The Ryan Hanley Show - World Champion MMA Fighter Diagnosed with MS Did This Instead of Quitting | Alberto Crane
Episode Date: March 27, 2026Join 15,000+ leaders and become undeniable: https://ryanhanley.com/subscribeWatch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/nMAx8-9DswYAlberto Crane was the first American to earn a BJJ black belt from Gracie Barr...a. He fought in the UFC. Won world championships. Built Legacy Jiu-Jitsu into a 25-year institution.Then came the MS diagnosis.Most people would have stopped. Alberto went on a world tour.In this episode, we talk about what getting punched in the face teaches you about leadership, why 3 years of losing made Alberto unstoppable, the power of the mantra "I believe in my technique," and why your rough edges are features, not bugs.His new book "All In: Lessons On and Off the Mat" is out now.📖 Get the book: https://amzn.to/3PBPMID🥋 Legacy BJJ: https://legacybjj.com🏋️ TACFIT: https://tacfit.com📸 Alberto's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/albertocrane/🌐 Alberto's website: https://www.albertocrane.com/✅ Subscribe to Finding Peak: https://ryanhanley.com/subscribe🎙️ More episodes: https://ryanhanley.com/podcastThis show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Most men lived lives of quiet desperation, you know, never really taking that jump,
in that risk.
I followed my dreams.
I was 23 and I started my school.
I had a big credit card bill.
I had a credit card limit of 20,000.
I lived on that, you know, but I went all in.
You know, like I realized most people never do that in their lives going for,
showing up, doing it, the resilience of everything of going through it.
I keep showing up no matter what, agnosed with multiple sclerosis.
I don't act like I'm a victim.
I figure out the solution.
What does a man do when the world tells him he's finished?
When he loses his first 13 world-class competitions in a row,
when a doctor's diagnosis hands him a death sentence for his physical life
and sentences him to a wheelchair.
If you're a reasonable man, you adapt.
You accept the fate.
You fade away.
But we're not interested in reasonable men on this show.
And today's guest is a testament.
into that. We have Alberto Crane. He isn't just a sixth degree Brazilian jiu jutsu black belt,
UFC veteran, and a world champion. Burdo Cain is one of the first Americans to ever conquer
the world of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. He's a pioneer who packed his bags for Brazil when
everyone else was just playing it safe at home. No one even knew about BJJ back then.
This is a man who was told no teen times and decided to become a world champion anyway.
a man who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis,
and instead of accepting a life of decay,
rebuilt his body and built a fitness empire,
tack fit, from the ashes of his diagnosis.
Get ready, my friends,
because you are about to learn what it truly means
to go all in.
I give you Alberto Crane.
Alberto, man, I appreciate you taking the time
to share your story, what you have going on.
My question, my first question,
And I like to ask this just because I think it's fun for anyone who,
who is any of the martial arts that's on the show is like,
most people have never been punched in the face.
Like, what is it like?
Just explain the idea of like this martial skill of being able to take a punch.
Like what is that about fighters?
Because I've had people tell me the best fighters and obviously I'm interested in are not
the ones who throw the best punches, but they're the ones that.
that take punches the best.
One is that true?
And two, how the hell do you take a punch
from some of the absolute animals
who do, you know, what you used to do for a living?
Have you seen the Rocky Balboa movies
where he tells his son?
He's like, it's not how hard you can get hit,
how hard you can hit, but how hard you can get hit
and keep moving forward, right?
That's how winning is done?
And so, you know, how does it feel to get hit?
You know, I think it's not,
Not everybody can handle that, right?
Nobody can handle that.
You got to have thick skin.
You got to be tough.
And you're going to have instant reaction to that.
Like, right?
You're either going to fight or flight, right?
You're not going to want any more.
And so you definitely have to be a wired a certain way, I think, if you're going to, you know,
continue doing if you're going to fight professionally and things like that, right?
You're going to know right away.
You're going to know right away if you're going to keep going forward.
You're going to keep moving forward and keep going or not, right?
Why then do some people?
I mean, obviously there's a lot of tremendous female fighters, too.
I don't mean just guys.
But why do you think it is that some people get hit and get back up and others stay down?
And I don't mean, that sounds trite.
I don't mean it to be.
I mean, like, at a deeper level, when you're working with someone, you know, there's just,
and I saw this in football, so I played football.
I haven't done any martial arts.
So, you know, I do some boxing.
I watch YouTube videos and I like the workouts,
but I'm not a boxer in any regard.
But in football, and I played high school football,
you know, you could tell almost right away
when you're sizing someone up,
when they got hit and knocked down,
like how they got back up
taught you so much about who your teammate was going to be
or who your opponent was.
Like, what do you think it is inside guys?
Is it motivation?
Is it just a screw is loose, you know,
or maybe it's a combination of all these different things,
that you can take.
Take that punch and know, like, I'm going to come back for more.
