Defying Limits and Inspiring Change with Bonner Paddock Rinn

Bonner Paddock Rinn

Episode 172:

In 2008, Bonner Paddock summited Mount Kilimanjaro, the world’s tallest freestanding mountain. Four years later, he earned the elite triathlete title, Kona Ironman. Thousands have done each individually. Bonner is the first person with cerebral palsy to do both.

When Bonner was born, his umbilical cord had coiled twice around his neck, depriving him of oxygen, causing parts of his brain to die. That cord didn’t take his life, but it changed it forever.

Diagnosed in his youth, Bonner swore he wouldn’t let this neurological disorder limit him, and for twenty-nine years he guarded the truth about his health. But the sudden death of a friend’s young son who also suffered from CP forced Bonner to re-evaluate his life. No longer would he be content striving for normal. Instead, he would live life to its fullest, pursuing one breathtaking experience at a time—while raising money for special needs children along the way—and never turn down a challenge for fear of his physical limitations.

His monumental climb up Mt. Kilimanjaro was documented in the film Beyond Limits and helped raise money for the construction of a new childcare center in Orange County, providing early treatment for children with all types of physical disabilities. Bonner took his vision global and has been building more centers around the world to help children live better lives. When he completed the Kona Ironman… which is 140 miles of racing…. in 16 1/2 hours, he raised over $560,000 for special needs children.

His is a remarkable journey that has taken him across the globe and introduced him to a fascinating cast of characters who have supported his inspiring quest. An athlete, adventurer, and philanthropist, he is no longer defined by his limits, but by the moments that pushed him past them. Bonner’s book, One More Step, shows us that we can all conquer our own challenges and embrace every moment life has to offer.

What you’ll learn in this episode:

  • The importance of finding the courage to move forward
  • Retrospecting life at every turn
  • Prioritizing your energy and time for people you value
  • How to continually challenge yourself toward improvement
  • The importance of seeking what your heart really wants
  • How life teaches you to face your fears

Additional Resources:

Learn more about Project Possible on:

Connect with Bonner Paddock on: 

Podcast transcript

[00:03] Voice Over

Welcome to the Athletics of Business, a podcast about how the traits and behaviors of elite athletes and remarkable business leaders frequently intersect. The real stories and hard lessons to help you level up your leadership and performance.

[00:16] Voice Over

Now your host, Ed Molitor.

[00:19] Ed

Welcome back to another episode of the Athletics of Business podcast.

[00:22] Ed

I am your host and CEO of the Molitor group, Ed Molitor.

[00:27] Ed

And today welcome back our incredible.

[00:30] Ed

Friend from episodes 90 and 91, Bonner Padock. And if you have not listened to.

[00:36] Ed

Episode 90 or 91 yet, I highly encourage you. As a matter of fact, I recommend it to go back and listen to those episodes even before you jump into this episode, because there is so much.

[00:47] Ed

In those two that add context to.

[00:49] Ed

The stories that are told here today. If you did listen to those episodes, awesome. Let me remind you, or reintroduce you to Bonner Paddock. If you have not listened to those episodes yet, which I am convinced that.

[01:00] Ed

You will, let me introduce you to Bonner. To say Bonner is amazing, to say.

[01:05] Ed

He'S got an incredible personality, to say he's overcome so much and given so much would be a massive understatement.

[01:11] Ed

Now, in 2018, Bonner summited Mount Kilmajaro.

[01:15] Ed

World'S tallest freestanding mountain.

[01:17] Ed

Just four years later, he earned the.

[01:19] Ed

Elite triathlete title, Kona Iron man. Now, you might be saying, well, gosh, I'm sure someone may have done that somewhere along the way.

[01:25] Ed

Well, thousands have done, each individually, right?

[01:29] Ed

Thousands upon thousands.

[01:31] Ed

But Bonner is the first person with cerebral palsy to do both.

[01:35] Ed

See, when he was born, his umbilical cord had coiled twice around his neck, which deprived him of the oxygen he needed, and it caused parts of his.

[01:43] Ed

Brain to die, as Bonner likes to say.

[01:45] Ed

That cord didn't take his life, though.

[01:46] Ed

But it did change it forever.

[01:48] Ed

He was diagnosed in his youth, and he swore that he wouldn't let this neurological disorder limit him.

[01:53] Ed

And for 29 years now, get this.

[01:55] Ed

For 29 years, he guarded the truth about his health. He talks a lot about that in episode 1991. The sudden death of a friend's young.

[02:04] Ed

Son, Jakey, who also suffered from CP.

[02:07] Ed

Forced Bonner to reevaluate his life. And no longer would he be content striving for normal.

[02:13] Ed

Think about the significance of that statement.

[02:14] Ed

No longer would he be content striving for normal.

[02:17] Ed

Instead, he would live life to its.

[02:19] Ed

Fullest, pursuing one breathtaking experience at a time while raising money for special needs children along the way, and never turned.

[02:27] Ed

Down a challenge for fear of his physical limitations.

[02:30] Ed

He continues to do this amazing work.

[02:32] Ed

That he started all the way back then.

[02:33] Ed

And we'll talk inside of this episode about that work, about the impact he has, how many centers there are open globally and what's coming down the road for them.

[02:41] Ed

And coming up soon, Bonner and his crew, some new members, all right, are.

[02:47] Ed

Celebrating the 15th anniversary of his first climb. By what?

[02:50] Ed

By going and climbing Mount Killy again.

[02:53] Ed

Also something that I find really exciting. Bonner is able to recapture the rights.

[02:57] Ed

To his story, his personal story, from.

[03:00] Ed

The original publisher of his book, one more step, overcoming our challenges and conquering the impossible. New York Times bestseller. Now the book has been republished, released with new content. The link is in the show notes. Please do yourself a favor.

[03:13] Ed

Read it, gift it, share it with your team.

[03:15] Ed

It puts life in such crystal clear perspective for everybody who touches that book and reads it. Also in this episode, we are going.

[03:22] Ed

To talk about accountability for the role.

[03:24] Ed

We play in our journey, despite our circumstances, despite our challenges. And you can imagine how rich that is in the conversation.

[03:31] Ed

And we talk about asking ourselves, what.

[03:33] Ed

Are our intentions and where is the fear? And we talk about the fear of the unknown. And for many of us, for so many of us, the fear of unknown is what actually cripples us, paralyzes us, keeps us from taking that next step. But again, please go back, listen to episode 90 91. Embrace this episode. It's amazing what just a few years difference makes in Bonner's life and our lives here at the Molotor group. And I would love the continued feedback. I appreciate all the emails to me at Ed, at the Molotor group telling us what a difference the podcast has made. Hey, can I connect with the guests?

[04:05] Ed

Whatever it is, keep sending it.

[04:07] Ed

And if you want to find out more about the work that we do.

[04:09] Ed

Here at the Molotor group, our 90.

[04:11] Ed

Day leadership coaching program, our 90 day.

[04:13] Ed

Emerging leader coaching program, all of the.

[04:15] Ed

Other things that we offer. Just check out our website@themalitorgroup.com, that's themalatorgroup.com.

[04:22] Ed

Now let's get to the important stuff. And that's Bonner paddock. Bonner, thank you so much for joining.

[04:27] Ed

Us again on the Athletics of business podcast.

[04:29] Ed

It is hard to believe that it has been, obviously, we've talked many times.

[04:33] Ed

Since then, but it's hard to believe.

[04:34] Ed

That we have recorded a podcast together. It has been almost three years. Wow.

[04:40] Bonner

That's crazy.

[04:40] Bonner

I can't believe that time has gone by that fast.

[04:43] Ed

You've been up to a few things, by the way, in the last three.

[04:46] Ed

Years, we're going to get into that. But to start this conversation, I'm going to say one word, okay? And that's it. I'm going to get out of your way.

[04:53] Ed

And I want you just to tell me the first thing that comes to.

