Good Neighbor Podcast: Cooper City
Bringing Together Local Businesses & Neighbors of Cooper City
Good Neighbor Podcast: Cooper City
EP #325: Dr. Mathew Jadan with ThePureRX
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A kid with grand mal seizures and a rare brain tumor grows into a doctor who believes healing starts at the root. That’s the arc of our conversation with Dr. Jadan, a three-time cancer survivor who refused more surgery at twenty-one, embraced a holistic roadmap, and watched his MRI tell a new story. The lessons he learned the hard way—about neuroplasticity, digestion, sunlight, and relentless consistency—now shape the way he helps patients ditch quick fixes and rebuild real health.
We walk through his early surgeries, the paralysis that followed, and why the right temporal lobe offers a better recovery outlook than the frontal lobe. From there, we get practical. He explains how low stomach acid can masquerade as reflux, why enzymes and meal timing often help more than indefinite acid blockers, and how gut bacteria contribute to the very enzymes that break down food. He talks about non-burning sun exposure, vitamin D, and circadian rhythms, offering a balanced view on sunscreen and better choices like mineral formulas. And he’s clear about tools: acute medicine saves lives in emergencies, while chronic issues require longer conversations, lab-guided plans, and changes you can repeat every day.
What makes his approach different is empathy backed by evidence. He and his physician wife run a hybrid practice that combines naturopathic depth with medical access—labs and prescriptions when needed, lifestyle as the foundation. Together they support autoimmune cases, hormone imbalances, brain fog, chronic pain, and complex gut issues with layered protocols that meet patients where they are. It’s not a miracle cure. It’s a system that works when you work it.
If you’re tired of symptom-chasing and want a plan that treats you as a whole person, this conversation offers a clear starting point: improve digestion, prioritize sleep, get morning light, move daily, and adjust based on labs and feedback. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs hope and a plan, and leave a review to help more listeners find a path back to themselves.
For more information, visit ThepureRX.com or call (586) 747-4578.
Framing The Conversation And Guest Intro
SPEAKER_00This is the Good Neighbor Podcast, the place where local businesses and neighbors come together. Here's your host, Jeremy Wolf.
Childhood Brain Tumor And First Surgery
SPEAKER_01Hello, hello, friends, family, wonderful community. Welcome back to another installment of the Good Neighbor Podcast. So I want to frame this episode. Our guest today is a gentleman I met. I've been very proactive on social media lately. If you've been following, I've been posting all sorts of stuff. And one of the things a friend of mine pointed out a while ago, uh, Michael Cuniff, was don't just be a voyeur of social media. If you see something out there that resonates with you, make sure you engage with it. Start having conversations. And that's exactly how I met our guest today. He posted something locally in the community. It really spoke to me in terms of uh his medical practice and how he's approaching uh his patient care, this idea of like long-term reading treating the root cause, right? And addressing, addressing the root issues to fix things uh without quick fixes. And that's really been on my mind lately. Uh so naturally I commented on the post. Uh turns out he lives in Cooper City, uh, moved down here recently from I believe up north, I think it's Detroit, if I'm not mistaken. Yes. And uh and so it's so awesome to meet somebody like that through Facebook that's posted, and then it turns out he lives in the community. So I researched his story a little bit further, and it and I'm gonna let him talk about that. But he's been some through serious some been through some serious life hardships, and that resonated with me also on a deep level. So I said, you know what, man, gotta get you on the podcast, learn a little bit about your your story, and spread that message with the community. So without further ado, I'm joined here by Dr. Jadan. Um Dr. Jan, pleasure having you on, brother. Um, really excited to get into this and learn about your your journey. Yeah, man. So so what what I found is that like it's interesting to learn uh about what people do because that's important what they're doing now. But I think more interesting than that often is how you arrived at what you do, right? Your your journey. So why don't we start there? Talk a little bit about your your journey that led you into the space that you're operating in today, and then we'll get into more of what you do on a day-to-day. Absolutely.
SPEAKER_02So I'm a I'm a three-time cancer survivor, um, two times in the brain, which I had a third recurrence as well, but I had two brain surgeries um back in 2003 and 2006. Um, you know, my first large brain surgery, I had what we call an oligodendroglioma. It's a it's a tumor that mostly older people get. So it's strange that you know, there's a kid that's 11, 12 years old having this kind of brain tumor. You know what I mean? It was extremely rare. So how they found out was I would have grandma seizures, you know, I would literally choke on my tongue to the point where I couldn't have breathing.
