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Season 3, Episode 140

Thriving Through Sobriety, Suffering, and Struggle with Charlie Engle

A conversation with Charlie Engle

1:05:36

About This Episode

I met Charlie backstage at a Tony Robbins event, and was immediately drawn to him and his contagious, positive energy. We talked about shared suffering and how sobriety and fitness has transformed our lives. He has such an incredible story, I was thrilled when he accepted the invite to share it on the podcast with you.

Charlie Engle is a writer, runner, recovering addict, and keynote speaker. As he puts it, he's an addict who runs and a runner who writes. He's run across deserts, summited ice-covered volcanoes, swam with crocodiles and served a stint in federal prison. But his greatest challenge is the one he takes on every single day—sobriety. He has been clean and sober since July 23rd, 1992.

As Engle got sober, he turned to running, which became his lifeline, his pastime, and his salvation. He began with marathons, and when marathons weren't far enough, he began to take on ultramarathons, races that went for thirty-five, fifty, and sometimes hundreds of miles, traveling to some of the most unforgiving places on earth to race. The Matt Damon-produced documentary, Running the Sahara, followed Engle as he lead a team on a harrowing, record breaking 4,500-mile run across the Sahara Desert, which helped raise millions of dollars for charity.

In this episode Charlie tells the stories of addiction, recovery, prison, sobriety, running, and overcoming struggles with grit and grace. He is a true inspiration, a treasured friend, a light in the world and in my life, and you will get so much out of listening to this episode!

Here's what you will learn:

  • How to welcome suffering when it enters your life and learn some of the greatest lessons (3:41)
  • How to keep forward momentum going. From addict to record-breaking ultra runner (12:09)
  • A way to publicly share your sobriety story (21:04)
  • Why owning your own struggle can be so powerful. "The addict part of me is the best part of me," says Charlie (28:31)
  • How Charlie uses breathwork and meditation to prepare for speaking (34:27)
  • What he learned about moving your body from his time in prison (42:38)
  • How wearable devices help in life coaching (54:22)
  • Learn more about his 30 year sobriety milestone and how he plans to celebrate by running for 30 hours!!

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

Follow Charlie

Links mentioned in this episode:

This episode is sponsored by Nootopia:

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If you are ready to leave your mark by discovering your message and sharing it with the world, you've come to the right place!! Let's work together to build your influence, your impact, and your income! Join the tribe you have been waiting for to activate your highest potential and live the life you deserve! Jump on the waitlist for the next "Unstoppable Life Mastermind!" JOIN NOW and let us know you are ready for greatness!

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. Thank you all for tuning in to True Grit and Grace. This episode is proudly brought to you by Nootopia, the most powerful nootropics on the market today. And these nootropic stacks are taking the industry by storm because they're highly effective and each formula is customized for you based on your strengths, weaknesses and your goals. So you can get exactly what you need. And your customized formula help you really focus intensely, block out distractions, reduce stress and anxiety, enhance your creativity, boost your memory and get rid of brain fog and so much more. And the best part, there's a one year guarantee. So there's no risk, zero risk to you to try them for yourself. So here's the deal. If you feel like you're not fully maximizing your potential both personally and professionally, then you owe it to yourself to try Newtopia's formulas. They're a total game changer. Simply go to nootopia.com Amberly that's N double O-T-O-P-I-A.com A M B E R L Y and make sure you use that special code, Amberly so you get your discount again. Nootopia.com Amberly and you can find that link in the show notes. And now enjoy the episode. Hey y', all, thank you for tuning in or tuning in again. If you're a first time listener, you are gonna love this episode. I feel so blessed because I have a new friend. He's on the show. It's gonna be a real treat for you. Charlie Engel is here with us today, y'. All. He's legendary. I mean, there's extreme and then there's Charlie Engel and I have his book Running man with a must read. We'll get into that some more. He has got a documentary that's produced with Matt Damon and also I think Matt Damon. I haven't seen that one yet, but Matt Damon also did the narration for it. He's run across the Sahara. He has run across icy volcanoes. There's probably not about anything this man cannot conquer. He's even had a short stint in federal prison. He has overcome addiction. He's coming up on his 30 year sobriety date and we're going to have a big celebration for that. He's doing a penguin race and we'll get into that. But I just am so grateful, so honored for you to be here. Charlie, thank you so much for coming onto the show today.

2:52
Charlie Engle

Well, Amberly, that was the best intro I've had a long time, so thank you very much. It's really a pleasure to be here, and I'm excited about this conversation we're going to have.

3:00
Amberly Lago

Well, I saw you on stage, so I got a ticket to go to a Tony Robbins event, y'.

3:06
Charlie Engle

All.

3:07
Amberly Lago

And I was like, I'd never been to a Tony Robbins event. And I saw. I just moved here to Dallas, and I bought a couple of tickets for me and my friend Sarah and Trevor to go to this event. And sometimes you think that you're going to event to learn something or may a speaker, and then you get there, and I'm like, oh, my gosh, Charlie, you were the most amazing speaker. And you even had, like, a technical difficulty. Like the electricity went off during the middle of your talk, and I was like, there he is, King of resilience. You just kept it going. But I was so moved by your authenticity, your vulnerability, and your story of struggle to success. And then even more than that, I was so touched by afterwards when I went to go meet you, just what a huge heart that you have. And so can we just start by saying what an incredible badass you are? And, like, were you. Was this your first time speaking on a Tony Robbins stage?

4:17
Charlie Engle

It was. It was. And I have taken to saying that, I guess my. It was a higher power thing, that the power got cut on me. So. Because I spent my life sort of telling people that adaptation is the key to pretty much everything, you know, you. When things are going right, it's easy to be an optimist. But you know what happens when, you know, somebody literally pulls the plug? And, you know, I'm happy to say, at least in that instance, I was able to kind of just keep. You saw me. I basically just kept yelling at the audience.

4:50
Amberly Lago

Yes, but.

4:51
Charlie Engle

But my microphone cut out.

4:53
Amberly Lago

Yes. And by the way, I was saying before we started recording, I was like, I haven't even checked email today. I haven't done much of anything except for stick my hair in a ponytail because I couldn't put your book down. And I was like, I just have to get to the end. In the end chapter. I love this. You say, I continue to believe that life is all about adaption. It's not the circumstances that we. That we are dealt that define us. Instead, the fabric of who we are is crafted by how we react, cope, adapt. And now I have a new mantra that I carry with me. No big deal. I've adapted that mantra, by the way. Which comes from your wife. Right.

