The Peter Attia Drive - #109 - John Dudley: The beauty in archery, the love of practice, and a model system for life
Episode Date: May 4, 2020In this episode, professional archer, John Dudley, shares the many insights he’s gleaned through the process of not only becoming an elite competitor of archery but also an exceptional teacher. John... describes how his desire for improvement has cultivated a sheer love of practice, and how pursuing mastery helped put into context how archery is an amazing model system for life. Additionally, John discusses the often misunderstood nature of hunting, but also makes the case as to why one should consider trying archery even if there is no desire to hunt.  We discuss: Why John loves archery, and what it means to be a professional archer [4:50]; How John’s love of practice and training led to archery [10:45]; How an intense desire to improve drove John to quit football and pursue archery [22:00]; A traumatic childhood event that changed John’s course from troublemaker to committed athlete [34:15]; The nuts and bolts of archery—Competitive events, types of bows, hunting, etc. [45:30]; The blissful nature of archery, and the uselessness of anger [57:15]; Hyper-focus and flow states—Did John’s ADD and task-driven personality give him an advantage? [1:07:15]; The common traits found in the most successful people [1:12:45]; The keys to maintaining credibility as a salesman—Integrity, honesty, and straightforwardness [1:18:45]; The coaching technique that makes John a great teacher [1:28:30]; Why you should consider trying archery (even if you never want to hunt) [1:36:15]; Hunting discussion—The morality argument, hunting vs. commercial farming, managing overpopulation, and the unique emotional connection [1:45:00]; Resources for those interested in taking up archery [2:12:00]; and More. Learn more: https://peterattiamd.com/ Show notes page for this episode: https://peterattiamd.com/johndudley Subscribe to receive exclusive subscriber-only content: https://peterattiamd.com/subscribe/ Sign up to receive Peter's email newsletter: https://peterattiamd.com/newsletter/ Connect with Peter on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram.
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Hey everyone, welcome to the Drive Podcast.
I'm your host, Peter Atia.
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Now without further delay, here's today's episode.
I guess this week is John Dudley. Before I tell you a little bit about who John is,
because I suspect many of you won't recognize his name, maybe a little reminder about one of my
obsessions being archery. Probably talked about it quite a bit on the podcast. To get a better
sense of why I love archery so much and why I think it's kind of an amazing model system for life.
I think you'll enjoy this podcast.
Now, John is someone who, from the day I got involved in archery, I was very fortunate
to be introduced to in terms of his work, would be another couple of years before I would
meet him.
He is a professional archer.
He's the host of what I consider hands down, no ifs, answer buts, the
absolute best content on all of archery, including podcasting TV, etc. So the
knock on TV station on YouTube and knock on podcast, his ability to teach
archery and do archery provide the rarest and smallest eclipse I've ever seen in performance, which is to say it's very rare that someone who is the top 0.01% of a performance is also at the top 0.01% of the ability to teach distil and communicate that and somehow John manages to do that.
Now, I could bore you to tears with all of his accolades.
He represented the US archery team for many years.
He's won more medals than I can count representing Team USA.
He was the rookie of the year as a professional national champion, multiple time national
champion, European Grand Prix gold medalist, British national indoor champion, et cetera.
Honestly, it's just, I'll turn most of you off by reading this because this introduction
will be even longer than it probably is already slated to be.
I was introduced to John through Joe Rogan.
When I was on Joe Rogan's podcast a couple of years ago, I let Joe know just how much
of a huge fan I was and Joe was just kind enough to introduce us.
And I had the real privilege of getting to spend a bunch of time in person with John.
So in this episode, we don't go too deep into how I got started in archery and how I fell
in love with it and how even though when I started, I had absolutely zero intention of hunting
and how over time that changed.
And now I view hunting and archery as the two beautiful book ends of this incredible continuum.
John had already interviewed me for his podcast and so we'll simply link to some of the highlights
from his podcast interviewing me where I get into a lot of that stuff. Obviously I wanted to focus
on John and his story and so in this episode we talk a lot about John and his story. And so in this episode, we talk a lot about John and his athletic background and how he
made what can only be described as one of the craziest decisions in the history of a collegiate
athlete, which is to turn down a Division I football scholarship one week into school
and go and work at an archery store for $4.10 an hour building arrows.
And that's exactly what he did. We talk a lot
about life in a sense as well because a lot of John's personality comes across in this and you get
a sense of sort of his philosophy on life which frankly I just find wonderful. I love being around
John his family and we can go back and forth between talking about these things in life and then
talking about these things in archery and how amazingly they seem to converge. So what it is that we're talking about in terms of technically improving
something seems to then converge on what the application is in life. So the last thing I'll
say is we asked John to help us curate a list of content from his unbelievable curriculum,
such that if any of you listen to this and come away thinking, you know, gosh, to listen to these two coconuts talking about archery for
so long, I at least want to give this thing a try, you will get all you need from
John's content, but we thought we'd simplify it a little bit by curating a step-by-step
set of videos that he's put together that will make it easier than trying to
probably navigate from all of his content. So without further delay, please enjoy my conversation with John Dudley.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
John, it's a little bittersweet that we are at the end of our archery camp here together.
I know. That bonfire you have over there is big enough to either burn Darth Vader or start the new Braveheart movie.
I mean, seriously.
If the listener is wondering what the context is here, when John interviewed me, he spent, I don't know,
at least a full minute griping about the fact that I reneged on my offer to light a fire.
So tonight, I was like, well, I'm not going to be out done. So there is a fire burning that you can maybe hear
through this mic.
It's a little hotter than I planned.
Yeah.
If on August 8th, you hear there's a wildfire lighting
across Southern California.
There's a good chance it started
on this big fire pit of Peters in this backyard.
Well, look, man, it is a real fire. There's a good chance it started behind this big fire pit of Peters in this backyard.
Well, look, man, it is a real pleasure to be
sitting here talking with you.
And I've been, we talked about this over dinner the other day that I've been thinking so much about how to
convey to an audience that is obviously very interested in performance and health and longevity,
how two of the biggest interests in my life
kind of come to this intersection
with one of them being archery.
And there's probably nobody that's listened to this podcast
that hasn't figured out by this point how much I love archery.
Certainly anybody who's ever taken the time
to follow me on social media will notice that probably
maybe a quarter of the things I post
or photos that have something to do with that.
So in the introduction briefly, I already kind of explained a little bit about who you
are, but that just doesn't do it justice.
And I try to keep the intro relatively short so that the listener can hear in sort of
your own words what it is.
But take me back to kind of maybe some basics, right?
So what does it mean to be a professional larger?
I think most people understand what it means to be a professional baseball player because you turn on TV and you see people playing baseball. But what does it mean
to say John Dudley turned pro as an archer in this year and for the next X years did A, B, and C.
In the big picture, it means nothing. That's the reality. I realize I'm fortunate that there's light being shed on archery right now because this was this small thing
that if, what was it?
ESPN, the Ocho, like in Dodgeball,
archery would probably be on that.
I think that was real, but I started out
learning to bohunt from family and it was just part
of the culture coming from the deep south.
You grew up in Mississippi, right?
Yeah, I was born on Fort Bragg, grew up in Mississippi for a while,
then moved up to the Midwest.
And I learned archery, I think when I was nine.
First bow hunt was when I was 10.
And I don't know, looking back,
there's been a lot of times where I've tried to decide
why I really liked it, and a good friend of mine who is a
former Navy SEAL retired, Andy Stump. There was this time someone was asking me the same question.
And sometimes I struggle with why I really loved bow hunting and archery. And he just looked at me,
he goes, have you not figured it out by now? He's like, it's all over your personality. And I said,
no, why? And he goes, because it's hard.
He goes, that is why you do it,
because there's days where you're good at
and there's days when you're not.
And he's right, there are several different points
in my career where I took different steps,
because in my career started out,
learning to shoot a bow, bow hunting,
not being good at it, wanting to be better at it,
deciding to start shooting some target archery because I wanted to be a better bow hunter,
realizing I sucked as a target archer, wanting to be better at that, becoming better at
that, then becoming a better bow hunter, then kind of getting a little bit bored in the
one aspect of competitive archery I was in.
So I jumped into another field that
was a different type of target, different distances, different type of competition, did that until I
kind of got complacent again. And then kind of, I just every time, I don't know, I like to jump into
something that challenges me. And archery is one of those things where I think golfers understand that there's days where you
go out and you play and you feel like you feel like you had the perfect game. You feel like the next
day if you go out and play another nine, you're going to do the same thing, but then also you realize
no, if everything's not clicking, I can't just do this continually. So I just have made a career out of being poor at a certain aspect of it and making it a mission
to become good at that. And then over the course of 33 years, I've got to the point where
now I feel like I have a very good understanding of the game and I've learned a lot from a lot
of mistakes.
I mean, that's kind of the truth of it.
Well, we're going to come back to kind of a lot of the things you've learned and more
importantly, how you've figured out a way to teach them.
But you've glossed over some things that I know a lot of detail about and I think for listeners
it will be interesting to understand that.
So this is the first time I've ever recorded a podcast outside and that just me or is there like some loud airplane
that's going? Yeah, there's an airplane man. We're outside. I know, but normally I don't hear them
that loud in my backyard. I don't know. I guess I don't have the microphone. Yeah, there's,
it's called a microphone. It amplifies sound. We're podcasting, but we're thoroughly enjoying
each other's friendship. We're out here.
We're drinking a protein shake that hopefully your monitor gives you some kind of data that you
can satisfy your listeners with. Meanwhile, I've also got wine on the back up. So this is real.
We're drinking Jocco's mulk and Cleo wine. Everybody always wants to ask me what my favorite wine is
and this is 2012 bottle of Cleo.
Yeah, it's familiar with it. So you were an all-American and you let it in 12 sports. I mean you some of the
athletic stories that when you were in high school and you're a big guy so for listeners that maybe
don't know, you look like you know you're six foot five kind of a wall of muscle. You told me a
story about a high school combine that just blew my mind where tell a story of what the coach said to all of you
Prospecting quarterbacks that we're trying to get division one scholarships. Yeah, it was at U of I
I was at a camp there and that the fighting a line I were putting on and I went there by myself my team
Wasn't with me. It was a kind of a thing where there's quite a few
recruits that were all brought in
there. And I remember Greg Landry was there as the quarterback coach. And during that first day,
there was a ton of people down. I think we were either on the five yard line or somewhere in there.
And it was the first day of camp. And obviously the first day of camp, a lot of guys are jacking around as it starts
and the coaches kind of gathered everybody up
and he goes into this serious moment where he's saying.
We're here to look at all you, we're here to teach you,
but you're here to learn, but you're also here
to put on your best in front of some big coaches.
And he said, a lot of these coaches
are only gonna look at you one time.
And just like in any big game, sometimes you only have one time to shine.
And what you do with that one moment is going to define what you get out of this camp.
It's kind of that type of thing.
And he was talking about it and everything.
And I was paying attention and sitting on the, I think I took one knee.
I actually have a picture, but it's on a little microfiche.
I should try to get it and see if we can blow it up.
I'm pretty sure I had like a play band on my wrist
and he just kind of looked over at me randomly
and he grabbed the ball and he just threw it underhand
and he's like, you, what are you gonna do
with your moment?
And so I did all I knew how to do,
which was a hook of football. So I just stood
up and took about two or three steps and just heaved this ball from, was about from the nine yard line
and landed it in the end zone on the other side. And I just said, I throw footballs. And he's just like,
that was perfect. Sit down and he just looked over at the other guys like, what are you going to do
with yours? And then later on they came up to me and they said, what else can you do?
And you got quite an arm.
How do you throw like that?
And I always had an insomnia.
I've always had that.
I've struggled to sleep.
I've always really enjoyed training.
And if I can't sleep to me, I don't know.
It feels like I've given myself a reason to get out of bed if I go and do
something. So and it's been that way with archery a lot of times if you watch my bow builds, I'm building
it crazy times in the morning because I can't sleep so I get up and I'll just start put a record on
and I'll just start building a custom bow for someone and I'll do that. But back then my coach had gave me a key to
get into the gym and I would pull the laundry baskets out of the washer room and I would
put laundry baskets and opsen into the gym and I would just throw footballs. I had a bag
of footballs. When I was a junior my coach gave me a whole bag of footballs and I had them
in the trunk of my car all the time and I would just do three step drops, throw it in the laundry basket, three steps and then when that laundry
basket had all the balls that go over and do the other one and then outside it was always
you're called black routes but it was a black right route was like in my when I'd be under
the center if I ever called an audible if I I ever called black, it would be a 73 pattern, which is just pretty much a flare pattern. So it was a quick three step drop to outside
shoulder. So I would always go to the 20 yard line, put the garbage cans from the football
field in the corner and I would go out there and just throw footballs, do three step
drops, throw footballs and garbage cans, that's just what I did. So all that stuff led up to that moment of,
he's like, here's your moment, what are you gonna do with it?
I'm gonna throw a football.
And so fast-forwarding a little bit,
you end up getting a Division I scholarship to play football,
which is, I'm sure your parents are just over the moon,
overjoyed.
It was a little bit different.
