Unashamed with the Robertson Family - Ep 1031 | Jase's Unexpected Intervention w/ Dr. John Delony & The Loneliest Generation in Human History
Episode Date: January 29, 2025Jase is getting intervention vibes over the amount of mental health professionals he’s been hosting lately, including Dr. John Delony, a national bestselling author, host of “The Dr. John Delony S...how,” and co-host of “The Ramsey Show” with Dave Ramsey. John lays out compelling evidence about the current mental spiral of today’s society, but he and Jase have come up with proven ways to combat the tech-dependency of young people. Zach and John discuss the need to be “right” in relationships versus the need to love well. — Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I am unashamed.
What about you?
Welcome back to Unashame.
Jace, the last time we sell you, you were off to the woods.
I'm curious as to what happened.
Well.
Because we had some guests, too, that we're going to go.
Yeah, are you going to, like, tell the whole story on that?
It's like your best idea.
Now, I get it.
This was a tough situation.
My dad.
Just don't put it on me because we were all just adapting.
Dad gives away a hunt, according to this story.
Yep.
Because he released a new book.
He did it, much to my shock, because he doesn't do that.
Well, my dad, although doing improving, I think we can all agree that his quality of life is improving.
Except, you know, he still has the big overall problems that's caused him some problems.
But I do think the prayers from everyone, and he's improving.
Yeah.
So, but he's unable to hunt.
Yeah.
And so Al's like, well, we got this, we got this hunt.
We're committed.
So.
What are we going to do?
I was like, well, it's cold.
It's really cold here and still is.
And so I was like, well, we'll do an afternoon hunt.
Yeah.
But we had other people coming.
So our sister wanted to come, her first hunt of the year.
Yep.
And we're still training her.
So yeah, she's in train.
Is she a duck, is she a duck girl?
Yeah, she would be a duck girl.
We have the two guests.
I didn't know she was coming.
I didn't know she wanted to go until we got out there.
So that was kind of a last.
So nobody ever told me that.
Yeah.
So when we all, I looked up and here's the crowd and I thought, well, is she just going to
hang out at the lair in this muddy place?
So it got kind of weird.
So I was like, oh, do you want to come?
Because she didn't look like she was dressed for it.
She had blue jeans on and a little jacket.
You know, they're from Montana and Colorado, so they were like, y'all.
That's where I was going with this.
She's like, oh, no, this is nothing.
Of course, it was like 29 degrees.
Yeah.
And we go out there, and I had two duck boys.
The only person that I have was a seasoned veteran was Burley.
Burley.
And he's from Colorado.
He is.
He's come in for a week to hunt.
He usually comes in for like six weeks.
And to be honest, when I heard Burley was going, I felt better.
Because Burley is really good at taking care of folks, making sure they get what they need.
So here's what happened.
We go out there, and I have, there's, including me, there's eight of us.
I only have one boat.
And so just us getting in the boat, and Burley's the size of two people.
So I'm like, this is a lot of people for one boat.
Now, you're like, oh, Jace, you're putting them in a dangerous situation.
My first words were, if we turn this boat over, stand up.
It's shallow.
Yeah.
And so we make it to our destination.
I decided since we had so many people to hunt a blind where we have the sun at our back
because I didn't think we could hide all these people.
I cut a little brush on the way, and I thought the wind was wrong.
It was in our face.
So for you non-duck hunters, dog.
ducks fly into the wind.
Usually.
So I thought, well, they'll come over from behind us.
They won't see our hunting party.
And this was kind of in the middle of our duck.
We haven't had a lot of ducks.
I thought, we'll just try it.
Put out a little decoy spread.
Even though we got the wind wrong,
you can't have the wind right and the sun right when it's a,
let's see, we're hunting in the afternoon,
and it was a northeast wind.
So for you that are smart, you can figure out.
You're not going to get both of those things right.
So I put the sun to our advantage.
So we get in the blind, and it wasn't that cold.
We were putting decoys out, and it's a clear day.
It just didn't seem like.
And so I had brought a coat, and we had two heaters,
and the two heaters were the last thing in the boat.
And somebody said, do we really need those heaters?
And I was like, nah.
It's a nice.
The Colorado people said, no.
Because it was so crowded.
Yeah.
And so we get up there less than one mile an hour.
And everything's fine.
I said, no, I don't need my coat.
And Burley said, I'll go park the boat because we didn't have a place to park the boat.
So I told him where to go.
I was like, there's a little road to go down the tree.
He's like, oh, yeah, I'll remember that.
So he goes and parks the boat.
He comes back.
We're putting the decoys out.
Everybody's happy.
Well, we shot a couple of dogs.
but I realize real quickly these people to my right,
which is seven people, and we have two guests who are,
and they didn't hunt, they just watched.
They're in the other section of the blind,
so they're completely safe.
Nobody can shoot but me.
I'm just being honest.
Because Burley's been doing a long time,
but he's not the greatest of shots.
And he did shoot one duck.
Oh, yeah, he shot a duck.
So, because we had a bunch of teal light wide,
but one of them was in range,
and he just boom, and he got that one.
So, you know, he's pretty good if the duck's sitting on the water, not moving.
But anything that came in flying, I said, shoot them.
Boom, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, boom, boom.
Nothing would fall.
I'd raise up, boom, boom.
One fail.
One time, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, boom, two fail.
Well, I went bomp, bomp, bong, bong.
I just thought, okay, they're just not very good shot.
Yeah.
Well, then all of a sudden, about 10 minutes, 15 minutes before sunset,
which is as long as you can hunt legally.
It got cloudy.
It covered up the sun and the wind started blowing,
I'm going to say 25 miles an hour.
