Podcast Episode
Lightning Strike Survivor Justin Briggs: How to Overcome Fear and Find Purpose
In this episode of Overcome: A Mental Health Podcast, host Travis White speaks with Justin Briggs, a lightning strike survivor, who shares his incredible journey of resilience, healing, and transformation.As a...
September 29, 2025
Lightning Strike Survivor Justin Briggs: How to Overcome Fear and Find Purpose
In this episode of Overcome: A Mental Health Podcast, host Travis White speaks with Justin Briggs, a lightning strike survivor, who shares his incredible journey of resilience, healing, and transformation.As a...
Episode Overview
In this episode of Overcome: A Mental Health Podcast, host Travis White speaks with Justin Briggs, a lightning strike survivor, who shares his incredible journey of resilience, healing, and transformation.As a... This conversation unpacks lightning strike survivor justin with practical insight and lived experience.
What We Discussed
- Lightning strike survivor Justin Briggs shares how trauma, fear, resilience, and purpose shaped his healing after a life-changing event.
- Discover more about Justin Briggs and his coaching work at:briggscoaching.com
- https://www.etsy.com/shop/OvercomeMentalHealth
- Follow Overcome - a Mental Health Podcast
- Want to have a real conversation about your mental health? Fill out this form!
Who This Episode Is For
- Listeners navigating lightning strike survivor justin or supporting someone who is.
- People looking for honest, practical mental health conversations instead of surface-level advice.
- Anyone who wants real stories about resilience, healing, and rebuilding after hard seasons.
Key Takeaways on Lightning Strike Survivor Justin
- Lightning strike survivor Justin Briggs shares how trauma, fear, resilience, and purpose shaped his healing after a...
- Discover more about Justin Briggs and his coaching work at:briggscoaching.com
- https://www.etsy.com/shop/OvercomeMentalHealth
- Follow Overcome - a Mental Health Podcast
Guest
How to Overcome Fear and Find Purpose
Visit How to Overcome Fear and Find PurposeResources & Links
Transcript
Show full transcript Timestamps included
0:01
Hello and welcome to Overcome, a mental health podcast.
0:04
I'm your host Travis White and I am excited for today's episode.
0:10
This is a place where you can speak about your mental health.
0:14
And I'm here tonight with Justin Briggs.
0:17
Justin is a husband, father, author and lightning strike survivor.
0:21
He has built the life of his dreams and is here to help individuals remove blocks,
0:21
overcome fears, find their passion in life and achieve their dreams.
0:30
Justin, welcome to the show.
0:32
Thank you.
0:33
Glad to be here.
0:35
It's a pleasure having you.
0:36
And I'm just going to turn the microphone right over to you and have you tell us about
0:36
your journey.
0:44
Yeah, I would say the biggest thing for me has been kind of overcoming a lightning strike.
0:52
like you said, I don't love the term survivor, but I definitely did survive it, which I'm
0:52
happy to still be here and still going afterwards.
1:07
was actually 10 years ago, I
1:12
a couple weeks ago was the 10th anniversary.
1:14
And it's very closely tied to my youngest daughter who just turned 10.
1:21
So it happened a week after she was born.
1:25
So my wife was just coming out of the hospital.
1:28
We have a newborn at home.
1:29
It happened when I was working.
1:31
So I actually was...
1:35
in the field, I was working as a backpacking guide at the time.
1:39
And it was, I would say, the most, you know, transformative event that I've experienced.
1:46
I've talked to a lot of people, you know, other survivors, that it just kind of changes
1:46
everything.
1:51
There's, you know, the time before it happened and the time after kind of
1:57
separate points of my life.
2:00
And what do you remember most vividly about the strike?
2:06
Luckily, I stayed conscious for it.
2:08
mean, it happens a lot of times where you can be killed instantly.
2:14
It's one of the uh highest fatality of any kind of incident like that.
2:20
I can't remember.
2:20
I did a bunch of research when I was in the hospital right afterwards just to kind of see
2:20
where I was at.
2:25
It's like a 70 to 80 % fatality rate for lightning strikes.
2:30
So happy to be in the minority there in the group of survivors.
2:42
staying conscious during it was definitely a blessing.
2:45
The times where people are knocked unconscious or it messes with everything in your body,
2:45
you can have your heart stop or stop breathing.
2:59
So, thankful that none of that happened.
3:03
But the kind of most shocking thing for me was the inability to move.
3:11
So, I would call it like a paralyzed for a short period of time, where all the energy and
3:11
electricity went into my body but didn't exit.
3:24
So what happens a lot of times is it will kind of go in, you know, one part and exit
3:24
another part.
3:29
It went into my leg.
3:31
It came up from the ground and just absorbed all of that energy.
