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Charlamagne tha God Opens Up About His Depression & Childhood Trauma!

May 27, 2024 / 01:33:19

This episode features Charlamagne Tha God, co-host of The Breakfast Club, discussing his life experiences, mental health, and the importance of authenticity. Key topics include childhood trauma, the impact of parental relationships, and the journey to self-acceptance.

Charlamagne shares his early life in Moncks Corner, South Carolina, detailing the influence of his father, who struggled with substance abuse and infidelity. He reflects on how these experiences shaped his views on relationships and masculinity.

The conversation touches on the significance of therapy, with Charlamagne explaining how he began seeking help to cope with anxiety and depression. He emphasizes the importance of being honest with oneself and the dangers of social media in shaping identity.

Charlamagne also discusses his career in radio, including the challenges he faced, such as multiple rejections and panic attacks. He highlights the transformative power of the microphone in his life and how he ultimately found success.

Throughout the episode, Charlamagne advocates for open conversations about mental health, particularly among Black men, and stresses the need for role models who can guide younger generations toward healthier paths.

TL;DR

Charlamagne Tha God discusses trauma, mental health, and authenticity in this insightful episode.

Video

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I didn't realize it until I got older I was just a young kid and that was
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molested [ __ ] please welcome Charlamagne the god
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co-host of The Breakfast Club and America's most influential radio host growing up my father was telling me if
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you don't change your lifestyle you going to end up in jail dead or broke the problem was he wasn't practicing
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what he was preaching when I started selling drugs I found out he was selling drugs then he had an affair on my mom so
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I became a player because I felt I had to be like my pops but then I ended up getting in a situation where a shooting
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happened and going to jail but I was able to finally wake up and I was smart enough to realize whatever I want to be
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doing 5 years from now I got to start doing now and then the microphone ultimately changed your life I didn't
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know that you had 12 years of rejection I got fired four times I just collected my last unemployment check I was scared
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to death but you can't live life with fear you got to live life with faith next gig I got was The Fast Forward 3 4
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years I'm having more success than I've ever had in my life but I just was not happy I was losing myself and um those
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Suicidal Thoughts just cross your mind for no reason you know and even even
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now what what am I still doing
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here man we've just hit 6 million subscribers on
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the D Co um so me and my team would like to do something we've never done before as little thank you and we're calling it
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The di Co subscriber raffle and here is how it works every episode this month we're going to pick three current
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subscribers at random and we'll send one of you a 1,000 voucher one of you tickets to come and watch the dire SE
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behind the scenes live with our team and one of you will have a 10-minute phone call with me to discuss whatever you want to talk about if you're a
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subscriber you're in the raffle thank you from the bottom of my heart for allowing me to do something that me and
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my team love doing so much it is the greatest honor of my lifetime and I hope it I hope it continues uh off into the
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Future Let's get to the [Music]
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episode get honest or d Ling why did you choose those words why
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did you choose that title um it's a play it's a play on 50 cents Get Rich or Die try you know um I'm always going to have
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have you know some some some old hip hop you know somewhere like my last book was was shook one you know that was paying
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homage to mob deep but also um you know just talking about how I felt my whole
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life when I would get get panic attacks get anxiety attacks and get honest to die ly that's you know not just to play
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on 50 cents title that's how I truly feel it's like yo if you don't get honest with yourself you're going to die
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lying like you know I had a um I went to a spiritual Retreat you know back in
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February me and my wife and like that's one of the things that came up for me you know that that that weekend at The
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Retreat one of the things that came up for me was stop lying to yourself and stop volunteering those lies to others
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and I think a lot of us do that you know a lot like we we lie to ourselves and then we just volunteer those lies to
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other people like nobody even asked us you know and I think I think social
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media you know uh contributes to a lot of that because every day you feel like you have to you know feed this beast and
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like you know you might go look at your feed and at some point you got to ask yourself who is this person you know or
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just the just the things that you you know say to people you know in your life
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as you're as you're as you're just you know growing and and evolving just as a human you might just volunteer lies you
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know for security purposes or the mask the mask insecurity are you know the
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mass fears and so it's just like yo if you don't start getting honest with yourself you going you going to die die
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a liar the truth and the lies start young for all of us absolutely especially if you look at the stats for
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black men because um they are much less likely to get to the point where they
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can get honest with themselves in their whole selves their mental health everything when I read through your
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story I met an individual that I never knew before I've watched The Breakfast Club for years years and years and years
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I've probably watched it for a decade I think something something like that it's always been my connection with us culture has been watching that show and
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I watched the guy that was a bit of an antagonist to the guests coming on but I never knew all of the other stuff and
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you're one of the only black men that I encountered especially in the United States that has a big sort of public figure who has been so unbelievably
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honest about what it is to be a complete man and the complete Human Experience and
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your complete experience that starts very young if I am trying to understand and the man that sits before me right
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now where do I have to start to truly understand oh you got to you definitely
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got to start from the beginning you know you got to start from that single wide trailer you know in mon Corner South
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Carolina you know growing up as as as a young man you know to a a great great
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father and a great mother I I say great you know now in regards to my father because I understand him as a man you
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know there was a period in my life you know especially when I first started going to therapy I didn't know if I even
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like lik him as a person you know because you know you got to question yourself you question things that he did
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to you growing up you know just uh I always said my dad raised me out of fear and not love but the fear was just from
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the standpoint of he didn't want me to you know make the same mistakes that he did and he didn't want to see me make
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the same mistakes that he saw a lot of people in our town making like you know the one thing that he used to always
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instill in me was like if you don't change your lifestyle you going to end up in jail dead or broke sitting under the the tree and I think that's what
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happens with kids a lot right like kids you they end up miring you know the
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parent and I think sometimes when you see yourself you know in your child if
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you made a lot of mistakes and you know you bumped your head a lot of times man
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that'll probably terrify you to see your child going down that that same path so
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for me my journey would definitely have to start um in Monks Corner South Carolina in that in that single wi
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trailer on that dirt road you grew up in a a single trailer in a a dirt road with a father that
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seemed to be pretty absent from what it says in your book you talked about him raising you there but it sounded like he very much also didn't raise you no he
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was absent in the sense of he had his own issues that he was dealing with you know and I didn't find that out until
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you know 2018 when I put out my second book shook one anxiety playing tricks on me where I really opened up about a lot
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of my anxiety and a lot of my depression and going to therapy I never forget it it was Thanksgiving um it the week of
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Thanksgiving 2018 and uh I had a younger cousin he
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was like 24 25 years old he tried to complete suicide four different times and on the fourth time he he completed
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it and it was the week that he completed it and then on that on top of the fact my father had just read my second book
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he said to me um he called me and he said you know he he talked about my cousins and he talked about my book and
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he said man I I was going to therapy two and three times times a week and I tried to kill myself you know 30 plus years
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ago and you know I was on 10 to 12 different medications for my mental health so when he said that to me I
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already knew that he had the substance abuse I knew he dealt with the substance abuse issues right but I knew that but I
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didn't know the other aspect of it so when I realized that I'm like oh I get
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it cuz my dad was absolutely you know there when he was you know sober
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for the most part or when he wasn't dealing with his own issues but when like I said the the the the way he
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raised me was out of was out of uh fear you know more than love but he definitely you know had his foot on my
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ass like on you know in a in a real way just because he didn't want to want me to make those um those same mistakes but
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you know I always felt like um growing up we didn't have the
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the kind of relationship I wanted to have that I would think a father and son would have but that's only because he
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was dealing with his own issues and then he started you know having a an affair
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on my mom so he really wasn't in the house then like he was you know off off
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with his his new family how what age were you it had to be like 90 98 so
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maybe I was 19 20 I probably might have been like 1920 when he when he like left the house
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I I think can we model our sort of Al relationships we model our idea of relationships based
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on the relationship we first see with our parents I think about my own my mom's Nigerian my dad's English a household that was very loud to say the
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least and I always thought my dad was in prison so growing up I never had a relationship because I thought women were like I thought it was prison and it
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was only until I got to about 30 years old that I had a real relationship but then I've had to go to therapy with my partner over and over again to get out
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of like being triggered by this idea like whenever we have conflict I'm like run cuz I always wanted my father to run
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my mom so same same like I had that deep in me that relationships were prison and when I read through your story and
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looked at your father and you know his infidelity with with your mother I was wondering how that impacted your future
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perspective of what a relationship is oh it had me it had me bad for a while CU you know I've always been the type person I like being with one one partner
