#437 – Jordan Jonas: Survival, Hunting, Siberia, God, and Winning Alone Season 6 - podcast episode cover

#437 – Jordan Jonas: Survival, Hunting, Siberia, God, and Winning Alone Season 6

Jul 21, 20242 hr 57 min
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Episode description

Jordan Jonas is a wilderness survival expert, explorer, hunter, guide, and winner of Alone Season 6, a show in which the task is to survive alone in the arctic wilderness longer than anyone else. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest competitors in the history on that show. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - HiddenLayer: https://hiddenlayer.com/lex - Notion: https://notion.com/lex - Shopify: https://shopify.com/lex to get $1 per month trial - NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/lex to get free product tour - LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/lex to get $350 off AMA - Submit Questions to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/ama-questions Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/jordan-jonas-transcript EPISODE LINKS: Jordan's Instagram: https://instagram.com/hobojordo Jordan's YouTube: https://youtube.com/@hobojordo Jordan's Website: https://jordanjonas.com/ Jordan's X: https://x.com/hobojordo PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (11:25) - Alone Season 6 (45:43) - Arctic (1:01:59) - Roland Welker (1:09:34) - Freight trains (1:21:19) - Siberia (1:39:45) - Hunger (1:59:29) - Suffering (2:14:15) - God (2:29:15) - Mortality (2:34:59) - Resilience (2:46:45) - Hope (2:49:30) - Lex AMA

Transcript

The following is a conversation with Jordan Jonas, winner of Alone Season 6, a show where the task is to survive alone in the Arctic wilderness longer than anyone else. He is widely considered to be one of, if not the greatest competitors on that show. He has a fascinating life story that took him from a farm in Idaho and hoboing on trains across America to traveling with thematic tribes in Siberia.

All that helped make him into a world-class explorer, survivor, hunter, wilderness guide, and, most importantly, a great human being with a big heart and a big smile. This was a truly fun and fascinating conversation. Let me also mention that at the end, after the episode, I'll start answering some questions and we'll try to articulate my thinking on some top of mind topics. So if that's of interest to you, keep listening after the episode is over.

And now, a quick view second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description as the best way to support this podcast. We got Hidden Layer for securing your AI models, Notion for Team Collaboration and Taking Notes. Shopify for selling stuff online, NetSuite for managing your business, Element for Electrolytes and 8 Sleep for Naps. Choose wisely my friends. Also, if you want to work with our amazing team, I just want to get in touch, go to lexfreemond.com slash contact.

And now onto the full ad reads, as always, no ads in the middle. I try to make these interesting, but if you skip them, please do check out our sponsors. I enjoy their stuff. Maybe you will too. This episode is brought to you by Hidden Layer, a platform that provides security for your machine learning models. I've got a chance to recently visit the GPU cluster that Tesla AI and XAI are building.

And well, first of all, I was extremely impressed by the rapid rate of progress and there's a lot more to be said about that. Maybe I'll have a conversation with Elon soon. But in general, I just want to comment how humble that was by just the sheer scale of computation that a GPU cluster is carrying and it's quickly growing. And just being able to see that in person, it makes it very visceral, very real that these machine learning models have power.

And that we as a civilization carry a heavy responsibility to make sure that we use them in a way that doesn't hurt others. And I think security vulnerabilities is the near term way of hurting others. So it's really important to minimize the number of security vulnerabilities. The battle to minimize the number of bugs, the number of attack vectors, the size of the attack vectors on the machine learning models and on software in general is a worthy battle to fight.

And so I'm glad Hidden Layer is fighting that battle, especially in the context of machine learning. Visit HiddenLayer.com slash Lex to learn more about how Hidden Layer can accelerate your AI adoption in a secure way. This episode is also brought to you by Notion, a note taking and theme collaboration tool. I've used it for a long time for note taking and I think the process of note taking is a science and an art and want to take extremely seriously.

Writing is a process that's essential for concretizing your thoughts. Without that thoughts are a kind of amorphous, ephemeral thing that just kind of shows up without a clear structure and leaves before you have a chance to really internalize it. So the process of writing does just that. It makes the thought more permanent and gives it structure. And so note taking is a process that I think is essential to thinking.

And I use bullet points and nested bullet points and Notion does that extremely well. And so I use Notion to organize my thoughts. But I think they also do an incredible job of collaboration for larger and larger teams. And they integrate an AI assistant into the whole thing that helps you summarize and doing all the LLM things that you now expect, but they do that in a seamless way. So try Notion AI for free when you go to Notion.com slash Lex.

That's all lowercase Notion.com slash Lex to try the power of Notion AI today. This episode is brought to you by Shopify, a platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere with a great looking online store. I've set one up in a few minutes at Lexington.com slash store. There's a few shirts. There's something about the ease and scale and the efficiency of Shopify that always makes me think about the machinery of capitalism.

And also because I've been beginning to read the history of human civilization as cover by Will Durant and I will Durant, I suddenly feel humbled by the scale of it all. And how capitalism is an idea, the modern version of it is a relatively recent one, just a handful of centuries, just with the industrial revolution. And we humans have been battling with this idea. Whether the means of production should be owned by the state or by the individual.

And now everybody's talking like that such an obvious thing, but it isn't. Every genius idea is obvious in retrospect. And the entire story of humans on earth is a long chain of experiments, successful and failed ones and from each we'll learn and we always rise. That's the fascinating thing about us humans. We always survive. We'll always find a way. It's actually one of the central kernels behind my optimism about the future of humanity.

But anyway, back to the store, if you want to set one up, sign up for a dollar per month trial period at Shopify.com slash Lex. All lowercase, go to Shopify.com slash Lex to take your business to the next level today. This episode is also brought to you by Neswee and all in one cloud business management system. And actually back to capitalism because once again, business is at the core of the capitalism machine.

I find that there is various communities now that dedicate themselves to rigorously analyzing the failures of capitalism at the edges. But in those communities, and in general, we don't often celebrate the positive impacts, the positive metrics over time that capitalism has resulted in in society.

And I think just the number of people living in poverty decreasing drastically under regimes that enable free markets should serve as an inspiring notion for anyone who wants to build a business for the very fact that humans build businesses that we together keep trying. It's the craziest thing. To start a business is the craziest idea because most likely going to fail. It really is the stupidest possible thing except it is not except that dream is the very engine that enables progress.

So I'm a big fan of startups of small businesses and grateful to humans take the risk and I'm grateful to humans find a way. Anyway, Neswee is a good tool to manage businesses. Over 37,000 companies have upgraded to Netswee by Oracle. Take advantage of Neswee's flexible financing plan at Neswee.com slash Lex, that's Neswee.com slash Lex. This episode is also brought to you by Element, an electrolyte drink that I love and depend on, especially when I'm taking long distance runs in Austin Heat.

It's a often 95, 100 degree Fahrenheit. And I love it. 10, 12, 15 miles. Let's go. But yes, you have to consume a large amount of electrolytes before and after to make sure I'm feeling good. One of these days I should probably run a marathon. But I'm run for time. I don't run to a destination. I don't run because I have to or even I don't really run for exercise sake.

I run so I can think clearly and contend with the heavier of my thoughts because when I'm out there just by myself whether no sound or brown noise in my ears, I get to really think there's something about sort of physical challenges, especially the higher pace where

I start getting uncomfortable and the uncomfortable thoughts rise up and I get to think and I get to face those thoughts and either meditate them away or try to figure out what is the kernel of the thing that disturbs me about those thoughts. What is this so uncomfortable? What is this thing that causes anxiety? This could be everything from intellectual philosophical type thoughts, technical design, engineering challenges or just personal life stuff, all of it.

So I love running for that reason. So if you want to join me in the element deliciousness, get a simple pack for free with any purchase, try to drink elements dot com slash Lex. This episode is also brought to you by A Sleep. It's pod 4 ultra. The ultra part is the extra thing, the base that goes between the mattress and the bed frame. It can morph like gravity does the space time, the surface, the shape, the landscape of your bed so it can put you in a reading position for example.

Now it's not just the base without the ultra pod 4 is still a big upgrade to pod 3. It doubles the cooling power, it just upgrades a bunch of different stuff. So I love it, it's a sacred place for me for the nap or the full night sleep. The older I get, the more I understand the power of a good night sleep.

Now of course you also want to be flexible and robust to the craziness, the madness that life brings your way but when you can find those hours of sleep, that little quiet escape from the boiling turmoil of the world. Go to A Sleep.com slash Lex and use code Lex to get $350 off the pod for ultra. This is the Lex Reurin podcast to support it. Please check out our sponsors in the description and now dear friends, here's Jordan Jonas.

You won alone season 6 and I think are still considered to be one of, if not the most successful survivor on that show. So let's go back, let's look at the big picture. Can you tell me about the show alone? How does it work? Yeah, it's a show where they take 10 individuals and each person gets 10 items off of the list. Basic items would be an ax, a saw, a frying pan, some pretty basic stuff. And then they send them all, drop them off all in the woods with a few cameras.

So the people are actually alone, there's not a crew or anything. And then you basically live there as long as you can. And so the person that lasts the longest, once the second-place person taps out, they come and get you in that individual wins. So it's a pretty legit challenge. They drop you off, helicopter flies out and you're not going to get your next meal until you make it happen.

So you have to figure out the shelter, figure out the source of food, and then it gets colder and colder because I guess they drop you out in a moment where it's going into the winter. Yeah, they typically do it in temperate, colder climates, things like that. And they start in September, October. So time's ticking when they drop you off. And yeah, the pressure's on.

You know, you overwhelm with all the things you have to do right away, like, oh man, I'm not going to eat again until I actually shoot or catch something. I've got to build a shelter. It's pretty overwhelming. Figure your whole location out. But it's interesting because once you're there a little while, you kind of get into a, well, at least for me, there was like a week or maybe not a week, but that I was kind of a little more annoyed with things. You know, it's like, oh my sight sucks.

And then you kind of accept it. Like, you know what, it is what it is. No, no amount of complaining is going to do anybody any good. So I'm just going to make it happen. And so then, or you know, do my best to you. And then I felt like I got in a zone and I felt like I was right back in kind of Siberia or in that headspace. And I found to actually really enjoyed it. I had been a little bit out of, I guess you call it, the game because I had had a child.

And so when we had our daughter, we came back to the States and then a bunch of things happened. And I just ended up, we didn't end up going back to Russia. So there've been a couple of years that I was just, you know, we were raising the little girl and boy then. And then you've gotten a little soft. So I was like, did I got a little soft? But then it was fun how like after just some days there, I was like, oh man, I feel like, I'm feeling like I'm at home now.

And then it was like, you're kind of in that flow state. And it was actually, there's a few moments like when you left the ladder up over the moose that you kind of screwed up a little bit. Oh yeah. And then from that moment of like frustration to the moment of acceptance. I mean, the more you put yourself in life and positions that are kind of outside your comfort zone or push your abilities, the more often you're going to screw up. And then the more opportunity you have to learn from that.

And then to be honest, it's kind of funny, but you almost get to a position where you don't feel that uncomfortable. It's not unexpected. You know, you kind of expect you're going to mess up here and there. I remember particularly with the moose, the first moose I saw. I had a great shot at it, but I had a hard time judging distance because it was in a mud flat, which means it's hard to tell yardage.

You know, because you usually typically go in by trees or markers be like, oh, I'm probably 30 yards away. This was a giant moose and he was 40 something yards away. And I estimated that he was 30 something yards away. So it was way off and shot and dropped between his legs. And then I realized I had not grabbed my quiver. So I only had one shot and I just watched him turn around and walk off. But I was struck initially with like, I actually noticed how unnat I was.

I was like, oh, this is actually, I was like, that was awesome. I was like seeing a dinosaur that was really cool. And then I was like, what an idiot. How to miss. But then I was like, that it made me that much more determined to make it happen again. And I was like, OK, nobody's going to make this happen except myself. You can't complain. It would have done me a good to go back and moat about it. And so then I was like, I had a thought.

I was like, oh, I remember these native guys telling me that you still like build these giant fences and funnel game into certain areas and stuff. And I was like, man, that's a lot of calories. But I have to make that happen again now. So I kind of went out there and tried that. That was kind of a attempt at something to it could have failed or not worked, but sure enough, it worked. And opportunity came again. The moose came wondering along and I was able to get it.

But being able to take failure as soon as you can, the better. Accept it. And then learn from it is kind of a muscle you have to exercise a little bit. What's interesting because in this case, the cost of failure is like, you're not going to be able to eat. Yeah. Yeah. That was really interesting. The most interesting thing about that show was how high the stakes felt because it didn't feel, you know, you didn't tell yourself you're on a show. At least I didn't.

You just felt like it was, you're going to starve to death if you don't make this happen. And so the stakes felt so high. And it was an interesting thing to tap into because I mean, so many of our ancestors probably all just dealt with that on a regular basis. But it's something that we're all the modern amenities and such and food security that we don't deal with.

And it was interesting to tap into what a kind of a peak mental experience that is when you really, really need something to survive. And then it happens. It's a, you can't imagine. I mean, that's what our all our dopamine and the receptors are tuned for that experience in particular. So it was, yeah, it was pretty awesome. But the pressure felt very on. Like I always felt the pressure of, of providing or starving. And then there's a situation when you left the ladder up, right?

You needed fat and what is it? Wolverine needs some of the fat. Right. Yeah. Well, it was, when I got the moose, I was so happy. The most joy I could almost experience max maxed out. But I didn't think I, I didn't think I won at that point. I never thought like, oh, that's my ticket to victory. And I thought, holy crap, it's going to be me against somebody else that gets a moose now. And we're going to be here six, eight months, who knows how long.

And so I can't, I can't be here six, eight months and still lose. So I've got to like, I've got to out produce somebody else with a moose. So I had all that in my head. Not already was of course pretty thin. And so I was just like, man, somebody else gets a moose. I'm still going to be behind. And so everything felt like precious to me. And then I had found a plastic jug. And I put a whole bunch of the moose is fat in this plastic jug and set it up on a little shelf.

I thought, you know what, if a bear comes, I'll probably hear it and I'll come out and be able to shoot it. So I went to sleep and I woke up next morning and I went out and I was like, where's that jug? And then I was like, wait, what are all these prints? And then I started looking around. And it took a second to dawn on me because I haven't interacted with Wolverines very often in life. And I was like, oh, those are Wolverine tracks.

And he was just so much sneakier than a bear would have been. And so it kind of surprised me and he took off with that jug of fat. And so then I went from feeling pretty good about myself to like, now I'm losing again against whoever, you know, this other person is with a moose. So I, again, kind of the pressure came back to, oh, no, I got to produce again. It wasn't the end of the world. And I think they may have exaggerated a little bit how little fat I had left.

You know, I still had, a moose has a lot of fat. It did make me feel like I was at a disadvantage again. And so that was pretty intense because that was Wolverines. They're bold little animals. And he was basically saying, no, this is my moose. And I had to counter his claims. Well, yeah, they're really, really smart. They figure out a way to get to places really effectively. Wolverines are like fastening in that way. So let's go to that happy moment of the moose.

You are the first and one of the only contestants to have ever killed a moose on the show, a big game animal with a bow and arrow. So this is day 20. So can you take me through the kill? Yeah. So I missed one and I just decided I'm not here to starve. I'm here to like try to become sustainable. So I was like, I don't care if it's a risk. I'm going to build that fence. I built it. I would just pick berries and call moose every day.

And it was actually a really pleasant to sit in a berry patch and call moose. But then I also had this whole trap and snare line set out everywhere. So I had all these, I was getting rabbits. But I went and I was actually taking a rabbit out of a snare when I heard a clank because I had set up kind of an alarm system with string and cans. So it's brilliant idea. It's another thing that could have not worked, but it worked.

And it came through and I was like, oh, I heard the cans clank and I was like, no way. So I ran over. I didn't know what it was exactly, but something was coming along the fence. And I ran over and jumped in the bush next to the funnel exit on the fence and sure enough, the big moose came running up. And you know, your heart gets pound and like crazy. You're just like, no way, no way.

