Episode 18
A Healthy Body is a Blessing: How Cancer can Change all Perspectives w/ David Moffett
Cancer can change your life, your loved one's life, and everyone's life - In my conversation with David Moffett, we talk through the struggles he faced being a man with prostate cancer - how being a part of the Military caused him to change his Mindset. Then we find how what and why your Mindset around Cancer being a survivor or going through it will forever change the way you see the world.
Take a listen, we discuss the vulnerabilities of being a man with Cancer, how we typically believe it could/would never happen to us, and most importantly, what it takes to be strong for yourself and others while going through illnesses and disease plus so much moreā¦
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Transcript
Welcome back.
Brian:My mindset explorers today's episode has a lot of vulnerability in it.
Brian:There's a lot of tough conversations that take place in things that are
Brian:brought up regarding struggles and.
Brian:Being a man and having cancer and coming back from being in the war,
Brian:being in the military and then trying to figure out your way in life.
Brian:And I think it brings us an understanding for those that might not have those same
Brian:walks and have that same walk of life.
Brian:It brings a understanding to the mind of the struggles that
Brian:a lot of people are facing.
Brian:A lot of our veterans are facing a lot of our male prostate cancer survivors,
Brian:or even prostate cancer is people that have cancer of the prostate.
Brian:And I think it brings into an aspect of understanding that again, is
Brian:mindset understanding perspectives and beliefs and struggles that
Brian:we've all faced and the number of other people face and David in this.
Brian:Brings to light a lot of struggles that he's had, and I
Brian:can align with a lot of them.
Brian:And I can say I've even had them in my own ways, maybe not to the
Brian:degree, but I can say that I've begun and I have had them before.
Brian:And what he brings to light is really an honor.
Brian:So what you gain from this show perspective of what it's like to be a
Brian:veteran and come back what it's like.
Brian:To try to come back into the civilian world and then what it's like to be a
Brian:cancer survivor, or even have cancer.
Brian:And we all know cancer runs rampant throughout our
Brian:country and around the world.
Brian:So again, it if you haven't had something close to you, impact you
Brian:like this, listening to somebody else's story in this regard is eyeopening.
Brian:And I want to share.
Brian:This now, early in the show, because if you have time, September 10th,
Brian:from 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM down at Larry Bell park in Marietta, Georgia,
Brian:David Moffitt is having a prostate cancer awareness walk in family event.
Brian:It's really, we're checking out.
Brian:If you want to see more information about it.
Brian:I have some, I have a link down in the show notes that you can check out more
Brian:about and it's really worth hearing it.
Brian:You're gonna gain a lot of perspective around real talk and greater awareness
Brian:about prostate cancer and what it does and affects how it affects men.
Brian:Not gonna really sugarcoat it anymore.
Brian:The show hits hard.
Brian:It's very vulnerable and it's eye opening.
Brian:It's worth listening.
Brian:Let's get into it.
Brian:David, I'm super excited to have you on the show.
Brian:I know your journey.
Brian:We've talked outside of even being on this podcast and getting to know
Brian:you as a person and your incredible be being and an incredible man.
Brian:And I have to say it's a real honor to have you on the show and really get into
Brian:your story and what you've overcome and the hurdles that you've faced being what
Brian:you've really walked in this entire life.
Brian:I'm really excited to get into that with you today.
Brian:But first off, thanks so much for coming
David:on.
David:Oh man.
David:I'm thank you.
David:Good morning, by the way, be I'm very humble BR very thankful and
David:grateful that we're having this opportunity to collaborate and I'm
David:just wanna have a good time, man.
David:And if we can help somebody and encourage somebody and bless
David:somebody, it's all good, man.
Brian:Absolutely.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:Those are all great missions and objectives.
Brian:And I definitely think people are gonna walk away with something from that.
Brian:So I like to get the show into an idea of figuring out where people came from.
Brian:One of my favorite questions and my audience has enjoyed it thus far
Brian:is I like to turn back the wheel of time and figure out who you were.
Brian:So I want to know who David was on the playground as a kid.
David:David was David was energetic loved sports but very reserved, shy kid.
David:But when it came to sports, I guess that brought out my my personality a little bit
David:more But just, I love being around people.
David:It didn't matter what demographics, if we were out on the
David:playground, it was all good, man.
David:So that's who I was as a kid.
David:that's a good question, man.
Brian:yeah, it's fun.
Brian:It's fun.
Brian:It makes sure you're right.
Brian:And think back as you were as a kid and all that sort.
Brian:So being that energetic type and, reserve shy going through you're growing up
Brian:and I, were there struggles growing up for you that kind of wrote your
Brian:childhood if you will, or were, was it a pretty good childhood overall?
David:I think for the most part I would say it was a good childhood.
David:It was tough.
David:My parents divorced when I was 11 ish, 12 ish.
David:I guess that pivotal age they got separated.
David:Maybe I was around 10 that was tough.
David:That was tough.
David:My mom was in corporate America.
David:My dad was in law enforcement and just the dynamics of our family just changed.
David:So that was tough.
David:And then, wanting to, I don't know, man, just trying to navigate through
David:that was tough now thinking back on it.
David:And I really don't think about it too much now, but in those
David:times, yeah, it was tough.
David:And trying to look out for my sister, and absorb some of.
