The Power of Belief: How One Teacher Changed Kyle V. Robinson's Life Forever

Kyle V. Robinson's compelling narrative is a testament to the transformative power of mentorship and self-discovery amidst adversity. Growing up in a challenging environment, Kyle faced the dual burdens of an abusive stepfather and a pervasive sense of inadequacy. However, a turning point emerged during his high school years when he met Mr. Brady, a teacher who recognized Kyle's intelligence and potential. This pivotal moment provided Kyle with the much-needed affirmation that he was worthy of success and happiness, a belief that had long eluded him. Mr. Brady's encouragement became a driving force, motivating Kyle to confront his struggles and embrace the possibility of a brighter future.
Kyle V. Robinson's compelling narrative is a testament to the transformative power of mentorship and self-discovery amidst adversity. Growing up in a challenging environment, Kyle faced the dual burdens of an abusive stepfather and a pervasive sense of inadequacy. However, a turning point emerged during his high school years when he met Mr. Brady, a teacher who recognized Kyle's intelligence and potential. This pivotal moment provided Kyle with the much-needed affirmation that he was worthy of success and happiness, a belief that had long eluded him. Mr. Brady's encouragement became a driving force, motivating Kyle to confront his struggles and embrace the possibility of a brighter future.
Takeaways:
- Experiencing turbulent childhood challenges can shape one's view of self-worth and potential.
- Facing challenges head-on, like Kyle's decision to represent himself in court, can empower individuals.
- Regularly checking in with our inner child can facilitate healing and self-acceptance.
- Finding supportive communities and healthy friendships can significantly improve one's life trajectory.
Kyle's journey is marked by significant challenges, including expulsion from high school and a tumultuous relationship with substance use. However, his decision to enter drug rehab was a pivotal moment that allowed him to step away from negative influences and focus on rebuilding his life. Returning to school for a sixth year, he encountered further obstacles, including a wrongful arrest, but these experiences only fueled his determination to prove himself. Notably, his self-representation in court became a defining moment, reinforcing his belief in his capabilities and setting the stage for his eventual success in college.
Ultimately, Kyle's story is one of resilience, growth, and the quest for self-acceptance. Through his book, "Wandering Spark," he seeks to share his journey with others facing similar challenges, emphasizing that healing and growth are achievable. His experiences serve as a powerful reminder that our past does not define us; rather, it is our response to those experiences and the support we find along the way that shape our futures. Kyle's narrative invites readers to reflect on their own journeys, encouraging them to embrace their unique paths and find the strength to overcome.
KYLE V ROBINSON is a graduate of Kent State University and Western Michigan University Cooley Law School. Kyle, currently, resides in Ohio with his dog Booker. You can find him running on trails, at kylevrobinson.com and @kylevrobinson on all social media.
Resources: To listen in on more conversations about pivotal moments that changed lives forever, subscribe to "The Life Shift" on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to rate the show 5 stars and leave a review! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
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00:00 - Untitled
00:40 - Untitled
01:42 - Introduction to Kyle's Journey
02:40 - In-School Suspension: A Catalyst for Change
06:10 - Facing Challenges and Finding Strength
11:35 - The Turning Point: A Desperate Decision
19:50 - The Legal Battle: Standing Up for Myself
22:20 - Graduation: A Milestone Achieved
30:40 - The Realization of Self-Worth
40:40 - Finding Purpose Through Running
42:20 - The Healing Power of Writing
01:00:40 - Conclusion: Embracing the Journey
When I went back to high school, they stuck me into something called in school suspension.
KyleThat's where you sit inside a room.
KyleYou can't talk, you can't leave.
KyleThey bring all your assignments to you.
KyleYou eat lunch in there.
KyleYou get, like, two bathroom breaks that are chaperoned by the teacher.
KyleBut as luck would have it, you can actually talk to the teacher that's in there.
KyleAnd the teacher in there, his name was Mister Brady, and he was the first male role model, actually took me aside, and he goes, because he got to know me.
KyleI was in his class for class in school suspension for my last senior year.
KyleAnd he told me that, you know, you could do something with your life, that you're smart, and that this actually, like, blew my mind.
KyleThis is the first time that somebody took the time to tell me that, you know, you're.
KyleYou're worth something, that you can actually do something with your life.
KyleAnd I was actually blown away because, like I said before, I thought all men were like, like the way my stepfather was.
KyleSo I was like, amazed that this was going on.
KyleLike, I was like, oh, my God.
KyleAnd like, something inside, he, like, planted a seed inside and was like, maybe I can do something with my life.
Matt GilhoolyToday's guest is Kyle v.
Matt GilhoolyRobinson.
Matt GilhoolyFrom a childhood really marked by challenges at home, poor role models, and just genuine struggle.
Matt GilhoolyKyle's story is definitely one of trying to prove oneself to an undeserving person, but really, truly, it's a long road of personal growth.
Matt GilhoolyIn this conversation, we explore those pivotal moments that really defined his path, focusing on the power of self awareness and truly the critical impact of finding positive role models, such as one teacher that he had in high school and someone he met a little later in life, Kyle opens up about the challenges that he faced, including navigating a turbulent home environment and the influence of a life changing teacher who believed in him.
Matt GilhoolyThis episode is not just about the trials, but also about the triumphs as Kyle reflects on the lessons learned and the strength gained through those experiences.
Matt GilhoolyYou hear me talk about this a lot in these episodes, about how some of the.
Matt GilhoolyThese really challenging moments, when we have the opportunity and space to reflect upon them, we can see the silver linings, and we can see the things that we've learned because of those challenging moments.
Matt GilhoolyIn my opinion, this conversation with Kyle is filled with hope and inspiration and really, that enduring spirit of growth.
Matt GilhoolySo without further ado, here is my conversation with Kyle v.
Matt GilhoolyRobinson.
Matt GilhoolyI'm Matt Gilhooly, and this is the life shift.
Matt GilhoolyCandid conversations about the pivotal moments that have changed lives forever.
Matt GilhoolyHello, my friends.
Matt GilhoolyWelcome to the Life Shift podcast.
Matt GilhoolyI am here with Kyle.
Matt GilhoolyHello, Kyle.
KyleHello, Matt.
KyleThanks for having me.
Matt GilhoolyWell, thank you for wanting to be a part of the Life Shift podcast.
Matt GilhoolyI never really thought, maybe even five years ago, that I would have the opportunity to talk to so many people about these pivotal moments in their lives.
Matt GilhoolyThat has really changed everything.
Matt GilhoolySo I'm just so honored that strangers essentially have come and wanted to share these conversations with me.
KyleSure.
KyleI'm happy to be here and actually share my story and what changed me, how I got from where I was to where I am today.
KyleAnd it's pretty interesting.
Matt GilhoolyYou know, I think it's so valuable because the life shift podcast really stems from my own personal experience of feeling very alone in my circumstances.
Matt GilhoolyWhen I was a kid, my mom died in a motorcycle accident and everything at that moment.
Matt GilhoolyMy parents were divorced, lived in different states, and everything changed in my life.
Matt GilhoolyBut it was also a time period where people weren't really talking about grief or mental health or any of those things, and I felt very alone, like I was the only person that ever had a parent die, and I didn't know how to navigate that world.
Matt GilhoolyAnd so, really, when I started this, I was hoping that we could have these conversations where people out there listening might hear your story, might hear someone else's story, and feel a little less alone in their journey, and maybe feel a little hope or inspiration that they can move through that moment, become whatever they want to be or however that may look for them.
Matt GilhoolySo, you know, like you said, your story has these changes, and it's changed you from before and after, and it's just, I know there's someone out there listening that will hear your story and go, okay, I'm not the only one to go through something like this.
Matt GilhoolySo it's just such an honor.
KyleRight.
KyleAnd I think there's a couple life shifts that people go through, like some that they don't have control over, and then some maybe, that they do.
KyleAnd I don't know if you really differentiate between those.
KyleSo I think some of my pivotal moments were some I didn't have any control over, and obviously it shifted my life.
KyleAnd then as you get older, things happen.
KyleYou're like, oh, I do have control, and I could do something about it and move forward from there.
KyleSo that's kind of the experience I had with my life.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolyAnd you know what?
Matt GilhoolyGoing into this, I was a little bit naive, thinking, okay, yeah, one life shift changed everything.
Matt GilhoolyAnd it's like, no, as humans, we encounter a lot of things, whether, like you said, these external factors that kind of knock us off our.
Matt GilhoolyKnock us off our feet or throw us in the water or whatever that might be.
Matt GilhoolyAnd people have these internal fires, which I didn't really understand for a long period of my life because I was in this fight or flight mode for decades, because I didn't process that grief.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I didn't realize that I had as much power as I do to change my life until I finally got therapy and all those things that helped.
Matt GilhoolyOh, okay.
Matt GilhoolyYou can have your own fire, and you can have your own life shifts that you dictate.
Matt GilhoolySo that's great point.
KyleI agree.
KyleAnd I think a little bit of that, too.
KyleMaybe subconsciously we're afraid to make those changes because you're scared of what's on the other side of that too, and come to certain realizations, for sure.
Matt GilhoolyAnd for me, it was like I was afraid of taking any chance, because if there was a chance that I was going to fail in my eight year old mind that I carried with me, I thought my dad would also abandon me.