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you know what I'm saying I like being with one woman like that's something that I always thought was really cool growing up probably because a lot of the
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images that we saw especially on TV back then it was always the nuclear house old it was I was like the the mother and the
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father whether it was you know the Cosby sh whether it was Martin and Gina you know whether it was you know the
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Windslow on Family Matters like you know whether it was the the Evans on Good Times before James died whether it was
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the Jefferson like you always saw you know a black man you know with a with a with a black woman and they had a family
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like that was what I always that's what I thought the American dream you know consisted of so that was like always
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something in my mind that I wanted and then uh I remember when I found out my PO was cheating on my mom and I remember
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just confronting him about it and just asking him I never forget it he was in my uh in my room with my mom's house and
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I used to have like this one of those exercise bikes in the room and he was riding he was on he he wasn't working out but he he came in to get on the
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exercise bike cuz I needed to talk to him and I bought it up to him and I remember him just saying to me like yo so so you only got one woman huh looked
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me right in the eyes and that's what he said he was like you only got one woman huh and I was like what you mean I only
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got one woman he was like huh you know like when you get older you'll understand like literally so planting
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that in my head just made me feel like am I doing something wrong am I supposed to have you know one woman so I spent
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like a large majority of my life trying to trying to show him that I was like a
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player I was like I was like my Pops I was like you know I was I I I had I had
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I had a I had a roster too right only for him to come all the way back around
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to tell me I always had it right literally don't only come back and
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tell me you know one of the worst mistakes he ever made you know was was was was leaving leaving my mom or or
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causing my mom to leave him however which way it went and I I remember him saying that to me and he just was like
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man you know you you you you've always had it right but that just kind that shows you right just because somebody is older than you you know doesn't mean
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that they're they're right doesn't mean that they're always correct like we're always growing we're always evolving if
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we allow ourselves too and you know we're going to figure out later on in life that yeah we did make a mistake you
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know doing whatever it is that we were doing and we should be able to admit that no matter the age and correct it no matter the age eight years old your
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cousin's ex-wife had a sexual encounter with you MH and you talk about these sexual encounters changing your
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personality thereafter when did you decide to speak
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about this and and when did you begin to learn the implications that that one instant sort of incident when you were
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that age had had on you throughout your life well I used to always make jokes about it right because I you know I used
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to always say um you know I I I used to always say that I
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used to buy these there used to be like these little firecrackers that were like these little poppers so you could throw
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them on the ground and they would pop and so it's like one day I just started throwing them at her cuz I didn't want her to touch me and um when when I did
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that she started calling me ugly like literally from that moment like oh you ugly you got a big nose you know she'd
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be telling everybody look at his no I think his nose is swollen so like to the point where my grandma God bless the dead would like take cream and put it on
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my nose to try to reduce the swelling it wasn't swollen she was just messing with me so in my mind it was like a psychological thing like she was she was
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she was messing with me mentally and how old was she I don't know you know she was 30 40 50 oh yeah she was definitely
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older yeah yeah yeah and you were eight I was eight yeah yeah yeah and um I remember her I remember her uh me
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telling people the reason I made her stop cuz I didn't like to smell of her Jerry cut so that was always that was
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always the joke and I remember watching uh Tyler Perry on the open Winfrey Show
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and I remember watching him cry over a older woman who molested him and I remember thinking to myself what's wrong
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with him cuz the way we rationalized it in our mind is like when you young you
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just used to talk about it like it was a sexual encounter and it was when I think about it now like I had like me like you
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know three of my other younger friends and all of us were talking about these sexual encounters we were having with
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older women so now that I think back on it I'm like damn we all was getting you
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know molested you just don't look at it like that when you're a young man when you look at it when you're a young man you look at it like I'm just getting
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action early so when I saw you know Tyler on Oprah that's when I first started like thinking about it and I
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remember this was I forgot what year this was but this was way way way back in the day but I remember there was Twitter and remember tweeting about it
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but I was tweeting about it in just like you know like wondering like what the hell is wrong with Tyler Perry you know but then I had to start asking what's
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wrong with me that like I that I'm not reacting to being molested the way that
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you know he is but then you don't even realize that it's molestation till you get old at least I didn't realize it
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until I got older and I was like oh I was getting molested and then when you
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start going to therapy and you start peeling back you know the layer of that that that trauma you start
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realizing oh this is why I am the way I am in regards to pleasing people because
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I felt like even though what she was doing to me was wrong and it made me uncomfortable and I didn't like it I had
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to keep doing it so she'd stop calling me ugly cuz her calling me ugly was really really really hurting my feelings
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you know what I mean as a young 8-year-old kid so that's that leads to you being a older adult who's a constant
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people pleaser because you don't want to let nobody down because you know if you let them down then they'll talk bad
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about you you know but that you realize you got to set those boundaries because if those people are going to if if
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making if you making yourself uncomfortable is the only way to please
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said individual that individual don't need to be in your life that's not somebody that you have have have in your
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your circle at all you've never gone back and found out
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who that person was and that done anything about it no I see her you still see her yeah I've seen her I've seen her
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I've seen her around in my hometown absolutely you're not interested in N last time I saw her actually she
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came up to me this was about let me see 2024 this probably had to be before Co you know she came up to me at at at a
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house party and she was like oh you so handsome and I was like you you been thought I was handsome Beat
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It Like You Been thought I was handsome like knock it off y your behavior becomes problematic
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15 years old 1993 I watched I sort of read through from you were 15 up until you sort of
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early 20s up to sort of 23 years old and there was um quite a shocking pattern of behavior involving
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drugs and other things I I was wondering not that early 15 I was still in I was still in high school so I was I was I
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was I was the disciplinary problems from started in Middle School it started when
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I was in like seventh grade and the disciplinary problem started just because you know my older cousins were
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like what you would call I guess bullying me right like they would I was wearing glasses and I had the fanny pack
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and I was in like what they had they they used to call it uh the classes were broken down in letters so it was like a
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A and C were for like the smart students right so I was in like the a class and
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there was only like two black people in the class two or three black people in the class right rest is all white and so
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like I would be with a lot of white people for the most part and like my cousins who were all from my daddy's uh
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side of town they would bully me like literally like they would just beat up on me because I beat with all the white kids cuz my dad is like a was a really
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cool dude you know like he was like a the the the the guy who always had like the small little Sugar Shack where you
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come over there and get your alcohol and stuff like that and you know he he used to hustle his his drugs stuff like that
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people knew my pops my pops was a cool dude so they they thought I was supposed to be like that so being that I wasn't
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like that they was like they would bully me and um it just became one of those things where it was like yo if you can't
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beat them join them so it's like yo my glasses fell off my face you know one too many times and like that one time
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where they fell and they just broke for good that's when I broke for good and I was just like you know what if I can't
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beat him join them so I I just started hanging with them and like in order to
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hang with them I had to be I guess like worse than them to prove myself in a lot
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of ways so that's when like the disruption really started in class that's when the the class clown you know
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really started to happen and that just evolved into me getting left back a couple of times you know I think I I
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went to summer school twice in seventh and eighth grade then I got left back in ninth grade and that's when I actually
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had to stay back and then by the time I got to by the time I got to 10th grade
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um I was getting kicked out of the school I was in Berkeley High School and they transferred me to to straford high
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school where my mom taught cuz they thought if I was my mom's school then I would act better but most of my problems
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from that point on started to be in the street more so than you know in school
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and so I ended up getting uh in a situation where I was with you know some
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of my homeboys and a shooting happened and we all ended up going to jail and they actually came and arrested me from
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straford high school and that's the last time I was in uh high school and you sat
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in jail for 3 months no it was was like 40 I think 45 days something like that
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yeah your dad could have bailed you out my Dad could have bailed me out um but he wanted to teach me a lesson like he
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wanted me to learn from my mistakes so he he let me sitting there for for 45
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days and and sadly that wasn't it it was a wakeup call but it wasn't the wake
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wake up call it was more like I woke up but then I hit the snooze button you know slept for a little slept for a little while longer before I finally got