5:33
Charlie Engle

I think you and I bonded immediately over what I like to call mutual suffering. You know, and I mean, I don't mean that tongue in cheek or as a smart ass. It really is the case that it's the same way I bonded with my wife. You know, she had already been through a tremendous amount by the time we met. And I think that that knowledge of shared suffering allowed you and I immediately to kind of cut to the chase. We know, we both know we've been through some stuff.

6:05
Amberly Lago

Yeah. And I feel like it allowed. You speak the same language.

6:09
Charlie Engle

Well, and the other thing, I mean, look, everybody goes through stuff. And this is what I like to encourage people, and I think you do too. We all think that our stuff is somehow shameful or embarrassing or if other people knew these things about us that they might feel a certain way. And I contend that for the most part, it's the exact opposite of what we think. The more of that painful stuff that we share openly with other people, the more it welcomes our community into, into the struggle and creates really lasting relationships. I mean, look at social media. It's a great example, you know, those people, God love them, who, nothing ever goes wrong in their life, at least according to social media. I'm just not interested in it. I, I don't, I can't, I can't really relate to that person who, you know, whose life that perfect is boring, really boring. And I mean, that's a, that's why I've done, you know, you read the book, but it's why I've done a lot of hard stuff. And I mean, people who might think that the book is about running because it's called Running man, it really doesn't have a lot to do with running. There's some running in there because I have done a lot of running, but it's really about this idea that controlled suffering allows me to learn how to deal with really hard situations that are out of my control. So what I mean by that is just if I run, and I know we haven't gotten into the story, but if I run a marathon or I run 100 miles or I run across a desert, I'm going to want to quit at some point. I mean, I'm not superhuman. Like I'm just a regular guy who likes to run. And there's going to be a point in that event where I'm going, why did I think this was a good idea? And I'm going to want to quit. That's the most important moment in the event, because that's the one I'll remember. Because everything is about trying to get past that moment. And for those people who are listening, I know you have a lot of sober followers, too. It's the same as that moment when relapse is, like, right there, or that same moment when you're thinking about leaving your relationship or your job or whatever it is, you may still choose later to take those actions. But usually in that dark moment when we're thinking about quitting something, if we can just let that moment slide by and then approach it again with a clearer head later, a less emotional approach to it, usually we will find that we make the right decision. So the point is, the more often I get to that place, like in a marathon, where there's really not that much at stake, like, if I quit the marathon, nobody cares. I care, but, like, there's no. It's not life and death. But the more often that I push past that moment and just let it slide by, the better I am at doing that in the other parts of my life.

9:17
Amberly Lago

Well, I mean, I want to get into, like, what do you do in that struggle? In just a few minutes. But I want to go back to, like, how you got into running, because here you were an addict, but you had. You were a successful salesman. You were, like. Would you call yourself a functioning addict or.

9:38
Charlie Engle

Well, aren't. Aren't all addicts successful salespeople? Because that's basically what we do. I always say that if you have a business and you're looking for salespeople,

9:48
Amberly Lago

get a recovering addict.

9:50
Charlie Engle

You got it. If you're not finding people who are in recovery, you're not. You're missing an entire pool because, you know, someone who's in recovery from addiction has figured out you can take that superpower of addiction and obsession and you can point at it positive things. Rather than drugs and alcohol or gambling or sex or whatever it is, you can point it towards positive things. And that energy is, like, unconquerable. I mean, so when I, you know, I spent 10 years beating my head against the wall of addiction, and very often a lot of it was about proving that I wasn't an addict. And my view of that was, if I was the top salesperson or if I was, if I could buy a house or I could get married or I could do, like. Addicts don't do those, do they? And, like, that was my viewpoint. And, of course, addicts do all those things. And it was my way of appearing normal, despite how I felt inside and how I knew that I needed to make a change. I just didn't have. I didn't have the courage or the ability for. Until. Until the time was right. And, you know, I'm lucky. We're lucky that we finally found that time when we had had enough.

11:09
Amberly Lago

Yeah, well. And what's so interesting is, so you started running, and it was a way kind of out of your addiction. So for me, I got into my addiction because I could no longer run, which is so wild. I had to figure out, okay, and. And I realized running was an addict, I guess, an addiction. For me, it was the way I coped with anxiety, fear, shame, a lot of shame. But when was it that you were like, enough is enough. I cannot kind of live this double standard, because for me, I was like, on the inside, I felt like I was dying inside. On the outside, I was trying to keep it all together and prove that I was really okay, but I wasn't. And when was the point, the turning point, if you could just share with the listeners like, that you were like, I am sick and tired of being sick and tired of feeling like this, of doing these things, or. What was that point for you?

12:06
Charlie Engle

Yeah, well, that. That decade of addiction that I had was filled with attempts at quitting. You know, I went to rehab, I went to meetings, I went to church. You know, I like to joke that I went to a shaman, and if I could have found a witch doctor, I would have done that. Like, I. I was what. In hindsight, what I realized is I was desperate for someone or some other thing outside of me to take away my pain. Like, I. I wanted somebody to basically force me to quit. And my son, when I was 29 years old, was born my first son. And I basically thought he was going to be that. That thing that was going to save me. That, like, I felt like I had tried everything else and nothing had worked. And of course, nothing had worked because I hadn't worked it, as we say. But I didn't know that at the time. So I was looking for this other, like, finally, you know, surely I'm a decent enough human that I could stay sober for my son. I mean, that's how I. That's how I felt. And of course, you know, that's not how things work. And a couple months into his life, you know, I found myself once again in the worst neighborhood in town, you know, drinking and smoking crack for six days. And, you know, that binge ended with me sitting on the ground outside a, you know, dumpy motel, handcuffed behind my back, you know, the police searching my car. And, you know, I sort of realized in that moment, despite not sleeping for six days, I had this epiphany, I guess you could call it. You'd have to call it that. And that is just that nobody's coming to save me. You know, my infant son certainly can't save me. My wife couldn't. My bosses couldn't. Nobody else could save me. I'm not a particularly religious person personally, but I have a lot of friends who, you know, the church, whatever church that might be, is very important to them. And most of them who are in recovery will also admit that even God can't save you until you're ready to be save, whatever that might mean to you. Until you can hand yourself over to something and say, okay, I obviously don't have the ability to do this, you know, for those 10 years, you know, I just thought I could outsmart this thing. You know, I'm a smart guy and, you know, I'm. All those other people who go to meetings and, you know, turn their life over and do all this stuff. It's like, that's not for me.