David:some of the the break, the broken hood of our family dynamic.
David:So
Brian:yeah, I think that's powerful and I definitely can see the emotions
Brian:of it and feel even emotions of it.
Brian:I've I, my parents divorced great or there was later in my life.
Brian:I was in my twenties when it happened, but I know divorce.
Brian:We know divorce is common and children are sometimes unfortunately collateral
Brian:damage in that regard for anybody that is unfortunately, maybe potentially
Brian:finding themselves in a divorce or going through a divorce as adults now.
Brian:And they do have kids speaking to your 11 year old self and feeling as if what
Brian:you were struggling with, understanding what wisdom or even in support, could
Brian:they provide their kids through that, that you feel as if maybe you didn't get?
David:I think
David:I think as parents, we try to hide.
David:And protect.
David:And I think just in my perspective, I think that probably does more damage.
David:Some of the things that as kids, we don't understand, and I think we pick
David:up on things like emotions and feelings and distance and those type of things.
David:I think the, like the relationship part, but I think if parents would parents
David:need to be more open with their children, even at those younger ages or whatever
David:age, when it changes just like anything else, if you're in a job or you're in
David:college and your professor changes or whoever your teacher changes, you have
David:to kind, you gotta roll with the punches.
David:You gotta deal with life as it is.
David:And I think a lot of times in our personal, we seem to try to
David:protect instead of give the full truth and then grow from it.
David:So I think that kind of stagnates the process of.
David:Children or young adults really being able to embrace it, deal with it
David:and just in a more healthier manner, I would say, because I believe
David:they have a lot more questions.
David:I believe they, as a child or young adult, you think things you want to know
David:things, and I don't think you have to know everything, but I think at least
David:that conversation or giving the kids the platform to be able to express themselves.
David:Yes.
David:Vulnerability man.
David:Yes.
David:There's that word?
David:Yes.
David:Yes.
David:Yes.
David:A lot of times as parents.
David:I think we'll probably go here a little bit later, but We have to
David:be vulnerable in those moments.
David:That's part of that's part of the life journey.
David:And I think the more vulnerable we are, I think people are able
David:to be better supports for us.
David:And then even our children.
David:I think we we don't give them enough credit because we're thinking about
David:their, what they may feel emotionally, but life is life and they're gonna
David:have to deal with it one way.
David:The other, yeah, I think we
Brian:also discount and maybe traditionally discount
Brian:how smart a kid is, right.
Brian:That we think we're faking it enough that they don't see it
Brian:or feel it, but they see it.
Brian:So I think giving that acknowledgement and that recognition of saying, Hey,
Brian:look, mom, dad, or whoever it is to that child, I'm, we're struggling right now.
Brian:Hey, this is what I'm going through.
Brian:We're gonna get through it.
Brian:Unfortunately, this is what's happening, but I'm here for you
Brian:and I'm just creating that space.
Brian:That's huge.
Brian:We took a big sharp left turn there and went real deep, but , it's good.
Brian:I wanna see, I know you went into military and I want to get into that aspect of
Brian:getting into your Marine or Marine, right?
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:that's right.
Brian:so what was that like?
Brian:Did you go right outta high school and get into being in the military?
Brian:Oh,
David:actually I went I went to college route.
David:And went to John Jay university in Manhattan.
David:And it was crazy, man.
David:It was like, I don't know, 30 to one and Manhattan, all the bars and all of that.
David:So I ended up bumping into one of my cousins and one of his best
David:friends and started hanging out with them, cutting classes and drinking
David:and girls and all of that stuff.
David:And I knew that was not the road, that was really not the road.
David:So I said I needed to do something different.
David:And I wanted to do something I wouldn't do in like civilian life.
David:I was talking to one of my good friends at the time and I was
David:like, yo let's go on the service.
David:Let's go on the Marines on the buddy program.
David:And he was like, All right.
David:Let's do it, man.
David:So we were we was all signed up and I know his pops was pissed.
David:He's how going you not going in the Marines, man?
David:No, hell no.
David:and it's crazy.
David:He was in a pickup football game and broke his ankle.
David:And so that canceled him out and I still went with it, man.
David:Changed my life forever.
David:Yeah.
David:Changed my life forever.
David:I was four active for inactive.
David:So yeah, man.
David:Yeah, I was in the first Gulf.
David:Yeah.
David:Was in Korea during the 88 Olympics.
David:we did a security detachment over there.
David:The college students were protesting did a security detachment in the
David:Philippines, in the Panama when they kidnapped the students out there.
David:So yeah.
David:Saw some stuff, did some stuff that really impacted my life going forward.
David:Yeah.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:There's a lot of you just speak into, and I know what you do now with veteran
Brian:support and you're kicking that off and you're getting into really supporting
Brian:veterans on the other end of it.
Brian:And we all know there's not enough, right there just isn't enough
Brian:support really poured into it.
Brian:So definitely those weaknesses and even potentially listeners that are veterans
Brian:or know somebody that is a veteran.
Brian:What do you tell them when they're coming back, trying to integrate,
Brian:if you will back into civilian life?
Brian:I bet that's a feeling of being
David:lost.
David:Yeah, man.
David:What I would share with the civilian world is that it's a, it's not a light switch.
