Peach Podcast
Two guys and an occasional guest breaking open topics on: Purpose, Energy, Attitude, Commitment and Health through shared experiences.
Peach Podcast
S3EP01: Welcome to Season 3!! Setbacks to Comebacks: Turning Defeats into Triumph!
"You're not afraid of failure; you're afraid of success and everything it demands from you." This thought-provoking idea anchors our Season 3 premiere as we pivot from building foundations to exploring the transformative journey from setbacks to comebacks.
Professional cyclist Neilson Powless story exemplifies this theme perfectly. Once fighting to maintain his position on the EF Education team and later sidelined by injury, Powlwss plummeted to 100th in world rankings. Yet just days ago, he stunned the cycling world by defeating three top competitors from the world's leading team to claim an impossible victory that commentators gave "a one in a thousand chance." His triumph propelled him to 21st in world rankings – a comeback story we can all draw inspiration from. Check out the 5 minute inspirational video here: Ridiculous Race Ending
Personal stories often illuminate universal truths most powerfully. Daryl shares how a broken hand in ninth-grade basketball became a pivotal moment in his life. When his coach simply said, "See you at practice Tuesday," instead of dismissing him for the season, it changed everything. For six weeks, Daryl practiced one-handed, developing his weaker left hand while his right healed. Forty years later, he still carries this lesson: what initially seems like a devastating setback often becomes the foundation for unexpected growth.
Throughout Season 3, we'll feature guests who've navigated significant challenges and emerged stronger. Whether in sports, business, health, or relationships, we'll explore how the comeback mindset transforms obstacles into opportunities. We're particularly excited to check in with our friend Tony as he recovers from upcoming knee surgery – living proof that our community supports each other through both triumphs and trials.
Want to join the conversation? Share your thoughts on our quote card using the text link in our show notes. How has a setback in your life become a setup for something greater? Your story might be exactly what someone else needs to hear.
Hey, hey, hey. Welcome to the Peach Podcast. Just a couple of dudes and an occasional guest breaking open topics from everyday life on purpose, energy, attitude, commitment and health. So, if you're ready, listen in as we live, to learn from our losses, gain from our gratitude and laugh as we level up. Always remember, if you ever feel stuck, all you got to do and a first-time listener. Welcome to Peach Podcast. We are so grateful to have you here.
Speaker 1:If you want to know why we are called Peach, I encourage you to go listen to episode one there's a pretty cool story in there to find out how we got our name. It's actually an acronym. Maybe try to play a game with yourself and see if you can guess the acronym before you go back and listen to the episode to hear exactly what the acronym means. But anyways, moving forward, man Daryl, I am so excited because we are moving into season three today. Season three we just finished up season two and season three is going to be about setbacks and comebacks and Daryl and I we have been going through our mind and thinking ahead and thinking of people and we're excited about calling on some people to share some of the setbacks they went through and how they've turned into comebacks and what that looks like, what that process is like. We're going to probably share a little bit of ours throughout the journey, throughout the season. Each season is only 90 days, so we got an action-packed season in that next 90 days for you.
Speaker 1:But before we move into season three, we're going to kind of just recap season two, season two. So the first thing I want to kind of just mention about season two for me personally, daryl, and then I want to ask you what, what are some of the takeaways and highlights you had from season two? But season two, which was based around foundation, just foundation in in physical movement, in in health and general health, physical health, all mental health, emotional health, all that stuff. Some of the key things that I took away from that was community resilience, uh, principal strategies, like you know, what's your strategy for sleep, what's your strategy for recovering, what's your strategy for rest?
Speaker 1:Because I think we're so caught up in doing, doing, doing, doing a lot of the times that we easily and quickly overlook recovering or rest or sleep. Sleep is a huge one, man. It's just really, really huge these days and it's something that really needs to be brought to the forefront. Such a powerful thing happens in sleep and I think we just overlook it and it's a major fault. It's a major fault and I hope our podcast on sleep, you know, brings some awareness to it and inspires people to really get serious about it, to create some sleep routines and sleep habits, morning habits, evening habits, all those things they help out. So, but, daryl, what are some key, key thoughts and takeaways that you had from season two? What? What landed on your mind, on your heart?