Matt GilhoolyLike, I felt like the death of a parent feels like at that age, it feels like abandonment.
Matt GilhoolyAnd so it was always that fear cycle, like you described.
Matt GilhoolyIt's like, what could happen?
Matt GilhoolyI don't know.
Matt GilhoolyIt could be bad, and I don't want to do it, so I'm glad I did it, but sure.
KyleSo when I was younger, I didn't have a parent die, but something I did feel alone, because when I was four years old, my mother was recently divorced.
KyleAnd so we were.
KyleShe was living as a single mom, me at four years old, and my older brother at six years old, and my younger sister at three years old.
KyleAnd one day we're just playing at my house.
KyleI'm upstairs playing around, and I hear the doorbell ring.
KyleAnd this is something that normally doesn't happen in our house.
KyleAnd I got really excited.
KyleSo I run downstairs to see what's going on.
KyleAnd as soon as I get to the bottom of stairs, like, standing before me is a six foot three tall man with, like, a big brown bearden and bifocal glasses.
KyleAnd I'm just stunned, like, scared, like, looking at this intimidating figure.
KyleAnd my mom, who had answered the door, went to go get a glass of water or something like that.
KyleSo it's just me and this intimidating figure.
KyleAnd I did what I thought any four year old would do.
KyleI just greeted him with, like, a little punch in the leg.
KyleAnd I giggled.
KyleAnd what this man did was he made a fist, too, and he punched little Kyle right in the stomach.
KyleAnd I keeled over, and I couldn't breathe.
KyleI couldn't scream out, and tears were rushing down my face.
KyleAnd so nobody heard.
KyleSo what this man did, didn't try to comfort me, didn't try to do anything.
KyleHe just walked around me into the kitchen, and I just scampered upstairs.
KyleAnd that was my first meeting with the man who eventually come my stepfather, Ben, or my sister.
KyleAnd I would later call him Triple B, big bad Ben.
KyleAnd that's kind of how my life.
KyleThat's a big life shift that I didn't have control over.
KyleThat's how my life started at four years old going on, you know, until I was, like, out of high school.
Matt GilhoolyWow.
KyleYeah.
Matt GilhoolyThat really can shape someone.
KyleSure.
KyleAnd so, as I got older, you know, I don't want to get in the grizzly details, but things didn't get easier for me, and there's, you know, sticks and things like that.
KyleBut as I got into high school, I really started to rebel out.
KyleAnd also, one of the big problems, too, is my mom.
KyleYou would think, well, didn't your mom do anything about this?
KyleAnd, like, the simple answer or the easy answer was no, because she was so.
KyleShe thought it was very, very important for us to have a father in our lives, because my biological father was out of the picture, seemingly.
KyleHe lived in Florida, and, you know, he sent checks on birthdays and Christmas, things like that, but he really wasn't in our lives.
KyleAnd so my mom was hell bent on getting a father for us, and she was excusing a lot of behavior, you know, thinking, like, boys will be boys and things like that.
KyleAnd as I was getting older and as I was growing up, through adolescence teenager, I thought this was love.
KyleI thought this is what a father was supposed to be.
KyleLike, I'm dead serious, man.
KyleI, like, I didn't.
KyleI really thought that.
KyleI thought all men.
KyleI thought all men's dads were like this at home.
KyleLike, I didn't know any better, so.
KyleAnd my mom was telling me, like, this is love.
KyleThat, like, she even made us call him dad and, like, you know, tell him that we loved him, like, crazy stuff.
KyleAnd, like.
KyleAnd I thought this was completely normal growing up.
KyleI really did.
Matt GilhoolyBut it was open.
Matt GilhoolyLike, you guys.
Matt GilhoolyEveryone was kind of, like.
Matt GilhoolyLike, it was a.
Matt GilhoolyEveryone was aware that he was doing this to you guys well enough close family.
KyleSo, like, you know, me and my brother and my sister, my mom.
KyleBut, like, on the outside, my mom would pretend like that everything was okay, you know, everything's fine.
KyleAnd as a little kid, I didn't know it was wrong.
KyleLike, I thought it was normal.
KyleLike, I thought, like, hey, this guy's just a jerk.
KyleGet it?
KyleI'm supposed to love him.
KyleMy mom tells me I'm supposed to love him.
KyleSo this is the way it is.
KyleAnd then as I got older, like, in high school, I eventually started to rebel out a lot because I didn't know, because I thought I was the problem.
KyleI thought, you know, it was my fault.
KyleAnd so.
KyleAnd I didn't know who to turn to or what to do.
KyleSo I got in fights all the time in high school.
KyleI started drinking a lot in high school.
KyleAnd eventually I got expelled from high school for, you know, for getting fights and not, like, skipping school.
KyleAnd so I had to repeat what, my junior year over again and again.
KyleMy mom was, like, blaming me, and I couldn't fathom because all of my friends, my friends in high school, they were only my friends.
KyleI kind of gravitated to people that were not a good influence because I didn't think I deserved better.
KyleBut I couldn't understand why they weren't getting kicked out of school.
KyleI couldn't understand why they weren't getting expelled.
KyleAnd it was because they didn't have the same home life I had, but I still couldn't realize it.
KyleSo I was just so upset at myself because I knew I was smart and I couldn't understand what was going on.
KyleAnd so after I got expelled, I come back again for my fifth year, and I'm doing the same stuff, same things, getting advice, and I just want all this madness to stop.
KyleAnd so what I decided to do in the middle of class one day, I got a test back that I failed.
KyleAnd I was just so mad because I knew if I would have, like, applied myself, I would have been able to pass.
KyleAnd I was like, I'm just so sick of this.
KyleI need to do something about this.
KyleSo what I did was I left school in the middle of the day, and I went to go turn myself into drug rehab as a 17 year old.
KyleAnd it wasn't like I was a drug addict.
KyleObviously, I had problems with alcohol.
KyleI was just using it as an excuse, but I didn't know what else to do.
KyleI thought I was the problem.
KyleSo how do I fix this problem?
KyleAnd so it's actually not really funny, but when I got there as a 17 year old, you just can't say, hey, here I am.
KyleI can turn myself in.
KyleYou need to be court ordered or you have to have a parent or guardian turn you in.
KyleAnd so my mom, who actually worked in the building, it was a big hospital and they had a, you know, a drug rehab wing for juveniles.
KyleAnd I knew my mom worked in there.
KyleSo they, she came down, she actually signed me in.
KyleAnd she was really relieved that I was actually doing something.
KyleCause she wasn't about to admit that, you know, your stepfather was the problem or.
KyleAnd I'm not blaming him or, I mean, he's the reasonable on why a lot of these things happen.
KyleBut we'll get to that part.
KyleWhen I had that realization.
KyleAnd so I'm in drug rehab and I actually felt safe at that moment.
KyleCause I'm away from him.
KyleI'm away from my like bad influence friends.
KyleAnd so.
KyleBut because I had to go to drug rehab, I had to spend.
KyleI missed another year of high school.
KyleSo actually when I got out, I go back to high school now, Matt.
KyleI'm in my 6th year of high school.
KyleAnd this is one of the pivotal moments.
KyleTwo amazing things actually happened when I went back to high school.
KyleWhen I went back to high school, they stuck me into something called in school suspension.
KyleThat's where you sit inside a room.
KyleYou can't talk, you can't leave.
KyleThey bring all your assignments to you.
KyleYou eat lunch in there.
KyleYou get like two bathroom breaks that are chaperones, you know, by the, by the teacher.
KyleBut as luck would have it, you can actually talk to the teacher that's in there.
KyleAnd the teacher in there, his name was Mister Brady and he was the first male role model actually took me aside and he goes, you know, because he got to know me.
KyleI was taught.
KyleI was in like his class for class in school suspension for my last senior year.
KyleAnd he told me that, you know, you could do something with your life, that you're smart and that this actually like blew my mind.
KyleThis is the first time that somebody took the time to tell me that, you know, you're worth something, that you can actually do something with your life.
KyleAnd I was actually blown away because like I said before, I thought all men were like, like the way my stepfather was.
KyleSo I was like amazed that this was going on.
KyleLike, I was like, oh my God.
KyleAnd like something inside he like put his, you know, planted a seed inside.
KyleHe was like, maybe I can do something with my life.
KyleNot that I really, you know, as a 17, eight year old I didn't really take action at that moment, but it was so nice to have somebody believe him.
KyleLike, hey, somebody is in my corner.
KyleLike, somebody's there.
Matt GilhoolyIs it hard for you to believe him?
KyleI knew that there was a little something inside of me, but no one's ever told me about it, so maybe I was just trying to convince myself, but it was nice to have a confirmation.
KyleLike, hey, you can do something with your life.
KyleYou can do something.
Matt GilhoolySo it's really interesting, though, because growing up and absorbing that for years upon years, I can see how someone might act out.
Matt GilhoolyBut also all along, it sounds like you still held on that thread of humanity and that, like, you were worth more than something.
Matt GilhoolyBecause I can't imagine someone that's acting out and going, like, really angry.
Matt GilhoolyI guess kind of getting that anger out in a different way would then also have that self awareness that you had to go, I need to, like, fix this, and I don't think I can do it myself, and then go check, like, go try to check yourself into something like that.
