But I don't want to say anything because I don't want to
risk anything happening to my son. So we just keep her mouth shut. And he's so,
He's driving and he turns around.
I was like, so what about that money?
And so Ben, like, gets on his phone and I don't know how he does it.
Ben does this all the time.
He just gets, like, he'll fall in a pile of shit and come out with a $100 bill.
Like, that's the shit Ben does.
And he just gets on the phone and starts texting customers or answering emails or something.
It ends up selling bump stocks because we were like the number one distributor or the number two distributor
of bump stock slide fires that year, because this was right after the casino thing happened.
So everybody wanted them before they were going to get banned.
And Ben ends up selling, like, however many, I don't even remember how many he's told,
but we were able to get this guy, his money, and he let us go.
We were all okay.
Nobody got shot or murdered, but for a minute there, I didn't know what the fuck was about to happen to us.
So this went from
Never Happens in front of the kid
To watching TV with him smoking crack
To end the trap house
To getting kidnapped
And he's two years old
Two years old
And it just spired
Yeah
It was horrible
And it went quick
It was just boom boom boom boom
Like worse worse worse worse
And it just kept going
Is that as bad as it got?
No.
I guess for James, for James, that's as bad as it got.
I think that kind of opened my eyes a little bit.
And I somewhat got kidnapped away from Ben and away from James.
We had another guy that, you know, had fronted us,
and I had promised him my wedding ring.
And so he ended up taking me,
and he wouldn't let me out of his sight until we were, like,
going to get it appraised. And, you know, so after that happened, I was like, okay, I've been
technically kidnapped like twice now. Maybe it's time to slow it down. And, um, but you don't
really have that choice. When you're on crack, you don't, you don't get to make that, like,
it consumes every bit of you. It just takes you. And, um, I think it, the only way to get out of it
is to, like, sufficiently suffer enough to go through so much shit.
that you're like, you know what, I would just seriously rather die than to live like this anymore.
And at one point, I had lost Ben.
Like, we were living in a $700 truck with stolen plates at this point.
And Brandon Kelly, his best friend that would later overdose, was kind of living in the truck with us.
And I don't remember where Ben went.
I think we dropped him off at a hotel to go score some dope for us.
He stole my phone and I couldn't find him.
Like, he wasn't at the hotel anymore.
I couldn't call him because I realized he had stolen my phone.
And we seriously had just lost each other for like three or four days.
I had no idea where he was.
I just rolled around in the Tahoe looking for him.
And I think that was one of the things.
Like, we had gone through this much shit together.
And now we're in the same area running around with the same people doing the same.
same drugs and we couldn't find each other. And as much as I was angry at him for stealing my phone
and doing all the shit that we had done to each other in active addiction, I knew that I still loved
this man and I needed to find him and I didn't want to lose him. And I think the thought of losing
him or knowing that he could be dead in an alley somewhere and I had no idea, I think that was
part of what got me to my end of being ready to quit. And then you hear Ben's version and he wakes up
just hovered in blood. I have no idea where it came from. So I think that part and then Ben's part
and we just, we're like, you know what, we're going to die if we don't leave. We're going to die.
Our kids are going to die. We're going to beat this time to go. Was there infidelity in here too?
Not on my end. I'm, I've never been unfaithful ever. On Ben's end?
Just with those three that we talked about earlier.
Not during this.
Well, because all we hung around were prostitutes.
And even though he was cheating, Ben treasures his penis, so he went going around prostitutes.
What will we miss them?
I mean, there's a whole lot.
I didn't know how long I was going to be sitting here, so I was just kind of jumping around.
There's, like Ben went in a very nice order, and I was just kind of all over the,
place. There's, I mean, the whole hell of a lot missing.
She stabbed me. I did. I stabbed him. I mean, there's a lot that's missing.
You stabbed them?
Mm-hmm. It was more of a slash. It was a slash. But he, one of the times that he tried to get
sober, he got really, really bad drinking. This is when we were in our big nice house and we had
all the, we were just swimming in money. And he just started drinking again and got so bad
that he would take the upper of his gun,
didn't even have the rest of the gun with it.
He would just take the upper, like,
I'm going to kill some cops.
And he would, like, literally run out the front door
thinking he was going to go kill cops.
Like, that's how out of his mind he was.
And it got so bad like that that I was like,
did you got to, we got to do something?
Like, it's going to get really fucking bad.
And remember, like, I grew up with an extremely violent alcoholic for a mother.
So that's what I was.
I'm used to getting beat shitless.
So, like, I'm, he's never been violent with me.
But I'm just seeing this progression.
And I just know that at some point, he's going to start beating the shit out of me like my mom used to.
So I'm getting really fucking scared.
I'm like, dude, you've got to do something because I can't.
Once you start hitting me, I've got to go.
And I don't want to leave him.
And I know that.
So she's like, cool, it's fine.
I will take a shot.
There's a shot called Vivitral.
and it makes it to where like you don't want alcohol or if you do drink alcohol it's supposed to make
you sick or something like that so so he starts doing that shot and at first he does okay
first maybe a week or two well then he starts drinking he starts drinking with it
turns out that when you drink with vivitral it makes you extremely violent and he got um
he got really really angry i don't even remember what it was about
out. And I remember we were arguing over something, and he gets in my face. And it's almost like
PTSD from when me and my mom used to be, and I just reacted. And I think I just pushed him or something.
I was just trying to get him out of my face and away from me because I didn't want to get beat.
And he took that as an act of aggression, and he took my head in like with his hand. He's got a big
hands, dude. So he took my whole head and bashed it.
into the wall and like I saw black like for a split second. I think any harder and I would have
like he would have made me black out. Luckily I didn't. Luckily it was like half second of blackness
and I you know I was like oh fuck he could have just really fucked me up and I'm always carrying a
blade always since I was like 14 I've carried knives on me and so I just pull out my knife
and I just slash the shit out of his arm like right here and uh that was it.
like gloves were off at this point. He was like, oh, fuck no, bitch. And he just starts, you know,
pushes. It was such a blur that I can't tell you exactly everything that happened, but I do know that
we were at each other's throats. He was trying to hit me. I was trying to hit him. There's a knife
involved. There's blood everywhere. And we make it into the bedroom. And I think at this point,
like he's, you know, I'm a girl. He's a guy. He's a lot stronger than me.
and I know this.
And so I'm trying to get the fuck away from him
because he's literally like blackout drunk out of his mind.
He's not been anymore.
And so I'm trying to run from him because I just realized
I just slashes this motherfucker.
He's going to kill me.
So I run into the bedroom and I try to close the door.
Of course he kicks it open and gets on top of me and starts choking me.
So much so that I'm starting to black out.
Like I'm starting to lose constantly.
consciousness and Thomas and his girlfriend Jackie were like in a truck in the garage or in the driveway
this whole time. Like he was supposed to be coming in to get his belongings or something.
Like Thomas, he had decided to move back to Thomas' house for a second or for a while because
we had gotten into it because he was drunk. So they were sitting outside waiting on him to come
back out. He was supposed to just be coming in to get his items. So I kind of come to you because
I was barely even conscious at this point.
And Thomas is ripping him away from me and pulling him off me.
Because he's, I mean, just hands around my neck.
I'm going to fucking kill you, bitch.
And just like, it was very bad.
It was a very traumatic experience.
But I do believe had Thomas not peeled him off of me, I would not be here right now.
I would be.
I almost lost consciousness.
So it was...
There's not a lot of stories like that.
That was the most violent one between us.
There were a couple of knife fights over heroin
just because I always have a knife
and I always pull out a knife,
so that's on me.
But there's a lot of bad that happened.