I remember the first school that recruited me
was Ball State, and me and my mom went there.
My parents were divorced at that time.
My mom was, I think I was a sophomore.
And I really had no idea what the heck we were even doing.
We went to Ball State, and then a lot of different things
came in, but I decided that I really wanted to go to a Carolina
school because my dad was a from Fort Bragg, my uncle, was a pilot at the time.
He was in Greenville, Spartanburg.
Most of the Dudley's were all from that part of the area, so I really wanted to go there.
And honestly, I really liked Western Carolina.
Their offense was really, really similar.
I had choices, but that was really where I wanted to go.
And I think if you would have asked any of my family members
what I was gonna do, they were gonna tell you
I was gonna play football.
I didn't care anything about school
other than the fact it allowed me to play sports.
And I played sports all the time.
I mean, every single semester in school,
I was in the sport.
It didn't matter, I ran track, did basketball,
did football, played tennis, it didn't matter.
All I wanted to do is, I just wanted to play.
I loved it.
I loved camps too.
When my parents got divorced, my mom traveled a lot.
She worked for Baxter Healthcare, I told you that.
And she traveled a lot because she was overseeing plants
in Malaysia and Singapore and Puerto Rico.
So she traveled a ton.
So she just, she left an open checkbook in her house.
And she just said, if I'm not home,
just don't get in trouble, do some productive.
So I just took that checkbook and signed up
for every single football camp
I could and I was traveling to football camps without my teams. I was just going going and being a guy without a team
just sitting there and just I loved I loved having coaches around me. Honestly, I performed. I liked having people
yell at me. I liked having a very specific purpose.
Like you're getting up, we're doing this from seven to nine.
Then you get a breakfast.
Then we're going to go out, we're going to freaking run for two.
I just love that. It was awesome.
And so the archery thing just blindsided me.
Because during this whole time,
during all this high school sport part of my life,
which when I first went into high school, I had no business thinking I was going to be a good athlete
because I was very skinny. I was tall. My dad told me I was like, he goes, when you ran up
and down the basketball court, I was afraid of you tripping because I thought it'd be like a
chandelier hitting the ground. I was skin and bones. I worked hard and I grew into it. But during that
time I didn't get to shoot archery very much. I liked it. I was fairly good at it.
I would make gas money going to parties and shooting. I would put eggs on the top
of two liter pop bottles and I would shoot them off these pop bottles at 40 yards
and I'd just, I'd be like,
you think I can hit that and people,
you can't hit that and then I'd bet me five bucks
and I would make gas money at parties.
I didn't drink.
I drank one time when I was 10 or 11
and then I got really sick off of it
and just said I'm never gonna drink again
and I didn't drink until my 20s.
So I would go to the parties because I loved
and I would have parties but I just I wouldn't be the partier. I would be there and I'd
kind of take money off my drunk friends.
And yeah, it's sort of fun. I got the first time in my life I ever got drunk. I was 12
or 13 working at my dad's restaurant on a New Year's Eve and it was me and my best friend
Mike Douglas. We were buss and tables and washing dishes and the whole night we're sneaking in drinks
here and there.
We're sneaking behind the bar and taking a drink at this and a drink at that.
This is the ultimate low.
Is it the end of the night when everybody's gone?
It's like three in the morning or whatever and we're cleaning up.
We drank every bit of remaining alcohol that was left on the table.
And sometimes you'd finish a drink and there'd be a cigarette.
But in there and you'd be like oops and you'd pitch the cigarette
But then just keep drinking so we had this cocktail of booze in us and my mom she came to pick us up
To take us home. She saw that we were just hammered and she was so pissed at my dad
She's like how could you let these two knuckleheads
Through this so she drives us back home and I that distinctly, it's one of those,
it's amazing that I could still remember something
so vividly from so long ago,
because of 1312, whatever.
I remember being in the back of the car
and sort of understanding why all those
don't drink and drive commercials existed.
Because I was like, oh my God.
I was like out of my mind and then we got home.
And then she had to do what I knew she didn't want to do,
which was leave us there to go drive the babysitter home
because there's a babysitter babysitter
in my younger brother.
And so now there's these two drunk 12 year olds
and beyond drunk and she has to leave for 20 minutes
which is what it's gonna take to drive this babysitter home.
And we managed to find, I don't know, a bottle of beer,
wine or something in the house and took it in the back,
drank it and started playing catch with it, which of course resulted in it breaking and smashing out of the place.
And then we puked all over the kitchen.
And she came home to that, had to clean that up.
It was a disaster.
Point being, I didn't have a sip of alcohol again until I was probably 22.
That might be me.
Mine was a blessing. It was one of these things where I got convinced that. That might be me. Mine was a blessing.
It was one of these things where I got convinced
that we needed to get drunk.
I went to one of my neighbors.
I had 20 bucks.
Went to one of my neighbors who,
our memory had a big red, like a firebird,
or a trans-am or something,
or red one with tea tops.
He looked like he just got out of a warrant concert.
You know, he had like a white leather jacket
with fringe down it, long blonde hair.
And I went over him like, hey dude,
I mean my buddies want some booze.
And he goes, he said house takes 50%.
And I go, I don't care, just get me as much
as I can get a whatever with this.
And he came back with a big jug of off brand peppermint schnapps.
And I remember this.
And then on top of that, like everyone was supposed to bring something to get
bombed to this event with me in a couple of my buddies that were just thinking
we're cool.
And one of my buddies brought some snuff.
And I had never smoked a sig or nothing, but he's like, just sniff it. So the first time I ever
got intoxicated was on peppermint snops and snuff. And I don't remember most of the night. I just
remember waking up and praying that God, if I make it through this, I will never
do this again.
And that was it.
I was like up chucking just peppermint snops that was black from the snuff.
And that was it.
So I did not party.
That's the moral of the story.
I did party.
I went and I shot archery a little bit on Thanksgiving. Every year
we went down to Mississippi for a family Thanksgiving and I would bow hunt down there. That was my time
to be a hunter. I loved doing it and I would shoot my bow. I'd bow fish some in the summertime
because at that time we lived in Illinois. And my focus was football. This is totally my focus. Well, during my senior summer, I'm scheduled to go to school.
I actually moved.
I think I went to Carolina one time.
And then I ended up hurting my right knee.
This knee right here, I hurt this knee.
And it was mainly because my growth spurt was so severe
that my ligaments didn't grow with the rest of my body.
So we kind of came up the plan for me to red shirt at a JC school that ran a
very similar, I think the coaches were somehow affiliated, but they said,
this is your opportunity to learn the entire playbook. You're gonna rehab
there. We've got some stuff there. So I was like, okay, this is all cool. So as this
is going down, this is in the middle of summer. I've got my bow in my
truck because like I said sometimes I would just randomly
Get out and shoot car if I saw a car. I grew up on the Fox River in Northern Illinois and
So I driving down this road and I see this sign that says archery shoot. So I thought,
what's that? So I went down, I turned down this road. If you went there now, it almost would be like a
weird way to lure someone in because you're turning down these cornfield roads, like going into this
place. And also, and I pop in, there's a bunch of cars there and I walk up and I'm like, hey,
what's up with this archery shoot? And I go, yeah, we're having a 3D shoot.
And I said, what's that?
And they're like, well, 3D targets with scoring rings.
I'm like, oh, I haven't really seen those.
And it was three dimensional deer targets, which now you have.
And there's molded rings molded into the foam.
So the smaller ring is a certain score and the bigger rings.
See, obviously, the more outside of the kill zone you get,
the poorer your score, and if you miss, it's a zero. So, I go out with this scorecard, get
with this group of three guys, I don't even know, and I start shooting, and you have to guess
the distance of the target. You have to know where the scoring ring is. I didn't have any binoculars.
I don't even know if range finders were around. So all this is going on, well needless to say,
after halfway through this course,
I'm out of arrows.
And because you've missed something.
I've literally missed practically everything.
Didn't know the distance.
I grew up hunting with, if you can shoot a paper plate
at 20 yards, you can hunt.
That was our thing. And meanwhile, hitting a paper plate meant 20 yards, you can hunt. That was our thing.
And meanwhile, hitting a paper plate meant go out and shoot 10 arrows if you can kind of
hit it some.
So I'd got better than that.
And I could have very specific pins to shoot exact numbers, but the in between stuff.
Like I hadn't filled the gaps, right?
So I went out and just was terrible.
Lost all my arrows, blanked a bunch of targets,
the people I was shooting worth was looking at me like,
wow, this is sad.
And I said, sorry, I gotta go, I'm outta arrows,
I'll be back and I left.
And I remember just driving up to Wilmot, Wisconsin, from this Illinois shoot.
The only shop I knew of was in Wilmot, Wisconsin, which is where my dad had taken me to get
some of my first bows and drove up to this gander mountain.
And I was pissed off the whole way.
I'm like, I am never going to suck this bad again at anything.
And I drove up there, bought another dozen arrows,
drove back and picked up where I left off, shot the course, and by then they were already
handing out trophies.
I was like last in and they were already handing out trophies
and the guys that were on the podium
had polo shirts on with embroidery of what shop
they were shooting out of.
And I remember the two top guys had these bright yellow shirts
on it said, gat guns, Dundee Illinois.
So this was on a Saturday or Sunday.
Monday morning, I'm in gat guns.
I'm in there.
They opened at one o'clock.
I was there by 11.
I just sat around on my car for a few hours.
And then when they opened, I came in and I was like,
Hey, I went to this 3D shoot. There are a couple guys at one. I want to ask them about their equipment
and what they're doing and they're kind of like, Oh, yeah, it's probably so-and-so. They normally shoot
at night. So I just lurked around there until people started to show up to shoot leak. And then I was
just this kid with all these questions. Why do you have a
colored bow? Why is your sight have a lens in it? Why are you're fletching shorter just
all these questions and went on a few days? And all of a sudden the guy at the shop, the
manager, his name was Mike Donovan. He grabbed me and said, Hey, kid, are you doing anything?
And I said, well, yeah, I'm asking these guys questions. He said, no, are you doing anything?
And I said, well, and then I go, why? And he goes, I need your help. And he pulled me in the back room.
And he said, hey, I forgot to do these guys.
Heroes, do you know how to flesh arrows? And I said, no, I don't know how to do any of this stuff.
And he said, okay, I'm going to show you how. So he handed me some feathers, gave me a fletching jig, told me to put the feather in here, put glue down it, clamp it on the arrow, set
the timer, do the next six in line, and then when the timer went off, take the clamp off,
turn this little dial so that it rotates the arrow, 120 degrees to the next position,
put another feather in, put glue on, right? Repeat that three times.
You got three fletchings on your arrow. And he's like, when these doesn't are done, come out and get
me. So I did that. And two hours later, I came out and I said, Hey, these are done. He's like, Okay,
now it's like, All right. He goes, Okay, do those. And he pointed over in the corner. And there was
just this like a hundred tubes of them with orders wrapped up and kind of in there
on what colors they got and everything.
So this went on for weeks of me just,
I would show up at 12 o'clock, I'd jump in that little room
and just start flexing the arrows for this guy.
And then all of a sudden he kind of told me like,
hey, we gotta replace this bow string.
I'm like, well, how do you do that?
At some point, as he said, by the way,
you work here now? No, no. This is to replace this bow string. I'm like, well, how do you do that? At some point, has he said, by the way, you work here now?
No, no.
This is all just pure apprentice mode.
Yeah, so this is kind of where it gets good.
So I think you got good about five minutes to go by.
I love this story.
So meanwhile, my dad is saying, hey, what are you doing for work?
Which I was born and concrete in the morning for an archer, buddy.
One of the guys that I was more or less stalking in this range, his name was Mike West.
He had West concrete while I was stalking him.
He's like, Hey, what are you doing for job?
And I'm like, I don't know.
He goes, Well, I need help with my concrete company.
You want to come?
He goes, we start early, kid.
I'm like, Yeah, that's fine.
And I said, I just want to be in here by night. And he's like, Okay, we start early kid. I'm like, yeah, that's fine. And I said, I just want to be in here by night.
And he's like, okay, we start early.
So I was just running wheel barrels full of freaking concrete every morning.
And then when it hit 1130, it'd be like, I got to get to Gacons.
And I would leave and go there and just flush these arrows for free.
And meanwhile, several weeks went by where I watched Mike hand out checks to other employees. So finally, I told Mike, I said, hey, when am I going to eat my paycheck?
I remember he just looked at me with this look of surprise and he just, he goes, you want
to get paid?
And I go, yeah, I've been here for a month from 12 to 8 o'clock every day.
And he just said, you can't put a price
on what I'm teaching you right now.
And he was like cold serious.
And I said, that's cool man,
but I've got to put gas in my car.
So he's just like, all right, and he goes,
let me think about it.
And then he came back and he goes, I'm going to give you 4, 10 an hour.
Then he goes, you'll have to work from 12 days every day.
I said, sounds awesome.
After about a week, I went back to my dad and I said,
hey, I've got, I think I want to change what I'm going to be doing.
He said, what do you mean?