I probably could have waited a little longer and had a perfect broadside shot, but I took the shot when he was, he was pretty close, like 24 yards, but he was quartering towards me, which makes it a little harder to make a perfect kill shot. You know, hence I hit it and it took off running and I just thought, you know, I was super excited. I couldn't believe I actually, you know, I was like, oh my gosh, got the moose. I think that was a really good shot. You get all excited.

But then it plays back in your head. And particularly when you're first learning to hunt, there's always an animal that gets away, you know, and you like make a bad decision or not a great shot or something. And it's just, it's just part of it. And so of course, you're like, I'm not going to be satisfied until I see this thing. So I followed the blood trail a little while and I saw some bubbly blood, which meant it was hitting the lungs, which meant it's not going to live.

You know, you'll get it. And so as long as you don't mess it up. And so I went back to my shelter and waited an hour. I skinned that rabbit that had caught and then super nervous, the slowest hour ever. And then I followed it along, ended up losing the blood trail. I was like, no, no. And then I was like, well, if there's no blood, I'm just going to follow the path that I would go if I was a moose, you know, like the least resistance through the woods.

So I followed kind of along the shore there and sure enough, I saw him up there. I was like, oh, you know, I was so excited lay down, but he hadn't died yet. And so he just sat there and he would stand up. And I would just like, no, no, no, no. And he would lay back down and I'd like, yes. And then he would stand up. And it was like that for a couple hours that took him. And then finally at one point, I, you know, a lot of people asked, like, why wouldn't you go finish it off?

So when an animal like that gets hit, it had no idea what hit it. You know, just all of a sudden it's like, ah, something got it and it ran off and it lays down and it's actually fairly calm. And it doesn't really know what's going on. And if you can leave it in that state, it'll kind of bleed out and as peaceful as possible.

If you go chase after it, that's when you lose an animal because as soon as it knows it's being hunted, you know, it gets panicked, adrenaline and it can just run and run and run and you'll never find it. So I didn't want it to see me. I knew if I tried to get it with another arrow. There's a chance I could have finished it off, but there's also a not bad chance that it would see me take off or even attack because the moves can be a little dangerous. And so I just chose to wait it out.

And at one point it stood up and fell over and I could tell it had died and walked over. Like you actually touch it and you're just like, whoa, no way. Like that whole burden of weeks of you're going to starve. You're going to starve. And it got rid of that demon. To be honest, it's one of the happiest moments of my life. It's really hard to replicate that joy because it was just so, so really or so directly connected to your needs. It's also simple. It was peak experience for sure.

And were you worried that it would take many more hours and it would take it into the night? Yeah, I was. I mean, until you actually have your hands on it, I was worried the whole time. It's a pretty nerve-wracking period there between when you get it and when you actually recover the animal, get your hands on it. So it took longer than I wanted, but I finally got it. Can you actually speak to the kill shot itself just for people who don't hunt?

Yeah. So it takes the stay calm to it's not free God too much. So like wait, but not wait too long. Yeah, yeah. I mean, another thing about hunting is that for every animal you get, you probably don't get 9 or 10 that just turned the wrong way when you're drawn back or went way behind a tree or you never had a clean shot or whatever it is. And so every time you can see a moment coming, you know, your heart really starts beating and you have to like breathe through it.

I can almost, you know, you feel almost feel the nervousness of it. And then you just try to stay calm, you know, like whatever you do, just try to stay calm wait for it to come up, draw back, you've practiced shooting a lot. So you have like kind of a technique, I'm going to go back, touch my face, draw my elbow tight, and then the arrow is going to let loose. So muscle memory, muscle memory. It's kind of muscle memory.

You have a little trigger like draw that elbow tight and then, and then it happens and then you just watch the arrow and see where it goes now with the animal, you know, you try to do it ethically. That is like make as good of a shot as you can, make sure it is either hit in the heart or both lungs. And when that happens, it's a pretty quick death, which is in death is a part of life. But honestly, for a wild animal, that's probably the best way to go they could they could have.

Now when a manimals kind of walking towards you, if it's walking towards you, but not directly towards you, that's what you call quartering towards you. You can picture it's actually pretty difficult to hit both lungs because the shoulder blade and all that bone is in the way. So you want to, so you have to make a perfect shot to get them both. And to be honest, when I took my shot, I was a couple inches, a few inches right.

And so it went, went through the first lung and then it sunk the arrow all the way into the moose. And, but it didn't, it allowed that second lung to stay breathing, which, which meant the moose state alive longer. What's your relationship with the animal in this situation like that? You said death is a part of it.

That's an interesting thought because no matter what your relationship to, however you choose to go through life, whether you know, whatever you eat, whatever you do, death is a part of life. You know, like every animal that's out there is living off of a dead, even plants, you know, it's all, it's all, we're all part of this ecosystem.

I think it's really easy in a, particularly in an urban environment, but anywhere to think that we're separate from the ecosystem, but we are very much a part of it, whether it be, you know, farming requires, you know, all this habitat to be turned into growing soybeans and, that it is, and when you get the plows and the combines, you know, you're losing all kinds of different animals and all kind of potential habitat. So it's not cost-free.

And so when you realize that, then you want to produce the food and the things you need in an ethical manner, so I, so for me hunting plays a really major role in that. Like, I literally know how many animals a year it takes to feed my family and myself. I actually know exactly. And it's like, and I know what the cost of that is. And I'm aware of it because I'm out in the woods and I see these like beautiful elk and moose.

And I really love the species, love the animals, but there is a fact that one of those individuals, you know, is going to have to feed me. And I, and particularly, like on a loan, it was very heightened that experience. So I shot that one animal and I was so, so thankful, you know, that I wanted to give that big guy a hug. And like, hey, sorry, it was you, but had to be something. Yeah, that's that picture. You just almost hugging it. Right, right. Totally.

And you, you can also think about it, the calories, the protein, the fat, all of that, that comes from that that will feed you. Right. You're so grateful for it. Like, the gratitude is like, you know, definitely there. What about the bow and arrow perspective? Well, when you hunt with a bow, you just get so much more up close to the animals. You know, you can't just get it from 600 yards away. You actually have to sneak in within 30 or so yards.

And when you do that, the experiences you have are just, they're way more dragged out. So, you know, your heart's beating longer. You have to control your nerves longer, more often than not. It doesn't go your way. And the thing gets away. And, you know, you've been hiking around in the woods for a week. And then your opportunity arises and floats away. You have to know.

But at the same time, that's the only time when you like really have those interactions with the animals where you got this bugling bowl, you know, like tearing at the trees right in front of you and other cow elk and animals running around. You know, you get you get you get you end up having really, I don't know, in their intimate experiences with the animal just because because you're in it. You're kind of in its world. You're playing its game. It has its senses to defend itself.

And you have your wit to try to get over those. And it really becomes, you know, it's not easy. It becomes kind of that chess game. And those prey animals are always tuned in. It's, you know, the slightest stick there looking for wolves or whatever it is. So, there's something really pure and fun about it. You know, I will say there is a aspect that is fun. There's no denying it. It's like how we're, you know, people have been hunting forever. And I think it speaks to that part of us somehow.

But, and I think a bow hunting is probably the most pure form of it and that you get those experiences more often than with a rifle. So I don't know, I enjoy it a lot. And the way they do regulations and such, kind of the best times to hunt are usually allowed for bow because they're trying to, you know, keep it fair for the animal and such. So the distance, the close distance makes you more in touch with the sort of the natural way of the predator and prey. You just want one. Yeah, yeah.

You're one of the predators where you have to be clever, you have to be quiet, you have to be calm, you have to, all of that. Yep. And the full challenge and the luck involved in the same thing as the predators do. Exactly. How many times do they snap a stick and watch them run off? Like darn, my stock was failed. Or, you know, so, yeah, you're just, you're in that ecosystem. How'd you learn to shoot the bow? Yeah, I didn't grow up hunting.

I grew up in a area that a lot of people hunted, but my dad wasn't really into it and so I never got into it until I lived in Russia with the natives. It was just such a part of everything we did and a part of our life that when I came back, I got a bow and I started doing archery in Virginia. They had, it was a pretty easy way to hunt because the deer were overpopulated and you could get these urban archery permits.

So you'd go out and, you know, every couple days you'd have an opportunity to shoot a deer that they needed population control. And so there were a lot of them and it gave you a lot of opportunities to learn quickly. So that's what got me into it and then I found I really enjoyed it. Do you practice with the target also or just practice out? Oh no, I would definitely practice with the target a lot.

And again, you kind of have an obligation to do your best because you don't want to be flinging arrows into like the leg of an animal. And it's a cool way to honestly to provide quality meat for the family. It's all raised naturally and wild and free until you bring it home into the freezer. So if we start back, what are the 10 items you brought and what's actually the challenge of figuring out which items to bring?

Yeah, the challenge is that you don't exactly know what your site's opportunities are going to be. I don't really know. Should I bring a fishing net? Am I going to even have a spot to net or not? And things like that. I brought a axe, a saw, a leatherman wave, a Pharaoh rod. This is like a Nick Sparks start a fire, a frying pan, a sleeping bag, a fishing kit, a bow and arrow, trapping wire and paracord. And so those are my 10 items. Is there any regrets? No major regrets. I took the saw kind of.

I thought it would be more of a calorie saver than I didn't really need it. In hindsight, if I was doing season 7 instead of 6 and got to watch, I would have taken the net because I just planned to make a net, but I would have rather just had two nets brought one and left the saw because in the northern woods in particular, every tree is the size of your arm or leg. You can chop it down with an axe and a couple of swings. Yeah, you don't really need the saw.

And so it was handy at times and useful, but I think it was my, if I had to do nine items I would have been just fine without the saw. So two nets would just expand your food gathering potential. And then in terms of trapping, you were okay with just the little you brought. The snare wire was good. I used all my snare wire.

I ran trap line, which is just a series of traps through the woods and brush every place you see sign, put a snare, put a little mark on the tree so I knew where that snare was and just make these pads through the woods. And I put out, I don't know how many, 150, 200 snare. So every day I'd get a rabbit or two out of them. And then I had a lot of rabbits, but once I got the moose, I actually took all those snares down because I didn't want to catch anything needlessly.

And you come to find out you can't live off of rabbits. Man cannot live off a rabbit. That turns out. So you set up a huge number of traps. You were also fishing and then always in the lookout for moose. Yeah. Like what's in terms of survival, if you were to do it over again, over and over and over and over, like how do you maximize your chance of having enough food to survive for a long time?

You have to be really adaptable because everything's going to, it's always going to look different in your situation, your location. I actually had a, what I thought was a pretty good plan going into alone. Then it just, the, you know, the location didn't allow for what I thought it would. What was the plan? Well, I thought I would just catch a bunch of fish because I'm on a really good fishing lake.

I'd catch a whole bunch of fish and let them rot for a little while and then just drag them all through the woods into a big pile and then hunt a bear on that big fish pile. Yeah. That was the plan and I thought, but when I got there, for one out of hard time catching fish off the bat, you know, they didn't come like I was hoping.

And then for two, it had burned prior so there were no berries and so there were very few berries which meant there weren't grouse, there weren't bear, you know, they had all gone to other places where the berries were. And so what I had grown accustomed to kind of relying on in Siberia wasn't there there.

You know, so in, in Russia, which was a similar environment, it was just grouse and berries and fish and grouse and berries and fish and then occasionally, you know, you get a move or something, but I had to reassess which was part of me being grumpy at the start. Like, that's my sucks. And then, and then once I reassess and, and, you know, right away I saw that there were moves, tracks and such. So I just started the plan for that.

I moved my camp into a area that was as removed as I could be from where all the action is where the tracks were so that I wasn't disturbing animal patterns. I made sure that when the predominant wind was blown out my scent to sea and, or you know, to the water. And then really, to be honest, if you want to actually survive somewhere, it's different than alone, but you do have to be active.

And it has to, you're going to have to, you're not going to live, you're not going to be sustainable by, you know, starving it out. You have to be, unlock the key that is sustainability. And I think there's a lot of areas that still have that potential, but you forgot what is it's usually going to be a combination of fishing, you know, trapping and then hunting. And then once you have some, the fishing and trapping, it'll get you until you have some success hunting.

And then that'll buy you three or four months of time to continue and, you know, to keep hunting again. And you just have to roll off of that. But every, you know, depends on where you are. What opportunities are there. So, okay. So that's the process fishing and trapping until you're successful hunting. And then the successful hunt buys you some more time. Right. Just go year-round. And then you just go year-round like that. And that's how people did it forever.

The pressure was, I noticed it, you know, with that, you got that moose and then you're happy for a week or so. And then you start to be like, it is finite. I'm going to have to do this again. And you'd imagine if you had a family that was going to starve if you weren't successful, you know, this next time. And there's just always that pressure, you know, it made me really appreciate that. I'm not going to let people out of deal with.

In terms of being active, like, so you have to do stuff all day. So you get up and planning. Like, what am I going to do? In the midst of the frustration, you have to figure out like what's the strategy. Like, how do you put up all the traps? Is that a decision like, you know, most people like sit at their desk and have like a calendar with them? Are you like figuring out like one thing about wilderness life in general is it's remarkably less scheduled than anything we deal with.

Schedules are fairly unique to the modern context. You'd wake up and you just sort of, you have us, you know, confluence of things you want to do, things you need to do, things you should do. And you just kind of tackle them as you fit as it flows in. You know, so, and that's actually one of the things that you, people really, that I really appreciate about that lifestyle is it really is. You kind of in that flow. And so I'd wake up and be like, yeah, maybe I'll go fishing.

And then I'll wander over and fish. And then I'd be like, I'm going to go check the trap line, add every day if I add five or ten snares, you know, you're constantly adding to your productive potential. And then, but it nothing's really scheduled. You're just kind of flying by the seat of your pants. But then there's a lot of instinct that's already loaded in. Oh, there's so much. Like you already just like wisdom from all the times you had to do it before.

You just actually operating a lot on instinct. Like you said, we're to find to place the shelter. Like how hard is that calculation? Where to place the shelter? If you're like dropped off and this is all new to you, of course, all those things are going to be things you have to really think through and plan. When you're thinking about a shelter, you have to think of, oh, here's a nice flat spot. You know, that's a good place. But also is there firewood nearby?

And if I'm going to be here for months, is there enough firewood that I'm not going to be walking a half a mile to get a dry piece of wood? Is the water nearby? Is there, is it somewhat open but also protected from the elements? Because sometimes you get a beautiful spot. It is great on a calm day and then the wind comes like, and so there's all these factors, you know, even down to taking in what game is doing in the area also and how that relates to where your shelter is.

You said you have to consider where the action will be and you want to be away from the action but close enough to it. To see it. Yeah, you want to be. Yeah, right. Uh, ideally, you know, it depends, you're always going to make give and takes. And one thing was shelters and locations selection and stuff. It's another thing you just have to trust your ability to adapt in the situation because you, everybody has a particular, you know, you got an idea of a shelter you're going to build.

But then you get there and maybe there's a good cliff that you can incorporate, you know, or, you know, or, and then you just become creative. And that's a really fun process to, to just allow your creativity to try to flourish in that. What kind of shelters are there? There's all kinds of philosophies on shelters, which is fun. Uh, people, it's fun to see people try different things.

Mine was fairly basic for the simple reason that I, I'd lived, you know, winters through winters in Siberia and a tee piece. I knew I didn't need like anything to robust as long as I had calories, I'd be warm and I wasn't particularly worried about the cold. Um, but you'll see, so I kept my shelter really pretty simple with the idea that I built a simple a frame type shelter and then most of my energy is going to fully focused on getting calories.

And then of course, there's always going to be downtime. And in that downtime, I can tweak, modify, improve my shelter. And that'll just be a constant process that by the time you're there a few months, you'll have all the kinks worked out. It'll be really nice little setup. You don't have to start with that necessarily because you got other needs.

You got to focus on that said, you'll see a lot of people on alone that really focus on you building the log cabin because they want to be secure or incorporating, you know, whatever the earth has around, whether it be rocks or whether it be digging a hole, you know, and we've seen some really cool shelters and I, I, I'm not going to knock it.