SPEAKER_01This was when you were 10, 11, like you were just a child at this point when you got this.
SPEAKER_02Just a kid, yeah. So I would have seizures, I had a hard time learning in school, I had a hard time doing anything. It was hard for me. You know, I would have seizures and you know, being that young, I mean, kids make fun of you, you're not really, you know, but and you know, we're Middle Eastern, so my parents were not very supportive of you know, like of everything. They were just like you have to listen to your doctors and be strong, uh blah blah. I didn't have like the empathy and whatnot that you know that kid a kid should have. You know what I mean? My parents are old-fashioned. Hey, tough it out, be strong, whatever. That's how they that's how I was treated. So I had to learn how to fight on my own. I had to learn how to how to motivate myself to keep going. And that's you know, that was like, you know, a kind of like a driver for me. So back in 2003, they told me that, you know, I had um I had to undergo brain surgery, and the tumor was in my right temporal lobe, by the way. Thankfully, that's if you're gonna have a tumor, that's the place to have it in the brain, the right temporal lobe. So they went in, they resected it, and it was the box.
SPEAKER_01That's a good way to look that's a good, that's a positive way to look at it.
SPEAKER_02Oh, yeah. And you know, they resected the tumor, but they it was in the right temporal lobe, so they had to go in and you know, have the score right here.
SPEAKER_01Well, and let me just let me just cut you off there. I'm just curious what why, if that's the place to have it, why is that the place they'll have it? What what specifically about the right temporal lobe is makes it the the best place if you're gonna have it?
Neuroplasticity And Recovery After Paralysis
SPEAKER_02So you know you have a left and right temporal lobe. The right temporal lobe does play a role in like facial recognition, word recognition, memory, and a little bit of speech, but you know, those areas can easily be compensated by other parts of the brain. If you have like damage to the frontal lobe, you're gonna have changes to your personality. You know what I mean? So, like if it was my frontal lobe, I may not act normal. Do you know what I'm saying? So, kind of like back in the day, they used to think because you have anxiety and depression, they would actually remove part of the frontal lobe. This is how it used to be back in the day. But the botomy, yeah, the botomy. They would that's what they would do, and they would go in and no no bueno crazy. Isn't that insane? So they would remove part of the part of the frontal lobe, and then the patient would be like a vegetable basically after they wouldn't fold they wouldn't, they were not normal anymore, they're completely like abnormal, like yeah, and they would think that they would treat you know like anxiety and depression and OCD and those things by removing part of the frontal lobe, which is not the answer because that's where you know a lot of your personality comes from. So, you know, they call it like a silent part of the brain when it's really not silent. So the brain, though, otherwise, you know, is what have you heard of neuroplasticity? The brain can rewire connections, and that's what you want out of the brain. You know what I mean? You want it to do that, and the right temporal lobe is one of those places where you know it's those are things that the brain can rewire. It's not like hey, it's you know, permanent damage. When they say you blow up your head, those cells are gone, they never regenerate. That's that's not true. No, your brain doesn't regenerate, it rewires. So just because there's damage to the brain, doesn't mean the brain can't come back from that kind of thing. Does that make sense? That makes sense. So after my surgery, I was paralyzed in the whole left side of my body and initial surgery. And so what ended up happening was after that surgery, I was paralyzed, I couldn't walk, the whole left side of my body was shot. So right side of the brain affects the left side of the body, and vice versa.
SPEAKER_01That's so this was had you were how old at this point when you had the surgery? Like around 11, 12. It was so as we were so so on top of all the issues that you had leading up to this, now you're in a situation where you're you're paralyzed, you can't move, and you have to deal with all that. Wow, man.
SPEAKER_02And I lost uh and they had to cut through um some of the optic nerve endings, not the entire optic nerve. Um, and so I lost vision in the left peripheral of my left eye and the left peripheral of my right eye. And they told me that would never get better. So I'd be walking and I would bump if it was um something right in front of like a car, I'd walk right into the car. That's how bad my vision used to be. Jeez. So they told me I wouldn't be able to ever like they don't think it was ever gonna improve. And you know, as a kid, I'm like, so you're telling me I gotta live like this forever? I'm like, and then you know, I remember walking out of that doctor's office, and I looked at my brother that took me to that appointment, and I was like, I don't think he knows what he's talking about. I know that the body can heal and the brain can regenerate. So he's like, Yeah, I know, I agree. I actually, you know, I actually no, I actually said that inside the doctor's office as uh in front of the staff.