I go, I've got this job at this archery shop
and it's just the best. I love it. And meanwhile, everyone's teaching me better shooting
techniques, right? They're teaching me a shooting. I'm meeting sales reps from arrow companies,
sales reps from bow companies. I'm in full dork mode. So I tell my dad, yeah, this is what I want to do. And my dad said, I assume
they're paying you a lot. And I said, I'm getting 4, 10 an hour. And I remember my dad, because
he's a psychologist. So he's looking at me as if he's kind of wanting to say, I really want
you to make the right decision right now. You're 18.
I don't want to tell you your decision.
And so it kind of just said, I think that's a terrible decision.
And like most 18 year olds, I just decided to freaking run with it.
I mean, is it safe to say that part of this is, you're pretty good at a lot of things
up until that point in your life, athletically.
How much of this is you getting bit by this bug a month earlier, you're at this 3D challenge,
you're the worst guy there, and there's like a lack of familiarity with being so bad at
something?
I mean, is that part of me rephrase the question?
I suspect that is part of it.
Is that a small part of it, or a large part of it?
I don't know, man. I think that same sort of things in you. I think that same sort of things in a lot of our friends.
I think a lot of our friends are very similar in the fact of if you give us something athletic to do,
we won't necessarily be awesome at it, but we're definitely going to be above average at it really fast. Or if we're not, we will make sure we at least get above average at it before we'd say,
yeah, that was cool.
I'm going to move on other things.
I don't think I've ever done anything where I just totally suck at it.
Maybe there's a few.
If someone got me into competitive limbo, I would probably be like, yeah, okay, I've
freaking suck at this.
I would maybe take a few lessons and I'd be like, know what I'm six five. I'm not meant to limbo
So I gave it a try but for the most part
I think that stuff's just in competitive people like people with drive they have drive all the time, right?
I think yeah
I don't know. I mean like my hope is by the end of this interview
I want to understand this better because as much as you and I have spoken about this stuff over meals and such,
I find your story remarkable. I mean, I interview some really amazing people on this podcast and
they're amazing in their field of a particular science or something, you know, lots of different
things. And I have friends who are among the best in the world
at something.
So you're in pretty rarefied air.
Like I can't compare to that.
I feel like I shouldn't even be here.
No, no, no, I mean, I'm saying the opposite actually.
Like I can't relate.
I've never been exceptional at anything.
I've never been as good at anything as you are at Artree.
Let's put it that way.
Let's just do that.
But I'm not exceptional.
I've just, I've made it a lifetime passion
to give everything I have to master it.
I'm not accept, there's prodigies.
I feel like I was born with a talent to do it
because as many times as I've kind of been burnt out by it
and walk away from it,
all of a sudden for some reason I come back to it
and then I do it and I realize, man, there's
a lot of people that work tirelessly to try to achieve this result and I really didn't
have to put that in and I'm getting it.
So I feel like this is what I'm meant to do, but I don't know.
I feel like I feel like you're cutting yourself short and not saying that.
You're 100% that way. You're just that way in a different light, just that way with a project
aisle.
I mean, well, look, we could split hairs on it. I would still argue that you at your best
were better at your craft than I've ever been at my craft or ever will be at anything
that will be my craft. And that's okay. I just mean that it's I'm always interested in
understanding how people, what kind of passion people bring to their craft.
Now, packing up for a moment, you've spoken only once that I've ever heard very briefly about
something that I was sort of, this was a couple of years ago, I think it was on Rogan. You talk
very briefly about something in your childhood that you guys didn't spend a lot of time dwelling on
it, but it really kind of gripped me, which was what happened to you when you were about nine years old with your house.
We've never spoken about that.
Are you comfortable talking about that at all?
Yeah, I'll talk about it.
I mean, it haunts me.
It haunts me in the fact that.
So just like most kids in this,
everything happens for a reason.
I'm happy that happened.
I've talked to Joe in depth about things
that are super close to me.
So sometimes he's gonna know how far we should go.
Down a rabbit hole, this rabbit hole doesn't really,
it doesn't matter, it's part of my past.
And it's honestly something that allows me to,
when I'm around friends that have kids that are bad,
not bad in the fact that they act up, but bad.
Just ran punctures.
Yeah, I tell them I'm like, hey, I was way worse than that.
And I said, you gotta just give them a chance.
Something will happen to where they'll change
their direction.
And a lot of people looked at me and they're like,
oh yeah, easy for you to say.
And I'm like, no man, let me tell you.
Yeah, right, because at the surface,
they would say easy for you to say,
because your son, who's 20 is, he's like,
we'll even look at me.
Like them knowing me now or knowing me
for the last 20 something or 30 something years,
they would never realize that me growing up,
I grew up on skateboard, I grew up on BMX bikes,
I grew up taking money from my mom's wallet,
so I could go by like fireworks and
I mean I was beevus and butthead. Like that's what I was. I was beevus and butthead. And yeah,
I played with fire when I was nine years old, called myself in sick from school, was at home.
My mom was in, I think Puerto Rico visiting a factory. My dad was at work.
And yeah, I started playing with matches,
ended up catching something on fire in the house, panicked.
And honestly, I tried to use the fire extinguisher,
didn't work, guess why?
Because I had been playing with firecrackers.
I wasn't supposed to have months before that in the garage
and almost burned the house down. So I put them out, this fire extinguisher and just stuck months before that in the garage and almost burned the house down
So I put them out this fire extinguisher and just stuck it back up in the house without telling anyone I had completely
Used it so then fast forward
Playing around with fire
Whatever primal say what you say. We got the fire going over here looks cool
Yeah, how started on fire started in a bedroom and I called my dad. He was on the other side of town middle of a session with the patient.
Told them there's a fire in the house. It's pretty bad. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Blah blah blah. He just said,
what's it like in the house? I said, it's just black. It's black everywhere. I put it out. There's black smoke everywhere and he just said,
get the smoke out of the house. Get the smoke out of the house. So I
There's black smoke everywhere and he just said get the smoke out of the house get the smoke out of the house so I
Open the windows and then open the front door and just like let the air blow through and I was just kind of
Crying frantically running around the house like trying to kind of prepare myself for when my dad was getting ready to come home to this thing
And then by the time I went back in the bedroom. It was even
to come home to this thing. And then by the time I went back in the bedroom, it was even smokier than it was that time. And then I remember I was just like open in the window even wider
and ripping the screen out. And keep in mind, I was a punk kid. I was like super, I still like
heavy metal, but I was into heavy metal. I was a skater. I was a troublemaker. That's what I was.
metal, but I was into heavy metal. I was a skater. I was a troublemaker. That's what I was. And I wasn't in the sports, didn't like sports. My dad was an athletic prodigy pretty much.
And I know that that's probably what was in my jeans. That wasn't what I wanted to do.
So all of a sudden, I look in that room, I'm in there and I'm trying to get the smoke
out. And then I look up and through the smoke, I can see there's just flames all the way around the entire ceiling.
And that like fell down kind of right in front of my legs.
Luckily, I was able to get out of the house and yeah, the whole house burned down.
The only thing that we had was what was in my mom's car at O'Hare Airport and what was in my dad's car. That was at work.
That was it. So yeah, I mean, I dealt with this. You have an older sister, right? Yeah, my sister
was at college. So I mean, yeah, I'm considerably older. Yeah, dealing with all of her stuff being
lost and my little brother did this and I was dealing with all this stuff. My parents were really good about, I've never asked them what their conversation was,
but they never really rubbed it in.
I remember my dad telling me, I was struggling dealing with it.
Honestly, we were living in an apartment and my dad told me,
you know, hey, you should try to get involved with school. I think he said something like, isn't there a dance coming up this weekend or something?
And I said, yeah, and he goes, you should go out there, go see your friends and stuff.
So I remember going to this dance.
And then one of the kids in the school ended up like making a request to play burning down
the house. And so I ended up kind of raging out on this kid. I was never really a fighter,
but I went little nuts on this kid and then I think my parents just realized we need to get
them out of this town. So we moved to a completely different town. And once we got there, I told myself,
I'm like, I got to make my dad proud. And I knew the only way I was going to really do that was basketball, football, or golf.
And so that was totally my passion was jumping in there and becoming as good as I can. And I remember
when I first started basketball, I wasn't like I had this size, but I wasn't natural at it.
And I remember my sixth or seventh grade basketball coach,
even though I was a tallest or the second tallest,
I remember seeing them like kind of crack jokes
that I was uncordenated and stuff like that.
I kind of remember that.
And then all of a sudden fast forward,
three or four years later when I was in high school,
and I was the starting quarterback for our varsity team already,
I remember going back to the junior high for something
and I remember running into that,
or maybe I ran into that coach somewhere in town
and I remember he's like,
well, what are you doing with yourself nowadays, Dudley?
And I just said, well, I'm coaching varsity
with the high school and I remember him laughing at him.
He's like, yeah, right.
And so like all those little things kind of,
they just fueled me.
So at first, I just, I wanted to do something
to pay my parents back for being that kid
that burnt the house down literally.
And then, I don't know, just, I think it began
this drive to just be fully committed to, honestly fully committed to training
because I never had raw talent. I just had size to start with. So then it just I
realized like if I knew every person's positions, every single person, if I knew
what they needed to do, every play, I would be a leader. I could look at them,
do you know what you need to do? No, I would be a leader. I could look at them,
do you know what you need to do? No, okay. You're gonna pull, you're gonna come across, you're gonna
pick up the first defensive hit. Like I knew every X and every O on the playbooks. And so that was,
I don't know, I think some of that looking back, thinking about it now. Some of that probably rolls over into just what molded my personality
of going deep into this stuff.
Do you ever talked to your dad about your mom for that matter, but maybe your dad just
because he's a psychologist by training about kind of the wisdom they had to that? Because
I know I've heard you talk about this a little bit in the past. And it sounds like your
parents handled this as well as any parents could have. I mean, I have to think that if a hundred parents had a hundred nine-year-old boys in that situation,
like 99 of those can end up a lot worse, where that kid never recovers from that.
For example, like, if one of my kids burned down the house, I'm just not, I don't know,
I don't know how I'd handle that.
It's hard to think about that.
Yeah, yeah.
What's hard is not having my dad losing all of his stuff from his military, not having
any baby photos.
Everything your parents had, like all that stuff's haunting.
It is.
Like no one could tell me anything that wouldn't make me feel bad about that
because in the end I know that they never had to tell me that.
My dad's never said, oh man, all my...
Well, that's the part that amazes me, right?
It's sort of like that.
It never did.
Yeah, but your parents had the understanding
that you were going to beat yourself up
in eternity over that.
They never needed to vent their frustration to you.
That to me is, that's remarkable.
And it's kind of an amazing testament to them.
And I'm sure they weren't perfect.
No parent is, but that may be their single most
exceptional parenting moment for event.
Yeah, for sure.
And it's another one of those,
another one of those perfect examples of,
when negative things happen, it's an opportunity to
really change full direction or make something out of it. If something blows up, there's new pieces
there, you can build it in a new way because the pieces wouldn't be there if that wouldn't have
happened, right? It would still be kind of a solid object that wouldn't have anything. So I've just,
still be kind of a solid object that wouldn't have anything. So I've just, I've kind of taken
that and dedicated myself to just really want to make my dad proud in that aspect and then
kind of rolled it into for whatever reason. This archery thing was all of a sudden this was the same sort of thing from the training from the dedication, the competition was still there, I wasn't good at it, but more importantly,
the archery was for me.
I think that was the first thing that was really for me again because that was what I loved,
not what I think I was worried about my dad really loving. And I don't know, it was in a small way.
It was also when I knew people thought it was a bad idea. It was a lot like
when that coach said, you're never going to be a varsity player because that
same sort of thing happened with archery. People told me they're like, I asked
about what's these national events or world championships?
You're never going to be that good. That's what I was told. I was told that. And then a year later,
I was already at my first triple crown as an amateur. Two years later, I was already at a world
championship as an amateur. Three and a half years later, I was already in the pro class. And by the fourth year, from that day, within four years of that day,
I was a rookie of the year in the pro class.
So I want to just pause for a moment and make sure people understand some of the
nuts and bolts about this because if we were talking about football, people would
understand what the sport is and what the quarterback does and what a wide
receiver does and what a touchdown is and all those things.
I think in archery, I mean, even it's sort of funny, like, how many hours a day do I do this?
And my wife still doesn't actually know anything about archery.
We were laughing about the other day at dinner, right?
No, every day at dinner.
You're like, let me put this in this perspective every day.
And God bless her. It's not from a lack of interest.
It's just the reality of it.
It's if you're not out there behind a bow, looking at something that is distanced and knowing
what those distances are.
I don't think a normal person walks through the world thinking about what has the difference
between 50 yards and 60 yards and 100 yards and 20 yards.
So can you explain how the competition works?
What is the actual event?
What does an actual event look like?
There are several events, but yeah, there's so many. I've shot on probably four or five different
types of pro tours over the years. And all of them have different rules. The one thing that's
consistent about football is you're always on the same field. You always have four downs. You
always have four quarters with archery. Each event has a certain number of arrows that shoot.
And once that score happens, some events, when it's done, top three, that's it.
Some, once the top five scores at the end of the ranking round or qualification round,
then the top five will go in.