David:You can't turn it on and turn it off.
David:It took me over 20 years to go to the VA.
David:So there was a lot of brokenness, a lot of damage.
David:I had PTSD and I would say the veterans coming back that and I think
David:I just wanna say men that we just need to move and navigate differently when
David:it comes to our feelings, emotions.
David:And when I think we feel like we can't talk to anybody.
David:and I was that I was one of those poster boys.
David:I wouldn't talk, shut down internalized.
David:Didn't feel like my family could relate or friends could relate outside
David:of the guys that were in my units.
David:But the things that we talked about were, when we was drinking and doing dumb shit
David:and kind of surface talk, and there was not really, there was no healing in that.
David:And I think where I'm at now, here's that vulnerability part being vulnerable
David:and being open and being able to let guys know that, or now we have ladies
David:in the combat theater, so I don't wanna forget about them, but that
David:there you have somebody to talk to.
David:And eventually I did get some counseling and that saved my life, man.
David:I had two domestic violence situations.
David:I remember my kids saying, dad, you got that look in your eye.
David:What does that look?
David:I remember my ex-wife saying it.
David:I remember I, I can remember my current wife saying, why do you look like that?
David:And I could never see it inside out.
David:But just that anger was just like a time ticking time bomb.
David:So the counseling really saved my life, man really gave me some tools to use.
David:And the biggest thing was to learn what my triggers are triggers were before.
David:I didn't know.
David:I didn't have a clue.
David:So just flying by the seat of your pants, just life, being a dad, being
David:a husband, being an employ employee, being a coach, being so many different
David:things, but never paying attention to really ever dealing with yourself.
David:Yeah man, I I would definitely say to vets that you're not alone,
David:that's like my biggest thing.
David:You're never alone, and especially with God, man, God is, he is awesome.
David:He's just he's a awesome fixture in my life.
David:I could speak to that.
David:And I said he's been through the journey with me and I'm thankful
David:that I know him to be able to tell my story in all capacities.
Brian:yeah, it's been a, it's a blessing and all of it and the
Brian:struggles of it and the walk that you've walked as well, and just the
Brian:healing process, we all go through it.
Brian:And some of us are in the early portions of healing.
Brian:Some of us don't even know that we need to heal.
Brian:So I wanna say, and I wanna see what you think on this and maybe even
Brian:wisdom that you can drop into it, cuz you were on that blind side of it.
Brian:Someone that doesn't think that they potentially have a problem or is
Brian:there needing for healing, right?
Brian:Because in the man world, if you will, I know I have it as well feeling as
Brian:if, I don't want to talk about it.
Brian:I I've done things coming from the streets of EMS.
Brian:I've seen things, all types of stuff.
Brian:I'm cool.
Brian:There's no reason to talk about it, but I know that there is now on the
Brian:other end 20, 20 retrospect hindsight, if you will, what would you say to
Brian:somebody that is so apprehensive in counseling or talking about emotions?
Brian:Where do they begin.
David:It's crazy, man.
David:I was just having a conversation about this with a couple of my friends
David:the other day, this past holiday.
David:And I think as men, we it's depositing us early.
David:We fall down, fall off your bike, scrape your knee, fall off
David:the fence, whatever it may be.
David:We're taught to get up, man, stop crying, just dust, dust yourself off.
David:And I think with women, if it was a woman and I'm not being chauvinistic
David:or anything, but I think they're more geared to get that love and affection.
David:It's gonna be okay, it's gonna be right.
David:We see it in sports, I'm sure I wasn't the fishermen or the
David:hunter, but and those demographics, I'm sure it's the same message.
David:But and I think that plant sees for men.
David:and I think that goes a long way because when we become of age, when we're either
David:in relationships or dealing with issues, we're not taught to show our feelings or
David:emotions or how to communicate, how we feel or being heard or being neglected
David:or being whatever that feeling may be.
David:So I think we be, it's hard for men just to, and then it's looked
David:at as a sign of weakness, right?
David:As men walk around with their Superman capes on and the corporate environment
David:or on the field or the basketball court or whatever it may be that's what we
David:tend to do instead of pay attention to the things that are really important.
David:So I think in the earlier ages, when we're young men, we need to
David:us as fathers and grandfathers, we need to change that conversation.
David:because I think if we do that allow young men and younger men to be
David:able to understand it's okay to cry, it's okay to show my feelings.
David:It's okay to say I've been hurt or I'm sad.
David:And it's okay to talk, that's not the boogie monster to
David:be able to talk to somebody.
David:So I think those are probably some of good nuggets that we could all take as far as
David:older men as far as fathers and uncles and godfathers and grandfathers to change
David:the dynamics, how we speak to our young men, cuz I think that will go a long way
David:into being a better version of ourself.
David:I could say being a more complete version of ourself later on in life.
Brian:Yeah, there's something about, even if you're talking to a child or, it
Brian:could be your nephew, it could be even your niece, there, everybody needs some
Brian:kind of talk and communication, but like you said there's this different type
Brian:of lie or soil that's laid fertilizer seeding, whatever happens with this,
Brian:the men mentality, if you will, where emotions aren't acceptable, right?
Brian:You don't really talk about 'em.
Brian:You're not supposed to do that.
