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Season 3, Episode 123

Making Your Life Matter Now with Dan Clark

A conversation with Dan Clark

59:41

About This Episode

Today's episode of True Grit and Grace is with my favorite motivational speaker. Yes, he has made me laugh and cry when attending his speaking events over the years. We discussed motivation, purpose, and how "reason leads to conclusions, but it's our emotion that leads to action." I loved this conversation with Dan because it was so relatable and powerful.

Dan Clark is the founder and CEO of an International Leadership Development Company; a High Performance Business Coach; New York Times Best Selling Author of 35 books; University Professor; a primary contributing author to the Chicken Soup for the Soul series; International Podcaster; Gold Record Songwriter; and an Award Winning Athlete who fought his way back from a paralyzing injury that cut short his football career.

Dan was inducted into the National Speakers Hall of Fame – and has been named one of the Top Ten Motivational Speakers In The World. Dan has spoken to over 6 million people, in all 50 states, in 71 countries, on 6 continents, to more than 6000 audiences including most of the Fortune 500 companies, Super Bowl Champions, NASA, and to our Combat Troops in Iraq, Afghanistan, Asia and Africa. Dan has appeared on over 500 television and radio shows including Oprah and Glenn Beck, PBS and NPR, and has been featured in the Mayo Clinic Journal, Forbes, Inc., Success, Entrepreneur, Thought Masters and Millionaire Magazines.

Dan and I had an amazing conversation about healing after devastating injuries, why believing in miracles gives us the perspective we need, and how you can change your circumstances no matter what, making your life matter now!

Here's what you will learn:

  • How a paralyzing accident changed Dan's life (5:32)
  • Why what we believe aids our healing (11:20)
  • How "ordinary miracles" help us to understand a higher calling (22:41)
  • How going through space helped him to gain perspective (31:21)
  • Why his course helps impact lives in a positive way (38:14)

What did you learn from this episode? Share on Instagram and tag me at @amberlylagomotivation @danclarkspeak so we can see!

Follow Dan

Links mentioned in this episode:

Read the "True Grit and Grace" book here and learn how you can turn tragedy into triumph!

Thank you for joining us on the True, Grit, & Grace Podcast! If you find value in today's episode, don't forget to share the show with your friends and tap that subscribe button so you don't miss an episode!

You can also head over to amberlylago.com to join my newsletter and access free downloadable resources that can help you elevate your life, business, and relationships!

Want to see the behind the scenes and keep the conversation going? Head over to Instagram @amberlylagomotivation!

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Full Transcript

0:04
Amberly Lago

Thank you for tuning in to the True Grit and Grace podcast. I'm Amberly Lago and I'll be sharing inspirational stories of resilience and empowering ideas to elevate your business and your life, ignite your passion and fuel your purpose. Hey, thank you for tuning in to True Grit and Grace. Oh my goodness, y', all, I have so much such a treat for you. My favorite motivational speaker and author is. With us, I have Dan Clark. He's an entrepreneur, transformational leader, hall of fame, motivational speaker, athlete, adventurer, musician. Y'.

0:46
Dan Clark

All.

0:46
Amberly Lago

Dan Clark doesn't just teach what he knows. He teaches what he's done, who he is and what he lives. He's the founder and CEO of international leadership development company. He's a high performance business coach, New York Times bestselling author of 35 books. I love his the Art of Significance book that I have right in front of me now. He has done so much. He's a primary contributing author to Chicken Soup for the Soul series, international podcaster, gold record songwriter, and an award winning athlete who's fought his way back from a paralyzing injury that that cut short his football career. I could go on and on. I had the honor of, well, actually sharing the stage with Dan, but I got to hear him speak at an event that we did together called Secret Knock. I laughed, I cried, and I just love you, Dan. So thank you for being on the show. I can't think of a more perfect guest to have on. You're resilient, you've got a heart of gold, and you definitely have are living a life of significance. So thank you for being here.

2:01
Dan Clark

Thanks. You know, you introduced me as a motivational speaker and that always kind of a weird introduction for me because most motivational speakers, they say goofy things like we become what we think about and that's not true. If that was true, I would have been Amberly Lago by the time I was 12. Just to put it into perspective, we always meet people who put their best foot forward, their best face on. And so often we don't see the behind the curtains life. And in my experience as a professional speaker for 40 years, the only credibility we really have is to be the same offstage as we are on stage. The predictability, the trust transference of trust. And I just want everyone to know in the True Grit and Grace tribe family that, you know, you're a beautiful soul inside and out. Everybody sees that. They see your grace, your sophisticated elegance. But I want everybody to know that what attracts me to You. And what attracts everyone to you, Amberly, is that you're exactly the same with everyone, and you're the same offstage as you are on stage. So when we start talking about credibility, everybody reads our bios. And I've known you for a while now, and I should have yanked your chain and said, I'm not coming on your podcast unless I have a mob spotlight and a fog machine, because we always think it's about us. But you and I both know. And I heard Amberly speak in Phoenix. Just went. Drove a distance just to hear her speak. And in her humility. In your humility, my dear friend, you said, so give me some pointers. I just felt like Ken Griffey Jr. S batting coach, you know? Atta boy, Kenny. Atta girl. So good. You're the same off stage as you are on stage. You treated everybody exactly the same, and that's your credibility. And I would hope that at the end of the day, people would say that about me, because that's what it really means to be a speaker. If you're nervous before you speak, it means it's about you. And if you're excited before you speak, it means it's about the audience. It's seek to bless, not impress. And I just wanted to pay that compliment to you. That's what attracts all of us to you, my dear.