Like, okay, I got hit.
I took this.
You know, it's not going to keep me down.
I'm not going to stay down.
I'm going to get back up off to canvas or whatever, and I'm going to go back in.
You know, that skill is so incredibly important, obviously, in the martial arts and in fighting.
But it transcends so much of our life.
And I'm just very interested from your very, you know, specific and unique perspective,
why you think some people do and some people don't.
In a simple way, right?
It's like heart, right?
In another sports, too, does that person have heart?
You know, a lot of Mexican, Hispanic fighters, right?
They can take a hit and they can keep moving forward, and that's what they're known for, right?
Whereas other ones, other ethnicities aren't known for that so much, right?
Have you ever heard the term gameness?
Gamedess?
Like, are they game?
Gamedess?
No.
In South Carolina, like, I think the mascot is like Game Cogs?
Gamecocks, yeah.
Right, right, right.
And so not that I am into cockfighting or pit bulls or anything like that, but there's something to be learned from that because they breed with, you know, game, other game dogs, right, to create champions, right? And so, you know, I think it's part of it's in our DNA. And, you know, if a dad or mom is a, you know, a competitive athlete and they have heart, they're going to have kids that have, you know, hard as well. So I think it's, it's, it's, it's,
It's not just one thing.
It's like all these things combined.
Of course, the environment shapes you, right?
Your team, you have tough teammates.
They raise up the level in the room on the field, right?
And so I think, yeah, it's a combination.
It's not just one thing.
We're a complex beings, right?
It's not one thing that makes us.
It's like all these things combined.
But I think some of those things definitely touch on that.
That was one of my, did you watch Last Dance with Jordan and the Bulls?
Yes, I did.
Yes, I did.
One of the biggest takeaways, and I'm not the only one,
but one of the biggest takeaways for me was when they were,
and I can't remember which episode it was,
but they were talking about the relationship that the players had to Jordan, right?
And obviously you had some players who appreciated who he was,
but there were a lot of these guys who had rings on their fingers
because of Michael Jordan, who were now, I don't want to say talking trash,
but certainly did not enjoy or appreciate the way that he was.
And I just found it incredibly telling that,
like, you know, Jordan comes on at the end, and guys, if you haven't seen this, it's been out for a while,
so spoiler alert that's on you for not watching it. But you should watch it anyways, even if I give
this away. Like, he says, you know, they may not have liked the way I practiced. They might not
have liked the way I pushed them, but they liked when the ring was slid on their finger.
And it was, there's so many levels to that for me where it's like, you had this guy who was obviously,
I mean, he had a great, he had a good family, gave him some of that. But obviously,
it was also born in at a level that made him the competitor that he was.
And despite even being around that and seeing that and seeing the success that he had,
there were still guys that could complain or bitch about how hard they're being pushed.
And it's like, you're going to be the greatest team in the history of the NBA,
six championships, and you can still complain about how hard that guy was pushed.
It was a very telling thing to human psychology for me that just,
even these very talented people still didn't,
want to push themselves to their max limit.
Right?
It's a choice.
Like, what do you want?
And I think a lot of that I saw in watching The Last Dance and other things,
interviews that I've seen with Michael Jordan, who I loved, who was my childhood hero,
by the way.
I got to go play, watch him in Madison Square Garden when I was in high school.
So I'll never forget that my dad got his tickets to Nick's game, right?
So, man, just, I think he checks people, right?
Like, I don't know who it was.
It wasn't Paxton.
It was somebody else towards the end, you know,
and basically he earned his wings or earned his respect, you know.
And all these guys were trying to earn his respect.
And he's constantly pushing these guys.
It's that getting punched in the face thing in a way.
Like, are you going to fight or are you going to flight?
Are you going to be a little bit?
You're going to move forward and try to win this damn game, you know,
because it's a fight, right?
It's a fight.
And so what are you made of?
Who are you?
Show me.
You know who I am, you want to be part of this, then do it.
If you don't, get off the train, right?
Go somewhere else.
This is what we're doing.
And I think that that's the level that he, the bar he's set, right?
You saw it from the early days when he came to the Bulls.
It wasn't like that.
It wasn't like that.
Guys were partying, guys were doing, you know, different things, right?
That were not aligned with what he wanted.
And he knew where he wanted to go and he set that,
he set that bar and he had expectations for his teammates and everybody.
and they kind of built the team, right, around MJ, right?
And the history speaks for itself.
Do you think he went about that the right way in motivating them?
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learning journey. You know, is there, and I've gotten this question from high achievers, let's say,
in like the sales industry. A lot of my work, the core industry that I came out of in my career
has been the insurance industry, a lot on the sales and growth side and stuff. And I deal with a lot
of a lot of people in sales and business development.
And you'll hear, you know, if they work in pods or they work in teams, you know,
you'll hear like whoever's at the top, you know, they struggle with how to communicate,
how to pull up, how to inspire and motivate their other team members.