Brian:So if we can talk to the young men right now and the young boys and get
Brian:them to recognize that this is normal, we're almost healing ourselves as well.
Brian:Cuz we're talking to a younger version of ourselves in a way, right?
Brian:So those conversations need to happen and we need to have healing take place.
Brian:And man, there's so long in my life that I just ignored so many
Brian:parts of anger and sadness and.
Brian:Loneliness and unworthiness, like all of these things that I just put it
Brian:away, be confident, just keep pushing.
Brian:So I think that we just need to have that more, those conversations with
Brian:boys and men and even adults, adults have really just sometimes inter
Brian:children grown up kids, just at times.
Brian:, there's portions of ourselves that still need some healing.
Brian:I know that you walk that walk and healing, and I know counseling
Brian:was a huge part for that.
Brian:And I go to counseling as well, and it's massive.
Brian:And there's so long that I fought against it and it's it's unfortunate.
Brian:So I think we, we need to chip away at that more and
Brian:Yeah, I think that's really, it.
Brian:It's just finding somebody and having that
David:conversation.
David:And I think as a man I took my mother and a friend of mine,
David:that's like a mother figure.
David:And my wife this past mother's day to a concert mother's day concert.
David:And it was, all it, I don't know, it was about 80% women in there,
David:grandmothers and everything.
David:It was a gospel concert and it was it was awesome.
David:But one of the one of the hosts towards, I don't know, three quarters
David:of the way through, he stood up and he was like, moms, I don't wanna be
David:disrespectful or anything like that.
David:And his mother's day and we're gonna celebrate y'all and it was
David:it, but I just want all the men that are in here to stand out.
David:And so all the men started looking around I don't wanna be part of nobody's joke,
David:on mother's day . And he was like, no, he was like, nah he stopped , he of
David:stopped, joking around and stuff, but he became serious and he was like, no,
David:man I just need y'all to stand up, man.
David:He just look, yo, y'all bought your moms, your wives your lady friend
David:and, or your daughters or whoever.
David:And I just wanna celebrate men like, and the hesitation in the men just to
David:stand up is we don't celebrate each other, and we, somebody celebrates us.
David:We're like, nah I'm good.
David:I'm good.
David:I don't need that.
David:And we never take time to celebrate each other, outside of, in the
David:sports arena, Hey hit a home run.
David:I ran a touchdown, those type of things, but we're talking about end
David:endearment, affirmation, other men, just supporting and uplifting each other.
David:It's always has to be in a, in a.
David:in a staged platform, right?
David:It's not something that's done every day.
David:So that really spoke to me.
David:I, and I said, what I was gonna start being is more intentional in my
David:relationships with my male friends, male family members, male coworkers
David:and just sending out like a little positive scripture, to encourage
David:the same ones I study every morning.
David:But at the end of the day to also let 'em know, to encourage 'em
David:and tell 'em that I love them.
David:Not that to just not that they're blood, but really speak life of look, man I
David:want to tell you daily that I love you, that I care about you, that I'm proud
David:of you, that that, you inspire me.
David:I'm here with you.
David:that same walk that you walk, whether as a father, a husband your faith walk
David:and, or just some of those down times where men struggle, just to know that
David:somebody's in your corner, not judging, not condemning, but loving, uplifting.
David:So that moment's really spoken to me brother.
David:And I just try to in my daily walk, try to do that and try to increase
David:it as the days and weeks go by.
David:So
Brian:yeah, that's huge.
Brian:That's huge.
Brian:And it is that's so true.
Brian:That's so true to just the.
Brian:The commonality or the lack thereof of it being common of just another
Brian:dude saying, I love you, man.
Brian:Like, why is that so weird in our culture?
Brian:It's so break breaking that and just saying come on, man.
Brian:Love.
Brian:Doesn't have to be like a love you in a weird way or a relationship
Brian:way, like anything like that.
Brian:But I just, Hey man I really, you're a good person.
Brian:You're a good guy.
Brian:You're a good man.
Brian:And you're an inspiration in what you do and just being here now, it's a blessing.
Brian:So yeah, I think having those and just chipping that away and
Brian:just, yeah, it's a, we have a lot of work to do as men of healing.
Brian:We do.
Brian:So that's big.
Brian:want walk into your journey of.
Brian:Your cancer and finding that out.
Brian:And I know we've talked outside of the show and I've gotten a lot it, and we
Brian:don't have to get into all the details, but I want the listeners to see and feel
Brian:what you went through, because we know everybody knows at least one person's
Brian:had cancer, if they haven't had it themselves cancer, very common, and we
Brian:know it shifts your mind and it shifts how you see the world and it shifts a lot.
Brian:So I wanna know if you don't mind, just a little story recap.
Brian:What was it like for you and where we at now with it?
David:Oh man.
David:It is
David:it was devastating.
David:Excuse me.
David:I can word has taken.
David:So many of my family members, people that were dear to me, and it was tough
David:to hear it, especially when you think you're healthy and for the most part
David:doing the right things not having any symptoms or anything like that.
David:It was a wake up call.
David:And I think for me, it was my faith, wake up call prostate cancer runs in my family.
David:My dad had it, my grandfather, my stepfather, three men that are
David:had serious impact on my life.
David:Just never talked to me about it.
David:My sister told me about my dad's version of it.