Speaker 2:my first kind of Musogi and you know I can still close my eyes and think about just what it felt like to be at the top of the big volcano in Maui and, more than anything, just doing something by myself, doing something that I wasn't quite sure about and that really, really set me off to a great year, and I love the seasons, I love the 90 days and when we went and looked back at there. Man, I have so many great memories. I think about strength and mental positive. You know, anytime I want to just get fired up, I just go and pick any part of Ricky's podcast and listen to it podcast and listen to it and, like you, can't help but feel just totally, you know, just have such appreciation, right For someone that just had an amazing, amazing story, went to some of the most difficult setbacks and what he's been able to come beyond that and his attitude and his strength and perseverance, for that was great, I can tell you right now, one that personally had a big effect on me was Ralph, that trail running and some of the stuff he talked about, and I assumed that we were going to be listening to a guy that, oh, I've been trail running my whole life.
Speaker 2:No, he decided to go do a run and bonked halfway through and made it to the end and kept doing that and it's just grown into this and he's got myself into doing some trail running and I absolutely love it. Sleep is something that's been a big shift for me. We've talked about this personally between you and I. I'm actually sleeping probably anywhere between an hour to 90 minutes more a day. Wow.
Speaker 1:That's huge.
Speaker 2:And I feel like I'm on a new drug called sleep. It has made that big of a difference in my life. Right, my wife every once in a while in the morning is like what are you doing here? Why are you still in bed? She'd be up like two hours ago and doing something. But it's made a big impact on my life and I love just some of the guests we had. Right, it was awesome having a discussion with me and kind of walking through the nuts and bolts of kind of his journey through the biking. Awesome to hear about weightlifting, you know last week from Destiny. So it's been really great. I've really had a wonderful, wonderful time on it. But really excited it's getting warm, doug it is. It's getting to be spring. Baseball just started in Sacramento. Can you believe baseball's in Sacramento?
Speaker 2:at the A's Wow, so we're heading into the new season, Doug, and I'm real excited about what we're going to talk about. But it was awesome. I love it was your idea I'll throw it out to you of breaking this up into season. So I think we did a really good job of foundation. Also, some of the goals that we set at the beginning of the year we still talk about them, Doug. We still talk about them, we still reflect on them. We kind of score of score them. Um, we got through our first season of running, Um, and now we're heading to our second season of biking and others. So, um, I I'm thrilled. I couldn't be happier. Can you believe we're in April, right? Yes, man.
Speaker 1:Three months went by. Quick spring has sprung. Yep, you mentioned biking. You mentioned biking, uh, that reminds me of the video that uh, eric sent us in our us in our Team Peach thread yesterday of Nelson Palace. I know you watched the video. You and I had talked about it, but I love the way you break it down and I think it's a great video for you because you have said, like I said, you have this great gift of just framing a topic. And so I know, and you know, that Nelson Pallas, who is a professional cyclist from Northern California, I know he's gone through some frustrating moments and some great big setbacks. His journey has been strewed with just setbacks, but yesterday was a massive comeback. So share a little bit about Nelson Pallas, who he is for the first time listener, so just pretend you he is for the first time listener. So just pretend you're talking to a first time listener, so they can kind of get present no-transcript.
Speaker 2:Sure, so Nielsen Palace, from Northern California, from Roseville, california, so just in our backyard. Overall he's been a pro for seven or eight years, started actually, I think, writing really cool family. We actually wrote in the Palace, gran discipline and everything else. And biking actually is older and was a pro before him. He is the first native American uh ever to ride in the tour de France.
Speaker 2:Uh, he's on a team called the EF education and one of the cool things about EF education it's one of the American teams is their colors. They are bright, bright pink, purple, right. You can see them coming like like miles away and uh, and when, whenever you see the Peloton or see on races, you can definitely point them out. And when he's back in the um, back in the summer, in the fall, we see him riding up and down. So he's kind of like a local legend, right, right, um, I think he's 26, 27. Um, they just had a um, they just had a um. Uh, he had his first baby, right, he lives over in europe during this time, so we're kind of um and eric is like a big fan. I think they're eric he's a stalker.