Matt GilhoolySo, like, that's a, that's a big thing that I don't think is that common.
Matt GilhoolyI think it's just like, people that are in your circumstance that you were in, I almost imagine a lot of the people that I've talked to.
Matt GilhoolyIt's kind of like you just absorb that and then you just place the blame on everything else.
Matt GilhoolyNothing's your fault.
Matt GilhoolyWhere it sounds like you were taking some ownership of, like, I'm doing this, but I can't stop doing this.
KyleRight.
Matt GilhoolySo that in itself is, like, super impressive.
Matt GilhoolyWhich then led me to ask you, like, I mean, I guess it makes sense why you would believe your teacher, but I think a lot of people be like, what are you talking about?
Matt GilhoolyLike, no, I'm a mess.
Matt GilhoolyLike, nobody cares.
Matt GilhoolyMy stepfather tells me every day that nobody cares.
KyleAnd I didn't have anybody else to go to.
KyleIt's like, back then, I'm 46 now.
KyleSo those teachers weren't looking for things that were going on and nobody was saying, hey, are you okay?
KyleYou must be acting like this for some reason.
Matt GilhoolyNobody was talking about anything back then either.
Matt GilhoolyThis is what, like mid nineties, right, exactly.
Matt GilhoolyOr like early mid nineties.
Matt GilhoolyPeople weren't talking about, like, things going on at home.
Matt GilhoolyPeople weren't talking about mental health stuff where, I mean, we're very similar in age.
Matt GilhoolySo I.
Matt GilhoolySame thing with me.
Matt GilhoolyI mean, I didn't.
Matt GilhoolyI got to my thirties when I realized all the things that were wrong with me.
Matt GilhoolySo that's kind of why I'm commending you in this sense of, like, at 1617 you had this awareness of, like, something has to change and I think it's possible.
KyleRight.
KyleBut also, so, I mean, not to get too out of my.
KyleI always thought it was external.
KyleThings needed to change, not really change inside myself.
KyleAnd also I was blaming myself for it.
KyleI still thought there was something wrong with me, so I had to fix me too.
KyleAnd that's what I wanted to do.
KyleLike, I didn't have the insight to, like, look inside.
KyleOkay, Kyle, who do you want to be?
KyleWhat do you want?
KyleI just wanted to change something like.
KyleAnd stop the madness.
KyleBut yeah, and what, I guess I'm trying to take credit away from that, what you're trying to give me.
KyleBut yeah, there was a little something inside me that wanted something more to my life and wanted something to change and wanted to be better.
Matt GilhoolyYou could have been 100% destructive.
Matt GilhoolyYou weren't 100% destructive.
Matt GilhoolyI mean, maybe you were a lot percent destructive, but there was something in you that was like, wait, you know, and maybe it was subconscious.
Matt GilhoolyMaybe it was something you picked up from your mother, you know, like whatever it may be from other parties that are in your life.
Matt GilhoolyBut yeah, I think there's something to celebrate there just in itself because I think a lot of people that grew up in those circumstances will just ride that, unfortunately, because that's what they know and that's how it goes.
Matt GilhoolyAnd it's just like, well, that's my life.
Matt GilhoolyBut you were, something was inching you and then, and I'm guessing that's probably what that teacher saw in you too.
Matt GilhoolyLike, there is potential in this kid.
Matt GilhoolyLike, he.
Matt GilhoolySomething's wrong, but there's also potential.
Matt GilhoolySo let me talk to him.
Matt GilhoolyRight.
KyleAnd similar to you, I know how you had a teacher who changed your life and you reached out to her a while ago about, you know, recognizing you.
KyleI actually reached out to him a while ago too, and thanked him and he said, oh, of course I remember you.
KyleThat's great.
KyleYou're doing well and things like that.
KyleSo it was nice to reconnect and let him know that he really changed my life a lot and he was just being him, that he wasn't trying like him.
KyleThat's what is crazy.
Matt GilhoolyExactly.
Matt GilhoolyTeachers, I mean, they're with us for so much of our lives, you know, when we're in the school day and they see so much that maybe those of us that had this home life that might have been tough, they see us, you know, in this other space, trying to, trying to do other things.
Matt GilhoolyAnd same like you said, I reached out to my third grade teacher.
Matt GilhoolySo I was eight, you know, when she met me, and she was trying to, like, help heal this little kid who was just so very lost.
Matt GilhoolyAnd then, yeah, in my, I want to say I was in my thirties.
Matt GilhoolyI reached back out to her, and I, like, she knew who I was.
Matt GilhoolyShe remembered things from the class.
Matt GilhoolyAnd you're like, how do you do that?
Matt GilhoolyYou've just been teaching for, like, 30 something years.
Matt GilhoolySo, I mean, there was something that must have stuck out because he also remembered you, which is, it was really impactful.
KyleIt was really great.
KyleAnd so after he planted that seed in me when I wasn't hanging out in school suspension, they eventually left me out.
KyleAnd by this time, I'm, you know, 1819 years old, I'm in my 6th year of high school, and I'm still kind of, I want to keep my head down because I can't get in any trouble.
KyleLike, when I was a yde juvenile, you know, I got in trouble, arrested for fights and things like that.
KyleBut now that I'm an adult, if I get arrested, like, I'll be go to serious jail.
KyleSo.
KyleAnd I was deathly terrified of that.
KyleAnd so I'm trying to keep my head down, trying to be on the straight and narrow.
KyleBut one day, I guess I was making fun of the wrong person, just having a smart mouth, and I was messing with the wrong kid outside of school one day, and he wanted to fight me.
KyleAnd I'm trying to tell him, no, no, no, I don't want to fight.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleHey, he could probably beat me up for sure and be, I didn't want to get in any trouble.
KyleSo I'm trying to get away from him, but before I can get away from him, there's a huge crowd around us, about 150 kids.
KyleThis kid is, like, trying to grab at me.
KyleI'm just, like, running around in circle, and before I know it, I'm grabbed out of the circle of kids, and I'm arrested, and I'm arrested for, like, assault, disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, and now I'm going to, like, real jail.
KyleI'm in real trouble, even though I didn't even do anything wrong.
KyleAnd so my mom won't give me a lawyer because she doesn't believe that I didn't do anything wrong from my past and anything like that.
KyleAnd so what I decided to do is I was like, I know I didn't do anything wrong.
KyleSo what I'm going to do is, you know what I'm going to do.
KyleI'm going to represent myself.
KyleAnd so what happens is we're in, and I'm fast forwarding through a lot of things, but it's fine.
KyleWhat happens is we're in court one day is just me, the prosecutor, the judge, and then the arresting officer, and court starts, and the prosecutor starts asking the arresting officer some questions, saying, do you see the person that was involved in this altercation?
KyleAnd the officer points me out, and the prosecutor asks a few more questions, and then the judge goes, Kyle, do you want to ask, you know, the officer some questions?
KyleAnd in my head, I'm very, very confident, but as I start speaking, my mouth starts, you know, start shaking, my voice is trembling, but eventually get enough nerve and I start asking him some questions, and I go, where were you when you first saw this allegeden incident?
KyleHe goes, oh, sitting in my police cruiser.
KyleAnd I go, well, where was that relative to where you saw this incident?
KyleHe goes, oh, about 150 yards.
KyleAnd I go, what did you see?
KyleHe goes, oh, I saw about 150 kids surrounding you guys.
KyleAnd I go, so you're telling me from sitting your police cruiser from 150 yards away through like 150 kids, you saw me strike somebody else?
KyleAnd he goes, well, no, I can't say that for sure.
KyleAnd that was it.
KyleThe judge just found me not guilty, case was dismissed.
KyleI was just so happy.
KyleAnd what I remember at that point is that what Mister Brady told me before is like, if you believe in yourself and if you push forward, good things will happen.
KyleAnd so that was a big life change for me, and I'll get to it.
KyleWhy?
KyleBut it was so, I was so happy that that happened to me and I was, because I wasn't in trouble.
KyleAnd a, what happens when I start believing in myself, even at that young.
Matt GilhoolyAge, on something also that, like, nobody is taught to do, right?
Matt GilhoolyI mean, we're taught to stand up for ourselves and speak up for ourselves, but not when it, not when it relates to, like, the court and the law and all those things.
Matt GilhoolyI think so many of us would just like, shy away and then we'd have to figure out a public defender of some sort.
Matt GilhoolyAnd here you are, like, no, I'm gonna do it.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, because I know I'm in the right.
Matt GilhoolyAnd you were.
KyleI was.
KyleAnd, but you had all these, you know, authority figures too, and telling me that I was wrong and like, you're, you know, you're in trouble.
KyleSo that happened.
KyleAnd eventually I do graduate high school after six years with, like, a 1.046 GPA.
KyleI think my class rank is, like, 346 out of, like, 349, something ridiculous.
KyleAnd so, you know, college is not on the horizon.
KyleNothing's on the horizon whatsoever.
KyleAnd so I don't know what I want to do with my life, but I want to do something.
KyleBut right out of high school, I get a job at, like, an oil change place.
KyleAnd between me and you, Matt, and our listeners, I know nothing about cars.
KyleAnd so I'm working at this oil change place, and one day I'm sitting underneath the car, like, changing some oil.
KyleAnd I think now I want to do something more with my life.