That moisture got in the air.
And look, the whole dynamic changed.
Because I look back at the people from Colorado first
and look, they were literally doing this.
The woman's face was so red.
I was like, are you okay?
And then Austin, one of the young duck boys,
he said, I didn't want to say this, but my waiters leaked.
And so when he was helping putting out the decoys, he was trying to just be a man about it.
And he started shivering so bad that I thought he was experiencing hypothermia.
Which, by the way, I saw Jeff, and he told me when Austin came in from that hunt, they went by their house first.
And he didn't even speak to Jeff.
As he was running past him, he said, I got to get in the shower.
I got to get the shower.
So he just, like, ran past him.
So I want to say this, that the next 30 to 40 minutes, picking up those decoys and that wind and how cold it was, and us, when we got back in the boat, because look, Burley then couldn't find where he parked the boat.
So that extended it another 30 minutes.
And fast forward this to when I'm now taking this couple to the hotel aisle, which nobody told me I was giving them a ride.
I actually had left, and I'd forgot my batteries to charge.
And they just got left there?
Yeah, they just got left there.
They were fixed to hang out.
I came back and they were like, I said, what are y'all still doing there?
And they're like, we need a ride.
I said, well, I'm glad I came back.
Stephen and Vanessa, if you're listening, I'm so sorry.
It was the worst trip you could have.
Well, I want to say this.
I've done the studies on this.
And I don't know how it correlates to Colorado, but 20 degrees in North Carolina in the mountains is 42 degrees in the biosephous.
you of Louisiana. I don't know how it does it, but I'm telling you. On the way back,
we turned, everybody's personal space was no longer an issue. It was a huddle. It was a huddle
of shivering people, because once I got my jacket on, I was fine. That thing's rated for whatever.
And I was like, this is what happened. Be careful what you wish for when you say, oh, let me have
my hunt. Well, be careful. Real quick, real quick, I hate to cut the story up, but we have an incredible
guests coming up and you have to stick around for this guy.
Y'all haven't met this next guest yet.
So I'm anxious to see.
Yeah, we're super excited about it.
We'll see what happens.
Jason, it is a doctor, so I hope this does it.
I'm probably going to struggle.
Let's take a break.
We'll introduce our guests when coming up.
Can I tell you all something?
I put your show on to listen to it this morning and the one I picked was
Jase, you getting carted off by the ATF at the airport?
Oh, yeah.
Listen, a couple of months ago, my son and I went on a deer hunting trip on our family place in Texas.
And in the hotel at 5 o'clock in the morning, I stared at, he's 14.
I lectured him.
I said, you listen to me.
There cannot be a bullet, a pocket knife.
There better be nothing in that bag.
Everything's got to be checked.
And he's like, yes, sir, yes, sir.
Some gooseball friend of mine had given me a joke.
I walked through, I have a little hip-pack with all my stuff in it because I got low self-esteem when I go to airports.
And wouldn't you know it?
Dude, I had a daggum switchblade in my bag.
And you would have thought that guy checking the screen like he won something.
It's like all these days he sits there doing nothing with his life.
And he's like, I got one.
I got one.
Get the jackpot on that one.
Well, Doc, I know we just met, but the fact that you're a doctor and you're carrying around a switchblade makes me nervous about where this conversation is going.
Man, I tell you what, some of my wildest adventures were at, in home of Louisiana, man.
I learned how the world works.
It was good, man.
Well, that's the bottom of the whole universe, as far as we're concerned.
That's where it all happens.
So, Doc, you'll appreciate this.
Somebody told me how to make sense of South Louisiana.
Because once there's a dividing line that happens about across Alexandria,
so there's a line.
We have two worlds within one state.
Kind of like being a member of the kingdom of God in this world.
You see where I'm going.
There's Church of Christ and everybody else.
I got you.
So once you enter that, go across that imaginary line.
When people are talking, so when you were in Homa, it would all make sense.
If you would have just closed your eyes and realized that everybody sounds drunk.
It's like a drunk French.
That's it.
It's bad English and bad French.
So we have John Deloney.
John, welcome to unashamed.
I appreciate to seat at the table.
I'm grateful.
John don't feel like you need to hope.
whole bag. I was going to tell you, I grew up eating squirrels and raccoon. I mean, we would get anything,
but it was only in home of Louisiana that I was fishing in a, and I called it a ditch. They called it a
Baya, and I was, I caught this gigantic, gnarly, red-eer turtle. And I was, you know how I was trying
to get off your hook, and I was trying to get off the hook. And this guy, he must have been
409 years old. Comes just hobbling down the edge of that bayou. Baw! Bo!
And he took that turtle and walked off with it.
And I was like, what's he doing?
And the guy who's with his father said, that's his dinner and breakfast.
Turtle soup.
And I was like, well, I like turtle soup.
I never seen anybody eat a red ear out of a bias.
Anyway, good on them, man.
They'll eat anything.
One of my most horrific childhood memories now that we've gone to the turtles.
So I thought I was going to struggle with what to talk about here today.
But you've hit an urge.
Until we met John, yeah.
So my dad and I had run the nets back when we were commercial fishermen,
and we came up there and there was this old truck,
beat up truck parked in our yard.
And my dad was like,
because my dad back then was a conspiracy theorist.
He was like, why would a truck be parked in my yard?
Federal agent.
That's the first thing he used to.
So we walked.
I knew it.
So we walk up there.
And I could hear the hissings.
sound coming from this truck and the engine was off.
And this guy like you, this guy was probably looked like he was 280 years old.
He gets out and he said, you all want some turtle?
The underground turtle market in South Louisiana.
I kid you not.