3:36
And so, you know, our bodies are all energy and electricity and it just seized every
3:36
muscle in my body.
3:45
So I was basically kind of
3:50
like in the fetal position laying on the ground, but any point in my body that could bend,
3:50
know, arms, wrists, legs, everything was kind of seized up and stayed in that position for
4:04
a while.
4:04
And so I was kind of just panicked for the inability to move.
4:11
Yeah, that's crazy.
4:13
I can only imagine like what was going through your head at that time.
4:17
How long did it take for you to like grasp like what really happened to you in that
4:17
moment?
4:24
It's hard to say because it was, you know, I guess I knew what happened instantly with
4:24
the, you know, it's like a like an explosion.
4:34
So with the, you know, concussive force and the sound and the light, you know, it's a huge
4:34
flash of light, obviously.
4:41
And so I knew what happened instantly.
4:45
But really, you know, laying there on the ground immobilized was just like, OK, well,
4:51
I'm not dead, which is great.
4:52
And kind of taking the stock of, know, okay, well, I'm breathing and I could, the only
4:52
thing I could move was my head.
5:00
So I was just, you know, locked up on the ground.
5:04
And I think the first thought was, okay, well, I can't move, but can I, you know, kind of
5:04
getting a bearing of what senses do I have?
5:17
So I was in the middle of a hailstorm is actually how it started.
5:26
So it a summer storm, lots of hail.
5:29
So there were hailstones covering the ground.
5:32
So I kind of rolled over and put my hand and my face in the ice cubes basically and
5:32
couldn't feel any cold, which was really surprising.
5:44
You're laying in ice, it should feel
5:46
and I couldn't feel anything.
5:48
So not being able to move and not being able to sense that was I would say the most
5:48
shocking and terrifying part of it.
5:57
Luckily, would say within a few minutes I was able to start getting some movement kind of
5:57
like from my core and getting to the point where I could
6:06
shift my weight a little bit and start to move.
6:09
So we had other staff was out there, the participants that we were guiding were out there.
6:15
So was kind of like the need to get back to everybody and kind of assess the situation.
6:20
And so once I was able to move, the first thing that I was starting to do is kind of like
6:20
an army crawl that I could.
6:27
move my arms enough to wiggle my body a few feet um to get back to everybody else.
6:35
And that's just bizarre.
6:38
I can't even imagine being a bystander and just being odd.
6:42
I don't even think, me, I know what to do to even help you out.
6:48
But what did your initial physical injuries look like?
6:55
So when we finally got to the hospital, was probably several hours, you know, because we
6:55
were back country to get to a good hospital.
7:07
Major extent of it was like muscle fatigue, muscle enzymes.
7:12
So they compared it in the hospital to
7:17
running a marathon or doing something extreme, you know, extremely taxing on your muscles
7:17
in a very short period of time.
7:24
so their concern in the hospital was, I can't remember the name of it, but it's whatever,
7:24
enzyme happens when you, you you use your muscles, and that being dumped into my
7:35
bloodstream kind of in a short period of time.
7:38
Uh, so
7:40
just checking liver functions, kidney functions, making sure everything internally is
7:40
still healthy and safe.
7:48
So it was a lot of flushing things out, know, checking, taking blood regularly and
7:48
checking that just to make sure those things were okay.
7:55
That was like the first couple of days.
7:57
Had a ruptured eardrum and a little bit of
8:03
blood in my ear from the concussive force.
8:08
So I have about, I haven't had it tested.
8:11
My wife definitely can tell one side is different than the other, maybe like 70, 75 % in
8:11
one ear versus the other.
8:23
And I would say the biggest lingering thing is what it affected in my leg.
8:29
where it kind of came up my
8:34
right leg and had a burn scar on my leg, really affected everything in that area.
8:41
So my foot, my ankle going up my lower leg was pretty bad for a while and took a lot of
8:41
physical therapy to help with that.
8:54
And do you have any lingering pains or was it pretty much all gone now?
9:02
Physically, no, everything's gone.
9:06
I would say it took probably, I don't know, four or five years before, you know, feeling
9:06
back to normal.
9:19
Initially, it was a lot of nerve pain, a lot of nerve damage, a lot of soreness and just
9:19
kind of weakness.
9:29
I did...
9:31
Like I said, the physical therapy was definitely a game changer.
9:36
There was actually like one place that I went to that does, it's like a, can't remember if
9:36
it's an infrared or whatever it is, but it's some kind of laser light therapy that was
9:49
crucial in like the healing process.
9:53
So everything in my foot and ankle using that laser therapy was...
10:01
Such a big difference before and after.
10:04
Yeah, I can imagine.
10:05
I've actually heard a little bit about kind of that laser infrared light therapy and it,
10:05
from what I understand, it does wonders to heal.