SPEAKER_01But what deep insight for a kid to have, right? I know about the potential. Like I took me, I'm 46. I'm just now learning how how deep and profound the human body's potentially is to heal itself from within and to have that realization in the in the face of all this illness with doctors. It's almost like a divine intervention, kind of like you're channeling something deeper to have that realization. That's fascinating, man.
Recurrence, Radiation, And Running Marathons
SPEAKER_02And it was a really tough time of my life, you know. I mean, I remember looking at my dad and that saying, sorry, dad, and he'd look at me and be like, What are you sorry about? I'd say, I'm sorry for what I'm putting you through. I'm sorry that you know I'm making you go through all this stuff. He's like, Are you serious? He's like, I'm your dad. He's like, You don't have to tell me sorry. This is I'm your dad. I love you. This is my job. I have to, I want to make sure you're good. You know what I mean? So make a long story short, I um ended up running um, I ended up running a half marathon after my surgery. And then I went I had a recurrence of the brain tumor in 2006. That one I had to have another surgery for because they saw some growth in the tumor. Um, and then they also had me undergo brain radiation as well. Now, six weeks after of uh of rain brain radiation, I ran another uh marathon a couple days later. So I was like motivated. Yeah, I I was like, I don't care, nothing's gonna stop me. This is all in my head, everything's a mental game. I can do this, I can beat this. Wow. And so, you know, I thought my journey was over there. I'm like, oh yeah, yeah, you know, I'll never have a recurrence again. Now, this is what this was my driving force, you know, as a kid in undergrad, you know, finishing his bachelor's degree in biology, biomedical engineering, actually. Um, and then I was like, I don't know what I'm gonna do. I got my I had my engineering degree to back me up, whatever. Anyway, so as a kid it was by it was biomedical engineering.
SPEAKER_01So there was always because of what we went through, there was always there's always this pull towards medicine and biology and the human condition. So I had options you weren't sure, you were figuring it out, and then obviously you trained. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02I was always a nerd, even in high school. I always loved to learn. I was always the smart kid that people used to copy off of. That was always me. In junior high, not so much because I was going through the medical stuff. My brain memory, my brain didn't really heal by then. By the time I was in high school, my brain had healed, so I was back to where I should have been. You know what I mean? So, at least not fully, but I was pretty darn close. I was doing great. Um, so anyway, what ended up happening was you know, I ended up um having a recurrence of the brain tumor for the third time. Here I am, 21 years old, you know, almost 22, recurrence of a brain tumor.
SPEAKER_01And you thought by that time, you're probably thinking in your rear view mirror, you're like, this is done. They want to do surgery, and then it just comes back.
SPEAKER_02They want to do surgery and chemo on me. And I said, No, I'm not doing this. I'm done. No more surgeries, no more chemo. And you know, I was old enough to make my own decisions. I wasn't 12, I wasn't 16 anymore. I was like, I'm done, I'm not doing this. Right. My parents were like, you know, you're like, you're crazy. What are you doing? You have to listen to your doctors, you know, like why aren't you listening to your doctors? I'm like, because I'm gonna end up dead and I'm gonna end up permanently paralyzed and you're gonna be taking care of me in a diaper forever. I'm like, I'm not doing that. And so I ended up meeting uh this actually a friend of mine, her name was Renee, um, actually connected me with someone that was working out of his house who was a holistic practitioner. He was not a doctor. I went and saw him, he saw me for free, told me because I didn't have money at the time, you know. I was, you know, just a kid, just in school. Um, and he gave me these supplements to take, and I and I bought the supplements, and a few months later I had my next brain MRI and the tumor was shrinking.
SPEAKER_01Really? Oh, that's when I said what kind of supplements are we talking about here? I mean, obviously, obviously, it's not just that, there's also the mindset component, which I'm sure we'll get into, but what kind of supplement?