They'll shoot down to a winner.
Some have more like an Olympic style round where you shoot a ranking round.
They rank everybody, they rank one to 64 and then number one will shoot against number
64, number two shoots against 63 type thing and you'll have brackets and you shoot all
the way down into a gold medal match.
And depending on the event, some events are multiple
distance through multiple days. Some events are fixed distances. The maximum
is up to 90 meters. So back, they've actually canceled this round here
recently. But back when I competed, a full feet around was 30 meters, 50
meters, 70 meters, 90 meters.
Feet stands for.
Back then it was a...
Federation, international.
Yeah, it was French.
I don't even know what it was.
Now it's called World Archery.
They made it much simpler.
But yeah, you would shoot rounds at 30, 50, 70, 90 meters.
And then once the quals were done, the head to heads would all be shot at 70 meters,
which is 77 yards.
That was for that type of event.
My favorite event was the field archery formats,
which is multiple size bulls eyes,
proportion depending on the distance that you're shooting,
anywhere from 20 meters out to about 80.
And you would shoot one round that had marked distance,
one round that was unmarked to distance.
And then you'd go into qualifications
that were half and half.
So let's put some specs to this.
So people understand what we're talking about.
So most people know how long a football field is.
That's just a touch over 90 meters.
Yeah, put it on the one yard line.
Honestly, this almost goes back to like me hucking that football, right?
Right.
So, you're on the one yard line with football field.
The other end zone is 99 yards away, which is 90 meters.
Which is, yep.
Okay, so a professional archer, one of the top professional archers can hit with their bow at that distance
if they took 10 shots what size diameter would they be able to land 10 shots inside of this jaco coffee cup right here is about the size of the 10 so the 10 ring there is about that's about 2.5 to 3 inches
no that'd be wider than that
do you
Looks like about 4 inches max, right?
That's three inches.
Yeah, we could look up the exact diameter.
But yeah.
It's pretty small.
So take your coffee to the jaffa coffee mug.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small.
It's definitely small. It's definitely small. It's definitely small. It's definitely small. It's definitely small. Most pro archers are gonna hit that eight out of ten. Okay, let's pause for one more moment here and now explain another distinction which we have yet to explain to the listener,
which is we talk interchangeably about bows, but if anyone ever turns on the Olympics, they're watching one type of bow,
but most of what you shoot and all of what I shoot is a different type of bow.
Can you explain that difference? So if you're watching the Olympic Games, they shoot recurves. So those bows are very long,
and it's a handle with wooden limbs, which are the parts that bend, and there's a string.
That's a recurve bow. So what we're shooting is what's called a compound, which is a bow that has
What we're shooting is what's called a compound which is a bow that has
Round wheels on it that essentially store energy so as you pull it back
The limbs of the bow flex, but they also have this cam system
That's I guess for layman's turn imagine like gears on a bike where as you're going through those gears, you have the ability to make it easier at some point. So as you pull this back, the cam rolls over into kind of a different
position to where it gets easier as you get closer to your fully extended position. That's probably
the easiest way to say it, right? And it's a little bit
easier to hold it at full draw. But because of that, you're also able to shoot much more
poundage at the beginning of that pull cycle. So in other words, in the Olympics, a heavy
recurve shooter would be shooting about 50 pounds. Because as he pulls that bow back,
every inch he pulls it back further, that weight continually increases as he pulls that bow back, every inch he pulls it back further,
that weight continually increases as he pulls it back.
So once he gets a full draw,
that in no way gets easier.
Whereas ours, we could shoot a 70 pound bow,
and as we start to pull it, it'll peak at 70 pounds fairly soon.
And then it gets easier and easier and easier
and kind of drops back.
You can be much more accurate with the compound bow, and you can also achieve much longer distances
because the energy stored is greater.
So the typical speed, so your bow or my bow, my bow, I just know this because it's my
bow, is 292 feet per second is what I would call the muzzle velocity.
Close to 100 miles an hour.
Yeah, which the way I describe it to Olivia when she's watching me shoot is if I shoot 50 yards
It's taken about half a second to get there
What's the speed on a recurve on an Olympian's bow way less like way way less and in the Olympics
They shoot what distance 70 meters which I've only ever fired a recurve at 20
I don't even understand how those guys fire
re curves at seventy seven yards that's impressive they use the same type of
process that i teach just with the different system and actually are our us guy he's a close
i can't say he's a close friend because i've known him since he was a kid. I liked his dad a lot. His dad was a very well respected person.
And I gave Brady his first recurve bow.
He was shooting a compound,
but he wanted to get into shooting Olympic style archery.
So I gave him his first recurve bow
and he just set a new world record with it.
He's one, I think the medal's the last two.
He's phenomenal. He's an amazing archer, but he just set a new world record with it. He's one, I think metals the last two. He's phenomenal. He's
an amazing archer, but he just said a new world record this morning.
Wow. Explain what the world record is. I think he shot a 701 out of 720. So that's the
exact same scoring ring I just talked about. So, out of 720 points, he shot 701 in this
coffee cup with that record, though. So that's means you get 72 shots? That's 72 shots.
72 shots.
Every time you're in that exact 10 ring, which is the inside of a coffee cup, 77 yards away,
you'd get a 10.
So that means presumably he got nine, nine's, and the rest were 10's, or some combination
there.
Yeah.
I mean, and what's impressive about it too is a lot of times when you're off with the
recurve, like if you make a really poor shot of the recurve, it's really poor. So it's possible
one of those was a one. And then well, probably not with him, but yeah, it would have been easy
to do on a 72 arrows, which is why those scores, even though people might have the pace to do that,
the reality is because they're shooting with fingers too, they're not allowed to shoot a mechanical release. So it's pretty phenomenal. It's amazing to watch it.
But as amazing as that is, that was never a pursuit of mine because these guys train for four
years for one event. And although there are world champs and world cups in between, sad part about
archery is the money pays out a lot more in the compound pro class than in the recurve class. And
there's more people there. The cost of getting it in is higher too. So although that's the Olympic
sport, the Olympians, their paydays are when they win medals
and that paydays really only every four years.
Now they'll, I'm sure they're getting compensated to shoot, but like for me, for example, my rookie
year, if I won a pro event, the guaranteed payout was 10,000 by the time you got some of your
contingency checks, you were making 15 grand a weekend on a win.
World champs were 30,000. Shooter of the years were 50,000.
If you win the Vegas indoor tournament, which is every February, that pays about 50,000.
Whereas with the recurve, they may make five or 10. I don't know.
Does anybody hunt with recurve?
Oh, yeah. me make five or 10. I don't know. Does anybody hunt with recurve?
Oh yeah.
There are guys that'll still hunt with the recurve, yeah.
I was wondering if that was also part
of the reason you favored compound,
which was you started as a hunter.
Yeah.
Then became an archer, the two go hand in hand.
I mean, they feed off each other.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I always said, and you and I talked about this,
and you told me, you said, now that I'm doing this,
and I've kind of became a target archer, I went to the night, I hunted axes, he said, I understand
that saying that you have, which what I tell people is I'm a target archer in order to
be a better bow hunter and I'm a better bow hunter because I'm a target archer. I feel like there's a very, very important puzzle piece to be in ethical
that involves you giving everything you have to be in the absolute best archer you can
be and being able to know your limitations on shots. And the reality is we talked about
like when Sharon was going to run that half marathon.
She prepped for it. I just decided to do it. I didn't know my limitations. I just went and did it.
Did I do it? Yeah, I did it. But in a hunting situation, guys, it just know how to shoot a bow and
then go out and then just take those shots and animals. I feel like morally,
there's gonna come a point where,
if their shot doesn't connect where they want,
that's gonna be hard to deal with.
So I've always felt like,
ethically, I need to know my limitations,
because when that moment happens,
I'm gonna be able to make,
ideally, make a perfect shot
or the more I've done it in practicing in weird conditions, the more you realize, this might
not be a shot I should even take, even though I know I can technically shoot this far.
Which you learned from me.
The list of things I've learned from you, John, is unbelievable.
And we'll link in this podcast to the interview where I was on your podcast.
And of course, I don't want to chew up any of our time here.
Retelling stuff I talked about there, which was sort of how this all spoke to me and what
this all, why, what you're saying resonated so much.
And that's something that to this day I still can't answer.
You ask me that question. I gave you the best answer I had. And in the end, I still don't know.
I just think there are some people for whom that degree of perfection is so blissful. There's
such an amazing state. And you know, my wife said something to me about six months ago,
which she's never said about any of my obsessions, because she's known me for
19 years now. And she's been through many seasons of obsession. We were talking about the
inastimosing, insurgery, and swimming, and cycling, and archery, and race car driving, and all these
things both passed in present, and then are my obsessions. And she said, you get so pissed off
when you're having a bad day in your given sport.
I used to call her every morning after swim practice on my way to work.
I'd go early, swim masters, and then I'd drive into work, and she'd be heading to work,
and I always just call on and say, hey, and she's like,
I could tell from your voice how the practice went.
You have to understand something here.
We're talking about masters swimming, like nobody cares.
Not on the national team, right?
I don't have a Weedy's contract, like nobody cares.
In fact, nobody else in the pool can tell
if I was one second off per hundred that day.
Like it's just not at that level.
But I mean, my day would rise or fall as a function of that.
And the same thing, like if I'm in the simulator for two hours and I come in and I'm
surly and pissy, she knows, like you just didn't drive well. And she's like, I don't know what it
is about archery, but she's like, I've only seen you twice pissed off for shooting bad. Usually,
even when you, if you come in and
I say, how'd you do, you'd be like, I sucked, but you're not pissed. It's almost like there's
a benefit to archery for my psyche that goes beyond the performance. There's something about
the act of doing it that is in and of itself beautiful, even if I don't meet the objective. So the journey
seems to matter as much as the destination in archery as anything I've ever done. Do you
feel that way? Or because you have done it at such a high level, do you struggle more with
those days or those seasons, which I'm sure there've been seasons or months
or whatever when you've been off your form.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, there's certainly times that there's been times where I have felt it, but there's
also times where I quickly realized that when I do that in archery, it makes it worse,
really fast. The thing with archery is, it really is a sport of Zen
and clarity.
You shoot better when you're trying less.
So when you get mad, you only get worse at it.
And so this was something that I talked about a lot
in my training is I was really fortunate
to have a coach walk by me one time and he
was a coach. He was a well-known coach that worked with some athletes, but he wasn't one that was
kind of sanctioned. I don't even know how he got with some of the athletes that he was with,
but he was with a few really high-level athletes and he worked with maybe two or three
in the archery world.
But he was there watching one of his guys shoot
and he kind of saw me make a bad shot on a target
and I came on glued, which I've talked about this.
In football, if I threw an interception,
I could just run after the guy
and if I couldn't get to him I could just hit someone.
And then, especially in high school, guess what?
I played offense, defense, kicker, punner.
I could just hit someone.
I could get it out somehow.
There was release, whereas with archery there wasn't.
So my release would be snapping an arrow over my leg or breaking a stabilizer or when
the shoot's all over and I know I'm not making the shoot off round like wait until everyone's
walking in and freaking hammer tossing my bow through the woods and walking away from
it.
I mean I had those moments where I was young.
Sometimes I wasn't even 20.
I want to go back to that for a moment, because if you're 20, that means you're only one
or two years post making this crazy decision to forgo.
Oh yeah.
A football scholarship to work for four, 10 an hour
to try to become an archer.
And so when you're breaking an arrow,
snapping your stabilizer and throwing your bow
into the woods, are there moments of doubt
where you're saying, I could be the starting quarterback
in Carolina. Like were you ever looking back saying, no, what was
yourself talking that moment of of anger?
Something defeat to me that day, and it wasn't going to do it tomorrow.
That's what I was like. I wasn't looking back. I was always right there.
What's happening now is what I'm focused on and this coach told me said
You're never gonna be any different than you are right now until you realize that the only arrows you have control on are
Those ones that are in your quiver
And I kind of looked at him and he goes do you know how to get that arrow back that's in down there in that five ring?
I kind of like looked at him again and he goes,
do you know anyone that can pull that arrow back to this shooting line from that target? And I just
said no. And he goes, and you never will. He goes, the only thing you have control on is what you
haven't shot yet. And he goes, you got to let that go. It it's the past and That like was so changing for me because it got to the point where I started just I was talking to arrows in my quiver
One would shoot I'd make a bad shot and think well
Okay, shit. I shot a five now. I'm gonna need at least three 12s to dig out of that hole
So I'd look into my quiver and be like
Which one of you son of bitches want a sheet of twelve because we got some work to make up for your
asshole down there so.
And I'd just be like, are you the one and I'd grab it and I'd just started doing that.
And things started to change but what I learned about archery and what I liked about it
and the reason why I went into a lot of different techniques or form of archery is because I really
liked the training aspect.
I loved it.
I liked prepping.
I really liked to prep.
So I think that's a big reason why I like to cook.
I love to eat at the end, but I also like when you say, hey, let's cook.
I kind of just let me prep.