KyleBut I wasn't sure what I can do.
KyleI was like, can a person who spends six years in high school go to college?
KyleAnd I was like.
KyleI wasn't sure, but I wanted to find out.
KyleAnd so eventually, I take the act to get into college because obviously I didn't take it in high school because I was too busy, you know, get in fights and doing drugs.
KyleBut I take the act and I get do well enough that I get into college.
KyleAnd so this is my opportunity.
KyleThis is my chance.
KyleAnd so I don't want to mess this up.
KyleAnd so what I decided to do is I buckle down.
KyleAnd my first semester of college, I get almost a 4.0.
KyleAnd I'm so.
KyleI was like, I knew it.
KyleAnd I fucking.
KyleI freaking knew it.
KyleAnd so I'm very, very happy with myself.
KyleAnd so my mom is pleased.
KyleShe put, like, the dean's list thing on the refrigerator back at home because I moved out right away because obviously, I need to get away from triple B.
KyleBut also, I'm doing a lot of this, too, to prove to triple B I'm not a loser.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleAnd I show him that I made the dean's list because my mom still wants me to call him dad.
KyleI still think he's my dad.
KyleHe's still in my life big time.
KyleAnd so he doesn't care.
KyleHe doesn't care at all.
KyleNot at all.
KyleSo did you feel like you had.
Matt GilhoolyTo win his love, or did you want to?
Matt GilhoolyOr do you just wanted to show him that you weren't who he said you were?
KyleI think it was more a little bit of both.
KyleAnd as I got.
KyleWhen I was younger, I think I wanted him like, I wanted his love.
KyleBut as I got older, I think I just wanted to show him, like, I'm not who you think I am.
KyleAnd so I think it kind of shifted as.
KyleAs I got older.
KyleAnd so eventually.
KyleSo after I made the dean's list, I decided to transfer schools.
KyleI'm going to a different school, and I start partying up again because I meet a whole new group of friends.
KyleAnd these weren't bad guys.
KyleThey just weren't good for me at that time because I kind of get right back into what I was doing in high school, just partying it up.
KyleAnd the excuse I gave myself was like, oh, you're in college now.
KyleYou're okay.
KyleYou're doing okay.
KyleAnd so it's okay to do this, it's okay to party and things like that, and obviously, like, everyone does it, right?
KyleExactly.
KyleAnd so my grades start dropping.
KyleThings aren't going so well.
KyleI'm like, academic probation.
KyleAnd then one day, all my friends decide, let's go drink and do some day drinking down at the bar.
KyleSo I go, okay.
KyleEveryone piles in my jeep.
KyleWe drive down to the bars, and so we're doing something.
KyleYou know, we're drinking.
KyleWe're doing something called power hour.
KyleYou take a shot every time you hear some sort of song.
Matt GilhoolyGreat idea.
KyleYeah, yeah.
KyleGreat idea.
KyleSo we're down there all day, and we decide, you know what?
KyleLet's go home and change so we can go back out.
KyleI go, okay, let's get my jeep.
KyleLet's go.
KyleSo as we're driving home, we're taking a left onto my tree.
KyleI hit the gas.
KyleBoom.
KyleRun into a telephone pole.
KyleTotal.
KyleMy jeep.
KylePut everybody in the hospital, and I get arrested for DUI.
KyleReckless drive aid.
KyleAnd I'm thinking to myself, it's high school over again.
KyleThis is like, you're not doing.
KyleLike, you're not doing great.
KyleYou're not trying to do what you want to do with your life.
KyleAnd again, it's hard for me to rationalize.
KyleEverybody does this.
KyleI was like, no, everybody doesn't get a DUI.
KyleEverybody doesn't put everyone in the car in the hospital.
KyleLuckily, they were all, okay.
KyleBut I was like, this is not.
KyleThis is not good.
Matt GilhoolyDo you kind of go back to thinking, oh, triple b is right?
KyleOh, all the time.
KyleThat's in the back of my head.
KyleYep.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, absolutely.
KyleI was like, so it's kind of like a self fulfilling prophecy.
KyleIt's like it doesn't matter what I do.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleIt doesn't matter.
Matt GilhoolySee?
KyleYeah, exactly.
Matt GilhoolyI have one win, and then three more loses.
KyleExactly.
KyleIt's like you're exactly who you think?
KyleWho you say I am?
KyleCause, like.
KyleAnd I didn't say this before, like, when I was growing up in high school, he would always call me a loser, you know, all kinds of stuff.
KyleAnd so it's like, yeah, it was kind of like, you know, maybe he's right.
KyleBut I did.
KyleI am inside.
KyleI'm fighting.
KyleThat was like, he's not right.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleBut these things would happen.
KyleLike, maybe he is right.
KyleYou know?
KyleMaybe he is right.
Matt GilhoolyWhat is the universe telling me?
KyleCorrect.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
KyleAnd so I eventually, you know, I have to go to some, like, a DUI diversion program, and, like, it's dropped or I get less charge, and so I don't have to, you know, go to jail or anything like that.
KyleAnd I eventually limp through college, and I do graduate with, like, a 2.02 GPA, but I have nothing on the horizon because I made no contacts.
KyleI kind of just partied through college, but I have a college degree.
KyleAnd again, triple B, he doesn't care.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleLike, it doesn't.
KyleIt doesn't matter because it actually was at the time.
KyleI make it.
KyleI make it sound like it wasn't that big of achievement.
KyleIt actually was a big achievement that I got a college degree after six years of high school.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleAnd so after what I've been through.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, I mean, it's a big deal with all you're discussing.
Matt GilhoolyAnd like I said before, like, people that grew up in those circumstances might not have done that, you know?
Matt GilhoolySo there was still something in you that was lighting you up, making you go, Jeff.
KyleAnd so I wanted to get.
KyleSo I knew, I started to realize it's about who I hung around with and who, you know, how I'm spending my time, dictating how my life's going.
KyleAnd so after I graduated college, I decided to, like, run away.
KyleThat is, I had an opportunity to go live in San Francisco, and I took that.
KyleSo I drove out to San Francisco, and I worked out there.
Matt GilhoolyNobody knows me there, right?
KyleI worked out there, and it was kind of good because I was away from triple B.
KyleI was away from, like, my old friends.
KyleBut my mom would call and she would, like, call on my birthday and, like, oh, your dad wants to talk to you.
KyleAnd, like, so put him on.
KyleAnd so she was just driving this home all the time.
KyleAll the time.
KyleAnd I'm still at this point where I don't think there's anything wrong.
KyleI think this.
KyleI don't enjoy doing it.
KyleBut I'm still doing it, right?
KyleBut I'm out in San Francisco.
KyleI'm kind of getting things together.
KyleI'm getting my finances together.
KyleI'm trying to get my life together, and I'm bartending.
KyleThings are going great.
KyleI was like, but you know what?
KyleI want to do more with my life.
KyleAnd I think about high school.
KyleI think about, what can I do?
KyleAnd I think about that incident where I represented myself.
KyleI was like, could I actually do that in real life?
KyleCould I be a lawyer in real life?
KyleAnd I wasn't sure, but again, I wanted to find out.
KyleSo I took the entry exam to get into law school, the LSAT, and I did well enough to get into law school.
KyleAnd now I'm moving out to Michigan, and I'm going to western Michigan law school.
KyleAnd so now I know I do not want to mess this up again, just similar to what I did in my first semester in college.
KyleI was like, okay, you have this opportunity, Kyle.
KyleLet's not blow this opportunity.
KyleSo now you're in law school.
KyleAnd so what I did was I found the two smartest kids that I could find and just stuck next to them all three years of high school.
KyleAnd it's very easy to find these kids because in law school, they're the ones who raise their hand every time the professor asks a question or anything like that.
KyleSo I literally hung next to those kids all three years.
KyleAnd I.
KyleAnd there's no dramatics that happen in law school because I was a very good kid because you can't mess around in law school.
KyleAnd in college, you kind of mess around and do well enough in law school.
KyleIf you're not studying and you're not going to class every day, you're going to get.
KyleYou're going to fail out.
KyleAnd so I made the dean's list one semester, I got the certificate of merit one semester, that's getting the highest grade in one of your classes.
KyleAnd I did well enough.
KyleBetter than I did in high school, obviously better than I did in college.
KyleAnd I was going to graduate law school, and.
KyleBut in order to graduate law school, you have to take an internship.
KyleAnd so I just applied to internships in New York City because that's where I always want to live.
KyleSo eventually, I got an internship in New York City, and I hated every second of it.
KyleIt was at this matrimonial law firm.
KyleIt was a nightmare.
KyleI hated every second of it.
KyleAnd I was like, I'm not sure if I want to be a practicing attorney.
KyleAnd so that was in the back of my head, too.
KyleEventually, I did graduate law school, and again, triple b, I was trying to prove to him that I'm not worthless.
KyleAnd at my high school or my law school graduation, this is what he told me, that he goes, I would have lost a bet.
KyleThat was his congratulations to me.
KyleAnd I started to come to a realization that I could find the cure for cancer.
KyleAnd this man, it didn't matter.
KyleI started to get the mentality now.
KyleYou know what?
KyleForget him.
KyleYou know, forget him.
KyleBut again, I don't want to disappoint my mom either, because she thinks she wants me to, you know, calm down, things like that.