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up as a great man you can look back now and think that 15 16 year old kid he
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needed something that he wasn't getting he needed a bunch of things he just wasn't getting because you got kids now yourself so you can if you saw that
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behavior in your kid you wouldn't say oh well I don't know I'm putting words in your mouth here but you probably wouldn't think okay they need to go to
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jail and sit in jail for a while you'd probably look at it and go there's something unmet there man that's such an
00:20:21
interesting question because when I do think back on it I say to myself I
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didn't have to do none of that like that's my mindset now like I didn't have to do any of that like um my mother was
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an English teacher she was a Jehovah's Witness my grandmother was a Baptist they absolutely taught me better like I
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absolutely positively knew better I had the example of my father you know if my father had been probably more honest
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with me about um his life and you know the things he had went through and who who who who he was then I probably would
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have seen a lot of those obstacles coming cuz I got to the point even when I started selling drugs when I found out
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he was also selling drugs you you can't tell me not to do it you know like like
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you can't be on some don't do as I do do as I say type stuff I remember us having
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that conversation and he was like well this my house so you're not going to be doing that in my house like cuz you you
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making me hot right like like literally and so I feel like you know for me I was
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just a young impressionable kid who wanted what every
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single human being wants and that's just simply security and if you don't get security you know from people you will
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you will find a way to get it so me you know
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becoming that that version of myself I was then was that was just literally for security that was for survival like I
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was just literally a kid that was tired of getting bullied but you know once you get down on that path you know if nobody
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stops you there will be things that stop you like jail you know are sadly in some
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cases deaf but then it's too late so I just always thank God that you know even though I I got caught up and I made
00:22:06
those mistakes I was able to you know finally you know wake up I've sat with Buster ryes and uh
00:22:13
Ashley welters and they talk a lot about their fathers and they also talk about the absence of male role models often
00:22:19
for for young black men and how the the impact of that I've actually come up to learn the impact of that by having these
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conversations over and over with black men that didn't have a a male role model in their life that could stop them from
00:22:31
going down that path and I don't think it's talked about enough because I've learned about it
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from Buster ryes and from Ashley Walters from Top booy um and it's really made me think that there's something we need to
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think more of in society for especially for people that are have sort of single parents or have an absent father or an
00:22:49
emotionally absent father I think we could save a lot of um Downstream consequences with mental health crime
00:22:54
and all of those things if we thought more about the importance of real male role oh yeah I mean listen I I had I had a a
00:23:02
a a male role model in my father but the problem with my father was he wasn't practicing what he was preaching so you
00:23:09
know you have to be about actions you can't just be about words and lip service people have to see you and and
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and see that you're you know a a living walking example of what it is that you're telling others like you know I
00:23:22
didn't even believe that men could be faithful to their women until I started
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seeing it from people that I actually knew like you know it's it's it's it's one thing
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for somebody to tell you they are but like let's just say you know you're
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you're you're out and about at a at a television shoot and you know you're out of town right and you and this person or
00:23:50
these people are hanging around after the shoot and their wife is nowhere in
00:23:55
sight and they got every opportunity to do the wrong thing but they like nah I'm
00:24:01
going back to my room you know what I'm saying I love I'm got to get home to my wife like or Nah then you where you
00:24:08
that's when you strike up conversations like really like then like n I'm faithful you know what I'm saying like
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literally like those are the conversation is like no I'm faithful I don't I don't get down like that and you like oh all right that's respectful you
00:24:20
know so it's just like actions speak way louder than words man and and the thing
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I love about the area that we're in now you know this is the first generation we're the first generation of of of
00:24:33
people that I feel like we have the luxury of healing our the people before us our
00:24:40
parents you know I'm 45 my my parents they were just scratching and surviving
00:24:45
they were just trying to figure it out they were just trying to trying to make it they were trying to keep some food on the table and a roof over their head we
00:24:52
are the first generation that has the luxury of actually healing and I think that's a beautiful thing
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so true there's a lot of Role Models
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emerging now on the internet you know do you think about like the Andrew Tates of the world and all of those conversations
00:25:09
and at the same time what it is to be a man has become quite unclear in many respects like gender roles and there's a
00:25:14
lot of because of you know we're in the the post Meo movement where a lot of inappropriate behavior was called out
00:25:20
and it's funny a guy came up to me in the gym Life Time Gym just down the road from here in Brooklyn yesterday came up
00:25:25
to me 25-year-old kid wearing a Barcelona shirt tapped me on the shoulder said I love you podcast I listen to a lot one question he goes I'm
00:25:30
25 years old he goes where do I find male role models and I remember I was with Will in the gym and I just remember
00:25:36
thinking it's so interesting because I'm getting that conversation over and over and over again I think what he's actually saying is like what is a man in
00:25:46
20204 and um who do I model myself on because there is a lot of you know if
00:25:51
you go on like Twitter there's a crowd of people that are saying Lamborghini um 17 women
00:25:58
Rolex loads of money and I'm not necessarily sure that's a great example
00:26:04
either and and then you look at the stats around Su suicidality amongst men in the UK where I'm from the single
00:26:11
biggest thing that's has the chance of killing you is suicide if you're over the age of 18 and under the age of 45 as
00:26:17
a man it's yourself and I just think about put all this in context this sort of like looking for Role Models
00:26:23
masculinity is really unclear we've called out men do we need to call them back in what matters if you got a young
00:26:30
son I got all girls I got four daughters four girls D yeah me and my wife got four daughters I guess it just depends
00:26:36
what you're trying to model like we use that term role model but what does the
00:26:41
term role model mean because you know
00:26:46
you can only model yourself after what somebody shows you you can only model you know yourself
00:26:53
off what somebody presents so if you like that person's Lamborghini if you like that Rolex if you like the clothes
00:26:59
that they got on if you like their jewelry then you're going to say to yourself okay that's what I want so that's what you're modeling you're not
00:27:06
necessarily modeling the man you're ma you're modeling the man's things yeah you know you might as well be a
00:27:12
mannequin you might as well be you might as well be looking up the mannequins you know it's hard to like really you know
00:27:18
model yourself after somebody's you know personality after somebody's morals
00:27:24
after somebody's values after somebody's beliefs cuz you don't necessarily know exact what they are and especially on
00:27:29
social media you just know what people present so you got to be very careful of that like I would tell people man you
00:27:36
know yeah if you admire something about a person cool you know let that be like
00:27:41
a a a guide for you so to speak it it gives you a it's like a flare going up
00:27:48
in the air so you kind of know which direction you may want to go but you don't know that
00:27:53
individual the only per individual that you will ever truly know is you what kind of man do you want to be are you
00:27:59
trying to be with the therapy with the work you've done with your books Etc what are you what kind of man are you trying to be a good man and what does
00:28:07
that mean um just somebody who is who they say they are like that's what I
00:28:12
always tell people and that's what I constantly tell myself I want to be who I say I am I want to be who you know if
00:28:21
if you see me um saying something if you see that that I'm telling you that this
00:28:26
is what I believe in if I'm telling you this is my truth I want you to know that
00:28:33
that's exactly who I am like you're not going to you know hear something in the
00:28:39
future and be like oh my God this dude had a whole other life going on and you know he had this going on over here and
00:28:46
that going on over here and nobody ever knew about it no I'm a I'm a faithful husband you know I am a a learning
00:28:54
father and the reason I say learning is because you there's no class on being a
00:28:59
parent none whatsoever anybody tells you that that they got that figured out they are lying I got a 15 yearold a
00:29:06
8-year-old a 5-year-old and a 2-year-old and every single one of them you know challenged me and my wife in completely
00:29:13
different ways and there's been plenty of times when me and my wife sit around you know late at night or at dinner
00:29:19
somewhere or just sitting around talking in the bed asking ourselves if we getting it right so like there's no you
00:29:26
know blueprint or no manual on to be that but I just want to be um I want to be the adult that I feel like I needed
00:29:32
when I was a child you know I want to be present um I want to be I want I want to
00:29:38
raise them out of love which is very hard especially being that I deal with
00:29:43
you know really bad anxiety in a lot of ways and I talk about parental paranoia a lot and you know you just have to man
00:29:52
you have to let go and let God like I'm a faithful person because I have no choice but to to be you know I'm a
00:29:59
optimistic person because I have no choice but to be like you know the the opposite of you know fateful is worry
00:30:07
the opposite of faithful is doubt and like you can't raise kids in that way
00:30:13
because they got they got to live their own life my 15-year-old she wants to go hang out I can't worry about what may
00:30:19
happen you know at the mall and you know you you open up a newspaper and you see all types of crazy stuff happening in
00:30:25
the world and you see crazy things happening to other people's kids and you know you just it's like y I don't want
00:30:30
my my child to ever get caught up in anything like that but man sadly that's just not your call and you just can't
00:30:36
live life like that man you can't live life um with fear you got to live life with faith with all this work you've
00:30:42
done on your mental health to understand the anxiety and um the bouts of depression and so on have you been able
00:30:48
to pinpoint the causal factors of it in your early years oh yeah I mean my being
00:30:53
being molested at 8 yeah was definitely definitely part of it um
00:31:00
um definitely the the the bullying you know early on uh
00:31:06
definitely wanting uh wanting my father to raise me
00:31:12
out of love and not fear um one of the main things that I I realized when I had
00:31:18
like one of my first breakthroughs in therapy was when I realized my dad used
00:31:23
to discipline me for things he never taught me all right so I remember one one one example I always tell is like I just got
00:31:30
my driver's license and so he told me to follow him somewhere and he was like follow me do what I do like all right
00:31:38
driving he's driving and we're coming off uh gilard Road in Mons Corner South
00:31:43
Carolina about to get on the highway highway is Highway 52 so we're driving and we get
00:31:49
to the stop sign but he doesn't stop he just drives onto the highway so I drove
00:31:55
onto the highway you know and he pulls over to the side of the road I pull over to the side of the road
00:32:01
what I didn't notice was you know you're coming down the highway you're driving he he drove like maybe a not I want to
00:32:08
say a split second but like several seconds before a car was coming and so I came right behind him so the car had to
00:32:14
Swerve out of the way I didn't even notice that so he tells me to pull over he pulls over so I pull over he gets out
00:32:19
the car he comes to the window slaps the [ __ ] out me right I'm like he's like wake up that's all he said
00:32:28
I'm just sitting there like I mean I think about that now but there's no teaching in that where was the teaching
00:32:34
in that I ain't even realize what I did wrong you told me to do everything that
00:32:40
you did you literally said do what I do you ran the stop sign so I ran the stop
00:32:47
sign and then once you slap the [ __ ] out me you don't even tell me what I did wrong so that's why I said my father
00:32:52
used to discipline me for things that he never even taught me so I think um um
00:32:58
that's where a lot of the insecurity and anxiety and you know impostor syndrome
00:33:04
that's where a lot of that comes from you know and the the bouts of depression I don't that's probably just some a
00:33:10
chemical a chemical imbalance or something cuz like that's just I constantly have to pump myself up and I
00:33:16
do that through prayer I do that through you know daily affirmations you know I do that through like um just constantly
00:33:24
telling myself I belong you know and that's something I remember being young my affirmation used to be I love Jehovah
00:33:30
God and his son Jesus Christ and I would say that three times then I would say [ __ ] Satan and I would say that three times and that is what used to get me
00:33:36
like okay I'm ready I'm ready for the day I'm ready for whatever you know the
00:33:41