14:49
Amberly Lago

Well, all the things we tell ourselves, right? Like, all the promises that I would make to myself.

14:55
Charlie Engle

Oh, yeah.

14:56
Amberly Lago

And. And I was. I was, like, in the victim mentality for a while. Like, how did a good girl like me end up like this? I was so different from so many people in my family. How could I be an alcoholic? And Charlie, I am married to a cop. He was lieutenant commander, so trying to sneak my drinking because I was, like, hiding it and sneaking my drink in and living with a cop, that took some skill. You know, I'd be like, oh, me? No, I haven't been drinking. Don't make eye contact. The things that we tell ourselves. There is one story in your book that I love, is when you're taken to prison and they ask you, okay, what's your religion? And you're like, I don't really have one. And he's like, okay, but when it comes time for Easter, don't be telling me that you're one thing or you're. Or you're, you know, a Jew and you want crackers or whatever. And I was just laughing. In that chapter of your book, it is, like, hilarious. Like, yeah, just the real raw conversations that you had. But when you decided to get sober, did you. What did you. What did you do at that moment?

16:12
Charlie Engle

You know. You know, I had been to. I think what it took for me was that. That moment of recognizing that nobody could save me until I was ready to take the first steps. And so I. I'd been to loads of AA meetings up to that point, but I went to a meeting that night. You know, that night I went to a meeting, and I got up the next morning, and I put on my running shoes, and I ran, like, two very painful, awful miles. And, you know, as you know from the book, I'd been a runner in high school and even in college, you know, I used running. I. You know, I was a binger. I would go hard for a week or a month or even six months, and then I would clean my act up for a little while and. And make that Proclama. I'm never going to do that again. And, you know, we all know how that goes. But this time, when I recognized that there was no other thing outside of me that could set this course in motion, and I made a commitment. I made one simple commitment on that day, and that's that I would do those two things. I would go to a meeting, and I would run every day for 30 days. That's all I said. And I kept it simple. And I knew I shouldn't be thinking about the rest of my life, and I shouldn't, you know, whatever. I should just focus on this one thing. And for 30 days, I did it. My life got markedly better. And I said, okay, why don't I just keep going for 90 days? And so I did it for 90 days. And ultimately, to cut to the chase, I ended up going to a meeting and running every day for three years.

17:44
Amberly Lago

Every single day for three years, you

17:48
Charlie Engle

went to a meeting a single day? Yeah. And, you know, and for me, it began to feel like people will accuse you of being addicted to anything. You know, they're like, oh, now you're just addicted to aa or you're addicted to running. I'm like, well, you know, I haven't pawned my computer or sold my car for dope lately. So I call that a step in the right direction. I said this on stage at Tony Robbins, and you want to know something? I'd never done it the way I did it there. And I didn't. Plan just sort of happened on stage, but I. I made this motion, I remember, of like, someone hauling on a rope, right? They're. They're pulling. And even when your life is getting better, there are people in your life and sometimes they're the ones who love you the most, and they're close to you, and they're still trying to pull you back into their lifestyle. And it took me years to understand that that wasn't about you, that was about them. You know, their fear of you actually getting better and leaving them was stronger than their desire for you to get better. And I use the weight loss thing as the greatest example because it's a simple one that most people understand, and it has happened so many times, and I guarantee you there's going to be people nodding their head when they hear this. You take two people, they're good friends. They both want to lose weight. Let's say they're basically at about the same spot, but one of them has much greater success, and the other one simply can't get going. It can cause a huge rift in the relationship. It's hard for the person who can't lose the weight to be happy for the other person. And the person who's losing the weight almost feels guilty about having made the change and suddenly they no longer have a relationship. And I. I think it's an easy example to understand. And it happens in addiction recovery all the time.

19:47
Amberly Lago

All the time it happens in addiction and recovery. I think it happens. I think you find your true friends. You want to find your true friends. You go tell somebody something really good that's happened, and you see the reaction to it. Are they genuinely excited? Like, I can't wait for this. This is amazing. Or not. And that happened even not just with my recovery from addiction and ongoing recovery, but also in the community that I had with complex regional pain syndrome. I was like, in this community with people who have this nerve disease. And I remember when I was on the doctors and, you know, they edit things out when you're in media. And I had some. I thought that was like my support system. And I had some naysayers and some people that came out really hard on me. Like, you can't get through pain with your mindset and moving your body. And I'm like, well, it works for me. I get through it. I didn't say it will end. It gets rid of all my pain, but it helps me get through it. And I think it was kind of a mirror to some things that maybe they weren't doing. It had everything to do with them and not me, you know? And so it's hard to kind of have to cut that cord. I did. I had to, like, cut the cord. I had to get out of that group, actually. And Be like, I don't want to be around negativity and that. And so I really had to. I think you find out your true blue friends when you're going through success or failures.

21:22
Charlie Engle

Yeah, no, I think you said it so well. And I. And I think we always have to try to be compassionate about other people's pain and the pain they're going through when they're using harsh words for us, you know, and the lesson I learned so long ago is never read the comments. That's kind of a. You know, it's an old rule. And, I mean, I'm actually not kidding. Whatever I'm on, I love being on podcasts. I love writing things. I love. But when you expose yourself openly and honestly, you know, there are tons of people out there who just seem to live their lives in order to criticize other people.

22:01
Amberly Lago

I just had an experience. I just flew back in town. I was speaking at an event in Denver, and I'm not one of those rah, rah motivation kind of speakers. I love your style. I love how you were doing a talk for Google, I think it was, and you were like, I threw out the scripted talk, like a couple of days or even the night before, and you said, I just wanted to keep it real, like, give it to them straight. And that's the kind of speaker I am. And I definitely have speaking points. And I went over it for a month, you know, going over exactly what I'm going to say, and then I get on stage, and sometimes, especially when you have 45 minutes to an hour, you have a little bit more time. I kind of can get off on a tangent, go over, and then I can reel it back into the topic. But I got really, like, raw, real. And I shared something that, you know, went on with some. Someone very close to me, how we don't always get the support that we might want from someone that's closest to us, whether it's somebody in our family or a best friend. And I actually had someone get up on stage and make a comment, like a negative comment about that. And I leaned over to this very successful coach that was one of the other speakers, and I said, did you get that from my talk? Did it seem like, you know, this or that? He goes, not at all. I said, I mean, how many people struggle in their relationships when they are achieving success? And it's almost a threat because it does create fear in loved ones, like, oh, are they going to get big? Are they going to leave me? And so it is hard sometimes when you're putting yourself out there. So my next question for you is, how did you start to publicly share your sobriety story? Did you ever have a lot of shame about your addiction, or were you always this, like, forthcoming? And this is who I am.