Everybody has all his different strokes for different folks, but I, in my particular idea was to keep it fairly simple, improve it with time, but spend most of my energy. You know, with a shelter, you really need to think about it. It can't be smoky because that'll be miserable, but it is nice to have a fire inside. So you need to have a fire inside that's not going to be dangerous and smoke free.

And then also airtight because you're never going to have a warm shelter out there because you don't have seals and things like that. But as long as the air is not moving through it, you can have a warm enough shelter with a fire with a fire and dry or socks and stuff. I didn't get the smoke out of the shelter. If you have good clay and mud and rock, you can build yourself a fireplace, which is surprisingly not that hard. You know, you just, oh, really? Yeah, it's fun thing to do. It works well.

You know, take a little hole, start stacking rocks around it, make sure it's opening, and it actually works. You know, so that's not as hard as you might think. For me, where I was, I, I kind of came up with it as I was there with my A frame. You know, I had built an A frame shelter like that before. And so when I built it and then I had put a bunch of tin cans in the ground so that air would get the fire. So it was fed by air, which helps create a draft.

But I realized in an A frame, it really doesn't, the smoke doesn't go out very well. Even if you leave a hole at the top, it like collects and billows back down. So then I cut some of my tarp and made this and cut a hole in the, in the A frame. And then I made like a hood vent that I could pull down and catch the smoke with. And so while the fire was going, it would just bill about the hood vent.

And then when it was done burning and it was just hot coals, I could close it, seal it up and keep the heat in. So it actually worked pretty well. So start with something that kind of works and then keep improving. Yeah, exactly. That was one, I mean, the, the, the log cabin. It feels like that's the thing that takes a huge amount of work before work.

The difference between a log cabin and a warm log cabin is like an immense amount of work and all the chinking and all the door sealing and, you know, the chimney has to be anyway. So otherwise, it's just going to be the same ambient temperature as outside. So I don't think it loans the proper context for a log cabin. I think like a log cabin is great in as a hunting cabin.

As you know, if you're going to have something for years, but in a three, six month scenario, I don't know that it's worth the calorie expenditure. And it is a lot of calories. But it's an interesting sort of metaphor of just like get something that works. You see a lot, a lot of this with companies, like successful companies, they, you know, get a prototype, get a system that's working and improve fast in response to the conditions to the environment. Yeah, it's constantly changing.

Yeah. And you end up being a lot better if you're able to learn how to respond quickly versus like having a big plan that takes a huge amount of time to accomplish. Right. And forcing that through the pipeline, whether or not it fits. Yeah. Can you just speak to like the place you were, the, the Canadian Arctic? It looked cold. Yeah, we were right near the Arctic Circle. I don't know. It was like 60 kilometers south of the Arctic Circle. So it was, it's a really cool area. Really remote.

Thousands of little lakes, you know, when you fly over, you're just like, man, it's incredible. There must be so many of those lakes that people haven't been to, you know, it really wasn't the area, really remote. And for the show's purpose, I think it was perfect because it did have enough game and enough different avenues forward that I think it really did reward activity. So I think, but it's a special place.

It was a, a DNA, there was a tribe that lived there, the DNA people, which interestingly enough, here's a side note. When I was in Siberia, I floated down this river called the Pudgamonayatunguska and you get to this village called Sula Mai and there's these ket people there called and there's only 600 of them left. But it isn't a middle of Siberia, not unlike the Pacific coast, but their language is related to the DNA people.

And so somehow, you know, that connection was there thousands of years ago. Super interesting. Yes, a language travels somehow. Right. And the remnants stayed back there. It's very interesting to think through history. Yeah, within language is contains a history of people's and it's interesting how that evolves over time. And how wars tell the story. Like language tells the story of conflict and conflict, shaped language and we get the result of that. Right. So fascinating.

And the barriers that language creates is also the thing that leads to wars in misunderstanding and all this. It's a fascinating tension. But it got cold there. Right. It's got real cold. Yeah. I mean, I don't know what I didn't have at the moment. I imagine it probably got to negative 30 at the most. You know, I get mine. It would have definitely gotten colder. Had we stayed longer. But yeah, to be honest, I was, I never felt cold out there. I was pretty, I had that one pretty dialed in.

And once you have calories, you can stay warm. Just the active, you can, you know, you got to dress warm. You know, you don't, never let, there's a good one if you're in the cold, never let yourself get too cold. Because what happens is you'll stop feeling what's cold and then frost by and then issues. And then it's really hard to warm back up. So every, it was so annoying. I'd be out going to ice fish or something. And then I would just notice that my feet are cold.

And you're just like, oh dang it. I just turn around, go back, start a fire. Try my boots out. Make sure my feet are warm and then go again, I wouldn't ignore that. You know, you want to be able to feel the cold. Yeah, you want to make sure you're still feeling things and that you're not tough and through it because you can't really tough through the cold. It'll just get you. So what's your relationship with the cold? Psychologically, physically. Oh, interesting.

Well, I actually, there's a part of it that really makes you feel alive. You know, I imagine, you know, sometimes in Austin here, you come and go out and it's hot and sweaty. You get that kind of saps you. There's something about that. Brist cold that hits your face that you're like, ooh, wakes you up, makes you feel really alive, engaged. You know, it feels like the margins of air are smaller. So you're alert and engaged a little more.

There is something that's a little bit life giving just because you feel on an edge. You're walking around this edge. But you have to be alert because even some of the natives I lived with, the lady had face issues because she let her head get cold. When they're on a snowmobile, hat was up too high. You know, that little mistake and then it just freezes this part of your forehead and then the nerves go and then you got issues when just hat wasn't high enough.

So you kind of got to be dialed in on stuff. Well, there's a psychological element to just, I mean, some pleasant. If I were to think of what kind of unpleasant would I choose, you know, fasting for long periods of time, it was going without food in a warm environment is way more pleasant. Then being fat in a cold. Exactly. Like, if you were to choose to watch the opposite. Oh, yeah. Okay. There you go.

I wonder if that's, I wonder if you're born with that or if that's developed maybe your time in Siberia, like you, or do you gravitate towards that? I wonder what that is because I really don't like survival on the cold. I think a little bit of it is learned. He like almost learned not, you learn not to fear it. He learned to kind of appreciate it. And a big part of that is, I mean, to be honest, it's like dressing warm being in good.

It's not that, you know, there's no secrets to that as you just can't beat the cold. So you just need to dress warm. The native, you know, all that fur, all that stuff. And then all of a sudden, you have your little refuge, have a nice warm fire gun and your TP, you know, and then you, I bet you you could learn to appreciate it. Yeah, I think some of it is just opening yourself up to the possibility that there's something enjoyable about it.

Like here, I run in Austin all the time in like a hundred degree heat. And I go out there with a smile on my face and like, and learn to enjoy it. Oh, yeah. And so you just like, I look kind of like you doing the cold. And just, I don't think I enjoy the heat, but you just allow yourself to enjoy it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I do feel that way. I mean, I don't mind the heat that much, but I think you could get to the place where you appreciated the cold.

It's probably just a lack of kind of scary when you're having done it. And you don't know what you're doing and you go out and you feel cold. It's like not fun. But I bet you could, you'd enjoy it. You left to come out sometimes. 100%. I mean, you're right. It does make you feel alive. That it like maybe that's a thing that I struggle with is the time pass a slower because it does make you feel a lot. You get to feel time.

But then the flip side of that is you get to feel every moment and you get to feel alive in every moment. Right. So that it's both scary when you're an experienced and beautiful when you are experienced. Were there times when you got hungry? I got shot at Rabbit on day one and I snared a couple of rabbits on day two. And then more and more as the time went. So I actually did pretty well on the food front.

The other thing is when you have all those berries around and stuff, you do have an ability to like fill your stomach. And so you don't really notice if you're getting thinner or if you're losing weight. So I can say on the loan, I was not that hungry. I've definitely been really hungry in Russia. There were times when I lost a lot of weight. I mean, I lost a lot more weight in Siberia than I did on the loan. Oh wow. Okay. We'll have to talk about it. So you caught a fish. You caught a couple.

I think I caught like 13 or so. They didn't show a lot of them. You caught 13 fish. 13 to those big fish. Oh, I caught a couple that were small. This is like a meme at this point. Yeah, it was a perfect example of a person who was thriving. I was thought, you know, this is in the in hindsight. Again, when I was out there, I never let myself think you might weigh. And I just was going to be out there as long as I couldn't try to remain. I just missed it. No, but then, yeah.

But I remember a thought that I was like, I wonder if they're going to be able to make this look hard. You know, I didn't have that thought at one point. And because it went pretty well. And I was definitely, it was hard psychologically because I didn't know when it was going to end. Like, I thought this could go, you know, like I said, six months, could go eight months a year. And then you start to caught, you know, that two and a three year old and you start to weigh in the, is it worth it?

If it goes a year, and it's not worth it. If it goes eight months and I still lose. So I feel like I had this pressure and it was psychologically difficult for that reason. Physically, I wasn't too bad. This is off my court talking about Gordon Ryan competing in Injiu Jitsu. And maybe that's the challenge.

He also has to face is to make things look hard because he's so dominant in the sport that in terms of the drama and the entertainment of the sport and in this case of survival, it has to be difficult. You know, I'll add that for sure though, that it's the woods. It's nature you never know how it's going to go. You know what I mean? It's like every time you're out there, it's a different scenario. So whenever, how is it going to be? So you won after 77 days.

How long do you think you could have lasted? When I left, I weighed what I do right now. So I just weighed my normal weight. I had a couple hundred pounds of mousse. I had at least a hundred pounds of fish. I had a pile of rabbits, a Wolverine. I had all this stuff. And I hadn't gotten cold yet. I just thought, but in my head, I thought if I get today 130 or 40, even if someone else has big game, I had a pretty good idea. They might quit because it would be long, cold, dark days.

And how miserable is that? It's so boring, it's freezing. And so I thought the only time I thought I could think about winning is when I got today 130 or 40. And I definitely had that with what I had. Now maybe I would have gotten more. I had caught that big 20-something pound pike on the last day I was there. I had to catch some more of those. And I don't know how many calories I had stored, but I had a lot. And so how long would that last in me assuming I didn't get anything else?

It definitely would have reached my goal of 130 or 40 days. And then after that, I thought we were just going to push into the, you know, then it's just to see how much, who has what reserves and will go as far as we can. And that would get me through January into February. And I just thought, man, that's going to be miserable for people. And you're like, I can last through. And I knew I would do it. What aspect of that is miserable?

The hardest thing for me would have been the boredom because it's hard to stay busy when it's all dark out when the ice is three, four foot thick. You can't fish. I just think I think it would have just been really boring. You would have had to have been a real zen master to push through it. But because I had experiences at some degree, I knew I could. And then I think things that might, you know, you start thinking about family and this and that in those situations.

And I just knew that those, because I had gone to all these trips to Russia for a year at a time, the time context was a little broader for me than I think for some people. Because I knew I could be gone for a year and come back, catch up with my loved ones, you know, bring what I got back, whether that be psychological, whatever it is, and we'd all enrich each other. And once it's in hindsight, that year would have been like that talking about it.

So I had that perspective and it, so I knew I wasn't going to tap for any other reason other than running out of food someday. So that was my stressor. And then. So you're able to, given the boredom, given the loneliness, kind of zoom out and accept the passing of time, just let it pass. You know, for me, I'm an app fairly, I like to be active. And so I would try to think of creative ways to keep my brain busy, you know, we saw that like dumb rabbit first skit.

But then I did a whole bunch of like elaborate Normandy reinvasion, you know, and I ate different admins and stuff. Like I was like, there was a, every day I would think I said, I got to think of something to make me laugh, you know, and then do some stupid skit. And then that would be, that would fill a couple of hours of my time. And then I'd spend an hour or two, a couple of few hours fishing and then you spend a few hours, you know, whatever you're doing. Would you do that without a camera?

Yeah. Oh, no, the skits, funny question, that's a good question. I don't know, I actually don't know. That, I will say that was one of the advantages of being on the show versus in Siberia. So no, because I didn't in Siberia just do skits by myself. But I didn't film it and so it was, it was quite nice to have this camera that made you feel like you weren't quite as alone as if you were just in the woods by yourself. And I think it, for me, I was able to, it was a pain.

It was part of the cause of me missing that mousse. You know, there's issues with it, but I just chose to look at it as like, this is an awesome opportunity to share with people, a part of me that most people don't get to see, you know, because, no, so that was, that just chose to look at it that way. And it wasn't advantage because you could do stuff like that.

I think there's actual power to doing this kind of documenting, like talking to a camera or an audio recorder, like that, that's an actual tool and survival. I had a little bit of an experience of being out alone in the jungle and just being able to talk to a thing is much less lonely. It is. It really is. It's a, it can be a powerful tool just sharing your experience. I had the, I definitely had the thought.

So going back to your earlier comment, but I definitely had the thought, if I knew I was the last person on earth, I wouldn't even bother. Like I wouldn't do that.

I got what just, probably not, I just give up, I'm sure, because even if I had a bunch of food in this and that, but because I knew you know, you're a part, you're sharing, it gives you a lot of strength to go through and, and having that camera just makes it that much more vivid, because you know, you're not just going to be sharing a vague memory, but an actual experience. I think if you're the last person on earth, you would actually convince yourself, first of all, you don't know for sure.

There's always going to be. I hope that is the last. Hope, hope really that does that. It's really, you really don't know. You really, you really hope to find. I mean, if you're, if like an apocalypse happens, I think your whole life will become about finding the other person. It would be, and there's a, I mean, I'm against saying if you knew you were for some reason, you were the last. I wonder if you would. I wonder if that was the thought.

I had, if I knew I was the last person, like, because out here I was having a good time, having fun, fishing, plenty of food, but like if I knew I was the last person on earth, I don't know that I would even bother. But now if that was for real, would I bother? That's the question. No, no, I think if you knew, if somebody, some, some way you knew for sure, I think your mind will start doubting it. That whoever told you you're the last person, whatever was lying.

The power of hope might be more, more powerful than I accounted for in that situation. Also, you might, if you are indeed the last person, you might want to be documenting it for once you die, you know, an alien species comes about, because whatever happened on earth is a pretty special thing. And if you're the last one, you might be like the last person to tell the story of what happened. And so that's going to be a way to convince yourself that this is important.

So the days will go by like this, but it would be lonely. Boy would that be lonely. It would be, well, it'd be delving into the dredges, the depths of it. Yeah, I mean, there is going to be existential dread. But also, I don't know, I think hope will burn bright. You'll be looking for the humans.

That's, you know, one of the reasons I was looking forward to talking to you, I think that pressure value is you're always, not out of naivety, but you're always choose to look at the positive, you know what I mean? And I think that's a powerful mindset to have. I appreciate it. Yeah. That'd be a pretty cool survival situation though, if you're the last person on earth. You could share it. You could share it. Yeah. Like I said, many people consider you the most successful competitor on alone.

The other successful one is Roland Wilker, rock house guy. Oh, yeah. This is just a fun ridiculous question, but head to head. Who do you think survived longer? Um, if you want to get me the competitive side of it, I would just say, well, I'm pretty dang sure I had more pounds of food. But, and I didn't have the advantage of knowing when it would end, which I think would have been a great psychological. Oh, yeah. It would have made it really easy.

Once I got the moose, I could have shot the moose and just not stressed. I would have been like a, and so that was a big difference between the seasons that I felt like, I mean, I felt like the psychology of season seven, they kind of messed up by doing a hundred day cap because for my own experience, that was the hardest part. But Roland's a beast. So for people who don't know, they put a hundred day cap on. So it's whoever can survive a hundred days for that season.

It's interesting to hear that for you, the uncertainty, not knowing when it ends. That was for sure. It's the hardest. That's true. It's like you wake up every day. I didn't know how to ration my food. I didn't know if I was going to lose after six months and then it was all going to be for not. I didn't know if it, you know, I just, there's so many unknowns.

You don't know, like I said, if I shot a moose and it was a hundred days done, if I shot a moose and you don't know, it's like crap, I could still lose to somebody else. But it's going to be way in the future. Anyway, that for me was definitely the hard part. When you found out that you won and your wife was there, it was funny because you're really happy. That was a great sort of moment of you reuniting. But also there's a state of shock of like, you look like you were ready to go much longer.