the day is going to deliver me so yeah it's just all of those things from my childhood contributed to those
00:33:49
issues at some point it appears that you reached a sort of personal Rock Bottom in those sort of early
00:33:55
20s and you made a decision to that enough was enough and I find that
00:34:01
so interesting because I sit here with so many people who reach that moment
00:34:06
where they they look at their lives and they go listen look look at what I'm doing with myself and some of them carry
00:34:12
on going and they're probably not around to sit in the chair and then some of them Hit That Rock Bottom moment and
00:34:17
they go I can't carry on doing this with my life and they make a decision to take at least one footstep in some positive
00:34:23
direction and that starts to compound for them is that accurate is that an accurate description of what happened cuz I cuz I cuz I learned early that
00:34:30
everything my father was saying was true so my father was telling me if you don't change your lifestyle you going to end
00:34:35
up in jail dead or broke under the tree I actually saw that starting to happen to not just myself but people around me
00:34:41
so you know I had my stin in jail but then I had people around me that was going to jail for like five years like
00:34:47
they were going to jail for actual prison sentences and you know I had people around me that were dying that
00:34:52
were actually you know getting killed and I saw like you know people that I used to once look up to who were older
00:34:59
than me sitting under the tree literally doing nothing with their lives like
00:35:04
becoming that next generation of you know people who just sit under the tree all day and drink or do drugs or
00:35:10
whatever it is so I saw that happening and I was just one of those kids that was smart enough to realize man whatever
00:35:16
I'm doing today will directly impact what happens in my life tomorrow and that's all that's been my mindset since
00:35:23
I was you know early 20 years old like whatever I want to be doing 5 years from now I got to start doing now literally
00:35:30
that's always been my mindset and so you know when I finally um got that break to
00:35:37
find the internship in radio like just being in that
00:35:42
environment being around that in 1998 as an intern literally made me say okay this is what
00:35:50
I want to do with my future before that I didn't know what I wanted to do I was going speaking of male role models like
00:35:56
I had you know Uncle Uncle Henry he worked at UPS I'm like all right maybe UPS is the move I had a uh one of my
00:36:03
mother's cousins named Bruce he was in the military okay maybe being in the military is is the move for me like I
00:36:09
was just trying to figure out you know what I was going to do with my adult
00:36:14
life and you know I started working a bunch of odd jobs I did I did telemarketing I worked at a clothing
00:36:20
store called demo in the mall I worked at a warehouse called industrial Acoustics I worked at a flower garden I
00:36:26
worked at Taco Bell for a couple couple of weeks cuz my sister was the manager there I was just trying to figure things out and at one point in my life I worked
00:36:32
at demo in the mall with my now wife I worked at the telemarketing place and I had stumbled upon an internship probably
00:36:39
like a year prior which was at the radio station in 1998 and then around 1999 I
00:36:44
actually started being on the air and once I started being on the air it just started to let me see what the future
00:36:51
could potentially look like up until that point did you have high hopes for yourself in your future um
00:36:58
um because because because I thought I was going to be a rapper cuz you know most most young black men you know from
00:37:05
the hood you know in the late 90s or from the the rural rural area that I was from in mon Corner South Carolina you
00:37:12
know when you look on television or you open up these magazines the people that you see that are successful are usually
00:37:18
in rap hip-hop in some way shape or form are Athletics and so I thought rapping
00:37:24
was going to be the way to get up off that dir Road mon Corner South Carolina that's why you know I got I got a tattoo
00:37:31
on my arm I got Wolverine from the X-Men tattooed on my arm holding a microphone in his hand I got this tattoo when I was
00:37:37
like I don't even know like 18 19 something like that and and I got it
00:37:43
made by a dude named T Willis T Willis was a tattoo artist in South Carolina tattoos weren't even illegal in this
00:37:50
time but I I got I got I got it I got it tatted on my arm in his apartment and the reason I got Wolverine holding the
00:37:56
microphone cuz always loved Wolverine because I loved his healing powers I Lov that he was able to heal quickly from
00:38:05
things this is this is me at 18 19 years old not knowing anything about no therapy not knowing anything about you
00:38:12
know the future journey I would go on of healing this is just me back then being a young comic book lover loving the fact
00:38:20
that Wolverine had these healing powers and I had them holding the microphone cuz I thought the microphone was going
00:38:25
to be you know what changed my life which It ultimately did I just thought it was going to be through through rap music the microphone ultimately changed
00:38:32
your life I also didn't know that you'd spent this really long stint on the radio from sort of 20 years old doing
00:38:38
that internship right up until The Breakfast Club when you're 32 years old so that's 12 years but it's not just 12
00:38:44
years of work and graft and mastering your skill it's also 12 years of rejection getting fired over and over
00:38:50
and over and over again I got fired four times I got fired from four different radio stations I got fired from hot 9 89
00:38:57
in Charleston I used to do radio I started my career at Z93 which I'm back on now which is the actual Heritage
00:39:03
station so The Breakfast Club is broadcast on Z93 so I'm back on Z93 but um I left Z93 which was the big Heritage
00:39:11
station in Charleston to go work for an up incoming station called high 989 simply because you know my man George
00:39:17
cook who's still a great mentor of mine to this day he offered me a full-time radio gig I was on Monday through FR
00:39:23
Monday through Saturday 7 to midnight I had to take that making what I don't know $199,000 a year or something like
00:39:29
that but that felt so good back then because I was able to show my mom a contract and say look I'm making a
00:39:35
salary I'm making $199,000 a year right like that just felt good to say that I had a job that I
00:39:43
had to be to you know uh every day and and not just a job a job that um that
00:39:49
she knew about because she would hear me on the radio what did your father think oh he loved it like that was I mean even
00:39:55
when when I was on Z93 that was a big deal cuz z9 was the was the Heritage station like that was dation in
00:40:00
Charleston so that was a big deal for him was he surprised um having shared a jail cell
00:40:06
with you at one point seeing your delinquency through that period of your life was he
00:40:12
surprised man you know what's interesting I've never had those conversations with him even to this day
00:40:21
like I've never had like that conversation with him like n like you know he he might tell me
00:40:28
he's proud of me stuff like that but we've never had like an indepth conversation like my mom like me and my
00:40:33
mom have had like those in-depth conversations like my mom has told me things like you know you've accomplished
00:40:39
more than you know anybody in the family ever thought about accomplishment accomplishing or she'll show me like um
00:40:45
the the taxes my my great-grandfather her father yeah her
00:40:52
father was it her father yeah her father her father my grandfather she would show me like the taxes that he would have to
00:40:59
pay on their land so like just to put things in perspective you know for me
00:41:05
and um yeah like she's like I share things with her like I share with her how much I'm making or how much I made
00:41:12
doing something I I share things like that with her and um yeah she she she's she's very always
00:41:21
supportive and you know lets me know like she's proud of me I remember she she gave me the best advice a long time
00:41:27
ago she told me just be happy you making a living up survival generation but but
00:41:33
but she the way she said it was basically basically saying you know this is how you stay humble she was like just
00:41:39
be happy that you're able to make a living and she's right cuz you know how hard it is for some people to make a living like like seriously it's just
00:41:47
it's hard for some people just to be able to afford some some wings from the grocery store like it's hard for people
00:41:53
can't afford daycare like things like like just little small simple everyday things that you know you and I may be
00:42:00
able to just take care of there's a lot of people out here who can't so you should very you should very much be
00:42:06
happy just to be making a a living so her telling me that you know puts a lot of things in perspective for me and then
00:42:12
that's kept a lot of things in perspective for me but nah me and my pops have never really we've never really had those
00:42:20
conversations 32 years old you you joined the Breakfast Club which is the first time that I I saw you um heard
00:42:26
about you with was entertained by you but before you joined the bref Breakfast Club something else became really sort
00:42:32
of front of mine in your life which is anxiety and panic attacks and you talk about the the first sort of panic attack
00:42:37
you had while you were driving down into say 26 in South car Carolina I had 26
00:42:43
that that was probably the first really really really major one um the first one
00:42:48
I ever had was definitely in first grade I would never forget that M Elementary School I I don't I can't forget that to
00:42:54
this day like my mom dropped me off first day of school and I just could not calm down I mean
00:43:00
balling tears screaming like like I could not stopped you know and and now
00:43:07
when I think back on it I'm like oh that was I was straight up having a panic attack I remember to look at my mom's face like what is wrong with like what's
00:43:12
going on um but the one I had then that was after being fired for the fourth
00:43:19
time from Radio I was back home living with my mom like you said I think I was 31 32 I
00:43:25
don't remember how old I was 3132 my daughter was like one or two my now wife was back living at home with her parents
00:43:31
in Mons Corner South Carolina and I remember I was driving down i26 uh going to Orangeburg to go see uh little Duval
00:43:38
at a comedy show he was at a comedy show in um Orangeburg I forgot what school it was and um yeah I just remember feeling
00:43:45
that feeling that I've always felt my whole life heartbeating crazy fast mouth getting dry Palm sweaty feeling
00:43:53
lightheaded dizzy had to pull over get some water take a few deep breaths and just told myself like look man I'm I'm
00:43:59
I'm going go to the doctor yet again cuz I you know I always would check myself in the emergency room whenever I would have those kind of panic attacks CU I
00:44:05
always felt like I was having a heart attack and so I went to the doctor and the doctor was like nah you got to your
00:44:11
heart is fine you got a athletes heart and then he was like um he said to me he said yo you you deal with anxiety I like
00:44:18
anxiety what do you mean do I deal with anxiety and he was like um do the symptoms you're
00:44:24
describing sound like a panic attack he said have you had these before and I'm like yeah and he was like are you stressed out about anything and I'm like hell yeah
00:44:30
like you know and so he was like yeah it sounds like you know that that's anxiety you know and then he was telling me some
00:44:36
breathing exercises I could do to possibly deal with it and then in my mind after he said are you stressed out
00:44:43
about anything the first thing I thought to myself was all I got to do is get another job and everything will be a
00:44:49
okay I just got to get out my mom house get my family back in position and everything will be okay next gig I got
00:44:55
was The Breakfast Club and so you think you fast forward three four years I'm
00:45:01
having more success than I've ever had in my life I'm making more money than I've ever made in my life everything is
00:45:07
going great but nothing's changed I'm still having the panic attacks probably
00:45:12
even more so now I'm still dealing with bout of depression and I can't figure
00:45:17
out why I just was not happy and so that's what finally made me decide to
00:45:23
start you know going to therapy we started Breakfast Club in 2010 I think I started going to therapy around
00:45:29
2015 2015 2016 how bad did your your depression get in those Z years there Z
00:45:37
30s oh no they got bad I mean they it got it got it n it definitely got bad it
00:45:42
got bad to the point where like I was the guy who you know you I I love to laugh definitely love to laugh love to
00:45:49
joke love to have a good time but then like yeah those Suicidal Thoughts just
00:45:56
cross your mind for no reason like literally for absolutely no reason like
00:46:02
you know you you would it would it would now's a good time to end it all like
00:46:07
just literally randomly and you like what was that you know and even even now
00:46:15
sometimes it it it'll cross your mind and it definitely it crosses your mind a lot when you have like I had a a friend
00:46:22
who committed suicide you know um her name was jazz jazz waters you know and
00:46:29
call her Jazz fly and me and her used to lean on each other a lot like she committed suicide during um Co and her
00:46:36
and I used to lean on each other a lot like I used to call her like my my my wartime General like you know when it
00:46:42
was like really time to you know get busy and you know really strategize some
00:46:47
stuff that's who I would pick up the phone and call and we would always have these conversations about you know therapy and you know depression and
00:46:53
anxiety and all of that from I mean deep conversations I'm talking about we' spend Sundays literally i' be in the
00:46:59
backyard sometimes three 4 Hour phone conversations right like away from
00:47:04
everybody my my wife kids everyone just really having conversation so you know
00:47:09
when she did it I remember um sitting in my backyard and and I heard her voice in my
00:47:18
head and it was like she she literally said to me you still here like on like you still like you
00:47:26
still there on Earth and I was I got that that like kind of just shook me to
00:47:31
my core a little bit right and so it's just like I constantly do not constantly
00:47:36
constantly is is a strong word but yeah those those thoughts just cross your mind I don't know if it's because it's
00:47:43
not cuz I actually want to do it or because I'm thinking about doing it but
00:47:48
because I've had people close to me do it and because I had those thoughts when I was younger sometimes I don't know if
00:47:54
it's to Sur survivors guilt maybe or survivors remorse of it all that just
00:48:01
makes you think about it like what what am I still doing here you
00:48:08
know but then I got a million reasons to still be here so that immediately makes
00:48:15
it makes it go away when when you have a friend like that that passes in such circumstances it's it a complex range of
00:48:23
feelings and he like I sat here with someone who described that exact same
00:48:29
thing to me their best friend who had said nothing to them was um always that it was actually works on radio in the UK
00:48:34