24:00
Charlie Engle

Well, first of all, I'm sorry that happened to you on that stage. You don't do that, you know, to anybody. Even if they disagreed with you, they could have come up to you privately and said, hey, you know, whatever. So that's just, again, one of those lessons that baffles me that people, no matter what they were wrong. I mean, and it made them look bad. I mean, so just always crazy.

24:21
Amberly Lago

Like, everybody was like, wow. And I had somebody come up to me and say, you just gave the most inspiring talk I've ever heard. And I cannot believe that other person got on stage and said that about you. I was like, you know what recovery taught me? I tell you what, I wish everyone in the world had. Would study the 12 steps. It really is just such a great way of living. But it taught me that, you know what? Obviously, there's something that they're going through in their life.

24:51
Charlie Engle

Yeah.

24:52
Amberly Lago

And it has something to do with them and not necessarily mean. I mean, I'm more than willing to see my part in things, but I was just like, but be a nice human. But. So thank you for that. But, yeah, just. I had so much shame about. Especially because being married to a cop, he was like, no, no, no, no. You are not an alcoholic.

25:11
Charlie Engle

Like, yeah, yeah.

25:11
Amberly Lago

You do not want. No, don't admit that. Like, because he arrested people like me.

25:17
Charlie Engle

Yeah.

25:17
Amberly Lago

Or, you know.

25:18
Charlie Engle

Well, which, by the way, though, I mean, and I know you. I know you're way beyond this and, you know all this, but, like, that's. That, again, is like, oh, so, you know, cops don't drink. Cops don't. Like, there's so much to dig into there that this isn't the time or place. But, I mean, that actually is the answer to your question you just asked me. It's like, when did I decide I was going to share openly? And it's because it really happened right from the very start. You know, it just. I got a chance early on in my recovery to speak weirdly at a. I was in a fraternity in college, which I'm actually always a little bit embarrassed by, because I'm sort of the opposite of what you'd consider to be your kind of typical fraternity guy, but at least stereotypical, you know, deal. And that's where I learned how to drink properly in College, you know, because the drinking age was 18 when I went to college in North Carolina in the early 80s, and I gave this talk that was the hundred year celebration for our national fraternity. So there were a couple of thousand people in the audience. And it was actually a terrible talk. It was the first big talk I ever gave. And I. It was terrible because of one thing. I was so inexperienced as a speaker that I thought this talk, I had an hour needed to start from basically the day I was born to that very day. Like, I needed to tell them because, like, they needed context, they needed to understand my story. Now, as a much more seasoned speaker, I understand my job is to tell two or three really good stories, give an overall context, and if people want to learn more about you, there's about a million ways they can do that. So, you know, I've. I've changed stylistically, but what I did do was literally dump all of my shit on that stage all those years ago. And it felt so freaking good. And what I actually did is then I started to learn to become a speaker, both in it within 12 step recovery. Because as you know too, a super safe way to learn how to speak is you. If you, if you're the one sharing at a meeting, even if it's just a short share or if you're the speaker for a speaker meeting, you know, it's your opportunity to tell your story. But I did it in Rotary clubs and Kiwanis and like, I just started to hone my. My craft. And what I recognized so early on was that when I told stories of struggle, I got so much support and strength and comments and everything else. And if I told only stories of success, people were like, golf clap, you know, polite. Oh, that was such a nice story. Thank you. And you know, and which is fine, but that's not what I was after. Did you ever see the movie Eminem was in called 8 mile? Do you remember that movie? Back in the day. So it's a weird reference, but I think it's a great example. So anybody who's ever seen 8 mile, this is like Rocky, except with rappers. You got these two guys who are arch enemies and they have these raps battles, which is basically like one guy rapping and talking crap about the other guy for 90 seconds, and then the other guy gets his turn. The ultimate scene in that film was the last one where they're having their final battle and Eminem gets the mic first, and he basically spends his 90 seconds saying, I live in a trailer with my mom. My best Friend had sex with my girlfriend. This. And like he, he took all of his stuff and he dumped it out. And the other guy actually didn't even take his turn. He walked off stage because there was nothing left to say. It's a really effective way to go through life. If I'm telling you I went to prison and I'm a recovering alcoholic and sometimes I'm an asshole. And sometimes like all of the. If I'm telling you these things, what is there left for you to say about me? Or it's not exactly.

29:36
Amberly Lago

You own it and then nobody can use it against you. It's so true. And it's like, that's why when I say I get up on stage sometimes and I was just talking to one of my sober sisters yesterday on the phone and I was telling her, I said every time I would get together with my dad, he would always say, why don't you have a beer? Just have a beer. I'm like, dad, I don't drink, Dad, I don't drink. And finally she goes, what made him stop? And I said, I think it was the day that he kept offering me a beer. And I looked at him and I said, dad, and I'm an alcoholic. He was like, oh, not much more he could say to that wasn't like he could say, oh, well can't you just have one? Or what? You know, so it was like I put it out there and there is such freedom in that. Yeah, it's like you feel like any chains that were holding you back are just released.

30:27
Charlie Engle

Yeah, well, somebody knew you were allergic to peanuts, they wouldn't keep offering you peanuts. I mean, these are not, these are not hard analogies, you know, and yes, people with alcohol. Because he would be more comfortable if you had a beer. You wouldn't be more comfortable, but he would be. And that's this. It's human nature. The other thing about it is we actually think, and this is the funny part, I love human nature. I love talking about it. Like we think that other people are sitting around thinking about us.

30:58
Amberly Lago

Oh my goodness.