4:23
Amberly Lago

Thank you so much, Dan. Well, I just have to share that story about Phoenix. So I was flying into Phoenix, and I had just written a list of things that I wanted to do, and top of that list was call Dan Clark. I'd been wanting to get you on the show, and that was. I had just written that down. So as soon as the plane starts to land, my phone pings and there is a text message from you. And I was like, wow, this is crazy. I just. I took a picture of myself and my list and sent it to you. I said, I literally just wrote your name down to call you, and here you're messaging me. And I told you I was flying into Phoenix, and you were like, oh, well, I'm in Phoenix. He said, what are you doing there? And I'm like, well, I'm doing a talk. And when you can't, you're like, well, I'll come and be your bodyguard. And I was like, what? You're actually going to come to Phoenix? And I could not believe that you made that drive. And there you walked in backstage. And honestly, to have. I was nervous. And I told you I was nervous because you're my favorite speaker. I really like everything you do. I'm like, I want. That's what I want to be like. You know, I want to be like Dan Clark speaking on a stage, because you really move people. You really bless people. And I told you, I said, oh, my goodness, I can't believe you're here. Now I'm nervous. And you're like, well, then that means it's about you. And. And so you instantly shifted my perspective. But I was a little bit nervous because you were there. And. But then afterwards I did. I mean, I pointed you out in the audience from stage. I was like, y', all, Dan Clark is here in the audience. And when you speak, you do move people. You move mountains. And, you know, reading your book, we have a lot of common because I was an athlete too, and my whole career was just shaken up after my motorcycle accident. But, you know, most people have a midlife crisis in their 40s or 50s, but you really had this life changing kind of a midlife crisis when you were about. I think you were 22. Can you tell us a little bit about that instant when you had this accident and were paralyzed? Can you take us back? Because I want people to know. Everybody I know that is really has this powerful story. They have gone through something pretty traumatic. And when I read about what you went through, I was like, oh, that's why he is so freaking amazing. So can you take us back and share that with the audience so they understand that?

7:16
Dan Clark

Yeah. Thanks. You know, you held up my book, the Art of Significance, Achieving the Level Beyond Success. It's my flagship book of Penguin Random House, and It's like a 30 year book in the making. And as I finished my book tour, I realized the most frequently asked question was, what's the difference between success and significance? And the definition of that actually begins the answer to this simple question. I was in a conversation with one of my football teammates. He was drafted into the National Football League in the second round by the Philadelphia Eagles. And after two years with the Eagles, he's traded to my Oakland Raiders. And after four years in the league, playing at that highest Pro bowl status, one day he walks out of practice, quits never to play again. Why? He loved being a football player, but he hated playing football. He got what he thought he wanted, but he hated what he got. And I only use that as precursor to my story, my personal experience with resiliency, because I played football for 13 years and I thought that's who I was. And when that career came to a screeching halt in one day, I lost my identity. I lost my focus. I lost my purpose. And when we identify ourselves in terms of what we do instead of who we are, we become a human doing instead of a human being. Unacceptable of significance is what we seek. So it took a strat.

8:53
Amberly Lago

It took a catastrophic.

8:56
Dan Clark

Thank you. How I've survived all these years on the road without you, I have no idea.

9:00
Amberly Lago

I got you. Always. I got you.

9:02
Dan Clark

Yeah, I'm really happy to be here. Thanks for filling in. I think as you said, we. We need a catastrophic event to shake, rattle and roll. They say the dog will not move off the nail it's sitting on until the nail starts to hurt enough. Good is the enemy of great. We have all these cliches pinballing around in our heads, but until we have to face the music. And you said midlife crisis. A midlife crisis usually happens for men. I don't know what the age group is for women, but men usually have that midlife crisis at about 50 years old, 50 to 55. And my definition of a midlife crisis is where the man you are comes face to face with the man you could have been. Where we realized that I had so much more to give, I have so much potential. And I just scratched the surface because I got waylaid, hung around with the wrong influences, whatever the case may be. And so when I'm riding the wave, projected as the number one draft pick by the Oakland Raiders, you know my letter from Al Davis invitation trial by the Kansas City Royals as a baseball pitcher, right side was paralyzed. And here's my story in a very consolidated way to kind of take us to the next level of what I learned about the difference between success, success and significance. So in a nutshell, I played football for 13 years. One day in practice, the dream ended. We had a tackling drill. Coach blew the whistle. Two of us ran into each other full speed, the only parts of our bodies that made contact. Lyle's helmet crashed into my helmet in a violent head on collision. My right shoulder was smashed into the cutting edge of my fiberglass pads and we slammed to the ground. And when Lyle got off of me, my eye drooped. I had loss of speech. I couldn't talk anymore. My right side was paralyzed. My arm dangled helplessly on my side.

10:50
Amberly Lago

Oh, my goodness.

10:50
Dan Clark

Coach comes running over. Clark Clarkey. All right, what happened? Rock I show roll, Chef Robert. He says, well, are you from Flower Mound, Texas? I'm just kidding you. I'm just yanking his hand. He said, you better just lay there. I said, whoo. A doctor that was present on the field. He came over and he examined me. He pulls the coach aside. He says, clark's got serious nerve damage. In fact, he might even have serious brain damage. Kosher looks at him and says, how will we ever know? Nice guy. Finally, I went back to normal. My speech came back. I could talk again.

11:19
Amberly Lago

How long did that take?

11:21
Dan Clark

I'm sorry?

11:22
Amberly Lago

How long did it take for your speech to come back?

11:25
Dan Clark

Momentarily. I just had my gray matter rattled so hard. My nerve was never damaged. All these theories because my speech came back. I came back to normal, you know, within minutes.

11:37
Amberly Lago

Oh, wow.

11:38
Dan Clark

I couldn't describe, but when it came back, I was completely numb. My neck, I just laid there, My arm dangled up my side. I talked to and it wouldn't move. Talk about a shocker. I mean, I can't even imagine what it was like when you kind of came to and realized what had happened to your motorcycle accident. Because it's that. It's that shock of reality of the new reality.

12:01
Amberly Lago

Yeah, it's very shocking. Yeah.

12:03
Dan Clark

So I stayed paralyzed for 14 months, went to 16 of the best doctors in North America, 15 of whom told me I would never get any better. And how many of us have heard that? And what happens if you believe it? You never get any better. And my life hit what I thought was a fast moving downward spiral until I hit what I thought was rock bottom, which I wanted to find in a moment, if I can. And now that I've recovered, the two most frequently asked questions are these. Excuse me. Why did I keep going from doctor to doctor? Why did I go to so many doctors? I kept going from doctor to doctor until I found one who believed I would get better. Significance of belief.