And, you know, I guess my question is, if you are that high achiever, you're the guy in
the gym who just comes in and you just you're just the light switch goes on and you're as hard as
you can go until the light switch goes off right that's just the type of and you're looking around
and you feel like you're dragging people is how do you motivate those guys to come with you and when do you
know like this one is just not he's not one of us right she's she's not one of us like we got to we got to
cut that person out of the herd how do you how do you make that distinction and become that leader if
you are that guy or that gal.
I mean, you, you, your example, one, I think that if you were talking about Michael Jordan,
it's funny because I'm reading a book right now, The Mindful Athlete, right, Philip Jackson's
guru kind of, the mindfulness and stuff.
I think, I think, right, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
there to make everybody happy.
If you're on the, if you're on the, if you're on a winning championship team, if you're
on an NBA, if that's what you want to do, you're the, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, you're
with it or you're not, right? And you're going to set, and everybody's different. Is it right or is
it wrong? It just is, right? It just is. And, uh, and like, you know, he worked, it worked. And,
you know, you don't know everybody's background on their, they have traumas. Like, I mean,
Michael Jordan got cut from his, uh, as a sophomore in high school and his brother, you know,
you know, favoritism, parents, this and that, who knows, but that was traumatic for him, right? That was
very traumatic for him. And then he came.
came back from that and same thing you get punched in the face what do you do it's not what
happens to you it's how you deal with it right like my daughter competes competitively and she had she had uh
they stopped c i f is the california the the the high school governing body for wrestling and she
transferred high schools and they blocked her from from competing this year her junior year
you know and yeah because because bs yes somebody had some pictures
well, the coach in the background saying that she was,
what do you call it, influenced or, what do you call it,
when not influenced, but influence and or when the team recruits you.
She was recruited or influenced to go to the high school,
but it was all BS.
It was just we went to support a kid or a couple kids
that used to train with us, and it's their gym, right?
Anyway, it's not what happens to you.
It's what you deal, how you deal with it.
It's not what happens to you.
It's how you deal with what happens to you.
The adversities, right?
The punch in the face, the losing, right?
The getting cut from your team, right?
And life, it's not what happens to you.
And so, man, yeah, it sucks.
She's there right now.
I'm going to go later on and I'm going to watch some of her teammates and stuff
compete.
It's a couple hours away.
But like life isn't fair.
sometimes life is not fair
but it's not what happens to you
it's how you deal with it
and so it's a good lesson for at a young age
to know that's going to happen right
because in life it's going to happen sooner or later
this is very much
your story and this is where I'd love to pivot
into for those that don't know
your career, your background
and the challenges that you have faced
like you know you don't have to do
the whole thing but if you could give us
the story to level set you know this exact
point of dealing with
a major challenge in your life and
and continuing through it.
You know, can you kind of just break that down
for the audience for us?
For sure. You know, when I was younger, I moved down to Brazil.
I took that jump, that leap of faith
and moved to Brazil in the early days of, you know,
of Brazilian jitsu being in the country,
UFC starting out, and it didn't make sense.
And I think I kind of keep going back to that Joe Rogan thing.
Like most men lived lives of quiet desperation,
you know, never really taking that jump,
in that risk, right?
I was, you know, I was my early 20s, 20 years old, 19, 18, whatever.
And I did that.
I followed my dreams, you know, and I came back when I was 23 and I started my school.
And I wasn't, right, I had a big credit card bill because I had a credit card limit of $20,000.
And I lived on that, you know, but I went all in, right?
The name of my book is all in.
And I took that wrist and I jump.
And, you know, like, I realized most people never do that.
in their lives. When I came back, I realized I was looking around and I realized that at that age.
And so I think it's one, in my book, right, it's basically like going for it, right?
Going for it, showing up, doing it, and then the resilience of everything of going through it.
I saw, I saw me actually before we talked, you know, somebody starting a business, right?
And he looks all pretty and all kept up.
And then the guy, what's the guy who made this, the winning goal for the hockey, USA hockey?
Jack Hughes.
Jack Hughes. And then they have a picture of Jack Hughes with the, you know, broken teeth, you know,
trying to make your business profitable, you know. And so, you know, listen, like that's, that's,
that's life, right? That's business. And so my, my story is about that, the ups and downs.
And I keep showing up no matter what, you know, I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis from my,
my last fight medical in 2012. So that was, I don't know, 13 years ago. And, you know, I've had to
deal with a lot of different things.
But again, I keep showing up and I do my best and I find, I don't say, I don't act like
I'm a victim, I figure out the solution and I believe that I can win no matter what.
And I think in martial arts, teaches that.
And I think it gave me the beautiful background of having that background to keep that mindset, right,
of always trying to find a solution and always trying to stay in that winning mindset.
it. Most people who are engaged in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and find out that they have multiple sclerosis,
I'm guessing, I feel like many would give up, certainly go into victimhood, probably, and some of
this you probably dealt with, right, and worked through, or, you know, I'd love to hear that,
but like, it's your body, it's your physical, and I'll give you just a little bit on this.
