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Mike Van Pelt with True Man Life Coaching, Melissa Stephens with Serenity on Fire and Stone Payton with Business RadioX®

February 13, 2023 by angishields

Charitable-GA-021023-feature
Charitable Georgia
Mike Van Pelt with True Man Life Coaching, Melissa Stephens with Serenity on Fire and Stone Payton with Business RadioX®
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Melissa-Stephens-bwMelissa Stephens is the Chief Energy Officer of Serenity On Fire. She is a Professional Certified Business and Peak Performance Coach, and Consultant for Entrepreneurs who are ready to elevate and expand, banish burnout, shift from burning everything down to creatively building from their biggest vision and desire, all while repairing the cracks in their foundation and refusing to settle with where they are.

After years of working long hours in the corporate world at the expense of her health and well-being, sacrificing her time and energy, putting her family last while building someone else’s dreams who only saw her through the lens of being expendable if productivity didn’t meet unrealistic expectations, she suffered burnout. She was frustrated and exhausted that bosses were in control of her time, her income, and her freedom with no regard for her as a person, only what she could add to their bottom line.

Over the years in the workforce, she noticed some recurring themes that seemed to exist no matter where or who a person worked for. Toxic culture cultivated by “bosses” because the organization lacked leadership, unrealistic performance demands at the cost of one’s self-preservation, and a lack of respect for boundaries separating a person’s workspace and their personal life. She couldn’t imagine being stuck in this cycle forever and knew there had to be a better way for people and organizations to coexist and experience personal and professional success.

Out of this desire to create change in organizational operation and leadership development that can greatly impact everyone from the C Suite to the lowest rank, Serenity on Fire was born. It blends her passion for helping entrepreneurs build the business they desire that focuses on people over profit, and that will support the life they dream of without following others rules and breaking their own.

Helping entrepreneurs take a creative approach in their business where they shift patterns using strategies that focus on mindset, culture, communication, emotions, energetics, and spiritual changes. They elevate and expand their business using their core being as the driver to reach the success they desire for themselves and for those within their organization. The by-product is the positive ripple effect that transcends professional and personal spaces impacting the lives of many.

Her approach is a blend of whole life performance coaching and business consulting where the focus is on the intersection of business and life. It is unique, creative, and impactful across all areas of one’s world. The result is Serenity – an internal feeling of peace and joy while continually activating your core Fire that keeps a person building their vision and living their best life.

She created this experience because it is what she wished for early in her career of working for others – to be part of a company that was focused on leadership, the culture, the people, staying true to their core values, and having a positive impact on those around them.

Now she helps entrepreneurs bridge the gap for themselves and their business using practical strategies, systems and processes, combined with the magic of their being to transform, elevate, and expand their business and life.

Connect with Melissa on LinkedIn.

Mike-Van-Pelt-bwMike Van Pelt is an entrepreneur, author, speaker, and men’s life coach leader.  He is the founder of True Man Life Coaching and host of the popular men’s podcast, True Man Podcast.

Mike’s experience and passion for coaching, guiding, and mentoring men has come from his involvement in leading Christian men’s groups along with his own journey to take his life back and achieve success. In addition, Mike has served in leadership roles for most of his career, bringing over two decades of engagement and expertise in account management, consulting, and leadership development.

Mike has authored numerous articles and is featured in the best-selling book, The Art of Connection: 365 Days of Transformation Quotes by Entrepreneurs, Business Owners, and Influencers.  In addition, Mike is completed his first book entitled, True Man True Ways, A Roadmap of Discovery to the Masculine Heart.

Mike holds a BA in Business Leadership and a Master of Public Administration from The University of Arizona Global Campus.

In addition to being an author and coach, Mike is happily married to his wife and best friend of 26 years and has two talented children.  When he’s not coaching, he’s probably enjoying time at one of his many family activities or getting in a quick round of golf with friends.

Connect with Mike on LinkedIn.

Stone-Payton-bwFor over 30 years, Stone Payton has been helping organizations and the people who lead them drive their business strategies more effectively.

Mr. Payton literally wrote the book on SPEED ® : Never Fry Bacon In The Nude: And Other Lessons From The Quick & The Dead, and has dedicated his career to helping others Produce Better Results In Less Time.

Connect with Stone on LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.

Websites:

  • BusinessRadioX.com
  • CherokeeBusinessRadio.com
  • MainStreetWarriors.org

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Broadcasting live from the business radio studios in Atlanta. It’s time for Charitable Georgia, brought to you by B’s Charitable Pursuits and Resources. We put the fun in fundraising. For more information, go to B’s Charitable Pursuits dot com. That’s B. S charitable pursuits dot com. Now here’s your host, Brian Pruitt.

Brian Pruett: [00:00:45] Good, fabulous Friday morning. It’s another fabulous Friday with three more fabulous guests this morning. We have two well, three incredible business coaches, I would say, and they all do things differently. So we’re going to start this morning with Ms.. Melissa Stephens. Melissa, thank you for being here this morning.

Melissa Stephens: [00:01:04] Thank you, Brian.

Brian Pruett: [00:01:05] So Melissa’s business is Serenity on Fire, and she does light you up when you’re a business does workshop, she helps you, but you have a passion for people in general. I think we all do. But you have a passion in people in general, helping them, wanting them to succeed. And if you would just share a little bit about your story and how you got into this, why are you doing what you’re doing?

Melissa Stephens: [00:01:28] Absolutely. So I actually come from a family who had small business, and I watch growing up the struggle, the feast or famine struggle that my parents went through as they tried to navigate running a small business, having a house, having a family, raising kids, and just really being able to navigate all of those things. And it was a struggle. And I watched how relationships were burned down sometimes in the pursuit of trying to build the business up. And I watched the sacrifice. I watched how often the late nights happened. The. Times that were missed from school events and the absence of them being there because they were so busy trying to build the business and they were running around like they were pants were on fire and they would be spending their wheels and not making a lot of headway. And then I transitioned as an adult working in corporations. I’ve worked for small businesses, I’ve watched I love small businesses, I love entrepreneurs. They bring so much to our economy. But it’s hard being an entrepreneur and anyone that says it’s just the limelight is not telling the truth because it is hard. It’s hard to be that entrepreneur. Get started, keep it moving, have a team, have a family, have a life. And it’s tough sometimes to how to how to create that balance, that harmony between all of the spaces that you want to inhabit. And I’ve watched people burn it all down in the pursuit of building it up.

Melissa Stephens: [00:02:59] I’ve watched marriages fall apart, I’ve watched kids relationships be damaged beyond repair and the pursuit of having something in the pursuit of entrepreneurship. And so for me, it’s being able to step in and help people see that there’s actually a better way, a different way that you can have both the business that you desire and let it support the life that you’re actually wanting to build without burning it all down and destroying all of the relationships that you’re actually having this business to support and allowing people to find their way. So I’m a rule breaker. I’m just going to be honest. I’m a rule breaker and I, I have my own rules that I won’t break, but I’m a rule breaker. And I don’t believe there’s only one way to do business. And I don’t believe there’s only one way to live life. And I don’t believe there’s only one way to get where you’re going. But I believe that there is the need for that journey to be the experience. And if all you’re doing is burning the midnight oil and being exhausted and not enjoying the entire time you’re doing it, what the heck are you doing it for when there are so many other ways that you can achieve what you want without the sacrifice of yourself, your health, your being, your family, your kids, whatever it is for you in your life. There’s another way to build it all up without burning it all down. So I always tell people all the time, if you live life like your hands are on fire.

Melissa Stephens: [00:04:23] Heck yeah, because you are out there living, enjoying and having the time of life. That’s what life is for. We’re here to live it. We only get one, so we might as well make the most of it. But if you’re running around in your businesses, running around like your pants are on fire, well now you’ve got it backwards. Because if your business is on fire that way, if your pants are on fire all the time, you’re so busy putting fires out that you’re not paying attention to what’s really going on and you’re losing sight of the people, you’re losing sight of your mission, your passion, and you’re losing sight of the people that are supporting you because they’re hanging out in the wing waiting for you to be able to be present, waiting for you to show up, waiting for you to have time for them. And they’re loving you and supporting you, but they also need from you. And you can’t seem to find enough energy to give them the time and presence that they desire and focus on the business and the people that help you build business. So many times, small businesses, entrepreneurs lose sight of the people that are in front of them and that help them because they are so in the trenches of being in the business and on the business that they lose sight of some of the things that are the most important to them.

Melissa Stephens: [00:05:28] And so I come in and help them reignite. We reignite that, so we reignite that fire. I always tell people I bring the flame when yours isn’t lit, we’re going to find what’s really inspiring you. We’re going to get back to your core and we’re going to build from that so that the people in front of you and the people supporting you know that you appreciate them and the way you’re doing business is supporting that. The way you’re doing business is actually supporting the life you want to build. And you’re not just running around with your pants on fire, putting out everything and never building, never growing, never enjoying the fruits of your labor because what the heck, We’re not meant to work, work, work and never enjoy. And the worst thing most people do is never take vacation. And if they take vacation, they work through the vacation. What the heck, I want to travel. And when I go someplace, I want to be fully immersed in that space. I can’t do that if my business runs like it’s on fire. I can’t do that if I don’t build the entrepreneurship the way I desire it so that I can have this life that I really want. And I can’t do that if my family is on vacation and I’m so busy working that I miss all of it. I don’t want to look up and see when my kids are grown.