So by the way
Have I at all been successful this week and convincing you to create a sub channel on your YouTube channel for cooking maybe
I'll just interject for a moment those of you obviously you've heard this in the intro but
School of knock knock on TV on YouTube unbelievable knock on archery on YouTube.
Is it knock on archery? I just click on the link. I don't even know what it's called. If you
just go to YouTube and put knock on it shows up. Yeah and it's not don't put a K at the beginning.
It's NOCK just like an arrow knock not like you and your box. We need to be clear. We need to be
you can be clear. We might not have the little but your cooking is it actually reminds me so much
of my father. So you know I grew up in a your cooking is it extra runs me so much of my father
So you know I grew up in a restaurant people always say to me like I like to cook as well
And people always ask me for recipes like they'll come over and have like that salmon that we had the other day
And they'll be like which was the bomb. Thank you
I appreciate that was the bomb and people always say like hey man
Can you give me that recipe and I actually finally one day wrote up the recipe for that
But I know that whatever
I wrote is not actually what I normally make, because I'm always just doing it by a pinch
of this, a pinch of that. If you ask me, like, what temperature I'm cooking in that or
how long, I don't know, I just watch it. I just like my dad, I remember him literally
telling me like, once the salmon starts to sweat, it's done. And I remember trying to explain
that to somebody once they're like, what the hell are you talking about?
And I was like, it just made sense.
The oil bubbles, bro.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so you're a lot like my dad,
when my dad's here and he's cooking,
it is so enjoyable because it's just,
I call it street style cooking.
Like it's just a little bit, what do you got?
Just show me what you got, I'll make it work.
And you are awesome, man.
We have, that's all we've done.
We have consumed, we've eaten really well this week.
By the way, I've lost four pounds since you've been here.
Right, you can, me.
Which is crazy given how much I've eaten.
But it's because like, part of it is I've eaten so well.
Well, we fast a lot during the day.
We're probably fasting a little bit longer than normal,
but it's like our dinners are super clean.
And a lot of times, if the entree's not that great,
I'll end up nibbling on my kids' leftovers
and crap like their mac and cheese
or whatever junk food they're eating.
But like there's been none of that this week.
So it's just like, yeah, it's, anyway,
you do have a gift for cooking.
I mean, I'm not just saying that.
It's really, really been a pleasure to watch
the way you interact and think about stuff.
Like even last night, you just had that idea out of the blue, which was, oh my God, like
if you put this sugar-free maple syrup into this type of mustard and glaze it on the
salmon, like boom, we got to try that.
Oh, I've gone further in that.
I woke up thinking, if we infuse that, if we smoke that syrup and then infuse it into like some frozen whiskey balls
and imagine the old fashions we can make.
Dude, I woke up thinking about that.
You have got to pursue this.
This isn't non-negotiable.
Back to the more serious stuff.
Well, yeah, because I'm trying to get to like, so all those processes that I was talking
about, I just started to realize that I was very
task driven.
Like all this stuff has always been about, it's always been about tasks.
Now it's hard, I will say it's hard for me to, I can't, I shouldn't say I can't, but
it's hard for me to be at my absolute best as a performer during practice,
because I do perform better when I,
as soon as I turn around and I see people
putting cameras on me,
that's a drive for me that I can perform better than,
I need that push.
But I did do a lot of research
and I kind of started, I read a book,
I've read a book called Mind Gym and I don't
read a lot because I don't have a lot of time.
Gym, GYM.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because I was really trying to figure out, so this is something that's been interesting
to me for a long time because I really struggle with ADD and I've been clinically tested. I went through a psychological full evaluation
for my ADD and my LD, which was a full day going through as a teenager, as an adult.
Yeah, because I struggled. Part of the problem was once I was working at that archery shop,
I did want to still go to college, but I realized really quick. It was, I realized I had never really taken a book home.
I just always got past in classes because I was excelling as an athlete.
And so I really, really struggled with that.
And I struggled with attention.
I struggled with certain things.
There's a lot of things that were distracting.
So my dad's like, I'm going to take you to one of my friends.
And we're going to really test you for this. So I
Have a pretty severe case of ADD and I have an LD as well and
So I started realizing that in what is the particular LD did they define it clearly?
Probably but I would not know unless I gave you my eVal
It's kind of a a thick eow, and I probably have it somewhere.
So what I learned was in archery,
I kind of zone out in archery,
I really feel like that's a big part of why I'm good at it.
And I'm the same one I weight lift.
Like I can do something repetitive so many times
that I almost get it to a trance in it,
and it takes someone to like snap me out of that.
And in competition, it's been that way too, where I've been competing. And for example, like a
cameraman or a videographer says, hey man, sorry for bumping you during that shot. I'm like, when?
And he's like, I bumped your elbow, and I'm completely oblivious to it because to me, I'm so zoned out on that.
So I really started diving into this.
I really wanted to find out some of these people
that write sports psychology books.
I was really curious if there's some type of connection
between high-level athletes that have ADD, in other words, they're hyper-focused,
they're hyper-focused just kind of by makeup. And there's certainly times where if a lot's
going on, I can be distracted, but during those same times, I can be having a conversation with you
and people can be trying to get my attention. And equally, I don't get it.
So I was kind of diving down this road of, is this 80-D making me better?
Me getting into my own zone because I also got to the point where during certain practices
when I would practice with certain music, there were times where I could get into flow
states that were honestly that most people don't
believe. I mean I've had times where I shot 99 shots one time into the same era hole without stretching
it. It took an hour and a half of doing it but I remember I had I had like kind of a meditative
type album plan. It was just I didn't even know it, but it was on repeat, like it was on repeat on my playlist.
So the same song had been playing for an hour and a half and I never knew it.
And then I would just get into these flow states like that.
So I started looking up, is there a connection between people that have these types of
hyper focusing and are these people also people that get into a flow state
better because then at that point I was almost at the point of retirement and
this stuff was starting to become clear to me and I'm thinking as a coach if I
get to the point where I'm coach in national teams I'm gonna be looking for this.
I want to be able to find this and so then at that same time I started going
into these books and I started to see the to find this. And so then at that same time, I started going into these books
and I started to see the difference in personality types
between ego-driven and task-driven personality types.
So, and then clearly, I am a task-driven mentality.
I looked at a lot of times the task-driven
personality type athletes are
normally the ones that kind of
Go down at their peak levels for the longest period of time
They might not peak as high as the ego-driven, but as fast as the ego-driven can peak
They can also disillusion when people are looking at do you want the superstar the ego-driven's like you're out
Do you want the task-driven the task- driven is what you build a team off of?
Yeah, it was pretty interesting to go down those.
Have you looked into that stuff?
Have you ever dove down those roads?
I have.
And there's other things that I think I think about when I hear people like you talk about
things that shape them.
So you've said already a couple of things that I think are really relevant to my observation
of exceptional performers. One of them you said, you just said it
outright, but a lot of people don't articulate it as directly. You love to practice. I have
yet to meet a world-class exceptional performer who didn't love to practice. So when you
talk to Lance Armstrong or his teammates, Lance's teammates will, you know,
spoke to at least one of them, they'll tell stories about how it just didn't matter.
Like when it was early season training and the ride was supposed to be a six hour grueling
ride at the end of six hours, Lance wanted two more.
Sometimes he would just go do it by himself.
And again, it's so funny to me, it just nothing makes me sort of more annoyed that people
simply want to dismiss
a natural talent of these cyclists because, that also happened to use performance enhancing
drugs.
I've interviewed Apollo on this podcast as well, and his appetite for training was just unbelievable.
I've worked out with Apollo, and it's just so much fun to work out with him even as a he's 10 years post as Olympian life but he just still like has this complete love for training even though he's not at
that same level. And so this is it's this love for practice and it's this ability to practice
deliberately and to practice correctly and to appreciate that. And I just don't think you can get to an exceptional level without that.
Of course, my other favorite example of that is they are Tonsena,
greatest driver in the history of motorsport.
And when you talk to people who are around him who I've spoken with,
many people, I've obviously never knew him or speak to him,
but people who are around him, they all say the same thing,
which is just his attention to detail, with second to none.
When every other driver had left, he was still there,
he'd spend the night in the garage,
talking to the mechanics.
He knew as much about the car as they knew.
More than any other driver could know about the car.
So the two feet off each other,
I don't know which one's the chicken
and which one's the egg, truthfully.
In other words, I don't know if the best of the best
are the best because they do those things
or if because they're doing those things
because of something else that is making them the best.
Again, for me personally, I've never been at that level,
so, but I feel grateful that,
especially when it comes to something like archery,
like I enjoy the process.
I think I was saying to JR, we were talking yesterday,
we were out there shooting when you were working with Josh and I was like, I've never once stopped practice shooting
practice out of boredom. There's only two reasons I've ever stopped shooting in the past
two and a half years and it's either I just have a time constraint, like I have a phone
call, I got to get on or something, or I physically just break down. Like I can't hold
the bow any longer and my form is deteriorating so rapidly.
And I never thought of that until like the other day,
and I was like, man, that is, that's really fun.
Like that's so cool that there is something I can be,
that you can love that much.
Because you can't say that about a lot of things.
Most things.
Yeah, most things like you can get bored of,
you can only watch so much YouTube
before you're like, I'm kind of dumb with this. I can't watch one more Jimmy Kimmel video or whatever it is. I gotta
go do something else. I think those attributes are so important to just lifestyle. I mean, we're
talking right now about sport, but there's times, luckily I've got to the point where I work
independently. We have a business that me and my wife, I kind of do
the educational side and then there's a product side that she runs our e-commerce, but I still work
independently for a lot of people as a consultant and having something to do and being active in that
stuff, like that is part of a personality type. And it's part of a personality type, I believe,
of someone that gets successful in not just one thing,
but a magnitude of things,
because there's a lot of people out there
that want to be a successful business person,
or they want to have a successful business.
And there's times where people will come forward and say,
hey, if you do consulting or if you
do brand representation, what do you normally charge?
And we'll talk about that.
And then also, and they come forward.
And then I realize really quick, wait a minute, this is like being on the team where the
coach doesn't know what we're doing for practice.
No one knows when to get here.
And I just tell them really fast like, hey, this isn't the right team for me.
I'm here to, it's like having that person that wants to lift with you, but they never show up.
If you're someone that has drive, you just, that's not part of your equation.
That's a disruption and it's amazing to me how many people that have really good concepts,
have really good investors, and then they come forward and it's almost like if I look
at it as a sport, there's no task.
The task portion or the work portion of this thing which a lot of times
Have in a product reveal is that's like being at the world champs
but not having all the preparation going into that really
In the time that goes into that and it's start to see that bloom and essentially you see the fruit of that if you don't have it
It's just I don't know. It's not my DNA to want to be part of that.
And the amount of people that I know that fail because they are really good about the
start and they're really good about wanting to know how they want to finish, but they
kind of lack the in between.
It's just a destructive path and it's unfortunate because I've seen good
business concepts, I've seen good people, and I've seen good investors fail. And I normally see
it pretty quick where I'm like, hey, I'm out. There's another thing you've done that one can never
fully project this or convey this to people without them knowing you. But I do think there's still an ability to convey it somewhat.
And that is your podcast,
even in your opening line to the podcast says,
this is a podcast for all archers of all interest skill levels,
independent of equipment you use,
this out of the other thing.
And I want to come back and sort of sing the praises
of why your podcast is sort of one of the most important
podcasts for me.
But there's something that you do that I know a lot of people aspire to be able to do,
which is you are someone who can sell something, honestly.
And that's not to say, you're the same.
I aspire to it.
I don't know of truthfully.
I convey as much of it as you do, but I know like, I just know anytime I see something
on your site, I can just buy it. like I don't have to say I wonder if
Dudley's just selling this because he's getting a kickback on it that's bigger than if he was I think that's rare
That's just hard to do it's hard to do that because we're humans and I know we're even
Subconsciously we can be motivated by things we don't see but do you spend a lot of time
we can be motivated by things we don't see. But do you spend a lot of time thinking about the choices you make? Because I mean, I even told you this a while ago, but when I was buying a target
bow a year ago, I mean, I was torn between two companies and I tried both of the bows out and I
spent a lot of time and a lot of reps on each bow. And I mean, in the end, you reviewed them and there was the one that you went with is the one I went with.
I mean, in the end, it was just going to come down to that. So it was that leap of faith.
I probably even paid more for the bow. And that's the type of leap of faith I think you take when you trust what somebody has to say about something.
And of course, in my world, there's different types of products.
Oh, yeah. Yours is a million times worse than mine.
Yeah. There's more snake oil in my world than yours, for sure. that's there's different types of products. Oh yeah, yours is a million times worse than mine.
Yeah, there's more snake oil in my world than yours,
for sure.
I guess what I'm getting at in a long-winded way
is your credibility is enormous.
There's always people out, I know there's a lot of people
that just, they're incredibly jealous of the success
that you've had because your success has really been
as a teacher, something we haven't even talked about yet,
but we're going to.
But the reality of it is anybody who I've ever spoken with, who's got even a half decent
head on their shoulders and who's honest, they can say, look, I don't agree with everything
Dudley says, but he's the real deal and he is on it.
I mean, he is, he's credible.
You can take what he says to the bank.