10:16
And side note, just me being me, but we actually got this thing my wife and I did.
10:22
And it's this thing that you put up your nose when you start feeling sick in this infrared
10:22
light.
10:28
And if you do it at the right time, your signs and symptoms completely go away.
10:33
think it takes like two or three times and it's actually really helps.
10:37
Yeah.
10:39
Nice.
10:42
Sorry, sidetracked there, but uh yeah, they're great.
10:48
They're just these little teeny things.
10:49
uh Let's get more, let's dig more into like the emotional side of things here.
10:59
was the most difficult part of recovery when it came to like the emotional side and
10:59
psychological recovery part.
11:09
I would say, you know, it's a traumatic event kind of in all aspects.
11:16
So obviously, you know, there's the physical side, you know, mentally and emotionally kind
11:16
of the, you know, I wouldn't consider it PTSD level.
11:30
My dad had PTSD.
11:32
I've talked to a lot of people who have...
11:37
gone through that, I wouldn't say it's at that level, but they're definitely, know,
11:37
lingering kind of things that would, you know, bring up or affect my emotional state,
11:48
mental state.
11:49
you know, obviously storms just in general for the short period afterwards, you know, it
11:49
was like very sensitive, you know, it's like, I can.
11:59
I can feel it or sense it off in the distance, like I'm going inside, even if it's not
11:59
raining.
12:07
And I think the biggest thing was the explosion, like the light and kind of bomb going off
12:07
sensation stuck around for a while to where I would have
12:28
dreams and it would be like you know that's kind of like the end of the dream like not
12:28
even attached to anything else it would just be like I wake up like in a panic because the
12:39
you know strike just happened and not it's not like I had a dream about being back there
12:39
it's just like you know unrelated and the explosion goes off you know in my mind and I
12:53
wake up
12:54
in a panic.
12:54
And that lasted for definitely a few years afterwards and kind of took a lot of time to
12:54
process the event and, you know, beyond the physical healing, the mental and emotional
13:09
healing to get past that, you know, fear that had so much control over me.
13:17
Yeah.
13:19
Did you have to use any sort of therapy or anything to get through the nightmares or the
13:19
somewhat PTSD that you explained to, did you have to use any type of therapy or how did
13:32
you overcome that part?
13:34
So really, not in a traditional sense of going to a therapist, but the same idea of
13:34
talking about it with friends and family.
13:50
And really, I think once my understanding of the event and kind of the things that led up
13:50
to it and things afterwards, that understanding
14:04
and kind of acceptance shifted.
14:06
That was when I really noticed, you know, being able to let go of things and there was
14:06
less of that fear and anxiety around it.
14:16
Yeah, that would be tough.
14:19
Another thing that I'm curious about is you said you had a newborn at the time.
14:24
How did that, let's see, I'm trying to think of how to word it.
14:29
How was your wife able to navigate the situation with a newborn and did you have any other
14:29
kids at the time or was it just the one?
14:37
Yeah, so our oldest daughter was three at the time.
14:40
ah Yeah, so, yeah.
14:45
So the, I find it funny, the initial conversation that we had, which I still kind of joke
14:45
around with my wife about it.
14:55
So she was, you like I said, a week out of the hospital, she had had a C-section for the
14:55
birth.
15:02
So major surgery, she's still recovering at home and trying to take care of a young kid
15:02
and a newborn.
15:10
So I had only been at work for a few days, but we were able to communicate.
15:16
So even when I was working and the schedule was very weird where we would work a week at a
15:16
time and then have a week off.
15:23
So when I would go away,
15:24
out of the house and gone for a week straight.
15:26
It's not like coming home at night, but still able to communicate.
15:29
So I'd be able to call when I got service or send texts.
15:33
So she was used to be checking in every once in a while.
15:38
And so the strike happened.
15:40
I've been in the hospital for a few hours.
15:42
They say everything's looking okay and decided to...
15:49
call my wife and check in with her and let her know everything that was happening.
15:53
And as soon as I got on the phone with her, she kind of launched in about her day, what
15:53
she was going through and the pains that she was having and her stomach was upset and all
16:06
the different things that come with recovering from surgery and a C-section.
16:11
And so just kind of letting her vent and it was...
16:15
a good five to maybe 10 minutes of just decompressing, talking about her day, everything
16:15
that was going on before I let her know what was going on with me.
16:28
And when I told her, she didn't believe me.
16:30
was like, that's not funny.
16:32
Don't joke around about stuff like that.
16:34
So I had to send her a picture of my burned up foot in the hospital.
16:39
She, I didn't want her to freak out because obviously she has so much going on herself.
16:45
But you know, I'm good, I'm alive, I'm, you know, mostly intact and, you know, I'll be
16:45
home as soon as possible.