12:47
Amberly Lago

Dan, that made me cry the first time that you shared that on stage. And I heard you share that. I was crying because when you are, you are desperate to get better. You want to get better. And just to have somebody believe in you and believe that you can get better is like. It just gives you so much hope and courage to keep moving forward. So that really hit home for me when you shared that.

13:15
Dan Clark

Especially when it's. When it's an expert like you or an expert like a physician, we trust their encouragement. It's not just a rah rah deal. And when, I'm sure when you were faced with the conversations, you overhearing conversations, we're going to amputate your leg. We're going to amputate your leg. Maybe even some cavalier physician said, ah, she won't need her leg. You know, I've had those experiences almost, and maybe that's why we relate so deeply and we connected chemistry and the whole deal so, so quickly because it really is about finding our tribe, finding people who believe what we believe. And the second most frequently asked question that really kind of elevates our conversation is, Clark, what took you so long to change? What took you so long to get better? So every single time anyone tunes into True Grit and Grace, my curiosity would be, okay, what did they do when they clicked off your podcast? What did they do when they left your seminar? What did they do when they leave our speeches? Do they really take action? Or was it just entertainment? And at some point, we've got to encourage each other to take action right now. And so the answer is, the reason why I stayed paralyzed for 14 months was because I was asking the wrong questions. And most of us do. I was asking the doctors how to get better when I should have been asking myself why. And once we answer why, figuring out the how to becomes clear and simple. Doesn't become easy. We still have to put in the hard work. Here are multiple surgeries, another six months of just working so hard to overcome the pain and fight through the. To persevere through resiliency. We all know that. But in the process, adversity introduced us to ourselves. No one will ever know how strong we are until being strong is our only choice. And now that I've recovered, I can publicly announce, as you do, that my paralysis, my football injury, is clearly one of the best things that ever happened to me. Don't misunderstand me. My accident wasn't one of the best things that happened, but who I became as a man and what I learned about time and about resiliency and about priority and about never say never as a result of going through this setback clearly makes it one of the best things that has ever happened to me. And in a philosophical, spiritual way, had you never been in a motorcycle crash and had I not been paralyzed, played football, you and I would have never met. You and I would have never shared a stage, doing our best to uplift humanity and having everyone leave us saying, I like me best when I am with you. I want to see you again. So we have got to look at our trials and tribulations just like we looked at ourselves going into the gym as athletes on purpose. We are creating discomfort. We are putting more weight on the bar today than we did yesterday. We are spending one more minute on the precor, one more minute on the elliptical than we did yesterday. And then for some reason, we leave that pushing ourselves to our ultimate capacity, potential as a human being mindset in the gym and walk outside and truly want it to be 90 degrees with a mountain breeze blowing our hair over our shoulder, with princess parking at every mall and a sale at every store. And that's not what it's all about. We have to do something on a daily basis to make sure we're pushing ourselves. Because if we're not failing a few times, I don't think we're pushing ourselves hard enough.

16:55
Amberly Lago

Do you think that being an athlete really helped you as far as your mindset get through that injury and recover?

17:04
Dan Clark

Yeah, because the mindset of at least a football, basketball, baseball player, once the game starts, the coach is on the sideline, so somebody on the field of play, somebody on the court has to make a play. And I played for 13 years, but I coached high school football for six and a half years. We won the state championship one time. Five, eight. And I used to teach my defensive ends and my linebackers that if it's 4th and 1 and you hope that they run away from you, you didn't work hard enough. You're not prepared. You got to show up at the line of scrimmage in a bad mood and say, I dare you to come here. I've worked way too hard. There's no way in a million years you're going to run 95 yards through my three and a half feet of real estate to score the winning touchdown. Bring it on. Because it's an individual commitment to excellence. It was an athlete. Yeah, we're part of a team, but teams lose, you know, there's no I in team. Well, there's no I sucks either. There's no I in last place. There's no I loser. But if you want to play that game, there's two eyes in winning. And the first I represents independent individual preparation. Please don't let me be the weak link. Don't let me be the wuss. I've worked too hard as an individual. I know how to get back up and go again. I'm a self starter. And if you're not, I don't want you on my team because you're the weak link. Eventually the opposing team is going to exploit your weakness and we're going to all lose. What we focused on winning. And the second eye in winning represents interdependent collaboration. So yes, it is about team. They don't give super bowl rings out one at a time. But the teams that win have the greatest Number of individual eye players on them. So to your point, the athletic mindset, the mentality of I better, if it is to be, it is up to me. I better focus up, focus in and make sure I am putting my best foot forward. Otherwise I might eventually let down my team. So there's that dichotomy between individual excellence and team performance. So, yes, definitely an athletic mindset matters. But because you have so many viewers, so many listeners, so many subscribers who aren't necessarily athletes, let's just put in the mindset of a first responder. You know, your husband is an amazing peace officer. You know, Joy Patrolman, they have the mental mindset, the heart set to run into a burning building while everybody else is running out. I've spent so much time downrange, I've been to Iraq, Afghanistan, downrange, firing up our troops eight times.

19:45
Amberly Lago

Wow.