30:59
Charlie Engle

And you know how much they are actually thinking about us. I mean, basically next to zero. Like, I mean, the same amount that we sit around thinking about other people. I mean, because we're basically self centered beings on this planet. And so we think that our stuff is so shameful and important and devastating and if anybody knew it, they wouldn't like us or whatever it is. And I've just found it to be the exact opposite. You know, the more that I open up and share that Even today, almost 30 years clean and sober, you think I don't sit around sometimes and think, think, man, my life sucks. Of course I do. I'm a normal person that has down days and like, I don't have it all figured out. What I do know is that experience has taught me that the vast majority of time those feelings aren't real and they will pass by, you know, and that's the lesson that I, that I continue to always hammer, is to try to, you know, try to let those, when I'm stuck. And we talked about this before, when you're stuck, help somebody else get unstuck, you know, and you know, it's that, that mantra to keep it, you have to give it away that I talked about in Dallas when we were together, you know, and it's this idea. My very first sponsor, he was A, he was 75 years old when I got sober at 29. And you know, he only lived a few more years, but he was the one who said, you know, the only thing you can ever do when you feel like your life is going nowhere is help somebody else get where they're want, where they're wanting to go. And you will magically be transformed out of your own nonsense.

32:46
Amberly Lago

It's so true, Charlie. I mean, and I, you know, when I was in the hospital after my motorcycle accident, I was not yet an alcoholic. I, I had no idea I was an, I was never really a big drinker. I was so centered on prob, probably addicted to my running and my career. And so in the hospital I noticed that I would feel better when I would make calls, even though I was in the hospital, didn't know if tomorrow was the day they were going to amputate my leg. When I would make calls to my clients, when I would help the nurses and give them exercise tips or sit there and let them talk to me about all their troubles and offer them advice like my grandmother would do, give me, I felt better. So it was a way for me to stop thinking about the self pity and I'm a victim and get out of myself and do good for someone else. So even in the hospital bed, I noticed how much better I felt about that. But so I so appreciate you sharing that sometimes with all your accolades, with all the amazing things you've done, you've done with your best selling book, with this documentary, with, I mean, all the races, the ultramarathons, the incredible things that you've done, you've done even with almost, you know, nearly 30 years next month of sobriety, that sometimes you go, God, this is hard, my life sucks. Or you have these feelings and how to get through those moments. Because that's the thing. It's not like we have it all figured out and we're just like, our life is great. It's about the resilience that we have and the tools and the resilience that we, we've built up so that when hard times do hit, we can get through those moments. So I just wondered, for me personally, I'm just like wondering is like when you're speaking because you've spoken on some of the biggest stages in the world, do you have moments before you speak that you get nervous or you start like doubting yourself or imposter syndrome comes in, or you're like, how the heck did I get invited to speak at Google? Or do you ever get those moments?

35:01
Charlie Engle

I certainly did early on. I, I will say, and it's not, you know, it's not false bravado. I will take five or 10 minutes before any big talk especially and I'll do some breath work and meditation and praying even, you know, which is kind of all the same thing, you know, I mean there's, they're wrapped in different packages, but in essence it's about trying to connect with whether it's a higher power or your own inner strength. And I've gotten good through the years, especially on the bigger talks. And the Tony Robbins was a big one for me, partly because it was very limited for time. And like you said a little while ago, if I've got an hour, I can kind of verbally wander around and interrupt myself and tell a couple of extra stories if I've got 25min minutes or whatever it is.

35:58
Amberly Lago

It's hard. It's like you sometimes get points people

36:02
Charlie Engle

can read about the prison stuff, you know, I mean, it was crazy thing that happened to me, you know, 10 or 12 years ago, long into my sobriety, by the way, which was crazy

36:12
Amberly Lago

because I feel like that was like,

36:14
Charlie Engle

it was a terrible.

36:15
Amberly Lago

Many people would be locked up if.

36:18
Charlie Engle

Yeah, it was a terrible, unfair thing that happened to me about, you know, mortgage fraud basically. And it was, you know, it shouldn't have happened, it, whatever, but it, part of it was the timing on in the World. You know, it's 2010 and like it

36:34
Amberly Lago

was the timing because I'm sure the

36:36
Charlie Engle

government was looking for that. Yeah, the government was looking for people to blame and you know, and I got, I got stuck. But anyway, the point of that is when I have A short talk, like, 15 minutes. The hardest thing to do. I have to talk about prison. That's the one thing I have to talk about every time. And the reason I say that is I don't ever want someone to listen to me tell my journey from addiction into sobriety, then into running and doing projects with Matt Damon and all this kind of stuff. And then they're like, man, that was a great talk. And then they're Googling me, and the first thing that pops up is they see that I went to prison. Like, I don't want them. I didn't even hear that from some other place. I want them to hear it. Because if I didn't say it on stage, then it feels like I hid it from them.

37:29
Amberly Lago

Yeah, I didn't think of that.

37:31
Charlie Engle

Yeah. So I want to be able to. At a very minimum, even in a very short talk, I will at least dump that out there. That way, if they choose to take a few extra minutes and kind of look for me.

37:42
Amberly Lago

I like how you word it. You also say when I spent time or my federal holiday.

37:48
Charlie Engle

Holiday. Yeah, yeah. You know, it changed my life, actually. For the better. I mean, crazy to say.

37:54
Amberly Lago

Well, you know, I. It really resonated with me because of my brother being on death row here in Texas. And so when you shared that, I was like, wow, look at your. Look at what you did in prison. Because I would love to just talk a little bit about. Yeah, yeah. And if y' all want to hear more about how it's crazy how you even ended up there, but you had a sense of humor about it when you first went in. You're like, oh, if you don't have my reservation, I can come back. Because you, like, self walked in. Yeah.

38:31
Charlie Engle

Thank you.

38:32
Amberly Lago

You are such. You're brilliant at. And gifted. And I think it's because of your. Your heart and all the work that you do on a daily basis to continue to rec. Share your experience, strength, and hope. But even in prison, you. You created community. Who would have thought? So can you take us back to, like, you're in prison, you're like, holy cow, I'm sentenced for. What was it, two years? Was it two years?

39:05
Charlie Engle

Yeah, just about. Yeah. Yeah. And I mean, look, I. I love what you just said, and I think the thing is, humor is the through line in my life, and somewhere along the line, I figured out that it's way. And when I laugh about something really hard in my life or even in someone else's life, as long as I feel like I have permission to do that. I mean, it's not for me to minimize their pain, but I can minimize mine all I want. And I'm not like. I'm not just, like, saying somehow that it's not painful or that whatever, but prison taught me many, many things. And I'm going to take a quick step back. So. So just for the listeners, because we're not going to have time to go through all of it, but just for the listeners. I got sober. I used running as a way to really help my sobriety. I started doing races all over the world, and I was winning these big, long hundred milers and hundreds of miles, and not always winning, but participating in these really hard things. And I learned the lessons of. Of kind of suffering. And I got this amazing job on Extreme Makeover Home Edition. I was a senior producer on this television show that everybody watched for a number of years. And this was kind of a fluke. The creator of the show and I became friends because of a race that I did in Borneo. And years later, he calls me and asked me to work on the show. And so my life is. Is going pretty well. And then I decide I'm going to run across the Sahara Desert. I do this huge run, almost 5,000 miles. Matt Damon's my partner, and we could

40:49
Amberly Lago

literally do a whole podcast just on the Sahara Desert.

