The School of Greatness - The Hidden Prisons Trapping You & How to Break Free
Episode Date: December 22, 2025This conversation hits close to home. Christian Howes is Lewis's brother, and Lewis has shared many times what it was like visiting him behind bars as a young man, watching someone he loved trapped in... a system designed to break people. Now Christian sits alongside Shaka Senghor, who spent 19 years in prison, including 7 in solitary confinement, to reveal a truth that will shake you: most people walking free are more imprisoned than they ever were. Through journaling, music, poetry, and confronting their deepest shame, both men discovered freedom inside concrete walls before they were physically released. You'll see how the prisons in your own mind, built from unhealed trauma and limiting beliefs, are keeping you from the life you want. Their journeys will show you how to identify what's truly holding you back and give you practical tools to break free, starting with the courage to name your pain and the wisdom to forgive without conditions.Watch & Learn More About Redemption TimeShaka’s books:Writing My WrongsLetters to the Sons of SocietyHow to Be FreeIn this episode you will:Transform your relationship with failure by celebrating your victories instead of erasing them with negative self-talkMaster the practice of forgiveness without conditions to free yourself from the past and stop carrying resentmentUnlock the courage to pursue your purpose even when society tells you your past disqualifies you from greatnessDiscover how to identify and escape the hidden prisons built from shame, grief, and trauma that keep you trapped in repeating patternsLearn why gratitude and presence are your most powerful weapons against depression, anxiety, and feeling stuck in lifeFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1866For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Jason WilsonGabor MatéEric "ET" Thomas Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Welcome back to the School of Greatness. We have a very special episode with two inspiring men,
with two different yet very similar stories. Shaka Senor and Christian Howes, two men who learned
how to rewrite their story and find purpose after time spent in prison. Shaka is a New York
Times bestselling author, internationally recognized speaker, and leading voice on resilience
and redemption. Christian Howes is my brother. He is an award-winning,
jazz violinist, a composer, an educator, and an inspiring teacher. Today, they're going to share
their stories. For anyone who's feeling trapped physically, mentally, emotionally, or spiritually,
and you feel like you can't break free within your own mind, in your own heart, or in your
body, this is the episode for you. It's all about how to become a free human being. We've got
two amazing individuals on here who are going to be talking about their experience.
from overcoming so much before prison, during prison, and after prison, and there's so much
that the world does not know about on what you guys have gone through and how you've overcome
the lives that you've had.
And there are a lot of people, Shockey, you talk about this, that there are a lot of people
that are imprisoned who are actually not in prison.
Yeah.
And they are living an imprisoned life, even though they're not behind bars.
And yet, both of you were behind bars, and I think both of you became free at some point in your own minds behind bars, but you've also been prisoners outside of bars.
And so I want to start with a quote from your book, Shaka, and then let you guys open enough from here.
This quote says, prison is designed to break you, the walls, the rules, the routine.
It's all meant to strip you down until you forget who you are.
But what I discovered is that the most powerful prisons aren't the ones made of concrete and steel
They're the ones we carry with with us built from grief
Anger shame trauma and self-doubt and I'm curious
How have you learned and how both of you learned how to
overcome the prisons that you created within yourself
Outside of prison I'll let you start that you start that that's such an incredible
question you know and I think about
my journey to actual physical incarceration where I spent 19 years, seven years of those was a
solitary confinement. What I discovered through that process of freeing myself was that I had been
incarcerated before I had ever been in handcuffs because I had inherited the narrative that
said, you'll be dead or locked up before you're 21. I was sentenced to prison. I was 19 years old.
So I fulfilled that prophecy that I thought about, you know. You manifested what you thought.
Absolutely. And the negative, right? It was like this whole thing that my life can only have this outcome. So let me just live within a framework of that mindset. Interesting. And it was when I was in solitary confinement that I went on this journey, journaling, trying to unpack. How did I get here? I wanted to be an artist and a doctor. But here I was serving out my most promising years in prison, in a prison inside a prison, which is solitary confinement. And what I did,
did is I started journaling to ask this question, how did I get here? And what I discovered was
mind-blowing because I realized that the mindset that I had accepted based on that narrative led me to
that path. And what I began to challenge was, if this works absolutely in a negative, then it has to
work in the positive. And that's when I went on this journey to discover my mind, which I
eventually fell in love with. And that's where I found myself.
getting free. When did you first fall in love with your mind? How were you? I would have been at that
point probably 27 or so. I was in solitary, so 1999, 2000. And it was through the journaling
process. And I found this incredible human being who had been covered up by trauma, shame,
grief, you know, all the things, anger, the things just clouded that I carried around. And I found
myself working through that cloud. And I was like, oh, this beautiful human being exists.
And if you can embrace this human being, this little boy who had all these dreams and desires,
like you'll never be held captive by anything. And that's when I began that journey. It was
the most, it's the most beautiful. My mind is the most beautiful place that I exist in. Wow.
So for those that don't know what solitary confinement actually is, maybe they have a conception
on what it is.
Yeah.
Explain what it is for people that have no clue.
So solitary confinement is 23-hour lockdown every day in the most chaotic, barbaric,
inhumane environment imaginable.
It is the one thing in America that I don't think people are even aware of the brutality
that exists in that environment and what is designed to do.
It is literally designed to break a human being and to, you know, ensure.
sure that when you leave there, any semblance of humanity no longer exist. And to be able to
discover my own mind in that environment was both survival, but also a spiritual reckoning that
I'm fortunate I was able to go into solitude inside a solitary, which are different things,
which is that internal journey that I was able to go on. But after seven years, how do you find
peace within solitary confinement? There's no mentors, there's no art, there's
There's no music.
There's no creativity around you.
How did you create that within you?
Well, I was really lucky.
I think that there are spaces in the world where if you inhabit them, you may be lucky, right?
So if you live in a certain area code, that can be a matter of luck.
If you're born with the genetics of LeBron James, there's a physical luck there, right, that
you can't script that.
luck that I was actually literate in an environment where the average literacy rate is third
grade.
And so I was able to read stories of other people who had triumphed over hardship.
I was able to read fiction.
I was able to read autobiographies and philosophy.
And so those things just kept my mind moving forward.
And what I've come to understand about being stuck, whether it's being imprisoned in your own mind,
whether it's suicidal ideation, whether it's depression, is what happens is your mind.
can't take another step. And so what reading did for me was that it allowed me to just keep
my mind moving forward as I was fighting to literally unlock myself from this in prison
way of being. Wow. Now, both you and Chris are the same age, right? You went in essentially
around the same time, maybe a six-month window in difference when you both went into jail
at the same time. And jail back then was a different time than it is now, I'm assuming, on how
things are run. Absolutely. I don't know if they're any better, but I'm assuming they're
different. But what Chris from what Shaka just shared, what resonated with you from your
personal experience, and again, you guys are around the same age, went at the same time, you
know, around the same neighborhood, you know, Vod, four hours away from each other, Michigan,
Ohio. What, what opened up for you during that?
I mean, pretty much everything that I've heard Shaka talk about has resonated with me from one way
another um from every and he speaks prolifically and eloquently about all these topics and
you know so it's great for me to hear it from him to answer your question like when i was locked
up i'm shocked i asked me this question earlier too um i tried to focus on like four areas of
productivity uh one was like intellectual academic reading you know
um one was my musical um development one was uh just my body you know so working out and then the fourth one was that i tried to maintain
interpersonal relationships not only in prison but really i'm talking about by by writing letters
so i would write letters to our family and to a few people back home those four things that was like kind
of my i guess north star of like like how am i going to make the most of this four years because obviously on the
given day in prison you have a choice a lot of things a lot of times people think
oh you're in prison well you had nothing better to do so of course you became a great
writer and like you got stronger it's like no it doesn't work that way i always tell
people if you were on a stranded island you'd be surprised and how easy it is get depressed
and like you know and i didn't do seven years in solitary but i did probably about seven weeks
in solitary so i know what it feels like and i remember that i would be in so and this is a perfect
example right well you don't tell me what you think but when you're in solitary you feel like okay today
I'm going to read books, I'm going to do pushups, I'm going to do meditation, but then you, I didn't always have the strength to do that.
And I would just lay the entire day.
And I could not get myself up.
I don't know if you ever experienced, but that's how, so it doesn't matter if you have time.
It's still the same dilemma for a human being, like, what are you going to do with your time?
And I think of anything, prison just, it just highlights these lessons for us, you know.
And, but since I've been out, which was part of your question, like,
How do I escape the prisons that can show up for me, as Shaka says, from grief, trauma, shame, guilt, all these kinds of things.
I will say that it's a we have to keep, we have to keep maintaining it.
We need to keep our eyes on it.
And I think there can be times just like in prison where we're up and where things are feeling good.
And then there can be a downturn.
So I'm 53 now.
I've been out of prison almost 30 years.
And so even now at 53, I'm like, hey, this, where are we going next?
How do we keep it moving positive?
So I, so the same thing, really, to be honest with you, it's like all the things that you share on your podcast.
Like these are the things that inspire me, you know, constantly trying to look for what can I do to feed my body, my, the, my knowledge of psychology, my emotional intelligence and building healthy relationships.
Yes. I mean, you know, not everyone watching this or listening has been to prison,
but I'm assuming everyone watching or listening has experienced some type of shame or guilt or grief
in their life or resentment or anger. They've experienced similar emotions. But how have each one
of you learned to heal from shame, guilt, or trauma that occurred either before prison,
in prison, or sharing your story after prison? How have you,
each one of you have learned or are still learning how to do it and not feeling ashamed every
time you walk into a room yeah does someone know this about me do they not know this about me
should i say this should i not say this like how to not feel ashamed about who you are and what
you've been through it's such a great question and one of the one of the things about shame i actually
write there's a chapter i write about this filling right um and actually it came from my work out here
in society, working a regular job like most people are doing.
And I remember I had this moment where a project was handed to me.
It was a very expensive project.
And I'm working with, you know, this team who I believed in, they were capable.
And unfortunately, just couldn't deliver.
And I could, I should have just stopped the project.
But I kept going to the end, cost the company some money, cost some time.
And I remember talking to the CEO and we had a very kind of just,
like a debriefing. And he walked me through kind of, you know, his process of like, what could you
have done different? What would you do, et cetera, right? And it was a very thoughtful, very prolific,
very intentional way of like assessing how do we just get better, faster, and more productive.
And I remember just being seized up with this feeling of like, man, I failed, you know.
And what I did, which is one of my superpowers, is my ability to go back and write about
what was the real feeling there.