So athlete my whole life, after college, play a little baseball.
And then once that's over, I kind of go into like dad husband mode, right?
Put on some weight, not working out as much.
In my brain, I still think I'm an athlete.
But I'm not.
I'm not at all.
And I'm in 2017, I'm emceeing a conference because I do a lot of public speaking and stuff.
And I'm about to go out and announce the closing.
keynote and I sack of potatoes pass out right to the floor my body my mind dehydration you know all the
things I had was not physically or mentally prepared for two days of being on right which at 35 or
whatever I was 34 whatever however old I was like that that's unacceptable to not be able to emce
a conference for two days and I start working my way back and I've gotten in very good physical
shape. And then about a month and a half ago, I wake up and my heart rate is pinned at 160.
I can't breathe and I can barely get out of bed. And I'm having sustained panic attack as well as,
which brought on a consistent A-flutter and A-fib. And for a month, I'm basically like incapacitated.
Like I can't, I can walk around the house, but even going up and downstairs. And it was the first time
I ever had to think about, like, what if I can't be physical? Like, what if I can't be physical? Like, what if
I can't, you know, lift weights four days a week and go to hot yoga and go skiing and do my
boxing that I do and like, what is my life going to be?
And one, did you have that moment?
What was that like?
And how did you work through that considering how important your physicality is to what you do?
Definitely, right?
Like, that was one of the first things, right, is I went to the doctor that treated me.
Like, my life was over.
and found these lesions in my brain
and gave me a stack of drug catalogs
and, you know, basically told me like I might end up
in a wheelchair and he started to
do research and you're like, well, okay.
And I had an interviewer this week
because we're gearing up for the book launch
to the end of March, ask me, are you scared?
And was I scared then? Am I scared now?
Like, yes, I was scared.
You know, and what did I do?
Like, going back to the punch in the face,
like, do you fight or do you flight? Do you freeze?
You know?
And what I did is I asked the doctor, can I still do jiu-jitsu?
And he said, yes, there's no brain damage.
I was like, okay, I was okay with not being able to fight professionally anymore.
And so I actually signed up for a jihitsu tournament.
And I did one, then I did two.
And then I did a world tour because maybe in six months, I'm not going to be able to, you know, walk anymore or more.
You know, I'm not going to be able to do what I love to do, what I've been doing my whole life.
And I had that in my mind.
And I literally did a world tour.
I went to the Amazon, I went to Middle East, all over Europe, Asia.
I was like, well, if I'm going to do this,
I might as well go out on my shield, right?
And then after that, I had a spiritual moment.
And one of my last stops, I actually won a Nogi World Championship
in the process.
In that same month, I went to Spain.
It was one of my last stops.
And I didn't realize it at the time, but I wasn't feeling good.
I felt nauseous.
You know, I couldn't really eat.
And I had food poison it.
And so I went out the first match, and then I survived somehow,
and I ended up throwing up after that match.
And I lost the match, but because I didn't throw up on the mat,
I wasn't disqualified, so I qualified for the open weight
because it was like a master division, like a veteran kind of division,
and I qualified for the open weight division.
And he's like, the open weight division is like, well, feeling too good.
Like, you know, I was like, well, just maybe you feel better later on.
And I was like, okay, maybe.
And so I was like, am I going to stay here, feel sorry for myself?
Or am I going to say feel sorry for myself at the hotel or here?
You know, so I was like, I might as well.
Stay here and see if I feel better.
And I couldn't drink.
I couldn't eat.
You've had the flu.
You know, probably food poisoning as well.
And you know how that feels?
Like you feel weak.
You feel terrible.
And I started thinking to myself, I believe in my technique.
And it started to make me feel good.
So I kept saying it.
again and again and again, I believe in my technique,
I believe in my technique, and it started to give me, like, energy.
And I did that for probably about an hour and a half.
I went out, I won my first match,
won my second match, won my third match,
and did multiple matches later on in the day.
After that day, I was mind-blown.
I still couldn't drink or eat all day, right?
The next morning I felt a little bit better.
You know, I started to be able to put some liquids in my body.
And I flew back, back to States,
and I just couldn't believe what I did,
the power of the mind.
And it was that moment,
that moment of doing this world tour
that I found my solution,
like just the power of the mind,
believing that I can,
believing that I can.
And the next step was actually
I ended up at the TACF certification
that kind of gave me one of the solutions
like movement practice,
applied neuroscience,
longevity, mobility,
you know,
practice that gave me
one of the solutions to be proactive in healing myself.
Why that phrase?
Was that something you had said in the past?
No.
Just came to me.
At the time, I was just thinking, and I said, I believe in my technique.
In my head, I didn't say it out loud.