I looked in the back of his truck and there were 10 of the largest loggerhead turtles that you could
ever imagined.
They were all like in their own little spaces.
And they were as old as he was.
Yeah, they're old.
They're old.
And my dad noticed with all that going on, he said, well, look like you only got two
working digits.
And I thought, what is he talking about?
And I looked at this guy's hand and he only, most people have 10 fingers, including
the thumbs, he had two.
He was a turtle.
Fish.
The longerheads took the decisions.
Yeah, they had taken all his fingers off.
Their bite is like, it's like the per pound, I think it may be stronger than an alligator.
I mean, it's like, it's insane.
Yeah, and this guy, this guy in a very thick Cajun accent said, yeah, these turtles gave me two hooks.
And he kind of did his fingers.
So I don't know.
I know that wasn't playing, but you brought turtles.
And that was like, flashback, flashback.
John, welcome Dona Shane.
This is what we do here.
We start talking and then you never know where it's going to go.
It feels like home, and I'm grateful, guys.
Good.
You don't need to read all those things, man.
Those are things I did because I had low self-esteem.
No, you're a very smart man.
We're glad to have you on our podcast.
You're connected.
Tell us what you do today, Ramsey, because you're working with him these days.
I'm still trying to figure that out, man.
I spent a couple of two decades working at colleges,
and then Dave,
I got connected and now as my 14-year-old said, I was arguing with him a couple weeks ago
about like, hey, I used to be like somebody of prominence.
I wore a suit to work and I was a dean of students and he said, Dad, you're just a YouTuber
now.
So all I do with Dave is help him with the mental health stuff and the relationship stuff
as he's helping people untangle their finances.
So, and you like to hunt because before we came on air, we were talking about hunting.
And you're from Texas originally?
Is that right?
Yes, sir.
I was born and raised there.
And I moved out of Texas at 40.
My old man sat me down and explained to me that Al Qaeda is waiting for you on the Arkansas border if you ever move out of Texas.
Oh, sound like we had similar childhoods.
Exactly.
But we've been in Nashville for about since 2018, and we love it.
Oh, wow.
I have a place up there.
We'll have to hook up now that.
I feel like we're, you know, got a lot more in common.
Kindred Spirit.
You were at ACU for a while, correct?
Abelian Christian.
I graduated from Love of Christian.
and then I worked at ACU for a while,
and I've got close, close friends.
One of my best friends in the world is a leader over there at Harding.
So, yeah, and obviously got some friends here at Lipscomb.
So that's kind of the gang.
Well, I saw that when I saw you had been at ACU and LCU
because, you know, we all come out of the same heritage.
We come out of the Church Christ heritage.
The one true church.
The one true church, yeah.
And so I noticed because when our little duck show took off,
we were quite popular for people raising money.
you know, to come in and try to get some crowds in,
uh,
in some unusual places,
including university,
uh,
campuses.
And so I made it my vow that I was,
every one of our COC colleges and universities that are out there,
that I was going to try to make sure I made it to everyone.
And I did.
It took me three or four years of fundraisers to make it around.
But it was just,
it was a nice thing we could share together,
you know,
from that idea.
So it was pretty good.
I think I got kicked out at some point and didn't realize it,
but,
I'm just
We heard the relationship was a strain
I have a problem with saying what I think
But I'm beginning to think
We've actually had a couple of mental health doctors on
In Successions
Are you feeling the intervention vibes?
Yeah, I'm beginning to think it's me maybe
We had Dr. Amon on
Do you know Daniel Amin?
We had Dr. Daniel Amin on
He's a real doctor
He's real, real smart
Like there's levels to this game
I'm not there, man.
Well, they talked about he was a brain scanner,
and I thought I'm really scared to have that done
because I've always thought that mine is a lot more small
than the average human.
Yeah, I wouldn't recommend that
because it might confirm some of your family's suspicion.
Exactly.
But like what you said a while ago,
you said you hang out in colleges
and spoke there for a couple of decades.
I have a theory, since you're, you know,
understand the human mind.
I have a theory that once you reach about 40 years old, that you're no longer listening.
So I'd keep gravitating toward a younger audience.
They try to catch them before they shut down.
Yeah, because I'm like, once they get about 40, it's over.
They're just shaking their head like, no.
So has that, have you had that similar experience?
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think it's, I think, you know, the person who I hope to emulate the most is, quite honestly, is Dave, Ramsey.
He's the he's the he's probably 64
I've not met a man past the age
Like my experience has been 55
Who is so interested in finding out places where he is wrong
And it's been like I used to think I want to make this much money
I want to have this kind of accomplishment
I want my family to have the X Y Z
I want to be 65 and still curious and wondering
How I can do something different or do something a little bit better
Or learn a new skill or something so
Yeah you're you're right man that
I think I think it gets some
We used to talk about this when you graduate with your dissertation and you get that PhD after your name.
One of two things usually happens.
When you go through your dissertation, you realize how much information out there in the world and how much you don't know.
So you do one of two things.
You get real, real humble.
And you say, hey, man, my mom named me John.
Call me John.
This is just, like the PhD is a sticker.
Like they put on the back of your car if you get through a marathon.
You can run it or walk.
It just was a high five on a journey.
I'm taking.
or you become one of those Ph.D. folks that makes the male, you tell the mailman, you will address me as doctor because you lock down with this arrogance because that's all you got because it's so disorienting.
So, yeah, I think most 45, 50-year-olds get nervous about what they don't know and they realize, oh, my parents were making it up as they went too.
And it just closes everything down.
Well, that makes me feel better because I've learned, I keep saying this, I've learned more.