What was really coming up for me?
What was the real feeling?
The real feeling was attached to my childhood at a time where somebody who our family trusted attempted to molest me.
And as a kid who didn't know what to do with the feelings of anger, I responded by breaking into this guy's house with the attempt to destroy his home and just say, hey, what you did wasn't okay.
and I got caught by the police and I got arrested and my mother and my father they thought that I was just on some type of bad behavior experience but there was a deeper thing that had happened and I hadn't talked about it and my family my parents they hadn't created space for me to talk about it which is something that I think a lot of people you know end up being trapped in shame because there's no space to talk about it and finally
I was 50 years old, the first time I ever told my dad, my reason for breaking in that man's house.
And I called both of my parents.
And I remember talking to my dad.
I'm a dad.
And it was this moment where I just said to him, you know, hey, here's my why.
And I could just feel through the phone, my dad just like, oh, whoa, you know, as a dad, that could not have felt good that, hey, I took my off the bar.
Maybe, or maybe not.
I don't know, but I explained to him, like, it wasn't nothing he did.
This guy was just who he was, right?
And so there's these moments that I've experienced it.
And even with my past, where it came full circle, which was one of the things that inspired
the book is my brother was murdered in 2021.
I fly home to Detroit to help with the burial process, all the things.
And there was a moment where I'm just sitting there in my stepmom, my bonus mom,
she's crying because she's grieving my brother's life
and I was struck by this feeling of guilt
at a time when I should have been grieving
because I made somebody else's family feel like that
and that moment for me was like
you know this is a deeper level of shame
and so what I did is I
actually ended up writing a letter to the person
who murdered my brother
And that ability to understand that something had to transpire in his life for him to pull that trigger
helped me process the feeling of guilt, but also the feeling of shame and recognize that the 19-year-old me
that pulled that trigger was a hurt, broken kid who had no space to heal.
And I was able to have empathy while still being accountable.
And so all these things that I've used to understand.
unpack these larger life lessons because I've seen colleagues who are doing amazing,
but they don't get a thing right and they beat up on themselves.
I've seen parents.
I've seen people in relationships.
And it all comes back to oftentimes something that happened early in our childhood
that imprinted in our minds that we have to be perfect.
We can't make mistakes.
And if we do make a mistake that we must therefore beat up on ourselves over and over and
over again replaying that moment of the failure over and over and what journaling did for me is it
disrupted that cycle what writing that letter did is it broke that cycle and allow me to be present
with myself and feel the grief of losing my brother without attaching it to my own guilt and like
that's the power of like really awakening to one's mind and realizing if you just keep these small
steps, you know, writing it down. So it seems like a small thing to do. It's one of the biggest
unlocks that we can, you know, ever have access to. Have you ever tried journaling, Chris,
and the last, you know, since you've been out of jail, have you tried any of that? Or how have you
learned how to process or still now trying to figure it out what's been open up for you from
the healing journey? It is funny that, I mean, I developed a writing habit. And I've recently,
I've kind of traced that back to when I was in prison and writing letters all the time.
I've seen that that is beneficial.
But I would say just naming it and even having permission as men especially to give a name to these real emotions.
And I think that's part of what I admire so much about your work, why I think it's so important, what you're doing, you know, creating like an example.
And you, you know, example for men to be able to talk about fear, shame, guilt, you know, the things that are not commonly associated as like male emotions.
I think that, and in prison, this was one of my big questions, like, what is the code of a man?
And what does it mean to be a man?
And when you're in, and we talk about this in the film, we use art to kind of address this question of, because I think some of these, the answers can't all be spelled out in words literally.
too. Sometimes it's poetic, sometimes it's visual, sometimes it's artistic. But in prison,
you know, you learn about the code of a convict. But I've kind of wondered like, what's the
difference? The code of a convict, code of a man. I mean, that's really what I wanted to know when
I was 20 going into jail. I think around the same time as you, right? And you were 19. I was 20.
But, I mean, I was young. I didn't identify as a grown man at 20. Right. I was like, I thought,
Well, in a couple of years, I'll be in a little bit, right?
But I went in there, and I was like, like, I was asking men around me, like, how does it work?
Like, what is it?
And there's very conflicting messages that we get as men for what it means to be a man.
And I think one of the most, the epitome of one of those messages is the idea that, as a man, you don't let anybody disrespect you.
You don't let anybody, like, get over on you, right?
But this, I think that the irony of this is that if we follow this definition, that it is ultimately a path of self-hatred and self-destruction.
And in prison, you see that it's like to the ultimate degree, right?
Because if somebody disrespects you, then you have to meet it.
And then it only just goes to that you're willing to kill somebody or you're willing to name somebody, which actually is just killing yourself.
because then you're going to do a life bit.
So this idea that a man is someone who is willing to meet anything with violence,
I think it's a very destructive force for men.
And I think it's also related to these other things,
like not being able to name fear.
What do you mean by not being able to name something?
What does that mean?
I think that men are, are, um,
don't feel comfortable saying,
I felt afraid.
Like this is another film.
This is another theme that we address in this film that I made and where it's like this idea, PTSD, right?
Like I went to see a therapist or I heard about this thing called PTSD.
And I was like, because you just hear the initials and you're like, I don't know what that means.
It's a condition, right?
You don't really understand.
Well, post-traumatic stress disorder.
Basically, the way it was explained to me, it's like, I asked my therapist.
It was like, is it, do I have PTSD?
And he was like, well, wait.
So you spent four years in prison?
He was like, well, yeah, that would be a good reason to have it.
But he broke it down to me.
He said PTSD is something if you've found yourself in a lot of uncertainty and a lot of fear and a lot of anxiety.
But what I'm saying is that I don't think I'd given myself permission to acknowledge that I had been afraid.
I think it's like taboo to say I feel fear.
Again, this is part of what I admire about you, I think is like you're very strong.
strong man who also names all these different emotions, complex emotions, and provide a model
for how. And you too. Yeah. You know what I mean? And this is like your book, The Mask of
masculinity, I think, deals with a lot of these things. So I try to be constantly surrounding myself
with education and inspiration, you know, stories. And of course, I keep trying to be engaged
in all the other work of being present in my body, present in my emotions, you know,
meditation, all these things.
But, but that's, I think it starts with naming these things and making it less taboo to be
able to talk about as men, all these different feelings that we have.
If we talk, first of all, if we say, I feel grief, that's the starting point.
Yeah.
The say, I feel fear, I feel shame, I feel guilt.
It has to start there.
a scale of 1 to 10, how much shame do you still feel from your past pains, what it might
be, whether it be jail time or stuff before, whatever it might be, 10 being the most amount
of shame, one being the least amount of shame.
So that's part 1, 1 to 10, how much shame do you still feel?
And number 2, how do you process the shame now, if there is any, to not be so extreme or so
intense in your body or your mind to hold you back from living the life you want that that's a that's a
powerful question you know i think i think in my in my journey what i what i know with certainty is
that it's been a sliding scale of course and i didn't realize this until i actually began to
write about shame that environmental factors oftentimes did take how we feel about ourselves
growing up in a city like Detroit
where the impact of like the
war on drugs was very present.
A lot of people were incarcerated.
A lot of people who were shot and killed.
The understanding of that environment in my community
saying, hey, we understand that you went through this thing
but it's not who you are today.
Kind of lessened that feeling.
But it's also been weaponized
in intimate relationships.
You know, where I've had, you know,
partners at times basically use my past to try to demean me that's not good uh and that was like
whoa you know and it made me stop and pause and think about well wow does this person really
see me as my old self right um and and just for context i went to prison for a second degree homicide
um and so to have someone who says that they love you call you a murderer and then how do you how do you
you know evolve from that right um and i remember when that that experience happened and it did
it took it it made that scale slide way up right you feel more shame at that point yeah it's more
like hey this is a person that i'm you know tasked with protecting and if they really see me in this
way what does that say right yeah um and then there's the subconscious things that happen when you're in
culture right you're i'm at work and i would just we'd be in the sales cycle and they're like yo you kill
that and I'm like oh you know what I mean so it's just like this subconscious thing will come up
or being a works thing like yeah good job but using it right yeah right and and without them even
being aware of like what that could signal or or mean and then there's the other social context
I'm moving a lot of spaces where oftentimes because of the space that I'm in nobody would even
assume that I spent 20 years in prison right and so to hear people talk candidly about someone
who's committed a crime and that they should be locked away forever, they should be given
a death penalty, like those moments of like, wow, like this is what that person would think
if I was, you know, at that low stage of my life, right?
They might have thought that about you.
They might have thought that.
Exactly, right?
And so how I've combated that is that I have been able to recognize that my 19-year-old self
was a kid who had experienced more trauma
than it's almost humanly possible
for people to even understand.
And that that kid deserved to be, one, held accountable,
which I was, I served that time,
but also to really be, to recognize
that that was a traumatic reaction
to a light full of trauma
and that there is empathy and compassionate
that those things can both be true.
Yes.
That I can be accountable.
accountable, but that I can also recognize that there was something that drove that behavior
that no longer exists in me today. And so it's just a constant going back and reminding myself
and, as I say, that scale slides back and forth. Where it's at today is a zero. I feel no shame
and who I'm at. But tomorrow, something else could arise. And then I have to do the work to get it
back down to a zero. Sure. Okay. Yeah, that's powerful. Well, you and Chris. That really resonates with
me. I think I agree that I do a lot of work in schools. I've visited nearly a thousand
orchestra classrooms in the United States in the last 30 years, you know, and that's a big part
of what I do is going to working with kids, middle school and high school. And a lot of the
teachers that have hired me over the years, they know my backstory and they even think like,
well, this is a good thing. We want this guy to be able to set a good example for these kids and,
you know, whether it's explicit or whether it's implicit, I see part of the work of being a music
educator as also influencing positive character development, right? You know, and so if I'm going,
and there's been a lot of times when people have asked me explicitly to speak about character
issues or tell my story and impart the messages, you know, to kids to try to not necessarily
scare them straight, but to inspire them to do good things. But most of the time when I go to
schools, I'm just a music teacher, right? I'm being, I'm like a guest music teacher. And sometimes
I worry that like if, you know, these teachers, they might, they might not want to hire me if they
know my backstory, because not everybody does, you know. And so that kind of like, you know,
this this this thought that that what you said about it depending on how other people are responding
to you i can relate to that but in general i feel like it's work that i just have to keep doing
like even if that brings up if one experience with a person brings up shame in me or guilt or triggers
me i just see that as evidence that i need to keep doing work yeah to get to a zero
ideally as much of the time and that it's about i i do believe that we have the
ability to respond, you know, and we have to cultivate that ability and that choice to respond
to situations that might trigger us today. So I'm working on them. You're talking about the old self
versus the new self. I think anyone here could identify that and no matter what type of shame or
trauma or experiences they've been through, you know, what range of, you know, experiences they've
been through. The old self, you know, I think people hold on to shame because they're living in the old
a lot.