Rejecting More Surgery And Finding Holistic Care
SPEAKER_02Puzzle diet, lifestyle, it was a lot of different supplements. There's a really powerful antioxidant I was taking, and you know, it was a whole list of a whole list of supplements. We're talking about a lot of different things. It's not just one thing that works, right? When you look at the body, it's like putting a puzzle piece back together again, you know. So anywho ended up shrinking my tumor. Three months later, you know, they had MRI, hallelujah, it's shrinking. And I said, Okay, um, this is what I'm gonna go to school for, that's what I want to learn. So, you know, and then I was also sorry at that time I got bit by a tick and got sick from Lyme disease, and I had a bullseye rash. And I went to my dermatologist, he's like, put that away, it's nothing. So I ended up getting really sick, really, really sick for a long time. And I ended up having to manage it with supplements and vitamins and minerals and whatnot. And that's when I was like, that was like my reassurance when I was starting to feel better doing that. I'm like, okay, then I know what I what I really know for a fact I'm gonna pursue this because I know it works. I went to conventional medicine, they gave me antibiotics, I felt sick as a dog. Oh my god, screw this. I'm gonna go the natural route and do this. So um I ended up, you know, going to school, finishing school, getting my and my doctor of naturopathy, and then you know, I started, you know, clinical and and working right away. And anyway, so what ended up happening was I it's not I'm not just a doctor that is like that, just learned and treats people. I'm a a doctor that studied this and learned it and experienced this firsthand and lived it. Yeah, yeah. What it feels like to struggle and feel like and be on the brink of death and feel like you're gonna die and come back and yourself and that really gives you a unique perspective, a unique perspective and a unique lens when dealing with patients, having having walked that walk, right?
SPEAKER_01If you're dealing with a patient that's suffering from a similar type condition where where their life is hanging in the balance, the fact that you've you've been there, you've been in the you've been in the mud and you you fought through it, uh that gives you an extra level of power on top of the medical component.
Lyme Disease, Education, And Naturopathic Calling
SPEAKER_02Yeah, it makes sense for passion because like yeah, if you look at your patient, your patient's sick, you're like, wow, like like you be you have empathy towards your patients because you're like, I know live empathy. Yeah, it's like someone tells me I have a gut issue, I have cancer, I have autoimmune issue, I have chronic pain. I've been there, I've seen it all, I've been through it all. You know, so it's like it's like you know, when someone says, Hey, I have chronic pain and I treat their I treat them, and a month later they're feeling amazing. It's like that I can't believe you, you know, I did this good and I'm this great now. And it's like they're they're thanking me a million times, you know, I've you know over a hundred reviews, and I had more than 150. I know my Google's been deleting reviews randomly, but um, I had and I'm five stars everywhere. It's like I I love my job and I'm passionate about it. And it's like even my patients, and I'm after I see them, they can text me with if they have questions. And you know, well, my wife is also a medical doctor. I'm an atropathic doctor. We created the pure RX, our practice together, because now I have the ability to run lab work on pay on my patients. I have the ability to, you know, to um to even if they need medications refilled and whatnot, I can do that too. And the lab work and the scripts are available to insurance, by the way, because it's mine and my wife's practice. So, you know, we are able to do that. But consults themselves and supplements, unfortunately, are not billable to insurance.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, unfortunately, right? They don't big pharma doesn't like that.
SPEAKER_02Exactly, exactly.
SPEAKER_01Damn shame. Yeah, we're all asked backwards in this country when it comes to healthcare. People are always looking, I talk about this all the time. People are looking for the quick fix, right? The pill, the instant gratification, like what can I do short term? That's just not how any of this works, right? It requires you gotta play the long game, you gotta, you gotta eat right, you gotta take care of your body, you gotta fix your mind, you gotta do all these things. And when you do all these things, you start becoming healthy. Magic, like magic, right?
SPEAKER_02And being in, you know, being in Florida, I moved from Detroit. You have the sun, and the sun is the most powerful healer you'll ever get. When they tell you the skin, the sun causes skin cancer, and you look up the relevance of why does Ohio and Florida have the same incidence of skin cancer, it doesn't make sense. It's not it's it's non-burning sun exposure. The new research is showing is reducing the risk of like melanoma, for example. You know, it's it's like the skin cancers are a lot of it's caused from burning, and then they say, Oh, but a little bit here and there will cause it. You know what the sun does, it's if it's improving your immunity, it's your body's gonna help to stop that from happening.
SPEAKER_01It's like yeah, the vibe, but you get the vitamin D from the sun, all these positive things, right? Like, I feel I always I always make sure.
SPEAKER_02What's that? Sunscreens are cancer causing.
SPEAKER_01Now, you know, the thing to prevent the the cancer from the sun actually gives you the cancer.