KyleSo, you know, I'll text.
Matt GilhoolyHow old are you around this time?
KyleSo I graduated law school in 2009.
KyleSo 46 now.
KyleSo I'm around 30 years old, if that I'm doing the math correctly real quick.
KyleSo some, it's a trick, right?
Matt GilhoolyIt's a math podcast somewhere around there.
Matt GilhoolyI get it, though.
Matt GilhoolyI mean, the reason I ask is because, like, 30, we, some of us that have these traumas early on, we are still so attached to the perception of those that are deemed parents have of us.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I can see why that would still matter, though.
Matt GilhoolyAnd, you know, I think some people are like, wow, well, you're 30, but when you have those early things, it sticks around and it probably still does.
Matt GilhoolyEven if you've worked through things, you still think of it and you're like.
KyleWell, for sure, my mom is still married to this man to this day, which is insane.
KyleAnd so, yeah, which is it?
Matt GilhoolyBut she comes from a different generation, too.
Matt GilhoolyAnd that generation has, there's different things that we work through.
Matt GilhoolyAnd, like, even our generation, we're just now pushing through things that our generation is not, wasn't used to and we didn't grow up with because we're like, oh, there is something we can do with ourselves.
Matt GilhoolyThere is something that can be better.
Matt GilhoolyWe don't have to accept everything.
Matt GilhoolyAnd so, sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt the story.
Matt GilhoolyI'm curious because I think that at 30, people that haven't experienced something like this, maybe they've had a more casual of lives moving forward.
Matt GilhoolyThey're like, yeah, 30.
Matt GilhoolyI was already out here doing all these things and never even called my parents or never even talked to my parents, never even thought of them, you know, whatever it may be.
Matt GilhoolyAnd so I think it's interesting to me because I was very similar.
Matt GilhoolyI was into my thirties when I finally finished grieving my mom.
Matt GilhoolyYou know?
Matt GilhoolyAnd so it was like everything before that was thinking, what is my dad gonna think?
Matt GilhoolyHe didn't care.
Matt GilhoolyI mean, he cared, but he didn't care, right?
KyleYeah, he was.
KyleYeah, exactly.
KyleLike, he didn't want that to dictate how you were acting, like, exactly.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, exactly.
KyleAnd I don't want you to think that I don't love my mom.
KyleOf course I love my mom.
KyleI'll get into this a little bit later, but, like.
KyleAnd I'll get to this later, but I can't control her, how she feels or how she reacts.
KyleI can just control how I feel and how I react and what I do and, like, moving forward.
KyleAnd I'll bet you tell you how I got to that realization.
KyleBut again, now I'm just trying to make my mom happy.
KyleI do not want to disappoint her.
KyleAnd so I will keep talking to triple B.
KyleI'll keep, you know, call him on Father's Day and things like that.
KyleSo it's.
KyleIt's crazy.
Matt GilhoolySo, checking the boxes.
KyleSo now I have to take the bar exam.
KyleAnd in New York, you have to take something called the character and fitness exam.
KyleAnd in order to get admitted to the bar.
KyleSo I took the bar exam.
KyleI passed the bar.
KyleBut in order to get admitted, you have to take something called the character and fitness exam.
KyleThat's where they do this huge background check on you.
KyleThey take your fingerprints.
KyleThey do, like, this FBI background check, and they find anything wrong, you might not get admitted to the bar.
KyleAnd I was actually terrified of this, all three years of law school, because I wasn't sure if I was going to actually be able to become a lawyer.
KyleBecause of your history.
KyleYeah, exactly.
KyleSo I rationalized to myself, you know what?
KyleYou'll just have a JD, Kyle.
KyleYou won't even try to take your bar.
KyleAnd I wasn't even going to attempt to take the bar exam at all, but I was.
KyleAfter I graduated law school, I was like, you know, you've come this far.
KyleWhat.
KyleWhat are they going to do, take your law degree?
KyleLike, you already went through this far.
KyleWhy not try to do this?
KyleSo what I did was I flew back home to Ohio after living in New York, live in New York City, and I went to all of the courthouses and police stations, got certified copies of all of my police records, and submitted it to the character and fitness board to see if I can admitted to the bar.
KyleAnd so the way they do it in New York is you have to get interviewed by a prosecutor or a member of the bar to see everybody goes through it.
KyleSo the day of my interview, I'm in there, and there's, you know, dozens and dozens of law school graduates being interviewed, but they're only taking, like, two, five minutes.
KyleI'm in there for 2 hours waiting for someone to interview me, and I finally ask, what's going on?
KyleThey go, oh, we're bringing in a special prosecutor for you.
KyleAnd so finally, yeah, finally, this woman comes in, and she has my file.
KyleAnd, Matt, there's, like, red tape coming out of it, you know, everything.
KyleAnd I'm like, here we go.
KyleThis is, like, worthless endeavor.
KyleAnd so finally we sit down, and she starts going through this file, and she goes, quite the file here.
KyleAnd I go, yeah.
KyleAnd then she pulls out this piece of paper.
KyleAnd I was like, what are we going to talk about?
KyleAre we going to talk about my fighting?
KyleAre we going to talk about, like, my underage drinking?
KyleWhat are we going to talk about?
KyleAnd she saw, oh, I see.
KyleYou got caught speeding, Michigan, like, while I was in law school.
KyleI was like, yeah.
KyleShe goes, well, how do I know you're not going to do this going forward?
KyleAnd I'm thinking, this is what she's questioning me about.
KyleI go, well, I live in New York City now.
KyleI don't even have a car, so it's impossible for me.
KyleShe goes, oh, I guess you're right.
KyleShe had, like, a little laugh about it.
KyleShe goes through the rest of my file.
KyleIt doesn't really ask me any more questions.
KyleGoes, you're going to be a good, you know, a good.
KyleAn ethical attorney.
KyleI was like, yes, ma'am.
KyleAnd that was it.
KyleStamped.
KyleI was admitted to the bar, and I was like, a great weight was lifted off my shoulders because I was.
Matt GilhoolyI bet, really?
KyleAnd again, I thought that that would fix everything, too.
KyleI thought, okay, so look.
KyleSee?
Matt GilhoolyAnd another reason to external validation.
KyleYeah.
KyleAnother reason, too.
KyleI wasn't going to go through the character and fitness evaluation.
KyleI was so scared.
KyleNot scared, worried that triple B was like, yep, I told you you couldn't do this.
KyleAnd so I didn't want to hear him saying that.
KyleSo that was a big part of the back of my head.
Matt GilhoolyBut then you also know that he's not gonna care, right, if you do eventually.
KyleBut I'm still trying.
KyleI'm still trying, right?
Matt GilhoolyI know.
KyleIt's insane.
Matt GilhoolyHumans.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolyIt's not insane.
Matt GilhoolyI would venture to say it's probably normal.
Matt GilhoolyI think that if anyone has that experience, they think they could relate, but it's funny.
Matt GilhoolyNot funny.
Matt GilhoolyJust like, it's not insane that we think, okay, well, it's gonna validate him.
Matt GilhoolyBut then we're also, like, we know that even if it validates me, he's not gonna validate it ever.
KyleExactly.
Matt GilhoolyAnd, like, it's a.
Matt GilhoolyIt's like a.
Matt GilhoolyAn endless trial that you're on for yourself to try to get this and no win, I would assume.
Matt GilhoolyWell, maybe there was.
KyleYeah, but also, like, I think part of that, too, is, like, it started morphing into, like, well, can you do a.
KyleKyle can?
KyleLike, you know, starting to see if you're capable of it?
KyleLike, Juan wants to see if I can do this, you know, prove to myself that I'm worthy of it, because I didn't feel worthy of a lot of things.
KyleSo I was trying to, you know, seek all these external validations to try and, you know, fix me and try to say I am worthy.
KyleAnd so a lot of it, too, starts shifting towards, I'm doing it for me to prove to myself, hey, I am.
KyleI'm worthy.
KyleHey, world, look at me.
KyleI am good.
KyleSo this is what I can do.
KyleThings like that.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, but it's like that balance.
Matt GilhoolyI mean, it's like that law scale with the scale.
Matt GilhoolyWhat is it?
KyleThe lady of justice with the.
KyleYeah.
Matt GilhoolyThat I'm thinking, like, okay, well, is Kyle thinking, like he's trying to prove it to himself, or is it really just this triple b that's just weighing everything down?
Matt GilhoolyBecause as you tell your story, there's a lot of triumph.
Matt GilhoolyThere's a ton of triumph.
Matt GilhoolyAs you talk about all the things that a lot of people probably wouldn't been able to achieve, that you did yet.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I can understand this as well.
Matt GilhoolyYou seek the next stamp of approval.
Matt GilhoolyYou seek the next.
Matt GilhoolyWhatever it may be.
Matt GilhoolyLike, maybe one more thing will help.
KyleRight?
Matt GilhoolyOne more thing.
Matt GilhoolyAnd then another thing.
Matt GilhoolyI did the same thing.
Matt GilhoolyI totally get that.
Matt GilhoolyAnd so.
Matt GilhoolyBut when you tell your story, and I hope you see this now, I'm sure you do.
Matt GilhoolyLots of triumph.
Matt GilhoolyLots of things.
KyleAbsolutely.