40:53
Charlie Engle

I'm hitting the highlights here, but the Sahara taught me so many lessons about perseverance and about focusing on the day that you're in. As I always say, the only miles that I could run were the ones that were right in the. In front of me. And that lesson sticks with me every single day when I feel overwhelmed. But so I do this run. Matt Damon and I create a clean water nonprofit, which today is called water.org. it's the world's largest clean water nonprofit. It all came out of this crazy idea that I had that running across the Sahara Desert could be meaningful. And in truth, all I ever wanted to do was just see if I could do it. It was just this thing, and I just wanted to see, am I capable of doing it. So this big thing put me on the map. You know, I got on NPR and the morning news shows, and I got my 15 minutes of fame. And a particular federal agent, an IRS agent in Greensboro, North Carolina, where I live, got interested in me because of the film. Don't know why. I'll never know why. But long story short, I become the only person in the United States, the only borrower in the United States to be charged with overstating My income on a home loan application, which I cited.

42:11
Amberly Lago

Who reads all that crap?

42:12
Charlie Engle

The irony is I was saying I'm not guilty of that. So I went to trial, which nobody goes to trial against the feds because you're going to lose. Like, it's a fixed game. 99.5% of cases that go in front of a federal court is, you know, a loser. And no country on the planet, you know, convicts its own citizens at the same rate that we do here in the United States. We love to point fingers at China and Russia and other places, which of course they're, they have their problems and, you know, maybe they're just taking people out back and shooting them. I don't know which would, which would in fact be worse. But, but the point of that is there came a day when, you know, I got sentenced to 21 months in federal prison. Fair or unfair, didn't matter anymore. It wasn't, you know, I mean, I could spend my life focusing on me being wrong before I could figure out how I was going to get on with the next phase of my life.

43:15
Amberly Lago

And my, that right there is the biggest life lesson. I mean, we need to shout that off the rooftops.

43:22
Charlie Engle

Yeah. Because we get so stuck in what happened to us and forget the fact that we still have an opportunity to write the next chapter for ourselves. Nobody else could control my happiness, even in prison. That was completely up to me. As you know, I did what I always do. I started to run. You know, there's 500 men in this prison in Beckley, West Virginia. And you know, there's no running. There's a little path around the recreation yard and. But I just started to run.

43:53
Amberly Lago

I love what you did when you first went in and you walked in and you're like, do you know how like you saw the, the run, the little path and you asked somebody what's the distance on that? And they're like, I don't know, like, we're in prison.

44:08
Charlie Engle

Who's, who cares? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I wanted to know, of course. And, and you know, we were in lockdown a lot too, so you couldn't go outside. And I would run in place in my cell for five or six hours at a time sometimes. And I love to tell the story that people, you know, very often thought I was not and sort of being, you know, the middle aged dude in prison that people thought was crazy was actually a good thing because basically everybody just left me alone. It's like, don't screw with that guy. Something's wrong with him.

44:39
Amberly Lago

Something's off with him. He runs in place.

44:42
Charlie Engle

But what happened is, is, you know, the same thing that happens, as I like to say, whether it's in addiction recovery or in other parts of our lives. And that is this. This idea of attraction rather than promotion, which you know very well. And if you are constantly promoting your lifestyle, people will be repelled by that. Some people might have. But in general, what people want to see is you living your life. They want to see the benefits of the things that you're doing. They don't want to hear you talk. If they want to hear more about it, they can ask you. And that's what it's for. And so I'm just running every day. I never one time go up to some guy and say, hey, looks like you got a little weight problem. Why don't you come run with me? Because that would be a really bad idea. And prison, especially in prison. Right.

45:36
Amberly Lago

You know what, Charlie? I think that goes even for anybody who's listening that does an MLM for healthy products or supplements or anything. And I see them promote, and they're always, like, holding the drink up or take these vitamins or whatever it is. It's like if you just show, like, don't sell the product, sell the destination, almost.

46:00
Charlie Engle

Yeah, Everybody knows they're being sold something. If you're holding up the product, you know, it doesn't mean you can't show a picture of you drinking the product. But what it really needs to do. There is no such thing as a product that is going to fix your life. I should say that again. You know, movement, getting out there and doing things is. Is the lifesaver, you know, more than anything else, the supplements and, you know, I told you right before we started, I needed to make myself a green smoothie. I mean, this is my own, you know, Know, I'm not selling that. That's just in my blender, in the house. And I live it every day, and I go out and I run. So in prison, even, all I did was run, and people made fun of me. The name of my book is called Running man. And it's not because I run a lot. It's because some other guy in prison yelled out something that I won't repeat on your podcast because it's, you know, not pg. But that's how Running man sort of became my nickname. But here's what happened is over time, people started to see my life being better than their life, even in that terrible situation. And so guys started coming up to me and saying, hey, can you teach me how to run? And by the time I left there, you know, a year and a half later, you know, I had 50 guys in my running group running with me every single day.

47:23
Amberly Lago

That's incredible.

47:24
Charlie Engle

I had a dozen guys who lost more than 100 pounds. I had 25 guys doing yoga with me out there on the softball field three days a week.

47:33
Amberly Lago

Who would have thought?

47:35
Charlie Engle

Never. When I left, guys were coming up and hugging me and crying, and they're thanking me for what I did for them. That's the lesson of sobriety and sponsorship and of just being of service to others. And we can be of service just by telling our stories and living our lives openly where other people who are trying desperately to find their way can hopefully take strength, strength from something that I'm doing. That's the lesson there. I didn't do any of it in prison for them. I did it for me, because it was my way to get through that terrible situation. I could have sat in my cell and marked off days on the calendar and moped around, and instead, I made the best of the situation. I read books, I exercised, I wrote letters. I talked to guys in prison, many of whom were there for. I thought what happened to me was unfair. You got guys that are in there for 25 years for a tiny little bag of cocaine or something. I mean, something just so small. But they're African American or they're Hispanic. They don't have a lawyer. They didn't speak the language. And the guy's getting 25 years, his whole life is taken away from something. And I think what happened to me is unfair. I know that you relate to this, too. You know, what you've gone through in your life is more pain than any person should have to endure. But you know what? You could name me 10 people right now who. You've seen their stories, and they had it worse than you, or they're not alive because they had the same accident you had and they didn't survive it, which is worse. You know, I mean, it's not hard to figure out the answer to that.