[04:55] Ed

Your mind, to your heart, what that word means to you and how it's impacted your life. All right, sounds good.

[05:01] Bonner

I'm ready.

[05:02] Ed

You ready? Okay.

[05:03] Bonner

Yes, sir.

[05:03] Ed

The one word I want to say to you is Jake.

[05:06] Bonner

So the first thing comes to me is connection. He created the opportunity to really connect with the first person to accept me.

[05:13] Bonner

I felt fully with my CP, with.

[05:16] Bonner

Who I am, just as a person at that time was Jake's dad, who I met officially.

[05:21] Bonner

And so the second word is acceptance.

[05:24] Bonner

And understanding and beginning to learn what that feeling of acceptance is, which then led to inspiration. To have connection and acceptance, I think, equals inspiration to me, is what just came forward. And when you have inspiration, you have purpose. And when you have purpose, I think.

[05:45] Bonner

The journey becomes much more deep, profound, and directed. And.

[05:54] Ed

So, just so you know, as you're sitting there listening, this was not scripted, like, literally. Bonner and I did not talk about this before. I didn't say, hey, Bonner, here's what I'm going to ask you.

[06:02] Ed

Figure it out.

[06:02] Ed

That's amazing. And Bonner joined us, as I mentioned, years ago on episode 90 and 91 of the Athletics of Business podcast. And we talked quite a bit about Jake and his father and the story and the journey. But can you just. For the new listener, the newer listeners who may not have listened to those episodes briefly describe where that came from and how Jake showed up in your life and continues to stay in your.

[06:22] Ed

Life with what you do.

[06:23] Bonner

Perfect.

[06:24] Bonner

Yeah. When I was working for the Anaheim ducks in the middle of the lockout.

[06:28] Bonner

Of five, six, I got hired by them.

[06:34] Bonner

And during the lockout, the Samuelles said that they weren't going to lay anybody off. They suggested during the free time that.

[06:41] Bonner

We had was to join a charity.

[06:43] Bonner

And that was the first job that.

[06:45] Bonner

I had told beyond my application and.

[06:47] Bonner

That they knew Bob Wagner, who hired.

[06:49] Bonner

Me, knew I had cerebral palsy.

[06:51] Bonner

So that was the first time that.

[06:52] Bonner

I was open about my disability to that level.

[06:55] Bonner

So I was inspired to join a charity locally in Orange county when they said that, because I felt like they.

[07:02] Bonner

Were starting to support or I felt.

[07:05] Bonner

Freer to be more myself.

[07:07] Bonner

So I joined a local charity there.

[07:10] Bonner

That focused on disabilities like cerebral palsy. And I met Jake's dad there. He was on the board of directors, and I ended up sharing my story.

[07:19] Bonner

In front of the board, which then.

[07:20] Bonner

They invited me onto the board. But Jake's dad, Steve, sent me an email that night after I openly shared to a group for the first time about my journey and the power of his email, saying, when he said, hey, I went home and talked to my wife Allie about you, and you give.

[07:37] Bonner

Us hope for our son, Jake.

[07:39] Bonner

I cried at my desk, and I didn't really understand that till recently that.

[07:43] Bonner

The reason I cried was that I.

[07:45] Bonner

Felt Steve was the first person to fully accept me and love me for exactly who I am and not want anything.

[07:53] Bonner

And that's just how I felt.

[07:54] Bonner

So the power that I felt and the connection I felt with Steve was.

[07:57] Bonner

Like, after that email was instantaneous.

[08:00] Bonner

And when Jake suddenly passed away six months later, after Steve and I ran.

[08:04] Bonner

Together in the marathon, you know, I was so crushed.

[08:08] Bonner

And I realized now that I didn't.

[08:11] Bonner

Want him to feel the pain that.

[08:13] Bonner

I saw him feeling. So I wanted to do anything in my power to maybe help ease the family's pain.

[08:20] Bonner

And I realized that it was an.

[08:22] Bonner

Opportunity to do other things in the.

[08:26] Bonner

Name of Jake and his memory and.

[08:28] Bonner

Do that honestly for their family.

[08:29] Bonner

And that's really what originated my physical quests and world record attempts, was to.

[08:36] Bonner

Somehow, I think, subconsciously relieve that pain. If I could, in any way, for the first person and the first family.

[08:43] Bonner

That I felt, like, really loved and accepted me like their own, it was.

[08:47] Bonner

The only gift that I realized now.

[08:49] Bonner

I think I could give them and.

[08:51] Ed

What an amazing gift it was.

[08:52] Ed

And speaking of your world records, right? And speaking of climbing Mount Kili 15.

[08:57] Ed

Years ago, we have the 15th anniversary.

[08:59] Ed

What in the world are you going to do to celebrate that?

[09:04] Bonner

I don't know if you want the short version, medium version, or long version.

[09:08] Ed

I mean, you could go out to dinner, bring everybody together.

[09:11] Ed

You could do something.

[09:13] Ed

So what is it? You give me your version. Don't worry if it's short or long.

[09:16] Ed

You give me.

[09:17] Bonner

Okay, I'll take you back to May of last year. There's the team Jake water station at the Orange county marathon. Every year that we use to pay homage to Jake, and it's an exciting.

[09:29] Bonner

Fun thing to be part of.

[09:31] Bonner

So last year, Steve, Jake's dad, and some of his, Jakey's brothers, had come out to be part of that. And so we arranged for a tour.

[09:40] Bonner

At the brand new, huge center that.

[09:42] Bonner

We built in California that had opened.

[09:44] Bonner

A little bit before that.

[09:45] Bonner

And we gave them a whole personal tour of that. And so we go to lunch beforehand at one of their favorite taco shops because they don't live in southern California anymore. And so we're just sitting there casually.

[09:55] Bonner

It's this awesome little dive taco shop.

[09:57] Bonner

And we're sitting there with Dr. Minion and everybody else, and. And they always bring friends from Texas with them. And so the kids, or they're not kids now, they're adults, but some of their friends always ask me about Killy or Iron man or something else. So one of them asked about Killy and da da, and I was like, that's funny. Next year is going to being. This year is going to be the 15th anniversary that you just talked about. And I was like, it's crazy that it's been that long. And Steve, Jakey's dad, literally looks at me directly across the little tables and.

[10:21] Bonner

Literally goes, I'd do it.

[10:23] Bonner

And I kind of turned my head.

[10:24] Bonner

Sideways, and I was like, what the?

[10:28] Bonner

And I was like, seriously?

[10:29] Ed

And he goes, I'd do it.

[10:30] Bonner

And then I looked at Tyler, his oldest son, right to his left, my.

[10:34] Bonner

Right, and he said, I said, would you do it? And he goes, oh, yeah, I'm in. And I said, well, I guess we're.

[10:39] Bonner

Doing Killy then, next year for the 15th anniversary. So for our celebration, I'd never thought I would do it again or anything like it.

[10:46] Bonner

And they would be the good reason to do it.

[10:49] Bonner

They would be the reason that it's worth it, because to share that experience with them. And we're going to use it as a celebration of what we all collectively.

[10:57] Bonner

Have accomplished in these 15 years since.

[11:00] Bonner

Now project possible was birthed to celebrate it. And they just want to go see all the centers and experience everything that I keep coming back and sharing with them the magic of East Africa and the people of Tanzania and Kenya and everything.

[11:15] Bonner

And it's just magical over there in.

[11:17] Bonner

Such a different way than what I grew up.

[11:19] Bonner

And so we're heading over there in July to climb Chili with 16.

[11:24] Bonner

There's going to be 17 of us total climbing, including myself. And so we're using the same master guides, which is going to be amazing. One of the master guides, you know.

[11:34] Ed

They'Re still around, right?

[11:35] Bonner

Yeah. And one of them led us to one of our centers in Tanzania. So, of all things, years after he.

[11:42] Bonner

Was my guide, I got a message.

[11:44] Bonner

From him on Facebook saying if we could just give them advice on how he came across this one with his local church.