David:My mother told me about my stepfather and my grandfather.
David:As I was going through it and I thought that our relationships had substance.
David:And then when you realize the men's health aspect, like we could talk about
David:grades, education, finance, being a good person, but when it came to something
David:close, bro, like when you revisit that relationship, it was surface
David:that hurt that's tough.
David:That's at some of their lowest points.
David:Why couldn't you talk to your son or your stepson or your grandson?
David:And maybe that's the reason why guys put, gave me this assignment to not
David:only speak to my son, my nephews and others, complete strangers about their
David:health and knowing their family is just near, near and dear to my heart.
David:And I, like I say, I believe it's my faith walk because
David:God has just really shown me some things about him.
David:about him and it's about him that he'll use us if we're just obedient and willing.
David:And I'm thankful for the journey, I'm thankful and grateful for the
David:journey, every aspect of it from.
David:The hurt, the brokenness the ed part of it.
David:He really gave me some clarity as far as intimacy with him and
David:knowing him, he wanted a more intimate relationship with me.
David:And he's taught me some things, shown me some things and is I believe
David:using me as a vessel to be able to minister to other men in their families
David:and communities to be a voice and
David:to serve others and not just to be stuck on my own story, but to serve others
David:and to help have a greater conversation and a greater awareness to this disease,
David:which I call the silent killer, because a lot of men don't talk about it.
David:Or won't talk about it or don't know their family history, or won't go to the
David:doctor or don't have the means to go to the doctor, or if you do go to the doctor
David:can for a good healthcare system, and what I've also learned in this process is to
David:be able to advocate for yourself, even in your healthcare journey to speak up to
David:question, not just to sit there and okay, that's a doctor, they know everything.
David:They're people just like us.
David:To definitely question, and if you feel like you're not getting
David:the best care, then find someone that's gonna give you the best care
David:that you feel like you deserve.
David:So it's been a it's been . I can, I'm thankful, bro.
David:Really, I'm just so thankful and so humbled and I thank God for
David:giving me the opportunity to be obedient in this season of my.
David:And to trust me with his message.
David:Yeah,
Brian:man.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:That's huge.
Brian:The aspect of just being grateful for something like that outside in looking
Brian:at you and hearing your story, and then hearing that you're grateful for
Brian:such a thing is just has huge healing and that's powerful and that's inspi
Brian:inspiration and motivation for anybody, even those that don't have cancer.
Brian:So definitely condone and respect and yeah.
Brian:Honored or honor all of it, of what you've gone through and all the sorts.
Brian:Yeah, definitely a journey that's difficult.
Brian:And like you said, you've walked even alongside of people.
Brian:Didn't share their story with you and how that made you feel.
Brian:And I think we're following this thread throughout this show.
Brian:So far as this vulnerability of just it's going.
Brian:Yeah,
David:man.
David:It's crazy.
David:Man, and I tell you much pain as I, I believe that there was in my elders not
David:talking to me, he filled that void man.
David:There's a elder gentleman in my support group.
David:that's in his mid seventies or getting close to 80 anyway and and he shares man
David:and he has, God has used him as a vessel to me filling that, void those questions.
David:And he says to me that I'm such an inspiration to him as well.
David:Sometimes when we feel like we're not getting God still supplies our needs,
David:man, maybe not all once, but our needs
David:And yeah man Mr.
David:Ali, I have to give him a shout out he's he has blessed my heart in more ways.
David:Just the simple conversation, man.
David:Just the simple conversation.
David:when we when we talk, I can say, yo, my, my pops, my grandfather,
David:my stepfather, this is must have been what they were going through.
David:This is what they were feeling.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:And I think that's again this just like I said, this thread that we're having,
Brian:we have to have these conversations and if it's somebody that we know or
Brian:someone in there, and that's a listener that knows somebody that's going through
Brian:this, how would you initially recommend or even find support for somebody
Brian:that's walking the walk themselves or know somebody that's walking this walk?
Brian:Where do they go initially?
Brian:Because we all know once you get this kind of diagnosis, million questions pop off.
Brian:How do you support somebody or even support yourself through that,
David:man?
David:It's crazy.
David:Cuz we work for a healthcare system, right?
David:we work for a healthcare system and the whole time I was going through the
David:process I didn't that never resonated.
David:I'm thankful that I had a, that I have an awesome wife.
David:Who's been a rock and family members that have been very supportive
David:and not everybody has that.
David:But I think finding a support group or, and people's different supports
David:are different, whether they're in their local church or asking, or maybe
David:somebody knows or a referral like for me B was it was like, it wasn't
David:something I was thinking about.
David:I was just thinking about trying to bounce back, get back to work.
David:And God was like, yo, this is what you're gonna do.
David:And I'm like hold up.
David:What do, what?
David:start a support group or what are you talking about?
David:And it's crazy how it started, man.
David:My two VPs were in a meeting and he was like, go in there.
David:And I was like, what?
David:And asked him, Hey David, how you doing?
David:What's up?
David:Ma'am they, they're saying we're so proud of you and we're so
David:thankful that you're doing well.
David:And I was like, I wanna start a support group and I need a place to hold it.
David:They was like, whatever you need.
David:And then I started walking into people.
David:People started coming to my work area and I need you to talk to this person.