I'm thinking of like what they did or what someone did to them or what they didn't do or what
they should have done or whatever, the mistakes they made or problems that happened, who they
hurt, who hurt them, things like that.
I was thinking of these things and holding on to them and it's still us, I think, when we
live in that shame.
But there's got to be a point where we can learn to figure out how to process and integrate
a new version of ourselves.
Absolutely.
So we can still recognize that part of that.
of our story, but it not be the new identity of who we are today.
Yeah.
So how do we learn to shift from an old self or an old identity and transform into a new
self and new identity without shame?
That's such a great flaming for a question that I think about often is how does one
reimagine themselves and how do you create a new narrative and not be held hostage to
your worst moment. Yes. And what I found for me is that is celebrating all the victories,
not just the small ones or not just the big ones, but when you start getting into the details
of how do you actually show up, right? So when I was thinking about my experience at the company,
what I thought about was that that was one project that I didn't get right. But what about
all these other ones I got right? What about all of my colleagues that come to me in search of
wisdom to solve a problem.
How many different ways have I innovated at this company and help the CEO see something
that he probably would not have seen without being in conversation with me, right?
And so it's like we, if we get to a space where we stop erasing our victories,
because that's what shame does.
Shame erases the victories.
And then when you lean into that old narrative, it literally says, hey, this season doesn't
count.
And you think about it from a sports, you know, perspective, right?
Like, you know, we love to hold on to the lure of yesterday year when it's the winning part of it.
But we know we can't carry those, you know, those losses over to the next year.
You start with a clean slate.
And it's really about how do you give yourself a clean slate?
How do you actually count those victories and be intentional about it, writing it down?
You know, that's the journaling part for me.
And the other part is mindfulness.
Whenever I found myself ruminating on a past failure,
what I instantaneously try to do is bring myself to the present moment.
Sometimes there's just with gratitude.
I'm thankful to be in this moment.
I'm thankful that I have a glass of water.
And that ability to move into the present is one of the greatest unlocks, right?
Because oftentimes we're just living in a space that no longer exists.
Like my past does not exist anymore.
You know, it doesn't, I'm not in that moment anymore.
My future hasn't arrived, so I can only be here in this moment with you and Chris,
which I feel so grateful for, you know, to hear Chris articulate his experience and it's mirroring
some of the things that I navigate, right?
That's how you, like, get out of the shame.
And that's how you start to create a new scorecard as just being present in a moment, you know?
That's interesting.
Yeah.
And, Chris, do you feel like you were holding on to or trying to
hide the past after you got out of jail for a while the first few years or you know i just heard
you in chaka talking about saying i'm just going to go be a musician and not talking about this and let
let just be in the past oh it's fine yeah when i first got out um i remember i applied for this thing
to go to um some teaching and it was like a a music slash whatever and i and i proposed i said
i'm going to talk about you know like drugs and i'm going to talk about you know trying to
to impart some of these messages to encourage kids and they and some of the feedback I got from
this particular application was like no just just stick with the music we don't what you're talking
about this other thing but um I don't know maybe that made you feel shameful of like who knows you know
there could have been a lot of different factors I mean fact is right now I'm I'm wanting to lean
more back into this because I sense that it is it's important for me to develop it's important for
me to lean into it as opposed to away from it. And recently I've reconnected with reentry communities
and that's been really inspiring because I feel like when I'm in a room, in that room with
formerly incarcerated people, I feel like I belong in that room. I feel like there's a way
that I can be authentic that I don't always feel in any other spaces. Even just like connecting
with you, you know, before the show, there's just a, there's a sort of understanding and a feeling
of being seen for who I am and the feeling of not needing to be ashamed actually yeah and so I so I think
that why is that I don't know why do you know what is it I mean well when we're in prison I think
you do learn to see the prisoners as being human yeah and when I first got locked up and I mean
you went for drugs right yeah it was a drug charge yeah it was uh trafficking LSD and uh when I first got locked up
You know, we came from the same family, and I was on full scholarship at Ohio State
University at the time. And I had been identified as, quote, unquote, academically gifted
and all these things. And I, and a lot of people thought that what I did was kind of like
didn't really count as a crime. It's kind of like, but it did, but, you know, but that was like
an old narrative. It was like, oh, it's just drugs. And so what I went in, I kind of had this
narrative inside that was like, well, I'm a drug deal. And you, I think you see a lot of this
in prison.
Oh, absolutely.
People are like, well, there's a, there's a hierarchy of, you're always trying to say,
like, I'm not as bad as that guy, you know?
Right.
And so I kind of have that story when I went in.
But the longer I was in, the more I saw like, I'm exactly the same as everybody else here.
Yeah.
Like, why is that?
Yeah.
I think, well, I think part of it was that I saw the people that I was with as being deeply
human, you know, that there was so much I could learn from them that they had so much
of rich knowledge and wisdom and soulfulness and that that they're you know my relationships with them
were meaningful and I was learning so much from the people that I met in prison yeah and you know the
idea would be that like you know because I had all these good grades and like the full that I should
be the one that's teaching and I did teach a lot of musicians a lot of a lot of people came to me to
teach them about music but I learned more from them you know and so so I think maybe another answer to
your question is that through positive relationships is a way to hopefully work through some
of their shame to surround yourself with people who see you as human and constantly give you
that feedback of valuing your that humanity what were the three biggest lessons each one of
you learned in jail whether it be from a person that said something something you observed
something you experienced yourself you know three biggest lessons i'll let you start chris i mean
that would probably be one of them is that knowledge um comes from in more places and more people than
we are taught to believe and that we can really enrich our perspectives um the more that we listen
to a wide variety of voices that knowledge can come from so many different
things. I think another lesson that I learned was that, and this is maybe kind of a, even
a cliche, but like when things are hard, we have the capability of being hard. And when things
are not hard, we can get soft real quick. And so we have to be, you know, my experiences that we have
to constantly be vigilant about that. Because again, when you're really suffering with things
that are hard, you can rise the occasion, but it can be easy to become soft and in bad
ways.
In being soft, like not taking care of yourself, you're doing yourself a disservice.
And that's something you have to cultivate.
As far as a third lesson, I think that the lesson that I want to always be present to
is the lesson that I've also heard you speak eloquently about, which is when you
came out how much you were, how much gratitude you had for the simple things in life.
That's something that I want to be more present to. I think prison teaches you much more
about the, um, the, the levels of, uh, of how much can be taken from you. And it teaches you
to value intimacy and trust and freedom. There's probably a lot of other lessons, but
That's three that I got for now.
What about for you, Shaka?
Oh, man, so many, so many lessons.
I would say one of the big lessons I've learned from prison that applies to life is that
even the great amongst us can fall short and that even the lowliest of us can rise again.
And that is something I've learned in prison from just being around incredible, incredible men,
some of the most inspiring men that I've ever.
met in my life. A second lesson that I would say is one of the ones that probably is the most
near and dear to my heart is being in service of others is one of the greatest expressions of
our humanity. Something that I've carried, you know, I'm always in service of specifically young
people and people who are marginalized and who have been forgotten about or demean, you know,
about society, then I would just, I think the third one is, it's kind of like, the third one is
that prison doesn't define you. It just reveals the essence of who you are. And like that to me
is rooted in, you know, this question that I get often of like, how did you become so resilient?
And I'm like, I didn't go in prison knowing I was resilient. It wasn't until I was in the story
that I begin to recognize this deeper part
of what it means to be able to overcome adversity
and that that's what prison revealed to me about myself
is that as someone who's had
I mean just incredible amounts of trauma and adversity
I also have an indomitable will to overcome those things
and so those are probably the big key lessons
but I mean it's like Chris says
there's so many more when he was speaking about naming the things right i was i was really
like struck in my spirit about an idea of like fear and something that's really
anxious in society is we always talk about people who are courageous but you can't have
courage if you were never afraid it's true like if you're not if you're not afraid then that
doesn't require you to be courageous yeah um but if you were ever been courageous in your life
If you've ever done anything where you're like, man, it's a courage to do that.
That means that you had fear and you did it anyway.
And so I live my life in that space of like going forward in spite of.
And so that was great that we get a chance to name, you know, these feelings and these
emotions and these thoughts.
And like, I'm just so grateful right now to be in conversation with you and learn from your
Germany.
Likewise.
And I used to see where it's brought you and where it's to.
taking you so it's incredible it's powerful this is powerful and again i'm for anyone watching or
listening i think anyone can relate to the feeling of not feeling free in their life at some point
yeah and maybe it's right now in a relationship maybe it's in their career maybe they don't feel
free in their body they don't feel free in their mind they feel anxious and stressed all the time
and the goal is how do we create as much inner peace and freedom as possible to experience life to the
fullest have beautiful relationships and feel joy
as often as possible. Amen. It doesn't mean we're not going to experience challenges and limiting
thoughts and grief and sadness and go through hard seasons. But how do we not let those hard
seasons turn into hard years and a hard lifetime and overcome them through grace? I'm curious,
the synchronicities here are really cool. I didn't even realize you guys both went in essentially
the same year and you're the same age until we got here earlier. But it's been almost 35 years
since you both went in.
Is that correct?
You're both 54.
You went in around 1920.
Yeah.
Sorry, 53.
33.
34 years, almost 34 years, right?
Over three decades, three and a half decades, almost since you went in.
If each of you could go back and talk to your younger self, the day before the crime or day
before the action happened where you got sentenced to sentence.
if you could say something to your younger self at this version like you as now going back
shotgun and walking right up to the younger 19 version of you if you could say something you had a
minute to say something what would you say for one and two do you think what you say would
actually matter from you changing and not deciding to take that action yeah wouldn't have made a
difference. So I'm curious about that. I'll have you both say, reply to this. What would you say to your
younger self right before the crime? Wow, that's a, that's a great question. Um, what I would say
to that 19 year old kid is you are deserving of therapy and treatment to address what happened
to you and you should feel okay with seeking that out even though it wasn't offered and then the
second part of that question is that based on my mentoring young men and young women who
come from similar backgrounds who have had similar experiences I think it would have worked
Really?
If you were eye to eye with your younger self from your version now.
My version now.