um both of them worked on radio then his radio partner one day died by Suicide never said anything to anybody appeared
00:48:40
to be fine in the complex set of emotions that he's left with the regret the feelings of what if what if ID said something did I reach out all of those
00:48:47
kinds of things is there anything that I could have done all of those feelings what is that complex set of
00:48:53
emotions that you man yeah you can't do that to yourself you
00:48:59
you will but you can't do that to yourself because like I was saying earlier when I
00:49:05
talked about you know modeling when you say the word role model and you're modeling yourself after people you don't
00:49:11
know what's behind all of those layers of a human like we're complex creatures
00:49:17
like to me she was one of the most intelligent brilliant creative strategic human
00:49:26
beings I ever met in my life and she was somebody that you know so many of us
00:49:32
went to and I never felt I didn't I didn't I didn't you know guilt myself
00:49:37
with that because I know that she would come to me with stuff too and I would always be an ear for her like I was
00:49:45
always there for her um but yeah y yo you it is it's just to
00:49:52
act like that to narrow it down the one emotion is crazy like you know you'll go through sadness you'll go through anger
00:49:59
you'll go through happiness you'll go through frustration you'll go through um
00:50:06
thinking about those last moments that that person was here and you'll be
00:50:12
saying to yourself I I I tried like like like I tried that's all that's that's
00:50:18
that's that's what I know that's what I do know I know for a fact I tried like it's it's not like we didn't you know
00:50:24
you didn't see things you know so it's not like we didn't try to get that
00:50:32
person all the help and more that that that they needed but yeah it is it is it is a very very complex set of
00:50:40
emotions something that you can't even really put in words and not even not
00:50:45
something I'm trying to suppress either like you know it is one of those things you want to you you you want to
00:50:50
constantly confront but it's it's a it's just very complex
00:50:57
cuz you wish that you could have had you what you really wanted you wish you could have talked to that person that
00:51:02
day you wish you could have had a conversation with that person that day that's what you really wish you know
00:51:09
and see where they see where they were at in that moment and and you and and hopefully if
00:51:15
you because you all every I think everybody would probably do that everybody probably says the same thing I probably say the same thing her mom
00:51:20
probably says the same thing her father probably says the same thing her sister probably says the same thing if I would have spoke to her that day you know I
00:51:27
probably could have got her in a better place but that's not the way that's not the way
00:51:35
the universe had it had it designed your external Life Changes rapidly when um your external your world your everything
00:51:42
around you changes when you become as a star in The Breakfast Club but internally you say nothing really
00:51:47
changes if not if anything it was potentially worse the panic attacks anxiety the bouts of depression a lot of
00:51:52
people will be surprised by that because as a big as you say people think that you get the job you get the money you get the
00:51:59
fame I was losing myself because you got to think I'm still in survival mode I'm still coming off being fired four times
00:52:06
you got to think what my journey was from 1998 up until that moment up until
00:52:11
that moment I'm just coming out of my mom's house living with my mom in Monks Corner South Carolina like I'm literally
00:52:19
I'm I just collected my last unemployment check right you can't chill nah I'm scared to death everything that
00:52:27
you saw was me was was rooted in fear it was rooted
00:52:32
in I'm not going back to that so whatever I have to do to not go back to
00:52:38
that I'm going to do that's why you see the ruthless anybody can get it you know
00:52:45
it's it's still a lot of pain there that I'm probably projecting on the other people it's still a lot of hurt there
00:52:50
that I'm projecting on the other people plus y'all done tried to fire me out of this business four different times y'all
00:52:56
thought it was sweet when I was down in Monks Corner South Carolina living back home with my mom now all of y'all got to
00:53:01
feel my wrath like literally that's what I was on and you know when you getting
00:53:06
when you're getting rewarded for that that fuels whatever that is Until you realize
00:53:14
like for me it was around 20 2015 you like this this ain't this not what I
00:53:20
want how did you know that how did you know just wasn't happy and I like at this time I got two kids like my my
00:53:29
oldest is like seven at the time in 2015 and my newborn had just been been born
00:53:36
and like I got married in 2014 so it's like yo am I really about
00:53:41
to become my pops you know am I really about to
00:53:47
become you know this I you know I love this man I despise the way he you know
00:53:55
ended up you know treating his family us treating my mom and I'm like yo am I
00:54:01
really going to be that am I really goingon to get caught up in this radio you know Radio Star and I'm putting star
00:54:07
in air quotes lifestyle you know am I really GNA get caught up in the women am I really going to get caught up in the
00:54:13
drugs am I really going to get caught up in the alcohol am I really going to become a character of myself this
00:54:18
character that I created you know to protect you know this vulnerable young
00:54:23
man named lonard am I really going to get caught up in that and and completely lose myself am I going to do that or am
00:54:29
I going to you know get back on the path that I know I'm supposed to be on am I going to get back on that that that that
00:54:35
that that righteous path am I going to do that so I chose to go the righteous
00:54:41
path sounds simple sounds like it was a one an epiphany one day but I and that's
00:54:46
a man speaking in hindsight there and I just want because there be a lot of people that are in that moment where they're looking at their life going is
00:54:52
this really who I'm going to be yeah yeah you're right it's not simple because you you you'll constantly lie to
00:54:57
yourself and I think that's why so many people uh from the street always end up
00:55:03
in the same situation like there's nowhere you going to go in any ghetto America USA any rural Town USA where a
00:55:11
older person isn't going to tell a younger person you keep living like that you going to end up in jail or dead my
00:55:18
dad added the other one or broke sitting broke sitting under the tree but everybody thinks they can beat it
00:55:26
everybody thinks they can live a certain lifestyle and if they just do this you know then that won't happen or that
00:55:33
person was stupid that's why they ended up like that nah you live a certain lifestyle you move in a certain way all
00:55:39
of y'all going to meet the same fate and it's no different you know um even in
00:55:44
even in that space like I was I was absolutely about to crash I knew it how
00:55:50
just I just I just saw it coming like a crash to me is losing your family you
00:55:55
know your leave in you like I don't want that like who wants that I don't envy those type I don't envy people like that
00:56:01
I don't envy people who and I'm not knocking them in no way shape for but I don't envy people who you know lost lost
00:56:07
their families because of infidelity and now they got to visit their kids on the weekend you know you you are unfaithful
00:56:14
to your wife oh yeah absolutely and she's the love of your life I mean there's very few people my soulmate 100%
00:56:20
you've been with her 30 plus years or something6 26 this year absolutely absolutely 26 years we were kids you
00:56:27
know and we we literally grew up together in every sense of the word like
00:56:33
literally the first time I ever filed out an application at a radio station she drove me because my license was
00:56:38
suspended like we were together since kids like literally like I I was at her
00:56:46
high school graduation I was at her college graduation you know I mean like
00:56:52
she like I said she the first time I ever filed that application at the radio station she drove me like she went to
00:56:57
college in Columbia South Carolina I got a radio job in Columbia South Carolina I
00:57:02
ended up getting a radio job in New York she ends up getting a job in New York City like our lives were just like that
00:57:10
all the time we couldn't escape each other if we tried and to be honest with you I would never want to because like
00:57:16
that has been the one constant in my life that has been my muse forever that
00:57:23
has been the person who's constantly made me want to be the best version of myself even when I wasn't the best
00:57:29
version of myself you know because when you ask God for certain things he's going to give them to he or she is going
00:57:35
to give them to you so when you tell God like this is what I want I want to be with this person for the rest of my life
00:57:41
or I'm looking for a soulmate or I'm looking for you know my My Hope Brady or
00:57:46
I'm looking for my you know CLA hustable like he's going to give you that but are you going to be prepared for it when you
00:57:53
get it same thing with any type of success you yeah God he or she may give you that but
00:58:00
are you prepared for it I think a lot of us are you know a lot of us get things that we're we're we're really not
00:58:05
prepared for and when we get those things we're not prepared for we don't hold on to them you nearly lost it I
00:58:12
feel like I did absolutely I feel like I did it would it wouldn't have been worth it even if I would have continued to
00:58:17
have success professionally in radio but Meanwhile my personal life you know I
00:58:23
lose my wife I lose my family that's that's not worth it that's there's no way there's nowhere on this Earth where
00:58:31
that's a fair trade for me you start going to therapy you go twice a week no
00:58:37
I always started off going once a week oh really yeah when did you start going to therapy 2016 either late either late
00:58:42
2015 or early 2016 why therapy who was who told you that that was a good idea a
00:58:47
lot of people lot of black black men a lot of black Americans period don't seek
00:58:53
Mental Health Care there's a huge disparity it's almost 100% difference between um white people and black people
00:58:59
seeking mental health MH a lot of people I mean you know I'm a big fan of the the
00:59:04
TV show girlfriends grew up watching girlfriends that's one one of my wife's favorite shows so when I would go to her
00:59:11
her house when she was in college she would have that on and we'd be watching girlfriends and like if you watch girlfriends a lot of them were going to
00:59:17
therapy that's the first time I even heard of it right but then as I got older talking to different people and
00:59:24
they were all you know ing from from men women like I remember having conversations with you know Neil Brennan
00:59:31
who's a comedian and he was in an interview talking about the benefits of therapy my my my Young Homie Pete
00:59:37
Davidson you know he was talking about it you know my my home girl Debbie Brown like she was really into it like not
00:59:44
just therapy but just all different facets of healing like if you know Debbie Brown now like you youd
00:59:50
understand why she was on that back then like she's one of the leaders and the mindfulness you know mental health space
00:59:56
right now I have some very exciting news to share with all of you as of yesterday you can find a 247 the Diary of a CEO
01:00:04
with Steven bartler Channel exclusively on Samsung TV Plus in the UK and in the
01:00:10
Netherlands the channel will also be launching shortly in Germany Switzerland and Austria Samsung TV plus is Samsung's
01:00:17
own streaming service which is pre-installed on all Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobile and tablets and it's
01:00:23
completely free so if you have a Samsung TV go and watch the dire of a CEO on your TV and please do me a favor take a
01:00:30
photo and tag me in it thank you what's helped you to heal what's if you look at the like tool kit you've used my
01:00:36
girlfriend's alternative healing breath work practitioner super spiritual she's helped me a lot with all of my child all
01:00:41
of that stuff all of it brother I didn't I therapy meditation breathing exercises
01:00:47
I done did raiki uh you know I got I got Crystals at home you know I do plant-based medicine I I like all of it
01:00:55
are you ask set of s I've I've I've I've I've done I've done an iwka Journey
01:01:01
that's that's when I that's what I was talking about earlier when I said I went on a a spiritual Retreat ah really yeah
01:01:06
early this year and that was South America was it or somewhere else N N I did it I did it I did it here in the
01:01:12
states it was it was a beautiful beautiful ceremony um and it was man it
01:01:18
was very very very lifechanging like that's where I got the the Revelation the Revelation was you know stop lying
01:01:25
to yourself and stop volunteering those lies to other people it's like yo whatever um
01:01:32
wherever you're at in your life like for me it's just like I want to show up and be my authentic self at all times like
01:01:40
me that's what I want to do all the time I don't matter where I'm at in my life I
01:01:45
want to present that and being on that Journey it literally
01:01:52
ripped away every single ounce of falsehood that existed it like it just
01:02:00
shattered it like B that gotta go like I watched it in my mind like go up in
01:02:05
Flames like like literally what's the cost if we live with those falsehoods and those
01:02:11
lies depression you know probably constant anxiety you know a whole lot of
01:02:17
insecurities a whole lot of impostor syndrome because you know I'm from the
01:02:22
country so I believe in simple sayings like God can't bless who you pretend to be you know and I think that constantly we
01:02:29
got to we got to constantly check ourselves and make sure we're always showing up is who we are and we're not
01:02:35
pretending to be you know some version of ourselves that's why that's why you read get honest or die line I talk so
01:02:42
much about social media in the book because I'm watching so many people lose themselves to social media like I'm
01:02:49
talking about intelligent well-educated well read academics are are literally losing their
01:02:57
s to social media you can have conversations with them and you realize
01:03:02
like all of their talking points are coming from social media like their
01:03:08
their thought process is being dictated by social media these people care more about their relationships online than
01:03:15
they do their actual relationships offline like I know people who are
01:03:20
personalities who have like you know uh podcast or who may have YouTube shows
01:03:26
you know and these people will literally be on Twitter all day be on redit all
01:03:34
day listen to what listening to what people are saying about them reading what people are saying about them and
01:03:40
crafting their thoughts just to talk to them in that crowd to just please them
01:03:46
I'm like my God how narrow-minded is that that's why for me man if you're if if you claim to be an an academic or you
01:03:53
claim to be a well educated person you came you claim to be a uh an intelligent book smart person I
01:03:58
don't think you're that smart if your emotional IQ is that low if your if your emotional IQ is so low that people on
01:04:05
social media can dictate how you move how you think how you talk you're not a
01:04:10