Matt GilhoolySociety would have excluded you from had you written you off, if you will, just, like, triple b did, you know, and you did it.
KyleSo I was also searching.
KyleYeah.
KyleFor the next thing.
KyleLike, I want to be good enough.
KyleI'm good enough.
KyleAnd eventually, I realized it, Kyle, wouldn't have mattered if you didn't even graduate high school.
KyleYou know, you are good enough.
KyleYou were good enough back then.
KyleAnd so it's a long.
KyleIt takes a long time to get there, though.
Matt GilhoolyBut there was like.
Matt GilhoolyI still feel like early in that story, this still sounded like there was that fire in Kyle, like, deeply buried, maybe like burning, that you knew.
Matt GilhoolyYou knew you could do it and you had faith in yourself.
Matt GilhoolyIt's just sometimes we're conditioned to do the other things, right?
KyleAnd I never had any.
KyleSo that brings me to the next.
KyleI never really had anybody cultivate that spark, you know, it was just always myself.
KyleI was granted.
KyleSo after I was admitted to the bar, I was like, well, you know what?
KyleI don't think I want to practice law.
KyleLaw.
KyleI'm open to it because I had such bad experience at that internship.
KyleThese guys working like 89 hours a week working in matrimonial law, and they hated every second of.
KyleYeah, they were, like, making all kinds of money, but all they cared about was, like, billable hours.
KyleAnd they were miserable.
KyleAnd I was looking at them, I was like, I don't know if I want to do this.
KyleI was getting panic attacks when I was working with them.
KyleIt was terrible.
Matt GilhoolyI worked so hard to achieve all this, and this is what I end up with, right?
KyleAnd so I started to apply to alternative legal careers where you need a law degree, but you're not actually practicing.
KyleAnd I got a job at a company, at this education company, and the CEO and president is actually similar age to me.
KyleAnd you.
KyleHe actually kind of took me under his wing.
KyleThis is the first time somebody, like, told me about, like, setting goals, you know, about meditating, about reading the right books and things, like.
KyleAnd he really, like, blew my mind.
KyleAnd it was great because he was same age as me, and he's running like, this multi million dollar company, and he's, like, telling me not.
KyleHe's not saying it out loud.
KyleHe's like, you can do this, too.
KyleYou can do something with your life, too.
KyleHere's how I did it.
KyleHere's how to do it.
KyleAnd I still.
Matt GilhoolyThat's what worked for me.
KyleAnd it was.
KyleIt was so life changing, similar to Mister Brady, but now I was ready to hear it.
KyleAnd he was.
KyleThis guy, his name's David.
KyleHe actually gave me the tools to do it.
KyleAnd so it was actually amazing.
KyleThis is what I was cravings for so bad.
KyleI was, like, starving for this.
KyleSo I ate up everything he was telling me.
KyleAnd he really changed my life about, like I said, just setting goals about what I am capable about, pushing the boundaries, getting out of my comfort zone, everything, you name it.
KyleAnd it really altered the course of my life.
KyleAnd I feel.
KyleAnd I understand, not everybody has that person in their life, or I understand how lucky I was to run into this.
Matt GilhoolyYou worked your butt off to get there.
Matt GilhoolySo I agree.
Matt GilhoolyMaybe it was all predestined, maybe.
KyleBut I'm so thankful for him and so thankful for him at that, at that moment.
KyleAnd so that was a huge thing that happened to me, and it was.
KyleIt was amazing.
KyleAnd I was just, like.
KyleI just dove in all the way.
KyleAnd also around this time, too, I got into running.
KyleAnd we can talk about running if you want, but running and ultra running became a huge part of my life.
KyleI'm a huge runner, too, because I wasn't really a big exercise guy, but that was good to get, like, mental clarity and things like that.
KyleAnd so I was in New York City about five years, and I was like, you know what?
KyleI'm done with.
KyleNot.
KyleNot done with New York City.
KyleBut I was like, it was time to move on.
KyleAnd so I moved back to Ohio, and this is around 2013, 2014, and that's where I'm at today.
KyleAnd when I moved back, I started a similar business where I was working for with David, and that kind of just kind of blew up a little bit, but enough where I was able to support myself, and it was actually great.
KyleGave me a lot of free time, too.
KyleBut also I knew that I learned from David was, you know, again, who you hang out with is going to dictate your future.
KyleSo when I moved back to Ohio, I just started hanging out with all my running friends.
KyleLike, people who like to run, like, people like to push themselves.
KylePeople like to, you know, have a good life and a healthy life and a healthy lifestyle.
KyleSo I just met these great friends that I'm still best friends with today, and I was hung out with them every day, and I went on adventures out west.
KyleI rent, I bought, like, a conversion van, and I spent, like, six months out west, like, traveling around, meeting a bunch of other people.
KyleAnd when I came back, and this is, like, one of the biggest life shifts that happened to me.
KyleAnd when I came back from that trip, I was like, you know what?
KyleI want to write about my life.
KyleI want to tell my story to the people and what I thought my story was going to be like, oh, you know, I spent six years in high school.
KyleI was a bad kid.
KyleI was bad.
KyleI overcame this, overcame this.
KyleAnd then as I started writing, I was like, well, let's start at the beginning, kyle, what is your first memory, your life?
KyleI'm trying to think about my first memory, and it was when I was four years old, when I met triple B.
KyleThat was my first memory that I ever had.
KyleSo I started writing this, and I started just crying, and I just started writing about how I grew up.
KyleAnd I wasn't even planning on writing any of this stuff, but this was the first time that I realized how I grew up and how bad it was and how serious it was and why.
KyleThe reasons why I became who I was.
KyleAnd it was really, like, hard at that moment, but it was amazing because now I know what happened, and now I can do something about it.
KyleNow I can change the narrative.
KyleI can change what's going on now.
KyleI was like, oh, you happen to, you know, you can, you know, seek therapy.
KyleYou can talk to people.
KyleNow you know why you act these way this way.
KyleNow you know why you tried to find those kind of friends that weren't good for you, and, you know, you're trying to prove something, but it was actually life altering.
KyleThat was one of the biggest things that ever happened.
KyleI started writing this because I.
KyleYou.
KyleIf you would have told me ten minutes before I started writing, it was like, oh, were you, you know, abused as a kid?
KyleI was like, no, my stepdad was just a jerk.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleI would have said, like, that's what I would have said.
KyleBut after this, it was crazy.
KyleAnd it just opened up a lot of things for me that obviously I had to work through.
KyleBut it was just.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, you probably got messy for a little bit.
KyleOh, for sure.
KyleAnd I'm still, you know, working on it.
KyleI'm not like, you know.
KyleBut it was.
Matt GilhoolyYou're not.
KyleWell, you know, I'm sure that's what.
Matt GilhoolyThat's what's coming.
Matt GilhoolyYou're just perfect.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, no, I think it's.
Matt GilhoolyI think a lot.
Matt GilhoolyThat was what happened to me in therapy was a very similar experience because I was, like, I was going to therapy for, like, work just was, like, really crappy at the time.
Matt GilhoolyAnd then I started, like, emptying my story to her, and she's like, you realize that all the decisions that you've made since.
Matt GilhoolySince your mom died, you were making with that eight year old in mind, like, a fear of that eight year old.
Matt GilhoolyAnd it was like you said, the clouds parted and like, oh.
Matt GilhoolyAnd then I was able to connect all these dots of all the things and decisions and poor decisions and things that I made over the years, and it just comes.
Matt GilhoolyAnd then you're like, what do I do with all this?
Matt GilhoolySo I'm sure as you're writing this on paper.
Matt GilhoolyLike, really.
Matt GilhoolyLike, did this really, like, could this be true?
KyleRight?
Matt GilhoolyDid you have any of those moments where you're like, this feels like it's a movie, not Kyle's life?
KyleWell, I.
KyleSo, after I wrote it all down, I was like, well, am I the only way?
KyleIt feels this way?
KyleSo my brother, my sister experienced, like, grew up in the same household.
KyleSo what I did before I published it, I shared it with them, and they read the whole thing, and they were like.
KyleIt was eye opening them, too, because they never.
KyleBecause, remember my mom?
KyleSo this is your dad.
KyleThis is love, this.
KyleAnd so we were all playing along this whole time, and once I shared it to them, they're like, oh, my God.
KyleYes.
KyleThis is exactly what happened.
KyleLike, this is what, you know, our life was like, like, thank.
KyleNo, like, thank you for bringing this up, but, like, it helped them heal as well, too, and way to move forward.
KyleIt was.
KyleIt was really.
Matt GilhoolyDid they face any similar challenges?
Matt GilhoolyNot that you have to give away their secrets, but did they face any, like, not as bad as similar challenges.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolySo it was just.
Matt GilhoolyYou absorbed more of it, probably.
KyleI don't.
KyleI.
KyleMaybe my brother, like, absorbed the meanness of him more than I did.
KyleI think I took it worse, but I don't know.
Matt GilhoolyBecause you were younger, you didn't have any memories before that, right?
Matt GilhoolyAnd I just felt, like, first lasting memory.
KyleAnd so, yeah, when I told my brother story, he said he had no idea that that was your first memory, you know?
KyleAnd so.
KyleBut it was good to get validation that I'm not crazy, that I'm not making this.