I've related to Bible study. I've learned more in the last four or five years than I learned in the first 35.
But I want to be open-minded to it.
I want to think outside the box.
I want to hear what other people say.
I want to constantly, you know, challenge myself in that area.
Well, the guy that mentored us here that led down to Christ,
mentored me and Jace in our early formative years in Bible study,
always said keep studying and stay open to God.
Because, you know, you never know what he's going to reveal to you.
And he was a man, even as he got older,
that had some beliefs that kind of were all of our heritage
is coming into the situation.
But over time, when he looked at the scriptures and was fair with, he said, you know, I've been
wrong about that.
And again, by this time, he's in his 70s and 80s.
And so I'm kind of like you, John, those sort of things impacted me because I don't
ever just shut down think I know everything that's out there, you know?
Y'all go think I'm lying.
I wrote this down this morning during some, I'm embarrassed to say I'm a hunter and I use the J word.
I was journaling this morning.
But I wrote this down.
I'm tired of being, quote, unquote, the most correct guy about stuff.
And this thing that I think has led me through, and it's been insecurity and it has been, like, looking for purpose is to try to be the most right guy in the room, whether that's with my kids, whether it's with my wife, whether it's with my anything.
And all that does is create space between you and people who are just trying to get with you, right?
As old Dr. Phil used to say, do you want to be right or do you want to be married, right?
And I think that that sentiment has been so powerful for me with theology, with science, with all of it, is do the best you can, but hold it all pretty loosely.
Because the goal for me is not to show everybody how right I am.
It's to love well.
Yeah, I heard a pastor say one time to a church he was speaking to.
It was a church that I would say, probably a dead church.
And he's speaking to this church that had no life left in it.
He said, you guys are dead right.
and then he stopped.
He said, no, I mean, you're dead.
Right, you're right, but you're dead.
Congratulations.
You won.
This is the perfect segue for me to reveal what just happened.
So I'll have to, Doc, I'll bring you up to speed.
I had an altercation with law enforcement that went on for months.
We did multiple episodes because I had.
They were actually competing sides in our audience as to who was right, who was wrong.
The story took another chapter this morning, and I hope it's the final chapter.
Oh, boy.
Because I get a ticket for not having my seatbelt on properly.
I had it on, and so I was going to fight it.
Long story short, after I met with the prosecutor, I thought this is not worth it.
I'm going to pay the fine.
So I pay the fine, because this guy, I could see it in his eyes.
He wasn't budging.
Pay the fine.
And as soon as I paid the fine, they extended grace, gave me the money back, and said, let's just call it at that.
So as soon as I admitted guilt, so I guess that took them off the hook for thinking they were giving me some kind of perk, they gave me grace.
So I thought, well, this is almost a spiritual application here.
I thought that was the end of the story.
And so this morning, I woke up and get my truck.
I'm driving, and I had my seatbelt.
on properly because grace is more of a motivating factor.
Grace teaches us to say no to ungodliness, Jason.
And so I thought, you never know, this guy may be in his spot because I haven't
seen him there since.
And wouldn't you know it?
Right in the roundabout.
Same guy.
And I'm on the right side.
So I thought, we're going to have a moment here.
I slowed down a little bit and I waved.
He did not wave.
back.
And I went on, but he didn't pull me over because I was wearing it properly.
That's when it hit me.
I thought, this is the problem with law-based work system.
There's no relationship.
I'm doing what's right.
Oh, you know who I am.
You remember what happened here?
How about a wave?
Guess what?
No wave.
Well, that's the end of that story.
There's a lot of truths in that.
He was, quote, unquote, right.
And his boss has called him in and said,
we're going to get lambasted on, on, in front of millions of people because you had to be right.
That's exactly.
So, congratulations.
You had a guy that was doing 98% the right thing and staying safe.
Exactly.
And Dr. Raymond wants to look at his head.
It's mostly empty anyhow.
I just thought it was, yeah.
I thought it was interesting.
And I mean, it was, you brought it up.
My thought, this is perfect.
This is a, now I'm doing technically the letter of the law.
Yeah.
And I was kind of happy about it.
And I like it that you're friendly.
I try.
You should keep coals on his head and Uber eats him just some snacks.
Well, he was part right in front of a donut shop.
I mean, this morning I saw him as well when I came by.
All right.
So that's great.
So any, can you analyze Jace on that?
No, he's right.
100% right.
100% right.
Love it. I mean, Jesus said, you know, come and see. We're fixing to get to that, John 1. But he also said, come to me.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, this is personal. He's a person. It's a relationship. That's where I was going with that.
Okay, I like it. Well, I think that's the thing for all of us, right, is figuring out that what's the spirit of it and what's the stuff anchored into concrete, right? I think that's been the challenge of my life is, hey, the Sabbath's for you all, man, if you're hungry, grab something to eat.
Like, you know, I mean, it's a set of principles.
And if you're going to die on some of this nonsense, but also, I think the fear all of us have,
especially in our church tradition, is if we cut all the tethers, then it's just going to be anarchy and bananas, right, everywhere.
So I think he's just finding that balance.
Yeah, and if you never do something, you'll never have to worry about it.
So I want to ask you this, because you guys obviously are doing great work with what you're doing with Dave and everything else.
We're in another lane and unashamed, but I feel like we're all kind of.
of working together.
That's right.
From my kingdom perspective, what we're putting out there.
So you know, because you said you listened to a podcast, that we're based, obviously,
in Bible study and then stories.
You know, stories is how, that's how we grew up.
My grandfather and my dad and all of our relatives told stories.
And so then that's shaped right into sort of the biblical story and how we go forward.
So that's kind of the unashamed lane that we're in that works for the folks that are here.