Wow.
Let's get Ben Beck in the seat.
Okay.
I want to pick up right before the turning point.
She had mentioned you woke up in a
With blood everywhere
So what was that?
To this day we don't know
I woke up in the empty lot next to 1428
Wilburne Street
Which is a very significant address
That's the house that she was describing
It's full of bullet holes
Where you know we had friends die in that house
Friends shot in that house
Uh
I had disappeared
I went into a blackout drunk
I wanted to get out of that life very bad,
and I knew if I kept going back to her dad's
where I had a soft place to land,
I was not going to.
And so I decided to just go all out
and either die or hit right bottom.
But it was going to happen that week, one or the other.
I mean, I got nose to nose
with a real young gangster disciple
who had a pistol to my gut
and told him to pull the trigger.
I mean, I was begging somebody to do.
killed me um and uh that was on hemlock streets so two blocks over from woodward and that was the last
thing i remember before waking up the um the 26th of may 2019 um in that empty lot just covered head to
toe and blood when i came to like i was coughing up blood and i figured i must have been puking blood
because i was i could still taste vodka so i knew i'd been drinking a lot um
And then as I got up, it was all over me.
And so I didn't know how badly hurt I was or what had happened.
And there wasn't a cut on my body.
So to this day, I don't know what happened.
And as I realized where I was, the window to buy dope fronts right there.
And I looked over in Daphne or Creche or whoever's in the window.
And my body is wanting to go to the window and get dope to wake up and figure out what's,
do and I just couldn't do it. I could not take another step in that direction. I couldn't remember
anything from the proceeding several days. Madison's father, Nick, I had been helping trying to
mentor and get him into a better life. He'd recently gotten out of prison and had no idea that we
were shot off. He was murdered the 19th of May. I was the last person to talk to him. And he was
killed for kicking a roommate out that I told him he needed to kick out before we would let
Maddie come spend the summer with him.
So I immediately took that upon myself that it was my fault and I went and drank at it.
And it began my progression to rock bottom that week.
I found a phone that day and called my dad and he told me to just come home.
And I didn't know how the hell I was going to get there.
Long story short, I ended up going to Georgia.
I got on a Graham bus.
I didn't get high that day.
I was done.
That was it.
By yourself.
By myself.
And I told Jess, I was like, you can either come with me or I'm getting my shit together and I'm coming back for James because this is over.
We're not doing this anymore.
And we'd had similar conversations a couple times.
I would go to detox and tell her you're coming or I'm leaving.
And she'd come.
She'd show up.
You know, we'd been through this a few times, and then every time it happened, somebody would die.
Somebody would get murdered.
There'd be another overdose, and we'd relapse.
And this time I was done, I was getting a fuck out of the mouth because I couldn't stay.
And so I went to Georgia, and I'm a control freak.
I always have to manage everything, manipulate really everything at this point.
You know, I had to be in control of, well, you've heard my story, everything.
and my attempts to exert control over things
I shouldn't have any control over
his historically fucked my life up in epic proportions.
That part of my brain, I think, broke that day.
I didn't know what was about to happen.
I had absolutely no control over anything.
I had the clothes on my back,
and that was it.
And I was okay with it.
For the first time of my life,
I had no idea what was going to happen tomorrow.
and I didn't care.
And the feeling of freedom that I had
is something I cannot put into words.
I was just, I was okay in that moment.
I was okay not knowing what's coming.
And that is, that is the piece I have wanted
since I was 13 years old
to not be in control and to be okay with it.
And I finally found that that day.
It was on the tail end of all of that misery
you just heard 18 arrests.
I don't even know how many friends dead and gone.
You know, I've been stabbed.
I've been shot at.
Lost everything.
But I finally reached a point where I just don't care anymore.
I'm okay.
I'm okay.
And a week later, she hit the same point.
I got like Graham Bus back to Memphis.
Got that $700 truck and James.
and started the drive back to Atlanta.
And I remember I took a picture in the review mirror
of that truck of Memphis in the river.
And I went and made some, you know, stupid emo dramatic post on Facebook.
Like, I'm leaving this city in the review for good.
And we laughed about it, you know.
And like, not even 20 minutes later, I looked at it.
And I was like, dude, we got to go back.
She's like, what are you talking about?
Like, I don't know.
I don't know.
Something's,
our work's not done in Memphis.
And that was like just clear his day,
not like an audible voice,
but clear his day a message God was sending me
as my work was not done in Memphis.
And we laughed because what work did I have in Memphis?
Like, it was just death and destruction
for the last five years, man.
But that was kind of foreshadowing of what was to come.
You know, we go to my parents.
You get a job.
this data company.
Just a bullshit job.
I haven't worked for anybody
other than myself in 10 years.
But I was looking at the bigger picture.
And, you know, even though we lost everything on paper,
I still retained a lot of data
and a lot of expertise in the marketing area,
digital marketing in particular.
I still had a lot of email lists.
I still had a lot of IP.
And so I'm looking at, like,
what am I sitting?
on right now. What do I have in front of me? What can I rebuild with? And I decided to get a job
of this data company and see what I could learn about how they're manipulating data and running
data intelligence for large corporations. And I meet this guy named Robert, and he's my boss.
We didn't really get along because he was convinced I'd been hired to replace him. He didn't
know about my background. He just knew that I had worked, you know, Fortune 500 and had a college
degree.
I was getting paid next to nothing.
I was working crazy hours.
I'm driving a truck that I can't register.
I don't have a title to it.
I bought it from some dope boy who stole it from his mom.
But I'm clean, you know.
And things are going really well.
I landed a deal to pitch a data concept, essentially,
to Pfizer pharmaceuticals, oddly enough,
on how to use data to predict the likelihood of a rare disease
to do their digital marketing.
And Robert and I kind of had an open conversation
about the dislike between the two of us around that.
We go to New York and we have the conversation over beer.
So I've relapsed now.
This was like in August, I think, of 2019.
And I'm still sticking things out of this data company.
I'm still trying to figure out how they're going.
I tell Robert what I've got as far as my email lists
and all the different strategies they used to use to get firearms products
around Google's stupid rules.
And we just start having this ongoing conversation
about how we're going to figure out how to do what this company does.
I'm only going to do it uniquely to the firearms industry
who has so much trouble advertising in the walled gardens of Facebook and Google and all that.
And we continued the conversation October 3rd of 2019.
I relapsed again.
Got totally transparent with Robert about my background, about everything.
And we're still living my parents.
Like, it's not comfortable.
I'm sleeping on a couch.
Jess and James were upstairs, you know, in twin beds.
Like, they're near in retirement age at this point.
They weren't planning on having their 37-year-old son and, you know, his new family moving in with him.
But they opened their doors to us.
and I was determined to make it work.
And Robert told me when I opened up to him, he's like, look, I don't get it.
I'm not an alcoholic, but whatever I can do to help you through this, I'm here for it.
And I've really called him task on that promise, and we haven't stopped since.
I went to AA.
I did not want to go to AA because I was still convinced at this point that I was special.
and that I wasn't like all these other crackheads and junkies and drunks
that I'm going to recover different.
I don't have to go to meetings.
So reluctantly, I went to AA on October 4th of 2019,
and I shared in a meeting,
and this Marine pipes up.
His name's David Gibson.
Come to fight out, he's got a background not too dissimilar than mine.
And we talk, and he shares some words of wisdom with me.
and I got a sponsor and I start working steps.
And, you know, Jess and I had it in the back of our heads this whole time
that when Brandon died, little Brandon, we were going to relapse.
That was our reservation.
You know, kind of like you held onto that bag of Coke or something.
Like, it's there.