How deliberate is that for you to cultivate that?
Well, it's super important.
I mean, it's really, really important.
I was really lucky that when I was 18 and about to turn pro,
I went to an archery trade show and I walked by a company
that I had just kind of started working with,
but I really wasn't working with them,
but I walked by and I saw them in the process of building their booth and I could tell they were late, and this is at
a trade show.
So if you've ever gone to any type of trade show, you know, you go in one or two days
before people build this thing.
So I walked in, and it was Matthews.
It was Matthews archery, and I could tell that they were late and that they were building
this new booth, and it was a brand new one.
They couldn't quite figure out how it all went together. So I walked up and I said,
hey, do you guys need help? And they said, yeah, so I jumped in there and I helped and ended up
building this booth up. And then the next day I was in there and just started talking about
product to different people and expressing my opinion. And then when that trade show was over,
since I was already there, I'm like, well, hey, I'll help you guys get out of here and I help
tear it down. That was just kind of what you do, right? That's just part of personality types,
especially the ones I like. And the next, I think it was on the Monday, I got a call from
the president of the company. And he just said, hey, I'd love to hire you as a sales rep.
You had unbelievable people skills and so and so and eventually I went to work for that archery
company at 18 and a half or 19 years old, which was very small, very few employees fast forward 10 years, ink 500 business twice, massive company.
We recruited the largest ambassador team in the history of archery, had the
largest payouts in tournament archery of anybody, and because I was internal in
that company, I saw a lot of our people that we were paying
to represent us make really poor judgment calls
that not only made themselves look bad,
but also at times made the company look bad,
and then also forced the company to make quick decisions
on them to where looking back, we were like, man,
did we really need to cut this guy loose?
Maybe we didn't, but at the time, for him to release confidential information, yeah,
it wasn't good.
So because I was young and saw people making mistakes that we were essentially hiring as pro staffers,
and I was a pro staffer as well.
And then also because I was a pro staffer
that worked for the company,
so I was directly employed by this company
that employed this massive pro staff.
So when I would go to an event,
I had rules on me that were 10 times everyone else's.
Like, if I made a poor call on someone's arrow, there was like a pro calling in saying like,
hey, what the heck, you guys are my sponsor and Dudley called my arrow out this weekend.
I thought it was in.
So I kind of started to have to deal with that stuff.
And because I dealt with all those little things, it just really started
to mold me on looking dot my eyes, crossing my teeth, understanding that your integrity is
the archery world is very small. And these bridges, there's only a few bridges. And when you burn
them, they're burned. That's it. So the company I work for now,
Hoyt, they were our biggest competitor. And when I worked at Matthews, and I had lots of opportunities
at sales conferences or product reveals or trade shows to talk poorly about the product, even
though they had a good product, I could have easily talked bad about them. I could have talked
bad about the employees because I really didn't know them. But in the end, I always told them, I'm like,
hey, this is a small world. There's only a few archery companies. I said, one day we might be
working together. Maybe who knows? And honestly, the day that I left Matthews, the first company
that called me was our biggest competitor. They're like, is it true you're not with Matthews? Yes, it is.
We would like to talk.
And that was very clear to me that me being straightforward
and truthful all the time, especially owning up
to when I make mistakes and publicly telling everybody
about when I make a mistake about this or that.
I think it's just critical.
And I don't work with products. I don't like 100%.
How do you handle it when, let's say you're at math user, you're now at Hoyt, and there's
a product that comes along and you don't like a piece of it. I mean, I guess maybe now
it's different because of who you are. You alone are a force of nature within the archery
world. But before you were the John Dudley, how did
you sort of handle that gap between this is something I'm not happy with guys like I can't
go out and sell this product and them say, Hey man, like do your job.
Well, there's two things to that. One is if I really didn't like it, I can always shout
what I shot last year. The good thing is, they've all trusted me enough to where
I'm normally shooting stuff three to six months
before anyone else anyway, and I normally know about it
a year before.
And you're putting feedback into it.
Oh yeah, no question.
But the other thing is, when stuff comes out,
there's times where competitors have brought out products
that are definitely
inferior to ones that I like.
The bottom line is you don't talk about what other people do bad.
You don't talk about what you do bad, you talk about what you do right, or you talk about
what you do better.
And that's how it always was.
When I would go up and have these PR press releases in front of the media,
I would be going up and talking about what we had at Matthews.
That was better than anybody else.
I didn't have to say these guys are five feet slower per second.
These guys have one inch shorter brace height.
This bow has seven percent more vibration in it.
What I would do is be like, we have 7% less vibration than
some of the models on the market. We've got a more generous brace height. We come in at
five feet per second faster. There's bow shoots a lot smoother in the hand. For me, I always
feel like if you focus on either what you're doing right, what your companies doing right, or what you want to do right.
You're just going down a super shady road to pick on the things that people might not be doing
right at that time. And if it's a product that I feel isn't right, you're just not going to see
me do a review about it. I'm not going to do a review to say it's poor. All I'm going to do is
about it. I'm not going to do a review to say it's poor. All I'm going to do is find another product to distract your attention to something that is a better option for you.
Well, it's great because, again, now you are at the point where you have the gravitas that
you can just sort of curate what is the best. And then that makes life a lot easier for people
like me. And I talk about this a lot on your podcast, but there's
10 different turns of complete luck that just allowed me to, from the day I got my first bow,
to be sort of plugged in straight from JR right into your YouTube channel and all of your videos.
And by extension, then the methodology, which sort of leads me to my next question,
when did it become clear to you that you had an act for teaching, which a lot of people who
are exceptional at the craft are actually not the best teachers at it.
So there's a very rare overlap between people who are in, say, the top one percent of doing
something and then the top one percent of teaching. That's not a huge overlap.
I don't really know how that came to be. I think some of its personality. I mean, I'm a good PR
person. I like communicating with people. I think I'm easy to engage with. So I think that naturally
helps any teacher or any coach. Even donkeys.
I mean, I've seen you interact with standing donkeys.
I was debating whether you're gonna release that to your followers.
But I'm hoping by the time this podcast has come out,
the donkey video is already out,
and we will just be linking to it through this podcast.
Okay.
It might be.
But I've also been really fortunate
to be around really good coaches too,
that did a great job of leading by example of teaching.
And like I said, I've always thrived
to learn how to do stuff better.
It was that way, even about weightlifting.
Like earlier today, I was at
Frank's Ainshaus. He's a former Mr. Olympia. And Frank and I have been friends a long time.
We met because he loved archery and him and Arnold shot archery as their R&R during
their kind of golden era bodybuilding, right? And so we met at an Arnold classic and him and I
hit it off and he kind of asked for archery lessons and I said, yeah sure. And what
was funny is he said, well, I'm doing a bodybuilding or I'm doing a training seminar
up at a gym and manyapolis. So he said, what I might do is rent a car. And I said,
actually, I'll, if I can sit in your class, I'd love to drive up. So I went up and
sat into his class. And I saw how he delivered. And I'm like your class, I'd love to drive up. So I went up and sat into his class.
And I saw how he delivered and I'm like, man,
I said, you have such a really cool presentation technique.
And then he just said, well, up until the last three years
of my bodybuilding career, I had to have a job as a teacher.
He's like, that's what I do.
And he was perfect at it.
So he gave me pointers about delivery and how to put things
in front of people to where they can see it and understand it, or you can express it
and understand it. Or also how you can, if you're really good at what you're talking about,
you can find a way pretty fast to relate it to something that you know the person you're coaching also likes.
So I didn't know a lot about you. I knew a few details.
I knew you're in F1, I knew that, I knew you're in a swimming biking.
Obviously when I worked with Jocco, I knew Jocco's background is a seal.
So when I explain certain things, I might not be the best at relating it
exactly of how you do it within your field, but I can give you just enough to where all of a sudden
hopefully you grasp what it is I'm saying just in case I'm talking on a level that's like outside
of your world. When we talked about the speed of your shot execution, I told you, I said,
you're making a great shot, but you're making your shot at a very accelerated pace. And so I told you,
it's a lot like if you have a group of people in a car and I say, hey, let's go 100 miles an hour, but I don't want anyone in the car to know that you did it.
I said, you would throttle at a pace
to where you were continuing gradual
and you would be there,
but you wouldn't be there with snapping everyone's
next backwards.
And I said, right now with your release,
you're putting your finger on the trigger
and you're wanting this shot to happen so fast,
even though you're executing it properly, you're executing it too aggressively.
So I said, I want you to make this happen without letting anyone know that it's happening.
And then the next shot, I'm like, dude, that's it. And then right away, I thought, oh, okay.
I said, how much did that relate to you and your car simulator? And you're like, oh, okay, I said, how much did that relate to you and your car simulator and you're like, oh, instantly, it clicked.
Well, not only that, I think the very, very first thing,
the very first insight was about the elbow position.
We talked about this quite a bit on your podcast
and you put a video together that's really nice
that explains this and I know that many people listening to this
aren't, and a lot of stuff won't make sense but the example the point you were making was look
right now here with your hand that's in the back your release hand the elbow is
probably about five to eight degrees off where it need to be rotational degrees so
very little grossly looks like it's in the right spot, but at that angle, your
lats and deltoids and biceps are doing the work when you have to release the shot.
And you said, I want you to put your elbow here.
And that felt like a very unnatural position to me, even though it was only 5, 7 degrees
back.
It was like two inches, like looking from the back, it was like two inches.
It's so subtle,
but you said now I'm putting you in this position and I want you to notice all of a sudden your
bicep is totally relaxed, your lats totally relaxed, and now all of the stress of holding that
bow and that release is on your rhomboids, which is a tiny little muscle. And now you're going to
release this arrow just contracting those
rhomboids, which by the way we're partially being contracted before, but it was
being dwarfed by the larger muscles. And you said, and this was what really
amazed me was you said, think about how if you are driving a car, you can easily
use your quads, glutes, and hamstrings to move between the throttle and the brake.
But wouldn't it be more effective if you could just sort of use the heel and the toe going
back and forth in the intrinsic muscles of the foot and maybe a little bit of the calf
and the anterior compartment of the leg?
Which of course is exactly how you drive.
You drive with finesse.
You drive using the smallest muscles
possible and not stomping in a binary fashion where it's all or none, but
having that gradation of the difference between a 10 pedal and a 7 pedal.
And there's a big difference between a 10 break and a 7 break.
Yeah, I think that just impressed me and I won. I got it immediately.
I mean, it just spoke to me, but too, I was like,
you don't even know anything about driving. Like, you're not obsessive about race car driving.
It was very interesting to me that you picked that up, and I guess I never realized
that you've been thinking about this so much, because I know you've done the same with Jocco. Like,
Jocco has talked to me about first time you told told them how to shoot, like you immediately related it to a rifle
because you know he's got more experience shooting a rifle than virtually anybody and you could
immediately put something in those terms and within minutes, Jaco's like getting something that
he just probably wouldn't have got for a longer period of time if you weren't able to connect it to him.
I don't know, I just think I've just always been impressed by that. I think your generosity when it comes to teaching is really amazing. To me, archery is a beautiful
sport. It's one of those sports like tennis where you can do it for a long time. It's not
like football. The reality of it is if you'd gone to college and you'd played football,
you wouldn't be playing football today. In fact, you might not be doing anything to it.
I might not be in archery today, yeah.
And I really hope that my kids get into it because everything you said about it, this is
an idea, this flow state, all of these things are beautiful. You never want to hunt an animal
in your life, which was, I certainly had no intention of hunting when I started. It teaches
you a lot about yourself and it is a beautiful metaphor for life in so many ways.
This ability to understand that the only arrow
you have control over is the one that's still in your quiver.
You can't turn back time, that's such an explicit thing.
Your ability to teach this sport is,
I think somebody could literally study your videos
and get 60 to 70% of the total theoretical benefit
that one could get having a great coach standing over their shoulder, which is hard to
believe when you consider how nuanced the sport is.
I mean, the list goes on and on, but the number of students that I have that I've worked
with less than a dozen times that are shooting at a level that, back when I competed, there
were such a small percentage of shooters that were even at that level.
You get someone like Jocco, worked with them for a day, coach a little bit through the
phone, game a little bit of practice, he showed up here, I wouldn't guess a lot, maybe
a few times, and then took him to his first tournament style event in July.
We went to Big Sky, and I let him set up a course with me. I actually built a course that some of
our followers were shooting, and I asked Shaka, I said, you want to come out and set this course,
because I said, I'll teach you why I'm building the course this way and what you'll learn from every
shot. And he's like, absolutely. So we went out,
I talked to him, told him all about different techniques, what you do, what people that lay a
course out do to trick you and so forth like that. And he went out there and the day before the
real shoot started, I went up with Jocco and another seal buddy of ours Trevor and Sharon my wife and I said let's go up and shoot
we won't shoot from like the competition stake we'll move closer and I said because I just want to
talk you through something so after we did that we shot probably 20 or 30 targets shooting pretty
close then also a little bit further back then then further back, and I'm like,
hey, this one is a bad, you want to try this one from this day? And he's like, yeah, no problem.