Melissa Stephens: [00:06:33] What are the heck did all the time go? They were in kindergarten. What do you mean? They’re walking across the graduation stage from high school. What happened to all the years in between? And they come to me and say, You missed it because you were too busy working. Or the spouse that says you missed all the times that I wanted to talk to you and spend with you and love you and have a life with you. You missed all that because you were so busy building this thing that you can’t step away from. And we’re all gone now. So if you build that entrepreneurship and you build that business and there’s no one left around you, what did you build? Like there’s a way to have wealth and well-being without burning it all down. And that’s what I’m here to help entrepreneurs do, because it’s so important to me that families are preserved, that relationships are preserved, that we recognize the importance and the people that are around us, that business can come and go. You can make money. Money is not the root of all things joyful. But there is a better way. And when you can tap into that, you get to live like your pants are on fire, but your business can run while you’re on vacation. And there is no greater feeling for a small business person than to know that they can make money and create wealth and enjoy the life that they desire.

Brian Pruett: [00:07:49] So you talk about being living like pants on fire and that kind of thing. Is that where the name comes in for your business?

Melissa Stephens: [00:07:55] So Serenity on Fire is really about having this peace and harmony in your heart. Joy comes from within our soul. Happiness is external, but joy is internal. And when you have that peace, when you have that serenity, then everything you want, that core and your fire, that belly core, that burning fire delivery, you light up the world with that. And as long as you have that joy and peace internally, you have taken care of you, that everything you want to create is magnetic and it magnetize. And it lights up so easily and effortlessly because you’re limited from that core being of who you are, that internal joy that you determine. So Serenity and fire is really about being able to do all those things, but without all the stress, without all of the exhaustion, without all of the mind melt, without all of the burning it down and feeling lost and crazed and overwhelmed and overworked.

Brian Pruett: [00:08:50] So you talk about one of the things that what you say is that you keep the fire lit from the business to the bedroom.

Melissa Stephens: [00:08:57] So we do so we talk about the fact that it’s from the boardroom to the bedroom. 80% of people’s issues. Entrepreneurs have problems that start in the bedroom and it impacts the boardroom. Now, whatever you do in your bedroom, hallelujah, that’s all on you. But you know what else happens in the bedroom? You sleep, you rest. It’s your sanctuary. It’s where your well-being starts and how you put your head down at night determines how you get up and start your next day. The tomorrow you want starts with who you are today, so your wellbeing starts in the evening time in that bedroom. And if you’re so exhausted, so tired, full of stress, missing, all of it not having intimacy, not having communication, not having conversation and everything’s riddled with conflict. When you lay your head down, your mind doesn’t shut off because you don’t have any internal peace. And if your mind doesn’t shut off and you’re not getting rest, then you’re well beings impacted. When you’re well being impacted, then you can’t create the wealth you desire because there’s too many distractions, there’s too much you’re dealing with. So it starts in the bedroom, it takes to the boardroom. But the same thing. You can’t see your way from the boardroom to the bedroom, because if you’ve ever tried to talk to your children or your spouse the same way you might talk to your team, you can’t see them. It does not work. They will shut you down in a heartbeat because that’s not who they are and that’s not what they need from you. So transitioning from the boardroom to the bedroom is a difficult thing for a lot of entrepreneurs because they don’t turn it off. But we have to learn how to preserve those relationships, to preserve the life that you want to have. You have to learn how to shift from the boardroom to the bedroom. So we say we do everything from the boardroom to the bedroom because that’s where wealth and well-being really begin.

Brian Pruett: [00:10:33] So you don’t call yourself a business coach. It’s a business. I always get the word messed up. What do you actually say?

Melissa Stephens: [00:10:38] So it’s a business. Alchemist Right? We do practical magic with practical strategies. So we bring your essence with know how and strategies that work for you. We work from your strengths. And so there’s a little bit of magic in there because each person is unique and they each have their own essence, their own spirit, their own way of being. We’re going to capitalize on that with the strengths that serve you, and then we’re going to build from there because that’s what’s sustainable, that’s what’s repeatable, and that’s why we bring the magic with the strategy, because that’s where it gets to be a whole lot of fun. And then you get to live like your pants are on fire because you’re having the best time of your life and your business is growing and making you what you desire.

Brian Pruett: [00:11:15] So she, a few months ago did a little workshop for one of the networking groups and didn’t charge for it for come in to listen to her. And it’s just incredible. I was there and I took three things away from it, which I’ll share in a second. But what was really impactful is the fact that you not only talk to us in the workshop, but you were willing to talk to everybody individually as well, and the people who aren’t currently your clients so you can talk to them and give them advice. And you know, I was struggling and shared that I had felt like a failure because I had closed three businesses in the last five years and started another one. And you politely reminded me that it’s not about failing. It’s you fail forward, you learn, you know, and also the fact that maybe God had bigger things in store for me. The other thing is that just as you talked about, about immersing yourself in business and people who are workaholics don’t put their family first. And so reminding me the fact that, you know, it’s great to be home in the evenings because it’s not about presence. It’s about being present.

Melissa Stephens: [00:12:22] Yes.

Brian Pruett: [00:12:22] You know, and then the other thing that I want you to touch on and talk about is it’s okay to say no.

Melissa Stephens: [00:12:27] Oh, my favorite thing. It is okay to say no. Here’s the thing. I do what I do because this is what’s been laid on my heart. The Holy Spirit fills me and this is what’s been laid on my heart. So I serve from that servant leadership space. And so I’ll talk to anybody and give anybody strategies, tips, advice, whatever it is. And the best thing I love to talk about is how to say no, because, one, we’re not taught how to do it. When you’re little, you’re not allowed to say no to your parents, and as adult, you forget how to say no because you want to do doo doo for so many people, but you can’t fill everyone’s cup when yours is empty. So learning how to say no to the things that will not support the growth and the direction that you want to have is the most impactful thing you can do. Because every time you say no to things that don’t serve you, that are not going to move you in the direction that you desire, you’re going to say yes to every other opportunity that shows up.

Melissa Stephens: [00:13:16] You can’t do that if you are so overwhelmed with taking care of everybody else because you won’t say no. Instead of saying no to the things that aren’t going to be in your goal view and start saying yes to your family, to your relationships, to yourself, to the business you desire, to the life you want to build. When you start saying yes to the things that light you up, starting to say no gets a whole lot easier because you start setting boundaries that you will actually hold to. Well, we’re human and the hardest thing we have is creating those boundaries. It’s not too difficult holding those boundaries. Honestly. We’re not really great at that as humans because we move that goal line. We’re so easy to move the boundary that we allow people to keep pushing it, pushing it, and people will push. If you move it, people will push because they’re human. So you have to learn how to say no. But it’s actually something you most people have to be taught in practice.

Brian Pruett: [00:14:06] Yeah, because I would think, you know, as I used to think all the time, well, it’s selfish to say no, because first of all, you want to help as many people as possible, but you also want to help yourself. And saying no doesn’t do that to me at first. But when you present it the way you presented it, you see why it’s okay to say no.

Melissa Stephens: [00:14:22] The most selfish thing you can do is say yes to everything to the point of depletion, because then you’re serving no one and you’re not available for anyone and not available for yourself. And if you ever thought about having a bad day, if it starts because there’s something you really wanted to do or needed to do or desire to do, and you couldn’t get to it because of everything else in the way puts you in a bad mood and it puts you in a bad mood because you’re not living in your purpose. It’s not living according to the dreams that you have and you start resenting all the people you’ve said yes to while it was with the best intention, you start resenting them because they’re sucking up too much of your time. They don’t mean to, but you’re giving it, so they keep taking it. You have to be able to say no, that’s the most selfish thing you can do for you. Your business, your family, your life is say no to things that are not in that vision line for you, that don’t serve you, that don’t light you up, that aren’t going to put you in the space of moving forward and growth where that’s what you desire.

Brian Pruett: [00:15:18] So another thing I like to ask, and obviously you shared why you do what you do, but you’re also very involved in the community. Now of the five of us that are sitting in this room, you’re the furthest away because you live in Temple, but you’re very involved in the community. You do a lot of things. So other than the reason why you share what you do for business, why is it important for you to be involved in the community?

Melissa Stephens: [00:15:41] I mean, we’ve always said that it takes a village to raise children. It takes a community for people to thrive. Social connection is important and being able to give back into your community, to build the community the way you want it to live, the way you want to see it. That can only be done if you get on the ground and put your hands involved and you are willing to put yourself out there. So I love supporting our communities because small business ownership supports our economy, that supports our communities. They need support too. And it’s full circle. Right? And I love being involved because I love people. If you meet me, we can have a conversation all day. I don’t meet a stranger. It’s so important to give back to community. It’s so important to be a part of the community. You can’t make change unless you’re willing to be in the change. You can’t be a part of the solution if you’re going to sit back and be a part of the problem. So we have to get in the community. We have to give back. I mean, how else how else do I get to meet all these wonderful people that I meet if I don’t get into the community? Brian, I’ve met you.

Melissa Stephens: [00:16:38] I met Mike. I met so many wonderful people because I get in the community and I’m willing to serve. And it’s not about money. It’s about giving from the heart. Because when you do that, you meet people as people. And when you meet people as people, you get to know their soul. You get to know what drives them, what is purposeful for them. And then you have an opportunity to share. And it’s not about giving advice or giving tips or strategies. It’s about giving time, it’s about the presents. It’s about allowing people to see you and you see them and just building a community that is safe for our children, safe for our adults. It’s a clean and safe place for us to enjoy. I come from Florida. I lived my life outside, running the streets, running around, having a good old time. You can’t do that today. Communities aren’t quite the same anymore and we need to get back to that.

Brian Pruett: [00:17:27] So on the business side, are there particular size businesses? That are better for you to work with than others?

Melissa Stephens: [00:17:34] No, because I love all people. So that might be where I have a hard time saying no. You know, I work with Solopreneur Hours as they want to grow and I work with small and medium sized businesses. You know, somebody that’s got zero employees and wants to grow to, you know, 25, 50 or 150 employees, because the important part is that they see them as people and they see them as the people that are helping them grow. And they want to give back and they want to make sure they’re serving in the space that allows that growth to continue. And they’re not losing sight of that fact that they’re people and they want to continue serving in that way and they want to continue making sure the decisions they make, the business that are building and supporting those families and community, supporting those individuals, they’re not losing sight, Don’t work with businesses that are profit over people because I’m a people over profit person. And I’ll be the first to tell you no all day long because your people, the people you’re building for and the people that serve you and doing that, that support your vision matter. We can’t get anywhere without those people around us, and I’m going to support those people.