You're going to beat it, but it's there if you need it.
Kind of that.
Like, we had that in the back of our head is, I'm going to stay sober, but, you know,
if I need to get high, I can do it when Brandon dies because we knew it was going to happen.
and in December that day came,
I realized I hadn't heard from him,
and we had gone through this exact same scenario
18 months prior with his mother.
We realized we hadn't heard from her,
and nobody could reach her.
And so we went and did a wellness check
and found her dead and decomposing.
And so 18 months later,
I see the same thing playing out with Brandon,
and I sent, I called one of my employees from RETEC
who I stayed in contact with over the years.
he'd watch my rise and fall over and over again.
And I told him what was going on.
He said, get me an address.
And he went and checked, and Brandon had been dead a few days.
And in that moment, that would hurt.
It still hurts because Brandon should have made it out with us.
You know, he had nobody.
One of the letters his mom wrote when she killed herself,
mentioned something to the effect of,
She knew that he'd be okay because he had us looking out for him now.
And I failed to do that.
Not only did I fail to do it, I left him there to die.
And that would cut me really fucking deep, man.
Just because of the totality of our story, we didn't really have time to get into a lot of Brandon.
But he changed the way I look at a lot of things.
And I wouldn't have been able to get off of dope if it wasn't for him, even though he went back out.
We all did.
But the one thing that didn't happen in that moment is we didn't want to get high.
Neither one of us did.
I called my sponsor, and I called Brian Owens, and he talked to Judge Dwyer.
Judge Dwyer was the drug court judge who had terminated me from his program,
gave me a $200,000 bond, and tried to send me to prison.
And Dwyer offered up their nonprofit that we could fundraise for,
to bury Brandon because he literally had nobody left.
And I used my social media presence to raise the money to bury him.
And we went back to Memphis and, you know, we had him cremated and then held a little memorial
for him and gave the money we'd raised to the Drug Court Foundation.
And we found some weird healing in that, not just the act of memorializing him, but the fact
that we were able to raise money to care for somebody else that we don't even know.
You know, just using a social media page, which at that time was nothing but shit posting.
But it lit a spark in our minds.
And then as luck would have it, my sponsor was taking me through the steps very quickly.
And I was getting ready for step 12, right about them, which is to be of service to those still struggling.
And something clicked in our heads, man.
And we're like, we want to do this.
And we want to find ways to raise money to help people who are fighting that battle.
And we actually had the idea probably high on crack back in 2017 to start a nonprofit called Glandersfields.
You know the poem, Lieutenant Colonel John McRae and Plandersfields were Poppy's Grow.
I don't.
Okay, it's a poem about World War I.
about a field of opium poppies called Flandersfields in the Battle of the Pree in Belgium.
But it's got lots of imagery in it.
There's dead people.
You know, there's beauty rising from the ashes.
There's opium poppies, which is what heroin comes from.
And I wanted to make a nonprofit called Flinders Fields to help vets battling opiate addiction.
You know, and time goes by.
I did figure out, with Robert's help, how to replicate my dad.
data set across the entirety of the internet to very accurately predict who's about to spend money
on a gun purchase or a gun accessory purchase. And I took that to market. And Black Rifle,
which had originally been an e-commerce company selling parts, is now a company doing advertising
for Leviathens in the gun space. And it took off pretty quickly. Well enough that after that little
data company was acquired by a Fortune 500 and Robert was acquired in the acquisition with golden handcuffs,
I was able to poach him away to bring him over to black rifle.
In March of 21, we filed to start Planders.
And the very first thing we did, oddly enough, was Fly Sergeant Deaton back to fucking rehab.
He had gone out and gotten addicted to crack and heroin just like I was.
He went from painfields to the same shit I did.
And was oddly enough facing a lot of gun charges too.
it's weird how that one played out but anyway we did our first good dude is flandersfields and
we're still waiting on irs to approve it at this point and in july of 2021
um our marine corps intelligence uh nCO hits me up about black rifle about what we're doing
he finds it intriguing um and uh so we start a dialogue and i don't know maybe around the 15th
caused me and it's like, you want to do something crazy?
Hell yeah, I do.
I'm bored, you know.
We had at this point moved into our own house.
We've got all the kids back.
I think two of the kids I shared with Aaron have moved over to Georgia with us at this point.
Lily and the twins stayed.
And life's good.
You know, we've got way more than we need, which is why we started the nonprofit.
Because historically, every time Jess and I have more than we need,
we start making bad decisions with the excess,
except this time I'm working a program of recovery.
And anyway, my answer to him is hell yes, I'll do something crazy.
And he goes, all right, cool, well, I'll hit you up the next day or two,
we're going to get some people out of Afghanistan.
I was like, I'm sorry, you said we're going to do what now?
He was like, yeah, the Taliban's taken over Afghanistan,
and we're going to save some good guys.
I was like, I don't know how I'm going to help that, but okay.
I ended up going to call about a week later and thrown into this app called Signal, which I had never heard of.
And I'm in chat rooms with all sorts of crazy professions, active duty, you know, three-letter agencies.
And they want to know if we can use black rifles data sets to do anything in Afghanistan, to vet people, to find missing people, to plot safe ground routes.
to spy on what somebody's consuming on their device.
And the answers to some of those were yes,
the answers to other ones were no,
and the answers to the other ones were like,
I don't know, but we'll find out.
And he ends up sending over a list of,
it came from a lieutenant general,
I don't know if I should name the guy,
but Jack Britton is the Marine NCO that pulled me into this.
He owns the CyberSameritan.com.
Really good dude, just a damn good human being.
He was volunteering at the time for the National Child Protection Task Force.
Sends over this list, and it's a list of 13 families that are stuck in Afghanistan being targeted by the Taliban for capture or kill.
And he wants to know, can we get them, can we find him?
Can we make contact?
Is there anything we can do?
And it's like a list of WhatsApp numbers and social media profiles or any other relevant selectors they had.
And so I start calming through breach data because a lot of what we've built out on the black rifle.
side is collations of breached data from, you know, like you hear about it, like, Park Mobile
had a huge breach and all this information gets out. And so I started cross-referencing, like,
who may have appeared in a breach? And the first family I had on there is, the last name
was Pardisi. And I started finding a lot of activity between that WhatsApp number,
a Facebook account, and then I got down to a hotmail email, and then that linked back to a number
at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, or Fayetteville.
I didn't know it was Fort Bragg at the time.
I called it, and the guy answered and spoke English,
said his name is Pardisi.
And so I'd like, what the fuck?
So I hung up real fast because I was a little freaked out, you know?
And I realized, like, I'm not doing anything nefarious.
Just call back and tell them what we're doing.
And as it turned out, this was the now an American citizen brother
of the guy we were looking for.
And he had direct comms with him.
So not only is this missing person no longer missing, we know they're alive, we know exactly how many kids they have with them, we know where they are, we know they have a tie to the U.S. military, and so they're good to go, right?
So we make contact with people inside the airport.
I've been handed lists of phone numbers.
It's kind of like Scott did with Pineapple Express.
Well, we were running the same lines in a lot of this.
And I called the airport.
I told these people to go to Adigate.
You know, we had them, I think they had a yellow flag that were going to hold up, and this Brit pulls them in.
Like, they're saved.
We just saved 11 lives.
Like, I'm dumbfounded.
I have no idea what I'm doing it.
Wow.
But it happened.
And that really kind of tricked me into doing the rest of Afghanistan because the feeling I got from that initial success that was such a low-lift effort.
But now they think I'm a hero.
You know, the family still checks in with me to this day.
They tell me happy birthday all the time.
Like, it's, anyway, I was hooked.