KyleYou know, they were like, yeah, this is exactly what happened.
KyleRight?
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolyNo, I could imagine if you told other people, they'd be like, that's.
Matt GilhoolyYou're just, you know, you're embellishing that, or, you know, this, that or the other.
Matt GilhoolyYou had control all along.
Matt GilhoolyYou're like, really?
Matt GilhoolyI was four.
KyleRight.
Matt GilhoolyYou know?
Matt GilhoolyExactly.
Matt GilhoolyThat's deeply embedded.
Matt GilhoolyThose feelings and those things that happen around that time.
Matt GilhoolyYou're.
Matt GilhoolyI can.
Matt GilhoolyI mean, your story makes sense to me.
Matt GilhoolyI think there are people that it would not make sense.
Matt GilhoolyLike.
Matt GilhoolyAnd it wouldn't be validated, because they wouldn't be like.
Matt GilhoolyThey'd be like, no, you could just.
Matt GilhoolyYou can just change on your own.
Matt GilhoolyYou can just stop doing that, Kyle.
Matt GilhoolyAnd you're like, I really wanted to, but that was just the way my life was turning out.
Matt GilhoolyIt was just.
Matt GilhoolyI got myself into these situations.
Matt GilhoolyI didn't want to, but I did, and that's how it happened.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I, you know, like, so many triumphs, like I said before, but I can imagine what that, what that book, was it scary putting that book into the world?
Matt GilhoolyFor sure, because it's one thing to write it down and share it with your family.
Matt GilhoolyRight?
Matt GilhoolyRight, for sure.
KyleWell, because I, right when I published it, I shared it with my mom, and it did not go over well because she.
Matt GilhoolyDid she tell you you were wrong or.
KyleNo, she was like, well, you know what she hangs on to?
KyleIt's like, well, there are good parts of your childhood, right?
KyleLike, that's what she hangs on to.
KyleAnd that's what she, like, she goes, you know, I love you.
KyleAnd I do.
KyleI don't want, again, I don't want my listeners think I don't love my mom.
KyleI do love my mom, but, like, she grew up, like, at a different, different life, and it's just she wants to pretend, and I can't control the way, you know, she's going to heal.
KyleLike, I want her to be happy.
KyleOf course I do.
KyleBut I need to focus in order for me to help her out.
KyleI need to heal myself and focus on me.
KyleAnd if I didn't focus on me, then I would just be unhappy, too, to my detriment, and then she would still be unhappy, too.
KyleSo what?
KyleAnd so I just need to focus on me healing, and I can't change anybody else.
KyleI just focus on what I can control and move forward.
Matt GilhoolyWell, you experienced that as well.
Matt GilhoolyNo one could change you either until you were truly ready to grab that toolbox that David gave you.
Matt GilhoolyYou know, you heard what Mister Brady said, probably sat with you a little bit.
KyleIt.
Matt GilhoolyYou moved forward, but you weren't ready until you were handed the tools on how it would work for you.
Matt GilhoolyAnd the tools that were given you were.
Matt GilhoolyThat you were given probably don't work for everybody, right?
Matt GilhoolyLike, you have to be ready and in the right place, right time.
Matt GilhoolyThe universe was conspiring for you to, you know, come across David and learn these things from him and see someone successful that's a similar age.
Matt GilhoolyThey're like, oh, I could probably do that, too.
Matt GilhoolyLike, I could try these things.
Matt GilhoolyAnd you were ready to do it at that time, right?
Matt GilhoolyDo you see it as that?
Matt GilhoolyOr do you think if you met David when you were 18, you would have taken those on?
KyleNo, it was the right time.
KyleAbsolutely.
KyleI was ready.
KyleI was craving it.
KyleI forget what that saying is.
KyleThe teacher will show up when the student's ready or whatever.
KyleI don't know if I ever quoted that until today, but I guess that's what happened.
Matt GilhoolyWell, it's true.
Matt GilhoolyI think from my own experience, I feel like until I'm fully aware of what I need, I won't accept any pieces.
Matt GilhoolyYou know?
Matt GilhoolyLike, I have to be ready for therapy.
Matt GilhoolyI have to be ready for whatever, for it to work for me.
Matt GilhoolyIf someone had forced me at 22 into therapy because, like, you had to go or court ordered or something, I don't think, I don't think it would have worked because I would have been, I don't need this.
Matt GilhoolyWhat are you talking about?
Matt GilhoolyI'm fine.
Matt GilhoolyYou know, until I was like, oh, I'm not fine.
KyleRight?
Matt GilhoolyAnd then it was like, then it worked.
Matt GilhoolyRight?
KyleAnd to answer your question, it still is scary putting this story out there.
KyleBut I think it's pretty important that question.
KyleBut I think it's pretty important because it's selfishly, it's very healing for me.
KyleAnd also sharing my story, like I hear back from other people, it's like, oh, my gosh.
KyleLike, this is, you know, similar to kind of what my story is.
KyleAnd also, I always had this excuse in the back of my head, like, no, you guys don't understand.
KyleMy story's different.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleThere's no healing or coming back from that or shifting from that.
KyleLike, my story's different, but, like, yes, everyone's story is different, but I never thought I'd be able to be where I'm at today, like, you know, years ago.
KyleCause I always thought in my head, like, oh, no, my story's just too messed up and, like, too, like, my mom's still with this guy, so that's excuse you guys wouldn't understand.
KyleYou know what I mean?
KyleAnd so I don't know where I'm going with this, but what I'm saying is just, there's, I stopped with the excuses, I guess, and just, and I knew there's something inside me that I wanted to put this story out there, and I'm just very glad that I did.
KyleAnd it still is scary today.
KyleYou know, people say, oh, once you put your story out there, it's, everything's, you know, rainbows and shut down.
KyleIt's not, you know, I'm still healing.
KyleI'm still moving through this, and it's just, I'm trying to do my best.
Matt GilhoolyBut it's out of you.
KyleRight.
Matt GilhoolyI think that's a, that's a big healing piece.
Matt GilhoolyYou're not keeping it all inside anymore, which is really tiring and really, you know, like.
Matt GilhoolyAnd so just letting it out.
Matt GilhoolyI.
Matt GilhoolySometimes I talk to people, and I'm like, you know, sometimes I manifest these things in my head, and they seem so scary, and then I say them out loud to someone, I'm like, oh, that's not that bad.
Matt GilhoolyLike, it feels like more power.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I would assume that putting your story to paper and then publishing it for the world to read, if they choose to, can be that fairly similar.
Matt GilhoolyLike, it just gets it out of you, and now you can move forward with what you have created for yourself.
KyleYeah.
KyleAnd it's like, my hope is, like, it just heals some other people, or hopefully it helps other people, too.
KyleSo that was the main reason.
Matt GilhoolyAre you finding that.
Matt GilhoolyAre you finding that people that have read it are saying, you know, I dealt with something similar, or, you know, and then does that help.
Matt GilhoolyHelp you heal more to realize you aren't the only one that's gone through something so terrible, in your experience?
KyleYeah, it.
KyleWell, it reinforces that I did the right thing putting it out there, and I'm glad it's helping other people.
KyleBut now I know.
KyleI mean, I think I'm mature enough, and I know that other people have gone through these similar things, and.
KyleAnd I think it's good, too.
KyleLike, we're so scared to, like, talk about these things, but we got to shine a light on, like, all this kind of stuff.
KyleLike, even these bad things that we might be embarrassed or ashamed about.
KyleLike, we got to shine a light on it.
KyleIt won't be.
KyleAnd then it won't hurt so bad.
KyleIt won't have this power over us because this had a power over me for so, you know, for so long.
KyleAnd then I was just like, I'm sick of it.
KyleBut, like, you know, now it's out here.
KyleLike, now I'm just shining a light on.
KyleIt's like, you can't hurt me.
KyleLike, the way you have been hurting or keeping me back.
KyleThe way you haven't keepd me back.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolyNo.
Matt GilhoolyThere's power in normalizing some of these feelings that we have, because we are humans and we have all these feelings, and you probably have had all of them.
Matt GilhoolySadness, shame, anger, all the pieces of happiness, all the pieces that come with you.
Matt GilhoolyBut our generation, growing up, we were really, as guys were told, you can show anger, which you did.
Matt GilhoolyYou can show happiness if you want to.
Matt GilhoolyHappiness and anger.
Matt GilhoolyYou weren't allowed to show people that you were sad.
Matt GilhoolyYou weren't allowed to show people that things weren't.
Matt GilhoolyThat you didn't have things under control.
Matt GilhoolyRight.
Matt GilhoolyLike, I feel like we were just taught to be, like, angry or happy.
KyleRight, exactly.
Matt GilhoolyDon't do anything else.
Matt GilhoolyBut now that if we're like.
Matt GilhoolyLike, Kyle, I'm having a terrible day today, and that's okay, you know, like, I'll figure it out.
Matt GilhoolyI'm going to work through it, but I'm acknowledging it and putting it out loud and normalizing the fact that, like, we can feel however we need to feel.
Matt GilhoolyBecause were full humans, I guess.
KyleAnd I've gotten a lot of the tools.
KyleLike, what's helped me out, too, is, like, obviously writing, but now, like, you know, journaling.
KyleI don't know if you practice with journaling, but, like, journaling helps so much because you just see patterns in there.