Brian Pruett: [00:18:36] And it’s true, because if you don’t have happy employees, your customers aren’t going to be happy. And so your vision is going down the drain.

Melissa Stephens: [00:18:43] Absolutely. Absolutely. Have you ever had a customer service representative on the phone who just sounded like they hated their job and so the service you got was so crappy and instead of being mad at them, you feel bad for them Because I just want to ask them, like, do you have a toxic culture, a toxic boss? Like, what makes you so miserable doing your job? You get to talk to people all day. Why is it so miserable? And you just want to go in there and help people understand there’s a better way, a different way of treating each other and building business off of kindness is so much easier and so much effortless because when people feel appreciated and valued, they give more than 100%. But when they don’t feel that way, they barely show up. And then I talked to them on the customer service side and I’m like, Oh, we need to figure out what’s going on because you’re not living, you’re not happy. There’s something else that’s at play here. It’s not just that individual. There’s a culture at play and that’s tough and that’s tough for people. We have to keep people as the forefront of what we’re doing.

Brian Pruett: [00:19:43] Can you talk a little bit about the workshops? I mean, there’s different kind of workshops that you do, correct?

Melissa Stephens: [00:19:47] Yeah. So I offer a couple of different kinds of workshops, and I do them throughout the year. And, you know, some of what we do is we do an intensive right. It’s a three day. We go hard, we go fast, we go deep, we get we really get in there, figure out where your blind spots are and figure out where you’re struggling. Where are the energy leaks are? We go in and start repairing Those Band-Aids don’t work. We’re going to go to the root. We’re going to figure out what it is and we’re going to tweak it. We’re going to fix it. We’re going to find what works. We’re going to make that repeatable for you. We’re going to do that over and over again so that you’re building on a sustainable platform. So we go in and we do these deep dives, these intensive other times, you know, we’ll do one day of just dive and deep. Everything we do is coming back to who you are and what you truly desire. The problem is, is we grow or we have these great ideas for business. As we lose sight of our vision, we lose sight of our mission in the chase of the dollar and the chase of the glory and the chase of whatever we lose sight. And when we can come back to that value, come back to that reason, that mission, the the vision that we have, we serve from that place.

Melissa Stephens: [00:20:49] Everything is so much easier. So we dive in and we get through that. So these workshops are really to help individuals figure out some of those things on their own and figure out where they might need help or where they might need to slow down and take another look. And it’s so amazing to watch. Just to watch people. When the light bulbs come on and they realize, Oh, it’s just a simple tweak. Oh, I’ve just been missing this. Oh, I don’t have to talk to people like Pooh on the shoe. Oh, I could treat them like decent human beings, and they do more for me. Oh, I don’t have to be this ogre. I don’t have to be this toxic boss to get things done. Oh, I get to live life joyfully, and I can be a happy, joyful employer, CEO and people like that. People want to work for me. That’s better. Oh, I’m making more money this way and my family’s happy in my life is happy. Heck yeah, let’s do it that way. So sometimes we just go in there and help people see where they misaligned, where they’ve stepped away. We bring them back to that core.

Brian Pruett: [00:21:49] If somebody is out there listening, want to get hold of you for either your your your coaching or your workshops, what’s the best way for somebody to get a hold of you?

Melissa Stephens: [00:21:56] So if you go to my website Serenity on Viacom, you can contact me through there. And if you see me in the community, you can always just say hello. I’m everywhere. I’m on social media. So there’s a number of different ways that you can connect with me. I love people just to reach out and say hello, ask questions. I’m always going to have that conversation. I’m always going to make time for that because it is so important for me. And besides, I don’t know if you all can tell. I’ll love to talk and I love people. So, you know, you can always hit me up and we can always have a conversation.

Brian Pruett: [00:22:24] You notice she didn’t say no when I asked her to come to the show because she does love to talk. So, you know, most I appreciate you coming this morning and sharing. Do you mind sticking around? Listen to these next two stories.

Melissa Stephens: [00:22:33] Absolutely. I can’t wait to hear them.

Brian Pruett: [00:22:34] All right. Now we’re moving over to a gentleman that I met, like about three years ago, four years ago. Again, networking and again. Don’t I say this all the time. Another powerful testimony of networking. Every story that you’re listening to it, this is the first time listening. This show is about positive things going on in the community, whether it’s about stories of adoption that we had a couple of weeks ago, or your passion or being vulnerable to share your testimony and let people learn from that and heal from that or whatever. So that’s just a very positive thing going on with networking. So Mr. Mike Van Pelt from the True Man podcast, you’re no stranger to the studio. You’ve been on Stones show, you have your own podcast, but I’d like for you to share because you have a passion for helping men in general, sharing their stories, getting them to, to, to get their stories out there, redo their stories. So share a little bit about, first of all, your story, why you’re doing what you’re doing, and then we’ll get into your podcast.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:23:32] I’m just glad I get to talk now. You know, that’s as long as I’ve ever said in front of a microphone without saying a word. I was really getting a little nervous. But Melissa is so incredible. I actually wanted to jump in and start asking her questions because I’m so used to doing that. It’s hard for me to just sit and be quiet. Yeah, So? So I started Drew man, Life coaching and the the podcast actually followed, but it really came from the whole idea of True man is Jesus Christ, walk on Earth as, as a true man. And you know that he serves as the model. And so that, that branding actually started in my men’s small group because we needed somebody to that had the model. And he’s the guy. He’s the guy. So that’s where the whole brand name came from and be by being a part of that men’s small group, what I recognize by going to retreats and just being around a lot of men was that I had started out doing some business consulting, but I just saw that there was a need in the marketplace for another man to come in and walk alongside another man and just help them weather it. Most of the time, these challenges start in business. Maybe Melissa can verify this come from the personal side of things, like things are not right inside of me and there’s a lot of reasons for that, you know, could stem from something that happened all the way back in childhood.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:25:02] And we just kind of as men, we typically carry this stuff along. We’re really bad about that. We bury it. We hope we don’t have to deal with it and it catches up to us later in life when you you know, part of business is having relationships, Part of marriage is that’s relationships. And so this baggage that we carry around sometimes shows up in relationships and can can end in a bad way if you don’t get your your self right. And so part of my coaching is to help guys gain that clarity and win their heart back, as I like to say, because the heart is the center of everything in the human body that is there more blood vessels and things that run to the heart than there are actually to the brain. So it’s a mini brain, so to speak, and you’ve got to get your heart right. If your heart’s hurting, you’re going to have a hard time being present for the people around you. And so I help men, you know, work through the things that they may be going through in their life when I do that one on one and. You know, I’m doing a lot more group stuff in that area, so.

Brian Pruett: [00:26:10] So that led to you having your own podcast now, too.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:26:14] So we did start the podcast and the whole idea around the podcast. It was started with Paul Bailey and I because we let our men small group and it was really the joke of the day, right? We’d get done with our small group and we’d be like, Hey, that would have made a great podcast. And it was a joke for the longest time. And until somebody else came to me and said, Have you ever thought about doing this? And I’m like, Hmm. Usually if somebody asked me if I get that question again, there’s something going on there, right? So I looked into it and, you know, Paul and I started doing the podcast together and he couldn’t keep up because that’s not his daily thing. He’s a financial advisor and I’ve just kept it going. I now do an interview style show. Sometimes I do solos, but, you know, I don’t like to hear myself speak and but it’s a lot more fun to do interviews because you have people on and the power of their stories is so real. You know, for example, yesterday I interviewed a gal, this will be a podcast that will come out in in March. And we were we were actually did a program on suicide. And she told me a story about her two teenage sons. She lost both of them in a 30 day span to suicide and which is and so the story is not only about the suicide, but it’s how she’s getting on in life. And the reason that that story is so powerful is we all go through stuff. We all go through stuff, and but we package it as if it’s unique to us, but it’s not unique to us.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:27:51] There’s somebody else has gone through that and it’s important that you be in community and put people around you that care about you in those situations. So the whole idea of the podcast is to help men be better men better, better dads and better husbands. And so topically we talk about a wide range of things that men need to know in order to be better in those areas. And it’s a great way, in all honesty, for people to hear me and begin to know like and trust me, I think podcasting is a great way to conduct business these days because it’s an opportunity to get your message and your branding out there. And it’s not just a podcast for me. My pants were on fire yesterday, Melissa, as we tried to reestablish my YouTube account, which went sideways for for a moment. But that entrepreneurial stuff, it’ll drive you crazy. But so so we put the video out on, on, on the YouTube channel as well because some people just like the YouTube. So it’s a lot of fun. We’re 93 shows in and first part of April I’ll be celebrating 100 shows which I reflect back on now. And it just I can’t even I just can’t even believe that there are that many in the books. And it’s really been the thrill of my life to to do it and meet these people and have them on the show. And and I hope it’s making a difference.