I was like, I got to do this more.
And so we went, as we tend to do with all things, way overboard into Afghanistan.
All right.
We're working multiple other angles through NCPTF.
I end up in direct comms with a driver in Kabul.
One thing leads to another.
I like have a ground team in Kabul now.
Like we're able to move people all over the place.
We were getting people into Blackgate.
I ended up in chats with Scott Mann, Ozgeist, that's how I'm at Sarah Adams.
And right at the same time, I started getting, because of Black Rifle's success
and because of the gun industry's general disdain for criminals and druggies,
that started getting kind of open about my background.
You know what I mean?
And I had the exact opposite feedback that I was expecting, especially on LinkedIn.
Like, people not only appreciated my openness, a lot of people like, oh, my, you know, I used to fight that too.
And especially from the firearms industry itself, I was actually kind of surprised.
So I'm in these chants to all these people who, like, can certainly pull up my background and figure out exactly who I am and what I've done.
So it's good that I'm already being open.
As we get closer to the 26th of August, things are getting real dicey in Kabul.
like we've had Afghans get shot on the other end of the phone with us while we're trying to guide him in.
I've been given access to this geocent reporting tool.
We're able to see real-time gunfire around the airport where the checkpoints are.
We're navigating like from 8,500 miles away.
I'm in my basement in Georgia telling people how to get into the airport.
I'm giving them contact with the driver.
They can get them through the 82nd at Blackgate.
Jess is on the phone with Afghan women.
They're, you know, screaming and crying and praying and Dari.
Dess is praying in English, two totally different religions, but just trying to get the same
thing done.
It was a very surreal experience.
Wow.
I'm less than two years clean at this point in time.
I'm in direct comms with all of these special operators and like dudes that are literally
on the ground in Afghanistan, guys that are across the border in Dushan Bay.
We had people in Abu Dhabi at the humanitarian city up there.
Like, literally within 45 days' time, I've gone from running my business and trying to find some purpose in life.
We're waiting on the IRS to approve Flanders, so I can't do a lot other than fly my old buddy to treatment.
And now I'm in chats with, like, super-duper badasses.
And, like, right in the middle of this, somebody finally checks our mail, and the IRS had approved Flandersfields as a nonprofit on the 15th of August, the day Kabul fell.
So now I've got all of this going on, but now I have a mechanism to raise money because Flanders was chartered to help house homeless veterans.
Did not say anything about American veterans.
We've got all these allied members of the Afghan National Army that we're trying to help.
We've got former commanders we're trying to help.
Jess, by this point in time, has her own little small entourage of former Afghan female police officers.
And then when the bomb goes off at Abbey Gate, you know, we couldn't get anybody else inside the airport.
That was it. It was curtains.
But we've already moved to all these people from the sticks of Afghanistan to Kabul trying to get them into the airport and evacuate them.
And so the need became immediately apparent for safe housing.
And in these single chat rooms, there was like all sorts of people freaking out about the legality of this, the legality of that.
You know, can or do we need to do something with the Foreign Agent Registration Act?
What's the Logan Act?
All this crap I've never heard of it, nor do I give a flying fuck about.
Like I'm barely two years away from being criminal, so I don't care at all.
I'm going to find out if I can lease an apartment.
Cool.
I'll be back in 10 minutes.
So I call my guy back at Fort Bragg.
He's like, yeah, my cousin's a real estate agent.
What do you need?
I was like, I need safe houses.
So the next thing I know, I'm signing a lease in Dari, all right?
Or far seat or whatever.
I don't even know what the fuck it was.
So we're signing leases in Afghanistan.
We start putting families in these safe houses because we can't get them out of the airport anymore.
And my dream.
of Flandersfields and helping homeless and addicted vets is now morphed because my weaponized ADHD
went for shiny object syndrome in Kabul, Afghanistan.
We ended up, like, no bullshit before it was over, we had 68 safe houses in Afghanistan.
We had them in Kabul.
We had them in Kunduz.
We had them in Lalibu.
We had them in Helmand.
We had them close to Torquim.
I'm not sure how close.
We had Mazar Shereef.
At one point, we were housing 650, former.
military.
Yeah, we were, I blew through my kids' college savings.
But this whole time, like, it's just, we're learning how to get shit done real fast, real fast,
make shit happen, we're making contacts.
And I had my life had purpose.
And before I know it, I've got two years clean.
That's the longest I've had clean since that relapse in 2011.
And, like, I'm starting to realize if I maintain a purpose, maybe I actually can stay clean no matter.
how much money I make.
So we've dumped, like, all of our personal savings into Afghanistan.
I'm making money just to give it to the nonprofit so that we can continue doing what we're doing over there.
We had a lot of very early successes.
We had a lot of really crappy things happen, too.
I ended up...
I think it was November of 2021.
I got invited to Fort Bragg to Eustace.
United States Army Special Operations Command,
to come talk to a roomful of 3-3-3-Rubrays
about how we're doing this.
Like, I'm literally a crackhead,
and I'm being asked to come to Usa-Sachk
and talk about what we're doing in Afghanistan.
Damn.
They had their own little NGO set up,
I think it was called Team America.
I can't remember what it was.
But I met a whole bunch of guys up there,
Jeff Diardia.
Do you know him?
Mm-mm. Okay.
And, oh, it's hilarious.
When I got there, you know they do the background check at the Lwelcome Center?
So, like, I think I'm fine because I'm there with Command Sergeant Major Fais Wafa,
one of the Afghan commando guys who had headed up a whole bunch of the command of stuff.
I'm there with him and then with two former 3-3-SF guys.
And I think I'm going to be fine.
and I'm watching the MPs across the counters that are running my shit.
I'm like, oh, no, I'm not fine.
And so one of the MPs is like this thick white girl covered in tattoos.
So I start flirting with her.
And then she looks down on her screen and looks back at me and goes,
I know what you're doing outside.
And I was like, oh, fuck.
So I'll walk out there.
She's like, what are you doing?
I was like, I'm trying to help the Afghan Evac.
What are you mean?
She's like, cut the shit.
What is up with your background?
I was like, I don't know what you're talking about.
She's like, what the fuck are you doing here?
And so come to find out the way they had entered all of those charts.
which I beat every one of into the NCIC.
It has me show them with like 14 felonies or some crap.
I'm like, no, I don't have 14 felonies.
I beat all of those.
And she's like, well, do you have proof of that?
And I got smart whether I'm like, yes, I always keep it with me.
Come on, let's go to the truck.
And she said, well, is there anybody you can call?
And so I called Division 8 drug court who had terminated me.
But we had started rebuilding that bridge with.
Brian Owens gets on the phone.
and I don't know if you pretended to be the judge
or if they got Judge Dwyer on the phone,
but they confirmed I do not have any felonies.
And so they ended up letting me go into the base
to do this little class at Usa Sock,
which is fucking cool as shit.
Like it, I still can't believe that actually happened.
Yeah.
But I tell you that story, for a reason,
the way God works in all of these little details,
if I hadn't started getting open about my past with all of the people in the Evac community,
before they work with me, I'm like, I want to make sure you know who I am.
Most of them already followed me, so they knew who I was.
They already know that I talked very openly about all this shit.
But if I hadn't been open about that, that would have outed to be right there in front of CSM Wafa
and all these other guys.
If I hadn't gone back and fixed the bridge with Drug Court, I wouldn't have been able to get on post.
And all of these things just kept working together.