[11:52] Bonner

So went out there and saw.

[11:53] Bonner

It and we ended up building a new facility for what they were doing for some disabled kids in a very poor area of a small town, small city called Moshe.

[12:02] Ed

And I think this is a great place to step into this. What's resulted from that first climb in Killy and again, episode 90 and 91, you amazingly just lay that out there. And I believe it was a day.

[12:15] Ed

After the climb, a couple of days after when you got done with the.

[12:19] Ed

Climb that you first went to see some different places.

[12:22] Bonner

And I might be, oh, 15 years ago. Yes.

[12:26] Ed

Two days before.

[12:27] Ed

I'm sorry. You can do much after. That's right.

[12:29] Bonner

Two days.

[12:29] Ed

Two days before, I'm sorry.

[12:30] Ed

Take us to the things that have.

[12:31] Ed

Happened with the Jakey centers.

[12:33] Bonner

Right now we're talking from Mexico, which is going to be our 6th country.

[12:37] Bonner

That we are exploring, but we've kind of shifted gears where we still are.

[12:41] Bonner

Building team Jake centers per se.

[12:44] Bonner

When we find that it's the best thing to do in those communities, we.

[12:48] Bonner

Partner with local charities that are non government affiliated in each of the countries. And now what we're doing is we're developing a software that is going to.

[12:57] Bonner

Take our current centers, as well as.

[13:00] Bonner

Any existing local charities that are out there in the world and begin to link them together. Like we've seen the success of linking all of our current centers together and.

[13:10] Bonner

How they share, and they don't feel.

[13:12] Bonner

Like they're by themselves anymore. So the software actually is building a.

[13:16] Bonner

Little bit of a social network for the disabled community globally so that they.

[13:21] Bonner

Can share ideas, talk with each other.

[13:22] Bonner

Know that they're not alone.

[13:24] Bonner

Families can actually, or individuals can be.

[13:27] Bonner

Part of this software so they can say, oh, there's other mothers here in.

[13:32] Bonner

Tanzania or Kenya or whatever.

[13:34] Bonner

And so we're trying to create that.

[13:36] Bonner

You'Re not alone type of feeling, but it's also going to have training videos on the most common disabilities that we.

[13:43] Bonner

Are able to serve so that even.

[13:45] Bonner

If there's no center near these people, but there's a large organization, let's say, like save the children. Who does have a refugee camp or.

[13:52] Bonner

Something else that's providing food, water, shelter.

[13:57] Bonner

And basic medical care? They say the biggest underserved that they see in the refugee camps globally is.

[14:03] Bonner

Disabled people, because they need certain things.

[14:06] Bonner

And it's critical to them because they usually had to leave quickly.

[14:10] Bonner

They have left everything, if they had anything, if we can provide those videos.

[14:15] Bonner

To those staff and allow them to.

[14:18] Bonner

Connect within that community digitally, they can.

[14:21] Bonner

Actually watch their own videos and learn how to take care of their own.

[14:25] Bonner

Kids a little bit better than what they currently have. So it's this massive project that we're.

[14:32] Bonner

Building with one of our board members. Mike Sunwich is brilliant in this software scape, and he's the one that's designing.

[14:39] Bonner

And building it off of, literally a.

[14:41] Bonner

Software that you can buy off the shelf, per se, online.

[14:44] Bonner

And then he's making it custom to ours. So it'll take us about two years.

[14:48] Bonner

To beta test it and run it.

[14:50] Bonner

With some huge organizations and create it. But we believe it's going to be.

[14:54] Bonner

With their huge contacts in the 178 countries, that the top, I think, 15 charities in the world, size wise, are. They will push it out to their local charities is the idea that they partner with in each of their countries.

[15:07] Bonner

And we can reskin it, rename it.

[15:10] Bonner

All those things in their charity's name.

[15:13] Bonner

So it's something that's just, we're giving.

[15:15] Bonner

It out for free, and then we're building it so that it never can be not taken, but just that it can run on its own, not for in perpetuity, but that's the general concept of how we're creating it, that nobody really owns it.

[15:29] Ed

It's truly fascinating and phenomenal when you start to think about the amount of lives that you can exponentially impact. Well, let's go back just so it's.

[15:38] Ed

Clear what the team Jake centers, they do.

[15:40] Ed

Like, when you first started the team Jake centers, what their mission was.

[15:44] Bonner

Okay, yeah, they're primarily great work.

[15:46] Bonner

They do, yeah, they are primarily focused on physical, occupational, and speech therapy, know, kids with disabilities.

[15:55] Bonner

Right now, we currently are focused on cerebral palsy, down syndrome, spina bifida, autism. And then we do see a lot of things that we don't really see here in the United States as well.

[16:07] Bonner

That's on top of. So. So it's like, you start to see.

[16:10] Bonner

The larger heads and things like that.

[16:12] Bonner

You have soft bones.

[16:14] Bonner

A lot of these things that we.

[16:15] Bonner

Have eradicated, for the most part, to most in the United States that I'm aware of.

[16:22] Bonner

In those things, you see club feet, you see those types of things in these countries that we still work with.

[16:27] Bonner

Because they also do need physical therapy, too.

[16:29] Ed

Six centers right now. Number seven is coming in Mexico, correct?

[16:33] Bonner

Yeah, we're still looking for the partner in Mexico that would be the right one to fit all that. If not, we will still link all the local charities across this huge country into our huge software program and with our whole training programs and everything that we're developing.

[16:49] Ed

Incredible. And let's talk about that amazing facility that you have in Los Angeles.

[16:54] Bonner

It's almost 10,000 sqft. It's some of the most cutting edge equipment.

[17:00] Bonner

And it's interesting because it's a concept that we've always thought would work really well. Where it actually brings together able bodied.

[17:09] Bonner

Kids and the disabled community, and where.

[17:12] Bonner

We believe that actually will help.

[17:14] Bonner

Is empowerment and acceptance is you put.

[17:17] Bonner

The able bodied kids that are recovering from knee surgery or something, they were just in a car accident, and so they're just more temporarily needing to rehab.

[17:27] Bonner

Something with the disabled community.

[17:31] Bonner

We believe it creates an electric way.

[17:33] Bonner

Of understanding compassion and exposing the world.

[17:38] Bonner

For able bodied families to learn about disabled children and what their families are needing to do on a daily basis.

[17:49] Bonner

That may help define.

[17:52] Bonner

We all hear spina bifida and autism.

[17:55] Bonner

And down syndrome, but most, at least where I grew up, really don't have.

[17:59] Bonner

A lot of experience with direct interaction with families or people that do have these disabilities. And so the more we can bring.

[18:06] Bonner

Those together, we feel that actually.

[18:09] Bonner

Creates such a better awareness of what's.

[18:12] Bonner

Happening out there, which only could help in the long run, because most of.

[18:16] Bonner

The time it's people just don't know.

[18:18] Bonner

So they don't want to ask questions.

[18:19] Bonner

They don't want to say the wrong thing, they don't want to come across rude. Jakey's mom said the same thing. She loved it when just people would come up and ask at the dinner table when they were out at a.

[18:29] Bonner

Restaurant or something that they would want to learn more about Jakey, and he.

[18:33] Bonner

Loved it, and so did he. It's trying to invite that inclusion more versus exclusion based upon fear of saying the wrong thing, not knowing. That's mainly why we feel like it's excluded.

[18:45] Bonner

It's not maliciously trying to exclude people.

[18:48] Bonner

It's just they don't know how to.

[18:50] Bonner

Approach or interact at first.

[18:52] Ed

And you don't know what you don't.

[18:54] Ed

Know, but you start and you take this to where your other centers are.

[18:58] Ed

Right.

[18:58] Ed

Is that something that's even feasible to do there in terms of the inclusion? Because when you first started this, you were blown away.

[19:05] Ed

Like, literally their own people thought that.

[19:08] Ed

These children were possessed and there was something wrong with them because they had these disabilities.