If you sat with him before that day happened and you said this, you think you could have gotten through your younger self?
I think so.
And I say that because I've gotten through to enough young men at this version of myself now.
Interesting.
Who have come off, you know, being victims of gun violence.
And I've encouraged him to actually seek out therapy.
and I've created the space for them to realize
that that doesn't make them weak.
It makes them human.
And that is going to empower them to make different life decisions.
And so to get the type of letters I get from the young man that I've met
on this part of my journey and how they say that one conversation
helped them think about life differently, make different decisions.
You know, it requires what's required to do that is a deep understanding
of all those consequences.
And you said something earlier that I love
is that when you enter these spaces,
you're not doing a scared straight program.
These young men need to be love straight.
Like Jason Wilson, what he's dealing, you know, it's like...
Yeah.
You're acting eye-to-eye, being vulnerable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think it works in that context
because I've seen it work enough times.
Okay.
What about you, Chris?
what would you say that that resonates a lot i think that i would i would say to that young
man um i would name some of those feelings that that he's feeling and i would say it's okay
to feel those things you know these are these are um and it's okay to get help um and i would
try to also point that young man towards the hope of a positive vision
for his life and all the joy and love and connection and purpose that he could tap into
because I think he was missing all of that, all those things at that moment.
I don't know if he would listen if it was just one day.
But if I had enough time and if I could if I could, you know, wrap around him and like
hold them back from certain things, then maybe it would have changed.
I guess the challenge is, you know, this is what, late 80s, early 90s?
When was this?
Early 90s.
Early 90s?
There was not even the talk of therapy back then.
That's the challenge.
So it's like now guys know, they hear of it more.
They see it more.
If you would have said that word in the early 90s, they'd been like, what?
Like, that's a crazy thing.
But it's more acceptable now.
It's more talked about in culture.
You see pro athletes talking about it.
Absolutely.
Artists, you know, you see other men that you might be inspired by talking about these things.
But no one's talking about in the 90s.
Yeah.
So who knows if you would have been receptive?
I have no idea.
Maybe you would have.
But now these kids who are teenagers who are more open to it because they see men talking about it.
They see Oprah talking about it with you.
And they're like, oh, that's cool.
That's interesting.
It's not a shameful thing to talk about.
Yeah.
Back then, it was very shameful.
Oh, absolutely.
So I think it's a challenge you guys faced culturally.
Absolutely.
In the early 90s.
Yeah.
That it was, you couldn't show any other way than scaring.
people straight. You couldn't show vulnerability because there was no model of it that was acceptable.
I mean, unless you guys tell me wrong, unless you saw something on TV where men were open and
vulnerable and talking to Oprah and doing these things where, you know, they were like, hey, let's talk
about our fears and let's talk about our shame. No one was doing that back then, right? No, no, we
weren't. And I mean, even now, there's, I mean, we're still overcoming and fighting against
those stigmas, you know, especially when you factor in some of the environmental, um,
realities, right? And, you know, I think that we're definitely way further along than we ever were back then. But I also think that, you know, how we even got here is that we had great translators. And, you know, that's what I would have hoped that I could have been for that kid is how do you translate something that seems so complex and so counterintuitive into something that is, you know, available to you. I mean, that's what I had in prison. I had incredible mental.
And they realized that the approach to me, like, you can't scare me straight.
I just came off a street where people who shoot Nakeds all the time.
And so what they saw was that if they could, you know, get me to be just curious about life and reading and things like that.
And then they can challenge that part of me that was very rebellious, right?
So I would, I would, these mentors, they were master teachers.
And what they would do is they challenged me with books and words.
And they would say, well, you didn't read that book.
Because if you did, what does it say in Chapter 8?
You know, what was, what was Socrates talking about in this dialogue?
What was Malcolm talking about in this story?
And I was like, oh, I actually did read it.
So now we're in the dust stuff, right?
But it was feeding that part of that young, you know, lying on the yard, all that testosterone,
and it was just directly to intellect.
And so I would go and had these, like, incredible debates in the law library with these master
teachers without even knowing that they were actually teaching me. They were teaching me how to
research. They were teaching me how to defend my position. They were teaching me how to arrive at an
argument that I believed in and that I cared enough about to vocalize. And they did it in a way
that was approachable. They did it in the way that was accessible. If they would have just came in
like, hey, you need to do these things, you know, to change your life, instant war would have been
up, you know? And so when I think about going back, you know, it's like, okay, you go back
with the wisdom of now, it's that you got to set the table. You know, you have to set the table
right for someone to come in and enjoy that spiritually rich food. And if you set the table right,
the likelihood of them being able to lower those walls is higher than if you just come in
hot and heavy, like, you know, if you don't do this, you're going to tear up and destroy your life.
what is the one conversation you wish you could have with every young man or woman who's going through some type of feelings of being trapped or they've been traumatized and they can't get past the trauma or the feeling of you know anxiety depression fear uncertainty what's the one conversation you wish you could have with any young man or woman so the way did I think about it is
it's more about the idea of the young man or woman that inhabits the body of adult men and
women because what you think about this audience inside all of us is that kid
young little boy and what i what i would say is that one of my um my my my quotables is like
never settle for mediocrity when greatness is available um you know that's a conversation
I always have with the young people that I mentor, but also with my peers when we're in
deep conversation about acknowledging what exists inside of us, which is that young person
who's still looking for validation, still looking to be affirmed, still looking for somebody
to bolster their confidence, is recognizing we don't have to stop loving on that little
person inside of us. We don't have to stop being curious. One of the chapters in the book,
is on joy and one of the breakdowns is about being a joy hunter how do you go out and find that joy
that feeds that inner kid because that's how you get to great outcomes is when you can be curious
I also talk about a mentor who I had he worked in the prison I'm curious if you had this type of
mentor but he was a civilian employee and he asked me a question that literally changed the trajectory
in my life he was outside of the president he would come in and yeah he was a
He came in and ran a recreation program.
What did he ask you?
He asked me, what else could I do with my mind?
And this was in relation to he saw my organizational ability
because I organized a man on the yard that I went to war with.
He saw my entrepreneurial skill set because I ran every hustle you could from the yard.
In the negative sense.
In the negative sense.
It was all illegal, but, you know.
And then he saw my intellectual acumen because he would read things
that I had written in a prison newspaper.
And that's when he just pulled me to the side.
And he was like, you run a yard.
Like you're, you know, I wasn't a model, just to be clear,
I wasn't like a model prisoner.
Like I was drug trafficking, ordering hits.
I was in full on wars on the yard.
And he still saw something that was there.
And he literally asked me that question.
What else can you do with your mind?
Interesting.
That's a question I'm asking myself at 53.
You know, this is why I've been able to come.
the many things that I've done, I'm still entertaining that little kid, you know, that 19-year-old boy, that 22-year-old, that 25-year-old.
And what I would hope is that, you know, your audience takes away is that hidden prisons has no, no hidden prisons have no age limit.
Healing has no age limit.
That little kid inside of us deserves to be loved.
And so those are the conversations that I would have is like, yeah.
Did you ever hear that from anyone when you were, you know, in your 20s about the kid inside of you deserves to be loved?
It wasn't until I was probably in my 30s.
I ran across this random book.
I worked in a law library.
And we would get people would donate books all the time.
Like, literally, like, your books are probably being donated, which is super important.
My books are being donated now in the prisons.
And sometimes they would just get these boxes of books and they wouldn't pass them out.
I come across this book called House of Hill.
House of Healing. Houses of Healing. And I started reading this book, and one of the things that struck me is it talked about resolving conflict by being able to see the little kid inside the person you were in argument with. That changed how I oriented myself toward the end of my incarceration. And that's the first time I was like, man, this is like you can, you can love on yourself when you see the kid and other people.
And once I started seeing that in other men, I was like, oh, this is a temper tantial.
Like, he doesn't want beef.
Yeah.
He's literally having a temperate because he can't name the thing.
He can't articulate that whatever happened between us caused some anxiety or trigger some
unheeled trauma, but I can see it as clear as day.
And it literally changed how I oriented myself in that environment.
And, you know, I was able to.
resolve conflict instantaneously by being empathetic and compassionate while still being
fun and who I am.
Sure.
Wow.
But I don't have to tear you down or destroy you or stab you or blundging you in order for us
to arrive at something that honors both of our humanity.
Wow.
And that showed up in work life.
It shows up in my social impact work today.
It's like whenever I see an adult having a moment, I'm like, oh, they're just having that
temper tension.
But it doesn't go away.
Yeah.
Like that trauma that we experienced early in childhood
and how we learn to resolve that, it doesn't go away.
It just comes up differently.
Yeah, and some people, you know,
they might not have had the same traumas of you,
but they still don't know how to deal with it.
Absolutely.
Even if it wasn't as extreme right of their trauma.
It's still, we don't need to judge how much someone's had trauma
or a little to that trauma.
They've experienced it they don't know how to process it.
Our minds has no judgment with trauma, right?
And that's the thing.
I think culturally, we get into comparative analysis.
That's just the way we tell stories in the world.
But trauma is trauma.
Yeah.
You know, and that, it doesn't, you don't have to go.
You know, that's what a subtitle was about the hidden prisons.
There's even one part where I talk about well-intended prisons where it's like, you don't even realize this thing is holding you back.
because on the outside it doesn't look handful.
But it's like you're in a relationship.
You break up with this person.
But you know, like, we're broken up, but we'll remain friends.
But you say you want to get married and you want to have a relationship.
But you have a whole thing that's anchoring your anchor to because you haven't cut it loose.
Yes.
You know, it's the helicopter parent.
No helicopter parent is sitting out like, hey, I'm going to be a bad parent.
They think that what they're doing is protecting.
but it's preventing their child from building resilience, you know, it's preventing them
from making choices, et cetera. It's well intended, you know. And so that's the hidden part of
all of these things where we, we started to compare ourselves to others' experience. And we were
talking earlier where 19 years is no different to me than 19 minutes of losing your freedom,
your dignity, being abused, whatever that brings up. Like, you don't have to
to compare it like hard is hard you know what I'm saying and so our the way that our minds work
it's not looking at the packets that is delivered in all our mind is saying hey something doesn't
feel right this isn't right and my I'm going to react to that right and so if you if you don't even
you don't even have to compare yeah but we've all gone through enough in life to where it shapes
how we think about our experiences 100% Chris when you feel like you were able to start
doing therapy or any type of therapy to support your journey.
When was that?
I mean, I had some therapy when I was in high school,
and so I was already, like, hip to it.
I was, like, hip to the idea.