That was the most genuine shock I could have. I hadn't even like entertained the thought yet. I didn't even think it was. You'd hear the helicopters and I just assumed there was other people out there. I just hadn't, I thought, you know, and for one, the previous person that had gone along has said gone 89 days. So I just knew whoever else was out here with me, somebody's got that in their crosshairs, they're going to get to 90 and they're not going to quit at 90. They're going to go to 100.

You know, I just figured we can't start thinking about the end until the couple months from when it ended. So it was just shocked and they tricked me pretty good. They know how to make you think you're not, you know, that they're not. So they want you to do the surprise. Yeah, they wanted to be a surprise. You really weren't. I mean, you have to do that, I guess, for survival. Don't be counting the days.

No, I think that would be, then you know, you see that on some of the people do that for myself. That would be bad psychology because then you're just always disappointing yourself. You have to be resettled with the fact that this is going to go a long time and suck. Once you come to peace with that, maybe you'll be pleasantly surprised, but you're not going to be constantly disappointed. So what was your diet like? Like what was your eating habits like during that time?

Like how many meals a day? This is a quick. Oh, no. I was trying to eat the thing. I was like not trying to, the more the moose is hanging out there, the more the critters, every critter in the forest is trying to pack at it or mice trying to eat it and stuff. So one of the ways you can protect the foods by eating it.

So I was having three good meals a day and then I'd like, cook up some meat and go to sleep and then wake up in the middle of the night because they're long nights and like have some meat at night, eat a bunch at night and then so I'd usually have a fish stew for lunch and then moose for breakfast and dinner and then have some for a nighttime snack because the nights were long so you'd be in bed like 14 hours and wake up and eat and think around and go back to sleep.

Is it okay that I was pretty low carb situation? Yeah, I actually felt really good. I tried to, I think I would have felt better if I would have had a higher percentage of fat because you know, it's still more protein than if you're on a keto diet, you want a lot of fat. And so I did try to mix in like nature's carbs, different like reindeer, liken and things like that but honestly I felt pretty good on that diet. I will say.

How did you, what's the secret to like protecting food in what are the different ways to do that? Yeah, it's a lot of times you know in a typical situation in the woods hunting you'll raise it up in a tree in the bag, put in like a game bag so the birds can't pack at it and hang it in a tree so that it cools. You got to make sure first to cool it because it'll spoil.

So you cool it by whatever means necessary hanging it in a cool place, letting the air blow around it and then you'll notice that every forest free loader in the woods is going to come and steal your food. And it was just fun. I mean it was, it was crazy to watch. You know, it's like all the Jay, all the camp Jay's pecking at it or everything I did you know was, was there was something that could get to it.

They've put on the ground, the mice get on and they poop on it and they kind of mess it up. And I ultimately kind of just donned on me shoot I'm going to have to build one of those a Venky like food caches. So I did and I put it up there and I thought I kind of solved my problem to be honest the Venky then so they would have taken a page out of like they would have mixed to me and roll and solution.

They've built a tall stilt shelter and then put a box on the top that's enclosed and then the bears can't get to it. The mice can't poop on it. The birds, the Wolverine, you know it's safe. And I never finished it. In hindsight I don't actually know why. I think I was just the way at time like I didn't think something was going to be up there then it did and then I you know you're counting calories and stuff I should have in hindsight just boxed it in right away.

To get ready for the long, for the long haul. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Is a rabbit starvation a real thing? Yeah, so you can't just live off protein and rabbits are almost just protein. I kill a rabbit, eat the innards and the brain and the eyes and then everything else is just protein and so it takes more calories to you know process that protein than you're getting from it without the fat.

So you actually lose, I lost, I had you know a lot of rabbits in the first 20 days I had 28 rabbits or something but I was losing weight at exactly the same speed as everybody else that didn't have anything. So that's interesting. That's right. Yeah, I'd never tried that before so I was wondering if I'm catching ton of rabbits. I wonder if I can last what six months on rabbits but no, you just starve as fast as everybody else inside to kind of learn that on the fly and adjust.

I wonder what to make of that. So you need fat to survive like fundamental. Yeah, that's the yeah. Anyone noticed when the Wolverine came or when animals came they would eat the skin off of the fish, they would eat the eyes you know they'd steal the moose fat. I said leave all the meat. Yeah, like behind the eyes is a bunch of fat. So yeah, you can kind of observe nature and see what they're eating and know where the gold is.

What do you like eating when you're like, when you can eat whatever you want? What do you feel best eating? What do I feel best? I just try to eat clean I think. I'm not like super strict or anything but I think when I eat less carbs I feel better, meat and vegetables. I like, we eat a lot of, you know, I eat a lot of meat. So basically everything you ate on low plus some veggies. I'm throwing some buckwheat I like buckwheat. That's good. Let's step to the early days of Jordan.

So your Instagram handles hobo, Jordan. So early on in your life you hoboed around the US on freight trains. What's the story behind that? My brother when he was 17 or so he just decided to go hitchhiking and hitchhike down to Reno from Idaho everywhere and ended up loving traveling but hated being dependent on other people. So he ended up jumping on a freight train and just did it.

He honestly, he pretty much got on a train and traveled to country for the next eight years on trains, lived in the streets and everywhere. But you know, he was sober so it gave you a different experience than a lot. But at one point when I was, I guess yeah, 18, he invited me to come along with him. He'd probably been doing it five or so four or five years and or more. And I said, sure, so I quit my job and went out with him. Hobo, Jordan is a bit of an overstepped.

I feel self-conscious about that because I rode trains across the country up and down the coast back. You know, spent the better part of the year and round riding trains and all the staying in places related to that. But all the people, you know, the real Hobos, those guys are out there doing it for years on end. But it was such a, for me, what it felt like was a, it felt like a bit of a right of passage, experience, which is kind of missing, I think, in modern life.

So I did this thing that was a huge unknown. I had been kind of with me, my brother, for most of it, we traveled around, got pushed my boundaries in every which way, you know, froze at night and did all the stuff. And then, and then at the end, I actually wanted to go back and go back home. And so I went on my own and went from Minneapolis back, you know, at the Spokane on my own, which was a first, my first stint of time by myself for like a week, which was interesting.

Along with your own thoughts? With your own thoughts is my first time in my life, haven't been like that, you know, and so it was, it was powerful at the time. You know what it did, too, is it gave me a whole different view of life because I had gotten a job when I was 13 and then 14, 15, 16, 17. And then I was just in the normal run of things kind of. And then that just threw a whole different path into my life.

And then I realized some of the things while I was traveling that I wouldn't experience again until I was living with natives and such. And that was, you know, you wake up, you don't have a schedule. You literally just have needs and you just somehow have to meet your needs. And so it's, it's a, there's a really sense of freedom you get that is hard to replicate elsewhere. And so that was eye opening to me. And I think once I did that, I went back.

So I went back to my old job at the salad dressing plant. And there's this old cross-eyed guy and he was, oh, homeowner, I was back. And that's kind of where I got it. But that freedom always was very important to me, I think, from that time on. Would you learn about the United States about the people along the way? Because I took a road trip across the US also.

And there was a, there's a romantic element there too of like, of the freedom of the, well, maybe for me, not knowing what the home going to do with my life, but also excited by all the possibilities and, and then you meet a lot of different people and all of different kinds of stories. And also like a lot of people that support you for traveling. Because there's a lot of people kind of dream of experiencing that freedom, at least that people I've met.

And they usually don't, they usually don't go outside of their little town. They have a thing and they, they have a family usually and they, they don't explore. They don't take the leap. And you could do that when you're young. I guess you could do that any moment. Just say, fuck it and leap into the, the abyss of being on the road. But anyway, what would you learn about this country, about the people in this country?

You're in an interesting context when you're on trains because the trains always end up in the crappiest part of town, you know, and they are, and you're always outside, interacting. Oh, the interesting things. And we know, every once in a while, I'll have to hitchhike to get from one place to another. One interesting thing is, you notice you always get picked up by the, you know, the poor people or so, you know, they're the people that empathize with you. Stop, pick you up.

You go to whatever ghetto, I mean, you end up in and people are really, oh, what are you guys doing? Real friendly and, and, and relatable. It kind of, you know, broadened your, my horizons for sure from being just that I had a hoke kid and, and meeting all these different people and, and just seeing the goodness in people and this and that. It's also very, you know, a lot of drugs and a lot of people with mental issues that you're friends with, dealing with, you know, all that kind of stuff.

So any memorable characters? Well, there's a few for sure. I mean, a lot of them I still know that are still around, but that, uh, Rocco was one guy which traveled that he's become like a brother, but he's, um, he was, he traveled with my, my brother for years because they were the two sober guys kind of, and he, rather than traveling because he was hooked on stuff, did it to escape all that.

And so he was kind of sober and straight edge and he always, like, five, seven Italian guy that was always getting in fights and, like, yeah, his own sense of, uh, ethics that I think is really interesting because he's super honest, but, but he expects it of others. And so it's funny in the modern context.

The thing that pops in my head is when he got a car for the first time, which wasn't that long, you know, his 30s or something, uh, and he registered it, which he was mad about that he had to register. But then the next year they told him he had to register again and he's like, what did he lose my registration? It went down there to the DMV chewed him out that he had to re-register because he already registered. Where's the paperwork?

And, but just kind of used the world from a different lens that I thought, but on everything he's the character. Now he just lives by digging up bottles and finding treasures in them. But he notices the injustices and he notices them in a very interesting, and speaks up. And he's always like, why doesn't everybody else speak up about the car registration?

And then there was like, you know, Devo comes in mind because he was such a unique character as far as just for one, he would have lived to be 120 because the amount of chemicals and everything else he put into his body and still, right, man, you know, one of those guys, you can always get a dime, you know, spare time, spare time, and you have bum change. And I'd see him sometimes and I'd be gone and then go to New York to visit my sister or something.

And I'd be sure enough, there's Devo on the street. What do you know? You go visit him in the hospital because you got bit by 27 hobo spider bites. You know, you're just always rough, but charismatic vital, like the vitality of life was in him, but it was just so permeated with drugs and alcohol too. I wonder what it's like. Because I met people like that. They're like, there's just, yeah, joy permeates the whole way of being. And they're like, they've been through some shit. They've scars.

They've got rough, but they've always got a big smile. There's a guy I met in the jungle in the pico. He lost the leg and he drives a boat and he just always says a big smile, even given that like the hardship he has to get to everything requires a huge amount of work. But he's just big smile and his stories and those eyes. It was something about, yeah, enduring difficulty that makes you able to appreciate life and look at it and smile.

Can you advice far to take a road trip again or if somebody else is thinking of hopping out on a freight train or hitchhiking? It's easier now because they have a map on your phone and you feel like you're going to cheat and know. It's not about the destination because the map is about the destination. But here's like, yeah, right. Give a chance. Where are you going? Yeah. Going anywhere. Exactly. I say do it.

Like go out and do things, especially when you're young, experiences and stuff help create the person you will be in the future, doing things that you think like, I don't want to do that. I'm a little scared of that. I mean, that's what you got to do. You just get out of your comfort zone and you will grow as a person and you'll go through a lot of wild experiences along the way. Say yes to life. Say yes to life. Yeah. I love the boredom of it. Freight train riding is very boring.

And I get wait for hours for a train that never comes and then you'll go to the store and come back and it'll be gone. And you're like, no. And I remember we went to jail. We got out and then I had you in up in jail. Oh, you know, it was things. Trust pass. I got a train. But we were riding a train and my brother woke up and they had a dead outland on his head and he really hit the train and fell on him and we were like woke up and we were laughing. That's got to be some kind of bad old man.

And then we were like looking out of the train and we saw a train worker look and saw us and he went, like, oh, we know that's a bad old man. Anyway, sure enough, the police stopped the train. Somebody had seen us on it and they searched it, got us and threw us in jail. It was not a big deal or jail couple days. And then the, but when we got out, of course they put us, we were in some podung town in Indiana and we didn't know where to catch out of there.

And so we were at some factory and we just, band and factory and we were ready there for like four days. No train that was going slow enough that we could catch. And then we found this big old roll of aluminum foil and now to, I got to apologize to this woman because we were so bored just sitting there.

We built these like hats, you know, like horns coming out every which way and loops and just sitting there and it was at night and some minivan pulled up to this train that was come by and we're like we're hurting. We're like, circle their car, so entertaining yourself with whatever you can. Poor lady was terrified. See, hitchhiking was tough. I didn't like hitchhiking just because you're depending on the other people and it is not, I don't know why you just want to be independent.

But if you do meet really cool people a lot of times, there's really nice people that pick you up and that's cool. But I just personally actually didn't do it a lot. And I wasn't, you know, if you're on the streets for 10 years, you'll end up doing it a lot more because you need to get from point A, but we just tried to avoid it as much as we could because it didn't appeal to us as much. Well, one downside of hitchhiking is people talk a lot. No, and they do. So it's both the pro and the con.

Yeah, yeah. Because sometimes you just want to be sort of alone with your thoughts or there is a kind of lack of freedom in having to listen to a person that's giving you a ride. It's so true. And then you don't know how to react to it. I mean, I was the young remember I got picked up as friend 19 or something and then I was like, Hey, how's it going? How's it been just died?

And then then this all and I got diagnosed with cancer and this was all right, but pretty bitter and all that and understandably so. But you're just like, I have no idea how to respond here. Because you got it. And so then you're young and you had to be nice. And I remember that ride being interesting because I didn't really know how to respond. And she was angry and going through some stuff and dumping it out. She didn't have anyone else to dump it out on.

I was like, wow, I'm going to take the freight train. Next time. So how'd you end up in Siberia? I'll try to keep it a little bit short on the cow. But I bet the long story short was that of brother that's adopted. And when he grew up, he wanted to find his biological mom and just tell her things. And so he did. And when he was he was probably 20 or something, he found his biological mom. Told her things.

Turns out he had a brother that was going to go over to Russia and help build this orphanage. And that brother was about my age. I mean, I remember at that time I read this verse that said, if you're in the darkness and see no light, just continue following me. Basically, I was like, okay, I'm going to take that to the bank even though I don't know if it's true or not. And then the only glimpse of like light I got in all that was when I heard about that orphanage. You go build that orphanage.

And I prayed about it. And I felt and I can't explain like I brought me to tears. I felt so strongly that I should go. And so I was like, well, that's a clear call. I'm just going to do it. Yes, I just bought a ticket. Got a visa for a year. And then I went and helped build an orphanage. And we got that built. And I wanted, but he was an American and I wanted to live with Russians to learn a language.

And so he sent me to a neighboring village to live with a couple Russian families that needed a hand. Somebody to watch their kids and cut their hay and milk the cow and all that. So I found myself in that little Russian village just getting to know these two guys and their families. It was pretty fascinating. And of course, I didn't know the language yet. And they were two awesome dudes. Both of them had been in prison and met each other in prison.

And like we're really close because they had found God in prison together and stayed to get you got out and stayed connected. And so I bounced back between those two families and they used to always tell me about their third buddy that had been in prison with who was a native fur trapper now in the north. And so they thought you got to go meet our buddy up north. And one day that guy came through to sell furs in the city and he invited me to come live with him. And my visa was about to expire.

But I was like, when I come back, I'll come. And so I went back home, earned some more money. And did some construction or whatever then went back and headed north to hang out with Yura and fur trapping. And that started a whole new, you know, open a whole new world that I didn't know about. Before we talk about Yura and fur trapping, let's actually rewind. And would you describe that moment when you were in a darkness as a crisis of faith?

Yeah. Sure, it was like a darkness in that I didn't know how to parse, you know, what is this thing that's my faith and what is the wheat and what's the chaff and how do I get through it? And I basically just clung to keeping it really simple. And oddly enough, in my Christian path, the God was actually defined in a certain way. And God is love. And I was just like, that's the only thing I'm going to cling to, you know, and I'm going to try to express that in my life in whichever way I can.