smart person to me smart people know how to disconnect from that and smart people
01:04:15
know how to go you know do some meditation to make sure that their thoughts are absolutely positively their
01:04:22
own like I got people right now today hitting my phone trying to tell me how they feel about
01:04:28
the new Kendrick Lamar record and I love Kendrick Lamar I think he's fantastic I think Mr morale and the big steppers in
01:04:34
the future is going to be known as one of the most hip-hop one of the most important hip-hop albums of all time that one in Jay-Z's 444 but people are
01:04:41
hitting me telling me their thoughts and telling me their opinions and I'm blocking all of that because I listen to
01:04:49
the record I listen to it five or six times same I know what I got from it I
01:04:54
know what I feel about it and I'm not letting y'all change my mind okay but they're doing that because they know
01:05:01
that tomorrow when I'm on the air I'm going to be talking about it so they're
01:05:07
trying to curate my thoughts and they're trying to push my thoughts in a certain
01:05:13
direction I don't want that and I'm not even I'm just using that Reg as an example because it's the freshest thing
01:05:19
on my mind but I don't I'm like that with anything I need my own Clarity I
01:05:24
need to I need to into my own discernment what is my spirit telling me
01:05:30
about this situation or this moment or this thing that's all I care about I
01:05:36
don't care about any of that noise that exist uh on social media that's that's giv you a real big
01:05:43
competitive advantage in many respects because originality is so that's right valuable that's right you're 100%
01:05:50
correct that's why I laugh at a lot of these individuals because what also
01:05:56
happens is you know they start whispering about me right and they start
01:06:03
wondering well why why is this happening for him and why does he get to do this and why why is that like why is that
01:06:10
going on like they looking you know cuz I keep growing and they wonder why they
01:06:15
wonder why I keep growing and they don't I tried to tell you
01:06:21
disconnect how you how how are you going to grow when you're not even watering
01:06:26
your own garden because if if if you're if if you're getting on social media and you're reading what they're saying about
01:06:33
you and you're catering all your thoughts and all your talking points to appease those people you're not watering
01:06:40
your garden you're you're you're literally trying to water somebody else's so as you're you're as you're
01:06:46
watering somebody else's that continues to grow and that continues to get louder and louder and louder but meanwhile you
01:06:52
just stagnant it's scary though it's scary to ignore and then to show up as
01:06:59
yourself in a world where we're rewarding Conformity with the likes the claps the okay you won't be cancelled
01:07:04
because you you fit in it's when you say oh I'm going to disconnect I'm going to be myself I'm going to be authentic I go Jesus Christ that is man I get I get
01:07:11
attacked all the time for thoughts for opinions because I don't go along with
01:07:17
with with with the mob and I'm not even I'm not a contrarian in any way shape or form I just know that nothing is black
01:07:24
nothing is white right there's always those areas of gray in the middle
01:07:30
there's Nuance to everything like like you can be objective about everything
01:07:36
right like there there there has to be a certain level of well let me see what this person is coming from you got to
01:07:42
hear both sides to me that's just common sense and I feel like the only way to
01:07:47
get the real truth about anything is if you see where both sides are coming from I can't just dismiss you as wrong
01:07:54
because you have a different opinion than mine or you feel differently than mine I got to hear where you're coming from first there's no political party
01:08:01
called nuance and we we're we're we're in an election year I know this as well I think if I if I wanted to go viral I
01:08:08
just got to do a hot take for either side because there's algorithms for that there's a group of people that are going to pick that up and retweet it and send
01:08:13
it but the people in the middle it's there's no and we're going into this election year now where there's I've
01:08:19
heard you say there's really no great choices yeah but on that point you just said about being able to see the other
01:08:25
side what you think about Trump I think that uh I mean I say this
01:08:31
everywhere I go I think Donald Trump is a threat to democracy you know I don't think that you should have
01:08:38
anybody uh especially in the United States you can't have a leader of a country who says said said he we should
01:08:45
suspend the Constitution to overthrow the results of an election I mean he he led an attempted coup of this country
01:08:52
like we watched it we saw it you know um yeah I just don't think a person like
01:08:59
that should be president of the United States of America I think that if you're facing you know the type of criminal
01:09:04
charges that he's facing what is it 80 86 counts or something like that now 86 counts 88 counts I can't remember the
01:09:10
exact number but if I was facing 88 counts of any criminal charge I wouldn't
01:09:15
be able to work at Walmart nonetheless you know run to be president of the United States of America so I just don't
01:09:22
think that he's you know he's he's he's not somebody that should should be in that position but I understand why he is
01:09:28
in that position because he's he's he's good at messaging what do you think about the people that follow
01:09:34
Trump do do you think they're good people some of them that even that even
01:09:40
that is a very broad question right like when you say what do you think about the people that follow Trump those people
01:09:46
aren't monolithic yeah yeah all of those all of those people those 70 plus million people who voted for Trump a lot
01:09:52
of them voted for Donald Trump for a for a lot of different reason I have actual friends who will remain
01:09:59
nameless who I know voted for Donald Trump and I know they're great people
01:10:05
and they didn't vote they not they're black they're also black too and they're not like the they're not black conservatives they're not in any way
01:10:12
shape or form they are black like Pro black individuals and like that's what I
01:10:17
mean when I say having conversations with people because you get to see why people do you know different things I
01:10:25
know why that person told me they voted for Donald Trump back in you know 2016 just
01:10:32
like I know individuals now who tell me why they they they voted for him in 2016 or or or 2020 and you can't
01:10:40
just chalk everybody up to being a racist you know you can't just chalk
01:10:45
everybody up to you know not caring uh about lgbtq issues or whatever it is
01:10:51
people have different reasons and interests why they vote for people it might be one thing it might be one
01:10:58
interest that they vote for that's what they always tell you right they tell you to vote your interest so it's the same
01:11:04
thing with a with a President Biden I can look at a million things that President Biden has done that I do not like the 80 86 mandatory minimum
01:11:11
sentencing the 88 crack laws the 94 crime Bill all of that I there's a million things I can point to and say I
01:11:16
don't like that he he he did this but if the if if the one interest is to at
01:11:22
least protect democracy in 2000 in in in 24 or if you're somebody who got their
01:11:28
student loan debt wiped away you that might be it if you're somebody who can
01:11:33
afford instantly now because of President B that might be the reason you vote for him so it's just like everybody
01:11:39
has different reasons as to why they vote for different candidates that's why you I don't even think the question is fair when you say what do you think
01:11:45
about the people who voted for such and such like I'm not the I'm not the person I vote for when we get to speak to those people
01:11:52
we understand their motives until then we kind of misunderstand them and I think right I see that Crossover with you and your father because eventually
01:11:57
you had a conversation with him you talked about that conversation at the very beginning of this one where you finally had empathy for him and his
01:12:04
experience and his life that conversation with your father where you rebuilt your relationship and finally
01:12:09
understood him did that help your healing Journey absolutely 100% because
01:12:15
like I said I never quite had the relationship uh with my father that I I
01:12:20
wanted to and it's I mean it's not too late he's still here right um
01:12:26
but yeah it did because I realized in that moment that he was just a man who was just doing his best and he didn't
01:12:32
have the tools that I have he didn't have the resources that I have even though he was going to therapy two and
01:12:38
three times a week even though he was on the 10 to he was on 10 to 12 different medications the state of South Carina just started giving him a check we used
01:12:45
to call that a crazy check back in the day you just get a check for being crazy like I knew people who used to play Crazy to get a check I remember when I
01:12:51
went to my mom and said yo did you know dad was going through all of this and she was like yeah I just thought he was playing crazy to get a check so it's
01:12:58
like all of those you know if if if I would have known when I was young if he would have told me all of those things
01:13:03
when I was young then I probably would have ended up on a totally different path much earlier I guess that's another
01:13:10
example of like you know Role Models right because I think another time A lot of times when we say role models we
01:13:15
think it has to be just about all the good a person is doing but if a person
01:13:21
has dealt with a lot of the things that you're going through because a lot of this stuff is genetic right like if a
01:13:27
person is dealing with their own anxiety if a person is dealing with their own you know bout to depression my father he
01:13:33
was already in therapy he was already on 10 to 12 different medications he tried to commit suicide if he would have told
01:13:40
me all of that when I was young I would have known what I was dealing with I would have been able to be like oh okay
01:13:47
I'm I'm dealing with that it's the same way you can see it in your kids you can when when your kids are dealing with
01:13:53
those things you can look at them and be like okay I know I know what that is because you know I went through that to
01:14:00
me that's being that's good even though my dad was dealing with all those issues but him if he was just telling me when I
01:14:06
was young if he would have just told me when I was young this is what he was dealing with then that would have been a good model for me to follow cuz I would
01:14:14
have known what it is I need you know to do much much earlier than I did my last question before we go to the
01:14:21
book for you um this is a question that I think is Central to why especially don't really talk about their feelings
01:14:27
or at least it's a question that I think we often just diminish which I wanted to ask you very simple question we ask each other this question every single day
01:14:33
which is um and please do give me the long answer how are you
01:14:39
doing I right now I'm doing great I am I am blessed black and highly favored I'm doing fantastic you know I just came uh
01:14:46
I just had a fantastic weekend man like we were in uh Atlanta Georgia um cuz I did my second annual
01:14:53
black effect podcast Festival cuz you know have a podcast Network called the black effect and you know we're the home
01:14:59
of you know like 30 various podcasts you know everybody from the 85 South show
01:15:06
the horrible decisions to you know carefully Reckless with J hilarious you
01:15:11
know all the smoke with Matt Bond and Stephen Jackson like we have a bunch of different you know um podcast and we
01:15:17
just had our second annual black effect podcast Festival in Atlanta and it's
01:15:23
such a beautiful event because podcast in is such a such a new industry and to be able to curate a
01:15:31
space where it's like seven or eight of your favorite podcasts on
01:15:38
stage people are from from 11 to 7 o'clock at night 11:00 a.m. to 7 o'clock
01:15:44
at night we got all the food trucks we got the vendors we got the merchandise like it's a festival so to be able to
01:15:50
have a real live podcast Festival to be doing it for the second year in a row to
01:15:56
see this you know community of creatives you know just come together for the day
01:16:03
that's very fulfilling to me and you know another thing we do during the festival is we um we bring three people
01:16:09
out from HBCU because you know Nissan is one of our sponsors of the sponsors of the festival so we bring these three uh
01:16:17
kids out from these HBCU CU another event that we do throughout the year with the black effect it's called The Thrill of possibility Summit and we fly
01:16:24
50 HP students to Nashville and we just have a weekend of like panels for them
01:16:29
and we have different you know uh people who went to HBCU who've gone on to have tremendous success in the world come and
01:16:35
just pour into them all weekend long so we had those three individuals come speak uh HBCU yeah historically black
01:16:41
colleges University so we had three people from The Summit come to the black effect podcast Festival just to talk
01:16:47
about the summit and you know how how fulfilling it was for them and then we're doing it again this year and the
01:16:55
reason that gives me such a high is because man I'm I'm I'm All About service man like that's what I'm about
01:17:00
at this point in my life I say all the time if I'm building things whatever I build nowadays if it only benefits me
01:17:06
it's not big enough and the things that I'm building now you know whether it's my black effect podcast Network whether
01:17:13
it's you know the company me and Kevin Hart got at audible called SB Productions whether it's the you know the book imprint black privilege
01:17:19
publishing with Simon and Shuster I'm able to provide so many people opportunities like we got got staffs and
01:17:26
you know we got presidents you know of our of our of our companies like and you know we're able to partner with people
01:17:32
and you know Ride book deals and podcast deals and all of these different things so it's just like that is what is
01:17:39
fulfilling to me and then being able to take those resources and do things like the Thriller possibility something we're
01:17:45
pouring into these HBC HBC youth students so I got a nonprofit called the you know mental wealth Alliance you know
01:17:51
where our goal is to get 10,000 black and brown people free free therapy over the next 5 years I do a Expo every year
01:17:57
I think I'm on my like my fourth year fifth year of that called the mental wealth expo here in New York it's a free event I bring some of the best
01:18:03
psychiatrists and therapists and spiritual leaders and I've seen it yeah I own the domain name mental wealth.com
01:18:09
so if you want it for free you can have it I was going to do something with it I bought it five years ago for no I bought it five years ago for a project wow and
01:18:16
then I saw you post on Instagram an event called mental wealth I was thinking damn I've got this domain name and he's doing something with it so you
01:18:22
can have it it's just sat there I'll send we'll send that would be fantastic no I saw what you're doing it's incredible I can't
01:18:28
think of a better reason to for someone to do with that that domain So yeah thank you so that's all so to answer