David:I need you to talk to that person.
David:It was another incident where a childhood friend of mine was on Facebook.
David:And I saw a fee that he had prostate cancer.
David:I'm like, what?
David:Dang.
David:So I went in and, we were going back and forth.
David:Didn't even know he was here in Atlanta.
David:So I was like, God was just navigating.
David:There was the first people I spoke to after I got the cancer
David:diagnosis at work and left and my wife and I went to Walmart.
David:I don't know.
David:I forgot what we were going to get and ran into a couple, a friend of ours that
David:I used to coach their son in football.
David:And she's a nurse practitioner.
David:And they were like, coach Dave, how you doing?
David:What's going on?
David:And I really didn't say too much.
David:And my wife was saying oh, he got some news today.
David:He has cancer and blah, blah, blah.
David:They was like, what coach Dave?
David:Oh no.
David:And I was like, yeah, prostate cancer and found out this gentleman
David:turned around two weeks later, find out he had prostate cancer.
David:So the dynamics of how God was just connecting dots opening doors to set the
David:platform for this, he was, he knew he just needed a willing vessel for, to operate.
David:And we started out with four and I think we're over 50 something
David:now, man, all walks of life, man.
David:Guys, I would even imagine I would ever have spoke to in my life.
David:So the common denominator is pro prostate cancer, but the group
David:goes into so many different things.
David:It goes into relationships and marriages and communication and men's health.
David:And through that I started a breast cancer woman with cancer, cuz I
David:invited some of my friends that in October to come share their testimony.
David:And they wanted to come back and I'm like, hold up a minute.
David:I wasn't y'all were just supposed to be my guest speakers, and I was like, I didn't
David:have an answer and I couldn't answer them.
David:Then I was like I have to get back to you.
David:And I was like, Lord, on the way home, like what, how do I do this?
David:He was like, I've already given you a platform.
David:I was like, okay.
David:So we started that one and I think we might be the 12 or 15 ladies in that one.
David:And that is, is so powerful.
David:And just, you learn so much you just think men talking with men,
David:but then hosting this women's group is it gives you such a different
David:perspective from a woman's perspective.
David:And they're mostly caregivers and, backbones to families and the things
David:that they do that sometimes that we take for granted, and just to see 'em
David:in a different light, different levels.
David:So I'm thankful and grateful for that.
David:And they inspire me so much.
David:And then I just would hear the conversations of the military guys
David:at the job, talking about this, that.
David:and I was like for even guys in my unit, like I said earlier, a lot of
David:times we just talked about sports and the good old days when we were
David:drinking and doing stupid stuff.
David:But not really talking about intentional conversations.
David:This past Memorial day we had a reunion back at our camp June and we rented
David:an Airbnb and, everybody was excited.
David:It was good to see everybody.
David:We sat on the back porch and we just had some good intentional
David:conversations about, like you said, like cancer guys have had cancer.
David:Whether.
David:Personally, or if it impacted somebody in their family, loss of mothers
David:during COVID talked about that, we talked about broken marriages, strained
David:relationships with children or siblings.
David:We talked about guys being laid off or just stressed out or guys on the
David:brink of look, man, I don't know if I wanna check out, so for the first
David:time we had some conversations that were substance, I was like, God,
David:man, like I never had conversations with my military brothers like that.
David:And I just it was just through obedience.
David:And then, so now we do we're starting to do a virtual, we get on
David:virtually now , and just see each other's faces and just chime in with
David:each other, encourage each other.
David:And just that same theme, you're never alone, you never know
David:what somebody's going through.
David:Someone's challenged with.
David:And so like for me, man, just like I said, being more intentional in my
David:relationships, or even if it's man, it could be a stranger, it could
David:be a coworker, could be a neighbor.
David:And then also being present in those times, not being somewhere
David:else when you're occupying another moment, you know what I'm saying?
David:Like so many times we do cuz we got so many other responsibility.
David:Your mind is so often this and this and I'm just, nah, man, I'm just,
David:I'm thankful and grateful and in this moment, cause the next one's not
David:promised, we think it is, but it's not.
David:So tho those like my, my marching orders now.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:I love it.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:The intentional living and vulnerability, getting those conversations going it's
Brian:sounds as if this entire walk has been a force of trying to just crack your heart
Brian:open and that love space of just loving yourself and loving others and just
Brian:loving life and then entire journey of it.
Brian:And I think we get so distracted, like you said, there's just
Brian:so much noise in the world.
Brian:And so many things, like I gotta cook dinner, I gotta take my care of my family.
Brian:I gotta do all this stuff.
Brian:And it's blue boom.
Brian:And then you get struck with something like this and your time stops.
Brian:Like just this is it.
Brian:so it just changes everything you were talking about it earlier.
Brian:Like relationships, we can talk finances, we can talk all surface
Brian:stuff, but the one commodity or not really commodity one asset that we.
Brian:This is the most valuable is time.
Brian:And we don't ever know how much is left in the bank.
Brian:So let's just, come together and love and support and create
Brian:these spaces of vulnerability and conversation and intentional living
Brian:and all these things more often.
Brian:Yes.
Brian:Than we do now.
David:Yes.
David:It's funny, man.
David:I have a I have a boss.
David:I'm not gonna mention that name.
David:We got the same boss.