And just trust that if I do that, if I act like I, you know, we've heard this lately, but if you just act like you believe, over time, that world kind of opens to you. When I said I would go to Russia, I pray. And I was like, Lord, I don't see you. I don't know. I got this, but I felt like it was a clear call. I have only one request and that is that you would give me the faith to match my action. You know, I'm choosing to believe.

Like I could choose not to because, you know, whatever, but I'm going to choose the act and I just asked to have faith someday. And then, and then, and then honestly, the whole first year I went through and that was a very crazy time for me learning the language, being isolated, being misunderstood. And then, but then trying to approach all that with a loving, open heart. And then I came back and I realized how that that prayer had kind of been answered.

That wasn't the end of my journey, but it was, I was like, whoa, that was like my deepest request that I could come up with and somehow that had been answered. So through that year, you were just like, first of all, you couldn't speak the language. That's really tough. That's really tough. It's because it's unlike on a loan where, because not only can you not speak and you feel isolated, but you're also misunderstood all the time. So you've seen like an idiot and all that. And so that was tough.

I felt very alone at that time. At certain times in that journey. But you were sort of radiating like you said, lead would love. So you were radiating this kind of camaraderie. I was really intentional about trying to, about that that was, I don't know why I'm here. I just know that I, you know, that that's my call is to love one another. And so I've just tried to like, and then I've been digging people's wells. It might just go in and visit in that old laid babushka up at the house.

It's lonely. And I was really cool. I got to talk to some fascinating ladies and stuff. And then go to that village, hope those families, I'm going to be like, cut the hay, be the most, the hardest worker I can be because that's my goal here. I didn't have any other agenda or except to try to live a life of love. And I couldn't define it beyond that. What was it like learning the Russian language? It was super interesting.

I think I had the thought while I was learning it, one that it was way too hard. Like if I would have just learned Spanish or German, I would be so much farther. But here I am, a year in and I'm like, how do you say I want cheese properly? And then, but at the same time, it was really cool to learn a language that I thought in a lot of ways was richer than English. It's a very rich language.

But I remember there was a comedy act in Russian, but he was saying, you know, one word you can't have in English is naidepidipilsa, meaning like, I didn't drink enough to get drunk, but you know, that type of thing. But it's just that you can make up these words using different prefixes and suffixes and like blend them in a way that is quite unique and interesting. And honestly, it would be really good for poetry because it also doesn't have sentence structure in the same way English does.

The words can be jumbled in a way. And somehow in the process of jumbling, some humor, some musicality comes out. It's interesting. You can be witty in Russian much easier than you can in English. Like witty and funny and also with poetry, you can say profound things by messing with words and the order of words, which is hilarious because you had a great conversation with Joe Rogan. And on that program, you talked about, you know, how to say, I love you in Russian. It's hilarious.

And it was for me the first time, I don't know why, you were a great person to articulate the flexibility and the power of the Russian language. It's really interesting. Because you were saying like, yeah, it's blue, tibia, tibia, it's blue, tibia, it's blue, tibia, it's blue, yeah. You could say every single order, every single combination of ordering of those words has the same meaning, but slightly different.

You could, like, it would change the meaning if you took yaw out and just said, blue, tibia. There's like a different emphasis or maybe or yaw, tibia, the blue or something like all these different. Or just tibia, the blue also. Right. Exactly. And so it is rich. It's interesting coming from an English context and getting a glimpse of that. And then wondering about all those Russian authors that we all appreciate that. Oh, we'd actually aren't getting the full deal here. Oh, yeah, definitely.

I've recently become a fan actually of Larissa Volkonskin, Richard Provere. There are these world famous translators of Russian literature. Tolstoy, the C.F.Sky, Czech of Pushkin, Bogak of BusterNOK. They've helped me understand just how much of an art form translation really is. Some authors do that art more translatable than others, like the C.F.Sky is more translatable. But then you can still spend a week on one sentence. Oh, yeah.

Like, just how do I exactly capture this very important sentence? But I think what's more powerful is not, like, literature, but conversation, which is one of the reasons I've been carrying and feeling the responsibility of having conversations with Russian speakers, because I can still see the music of it. I can still see the wit of it. And in conversation, it comes out like really interesting kinds of wisdom.

You, like, when I listen to, like, world leaders that speak Russian and speak, and I see the translation. And it loses the irony. Like, in between the words, if you translate them literally, you lose the reference in there to the history of the peoples. Yeah, for sure. And I've definitely seen that on, like, you know, and if you listen to, I think it probably was a Putin speech or something. And you just see that, oh, wow, something major is being lost in translation.

You can actually see it happen. I wouldn't be surprised if that wasn't the case with the, you know, that whole greatest tragedy as a fall of the Soviet Union. I hear him being quoted as saying all the time, I bet you there's something in there that's being lost in translation that is interesting. I think the thing I see the most lost in translation is the humor. Mm-hmm.

I'll just say that that was the hard, that was the tangibly the hardest part about learning the language is that humor comes last. And you have to wait that whole year, you know, or however long it takes you to learn the language to be able to start getting the humor, you know, some of it comes through, but you miss so much nuance and it, and that was really difficult in interaction with people to, like, just be the guy, you know, when there's humor going on and you're totally oblivious to it.

Yeah, everybody's laughing in your own. Yeah. Trying to laugh along. What do they make of you? To be honest, this person that came from no descendant upon us. I've had a nickel for every time I heard, like, oh, American suck, but you're a good American. You're like, you only get American, I've never met. But then, of course, they never met. Yeah, exactly. You're the only one.

But, you know, I think because I was just, I tried to work hard, tried to be more useful than I was a drain, they all, I think it was pretty appreciated me out there. I've definitely heard that a lot. So that's nice. Can you talk about their way of life? Also, like, when you're doing foot trapping? As a foot trapping was an interesting experience to you.

Basically, what you do in October or something, you'll go out to your hunting cabin and you'll have like three hunting cabins, you go, you stalk them with noodles or whatever it is. And then for the next couple months, however long, you'll go from one cabin, usually the guys are just out there doing this on their own. So they'll go out and they'll go from one cabin and each cabin will have five or six trap lines going out of it.

Every day, it'll take a half a day to walk to the end of your trap line, open all the traps and a half a day to get back. And they'll do that. This will spend a week at a cabin, open up all the traps and then it'll take a day to hike over to the other cabin. Go to that one, open up all those traps and then there and then like three weeks later, so they'll end up back at the first cabin and then check all the traps.

And so it's kind of that rhythm and they'll do that for, you know, a couple of few months during the winter and your trapping sable. They're called sable, like Pine Martin is what we would have the equivalent of over here. And it's like a weasel, a furry little weasel and they make coats out of it. And so when I went, he showed me how to open the trap, showed me the ropes, gave me a top of graphical map. There's one cabin, there's the other and we parted ways for like five weeks.

We did run into each other once in the middle there at a cabin, but other than that, you're just off by yourself, hoping to shoot a grouse or something to add to your noodles and make your meal better, catch a fish and then work and really hard trying not to get lost and stuff. So that's from one trap and location to the next. That's funny because I was most basically by landmarks and feel like I didn't have come this and things like that. By feel.

Okay. I got myself into trouble once and I, the first time I went to one cabin, I got myself into trouble. First time I went to the other cabin, I nailed it. And so I had two different experiences on my first trip. But the one that I nailed, I remember I had to go and it's like a day hike. I was like, well, I know the cabin south.

And so if I just walk south, the sun should be on the left in the morning and right in front of me in the middle of the day and by evening it should end up at my right and just kind of guess what time it is and follow along. And it takes all day and a kidy not ended up like a hundred yards from the cabin. And I was like, whoa, this is the trail. And that's the cabin. Like, oh, amazing. And then the other time that went out and I had no other mountains and I thought, you know, hours had passed.

I probably had gotten slightly lost. And then I thought I was halfway there. So I thought, okay, I'm going to sit down and cook some food, get a drink, I'm thirsty. So sat down and went to start a fire and my matches had gotten all wet because it snowed fallen on me and soaked me and I didn't have them wrapped in plastic. I was like, oh, no. I can't drink water. You know, so I was like, well, I'm just going to power through I'm halfway there.

I kept hiking and then I realized it was getting night and then I realized I was at the halfway point because I saw this rock that I was like, oh, no, that's the halfway point. I was like, I can't do this. And so I need to go get water. I ended up having to divert down the mountain and head to the water. I ended up, you know, there's a whole ordeal. I had to take my skis off because I was going through an old forest fire burn. So they were all really close trees.

But then the snow was like this deep so I was just trudging through and just wishing a bear would eat me and get it over with. I finally made it down to the water. Chopped the hole through the ice was able to take a sip. So you severely dehydrated? I severely dehydrated and I exhausted cold like, you know, you feel sort of nervous. You're then over your head and then I got down to the river. Chopped the whole nice drink. It hiked up the river and eventually got to the other cabin.

It was probably three in the morning or something. Chopped a whole and the ice to drink. To get some water. Yeah. It was this got to be like the one of the worst days of your life. You know, it was a bad day for sure. I'm out of fuel. It was a bad day. And here's what was funny is I got to the cabin and like, three in the morning and I should have brushed over a lot of the like the misery that I felt and I laid down as about to go to sleep. And then your charges in from from there.

And I was like, whoa, dude, you're what are you doing? And I was like, how's it going? He said, it sucks. And you laid down and just fell asleep. I fell asleep and I was like, oh, that's funny. The last few weeks that we've been apart. Who knows what he went through? Who knows why he was there at that time at night? I'll just summarize in the sucked and we went to sleep in the next morning. We parted ways and who knows what happened. And you didn't really tell him.

Never knew neither of us said what happened. It's just like, oh, that's interesting. Yeah, and he probably was through similar kind of thing. Who knows, yeah. Like what gave you strength in those in those hours when you're, you know, just going to waste high snow. Yeah, all of that. You're laughing. But like that's hard. Yeah. You know that Russian phrase in the closet by Otsaru Kideelut? Eyes are afraid hands do. I'm sure there's a poetic way to translate that.

It's kind of like, you know, just put one foot in front of the other. You know, when you think about what you have to do, it's really intimidating. And but you just know if I just do it, if I just do it, if I just keep trudging, eventually I'll get there. And pretty soon you realize you'll have covered a couple kilometers. Or a, and so when you're really in it in those moments, I guess you're just, you're just putting your head down and getting through. I've had some other moments.

There's wisdom to that. Mm-hmm. Like once, just take it once up at a time. Once up at a time. I think that a lot. I feel like that a lot when I'm about to do something really hard just, you know, go outside of Itsaru Kideelut. It's one step at a time. I'm just going to get, don't like sit there and think, oh, that's a long ways. Just go. And then you'll look back and you cover a bunch of ground. One of the things I've realized, it was helpful in the jungle.

That was one of the biggest realizations for me, is like, it really sucks for me now. But when I look back at the end of the day, I won't really remember exactly how much it sucked. I have a vague notion of it sucking and I'll remember the good thing. So being dehydrated, I'll remember drinking water. And I won't really remember the hours of feeling like shit. That's absolutely true. I don't know.

It's so funny how like this awareness of that, having been through it and then being aware of it, means next time you face it, you know what? This is over. I'm going to look back on it. And it's going to be like that and nothing. And I'll actually laugh about it and think it was, it's the thing I'll remember. You know, I remember that story of that miserable day going down to the ice and I can smile about it now.

And now that I know that I can be in a miserable position and realize that that's what the outcome will be once it's over. It's just going to be a story. If you survive, if you survive, and that can be... So you mentioned you've learned about hunger during these times. What was like the hungeriest you've gotten? It was the first time. So to continue the story slightly, I, I, I, I, I, I went for a trip and with that guy.

And then it turned out all his cousins were these native nomadic reindeer herders. And after I like earned his trust and he liked me a lot. He, he took me out to his cousins who were all these, you know, nomads, living in TPs. I was like, this is awesome. I didn't even know people still lived like this. And they were really open and welcoming because their cousin just brought it me out there. And vouched for me. But it was during fencing season and fencing in Siberia for those reindeer.

It's like an incredible thing. You take an axe. You go out and you just build these 30 kilometer loop fences with just logs interlocking. It's tons of work. And all these guys are more efficient bodies. They're better at it. And I'm just like working less efficiently and also a lot bigger dude. But we're all just on the same ration kind of. And I got down, that was like 155 pounds. You know, getting down pretty big skinny for my 63 frame. And just working really hard.

And then in the spring in Siberia, there's no like, there's not much to forage. You know, in the fall, you can have pine nuts and this and that. But in the spring, you're just stuck with whatever random food you've got. And so that's where I lost the most weight and felt the most hungry. And it had a lot of other issues. You know, I was new to that type of work. And so working as hard as I could, but also making mistakes, chopping myself with the axe and getting injured, all kinds of stuff.

You know, so injuries plus very low calorie intake. Low, yep. And exhausted. I remember it if you got your thus poor son of a gun, you get stuck slicing the bread, you know, like you're here cutting the bread and somebody throws all the spoons and drops the pot of soup there. And it's like before you can even done slice in your slice, all the meats like we've gone from the bowl.

Everybody else has grabbed this spoon and midair and you're like, oh, hoping this one little noodles is going to give me a lot of nourishment. Wow. So everybody gets sent me, yeah, first come first serve, I guess. Because it's like all the dudes out there working on the fence. So you mentioned the axe and you gave me a present. Yeah. This is probably the most badass present I've ever gotten. So tell me the story of this of this axe.

So the natives when I got there, I thought, you know, I grew up on a farm. I thought I was pretty good with an axe, but they do tons of work with those things. And I really grew to love their type of axe or style of axe and I'll just an axe in general. They'd always say it's the one tool you need to survive in the wilderness and I agree. And what was this one has certain, yeah, design features that the natives that was unique to the event key to the natives I was with.

One is with these Russian heads or the Soviet heads, whatever they had, they're a little wider on top here, meaning you can put the handle through from the top like a Tomahawk. And it, I mean, you're not dealing with a wedge. And if it ever loosens and you're swinging, it only gets tighter. It doesn't fly off. And so that's something that's kind of cool. Then they have what they do that's unique is.

So you can see the Wolverine axe that's got the Wolverine head in honor of that Wolverine I fought on the show. So you have actually two axes. This is one of the small. This is a little smaller. I didn't want to make it too small because you need something to actually work out there. You need something kind of serious. But then they sharpen it from one side. So if you're right handed, you sharpen it from the right side.

And that means when you're in the woods and living, there's a lot of times where you're whether you're making a table or a sleigh or an axe handle or whatever you're doing that you're holding the wood and doing this work. And it makes it really good for that planing. The other thing it is, especially in northern woods, all the trees are like this big. You know, you're never cutting down a big giant tree.

And so when you swing with a single sided axe like this, sharpen from the one side, it really with your right hand swing like this, it really bites into the wood. And gives you because with that, if you can picture it, that angle is going to cause deflection. And without that angle on your right hand, it's like it just bites in there like crazy. And so that there's the other little, you know, the handle is made by some Amish guys in Canada. This is all hand forged by, oh it's hand forged.

Yeah. I mean, yeah, look. And so it's a pretty sweet little. Yeah, it's amazing. There's the other thing, you know, like I slightly rounded this pole here. It's just a little nuance because when you pound a stake in, if you picture it, if it's a con vex, when you're pounding it, it's going to blow the fibers apart. If it has just a slight concave, it helps hold the fibers together. And so it's a little nuance, not too flat because you want to still be able to use the back as you would.

What kind of stuff are you using the axe for? Oh, so that's an excellent. It's an axe that's super important to chop through ice in a winter situation, which you probably hopefully won't need. But what I use an axe all the time for is when I'm, when it's wet and rainy and you need to start a fire. Yeah. It's hard to get to the middle of drywood if just a knife or a saw.

It's a, you can, I can go out there, find a dead tall tree, you know, dead standing tree, chop it down, split it apart, split it open, get to the drywood on the inside, shave it some little curls and have a fire going pretty fast. And so if I have an axe, I feel always confident that I can get a quick fire in whatever weather. And I wouldn't feel the same without it in that regard. So that's the main thing. Of course, you can use it.