19:45
Dan Clark

And after hours after the show and the bells and whistles are off, hanging around a bonfire with the Navy seals and the special Forces and the air combat controllers from the Air Force and hearing their stories that I call, that they call ordinary miracles, I just sit there and wonder, could I do what they do? Run towards the sound of the guns? And yes, we all can. If we up level our mindset, if we understand true Grit and grace is more than a podcast. It's a philosophical way of life based on a higher belief, a higher commitment to a credo, for example, Navy SEALs, my words. But what I learned from Marcus Luttrell and Robert o', Neill, who killed Osama bin Laden. I've hung out with these guys so many times, been on the program with them. Under pressure, you don't rise to the occasion. You fall to the level of your training. It's not enough to say, I will do my best. We must succeed in doing that which is necessary. What would happen to your life, your personal performance, if you just suddenly believe that and then allowed your behavior and actions to follow your belief, which they do, under pressure, you don't rise to the occasion. Which means pressure is not something that's naturally there. It is created when you question your own ability and when you know what you've been trained to do, there's never any pressure. That's why we train and practice so hard. We fall to the level of our training. So we have to tune in to true grit and grace. We have to tune in, read Amberly's book, do whatever we can do on a daily basis to up level our mindset. Because everything begins with our belief. You know that reminding your subscribers, reminding your tribe, that anyone can be resilient, anyone can get back up and go again. No one ever has to be the victim mentality ever again. No, but you don't understand. No matter what your past has been, you have a spotless future. You can't always control what happens, but you can always control what happens next. May I share one of my tear jerking stories?

21:50
Amberly Lago

Yes, I would love that. And I think that's a big, big change. When you in your mind decide that you're not going to be a victim, that no matter what has happened, you choose and you decide to be the victor of your life. And you have definitely done that. And you are the best storyteller. So I could sit. I could only imagine sitting around a campfire with you listening to you tell your story. So yes, please do share one of your stories.

22:19
Dan Clark

When I was in your audience in Phoenix, you are a great storyteller. You are so eloquent in your ability to help people answer the three questions that I talk about in my public speaking boot camps and in my classes. Every person in every audience, one on 10 in a boardroom, one on 20,000 in an arena, we crave the answers to three things. I call it my speaker's triangle. Number one, why should I listen to you? Have you done it? Are you currently doing it? It's the credibility piece. Number two, can I do it too? With my past, with my weaknesses, with my limitations, with my strengths? It's the possibility piece. And then because it's an inverted triangle, visually you can see it's a funnel. If you answer question number one, why should I listen to you? Credibility. Question number two, can I do it too? Possibility. Then you're going to be on the edge of your seat. To answer the third question. How do I do it? How do I get from where I am to where I want to be? And is it worth it? To me, it's the actionable system. It's the usability. Credibility, Possibility. Usability. So the reason why we still tell stories is for social proof, because our outside introduction builds our credibility, gets the audience to say, okay, I can't wait to hear what this woman, Amberly, what's her last name? Logo, I hope. I can't wait. And you gave that brief introduction for me before we started interacting. So the credibility booster is critically important. Why should I listen to you? But the way we answer, can I do it too? Is always through a story. Because when we tune into the news source, we never remember facts and figures. We only remember the interpretation of the facts and Figures. How does this relate to me? So when we listen to podcasts, when we read books, when we go to courses or seminars, we have to be reminded that knowledge is power, but knowledge has no heart. In a sales presentation, you never close past the sale. Think about that one for a moment. We don't learn to know, we learn to do. All the information in the world is going to make a person successful. It's like the guy who has three PhDs, one in philosophy, one in psychology, one in sociology. He doesn't have a job, but at least he can explain why. What's my point? Reason leads to conclusions, but it is emotion that leads to action. Reason leads to conclusions, but it is emotion that leads to action. So let me just remind us about the sanctity of time that relates to all ages, all generations, all races, all genders, every one of us. And then just share a short tear jerking experience that will give you the social proof required to believe that this podcast can change your life. That one moment in time can really change your life forever. My quote time. Today you've never been this old before, and today you'll never be this young again. So right now matters. And every right now matters. Which means, as I said before, no matter what your past has been, you have a spotless future. Which means you can't always control what happens, but you can always control what happens next. My begging you to answer that. So do you really believe that right now can change your life? That this True Grit and Grace podcast can change your life forever? I know it can, Amberly. If you and I added up the actual number of minutes that we have spent together, belly to belly, you listening to me, me listening to you, listening. It's such a short amount of time. But those moments transformed our lives, galvanized us as dear, dear friends for the rest of forever because we believe the same, we want the same for humanity. We're trying to serve others with that commitment. Using my lyric from one of my songs to make sure everybody leaves us saying, I like me best when I'm with you. I want to see you again. So here's the social proof. One moment in time will change your life forever. I'm on the program with Henry Winkler Fonzie from Happy Days, clearly one of the funniest guys I've ever met. Obviously many of your subscribers, many of your followers or viewers are so young you don't even know who Henry Winkler is. That's a tragedy. You need to.

26:47
Amberly Lago

I know who he is.

26:49
Dan Clark

You need to Google. He started in a 1970s television sitcom called Happy Days. And his character was the Fonzie. He was the coolest guy who ever lived. Hey, whoa. Henry Winkler and I, we finish our speeches. He decides he wants to take some time off, treat himself to a matinee movie. So we slide in through the side exit door of the theater. And as we shuffle ourselves through the aisle, we find ourselves vacancies. As we turn to sit down in the chairs to look up at the movie screen, the little girl sitting right behind us smiles this giant smile. She points her finger and she slowly says, fonzie. Henry Winkler immediately snaps into the Fonzie character from Happy Days. Hey.

27:30
Amberly Lago

Whoa.

27:31
Dan Clark

And the lady sitting next to the little girl passes out. Henry Winkler milks the moment. Oh, I thought this only happened on tv. Drama. Hey, how cool is this? Theater manager comes out, takes care of the woman's needs. She's lying in the aisle, cold pack on her forehead. She's asked one question. Why did you pass out? She said, my little girl is autistic. And that is the very first word she has ever spoken in her entire life.

28:01
Amberly Lago

Oh my goodness. You are kidding me.

28:04
Dan Clark

You have to believe in our situations. Motorcycle crash, football paralysis. One moment in time changed our lives in a drastic, catastrophic, negative way. But then we turned it around and realized you never lose if you always learn. What can I learn from this to make me a better human being, A better human becoming? And look where it's brought us. And look where we'll bring everyone when we realize that we can control our destiny. We can do what we need to do. The law of attraction isn't about attracting who we want. It's about attracting who we are. We know that. It's about attracting what we deserve, what we believe we deserve in our lives. And that's why you and I are sitting across from, you know, you're in Texas, I'm in our house in Phoenix. And you know, with the threat that I'm going to buy her husband a one way ticket to Jamaica so we can spend more personal time together.