Yeah, and so it was just always something that I pursued
when I was locked up at the time.
We had access to Pell Grants, and we could go to college.
I believe the same thing happened for Shaka.
And so that was a real important thing.
That was like a lifeline for me in prison to be able to take classes from professors that would come in.
And yeah, so I took a lot of psychology classes as well as philosophy.
And then I've just kept it up ever since then.
So, you know, I like to go to therapy.
I like to also listen to podcasts that are, you know, read books and all that kind of thing,
wherever I can learn emotional intelligence tools.
Where do you feel like both of you would be if you didn't do therapy after your experiences?
I think that there's such a strong impulse to react as opposed to respond consciously to all the things that around us.
I think that based on the amount of even things that happened to me when I was young, but also from prison, you know, like I would just be, I would be violent.
and unruly.
Reactive.
Yeah, reactive.
And so that's really, like, that's one of the biggest things that I'm, that I'm conscious
to is trying to learn to respond from an intentional, mindful place.
And, yeah, like I said earlier, I think that this is one of the big problems we have as men,
is that combination of not having those tools?
to overcome those traumas
and learn how to respond.
Where do you feel like you'd be
if you didn't have some type of therapeutic expression
to heal from the past?
So I've done,
I've had a couple of therapists
since I've been out of prison
and neither of them worked for me.
Largely because I think they just became so infatuated
that I survived solitary confinement.
I kind of became their therapist.
And I was like, I was like, y'all should be paying me for this.
But I will say the self-practice of healing, you know, doing the hard work, being able to, you know, again, I was lucky.
I was literate.
You know, so I was able to read a lot of books about trauma, undoing, trauma, unpacking it, you know, figuring out these tools that I can use, meditation, mindfulness, journaling, being in community with, you know,
know, people who were where I wanted to be in my life in terms of how I wanted to fill about
myself, people who had a healthy orientation, I would probably be like the other, you know,
70% of people who end up back in prison. You know, society is very unforgiving.
Is it 70% of people that get out of prison and go back?
And end up back in prison, absolutely. Really? Yeah. Yeah. It is, um, so I'm sure I would,
I would be counted amongst those, those people who went back. Because,
one, society is not as forgiving as we would like to believe.
Any of us who've made anything of our lives post-incarceration is because we probably had a type of
determination and grit to do it the right way that superseded our ability to fall into
the depression trap and the, hey, I'm a failure, you know, all the things that society
is constantly telling you.
You know, even going back to shame, you know, I forgot about this piece.
Anytime I have to fill out an application and that asks, have you ever been convicted of a felony, you know, that it brings back like, man, when does this stop?
You know, when there's enough enough, you know.
So I think without.
Yeah, you should have already had the punishment.
Now I'm still being punished, even though I did my time.
Yeah.
So we're in a society that doesn't, you know, think kindly about those.
of us who run a file of the law. It's hard to get employment, housing. I mean, it's 44,000
collateral consequences of having a felony. And so, yeah, I think without the, you know,
therapeutic outlook I've had on life, you know, the many failures I've had this side of
incarceration, not the, the times I wasn't called back after a great interview, the times I was
deny housing, the times I was denied insurance, and like the list goes on and on and on,
where those things can be very much like a trigger that says to you, nothing I do will ever be
enough, right?
Man, how do you overcome that then?
Yeah.
So for me, it was realizing that people who've never had a felony have had failure, people
who have never had my background have been not, have not got the call back.
that they have to overcome maybe different things,
but part of this journey in adulthood
is like you have to fight for what you want in life.
And so just that awareness that I'm not alone on this journey
and that while it may be specific to my experience,
it's not unique in overall adult experience.
That's helped me to navigate it, you know?
And then I'll say the last part for me was that
I never
wanted to
never want or desire to
ever
ever have my life
controlled
that's somebody who's
intellectually inferior to me
and like that was just enough
for me to be like you know what
I'm never going back there
I don't know how I'm gonna do
whatever it takes to stay out
but I know that I'm never going back
because I never want to be in that situation again
wow
I want to ask about forgiveness, because I think forgiveness is a big part to everyone's life.
And I think when we don't learn to forgive, specifically ourselves, we are in some type of a prison.
Absolutely.
Internally.
So there's forgiving others, you know, the people that maybe influenced you in your environment, friends, family, outsiders who influence you to become who you were to get into that space.
But then there's forgiving yourself, which I've got.
think can be even harder. Was it harder to forgive the people around you or to forgive yourself?
And what allowed you to start forgiving in general? I'll let you start. I'll let you start.
I probably, it's harder for me to forgive myself than to forgive other people. What allowed me to
forgive myself? Have you allowed yourself to forgive yourself? I think to some degree. Yeah. And I think it's just a
process that keeps ongoing. And I think continuing to do the work of, you know,
living intentionally and putting myself doing good habits, you know, all the same habits
that I was working in prison, in prison, and putting myself in service to people and in
positive affirming relationships and maintaining that. I think all that's helping me to forgive
myself.
It is.
What about you, Shaka?
Who, forgiveness is the big one.
So my journey to forgiveness has been this long, incredible, winding road.
And what I will say to your audience is this.
When you ask the universe to give you something, the universe is going to test that.
And when you proclaim to the world that this is what I believe.
Your belief is going to be tested in a way that will blow your mind.
But if you trust the process, it'll unlock everything you've ever thought possible for your life.
Forgive this for me was that.
A couple of years ago, I got a letter from the man who shot me when I was 17 years old.
I saw this.
This is crazy.
It was.
So someone shot you at 17.
At 17.
And then 16 months later, I shot and tragically caused the man's death.
but you didn't know who shot you.
I never saw his face.
Wow.
A 30 second argument escalated to gunfire.
He shot, drove off.
I ran and went to the hospital.
And all I heard was rumors of who this guy was.
I was out.
After I got out of the hospital, I'm on a hut trying to find this guy.
And eventually the rumor was that he was locked up or killing somebody else.
Never knew if it was true or not.
Never encountered him.
in prison, nearly 30 years later, I get a letter. This guy encountered one of my books
in prison. He's reading the story of me talking about being shot. He realized he was the shooter.
Wow. He writes me a letter apologizing and saying to himself that he took on the responsibility
of the life decision I made that led me to prison. And he felt partially responsible.
responsible for that.
Wow.
At the time he wrote me, he was in prison.
When I got the letter,
what it did is it triggered the old me.
I can have this guy taken care of.
Done.
For literal nothing.
Tomorrow.
Instantaneously.
Gosh.
And I was like, oh, this is how the universe
tests what you really believe.
Oh, man. That's heavy.
And so what I did is I sat down
and I started to write him back.
And then I decided that I didn't owe him that letter
because if forgiveness for me
was really about me.
So instead, what I did is I looked him up on the computer
and I just wanted to see with this guy
who had been a ghost in my life, what he looked like.
Saw what he looked like that ghost went away
and I decided to write my mother
because I had this experience
where I thought I had forgiven
my mother for the abuses and all the things as a child.
And what I did is that I told her I forgave her because it was a noble thing.
It was all about my ego.
You didn't feel it.
I didn't feel it, but I also attached something to it is that now she has to change and become
this mother that I desire.
You put a condition on it.
Condition.
Forgiveness with a condition really isn't forgiveness.
Right.
And so that's when I realized that true forgiveness.
is really about letting go of a moment.
And that person doesn't have to change.
They don't have to be receptive.
It don't have to be anything.
If you desire to be free, then you have to free yourself.
And when I did that, it just changed the dynamic of my relationship with my mother,
where I feel more like the parent now.
And the power and the beauty of it is that I get a chance to love on that little girl
in her who was hurt
that turned into the hurt mother
who hurt her kids
yeah and you may not enjoy it
or you may wish there was a different scenario
where I wish my mother could be this way
I wish my mother I wish I wasn't parenting my mom
you could still have that feeling
and also love and accept her and forgive her
and grieve the loss of a life
you wish you could have with her
and also love her for who she is
and just reimagine a new way of being
Yes.
And when you let go, fully let go of that thing that you're holding on, life were your answer to so.
And whether that person is in your life or not, you're not carrying this albatross around your neck that you beat yourself up with over and over.
You know, like I learned with my mother that my mother had went through so many things in her young life.
And I was like, oh, this is the universe is delivering on everything that I said I wanted.
And it's really putting it front and center.
You know, you want to be compassionate and empathetic.
And you talk about being able to love one of the child.
Well, here, look at your mother.
Look at her joining.
Yeah.
Look at her joining.
Can you handle what she's went through and still see her as a full human being,
even though she hurt you when you as a kid?
That's the power of, like, yeah.
What's the thing both of you struggle with the most after 33,
plus years.
What do I struggle with the most?
In regards to what?
What's still something you feel like you struggle with trying to overcome or letting
go of that's maybe hold you back from time to time or you wish you didn't have to
hold on to or you wish you weren't still reliving or experiencing?
Yeah.
I think that this one of these questions when I went to
to jail this like code of what it is to be a man this kind of you know one of these big
questions i always felt unresolvable to me um which is there's no answer yeah well this this
well it's like the dilemma of non-violence right like i think that's a very difficult um spot to to
find the answer to for me um yeah because like you know when i was in jail i remember distinctly
feeling like this is, you know, being between a rock and a hard place. Because if somebody,
you know, threatens you or disrespects you, then you either have to meet that. You have to
escalate that with violence or you have to retreat from it. And either of those choices,
both can have very profound consequences. Absolutely. Interesting. And I know that there's like,
you know, great thinkers that have articulated the nonviolent. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Like, you know, like maybe you can't do that in prison like you could in outside of prison.
Maybe it's different.
I don't know.
Yeah, but I still think it's something that like, you know, we carry with us, you know.
And it's and now maybe I'm doing myself a disservice by.
Maybe I'm nitpicking because, because I mean, I don't, I'm not violent, you know, obviously.
But it's just, you know, it's just trying to kind of find like consistency, more consistency of being feeling.
peaceful and having harmonious responses like day to day.
So, I don't know if it's really a struggle, but it's something that I'm conscious on.
Yeah, yeah.
What about you?
Is there anything you still struggle with today?