Brian Pruett: [00:29:25] Well, I saw something on Facebook yesterday that you interviewed somebody talking, overcoming obstacles. And that sound, you know, again, that’s the way about this show, too, is both things are talking about just inspirational stuff and people learning because you never know who’s listening or watching.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:29:41] You Absolutely don’t. Honestly, my favorite thing to get fact, some guy that I met the other day, he didn’t know I did a podcast. He listened to this week’s podcast, which is Dorsey Ross. He has he was born with a disease called Alpert’s Syndrome, I believe is what it’s called. And so he’s he’s his face is physically deformed. He’s gone through a number of different surgeries. His speech is a little slurred. But what an incredible story, because, I mean, we all hear these stories about bullying. So you can imagine if you’ve got some kind of deformity, what you go through as a kid. But his parents were so positive, they were so encouraging. And if you listen to this guy, listen to the podcast, you’ll quickly learn that he got the guy. Doesn’t even sound like he’s ever had a bad day in his life. Right? His attitude is so positive. And, you know, he’s a professional speaker now and travels around. That’s part of his ministry. And it’s it just goes to show you that you can overcome anything with a positive attitude and that, you know, the naysayers, the people that try to get you down, you know, they don’t matter. They don’t matter. And so it was a great podcast to. With with Dorsey. And here his story about overcoming essentially the odds. The guy when they told him he couldn’t go to college, told them he wasn’t smart enough to go to college. Guy went to college. Now, it took him a while, but that’s okay. It takes a lot of us a while. It took me a while, so, you know. But they said he would never get a college degree and he went on to get his college degree. So this guy is an overcomer. And I think that that’s an important a really, really important message that, you know, you can’t you can’t put up walls, man. You got to run through them.

Brian Pruett: [00:31:36] When you’re working with the man as their one particular area that you kind of see the most. I don’t know area that’s kind of like the struggle. Can you share that? Is there something that’s more prevalent than others that you see?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:31:49] Well, guys, talk about anger a lot and we all struggle with that to one degree or another. But it’s purpose. You know, I think that, you know, unless you’re doing something that you’re 100%. You know, dialed in on and you love and you got everything. And that’s that’s a small percentage of people. Quite honestly, I think a lot of us walk around. That’s what happened to me. You know, I went through a very long period of time where I was like, man, professionally, what I’m doing just flat out sucks. I hate it. I don’t enjoy it. It doesn’t bring me joy and I don’t. But I don’t know what I want to do. And I went through a number of different coaches trying to find the right person that could help me. And I don’t think it was any one person that helped me. I think it was just that learning that went with it as as I went through that process. But purpose is something that a lot of people don’t have peace or clarity around. You know, it just kind of float through life, hoping we can get through the next day and that can be a really miserable way to live.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:32:54] And it leads to a lot of other things that will make you unhappy. So I think people just try and my audience typically is going to be a middle aged guy. And at that point, you know, they’ve lived long enough to go, Maybe you’ve had a little regret here or there, but I don’t want to go down that way. What do I want my legacy to be? And I think that we all reach a point where we get, you know, what is my legacy? How do I want, you know, and I encourage people to sit down, write your eulogy. And if you don’t like your eulogy, man, you better change your game. And so, you know, but a lot of that is around finding purpose and just pausing to go, man, what’s next? What’s next? What do I really want once with my heart telling me? Because too much of the time we think with our head and not our heart.

Brian Pruett: [00:33:50] Melissa, you talked about sitting there and talking and talking for hours. When Mike and I get together, it’s wind up being three or four hour conversations and you and I talked to all the time about we don’t believe in things of coincidence.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:34:00] No.

Brian Pruett: [00:34:01] You are working on a book, but you just coauthored a book and then you shared with me a couple or about a week ago about somebody just that day reaching out to another one to share that story.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:34:11] This is getting crazy. I’ll tell you what, the things I kind of laugh about it, quite honestly, because I know that my high school composition teacher, I don’t know where she is, but if she’s not alive, she’s definitely spinning in her grave going, There’s no way that cat ever wrote a book. No chance. And by the way, I still remember that paper that you chopped to pieces. Oh, you’re forgiven. Yeah. So I did a collaboration book that I had a couple of pages in that came out the first week in January, and that was kind of a cool thing to be a part of. There were about 300 some authors in there. So for every day of the year, there’s an entrepreneur that wrote essentially a little story and had a quote just to provide motivation to other entrepreneurs. That book was called The Art of Collaboration. And then I’ve been in the process of writing my own book, which will be out probably towards the tail end of the summer. True Man, True Way’s roadmap back to the masculine heart. And, you know, the reason I’m writing that book is it gets into my story, but I’m really just trying to provide guys a very simple roadmap and gain clarity around, you know, their lives. And just based on things that I’ve worked on. And then I had another collaboration that came by way completely unexpected, expected the guy by the name of Jim Brett, who’s one of the top 20, I guess they call him one of the top 20 speakers.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:35:49] Historically, he was with Jim Rohn and worked with Jim Rohn on his team and built his sales team up. He’s the guy that hired Tony Robbins and he reached out to me and we connected and he asked me if I would be a part of their collaboration book where you get to write a chapter. So it’s Jim Britt and Kevin Harrington from Shark Tank do that together, and the book’s endorsed by Tony Robbins. So that’s another cool project that’ll be out later this year because I can’t pile them on fast enough, I guess. I don’t know. But it was too good to pass up. You know, I find in all honesty that the coaching field sometimes gets a little messy and there’s a big gap between the good coaches and the folks that just threw a shingle up and said, I’m going to help people. And there are a lot of nuances to coaching that, you know, there’s good and there’s bad. I’ll just leave it at that. But you’ve got to differentiate yourself in the marketplace. And over the last year, I’ve come to realize that and especially working with men, because as men, we don’t typically put our hand up in the air and go, Yeah. I could use some help. I could use some help.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:37:04] Usually we’re bleeding out before that happens, and so you know it. What I try to what I’m trying to do is position myself professionally to be at the forefront of the industry, of the men’s movement. Because I want to be there to help guys, because I know guys are struggling. Every once in a while somebody asked me what I do, and usually if I get that snicker, I’m like, You’re the perfect client because something’s going on there. They may not want to reveal it, but, you know, usually something’s going on there. But but that’s part of the reason I do some of those projects. And it’s cool to be around people that have been there, done that. So and now I find myself in the position of being an author, which is really cool. You know, I’m putting myself in the position to be a speaker. And this is one thing that I tell people all the time, Whatever it is that you want to do, get around those people. You know, if you want to be a speaker, get with other speakers. If you want to be an author. Get with other offers authors. So I think those things are really important and that’s what I’m trying to do in my business, because I not only want to be the best I can be for myself, but I want to be the best I can be for my clients.

Brian Pruett: [00:38:20] So you also are very involved with the community. You’re part of a rotary group. You do all kinds of things. Why is it important for you to be involved in the community?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:38:29] Well, listen, there’s a there’s community is everything. If you’re not involved in the community, how are things going to improve? Right. There’s a. When we first moved here, I’ve been in the area now for about 18 months. When we first moved here, I was very familiar with Rotary. I was not a part of Rotary, but one of the reasons I got involved was it was an opportunity to hit the ground running with people that were very familiar with the community. And so we do a number of things. I’m a member of North Cob Rotary, and if that’s something you’re interested in and you’re hearing about this, reach out to me because we have a fantastic organization that meets in North Cobb and we’ve got our hands on a lot of different things. And I just love serving and helping people. And there’s there’s so much opportunity in in our community. I’ll tell you, one of the cool things we did last year, North Cobb Rotary is a participant in this. We got I got to go to the baseball field and Acworth and the I can’t think of.

Brian Pruett: [00:39:44] What.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:39:44] League Horizon Lake and do the Horizon Lake. I just thought that was really cool because those kids, they didn’t have a care in the world, man. They were just having fun. And it was just so cool to run the bases with them and be in the field with them. And so, you know, there’s just all kinds of things like that that you can do in your community to make it a better place to live.

Brian Pruett: [00:40:03] So we just had them on the show not too long ago, and then we did an expo that helped benefit the Horizon League a couple of weeks ago. So yeah, it’s it’s a great organization. So if somebody wanted to get a hold of you, first of all about your coaching, how can they do that and then share how the people can listen to your podcast?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:40:21] Yeah, so all this stuff’s on my website, so but you can send me an email at Mike at True Man Life Coaching dot com and my podcast is actually on my website, but I’ll give you a link. True Man podcast will take you right to that page and my author, my page and my book or also on the website. So you know just go to true man life coaching dot com. Hopefully my videos will be up and running and it’s just you know entrepreneur thing man right And you know hopefully everything will be up and running today and Yeah but go check it out All my information’s on the on the website. You can get ahold of me there.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:03] Awesome. Mike thank you again for coming and sharing your story and what you do. And you mind sticking around for this next story.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:41:09] Absolutely.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:10] So we’re going to move over to no stranger to everybody, I’m sure that’s listening. He’s going to switch roles for a minute and be actually be interviewed because I’m sure he’s never been interviewed. Right. I mean, you’re used to the producing and asking the questions on shows. So Stone Payton from Business RadioX, How are you doing this morning?

Stone Payton: [00:41:27] I’m doing good, man, and I am enjoying listening to these stories. Can I ask a couple of questions? Sure, Absolutely. Before I put the other hat. I mean, those are a couple of tough acts to follow anyway.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:36] Absolutely. Go ahead.

Stone Payton: [00:41:37] But I wanted to ask Melissa, when you first are engaging with people, they begin to work with you. I wonder, do they sometimes come to you with a a definition of the challenge or problem that is maybe more often than not less than accurate, And you have to help them identify what’s really the challenge or the problem, or do they have it nailed when they come to you and then you can start working on it?

Melissa Stephens: [00:42:03] Oh, that’s such a great question. No, sometimes what we think the problem is is only a symptom. It’s not the root of what’s really going on. So oftentimes clients will come to me, they’re overwhelmed, they’re stressed, they’re feeling burnout, they’re frustrated, they’re angry, they’re mad, their relationships are falling apart. Business isn’t growing, whatever it might be. And those are sometimes just symptoms of what’s really going on underneath. So I’m a great listener. I love to talk, but I’m a great listener. And we we sit through all of that and get down to the root of what’s really going on. And it really comes down to Mike was talking about before, it really comes down to heart. So we get down to the root and the soul of what’s really happening, what really is underneath all of that. We start unpacking all that. I want to tell you what, we just go diving in. People hear me say it all the time. We go hard, deep and fast. We just start unpacking all that. If you’ve ever seen someone unpack after vacation, they just toss in everything. Everywhere. We start tossing everything everywhere, getting rid of everything that doesn’t need to be held on to it. Sometimes we hold on to energy that’s not ours. So we start unpacking all the junk that we don’t need to keep on messaging, communication, issues, traumas, whatever it is. We start throwing all that stuff out and start getting back to what you really want to get into. So that’s a great question.

