All Episodes

July 9, 2025 83 mins

Hello Friends,

In this engaging conversation, Chris, Mike, and Brian Morris delve into the journey of Brian's business, We Fix Ugly Pools, and his remarkable experiences in the pool industry. They discuss the renovation of the Diamondbacks pool, the challenges and triumphs of building a world record pool, and the importance of marketing and customer retention.

Brian shares personal stories about his family, the impact of his father's values on his life, and his health journey involving alternative therapies. The conversation highlights the significance of relationships in business and the lessons learned through perseverance and hard work.

In this conversation, Brian Morris shares his transformative journey through the use of peptides and alternative medicine, contrasting it with traditional pharmaceutical approaches. He discusses personal experiences with injuries, recovery, and the impact of lifestyle changes on health. The dialogue emphasizes the importance of understanding the body, the potential of peptides in healing, and the need for a supportive community in health journeys.

Subscribe and Comment at all our links below.

https://www.youtube.com/@chrisandmikeshow

https://www.facebook.com/chrisandmikeshow

https://www.instagram.com/chrisandmikeshow

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:44):
What's up there, boys and girls?This is Chris and Mike show
broadcasting live on the YouTube, and we're coming to you
kind of live from the We Fix Ugly Pool studio, where
installation creation and complete background creation is
possible. Call We Fix Ugly Pools at 6:02
253-4199. 44994. 499, it's been a while.
It's been a while, man. Let's repeat that.

(01:04):
OK? Hey, we are coming to you live
from the We Fix Ugly Pool studios from installation,
renovation and complete backyardcreation.
We Fix Ugly Pools does it all atwefixuglypools.com 602-253-4499.
Nicely done. Welcome, Brian.
Hey welcome. Thanks for having me.
Absolutely. Very nice to meet you man.
So Brian and I go way back, we go way like way back.

(01:27):
Like I was watching the Diamondbacks and, and the night
before there's a monsoon and my grill went into the pool.
So we in the morning got up and pulled everything out and and
when I pulled the grill mat up the entire bottom of the pool
had the had the 2 grill grates and it rusted the bond rappool.
So the following night legit I'mat home watching the

(01:48):
Diamondbacks play and a we fix lucky pools commercial comes on.
So I call the number oh this is awesome.
And he answers the phone and so I start talking about what it my
thing is and then somehow he brings up he's the one.
I'm like, you're the owner, you're answering your own phone.
I remember doing that order and guitar lessons out of the back
of a magazine one year and the yeah, the dude and I was living

(02:09):
in Phoenix and the dude that wasin the ad answered the phone.
I thought the same thing. That's an awesome story.
Man, and we've been friends eversince.
Because that's. I used to watch the I used to
watch the games because I knew what ending the rotation was
coming up behind the home plate.And it was always exciting to
see how many phone calls would come in.
So right, we would sit there andhave like a pizza party during
the games at the office. I just happened to field that

(02:29):
call. It was kind of cool.
It was really cool because here we are like that's got to be
fucked. Dude did 2. 1520 years ago.
Yeah, 20 years ago. And did you?
Ever take a tally like of what the difference was or like a
grand total of you know what themost calls was during that
segment? We had a, we had 1/2 inning, we

(02:50):
took 230 calls. We used to get drunk
fraternities that would call us,people would call us.
You got to remember 2005, not everybody had a cell phone.
So it was still pretty new, but people would call us and be
like, and, and then they would say the most random stuff.
But we got in some pretty cool conversations with with people
and across the country that which was kind of fun.
That's so awesome. Yeah, what's even cooler is the

(03:13):
Diamondbacks came in 2001, right?
Yeah, it was an inaugural No 1999. 99 OK.
They won in 2001. That's what it was that was a
partial. Season ticket holder then in our
inaugural season. Right, because that's when Jake
was born. So, but the really neat thing
that most people probably don't realize, I mean, some do, but
not so much anymore because Brian doesn't hammer on the
head. Brian actually renovated bank on

(03:36):
ballpark swimming pool. I actually ripped out the old
one and put a new one in. So, so tell tell those that are
watching this live on YouTube right now, and because we're
going to use this later, tell ushow that all happened because
I've heard this story before andit's a really cool story.
So when you're watching the gameand you're looking at that pool,
we're talking to the guy that did it, that is, yes.
There's been some work done since then.

(03:56):
Was 20 years ago literally 2000?January 2004, I'm sitting at the
Monster Truck Jam and I was trying to figure out how do I
really get my company out there.It was a fairly new business and
I wanted to get out there. And I looked out at the pool and
I'm like, I think I'm going to renovate this pool.
And it was only, you know, five years old at the time.
So I decided to go ahead and puton my best, my best pitch.

(04:20):
And I went down to the Diamondback Stadium and I tried
to get a meeting with someone and I didn't get a meeting.
So for three months, I would show up every day and I would
sit in the lobby for three to four hours trying to get a
meeting with someone. And it was three months later.
And this we go through a number of things that happened.
I think the, the receptionist there, I can't remember her
name, but I used to bring her coffee, I would bring her

(04:41):
flowers, I brought her Valentine's Day gifts.
Nothing worked, right? And then one day I'm sitting
there and these guys come in really nice in their suits and
they're like, we're here for ourmarketing meeting.
Next thing I know there's five guys down there and I'm like,
Hey, can I get a, a marketing meeting?
And she's like, I thought you'd never ask.
And so that was my, my ticket up.
And so I showed for my meeting. We get in the elevator, I

(05:02):
stopped and do a whole elevator pitch.
The guy is just kind of like, whoa, you know, just kind of
like it's, I don't know where this is going to go, but he took
me upstairs and the rest is history.
But I have to tell you the, the,the, the main part of that
story. So I'm, I'm a big Jerry
Colangelo fan. I think without dirty Arizona
would have no sports. And so we I get a call one day

(05:24):
from from Tim Emery, who is my, my guy.
And he tells me he's like, hey, we're having a meeting.
I used to wear black T-shirts, basically cargo shorts and flip
flops because I was out in the job sites all the time.
He's like, I need you to come down.
We're having a meeting. And I'm like, OK, I don't think
anything of it. I show up at the meeting an hour
later. I walk in wearing black T-shirt,
cargo shorts and my flip flops. I love it.

(05:45):
And I open up the door and he's like, you're a little
underdressed. And it's Jerry Colangelo and all
the owners of the Diamondbacks into the table.
And I can tell you immediately just started sweating like I was
going to pass out right there onthe floor.
Now now just so people understand though, your black
polo shirts had your We Fixed Ugly Pools logo.
It wasn't even a polo shirt, Chris.
It was a really shirt we fixed it was it was generation one of

(06:06):
our of our T-shirts. So it was the rest of the logo.
Wow, that's crazy. That makes that makes the story
even better though. Yeah, so I, I get, I get, I get
a chance to, to, to very informally pitch them.
I get told pretty much they're not going to go anywhere.
And then next thing I know, we're we're getting the
opportunity to to do something on a grand scale.

(06:27):
And there's only a couple pools that have that notoriety or
that, you know, where people actually recognize it.
And to be able to be a part of that history was pretty awesome.
How long was it between the timethat you didn't think it was
going to happen and they changedtheir mind?
Months. Like not even very many months.
It happened very quickly. So my whole thing was is, is the

(06:48):
Diamondbacks had a great season,2001, their inaugural season,
99, 2001, they won the World Series.
By 2004, they were struggling for attendance.
They were just not having great season.
So we were giving them some opportunity and I came in with
this idea that, hey, you know, let's bring a new life to it.
The old pool was put in by Paddock Pools and it was a
typical commercial pool, blue tile plaster finish.

(07:09):
And I'm like, let's make it morerenditious of outdoor living.
So I put in a BBQ. I did stone decking, I did a lot
of stacks stone. I actually.
Awesome man, I love. It the pool is actually not
built as as a pool, it's actually 2 spas because I had to
circumvent some of the the the codes.
And with a pool you have to have100% decking.

(07:29):
With a SPA you only have to have30% decking.
So I actually wanted to elevate the pool so when you sit on the
pool, you'd be seeing out over the fence instead of being on
the bottom at the at the level of the ground and then staring
at the fence. That's cool.
So you use the code to your advantage.
Well, I learned a lot of lessonsduring that.
Yes, Sir. That's awesome.
Yeah, but yeah. And he also, by the way, has the

(07:51):
world record for building an in ground swimming pool as well.
Yes, that's awesome too, and I want to hear about that.
But I can't tell you enough thatI did not know obviously, that
you did that. And I've seen it 100 times
watching Diamondbacks games. It is very impressive so.
Thank you. That was so a couple years later
I had this, we've, we've, we managed to figure out how to

(08:13):
build that, that pool and we were told by the, the county
that we built the pool. The paddock took like 9 months
to build the dime backs pool. The first one I built it in 16
days my, my time. So I, I was worked on an
amplified timeline. So a couple years later I was
sitting there thinking, I know Pat Shasta had the, the world
record for building a pool in 7-7 hours and 50 something

(08:36):
minutes or something like that, or 7 hours or 14 minutes.
And it had been there since 1970s.
So we had I put together an ideaand in two weeks decided I
figured out how to make it happen on 7th St. and Thomas
would put together a pool in five hours, 56 minutes and 7
seconds. That included not just the pool,
but the landscaping, the play area, the fence, the solar

(08:56):
covers, the solar heating, the lighting, the water features.
I mean, it was a pretty awesome experience.
So this day. Guys, did that take?
What's that? How many guys did that take?
I had 189 on site that included multiple inspectors that I had
to pay City of Phoenix. We had police officers on site
for traffic and and time control.
The fire department actually filled the pool.