Um, I think one of the, one of my biggest, the biggest things that I've been
unpacking over the years is like, there can be an emotional hardness to me.
hardness yeah not a not a tenderness sometimes yeah yeah where it's very it can be very just kind of like
i can cut things off and keep it moving it not even a lot even blink and i don't i don't like that
you know so i'm i'm constantly working on that part of of of my healing journey um and i think
that's probably the biggest one is that you know prison prison hardens you like you don't you know
It's one of the things I tell people, I'm like, you know, Chris and I think we look like
two lovely gentlemen and you'll probably have great time hanging out with us. And then there's a
language that only he and I understand. That's real. That's true. That's like you can, the way
that you orient to the world is very different than what people would imagine when they see the
smile and they see the laughter, they see the joy. And then there's this other part of us that
comes from that experience and part of it is that you have to disassociate from your body so much while
you're in there wow um you know the first arrest and someone strips you naked like there there's
there's there's in order to normalize that level of depravity and that dehumanization you have to
disconnect and then you're in this very volatile environment where there's constant violent eruptions
And you have to start emotionally hardening yourself toward, oh, this is just life on the yard.
This is just what it is.
You know, a guy getting into an argument over $2 that leaves to bloodshed, oh, this is a normal day in prison.
And so when you experience that for a year after year after year, it hardens you emotionally in a way to where the work that it takes to embrace your humanity and to be compassionate and empathetic.
You see someone that is hurting or who's been hurt or, you know, someone who's having that, you know, that adult temper tantrum that's directed towards you and to still be able to love that person and not just cut them off and be like move on.
And not just go back into that old way of being.
Yeah, where they no longer exists, right?
And so that is the toughest part of anything else that's been.
hard is like the toughest part has been that and how i've you know saw for it is like you know one
being a mentor of young people being a dad uh being a husband um having my little i have a little
neighbors they're like they're twins they're like three and then the oldest boy is like five
and they love me i think it's the hair but they like if i'm outside and they see me and they just
run up and they're like you know and so it's those things that
that I am racing, I intentionally seek out to kind of soften that part of me.
But that's tough.
You know, it's tough to, like, let that go.
I mean, how do you, I mean, speaking of father and both of you guys are parents,
how do you, two kids each, how do you both deal with being fathers, you know, to younger
kids who learn about your experience, who, like, how do you navigate those conversations,
but also parenting without feeling shame or fear for your children for their lives.
Yeah.
Like how both of you navigated parenthood now.
Yeah.
I think for me it's been Dr. Safali.
She's great.
Yeah, her book on Conscious Parenting.
She's great.
And one of the things that she just talked about is like, your children aren't your children, right?
It's like, it reminded me of Khalil Jabim's the Prophet.
And it's kind of like we just get to bear witness to their lives.
You know, I constantly remind myself that.
He has his own journey, you know.
And then what I've done as a dad is I've just been intentional about sharing, hey, here's what my life was.
Here's where I come from.
What if that's really painful for your kids?
What if it's really hard for them, like, to hear that about you because they love you, they care about you.
Yeah.
How do you navigate that?
I think kids need to hear hard things.
You know, I think it builds resilience.
I think they'll be fine.
I think we live in a culture now that's kind of soft.
protecting them
Yeah, yeah
And I, you know, with my son,
I was like,
here's where, here's what happened
where I knew that I had to tell him the story.
Kindergarten,
taking him to school,
literally like the night prior,
Oprah Winfrey was on CNN
with Van Jones and Ava DuVernay.
Uh-huh.
And Van asked her a question
about her relationship with me.
Really?
And she got so excited
and she was like,
God. I read his book, et cetera, et cetera. I get to the school the next day. I'm standing there
dropping my son off. One of the parents comes up. It was like, oh, my God, I heard Oprah Winfrey
talking about you last night on the news. And it was a moment where I should have felt like pride,
but I instantaneously thought about my son. Because I was like, oh, parents are like, hey,
your classmates, dad was on the news. And by the way, he was in prison for this. And I instantaneously
he was like, you know what?
He's on kindergarten or just tell him what it is in that language.
And then over the years, I've just continued to do it.
And like now he probably can tell my story better than me because I bring him to the events.
I bring him into the other side of it.
So he used to come to my job where I work with men and women coming out of prison in jails.
He goes into community events where I'm talking about gun violence and the things,
none of which his life looks like.
but because that has happened consistently on his journey he's now mature to the point where
we can have real discussions about it you know and I just think that's what you know
whether there is any other thing right is with kids is you know sex is internet is all these
things they're going to like we can't we can't protect them the way maybe our parents
could have protected us a little bit because it's just so invasive right and
they have so much access. So I just think as a parent, you know, figure out the right language.
Sure. You know, consult with professionals. You understand that part. You know, reading Dr. Spottie's
book was great for me and some of her stuff. But I think we're in a world where we have to beat
the internet to our children. Get ahead of it. Yeah, we got. We have to. How have you dealt with it,
Chris? Yeah, I mean, I have two children. So my oldest is 28. My youngest is 16.
I think trying to be really human with both of my kids and trying to have really honest relationships with them,
reading books, getting advice from different parents,
but really from all the lessons I've learned from therapy.
Like I think parenting that relationship I have with my kids,
I see it as just like, I see it as an opportunity to be honest.
to be vulnerable with them, to open a door and let them know that they can share anything they
want with me. And I just, I take it as like a huge responsibility that I want to be present in their
lives and I want to show up for them in the most loving way that I can and have a close relationship
where they feel they can tell me anything. I'm curious about both of you guys' purpose since,
like the moment you knew you were getting out of jail. First off, can you share what it was like
either getting that moment that you knew when you were going to get out and the day you got
out can you both share that feeling were you scared were you excited was it like confusing what was
that like first yeah i can't wait to hear chris though i'm always curious like how other
guys experienced what was it like um yeah well you remember you were there when i got out yeah
but what was it like for you i mean maybe it's exciting maybe it's joke me it's fear i don't know
it's like could be a number of things it was it was incredible um coming home you know we we got together
siblings were all at the house they all came back from different places and uh both of our parents
brought me in i remember lewis was there and i came in and we ordered a pizza we all cried
you know all of our siblings our four siblings we all we made a sign like welcome home crows of
yeah yeah and it was it like for you just like even just getting out for the first time you know
it's like yeah it was it was it was exhilarating it was also um it was a lot of emotions it was a big
relief but it was also like and i think i've heard shaka speak about this there was a period of years
um where i've always felt like i was worried about being out of place as they say right and you
spoke about this too about that being out of place like always on tip shows and like wondering or
you're walking down the street and somebody walks and they come close to you and you and if they
would have done that in the yard yeah you're like that's disrespect but they're not even
think about it there's different rules and you're so you're like coming
Like, I was constantly triggered when I first got out, like, I had to stop myself from being, like, super aggressive because when you're in the yard, you learn to carry yourself in a certain way and you steer people down and you, like, you have to, like, huff up and be like, I had developed certain ways of being and communicating and of carrying myself and to try to, I couldn't just change that right away, you know. And so I was really triggered on the street when I first got on the street. But, of course, I had all these other great emotions, too. Like,
obviously right you know like when getting home feeling that freedom was was wonderful and then um
but you had asked i think you also asked about what was the vision or what was the purpose yeah what
was did you have a purpose yeah after like once you knew you're going home did you have a vision
for your life or were you just like i'm not sure yet and i'm assuming having a vision and a purpose
is going to support support you at not being the 70% statistic that goes back yeah to jail i'm assuming
But, yeah. Well, you know, before I got locked up, my purpose was to be a great classical violinist. And while I was locked up, that kind of changed. And I had a vision about becoming a great jazz violinist.
For people who don't know the story, you were classically trained violinists for most of your life, very gifted. But then you went to jail for four and a half years and joined the prison band and learned lots of different type of musical skills with inmates.
who taught you funk and rap and blues and jazz and hip hop and soul and R&B and all these
different things.
You learn jazz in jail.
Yeah.
Which is pretty fascinating.
So his greatest musical teacher, no, he had great musical teachers growing up
classically, but to expand creatively, his greatest musical teachers were in jail, which
made him the musician he is today and the teacher and the educator today.
I fell in love with the music, but I also found out.
love with like the people that showed me the music and like the culture that was behind it and the
feeling that I had of being in the room during the church service and making music in in these other
ways and it was like an insight into it's like you're looking at the world through this window
and then you know for years and you turn around it's like whoa this is a whole other thing
which was and uh you know it was also Appalachian music too right you know but especially a lot of
Black American music and Black American culture.
I mean, that was just an eye-opener for me as a kid, you know, and it was different times back
then that it is now.
But so, but it would be proper to say it was an awakening for me.
But that's also a little bit awkward for me to talk about.
Because, I mean, just that whole experience, because I'm sensitive to wanting to be respectful
of what it is and not to be posturing around the whole idea.
you know what I mean and so but but that's part of why the vision that I had was important to me
actually because it's like I want to honor what happened here and so I don't even need to talk
about it to honor it I can play music and because the people that can recognize that it there's
no word it needs to be spoken you know and so I mean before you go out of that what we
just say to that shocker because I've always encouraged him to speak more about it
And maybe I should stop telling him to do that.
But I think when he speaks about it from the experience of learning this style of music
from some of his greatest mentors in prison, I feel like he's honoring those men as well
while educating the world about those lessons.
But again, no one wants to listen to the younger brothers.
So I don't know what you think.
And maybe it's, you know, in his own time or maybe it makes sense for him not to do that.
No, I almost think there's like almost two different things.
there's the musicianship in
artistry is what I'm hearing
is like there's a sacred exchange
that happen and there's
a protective element around that
if I'm not mistaken that's
kind of what I feel or what I sense
and I truly get that
and then I also think about
the stories that go untold
and that if they are told it helps so many people
I'm very protective of my mentors who
guided me to reading
and who guided me to writing.
And what I knew is that I wanted to honor these men.
And that I mentioned their name and rooms
that they can't even imagine themselves ever being in
because what it speaks to is the humanity
of any of us who have walked those halls,
of halls of shame and the punity of halls that we existed in.
And so I think there's a beauty in,
magic to holding on to that sacred. And then I think there's a power and responsibility with
how do we articulate that in a way that really helps people see the humanity. Right. That art
galvanizes in an environment where sometimes and oftentimes it's the early hope that people have.
You know, it's the only light that we have is those moments when you do a show for the prison.
Right. And you see people just like let loose. Right. And the tension.
goes down and there's no night fights and they're just like oh my god to see that you know and so
i think it's a duality there um but all things in their own time you know and i think playing
the music has been i mean i'm so intrigued by your art and and so appreciative that i get a chance
to bear witness to it and in your journey of how you got to it so i think that's the the power yeah
yeah and it's probably it's not that i don't want to appreciate
it. Thank you for that, first of all. And it's not that I don't want to tell the story, it's why
I want to tell it, right. You know what I mean? Because it feels like a heavy responsibility
to talk about. But actually, I mean, the film that we're putting out, I think does do it justice
because we tell it through poetry and we've put like so much work into and that's why. And
maybe if I were to write a book or, you know. You know, the question you asked about, you know,
anticipating getting out and the purpose part, right?