And then the next day we show up, and I had a private event where people had booked private
shooting times to shoot with me and some of my VIP friends that I had there. And so my intention
was to shoot four or five targets with each of those groups.
So the very first group that I shot with was Jocco and another mutual friend of ours,
Andy and the people that had signed up. So I shot five targets with them. Jocco was
hitting all the targets and he was shooting them from the proper stake, which was that course that I laid out averaged 71 yards.
It was super technical, super hard, and I told people, the stake is the hardest shot here.
You're always welcome to walk closer.
There's no score cards here.
This is kind of a learning event.
And I got to the end and I remember asked
and jockele, I'm like, how'd you do?
He's like, I miss one target and he knew exactly why.
He knew exactly why.
And I said, dude, that is unbelievable for you to be shooting
at best if he was adding up his arrows to what I would do
in a day training when I was serious about it. He might have shot
three of my training days, right? And to be able to learn the techniques and the basics and be
set up that perfectly with your equipment and then to have the understanding of what you need to do,
it's amazing, but I really feel like it's a necessity, not only to archery, but to any sport.
For people to recognize the fact that the fundamentals is what makes people good at things.
And when people are good at things, they stay involved.
So, I've always said, like, my boy here, he had some video games and stuff that he played in high school and normally for Christmas
He'd ask for video games and I noticed really quick that
Video games that he played all the time were the ones that he was good at the ones that he didn't win
And the ones that were like failed
Those ones just went back in the drawer and they never got
played again and it's the same way. And as parents, especially now, I look at any kids
and I'm like, what you need to do is you need to make this fun and you need to make sure
that they're doing well at it a lot so that they stay involved with it.
But that wasn't necessarily the case for you. I mean, that to me is where,
but I was also older, yet I remember.
So do you think that that's sort of what you're just
describing is what's necessary when you're dealing with
kids that are when their early teens are preteens?
Preteens for sure.
Like yourself, you're nerded out right now with archery, right?
And you really want your kids to maybe be involved.
So if they said, hey, I want to shoot. It's highly likely that you would probably be a little bit
more intense with that practice than what I would say is get the biggest bulls
I possible, put one target that's 10 yards away, even if you're shooting it 70
or 80 and let them shoot at 10 yards all the time and just say, okay, you
shoot for the gold and I'm going to shoot for the gold. And then they're going to hit
9 out of 10 and they're always going to be beaten dad, right? And they're going to like
that. When I started archery, part of the reason why I didn't like it, but also didn't
get super serious about it is because my arrows were all the ones that my dad had lost,
bent, or picked up in the lost and found bucket at the archery range. So I was just shooting
a smorgasbord of arrows and getting a smorgasbord to results down on the paper. So it's amazing
to me that I really stuck with it because I probably would have been more infatuated
with it. And honestly, I probably looking back because naturally, I think you said it
the other day, I went out and you made a shot and it was super peaceful in the morning.
And you made this shot and it was like, don't. And you go, do you think there's something
primal about that sound? And I said, yeah, absolutely. Like,
that is a primal sound. And you were excited about that. You
had that excitement. I feel like there could easily have been a
good chance that me turning into this punk kid, it might not have ever happened if I would
have really got into like going to an archery range with my dad. If I would have been good
at it, really liked it, like that could have been my thing. So I don't really know, but I think
that's important for, especially for me, working with kids now, and I'm pretty limited on who I work with like yourself. But
when I do work with people, I tell parents all the time, I'm like, you can't acclimate
your kid to as soon as he shoots looking at you for you to tell him what the score is.
I'm like, that is a really bad training thing for you to do because I'm like, you're imprinting your
result. Him immediately wanting your feedback for whether he hit or missed or
she. And I just think it can't be about that. I tell the parents, regardless of
what your kids score, watch them on the shooting line and tell them when they're
shooting good or tell them when they're shooting good or tell
them when they might need to make technique changes. If they're, if maybe they're not executing
properly, I think finding that balance, I think it really helps not only the kid, but I think
it helps the sport, all sports, because I think people will be involved in it more when they are
that way. Let's pivot a little bit to hunting because it's hard to talk about archery
without talking about this extension of archery,
which is hunting using the tools of archery.
And as I talked about in some length,
I guess, on your podcast, when I got into archery,
it was purely for the desire to shoot paper targets
and learn a new skill that would meet the Peter IT
criteria of you could spend
your entire life trying to get the last 20% of value that will be so incremental.
No one will notice but you which gave you a huge kick.
But eventually I did decide to go out and hunt and it has changed my relationship with
archery for reasons you've already somewhat alluded to.
First of all, the stakes are much higher now.
So now, every time I miss a shot on a paper target, it hurts a little more. I imagine for a moment,
any one of these shots I take could be a shot in the field against an animal. And if I miss that shot
and I injure that animal non-fatally or injure that animal or cause that animal to suffer,
I've made a mistake and that of course is exactly
what got me interested in the sport in the first place
was that concept even though I never wanted to apply it
to hunting if that makes sense.
You've spoken a lot, in fact, I think that when you and Joe
Rogan have spoken about hunting on his podcast,
which you've probably been on Rogan like five times
or something, I've heard every one of those podcasts
that are super enjoyable. I think heard every one of those podcasts. They're super enjoyable.
I think you and Joe have some of the best back and forth on this because I mean, one,
I just, I think Joe is a really smart human being and he's always good at seeing sort
of both sides of every discussion.
So it's not what a lot of people might expect, which is two knucklehead bros talking about
how hunting is the best thing in the world.
And anybody who doesn't like hunting is a hippie or something.
It's not at all like that, right?
It's a very nuanced discussion.
So one of the things that you've often alluded to is the in and the yang of this sort of
tension that exists.
So I've been thinking about how to talk about this.
And there's so much in my mind around this.
But I'll start with just maybe explain to someone
who's listening to this, who's never hunted,
who's never thought much about it one way or the other,
which is effectively where I was two years ago.
I'd never really given it a thought.
How does hunting fit into conservation?
Like what does it mean to hunt?
And who decides what animals get to be hunted
and when and in what quantity.
Is it the Wild West?
Anyone just go shoot anything they want? How does this whole thing work?
No. So each state has department of natural resources or department of game and fish.
They do a lot of studies on where that species is at and what the population numbers are at. And with that, they also decide how many need to be taken to keep that herd in proper
management.
And then with that, they sell those tags and non-residents often pay a multiplier more
than the residents. And those funds end up going back into conservation to a magnitude
of programs. I mean, if you look at national parks that you have, or if you go into a lot
of the public wildlife areas that we have in Iowa, you'll see sunflowers planted, CRP grasses, you'll see row crop that's planted in there in certain times.
Obviously, there's waterways with fish and so forth in there.
And the money's from fishing licenses, that's what pays to restock those ponds or dredge those out
or put them in those wetland programs, the
sunflowers and stuff that I talked about.
That's probably an allocation that came from the peasant tags or the upland game tags.
So a lot of that stuff that they get is to put back in and to also be able to employ
those game wardens to be out there policing that and checking people's tags and making sure they're not overtaking their quotas and
etc etc so
there really is a check and balance system that's out there and I totally get it when
Earlier today I was down on the beach cruising around on a scooter that I was renting for whatever it is, a dollar every 10 minutes or whatever, and
cruising around down there on the beach. I might have seen
one person's cat in a seagull. Well, I saw a lot of seagulls.
So it would be totally understandable for me to see that person's side of the story to say, why do you need to shoot a deer?
Why do you need to shoot a deer? Why do you need to shoot an elk? The difference is you go to a place like Iowa, for example,
where I'm at, where every year, well Wisconsin I knew, when I lived in Wisconsin I knew that. So
every year I think there was about 750,000 deer that were shot. But that
was every year and it had to be. But there was still millions and millions of dollars paid
out every year for insurance claims for deer collisions with vehicles and six deaths a
year on average. Oftentimes more, I think it's hundreds of deaths
nationwide a year for animal collisions.
And this is...
We will put together in our show notes,
the exact numbers, but my recollection is it's a little
over a million collisions a year between deer...
Nationally.
Nationally.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
...between deer and automobile in the United States.
About a million, too two if my memory especially
Frankly, it's about a hundred thousand collisions a month between deer and automobiles nationwide and
The dollar amount of that is about four or five billion was it? I can be wrong
I'll put the numbers in here, but it's yeah, that would be great. It's higher than I
Recall sort of higher than I would have guessed mm-hmm
My wife she's from England. she's from just North of Liverpool and when we met we kind of talked a little bit about hunting
and she was awesome with the fact that I told her I'm like, hey, I get it over here when I'm in Europe.
I wouldn't hunt deer over here, there aren't any. I'm a hunter and all I would say is we need to find a way to get your numbers up like let's get your numbers up as a hunter
I would love to get the numbers healthier so that yeah
Maybe there is an opportunity to regulate down the road. I don't want them to go away
I don't want them to decline that's really not what we want when we look at the numbers of white-tail deer
Wild turkeys elk all those things. These are based on
programs that have been probably the boar and the wild pigs might be some of the most destructive
animals. Oh, they are the most. Yeah, they're definitely, you can't keep up with their numbers,
their numbers are staggering. If you look at the life cycle of one female pig and how many pigs
she could be a multiplier of, it will blow your mind. And
you can't keep up with it.
Right. Very short gestation cycle, very quick with the high litter count and with a high
survival of litter. Yeah. And then they're also her fuller already breeding within six months.
Once they're born, they could potentially breed again in six months, right? So yeah, it's
different. I told her I said, when you come to the stage,
you might see things a little different,
which yeah, once she came to the stage,
she realized there's 20 deer a night in our garden.
We can't grow food fast enough to eat
because the deer eat it every night.
I don't know if you were here when she was talking about it
when we were having dinner tonight,
we were getting a much stuff right in.
She was saying to your son, she's like, God, like, what a dream it would be
to actually be able to grow all of our own vegetables,
but it's like you just can't do it where you live
because the deer are gonna smoke them.
Yeah, they would, so I get it.
But I also feel like we feel two freezers a year
with animals that I train for all year, buy a tag, put money back into
the natural resources, shoot this deer, process it, put it in my freezer, and I know everything
about it.
I didn't provide and I guess support commercial farming.
I didn't do that, which I feel pretty good about.
I know exactly where it came from. I know who touched it. Start to finish. And also it
just, I don't know, it means more to me. Part of the reason why I'm passionate
about cooking is because I'm passionate about, I'm passionate about taking
something I've put a lot of work into and finishing it by serving it to people that are
important to me. And if we waste it and throw it away, to me, it's, there's a lot of hard work
that went in that. If I get an elk, that means I've lifted weights all year, prepping for that time.
I've shot my bow, I've worked on my equipment, I've probably bought equipment, so I've invested.
I've shot my bow, I've worked on my equipment, I've probably bought equipment so I've invested,
I've went out and then I put on the miles.
Like last year, I think,
I think when we shot our first L,
I had hunted with my buddy Andy,
who I talked about earlier.
We started hunting, I think August 24th
and then we shot his bowl on 9-11.
And I think at that time,
between the two of us we had put I think it was somewhere
around 200 to 250 miles on the ground on our GPS is before we got that shot and I mean it was
such a reward and then to break this whole thing down package it it all up, pack it out, three mile pack out.
How many trips?
It took three of us two trips.
Well, how many pounds of meat?
Heck if I know a lot.
I mean, easily 500, right?
Yeah, yeah, quite a bit.
And then through that, we've used it for, and then I shot a bowl a few days later.
I took my bowl, took the prime cuts, took them home, have used those on my family,
took all the trim, actually grounded into burger because I knew I was going to be having that event
in big sky, whereas going to be at that big archery tournament. And we really wanted to have a
community thank you to the people that follow us. So I think Sharon packed and cooked over the course of a few days, close to 500 elk
burgers at that place that we gave out to people for free. And every person that was like,
that's the best burger I've ever eaten. I thought every freaking mile that we packed that
sucker out of there was, he was totally worth it.
That's a very remarkable and special experience, which we talked about a little bit on your show
when I was in Hawaii and the Axis deer,
which are very invasive there.
Axis deer, just for you folks listening to this
are a beautiful, beautiful deer.
Probably when you think of a deer,
I mean, at least when I always thought of Bambi,
it was really an Axis deer,
it's a brown deer with the white spots.
And they're, I mean, they're simply gorgeous, actually.
I've never seen a prettier animal in nature,
but they're not native to the United States.
They evolved in India, and they evolved
with only one natural predator, which was the tiger,
and there's few things that will sharpen your skills
of evading than a tiger.
So these animals evolved to have remarkable vision, not color vision,
but remarkable vision. They can basically see things in frames per second we can't. Their
sense of smell is pretter natural and their hearing is from another planet.
And their muscle twitches imagine being able to recruit any type of cornerback or wingback
or a half back with that kind of muscle twitch factor.
Yeah, there are an animal that twitches so much that even long after it's dead, it's
still twitching like crazy.
Yeah, they're so fast.
And then it was brought to the United States or at least brought to Hawaii maybe 120, 150
years ago, which is a speck of time in terms of evolution.
So as far as it's concerned, the tiger is still what it is built to evade, and then you've
got clowns like us trying to track it down and such.