(09:18):
And then we had all of our crewsthat were just cycling in and
out. I mean, it was just, it was, it
was pretty awesome feat. Yeah.
I, I was I, I was blessed enoughto be standing there watching
it. Oh, you saw the thing live.
Yeah, I was there. Yeah, that's awesome.
At the at the time, because the real estate market had changed,
we turned and we kind of went from a downward slope.
OK, So then because Brian and I,Brian knew first hand about my

(09:40):
marketing and how I stayed in contact with clients and things
like that because once I sold him his house, he started
getting all my stuff. Sure.
So he and I are born of the samecloth as far as marketing in
your face, like non-stop, just, you know, top of mind, top of
mind. So we had that mutual respect.
So when the market turned, I'm like, well, shit, you know, real
estate's blah, blah, blah. So I reached out to him.
I'm like, hey, now, how about I come work for you and I show

(10:03):
your your sales guys how to get repeat and referral business.
So it was kind of just somethingthat that we both agreed would
would work and it was cool. So when he was doing that, the
world record pool at the time I was working when his in his what
is what HR department, I guess you'd call it.
Yep. Well, you're doing a lot of the
the, the the customer retention training.
Yes, yes. So I was helping with that,

(10:24):
helping to show and his, his C or his contact management system
was insane. And just, I mean, it was off the
charts because that's Brian. Brian does everything off the
charts. There's nothing little with
Brian. It's like we're going to do it,
we're going to do it. But it was a great follow up.
I appreciate. So right.
But it was a, it was a great follow up system that he has and
it, it enabled me to help his, his sales guys understand how
to, how to get that referral andrepeat business by just, you

(10:47):
know, touches. And I don't think texting was
big back then. What didn't exist?
No. E-mail. e-mail was just getting
to be big, but we were still doing a lot of postcards.
We're doing a lot of thank you cards, handwritten thank you
cards. That was our big thing back
then. Yeah, I remember 1 Christmas, he
sent little gift, little gift baskets to all the clients we
all had. We all all the employees met at

(11:08):
his house in Mesa and we we had each had our set of stuff and we
had to go to the different past clients and drop off their.
Little 750 gift baskets. Yeah, Brian doesn't mess around,
man. That's awesome, man.
Yeah, but that's why he's been in business.
I mean, what, 20 years? 20 plus years.
Almost 25 years now. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

(11:29):
He was actually part of my radioshow and on on iheart, he was a
sponsor. So every, every show we had a
segment that was brought to you by We Fix Ugly Poles, which is
where I came up with that thing.We were just sitting in one day
and they stood I'm like from installation innovation and back
of complete back. Our creation week looks ugly,
pulls this little and he's like dude.
But you hit the nail on the headwhen you said top of mind, you

(11:49):
know you keep in touch with yourclients like that.
I was calling my go to people, right?
I got, I have a go to mechanic. I have a go to person that'll
work on plumbing or, you know, my roof or right.
It's not just anybody. It has to be that guy because
that guy pays attention to detail, right?
I noticed things like that because I became a good guitar
player. When you master one craft, you

(12:12):
see that same attention to detail in every other craft,
right? And you guys both possess that
in that you keep in touch with the people that did business
with you first, which is unheardof in business these days.
Absolutely. Normally it's customer
acquisition, right? Who's the next person coming?
Yeah, because there's there's things that I've seen over the

(12:33):
years in real estate that and I'm sure it falls, falls in line
with what Brian does is that that it's like 90% of people who
who buy a house don't use that realtor when they go to sell it
because they never hear from them again.
True. And I've had, I mean, I've had
people that I'm constantly in contact with and they'll still
walk into a new, but I'm like, you did not just do that.

(12:54):
And that's the catch with new builds.
There's a little thing in the very bottom of the door.
If your realtor's not with you, you're screwed.
And then they'll call me, hey, dude, I went to a new build.
I want to buy it. I'm like you're killing me
smalls, that's why I make videos.
Do not go into a new build without me.
That's why you never have any problem with me though, Chris,
come on now. Right, right.
And yeah, yeah, see. Brian Chris Ragged across town

(13:15):
believe. That yeah, Brian's an hour away
from me and I'm still when, whenhe was looking for houses, man,
it's like let's go he referred me somebody that I've been
working with for about 3 weeks now it's legit it's an hour and
10 minutes one way just to show this this person houses and
stuff and what he wants is unique so we we're still kind of
open our doors and exploring things but we've never been
afraid to drive, you know most. Realtors, let's be honest, 2,

(13:37):
two, 2 1/2 years ago when we purchased the, the house I'm in
now, that one was tough market. There wasn't a lot of
availability and what I was looking for was really
difficult. And well, I think what we did,
we did one day, we did 2020 house views in one day.
They just lined them up. We if we drove by, they had curb
kill, we went in. If they didn't then we were on
and we put he put offers in on on five or six, did inspections

(13:59):
on four and cancelled a bunch ofthem.
But that's, I mean, you have to adapt when the, when the market
changes, you evolve or you die. And right.
So it's kind of like you ugly pool man, he evolves.
He's evolved over the years, youknow, because now he, he does
complete backyard installation and creation.
So anything from the back door to the back fence, wall to wall,
Brian can turn it from dirt intoparadise.

(14:22):
Oh, we've always, we always did that.
We just never focused on our marketing.
Now it's become a pretty big part of it do.
You have a YouTube channel? I do.
It's that we fix ugly pools or we fix light pools and ugly pool
guy. So I've got a couple of them.
There are a lot of, some of. These I've only ever seen the
Diamondbacks pool that you've done so I'll definitely
subscribe and. The the World Record pool is

(14:43):
pretty pretty fun. It takes you about 6 minutes to
watch. What we want to watch out on our
big screen. Yeah, and the, and the cool
thing about that, the world record pool, it wasn't just
digging a hole, dropping a pool in the ground.
They they had the water featuresthat shot across the pool like
it was legit. Is that when you're done with
it? It's like, holy smokes, this is
a really nice swimming pool. So you didn't just go in, slap
it together, you built a badass pool.

(15:05):
Yeah, that's. And the and the.
Like I said, it wasn't just the pool though.
Yeah, we did everything. We we landscaped it, we built
the play area for the kids. Because every time I turned
around, the media was like, whatelse you going to do?
What else you going to do? What else you going to do?
And I'm like, what more do you want me to do but build a pool
and under 5, you know, 6 out. Yeah, yeah.
Is that all you you were required to do is just build the
pool to beat the record? Yeah.

(15:26):
Wow. Shasta's pool is a very basic
pool. It was over off actually went to
the pool. It was over off of Peoria and
like 90 2nd Ave. I met the lady.
She was, you know, very upset about the fact that we were
going after this record because she's had it.
But their pool is a very basic plaster pool with cap tile.
And I, you know, wanted to do something much better, but we

(15:50):
wanted to make it more of the complete experience.
In fact, the husband went to work that morning thinking we'd
be done in the afternoon. And the the boss that was before
streaming was a big thing. So we streamed.
Oh. That's right, I remember that.
And, and we had a million, we could cap it a million viewers
and our system kept crashing because there was only, there
was always a million viewers, but people were waiting in the
queue. 60% were from other countries, yeah.

(16:14):
Yeah, I forgot about the. Stream.
Yeah, because it didn't. We didn't have all this cool
technology where you pick up your phone and stream.
We had to set up this whole intricate system and have
cameras everywhere. And it was.
Pretty cool, right? And then just so people realize
I'm in. I'm in Queen Creek, AZ Brian's
in Glendale, AZ Mike's in Pontiac, IL.
Yep. And here we are, you know.

(16:35):
But it's so much simpler now because everybody's video
calling now. Oh.
Yeah, right. Oh yeah.
Yeah, this system works pretty much Florida State as long as
you have a cable modem or faster.
Yeah, So what else do you want to talk about there, ugly pool
guy? Man, what do you want to talk
about? I'm all of excitement all the
time. So I know, I know, I know.

(16:56):
So in the background, I can't help but notice the superhero
picture because, you know, somebody gave that to you.
Yeah, that was from you. So the representation.
Yeah, Talk a little bit about your dad, man.
Your dad was, was a, was a, was just a cool human for sure.
I didn't know how much of A coolhuman he was and until
unfortunately, you know, he, he passed away.
But that's when I like, Oh my gosh, this guy.

(17:20):
So I've always looked at my dad as like larger than life.
He's always been my superhero. And he he used to have these
little quips all the time, saying things like, you know,
inch by inch is a sense yard by yard is hard.
And it became my my motto in life.
And I didn't realize it. We used it when we were on the
track and field. So it back in the 90s high
school was a national champion, state champion and went on to

(17:41):
the national championships. Was placed top in the world of
of. These people don't know.
Shot put in discus so I was a shot putter and but anytime that
I would get frustrated, he wouldsay, just remember inch by inch
is a sense yard by yard is hard.But I didn't realize that the,
the phrase actually meant more in life than it did in in on the

(18:02):
field. So I, I adopted it and I started
to learn to celebrate the small victories and that was how I
started to gear all my success. So when I talk to people, our
mentor people and they get frustrated because they see I
said, look, I've had 20 years offumbling to get where I'm at you
know, inch by inch is how it howyou get there.
So in 2023, he passed away and that's when you grabbed this

(18:24):
and, and sent this to me. But I had created the, the, the,
the character for the ugly pool guy.
And I always put my dad in the picture and you know, he's
always been my Superman. So he's always looking over my
shoulder, but reminding me that,you know, inch by inch you can
make anything happen. So it's he, he was the eternal,
he was the eternal mentor. He taught for 27 years.

(18:46):
And I, I run into his students all the time that he had him in
the 70s that talk about the profound impact that he had on
their lives. And I'm blessed to have been
able to call him my dad. As hard as he was, he, he was a,
a ball Buster. You know, he was not afraid as
even as much as he was always the most supportive guy.