It's kind of like you see in those numbers repeatedly.
you know the little godwinks they just kept happening um 2021 was a blur all right um just and i have been
working with uh randy surrell's uh another green beret who helped scott with a couple of his books put all
of this into a book so like it's actually all written out with all the stories from the afghan stuff
um i don't want to try to get in all that here because i really want to talk about what we're doing
in memphis um what's the name of the book it's called we fight monsters yeah it's called we fight monsters
and we're launching a Kickstarter to help get it across the finish line at some point this month,
probably before this actually airs.
But having been on here and just said that, it's going to help a ton.
So I hope people go look up the Kickstarter.
And it's going to go into detail about our background, what we did in Afghanistan, Ukraine, Haiti, Mexico.
We've done some weird stuff in several places at this point.
But it's a roadmap for how to get good shit done.
very weird places and odd circumstances and against all odds, which is really what we pulled off
in Afghanistan.
Man, that's amazing.
And that's how long silver?
How long since?
I hit two years right around the time.
I went to use Sasak.
We ended up the next month.
It gets crazier.
It gets crazy.
I'm sure it does.
The next month, we get invited to Capitol Hill to meet with members of Congress.
and a lot of other soft guys, all right?
And our child care canceled the morning of her flight, so we bring Ava.
So there's pictures of Ava entertaining former agency case officers, senators.
Like, she was the star of the show up there.
In D.C., we started tightening up these circles of people that we know and work with
because we've got a reputation at this point as being folks who can get shit done in unorthodox ways.
ways. You know, I'm, if we have something that needs to get accomplished, our goal is to find a way to get it done. And I don't want to worry about stupid stuff like legality until after the fact. I hope that never comes back to bite me in the ass. I've gotten lucky so far.
Right before Christmas, Jess gets a message. We started to shut down the safe houses because I couldn't afford them, you know, or not just shutting them down. We were trying to find work for the guys or find them a power.
halfway to somewhere else, get them out, get them taken care of, but instead of keeping that
house open and moving somebody else in, we'd just terminate the lease.
And we started doing that in December.
Jessica's message the day before, the day after Christmas from this girl and started reading
it to me.
I'm like, no, we're not taking anymore.
The next thing I hear is screaming and sobbing coming from Jessica's phone.
I'm like, what the fuck is that?
And this girl has sent her a voice note in real time of the Taliban beating her father in
front of her mother.
And she tells us about herself.
She's Shia Hazara.
She's in college.
She was 19 when the collapse happened, and she wants to finish college.
Her dad was a commando served with our green berets since the inception of the
Commando Corps, served in the ANA four years prior to that.
Like, this is somebody we got to help.
And just basically, but she basically told me, I don't give a show what you say.
We're helping them.
So she moved them into a safe house.
The girl lives with us today in Memphis.
Wow.
She started college two weeks ago in Memphis, Tennessee.
She is today probably the single most protected individual in the city of Memphis hands down by both sides of the law.
It's been absolutely amazing to watch.
It took three years to get her here, but she smuggled herself alone through 14 countries,
through the dairy and gap, into Mexico, and then we started helping again in Mexico.
I don't even know how to...
I ended up with contacts in the Mexican government
as part of all of this weird stuff we've done.
We got sent down to Mexico during the evacuation out of Ukraine.
And so I had contacts in the Mexican government
that helped us get her from Guatemala through Mexico
and then friends that I've made at CBP helped get her lawfully into America.
I made the CBP friends when we responded to the Evaldo Massacre.
Wow.
Yeah.
And I would love to, I do talk about all these in the book.
I would love to sit here and talk to you about them.
What do you mean she's protected by both sides of the law?
Bro, everybody loves her.
You gang members, the cops, like, both sides of the law.
Know her, love her, appreciate her, watch out for her.
Ex-cons, like, everybody in Memphis knows who she is,
and they will not fuck with her.
Yeah, she's just the most cared-for person in the city of Memphis right now.
Wow.
what's her name
orizo
her dad and siblings
are still stuck in
Pakistan and that sucks
you know
lost any
and all ability
to get people moved
but you know
all told in that effort
I mean we helped
I mean I directly got
about 250 people
into the airport
before we were no longer
able to get them in
and then after the fact
we worked a lot too
and I
I want to touch
on all these crazy stories
just to illustrate the network of people we've got that are helping us to do what we're doing in Memphis is staggering.
It's not just addicts, and it's not just vets, and it's not just cops, and it's not just federal agents.
It is people from literally every walk of life that has come alongside an effort to help people who can never, ever repay them.
And this method that I guess you can call it that we're using, it's kind of Scott's idea.
We did it in Ukraine.
We did it in Ecuador to evacuate some American medical students that were stuck.
We did it a little bit in Haiti to save a guy that was kidnapped by a cannibal gang.
We did it twice in Mexico.
We've used it in Yuvalde.
We used it at Q Club.
We did it again with Task Force Lahaina.
These grassroots movements that you hear,
talk about all the time, they're real. They're very real. And I think the time for Americans
to stop paying so much attention to the division that our mainstream media pedals, that that time is now
because it's not real. It's manufactured division. And I can tell you this is a white guy that goes
under the blackest streets of South Memphis where everything revolves around race, and I'm able to get done
some amazing things. I'm able to, I'm out there fighting narcotics trafficking, not by putting people
in jail, not by shooting people, by meeting people where they're at, and I'm able to take food off
the table of drug dealers and have them help me do it. I have been able to get convicted human traffickers,
help us get women into treatment out of that life now. You know, and it's not because I'm special.
It's not because I'm from those streets. Sure, some of it is because I'm from the streets. Sure, some of it is because I'm
from those streets and they've seen me do very bad things and they've seen me recover.
But a lot of it is just, it just comes down to human connection.
You know, it comes down to what you and I are doing right now, having a conversation
and giving a shit about where the other person's coming from.
How? How do you get, how do you get a dealer who's making money off of that to help you?
You can't always, but I'll tell you what we've had great success.
drug dealers are humans
just like CIA case officer
or a seal is still a human
they've got a particular skill set
but they still have things that are very human about them
and relationships are one of those things
there's somebody that is important to that drug dealer
there are usually multiple somebodies
that mean a lot to him
he still has a soul
and he still has to earn a living
and if you understand
that not all of them are necessary
evil, and if you understand that there is that human aspect to all of them, you have an opportunity
to find a way to get through to them. Now, it's not going to surprise anybody listening to this
to hear that a lot of drug dealers make good entrepreneurs. All right, obviously, they're
businessmen. We've been able to take that approach with some of them, you know, demonstrate some
of my business success and prowess over the years and say, look, if you will consider a different
way of life and put this shit down, I'm going to mentor you, I'm going to help you. That's worked.
Sometimes.
Sometimes they don't give a shit.
You know, they're going to keep living in the life they're living.
And you've got to find a different way to reach him.
Well, if you figure out that that dope boy's mom has been out there on the ho track for the last 30 years selling her body or his sister or his baby mama.
And you go get to them.
You get that one some help.
Man, you've got a friend for life from that dope boy.
He may not stop selling dope, but that's the only way he knows how to make a living.
Or if that's the way he enjoys making a living.
but you can reach him, you can make some level of impact,
you could start going after their customer base.
And we did that successfully on one trap house.
Actually, it took multiple methods on this one on Woodward,
the one where I should have died.
That's how we shut that house down.
You know, we put one of the dope boys through CDL school,
he went back to selling dope.
We helped him open up a car detail in business.
It went back to selling dope.
we ended up getting help for several people that he was real close to, and he loved, like family.
Even though he was selling them what they were killing themselves with, he loved them.
We got them help, and that caught his attention.
And so the totality of those opened him up to a conversation, and he agreed to shut the trap down.
How's the approach happen?
So it's going to depend on whether or not we have history with that doughboy.
And if I don't, I've got to become known to them.