Yes.
So I, you know, I started writing in solitary confinement.
And initially, I was writing to save my own life.
I called it my right or die moment.
And I was journaling and I realized I had never accomplished anything.
And so.
Never finished anything.
Never finished anything, right?
And so the idea was like, just finish one thing.
And if you finish one thing, you can turn your life around.
That just happened to be a book.
And then I was like, okay, well, now, what do I want to do with this book, right?
What I want to do with my writing?
And that's when I started to write down the most absurdly ambitious, audacious goals ever.
I want to be a best-selling author.
I want to meet Oprah.
Like, I would just write it down no matter how wild it sounded, right?
And then I fell into about a depression.
You know, we talked earlier about being depressed in prison.
So the prison itself is depressing.
But there's another level of the pressure you can get through where you just don't, you can't even get off the bunk.
You know, you're just like, I just want to give up.
I just, I don't want to be in this anymore.
Yeah.
And it was because I realized I had this gift all along and I couldn't give birth to it.
Oh, what was the gift that you couldn't get ready to?
Writing.
Writing.
I had wrote those letters and my family would be like, write me more letters.
They're so detailed.
I'm not thinking of myself as a writer.
You know, Tom asked me, what else could I do with my mind?
I'm just writing prison articles.
I'm not thinking I can become a real writer.
And so, but once I went through that depression, which was probably about a year, I wrote, I wrote two books, started a third, fell into depression, couldn't finish it.
And then eventually I got on the other side of it.
I went back to my books, you know, as a man think of The Secret, all these different books.
I would go back and read them and, you know, Nelson Mandela's, you know, long road to freedom.
I would just go back and read these books and read them, trying to get my brain to move for.
And then eventually I was like, okay, finish the third book, finished the fourth book.
Started a publishing company in prison.
The same year I went up for parole, which was 2008, published my first book from prison, got sued by the prison, got denied parole, went back up 2009, got denied parole again.
And I almost gave up.
You know, at that point, I had 17 years in.
I knew how to do time.
No, actually, I had 18 years, and I knew how to do time.
And I almost gave up.
And then I went back and how I felt when I got the news that I was getting out.
I was never forget, I came in the unit.
This officer, she was joking with me.
She was like, hey, I got something big to tell you.
Me and her had kind of a flirty relationship.
So I'm like, I don't know what it is, you know.
She was like, meet me down at the cubicle, went down to the cubicle.
she was like, they're letting you go home.
Wow.
And I was just like, whoa.
And so I went around to the council.
I wanted to ask the counselor, but I didn't want to kind of, you know, reveal that she had already told me.
So I go in, I'm asking the concert some random stuff.
Hey, can you check my account?
And she was like, oh, actually, you're leaving.
You'll be transferring in a couple of weeks.
You're going to Detroit for the reentry program.
You're going home.
Wow.
Now it's like, yo, this is crazy.
This is real.
This is real.
I go back around to the cubicle. Yard opens up. My brother-in-law was there and a friend from our
neighborhood. They were both there serving time. I went out and walking and talking to y'all. I'm
like, yo, I think I'm going home. They said it. I don't got the paperwork yet, though. And so we
walk and talk and, you know, they're excited from me. I'm excited, you know, and come back in. And when
they passed out mail call, they gave me the paper. They was like, you're going home, June 22nd, 2010.
Wow.
One day after my 38th birthday.
Wow.
And so I literally called my dad.
My dad answered the phone and I was like, Dad, I got my parole.
And my dad let out a guttural cry, a rejoice that he had held pent up for 19 years.
And it was like, holy smokes, you know.
And so I knew when I got out, my plan was, I'm going to get a little.
out, I'm going to hustle these books out of the trunk of the car.
Get out, I'm going to just sell these novels, and eventually I'll make it.
And so I get parole.
They take me from the prison to the parole office.
I get to the parole office, and I'm inside.
And I literally asked the lady, hey, can I go outside?
Really?
And she was like, what are you talking about?
Like, you're free.
You go where you want to go.
Wow.
And I was like, yo, I'm still asked permission.
So I get there and I'm outside.
and my son's mom comes to, you know, pick me up at the time,
and she has the books with her.
And I sold my first book in a parking lot.
Literally, literally.
I sold the first book in the parking lot.
I still have, it's the funniest picture ever.
I got on these big baggy shorts that were probably from the 90s,
or oversized T-shirt.
And I sold that first book 15 years ago.
I've been selling books ever since.
And so when I came home,
That's what I, I thought that was my purpose was just to sell these novels.
And I ended up writing, writing my wrongs after prison.
And that book skyrocketed, but I wrote it for that reason where I would go and do these talks.
And people would say, you don't sound like someone who's been in prison.
And they meant it as a compliment.
Yeah.
But I was like, I just left some of the most brilliant scholars, some of the greatest legal minds,
some of the greatest writers, thinkers, comedians, you name.
and those were the men I served time, but that's what inspired me to write, right, in my wrongs.
I wanted people to understand that whatever landed us there was not the defining part of who we all are.
We're still humans.
We're dreamers, builders, doers, were all these things.
And to tell that story.
And so once that happened, that book came out, people would come up with me and they would just tell me all type of stories.
And in the last couple of years, I've really been questioning what has been my purpose all along.
I thought it was to sell novels.
I haven't done a novel deal yet.
You know, I thought it was prison reentry.
That's really not what that was about for me.
That was about my friends are incarcerated.
What I realize is that my purpose in life is to help people find the door to their own personal freedom.
Like, that's what I know with certain.
There's like, there's a lot of things that I don't know.
And there's a few things that I know with certainty.
And one of them is I am searching what I'm here to do in the world.
And that can be expressed through different avenues.
Absolutely.
Or through work or through speaking or all the different things.
Yeah. That's interesting that you got clear with that purpose.
And I think we're going back to depression, talking about how depressing prison is.
Yeah.
But I think most people are living in depression in their own prison.
And I think a lot of people are depressed because they are discounting themselves or doing a
disservice from actually expressing their truest gifts and finding their purpose.
And they know, like you said, you knew there was more inside of you, but you weren't doing it.
You weren't accomplishing things.
You weren't finishing things.
And that depression, like, captured you.
I think a lot of people are depressed because they know they're doing a disservice to what they
truly want to be doing in the world.
Yeah.
And so the purpose side of things, how do you got, I mean, both of you have a purpose now.
It's so funny you say that you have so many synchronicities and similarities because
I have vivid memories of Chris after he got out of prison.
He made his first album, I think it was a CD called 10 Yard.
I think it was your first one, right?
It was your first album called the second one.
The second one.
I mean, you have, what, almost 20 albums or 19 albums.
But his second album was called 10 Yard, and his experiences in the yard.
and I remember him doing these little bar restaurant clubs right afterwards
and taking his CDs and just handing them with people and selling them one by one.
You sold books one by one.
Absolutely.
You were both expressing your art after jail and doing it one by one trying to make a difference in an impact.
Yeah.
And today, both of you, you know, Chris has taught over a thousand schools teaching music education,
expressing yourself through music.
He has a camp called the Creative Strings.
workshop. It's a yearly camp that brings musicians in from around the world and to express themselves
creatively. You do this through speaking, through writings, through workshops, to all these different
things. So you guys are both doing your purpose in a beautiful way, and I'm grateful for that.
But a lot of people, I feel like, don't even know what their purpose is, or even if they do know
it, they discount themselves from actually pursuing it. They live in fear, and that's a prison
of itself in my mind.
Absolutely.
And I think that's what, you know, if people take nothing else from this conversation,
what I would hope they would take from it is life as a metaphor.
We were, we've done the hard work for the audience.
And we were physically incarcerated, and yet we found a freedom through artistic
expression, through meditation, mindfulness, community, all the things that we've talked about.
Yes.
those are things that are replicable
and can be easily modeled
in any facet of life
you know so if there's something that you feel
is holding you back
like you have to one you just have to
you have to call that thing what it is
and then you get a chance to decide
what are you going to do about it you know
and that's the beauty of like
you know where we started from
we're not supposed to be sitting here
based on the statistics
you know we're sitting here
because we made choices in spite of
you know we made the
the hard, the harder choice is to try to figure out how to do your purpose when you're not
getting the big checks. You know, you're selling two books and two CDs and, you know,
three people are showing up to your show and you got to perform like it's 3,000 or, you know,
two people show up to your book signing and yet you've got to keep making just one step after
the next. And for me, it's like you count all those victories. And you're cruel enough of them
And you'll see life really, you know, it's just like training, right?
It's like you live, you start to get stronger.
And you're like, oh, okay, I'm getting some action, but you've got to be consistent to get
the strength that you desire, you know, so, yeah, life is metaphor.
I want you guys, I'm going to have you guys, Chris is going to play a song and you're going to
read a poem here in a second before we do that.
I want people to know more about your book.
It's called How to Be Free Again, if you want to be free in your life, this is the book
for you, a proven guide to escaping life's hidden prisons.
So make sure you guys check out this book that breaks down a lot of the different strategies
on how to create personal freedom from the strategies and techniques that you've talked about as well.
Chris has a movie called Redemption Time.
And you can go to Redemption Time Show.com.
It's touring throughout the U.S. this year and next year.
And people can learn about it by going there and checking it out.
But it's a 70-minute performance film featuring poet.
Jimmy Santiago Baca, who was Chris's poetry mentor that you found his poetry in jail that really gave you some personal freedom, along with Christian Howes, Jazz Miletus, and two were formerly incarcerated artists who transformed their lives through creativity.
And through poetry, jazz, and their own stories, they reveal the trauma of incarceration and the redemption power of art.
Something you talked about is the importance of art and mentors in everyone's life.
Absolutely.
By having a place to experience art and express art and having a place to find mentors and connect with mentors is a powerful thing.
I think this conversation, you two are powerful mentors for anyone watching and listening right now.
And if anyone's struggling in isolation, I highly encourage you reach out to a boys and girls club if you're a teen, reach out to local mentors if you're an adult, seek mentors online, read books, watch movies that support your critical thinking.
but find mentors and express your art.
Absolutely.
And I've got a couple final questions at the end,
but I want you guys to,
Chris has got a song that he wrote that's in this film.
So I want people to hear this.
Shaka is going to read a poem that you've never read before.