(19:06):
Hey, 2nd place was first loser. So just remember this, there was
there was always that if you're going to go after it, you go
after it and do the best that you can.
But second place is first loser.So he didn't give out
participation trophies. He expected.
If you're going to do it, you goto it.
You're never allowed to quit in the middle of a season.
If you're if you don't like something, you finish out the
season, you do it. But if you're going to do it and
he want you want me to, he wantsyou to, you want me to.

(19:27):
If I wanted him to help me, I was going to perform at the
level that he wanted that I wanted to be at, not him,
because he never put those expectations on me.
But a lot of that made you who you are today, for sure.
I feel the same way, man. You know, there's times when you
really, when you're young, you think, man, does he really love
me? You know, why, why's he got to

(19:48):
be like this? And then when you're our age,
you think back on those moments or you see people that didn't
have that and they're they're really fucked in life, right?
They didn't have anybody to callthem on their bullshit, right?
Because women can serve both roles to an extent.
But there has to be that what you called an intimidation

(20:08):
factor, right? I had that as well.
My dad 64235 when he, you know, as a young man, he was built
like a freight train. So I could only go so far before
I had to be either. I could never be smarter than
him and I could never be bigger than him at that time, you know,
like I'm fucked. OK.
I got. I got to tell you, Mike.

(20:29):
I'll just tell you the truth. I I graduated I graduated high
school 6 foot 4 and 295. My dad was 50 years old, 662 and
a half and 2:50 and I made the mistake of of stepping up to him
right after my mom passed away my senior year.
And I made the mistake of stepping up to him one day.
And at 50 my dad picked up a 290LB man and put me through a wall

(20:52):
this far off off the ground. Oh my God.
And he told me he goes always remember something.
You can always be bigger than me, but you're never going to be
meaner than me. I love that.
Fair enough. So I I had had an opportunity
late in life. I I just had a son when I turned
49. Congratulations.

(21:15):
And and I have to give my dad again, all thanks to this credit
because in 2022, I was running for a, a state State House
representative and we were watching the video at the
primary and I was like, man, that video really puts on some
weight. My dad looked at me and goes,
son, that's not the video. And I was, I had gotten, I'd
gotten heavier than I'd ever gotten because I just kind of

(21:35):
let myself go. I was wearing a almost a 5X
shirt, 44 pants. I'm 370 lbs.
I'm just unhealthy. But I had convinced myself that
I was still this large man. So over the next 15 months, I
dropped 130 lbs. I turned my biomarkers around.
I was biologically 56 years old at 47.
I'm now biologically 42 at 49. And all of a sudden, all of a

(21:58):
sudden my baby pops up. And so now I've got the, the
revision to the Superman pictureas we put, we put grandpa in
heaven and he's looking down on us and his Superman and I've got
little bee on my shoulder. So when I get that that one.
Done. And I love that.
The difficulty with that too, because when I, when I had that
idea, I had nobody would do it because Superman's a trademark

(22:20):
logo. And I was like, you got to be
kidding me. Like I went to so many different
outlets that to do it and nobodywould do it.
I forget who ended up doing it for me.
And from this point it looks really cool.
But well, I know, but Brian knows when you're up close, it's
kind of pixelated just because of of the image itself.
But from this point of view it'sI mean.
It looks bad ass from where I. Yeah, And I was telling you,

(22:42):
what do you get somebody that that because really, the stories
I've heard from his dad, the onethe one that resonates with me
because I didn't know your dad, but I met him one time.
And then when I ran into him at the Rattlers game, it's like we
we known each other entire life.Like that's just how he was.
He was he always looked at me and smiled, was happy to see me.

(23:02):
I mean, he was that kind of guy.But the story that stuck with me
that you told was the fact that the one time he got stuck on the
side of the road and nobody would help him.
So from that point forward, he would, he would always have a
tool kit in her or tool, whatever in his box, right?
And anybody he saw on the side of the road, he would stop,
regardless of the time of day, regardless of where he was

(23:24):
going, regardless of. This we would be on cross
country trips to go to visit family in Oklahoma.
It would be 0° outside icy roadsand he'd see a family.
My dad had this this this littleCraftsman toolbox that had
everything in there. My dad was a a badass mechanic.
He was he. He taught in industrial arts and
mechanics in school. I watched them drop the engine

(23:44):
of a VW bug change out, rebuild a carburetor in a Fry's parking
lot. Smitty's back then, but if.
Parking. I himself put the engine back
in, bolt it up and get the people on their way.
So we're driving to Oklahoma, it's middle of the night and
there's this family struck on the side of the road.
My dad pulls out his toolbox. We're sleeping in the motorhome.
I wake up, I go out there, he's like here, hold the flashlight

(24:06):
for me and my head in freezing conditions, wearing AT shirt and
shorts and socks and his slippers works on this guy's car
and gets his family back on the road.
And he told me this, you know, when he when he goes, I'll never
leave anybody stranded. So that's my philosophy today,
even though everybody has cell phones and AAA, we still stop
the change tires all the time. Yeah, that was that was the most

(24:28):
endearing story I heard when when we were at his, at his,
what do you call that celebration of life?
Celebration of life? Yeah.
That was I mean that. Wasn't just an impressive thing
though. I mean you saw people that
showed up for him from elementary school kids that had
him in as a teacher in the Seventies, 80s and 90s.
I mean, there was 300 and 5400 people that showed up for that.

(24:50):
Yeah, it was packed. It was packed.
But that was the one story that stuck out to me just because
it's, you know, who does that anymore on a grand scale?
You know, unless you're a small town Midwest type thing, you
don't hear about that. So.
Yeah. And even that's rare nowadays
for sure. Yeah.
Well that cause of all the serial colors and stuff you know
and so. So there you go.

(25:12):
So Little B just turned 1. Just turned 1.
I got to spend his birthday party on Saturday in the
hospital. Right.
And and why is that? Brian Morris?
So in February this year I decided that I was going to
start throwing shot, putting discus again.
I got healthy. So I decided I'm driving down
the street, I'm going to start throwing shot.
I haven't done it in 28 years. Why not?

(25:33):
I had no plans of competing thisyear.
And 3rd day into it at the second week of February, the
coach at GCC is like, hey, why don't you throw in our meat on
Saturday? Well, in the master side, as you
get older, they, they breakdown age divisions like 50 to 5455 to
59. So it was a five year age
division. And after my meet I threw
against all these college kids on that Saturday I played second

(25:55):
out of 36. That following Monday I found
out I was #3 in the world for masters after not throwing for
that long. So I, I spent the next 15 weeks,
I, I didn't prepped myself for it.
I was kind of like just right back to throwing and I thought,
hey, I'm going to train the way I used to train when I was in my
20s, which was five days a week,compete on the weekends, don't

(26:17):
take any days off. Well, our bodies breakdown at 50
a little differently a little bit.
So I, I tore A calf, I tore A hamstring, I pulled a growing.
I ended up with a small anigual hernia that I just kind of
ignored. And then I just kept going and
going and going. I was doing things at the I
think it was right around the 4th of of May.

(26:38):
I had set my sights on breaking this meat record up in Eugene,
OR and had stood for 30 years ata place called Track Town USA.
It's the most amazing track stadium.
Eugene, is that in the same kindof area where Nike was
developed? That's exactly it.
OK, Yep. So the Eugene Stadium is it's
track town when you when you pull in, it's track everything.

(26:59):
I mean, that's that's what it is.
Yep. So.
So that's what it is. You're.
Fine, whoever wants to see you. So it's Penny.
We're not that. We're not that like rigid dude.
Yeah, so I get there. I, I set sights on breaking that
record. I, I'm on my, my last throw and
I broke a record that was 30 years old at that point.

(27:21):
I'm, I'm within striking distance of an Arizona record,
which is 20 years old and the national record, which is 20
years old. I come back, I start training
right away on Monday. That Thursday, I'm just doing
basic drills and I blow the meniscus out of my knee.
Ouch. So I tore up both horns on the
meniscus of my knee. And how?
Does everybody says it does. It worse, I went from feeling

(27:45):
like I was on top of the world to couldn't even walk.
You hear grown men who are powerful athletes scream when
that happens, so I just, it's got to hurt like you can't even
imagine. I got carried to my truck, let's
put it that way, OK? So, and you're on.
Stop throwers are pretty good yeah yeah, I started started
doing the the rehab right away Alot of alternative therapies I

(28:08):
do a lot of regenerative factorsstem cells, PRP, red light,
hyperbaric oxygen, cryotherapy. I mean, I'm doing it all.
Stem waves, shockwave, you name it, I'm.
Doing it stem cells just out of.Curiosity Well, in in America,
you can't get true stem cells. So we get what's called
regenerative factors. And regenerative factors are
what stem cells turn into. A lot of people don't understand

(28:28):
how it works. So, and I can't say this word
correctly, but they're called mesochemical.
Stem cells are what we get with you go out of country, you can
actually get where they're embryonic and you actually get
the, the, the, the young stem cells that can become pretty
much anything. But what the stem cells do is
they turn into what's called regenerative factors.
And regenerative factors are themessaging systems that actually

(28:50):
help to rebuild tissue cells, everything like that.
In America, you can't get true stem cells because of all of the
stipulations about having embryonic stem cells and
whatnot. So that's why a lot of people go
back down to Mexico, Costa Rica,or Panama.
You hear Joe Rogan talking aboutPanama all the time for stem
cells. It's a huge Joe Rogan fan.