KyleIt's good to get all your thoughts out at the beginning of the day.
KyleAnd so that's helped me out a lot, too.
Matt GilhoolyWhat makes you feel most like, human these days?
KyleMost human?
KyleWell, like, running makes me feel most human.
KyleThat's where I feel most alive.
KyleJust running out there.
KyleI don't.
KyleI don't listen to, like, music or anything like that.
KyleAnd usually I'm with my friends, but when I'm out by myself running in the middle of the woods or something like that, that's where I feel the most.
KyleBecause then I could see, you know, how far you're.
KyleWhat you're capable of doing.
KyleIt's just you and the outside world.
KyleSo that's what I love doing the most.
KyleIs.
Matt GilhoolyIs that like a thought cleansing?
KyleAbsolutely.
Matt GilhoolyExperience for you, too.
Matt GilhoolyDo you process thoughts or you kind of erase and just run and do your thing?
KyleI think it's more of a processing the thoughts.
KyleYou're just going through things and just, you know, going through life.
KyleAnd I.
Matt GilhoolyIt's like journaling without, like.
Matt GilhoolyBut exactly running.
KyleYep.
KyleExactly.
Matt GilhoolyIn a way.
KyleYeah.
KyleIt's just very.
Matt GilhoolyNo, I mean, that makes sense.
KyleMeditative.
Matt GilhoolyBut you were running your whole life, right?
KyleNo, I just.
KyleTechnically, I just started running.
Matt GilhoolyNo, but, like, metaphorically.
KyleThere you go.
KyleExactly.
KyleYes, I was.
Matt GilhoolyAnd, like.
Matt GilhoolyAnd now you're running with purpose.
Matt GilhoolyNow you're running because you choose to.
Matt GilhoolyTo see how far you can go.
Matt GilhoolyWhereas your whole life, you are running from triple b and or running, you know, like, to the next thing that maybe can make everyone love you, maybe can impress everyone, maybe can show everyone that they were wrong.
Matt GilhoolyAnd now you're like, now I'm gonna just run because it helps me.
KyleWell, I think so.
KyleJust to put in a little another metaphor, I think I was running away from myself, as opposed to.
KyleI think I just turned around and started running towards myself inside myself.
KyleAnd so I think that's a big thing that I did.
Matt GilhoolyThat little fire that I was like, you had some kind of fire.
Matt GilhoolyIt's like, now you're running to light it up even more.
Matt GilhoolyWell, that's cool.
KyleYeah, that's the title of my book is wandering Spark.
KyleAnd that's kind of like, why I wrote a, like, had that title, because I had that little spark inside me.
KyleIt could have gone either way, though.
KyleLike, could have.
KyleI could have blew myself up and.
KyleBut it was a spark inside me that, you know, flourished and blossomed.
Matt GilhoolyI.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolyJust for full disclosure to everyone listening, I choose not to know too much about the people that I speak to on the podcast.
Matt GilhoolySo I'm not, like a jerk.
Matt GilhoolyI just don't want to know too much because I really want these conversations to unfold in the way that they have.
Matt GilhoolySo I think it's interesting that I kind of saw that, and now that's your title.
KyleNo, I appreciate it, actually.
KyleThat reinforces that.
KyleIt was a good title for me.
Matt GilhoolyYeah.
Matt GilhoolyThe thing about your story is that although unique to you, it's probably unfortunately not unique to a lot of people in a similar.
Matt GilhoolyThe way that they felt growing up and the way that that affected them as they tried to go through each stage of life, if you will.
Matt GilhoolyBut you did the right thing, in my opinion, by putting it out there for the world to see so that other people can see.
Matt GilhoolyOh, he went through all this, but look what he's doing now.
Matt GilhoolyLook what he did for himself.
Matt GilhoolyLook how he turned this around.
Matt GilhoolyMaybe I can take one of those tools from his toolkit and try it in my own world to, like, make my life feel the way that feels most human, if we will.
Matt GilhoolyYou know, maybe it's not running, maybe it's not journaling, but maybe it's something that they read that you.
Matt GilhoolyThat you also do, and they choose to do that.
Matt GilhoolySo I think.
Matt GilhoolyI think you've made that terrible situation into something that can be really valuable for other people, not just yourself.
KyleRight.
KyleThank you.
Matt GilhoolySo, yeah, no, I think it's a similar vein to.
Matt GilhoolyI know you said, like, something about it was, like, somewhat selfish because it was healing in a way.
Matt GilhoolyFor me, this podcast is somewhat selfish as well, because every conversation I have has this little element of healing, that eight year old version of me that just felt like he was the only kid, and so it's just such a valuable experience and so relatable in a terrible way because humans shouldn't have to go through all these things that we go through.
Matt GilhoolyBut I guess that's part of the journey that each of us has on this earth.
KyleAnd I think us being like, being in service to others, you know, I'm sure in the book you're doing the podcast.
KyleI think that's really helpful too.
KyleLike, selfishly is fulfilling, but also being a service, just trying to help out of as much as you can.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I think the more that we do it, like, we discovered this decades into our journeys, right.
Matt GilhoolyBut I think the more that we can do it, maybe the younger generations can pick that up early on and then they don't have to wait till they're in their thirties and forties to kind of really manifest the change that they want to see in themselves, but also in the people around them.
Matt GilhoolySo I think by what we're doing, I see that as the hope that comes from it.
KyleThat's my hope as well.
KyleYeah.
Matt GilhoolySo if people want to read your book and stuff, how do we get that?
Matt GilhoolyHow do we figure that out?
KyleSo my book is on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.
KyleWandering Spark is the title of it.
KyleAnd then all my social medias is Kyle v.
KyleRobinson.
KyleOn all my social medias, on everything.
Matt GilhoolyAwesome.
KyleFind me.
KyleSay hi.
Matt GilhoolyWell, yeah, definitely connect with Kyle.
Matt GilhoolyBefore I let you go, I do want to ask you a question, and I'm trying to think of who, if this version of Kyle could go back to the version of Kyle that's sitting in that in school suspension.
Matt GilhoolyAnd just like, how do I.
Matt GilhoolyI gotta be good, and I have to make it through, and I.
Matt GilhoolyHow do I figure that?
Matt GilhoolyIs there anything that you would want to tell him?
KyleWell, so it's funny you say that.
KyleI actually have talked to him before, and I do, you know, through therapy.
KyleI don't know if you're familiar with ifs therapy, internal family systems, where I do go back and I do talk to him.
KyleI have told him that, you know, and just tell them that I am here for you.
KyleSomebody is here for you.
KyleI talk to that four year old more often, you know, telling them that I am here for you.
KyleYou are worthy and, like, you are loved, because I didn't.
KyleI didn't feel loved for a large, long portion of my life.
KyleAnd so I talk to them often, to be honest with you, and I let them know that I'm here for you.
KyleSo just knowing that, you know, they're still part of me.
KyleAnd they're just like.
KyleAnd just knowing that they have somebody.
KyleBecause growing up, I felt like I didn't have anybody.
KyleLike, I felt like no one was there for me.
KyleAnd so I didn't know that at the time.
KyleI didn't know what I was looking for.
KyleAnd so it's nice to tell them that I am there for them.
KyleAnd, you know, I'm an adult now, and you're gonna be okay, and then I love you.
Matt GilhoolyThat is probably what they.
Matt GilhoolyWhat that version of you needed to hear, because you were told what love was, but you weren't shown in a way that maybe you understand now as an adult and the self love and those pieces that come along with it.
Matt GilhoolyYeah, it's so interesting.
Matt GilhoolyI think more people that I talk to, to are doing what you do and have those conversations with those people.
Matt GilhoolySo I'm glad that you're doing that and you regularly do it.
Matt GilhoolyI think it's such a healthy practice that probably the 18 year old version of you would not think was anything real.
Matt GilhoolyCorrect.
Matt GilhoolyI think we would be like, what?
Matt GilhoolyWhat are you talking about?
Matt GilhoolyWhy would you do that?
Matt GilhoolyBut it's just such a valuable experience.
Matt GilhoolySo thank you for sharing your story in this way, in the way that you do.
Matt GilhoolyAnd I look forward to reading your book and reading in between all the pieces that you probably had to skip over for this podcast.
Matt GilhoolyIt's really an important thing you're doing.
Matt GilhoolySo thank you for that.
KyleNo, man, I appreciate you let me share my story.
KyleAnd thank you so much.
KyleYou're doing a great, great service here on your podcast.
KyleSo thank you.
Matt GilhoolyWell, I appreciate that.
Matt GilhoolyI will accept that.
Matt GilhoolyIf you heard Kyle's story today and you know someone in your life that might benefit from hearing his story, we would love it if you would share this episode with them.
Matt GilhoolyThat would be super valuable if it helped you reach out to Kyle.
Matt GilhoolyTell him.
Matt GilhoolyTell him so.
Matt GilhoolyTell him that you related to something that he said.
Matt GilhoolyI think he will also enjoy that.
Matt GilhoolyAnd with that, I'm going to say goodbye, and I will be back next week with a brand new episode of the Life Shift podcast.
Matt GilhoolyThanks again, Kyle.
KyleThank you.
KyleGoodbye, everybody.
Matt GilhoolyFor more information, please visit www.thelifeshiftpodcast.com.