SPEAKER_02Isn't that sad? That's the world we live in. And I mean, not all sunscreens, there are some good ones, like like mineral sunscreen, zinc oxide, but even then, you gotta watch out. What's in there? Parabens, what's in there? Heavy metals, what's in there? It's like we don't know, it's like there's so many bad things that they're putting in our food, and you know, and things like that, too. It's like it's it's I'm happy they're getting rid of food dyes right now. That's a big plus, but it's like you know, it's like you know, there's still other things that we have to work on. I mean, hey, go to the store and buy ketchup. What does it have in it? High fructose corn syrup, parents giving cereal to their kids and getting it. Poison, yeah, it's poison, it's all poison. Yep, and that's what you know, that's why it's like people sit there and say, Yeah, I want to trust my trust the government, I trust them, and you know, it's like you can't trust the government, they don't care about you, they really are in it for the money. Let's look at like that. Just now the FDA is starting to get cracked down on when the when we own that food colors cause ADD, ADHD, they cause cancers, and we know this, it's known facts, and then now they're starting to realize it. What about high fructose corn syrup? What about seed and vegetable oils? What happens with those? That's tons of omega-6s, my friend. That's a big reason why we're having an influx of heart disease and obesity. It's the omega-6s, it's a massive and massive, massive overdoses of it.
Practicing With Empathy And Patient Results
SPEAKER_01Yeah, people put too much stock in the government's ability to fix their own problems. Like at some level, you got to take personal responsibility. And it's not, it's not that, like what back to what you said about trust in the government, it's not that the people within the government don't want the best for people. Like most people, what I found is they're like not evil people, people want to do good. It's that the government is behind it. It's the administration, it's the bureaucracy, it's this giant conglomerate where you have all these outside influences pressing on it, and it's so complex that even if people have good intentions inside, it's hard to amplify the pure intentions, especially living in a capitalistic society and an instant gratification society where everybody wants that quick fix and that's that instant result. Yeah. Interesting stuff, man. I want to I want to shift a little bit more. I want you to speak to Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine, right? Like, who who is your ideal patient? You talked a lot about struggling with like life-threatening illnesses, but like speaking to the general audience out there, like who is the ideal type of patient, somebody that that you could really help to? Speak to that person.
SPEAKER_02So the only two types of medicine are acute and holistic. Emergency and holistic, emergency and holistic. Aq? What is it? No, acute care, like emergency room. Oh, acute, acute, acute care.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. So emergency room and holistic are the only two types of medicine I believe in. Okay. So I treat anyone that's looking to improve their quality of life. If someone has sepsis or pneumonia, I tell them go to the emergency room. Someone has something really severe, a severe illness, go to the ER. But if it's something chronic, let's say you're you're fatigued, you're tired, you have, yeah, I treat cancer patients. Um, you know, I treat patients that have, you know, autoimmune diseases, I treat a lot of chronic conditions. Um, you know, I've I've I can't even tell you how many times I've reverse teshimoto's in patients and help them live a healthier life, you know, and I've treat you my wife and I we do hormone replacement therapy for women in menopause, if they're in peri or on the way to you know, on the verge to perimenopause, then we try to reverse that completely, which it's possible to do that too. Men even with low testosterone, we can help them too. And you know, like men with you know low libido, any kind of hormonal issues, gut issues, chronic pain, just about everything. Memory issues. Um, you know, I've seen it all. You know, I've I've treated, you know, children, children with eczema, children with ADD, ADHD. We the whole goal here is we try to get to the root cause of the problem. And that's why my initial concepts are an hour long.
SPEAKER_01So you I think you mentioned earlier, is this a more towards like a DPC direct primary care model as opposed to the insurance? Like because most people have health insurance and they go see their primary care physician once a year, they get a checkup. Are you leaning more towards like the DPC, like like a monthly subscription model, or is it a hybrid?
SPEAKER_02Right now we haven't really incorporated the monthly prescription model. Um, we just charge for consults. Initials 400, it's an hour, follow ups are 150, and normally like we have the follow-up you know five weeks later, and then after that, usually it's every couple months. But we might be switching to the direct primary care pretty soon, just depending on the patient's needs, of course. Yeah.