01:18:33
your question I'm doing great and the reason I'm doing great is because I realize that um your true purpose in
01:18:39
life will come through service to others Dr Wayne W Dyer says that in the power
01:18:44
of intention I read that years ago and didn't understand what it meant I'm talking about I got I read this 20 plus
01:18:52
years ago and didn't quite understand that that what that meant your true purpose in life will come through
01:18:58
service to others I over understand what that means now that's not the way
01:19:03
culture's gone culture's become less religious less Community more about yourself your own goals your own
01:19:09
individual being less about others less about a higher power and it's so interesting because as I've had these
01:19:15
conversations over the years I was Rel I was religious until I was 18 years old my mom's religious I was baptized raised
01:19:21
in a Christian household and I lost that religion and with that you lose the church and then social media made me more
01:19:27
individualistic get the get the lambo I was this broke kid dropped out of University trying to get the range over sport in the Mansion I got those things
01:19:34
the anticlimax something's missing going in search of more and I've almost found myself right back at the beginning again
01:19:40
going I said it yesterday I was like damn I wish I was still religious but what I'm searching for is what youve said I'm searching for service in my
01:19:45
life yeah because listen I grew up Brook so when you grew up Brook I grew up I grew up broke but I grew up watching my
01:19:50
grandma even if you know we didn't have much she all always knew how to whip up a lot of food yeah and so whoever was in
01:19:57
the yard could come to my grandma's house and eat same thing with my pops my pops was the guy who like they all like
01:20:04
frying fish you here you going to eat you know hey we got drinks you going to drink so to me that was service that was
01:20:10
early versions of service so I've always you know known that you know you got to
01:20:16
you got to give to receive like that's just how I how I grew up so being that I
01:20:21
never had much you know growing up um I just always felt like that was the way
01:20:26
for me to show up for people like do something for them and now that I got
01:20:32
you know a lot of resources that's just Amplified you know
01:20:38
like I really I I used to look at people that would put philanthropist in their bio and be like what what all you doing
01:20:45
is giving money like what does that even mean but now you like
01:20:51
I understand I get it when you can go to your mother's Alma moer South Carolina
01:20:59
State University and say I am starting a scholarship fund and my mother's name
01:21:06
the Ford family endowment scholarship and I'm going to donate this amount of money a large amount of money right and
01:21:15
I you can look it up and see how much it was I mean by the way it wasn't that large because Mr Clyburn who's a
01:21:20
congressman here in South Carolina I remember the day that we did it we were both donating money to South Carolina
01:21:25
State University cuz that's where his his his uh beautiful wife Emily went she's from my hometown he literally said
01:21:31
to me you should go first and I was like nah n n you go first and he was like n you you should go first and I was like n
01:21:37
you should go first he like no you go first I'm like all right so I went first you know they hold up my check I say it was a quar million dollars right blessed
01:21:44
I'm happy to be able to receive that I mean to give that Mr curn goes up it was like 1.3 million you know he goes up and
01:21:53
he and he was like and I was was like you were right i' see why you wanted me to go first but my point with all that
01:21:59
is the fact that I'm able to do things like that yeah man that means the world
01:22:05
to me and that's literally what I just want to do for the rest of my life I want to be able to provide
01:22:12
opportunities to people I want to be of service that's it that's all we're here
01:22:18
for it's self selfish and selfless at the same time and both of those things because as you said you you said said by
01:22:25
giving you get so much yeah there's only so much you can get from the Lamborghini right and like I've never wanted that in
01:22:30
my life and you know what's so crazy I used to say that when I was broke and when you say it when you're broke you
01:22:36
sound like a hater and you see a nice car like I don't want that well you can't afford it yeah you know how when
01:22:42
you know you really mean that when you can afford it and you still don't want it I don't want it what the hell am I do
01:22:48
with a Lamborghini what am I going to do with a Bentley what am I going to do with a phantom like what why does that need to be in my yard you know what I
01:22:55
have to say but we don't have especially like I grew up on rap videos I grew up on 50 c on MTV and all that stuff and
01:23:02
that was model to me and it's model to a lot of young black men as success and it's so nice to hear people like you say
01:23:08
listen you don't that's not that's and fact you're doing yourself a disservice because it's a some of those things are really bad use of your funds like go and
01:23:15
invest a lot of the these other a lot of other people have a dad at the table who's an investor and knows to put it into a this investment fund or this
01:23:22
investment fund and I think some of our role models growing up said okay if you get that kind of money you go spend it
01:23:27
on champagne in a nightclub and something else which is going to make it go to zero yeah most of that stuff is
01:23:33
ritten too like when you look at those rap videos most of that stuff wasn't even wasn't even theirs so yeah I've
01:23:38
done that I've I've gone to Miami and and and my partner E-class salute to E-class he's the the founder and CEO of
01:23:45
of the licking restaurants in Miami he toss me his keys to his big bins back in the day and I drive it around Miami I'm
01:23:51
cool I get my fix I don't need to have one of those at home you know what I'm saying I don't need it like that that
01:23:58
stuff does absolutely positively nothing for me in any way shape or form we have a closing tradition on this podcast
01:24:04
where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for and the question that's been left for you in
01:24:09
the Dio is what are you most afraid of
01:24:18
feeling [ __ ] grief grief the grief the grief of
01:24:26
death 100% 100% the grief of death that's the thing that like if I was an actor or an
01:24:33
actress I I would never be an actress well I mean I guess I could be in 2024 if I wanted to be but if if if I was an
01:24:41
actor that like if you know how they tell you you got to cry on que like it's C it's that like that that that's the
01:24:48
thing that I dismiss out of my mind because it's just certain things like I always say the things you want to happen
01:24:54
in your life you constantly think about and you speak about the things you don't want to happen in your life you don't think about you don't speak about your
01:25:00
thoughts creep up on you but when they do creep up on you you just got to push them out but for definitely for me man it's that feeling of um that feeling of
01:25:09
of of of grief when somebody close to you passes like like that
01:25:15
is man I i' I've had some like really traumatic things happen to people that I
01:25:23
genuinely love like you know I haven't lost a parent God bless you know not
01:25:29
going I haven't lost a parent um I haven't lost a mate you know a wife a
01:25:37
significant I haven't that hasn't happened to me but I've had that happen to people who are very very very very
01:25:43
close to me I haven't lost a child God bless you know so yeah people that people that have had
01:25:50
have have experienced that I truly truly truly truly truly truly feel for and I
01:25:55
know that we all will that I I hope I don't I hope my kids bury me you know
01:26:00
man I hope my my wife buries me but um yeah that's that's the feeling that I
01:26:08
don't want to want to feel even though I know I probably will at some point in
01:26:15
life a long long long long long long long long long time from now but n you don't you don't you don't want to feel
01:26:22
that thank you thank you for for so much I think um I can't imagine how many people's
01:26:30
lives and relationships you've saved by making the what many people would consider the Brave and vulnerable
01:26:35
decision to speak to speak about your own struggles and to as you've said said step into an authenticity that's what
01:26:42
you do in this book but that's what you've been doing long before long before you came here you've been doing
01:26:47
that for years now and it had an impact on me imagine that I'm thousands and thousands of miles away in my own room
01:26:53
I'm feeling anxiety for the first time in my life and I see this man who I love watching he's an Entertainer I see him
01:26:59
of all people because he's a black man and black man never speak on these things I see him speaking about it and I go damn this isn't me being broken this
01:27:07
isn't something that I should hide this isn't something that I should be ashamed of this is something that happens to all
01:27:12
people and it's not evidence of my inadequacy it's actually evidence that I'm a human being too you're human man like there's there's nothing inadequate
01:27:18
about any of us like we're literally all Spiritual Beings Liv in a human human
01:27:24
existence and that human existence is is is is going to go through a lot but at
01:27:30
the end of the day like I think you said it earlier man we all got to return back to to to Spirit like I I love uh I love
01:27:40
the movie uh well not the movie the the book American Gods it became a a TV show
01:27:45
and you know in the book American Gods one of the new Gods was the Internet
01:27:51
it's like internet boy social social media and I think that too many of us
01:27:56
man are submitting our will to the internet literally we're submitting our
01:28:02
will to the internet and if you talk to anybody who works in Silicon Valley they'll tell you that the internet it literally thrives off the seven deadly
01:28:10
sins the seven deadly sins it thrives off of those it is fueled by the seven
01:28:16
deadly sins so if you're submitting your will to something that is fueled by the seven deadly sins then what are you
01:28:22
fueled by and you you wonder why the anxiety is is is so crazy you wonder why the insecurity is so crazy you wonder
01:28:28
why the impostor syndrome is so crazy you wonder why the depression is so crazy it's because you're worshiping
01:28:36
that that should be a tool that's what that's that's what you should treat as a tool like you wouldn't
01:28:42
walk around with a hammer in your pocket and you wouldn't be pulling out that hammer all day and just looking at it
01:28:48
and staring at it you wouldn't be pulling up that that screwdriver all day and just looking at it and staring at it so why are we doing that with our phones
01:28:55
why are we all in verbally you know abusive relationships with social media
01:29:00
we literally go especially when you're a public figure you'll go on these these Pages just to read people talk about how
01:29:08
bad you are these are all people that are dealing with the same things you're dealing with the hurt the pain the
01:29:14
anxiety the depression the insecurity impost syndrome they don't it it brings them joy to talk like that to you and
01:29:22
hope that it gets to you in some way shape or form so why are we letting that in here we can't have all these conversations about mental health and
01:29:29
not really truly be protecting our mental amen yes sir everybody needs to
01:29:35
go get this book um get honest or or die lying and I think it's been one of the biggest Inspirations for me to really
01:29:41
get closer to being my authentic self in every sense of the word and it's also made a really good case to me as to the
01:29:47
power of that authenticity because people say I'll be authentic whatever and they say that's part of their like virtue siging status games but it's it's
01:29:54
so clear to me that it's one of the greatest Services you can do to yourself and those that matter most to you in your life I'm going to link this book
01:30:00
below everybody needs to go and buy a copy and don't forget the why Small Talk sucks part that is that is actually the
01:30:08
most important part to me because what we just had here was a
01:30:13
macro conversation and I think a lot of times you know in this world that we
01:30:18
live in we're having too many small conversations like we make micros macros
01:30:27
like literally and once again that's what social media does it takes these micros and it makes them macros and you
01:30:33
don't realize that they're micros until you get out into the real world and you walk up to somebody and you talking like
01:30:39
hey did you see such and such and that person's like no I didn't and you like what do you mean it's trending number
01:30:45
one on Twitter and they're like I don't know what the [ __ ] you talking about like that's literally the world that we
01:30:50
live in so when I say why Small Talk sucks I'm not just talking about like when somebody's trying to make CH chatter with you like you know I hate
01:30:57
that too I can't stand it but I'm talking about just those small conversations those small conversations
01:31:04
we have we're we're we're talking too small we're thinking too small so this book is literally giving you some things
01:31:11
to just simply talk big about to think to think big about that's why I end every chapter by saying let's discuss
01:31:18
cuz I'm not an expert at anything I'm not an expert at nothing I just got some experiences and I got some thoughts and
01:31:23
I put them in that that book and you read them and next time you find yourself in a situation where you feel like the conversation is too small I
01:31:29
want you to say yo charag Lenard he said we don't got to do this we don't we don't we can we can
01:31:36
sit here in silence or we can talk about this in this way in this large way and
01:31:44
hopefully you know when you start doing that you'll start having more fulfilling conversations like uh this one I just
01:31:49
had was with you thank you so much thank you so much you're an honest massive inspiration to me in every sense of the
01:31:55
word and uh you're so right about the small talk I think my relationship wouldn't exist after 5 years if I didn't
01:32:01
figure out how to start having big talk uncomfortable conversations with my woman um and that's changed my life it's
01:32:07
made me a better it's made me better inside my head and it's it's saved the thing that I care about most in my life at the moment which is my relationship
01:32:13
with her and a lot of men they don't have the tools they don't have the role models and hopefully you know they can look to you and this book now as a as
01:32:21
that guidance and that framework for for how toel model ourselves in such a way I have to say I have to shout out your
01:32:26
podcast as well the brilliant idiots because one of my favorites I was watching the other day when you you guys were talking about all the the Drake
01:32:32
Kendrick stuff like that and he was doing the little white thing and saying about the the it's just so hilarious and it's the best combination of podcast
01:32:39
Andrew Schultz is the best standup comedian in the business today I think he is the best I I bought his pay-per-view for his when he did the
01:32:46
online thing it was incredible oh the infamous yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah absolutely thank you so much really
01:32:52
really appreciate it appreciate you brother thank you oh
01:32:57
[Music]
01:33:14
[Music]