[19:14] Ed

Yeah.

[19:15] Bonner

The more we kind of explore in.

[19:18] Bonner

Different parts of the world and meet organizations and people that are from those.

[19:22] Bonner

Parts of different parts of this world.

[19:26] Bonner

We see that there seems to be.

[19:29] Bonner

A lot of shame around in some of these cultures.

[19:34] Bonner

And it's just because they don't even understand what their child has, their own child. And there's not a lot of information readily available in developing countries to really.

[19:43] Bonner

Support these parents when their child does have a disability. And so the unknown creates a gigantic hesitancy, which can easily lead to doing.

[19:55] Bonner

Very, very poor choices of how they treat their kids in very potentially inhumane ways or ways that are very damaging.

[20:05] Bonner

To not only the disabled child, it's.

[20:08] Bonner

Also very damaging to the community in.

[20:10] Bonner

General, because it's like a secret and they know it.

[20:13] Bonner

And when we all know we carry the weight of a secret, we all know what that all does to each of us individually, slowly eating away inside of us. So the outreach, like our northern Uganda.

[20:24] Bonner

Center, is the most exceptional community outreach.

[20:28] Bonner

We'Ve ever come across. The level of what they cover and how they're integrating within the communities. In the very rural parts, up by the South Sudan border, the DRC.

[20:38] Bonner

The Congo border, they border some very volatile countries and they're reaching very big.

[20:45] Bonner

Swaths of areas that really aren't that reachable and having tremendous impact as using these parents, primarily the mothers of disabled.

[20:55] Bonner

Kids, as the leaders within their communities.

[20:57] Bonner

Bringing multiple villages together to meet on.

[21:00] Bonner

A weekly basis to share what their.

[21:03] Bonner

Life is like and to have that support group. And it's a very empowering thing that.

[21:07] Bonner

We'Re seeing that everybody's feeling more comfortable.

[21:10] Bonner

To talk about it and embrace those.

[21:12] Bonner

Children and not again.

[21:14] Bonner

The same thing we have in the.

[21:15] Bonner

United States was know.

[21:17] Bonner

Jakey's mom would say that most people would just kind of stare or side eye or something like that, but would never say anything.

[21:24] Bonner

So the veil looks different in the.

[21:26] Bonner

United States, but it's very similar that it's more standoffish and not willing to step forward and ask about it. It just looks in different forms over.

[21:35] Bonner

There that are more real or in.

[21:37] Bonner

Your face and startling than the subtleness that happens in my experience in the.

[21:42] Ed

US 15 years later.

[21:44] Ed

17 of you, including the original guys.

[21:46] Ed

Including, am I correct, fireman Robinson on this one?

[21:50] Bonner

He was until the doctor. He's getting knee surgery this month. Yeah. So unfortunately, he had to back out after.

[21:55] Ed

He would take a lot to make that man back out of anything.

[21:58] Bonner

Correct. And he's learning that, which is a good thing, I think that's a good trait I love.

[22:03] Ed

I got to give him a holler then. Yeah, I'm sure he feels awful. Feels awful.

[22:07] Bonner

Three original climbers of the group and.

[22:10] Bonner

Then Jakey's dad and three of Jakey's brothers. Neil Bascomb, the co author of one more step is doing it as well. And then a bunch of other people that have been involved with the organization, David Aberton, another board member, is climbing. So yeah, it's fantastic.

[22:26] Ed

I'd love to have David on the podcast.

[22:29] Ed

Just so much to talk about. Hey, speaking of your story.

[22:32] Ed

Right. Speaking of the book, it would be phenomenal if you could get the rights.

[22:35] Ed

To your book and you could add some stuff to it that you've done.

[22:38] Ed

Over the last 15 years and some.

[22:41] Ed

New stories, some new twist and how things turned out in certain relationships in your life.

[22:45] Ed

What does that look like to you?

[22:47] Bonner

After a couple of years of working.

[22:49] Bonner

With Harper Collins and a special thanks.

[22:52] Bonner

To Lisa Sharkey, were able to.

[22:54] Bonner

Get the rights back of the book. And so it is now property of the foundation of Project possible. And we are going to be releasing a revised version here. Today is, we're in mid April now, so any week now we will have, everything's been edited. Everything is now we're just uploading it and getting the files over to Amazon and all the others. So it should be coming out any week now.

[23:21] Ed

I can't wait. And when you say revised, what will be some of the things that you have added that you subtracted?

[23:26] Ed

How is it going to look?

[23:27] Bonner

Yeah, so subtle changes to the COVID We get to permanently add that nice little red Dot on the front of it that says New York Times bestseller. So that was pretty cool. We had never done the audiobook, so the audiobook was recorded by myself, which is cool and quite a four day experience.

[23:45] Bonner

But the audiobook will be released. With that, we added a new chapter.

[23:49] Bonner

That was kind of like an intro to the intro of kind of sharing what's happened since the book was published in 2015. So there's an update on that. But primarily most of it we wanted.

[24:02] Bonner

To keep kind of as the same.

[24:04] Bonner

We didn't really change. So, like when you hear mentions of the foundation, they'll still say Om foundation in there. Although the new chapter that we added.

[24:13] Bonner

The intro, I guess, does say project.

[24:15] Bonner

Possible and updates those types of things. So we wanted to kind of keep the integrity of the book as is. Nothing really had changed. We didn't notice anything, glaring mistakes or anything that may have been misquoted or at least wasn't brought forward to us.

[24:27] Bonner

So we decided that if people love.

[24:29] Bonner

The book based as what it is, why mess with that and only just add a little bit to it to enhance it.

[24:35] Bonner

We added the QR code. We readjusted some of the pictures, QR.

[24:39] Bonner

Code kind of just easily gets. We're going to add more digital files.

[24:42] Bonner

So that they can see more color.

[24:44] Bonner

Photos and everything like that.

[24:46] Bonner

So we just tried to go forward with technology and then the audiobook, and.

[24:50] Bonner

Then secondarily, the next phase, once this eventually rolls out, is we will get it translated into Spanish and Swahili, because.

[24:58] Bonner

That'S where all of our centers are.

[25:00] Bonner

The primary languages are spanish and Swahili so far.

[25:03] Bonner

And we are going to give it.

[25:04] Bonner

Away free in our centers, in those languages, and begin to try to offer.

[25:10] Bonner

It up to anybody that basically would.

[25:12] Bonner

Like to understand more of the history of why we're there, why we're supporting them, and how we honestly got to that point. So that will be given away free in those countries.

[25:22] Ed

That's unbelievable.

[25:23] Ed

You have to be thrilled about that. I mean, to think about that you're just absolutely, literally just giving it.

[25:27] Ed

Away that people are going to be.

[25:29] Ed

Able to connect with. They already know what you're doing is amazing, but when they know the why.

[25:32] Ed

Behind it and they know the story behind it, I think it makes it.

[25:36] Ed

That much more powerful.

[25:37] Bonner

Yeah, I agree.

[25:38] Bonner

And now we have control of that. We have control of the documentary, which the amazing filmmakers gifted that to the foundation as well.

[25:44] Bonner

So the overall parts of everything that.

[25:48] Bonner

We'Ve developed are all part of the foundation now and under one roof, which gives me amazing gratitude and happiness, knowing that whatever we do and forever long.

[25:58] Bonner

We'Re able to keep doing this, the.

[25:59] Bonner

Foundation will kind of have all these key assets to continue whatever its goals are.

[26:05] Ed

So I've got to ask you, I have to ask you a serious question.

[26:09] Ed

Because this is going to be for the people out there trying to push themselves and trying to think differently and reframe some situations.

[26:15] Ed

All right, first person was CP to.

[26:17] Ed

Climb Killy, unassisted to complete Kona.

[26:20] Ed

All right, we talked about on the.

[26:22] Ed

Previous two podcasts, the mental scars and how long they take to heal.

[26:25] Ed

Right?