Stone Payton: [00:43:18] Well, it’s it’s one that occurred to me while you were talking and the entire time you were describing the challenges of entrepreneurs in particular, I kept thinking, Boy, I resemble that remark. I resemble that remark and. And then I’ve reached periods and I feel like maybe now is one of them where I have felt the serenity, you know, like, I got it all, I got it all dialed in. And and then I had reached another point where I didn’t and I kind of cycles and I wanted to ask you, when in writing and doing the writing to talk a little bit about that experience, if you don’t mind my, my asking, because, well, my specific question, or at least my first one is, did some of it just come together really easy and like, you just couldn’t wait to get it on the page And then did you like just sit there and really struggle with how what am I trying to say here, what I want to say about this?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:44:10] It’s such a good question. Listen to tell you what kind of individual I, I, I grew up watching sports. I was very athletic. I was the guy that was in the driveway shooting hoops before I grew up in central Iowa. Before the Iowa game, I was shooting hoops. I would come in, turn the game on halftime in the driveway. And so I don’t sit very well, like I need to be active. Right? And and so sitting and trying to capture content is really a huge challenge. But I will tell you, towards the end of the year, I had a woman that I and she was in my mastermind group and she’d heard me and she she said, Mike, I want you to call me. This is my kind of my breaking point in terms of even getting towards the the book because I knew I was struggling, trying to come up with content and stopping. I needed to stop and do some stuff for my business. But, you know, as entrepreneurs, sometimes we keep charging even though we know we need to stop. And so she helped me towards the tail end of the year. And oddly enough, so you just heard me talk about these books. We basically outline where we were at with everything and we got done with it. And I went, Holy. I just outlined another book. So. So but to tell you the truth, it’s really hard. But I think what I found by going through that process with her is that the content is coming to me a little easier now because I have a better feel for how I can really help and serve.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:45:54] I knew what it was, but I hadn’t stopped to get it down on paper. And this is why and this is going to be part of the book, I think journaling is so important. I mean, we have all this technology in the world, and I know that there’s a number of different resources for journaling and in technology, but I just don’t think that there’s anything better. And I, I don’t write like this. I, of course, get on the computer and write, but I don’t think there’s anything better than getting pen to paper and writing our goals. And, you know, having a gratitude journal could be a piece of it. But, you know, writing and journaling I think is and guys don’t do this well. In fact, one of the things we’re going to work on, we’re going to bring out a masculine true man journal, a really masculine leather bound. So this has been stuck in my head forever because guys don’t journal for some reason, I guess we don’t think that that’s the masculine thing to do, but we need to get our thoughts down on paper. And so, you know, that’s going to be a part of the book. But I guess to answer your question, it is a struggle. But I have. But once you start in, you know, and you have clarity around the direction you want to go. Then, you know, it gets a little easier.

Stone Payton: [00:47:18] Well, the reason I ask I was thinking when you were talking, the way I got into this business eight years ago, Lee, and I’ve been doing this for 18 years, my business partner, Lee Kantor and I, I kind of came from the training and consulting world. When I got fired from the last consulting firm that I worked with. I went out and did some keynote work, self-published a book. Yeah. And the book had some success on its own and helped me book speaking engagements. It was a credibility piece for the consulting, all this stuff. And I got to tell you, if if all of the copies of that first printing that we did of that book would have stayed in Mom’s garage. And if me and Mom were the only ones that ever read it, I still would have been glad to have done it because I feel like it. It helped sort of solidify, crystallize my own thinking and equip me to be a more effective consultant, even if no one else had had read it.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:48:10] That’s that’s that’s totally it. I mean, it is it doesn’t come to me easy, but it’s it’s it’s kind of cathartic in a way, right? Because you’re like putting it down on paper and you’re like going, okay, this sounds good. And the funny thing of it is like, I’ll write something. I’ll go back a month later and I’ll be like, I wrote that. That’s kind of silly. And then you go back and you tweak it. So I think it’ll be an evolving thing for me. I think the hard part is doing number one, right? If you can get the first one out of the way, then the second one is probably a little bit easier. But you know, it is a very cathartic thing. And the reason I’m doing it, I’m not trying to sell millions of copies. If I do, great. But that’s probably not going to happen, by the way. But the point is, is that I want to be an authority figure in my industry. And so just by doing one collaboration book, I’m already an international best selling author, which is like really kind of cool, you know.

Brian Pruett: [00:49:12] A selfie now.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:49:13] Yeah, Yeah. So, so, you know, it’s, it’s a really cool thing to do. And, you know, Brian, you were talking about networking. Ultimately, you end up networking with a group of people, especially when you do a collaboration book that you would have never, you know, this, this collaboration book that I to do with Jim Britt and Kevin Harrington and this I mean, when in the heck was I ever going to run into Kevin Harrington from Shark Tank? I’ll give you a clue. Never. But, you know, they’re all a part of, you know, the the mastermind group that goes, you know, gets to be a part of that. And so who am I going to meet in that group? That could be the next great thing that helps my business. You don’t know. And that’s why I love networking and being a part of the community and getting to know people because you never know where the next great idea. In fact, the podcast has led me to so many different strategic partnerships that I mean, you know. Stone You may have you could have told me, Oh, well, it will. And I would have been like, I doubt it. But you know, but, but it ultimately it just, you know, so many cool relationships have happened to me over the last 18 months. It just blows my mind.

Stone Payton: [00:50:38] Something else that you get if you have your own radio show and if you’d like to interview authors about the books that they’ve written, or you can build up your own library of signed business books. I did that once the house burnt down and I’m building up my collection again. Okay, I’ve stalled long enough. I’m willing to be an interviewed guest now, Brian, but we’re going to leave their mikes open because I got other questions.

Brian Pruett: [00:50:59] Yeah. So first, have you ever written a book, Melissa?

Melissa Stephens: [00:51:01] It’s on the to do list.

Brian Pruett: [00:51:03] Okay, So I was a sportswriter at one time, but you don’t want me writing anything Because if you talk to my mother and my wife, I have a very strange disease, and it’s called comma phobia, and I don’t use them. So you have to take one long breath.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:51:17] I understand.

Brian Pruett: [00:51:18] That. But I was told one time when I first got the sports sportswriting job that that’s what editors are for. So we’re all good.

Stone Payton: [00:51:23] Yeah, well, mine’s dipped in adverbs. I think I would do it better. I mean, I wrote this thing like, 20 years ago. I think I would do a much better job of the actual writing. I stand by the content and it’s, you know, it’s had three printings and it’s been in leadership development curriculums. It’s had some success. But I so I cringe a little bit sometimes at the actual mechanics of the writing, but I stand by the content, which I think that’s a good sign.

Brian Pruett: [00:51:44] There you go. So, all right, we are going to ask you some questions.

Stone Payton: [00:51:47] Okay. All right. All right. And I’ll try to.

Brian Pruett: [00:51:49] Answer I know it’s hard to to sit back and not ask questions, but first of all, you are very passionate about helping others, too, because as you shared, you were a consultant. You’ve started this platform where you’re helping businesses. And before I get into what we’re really going to talk about, which is your Main Street Warrior program, which I really think is cool and I want you to share. But can you please share your story of why eventually why you wind up here and why you’re doing what you’re doing?

Stone Payton: [00:52:17] Sure. And I’ll try to be succinct, but I mentioned it was a book. You know, I published the book. I got invited to be on different shows and I got myself invited to be on like these Saturday afternoon. I’m a smart CPA, you know, shows on FM, and I did a handful of those. I got on cable access TV. I mean, I would have talked to the high school newspaper, right? Anybody to listen to me talk about the book. And they were fun. But it was very different than what we’re doing here. Right. It was often a little bit more host centric. You know, the host was the personality or we were I always felt like we were kind of doing a little bit of a dance for this anonymous audience out there. And but I got pretty good at it. But in those things, if you guys have ever been on one of those kind of shows, man, you got to have your three bullet points. That one joke that you know, always lands and then that quick offer it to, you know, it was much it was it was more superficial. Right? You know, like it wasn’t like the show’s about Brian, you know, and but I you know, it was still a fair energy exchange, right? I knew I could leverage the content. We didn’t have content marketing back there. We didn’t have the phrase.

Stone Payton: [00:53:18] But I knew enough about selling and you know that I did that. And then I got invited onto a show called Atlanta Business Radio. We weren’t a network back then, and this guy named Lee Kantor was running this thing. We walked in, there were two or three other business people in there. And I mean, I got to tell you guys, I mean, I walked in, the clouds parted, the doves flew, the angels sang. It was just it was a completely different experience. Like we had a conversation about me and the work and the why behind the work and where I was trying to take it. And I just I just got very enamored with that. So when when Lee explained to me his business model, which I could not figure out at first because he didn’t charge me to be on the show, he didn’t run any commercials. I think he did like a live read for some nonprofit or something. When he explained that to me, I wrote a check, became a client, started using the platform to grow my business, build relationships, and are you guys old enough? I don’t. I don’t know that y’all are. I know Brian is, but. But he used to be a commercial where the guy he he used the he liked to raise her so much he bought the company.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:54:23] I do recall.