So this is a first-time experience that you guys performing together.
Okay, so this is a poem written by Jimmy Santiago Baca,
and I wrote the music to go behind a lot of his poetry.
in our film, it's called Redemption Time.
And this is like the redemptive moment at the end
where Jimmy gets out.
So the film has like, you know, 10 to 12 different like episodes
or 70 minutes.
And each one of them address like different themes
of manhood, trauma and all these kinds of things.
But this is like the, the redemptive moment.
So I thought it would be cool to have shock
and read the poem and try to do my best to kind of truly on it.
Yeah, thank you.
I'll try to render it here with just the cell.
So, yeah.
prison. I didn't have a plan to go back to crime. I came out of prison with one gift,
and I'm about to tell you what that gift is. Not a gun, not a criminal, but a gift. I'm offering
this poem. I'm offering this poem to you, since I have nothing else to give. Keep it.
like a warm coat when the winter comes to cover you or like a pair of thick socks that cannot
fight through. I love you. I got nothing else to give you. So it's a pot full of yellow corn
to warm your belly in the winter. It's a scarf to wrap up around your head on windy
days. I love you. Keep it. Treasure this as you would if you were lost, mean direction in the
wilderness that life becomes when you're mature. Tucked away like a cabin in the trees.
You come knocking. I'm going to answer you. I'll give you directions. I'll let you warm yourself by
this fire. I'll let you rest by this fire. I'll make you feel safe because I love you. And this is all
I got to give. I ain't got nothing else. And all anyone needs to live and to go on living
and sigh when the world outside no longer cares if you live or die. Remember. Remember. I love you.
love you. I love you.
So, yeah.
So good, man, that's so good.
Thank you.
And thanks to Jimmy Santiago Baca for that.
Big shout out of Jimmy, this incredible writing and such a gift.
Wow.
And I love you.
Wow.
I love you, man.
This has been, wow.
Like, so cool to meet you today, man.
Likewise, brother.
It's good.
What's been the bit, what opened up for both of you while playing that with each other?
Man.
After this conversation and after, you know, what you've talked about in your book and what
you've gone through for 10 years in your movie, what opened up for both of you during that moment?
Oh, man.
This is my brother.
it's a small brother man and
I'm really super proud of you
and what you're doing in the world and
honor to know that our stories are
you know trusted you know and
and your art is you know
giving birth to new listeners that will hear our
stories and you know they'll help a lot of people
so I feel this true kindred spirit
and brotherhood
um you know we've been through something
that most people can't comprehend
But we both know that language both spoken and unspoken.
And so to be able to share this moment with you, man, is enriching my life.
So thank you.
Thank you.
Wow.
That's powerful.
Thank you.
Beautiful man.
What opened up for you, Chris?
What was during playing that?
Playing it?
I mean, just doing this experience together.
Yeah, it felt, it felt great.
It brings me back.
to what you were talking about what you because when you're in jail you make do yeah
you know and i was like i'm not going to let any of that stuff like i got the violin we're
just going to make this happen yeah yeah one take first time it's great beautiful it's powerful
it's powerful man i can feel it you that's cool that's cool but but also yeah i mean really
getting to meet you and i've listened to a bunch of your stuff and heard you talk beginning to speak
to you and be with you in the room it feels like a homecoming for me it's it gives
me a lot of openings in my heart about how I can lean heavier into telling my own story
because I think you do it so well.
Thank you.
And so it feels like a great encouragement for me.
And not only to share my story, but to step into more community with more folks
that are doing this work and just to lean into it more, the fullest expression of
who I am getting clearer on whatever that purpose is and how I can show it.
So thank you, brother, for opening it up for me.
Of course.
Number one, both of you guys connect for a while.
I'm telling you guys about you doing it for a while.
I'm curious, you both gave a piece of advice to your younger self at 19.
If you could, I wonder if you could both give one piece of advice to what you see in another.
What do you see in Chris that you see he should keep continuing to do or encouragement?
Yeah.
Yeah, I would say my words of wisdom and take them as you as you may, you have such an incredible, powerful gift and coupling that gift with an unbelievable story of reimagining a life for yourself.
Like, there's power in that.
There's power in it not just for you, but for others.
And you get a chance to really help other people salvage their life.
re-imagining their lives and think about those who are brothers and sisters who we've left behind
and knowing that they're counting on us and looking forward to us being able to tell their stories and the telling of our own stories
and so what i would what i would encourage is is to really embrace it you know embrace the power
of your own story to help others and to make sure in the doing of that just create space for yourself to breathe
and to, you know, reach out and just, you know, even if it's at the talk and say, hey, bro, I just got off the stage. I just need an ear. I'm here to be able to hold space for you. And there's many others who would be honored to hold space for you. And I just encourage you to keep imagining different ways to tell that story and to tell the many stories. And obviously, you know, we'll collab on some stuff. But I would just say lean into it. You know, like you've earned.
that you've earned the right to tell the story.
You've got the strikes, you know, you got the wounds, you got the things.
And so now there's an opportunity to, you know, relieve some of that by helping others
never have to endure it.
And so that's the power that you hold in your hand and your violin and your story, your voice.
And lastly, I would just say lean on the wisdom of your younger brother.
He really has not got here without.
dedication to an incredible craft. He's built something that's, you know, monumental, historical,
and his leadership is proven, he has a proven track record. And, you know, there's power
and leaning into the little brother who's wouldn't help you and support you on your turn. It's a
gift. Yeah. Thanks. Thank you. I think a lot of men are going to see you as somebody who represents
strength and to show that you get to be able to define manhood for generations of men
men right and I think that you do I think you I think you do a great job of that I
think you come across as being very naturally who you are and I think that who you
are is very multi-dimensional and it's warm and it's soulful and it's empathic and
compassionate and also strong. I think giving men in explicit terms, talking about these things,
talking about fear, talking about shame, talking about guilt, talking about how do you, you know,
respond to the urge to be violent, you know, and kind of this, these, this, if we say, the
warped definition of what it is to be a man, you know, how does a man on the street going to deal
with um if they're disrespected how are they going to um address that without putting themselves
into a self-destructive cycle without destroying themselves really throughout throwing out
away their own life you know how can how can i think that you already are doing that i think
you're already speaking to men from that and i already see all that in you and hear it in your stories
but i just want to reflect that back to you and and for you
you did know that that's how you're received.
And in case that makes you want to lean into any of those themes in explicit ways.
And you might want to ask people that question, your audience, whoever you want to speak to
and whoever you want to hear your message, you might want to ask them, what are you looking
for for me?
What are the answers you want me to answer?
Because I know you get a lot of inspiration for these books.
So I'm already thinking about what's your next book.
Maybe it's going to, maybe some of those answers to what you're going to write about is going to come
from people in your audience.
The advice that both of you guys are giving
are what you see in each other
is what I want the audience also to know
that they should be listening for themselves.
Absolutely.
Because what you guys are speaking to each other,
I'm assuming everyone listening or watching
has some type of insecurity or doubt
or hidden prison that's holding them back
from pursuing their greatest version of themselves,
their gifts, their potential.
And there's an unlock for everyone watching,
listening, including all three of us.
To our next level of greatness, which you talked about.
And so to wrap things up, I'd love for you both to share your three lessons you would leave with the world.
You can imagine and get to live as long as you want to live from this moment until the last day.
And if you could share three lessons, three truths to the world, as simple as they wanted them to be or profoundies wanted to be, what would those three lessons be?
And maybe you've already shared them, so just recap them.
yeah and what is each one of your definition of greatness as well so three lessons you would leave
with the world from your experience and then definition of greatness i'll let you start three lessons
i i would say um the first lesson is to embrace this magic carpet ride we call life with the spirit of gratitude
I'll be thankful literally for every moment you're in, good, bad, and different.
It just makes life so incredible.
Show up in service.
The second lesson will be show up in service of others.
Meet a need that someone has without expectation of anything in return.
And the universe will reward you abundantly for your care and consideration.
The third thing would be read if you're literate or listen if you're not to books and stories and journeys of other people.
I think that's one of the most magical gifts that we have is access to stories of others who have walked similar, different paths than we've walked.
You just learn so much from life through other people's stories.
And the third part, what does greatness mean?
Greatness to me means that there is an acceptance that inside of us,
there is a connective tissue that is rooted in whatever the creative force in the world,
we imagine it to be, whether it's God or any other entity, a way of being,
but there's a connectedness that we have.
That is the power source that allows us to imagine and birth into the world.
Anything that our hearts can dream of and desire, that's what greatness is.
To me, like when I think about my journey, where I started from, where I'm at today,
is that I leaned into this idea that there is a greater power that always wants the best for us.
And if we just attach ourselves to that energy, anything is possible.
possible.
Wow.
It's a beautiful.
Chuck.
Chris,
three lessons you would leave behind.
What are those for you?
Lean into your relationships and make them as deep as you possibly can, whether it's
your, you know, your kids, your parents, your brother, your siblings, your friends,
your students, the people that work with you, your colleagues, those relationships are
the place where you get to really express yourself fully and feel a lot of connection and a lot
a purpose. I would say constantly work to re-articulate your vision or your purpose for your
life. If it means every day, you think about what am I committed to, what do I want to stand for,
what are the things I want to feel, give, and what are the things I want to contribute?
Third lesson, I'll go with gratitude, as Shaka said. I'll say, if you can
try to look for something to be excited about and to feel that joy like the day that we walked
out of prison and look for it yeah my definition of greatness I think that just if if I were to
tie it to some of the men that I've met in prison and what I saw in them as greatness was the ability
to to really deeply feel whatever it is that you feel whatever
suffering that you feel and whatever fear that you feel, whatever anxiety that you feel,
and still be willing to push through to try to make the best of yourself that you can.
I think that's a representation of greatness.
Nice.
Well, for everyone watching and listening, I hope this gave them a sense of peace and hopefully
a path towards freedom.
And hopefully gave both of you another connecting element of telling your story of telling your
stories to feel more free for more alive and know that both of you are doing your doing an amazing
job of being of service to people watching and listening so i acknowledge you both thank you guys both for
being thank you so much for having us thank you a lot i hope you enjoyed today's episode and it
inspired you on your journey towards greatness make sure to check out the show notes in the description
for a full rundown of today's episode with all the important links and if you want weekly exclusive
bonus episodes with me personally as well as ad free listening then make sure to subscribe to our
greatness plus channel exclusively on apple podcasts share this with a friend on social media and leave us a
review on apple podcast as well let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review i really
love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve you moving
forward and i want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are loved you are worthy and you
matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