(29:10):
Oh yeah. I listen to a lot.
Yeah, me too. So I, I found a Doctor that
actually does the, the, the regenerative factors.
And when you do stem cells, you're doing hundreds of
millions. When you're doing regenerative
factors, you're doing billions. So I, I, I got hurt.
I called him up on the phone. It's 5:00 in the afternoon and

(29:31):
I'm like, hey, I got hurt. He's on his way home.
He's like, come to my office. I get to his office 7:30, he
stays till 9:00 treating me withstem cells on my knee and
intravenously. I come back ten days later, do
another round. Amazing.
So Saturday had been six week intwo days, five weeks in two days
that I'd been off. They told me that I wouldn't be

(29:52):
able to throw the rest of the season.
I'm trying to get to nationals. I'm out.
I'm out at the track meet at Mesa Community College and I'm I
hadn't thrown a full throw in six weeks.
So I hadn't even practiced but twice in six weeks.
And since I got hurt and I throwmy 5th throw and I, I fouled the
throw, but it was over the American record and it was over
the Arizona record. So I'm feeling really good in my

(30:14):
last throw and I go to load up and next thing I know I felt the
pop and, and I knew I knew something was wrong.
Got home and found out that not only the indigo hernia that I
had that I knew the other one had split open too.
So little Bee's birthday startedat this was I got home at 11:30
at by 2:00 I had swelling in places that I wish I didn't.

(30:37):
I felt like I was carrying a basketball between my legs and
something was wrong. And so I head to the the ER at
2:00. Seventy people showed up for his
birthday party at 5:00 and I wasin surgery and the next morning
at 7:30. Yeah man, well at least it was
his first birthday so he won't remember.
It sucks for you that you weren't there for sure.
And holy crap. It was a great party.

(30:58):
I saw what I could see on. Facebook, that's insane and,
and, and technology. We were able to.
You watch some of them on FaceTime, right?
Yeah, I watched the gift opening.
I watched. I got a lot of pictures.
I cried a lot, you know, becauseI want to be here with my son.
And. And whenever he would grab the
phone, Little Little Bee is so in tune with me.
He grabs a phone and he runs around.
He shows everybody Dad, dad, dad, dad.

(31:20):
And he just so it's just so funny.
But he's going in circles and he's looking down.
He's like Dad and he's showing everybody me, you know?
Yeah, it was pretty cool. But then I got home.
Yes. I got home late on Sunday night
and he he immediately runs up tome and I can't pick him up
because I, you know, I can't carry the weight.
So it's, he was just crying that, that just broke my heart.

(31:42):
I mean, as a man, I, I think I've waited a long time to have
this kid. So yeah.
Yeah. And if anybody knows Brian,
Brian just this was this definesBrian having a son.
Like if anybody, if anybody in the world deserved to have a son
that wanted a son more than anything else in the in the
world, that's Brian Morris. I'm just.

(32:03):
Sitting here thinking that this is the luckiest kid in the world
because, you know, everything I'm feeling from you is exactly
what Chris just described. Yeah.
And and little kid was. Blessed for sure.
And he is he's such a cute little kid.
Like he's he when you see a picture of me, like he doesn't
look like he's 1. He just he looks like this
really old soul for being such asuch a little.

(32:24):
I mean, it's one, but you just Imean it's.
Just like a little person already, yeah.
It's a trip. It's all, it's even crazier is
his muscle development. Like, you know, he's got a
chest, he's got a back, he's gotlats and I'm like, he's got
these, he's got, he's got grandpa's thighs.
I mean, I wish I had my dad's thighs.
My dad had these massive thighs and he's got these massive
thighs. And I'm like, Yep, you're

(32:45):
definitely your grandpa's kid, you know?
That's why he picked you up and threw you through that wall.
Power's in your legs, man. A lot of power was in that man
in every aspect of his body. I mean, the funny story, there
was an athlete that came down. His name was Mike Hungerford
right before he passed away. And Mike was one of my dad's
throwers, big football kid. He was massive lineman in in

(33:07):
Moon Valley. My dad used to arm wrestle these
kids and they used to always want to try to take on my dad.
My dad never lost arm wrestling.That's fun.
So it took about a couple days before my dad passed away.
Mike comes over to the house andmy dad's down to 175 lbs.
He's still got these massive manhands that's been cranking
wrenches and and and working on farms and doing all this stuff
his whole life. And I'll never forget Mike
looking at him and goes, you know, coach, he goes, I think I

(33:29):
can finally take you and my dad with this big shit eating grin,
looks at him and goes. And Mike just lost it, you know,
because my my dad, yeah, he's the eternal tough guy.
There was there was no if you want to talk about a man being a
man, that was him. Like even on.
Your best day is that going to happen?
No, and that's what he said. It was basically, you know.

(33:49):
No, I feel the same way about mydad for sure.
It's like he, those guys were just a different, no matter how
much we think we're men sitting here, they were a different
breed of man, right? For good or bad, indifferent.
You know, they lived in a different time, but that was a
different man. As far as you're saying the
toughness, the meanness, the there's no quit.

(34:11):
I go to work every day. Unless I'm dying, I'll be at
work, right? Yeah.
That was their mindset. And that's the mindset that I
carry too. I mean, you know, I got home at,
I got home at 4:30 on Sunday. I was back at work at 7:00 AM
yesterday so. And on the way from the
hospital, where, where did you stop Brian?
So I, I'm a big, I left the hospital and rent right to

(34:34):
hyperbaric oxygen. So I, I've been studying
alternative therapies for the last 2 1/2 years.
I got on the the trail of alternative therapies.
I don't believe in big pharma. I don't take, I haven't taken a
single painkiller in years. I don't take aspirin.
So I, I, I've been on this sincemy dad got cancer and actually

(34:55):
went right to the hyperbaric oxygen therapy and, and started
treatment with that, got into the red light, got into that.
I, I believe that if we were actually empowering people to
heal, that we would be putting people in a hyperbaric prior to
surgery and immediately after surgery, because the number one
thing that allows our body to heal is oxygen.

(35:15):
So if you preload the body and allow it to have a more cellular
movement and have that better blood flow, everything's going
to work better. You can use a lower doses of of
anesthesia. You can use lower doses of pain
meds to get the same results andyou're going to have better
tissue healing. And actually in 48 hours, the
scarring around my incision points has almost completely

(35:37):
there's almost completely no, nobruising at all, which is
insane. So, people.
Need to hear this for sure because very few people listen
to the amount of different kind of alternative medicine therapy
doctors, you know, people who are legitimate.
You know that you and I do because we hear a lot of them on
Rogan and the people that you know, Jordan Peterson and the

(36:00):
people that have followed Rogan for years that he's had on there
that I listen to for different things for the same reason.
You know, there has to be a better way.
I was an avid cannabis user for years.
You know, I used it recreationally in the band, you
know, to write better songs. I used it later on after I got

(36:21):
in a car accident for pain management.
And then that ability was taken away from me through a job and I
got addicted to Xanax for anxiety.
You know, the actually Chris figured it out on this podcast,
Brian, the first thing that I was ever addicted to was
painkillers. After I got in that car accident

(36:43):
that were prescribed by a doctorlegitimately, they sent me home
and gave me two muscle relaxers and a painkiller and said take
this three times a day in perpetuity.
You know, I didn't know any better.
The doctor gave it to me. This was 1998.
So, you know, we didn't have thewhole opiate knowledge that we
have today. And if they did, they didn't
tell us, right? Yep.

(37:04):
So I'll tell. You.
Kudos to you for saying all that.
My, my journey is, has taken me down the the rabbit hole of stem
cells, regenerative factors, redlight, hyperbaric cryotherapy.
I have a cold plant red sauna inmy garage.
But I've become a guru when it comes to peptide therapy because
I believe that holistically our bodies are already.

(37:26):
And I'm going to throw this thing out there like.
In the two main explain peptide therapy because very.
Few people I'm going to right now.
So first thing I'm going to do is I'm going to say this.
We treat everything better than we treat ourselves.
And the reason why I say this isbecause when you drive down the
road and your check engine lightcomes on, you don't just pull
over and pull the fuse on your check engine light.
You take your car and you schedule for maintenance.

(37:47):
But when you have a headache, you pull the fuse on the check
engine light. A headache is a check engine
light. A headache.
A headache is your body's way ofsignaling your brain because the
brain knows no pain. You can have open brain surgery
and there's not a single pain receptor in your brain.
All the pain receptors are from somewhere else.
So when you have something that goes off in your brain, it's
coming from somewhere else, that's a signal.

(38:07):
The brain is the computer that you plug in.
Like when you go get your car, your brain plugs in and it says,
hey, you have this error code and then it has to signal your
body on how to regenerate. And the reason why we know that
our bodies are perfect machines is because when you are in a
situation where you're extremity, when you're freezing,
what is the first thing that freezes your extremities, right?
Correct. Is your body has to protect the

(38:29):
head, the heart, the lungs and the and the torso.
You can lose both arms, both legs and still function and
still live. And your body knows this.
So it knows how to shut down thethe systems that it doesn't need
in in, in perpetuity until it gets to a point where it it has
to start taking from other things.
So let's use that as aging. As we age, our body takes from

(38:49):
things like our skin. If we want to know why women age
differently than men, as we get to 5060 seventy years old, we
don't look as aged as a woman who's at 506070 because a woman
has more collagen that's taken from their skin.
Once it takes from their skin and the wrinkles start to
happen, where does it go next? It goes to bones.
Why do women have more more conditions of of of osteoporosis

(39:13):
than any other than any other thing?
The men, because they're that's the next thing that's that's
that's gone after collagen is the building block, not protein,
not calcium collagen, skin, bones, organs, all collagen
based. So let's just use that as as as
a building block. Peptides signal our body.
They're short chain amino acids or short chain proteins in our

(39:33):
body that actually allow our body to do certain things on a
cellular level. There's hundreds upon thousands
of different proteins in our bodies, and there's hundreds
upon thousands of different peptides in our body.
At age 30, our body starts to lose the ability to regenerate
these things, so our production starts to go down.