29:08
Amberly Lago

I hope he hears that. Oh my goodness, I hope he hears that. Years that I have to tell you, Dan. So after I first met you, I came home from San Diego when we were in secret at Secret Knock together. And I was just going on and on to my husband about you. I was like, you've got to check out Dan Clark. And he is, you know, he's like, oh gosh, yeah, yeah, yeah, this guy. Oh yeah, whatever. And I'm like, no, you need to look at his Website right now. And he, he pulled you up and he was like, certain. He looked at your website and he's like, oh, wow. Yeah, he's the real deal. That credibility piece, like, oh, yeah, he's been, you know, he's flown up in space. He's, wow. He hangs out with Navy seals. He's the real deal. So, yes, my husband knows all about you. He's heard all about you. But how was that you up in a spacecraft like, tell us that story. What was that about?

30:14
Dan Clark

You know, I just had an article come out on Entrepreneur magazine and Cheryl Snap Connor, the journalist, she did such a magnificent job. Because in my experience, I didn't go as high as Jeff Bezos and as high as Sir Richard Branson, obviously. But their excursion, their adventure to space lasted a total of 11 minutes from launch to landing. And they only saw the curvature of the earth for one minute. They were launched as a rock, not a rocket. Kind of like a rock that would eventually come down, pop the chutes and. But on October 23, 2010, and you can go to my YouTube channel, Dan Clark Speak. You can watch the 15 minute documentary. I had to dumb it down because it's classified mission, but you can actually see what happened. In this article in Entrepreneur magazine, I was able to share the lessons of life that I learned. The tie into true grit and grace. So Beale Air Force Base outside of Sacramento, California is a base for what is called a U2 reconnaissance aircraft. And because it's a classified mission, I can only tell you that it's 70,000ft above the earth's surface. You see 2/3 of the state of California at 80,000ft. You see mapped out lines of america. And at 90,000ft, you actually tear up and feel like you can reach out and touch the face of God. It was the most extraordinary spiritual experience I've ever had that I wish all of your listeners, your subscribers, anyone in the world could have had. Because for five hours, Amberly, I sat in the sounds of Silence for five hours, witnessing the breathtaking curvature of the earth, gazing into the endless blackness of space, the universe, pondering eternity, my place in it. And because I know you're a very spiritual being, I just need to share with your tribe that in that environment, my twisted sense of humor first kicked in. Wow. If we're the only ones here, there sure is a lot of wasted space. But then, in humility and in awe of the universe, I asked a very poignant question. Are we more than mere mortal beings living on a small planet for a short season what is it really all about? What is our true purpose? Are you just making a living or are you designing a life? What is it all about? In that transformational experience, I came to grips with my mortality, with time I related to my football injury. Everything seemed to flash through my mind, through my heart, connecting my head and my heart, all those things that really mattered. But it reminded me of the true lesson I learned from recovery, from resiliency that ties into my football injury that both you and I understand. Getting better and being resilient in any situation, my friends, is not just a rah rah you can, if you think you can, experience. It's biological, it's physiological. Because what we now know is that when you only identify a how and a what, you only engage the brain, you only engage the mind. But when you clearly identify your why, and your why is your why, and your why is bigger than your why not. When you clearly identify your own why and you add to that a compelling want, which is a meaningful goal, it triggers not just your mind, but also your heart. And when you combine triggering your mind, your brain, with your heart biologically proven, your blood pumps more rapidly, your brain fires and your muscles engage. And when you only identify a how and a what, no such emotional experience will ever occur. So I asked my commander and I said, so teach me something. You've been up here many times. He said, right now, Dan, you and I are the highest human beings in the universe other than the astronauts and the cosmonauts living on the space station. And I got teary eyed. I'm like, oh, my gosh. With that perspective. So when we landed, Amberly, this is what I learned when we landed in that retrospective, introspective mindset. I'm telling you, it blew my mind. When we landed, I realized that when we die, everything, everything I had aboard with me on that aircraft is the only thing we can take. That when we die, the only thing we can take with us, I already had with me on that aircraft. Not my money, not my cars, not my houses. Four things. Number one, education. We already talked about that. We don't learn to know, we learn to do. What are you going to do after you click off this podcast? Number two, our character. How are you going to get back up and go again? Resiliency. I already talked about that. I came back from my injury, so did you. Number three, our conviction. How deeply do you believe? Is your current belief deep enough, strong enough, and true enough to empower you to respond, not react, respond to rapid change? Those who have had a hard time coming out of this pandemic, this Covid crisis do so because they call it a crisis. Crisis does not make or break the man or woman. It just reveals the true character within. Come on, let's rename things. In business, if we call it stress, it causes anxiety, stress, and stress. But in sports, stress is competition. Bring it home, baby. I hope you do your best, because I want to beat you here. Best. And leadership stresses urgency. It's not. Oh, my gosh, it's a deadline. Come on, let's rally the troops. All hands on deck. We can do this. It's that second wind is that we can get back up and go again and be more than we thought we could be.

36:14
Amberly Lago

Yeah. You know what I've had?

36:16
Dan Clark

The last thing we can take with us when we die is our memory. I don't believe we lose our memory when we pass to the other side. So the question is, did your life matter? Did you serve others? I've never missed a speech since 1982, Amberly. And I don't want everybody to think, whoa, you're trying to be such a noble soul.

36:34
Amberly Lago

No.