Do you have a lot of, are there a lot of the same people down there that you were dealing with in your?
There were in the beginning.
When we first went back to Memphis, we went back in 2022.
Now, you know, we found out of the first day we went back out there, 14 of them were dead.
14.
Murder, overdose.
One natural, but a lot of them died.
But the majority of them are still the same people.
It's like we never left.
They're still there doing exactly what they're doing the day I hit rock bottom in that empty lot.
And they don't want to be.
They don't.
They don't know anything else.
They were raised there.
They were taught if you need something.
You get it off the block.
You know, you do what you've got to do out there.
What do they think when you come out there and they see you?
It's completely changed.
Depends on who it is.
Like today, they love to see us because they know we're there to help people.
You know, they know we're out there trying to bring hope, recovery,
economic opportunity.
We've started up a skills training workshop, like a world.
work yourself. We're trying to bring opportunity to the hood to one of the deadliest zip codes in
America, where, as I mentioned earlier, young men have a higher chance of being dead or incarcerated
than they do to be in school or have a job, much less being their kids' lives. These are things
that have to change. You can't change that being the most violent place in America without
addressing that. That is what has to change. And so we change that by bringing hope out there.
So when they see us coming, they're happy, man. Now, maybe we have cheated a little bit because we're
doing this where we hit rock bottom and they do know us and that is important because they need to
know i'm not the polis right um otherwise i just get shot you walk up to a trap house and say hey man
i want to shut this house down no you're going to get shot you know you've got you've got to use a little
more tact than that and and you got to show up like every trap house how do you show up
i should just like walk up and say what's your opening line well so well wouldn't just walk up to a
trap house in the building line and say, I want to shut this down. It is a very long process.
What's the approach? The initial approach. The initial approach is going after the addicts,
get them help. Because every dope boy has an addict or two or five that are pains in his ass.
And when you're selling dope and you have somebody that's shot off real bad, very risk to your
operation. If they get rolled up, the cops are going to offer them a deal to flip. And so that person is a
threat to your existence. You want them to get off of dope. You don't want to lose them as a customer
necessarily, but you want them to go go to rehab and, you know, if they relapse and get back on dope,
oh well. Right. And so we started by going after the addicts that frequent those houses. And that's
not a threat to anybody. No dope boy in their right mind is ever going to get upset if you
are getting the worrisome prostitute crack head off the street.
They're going to love it, actually, and you're going to build some trust with them by doing it.
And so they know that.
They know that.
How do they figure out it's you helping them?
Oh, because they see us.
I mean, there's only two white people going out in the hood doing this.
Well, it's more than that now.
But they know, and then we'll hold events out there.
Like, we'll feed the hood.
We will buy Christmas presents for all the kids in the hood.
Thousands of toys.
We've done that two years in a row now.
And while that may sound like handouts and enabling people to make poor decisions with their money,
buying drugs instead of presents.
Yeah, that I'm sure happens.
But it wasn't James's fault when Jess and I bought drugs instead of Christmas.
You know, it's not those kids' fault.
And so even though there's a little bit of handout involved in the events that we do,
it's building trust, man.
These people are seeing and realizing you're there to actually help them.
You're not there just to go put somebody in jail, you know, or shoot somebody.
you're actually there trying to meet a need
and meet these people where they're at
and show them that they still have worth as human beings
because I can tell you when I was out there towards the end
I didn't feel human
I wouldn't make eye contact with anybody
I felt I felt substandard to literally anyone
I felt so insignificant and worthless
and I came real close to internet more than once
on purpose I tried
more than once.
And do you have conversations with these guys?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
I want to talk to them about their hopes and dreams.
I want to talk to them about where their life diverged
from the one they had always envisioned.
And the sad part is that in a lot of these cases,
you find out it didn't.
They're living the life they envisioned
because that's all they're ever taught.
It's all they're ever shown.
It was all it was ever modeled for them.
you have like generational legacies of dope dealing in some of these neighborhoods.
I would imagine.
So, I mean, how do you, like, how do you even, we just had a conversation a couple hours ago about having your identity wrapped up in your occupation?
I am.
And that's, that is, I didn't want to, like, try to make a comparison between soft guys and dope boys.
But I was thinking about that when you were saying it.
because their identity is completely wrapped up in that.
Completely.
It is their whole sense of worth and value is wrapped up in the fact that they're a dope boy and they got money and they have control.
They have power.
Because the reality is, especially when we're talking on the trafficked women's side of it,
if you've got that sack of dope, you have whatever you want.
You can get whatever you want out there.
No questions asked.
And that is a hard thing for some of you guys to let go.
when they start seeing it happen to somebody they love, though, their sister, their child, their baby mama, their cousin, their mom, their eyes open up a little bit.
You've got a window of time to make some impact there.
Young kids getting shot out there, that happens all the time too, and it breaks everybody's heart, you know.
Nobody wants to see that shit.
And those are opportunities to go in there and have conversations.
they all know and accept that their means of earning income is not sustainable and that it will send them to prison.
And so trying to break it down to these guys that prison is not a normal part of life.
That's not, like don't have that on your 5, 10, 20 year plan.
You know, like don't put prison as something that's going to happen.
You can actually control whether or not you ever go to prison.
And that's like a revelation to some of these guys.
Oh, kidding.
Yeah.
And how sad is that?
How sad is that?
In fact, I'll give you an example.
I'm not going to say his name.
But years ago, in the Trap House on Wilbert, they used to give the biggest dope boy on that block a hard time because I had done more prison time or more time than he had.
I've never even been to prison.
Oh, mine was jail time.
But they used to give him a hard time because I had done more jail time than he had.
when was it ever a badge of honor to do more jail time than somebody else it's not it shouldn't be
and so these mentalities that you're having to break down out there they've been in place for
generations you know and it's do they become vulnerable with you do they do they give you
validation for for for helping oh yeah absolutely now it's good it's going to depend on who it is
you know everybody's individual and some of are going to be way more closely guarded
But I've seen tears shed by a lot of these guys,
especially when it comes down to things like fatherhood,
being present in your kids' lives.
And if you can get them to talk about childhood,
that usually rips open some wounds, some painful ones.
Because I don't know if this is unique to the neighborhoods in Memphis where we operate
or if this isn't across-the-board thing in inner cities,
but sexual abuse is very common in childhood,
even incest, incestial abuse.
And that's not something that gets talked about in that community.
And if you can create an environment where they will talk through childhood traumas,
you really get another end with these people.
You know, and again, it's just that thing about it.
You have to make human connection.
And that's why I think, well, I forgot where I was going to.
You have to make human connection, and that's why.
So you're saying you have to establish human connection.
You've got to establish human connection.
And in the communities we're working,
and that's not necessarily a popular thing to do at scale publicly.
So you've got to create an environment
where you can have one-on-one conversations with these guys.
And I keep saying men, it's women too,
but you know from your own experience,
most of the calamities we face as humans are driven by bad men actors, right?
And so my focus is always on the males out there.
We've got women that will work with women too, though.
But trying to reach them and just get to the root cause of why things are the way they are.
And I think at the end of the day, most of it does come down to lack of economic opportunity
and an acceptance at scale of violence, drug addiction, drugs, and human bodies as currency.
I know my team's getting ready to go down there and do that with you.
Yeah.
You got Wyatt and who?
Wyatt and Justin.
They're going to have a blast.
They're going to get to see this in real time.
I'm going to take them to 1428 Wilburne Street,
the house that used to be full of bullet holes.
There is a woman and her three children who I helped her get custody back of living in that house
that just celebrated Christmas in there.
She's a year and something sober now.