But I want to ask you about that.
Because I feel like you and a lot of guys like you are what I call in the cultural trenches,
because you talk to people every day.
They're right up next to a lot of real issues that they may or may not talk about their church
or some other place because they're just struggling, but they don't know how to get this out.
So just to get us started, how do you approach that?
Do you how do you think people's identity in Christ can help them through mental issues
and all the stuff you deal with?
I think this first time I've ever talked about this.
I appreciate the invitation.
The guiding story that has guided my professional life probably for 20 years is the Jesus
with the woman at the well.
And I say this as a member of somebody who's sitting at the table, so it's not me throwing
stones.
It's me being honest about my own family.
I think the church, especially over the last 50, 60 years has failed pretty bad in this,
which is we like to see the woman at the well and we like to
give her a list of things she needs to do before she's got permission to talk to us.
And we like to make sure that she knows that she's wrong, she's bad, she's not good enough.
And then if you want to come knock on our door, we'll see if we can let you in.
And I think that story is so powerful because you have somebody that breaks every social convention to go to and reaches out and says, hey, you can help me with something.
I give you a purpose.
And by the way, I see you and I know you and I love you.
and then at the very end there's this sense of hey there's another way to do life right and if you get that out of order um it's like you say people will man you'll put your seatbelt on the right way and uh people won't see how many fingers you're holding up because your hands are in your pocket but there's not a relationship there right and the other side of it is like man man if that guy pulled you over and said i hate to do this man but like here we are somebody's going to pull you over and they're going to give you a ticket it's two inches and what i'm saying is obnoxious and silly but it's just a lot of
like and he and he fist bumped you and drove off you would laugh you would right there'd be a
relationship there and he would get what he needs to do which is hey you got to move the seatbelt
on quote unquote properly right so I think we get the relationship stuff so when it comes to
approaching people I don't care what you're experiencing what I've learned is um I'll say this
when I first kick this show off I listened to two podcasts and they were like a nerd podcast
They were like really high science nerd stuff.
And I, three or four calls into my own show.
Every time I would ask, hey, hey, why are you calling me?
Call a friend.
And every single person had the same answer, which was, I've got nobody to call.
Wow.
And I remember thinking, oh, we've created the loneliest generation in human history.
And we're melting on the vine.
And we got no families to go home to because we all vote different.
So that means we have to hate each other.
And we've got no churches.
churches is in a place where we can say,
hey, this is going on in my life.
And people say, dude, pull up a seat, me too.
It is, oh, there's a class down the hall for the divorces and for the singles.
And, like, y'all go over there.
They'll handle you.
And so it's just become a place of, I don't care what's going on in your life.
I don't care bananas thing you've done or has been done to you.
Pull up a seat and we'll get some nachos and we'll figure this thing out.
And I think presence is largely more important than any answer I'm going to give somebody.
That right there is the thrust of everything we're doing on this podcast.
and we're going through the Bible.
And really, our method of interpretation of the scriptures,
it is storytelling.
We tell a lot of crazy stories where it's almost like a sign-fail to show about nothing with the Bible study.
But the way we're interpreting the scripture is through that lens of God's presence.
First, he's present with us and then allows us to be present with one another.
I recently heard, I don't know where you were speaking at, but I saw it on Instagram.
I love your stuff, by the way, because it's always super practical,
and it hits people right where they're at.
And I'm like, and I agree with almost everything you say.
I'm like, man, I need to send this to somebody.
But you were talking about this idea of presence.
I think the word you might have used was connection, being connected.
And you said something that's very simple but very profound.
And it should be obvious, but it's not in our culture.
You said to be connected, you've got to be face to face with somebody.
You got to look at them.
How do you see technology, Instagram, phones, all that as a disruptive, at least
of our ability to be present.
What would be your advice to someone who's got teenage kids like yourself?
That's a, that's a big one, man.
Just to put it bluntly, I think it's, it is the same,
we're going through the same exact thing with our minds and our spirits and our relationships
that our parents went through in 1971 when this awesome thing came out called the TV
dinner.
And they're like, man, you can just take this box.
put it in a microwave and you don't have to you don't have to go shoot anything and skin anything
and smoke anything you can just you can have in five minutes and everybody got real excited
and then we've had a generation of people dropping dead from heart attacks and cancers and
all sorts of degenerative diseases and but we called that stuff food and i think very similarly
for thousands and thousands of years we have i was thinking this the other day to listen to
this conversation for all of human history, you had to be in that room, y'all are in.
Yeah.
Right.
And so at some way, our body hears these voices talking.
They hear the stories.
And it's connecting as though we're friends.
Y'all meet people when y'all go travel.
And they come up and ask you questions.
And if you're like me, my body's like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
You don't ask me about my daughter.
I don't know you?
You know what I mean?
That's like, you know what I mean?
You know stuff about my life.
And so it's this, it's this through a glass darkly.
It's we think we're connected and our bodies are screaming at us that we're lonely.
And so I think at the end of the day, we'll have a same as we're having with the food issue,
we'll have a gnarly reckoning with just our basic physiology that our bodies, let me put this way,
if your body recognizes that you've lost your tribe, it would be failing you if it let you sleep
at night because it knows you are all you've got.
and we can have these long text threads full of emojis and funny jokes and that's fine but that's
just a twinkie that's just a bag of popcorn that is not a meal yeah and so your body has to have
real people that it knows it can lean on and see and experience your breath and your eye crinkles
and your jokes and just your glances that is the stuff that keeps our brain functioning well
so these phones at the end of the day man they're they're they're protein bars um when you're out
hunting but man i can't sustain you for very long
I had never thought about connecting back to 50 years ago and sort of the dawn of the television age with that,
and how much you're right, at how much that has just set the stage for where we are today.