[26:26] Ed

We talked about the physical.

[26:27] Ed

What does someone like you, who has.

[26:30] Ed

Been through so much, who has grown so much physically, mentally, emotionally, what in.

[26:35] Ed

The world do you do to challenge.

[26:37] Ed

Yourself now and to get yourself outside.

[26:39] Ed

Your comfort zone daily to continue to grow?

[26:43] Ed

Because it would be real easy for.

[26:44] Ed

Someone like Bonner to kind of rest.

[26:46] Ed

On her laurels and say, man, I've really done a lot. I'm doing some really cool work, and I've got this amazing board and this amazing project possible. We're doing some cool stuff.

[26:55] Ed

I'm good.

[26:56] Ed

But every time I talk to you.

[26:58] Ed

There is something new can you share with us, just since our last time.

[27:03] Ed

Recording a podcast, the things that you.

[27:05] Ed

Have done to grow and evolve and.

[27:07] Bonner

To get better right now for that.

[27:09] Bonner

Part, the first thing that comes forward for me is just my personal journey and exploring areas within my own journey.

[27:17] Bonner

Of expanding my understanding, trying to open.

[27:21] Bonner

My mind and things to see how and what this whole greater thing is.

[27:27] Bonner

That I get to experience every day.

[27:29] Bonner

And it's beyond my total realm. I don't think I'll ever fully understand it. But for me, I just am enjoying living in a place here in Mexico that is very fertile with growing a lot of the food of Mexico and.

[27:44] Bonner

Learning how to grow food and trying.

[27:47] Bonner

To connect interesting ways that I was. I grew up in Orange County, California.

[27:51] Bonner

So I grew up with food very.

[27:52] Bonner

Plentiful, very available, all types, always looking kind of pretty.

[27:57] Bonner

And it just gave a different story.

[27:59] Bonner

Than my understanding of I didn't really appreciate the food that I ate and that nourished me. And so part of what I'm trying.

[28:06] Bonner

To learn now from square one is trying to understand how all of this thing works.

[28:12] Bonner

Like watching food grow is fascinating. And volunteering at this local little organic farm has been amazing to understand, begin to understand a very complex, yet very.

[28:25] Bonner

Simple thing of how food starts from.

[28:28] Bonner

A seed, grows into something that we can enjoy, and then that also can return back to the seed and grow again.

[28:35] Bonner

And so it's just been a fascinating thing to understand how I am, be.

[28:40] Bonner

More connected, how everything works. And so I know it's a very broad thing, but primarily personally, it's like girlfriend is in love with this amazing woman.

[28:51] Bonner

And we have a great way of.

[28:55] Bonner

Connecting that I've never experienced and continuing to explore that with someone where I've done a lot of this road by.

[29:02] Bonner

Myself, per se, and to have someone that's special in my life, to begin.

[29:08] Bonner

To really explore a very serious connection.

[29:12] Bonner

That is special and beautiful in its.

[29:15] Bonner

Own right, while also honoring the challenges that it brings. Those are the hardest things for me, who is used to making those decisions just by myself and everything else.

[29:24] Bonner

So that is a whole new world that pushes me outside the box of just my choice to do it.

[29:30] Bonner

Then I can take full accountability.

[29:32] Bonner

Adding somebody to that completely changes the.

[29:36] Bonner

Dynamic in a very beautifully challenging way.

[29:39] Bonner

To how that works with two people.

[29:41] Bonner

Moving within the same space and how.

[29:43] Bonner

That can be a new way of.

[29:46] Bonner

Just even enhancing all of this experience.

[29:48] Ed

At what point in that relationship, right.

[29:51] Ed

Did you realize, because you really had an interesting journey, because even though you may have had many great relationships around you and many people in your life. There were times you felt all alone.

[30:01] Ed

With what you have because you truly couldn't fully disclose what was really going through your mind and heart. And now here you are, connected to this wonderful person, and you realize there.

[30:11] Ed

Are some things you have to give.

[30:13] Ed

Up 100% or how is.

[30:14] Bonner

I should say how well, I'll say.

[30:17] Bonner

It'S going well in the sense that some of the words that are very easy to maybe begin to kind of describe it is grace. One of them is grace. And allowing the natural, just like I.

[30:29] Bonner

Talked about the food and watching it.

[30:31] Bonner

Grow organically and naturally, everything is a microcosm of these foods that I've been just beginning to learn how to see because they got bugs eat through some of the arugula. And the tomatoes all have different shapes.

[30:43] Bonner

But they're all beautiful, and they're all.

[30:45] Bonner

Nutrient, and they all taste great, but they all look very different.

[30:48] Bonner

And so I had to get outside.

[30:50] Bonner

Of this conceptual box of everything needs.

[30:53] Bonner

To look a certain way, including a.

[30:55] Bonner

Relationship with another person.

[30:57] Bonner

And so to step out of this box and to allow grace within that and to allow myself to know I'm.

[31:03] Bonner

Going to make mistakes and not hold.

[31:05] Bonner

Myself so strictly over those, but use.

[31:08] Bonner

Them as learnings and not failures as.

[31:11] Bonner

In a bad thing.

[31:12] Bonner

It's almost reframing a lot of words that I had in my vocabulary.

[31:17] Bonner

There's being lonely, and then there's being alone.

[31:19] Bonner

And I would say that I grew up and I was very lonely when.

[31:22] Bonner

I grew up and felt like this big secret of didn't know what Bonner.

[31:27] Bonner

Had for many years, then was properly.

[31:29] Bonner

Diagnosed with cerebral palsy. Later growing up and then still not.

[31:35] Bonner

Talking about it is the best way to say it. I don't feel like they kept a.

[31:38] Bonner

Secret, but it's a form of keeping.

[31:42] Bonner

A secret when you just don't talk about it versus actually telling me not to talk about it.

[31:46] Bonner

They didn't do that, but we just didn't talk about it.

[31:48] Bonner

So you knew that there was this heaviness of something that we're just not talking about.

[31:53] Bonner

And so when I learned growing up.

[31:55] Bonner

That we just don't talk about things that are too complicated, too heavy, too emotional, too this or that.

[32:01] Bonner

And so to then come into a.

[32:03] Bonner

Relationship with somebody intimately and have this connection and learning that you can't hold on to things like that, you need to share them, but learn how to.

[32:12] Bonner

Share them in a loving manner and.

[32:14] Bonner

Invite each other into spaces that we.

[32:16] Bonner

Can have very beautiful conversations albeit can.

[32:20] Bonner

Be very tough at times. And know that there is still this overarching love above us is very hard because it takes on your biggest insecurities. It's easy for me and had because this is not the first time that we have dated. So we have learned a lot and have gone around the racetrack, as I.

[32:38] Bonner

Say, sometimes multiple times.

[32:40] Bonner

We keep inviting each other forward and holding each other now to doing our own work. And it's so important for me to.

[32:47] Bonner

Be with somebody that's willing to have.

[32:49] Bonner

That humility and humbleness, to know that they are working through their traumas and their conditionings, and so am I. And to support each other on those.

[32:59] Bonner

Versus in the past, I would get.

[33:02] Bonner

Afraid of those and want to criticize or withdraw for safety because that's what.

[33:07] Bonner

I did as a kid was withdrawal.

[33:09] Bonner

And putting up the wall was what.

[33:11] Bonner

I did for safety, perceived safety.

[33:13] Ed

It's interesting, and I think in terms of the leadership and the coaching leaders that we work with here at the monitor group.

[33:19] Ed

But you said something.

[33:20] Ed

So, I mean, this is all very significant. It all ties together to what I'm about to say. There's a difference between being lonely and being alone. And the irony of all of this.

[33:29] Ed

Is when you were lonely, you were around a lot of people. A lot, tons. And now you're not alone, but it's.

[33:36] Ed

A little bit quieter for you down in Mexico, and you're as comfortable as you've ever been and probably have as.

[33:40] Ed

Many amazing people in your life as you've ever had.