Stone Payton: [00:54:24] That. Okay. All right. So Mike sold enough. Anyway, I liked what Lee was doing so much and got so enamored with. I bought 40% of the company. So I became, you know, so and to this day, I own 40% of the business radio network. Lee on 60%. We rarely disagree, but when we do, it’s his final call. That’s the way we organize stuff. And now we’re in 57 markets. We have 19 of these studios. And so that’s my day job is I am out recruiting people around the country. And now a couple of conversations internationally kind of provide for the care and feeding of people to run these hyper local studios. So that’s my day job. And then Lee and I ran a have been running for most of those eight years, a studio out of Sandy Springs, kind of our headquarters studio. And then Holly and I, my wife Holly, our youngest, we have two daughters, Katie and Kelly. I’m getting to see them both this weekend. Kelly When we broke her play and she moved to Chattanooga, we moved from our home on a cul de sac in East Cobb, and we bought a little patio home right here on the edge of town. And I told Holly, I said, I’m going to put a studio in Woodstock and we’ll do a Cherokee business radio.

Stone Payton: [00:55:30] So here I am. I got I’m wearing that hat. You know, I still have my day job of helping to run the network, but now I’ve got. Studio. And I’ve got, I don’t know, I think maybe nine clients professional services B to B, we’ve helped them create their own show and do all the things we do to do stuff like this. And they capture all these great stories and they build relationships. And and I’ll share with you and I know I’m jaded because I have a tendency to see everything through like the Business RadioX lens, right? Like Business RadioX going to solve world peace. And but I really my current belief as of today is, yes, storytelling is a marvelous way to promote your business. Get your thought leadership out there, provide some consistency of brand, and begin to create that foundation for people liking and knowing and trusting you. I got to tell you, gang, I think story gathering is infinitely more powerful in terms of building relationships and growing your business. I think that’s and I can’t take full credit for that thought. I’m reading a book right now. What is it costing you not to listen? And she talks about story together. So that’s that’s what I’m doing. And then I and then this mainstream warriors things happening.

Brian Pruett: [00:56:46] Yeah. So go ahead and share with that because it’s really cool. Your passion is again, like everybody here is people and helping others. And this is the way to help businesses who I guess fresh off the ground kind of thing. But when I have this platform that want to be able to leverage and and do things like this, but this is a way for them that that don’t have that money or whatever that you normally do. But share share about Main Street Warrior.

Stone Payton: [00:57:08] I’m so excited about this. And I wore the t shirt today. So if you let me be in the picture, I’m hoping you’ll let me be in the picture. You know.

Brian Pruett: [00:57:14] That. Well, you got to get someone else to take it because you won’t be able. You don’t have the selfie arm like Wendy does.

Stone Payton: [00:57:18] We’ll bring Monica in here. But no, Melissa, remember I was telling you about reaching that point of serenity, and you got it locked and loaded? Well, I mean, I’ve made a very comfortable living doing some really cool stuff with Business RadioX. And now we’re empty nesters. We live right on the edge of town. I know every bartender in town. I know a lot of people. So I just thought I had it all dialed in, right. You know? And then I started getting more and more immersed in the community. I started going to young professionals of Woodstock. I’d never done networking stuff. I went to the Woodstock Business Club. And so, you know, in Thursday mornings I get up and I’d walk across the street to the circuit and go here. And I walked down the street to reformation. And, you know, within six weeks I’m thinking, Man, I love these people. They’re great folks. Almost nobody in this room can afford to work with me. Our fee structure is a little out of reach for our ideal client for the business, radio, business, professional services B to B, But they’re established enough that they’re trying to make another 50,000 or 100,000 this year, you know, And so they can afford to make an investment that that warrants that and we’ll give them anywhere from a 4 to 10 x return on that.

Stone Payton: [00:58:29] But you got solopreneur hours. You get these small firms, you got startups, you got kids with an idea on a cocktail napkin. You’ve got all these nonprofits. And so much of what we do in here would benefit them greatly. Yeah, but, you know, so I guess I’m scratching my head since I got here, you know, like, what can we do for these guys? Now? One thing we can do and I always we’ve always done this all along is I can cast a wide net and invite folks on the show on like any of the house shows that I know are not going to be prospective clients, but I’m just serving the community now so I could help at that level. But I knew there were people in here if I could give them more access to the story gathering and give them more that and so so yes, what I came up with, with the help of Sharon Cline and a lot of mental energy and a lot of creative thinking from David Semel with Diesel, David Inc, help me think through this. So what we did is we created this this thing called Main Street Warriors. And the idea is to be even more directly targeting to support the that small business person is start up and retail. We’re not a good match for retail.

Stone Payton: [00:59:41] Our core thing, if you want to meet Bob Smith or if you want a Bob Smith, a husband and father to buy a lawn mower or diapers, I don’t have the first clue about how to reach that guy and convincing them. But if you want to build a real relationship with Bob Smith, who owns the lumber yard, I’ll put him in that chair right there and you guys will have a heck of a relationship in 45 minutes. Right? So but the lady who’s running the boutique, the guy who’s run into, you know, the dry cleaning place, the restaurants around town, all these small companies, I thought, man, we got to figure out a way to I got I got this space right here. So what we did, we create we call it Main Street Warriors, and we have kind of this creed, right, defending capitalism, promoting small business and supporting our local community. I hunt and fish. So everything’s camo. And I wore my shirt today. And so we built a membership structure. So for $12.50 a month, anyone who cares anything about any of these issues can can join the movement at a supporting troops kind of level. And they get to come along for the ride on stuff and they help us promote this. They help us help other nonprofits raise money. And they they go like they given anything else being remotely equal.

Stone Payton: [01:00:59] They’ll go do business with all these other small businesses that we’re promoting and talking about. And then so at the very I mean, like a kid, you know, there’s a lot of people that can afford $12.50 a month and and they’re part of something, right. This Main Street Warriors effort. And then on the business side, these smaller businesses for 125 bucks a month or 150 bucks a year. And what happens is we pool the money, right? So they’re not going to get a custom weekly show, you know, like somebody that’s paying me 30 grand a year. But they can sponsor episodes, right? They can have signage on like this wall behind you. That’s why I have the signs are down there because I’m switching them out with different things. We can we can talk about them on the air. They can we can put their logo and stuff. You know, today’s episode was brought to you in part by blah, blah, blah. There’s a as you know, Mike, there’s a ton of stuff you can do in the content once you’ve created it. Well, they can sponsor those things. So when we go out and do onsite remote broadcasts, right? Well they can be, they can they get to come along for the ride on that. They can schedule quarterly special episodes.

Stone Payton: [01:02:08] Right. So a small business person who, you know, is running a tax accounting practice, right? They don’t they can’t write me a check for 15 grand, 30 grand this year, but 150 bucks. And to be tied to and be part of the community, it’s not like. Sponsoring a Little League team and you just seeing everywhere and we take 20% of that. We’re not a nonprofit, right. But we take but it does allow me in our team to do stuff that was all coming out of my pocket. So we weren’t doing it nearly as much as I felt like we could and should. And so now we can serve a whole lot more people a lot faster, and we can go out and do these onsite kind of remote broadcasts. Again, it’s all about gathering these stories and supporting and celebrating these folks. Well, now that’s, you know, that tax accountant person. Is there part of how and why we’re able to serve those folks so we’re able to go out to like trivia nights and do an on site remote broadcast. It is the main Street Warriors is what is making what we’re doing this morning possible. We can we can work with charitable pursuits at a very different kind of fee structure than, you know, unless you didn’t write me a $30,000 check, did.

Brian Pruett: [01:03:21] You know it would bounce to the moon and back?

Stone Payton: [01:03:24] But and but we’re we’re part of any time we’re working with and through folks like Brian and and somebody like the Horizon League gets a check. We’re a small part of that right? And the main street and there’s the money thing, but there’s also the the gathering and the sharing and the redistributing of all this. So. So once you got me talking, you can’t show me up.

Brian Pruett: [01:03:45] That’s all right. That’s what this shows for.

Stone Payton: [01:03:47] I’m very excited about it. But but there was this gap and let’s what I’m getting at is, you know, I felt like I’ve kind of hit it. I’m coasting. I got money and I was rich before I was rich, which that was fortunate. I was I was I was rich before I was money rich. Yes. And then I got money rich. Or at least by my I mean, there’s always richer people, but we got plenty. We’re not worried about the next meal and the mortgage. And then it felt a little hollow. Right? Because I’m meeting all these people and they’re struggling and you want to help every little one of them. And you can’t say yes to all of them. But so yeah, Main Street Warriors dot org. Go there, think about it. Call me. Talk about it. We love to have you. That’s what we’re doing.

Brian Pruett: [01:04:28] And why so So other than what you just shared about that, you’re all very passionate about the community too. Because like you said, you came out and did a live remote at the trivia night. We had 60 people there helping footprints on the heart. My next trivia night, by the way, is this coming Wednesday the 15th at St Angelo’s help benefiting the Good Neighbor. Homeless shelters, tickets still available. If you want those, I’ll share those in the second how to get that. But you also came out and did a live remote for the Horizon League expo that we did to help benefit them. Yeah. So other than for the reasons you just shared, why is it important for you to be part of the community?

Stone Payton: [01:04:59] Well, for me, this is where we’re going to die. I mean, it just it’s that was in East Cub. We had a great life and we raised but we weren’t involved in the community. And now to me, it is so important that everybody around us that is just doing such great work and contributing. I just want to support them any way, any way that I can. And it’s it’s when you when you dive in and you hear some of these stories, it’s just it’s amazing that one of the favorite questions that I’m starting to ask now, I got it from from what Jared wrote and I asked two young professionals of Woodstock, if you in an environment like this, if you just ask Melissa. Melissa, outside of the scope of the work you talked about, what’s something you have a tendency to nerd out about the next 5 minutes, you will learn more about Melissa and her family, right? So in this role, it’s such a blessing to gather all these stories, support and celebrate all these folks. And I don’t know, maybe it’s as basic as Maslow or whatever, just wanting to feel like you’re partizan my wife, high powered exec, you know, very well compensated, very well respected at IBM. Right. She’s going to hang up her cleats before too long. So she’s starting to transition into getting involved in the community. She teaching watercolor class out at the Reeves house. She took the pottery class. Tonight is opening night for the murder on the Orient Express. She plays the part of Helen Hubbard. She is. So we’re both kind of moving in that direction. So to me, it’s important for me, it’s important to to Holly, and we want to be a part of it. Plus, I mean, every bartender in town treats me like go, you know, I mean, I tip them well.