16:54
yeah, the fact she's got mad at me for not saying something immediately.
16:59
whatever I'm going through, just interrupt me and tell me like you're in the hospital,
16:59
but, you know.
17:04
I would have probably done the same thing and let my wife vent before I said anything,
17:04
just because it's like she's getting out her frustration before, I the bigger blow.
17:17
Yeah.
17:18
Yeah, it's all crazy.
17:20
And those dark moments that you've been explaining and how were you able to...
17:27
Stay strong for your family even while you're struggling.
17:33
So like I said, the kind of realization or understanding of why all of this happened in
17:33
the first place was really instrumental for me.
17:44
And it definitely took a while, you know, it wasn't a quick process.
17:51
So I think once I had kind of talked to people about the incident initially,
18:01
It took a while for the realization to hit, but so it came to me where I basically called
18:01
this into being or, you know, created this thing happening to me without even intending to
18:18
or realizing it.
18:19
So it was probably a year or so before the strike happened.
18:24
I was talking to my wife, sitting outside, you know, summer thunderstorms off in the
18:24
distance.
18:30
I've always been fascinated by lightning, just the power and magnitude.
18:36
People describe it like the temperature and energy of the surface of the sun and an
18:36
instant.
18:40
And it happens all over the place, but it's not something that we can really comprehend
18:40
that much power.
18:48
And just kind of random comment to her that,
18:52
I said it, I wonder what it would feel like to be hit by lightning, not realizing.
18:57
And she laughed it off and didn't really pay much attention to it or talk about it after
18:57
that, just something random that I said.
19:06
And I'm glad I put the stipulation that if I could survive, so the whole piece of it, if I
19:06
could experience that much power and
19:17
you know, live to tell the tale.
19:19
And I said that, you know, I put that out there.
19:22
So realizing that that was something that I had asked for, and I got it was, you know,
19:22
kind of a huge revelation.
19:31
And so, you know, moving forward, it's like, even in those dark times, it's like, you
19:31
know, there's a lot of pain and suffering and, you know, challenge.
19:43
but that was something that I asked for and I got it.
19:48
you know, learning that lesson of like, be careful what you wish for, be careful what you
19:48
ask for.
19:54
So now, you know, I only put out there positive things that I want to have happen.
19:58
It's like, all right, if I'm gonna say something, it's gonna be intentional.
20:02
It's gonna be, you know, for my good, my family's good, the greater good.
20:09
So, and also kind of recognizing that that
20:13
it is like an ability or a power that we have, you know, to create things and bring things
20:13
into life and to reality.
20:21
know, you know, people ask afterwards, you know, even in the hospital and days after, you
20:21
know, whenever I talk to people about it, if they're, if I notice anything like a, like a
20:32
superhero that, you know,
20:34
things have changed.
20:35
tried in the hospital touching my phone to finger to my phone to see if I could charge it
20:35
or have any kind of electrical changes but no physical know superpowers but I would say
20:48
that realization of like this is the power that we have is kind of a superpower now so
20:48
using words as a tool or a power.
20:58
Yeah, I hear all this and I first of all, think I hope I haven't said anything to my wife
20:58
that I'm going to manifest upon myself.
21:07
That was like, I've been sitting here for a second.
21:10
Is there anything like I don't think there has been, but I never know because a lot of
21:10
times I say stuff out of sarcasm and stuff.
21:21
So I hope I haven't said anything that's going to.
21:24
Yeah, you got to realize the intention.
21:26
Yeah.
21:28
But then second thing that I was thinking about was I hear your story and I was like, I
21:28
just think you're so lucky to
21:40
to see.
21:40
don't know if have so much less happen to you than what could it could have been.
21:46
Like I don't want to minimize it at all because it's not what I'm trying to do.
21:50
But I feel like it could have been so much worse.
21:53
But you not not that I not that what you went through wasn't hard or challenging.
21:58
But you're you're you're here and
22:02
survivors and, you know, the physical effects, you know, that could be, you know,
22:02
lingering, you know, the emotional damage.
22:11
Yeah, it's definitely for how bad it was.
22:14
And, you know, it was traumatic.
22:16
I'm it's weird to say I'm grateful that it happened and it happened the way that it did.
22:21
you know, moving forward from it, I, I appreciate, you know, the things that led up to it
22:21
and the moment and everything afterwards.
22:31
So, yeah, it's weird to say, you know, being grateful that I got struck by lightning.
22:35
It's, don't want it to happen again.
22:36
That's for sure.
22:37
It's the one and done, you know, I, and I don't, you know, wish it upon anybody else.
22:43
You know, I would not recommend, Hey, you know, this is an experience for everybody.
22:48
ah Definitely not.