Trafficking survivor.
the women that used to sell dope out of that house,
I've got them housed in another old trap house around the corner.
And it's like I'm taking the most, I keep saying I, I mean we.
This is not just been out there.
We have like a literal army that's out there doing this with us.
How many of you guys are there?
I don't even know at this point, man.
So at any given point, we're housing around 75,
and we're working with roughly 200, sometimes more, sometimes less.
Now, we've gotten north of 350 people off the streets through detox into rehab, through sober living, and back into the workforce.
I don't know that all of them stayed clean.
I mean, I know not all of them stayed clean, but a lot of them did.
So we've got a pretty sizable team out there.
And then we've still got all these people from the EVAC communities, the Afghanistan and Ukraine that are pouring resources into this, too.
Guys like Scott.
Scott, man's on our board.
General Hicks, who's A-10 Burrell's down there, is on our board.
Travis Peterson, retired master sergeant.
He was an Air Force guy and an agency contractor, too.
He's on our board.
We've got a gunny from the Marines.
And then all of us have some level of trauma that we've had to deal with.
And I think that's kind of the key to building these teams out,
is you have to have some of its overcome trauma
if you want them capable of doing anything really, really cool
for no reason other than to have purpose.
Man, that is a...
That's incredible.
That's going to get more incredible.
So are you buying these houses?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, we had this real estate developer
who had bought up a couple of them
at tax sales,
and every time she tried to do something out there,
they would, like, steal her car,
you know, or cut her catalytic converters off,
so she donated those houses
because we're actually able to go out there and do whatever we want.
The house on Wilbert I bought.
I bought it from my friend Drinan who was shot six times in that house.
His wife died in that house.
That was one of those relapses right before Rock Bottoms when she died.
I bought that house from him,
and the drug dealer that made his living in that house
is who convinced him to sell it to us.
No shit.
Yeah.
Now, he failed to convince his partner,
and his partner shot somebody six times.
another somebody, no, three times the day we shut the house down.
Coming out of my house.
After it was legally mine, he shot somebody.
He's back in prison now, where he belongs.
That was actually the guy that kidnapped her over the wedding room.
Evil, evil, evil, evil person.
You know, we deal with the worst that humanity has to offer,
but I can count on one hand the number of truly evil individuals I've ever met.
And it's low.
Even in the child predator space, they're not as evil as you would think they'd have to be,
which I still have a hard time wrap in my mind around that.
I really do.
Is there a lot of that going on down there?
So we've recovered several dozen women from sex trafficking, prostitution.
Two of them were minors.
And I hate to tell you this, but both of them were pissed.
We recovered them.
No, I mean, we've talked a lot about that subject here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, it's, they're slaves to dope, man.
And in that age demographic, you heard my story when I was 15.
It was no getting me sober that early.
I hadn't suffered enough.
Shely just said, you've got to suffer sufficiently to choose something different.
While you and I may hear that, you know, a 15-year-old being sold for sex,
that sure sounds like suffering to me.
It's not enough for them sometimes, you know.
Now, I don't give a shit. It's still a crime. I'm still recovering you and anybody that was involved in your trafficking is going to go to prison.
But it doesn't mean the victim's going to stay sober. You know what I mean?
So how many houses are there?
We've got a total of 10 houses in Memphis. And I'm really excited to tell you this because I've not announced this publicly because we're still waiting on paperwork.
There is a 76,000 square foot nursing home behind one of my blocks, immediately behind it.
It's been abandoned for 20 years, and last week we tracked down the owner and told her we want to turn it into a treatment center, which will make it, I think, West Tennessee's the largest treatment facility.
So you guys have Morgan County and DC4 over here in this area. West Tennessee has nothing.
The lady told us that not only is she interested in donating the property to is she wants to actually assist in raising the money to renovate it and oversee it.
I'm going to go ahead and say...
Did you say 76,000 square feet?
Hundreds of rooms that sits on five, eight.
It's massive, massive.
And so I think that's our next move is our own treatment facility.
Because right now I'm having to work with community partners, who I love.
I'm so grateful for all of them, like Alliance, Serenity Cap, all the treatment centers.
We don't have anything that can do it all in one house in that side of Memphis.
It's certainly not this size.
This is in the middle of the track.
I mean, you're sandwiched between the Ho Track and the Doke Track right there.
It's a perfect location to do this.
And I'll tell you this, you know, a lot of people might hear this and think, well, that's really cool.
That's great.
It doesn't really affect me.
That's not accurate, man.
This crap affects everybody and it's happening in everybody's backyard.
I'm talking about fentanyl and human trafficking.
You might not see it the same way that we see it out in South Memphis, but this is happening everywhere.
And violent crime spills out of big cities.
There's no way to argue that.
I can tell you from experience, when we shut down the trap on Melrose,
and when we shut down the trap on Wilbert,
violent crime on those two streets ceased that day.
Literally that day on Wilburne, somebody got shot that day.
But you got what I'm saying.
It is the sole source of all the mayhem that happens anywhere near there.
We work with certain law enforcement agencies in Tennessee
who have tons of data on this and are able to back all of this up,
but 90 plus percent of the violent crime in Tennessee goes back,
in one shape, form of fashion, too dope.
And so if you remove the drugs from the equation,
so much that violent crime goes down.
And that's something we all want.
It's good for everybody.
How many dealers have you turned?
We've turned two very big ones, four smaller ones,
and that's been through, well, I hate to use this term with you
because you're a seal, but direct action.
And what I mean by that is that what you mean by DA.
and what we're doing, we're going direct.
Ben is going directly to this guy to talk to him,
and we're going to try to turn this thing around.
So two big ones, four small ones.
Now, if we're talking about court referrals,
because we do work with the drug court program,
we work in Veterans Court, we work with the DA's office,
they send people to us all the time.
And if we're counting those who have already been justice involved, right?
They've already been arrested.
It's in the dozens.
Now, they may not have had a choice.
There wasn't an agreement reached.
They were court-ordered to stop their,
behavior, but they did succeed in turning their life around.
There are dozens of those.
Dozens.
Wow.
And so it's easier, obviously, to do it if you have the law backing you up.
But my goal out there is to keep these guys from going to jail if they're fixable.
And definitely keep the addicts from going to jail.
Because if you look at the way we fought the war on drugs for the last 40 years, it's an
abject failure by every metric measurable.
We've made no progress.
In fact, it's worse.
Overdust deaths are higher than they've ever been.
Now, I know, and you know, that's in large part because of fentanyl and the issues at the southern border with it just coming right across, but the status quo has to be challenged.
We're not prosecuting our way out of the war on drugs.
We've tried it for 40 years.
We're not prosecuting our way out of the war on human trafficking.
It's not working.
I'm not saying we stop prosecution.
I'm not saying anything in favor of decriminalization or anything like that.
What I am saying is we need partnerships like the one I just described, where we, we don't.
do work with courts. We do work with law enforcement. But we also work with the guys
on the other side of the law. We work with the junkies. We work with the addicts who are in the
gutter actually enduring this shit. And we help them get better. We help the other guys who
are literally sometimes just in it to put food on their table. We help them find a better way out
too. And I think by working that kind of, I like to imagine it like this, this is a vice.
You know, you're fighting from the top and the bottom at the same time. We can actually get
some big shit done.
And if we have more time, we could talk about how we did exactly that in Afghanistan.
We got big shit done.
How we did it in task force, La Hina with the Malifier's, and we got big shit done.
It's the same method.
We're working from the bottom up and the top down, but that grassroots side is something
we have complete and total control over.
I don't have to wait on a bureaucracy to make a decision.
I can just move right now.
I don't have to wait on legal to approve something.