[33:43] Bonner

Yeah, it's the old adage of quantity versus quality. For me, I had the quantity life for a long time, quantity of people around me, quantity of money, quantity of things, and all of these external things that I was using to define me.

[33:58] Bonner

Which really wasn't my true self.

[34:00] Bonner

I still felt like, in my own way, by my own design, subconscious or.

[34:04] Bonner

Consciously, and a mix of both, I.

[34:06] Bonner

Was creating a false narrative, I was.

[34:08] Bonner

Creating a false story because that's what.

[34:10] Bonner

I thought people wanted and that's what I thought I needed to do to.

[34:14] Bonner

Get to this more connection and more happy. Let's call it happy for simplicity, more.

[34:20] Bonner

Happiness and everything else. And learning that all of those things actually, if they're not done with intentionality, and if I truly wanted them or needed them, then they're defining a part of me that really isn't me. It's maybe part of the shadow side.

[34:36] Bonner

Which is things that I had to suppress.

[34:39] Bonner

It's Carl Jung. The shadow side is all the things that we had to disown or suppress as a kid. And we do very interesting ways to try to appease those shadows when we know that they're not, when they're the ones in charge, not our true self. And so those fed a lot of.

[34:54] Bonner

That stuff, and I had to learn how to work with them and say, what is my true self, and what.

[35:01] Bonner

Do I really want and need in my life? And it brought it to much more.

[35:04] Bonner

Of a simplistic, yet beautifully close circle of people that is much smaller, yet extremely tight. And the trust and safety within those people that I have is something I.

[35:17] Bonner

Never felt growing up. And so that was the biggest switch for me.

[35:22] Ed

And one of the lessons that I learned, like all of us in life, the hard way, is we truly do.

[35:27] Ed

Have the ability to be the author.

[35:28] Ed

Of our own story.

[35:30] Ed

What advice would you give someone who's in a really good place in their life, let's say, professionally right now, what they're feeling, the things that you just talked about? Because what I have found with clients, when they struggle with certain things or self identity, self limiting beliefs, self limiting.

[35:44] Ed

Behaviors, because of all those different things that we're talking about, they feel like.

[35:48] Ed

They have to scrap the whole thing.

[35:50] Ed

And start all over and move away.

[35:52] Ed

From where they're at to even have a shot.

[35:53] Ed

But the reality of it is, you don't.

[35:57] Ed

One part of your life's in great shape. That doesn't mean they're not mutually exclusive. Like, you can fix this.

[36:03] Ed

You are.

[36:04] Ed

What advice would you give to that.

[36:06] Ed

Person who might have those self limiting beliefs?

[36:09] Ed

The self doubt, the imposter syndrome, or the pain?

[36:13] Bonner

What I had to learn through Nicaragua.

[36:15] Bonner

Experience when I retired, I will say.

[36:18] Bonner

I moved to Nicaragua, and it was under good intentions, per se, but literally, it was running from everything.

[36:25] Bonner

When I wanted to look at it.

[36:26] Bonner

There was goodness laced in there where I built a center and everything else for a team. Jake, center there.

[36:33] Bonner

But when I look at it, I.

[36:34] Bonner

Was mostly trying to run from myself. And that was a big chunk of what Nicaragua experience was, because it does put you out there in a remote place.

[36:43] Bonner

And so that loneliness, if you don't.

[36:45] Bonner

Understand how to be alone, then that.

[36:47] Bonner

Loneliness and everything follows with you.

[36:50] Bonner

So I had to come back from.

[36:52] Bonner

There and really begin to understand what my passion and purpose is.

[36:59] Bonner

And that can be in so many different forms. My passion and purpose was very well intentioned and going very well with the foundation. So one part of that was going well.

[37:10] Bonner

But then when I looked at my.

[37:11] Bonner

Personal life, I said, what is my passion?

[37:13] Bonner

And purpose in my personal life. And being honest, I had to say.

[37:17] Bonner

I actually do want to have a partner. And I do want to be in.

[37:22] Bonner

A space where my passion and purpose.

[37:25] Bonner

For that and connecting with someone on such a level that only an intimate.

[37:31] Bonner

Partnership can happen is going to be.

[37:34] Bonner

So much more challenging. Because that wasn't shown to me growing up. Parents got divorced at an early age, so I didn't really see a lot of healthy relationships growing up.

[37:44] Bonner

And so I had to go and look at what I was utilizing in.

[37:50] Bonner

Parts of my life that weren't really.

[37:52] Bonner

Who I was and realize that my truth is not the real truth of what's going on in the world.

[37:59] Bonner

So I had to understand that there's always two truths in the room. Like you and I have two truths. Right now, we're having the same experience.

[38:05] Bonner

Per se, meaning we're having a conversation. But your truth is different than my truth, and they're both equal.

[38:11] Bonner

I take that in every part of my life now that when I'm talking.

[38:14] Bonner

With someone or anything else, it takes the judgment away.

[38:18] Bonner

Our harshest judger and inner critic is on ourselves.

[38:22] Bonner

So if I actually hear stories, self doubts, impostor syndrome, all of those things.

[38:29] Bonner

When I hear that come forward in.

[38:31] Bonner

Me, I ask myself a question. Is this true? Is this really true?

[38:35] Bonner

Or is this my trauma? Is this my conditioning? Is this the imposter syndrome?

[38:40] Bonner

Is this the shadow?

[38:41] Bonner

And my work with Connor Beaton, he's.

[38:44] Bonner

The founder of man talks.

[38:45] Bonner

He is an expert in Carl Jung and was one of learned from one.

[38:49] Bonner

Of the disciples of Carl Jung in.

[38:52] Bonner

The godfathers of psychology world. And so he's taken it into the modern day and really helped me understand shadow, imposter syndrome. All of these things that were really running my life in the areas that I wasn't happy. And so once I was able to identify those, all of a sudden those areas started opening up differently.

[39:09] Bonner

And it's just trusting that the unknown is what stops most people, is the unknown.

[39:15] Bonner

And that's where the impostor comes in. That's where the doubts come in, because you don't know what's on the other side of fear. And so instead of me running from fear and everything else like I did.

[39:26] Bonner

To Nicaragua, I have learned to turn and face that fear, but not fear as an enemy.

[39:32] Bonner

Seeing it as an invitation to get to know that part of me better. And not shaming myself and not criticizing myself for being. Not recognizing it or making mistakes, which I try to reframe now, is learnings and using those learnings for wisdom so that I don't repeat those things anymore, instead of beating myself up and calling me stupid for making that mistake or.

[39:54] Bonner

This mistake and saying, great job on.

[39:56] Bonner

Putting yourself out there.

[39:57] Bonner

You move through fear into the unknown.

[39:59] Bonner

Didn't nail it, and that's okay. So what did we learn from that? So that we don't repeat that way. And then we have to be willing.

[40:05] Bonner

To move through the fear again in another direction, not knowing if that's going.

[40:10] Bonner

To be a better direction or what. The lesson may come out of it.

[40:13] Bonner

But have to be willing to pause.

[40:16] Bonner

And really assess, why am I doing this?

[40:20] Bonner

What's my intentions? Where's the fear in it?

[40:22] Bonner

That's probably the direction I need to move towards.

[40:25] Bonner

Or it's telling me you've done that direction.

[40:28] Bonner

Let's not go down that road again. Let's look at the other part of.

[40:32] Bonner

Fear, which is the unknown and go maybe that way.

[40:35] Ed

It's interesting. You talk about move in the direction of your fear. We talk about it.

[40:39] Ed

Run to the fight. Yes.

[40:41] Ed

Just go confront it.

[40:42] Ed

Deal with reality in real time in the fear of the unknown, unfortunately, and tell me if I'm off here.

[40:48] Ed

Unfortunately, we are now living in, and we've created this mess of a society where the way we fill that void.

[40:54] Ed

And the fear of the unknown is.