I use it if you're taking an animal apart or if you're, what, you know, all kinds of, what else been building a shelter, tea skin and tee peep holes or whatever you're doing. What's the use of a saw versus the axe? I greatly prefer an axe. A saw though has, its value goes up quite a bit when you're in hardwoods. Like when you're in a hardwood oaks and hickory and things like that. There are a lot harder to chop. So a saw is pretty nice in those situations.

I'd say in those situations I'd like to have both in the north woods and in like more kind of forest. I don't think there's enough advantages that a saw in curves with a good axe. Now you'll see people with little like camp axes and stuff and they just don't think they like axes. It's like, well, you haven't actually tried to try a good one first and get good with it. The one thing about an axe, they're dangerous.

When you do like practice, always control it with two hands, make sure you're not, you know where it's going to go. It doesn't hit you or when you're chopping, like so you're creating something that you're not doing it on rocks and stuff so that it's, you're doing on top of wood so that when you're hitting the ground, you're not dull in your axe. You know, there's, you gotta be a little bit thoughtful about it. Have you ever injured yourself in the next in the early days?

Yeah. That first, so I'd gotten a knee surgery and then about three months later, I had torn my ACL and went over to rush it. I was like, well, I got a good knee. It's okay. That's when I was building that fence that first time. At one point, I chopped my rubber boot with my axe because it reflected off and I was new to him and I was really frustrated because I'd done it before. The native guy was like, oh, you know, I think there's a boot we left.

A few years ago, we left a boot, like four kilometers that way. We got the reindeer, took them, rode them over. Sure enough, there's a stump with a boot upside down, pull it out, put it on. I was like, sweet, I'm back in business. I went back a couple days later, put in a chump chop that cut your foot, cut my rubber boot and I was just like, dang it. I was mad enough that I just grabbed the axe and swung it at the tree and it just one handed and like deflected off and ran right into my nose.

I was like, oh, I fell down. I was like, oh my gosh, because you get your axe really like razor sharp and then just swung it into my knee. I didn't even want to look. I was like, oh, no, I looked and it wasn't a huge wound because it had hit right on the bone of my knee, but it split the bone, cut a tendon there and I was on the middle of wood. I knew I was in shock as I'm just going to go back to T.P. right now. So I ran back to T.P. laid down and honestly, I was stuck there for a few days.

I was so much pain and my other knee was bad. It was rough. I couldn't even, I literally couldn't even walk at all or move. Like there was a plastic bag, I did like poop in it and rolled to the edge of the T.P. like shove it under my eyes. I was like, I can't just totally immobilize. I guess I should teach you to not act when you're in a state of frustration or anger. There you go. I mean, it's such a lesson too.

There were so many of those and it was always, I was always in a little bit over my head, but like I said, you kind of do that enough and you make a lot of mistakes. But every time you learn, now it's like an extension of my heart. It's not going to happen because I just know how it works now. You mentioned what would, how you start a fire when everything is around you is wet.

It depends on your environment, but I will say in most of the forest that I spend a lot of time in and all the north woods, the best thing you can do is find a dead standing tree. So it can be downpouring rain and you chop that tree down and then when you split it open, no matter how much it's been raining, it'll be dry on the inside. So you chop that tree down, chop a piece, you know, a long piece out and then split that thing open and then split it again and then you get to that inner drywood.

And then you try to do this maybe under a spruce tree or under your own body so that it's not going to rain down while you're doing it. Make a bunch of little curls that'll catch a flame or light and then you make a lot more kindling and little pieces of drywood than you think because it'll happen, you'll light it and it'll burn through and it's like dang it.

So just be patient, you're going to be fine, you know, like then make a nice pile of curls that you can light or spark and then get a lot of good dry kindling and then don't be afraid to just boom, boom, boom pile a bunch of wood on and make a big old fire, get warm as fast as you can. It's amazing how much that is of a recharge it is when you're cold and wet. You can throw relatively wet wood on top of that.

Once you get that going, yeah, then it'll dry as it goes but you need to be able to split open and get all that nice drywood on the inside. I saw that you mentioned that you look for fat wood. What's fat wood? Yeah. So on a lot of pine trees, a place where the tree was injured when it was alive, it like pumps sap to it and it is a good point because I use this a lot.

It pumps that tree full of sap and then years later the tree dies, dries out, rots away but that sap infused wood, it's like turpentine in there. It's oily and so if it gets wet, you can still light it with repulsed water and so if you can find that in a rainstorm, you can just make a little pile of those shavings, get the crappiest spark or quickest light and it'll just sit there and burn like a factory fire starter.

You know, it's really, really nice that's good to spot and it's a good thing to keep your eye out for. Yeah, it's really fascinating and then you make this thing. That's just to get the sauna going fast. What was that? That was a well. Oh, it was a used motor oil. I had to mix it with some sawdust and then no, it's not as good as going just like that. That's kind of like homemade fat wood.

I don't know how many times I've watched happy people a year in the Thai guy one of her is you've talked about this movie. Where is that located relative to where you were?

So there's this big river called the Yenisay that feeds through the middle of Russia and there's a bunch of tributaries off of it and one of the tributaries is called the Pudcom in the Atun Guska and I was up that river and just a little ways north is another river called the Bachta and that's where that village is where they filmed happy people. So in Siberian terms, we're neighbors. Nice. Similar environment, similar place. That's for trapper that I was with knew the guy in the film.

What would you say about their way of life? Maybe in what you've experienced and what you saw in happy people. There's something really powerful about spending that much time being independent. Depending on what we talked about a little early but you're putting yourself in these situations all the time where you're uncomfortable where it's hard but then you're rising to the occasion. You're making it happen.

Nobody, when you're fur trapping by yourself, there's nobody else to look at, to blame for anything that goes wrong. It's just yourself that you're reliant on and there's something about the natural rhythms that you are in when you're that connected to the natural world that really does feel like that's what we're designed for. So there's a psychological benefit you gain from spending that much time in that realm.

For that reason, I think that people that are connected to those ways are able to tap into a particular... I noticed it a lot with the natives. If I met the natives in the village, I would think of them as unhappy people. They drink a lot. They always fight and the murder rate is through the roof, the suicide rates, through the roof. But, you meet those same people in the woods living that way of life. I thought these are happy people. It's an interesting juxtaposition to be the same person.

But then I lived in a native village that had the ring. You're hurting going on around it and everybody benefited because of that. I also went to a native village that they didn't hold those ways anymore. Everybody was just in the village life. It just felt like a dark place. Whereas the other native village was rough in the village because everybody drank all the time. But it had that escape valve. It had that escape valve. Once you're out there, it's just a whole different world.

It was such an odd juxtaposition. It's funny that the people that go trapping experience that happiness and still don't have a self-awareness to stop themselves from then drinking and doing all the dark stuff when they go to the village. It's strange that you're not able to, you're in it, you're happy, but you're not able to reflect on the nature of that happiness. It's really weird. I've thought about that a lot. I don't know the answer. There's a huge draw to comfort.

There's a huge, and it's all multifaceted and so complex because you can be out in the woods and have this really cool life. I will say it's a little bit different for men than women because the men are living like the dream as far as what I would like. It's like you're hunting and fishing and managing reindeer and you got all these adventures. So what ends up happening is that a lot more guys and girls, young men out there in the woods.

I think the draw also, I think, to go to the village, probably to find a woman and then there's a draw of technology and the new things. But then once they're there, honestly alcohol becomes so overwhelming that everything else kind of just fiddles away. It's funny that the comfort, you find either a draw to comfort, but once you get to the comfort, once you find the comfort, within that comfort you become the lesser version of yourself. Yeah, it's weird. What a lesson for us.

We need to keep struggling. Yeah, a lot of times you have to force yourself in that.

So like if we took them as an example, I mean a lot of times you drag us to drunk guy into the woods, literally just drag him into the woods and then he'd sober up and then he was like a month blackout drunk and now he's sobered up and now boom back into life, back into being an knowledgeable, capable person and because comfort's so available to us all, you almost have to force yourself into that situation, plan it out. Okay, I'm going to go do that.

I'm going to do that hard thing and then deal with the consequences with them there. What do you learn from that on the nature of happiness? What does it take to be happy? Happiness is interesting because it's complex and multifaceted. It includes a lot of things that are out of your control and a lot of things that are in your control. And it makes it's quite the moving target in life. You know what I mean?

So one of the things that really impacted me when I was a young man and I read the Gulag Arcapello was don't pursue happiness because the ingredients to happiness can be taken from you outside of your control, your health, your, but pursue like a spiritual fullness pursue. I think he words it duty and then happiness may come alongside or it may not, but so he gave the example that I thought was really interesting and the prison camps.

Everybody's trying to survive and they've made that their ultimate goal. I will get through this and then and they've all basically turned into animals and pursued that goal and like lying and cheating and stealing and then he was like, somehow the corrupt Orthodox church produced these little bobbushkas who were like candles in the middle of all this darkness because they did not allow their soul to get corrupted. And he's like, what they did do is they died.

They all died, but they were lights while they were alive and lost their lives, but they didn't lose their souls. So for myself, that was really powerful to read and realize that the pursuit of happiness wasn't exactly what I wanted to aim at. I wanted to aim at living out my life according to love like we talked about earlier. Trying to be that candle. Trying to be that candle. Yeah, make that your ideal. And then in doing so is interesting.

So for me personally, my personal experience was that is I thought when I went to Russia that I kind of gave up, I was like in my 20s, I spent my whole 20s living in teapies and doing all this stuff that I thought I should give you a job. I should be pursuing a career. I should get an education of some sort. Like what am I doing for my future? But I felt I knew where my purpose was, I knew where my calling was. I was going to do it.

And it, it sounds glamorous now when I talk about it, but it sucked a lot of the times. And there's a lot of, a lot of loneliness, a lot of like giving up what I wanted, a lot of watching people like care about. You know, you put all this effort in and you just see the people that you put all this ever and just die and that and then it's, it was that happened all the time.

And then the other thing I thought I gave up was like a relationship because you couldn't, you know, I wasn't going to find a partner over there. And so interestingly enough, now in life I can look back and be like, well, we're those two things I thought I gave up is where I've been like almost provided for the most in life. Now I have this, this career, guiding people in the wilderness that I love. Like I genuinely love it. I find purpose in it. I know it's healthy and good for people.

And then I have an amazing wife and an amazing family like how did that happen? But I didn't exactly aim at it. I like, I consciously in a way, I mean, I hoped it was tangential, but I aimed at something else which was those lessons I kind of got from the Gulagar Capella go. So you have just because you, you mentioned Gulagar Capella go, I got to go there.

You have some suffering in your family history, whether it's the Armenian, Assyrian genocide or the Nazi occupation of France, maybe you could tell the story of that. But this survival thing runs in your blood, it seems. I love history. I find so much richness in knowing what other people went through and find so much perspective in my own place in the world. I have the advantage of in my direct family, my grandparents. Yeah, they went through the Armenian genocide.

They were Assyrians, which was a, you know, like a Christian minority indigenous people in the Middle East. They lived in Northwestern Iran. And during the chaos of World War I, you know, and the Ottoman Empire was collapsing and had all kinds of issues. And it, one of its issues was it had a big minority group and it thought it would be a good time to get rid of it. And you know, they can justify it in all the ways you can. Like there's some people that were, we're belling or this is that.

But ultimately it was just a big collective guilt and extermination politely against the Armenians and the Assyrians and the, my grandparents. My grandma was 13 at the time and my grandpa was 17, which is interesting because it happened almost 100 years ago. But our gender, just my dad was born when my mom was, my grandma was pretty old. But my grandmother, her dad, was taken out to be shot.

You know, the turrets were coming in and rounding up all the men and they took them out to be shot and then they took my grandma and her, she had seven brothers and sisters and her mom and they like drove her out into the desert. Basically, she, her dad got taken out to be shot. So his name was Shalman Yumara, whatever took him out. They were all tied up, all shot. And he said a quick prayer before they shot him, but he fell down and he found he wasn't hit.

He'd come up and stab everybody or finish him off, but there was some kind of an alarm and all the soldiers rushed off and he found himself in the bodies and was able to untie himself. They were naked and, you know, hungry and all that. And he ran out of there, escaped, went into a building and found the loaf of bread wrapped in a shirt and was able to escape. He fled. He never saw his family for, so to continue the story.

My grandma got taken with her, with her mother and brothers and sisters and all just, they just drove them into the desert until they died. Basically, and run them around in circles and this and that and then all the raping and pillaging that accompanies it. And at one point, her mom had the baby and the baby died and her mom just collapsed and said, I just can't go any further. And my grandma and her sister like picked her up to the tea.

We got to keep going and like, picked her up and they left the baby along with the other. Everybody else had died. It was just the three of them left. And somehow they bumble across this British military camp and were rescued. My neither the sister nor my great grandmother ever really covered as far as recovered from what I understand.

But my grandma did at the same time in another village in the north and the ran there, the church came in and we're burning down my grandpa's village and they caught and my grandpa's dad was in a wheelchair. He had like some money belt and he stuffed all his money in it and told it gave it to grandpa and just told him to run and don't turn back. And they came in the front door as he was running out the back and they, he never saw his dad again.

But he said, he turned around and saw the built, you know, the house on fire. Never knew what happened to his sister. And so he was just alone, he ran, yeah, at some point he, I can't remember, like lost his money belt. Like he took his jacket off for God, it was something happened. Anyway, so he got, he was in a refugee camp, he ended up getting taken in by some Jesuit missionaries. So anyway, both of them had lost basically everything.

And then at some point they met and bagged dad, started a family, immigrated to France and then it just happened to be right before World War II and so the knot she's invaded, my aunt, she's still alive. She actually met a resistance fighter, you know, for the French and under a bridge somewhere and they, and they fell in love and she got married. So she had kind of an in on the, on the French resistance at one point. And of course, they were all hungry.

They'd recently immigrated but also had this Nazi occupation and all that. And so the uncle Joe, the resistance fighter guy told him, hey, we're going to storm this noodle factory, like come and so they storm the noodle factory and all my aunts around in there and we're like throwing out noodles into wheelbarrow and everybody was running.

Then the Nazis came back and took it back over and like shot a bunch of people and everything and, and grandpa, because he had already come from where he came from, was paranoid. So he buried all the noodles out in the garden. And then my two aunts got stuck in that factory overnight with all the Nazi guards or whatever. And then the, the Nazi guards went all from house to house to find everybody that had had noodles and you know, punish them, but they didn't find my grandpa's fortunately.

They searched his house, but not the garden. And then, so they had noodles and somehow must have been in the same factory or something but all the oil and they just lived off of that for the whole, all the whole war years. My aunts ended up getting out of that they hid behind boxes and crates overnight and stuff and the resistance stormed again in the morning and they got away and stuff. But anyway, chaos. So when they moved to America, I will say the most patriotic family everywhere.

Ever loved it. Just like paradise here. I mean, that's a, that's a lot to go through. What lessons do you draw from that on perseverance? Look, I'm one, I just one generation away from all that suffering. Like my aunts and uncles and dad and suffer the kids of these people. And somehow I don't have that. Like what happened to all that trauma? Like I, it's like somehow my grandparents bore it and then they were able to build a family but not just a family that, but a happy family.

Like I knew all my aunts and uncles and I didn't know them. They died before me, but they were, it was so much joy. The family unions were the best thing ever at the Jonas' and they, and it's just like how in one generation did you go from that to that? And it must have been a great sacrifice of some sort to not pass that much like resentment or like what did they do to break that chain in one generation?

Do you think it works the other way like where their ability to escape genocide, to escape Nazi occupation gave them a gratitude for life? It's not a trauma in the sense like you're forever bearing it. The flip side of that is just gratitude to be alive when you know so many people at the Nazi vibe. Yeah, it must be because the only footage I saw of my grandma was like they were all the kids and stuff and they were cooking up a rabbit that they were raising. And they got, but a joyful woman.

You can see it in her and she must have been so, she must have understood how fortunate she was and been so grateful for it and so thankful for every one of those 11 kids she had. So I recognized it again in my, in my dad because my dad went through a really slow kind of painful decline in his health and he had diabetes ended up losing one leg and so he lost his job. He had to watch his mom or my mom go to school. He had long all he wanted to do was be a provider, be like a family man.