In the process, because it has no predator in the entire state, it has multiplied at a
rate that on the three islands in which it's present, it outnumbers people by anywhere
from two to 1 to
10 to 1.
And it's basically destroyed the land, such that now the livestock don't have what they
have.
So the government of Hawaii is basically said, look, we've got to get rid of this animal
entirely.
And so the compromise is to allow it to be hunted in an ethical way rather than just a wholesale
slaughter, which is some really interesting
stories about that, which maybe for another time.
But point I wanted to make was the people of Hawaii know this.
Everybody I spoke with who worked at the hotel or elsewhere in the city, they understood
that this is a problem, this animal's a pest.
And when I remember the first day I went hunting there and I brought back a deer and I took it to
the restaurant there and I met with the chef and we became friends and she cooked it up for our
family and for the restaurant staff and she said, this is the first time I've ever been able to cook
an axis deer. She's from Hawaii. She lives there but she'd never cooked it before. She'd never had
someone bring her mind blowing. Yeah, it's mind. Well, because it's not commercially available, right?
Like if you don't know somebody who's hunting it, you're not going to get it. You can't go to a store and buy it.
And then fast forward a couple days, we got a much larger animal and it was enough to be able to
feed all the staff of the restaurant. This is a smaller scale version of what you were talking about.
But what a really special feeling to be able to say, this is a circle of life here. This is a beautiful animal,
but it's now out of balance with our environment.
And this is a little part that we can do
to bring it back into balance and in the process
that those amino acids, that carbon,
that nitrogen is gonna come back into the people
who live here, who have lived here,
and who are not working here.
So I just don't think I would have ever understood that.
If someone tried to explain this to me five years ago, I think I could have intellectually
understood it, but I don't think I could have viscerally or emotionally understood it.
And maybe someone listening to this now who hasn't done it will feel the same way, but
I'm certainly will.
It's an impossible thing.
You can try your best to talk about it in a way that where people will at least embrace the idea of it and they'll be curious about it in a way that where people at least embrace the idea of it and they'll
be curious about it. I don't know if I've ever been with someone that decided to
pursue it and see what it was really about and then they did it and then said I
didn't like anything about that. Most people at Trigger something to where
they just end up saying it was so much different.
I feel so much differently about food than I'm buying in a store. I kind of want to ask them like
what it came from, what it was like. And you just realize you're missing out on this huge, huge piece
of what's weird is think of the wrappers we read especially you But I walked in everything we're eating were label readers what you should be you should be
But people don't read they don't read that on red meat or chicken
I mean they might be like well. I want organic chickens. I don't want any type of
Stereoid in my turkeys or whatever
But other than that,
there's not a lot more questions asked besides that.
You know, it's funny,
I actually had the privilege, I guess, to go
and actually see a place where the cattle were slaughtered.
And this is considered about one of the most humane places
it can be done.
I don't want to tell necessarily where,
because this is such a polarizing topic I understand.
And it's true, as far as cows being commercially raised and allowed to eat grass and not
given hormones and not given antibiotics, it's as about as healthy as it gets.
But you couldn't help but be struck with the stress that the animals were under when it
came time to be slaughtered.
Cows might not be the sharpest tools in the shed, but they know that something's wrong. When they're walking through this sort of steel barricade that's funneling them and getting
narrower and narrower and narrower to a point where they're being slaughtered, one, you know,
they're not truly wild animals still. They haven't really lived. We could debate the consciousness
of animals all day long, but even abs and consciousness, I still think an animal has, there's different qualities of life they can be given.
That experience coupled with actually seeing what a wild animal looks like and watching
how if you can be an exceptional archer or hunter, you know, it's for using a gun, if you
can end that animal's life without its suffering and it's basically lived for four years
in perfect nature, eating exactly what it's supposed to its suffering, and it's basically lived for four years in
perfect nature, eating exactly what it's supposed to be eating, behaving and moving exactly
what it was supposed to move, and then in a moment its life ended, it just strikes me
as the single most ethical and healthy way you can consume that.
And what you said a moment ago really resonates when I got back from my very first hunting
trip, I simply, I didn't know what to eat when I was at restaurants.
Like when I went out and didn't have control
over what kind of meat was being served,
it was very difficult for me to just order a steak off the menu.
In fact, I really lost my taste for it
because I was like, ah, you can just sort of,
maybe of course it was maybe all in my mind,
but I could almost just taste the unhealthiness of like what that animal lived like.
So paradoxically, and it was a long-winded way of saying this, paradoxically, it gave me
a greater appreciation for the people who oppose the consumption of meat based on the ethical
treatment of the animal, which is odd, right?
You wouldn't think that hunting would make you more compassionate
and more considerate of how the animal is treated. But for me, it has done that. And for many
people, I know it's the same for you. I know it's the same for many of my other friends in
this world. That's exactly the effect it's had.
Yeah, there's so many things that hunting has showed me in nature that I would have never,
ever got to experience just timeless
things.
I mean, it's kind of like when you watch Forrest Gump and he was making that run back and
forth across the US and they kept showing these parts of America that were just breathtakingly
beautiful.
And a lot of people just take for granted some of that scenery, some of that nature and
how amazing it was.
But being an outdoors person, I see that stuff a lot.
And I don't take it for granted.
It's something to where I want to go back every day.
I want to see it all the time.
And more importantly, for me now, is I see that first moment when someone goes out
and actually bohunts for the first time and makes a shot and kind of sees it and watches
the breakdown and puts in the effort to get it out of there and then you kind of grill
their first piece. It's like as soon as you see them take it, you can see in their
face, wow, this is the most meaningful meal that I've ever done. That is what Thanksgiving
should really be. That's kind of what it was, is when everyone came together with this
group effort to have this big feast. And that's kind of what digs out of you, primarily
when you go out and have your first
hunt experience with people that are close and then all of a sudden you cook it for the
first time and give it to your family and explain to your kids where it came from and all
those little aspects that you were telling you did, I think all that just plays into being
more meaningful.
Yeah, I'd be talked about this a lot on your podcast
so I won't repeat it and we'll link to that
so people can go back and hear it
because I think we had a lot to say about it.
And I don't think I said this on the podcast
which is why I repeat it now.
One of our guides in Hawaii, Uka,
who's all of those guys are like they're magical,
they're like sorcerers to me, you know.
They definitely have a sense that the rest of us that certainly I don't have
When my daughter was there when I shot that buck
He was amazing like he was amazing the way he talked to her
My knowledge uca doesn't have kids. I don't know that piece but that much time around 10 year old girls let alone, right?
I in fact, I'm pretty sure he didn't because at one point when Mike and I went off to hike, Uca and Olivia went off and he let her drive the Polaris up and down the hills.
I was like, oh my god, how they not die.
But I remember him saying to her, he's like, he looked at her really seriously and he goes,
you know, this is in your blood, right?
And she was like, kind of looked at him like, what do you mean?
And he goes, like, he said, you are a hunter.
You wouldn't be here, Olivia, if this wasn't a part of who you are.
And she really got that.
He really set it in such a profound way.
I knew what he meant immediately, and I think it took her one more repetition to do so.
But then she got it. She got it, which was, yeah, there was a day when you didn't go to the grocery store.
Like, there was a day, and it was tens of thousands of years ago, or even thousands of years ago,
when this was the only way
you had to be able to do this on some level.
And the pride with which he was able to speak about that
to her and share it with her.
I just thought it was the lighted she was there
and couldn't imagine waiting to do it again.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Well, if you look back to how long ago was it really when
on that island where you could go to a grocery store and buy food?
I mean if you go there are people that are still there now, especially on islands like they're less populated where they may never have
I know people there that subside exclusively on what they hunt and fish exactly. Yeah. Well, I get it
I get when people don't understand it
Have you ever been confronted harshly? Have you ever found yourself in a situation where there's been a really harsh confrontation when someone is really just sort of aggressively
Saying John, how dare you do this. This is an awful thing that you do.
Hmm. Yeah, I've had a few people that have been pretty disgruntled mainly in Europe, but sometimes I feel like
It would be like me trying to talk with Jocco
deeply about what happens in war. Even if I have a variance or disagreeance with it,
we're not even on the same field for that. I don't feel like I really would have a right
to. And he probably, with me being a friend, maybe he would go a little bit in the detail,
but all I can do is just say,
I see your point, you're somewhere where
just isn't gonna be clear to you.
And I think that's the best way really to address it.
I tell the hunting community a lot.
We don't really wanna provoke.
You kinda don't wanna poke the sleeping bear,
so to speak, because there's a lot of people
that'll never hear podcasts like this,
there's a lot of people that'll never hear podcasts like this.
There's a lot of people that will never understand the necessity behind it.
We talked earlier about Frank Zane, like Frank's a zen of a dude as you could ever get.
He's totally zen.
But I remember we were talking one time because he's,
he's really into meditation.
They love animals.
They rescue animals.
And we were kind of talking about the hunting.
And he just said, yeah, he has a, they hunted a lot.
And I don't know, I just, he's like, I'm okay with it,
but I just, however he said it, he was being cordial,
but I could tell he would have no interest in doing it.
And he kind of deep down, he didn't like,
what could easily be portrayed as like cruelty to animal
shooting him. And what's crazy is the night that we drove home from Minneapolis to my house. We freaking smoked a
deer. I was driving like a Hyundai accent and I've smacked this deer and it bounced off the hood and off the windshield
and he was like, holy shit, how's the deer?
Is it okay?
Are you okay?
Are we okay?
And so he was like, oh my God, and I just said,
yeah, it's really bad.
I said that it's really bad around here this time of year
and then I turn on the lights
and we might have seen another two or three
Before we got back to my house and he was just like I can't believe we hit a deer
I can't believe there's so many deer and so I told him like hey man when I tell you we need to shoot deer or I went out and shot a
Deer this is it's something that needs to happen and
And he told me he's like yeah, yeah, honestly, he goes,
honestly, he goes, that was crazy.
He said, obviously, there's too many.
So he had a very visual wake up call.
Some people will never have that.
And as a hunting community, the best thing we can do
is realize that we need to speak positively when we have an
opportunity and kind of going back to what I said before. The easy route is to talk negative and
to talk bad about what the opposing people have, whether in what we should be doing is just
talking positive about what we have and we have a very sustainable and in my opinion, ethical way of feeding ourselves.
And we welcome people to it.
I know it's not for everybody,
but I think the people that do come here,
I think they find a different meaning to eating
and it's made me eat cleaner.
It's honestly made me eat less junk
and it makes me more focused on supporting what our
environment puts in front of us more so than what some type of refinery does or a chemical
does.
Yeah, I would agree with all of that, John.
And as we kind of wrap up here, I just, I want to thank you very much for the incredible work you've
done almost single-handedly.
You have a team with you and you couldn't do what you do without them.
I know that, but you really are kind of changing, I think, forever the way this sport is taught.
I feel so blessed to be in this point where I can be in this complete sink, this back and forth balance between
the pursuit of excellence within the sport of archery and how it feeds into this completely
separate thing called hunting, which by the way is about 1% taking a shot and 99% all
of the other stuff we didn't even talk about.
Oh yeah.
But we've talked about it a lot on your podcast,
spotting animals, stalking animals,
all of the strategy that goes into it,
all the physical, the grueling physical stuff,
depending on the terrain that you choose.
Guy, I just don't think this sport for me personally
would be nearly as enjoyable
if it didn't have the educational component
that you've single-handedly provided.
So I feel like if I'd had someone like you that could have taught me the equivalent of
what you're teaching me in archery and any of the other things I'd done, I can't imagine
how good I could have been in those things.
So I thank you on behalf of a lot of people.
And my hope is that if even one person listening to this, and I suspect there'll be a heck
of a lot more than one, but if even one person listening to this, and I suspect there'll be a heck of a lot more than one, but if even one person listening to this considers this the opportunity to go
down to their local bow shop, check out a bow, take an archery class, maybe buy a bow,
start watching school and knock, and all of your stuff on, it's knock on archery then.
For the YouTube channel.
For the YouTube channel.
Yeah.
On Instagram, it's knock on TV, and on the Instagram if you go to my IG TV
The knock on TV IG TV. I have the school knock the 12-week
Sessions most of those are all under 15 minutes. I think yeah, you can do that whole thing in less almost two hours
Yeah, and it'll pave the way for you to have really good fundamentals and basics.
It's actually beyond basics. We're going to link to this so much. In fact, what we'll probably do,
John, is even before we put up the show notes, we'll send it to you to look over and make sure you
like the order in which we've laid it out so that anybody who says, hey, I want to get started, we will curate every
link in order that you would suggest people go to.
And I mean, I'm already looking forward to school and knock again in January.
It's an unbelievable curriculum you've put together.
And I think you're only at the beginning of what you're the potential of.
I mean, again, we've talked about cooking, we've talked about all of this stuff we could do
around exercise and conditioning with respect to this stuff. So anyway, man, thank you
for everything, both on a personal level, but also just on behalf of all of those of us
that benefit so greatly from your wisdom and generosity.
Oh, yeah, man. Thanks a lot. Thanks for having me, too, for sure. First of many.
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