It's been a natural advancement because you said it.
It's TV dinners.
So it's not just the, we lost that, you know, supper time.
We lost that meal experience.
We lost that idea of connection to what gives us that nutrition for both our bodies as well as our,
psyche and our soul.
Right.
But also it was tied to a device.
It was tied to the television.
And so, you know, back in that day, because I remember being a little kid, it was three
channels and, you know, it was colored bars at 10 o'clock at night.
At least there was a stop to it.
But now, right.
Right.
There was a way to turn it off.
Now it's just endless.
Well, I read yesterday that they sell seven iPhones per second now.
Seven.
So we've been going for a few seconds.
Yeah.
Seven iPhones per second.
Yeah.
Which it's not shocking then on the way over here.
It took me 15 minutes to get here.
I saw at least four or five people who were not going in with the traffic.
And every one of them had their cell phone.
Of course, I'm thinking, this guy didn't wave at me over the seatbelt thing.
I'm like, I just passed three people who have stopped traffic.
Because they had their head.
in their phone, you know, get them.
But so I was just going to say, you know,
what we did with our teenagers, which are, you know,
now they're all grown, is we had to invite all their friends
to come over for meals.
I mean, we tried to do this once or twice a week
because I want to know who they're hanging out with.
But it was amazing if you feed them good food, they're coming.
Because there's just not much to offer to your point.
And I always made them turn in all their cell phones,
which seem like crazy to them at first.
Oh, you go over there.
That jace, he like makes you turn your phone in when you come.
I'm like, you can come check it.
You can come, but it stays right here.
And no TVs around.
We just sat around eight good food and talked and had conversations.
It was amazing how much that grew through the years.
I mean, it got to where the parking lot couldn't hold them
because this is what life should be about.
So I'm just offering that as one.
I'm saying I'm willing to bet that the ones that stayed on as friends of your kids are probably still friends to this day.
They're friends with me.
That's why I'm saying.
When you see them, you've got a relationship.
So that brings me something, John, because you talk a lot.
I saw some of your shows where you talk about getting weird if you have to because you're in protective mode.
And Jay's what Jay's just described as weird, but only because it's just different.
It's right.
Most of us can agree, but most people don't have the courage to do something like that.
Yeah, Jace, you mean, you were ahead of your time on that one.
Yeah.
It breaks my heart.
My 14-year-old doesn't, he doesn't have a camera on his phone.
Why?
Because I was 14 years old.
I would be wholly unemployable if I'd had a camera on my phone when I was 14.
The stuff is funny when you're 14.
Listen, the stuff my son laughs at, I'm in my late 40s.
It's still hilarious, but I don't want to explain it to my grandmother.
It doesn't need to be recorded somewhere.
And so, like, yeah, like he was the only kid in his class in fifth grade without a phone.
Yeah.
He's the only kid in middle school that did not have a phone.
And he's a freshman in high school now.
So we've got some contracts, but he didn't have Google.
And I think it's madness.
And I say this boldly, it's insanity to give a child access to the World Wide Web 24-7, 365 in their pocket.
And worse, to give the world.
wide web access to your child.
Wow.
24-7, 365.
It's madness.
And Jason, we have the same, we have some,
a little bit of land out here outside of Nashville.
And so we experienced the same thing.
My wife had a basket.
Everybody who came over, I wanted all,
I wanted my place to be the place where all the kids came.
And I tell you what, man, it started kind of weird.
My wife had to text all the moms.
We're watching them.
They're fine.
And we found out it's usually the parents that wanted it.
they are the ones who are anxious all the time about where's my precious little baby.
And so they were the ones that needed to be coached. Hey, we're good parents. We got it.
And those kids would come drop their phones in the basket. And then I think their nervous systems regulated.
And for a kid, it just felt good. Because then they, now they come over, man. They drop those phones so fast and they are off into the woods.
And their bodies are just exhaling, right? Like, thank you, God, there's a place where I can put this thing down.
And so the weird part, it just stinks when you find yourself the only parent, man.
And nobody wants their kid to miss birthday parties because they don't have Instagram or whatever.
But I got to play a long game with my kid's soul.
And I did, I just been in the room with these tech folks.
It's not good.
It's not good, man.
It's not good.
Yeah, we've got, I think there is a movement, though.
We've got Jonathan.
Jonathan Haidt.
Yeah, he's coming on the podcast in a couple weeks.
Oh, good.
Well, let him talk.
He's the goat, man.
He's the expert.
He's fantastic.
Yeah, his work.
I read a couple of his books.
And the irony is, is the fear, you fear that your kids are not safe by letting them go out without a phone and just do what we used to do.
And he said, actually, there's not an increased risk in your kids getting kidnapped and all the things.
And we're de-risking their lives.
But at the same time, like you said, we're giving the world, the World Wide Web access to our children.
And that is a, I think he says that not to give kids' phones or smartphones access until their Instagram.
Yeah, 16.
I mean, and Europe's passed a law.
So I think there's, I mean, there's a real mental health crisis.
I mean, I think we're all seeing this in real time.
And it's like, we've got to have this conversation, but we're almost afraid of our children because they're like, you know, gaslightness as kids do, you know.
That's it.
I noticed a transition.
So when that, because it was awkward at first.
And I ran into the same thing with a couple of parents.
And I'm like, I'm not taking their phone away.
It's just a public place where they can check their phone.
Because I think the most annoying thing in life,
and we've had a problem with that this duck season
with taking the duck boys, in quotations,
because they'll get in the duck line
while everybody's working, getting ready,
and they're just sitting over there on their phone,
which that happens once.