(39:54):
And the way I can use this, I like analogies because it makes
sense. If you have a janitor that goes
to a classroom and he's new on the job and he's doing a perfect
job, he goes into the classroom,the classroom's always clean.
He's wiping on the chalkboard, he's cleaning the trash cans.
He's mopping the floors. Ten years later, that same
janitor, he's got a lot of otherrooms, the classes are messy,
He's getting in, he's hurrying you through, but he's not
cleaning them exactly right. So now you start to leave these

(40:16):
cells behind that are called zombie cells, or they're cells
that are just not getting taken care of.
They're not getting cleared out of our body because our janitors
aren't doing the work that they're supposed to do.
And pretty soon it becomes too overwhelming where he's lucky to
come in and empty the trash can anymore while those zombie cells
come together and we start to have clusters of zombie cells
that then become what, cancers and things like that that cause

(40:36):
degeneration in our body. So I'm giving you the simple
understanding of how this works.Peptides allow your body to
restart and give yourself some new janitors or to invigorate
the janitor. Maybe you're giving a Red Bull
and it allows you to have that that whole idea that your body
can heal. So I'm going to use this.
In October I tore my calf muscle.
I had a CT scan in my calf. They told me it was 6 to 12

(40:58):
weeks for the swelling to go down and then I'd be good to
throw again or not throw at the time, but be good to walk. 3 1/2
weeks later I went back. I had him circle exactly where
the tear was in my calf. 3 1/2 weeks later I'm back and the guy
thought he CT that he kept the wrong leg because it had
completely healed. I had gone home, started
treating it with with peptides immediately.

(41:18):
I for my, my hamstring third week of 4th week of of training
started treating with peptides and never took a day off.
I pulled my growings, never tooka day off.
I've competed, I've completed competed at better levels.
I've got a a whole system for 15months or 15 weeks of of better
throws that at meats getting better and better and better

(41:39):
while I'm injured dealing with knees and everything else.
So I've been invigorated over the last 2 1/2 years by
peptides. Can I interject for one second?
Yes, I love everything you're saying.
I'm sitting over here. I'm like floating on my chair
because you're speaking my language, right?
I listen to this all the same things.
I haven't applied it to my life to the level that you're talking
about right now. So this is amazing.

(42:02):
What I'm hearing, and anybody that's listening should be
hearing, is there's no money in treating people the way you're
treating yourself, right? There's money in giving them
prescription drugs and followingthe status quo.
The way we've been doing it for however long.
Big Pharma's been controlling a lot of this country in that they

(42:25):
just dole out prescriptions likethey're candy.
Well, Big Pharma wants to treat us to death and I want to live a
better life. Literally want to treat you to
death. Literally.
And there was a time when medicine in this country, I want
to believe, was way closer to wanting to do the right thing.
Right. Nope.

(42:45):
I, I, I think that the original intention, but very quickly
people saw the opportunity of money.
I think that I think that, but Ithink that that when you have
there absolute power is absolutecorruption and when you have
power to to heal people, you have absolute power.
If you have power to treat people, then you have the
ability to have a return residual income, and that model

(43:08):
started 400 years ago. Yeah, what do they say?
Absolute power. Corrupts absolutely.
So I, I'm a big believer that we, that we have allowed
ourselves to be funneled. If you look at, at, at third
world countries, we're all old enough to remember this.
Do you guys remember the AIDS epidemic in the 80s and the
early 90s? Absolutely everybody was going

(43:29):
to die of AIDS. A lot of five people had AIDS.
How come Africa's not wiped off the map?
I'll tell you why. Because they're being treated
with peptides type 1-2 and threediabetes being treated.
Not just treated, but let's use the C word cured with peptides.
So they don't have access to thepharmaceuticals that we have
because there's no, there's no money in the third world country

(43:51):
to have pharmaceuticals. So they're treating them with
alternatives. Alternatives being the peptides
for AIDS, hepatitis, AB and C diabetes, 123 cancers, all of
these things. There's actually a peptide out
there, PNC 127, that is called the cancer killer.
Really. How come nobody talks about it?
I've heard there's no money in it, man, no.

(44:13):
Money in it. There's no money that's why I
wanted $1000 in a treatment of of radiation or chemotherapy, a
round of of chemotherapy. My dad's when I saw his bill was
80,000 for his his. Round so so here's and this is
this is me being who I am as faras have a conversationalist and
whatnot. So with your dad, was, was he
just not, was he not a believer in peptides or was it something

(44:36):
that came? Out.
I was new, I was new. I was just getting into the the
understanding of it and it's a lot to learn.
I spent 50,000 to take him down to Mexico.
I went down there. The tumor shrank.
But when he came back, the oncologist told my dad that if
he continued the alternative treatments, that my dad was
going to die and that he wouldn't treat him anymore.

(44:57):
So he stopped. So he stopped.
That's because he believed he believed the medical
professional. Even though we had a proof model
that those cancers were the cells were shrinking, that the
tumors had shrunk, right. And he gave himself back to the
conventional because he was, he was scared.
He didn't want to. He didn't want to die.

(45:19):
Yeah, yeah. So how do you how do you
balance? How do you?
Balance. The idea?
Here's the one thing we know. Right.
People that have had people havedied with treatments of
chemotherapy and radiation, right?
Yep, Yep. Absolutely.
We we know that. So we know that we know that
healthy people have died becausethere's been mis mixed diagnosis

(45:40):
and people that have been prescribed that people that have
taken those treatments have diedeven though they had no cancers,
right? Did the cancer kill them or did
the treatment kill them? The treatment because if you
think about it, I've heard, I don't know if this is accurate
or not, but I've heard that all the all the people that died of
COVID died in hospitals or underdoctor's care.
None of them died at home. Correct, and most of them were

(46:01):
put on ventilators. Right.
Which what does that tell you? Like the big thing when I had
COVID both times, the first timewas they didn't want you laying
on your back because you know, whatever the lungs and things
like that, which is impossible. When you sleep, you don't know
how you're sleeping, right? But that was and when I got it
the first time, the big thing was I was over 50 and had
asthma. So even if it went to the

(46:23):
hospital stage, they were going to write me off anyway because
my chances of survival were nextto none.
Because over 50 with asthma, notknowing how what a physically
fit specimen I was. And they got money for every
person that died in the hospital, right?
Right, right. Yeah.
Crazy man. Well, so, so this is my next
adventure is I've really my lifehas always been about helping

(46:45):
people and, and, and the longer I'm on this journey, the more I
believe in it. So I actually own the website
peptideguy.com and I'm two weeksaway from two weeks away from
launching that. I haven't launched it yet, but
what it's going to be is it it takes a different approach.
It's not a scientific approach, it's an informational port

(47:05):
approach from someone who's who's been.
Been there, done that. Who's been using them?
Who has been studying them? Who?
Who's had the trouble of understanding how to titrate up?
How to titrate down? When to come off the cycle?
When not to come off the cycle. How so?
It's not a SO, so it's not a continuous.
No. Well, so it isn't because you're
you have receptor sites that youcan burn out and you don't ever

(47:27):
want to burn out a receptor sites.
OK, now that we've explained what it is and how it works, and
I challenge everybody to rewind us, I'm going to listen to it
again. You just told 2 incredible
success stories of recovery fromhorrible injuries that were not
related to Big Pharma, not related to drugs that were not

(47:47):
invasive to your life and a complete 100% success story
right, right yes. So now explain how that what you
call a cycle worked yes. What is a peptide?
Is it a pill? Is it liquid?
Is it? What is it?
So the peptides do come in oral format.
The the problem is, is people are scared of of injections and

(48:09):
even though the needles are verysmall, they're the size of of
diabetic needles. OK, so let let let them
understand. So is a is a peptide needle the
same size as like a testosterone?
No, okay, smaller, much smaller.It's the size of a diabetic
needle, which is. Like I'm not diabetic so I have
no idea. So a testosterone needle will go
down to like 21 gauge which is like about a pencil lead,

(48:30):
whereas a diabetic needle is thesize of a hair.
Okay, that explains it. Thank you.
Yes. So the problem with oral
peptides is that when you ingestanything, the first thing it has
to go through is your stomach, your, your gastrointestinal,
sure, your juices. So it it, it eliminates a lot of

(48:51):
that stuff. That's why when you take a lot
of vitamins, you're passing a lot of the vitamins right
through because you're just not getting a chance to, to, to
allow them to, to be cycled intoyour body.
So a lot of the stuff that we take as which you should be
still be taking your multivitamins and everything.
I have a very good regiment, butthat only a portion of that's
getting absorbed. So with peptides, if you take

(49:13):
oral peptides, the efficacy of the peptides is lost in the
stomach gastrointestinal. So you do an injection and you
can inject it into the love handle.
I inject into like if I have a pain point, I inject right into
it. And it depends on the peptide
and depends on what you're trying to get.
There's peptides for skin, hair,nails, scarring.

(49:34):
There's peptides for for tissues, cellular regeneration,
weight loss. A lot of people don't realize
that Wygovy, Ozempic, tirzepatide, all the weight loss
is a peptide and it's the first one that they've actually FDA
approved because they found out they can make money on them,
right? Right.
So if they can make money on it and then they can try to figure
out how to force everyone out, they're going to they're going

(49:56):
to do that. Well, peptides are are like
vitamins. You can get them online.
You can get them. You just have to understand them
and make sure you're getting from a reputable source.
So, so I'm going to stop you fora second.
So Ozempic, we've heard of like a ton of fallout from Ozempic
because it originally was used for a diabetes, then it was used
for weight loss because a lot, there's a lot of side effects
now that are coming to light, kind of like with vaping, right?

(50:16):
Vaping is safer than cigarettes,which we're all kind of called
BS on to begin with anyway. But now that's become more and
more apparent that it's the harmful.
Let me ask you. Let me ask you a question,
Chris. Is eating harmful for you?
Absolutely. No, it's not.
It's how you eat. Well, OK, yeah.
Yeah, let's use this. You eat to live, right?
Sure. So peptides are naturally

(50:37):
occurring in your body, but if you are trying to lose weight
and you do nothing else right, you're going to muscle waste.
Oh yes, exactly. So a lot of times people are
like, I'm going to take this injection, it's going to be a
miracle, right? They don't move, they don't
change their diet, right? They don't.
They don't take the necessary precautions to allow them to
have the good. Point too that is a.