[40:56] Ed

By surrounding ourselves with people that are going to tell us what we want.

[40:59] Ed

To hear, they're going to fill it.

[41:00] Ed

And that's why we have all this divisiveness. That's why we have all of this. If you don't agree with me, then you are complete horses rear end, and.

[41:08] Ed

I can't stand you. And you see it.

[41:10] Ed

You see it show up in their.

[41:11] Ed

Professional lives, their personal lives.

[41:14] Ed

When you're talking about move towards the.

[41:16] Ed

Fear, you're talking about move towards the fear with the curiosity, the intent, the.

[41:22] Ed

Willingness to be vulnerable and figure it.

[41:25] Ed

Out to the best of your ability.

[41:28] Ed

How much of a challenge was that.

[41:29] Ed

For you when you first started doing that?

[41:31] Bonner

It was a massive challenge.

[41:33] Bonner

Huge, biggest challenge ever. Because the one way I kind of.

[41:37] Bonner

What I'm hearing from you is what I hear in that is the way.

[41:41] Bonner

That I used to do it and still do it time, because I understand that I still have that in me to go other directions that I'm like, I know better.

[41:51] Bonner

Not sure why I did that, but.

[41:52] Bonner

I did it and then try to back up again and go in a different direction. The number one thing I hear in that, though, like you said, is one.

[42:00] Bonner

Preys upon differences and divide, which is fear based.

[42:05] Bonner

And then the other way, like you.

[42:06] Bonner

Said, is, I think, is through love, but it's all within us.

[42:12] Bonner

And so turning inward is what I would say is the biggest thing that's changed for me versus blaming outwardly. I would point at other people, and I grew up learning that from my parents is like, I saw that you either don't talk about it or you blame somebody else. There was very little accountability happening within each individual.

[42:31] Bonner

So I wasn't modeled that to be in a healthy way with myself is.

[42:37] Bonner

We have to take accountability for our role in everything. And that has been a game changer.

[42:41] Bonner

For me, is seeing what my role.

[42:43] Bonner

Was in anything that happens in my life and anything that happens within my life.

[42:49] Bonner

I've played a role.

[42:51] Bonner

And so what choices did I make? What did I maybe miss? Those are the things that we don't. And then to come back and do these things that we don't see in politics a lot at all, if any, is apologize. There's scapegoating, there's gaslighting, there's all these terms and everything, but you're really seeing a lack of accountability. And the inability for people in a.

[43:12] Bonner

Healthy way to hold people accountable in.

[43:15] Bonner

A healthy manner is being lost. I think it's becoming a lost art of how you and I could have very difficult discussion while maintaining love and.

[43:24] Bonner

Respect for each other.

[43:26] Bonner

Having and knowing that we have differences of opinions because our truths are going to be different. There is no two people that have identical truths. And then somewhere in the middle, usually that's how you get with both people taking accountability. And where my relationship has gotten so.

[43:40] Bonner

Beautiful with Jill is that there's accountability on both sides.

[43:44] Bonner

There's a willingness to find that space in the middle.

[43:47] Bonner

That is where we can discuss and.

[43:50] Bonner

Really come to an agreement on things.

[43:53] Bonner

While knowing that I'm not right, she's not wrong.

[43:56] Bonner

Nobody's good, nobody's bad.

[43:59] Bonner

We just are living within our truths.

[44:01] Bonner

And when we do that, it brings.

[44:03] Bonner

Us together and we can actually have.

[44:06] Bonner

Beautiful conversations with each other.

[44:08] Bonner

And that's where you get, I think, a much healthier in business, in politics, in sports, in anywhere. When we're able to come together, you.

[44:18] Bonner

See it like heck. My San Diego's Aztecs. Let's talk about the know.

[44:22] Ed

Let's talk about the Aztecs.

[44:23] Bonner

What a run.

[44:24] Ed

But you mean besides their hand at the Creighton game? But we won't go. That was an amazing game. An amazing. Dutch is the best. I mean, I couldn't be happier I.

[44:36] Ed

Just wish I would have got Yukon.

[44:37] Bonner

Yeah. The Fisher story is amazing. Mark Fisher, Steve's son and I believe that was the link that this team really could see. What's the bigger picture in this whole entire journey is not basketball games. It's this man and the way he's approaching his greatest challenge, which seems to be far greater than any challenge that we are aware of anybody else on that staff. So there was a unifier there that I would say that definitely added some boost to the positive energy and the.

[45:09] Bonner

Ability to understand that together and supporting.

[45:13] Bonner

Each other is going to be far greater time than those guys would probably get on top of each other and chirp at each other negatively.

[45:20] Bonner

And I saw that. I feel like just not being in the huddle, but I got that general.

[45:25] Bonner

Feel that's what cultivated from that team, that there wasn't the one person that was bigger than the team in that whole group.

[45:34] Bonner

And I think that's for me.

[45:36] Bonner

Knowing that I'm an important part. I'm not bigger or smaller than anything else. And my truth is equal to everybody's truth that I come across.

[45:44] Ed

And you know what?

[45:45] Ed

I'm going to take that a step.

[45:45] Ed

Further because I really think that we.

[45:48] Ed

Can all find a mark Fisher in our life if we just stop 100%. And I think that it would behoove all of us to do that. And I grew up 100%. I just grew up around the fact, realizing the significance and knowing the significance. I was taught this by my father.

[46:01] Ed

And my mother of, somebody always has.

[46:02] Ed

It tougher than yourself.

[46:03] Ed

Right? And that isn't the old school. Like, don't feel sorry for self. Someone has it worse than you. Okay?

[46:09] Ed

Even though that was a little bit of the south side, irish catholic way. But no, what they would instill in.

[46:13] Ed

Me is the fact that learn from it, appreciate it, serve them, find power.

[46:19] Ed

In their story, and surround yourself with people like that.

[46:22] Ed

And that's going to take everything in.

[46:24] Ed

Your world to a whole different level. And the other thing I have found, and this would just benefit our world.

[46:29] Ed

In general, especially the way things are right now, is the more you rally.

[46:35] Ed

Around something that is bigger than yourself, the more you have the difficult conversations, the more you have, what was it? The willingness to meet in that space in the middle.

[46:46] Ed

Right.

[46:46] Ed

Take the accountability. But that willingness to meet in the.

[46:48] Ed

Space in the middle, when you do that at this level, okay.

[46:51] Ed

And obviously the listener can't see me.

[46:53] Ed

I got my hand about chin level.

[46:54] Ed

Next thing you know, you're going to be able to take it to this level and then this level. Or if you want to go the.

[46:59] Ed

Other way, you'll dig deeper and deeper and you'll be able to.

[47:02] Ed

Handle greater things and take on his task together. And, I mean, you've seen that shown up your world, and that's something I want to make sure we touch on.

[47:10] Ed

Before we wrap this up is in.

[47:12] Ed

Your book, you talk about some of the challenging relationships to people very near.

[47:16] Ed

And dear and very close to you, right?

[47:18] Ed

Probably some that you thought would never heal or would never improve or would never get better. Can you talk to the. Because there's probably listening right now that's saying, man, that's great.

[47:26] Ed

It's worked out for him.

[47:27] Ed

It's never going to work out for.

[47:28] Ed

Me because I can't see past this.

[47:31] Ed

How over time have your relationships evolved.

[47:34] Ed

And have you learned to reframe them.

[47:38] Ed

To see them from a different vantage point?

[47:40] Bonner

Yeah, the reframing is key and learning a thing is called, I call it protecting my energy and protecting my energy.

[47:48] Bonner

I kind of know I put people.

[47:51] Bonner

In three different rings.

[47:53] Bonner

So think of like a target, like a bullseye.

[47:56] Bonner

There's the smaller one that's in the.

[47:57] Bonner

Middle, then the medium one that's next out, and then the next larger circle is that.

[48:03] Bonner

And it's constantly fluid. But I move people in and out. The inner one rarely moves as much, but there are people drifting in and amongst those three rings.