I was just in my head.
I believe in my technique.
You're down.
You got nothing.
You don't feel good.
You can't drink.
You're weak.
You got nothing.
And I was like, I believe in my technique.
And it started to give me energy inside, right?
It gave me power, it gave me energy.
And so I kept saying, I kept feeding that it was like a mantra, right,
over and over and over and over, I don't know, an hour and a half, two hours.
I don't know how long it was at the time.
But after the tournament, I was like, I know I can win.
I know I can win because of the power.
It showed me the power of the mind.
I mean, you got to believe that's nothing less than divine, right?
I mean, that's, that's just being tapped in.
And I, I, I know that man, I think ideas like manifestation, like mantras get, you know, it's very polarizing.
People are either like, that stuff's complete, foo, ethereal nonsense or absolutely locked in.
And I'll tell you, as I've done this show and, you know, I've done, we're north of 400 episodes on the show.
You know, we've interviewed some amazing people, you know, like yourself, just over the years.
And one of the biggest changes in my own mindset from the beginning of this show to today has been this idea, has been, I'm going to throw a bra.
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A stroke on it as kind of manifesting, but, you know, that can go in a bunch of different places.
You know, you didn't say that I said that.
but like this idea of holding an idea in your head and repeating it over and over and regardless
of how you feel right um an example of this is i sold a business and when i sold that business
it was the first time in my life that like i really didn't have an identity after that like who was
i you know i had been sales guy marketer guy then i was business owner guy after business owner guy
what guy am I?
Am I consultant guy?
Am I my speaker guy?
Am I just a dad?
And it was really tough.
And then I had a couple of financial things happen.
It was like this maelstrom.
You know, kind of, you know, thankfully I didn't have any health issues, but, you know,
pretty much everything else felt like it was on fire.
And I remember one day, I'm just sitting there and I said, don't fall apart.
That's the win.
I go, Ryan, the win for you is just don't fall apart.
Don't be that guy who goes down to the bottle or to drugs or has got to go out or, you know,
like just don't fall apart.
Just maintain.
You don't have to win some big prize right now, but like just ride this out.
And just saying that to myself, you know, at that time, that particular thing, I don't know
if I would advocate for that all time, obviously.
We'd hopefully like to do better than just not fall apart all the time.
But it was wild, dude.
Like you said it, like gives you this peace.
Like you can kind of feel it.
Like you relax a little bit.
And you're like, oh, I don't have to be a.
rock star right now. All I need to do is not, okay, I can do that. Like, I can do that. Like,
you, like, you know, I'm assuming for you, it's like, I'm not thinking about winning. I'm just
thinking my technique, my technique. Okay, I can do my technique. Ooh, wait, if I just focus on my tech,
wait, I can win if I focus on my tech. And then it's like you, you talk yourself into being the thing,
even if you're not. Does that make sense? It does, 100%. That's it. You made, you may, you
I think about, you know, when I was younger, when I was probably about 20 years old, I lost.
When I first started competing, I lost for about three years.
I lost for about three years, about 13 tournaments.
And I was really investing in myself, like I was betting on myself, right?
I didn't have a lot of money, and it was kind of a crazy thing for me to move to Brazil,
to pursue this thing called Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu because nobody knew what it was.
And we didn't know that it was going to,
the UFC was going to get as popular as it is, right?
Things like that.
Anyway, after three years and 13 tournaments,
I was, you know, I was competing everywhere.
I finally won one.
And when I finally won that tournament,
I was one of the best, like, blue belts
that one of the lower belts in the world.
And I wouldn't have known that
if I hadn't have gone through those three years of losing.
And it wasn't that I was terrible.
It was just, I either lost my first and second match
is because I didn't know how to compete.
I don't know these little things, right,
that these other guys that grew up doing jiu-jitsu
and competing and jiu-sidzzi knew how to do.
And so it was those three years
and those 13 tournaments that I lost in a row
at the beginning of my career
that has given me true confidence in my life.
And you mentioned, I just got to keep it together.
I kept showing up.
I felt like my life was over after every tournament,
but the next morning I got up, I got up, got ready, and tried again.
And if I would have given up in that time period in those three years,
I wouldn't have known that.
And those three years of losing has given me so much confidence,
so much resilience that no matter what happens to me,
I know it's going to be okay.
I'm going to be able to get through it.
And that's the moment.
That's the thing I'm most proud of.
Okay, tournaments, championships.
I've won, I've won many, right?
But that's what I'm most proud of in my career
is the losing and keep moving forward
and coming up on top, getting through that and doing it.
I think this is such an important point,
and it's something that I really worry about
with some of the younger generations
that are coming up with, you know,
we call them the chat GPT kind of generation
is, I think it's brilliant and amazing
that we have all this information at our fingertips.
but you can't read about Brazilian witsu on Chatchip-T
and think you're going to go to the mat and be successful.
You may know the names of moves.