22:50
And I don't personally think it sounds weird when you say that you're grateful for it
22:50
because it's our, to me, our most challenging times are the ones that teach us the most
22:59
about ourselves.
23:00
So that moment though, that you were, you know, now exploring the idea of you manifesting
23:00
it yourself.
23:08
How did that shift your perspective on life and your own personal power?
23:15
Yeah, that's where things really started to turn for me because going through kind of that
23:15
dark period that is, like you said, having those challenges and struggles kind of defines,
23:33
you know, okay, which way are you going to go, you know, succumb to, you know, all those
23:33
things and kind of let the darkness, you know, take over or, you know,
23:45
decide to do something different and make a change and learn from it, grow from it,
23:45
whatever it is.
23:52
And that's so much harder to make that decision and then to keep making that decision
23:52
every day and kind of moving down that path.
24:03
For some reason, I don't really know why or where it comes from, but I really enjoy the
24:03
struggle.
24:11
I've had other kind of...
24:15
big events and that's just one of them.
24:17
those times are what I, I don't enjoy it the most, because obviously the great times after
24:17
the struggle are amazing.
24:28
The ability to see the progress and all the fruits of your labor, I love that part of it.
24:33
But there's something about being challenged.
24:37
Am I able to rise to the occasion?
24:40
What about my skills and abilities and fortitude can I apply here?
24:47
And what can I learn from it?
24:50
It's always like the opportunity to evolve and grow in those times is something that I
24:50
enjoy.
25:02
And so I think...
25:05
and learning that about myself and also sharing that with others.
25:09
I don't think that's uh a typical response to challenging events and struggle.
25:15
So people are always kind of curious about that and want that for themselves.
25:21
And I think a lot of times there's the desire there and just the...
25:28
the understanding or the, I guess, guidance or skills needed to kind of go through that
25:28
process isn't always there.
25:36
So that's what I love, you know, sharing with people and then giving them those tools so
25:36
that they can go on and do it, you know, for themselves.
25:44
And the same thing, you know, then they can go on and do it for other people.
25:48
So it's kind of that pay it forward mentality and, you just keeps growing and...
25:53
spreading throughout people throughout the world.
25:57
Yeah, I love that.
25:58
And I admire your totally positive mindset through these struggles because being honest, I
25:58
don't always have that.
26:08
My wife always tells me I'm very pessimistic.
26:12
And I'm trying to overcome that because she's the more optimist in our relationship.
26:18
And so every time I go through something bad, she has to sit me down and be like,
26:22
Okay, don't be pessimistic about it.
26:24
Like things are going to be better.
26:27
Can't get any worse from here.
26:29
I'm like, well, can't they?
26:30
Like, are you sure?
26:31
So she keeps me on my toes, but I really love that positive mindset.
26:37
So somebody who's kind of struggling with that, what tools would you give them or advice
26:37
would you give them to start thinking like,
26:46
get their mind into a where they can think that way.
26:50
So definitely starting small is always the kind of basis for it.
26:58
So, you know, we do things every day, you know, every week, every month, sometimes without
26:58
even realizing, you know, that it's, we just, you know, overcame something or, you know,
27:09
did something challenging.
27:11
And so figuring out and identifying those things in your daily life.
27:20
is crucial to be like, you know, instead of overlooking it or just, you know, like
27:20
downplaying it, doing the opposite.
27:29
it's like, you know, identifying it, focusing on it, kind of like shedding light on, I do
27:29
things, I, you know, have overcome things or, you know, big events in the past.
27:40
So recognizing
27:42
those successes and then building on it moving forward is okay, whatever the next big
27:42
thing that comes up is again, starting small.
27:53
So I think what happens a lot is whatever the challenge at hand is seems daunting because
27:53
it's, you know.
28:03
complicated or lots of steps or you know might take a lot of time and once it's broken
28:03
down into you know manageable things like what is it how do you eat an elephant right one
28:18
bite at a time it's like yeah you're not gonna you know swallow a whole elephant you're
28:18
not gonna take on this huge project or you know events all at once so you take it
28:31
one bite at a time and you have that consistency is the greatest thing.
28:38
If you can do anything for a long period of time, then anything's possible.
28:44
And you hit on a word that I really like right there is consistency.
28:48
Cause I think when it comes to, and I'm not just saying mental health here, want to, think
28:48
physical is right there with it.
28:57
But if you're consistent in doing something, you can overcome anything.
29:00
And it's so much easier to stay focused.
29:06
So with your, this journey of uh self discovery and go through your recovery, how did that
29:06
experience evolve your relationships with maybe your wife or as a father?
29:22
Yeah, it was huge.
29:24
kind of my transformation was going from really just kind of existing and going through
29:24
the motions to a lot of people having experiences like this or other.
29:50
traumatic events, it's like a second chance at life.