Speaker 2:Eric is a stalker he literally is tried to chase him down on the bike trails to get a thing so anyway.
Speaker 2:So he's chasing down a pro so, um, you know, the the biking season started and we, you know, see some things. We get a text on our team peach yesterday and it says palace wins and like palace wins. I mean, there's like palace did well, but palace wins. And we're like Whoa and Eric put a a five minute video and, uh, right now they're just starting to ramp up the big races in Europe and there's a race in the Netherlands, it's the Dwarves Door Vanderen. It's a 184 mile kilometer race, it's a one day race and it's over cobblestones and a whole bunch of loose things, and the video comes up right in a recap and all they show is coming around the corner with 30 kilometers to go, four people and there's this one team, team Leasebike, and they basically are considered to be the one or two top team in the whole world. Right, and they've got their three riders and they're all in this. What yellow jerseys? Well, okay, so they're the breakaways and they broke away from all 150 people and they're in the top things.
Speaker 2:And as we watch it and they're going in the corners and it's about a five minute video. The announcers are talking about how, basically almost giving right the whole race to the team and everything else and they're talking about it and they're like, well, paulus is there. And they even said, well, I'd give him a 1 in 1,000 chance. And the other one says, well, so you're saying he has a chance. And as they start to go, paulus is behind. They go into the last turn and they have a sprint. By the way, these aren't three normal riders, right? This is like the top sprinter in the world, the world man, this guy's badass yeah and he's got his two teammates to basically hand feed him over the line.
Speaker 2:Right, right right and uh. So they come around the corner and they go and they take off and they kind of block palace and so palace is in fourth. Palace comes around the side and somehow gets up next to him and passes him in the sprint and wins. And the announcers are absolutely just palace wins, palace wins. And they cannot believe it. And palace raises his arms and he can't believe it. He can't believe it either. He cannot believe it. Right, and Pallas raises his arms and he can't believe it.
Speaker 1:He can't believe it either he cannot believe it.
Speaker 2:Right. And you know what's cool? It was one of those ones where he had about a length or so, so he got to raise his hands. You know, sometimes they're like. So he raised his hands before he hit the line and they're like Pallas wins and the guy behind him just put his head down and they could not believe it.
Speaker 1:Yeah, they were, man, they were frustrated oh my gosh, that like the win, because I saw the video too. And the team in the yellow jerseys, they were just, they were beside themselves. I think they were speechless, they were caught off guard. They were caught with their pants down that's the phrase I must just use. Man, they were caught with their pants down. They had a strategy and unfortunately that strategy didn't pay off. But, daryl, go back a little bit, because this was a huge win for EF cycling team, for Palace, but it came with over a multitude of setbacks and frustrations. What were some of the things that Palace was kind of faced with over the last couple of years?
Speaker 2:Yeah, so Pallas, overall, in 2020, when we kind of first got into it with this, he was probably almost like 200th in the world. He's trying to hang on to being on the EF education. He actually did a great job, got all the way up. It was two years ago. The Tour de France he actually came up in 24th. He almost won a couple Tour de France stages, which, for an American, the last time they had done that was like 20 years before, and so he was really working his way up. And then, the year he was supposed to have his great year, he got hurt. He got hurt and he had his knee. He dropped all the way back to a hundred Wow, right. And so, um, last year when we saw him racing, he was racing but he was kind of trying to help out other people and just just never quite there. And you know these. You know you start to drop off performance in cycling, you drop off, you're no longer there, right.
Speaker 1:You know what I?
Speaker 2:mean it's like. It's like you either perform or you don't. And then this year everybody was very excited and he got sick. There was a race in Paris-Nice where it was super cold and he got pneumonia and got all sorts of stuff and he was just very frustrated. When he gave his interview he literally the first thing he said was nine times out of 10, I wouldn't have won that sprint Going into the last 30 miles. I thought I was riding for second place. So he, he said that. And he said when he made that last turn and he got a little momentum, he finally says I think I can do it. And he did everything right in one and absolutely shocked them.