(50:58):
Great put there. If I drive my car, I can drive
my car. If I go over the mileage on my
oil, I'm OK until I get to a certain point, right?
Right. Yep.
Well, the the fallout from thesedrugs is because people don't
want to put in the effort it needs to to do what it needs to
be done. Peptides are generally safe.
It's hard to OD on a peptide because it's a protein.

(51:20):
It's not a medicine. There's no it's, it's not a
medicine. If it was a medicine, it would
be a different kind of regulation.
That's an important point that Idon't think we've distinguished,
so I'm glad you just said that. For sure, people have this idea
that if if it was a medicine, there would be no way to buy it
online. And they're all over online
because they're not for human consumption.

(51:40):
They're not for human use. And that's that's the bottom
line. I would never tell anybody to
use them. They're for research purposes
only, whatever. But when you come down to the
Ozempic tirzepatide and the way Govi Ozempic has muscle wasting,
if you don't give yourself the necessary vitamins, the proteins
and do your movements, you're going to have wasting.

(52:02):
It's going to have problems, absolutely.
And This is why it's important for me as I'm posting on
Facebook, I'm getting blown up on my DMS and I spent half the
day answering that stuff becausepeople have so many questions
about this. They heard this or they heard
this, they heard this. That's why I created or I'm
creating This site is I just wanted to put a, a practical
approach to it that can answer these questions and help people

(52:25):
get through because I believe that if I can reach one person,
I was 370 lbs. I was a 44 shirt and a 44 pants
and a 5X shirt and with peptidesand good eating habits and
working out and moving right, I changed my lifestyle and I'm now
a 34 which I haven't been a 34 since I was in. 8th grade I was

(52:45):
300 hundred and 40. Pound loss and I've maintained
it through all of the things that I've gone through,
including death, holidays, son'sbirth and I.
And I didn't work out for almosta year after a little.
Yeah. Yeah, I know we talked about
that. But again, so that makes more
sense then. So it's not necessarily the drug
itself, it's the it's, it's because people are lazy.

(53:07):
They expect results, they expectresults.
They want results in a can, theywant results in a pill, they
want results in an injection. And the reality is, is that
these are tools. A mechanic is only as good as
this toolbox. But if you have a Snap on
toolbox and you only use one tool out of that toolbox, that
doesn't make you a good mechanic.
Right. If you give me that Snap On
toolbox, it'll collect dust mostof the time until you come over

(53:29):
or somebody like my dad comes over, my brother that actually
knows how to use tools because Ispent my formative years
learning to play a guitar. So I understand what you're
talking about for sure. I like your analogies and I I
like the alternative side of it.I'd definitely like to talk to
you more about that side of it. Absolutely or.
We could do a whole another showon peptides alone.

(53:50):
Oh my God. This is just the.
Alternative once once you once you get the peptide guy up and
running, we'll have you back on and we'll just we'll just talk
about the different types of peptides and.
Yeah, I thought we were going totalk about pools for an hour and
a half, which was totally cool with me, and then we went down
what we like to call a squirrel moment, and it's like, holy holy
shit, Brian Morris is cool as fuck.

(54:11):
Right. Well, yeah, well.
That's why I bucked. I've been bugging him for I
love, go ahead. I love the pool business.
But I'll be honest with you thatthe thing I love even more is
watching it. So there's two journeys that
people are in life that are on. They're on a transformative
journey, which is what I'm on, or they're on a preventative
journey, right as we get past our 30s, we have to make that

(54:32):
decision. Are we on a preventative journey
or transformative journey? Every using the the bullshit
word biohacking. Yeah, I call it bio
optimization. Forget the biohacking, I'm not
hacking shit. And here's the reason why.
Our bodies already know what they're doing.
It's perfection from the start, right?
And that's it. So there's I have a doctor
friend of mine, he became a medical doctor because his

(54:54):
family had a history of Parkinson's, dementia and
Alzheimer's. He started becoming a doctor 8
years old because he saw what itdid to his family.
So he spent his entire life learning the medical profession
to be able to prevent that in himself.
So he's been on a preventative journey since he was 8 years
old. Wow man.
I've been on the ups and downs. I've been at the top of my

(55:14):
sport. I've been at the lowest point
health wise where at 370 I was pre diabetic.
I was getting out of bed, my feet would swell up, I'd have to
crawl on my knees to the bathroom until the blood started
moving. I was embarrassed but I didn't
let people know that you know, and I just do my thing.
So I'm on a transformative journey but the transformative
journey for me is almost done. And now I'm on the preventative
journey because I want to have more time with my son.

(55:36):
But you know what? People need to hear that first
story that you said before. You said I'm on a transformative
journey. There is so many people
listening to this right now. That might be 300, four, 100
lbs. And they're like, there's no
hope for me, right? This guy's not talking about me.
You were that guy. Yeah, and by the and by the way.
I am that guy. And by the way.
If I, if I slip my, my, my body type, I've always been big.

(56:01):
I, I, I've just managed to use it in, in different ways.
So like when I threw competitively, I was, I was 350.
I was a lot healthier. But then when I got injured, I
would drop down to, you know, I,I, I carried weight between 260
and 290 as my normal weight. And now I'm carrying that 2:30
to 2:45 as my normal weight. And it's weird.

(56:21):
When I went in to, to, to put ona pair of pants and the guy
goes, what size? You guys said I need a 36.
He goes, no, you need a 34. I said, son, I haven't worn a
30. And I use the word son because
I'm. 50 now. I said I haven't worn a 34 since
I was in 8th grade. He goes, I'll tell you what, if
you put these on and they don't fit, I'll buy your pants for
you. I put them on and I gave out the
loudest woo woo in the in the I walked out and I was like kick

(56:42):
me out. I'm wearing a pair of 30 fours,
baby. I was in 8th grade and I was 188
lbs and learn a 34 in 8th grade.That was the last time I put on
a pair of 30 fours. Yeah.
So when so when Mike mentioned earlier the amount of people
listen to the show, we're in 19 countries now, 20 O20, I'm
sorry, 120 countries now. So you know, we're not our reach

(57:04):
is as far which is cool. So you that part of your life,
that is something definitely when we have you back on, you
know, we can kind of touch because we've kind of Mike and
Mike knows my story and stuff. You know too, that I was at the
time what, when I was drinking probably about two 30s, you
know, and then before the next church is about 2:16 and then
you know, so where approach, ourend game is the same, but our

(57:25):
approach is different just because it wasn't the knowledge
that we have now with everythingthat's social media wise because
that's one of the benefits technologies, learning all we
can learn from. Well, the cool thing for me is I
listen to this kind of stuff allthe time, and to meet somebody
who has done the same thing and then applied it to their life,
you went one step further than Idid in that you had some serious

(57:47):
injuries that you needed to try something different, right?
I don't want to go the route that everybody else goes.
So let's try this and see if it works.
And holy crap, not only did it work, it worked either twice as
fast or 70 or 80% faster in somecases.
So not only is it worth trying, it works right.

(58:08):
Well, it goes back to this too is right before, well, the show
started. I just finished another session
of hyperbaric oxygen and, and I'm a big believer in oxygen
therapy. I started using something called
EWAT, which is exercise oxygen therapy.
You'll see it in the in, in movies where they're on a
treadmill or something. They have a mask on and they're,
they're getting well. We, we, as we walk and breathe,

(58:30):
we're breathing 18 to 22% oxygen.
So when you get a chance to hyperoxygenate your body, you
can actually infiltrate your body with oxygen and push it to
that 90% under hyperbaric. You're at 100% under pressure
and what that does is that actually fills your body, not
just your, your, your, your breath, but your veins, your
blood, your bones, your skin. It just hyperoxygenates

(58:52):
everything. So it allows things to move
better. So when you're doing, what do?
You feel like when you're done with.
That. What's that?
What do you feel like when you're done with that?
Amazing. Like 20.
Years young, like 20 years old. Well, no, it's it's it's a
clarity because your OK your body is so well oxygenated that
things are just firing differently like my brain over

(59:13):
the last. Sentences are firing quicker.
Yep. OK.
And, and so when you're doing regenerative therapies like like
stem cells or regenerative factors or peptides, because it
helps with the circulation, thisstuff getting to where it needs
to go. Now, the first thing that it
gets attacked when you use peptides is places of

(59:34):
inflammation. So that's the idea of like the
BPC 157TB500, which is a lot of people are using for recovery is
that actually works on inflammation.
So it actually helps to reduce those, those pain points.
And again, our body is being told we, our, our brain has no
pain receptors. If I cut open your head and I

(59:55):
worked on your brain, I would not have to give you pain.
Medication, well, they did it back in the day.
They used to. They did lobotomies on people.
Correct before. They knew that wasn't, you know,
that's really correct. Let me ask you this.
Chris and I both have the same injury, right?
We have degenerative disc disease in our neck, so you know
the bones are starting to rub together.
What does that do for something like that?

(01:00:16):
Well, it's going to, first of all, it's going to reduce
inflammation. It's going to help to actually
deal with the the tissues aroundit.
You're going to need to go the one step further into the
regenerative factors and actually have regenerative
factors injected into the pointslike my knees are osteoarthritis
and that's what I've been treating on those.
And then do intravenous. But then what you'll do is your
peptide stack will actually helpwith inflammation, the the

(01:00:40):
ability of fluid to move and actually healing and delivering
the blood to those areas that help those tissues.
Nice, so it's kind of like it's the same kind of concept as stem
cells, but peptides are more available than the stem cells
are because isn't stem cells. Correct me if I'm wrong, but
isn't that something you inject to help regenerate and, you
know, repair? Stem cells can become anything.