I bet the best time in his life was when his kids ran to him again. But then all of a sudden he found himself in a position where he couldn't work and he had to watch his wife go to school, which was really hard for her and and become the breadwinner for the family. He just felt like a failure and I've watched him go through that. After all these years of letting that foothill, we went out. First day and we were split in fire with a splitter and he was so good to be back out Jordan at seven.

And he crushed his foot in the log splitter and he's like, no. And so then they just ambitated it. We've got both legs amputated and then his health continued to decline. He lost his movement in his hands. So he was like incapacitated to a degree and in a lot of pain. I would hear him at night and pain all the time and I delayed a trip back to Russia and just stayed with my dad for those last six months and it was so interesting having had lost everything.

I watched him wrestle with it through the years. But then he found his joy and his purpose just in being almost, I mean, a vegetable. I'd have to help him pee, roll him under the cot, take him to dialysis and but we would laugh. He would like, you got here at night crying or like and pain like, and then in the morning who'd have like encouraging words to say and and I said, wow, that's how you face loss and suffering and and he must have gotten that from him somehow from his parents.

And then you know, I find myself on this show and I had a thought like, why is this easy to me in a way? Like, you know, why is this thing that's and I was like, and it just felt like this gift that it kind of handed down and now it would be my duty to hand down. You know, like, but it's kind of an interesting and be the beacon of that. That kind of perseverance in the in the simpler way that something like survival in the wilderness shows. Yes. The say it rhymes.

It rhymes and it's so simple like the lessons are simple and so we can take them and apply them. So that's on the survivor side. What about on the people committing the atrocities? What do you make of the Ottomans? What they did to Armenians or the Nazis? What they did to the Jews, the Slavs and basically everyone? What do you, what do you think people do evil in this world? It's interesting that it's really easy. All right. It's really easy.

You can almost sense it in yourself to justify, to justify a little bit of evil or you see yourself cheer a little bit when the enemy gets knocked back in some way. It's really, in the way it's just perfectly naturalist for us to feed that hate and feed that tribalism in group out group. We're on this team. And I think that can happen. I think it just happens slowly, like one justification at a time, one step at a time.

You hear something and it makes you think that you are in the right to perform some kind of, you know, you're justified and create, you know, break a couple eggs to make an omelette type thing. And then, but all of a sudden that takes you down this whole train to where pretty soon you're justifying what's completely unjustifiable. It's just gradual. Yeah. It's a gradual process of a little bit at a time.

I think that's why, like for me, like having a path of faith is like, works as like a mooring because it can help me shine that light on myself. You know, it's like something else, because if you're just looking at yourself and looking within yourself for your compass in life, it's really easy to get that thing out of whack. But you kind of need a perspective from what you can step out of yourself and look into yourself and judge yourself accordingly.

And in my walking in line with that ideal, you know, and then, and I think without that check your subject, you know, it's easy to ignore the fact that you might be able to commit those things. But we live in a pretty easy, comfortable society. Like what if, you know, what if we pictured yourself in the position of my grandparents and then all of a sudden you got the upper hand in some kind of a fight? What are you going to do?

You know, you could, you'd definitely picture becoming evil in that situation. I think one thing faith in God can do is humble you before these kinds of complexities of the world. And humility is a way to avoid the slippery slope towards evil, I think. Humility that you don't know who the good guys and the bad guys are. And you defer that to sort of bigger powers to try to understand that.

Yeah. I think there's a kind of, I mean, a lot of the atrocities were committed, but people who are very sure of themselves being good. Yeah, that's so true. It is sad that religion is at times used as a way to kind of just, as yet another tool for justification, which is a sad application of religion. It really is, it's so inherent and so natural in us to justify ourselves.

It's really, it's really, I mean, I think it's almost, I mean, just understanding history, read history, it blows my mind that and I'm super thankful that somehow, and this has been missed you so much, but somehow this ideology arose that love your enemies, forgive, those that persecute you and just on down the line that something like that rose in the world into a position where we all kind of accept those ideals, I think is really remarkable and worth appreciating.

That said, a lot of that gets wrapped up in what you're talking, you know, what is so natural just becomes another instrument for tribalism or another justification for wrong and so I even myself, I'm self-conscious sometimes talking about matters of faith because I know when I'm talking about, I'm talking about something else. There's then, you know, there's everybody within what someone else might think of when they hear me talking about it, so it's interesting.

Yeah, I've been listening to Jordan Peterson talk about this. He has a way of articulating things, which are sometimes hard to understand in the moment, but when I like read it carefully afterwards, it starts to make more sense.

I've heard him talk about religion and God as a kind of base layer, like a metaphorical substrate from which morality of our sense of what is right and wrong comes from and just our conceptions of what is beautiful in life, all these kinds of higher things that are like fuzzy to understand that their religion helps create this substrate from which we as a species, like as a civilization can come up with these notions and without it, you are lost at sea.

I guess for him, morality requires that substrate. Like you said, it's kind of fuzzy, so I've only been able to get clear vision of it when I live it. It's not something you profess or anything like that. It's something that you take seriously and apply in your life and when you live it, there's some clarity there, but that it has to be kind of defined.

It's like, and that's where you come in with the religion and the stories because if you leave it completely undefined, I don't really know where you go from there. Actually, in the funny, to speak to that, I did mushroom. Have you ever done those? Mushroom, yeah. I've done them a couple times, but one time was, didn't do that many. The other time more, and I had a really profound experience in helping couch all this in the proper context for myself.

When I did it, I remember I was sitting on a swing and I could see my, everything was so blissful, except I could see my black hands on these chains, on the swing, but everything else was blissful and kind of amorphous. I could see the outline of my kids and I could just feel the love for them and I was just like, man, I just feel the love. It's so wonderful. But then at times, I would try to picture them and I couldn't quite picture the kids, but I could feel the love.

Then I started asking all the deepest and existential questions I could. I felt like I just won another answer, another answer, and everything was being answered. Then I felt like I was communing with God, whatever you want to say. But I was very aware of the fact that that communing was just peeling back the tiniest corner of the infinite and it just dumped me with every answer I felt like I could have and blew me away.

Then I asked it, well, if you're the infinite, like, why did you reveal to me yourself? Why did you use the story of Jesus to reveal yourself? Then that infinite amorphous thing had to somehow take form for us to be able to relate to it. You have some kind of a form. Whenever you create a form out of something, you're boxing it in and subjugating it to boundaries and stuff like that. Then that subject to pain and subject to the brokenness and all that. I was like, oh, wow.

Then when I had that thought, then all of a sudden I could relate my dark hands on the chains to the rest of the experience. Then all of a sudden I could picture my children as the children rather than this amorphous feeling of love. It was like, oh, there's a law in all times. They were bounded and then once they're bounded, you're subject to the death and to the misunderstanding and to all that. I picture the amoeba or the cell and then when it dies, it turns into an unformed thing.

We need some kind of form to relate to. Instead of always just talking about God completely and tangibly, it gave me a way to relate to it. That was really powerful to me and putting it in a context that was applicable. But ultimately God is the thing that's formless that is unbounded. We humans need. The purpose of stories, they resonate with something. When you need the bounded nature, the constraints of those stories, otherwise we wouldn't be able to relate to it. Can't relate to it.

Then when you look at the stories literally or you just look at them just as they are, it seems silly. It's too simplistic. That was always a lot of my family and loved ones and friends have completely left the faith. I understand it. I also really see the baby that's being thrown out at the bathwater. I want to cherish that in a way, I guess. It's interesting that you say that the way to know what's right and wrong is to live it. Sometimes it's probably very difficult to articulate.

The living of it, do you realize it? Yeah, I'm glad you say that because I found a lot of comfort in that because I feel somewhat inarticulate a lot of the times. I'm unable to articulate my thoughts, especially on these matters. Then you just have to, but I can't live it. I can try to live it. Then what I also am struck with right away is I can't because you can't love everybody. You can't love your enemies.

As placing that in front of you, I was so important to put a check on your human instincts on your tribalism on your... You can very quickly... I like the time that I'm with evil. It can really quickly take its place in your life. You almost want to observe it happening. I so much appreciate all the me-striving. I grew up in a Christian family, so I had these cliches that I didn't really understand a relationship with God. What does that mean?

But then I realized when I struggled with trying... I actually did try to take it seriously and struggle with what does it mean to live out a life of love in the world? That's a wrestling match because it's not that simple. It sounds good, but it's really hard to do. You realize you can't do it perfectly, but in that struggle, in that wrestling match is where I actually sense that relationship.

That's where it gains life and I'm sure that relates to what Jordan Peterson is getting at in his metaphor. In the striving of the ideal, in the striving towards the ideal you discover, the ideal, how to be a better person. One thing I noticed really tangibly on alone was that because I had so many people that were close to me kind of just leave it all together, I was like, I could do that. I actually understand why they do. Or I could not. I do have a choice.

I had to choose at that point to maintain that ideal. I could add enough time on alone one nice thing is you don't have any distractions. You have all the time in the world to go into your head. I could play those pads out in my life and not only in my life, but I feel like societally and in generationally, I throw it all away and everybody start from square one or we can try to redeem what's valuable in this and wrestle with it and just throw it in. So I just chose that path.

Well, I do think it's the kind of wrestling match because you mentioned Guggar Kapalgo. I'm very much a believer that we all have the capacity for good and evil and striving for the ideal to be a good human being is not a trivial one. You have to find the right tools for yourself to be able to be the candle as you mentioned before. And then for that religion and faith can help.

I'm sure there's other ways, but I think it's grounded in understanding that each human is able to be a really bad person and a really good person. And that's like a choice, it's a deliberate choice. And it's a choice that's taken every moment and builds up over time. And the hard part about is you don't know. You don't always have the clarity using reason to understand what is right and what is wrong. And you kind of live it with humility and constantly struggle.

Because then yeah, you have to, you might wake up on a society where you're committing genocides. And you think you're the good guys. And I think you have to have the courage to realize you're not. It's not always obvious. It isn't, man. And all the history has the clarity to show who were the good guys and who were the bad guys. Right. You have wrestle with it. It's like that quote, you know, the line between Good and Evil goes through the heart of every man. And we push it this way and that.

And our job is to work on that within ourselves. Yeah, that's the part. That's what I like. So the full quote talks about the fact that it moves and moves from the line moves moment by moment, day by day. We have the freedom to move that line. So it's like a very deliberate thing. It's not like you're born this way. And it's it. Yeah, I agree. And especially in conditions where they're like, worn piece, in the case of the camps, you know, absurd levels of injustice in the face of all that.

And everything is taken away from you. You still have the choice to be to be the candle like the grandmas. By the way, the grandmas in like all parts of the world are like the strongest. Down out some grandmas seriously. It's like, I don't know what it is. I don't know. They have this like wisdom that comes from patients and have seen it all. They've seen all the bullshit of the people that come and gone. All the abuse is a power all of this. I don't know what it is. And they just keep going.

Right. Right. Yeah, that's so true. What do you think of as we've gotten a bit philosophical, what do you think of a Werner Herzog style of narration? I kind of wish he narrated my life. Yeah, it's amazing to listen to. Does that document is actually in Russian, I think he took a longer series, yeah, and then put narration over it. And that narration can transform like a story. Yeah, he does an incredible job with it. I was I'd probably seen the full version.

Have you watched the four part full version? You should. It's in Russian and so you'll get the fullness of that. And it's he had to fit it into it to our format. And so I think what you lose in those extra couple hours is worth watching. I think you'll like it. So they always go, they always go pretty dark. Do they? He has a very dark sense about nature that is violence and it's murder. I think that's important to recognize because it's really easy.

I mean, especially with what I do and what I talk about and I see so much of the value and nature. Gosh, you know, I also see like a beautiful moose and a calf running around. And then next week I see the calf ripped the shreds by wolves and you're just like, oh, and it's not as it's not as resilient as we'd like to think. It is, you know, things must die for things to live. Like you said, and that's just played out all the time.

And it's indifferent to you, doesn't, doesn't care if you live or die. It doesn't care how you die or how much pain you go through while you, you know, it's like it's pretty brutal. So that it's interesting that he taps into that and I think it's valuable because it's easy to idealize in a way. But yeah, the indifference is, I don't know what to make of it. There isn't a difference. It's a bit scary. It's a bit lonely. You're just a cog in the machine of nature.

I think that doesn't really care for you. Totally. I think that's the most that with a lot on that show is another part of the depth of your psychology delve into. But it, and that's when I thought like I could, I could understand that deeply, but I could also choose to believe that for some reason it matters. And then I could live like it matters. And then I could see the trajectories and the kind of that was another fork in the road of my path, I guess.

What do you think about the connection to the animals? So in that, in that movie, it's with the dogs. And with you, it's the other domesticated, the reindeer. What do you think about that human animal connection? In the context of that indifference is interesting that we assign so much value and love and appreciation for these animals. And in some degree, we get that back in a recipe. I think right now you just said the reindeer.

I think of the one they gave me because he was long and tall, so they named him Dleene. And I just remember Dleene and just watching him eat the leaves and go with me through the woods and trust him to take me through rivers and stuff. And it really is special. It's really enriching to have that relationship with an animal. And I think it also puts you in a proper context.

One thing I noticed about the natives who live with those animals all the time is they relate to life and death a little more naturally. We feel really removed from it, particularly in urban settings. And I think when you interact with animals and you have to confront the life and the death of them and the responsibility of putting it in a symbiotic relationship you have, I think it opens a little bit of awareness to your place in the puzzle and puts you in it rather than above it.

Have you been able to accept your own death? I wonder, you wonder when it actually comes, what you're going to think. But I did have my dad to watch, confronted in his positive of manner as you could. And that's a big advantage. And so I think when the time comes that I will be ready, but I think that's easy to say when the time feels far off, it'll be interesting if you got a cancer diagnosis tomorrow in stage four. It's like, be heavy.

Did you have a confront death while in survival situations? I mean, you're in trouble. I did have a time where I thought I was going to die. I had a lot of situations that could have gone either way and a lot of injuries, broken ribs and this and that.

But the one that I was able to be conscious through a slowly evolving experience that I thought I might die in was at one point where siphoning gas out of a barrel and it was almost to the bottom and I was just like, so it's sucking really hard to get the gas out. And then I didn't get the siphon going.

So I like waited and then while I was sitting there, Europe put a new canister on top and put the hose in and I didn't see and so then I went to get another siphon and I went, like sucked as hard as I couldn't. It's just instantly like a bunch of gas filled my mouth and I couldn't like spit it out. I had to go like that and I just full mouth full of gas that I just drank and I was just like, oh, like what is that going to do?

And he and my friend were going to go on this fishing trip and so is I and I was just like, oh, I might just stay and I was in this little Russian village and they're like, all right. Well, Europe was like, man, I had a buddy that died doing that with diesel a couple years ago. And so anyway, I made my way to the hospital and by then you know, you really out of it because and then and it was they put me in this little dark room and almost sounds like unrealistic, but it's exactly how happened.

Put me in a little, a little room with a toilet and they give me a cold, you know, galvanized bucket and then like, there's had a cold water faucet and they're just like, just jug water at puke into the toilet and just flesh your system as much as you can, but they only had a cold water faucet.

So I was just sitting there like, chug chug chug chug chug until like puke and chug until you puke and I'm in the dark and I and I was like, started a shiver because I was so cold, but I said to like still like, get the sting up to me and chug and I was like, I was picture in a member reading, you know, about the Japanese torture where they would put a hose in somebody and then make them drink water to lay puke.

Right, and I just felt so, the only way I can express it, I felt so possessed like demon possess, like I was just permeated with gas. I could feel it just coming out of my pores and I like wanted to like rip it out of me and I couldn't, I'd like puke into the toilet and then couldn't see, but I was wondering if it was like rain by me.

And then, and then I just remember like, I could tell I was going out pretty soon and I remember looking at my hands up close, I could see them a little bit and I was like, oh, that's how dad's hands looked, you know, they were alive, alive and then, you know, interesting, is it, is it, are my hands going to look like that in a few minutes or whatever. So then I wrote down like to my family, what I thought, you know, like I love you all, like feel at peace, blah, blah, blah.