29:54
I wouldn't say that was really the driving force or kind of sentiment for me, but just.
30:03
there's more to experience.
30:06
And I want to, I asked for this major experience and I got it.
30:11
So I was like, well, what else can I ask for?
30:13
once things started to improve kind of internally for me, how can I share that with
30:13
others?
30:21
starting with my wife and kids, building our relationship.
30:26
ah You know, my communication was something that I had always struggled with from, you
30:26
know, the way that I was raised, you know, being kind of more quiet, closed off, you know,
30:37
you don't share things, don't talk about a lot of things.
30:39
But just because, you know, your past or the way things were done doesn't mean it's, you
30:39
know, the best way.
30:46
And so changing that up.
30:48
myself and communicating with my wife and then seeing what it does and you know what it's
30:48
able to bring about and grow the connection and make things so much better.
31:03
You know wanting to do more of that and then with our kids you know they were young at the
31:03
time.
31:12
I was able to stay at home with them and
31:18
just experience everything, the good, the bad, the boring, the exciting.
31:23
But being able to kind of see them progress through everything kind of got me more in
31:23
touch with my own inner child and seeing everything through their eyes and wanting to give
31:40
them experiences and lessons and.
31:43
you all the things that I didn't have.
31:46
And so being able to have that awareness for myself and then being able to share it with
31:46
them was huge.
31:53
That's really cool.
31:54
It sounds like being able to stay home with your kids, it helps shape your healing.
32:03
That's really cool.
32:06
And I love this stuff.
32:08
I love every piece of what you're saying.
32:10
it's, it just makes me like think of my own life and what I can change going forward.
32:19
And that's, that's a big reason why I do this is for everybody else to, my listeners first
32:19
to hear the stories, but also like it gives me motivation as well.
32:31
Yeah.
32:35
So in the very beginning, as I was telling people who you were, one of the words that
32:35
popped up was author.
32:45
Can you tell us a little bit about that?
32:48
Yeah, that actually kind of came about right after the lightning strike.
32:55
So not something that I ever would have thought about or, as a kid, you know, it was like
32:55
no desire to write even, you know, in in school and high school, any kind of English
33:16
assignment writing assignment, you know, is like
33:18
begrudgingly like, okay, I just have to get this done for a grade.
33:21
wasn't taking joy in writing.
33:25
So it was an interesting realization that it was something that I wanted to do when it
33:25
came about.
33:37
So I had the idea.
33:43
Not sure when exactly after, you know, being at home and recovering and you know, like I
33:43
said, at home with two kids and a lot of time on my hands and not the most engaging
33:53
conversations with a newborn and a young kid.
33:56
But, you know, seeing movies was always really big for me, you know, taking them to the
33:56
theater, you know, for the first time when they were young and...
34:06
I feel like it's been this way for a while where movies versus when we were younger now is
34:06
more spin-offs, recreations, sequels.
34:18
There's not a lot of original things, new stories coming out in movies.
34:26
And a big favorite genre of mine has always been sci-fi.
34:30
and seeing different things that come out.
34:35
I would say every couple of years there's a great sci-fi movie, but what else could be
34:35
done?
34:46
What kind of new ideas haven't been explored in that genre?
34:52
And not really sure how I would get a movie made.
34:58
You know, it's not something that I could control even if I did, you know, write a
34:58
screenplay.
35:03
You know, the chances of it being made into a movie are very small.
35:10
But what I do have control over is writing something, you know, that I could put out
35:10
there.
35:15
So switching from kind of the movie realm to book realm, where it's like if I tell the
35:15
story, you know, like a movie.
35:26
It's uh something that I can put out there in terms of a book series.
35:30
So then, you know, opened up the computer and fired up a Word document and started putting
35:30
ideas down and it was such a process, you know, I've talked to other people that have
35:44
gotten books out, you know, some people are able to
35:47
crank it out in a few months.
35:49
Some people take years.
35:51
So mine was on the longer end.
35:52
And I would say from start to finish of the first book was about six years.
35:58
And there's a lot of things that come up during that time and a lot of hesitation.
36:03
At a point it was just done and I was kind of just sitting on it, hesitant to publish it.
36:10
But yeah, it's been, you know, another journey learning process challenge, you know, all
36:10
the all those things to, you know, come to a point where I just published the second book
36:23
in the series a couple months ago.
36:25
And, you know, working on the third book in the series, like I said, it's not something
36:25
that I ever thought that I would kind of
36:33
have, you know, be a part of my life, my bio.
36:37
But now that it's out there, you know, I talk to people, you know, people read it and ask
36:37
questions.
36:43
And that's like, my favorite thing is discussing it, you know, how it affected people,
36:43
what they thought of it, you know, I've had these ideas and things going around my mind
36:53
for years now.