They never...
Because out there, it's a different world.
John, that's why they're called Duck Boys.
They have it.
He's got a whole program.
He's got a whole program of raising up these group of young men
in the duck line that he just launched.
It's called the duck men or duck boy society.
Boys to men.
I think it would make a great TV show, honestly.
If you watch this stuff, it is fascinating.
But what I want to say is something powerful because I don't think I've ever shared this.
But I did notice that transition after the bumpiness came out.
Because then more parents started because they saw a difference in their kid.
They're now connected with people and having spiritual conversations.
And so their life starts improving.
And they're like, oh, whatever you all want to do over there is fine.
But at first it was bumpy with a few people.
But I would notice they would come down because I'm a late night owl,
and that's when I do my studying.
Well, that one by one, they'd walk downstairs, and they'd go over there.
Look at that phone, you know.
It's like, just through the night, I thought,
well, it validated what I was doing.
I was like, if you're so upset.
And so I started, as they would walk by, I'd say,
it's still there.
And it's just little jokes, you know.
But what I notice is so those people get older and they keep coming to our house.
Well, now most of them are college age.
And now I've noticed a difference because they're, you know,
they're still gathering up at my house.
Every time Mia comes in, there's just all our friends are there.
But now they're coming downstairs and they're stopping instead of going to check their phone
because they're still turning on their phone.
And I'm like, look, at this point, you're in college.
But I don't say anything because they're like,
That's the rule here.
But now I've noticed they stop.
And we've had multiple conversations about Jesus and life.
And I thought, isn't that something in this,
that all started with just putting their phone in,
has now developed in a relationship
where they want to talk about life, talk about Jesus.
And it's really happened in the last year.
I've just noticed more of these same people.
We're just having conversations into the night
about how we can get Jesus in the world.
But it's almost like you flip from defense to offense.
because it's what John was saying earlier about the woman at the well.
She starts out.
She's isolated.
She's alone.
She doesn't want to talk to people.
She's engaged with Jesus.
In just a short conversation, all of her life hurts are brought out.
And then what is the next thing she does?
She goes into the village and says, hey, you've got to come out of here.
I mean, so all the people she's been avoiding, now she's on offense and saying, you know,
this guy will tell you everything you've ever done.
So I find that that defense to offense makes a big difference.
Well, I even think about the woman at the well.
I mean, what she's asking the question, where do we worship?
Like, where is God at?
Where is His presence at?
And I think that that goes back to everything that, you know, we've been talking about.
Oh, exactly.
I love this conversation.
I mean, I didn't know what we were going to talk about,
but I think this is at the top of the list for our young people.
When it comes to technology, I like to just go back to that meal analogy.
And whenever we went home from college,
when I ride it, I mean, most of my life was eating in a college cafeteria,
or eating Taco Bell,
or there was a little place called Lone Wolf out there in West Texas
that had like 19 tacos for nine cents or something or whatever.
And it was just like you eat the tacos and it's a race back to the bathroom, right?
But when you get home, I knew my mom was going to cook.
And it was just that meal that sat in you and it made you feel home, right?
And I think the technology and the relationship aspect is the exact same.
It's just not food.
It's that social connection, that spiritual connection we all are so desperate for.
Well, it's like I was hunting with Burley yesterday.
He's from Colorado.
And he just got a text from a young guy who recently, you know, came to Christ.
But I think he said he was 16.
But when he read it to me, he didn't say who it was.
He just said, what would you say?
here and it was basically the guy saying you know he's having suicidal thoughts and this kind of thing
and uh i thought man this this seems to be a common practice with our young people now and i don't know
if it's from technology or what but it just seems like every once a week i'm having some
conversation about a young person having these types of problems coming up so i was going to
throw that out do you think that's a connection to the technology world
or all of the above or...
Yeah, because you never really thought about this, like, ending your life stuff being
that present in young people, but it seems to be part of this new phenomenon.
Yeah, I mean, that's the reason I went back to grad school again halfway through what I thought
I was done, being educated, right, was my students in 2004 and five were talking about what
I want to do when I grow up and should I go into technology or should I go into psychology.
And then in 2010, 2012, the conversation shifted overnight to, I don't think I want to be alive anymore.
And my response to that, when somebody, I call those grenades, when somebody texts me a grenade, my response is always to pick up the phone.
I'm going to call you.
I'm going to talk to you in person.
I'm not going to respond to something that heavy.
I'm not going to dishonor you by talking something that big in a text response, right?
We're going to talk.
I remember one of my graduate students came in one time with a phone.
phone and his wife had said, I'm divorcing you via text message. And I was like, this is crazy.
Isn't it nuts. And then I said, why are you still here? Why aren't you in the car to go see your
wife? And he goes, well, we have a Zoom call set up. And I was like, man, this world is nuts, right?
Yeah. But yes, I do think there's, I mean, Jonathan will talk about Jonathan Hyatt, Dr. Hyatt,
but there's a massive increase in suicidal ideation. There's just these pictures in their heads.
Every, every 16, 17, 18, 19 year old is uncomfortable in their own skin, every one of them.
And there's something about being uncomfortable with a bunch of other kids, being uncomfortable and being anchored to some sturdy, regulated adults.
And they don't have that anymore.
They've got adults that are on their phones all the time or just mainlining news channels and thinking that's gospel truth.
And so they've got parents who are angry, exhausted, frustrated, who don't like each other.
And so kids have nothing to anchor to.
and then they get this picture of,
well,
it may be that you shouldn't be here anymore.
Or here's a video of it.
Or here's 50 ways you can Google 50 ways to take your life.