You may understand visually,
maybe even what a move is supposed to look like.
But until you've gone through them and then found out,
oh, well, even though it says I'm supposed to do this,
when I do that, this guy, you know, blocks me and, you know,
until you feel that a thousand times, five thousand times,
You can't know what it's like.
You can't actually, you don't actually own it.
And, you know, I know this is maybe off context,
but I'm just interested in your take.
Like, I guess, I mean, maybe even with your kids, your daughter,
like, how do we marry and how are you viewing, like,
some of these AI tools in this regard, right?
How do we marry the knowledge that's literally at our fingertips, right?
it would take days, months sometimes to gather the information that we now can prompt out
in as fast as your fingers can move.
With the real life experience of, you know, when your feet hit the ground, you know,
the mic, everyone's got a plan until you get punched in the face, right?
The mic type, like, how do we marry these two things so that we can take advantage of
the information that's at our fingertips and the technology, but we're not losing that
real life experience that is paramount to success?
Well, I'll start with the jiu-jitsu part.
I think when years ago, I had this black belt psychologist,
and I was like, why does it seem that people that do Jitsu,
why do they seem younger than they are?
And it's interesting you say that is because when you get on the mat and when you train,
everything's in the present.
And when you're a kid, everything's in the present.
And as you get older, everything's either in the past or in the future.
So it kind of brings you back to your childhood.
And because of that, even if it's an hour, if it's 30 minutes,
it brings you peace of mind and it just makes you better for,
it gets you grounded, right, for the rest of the day.
Kind of takes you out of the matrix.
I forgot my trainer thought.
There was something else that I was, we started with Jiu-Zitsu.
What was the things you mentioned at the end?
I asked like how, even, you know,
whether you wanted to put it in the context of how you're talking to your daughter or whatever,
how do you marry leveraging.
Right, I know what I was going to say.
Figurtips with real world experience.
Yeah, so a chat, GPT, right?
It's interesting, all those things, right?
In China, it's required in the U.S., they frown upon it.
Well, depending on the school, right?
And I just, you know, the, that whole thing of,
there's a doctor, I've heard if she's a doctor,
but she was a lady, she spent her whole life kind of educating people on the brain.
And she said, our brain needs five things to be good.
And when I think about the brain, I think it's us as humans, right?
We need nutrition, like, you know, food, like air,
water, right, those kinds of things.
Movement, challenge, newness, novelty, and love, connection.
If we have those five things, we're good, you know?
And so we need a challenge.
If there's no challenge, we're not going to be happy.
If we don't have those things, like something new,
we're doing the same thing over and over.
That's why you got to put yourself up.
Drive a different way to work.
Do something else.
If you do the same thing over and over and over, your brain's not growing.
You're not getting that change in your brain, right?
You're not getting that neuroplasticity happening, right?
And movement, you've got to move your body.
We all sit down too much.
And so I think as long as we cover those bases, we put good things in our body, our nutrition,
we move our bodies in the right way.
Like, you know, my modality is tack fit in jiu-jitsu, right?
You know, we do some, we do different things, right?
whatever it is, like we're talking right now.
We never talk before, right?
We're learning or we're talking to exchange information.
And then, you know, human connection, right?
At the end, human connection, connecting, being connected with others.
As long as we have those things, we're good.
This idea that you shared, I want to come back to this idea of being present.
This was something, I learned this lesson the hard way with my family.
When I first started gaining some popularity,
and going out and speaking and stuff like that,
you know, you start getting asked to do all these things
and your attention and your presence
that's pulled in all these different directions
and you start thinking, you know,
oh, you know, if only I could do one more gig a month,
if only I could get, you know, on this magazine,
if only I could get on this, and like you said,
you're constantly, like, ruminating on the past
and projecting into the future,
and what happens is I'm sitting right next to my children
and I don't even know they're there.
And it's not a, it's not a,
It was about a decade ago.
It's not a period of time I'm particularly proud of in terms of how I related to them,
hopefully corrected.
But you said something that I think is really interesting, which was why does it seem like
people who do Brazilian jiu-jitsu are younger?
And I would put other people in this category.
I would put stand-up comics in this category.
I'd put a lot of speakers, a lot of the speakers that I meet.
and I think you nailed it
and I just want to dig into this a little bit
because it's this idea of like
when you're face to face with someone
and they're trying to beat you physically
if you're not present, game over.
If you're on stage and you're trying to make people laugh
and you're not 100% in that moment,
you're not going to make them laugh.
If I'm out on stage and I'm trying to move people
or motivate them from where they are
to where I want them to go,
if I'm not present in that moment,
that transformation ain't happening.
And I will say that the, there is a,
and I've never framed this before.
So I'm going in real time just based on what you said.
So I take this for what it is.
Like when I am on a regular speaking cadence
and I am forced into these moments
where I have to be 100% present in that moment,
the more often I am, the do feel a little lighter.