Speaker 2:And they asked him after all that. He says this is by far the biggest win of my life. Wow, right. And you know, here's a guy that was working his way up a couple of years ago, got hurt, had a couple setbacks, but all the way back to a hundredth and he just had his first win and nobody could believe it. And this weekend is another big ride. And the last question the interview asked him yesterday. And, by the way, you saw the interviews, I've never seen somebody that happy in my life being interviewed. I mean like just we'll put the, we'll put the couple minute video up there. But they asked him. They said what do you think about this Sunday's tour de Flanders? And it's like a massive, massive race over these cobblestones in the Netherlands. And he says well, there's two things you need to have to win a race. He says you got to have the right form and strength and you have to have confidence. And he says I've got confidence, damn After yesterday he's got a lot of confidence man.
Speaker 1:He filled his bucket up.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so it was cool. It was cool Local guy and overall, sometimes we face setbacks, right Right, but think about it. You're a professional athlete, you're doing well, and how many times do you hear about professional athletes? You get hurt and that's it. Yeah, you had your claim to fame and there're so super exciting for him and, uh, good for American. By the way, he's now number two, the second um highest ranked uh, american um for cycling, and he's number 21 in the world as of today. Wow.
Speaker 1:From a hundred to 21 overall. And that's man. That. That's that's what you're talking about. A comeback right there, daryl, that's huge. In cycling, you know as well as I know that's not an easy feat, because all those wins come within inches of each other man. It's just a matter of a pedal stroke or a freaking front tire the thickness of a front tire to get you that win. But like you said yesterday, he was far enough ahead he could raise his hands across the finish line. He didn't have to push past the finish line and it was fun and exciting. I'm definitely going to put that YouTube link in our show notes because it's just. I think it's like what a three minute, three to five minute video. But the announcers make it really exciting, especially when you had, as you said earlier, he's got a one in a thousand chance to win and the other announcer says so you're saying I got a chance. That's from that movie, dumb and Dumber, do you?
Speaker 2:remember that. You know it's funny. The announcers are from Europe right. For them, kind of pulling out a Dumb and Dumber reference is pretty cool. Yeah, you do not have to be a cycling fan not to love that three minuteminute video. It was absolutely awesome.
Speaker 1:It's really awesome. I'll definitely make sure I drop that in the show notes. So look for that in the show notes as you're watching this or when you finish listening to this podcast. Let's bring it down because, you know, when we talk about professionals and pros and their setbacks and comebacks, you know I think a lot of people can't relate. They're like, well, that's a pro. That I think a lot of people can't relate. They're like, well, that's a pro, that's what they do for a living and whatnot.
Speaker 1:But, darrell, let's talk and again, to a lot of people you might seem like just a superhero kind of guy doing your athletics, because you're out there all the time working out and maybe they can't relate to you, or maybe they can. But I just want to let the people know that Darl is an ordinary guy doing ordinary things, but he does them consistently and because he does them consistently, he produces extraordinary results. And so, daryl, you had shared an email I think you were sharing with your crew at one point, and you had put me on that email thread as well, or shared it with me, and it was a really inspiring story. So I'm going to ask him to put you on the spot and and ask you to share. I think it was from your high school days, something that happened in basketball. Do you remember the email I'm talking about and would you be open to sharing that?
Speaker 2:Yeah, I will, I will. We were going through some, you know, normal kind of tough, tough time at work, going through a big transformation, progress and in my world, in high-tech you go through a lot of ups and downs and transformations and we're going through a particular tough time and I sent an email and the title of the email was A Setback is a Setup for a Comeback and I titled it from my youth ninth-grade basketball. I was not tall back then and I wasn't Wow, but wait so Daryl?
Speaker 1:Wait, so Darrell is for the first time listener. Darrell is six foot seven. How tall were you back then, darrell?
Speaker 2:Oh gosh, I was well under six feet. I was probably one or two inches below average right. I grew kind of later in my junior and senior year.