And then I passed out and I woke up. I didn't think, I actually thought, I mean, I went to pass out, I thought it was, there was a coin toss for me. So I really felt like I was confronting the end there. What are the harshest conditions to survive in on earth? Well, there are places that are just purely uninhabitable, but I think as far as places that you have a chance, you know, chance to go out and put it.

What, maybe Greenland, I think of Greenland because I think of, you know, those Vikings that settled there were rugged, capable dudes and they didn't make it. But there are in you that, that, you know, natives that live up there, but that's a hard life, you know, in the populations that were growing very big because they're, you scrape them by up there and you picture in the, in the Vikings that did land there, you know, they just weren't able to quite adapt.

And the fact that they all died out is just a symbol to that must be a pretty difficult place. What would you say that's, that's primarily because just the food sources are limited. Food sources are limited, but the fact that some people can live there means it is possible, you know, that they've figured out ways to catch seals and do things to survive, but it's by no means easier to be taken for granted or obvious. I think it's a harsh, probably a harsh place to try to live.

Yeah, it's fascinating, not just humans, but to watch how animals have figured out how to survive, of watching like a documentary on polar bears. Like, they just figure out a way and they get, and they've been doing it for generations and they, they figure out a way. They travel like hundreds of miles to like, to the, to the water to get fat and they travel 100 miles.

Like for whatever other purpose, because it, because they want to stay on the ice, I don't know, but it's like, there's, there's a process. Yeah. And they figured out against the long odds and some of them don't make it. It's incredible. What are tough things, man? You just think every little, every animal you see up in the mountains when I'm up in the woods, is that thing just surviving through the winter, winter scraping by? Like, it's tough. Tough existence.

What do you think it would take to break you? To say mentally. Like, if you're in a survival situation. I mean, I think it would have mentally, it would have to be, you know, like, a very very very tough experience. Well, I, we thought, we talked about that earlier, I guess the thing that I've confronted to that I thought I knew was that if I knew I was the last person under, I wouldn't do it. I got thought of it, but maybe you're right, maybe I, I think I wasn't.

But I think, you know, I can't imagine, I can't imagine where, we're so blessed in a time we live. Like, but I can't imagine what it's like to lose your kids, something like that. It was an experience that was so common for humanity for so much of history. Would I be able to endure that? I would have at least a legacy to look back on of people who did, but God forbid I ever have to delve that deep. You know what I mean? I could see that breaking somebody.

And I mean, in your family history, there's people who have survived that. Maybe that would give you hope. I mean, I think that's what I would have to somehow hold on to. But in a survival situation, you're just very few things. I don't know what it would be. So I'm alone. Like, I knew if I wasn't going to, and ultimately it is a game show. So it's like, ultimately, I was going to kill myself out there.

It's like, but, so if I hadn't been able to procure food and I was starving to death, it's like, okay, I'm not going to go home. You know, but like if you put yourself in that situation, but it's not a game show, and haven't been there to some degree, I will say I wasn't even close. Like I don't even know. Yeah, yeah, I hadn't gotten, it hadn't pushed my mental limit at all. Yeah, that would say, or on the scale. But that's not to say there isn't one. I know there is one, but I have a hard time.

I know I've dealt with enough pain and enough discomfort in life that I know I can deal with that. I think it gets difficult when you start to, when there's a way out and you start to wonder if you shouldn't take the way out as far as like, if there's no way out, I don't know what to do. Oh, that's interesting. I mean, that is a real difficult battle when there's an exit, once easy to quit. Right. Yeah, well, I'm doing this.

Yeah, that's, I guess the thing that like, it gets louder and louder at the harder things can. That point. It's not insignificant. Like if you think you're doing, like, you know, if you think you're doing permanent damage to your body, and you would be smart to quit, you should just not do that on a, when it's not necessary, because health is kind of all you have in some regards.

So, well, I don't blame anyone then they quit because of that reason, it's like good, but, but if you're in a situation and you don't have the option to quit, is knowing that you're doing permanent, that's not gonna break. That won't break me. You know, you just have to get through it. I'm not sure what my mental limit would be outside of like the family suffering in the way that I described earlier. One is just you, it's you alone, there's the limit. You don't know what the limit is.

I don't know. Injuries, injuries, like physical stuff is annoying though. Oh. That could be. It's weird how, like, I mean, I can be, have a good life, happy life, and then you have a bad back or you have a headache. Yeah. And it's amazing how much that can overwhelm your experience. And again, that was something I saw in Dad. It was like, interesting. How can you find joy in that? When you're just steeped in that all the time and people I'm sure listening, there's a lot of people that do.

And it's so, I, and talk about the cross to bear in the like hero journey to be like good for you for trying to find what you can, what your way through that. There was a lady in Russia, Tanya and she had had cancer and recovered but always had a pounding headache. And she was really joyful and really fun to be around. And I just like, man, I mean, you just have to have a really bad headache for today and know how much that throws a wrench in your existence.

So, so all that to say, if you're not right now suffering with blindness or a bad back or it's like, just count your blessings because it is all, it's so easy to have. It's amazing how complex we are, how well our bodies work and when they go out of whack. They can be very overwhelming and they all will at some point. And so that's an interesting thing to think ahead on. How you're gonna confront it when it does. Keeps you humble, like you said.

It's inspiring that people figure out a way with my brains, that's a hard one though. You have headaches. It's so hard. Oh man, because those can be really painful and dizzying and all this. Yeah, you're that. That's inspiring, that's inspiring that you found. There's not nothing in that. You know, I mean, you can find somehow you can tap into purpose even in that pain. I guess I would just speak from like, right, my dad's experience, I saw somebody do it. And I benefited from it.

So thanks to him for seeing the higher calling there. You were to note on your blog in 2012, you spent five weeks ish in the forest alone. I just thought it was interesting because this is in contrast to on the show alone.

You're really alone, like you're not talking to anybody and you realize that I remember at one point after several weeks had passed, I wondered into a particularly beautiful part of the woods and exclaimed out loud, wow, it struck me that it was the first time I had heard my own voice in several weeks with no one to talk to. What, where did your thoughts go into something like deep place? Yeah, it's in my mental life was really active.

You know, what you end up, when you're that long alone, until you what you won't have is any other skeletons in your closet that are still in your closet. Like he will be forced to confront every person, even the one, not, I mean, one thing if you've cheated on your wow, a wife or something, but you'll be confronted with the random dude you didn't say thank you to and the like, and the issue that you didn't resolve,

all this stuff that was long gone will come up and then you'll work through it and you'll think how you should make it right and I had a lot of those thoughts and while I was out there and it was so interesting to see what you would just brush over and then confront it because in our modern world when you're always distracted, you just never ever gonna know until you take the time to be alone for a considerable amount of time. Spent time hanging out with the skeletons. Yeah, exactly.

I'd recommend it. So you said you guide people, what are your favorite places to go to? Mm-hmm. Huh. If I tell them then is everybody gonna go? I like how you actually have, it might be a YouTube video or your Instagram post where you give them a recommendation of like the best fishing hole in the world and like you give detailed instructions how to get there, but it's like a journey of life. It's like a Lord of the Rings type of journey. Right, right.

No, I love the, I love the, like in the, you know, there's a region that I definitely love in the States because it's special to me. I grew up there. Stuff like that. Idaho, Wyoming, Montana. Those are really cool places to me. I like that small town vibes. They're still maintaining and stuff there. So it's like a mix of like mountains and forests. Mm-hmm. But you know another really awesome place that blew my mind was New Zealand. That's South Island of New Zealand was pretty incredible.

As far as just stunning stuff to see, I was pretty high up there on the list. But there's all these places have such kind of unique, unique things about Canada became like where they did alone. It's not typically what you'd say because it's fairly flat and cliffy and stuff, but it really became beautiful to me because I could tap into the richness of the land, you know, or, or, you know, the fishing hole thing. It's like that's a special little spot, you know, something like that.

And you see the beauty and then you start to see the beauty on the in the smaller scale. Like all of that little meadow with that, it's got an orange and a pink and a blue flower right next to each other. That's super cool, you know, and there's a million things like that. Have you been back there yet? Back to where the alone show was? No, we're going back this summer. I'm going to take a guy to trip up there, take a bunch of people. That's some really looking forward to the roots.

Going back to the roots. You're going to enjoy it without the pressure of. It's going to be fun. What advice would you give to people in terms of how to be in nature? So like a hikes to take or journeys to take out of nature where it could take you to that place where the business and the madness of the world can dissipate and it can be with it. Like how long does it take for you for people usually to just like? Yeah, I think you need a few days, probably to tap into it.

But maybe you need to work your way there. Like it's awesome to go out on the hike, go see some beautiful little waterfall or go see some old tree or whatever it is. You know, like, but I think just doing is it. Now, you know, everybody thinks about doing it. You really just really do do it. Like go out and then plan to go overnight. Don't be so afraid of all the potentialities that you delay it inevitably.

You know, it's actually one of the things that I've enjoyed the most about guiding people is giving them the tools so that now they have this ability into the future you can go out and feel like, I'm going to pick this spot on the map and go there and that's a tool in your toolkit of life that is I think really valuable because I think everybody should spend some time in nature. Everything, I think it's been pretty proven. I mean, camping is great.

And solo, okay, she has a dude solo is pretty cool. Yeah, that's cool. You did. Yeah, it's cool. And I recorded stuff though that helped. Oh, good. So you sit there and you record the thoughts. Actually, for having to record the thoughts, I had to like, it forced me to really think through what I was feeling to convert the feelings into words, which is not a trivial thing because it's mostly just feeling. Mm-hmm. Yeah. You feel a certain kind of way. That's interesting.

You know, I felt like the way I met my wife was like, you know, we met at this wedding and then I went to Russia basically and we kept in touch via email for, you know, that year. And a similar thing. It was really interesting to be, have to be so thoughtful and purposeful about what you're saying and saying. Like, I think it's probably healthy. Good thing to do. What gives you hope about this whole thing we've gone on? The future of human civilization?

If we talk about gratitude earlier, like, look at what we have now. That could give you hope. Like, look at what we've, the world we're in. We live in such an amazing time with, you know, buildings and roads and other things. Buildings and roads and food security.

And, you know, I lived with the natives and I thought to myself a lot, like, I wonder if not everybody would choose this way of life because it is, there's something really rich about just that small group, your direct relationship to your needs, all that. But with the food security and the help, you know, modern medicine, things that we now have that we take for granted, but that I wouldn't choose that life if we didn't have those things.

Otherwise, you're gonna watch your family starve to death or things like that. We, so we have so much now, which should lead us to be hopeful while we try to improve because there's definitely a lot of things wrong, you know, but, but I guess it's, there's a lot of room for improvement and I do feel like we're sort of watching it walking on a nice edge, you know, but I guess that's the way it is. As the tools we build become more powerful. Yeah, it's actually, it's not nice.

I just get sharper and sharper. I talk, yeah, I'll argue with my brother about that. Sometimes he takes the more positive view and I'm like, oh, I mean, it's great. We've done great, but man, more and more people with nuclear weapons and more, so it's gonna take one mistake with the more power. I think there's something about the sharpness of the knife's edge. It gets humanity to really like focus and like step up and not screwed up.

There is just like you said with the cold going out into the extreme cold, it like wakes you up. And I think the same thing when your nuclear weapons is just like wakes up humanity like this. Everybody was half asleep. Exactly. And then we keep building more and more powerful things to make sure we stay awake. Yeah, exactly, stay awake. See what we've done, be thankful for it, but then improve it.

And then of course I appreciated your little post the other week when you said you wanted some kids. That's a very direct way to relate to the future and to have hope for the future. I can't wait. And hopefully I'll get a chance to go out and the wilderness with you at some point. I would love it. That'd be fun. Open and by, let's make it happen. I got some really cool spots on it. Having minds to take you. Awesome, let's go. Thank you for talking to me, brother.

Thank you for everything you stand for. Thanks, man. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jordan Jonas. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me try a new thing where I try to articulate some things I've been thinking about, whether prompted by one of your questions or just in general. If you'd like to submit a question, including an audio and video form, go to lexfremend.com slash AMA.

Now, allow me to comment on the attempted assassination of Donald Trump on July 13th. First, as I've posted online, wishing Donald Trump good health after an assassination attempt is not a partisan statement. It's a human statement. And I'm sorry if some of you want to categorize me and other people into blue and red bins. Perhaps you do it because it's easier to hate than to understand. In this case, you shouldn't matter.

But let me say once again, that I am not right wing nor left wing, I'm not partisan. I make up my mind one issue at a time and I try to approach everyone and every idea with empathy and with an open mind. I have and will continue to have many long form conversations with people both on the left and the right. Now, onto the much more important point, the attempted assassination of Donald Trump should serve as a reminder that history can turn on a single moment.

World War I started with the assassination of Arsch Duke, France, Ferdinand. And just like that, one moment in history on June 18th, 1914 led to the death of 20 million people, have a whom or civilians.

If one of the bullets in July 13th had a slightly different trajectory, where Donald Trump would end up dying in that small town in Pennsylvania, history would write a new dramatic chapter, the contents of which all the so-called experts and pundits would not be able to predict, it very well could have led to a civil war. Because the true depth of the division in the country is unknown. We only see the surface turmoil on social media, and so on.

And in his events, like the assassination of Arsch Duke, France, Ferdinand, where we as a human species get to find out what the truth is of where people really stand. The task then is to try and make our society maximally resilient and robust as such the stabilizing events. The way to do that, I think, is to properly identify the threat, the enemy. It's not the left or the right that are the quote, enemy. Extreme division itself is the enemy. Some division is productive.

It's how we develop good ideas and policies, but too much leads to the spread of resentment and hate that can boil over into destruction on a global scale. So we must absolutely avoid the slide into extreme division. There are many ways to do this and perhaps it's a discussion for another time, but at the very basic level, let's continuously try to turn down the temperature of the partisan bickering and more often celebrate our obvious common humanity.

Now, let me also comment on conspiracy theories. I've been hearing a lot of those recently. I think they play an important role in society. They ask questions that serve as a check on power and corruption of centralized institutions. The way to answer the questions raised by conspiracy theories is not by dismissing them with arrogance and feigned ignorance, but with transparency and accountability.

In this particular case, the obvious question that needs an honest answer is why did the secret service fail so terribly in protecting the former president? The story we're supposed to believe is that a 20-year-old, untrained loner was able to outsmart the secret service by finding the optimal location on a roof for a shot on Trump from 130 yards away, even though the secret service sniper spotted him on the roof 20 minutes before the shooting and did nothing about it.

This looks really shady to everyone. Why does it take so long to get to a full accounting of the truth of what happened? And why is the reporting of the truth concealed by corporate government speak? Cut the bullshit, what happened? Who fucked up and why? That's what we need to know. That's the beginning of transparency.

And yes, the director of the US secret service should probably step down or be fired by the president, and not as part of some political circus that I'm sure is coming, but as a step towards uniting and increasingly divided and cynical nation. Conspiracy theories are not noise, even when they're false. They are a signal that some shady corrupt secret bullshit being done by those trying to hold on to power. Not always, but often. Transparency is the answer here, not secrecy.

If we don't do these things, we leave ourselves vulnerable to singular moments that turn the ties of history. Empires do fall. Civil wars do break out and tear apart the fabric of societies. This is a great nation, the most successful collective human experiment in the history of Earth. And letting ourselves become extremely divided, risks destroying all of that.

So please ignore the political pundits, the political grifters, clickbait media, outrage, fueling politicians on the right and the left who try to divide us. We're not so divided. We're in this together. As I've said many times before, I love you all. This is a long comment. I'm hoping not to do comments this long in the future and hoping to do many more. So I'll leave it here for today, but I'll try to answer questions and make comments on every episode.

If you would like to submit questions, like I mentioned, including audio and video form, go to lexfremar.com slash AMA. And now let me leave you with some words from Ralph Waldo Emerson. Adopt the pace of nature, her secret is patience. Thank you for listening. And hope to see you next time. boxing avi

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