I feel like my brain pops a little more.
I feel like I have a little more purpose and meanings.
Like, how do you cultivate presence outside of those moments that demand you to be present?
Because I have a feeling this idea of being present is a major issue among especially young adults,
but I think really anybody in this day and age with distraction everywhere.
You're not the only one, right?
That's something that I think, I mean, more and more like men, right, especially with women,
everybody is dealing with, right, is not being present because of,
social media and different things that we that sucks our attention away from maybe our kids you
know and whatever it is right people that that mean mean something to us i went on a trip to
i took my wife to india and i had this uh philosophy meditation phd tour guide and he was talking
to me about you know meditation right we think about meditating you're just like you know
sitting there doing nothing you're nowhere everywhere and
And he's talking about meditation.
No, meditation is also in doing, in doing, being completely in the moment, right?
And that, for example, we're talking about jujitsu.
You're talking about public speaking.
You're talking about doing comedy, doing something that brings you completely in the moment.
You know, I was training, I had this tack-fit test that I trained for.
I did a little video where I trained for my team leader thing.
And I had so many injuries in my body that it was kind of like,
impossible, but it was such a high of training for this moment to pass this moment.
This test, this physical test, I trained for about a year.
It took me about six months to do one strict pull-up, you know, chin over the bar because
of all the injuries of my shoulders, elbows, and wrists.
And after six months, I got one, and then I had to have to do 50 strict pull-ups under five
minutes.
Anyway, when I was done with the test, I got emotional because I was so focused on it.
It was like a high, right?
I was going to miss that focus, right?
And so you're asking me, how do we become more present?
And I think it's having goals,
having, you know, doing activities that brings you to these present moments, right?
And we're all wired differently.
And I think in my book, my wife, she's, you know,
I've been competing and fighting my whole life.
And she was asking me like, okay, are you going to be happy after you win this?
after you do this, you know.
I was chasing something, right?
And I was like, yeah, I'll be happy when I do that, you know.
But there's always something else.
And there's always something else.
And so it's like, well, you can be happy now.
I was like, yeah, you're right.
I can be happy now.
And so I'm still figuring you that out.
But I'll tell you, the biggest blessing for me was this MS diagnosis
because I have to slow things down.
I have to not get stressed.
I can't be living in that stressed out state.
Always chasing something.
I always, you know, challenge myself.
I have to like chill out.
I have to go the other way.
And it's been such a blessing because it's given me more presence,
better relationships in my life.
So I think doing activities to answer your questions,
doing activities that make you present.
And then slowing things down,
look at the flowers, look at the, slow things down,
start that in the morning, you know?
Do a practice that you have routine in the morning, right?
Of just slowing everything down with just looking into nature
or doing some kind of activity, whether it's a routine with your kids.
I don't know, like doing something that brings you completely to the now,
to the present.
It's funny, our culture has taught us, you know, grind, work hard,
you know, there's certainly a type of guy also that buys, you know, that kind of buys into this
idea that like, if I'm not working, then like, what's my purpose, right? Like, you're fitting in
emails in between, you know, dinner to when you're doing dishes and it's like you're always
having to come back to this and you're never kind of fully present in anything. You're kind of,
just a little bit of attention scattered all over the place. And Stephen Kotler has written a couple
books. He's like the flow guru, at least one of them.
Yeah, yeah, it's Stanley Fire, right?
As well? Yeah, yeah, that's one of them, which is phenomenal.
And like, and the idea here is if flow state
in a broad stroke is where we do our best at whatever the thing is that we do.
So whether it's hitting a baseball, you know, uh, jujitsu, giving a talk,
leading a meeting, whatever your thing is, selling something.
When you're in flow, you are in the,
best version of you. It is your your most unconscious version fully, but the only way to get there,
like one of the requirements to flow state is presence. So this, you know, it's, I find it interesting
that, and I'm such a, like this is so much something that I do to myself, in an effort to do more,
we try, we scatter our attention and thus make it impossible for us to be our best at any one of those
things that we've got our attention scattered over.
And it's like logically, it comes out of your mouth and you're like, yeah, duh.
Yet every single day we operate almost from the moment we get up to the moment we go to bed
with a completely scattered attention and never give our focus to any one thing.
And we have to like manufacture moments of presence, which to me seems counterintuitive.
It feels like maybe the answer is cultivate presence as often as you can and make distracted
moments, the exceptions.
Yeah, yeah.
May I see this, Ryan?
What are the most important things in your life?
I'd say right now the most important thing to me is trying to be a man that my kids,
my two young boys, that they can use as a jump off point,
that they can, you know, they can learn from me and then build their own lives off of that.
Being something that I'm proud of for them is probably the most important thing.
Yeah, like your kids, right?
But it's like, I think it always goes back to like relationships, right, and no matter what we do.
And I think being busy with the busy is not being busy with the business or things that really matter, right?