You know what I mean?
And honestly, when you're dealing with an issue,
an issue like human trafficking, veteran homelessness,
anything where addiction touches it,
I have seen more times than I can count
a delay of hours result in death.
Literally just hours ends up with a dead person.
A month ago, we had two double funerals.
Siblings die within hours of each other.
Oh, man.
This has to stop, man.
We're losing a generation of American youth.
Fent is the number one killer of people
I think under 55 now.
And if you want to talk about that from national security standpoint,
recruitment's at an all-time low,
and we're losing a generation of warfighters.
Like 300 a day.
That's kind of scary.
Damn.
That's fucking amazing, man.
It's keeping me sober.
I bet it is.
Nothing more, nothing less.
That's some big, big impact.
We have no plans on slowing down, man.
We want to take what we're doing in Memphis.
I want to quantify it and validate it by getting that city off of the top five
Deadly the City's list.
And then I'm going to blueprint exactly how I did it.
Every relationship we made, every agreement we went into with the street gang or with law enforcement,
and just write every bit of it out and see if somebody else can replicate it in their city.
Because I'm positive they can.
I'm literally just a crackhead.
And we've pulled this off in South Memphis.
you know, like I'm not that special.
I think this can be replicated.
I think it's scalable.
I think it's viable.
And if nothing else,
I've seen a lot of families get put back together.
I've seen a lot of lives get saved.
I've seen a lot of people become productive members of society.
And that's enough for me.
And you and Jess are some amazing people, man.
I appreciate that, brother.
I do.
That is.
That is astounding what you guys are doing.
Wow.
It's our duty.
You remember we used to pray to God if you'd get us out of hell together.
We'd go back for those who left behind.
You got us out.
We're together.
We've got to go back.
I don't have a choice.
Well, then.
I'm blown away, man.
That is what you've been through, what you put yourself through,
just your kids.
I mean, are your kids involved?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So Jacob worked 17 of the 21 funerals in Evaldo with us.
He made a lot of the surviving kids smile for the first time and a long time.
Jacob helped renovate the house at 1186 Melrose.
Jacob had to jump.
I hope his mom's not listening to this.
Aaron, I'm sorry.
Jacob had to jump under floorboards to hide from a drive-by on Webberd Street.
But, yeah, they're involved.
James and Ava come everywhere with us.
They love it.
Lily has had a great time going out and meeting people in the hood.
Madison has come out.
They all have.
They all love it.
You know, the twins, they're 14.
It's kind of cool sometimes.
I think the only one that hasn't really gotten terribly involved is my oldest son, Jackson.
And he's in college, you know, doing his own thing.
He's very focused on school.
And he's still working full time, too.
So for all that we put our kids through, they turned out okay, you know.
They really did.
That's pretty amazing too.
We got really amazing.
We got really lucky.
Wow.
You know, and huge, huge props to Aaron for that because she shielded a lot of them from a lot of bad.
Man, I'm proud to know you, dude.
Like my God's brother.
That is.
I love it.
Is there anything my audience can do?
Definitely look for the Kickstarter.
for We Fight Monsters by Ben and Jessica Owen.
That would be huge.
If y'all want to check out the website,
it's wefightmonsters.org.
We've got our YouTube channel,
YouTube.com,
slash, it was at Monster Fighters.
Just check us out.
Or look me up on Facebook, LinkedIn,
follow me.
I got a Patreon too.
Patreon.com slash Ben Owen.
We'll link it all in the description.
And, man, just God bless you.
God bless you,
your kids,
everybody you're working with,
all the people you're saving.
I mean,
lots of love, man.
Thank you.
Thank you for the opportunity to be here, man.
Seriously.
Holy shit, dude.
Dude, we could have gone
another eight hours. I know.
I know. I know.
So you brought up psychedelics.
Huge proponent.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Cilicide and save my life.
life. I was going to actually tell this today, but we didn't get a time. She doesn't even know this. I tried to kill myself in her house and then told her somebody broke in and robbed me. I cut myself two fucking pieces. I mean, but I never could have hit an artery. And I guess it's because of all the dope I shot.
She doesn't know that? Well, let's keep it in. Be it a little encore.
Yeah. Yeah. She's got a picture. How does psychedelics change your life? So microdose and psilocybin.
microdosing
Now see it's a weird
I can't do that now because I'm in recovery
You know
But it got rid of that suicidal ideation
But despite being in recovery
Ayahuasca psilocybin
There's so much research
It needs to be done with all of these things
It needs to be available
Especially
I'm going to link to demographics
That people don't link often
But I think to combat veterans
And sex trafficking survivors
I've not come across a sex trafficking survivor to date that has not been a witness of extremely horrific violence.
And I think there's something to be said for the fact that this is happening in their hometown, like where they live and sleep and eat and have to re-assimilate in society.
So I want to see more psychedelic research done in that demographic.
I really do.
But it's tricky because not every addict is going to be able to responsibly do psychedelics.
We're still talking about drugs, you know.
But there's a lot of us that can, you know.
Damn.
And in a controlled environment, I think it's the outcomes from it.
If you've read any of the studies, which as well read as you are, I'm sure you have.
I just went brain dead.
Not mayor, but which one?
Stanford.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They've, I had a Marsock buddy we worked with during the Evac that was part of, I forget
which one. And then everybody
swears by ayahuasca.
Everybody swears by it.
You haven't done that. I did Ibigen.
I've heard a lot of good things about Ibogaine.
I wanted to do that coming off heroin
when I was still thinking I was special.
You know, I just couldn't afford it
because I blew home my money.
But, yeah, huge proponent of
abagane, psilocybin, ayahuasca, all of them.
Yeah. Me too. Me too.
Yeah, have you read up on neuroplasticity?
A little bit.
That shit's fascinating.
It is so fascinating.
The way your brain literally will rewire itself and form you pathways with psilocybin.
If you're doing the guided, uh, John's Hopkins, that's the one I was trying to think of.
They've, it's mind-blowing the kind of shit that, like, we just, we don't understand.
Some of that stuff's over my head, Ben.
I didn't write a fucking medical, medical, medical, medical, general publication at 813.
But.
Damn, dude.
That's a hell of a story.
Wow.
Yeah.
Scott wasn't fucking around.
Well, you got to hear a lot more than Scott heard, but there's still so much more.
There's so much more.
We'll get you back on.
I would love to be back on.
And I love that you put her on that camera, man.
That was awesome.
You like that?
I do.
Because if I'd told her she was going to do it, she either wouldn't have done it or she'd have fucked up.
But you made her comfortable.
And what you've obviously done with me too.
This is my greatest fear.
Well, public speaking in front of a crowd is my greatest.
This is my second greatest.
Yeah.
And it's not even, I was telling Darren downstairs,
it's not even fear of really speaking.
I'm afraid I'm going to be afraid while I'm speaking.
Well, when I made this,
I wanted it to be like a super comfortable environment.
It very much is, man.
It's not just all equipment in the shots, nothing in your face, you know.
and I think
well I don't think
I know I
credit to my therapist
man I did three years twice a week
and
have you ever done
SGB
what's that
the Stellic Ganglion blocks
no okay
no
I just wondering because
Travis and Joel
on our board both do those
and you're very
even killed and calm
much like
no not Joel but Travis you guys the way you talk just you're just you relax people when you talk to them
and Travis has the same trait I appreciate that but um take it as a compliment but uh
no I'm not I've not done that I'm in a good place man I can tell you I don't need to
rock you just sound content I envy you I got a great team you do great family I don't
Dob.
I'm good.
God is good, ma'am.
Yes, he is.
You got it made.
I love it.
Thank you.
You too.