49:17
Amberly Lago

Yeah. And I think that sometimes when we can look at our struggles and former struggles that we have overcome, it builds our strength and our confidence to move forward and get through the next and the next, just one day at a time. You have so many incredible stories, and in the book, you have so many incredible stories. I want to celebrate your sobriety coming up, but before we get to that, I wanted to ask you, do you ever have days now where you've thought, oh, I want to drink, or, oh, I want to escape it. I want to escape this pain.

49:56
Charlie Engle

Absolutely. You know, And I mean, it's. It's. You know, look, I'm happy to say that doesn't happen very often. And just a few weeks ago, somebody asked me, and this, I'm sure, happens to you, too, though I ask a very open, honest question. It's like, couldn't you just have a beer? And I'm like, yeah, I probably could. Like, today I could probably have one beer. I could probably have one beer. Tomorrow, I could probably have one. You know, I might do that for a whole year. But I know for sure there would come a day when I would have two beer. I know it 100%. And then there would come a day I'd have three and five and all the beer, and I would head back down. I just know it. I am not a moderate person. And so.

50:38
Amberly Lago

No, you're not.

50:40
Charlie Engle

Well, so to torture myself with that idea of moderation, it literally is like me sitting around thinking about, maybe if I train hard enough, I could win the Boston Marathon. I'm sorry, I'm a good runner. That's not going to happen. You know, I'm not going to win the Boston Marathon. So it's this thing. So I have those days when I sort of think to myself, man, it would be nice to be able to escape into something else. Yeah. And that's what you know. But that's what running is for. I used Covid to become fairly much an expert in holotropic breath work. So I do deep, deep therapeutic breathwork every single day. I'll share with you offline some of the things that I'm doing, and you could even share with your listeners, because I just know there are ways for me to reach in a way, I guess that same escape of sorts, I can find my way into a peaceful state of mind that's not about blocking anything. Because, of course, drugs and alcohol for me were all about being invisible, having no feelings. Like, if I had a feeling, good or bad, I just drank or drugged it away, you know? Now when I have a feeling, I have to sit in that. I got nowhere to go. And so what I do is put on my running shoes or I go lay down on my mat. And I know I have the tools, and I know that those are the things I need to do. And I think that's the hardest part in a person's journey through sobriety, is finding those tools for yourself. We spend 99.9% of our time or more as sober people Preparing for that 0.00001% of the time when we are tempted to go back in that other direction, it's almost never on my mind. But when it is, it's a very powerful thought thought. It's like building up my armaments and preparing for that battle. And if I let down my guard and I don't do things like sleep, hydrate, exercise, have therapy, talk to other people, be of service to others, if I'm not doing all those things, I'm setting myself up for the out of the blue thing that comes at me that is going to rock my world, and then I'm susceptible to relapse. So I have to always be diligent about making sure that I'm taking those steps every single day, you know, to be as healthy and happy as I can be in preparation for the time when I'm not going to be, because life is going to slam me back down to the ground at some point, because that's just the nature of being human.

53:27
Amberly Lago

And you know what, Charlie? I think there's probably so many people out there that you have no idea how much you've touched them. I know just yesterday I was at the market, so talking about getting enough sleep, eating, you know, drinking enough water, moving my body enough. I hadn't done any of it. I had a late flight, just got in. I was tired, I was hungry, it was a holiday. And my husband was like, oh, yeah, I need you to go to the store and get all the stuff to grill and get beer for your dad and do all these things. And I actually had had a thought. I was on the aisle and I'm like, oh, that wine. Well, maybe I could have. I really. That thought was powerful and you came to mind. And I thought, there is no way that I am going to take a drink because I get to interview Charlie freaking Ingle. And I would not. I wouldn't be able to, to have like, the confidence even to do that and show up authentically. And so you really saved me. I had that thought and just hearing your story and knowing I was going to get to see you, and so some of the things I know, like you were telling me before we started the interview that you have something called whoop. That is really. It's like this new, latest technology. Because I believe accountability is one of the things that if I didn't have that accountability with my sponsor, my sober sisters, that we connect every single day with, the gratitude list that we share with one another. But what Is, can you tell me a little bit more about this Whoop?

55:13
Charlie Engle

It's called whoop, right? It is W h o o p. And I know you wear an aura ring and this is all in the same category of wearable device. Like, like Apple Watch or Fitbit was sort of the first, like best known in this category. But Whoop has put a tremendous amount of money and effort into the addiction recovery space. And I'm happy to say that in partnership with me and together we are looking at ways to help people have accountability and long term sobriety. Not like somebody's watching you and gonna like write you a note and say, hey, lazy, you know, get out and work out. But you know, what I've learned in sobriety is that the people that I've sponsored through the years, which has been a lot of people, I still have to. Before having a wearable device, that they have one and I have one. Before having that, I had only one choice. I had to call them or they call me and I ask a question. How are you doing? I mean, look, I'm not saying that addicts are liars, but we are not great when we ask that question, we do really mean it, but we rely so heavily on the other person giving an honest answer. And again, I don't even say they're giving a dishonest one, but that's assuming that a person even knows themselves. Like, if I ask you how you slept last night, you don't have a wearable device, you don't have any of that, you have a vague notion of how you slept, you might be thinking, well, I gosh, I remember laying there and it was 2 o' clock in the morning. I hadn't gone to sleep yet. Like that's the gauge you're using to see whether you got a good night night's sleep. What wearable devices do, it's an accountability tool. As you said, it allows me, for someone that I'm coaching, and I mean like life coaching, not exercise coaching, even though that's part of it. For someone that I'm coaching, I get a chance to see that for two nights in a row, they haven't slept well. So instead I can send them a text and say, hey, you know, Dave, it looks like you haven't slept well the last couple of nights. Here's a meditation from Deepak Chopra, or here's an idea. You know, I also see that you've missed your exercise. Maybe if you have time today, you could just get out for 20 minutes and do a quick walk. Do A breathing exercise, whatever the point of it is. And here's the big part, Amberly. Even if they ignore me completely and they don't do any of it, they have been seen by me, like. And that's, I think, the thing that we all suffer from. We feel invisible to other people. People so often, whether we're a day sober or 30 years sober, there's that invisibility that goes along with being human. And to have someone else reach out and say, dude, I see that workout you had yesterday. Then you got a great night's sleep. Way to go. Keep up the good work. Like, just that simple thing instead of relying on them to tell me what's going on. So it doesn't have every answer, but it gives me a lot of basic information about someone, to be honest with you. I say often now that I can predict relapse. And it's provocative. Well, it's a provocative, outlandish statement. But if I do see someone in a terrible sleep pattern not exercising all these other markers, it doesn't mean they're going to relapse. But if they're in early recovery, like maybe they just left rehab a few weeks earlier, those are all the signs of somebody who's maybe in trouble. And if you can get ahead of that, that and reach out to them, because maybe they're not being honest with their sponsor, maybe they're not talking to anybody, but if they're willing to let me work with them and I can see those things, I can probably stop the car from crashing before it does.