Speaker 1:Wow, that's a trip dude. Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 2:But it was a passion of mine and all my close friends were on the team and it was a Saturday practice and I hurt my right hand and after practice I went home and I showed my mom and I'm going to ER that night and my hand was broken it was in cast for six weeks, and this is a Saturday. Back then you weren't texting your coach, right?
Speaker 2:on Saturday and this is a Saturday. Back then you weren't texting your coach right on Saturday. So no more basketball for the season. I felt crushed. I felt like my sea was over. So Monday I went to see my coach to tell him the news. He was great supportive and he just he realized, uh, I was super down Right. And you know, in ninth grade man, you think your world, you know like you're like my world is over, I no longer exist.
Speaker 1:Right.
Speaker 2:You know, and he asked some questions, doctor instructions, and was I in a lot of pain? I was at least in his office. He said see you at practice Tuesday. We'll figure out how you can still be on the team. Wow, and so each day I practiced with the team. I did as much as I could do with my left hand. I was able to do all the conditioning work. I competed hard. Each day, when I couldn't do the drills, I'd go down to the other end and shoot baskets with my left hand. Oh, wow, and so let's say so each day. You know, I spent more and more time by myself doing left-handed drills, layups, shooting and everything else, and even though I missed the games in the string, I was still part of the team. I still felt connected. And then I worked super hard and the next fall I was ready for JV basketball. The first week of practice was great. I was more confident, I developed my left hand and if you play basketball right.
Speaker 2:Nobody had it. You were very one, dominant and literally I ended up being a better basketball player for that six to eight weeks because I could use my left hand, I could do a lot of stuff and, more than anything, my coach noticed and he just saw me as being down and he kind of gave me a lifeline. You know what I mean.
Speaker 1:Right, you know what I?
Speaker 2:mean, and I took advantage of it and right. So you know the setback I missed part of my ninth grade season to come back. I learned, like the value of being part of the team and I ended up working harder and ended up being a better basketball player. So, um, I think that was an early lesson for me and I just can't thank that coach enough for just kind of throwing me a lifeline Right, um, and just recognizing there and very happy that I did something with it. So sometimes when you get a setback, maybe it's a setup for a comeback.
Speaker 1:Wow, I love that story. That story has many components of wisdom in it and one of them is you know again, it's so important who you surround yourself with and sometimes you know you don't get a choice. I mean, that was your coach. You didn't get to choose who your coach was. But, man, what a blessing and how fortunate that you were in a place and an environment where that coach obviously had a real coach mindset, like he didn't see obstacles as things that got in the way. There were things that were there to teach you lessons. Obviously that was his mindset. Whether he described it that way or not, that's what he set you up for. You know, it'd be interesting if, uh, I don't know, is that coach still around? And if he is, if he is and you saw him in the grocery store one day, let's just say you happened upon him.
Speaker 2:What would you say to him today? I would just say thank you, thank you, for um probably doesn't even realize it right, but you know, it's those little things, doug, don't you think it's those little things?
Speaker 2:It's always those little things little things that can have such an impact on somebody else's life. I think he would probably remember that I worked hard. I don't know if he'd remember that I hurt my hand, but, um, I would just thank him and thank him for uh one believing in me and uh, just encouraging. You know, um, you know, I think back on a lot of things. You know, I think we need to think about that sometimes. It's sometimes the little things you can go do, being nice to people, encouraging them, um, and it's really on what I did with it, right, but um, he could have easily said okay, gannis, uh, see you next fall.
Speaker 1:Do you remember his name? Coach Intividad? Coach Intividad, yep, all right. So who knows, he might listen by chance to this. So, coach Intividad, if you're on here, darrell Gannis. So, darrell, in ninth grade, how old were you? 14. 14. And how old are you now?
Speaker 2:54. All right 54.
Speaker 1:So listen up, people. So this isn't just for people who are on the receiving end. This is the people who are doing those small things and may not even realize you've had an impact. So Coach Intividad Daryl's 54 years old and he chose to share this story, not just on this podcast, but he's a leader at work, his team for inspiration. So, man, what you did if you're listening to this coach, it mattered and it made an impact and I share that, not just so that this can be a thank you to the coach if he listens to this, if he hears this, but also for people out there who are in positions of leadership.
