Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Everybody.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
It's Bill Courtney, Welcome to Shop Talk number thirty six.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Welcome in.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
You.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
That's better.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Welcome into the shop. Is that better?
Speaker 3 (00:11):
That was better than the last one.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Welcome in.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
It's getting late from a reader, I mean a listener.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
I'm a reader, an army member from an army member.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Yeah, even better than a listener and army.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
An army member and a listener. Clearly he sent this.
The subject is a quote from Simon Sinek.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Hey saw this quote and thought of you.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Normal is what the majority does, which is why different
is so much more interesting. That's the quote. I know
we are an army and normal folks, but your guests
are so many more people listeners are breaking free from
the expected or normal activities and doing things that are
different and far more interesting. My suggestion for a shop
(00:59):
talk is how and why doing different things are more
interesting than doing normal self serving activities. God bless you
as you inspire others. God bless you, and thank you
for sending me the letter after this, Why being normal
is not interesting, but being an army of normal folks
(01:21):
is different and quite interesting. I don't know how you're
gonna paraphrase that in the title Alex. But that's what
this Shop Talk number thirty six is.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
What are you gonna do?
Speaker 2 (01:30):
What are you gonna call it?
Speaker 3 (01:31):
I don't know, figure it out later.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
Right after these brief messages from our general sponsors.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
Hey, everybody, welcome back. Great note.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Normal is what the majority does, which is different is
so much more interesting. When I read that, I thought
of a book that I used to give when I
coached football for six years. We would have a player
of the week whatever kid on Friday at a specifically
(02:22):
great game. And it wasn't always the guy with the
most touchdowns or most yardage or the most tackles. It
was somebody who did something abnormal.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
That's making me want you to tell that story from
Undefeated about it.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
That's so good?
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Which story the.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
Player of the week. Didn't one player give it and
then say, Shavus, you're really the player of the week.
That yeah, well they're all crying like it was a
really powerful Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Well, if you want to go watch Undefeated and you
can see something that relates to the thing we're talking
about right now on Shop Talk. So for the player
of the week, which Davis was that particular scene, we
don't give a trophy or anything. We give a book,
and the book is Tony Dungee's book, which I think
(03:07):
was the number one New York Times bestseller. Anyway, it's
called Uncommon. I have read it a number of times.
I will give you a feel for it. Part one
is called Develop your Core, with four chapters about character
and integrity and courage and stewardship. Part two is Love
(03:28):
your Family. Part one Develop your Core. Part two, Love
your Family. Part three, Lift your friends and others. Part four,
Your full Potential. Part five, Establish a mission that matters.
Part six choose influence over image, oh boy. And Part
(03:49):
seven live your faith first before I go into what
I'm going to talk about. If you have not read
Uncommon by Tony Dungee, you do not have to be.
Tony Dungee was football coach Indianapolis Colts. He is now
kind of a mentor in and amongst the folks that
play and operate in the NFL. He is a fabulous
(04:10):
human being. And I highly suggest, even though the book's
probably ten years old, now you get it and read it.
It is for everybody. It has nothing to do with
just football, but it's interesting what our army member said,
Normal is what the majority does, which is why different
is so much more interesting. When Tony Dungee makes the
(04:31):
point that being uncommon is what differentiates you from everyone else.
It's common to just get up and go about your
daily life and walk past those in need and do nothing.
It's common to look down your nose at folks who
(04:51):
may be living in squalor. It's common to assume that
the reason kids are in gangs is because they're just
bad kids. It's common to well our marriage is in
a divorce. It's common to have interpersonal issues. It's common
(05:16):
to see people in pain and not getting involved. Not
long ago, a woman was caught on fire and burned
to death on the subway while people filmed it with
their phones. It's pretty common to be so consumed with
(05:36):
what today's societal preconceived notions say about who you are
when you post something and you get lots of likes,
and that you're more consumed with the thumbs up likes
on something you post on social media than you are
with actually opening a helping hand to another human being
(05:56):
and looking them in they eyes. Those things are common,
not real, impressive, or interesting. What is different in my
Army members letters language? What is uncommon and Tony Dungee's
letter in Tony Dungee's book is developing your core with character, honesty, integrity, humility, stewardship,
(06:19):
and courage, by loving your family, by treating your spouse well,
by being a good father and mother, by respecting authority.
What is uncommon is by lifting your friends and others.
Those things are uncommon, and those things are what's interesting.
(06:41):
I think about.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
The opening to Monday.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
Night Football, and you know, you see these clips of
these amazing plays while they play all this music, and
I've never seen when they're exemplifying the excitement of football
and they're showing these amazing clips. You never see a
guy catch a ball for five yards and run on
(07:12):
a bounce. It's just not something that they highlight because
it's a common play. You never see a guy get
a handoff and run three yards and get tackled, and
that's a highlight. It's a common play. What they show
you is the immaculate reception. What they show you is
(07:32):
some one handed grab. The reason ESPN, on an hour
long Sports center show, waits to the very end of
the show to show the top ten plays of the
day is because you're willing to sit through an hour
show just to see those ten plays because they're amazing
and they're uncommon. The reason they play the loud music
(07:56):
and show these clips of amazing plays where somebody runs
fifteen yards and spins off a tackle and cuts back
against the grain and goes all the way through three
defenders to a touchdown is because that's not something you
see all the time. It's uncommon. See, it's the uncommon
that gets us on the edge of our chairs. It's
the uncommon that gets us to stand up in the
(08:18):
stands in chair. It's the uncommon that inspires us. So
that's why being different is so much more interesting. That's
why being uncommon is what inspires us. Because doing what
everybody else does and allowing injustice to continue to occur
(08:43):
without having the passion and the discipline to insert yourself
where need is, where you can offer help, well, that's uncommon.
That's inspirational. That's what moves the needle. That's what being
a member of the army is. So while you think
(09:05):
about how common or uncommon you are, or how different
or normal or interesting you are, try to think about
your passion and your abilities and your discipline and where
you can put them into your culture and your society
to happen to affect some type of change, because by
(09:26):
doing that, you become uncommon, you become different, you become interesting,
and then you become a part of the army of
normal folks. So what my listener and this army member does,
and what Tony Dungee does and what I do, is
(09:47):
try to inspire you to think about how to be uncommon,
how to be different, how to be interesting, how to inspire,
and how to exact change in your culture. All of
us have the ability to do it, just got to
have the courage to step up. I'm Bill Courtney. That's
Shop Talk number thirty six. If you like this, please
(10:08):
rate it, review it, subscribe to the podcast, tell people
about us, share the so on social Thanks to our producer,
iron Light Labs Alex. Do you have anything else to offer?
Speaker 3 (10:21):
Join the army at normal folks dot us. Sign up
and get the emails.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
Write me anytime and bill it normal folks dot us
and if it's something I can talk about, I will,
but I will always respond.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
What else?
Speaker 3 (10:32):
That's it?
Speaker 2 (10:33):
You did it?
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Pretty good job?
Speaker 2 (10:34):
Okay, Thanks, We'll see you. We'll see you after you
alex Age before beauty. We'll see you next week.