Brian Pruett: [01:06:42] But I was going to say, because you’re out there paying their bills, so.

Stone Payton: [01:06:46] Right. And we want to we want to support the restaurants. I want to I think it’s it’s I don’t know. I don’t have great words for it. We’ll have Mike write a book about it. But it is important.

Brian Pruett: [01:06:56] You know, can collaborate and write together. Yeah.

Stone Payton: [01:06:58] It’s that other type of rich. Yes. Right.

Melissa Stephens: [01:07:01] And I have to tell you, Stone, you are your story. You’re the example. That’s serenity on fire. Yeah. Your soul recognition is infectious, right? From finding the struggle to finding the gold to then deciding there’s more. And then you want to give back a little more and you want to do more. And I see how it lights you up. That that’s the gold and that’s serenity on fire. Because it’s finding that internally that allows you to magnetize and light everybody around you up with that energy. That’s what it’s about. That’s what’s living. That is what the living about. Right. And so I am so appreciative that you shared that because you are a walking billboard for me. You’re a walking example of what that can do for you and what that is all about.

Brian Pruett: [01:07:47] That smoke was coming out of your headphones when you were so excited about that.

Mike Van Pelt: [01:07:50] I was thinking the same thing, you know, and but I was thinking at the same time. I was thinking when Melissa said, I have to say no, but but when this podcast is over, I felt like I got to ask Stone more about this, you know? But I’m supposed to say no.

Brian Pruett: [01:08:09] Well, Stone, you also I mean, obviously a giving heart and a passion because you’ve allowed me to use this platform to get the positive stories out there, which I really appreciate, because you’ve heard over the last since December 9th, all these amazing stories that we’ve had so far. Yes. I mean, and there’s not one that just tugs at your heart at some point or another, whether it’s a personal, whether it’s business, whether, you know, whatever the case is. So I just appreciate you allowing that. So we’ve got I’ve got two more questions for all three of you, and then we’ll wrap this up. But the this again, both of these goes to all three and we’ll start Melissa with you answering. So there at least when I was growing up and starting getting into the business world and stuff, there was always this stigma for business coaches and consultants. Share your myth buster, if you will, on on those.

Melissa Stephens: [01:09:04] Wow, that’s a tough question. So the myth buster is Mike spoke to it a little earlier. We’re all unique and we all bring something a little differently to the table. And it’s, you know, anybody can give you some tips, anybody can read you something out of a book, anybody can toss at you The marketing guru, statistics and cookie cutter ways of doing things. Well, tell you that stuff don’t work because I’m not a cookie on a pan like the rest of y’all, so that don’t work. What sets me apart and what’s different and what the myth buster is about, that is when you connect with someone who is unique and sees your uniqueness and recognizes your strengths and wants to help you build from that space that peaks, that fire that you have and wants to magnify it and wants to really light it up for you and help you figure out how to do that. Like that is the gold. Like that is everything, and that’s what sets people apart. So the people and you know, a lot of people making a lot of money, doing a lot of things that way, that’s great. I’m not a cookie cutter. I’m a rebel. I don’t follow the rules. I make my own. I have rules. I won’t break for myself. And I encourage everyone to have that. But otherwise, I mean, the world is wide open and possibilities are endless. So do it your way.

Brian Pruett: [01:10:25] Mike.

Mike Van Pelt: [01:10:26] Well, I concur. You know, it’s a. Coaching, consulting. Particularly coaching. For me, it’s serious business. You can affect somebodies life either negatively or positively, and I would prefer to do it positively for sure. But you know what? I’ve found and I’ve done a lot of study around this because I’m not the problem solver. I’m just the conductor of the orchestra in those coaching situations. We all have the answers inside of us. It’s my job to ask the appropriate questions, to get to the point where you find those answers. That’s it. And a lot of people that get into coaching, they think that they’re you know, they may say things like, well, I’m a great problem solver. It’s not your problem to solve. You know, you said that’s not that’s not what it’s about. You just you better study the questions and know what questions to ask in order to help people get it. I’ve gone through this personally. I know, I. And guess what? I remember saying at times, Just give me the answer. Just give me the answer. And if you have good people around you, they won’t give you the answer. You know what the answer is? And so, you know, anybody that’s looking for a good coach or a consultant, don’t find somebody that’ll fix you. Find somebody that will help you. Come up with your own conclusions.

Melissa Stephens: [01:11:59] That’s it. We challenge the status quo. That’s what I do. We challenge our thoughts, our beliefs, our situations. We challenge that because everyone does have the answers inside themselves. But sometimes they don’t have the confidence to trust that or the or they’re not willing to believe in their own gut intuition to follow through. And as coaches, as consultants, we’re here to help be the navigators, right? I’m a guide. I’m just here to help you.

Mike Van Pelt: [01:12:26] That’s it.

Melissa Stephens: [01:12:27] Find that for yourself. And I’m here to help you do it in a way that lights you love. I’m here to help you do it in a way that serves you. And, you know, after you get done with all the cookie cutter stuff and you realize that didn’t actually work, it only works for chocolate chip cookies, you realize that there is another way to do that, and it’s your way. And we just work coaches. We’re here to help guide that and help navigate that and be the sounding board and accountability for that.

Brian Pruett: [01:12:51] Stone You were in that world for a while. What about.

Stone Payton: [01:12:53] You? So I have a couple of observations. One very recent as recently as last night, I went to this young professionals of Woodstock gathering at Jacob Slaughter’s dental office, and we broke out into groups and I had the benefit in our little crowd was Joe, I’m going to butcher his last name since the analog, but he’s with Front Porch Advisors. Joe was so helpful to all of us. We were talking about customer experience. I don’t think he ever answered any question. He just he just asked great questions that led us to explore. So I’ll echo what you guys said. I also over the years have come to genuinely appreciate maybe there’s some label for this guys and you would know it. I don’t know if it’s micro coaching or highly targeted coaching, but I’m almost to the point now where I consider a lot of different people in my life a potential coach on a very specific little niche thing. And so the second observation is earlier this week, Holly and I went to go see Carrie Underwood. Oh man, what a set of pipes. And she’s a great entertainer. Before we did, we went to McCormick and Schmidt, Schmidt’s Schmidt Yeah, we had a bartender named Shawn. All my stories involved bartending. That was the quintessential I mean, it was the epitome. It was the paragon of virtue when it comes to providing customer service. How he asked us our names, wrote it down on the napkin, checked in with us. And I got to tell you, if I decided, you know what, this quarter, I’m really going to work on elevating our customer experience at Business RadioX. I really think I would go to Shawn and say, Hey, you know, can I engage you? Can you from a completely different business? Maybe. I don’t know what you guys think about that, but I would be inclined to take a swing at that because because this guy may have an idea that just would not occur to to to me.

Brian Pruett: [01:14:41] Well, you know, they say bartenders are counselors.

Stone Payton: [01:14:44] So if I thought about that.

Brian Pruett: [01:14:45] Right.

Mike Van Pelt: [01:14:46] Well, it’s all about right. You’re serving drinks. You have people in front of you. It’s all about building relationships. I think the thing that we’ve gotten away from just too much and you can go to any social gathering, how many people are talking to each other versus having their face buried in the phone. And so if you’re if you’re a bartender, such a great example, right? You don’t you can’t have your face buried in your phone. Right. And so the funny part about that stone here and you tell that example is I think through this, maybe it’ll land in a book someplace is No, but but that bartender has to be present for his customers, has to be present, has to be attentive and has, you know, has to ask you what you want. Right. You know, what would you like to drink tonight? Now, he may make some suggestions based on what our house specialty is, X, Y, and Z here, Based on what you said, you may enjoy that. You know, now that that would be a good way to follow it up. But I mean, a bartender has to be present and so much of the time anymore. We’re also buried in our phones that we’re not present with each other. And those relationships matter. That customer experience matters. It’s still matters. And we because we all want to be seen and heard, we all want to be seen and heard. And when we’re seeing and heard and, you know, we get that pat on the back, it feels good, you know?

Brian Pruett: [01:16:20] Yeah. Well, last question for the three of you and we’re going to wrap this up. So I’ve been ending the show with getting everybody on the show to share either a quote, a word or just a nugget going forward to live 2023 and beyond with. So, Melissa, what you got?

Melissa Stephens: [01:16:40] Every journey is the destination. Live it like it’s on fire. Just live life. There’s no tomorrow, right? So live every journey like it’s the destination because half the time we don’t ever get to the destination anyway. We get sidetracked off course but live like the journey is. The destination, enjoy and be present in every single micro moment and celebrate every single micro win because they’re the big things, big things that add up and that just bring so much joy to your heart.

Mike Van Pelt: [01:17:09] Mike Wow. And I’ll tell you what, this is towards the tail end of the last last year, everybody kept asking me, Mike, what’s the definition of a true man? What’s the definition of a true man? And you know what? Here’s what I came up with. And this is the best advice I can offer anybody. Jesus offers us a two word statement that I think is perhaps some of the most beautiful words he’s ever said. Follow me. And that’s my definition of a true man. And I think that if you want to have a truly authentic life, that that’s what you need to do.

Stone Payton: [01:17:45] Stone Well, the second book on my nightstand as we speak right now, was recommended to me by my daughter Kelly, who I mentioned earlier. And the title of that book is going to be my mantra for the next little while, I think, and it’s everything is figure out a goal.