Speaker 1:Whether you're a parent or a coach or a teacher or just a kind human being, man helping somebody cross the street. You know what you do, how you say it and how you follow through on that really, really matters. So that's what this season, that's what season three, is going to be about, daryl man, it's just setbacks, comebacks, the people behind those and how it's. You know how it's structured. Whether it's knowingly structured or unknowingly structured, it has an impact. It has an impact. But if we get intentional about that, wow, imagine the power that can be produced with that intentionality behind looking for opportunities to turn setbacks into comebacks. That's just a whole different way of living and a whole different mindset shift I just see as being nothing but positive and great. It's going to go through some. You got to go through some hard shit, for sure, um, but that's. That's where the the beauty is is through the hard shit.
Speaker 2:Yeah and uh, this last weekend, uh, it was up with uh, tony and Jamie and remember Tony, uh, it signed up for Shamrock but he, he has some knee issues and everything else and we talked to him on a couple of the recent ones there and I know he's pretty bummed and he's doing much better. He's actually gone this week. He went in to see his doctor, uh, for kind of the a follow-up visit after the MRI and, um, he's going to end up getting surgery. It looks like uh and uh, the doctor gave it to him but I think he's going to do that. He wants to get it corrected. He's got a bit of a complex tear in his meniscus. He's going to go do it.
Speaker 2:So I shared him, I text him. I was like, can't wait for the comeback. Tell me the recovery, we'll sign you up for something. Tony, you're going to be back better than ever. And we were texting and he appreciated I texted him and kind of followed up with him. He said, hey, thanks for following up with me. I know his doctor appointment was yesterday so I mentioned, I told him I was going to mention it on the podcast.
Speaker 1:So, uh, we're looking for a big comeback Tone Lope in the house he's going to do great yeah.
Speaker 1:He's he's, he's definitely uh. I had talked to him a couple weeks ago and he's uh, his whole attitude and just mindset around the process was just, you know, he had that sense of just going to face what comes my way and do the work and do the work. And you know, we'll have to kind of lean into him along the way, because that work gets lonely sometimes and sometimes it's easy to get forgotten. But Tone's a good guy, man. I want to make sure we're all there for him and just loving on him and reminding him he's not forgotten. And not only is he not forgotten, but we're counting on him to be a part of his comeback story, to run that race that he never got to run at some point. Whether that's within six months or next year at the next Shamrock, it doesn't matter. We want to be part of it because we were there when it happened. We were there pre it happening. I remember his excitement signing up for the Shamrock when we were interviewing him with Josephine and he was talking about just how excited he was about moving forward and getting through this stuff. And now it's going to even be a better story, an even better story, and so I look forward to that. But, daryl, I know we got a few things lined up. We won't cover them all right now.
Speaker 1:I'm excited about you know, every year we have an agenda and just a plethora of different events. We got running events, cycling events. We've got I think there's a I do my birthday challenge with my friend Ted and Nia down in Danville this year coming up and we're going to be walking some god awful amount of steps with doing a thousand pushups. It's, uh, it's, it's, you know, man, walking. Never thought walking would be so hard, but I tell you, last year when I did that walking event with him, I forget how many steps we did. It was an all day event though. Uh, I never felt more damn sore and, daryl, I have hiked with 40 pound pack through the desolation wilderness with you guys and I didn't feel sore that as sore as I did walking that time with Ted and doing the pushups. The pushups weren't so hard and both Ted and I agreed we needed to ante up on that and he so he's got a big challenge coming up.
Speaker 1:Um, but we've got other things coming up. What are some of the? Uh, just off the top of your head?
Speaker 2:what are the some of the things that we're going to be doing this year? We got one last one, a running event called Silver Moon and that's coming up in less than two weeks, on April 12th. We're going to have Eric come on and talk about that. As my wife says, it's an adult jog-a-thon. It's six hours of running, so I'm going to leave it at that and Eric's going to come back and talk about that and then we're all in.