And so, man, isn't that crazy?
We spent our whole life, like working and chasing these things that don't matter when all that matters is our kids and our people that are our family, people that, those are the things that matter to us.
and we spent all this time away from them doing other things.
And it blows my mind.
And the fact that I had this, this MS diagnosis has been, like I said,
it's been eye-opening and a blessing in a way because it's forced me.
It's forced me.
Like, hey, slow down.
You know, when I first started having symptoms, like I started feeling numbness in my body,
I thought I had just, you know, gone too hard for too many years.
my body was like, screw you, I'm going to, you know, I'm going to go numb. I wasn't feeling my body,
you know. And so it's this, this situation that slow me down, help me slow me down. Of course,
I'm still doing things, but I definitely have priorities, right, of what matters to us for our kids
or being a good example and, you know, I have a gym here and being a good role model for our
students and our group here. But yeah, we spend all this time.
chasing different things when all that stuff doesn't matter and the big time and space of the
universe or just a spinning rock flying through the universe right right yeah and it's funny you know
sometimes um sometimes i you know you listen to maybe you know someone say what you just said and you're
like oh yeah but you know real world and i and i and i probably tend to do that like i i tend to i tend to fight
like some of these high level kind of ideas
or kind of more fluffy ideas
because, you know,
when you smash them up against the world,
maybe in the short term,
they don't yield as much result in the short term.
However, when you start to pull back a little bit
and look at your life over the broader stroke,
like you said, like does another email,
like where does another email that,
that turns your wife off, that gets her, you know, now she's not paying attention to you.
Your kid now has got his head back down in a video game, and you're sitting at the kitchen
table writing one more email.
When all those two people want is for you to pay attention to them.
They literally just want you to, like, share space with them and talk to them and ask him
how their day was.
But you got to write one more email.
And you justify it through, well, I got to, you know, if I don't do this, my boss will get
mad or this client will get mad or, you know, I got to make money for the.
the family, but you then are going through life and never experiencing.
Like you say you take your wife to India, you went on this world, like you have all these
experiences, like you've done these things.
You took this trip to Brazil and you'll carry those experiences with you and the relationships
and the feelings with you your entire life.
And I think just it makes me sad because I get so many, that's sad is the wrong word.
I feel for the people who I speak to, I talk to, I made it a
events that in a broad stroke, they're just kind of like numb and a little gray and just
kind of like grinding through things and not never really taking a big risk, trying to kind of
shave off all the rough angles all the time. And I said this the audience the other day. I was like,
you know, in business, we want to automate, you know, as much as we can. We want to fish and see.
But like some of the rough edges are features, not bugs. Like some of the rough edges,
the rough edges are what make you who you are.
You know what I mean? Like, are you the same teacher if you don't have MS, right?
If you're still trying to grind or you never had to go through that hardship and never
had to feel what that was like, are you the same coach for those kids that are in your gym,
right? Or are you better today because you have all this additional experience that you were
able to bring back to them because you frigging went for it and life gave you a shit hand.
And you said, nope, screw that, I'm going to come right back over to top. You're not putting me down.
right like like it's like sometimes i just i wish for everybody that they just go out and like cause
some trouble like bang into some stuff like like just afo a little bit like this vanilla gray life is
just it's not worth living and then you pop your head up when you're 65 and you got diabetes
or you're 50 pounds overweight and you can't even enjoy your life anyways you know the teddy
or so at the man in the arena i have it on my wall upstairs on no way there we go right that's it right that's
it, that's it, you know, going for it
it no matter what. I think
just that alone is you're winning,
right? And there's a lot of people that never
go for it. They never take that risk.
You know?
And you wrote the freaking book, man. You wrote the book.
The book is all in.
Pre-order until March.
This will be out
right around the time of the book because we want to put
this out right when the book is coming out.
The book is all in,
dives deep into your story.
and, you know, dude, I'm just so glad that, like, one, I'm so glad that I get to meet people like you.
And I just love when someone who can perform at a high level, you know, you put this obstacle in front of your life and you're like, nope, nope, I'm still going to have massive value to the world.
Like, I'm going to, you can't keep me down.
And that, it's meaningful to me.
It's meaningful to audience.
And guys, I just highly recommend you go out and pick up this book.
It's all in.
I'll have it in the show notes.
Where else can they get into your?
world besides the book?
You can have a website, Alberta crane.com.
You can have a little newsletter.
My gyms, legacy, BJJ.com, and tackfit.com, something that I really believe in,
functional fitness, recovery, longevity.
So those are the worlds I rotate in and live in.
So one of those, those, if you go to one of their events or one of our gyms, I'm here
in Burbank, legacy here in Burbank.
This is my home, my home away from home.
I'll probably spend more time here than I do at home because I love this so much.
But you can find me here.
I appreciate the hell outy, man.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, Ryan.
Thank you.
Appreciate you.
Thanks for having me on.
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