(01:01:03):
So, so you can stem cell, that'swhy we call them regenerative
factors. They don't, they don't have a
personality. So essentially wherever you
inject them, they go to the places where you need them and
then they take on the personality of like your
cartilage or they take on the personality of a of a blood
vessel. Or that's why they found that
they can regrow somebody's ear inside somebody's stomach.

(01:01:25):
Because if you give it the rightsignalling, you can actually
grow something because they could become anything.
That's what stem cells can become.
We become people from stem cells, right?
Peptides are proteins that aid in the, the, the way your body
processes. So it's, it's, it's just, it's
just an aid for that. And a lot of them are short.

(01:01:45):
They're, they're short lived. So they have a very short half
life, which is why you take themon a certain like I take a a
certain things I'm. Glad you described it like that
because now it makes way more sense to me.
Yep. So I guess.
So a peptide cycle would be whatlike like 7 days on five?
Days we never. Finished that, Yeah.
Yeah. Well, what's different?
For every peptide, so there's some stuff that I'm going to

(01:02:07):
take for 8 weeks and then I'll take 8 weeks off.
There's some stuff I'm going to take five days a week, take two
days off. I'll do that for six to 10
weeks. It depends on what my needs are.
And this is what's crucial is that there's no cut and dry for
every single person. This is something you have to
learn your body. OK, so if we, so if I started
the peptides for my, my degenerating neck, right, my

(01:02:29):
stuff. So it's one of those things you
just kind of kind of got to do it and and see how you feel to
understand what the cycle is. Well, there's a baseline.
OK. And, and I could build you a, a
stack, OK, and then tell you howto do it for the next six
months. I'll tell you when to stop, when
to start, what to take at certain times.
They're not anabolic steroids, they're not medicines, they're

(01:02:52):
not any of that stuff. So protein going to have is
protein when we, when we stop taking them, it's called a
washout period. Essentially what it's doing,
it's allowing those receptor sites to calm down, not be
infiltrated so that when you restart again that they can
absorb all that stuff again. Because we build up an immunity
just like we do. If we take something over and
over again, we're going to buildup an immunity towards it,
right? So that's what we're trying to

(01:03:14):
avoid is ever building up an immunity towards it.
Now we're going to see, just so you guys know, in the next 10
years, we're going to see thingshappen on a cellular level at a
rate that we've never seen. They're going to unlock certain
things like the ability of the body to continually build muscle
that's going to make anabolic steroids look like a 1970s Pinto
sitting on a shelf. Wow.

(01:03:34):
So where we're heading with thisstuff is so far advanced.
This is just the opportunity nowto get people on that on that
journey and and start to feel good about themselves.
At 50, I feel better now than I did in my 30s.
I'm benching over 3. 100 that from so many people now and I
want to feel that same way right.
I mean, I'm not like decrepit, but having Chris will tell you

(01:03:56):
this neck it, it messes with things you want to do a lot of
times, right? It makes you hesitate to do
certain things for sure. And after an injury, like when I
went to go throw on Saturday, myfirst few throws was is my knee
going to hold up well? After I got past the first few
throws, I'm like, hey, I'm good.My 5th throw I threw better than

(01:04:16):
I did six weeks before my injuryand I haven't thrown in a meet
in six weeks. I haven't thrown in a practice,
a full throw and then on my 6th throw I blow up my hernia.
But I'm like, OK, go get it fixed and come back next season.
I'm not at work. I'm 48 hours post surgery right
now. So if you look at this, this is
not me. I'm I'm not like sitting in
there sulking about it. I went to work the next day.

(01:04:39):
Yeah, I'm, I went right to therapy.
I'm ready to go. And here I am talking to you.
I'm just excited as I. Will be Yeah, when I texted him
earlier, yeah, I texted him the other day.
I was like, hey, dude, I know you know, all things considered,
you still down for days? Like, absolutely.
I threw myself, I'll throw myself under the bus.
Before we recorded the show, I told him.
I said I'd be laying on the couch and somebody would be
waiting on me hand and foot, andI'd be crying like a Sissy

(01:05:00):
because you're going the modern route, right?
So I think you just proved that.Here's a guy who 48 hours ago
was literally having surgery on one of the worst hernias anybody
could ever have, and now he's sitting here and he's got all
the energy in the world talking to us.
And you're not on painkillers? I was going to say that.
Yeah, not on painkillers at all.Nope, I haven't taken a single

(01:05:22):
thing. So they gave me they gave me
morphine at the hospital and then they gave, they shot me up
with one shot of fentanyl. Then they gave me some, some D
thing. I don't remember what it was.
And I and I was like, they gave me 3 prescriptions to come home
when they're sitting on the counter.
They haven't even come out of the bags.
I just, I don't believe in that.I don't even take aspirin.
I I don't take cough medicines. I don't take aspirins.

(01:05:43):
I don't believe in that. The other thing is, is that
narcotics have a tendency to block you up.
So for the last two days I've been just like waiting to get
past the morphine shots from Saturday 'cause I'm like the
Dilaudid is what they gave me. That Dilaudid was the only stuff
that even worked, which was crazy.
So I. Couldn't think of it.
I had it on the tip of my tongue.
Yeah, me too. And I'll agree with you, the

(01:06:03):
narcotics block you up. Because I'll tell you, when I
told my recovery story, it blocked me up so bad that I was
suffering from psychosis, right?So my body was just in chaos on
a level I can't even describe. I was just next to death, but in
the middle of all that I was losing my mind at the same time.
So it was a whole lot of fun during that.

(01:06:24):
Well, the weird thing is this doctors and, and, and like your
dad, like he believed in conventional medicine, because
that's ingrained in this from from day number one, right?
Like day number one, it's doctors.
Doctors know best. Doctors are the best, right?
You go to the doctor for physicals.
You go for you have a cold, you have a flu, you know you have
pain, all that kind of stuff. It's all we're always going and
gravitating towards medical professionals because they're

(01:06:45):
the ones that have degrees. There's the one that went the
school and all that kind of jazz.
They're. And what did we talk about with
Peter from Australia? There's two countries on Earth
that allow pharmaceutical pharmaceuticals to advertise on
TV. the United States. Yep.
And new. Zealand and New Zealand?
Or was it Australia? New Zealand.
The only two. That's it.
The only two in the entire worldthat allow pharmaceutical ads.

(01:07:07):
So the reason I say that is because every day it's inundated
in you that Brian said it earlier, you need this for this,
you need this for that. You need this for the other
thing. If you're watching regular TV
like every other commercial, is a.
Drug, right? Well, and think about in the 50s
when the TV first started comingout, right?
What they advertise Geritol. I don't know what the hell

(01:07:28):
Geritol is for, but right, Remember that you see those like
Geritol, you know, a spoonful, you know, and Mary Poppins and
Mary Poppins, a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go
down. It's in a Disney movie that is a
classic. So it's all about medicate,
medicate, medicate, medicate. And I'm a guilt.
I'm guilty. Of it and look at what we do.
What do we do? We start giving kids oh, you
have a headache, we start givingthem aspirin and then we

(01:07:50):
diagnose these kids because we want to put them in boxes.
You know, we start diagnosing ifI was in today's world, I would
have been diagnosed ADHD back and I would have been medicated
and that would have stifled everything that I grew up to be
the person I am. But we start giving these kids
medications with altars and thennot just that, we give them all
this processed bullshit that we put into them from from the the

(01:08:14):
cereals on up. We've been very fortunate with
little B that Jess and I have a very strict understanding of of
what we're giving him. He's eaten.
No, he's eaten no cereals. He's had no baby foods.
He gets no formulas. He still breastfeeds and instead
of juices and waters, he gets electrolytes.
And I have a pedia version of electrolytes that he gets three
times a day and he loves it. But he will never get juice.

(01:08:36):
He doesn't drink milk. He drinks very, very, very, very
little milk, if he gets any at all.
But his process his his food. He started eating solid food at
8 months. He was eating avocado, he was
eating a steak, he was eating lamb.
He was eating anything that we could that we would make that
would be wholesome, that would be.
But he has not gotten anything processed.

(01:08:56):
He gets no, none of this bullshit cereal because it's
fortified with iron. And that was the first thing
that all you need to get him iron fortified cereal.
Now it's trash. Yeah.
It's trash and. And my little dude's a bad ass.
Right now I love. Right and see, and, and here's
the here's here's the thing about Brian, cause I've known
him for so long. There were times when I'd be
with Brian and we'd stop at at McDonald's and he would get, you
know, 4 big marks, 3 diet Cokes,6 fries.

(01:09:18):
So that shows you the transformation of not only who
he has an individual, but just the life.
Because I don't call it like yousaid, biohacking instead of
biohacking is bad bioengineering, right Bio.
Optimization. Right, So my thing is, it's not
a diet, it's a lifestyle. Diets don't work.
Lifestyles do Change your life, change your lifestyle and and
you'll be better for it at the end of the day.

(01:09:40):
So like you said, instead of biohacking, it's bioengineering.
It's the same concept, right? So it's what you put in is, is
how you feel when like Nick and I stopped breads, bad starches,
crackers. I've cheated a little bit on
crackers because you know, but and we've had a couple little
slip UPS. Everything in moderation.
Right on the starches and the tortillas and stuff, but.
It's not a slip up, Chris. It's life, man.