36:35
Dan Clark

The reason why I've never missed a speech is because when I was down, I lost everything. My identity, got all of my attention by being an athlete. I was lost, confused, suicidal, bad. And I know, Amberly, for a fact, that in every one of my audiences, over 6,000 audiences, 73 countries, been doing this forever, there's at least one woman and one man in every one of my audiences who was hurting as badly as I was. And if I can show up sometimes, I've had my flights canceled. I've had to rent a car, drove seven and a half hours one way through the badlands of Nebraska to get to Rapid City, South Dakota, to make a speech. I'm the last speaker of three day conference. When I show up, this man is sobbing, he hugs me. This woman is sobbing, she hugs me. I was the only speaker in three days that showed up because it was weather. Never forgotten that all those years ago. If I can say something, if you and I can say something to save a marriage, to save a life, to give someone that little push that they can trust us because we have gone through it. Isn't that worth it? Isn't that why you even have your podcast?

37:46
Amberly Lago

Oh, my goodness.

37:46
Dan Clark

We've got to do something to make our lives matter. And we have that choice every single day. That's why it's such an honor to hang out with you and to be on your podcast.

37:53
Amberly Lago

Oh, it's such an honor to hang out with you. And I literally, I'm taking notes over here as you're speaking. I'm taking notes. I am just so grateful for you sharing your story, how to be resilient. You definitely have some grit and you give so much grace to others every time you show up and you speak and you were the life of the event, of the party at Secret Knock. You, like, were moderating. You took over. You had everybody crying, you had everybody laughing. And so we have a lot of people. If I can just ask you a couple more questions, because I want everybody to learn how to share their message because we all have a story, we all have a message that matters, but you really teach people how to share their message, how to become a speaker, and you do courses. I think you have one coming up in April, maybe one going on right now, but coming up in April. It's called Speak Like a Pro. Can you just walk us through a little bit of what that looks like, what the program looks like? Because I have a lot of listeners that are like, yeah, I want to be a speaker. Yeah, I have a message that matters. I want to impact something, someone's life in a positive way. So what does that look like in your course? Is it one on one? Is it pre recorded? Do they get to hang out with you? Do they get coached by you? What does it look like?

39:22
Dan Clark

That's my passion in my older age, my way of giving back. So, as I said earlier, I've taught public speaking at the university level for 11 years, which allowed me to crystallize and consolidate what I've learned in all these experiences and put it into a syllabus, put it into a curriculum. So that's definitely part of it. But because I'm a storyteller, let's just pause for a moment and remind ourselves of some of the negative slaps in the faces that all of us as presenters have experienced in our life. Have you ever given a speech and you felt like you didn't rise to the occasion? Have you ever been on a podcast or tried to communicate, make love through a little camera on your compute you bomb? Have you ever done a. Oh, Dan, I did.

40:15
Amberly Lago

I did a webinar. And trying to share the slides and technology, it was so hard. Oh, my goodness. If anything could have gone wrong, it went wrong. I got off of it. I was speaking to a company in the UK and I got off of that presentation and just, I cried. And then I got it together. I pulled it together and I reached out to Them. And I said, hey, thank you for your patience with the technology. I'd really like to make this up to you. Can I do a pre record, like a recorded version so you can send it out to all your employees? Because I know we had some technical difficulties. And so I did, I did it over. They let me do it over. But oh, my goodness. My husband was like, I've never seen you like this. I was like, I bombed that so bad. Like, the video didn't work, the slides didn't work. It's like, oh my goodness. So is that one thing you do also is teach people how to do that.

41:17
Dan Clark

And I'm old school, so what happens if. Let's just be honest with ourselves. Most people who use slides are unprepared because they put the slide up so they can narrate the. The slide number two. My audio visual has never gone south before because I don't use it.

41:36
Amberly Lago

Okay, good. So wait, now do you not use. I don't like using slides. I can't stand using slides because everybody

41:44
Dan Clark

looks at the slide instead of you. And that's.

41:47
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

41:48
Dan Clark

And that means you're, you're, you're. You're relegated to following your memorized script. You can become word bound. And it's just like as if you and I went to dinner, Amberly. And I pulled out three by five cards and I said, how are you, Julie? No, Amberly, I'm so excited to be here. And you whip out your three by five cards and say, oh, Dan, yes. It's so wonderful to be here. I refuse to be relegated to a memorized script. So here's my teacher. A lot different.

42:21
Amberly Lago

Thank you for that.