36:55
So that's been
36:57
I think my favorite part.
36:59
That's really cool.
37:01
Even though you said you sat on it for a bit, now it's out there.
37:05
You did it.
37:05
So kudos for you.
37:07
I can't tell you how many times that I've had an idea and just didn't even do anything
37:07
about it.
37:14
And I see somebody else, create something that's like it.
37:18
And I'm like, why didn't I just do that when I said I was going to do it?
37:22
Yeah, that's what the interesting thing I've seen with like creativity and ideas is, you
37:22
know, it's almost like it comes to you, right?
37:33
Like you are presented with this idea and you don't really know, you know, kind of the
37:33
catalyst or the uh inspiration behind it.
37:42
It's just that like you have it.
37:44
And if
37:48
You know, it's hard to say like does it that same idea kind of come to a bunch of people?
37:54
You know, because there are stories like that where it's like, you know, this person is
37:54
creating this thing or this person is, you know, writing this thing or whatever it is and
38:05
it's like, how do you so many people have, you know, kind of similar things and and what's
38:05
your interpretation of it, you know, because like whatever you thought of and
38:16
creative might be different from somebody else.
38:19
Yeah, it's crazy.
38:20
I want to say it was my therapist.
38:23
I was talking to him and I honestly think it was about the idea of my podcast and having a
38:23
place for the speak about mental health for people.
38:33
And he said, because I started seeing him like really a lot before I started this.
38:39
started this back in January and he mentioned to me, said, no, just, just, do you have
38:39
this idea?
38:46
I think it's great.
38:47
You just need to push forward and do it.
38:50
Otherwise, somebody else is going to get the same idea and do exactly, almost probably to
38:50
take it from you as if it wasn't yours anymore.
39:02
So it's up to you to take what the universe is giving you and act upon it.
39:09
Yeah.
39:10
And you did.
39:12
Yeah, I'm here, it's going good.
39:15
m
39:19
absolutely how I felt.
39:21
So the reason that I kind of got over the fear of, you know, putting something out there
39:21
for people to experience with the book was that idea if I didn't and if I waited and
39:36
something came out just like it, I would have like, it's, know.
39:41
heart breaking because yeah, it's like something, you're so passionate and like, you
39:41
created something and then watching somebody else do it, yeah, would be.
39:55
Yeah, couldn't come back from that, I feel like.
39:59
Yeah, it's I could imagine the one thing that the one idea that I had right before it came
39:59
out was I don't believe to this day that I have the skill set to do or know the correct
40:12
knew the correct way to do it.
40:14
But I remember going to a restaurant.
40:17
It was super, super busy.
40:20
And this was before they had any app or phone system to link it directly to your site.
40:28
mobile numbers like to text you.
40:31
So I told my wife, I was like, how cool would it be if I could create an app that I could,
40:31
we could just enter in our phone information and it would just text me back and tell me
40:46
how long the wait was for specific restaurants, the ones that are busy.
40:50
She said, that would be really cool.
40:52
A year later, guess what popped up?
40:55
Yeah.
40:58
I was like, man, we could be living a totally different lifestyle at this point if I would
40:58
have done this.
41:03
But the great part about that is you know your ideas are, you know, worthwhile.
41:09
So then whenever the next one comes around, you're like, okay.
41:13
Can I pick that up faster and act upon it?
41:15
Yeah, awesome.
41:19
Well, just a couple, honestly, like little follow up questions here.
41:24
And this one, I got us on kind of a sidetrack there, but I love books, so I had to ask.
41:35
But I asked this question, it's pretty general.
41:39
But I like to hear the response that I get from everyone because they're all so different.
41:44
What would you say is the biggest stigma in regards to mental health?
41:53
feel like it's changed so much over time.
42:01
You know, it used to be not talking about it.
42:04
And I love the fact that it's that has changed to where people are more comfortable
42:04
talking about it.
42:14
I guess.
42:18
Maybe not necessarily a stigma or just misinformation or misunderstanding, I guess, but
42:18
just how much it affects the daily lives of people.
42:30
where you, I guess the difference between physical health and mental health, where if you,
42:39
say to somebody, you have a physical issue or disability or whatever it is, people
42:39
instantly recognize, okay, I understand that you are struggling, right?
42:54
Like if it's, you had a leg amputated or you have multiple sclerosis or whatever issue
42:54
that people...
43:05
Accept it easier, I guess and just kind of know that's what you're struggling with Versus
43:05
when you know people bring up whatever their mental health issue is That there isn't the
43:19
same I you know understanding or Empathy that comes along with okay, you're struggling,
43:19
you know every day
43:30
just like somebody who has a physical issue that, I think just like the acceptance of
43:30
things weren't talked about in the past and they're talked about more now, I look forward
43:44
to the day that, like I said, when people have a handicap parking pass and they park a
43:44
little bit closer because it's harder for them to get into the grocery store.