David:No, we
David:And when I got hired on her team, I was like, she's used to a younger team
David:and some other coworkers, we're in the fifties grade, so we're, I don't
David:wanna say old enough to be her dad, I would say older brother or maybe
David:a younger uncle put it that way.
David:And she's awesome person.
David:Just very excellent in what she does.
David:And she she challenged me.
David:Lets say what are your goals?
David:And before that I was like with the security team, for over 10 years and
David:our goals were mapped out for us.
David:You just make sure you go to this training, make sure
David:you keep disqualification.
David:You good?
David:I struggle with that question, man.
David:Like it, it hit me like a ton of bricks cuz I couldn't answer her like
David:being a husband, being a dad, being a grandfather, being a coach, being an
David:employer, being a teammate or whatever.
David:And doing these, like you say, this constant grind.
David:I never thought about me.
David:I never thought about what my likes were.
David:What I was interested in, what my passions were anymore.
David:Just just going through life's journey.
David:And she was like, don't stress out.
David:Next time we meet, just see.
David:And that, that did something that she cared about, my profess my
David:professional career, but she cared about me as a person cuz she said,
David:it's not all about the company.
David:And so I was like, okay.
David:So we, I jotted some stuff down and I was there we go that vulnerability.
David:Like share with her, like what do you think , she's that's awesome.
David:I'm so proud of you.
David:Like it was just those little things of affirmation of
David:encouragement to that little push.
David:But then I also realized on the back end of that, how God was
David:gonna use me, the minister to her.
David:The corporate dynamics of, what it is in corporate America.
David:But God was using me in a different way, just so my things is, I'll check
David:in on her, you know what I'm saying?
David:Hey, I'm just calling to check on you.
David:I don't need anything, just you good today, and just being that mindful, just
David:being that intentional person to say, Hey, it's my responsibility to check on people
David:that are near and dear to me as well, whether it's professionally or personally.
David:And so I think that showed her a different side of, what we call like relationships,
David:or how we're supposed to deal with one another, especially in the workplace.
David:And so God is showing me that, yeah, you can do this in both places and it's okay.
David:I'm showing you, you could do this in both places.
David:And not to be afraid of it because you, like you say, you never know
David:what somebody's going through, and then sometimes they push back,
David:cause they're not used to it.
David:They push back, they'll push back, but you still but my mission every day, B is to
David:not let people see David Moffitt, but to let them see Christ and I made a choice to
David:serve him and committed to my salvation.
David:Am I perfect?
David:No, I'm not perfect.
David:Do I still struggle in fall times?
David:Yes I do.
David:But I couldn't do this without him.
David:I wouldn't even, we wouldn't be having this conversation without him.
David:It's real.
David:It's transparent and the world needs more of it.
David:Yeah,
Brian:definitely needs more of it without a doubt.
Brian:I think that just, again, speaks into the strength of, even though you
Brian:were saying a corporate America part of just, you don't talk that way.
Brian:Topped up doesn't work that way or bottom up, if you will, doesn't work that way.
Brian:You're not supposed to ask how people are doing right.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:Will ask you in the passing of a hallway or water cooler, if you will.
Brian:What's, how's it going?
Brian:But don't really, how are you?
Brian:No, like seriously, how are you?
Brian:So yeah, the whole tire walk of just having that ability to have those
Brian:conversations and the chance and the opportunity and the, even the gift to.
Brian:We need to start seeing that a little bit more, even just when we're having a
Brian:conversation, it could be on a podcast, it could be passing the hallway.
Brian:It could be a line at a grocery store, just given the chance
Brian:to talk to somebody else.
Brian:We pass it by as if it's just a, an average thing, it's just commonality.
Brian:Eh, it's okay.
Brian:But it's a gift of life in order to be able to talk to another person.
Brian:So yeah, we have to shift our minds and how we see that.
Brian:And that goes with intentional living that goes with vulnerability that goes
Brian:with slowing down, being mindful of your actions and what you're saying and what
Brian:you're thinking and why you're doing it.
Brian:And sometimes we need those questions of getting the goals,
Brian:cuz it's easy to be an autopilot.
Brian:We live most of our lives in autopilot.
Brian:Going through the grind, and one day I'll retire and then I'll
Brian:get to relax, but oh, what do you like, what do you really wanna do?
Brian:It's man, I dunno.
Brian:, David: it's crazy, man.
Brian:It is.
Brian:It is man.
Brian:Yeah, it's a good journey and all of it and it is, I wanna know.
Brian:And I wanna share as well as if you have any resources or people that
Brian:you can drive toward your support groups or where they can find
Brian:more information about your stuff.
Brian:If they're wanting to even attend in person, it could be a Atlanta
Brian:local that's listening, or somebody around the lines of that.
Brian:Anything you got to drive them to some information to find more.
David:Yeah.
David:We're here.
David:I just started my nonprofit it's in its baby stages, courage and
David:strength to fight incorporated.
David:I was fearful of that too, man.
David:We
David:I do here in the Atlanta area, I do the monthly meetings.
David:I don't even know what to say right now, man.
David:I'm so humble, bro.
David:Like you don't, it's not about me brother.
David:It's not about me.
David:I'm just thankful to be a voice that he's using me to be a voice
David:and to be an advocate for others.