Speaker 2:On cycling, we've got some things with Gold Country Death Ride July 12th. We got to get on that and the one thing I will throw out there is we're Eric has done this a few times. There's something called the Great American Triathlon. It's a very, very long event that used to be called the Eppies Great Race in Sacramento. It's not a long triathlon, it's a 5.8 mile run. It's up and down the bike trails on the American River and then you bike back 12 and a half miles and then you get and you can paddle, and you can paddle in a kayak, you can paddle in a canoe, people do boards and everything else. It is so fun, so you don't have to swim.
Speaker 2:We've got about 10 people signed up. Afterward we're going to have a big barbecue event, a big family thing, and so we'll definitely put in the word out there. It's not very long. So we've got some nice events, but we got to start cycling. The tough part, doug, is we're really enjoying running. So we're going to have to make the crossover pretty quick, because those 103 miles don't ride themselves.
Speaker 1:Right. So you know what? This is a monumental moment, daryl. You might not have recognized it just now, but Daryl Gannis just said it's going to be tough to transition to cycling because we're really enjoying running. You heard it here first on Peach Podcast people. I think it's probably been over a year since I got Daryl to admit he's a runner and two, he actually enjoys the shit. Right on, daryl, look what happens when you face the fear and you get uncomfortable in your willingness. On the other side you find yourself saying ridiculous stuff like we're really enjoying running. That's awesome, man, I love it. Yeah, so we also have death ride.
Speaker 1:We've got a few other things coming up and we'll. We'll talk a little, we'll spread those out as we do more episodes and whatnot, but I'm excited about season three. Uh, let's definitely get together behind the scenes and start brainstorming on some people. I think we can have some previous guests come back on and get real specific about some of their comebacks in their businesses and their setbacks. Obviously, that led to the comebacks in their businesses and their health sports, whatever it is. But I think we've already got a bunch of people to draw from and I'm excited to think about some new guests as well to draw from in this season. It's going to be really fun. I'm looking forward to it.
Speaker 1:But with that said, daryl, let's move into. This is just an introduction to season three, so we're going to keep it short. Let's move into our quote card. Quote card. Last week, you served me up and Destiny with a quote, and this week I am going to serve you up with a quote. You ready, I'm ready, all right. The quote is you're not afraid of failure, you're afraid of success and everything it demands from you. I'll say it one more time, while you think about it You're not afraid of failure, you're afraid of success and everything it demands from you. So, as you ponder that quote, what comes to mind?
Speaker 2:Well, first of all, I think I am afraid of failure. Doug, as we've talked, I think a big thing that drives me is a fear of failure. But yeah, I think definitely, sometimes when you succeed at things, you can open up a whole bunch of more doors, which include responsibilities and everything else there. So, um, I think it's a fine line. I think it's a fine line. I think some people are on both sides of it. I'm definitely on the more feel fear of failure, and when I have success I don't. It doesn't probably bring me as much happiness as I would think, but on the other hand, I definitely understand what success can bring. If you look at, just kind of going back to some of the people that have been super successful, the more success I have. Sometimes they really struggle managing that. You know, to be honest with you, the amount of responsibility, the amount of things that come with that is huge. But that's a really fine line between what's failure and success. Yeah, that's a good one. That's a really, really good one. I'm going to ponder that one.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I know you are, because I saw that I'm like this is good, this is going to mess with Daryl's head, so I gotta, I gotta give it to him. But, daryl, you know what I want to do and maybe you can remind me, because I get forgetful sometimes. But I think it would be great to, number one, remind people on the show, and I'm going to use this segment right here to remind people that we have a text link in the in the show notes. It's the first link above all in the notes, so you don't have to read everything.
Speaker 1:We would love to hear your response to every quote that we put out there as well. It could be a paragraph, a page, it doesn't matter. You can text as much as you want and, again, all texts that are sent are anonymous. You can put your name in there, you can type it in if you want, but all texts we receive are anonymous. It would be fun to start getting some listeners to respond to some of these quotes and what it means to them. So, without much more to say after that, we're going to close this show out, like we always do, by saying God bless and peace out, peace out, we're out, bye.