43:54
you know, in the same way that, you know, people talk about, okay, well, you know, I have
43:54
bipolar disorder and I can't get out of bed some days and people are like, okay, yeah,
44:04
absolutely.
44:05
so, you know, people going out with friends or going to work or, know, whatever the
44:05
situation is, there's that immediate kind of understanding and acceptance.
44:14
Like it is so hard some days, you know, just to function.
44:22
I love it.
44:24
And if your story could help just one person, what is the one thing you'd want them to
44:24
take away from it?
44:36
So recently I've been kind of focusing on this for myself and for other people and the
44:36
idea that, you know, things get better and they can just keep getting better.
44:48
So.
44:51
I guess, not being limited by circumstances or situations or all the things that kind of
44:51
tend to overwhelm you.
44:58
That looking at small things, small victories, small success, it just builds.
45:06
And that idea that whatever you think the best situation or best scenario possible.
45:13
is possible that it can be better than that.
45:16
And it's like, and then you get to that point and you didn't think it could get better.
45:19
And then it keeps getting better.
45:21
so it's always surprising.
45:24
And I love hearing from people, you know, that I've talked to and worked with that it's
45:24
just so surprising and it's so motivating and uplifting and you know, it's just a
45:37
Yeah, that simple idea is one of the best things out there.
45:42
That's awesome.
45:44
I love it.
45:44
And you've mentioned it a couple times, but I want to emphasize on it is cell breeding for
45:44
small stuff.
45:55
So what is next for you, for your journey?
46:00
Where do see yourself in five years?
46:05
So right now, like I said, is working on the third and final book of this series that I've
46:05
been, you know, 10 years now in the making after the lightning strike and having the
46:20
trilogy, you know, done and out there and people experiencing it.
46:25
If it ever was, you know, able to be made into a movie, you know, book adaptation into a
46:25
movie, I would love that.
46:32
That's something that I would want to create and be a part of and have people go to the
46:32
theaters and be excited about a movie trilogy that's new and different.
46:43
Spending time with my wife and kids has been, always has been, and it's just...
46:50
continues to amaze me.
46:52
uh You know, our kids are older now moving into teenage years and I guess experiencing all
46:52
of the different stages with them, you people talk about, you know, being worried about
47:05
different parts, you know, the terrible twos or, you know, kids going into, you know,
47:05
becoming teenagers and all the drama and things that come along with that, you know.
47:15
but instead of looking at the negative things, like I said, I'm always trying to look at
47:15
the positive things.
47:24
And so I know there's gonna be drama.
47:28
I live in a house with three women, so, and they're coming into their own and I'm sure
47:28
puberty is gonna be a wild ride and I'm here for it.
47:44
It's something that I have no experience with myself, you know, for them, but their mom
47:44
does and we get to do it together and, you know, raise kids, you know, to become adults.
47:56
And it's really such an interesting period.
47:59
You know, people talk about having kids, they're really only kids for a short while and
47:59
then they're adults forever, you know, it's so.
48:08
Yeah, the time, you know, the next few years before they are adults and, you know, go out
48:08
on their own, you know, this is what we have with them.
48:15
So I'm excited about that.
48:19
Awesome.
48:19
love it.
48:20
And I have a daughter, two sons, and my daughter is five years old now.
48:25
She's my oldest.
48:27
And I am completely petrified of those teenage years, just because she's really, the best
48:27
way to describe her, she's a Spitfire.
48:35
She's really sweet and sassy, but I'm totally petrified because I don't know what the
48:35
future holds with this.
48:43
Yeah.
48:44
Yeah, she's going to be a strong woman.
48:47
Yeah, that's what I'm hoping for.
48:51
but, and also the last thing is, is there anything that we did not discuss today that you
48:51
would like to bring up?
49:02
I don't think so.
49:03
I that's, I feel like we covered a lot and yeah, that was excellent questions to get me
49:03
thinking about, you know, my own stuff and yeah, introspective and being able to share
49:18
everything.
49:19
That was excellent.
49:21
Awesome.
49:21
Well, I thoroughly enjoyed our time here.
49:24
I admire the work you're doing and I'm absolutely glad that you survived and that you're
49:24
using your story to help people out and push through their own struggles.
49:34
That's a lot.
49:35
So thank you again for coming on the show.
49:38
Definitely, thank you.
49:40
Thank you to all the listeners out there.
49:42
Thanks for spending this hour with us.
49:44
Please share, please follow us, like our stuff, share it, and subscribe.
49:49
That's the best thing you can do for us right now.
49:52
Just get our name out there.
49:53
Thanks again for listening.
49:54
Until next time.