59:03
Amberly Lago

It's so true. And I mean, it's that keeping it basic. Never get too lonely, too hungry or too tired, whether you're sober, sober, curious, or maybe you're an entrepreneur that tends to go all grit and don't give yourself as much grace. You know, that's the reason I started wearing a device that tells me how much sleep I'm getting and the quality of sleep, because I had to start taking rest as, like, make it a part of my business strategy to get more rest. And so I love that idea. So where can people find that? Can they find that through you? Do you have a link for that?

59:43
Charlie Engle

They can in the show notes. By the way, my website is my name names charlie engle.com. all my social media links are there. Blogs, videos, a few of my talks. You know, it's a typical website. And my email and phone number is right there in the contact. It's me directly. I don't have people, so.

60:03
Amberly Lago

And you look at his website, y' all. We didn't even get into all the different shows, news, documentary, everything. We go to his website, Charlie Engle.com go to his Instagram at Charlie Engel and you will see all of the amazing things he's done. There are so many stories and so many directions we could have gone on this show. I literally could interview you 12 times and there would still be more to cover. So, yeah, check out his website. If you're out running or at the gym or you're driving, you can check out the show notes and also find his information. If you, you know, forgetful or like me, I'm like, I have to go and take a screenshot of it is what I do. I take screenshots. But if there's one part of this episode that you just love, share it on your social media and tag me@amberly lagomotivation and Charlie Engel, because I see that I run all my social media and I will share that this. You give so much hope, not just inspiration, but hope and encouragement and real tools for people to apply to their life that are life changing. And you have a big event coming up for your 30th Friday. Tell us about that before we go.

61:17
Charlie Engle

So it won't surprise people that my way of celebrating is a little different than others. So every year I run for the same number of hours to equal how long I've been sober. So I will actually run for 30 straight hours on July 23rd and 24th. So hopefully this podcast will be out before then and I'm gonna it out before them.

61:38
Amberly Lago

You're gonna do that.

61:39
Charlie Engle

So it's up at a treatment center called Ashley, which is up in little town in Maryland. Been around for 40 years. I would call it top five treatment centers in the country. It's an amazing place. It's a nonprofit, so we're raising money for continued research and addiction recovery, but also for scholarships for people who can't afford treatment, which is a lot of folks.

62:04
Amberly Lago

Folks.

62:04
Charlie Engle

Because it's one thing. Yeah. People say, why don't you go to rehab? Well, if you don't have any money or you don't have insurance, you know, you try going to rehab, you can't get in.

62:13
Amberly Lago

And so that's what's crazy how expensive it is.

62:17
Charlie Engle

Yeah, yeah. So this is about, you know, this run is my way of celebrating my 30 years, but also inviting other people to come celebrate with me their own recovery, the loss of a loved one. I mean, look, every single person listening to this right now, whether you're in Recovery or not, you know somebody or know of someone who has not survived this disease. There's a lot of people that need help. 90% of the people that need help out there actually don't ever get help. And so this is just my way of honoring and celebrating my own sobriety, but also reminding others out there that there is a path forward and you just have to commit to it and make some changes. But it definitely is the case. If I can do it, anyone can.

63:06
Amberly Lago

Oh, well, I just love all the work that you're doing. How can people get involved with this?

63:13
Charlie Engle

Yeah, that also is on my website. So if you just go to my website, you'll see this 30 hour run. You can do it virtually. You don't have to do 30 hours. You can walk for 30 minutes at your house. You know, you can, could. You can enter this thing. You ride 30 minutes on your Peloton. You can do a 30 minute yoga class. You can. There's no limit to what can be done and it's just a way of specifically on July 23rd and 24th. The 23rd is my actual birthday, but I've been sober long enough that, you know, for 30 hours, I can't fit that in one day. So.

63:46
Amberly Lago

Yes.

63:47
Charlie Engle

Yeah, it goes over a weekend.

63:49
Amberly Lago

So are people gonna actually try to run this with you? I just going to be there for

63:54
Charlie Engle

50 people that are actually coming to run the entire 30 hours with me in Maryland. A lot, probably five or 600 more will be coming to run. It's on a two and a half mile loop. So people can come in and out as they please. They can walk, they can sit in a chair and make fun of me. They can do any. They can throw. They can throw grapes at me. This is just a very weird way of celebrating. And it's what I do, you know, and it's what I love to do.

64:22
Amberly Lago

When you're telling me that I'm looking at my calendar because I'm still old school and use this paper calendar.

64:27
Charlie Engle

Yeah.

64:28
Amberly Lago

Can I go to Maryland? So I'm seriously.

64:30
Charlie Engle

Well, you are invited. I would love to have you there. And I mean, you and I spoke. We're going to do something on Instagram, maybe a couple of things where we can have a chat about movement. You know, in recovery. I always say that, you know, know the addiction recovery industry is kind of mired in talk therapy, which is very important. But the fact of the matter is you need to move your body, you got to move your body. And it's equally as important as trauma therapy. And talk therapy. You have to move your body. If you don't feel good, you can't get well. So. All right. Thank you so much.

65:07
Amberly Lago

That is such a powerful way to end. Thank you. And y', all, check out charliengle.com I'm really hoping I'm going to see you for the race.

65:15
Charlie Engle

We're going to make you posted.

65:17
Amberly Lago

Thank you so much for being on.

65:19
Charlie Engle

Okay, my pleasure. All right, see you later.

Pain to purpose to joy.

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