Building A Hybrid Practice With His MD Wife
SPEAKER_01Um, that's something that we might be offering here pretty soon. I mean, it's a it's a wonderful concept, right? Because there's all this talk in the news nowadays about this healthcare crisis. And going back to what the government says about like, oh, just give us more money, we'll throw more money at the problem and we'll fix it for you. Right. It's like, well, no, that's not going to fix the problem. What we what the government needs to do is incentivize options to take some pressure off the insurance system and this model where it's like a subscription, like people get buy-in, people build better relationships with their doctor, people can really like take some, put some skin in the game and take care of themselves and take the onus away from the external thing trying to fix them to actually taking personal responsibility. Um, and I think having a good relationship with your healthcare provider and doctor and really getting to know like how your body works and trying to optimize your performance is going to take care of a lot of these symptoms and and problems that come up in people's lives.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. That makes perfect sense. And that's why it's important to treat the body as a whole and not just one piece at a time. Someone says, Oh, I have acid reflux here. Take let's take their let's take the acid away. That's not the answer. Well, what's causing it, right? What's behind that? There's always there's always an explanation deep down. The problem is lack of acidity. It's actually lack of your gut needs to be at a pH level of three or below. If it's not pH level of three or below, your gut's not gonna be making the enzymes you need to break down your food. That's why if you take a digestive enzyme, it's gonna help you feel better when you have reflux. So the problem is lack of acidity, you've got to make the gut more acidic. That's why apple cider vinegar works when you have reflux for a lot of people, and you know, so it's it's like that. And plus, gut bacteria plays a role in making those enzymes as well. So that's why it's important when you treat these things. You have to look here, here, here, here, here. We got to go from every angle we can. We change your diet, we change your lifestyle, we look at your internal biological clock. How is your sleep? How are you sleeping? Do you have sleep apnea? So you know, are you watching TV before bed? Are you eating before bed? Oh, we have to look at everything. This is how you look at the big picture and not just look at one piece of the puzzle.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, man. People people make time for what's important, but so many people gloss over the most important thing, which is taking care of themselves, and they they just go to like, oh, I don't have time to do all these things and and do the hard stuff, right? I so I'll just give me a pill, right? But like, you gotta do the work to get the results, and you gotta do that.
SPEAKER_02Have you ever heard this thing? You can have a hundred problems in your life until you have a health problem, then you only have one problem.
SPEAKER_01Then that's the that's that becomes the primary focus, yeah. Exactly. All right, well, let's let's leave it at that. Uh, I gotta jump. I uh before we go, why don't you let everybody out there know how they could find you? Maybe share whatever your your contact number, website, social media hooks. We'll we'll link it in the description, but but put it out there.
SPEAKER_02Sure. My uh my direct line is five eight six seven four seven four five seven eight. My website is the purrx.com, t-h e p-u-r-e rx, r like robber, x like x-ray.com, the purrx.com.
SPEAKER_01Beautiful. Brother, it was a pleasure learning about your story. Really powerful stuff. Appreciate you coming on. So if you're out there listening, yeah, man, if you're out there listening to this and you're struggling in your life and you know your health is not where it needs to be, pick up the phone. Call Dr. Jadan. Uh clearly he has a vested interest in this. He's he's lived this, he's walked the walk, uh, and he's here to help you. And we're we're so blessed and grateful to have you here in our great community to help everyone out, man. So truly appreciate your time, brother. Thank you, Jeremy.
Systems, Sunlight, And Lifestyle Debates
SPEAKER_02You know, it's been wonderful being a part of your podcast. I really appreciate the opportunity. And if anyone just really has struggles in their life and they want to call me and talk to me and have a quick question, I'm happy to do that too. I do this because I'm passionate about it. I and I just love helping people. So um, you know, I'm always here to help.
SPEAKER_01All right. Sounds good, man. Have a wonderful day. Thanks everyone for tuning in. As always, if you found this conversation useful, don't forget to like, subscribe, comment, be part of the conversation. You never know what kind of connection you're gonna make when you reach out. And that's what I found through social media, through this type of stuff. If something resonates with you, get engaged. You don't know who you're gonna touch, you don't know what kind of people you're gonna meet, you know, don't know what kind of impact you might have on the rest of humanity. Everyone have a wonderful day, and we'll catch you next time.
SPEAKER_00Thanks for listening to the Good Neighbor Podcast Cooper City. To nominate your favorite local business to be featured on the show, go to gnpcoopercity.com. That's gnpcoopercity.com or call nine five four three one three one seven zero.