[48:14] Bonner

Based on that, I know how much.

[48:17] Bonner

Energy I am willing and want to.

[48:20] Bonner

Give to each of those relationships because.

[48:23] Bonner

I know I have limited amount of energy, meaning time. You can use the word anything you.

[48:28] Bonner

Want to put on there and it's a value and whatever the value is.

[48:32] Bonner

And I feel like my time or.

[48:33] Bonner

Energy is the most valuable that I have. So moving people amongst those three rings.

[48:39] Bonner

Has been very important to me. And family has been the most challenging for me. Primarily.

[48:45] Bonner

My mom, oldest brother and my dad for a bit were my three most.

[48:51] Bonner

Challenging relationships and still are to their own different beautiful ways. But seeing them as beautiful challenges versus.

[48:59] Bonner

What I used to look at them as, lot of anger, lot of pain.

[49:03] Bonner

I was projecting my pain in other ways.

[49:06] Bonner

Instead of learning how to go and meet my pain, release that pain. And through actually learning how to build.

[49:14] Bonner

New and different relationships with each of them, that protects my energy first and.

[49:19] Bonner

Foremost, which means I still have enough energy to give them.

[49:23] Bonner

I'm giving them what energy I want.

[49:25] Bonner

To, which keeps me still in love.

[49:27] Bonner

It doesn't wear me down to the.

[49:28] Bonner

Point where when I'm tired, fear and.

[49:31] Bonner

Anger can easily creep in if we have that unhealthy still stored in us. So my mom is probably the hardest, most challenging one. My oldest brother as well is still a challenging one.

[49:42] Bonner

And they have both been in all.

[49:45] Bonner

Three rings in my life. My dad is back into the smallest.

[49:49] Bonner

Closest ring and dealing with his on.

[49:52] Bonner

Stage either dementia and Alzheimer's that we're.

[49:55] Bonner

Starting to see it's moving fast has really put an interesting understanding of.

[50:00] Bonner

What I want from each person. And I ask myself that, what do I really want from them? Am I still trying to get something from them? Am I still trying to get the acknowledgment and love and things that I.

[50:09] Bonner

Didn't feel like I got as a kid? Or am I giving them my energy.

[50:13] Bonner

For what the current relationship is able to develop? What does that middle space look like for each of them?

[50:21] Bonner

With my mom, she's in the third ring still.

[50:24] Bonner

She's in that outer ring.

[50:26] Bonner

I still love her.

[50:28] Bonner

My time and energy with her is very limited. And for the most part, my visits.

[50:34] Bonner

With her and interactions with her are rewarding because I'm able to do that.

[50:39] Bonner

My oldest brother is now out in.

[50:41] Bonner

That outer ring where I hardly ever speak to him.

[50:43] Bonner

I did that to protect my energy.

[50:46] Bonner

Because I didn't feel like that energy. And so being willing to move past the labels that we put them on and society puts them on just because.

[50:54] Bonner

They'Re family does not mean we have.

[50:56] Bonner

To put up with any. And so if we feel that.

[51:00] Bonner

Relationship is not in a healthy space and we aren't able to find that.

[51:04] Bonner

Middle space together, then I have to.

[51:07] Bonner

Move them to that outer ring until both of us are able to find some type of space where we feel.

[51:13] Bonner

Safe and we feel like we can.

[51:15] Bonner

Actually develop and maybe increase the energy spent into that relationship. So it's very fascinating to have two of them more on the outer ring now and one of them on the.

[51:25] Bonner

Very inner circle as well.

[51:28] Ed

I love it. An amazing man doing unbelievable things.

[51:32] Ed

Bonner, I appreciate you so much. We've got a couple of things to cover here, though.

[51:36] Ed

So the revised book, when it comes out, will they be able to go to the website project possible and find it?

[51:42] Ed

Amazon?

[51:43] Ed

Talk to me here where we can find the book.

[51:45] Bonner

Yeah, it'll be on all the major platforms, digital online platforms like Amazon and everything like that. It won't be in bookstores that we're aware of and then digitally, it'll be on iTunes, it'll be on all those things that you can digitally download the digital version and then the audiobook, it'll be on audible and all those as awesome.

[52:04] Ed

And then projectpossible.org. If someone's interested in sponsoring and donating somehow finding a way to connect to the work that you do, is there a way on there that they can.

[52:16] Ed

Get connected to you?

[52:17] Bonner

Yeah, they can donate on projectpossible.org. And still, 100% of all donations go to our projects and centers, so nobody takes any of the money or anything.

[52:28] Ed

How about your social media?

[52:30] Ed

Where can they find Bonner?

[52:31] Bonner

Yeah, project possible is on Instagram and Facebook, so you can find the foundation on there.

[52:37] Ed

Okay, what about you? If they want to follow you on Killy in this journey, it will be.

[52:43] Bonner

Through both of those social media outlets. It'll all be posted through Project Possible's social media stuff and on our website.

[52:50] Ed

Well, I wish you the best of luck with everything. Thanks, brother. I can't wait to follow this.

[52:56] Ed

Climb on Killy. Let's wrap it up with this. I know the answer, but the listener.

[53:01] Ed

Doesn't know the answer.

[53:02] Ed

Okay, what's different this time?

[53:04] Ed

What's different between this climb?

[53:06] Ed

What's the difference between this climb and the climb?

[53:09] Bonner

15 years ago, I was talking to Jake's dad about that.

[53:11] Bonner

I don't feel like I have anything to prove this time. I actually don't even feel like I.

[53:15] Bonner

Have to get to the top.

[53:16] Bonner

For me, it's the experience of being together with these amazing people that have been such a huge part that this is a village that has taken to.

[53:25] Bonner

Bring myself individually on my journey as.

[53:28] Bonner

Well as project possible. It's been a lot of.

[53:32] Bonner

People taking on this task.

[53:35] Bonner

And so to celebrate it after 15 years and just talk about all the amazing things, then go visit our centers.

[53:41] Bonner

In Kenya and Tanzania and see how it's actually daily impacting.

[53:47] Bonner

Yeah, I'm going to need a lot of Kleenex. Steve already said that as well. But it's just going to be such a different approach.

[53:54] Bonner

And that was the thing.

[53:54] Bonner

I don't have to get to the top. I don't have to prove anything. I'm there for the connection and the experience with these amazing people and just seeing what comes of it and try to be much more present than I was last time.

[54:07] Bonner

It was just such a really challenging.

[54:10] Bonner

I did not enjoy that experience 15 years ago.

[54:13] Bonner

That's the fact. And I'd like to go give it.

[54:15] Bonner

Every opportunity to have a much different.

[54:17] Bonner

Experience 15 years later.

[54:19] Ed

And the fact that you're taking this approach might be what makes it even.

[54:23] Ed

More feasible for you to get to.

[54:25] Ed

The top, because you might be more open and more aware to the fact, the power of what you guys are.

[54:29] Ed

Doing as a group.

[54:30] Ed

You might see that vision of Jake.

[54:32] Ed

In your head, like, don't stop now.

[54:35] Ed

You didn't just get here to stay here.

[54:37] Ed

Come on.

[54:38] Ed

But, no, I wish you all the best luck. It's going to be absolutely amazing. Thank you for your time. I appreciate it. And I look forward to the day that I'm sitting next to you there in Mexico, eating from that wonderful garden that you showed me the last time we talked.

[54:50] Bonner

Absolutely.

[54:51] Bonner

You're welcome anytime you want to defrost with that cold weather.

[54:55] Ed

Yeah, you ain't lying.

[54:56] Ed

All right, Bonner, thank you so much. Look forward to connecting again soon.

[54:58] Bonner

Thank you so much, man. Talk to you soon.

[55:00] Voice Over

Thank you for listening to the athletics of business. Be sure to give us a rating and review so we know how we're doing. For more information about the show, visit theathleticsofbusiness.com. Now get out there. Think, act and execute.