(01:10:02):
I know, I know, but you know, it's so and it's we've, I've
noticed a difference because my neck would, I would, it would
tangle and go numb and stuff like that.
So the part up there. But now I'm still trying to
figure out what's what's the middle of the back pain and
where that coming from, which I think it's a direct result of
the neck. It's just I don't have the
inflammation because I stopped alittle bad starches and stuff.
So the whole pep type thing, which I've been super interested

(01:10:24):
in and I had no idea how deep you dove into it.
I mean, you showed me Nikki and I your regiment a couple weeks
ago as far as supplements and peptides and all kind of jazz.
So I knew you knew had some understanding of it.
But this is just like. I spend, I spend 2 to 3 hours a
day in research and that research I've surrounded myself
with doctors that are in this field to the point where when I

(01:10:46):
came home from the, from the hospital, went to hyperbaric.
I was posting online, I had a doctor here doing regenerative
factors because he was leaving town the next day.
He drove to my house an hour and20 minutes to do regenerative
factors for me at 8:00 at night that that is unheard of.
And he just said, hey, I saw that you were in the hospital.
Let's get you some regenerative factors before I leave for
Florida. And The thing is, is once you

(01:11:08):
know, you talk about putting yourself with the right people.
It's about running yourself withthe ability to, to, to have this
knowledge. So if I have a question, I can
get an answer. Here's the crazy part.
I deal with medical doctors thatstudy this stuff all the time
that come to me for answers for things because I've actually
gone deeper in certain subjects than they have.
Nice, that's awesome. That is really cool.

(01:11:30):
I, I learned so much and I'm just sitting here thinking, I
learned just enough to know I got to go back and listen to it
again, right? So I'm like Chris, I've been
super interested in it and I've heard just bits and pieces from
different doctors. Like I think Doctor Rhonda
Patrick talks about it a lot, but she only talks about a
little portion. You just did a deep dive on what

(01:11:51):
they are, how they're used. I understand them way better now
and I'm super curious about talking to you and trying
something like that to just giveit a shot.
You know what, What can it hurt?It's a protein.
And if it helps, yay. You know, now I can do things
that I wanted to do that I have been putting off, right?
Well, here's the number one thing that when I post, I post
online, I post about my journey and I and I just do it because

(01:12:15):
I'm excited. And like I said, if I can reach
one person, I have people that are going to the oxygen Wellness
clinic where I go now because they saw what I'm going through
and now they're doing therapies and they're sending me messages.
Hey, thank you for posting that.Right?
So that's why I post as much as I do.
But here's the one thing that that comes up every single time.
What's it cost? And all I can tell people is,

(01:12:35):
what's it cost to be sick? Yeah.
OK, I did it there. There's things cost money, but I
would rather not be tied up in bed.
I would rather not be in pain. I'd rather not be be aching and
worried about what's going to break on me.
I see a 65 year old man and I think to myself, my son's going
to be 15 when I'm 65. Do I want to be the old man

(01:12:57):
that's shuffling around at 65 ordo I want to be that badass dad
that's still competing in the shop in the discus?
You know, I'm, I'm 50. I'm, I'm throwing up weight in
the gym that I didn't throw up since I was in my 30s.
I feel good. Yes, I, I've gone through some
injuries because I'm pushing myself to another level, But I,
I'm, I'm doing that intentionally.
I'm doing it because I'm like, Idon't want to hold back.

(01:13:18):
I want to, I want to give all that I can give.
I don't have, you know, so much time.
Not to interrupt you, but I don't think I can stress enough
that this is a guy that didn't live his whole life like this.
This is a guy that went from being broken down and overweight
at an unprecedented level to sitting here talking to you
saying I'm going to the gym and I'm kicking ass, right?

(01:13:39):
Yeah, this is like 2 years, right?
So. Impressive your journey.
August 4th, 2022 was the primaryand we were watching the video
and I told my dad I was like, I'm like I would turn this
around August 5th. My biggest problem wasn't even
junk food or sodas. I don't drink that or eat that.
My biggest thing was I eat pastafive days a week.
I love bread and I drink a gallon of milk a day and that

(01:14:00):
was pretty much what I was. I was a pasta, bread and milk
drinker and. I'm allergic to dairy so I don't
do that, but I love breads and pastas man.
He froze. I do believe so, Brian.
I lost you guys for a second. So.

(01:14:20):
Yeah, you froze up for a second.So, so I ate a lot of pasta, ate
a lot of bread and I drink a lotof milk and that was pretty much
it. And and that's, you know, what
it was that got me to where I was.
I would sit down and just eat and eat and eat.
I love macaroni and cheese. I'd eat macaroni and cheese, you
know, 3-4 times a week. And so I, I turned myself on 20
days starting on the 5th of August 2022.

(01:14:42):
By August 25th, I had already lost 20 lbs, hadn't touched the
gym. I go to the gym on August 20,
25th, I get on the elliptical. Now this is a guy who used to to
to venture over 500. He's just squat over 7.
I was power lifter. I was a thrower.
I get on the elliptical for 15 minutes and I feel like I'm
going to die. I walk outside after throwing up
and I call my dad and I'm like, you're never going to fucking
believe this. And he's like he's like he's

(01:15:05):
like he's like, well, just remember and goes back to this
by inch is a cinch, you know, and that's what he said.
So I would just progressively, hey, make sure I'm I'm eating
right And a year and a half later, so that was August 4th.
I started at two at 370 on November 13th in 2023.

(01:15:25):
Fifteen months, right, 15 months, I was down to a 245.
Wow, yeah. Congratulations, lifestyle
change, man. And that was before the peptides
and before the supplements, right?
That was just. Peptides started, I started
getting, well, my dad had started getting sick in that
September and I started getting into the peptides.
I started using very small amount of stuff at that point.

(01:15:46):
That's what set me off on that, that thing.
And with his cancers, I went deep into it, started realizing,
and then I was my own Guinea pig.
So, I mean, yeah, there still wasn't.
There's still even to this day, you've said it.
There's so many little tidbits and snippets out there, but
nobody really gets into it because they're not really
promoting something they've done.
They're just promoting stuff that they're seeing 'cause

(01:16:06):
they're trying to sell you some shit.
Yeah. Realistically, or in her case,
like she read about it, right? Yeah, yeah, I've read about how
people are doing this and it was, yeah.
Maybe there was a peer review paper or something.
I have an entire refrigerator. He does.
It looks like a pharmacy. He does that's he showed it to
me. Nick and I were on a FaceTime
with him and he's like, hey, check out my regimen and we're
just. Like what?
That's awesome. Just.

(01:16:27):
Yeah, it's, I'm just so happy itworked for you, you know, to
think about where you were and where you're at now.
And for Christ's sake, you had surgery 48 hours ago and you're
still full of all this energy totalk about how positive this is.
That's awesome, man. Yeah.
No, it's just part of it's. Just because it's Brian Morris,
that's just, that's just, you know, that's just his
personality, you know, now it's.Helping people.

(01:16:51):
I feel like I said, I fully believe that after 30,
especially in our 40s, I, I put up a post the other day and I
was like, Hey, I need a referralfor a cardiologist.
And I cannot believe how many ofmy friends in their mid 40s to
mid 50s are already seeing cardiologists.
And there's a hundred and something referrals on there
from people who are actually seeing cardiologists.

(01:17:11):
And I'm like, therein lies the problem.
We're, we're all on this journeyof being transformative or, or
preventative. And realistically, if you're
not, you're just you're, you're on the pathway to just being
that 65 year old man that's shuffling his feet.
And I don't want to be that guy.And that nor do I.
No, and that is the that is a perfect way to wrap this thing

(01:17:32):
up. That's Brian Morse of We Fix
Ugly Pools. You can find him on on YouTube
at wefixuglypools.com, right or right or just at Brian Morris.
He's there. Just go find him.
We're going to have you back on.We're going to do a whole show
on peptides. Once you get your website up and
running, let me know and then we'll get that scheduled out.
I've, you know, I've known you forever and ever.
So none of this is a surprise ofheart because I know how you see

(01:17:54):
something and you, you're just, you're dialed in.
You're kind of like me like that.
Mike, you have any any thoughts about for Brian before we wrap
it all up? No, definitely look forward to
having you back and thanks for I, I had no idea where you're
going to go down that road. So that, that was awesome for
sure. Well, and see, that's the cool
thing about our show, Brian. We don't.
There's no agenda. There's no agenda.

(01:18:16):
It's a conversation. It's not an interview.
It's kind of like how I did the radio show, right?
There was never I got, I got they would give me shit all the
time because I wasn't always talking real estate.
I was like, I don't want to justtalk real estate, man.
I want to talk about life, you know, and, and we always wrap
the show up like this. Don't let the bad days win.
If you don't wake up tomorrow, somebody's who loves you is
going to miss you. And Burrell just apparently took

(01:18:36):
her own life. She was found.
If you don't know Amber Ella, she's a Food Network star that
had all kinds of shows and stuff.
She was found unresponsive this past Tuesday morning in her
shower with over 100 different assortment of pills.
So they're think she took her own life, which really, really,
I mean, you know, it's, it's there's always a better way.
Reach out to somebody. Somebody Loves You.

(01:18:58):
Somebody will miss you. So don't don't take your life
because you're having a bad day.Do not let the bad days when it
will be better tomorrow when youwake up and and start all over,
right? Inch by inch, baby.
I love that too. Love you Brian.
Love you, Mike. Love.
You guys too, I appreciate. You.
Yeah, yeah. Tell little Brian.

(01:19:19):
Tell, tell little B We said hi. Absolutely.
Happy birthday. Happy birthday, little B.

(01:19:40):
On your journey, this is the place where you will go.
Be on the trail behind your eyes.
Feel yourself and need yourself.Take a moment, Look until you
see it. Fight your battle.

(01:20:02):
That's you. You both will fight your battle,
but you both will. Come down here.

(01:21:32):
He haven't found solids in his sand.
He's from fighting. Wait for the dead when he's
closer. I'm here.
He put in the weed you ain't no quizzes we're playing smile and
you should you put it on the almighty day.

(01:21:55):
You've got to do you 2 in your life.
The people. So in every day, take the turn
behind your eyes. Feel the soul evolution now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

(01:22:20):
Take a moment. Listen to your tear.
Fight the battle with you more clear.

(01:22:53):
You gotta, you gotta. You gotta, you gotta, you gotta.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Special Summer Offer: Exclusively on Apple Podcasts, try our Dateline Premium subscription completely free for one month! With Dateline Premium, you get every episode ad-free plus exclusive bonus content.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.