There's just that ecosystem is so toxic and gross and awful.
And it just didn't exist for us.
There definitely were kids that died by suicide when we were young,
but it wasn't as pervasive.
And I also think this, Jason,
and this,
you've got to be careful saying this.
And so I'm saying this,
having done this as a professional, I also knew there were often young people who simply were
hurting so bad and no adults in their life would pay any attention to them. And it was a young people
learned, I can stop the presses. I can shut down my school. I can shut down my family. I can finally
be seen and heard if I just send a text that says I'm having dark thoughts. And I can just shut
the whole system down. And then people will finally come and say, are you okay? And so,
So, again, there's six and we have to another when it comes to that stuff.
But it's very, very serious.
And I take that stuff real serious.
Well, when you talk about that, about these kids, they don't have an anchor or something to anchor into,
I think that's the insanity of our cultural moment is that we're putting them in charge as the experts now.
And you're, you're.
Their feelings, not even their thoughts.
We're putting their feelings.
Oh, yeah.
In charge of our culture.
Yes.
How does a 16-year-old feel?
We're insane.
It's madness.
You have to ask, how's it working out?
And I look at what you're doing.
And it's really kind of in the same vein as Dave Ramsey, who's also coming on the podcast soon, too, how he handles it with the financial advice.
You might say it's blunt advice, but it's actually just that we're not, like, I'm just telling you the truth.
And I think that there needs to be some level of, like, truth telling from the adults in the room.
Like, I think our culture that has shifted so much that empathy is like this highest ideal that we're all,
ascribing to, but a man, if I get down in the hole with you, then I can't help you get out of the hole.
And so maybe you could talk about your methodology a little bit because I don't, you show a lot of sympathy in what you're doing.
But I don't, but I do see you speaking truth in a way that I heard someone call your show and ask about travel wall one time.
And you were very blunt about it.
But I'm thinking, I've been thinking this whole thing, this whole time about how this RIPP's family's apart.
And you just said it in a way that was so matter of fact that I think it's so compelling.
and I was listening to the lady on the other end
and she was like, yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, of all the things I've talked about on my show,
and we've talked to us about some banana stuff
when people call in,
the two things I've gotten in the most trouble about
is telling a woman,
there's no such thing as a dog mom.
There's a dedicated pet owner.
There's no such thing as a dog mom.
That's not a thing.
And you would have thought,
good God almighty, they came after.
And the other one was, yeah, the travel sports thing.
I had one person in a book signing line one time, and you all have probably done this,
and you sit with the experts, and they're good at what they do and everybody's well-meaning,
but they're the branding folks and like, hey, how are we going to tell the story?
Like, what's the picture we want people?
All that kind of stuff.
And y'all are probably similar to me.
Like, I don't understand all that what y'all are doing, but I'm just going to go be as
honest as I can with the person in front of me, right?
And that gets you in trouble sometimes.
And also, I think it's endearing sometimes.
Refreshing, yeah.
A woman came up to me in a book signing line and she said, you know you're the big brother.
that none of us ever had.
And when she said it,
I remember thinking,
that's it.
Yeah.
Is I'll hit somebody for you if I got to,
but I'm going to sit down and tell you,
you shouldn't have said what you said, right?
I'll sit with you,
but I'm going to tell you the truth.
And so I think our culture is desperate for truth,
but I also think those of us who think we are seeing a world
who's being crafted without truth through illusion and lies,
our solution has not been to offer somebody a couple water.
Our solution has been to go set that house on fire.
And I think we have to, I can't control what they're doing or what they're saying.
I can't control that.
What I can control is I have never one time changed my behavior because somebody screamed
and yelled me into it, ever.
I have been out on a hunting ranch with my buddy Nate in West Texas,
and we're sitting next to each other, and he's got a recurve.
and I'm poking fun at him and he's poking fun at me.
And then we talk about something serious and he says,
hey, I know you got 17 degrees,
but I think you're off on this one.
And I know he cares for me.
I know we're in this thing together.
And then I can go,
okay,
tell me more.
And so I think that's the move we got.
So my methodology is pull up some nachos,
pull up a drink,
sit down.
And I'm going to look in the eye and be honest and hear you and say,
man,
that stinks.
And say,
if necessary,
hey, if we can't agree on live on less than you make,
we're probably not going to get very far, right?
Like, if that's a crazy idea,
if the idea of you and your husband
deciding to date other people while you're still married,
if that seems like a good idea on how you're going to solve your problems,
I'm probably not the guy for you because that's madness.
And usually they'll lean forward and go, all right, tell me some more.
That's good.
I love it. John, we're out of time.
You know, we have a way of rating guests on the,
The Unashamed podcast.
The really good ones, it feel like we just got started.
And literally, we're out of time.
Zach came up with 17 questions to ask you.
We asked two.
So we've got to have you back on.
It's the Dr. John Deloney's show.
If you want to check out John's work, he's written some books as well that look fantastic.
Thanks, John, for what you do every single day.
And, man, thank you for coming on Unashamed.
Well, blessings to you guys.
And you have an open invitation to do some deer hunting out here in Nashville.
The limits three a day in middle Tennessee.
So come on out for the whole season.
Ooh.
Jay's Liz up there, please.
I do have a place.
We may get together when I come up there.
My manager is a massive duck hunter, and he always laughs at me because my one Achilles
heel about hunting is I just hate being cold.
And he said, you don't know a cold until you've been duck hunting.
So I still haven't gone.
I got to get out of doing.
All right.
We may make that happen as well.
John, thank you for coming on, brother.
Blessings, guys.
Appreciate y'all.
Thanks, John.
That was awesome.
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