David:The enemy is busy and I just, I'm just giving him 100 in my faith walk and
David:trusting him in all areas of my life.
David:I will I will forward you to information so you can
David:really have my first event.
David:I'm excited about that in September 10th and to have a greater
David:conversation and create a greater awareness for prostate cancer and
Brian:is great, man.
Brian:It was a great, it's a great joy and that's the point of it.
Brian:And man, there's just things that are happening in our
Brian:lives in each of our lives.
Brian:And.
Brian:I think we fight against a lot of it and you were able to
Brian:surrender to something bigger.
Brian:But that's hard.
Brian:That's so hard.
Brian:How long, how many years did you fight against it?
David:I was fighting big.
David:You don't know?
David:Y'all didn't know.
David:No, I called B Bryan B at work.
David:So that's, if y'all, don't call him B, I call him B , but he's a
David:good, he's a good brother, man.
David:And I truly enjoy our conversations.
David:I enjoy and thankful for the friendship and the brotherhood.
David:I could tell you're a good husband and dad and and you're playing a good seeds, man.
David:And not even in, in so much of your personal, but even your presence
David:in the workplace is honorable.
David:And respectful man, and how you treat others.
David:And that's important as well.
David:In your heart, man, speaks volumes how you deal with folks and the day to day.
David:So I'm blessed and thankful to know you, man, professionally and personally.
David:Yeah, man, I appreciate that.
David:It's good to my heart.
David:Yeah.
David:Nah,
Brian:just all the same for you and still
David:gonna get you in white for cone.
David:One of our date nights, we're gonna put another one together.
David:Y'all ain't gonna, y'all gonna have to find the babysitter, but yeah, we'll
David:find that's another big thing, man.
David:Really trying to encourage marry folks as well, man, in this day to
David:day, especially with young kids, man.
David:I've been there before and it's important to know that people are rooting for you.
David:And in supporting you cause marriage is tough brother, and really
David:marriage is about being selfless and sacrifice, but most importantly,
David:that's God's covenant brother.
David:So we have to really understand what our roles and responsibilities are
David:as God gives it to us so that we can be successful and to inspire others,
David:to be purposeful in that covenant.
David:So
Brian:true and really in all aspects of it and just getting to the tail
Brian:end of the show and all of that.
Brian:But I always like to get an idea of any words of wisdom that you would deliver.
Brian:And I like to deliver an certain type of question, right?
Brian:So if you had the chance to talk to a young man, woman, yourself,
Brian:whatever it be a young person.
Brian:What words of wisdom would you drop now, knowing everything you've gone
Brian:through, if it was just real quick billboard size, what would you say?
David:It's okay to face your fears.
David:It is okay to face your fears.
David:You don't have to run from your fears.
David:It's okay to face them head on.
David:That's
Brian:huge.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:I think there's portions of ourselves that we're fearful who we're supposed to be.
Brian:I know my own walk on my own journey and you've shared yours immensely
Brian:with me outside of even the show.
Brian:So you know, yours as well, and you're finding yours every day and that's the
Brian:thing as well as the journey of it.
Brian:But we're so fearful.
Brian:What if I don't do what I'm supposed to do, right?
Brian:Or what if I, they see me as a fraud or what if I don't fill
Brian:the shoes the right way and just.
Brian:Go face that, go figure it out, man.
Brian:Go face, go ask those questions with it, standing in your
Brian:face and don't run from it.
Brian:So that's huge.
Brian:That's huge.
Brian:David, it's been legit.
Brian:We've cut through almost an hour here, so I'm gonna wrap up the show,
Brian:but it was a great time talking with you and everything that you're doing
Brian:now to be a support and be a voice.
Brian:And then also to create this space for others to be vulnerable.
Brian:And like we've talked about intentional and just authentic and who they're
Brian:supposed to be and what we go through as humans in this world, it's just it's we
Brian:don't have to put up these two faces or these two different alternate realities.
Brian:If I'm, oh, I'm the corporate.
Brian:Broken and hurt and unhealed version of myself that I keep stuck away in a
Brian:closet somewhere, but I'm both right.
Brian:So I have to respect and condone you for everything you've
Brian:done to step outward in that.
Brian:And to do that in a place and even in an environment, like we said, corporate
Brian:America, where it's tabooed, if you will, where it's not commonly seen.
Brian:And you're breaking those molds and shifting and molding that
Brian:there's not a work life balance.
Brian:There's a life, right?
Brian:I'm a human being.
Brian:So you're doing great things.
Brian:And it's been an honor.
Brian:So again, thank you so much man, you know it, bro.
Brian:And that's this episode of the art of mindset with your host, Brian Sage.
Brian:If again, you're wanting to see more information.
Brian:Prostate cancer or be contact with David Moffitt.
Brian:There's information down in the show notes.
Brian:It's worth checking out.
Brian:It's worth reaching out.
Brian:He's got a lot of information and a lot of ways to help.
Brian:So if any of that resonates with you and then you find yourself
Brian:wanting to fit, find out more, drop down into the show notes.
Brian:And if you haven't already hit subscribe, hit follow we'd release episodes
Brian:every Wednesday, 7:00 AM Eastern.
Brian:And we always have an interesting guess for every episode and
Brian:as always stay curious, keep