42:22
Dan Clark

So a golfer goes out on a golf course with 14 clubs in his or her bag, which means no matter where the ball sits in the middle of the fairway, in the bushes, in the sand, you can select the right club to hit that golf ball wherever you need it to go. So my whole style is to first and foremost milk from you. In my boot camps, in my masterclasses, your stories. And then we edit so every word pays its own way. And then we go and we make every story funny, evocative and emotional by adding a quote and making it emotional. And you practice and rehearse that story so it becomes conversational. Then we move on to the next one, the next one, and the next one, which gives you the option. When you're on a pre conference call with the event planner, you ask four questions. This is all in the course. What's your theme how did you come up with it? What does it mean to you? What's the purpose of your meeting? Continuous education units, networking. Is it a trip that they want in an incentive sales contest? Attendees, who are they? What do they do when they wake up? Are they selling? Are they manager? Blah, blah. And number four, the message. What are you looking for me? How can I echo what. What your theme, what your message is? So you leave and everybody thinks, Amberly logos. Amazing, because Dan Clark came in from outside the organization and said exactly what you've been saying in my own little way. In order for you to rise to that occasion, you have to be adaptable and flexible, which means you have that meeting planner help you write your story based on your own past experiences that you've already figured out, you've already identified, you already rehearsed. So let me just give you this quick example. Remember, reason leads to conclusions, but it is emotion that leads to action. So I'm hired to go into Chattanooga, Tennessee, to be the keynote speaker at the luncheon, the fundraising luncheon for the Boy Scouts of America, the Cherokee District of the Boy Scouts of America. And I talked to the chief Scout, the CEO, and we're talking, and I asked him those four questions, and he, about five times during our telephone conversation says, dan, you've got to end on time. You have to end. Got to be a professional speaker. End right on time. He said, last year, speaker went over. Our police chief has stood up to ask for the money. He didn't have enough time. And we fell short $40,000 less last year in our fundraising luncheon than we've ever done. We can't afford to have that happen again. You got to end on time. I said, okay. Speech comes up. I fly in, stand at the Marriott across from the convention center. He says, can I meet you for breakfast? Yeah. Comes over. The only thing you wanted to make sure is that will you stop on time? You've got to stop on time so our police chief can make the ask. I'm like, yes, I can. I'm on a roll. We're laughing, we're thinking, we're feeling. I look at my watch and I'm like, oh, no. My closing story that I thought I was going to end with, which is one of my classic iconic stories about the day my dad died. I still went and spoke. I get a call. It is a great story called the Bellman, but I know it is about seven and a half to eight minutes long. And I am looking at my watch. I am like, no, no. So what do we do? What's the goal? What's the purpose, mission statement? What's the business that your organization is working in or working on? Vision? What are you going to do in the future? Where do you want to be? What's your strategic direction? But a purpose statement is why do you exist in the first place? What are you trying to do? Disneyland. Their entire purpose statement is we create happiness in others. It doesn't matter if you're an executive conducting a business meeting in an office or suiting up as one of the Disney characters or a groundskeeper cleaning up the grounds or running one of the rides at Disneyland or Disney World. Everybody agrees on their purpose statement to create happiness in others. What do we have to do? It's not enough to say, I'll do my best. We must succeed in doing that which is necessary. It's that up level mindset. So I'm on stage going, what's my purpose here? To help them raise money. So on the fly in my mind, because I'd already figured out my stories and practiced and prepared them, I could draw from them if I needed to, just as if we're on a date, just as if we are having an inspirational conversation in any environment. Don't you want to be authentic? Don't you want to be real? Yeah. This is how you do it. This is my uniqueness in my speaker school and what I teach in the art of storytelling, story selling. So visualize the audience. And I said, you know, I live in Salt Lake City, Utah. I am a really good friend with the general manager of the Marriott Hotel downtown. The other day he told me the story. He said, in their lobby restaurant every Wednesday a local businessman shows up in a coat and tie and he conducts a business meeting every Wednesday in their restaurant. And he said, on one Wednesday he came into the lobby restaurant with a young boy. And the general manager of the restaurant comes over to their booth and he says, hey, how you doing? Usually here on business. Who's this? And the gentleman says, this is my 10 year old son. And the general manager of the restaurant says, what's the special occasion? And just then the little guy excuses himself and he goes to the restroom in the lobby. And dad says to the general manager of the restaurant, hey, it's not really a special occasion. My son was just diagnosed with stage four cancer and he's in for the battle of his life. So we decided that we were going to check into the hotel this morning, have breakfast, we're going to go shopping, we're going to come back Take a dip in the pool. Then we are going to order some room service and watch a movie together. And my 10 year old son in his maturity says, dad, I know I am going to lose my hair in my chemotherapy radiation treatment. So I am going to shave my head in symbolism that I am controlling my cancer. The cancer is not going to control me. So if you are a dad, what are you going to do? Obviously, dad tells the general manager of the restaurant, I decided I am going to shave my head tonight as well. So dad asked the general manager, I need your help. Will you please notify all of your staff so that when we show up in the morning with our with our heads shaved, no one gawks and no one asks an inappropriate question like, so what happened to your hair? General manager says, you have my word. Next morning, dad and his little 10 year old son show up to the restaurant. When they're seated at their booth, the two 17 year old boys who came to the booth to take their order had also shaved their heads that night as well. And they were two Eagle Scouts. When you participate in the Boy Scouts of America, the Scout oath teaches young men and young women to be trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and reverent. I concluded my speech by saying, you know what it's all about? Support. And to help you remember the significance of support, a mother encourages her daughter to come home as soon as school is over. The time comes, the time goes. Thirty minutes later, daughter walks in through the front door of her home and her mother scolds her, where have you been? I've been worried sick. She says, oh, mommy, I walked my friend Sally home. She dropped her doll on the sidewalk and broke all to pieces. It was awful. Her mother said, so you're late because you stayed to help your friend pick up the pieces of the doll and put it back together again. She said, oh no, Mommy, I didn't know how to fix the doll. I just stayed to help her cry. I said, ladies and gentlemen, you have a gift card in the middle of your table, a donation card. Let's support the Boy Scouts of America to give character education to young men and young women, wherever they may be. Ten days later, Amberly, I got a letter on the Chief Scout, on the Chief Executive Scouts letterhead. Dan, you helped us raise $100,000 more. 60,000 more than last year because we went down $40,100,000 more than we did last year.

50:20
Amberly Lago

Wow.

50:21
Dan Clark

And it was because of those two stories. He said, they had donation cards where they crossed out their amount at the beginning of the luncheon.

50:29
Amberly Lago

Oh, my goodness.

50:30
Dan Clark

Tripled it. And The President of SunTrust donated this huge amount of money. It's the significance of storytelling. It's the integrity that we take to the stage, the privilege of the platform. Seek to bless, not impress. And so when you have so many stories and you're prepared, when you're prepared, you shall not fear. The number one fear is not speaking in public. The number one fear is speaking well in public. When we understand that we can always rise to the occasion and refuse to lose, refuse to bomb. And I never have because of that.

51:01
Amberly Lago

Oh, my goodness. Yes, that story. You had me crying again. But you just have such an incredible way of, of sharing stories. And you were getting people donating at Secret Knock. Everybody was like, they were going to like, auction. At the auction, people were battling, trying to win stuff because of your storytelling. So tell us where they can take part in your speak like a pro. That's coming up.

51:32
Dan Clark

Okay, so generally speaking, you can just check me out, danclark.com. that's my website. You can snoop around. Go to the library. I have all my books. Blah, blah, blah. Go to my music page. You can hear some of my great songs. Had I shot you when I met you, I'd be out of jail by now. That's a cheer jerk you all need to hear. You can follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Dan Clark Speak. I always publish a master of the morning, own the day, but I will always notify you when there's a new bootcamp masterclass coming out. It's a roll up your sleeves, exclusive opportunity where when you enroll and when this comes live, Amberly, you'll be able to put up the QR code as we talked about before we went live. But what you're going to get is a free download of my book, Speak like a, which is the art and science of public speaking. We make every story funny, evocative and emotional. So you're going to get my joke book. You said, you know, it's 35 books. It's actually 37 books because I read.