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most inspiring
  • 80
    Most quotable
  • 80
    Best overall
  • 75
    Most emotional

Episode Highlights

  • Charlamagne's Journey
    Charlamagne shares his path from adversity to success, emphasizing the importance of faith and honesty.
    “You can't live life with fear; you got to live life with faith.”
    @ 00m 59s
    May 27, 2024
  • Subscriber Raffle Announcement
    To celebrate 6 million subscribers, Charlamagne announces a special raffle with exciting prizes.
    “Thank you from the bottom of my heart for allowing me to do something that me and my team love doing so much.”
    @ 01m 56s
    May 27, 2024
  • The Impact of Honesty
    Charlamagne discusses the necessity of being honest with oneself to avoid living a lie.
    “If you don't start getting honest with yourself, you're going to die a liar.”
    @ 04m 01s
    May 27, 2024
  • The Importance of Male Role Models
    Conversations reveal the impact of absent fathers on young black men.
    “There's something we need to think more of in society.”
    @ 22m 49s
    May 27, 2024
  • Breaking the Cycle of Anxiety
    A personal journey through anxiety and the importance of faith in parenting.
    “You can't raise kids in that way; they got to live their own life.”
    @ 30m 07s
    May 27, 2024
  • Finding Purpose in Adversity
    From a troubled youth to a successful radio host, a story of resilience.
    “Whatever I'm doing today will directly impact what happens in my life tomorrow.”
    @ 35m 16s
    May 27, 2024
  • Panic Attacks and Anxiety
    Reflecting on childhood panic attacks and adult anxiety, leading to a journey of self-discovery.
    “I was straight up having a panic attack.”
    @ 43m 07s
    May 27, 2024
  • The Turning Point
    A pivotal moment in life where the speaker realizes the need for change and stability.
    “I just got to get out my mom's house and everything will be okay.”
    @ 44m 49s
    May 27, 2024
  • Authenticity and Healing
    The importance of being true to oneself and confronting personal lies for healing.
    “I want to show up and be my authentic self at all times.”
    @ 01h 01m 40s
    May 27, 2024
  • The Importance of Authenticity
    In a world rewarding conformity, showing up as your true self can be daunting.
    “It's scary to ignore and then to show up as yourself.”
    @ 01h 06m 52s
    May 27, 2024
  • Understanding Political Choices
    Voting motivations are diverse; understanding them requires empathy and conversation.
    @ 01h 09m 46s
    May 27, 2024
  • Service as Purpose
    Finding fulfillment through serving others can redefine your life's purpose.
    “Your true purpose in life will come through service to others.”
    @ 01h 18m 39s
    May 27, 2024

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Subscriber Milestone01:26
  • Lessons from Jail19:50
  • Role Models22:19
  • Journey to Radio36:39
  • Authenticity1:01:40
  • Growth and Stagnation1:06:10
  • The Power of Nuance1:07:30
  • Conversations with Dad1:12:09

Words per Minute Over Time

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