52:23
Amberly Lago

Is it 37?

52:24
Dan Clark

But I have a joke book. They're all time tested, hilarious jokes, very clean. But every joke has a message. So you don't tell a joke. Because if you tell a joke and no one laughs, you bomb. If you tell a joke with a message and no one laughs, you still teach. It's okay. You make every story funny. I have a quote book, my own quotes, my own quips. Really proud of that. And a chance to add in a quote to make your message or story come alive with credibility and evocative.

52:50
Amberly Lago

Oh, well, I want to get that quote book. I don't have that.

52:53
Dan Clark

I'll send them all to you. And then emotional, you got to have an opportunity to tell stories. So we talk about the art and science of storytelling, how to trigger these brain chemicals. Just like I did in you sharing that story about the two 17 year old eagle Scouts. Oh, you had not just endorphin. I triggered a little bit of dopamine. Can I do it too? But more importantly, I triggered oxytocin and serotonin, which are the relationship love drugs, the service drugs. So now everybody's more willing to write a bigger check. There's ways to trigger these emotions to help influence buying decisions and you need to learn that. So you'll get a free download of all these books as a resource library and then you'll get my course. Usually, you know, it retails for 997. I'm going to give it to you for 497. You can upgrade with coaching calls. So you could literally get a $5,000 retail package just for trugrit and grace the friends and family discount with Amberly. We'll work it out. I just want to be your speaker coach because my whole philosophy is completely different than anyone else's. And I guarantee that you have the story in you and I can help you turn it into a TED Talk. We can convert that into a book because of this process. But more importantly, you can be that most significant communicator and tear at people's heartstrings, educate them, inspire them all through the art and science of storytelling. So thanks for letting me. I can't believe I took so long to just give this surf pitch. But I want everybody.

54:23
Amberly Lago

You know what, it's because it's that good and I want people to know that because especially we need more female speakers as well, like sharing their story. And I love your philosophy. And you had me at. You don't like slides. That was awesome.

54:42
Dan Clark

So let me just, let me just compliment you. You brought up something so magnificent. So one of the boards I served on was that I was on the National Civic Leaders board of the Chief of Staff of the Air Force. So we would meet as a Pentagon appointee. We'd be meeting Washington D.C. maybe every six weeks or so. We're at the Pentagon. They introduced this war hero. He comes out kind of got a limp. They tell his story. He comes out we meet him, he tells his story. He's wounded. He's still shooting the bad guys. He's administering first a. He's calling in close air support as an air combat controller. I mean, he's got all these things going. True hero. We give him a standing ovation. Unbelievable story. Then they introduce this petite blonde who looks like you, Amberly. And she comes out and she was a nurse, and she's in a convoy and they're attacked and she's wounded and she's shooting the bad guys and she's administering life saving first aid and she's saving lives. And under all this chaos and commotion, True hero. We gave her a standing ovation. Cheers. Unbelievable. And in that moment, Amberly, I realized as a professional speaker, a man can be a role model to a man, but a woman can be a role model to both a man and a woman because you can get men to do things that other men can't get us to do. So to your point, I am such a fan of women in business. I am such a fan. So devoted and dedicated to helping more women get on big stages to get their messages out. Because the impact you have, that is why I am the number one fan of Amberly Lago. That would be a reason for you to participate in our speaker masterclasses, our speaker boot camps, and to really get together as we embellish one another's stories and help one another take our storytelling to the next level.

56:32
Amberly Lago

Oh, Dan, count me in. Yeah, please count me in. I really do want to do that. From the first time I learned of it.

56:41
Dan Clark

Gosh.

56:42
Amberly Lago

I think back in San Diego, I was like, yeah, I want to do that. But you guys also check out the. His book that I'm reading right now is the art of Significance. I'm just going to hold it up. Look at this book. It's beautiful. I also have it on audible. It is such an incredible read and I have so many pages highlighted. I mean, there's so much. Dan, I could go, I could talk to you all day just because of what is in what you do. But what is in this book about exercise, perseverance instead of patience. Focus on winning instead of team. We talked about that a little bit. Do right instead of seeking to be the best. So this book is incredible. You guys can get the link of the book in the show notes as well. And I will have the QR code in the show link so you can take part. Come join me in his speak like a pro. It's going to be so much fun to hang out with you again and thank you for all that you do, for the impact that you make. Thanks for coming to see me in Arizona. That blew me away. I went into the back. Can I just admit something really quick? So when you came in, I don't know if you know, you met Patrice Washington, who was there at the event. Love her. She's an amazing speaker. So actually, she's going to be on the podcast, too. So we went into the bathroom, and I barely knew her. I just met her, and I looked at her and I said, oh, my gosh. Dan Clark came to hear me speak. I'm freaking out right now. I can't believe it. And she goes, do you want me to pray with you? And I said, yes, please. And she just held my hands and prayed with me. And I was like, okay, it's not about me. God's with me. God speak through me. So I was freaking out a little bit. I mean, so excited and so honored. But you are just. You bless me in so many ways. Your friendship does. And I think I am going to see you in Dallas soon at the your message matters mastermind, right?

58:53
Dan Clark

Yes, ma'.

58:54
Amberly Lago

Am.

58:56
Dan Clark

Your message matters. It really, really does. You know, as long as we have that purpose statement already figured out before we arrive, we'll just take each other to the next level. I can't wait to see you, my friend.

59:07
Amberly Lago

Oh, I can't wait to see you again, y'.

59:09
Dan Clark

All.

59:09
Amberly Lago

Check him out. Dan Clark is with us and blessed us, and I just appreciate you. Thank you so much for being on the show. Thanks.

59:19
Dan Clark

Love you at every level, my friend. You inspire me, and I appreciate you. You are truly a beautiful soul.

59:25
Amberly Lago

Oh, I love.

Pain to purpose to joy.

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