Speaker1: [01:17:59] Yes, I love that.

Stone Payton: [01:18:01] So you.

Melissa Stephens: [01:18:02] Know this. Yes. Yes. And I want to tell you so when you were talking about that bartender story, which I think those stories are the best, because they are really they they have to be people, people, people, Right? Yeah. You said out of the box thinking if those servers, if those customer service people aren’t some of the most out of the box creative people sometimes because in order to make people happy, in order to make things work, they have to get creative. And I’m telling you, when you tap into your own out of the box or you tap into other people’s out of the box and you start allowing creativity to flow.

Mike Van Pelt: [01:18:30] Yeah.

Melissa Stephens: [01:18:31] Everything is possible because suddenly nothing is the same. Nothing is cookie cutter. And it’s unique to you and me and those ideas. I mean, there are some of the best things we’ve ever had in the world, like pool noodles. Who knew?

Speaker1: [01:18:43] Oh, noodles.

Brian Pruett: [01:18:46] Yeah. So all again, Melissa. Mike Stone, thank you again for your time this morning and being on the show. Everybody out there listening. Let’s remember to be positive and be charitable.

 

Tagged With: Main Street Warriors, Serenity On Fire, True Man Life Coaching

Mike Van Pelt with True Man Life Coaching

September 14, 2022 by angishields

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Cherokee Business Radio
Mike Van Pelt with True Man Life Coaching
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Mike-Van-Pelt-True-Man-Life-CoachingMike Van Pelt is a Men’s Life Coach and known as the “Comeback Coach”. He, is also the creator and host of the True Man Podcast. His experience and passion for coaching, guiding, and mentoring men has come from his involvement in leading Christian men’s groups along with his own journey to “take back” his life and achieve success.

In addition, he brings over two decades of deep organizational expertise and thought leadership in account management, consulting, and leadership development. His purpose is to help serve men that have misinterpreted or been misguided in the direction of their lives.

He believes men want success and satisfaction in every area of their lives, and they are looking for a roadmap of discovery back to their true hearts and minds. His goal is to be an instrument of guidance and healing and to lift the heavy heart loads that many men carry.

In addition to being a coach, he is happily married to my wife Jill and best friend of 26 years and has two talented teenagers. When he’s not coaching, he’s probably enjoying time at one of the many family activities or getting a quick round of golf in with friends.

Connect with Mike on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Woodstock, Georgia. It’s time for Cherokee Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Stone Payton: [00:00:24] Welcome to another exciting and informative edition of Cherokee Business Radio. Stone Payton here with you this morning. And today’s episode is brought to you in part by the Business RadioX Main Street Warriors. For more information, go check them out at Main Street Warriors dot org. And also for those of you who have been following the Main Street Warriors and our activities, make sure you check out the high velocity awards. This is where we make available grant scholarships and cash. Yes, cash money to solopreneur, non-profits, minority and veteran owned businesses. And of course, my personal favorite youth entrepreneur. So go check it out at high velocity awards dot com. All right. You guys are in for such a real treat this morning. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast with True Man Life Coaching. Mr. Mike Van Pelt. Good morning, sir.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:01:23] Good morning,Stone. Thanks for having me on. I appreciate it.

Stone Payton: [00:01:27] Oh, man, I’m looking forward to it. We were connected by a mutual friend, Brian Pruitt, who I just think the world of. He’s got a golf tournament coming up in a couple of days. I’m not going to be able to make it. We’re headed down to Savannah. We’re going to be doing an on site broadcast for the what is this, the Georgia Economic Developers Association. But yeah, Brian and that crowd, they will be in our in our thoughts and prayers and what a what a marvelous community we have here in Cherokee County. And and Brian is a perfect example of that, isn’t he?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:02:02] Well, you know, Brian and I talked yesterday, and it was really funny because we’ve we’ve reconnected a little bit here. We hadn’t talked in quite a while and we reconnected. And the funny part about it is you find out how small your community is because he’s he’ll be like, I’m working with this person and I’m like, Oh, you’ve got to connect me with them because they do such and such. And so and you know, that’s that’s the beauty of doing business, is finding these strategic partnerships and these relationships where you can all mutually benefit and and create these win win type type things. And I love that. A man.

Stone Payton: [00:02:38] All right. Let’s talk about true man life coaching, mission purpose. What are you really out there trying to do for folks?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:02:44] Well, you know, the simplest way for for me to tell you what I do is I like to tell people I impact the lives of men for good. Now, that’s a pretty broad statement, right?

Stone Payton: [00:02:57] That’s a big one, man. That’s a tall order.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:03:00] That’s a pretty big statement. But essentially, you know, what I do in my coaching practice is is just work with them a variety of different ways, but primarily one on one where they need it just kind of clear the cobwebs and give them peace and clarity around their life or their business or whatever’s going on. You know, when I got into coaching a number of years ago, I did it from a business perspective. But what I found was that there are all kinds of systems out there. And, you know, I encourage people to go get systems that make their business better. But if the real system, the real meat on that bone is what’s going on, on your inside. And so if you’re not right in your head, your heart, your mind, your soul, it doesn’t matter what kind of business system you have. And so that’s was kind of my breakthrough. And I said, you know what? I just want to work with people. I want to work with people and help make them better. And I didn’t see a lot of men out there or a lot of people in general just saying, hey, I’m going to plant a flag for men and walk alongside them. And I decided that’s what I’m going to do. So here I.

Stone Payton: [00:04:11] Am. So how did you get started? What compelled you to move into coaching? I’m operating under the impression that you had some other type of career going into. Yeah, what’s the back story?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:04:23] Well, so, I mean, really had a sales career going and but I wasn’t being fed. I just wasn’t being fed and I didn’t really know what that meant. And I was in the insurance and financial services world, and I went to one of their leadership development programs, and it was a six month program and I’d never done anything like that. And I got done with it and I was like, Wow, what am I going to do with this? This was amazing. And I didn’t really want it to end, so I didn’t let it end. And the whole idea of it was that you would take what you’d learn and bring it back to your organization. But I took what I learned and used it for me and I realized, hey, you know, I’m telling my kids how important it is to get a great education, but I didn’t complete my college degree. I want to do that. And so I went back, completed my business degree, and at the time I was doing and I became a stay at home dad. During that time because my kids were really young and I was doing a ton of volunteer work within my church and in the community. And I thought, you know, I really think my life’s leading me to to be in the nonprofit world. What do nonprofit directors have at the top of the food chain that I don’t have? Oh, they have a master’s degree. So. So, yeah, I’m a glutton for.

Stone Payton: [00:05:46] Oh, no, no. Now you’re getting addicted. Yeah.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:05:48] So I did go back. I got my master’s degree in public administration and you know that that’s really how I started down the trail. But what really happened after that was once I got my master’s degree, I was out looking for work and struggling like people did not know what to do with Mike Van Pelt. Here’s a guy that was a stay at home dad. He got this education. You know, he’s doing all this volunteer work. They just didn’t know what to do with me. And it really led me down a road of I internalize the nose and I took it in and it became kind of a deep wound for me. And that’s when I decided I’m going to go down this road of entrepreneurial is I don’t need these people. And that’s when I kind of started the business consulting and I met a guy by the name of Paul Bailey, and I always mentioned him because he’s been a part of of everything that I’ve done since. And so I met him at a business networking event. And this is why business networking events, I think, are so important, because you never know who you’re going to meet for sure. But I met Paul and we had this great conversation at lunch about giving and taking and how we saw more takers in the room than givers. And we thought, doggone it, we can do this better. And so we decided we were going to start our our own group.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:07:09] But that group, I think, before it ever got off the ground, turned into, you know, what we really need? We need a men’s small group. And that’s when things really began to shift for me because I got involved in men’s small group. We connected with guys that were doing retreats. I got involved in a retreat and it was really at that retreat where I had an opportunity to get out there with 300 guys and walk around the woods and get in touch with my faith, where on a Saturday morning they played a song by Josh Groban and I recommend listening to the song. I’d never heard it called You Are Loved. Now people would say, Well, that’s not a Christian song. Listen to the words, because the perspective in that situation was Listen to the song as if God is singing it to you. And when I did that, I almost hit the ground because I had no idea that God wanted such an intimate and loving relationship with me. And that was my take away from that weekend. That was in March of 2019. And it was at that point I said, You know what? I’m going to go fight for the hearts of men. And I don’t want guys walking around empty. Like, I was like the tank was on E! And if you’re listening to this and you’re on empty, you know what I’m talking about? It’s undeniable.

Stone Payton: [00:08:31] So let’s talk about the work a little bit. Someone maybe through the benefit of hearing this conversation or for some of the other work that you do. I know you have your own show and I want to hear more about that in a little bit. But however they get there, they sort of identify, yeah, I’m kind of running on empty and they reach out to you, talk about the work a little bit. Is it is it individual one on one? Is it group? Is it retreats? Is it a little bit all of this?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:08:57] Well, it’s turning into a little bit of of all of it. That’s kind of the entrepreneurial journey that we go on. Right, right, right. You like, okay, I’m going to plant a flag and this is what I’m going to do. And then, you know, some people, I guess, are fortunate. They know exactly what that means right away. But it wasn’t me. Yeah, but but that hasn’t been me either. And so really what happened was, you know, I’m working with a gentleman who has some fantastic coaching programs and so he had a system and I love systems because I also like shiny objects. And when I find a shiny object, it typically takes me off the system. So right. So I’m sure a lot of business people can relate to that. And so I found a system that worked for me for one on one coaching. And so that that was priority number one was to find that. And so what I do is really primarily work with guys one on one. So when somebody says, you know, yeah, I want somebody to kind of clear out the cobwebs for me and I want to figure out what the, you know, my next thing in life is, whether it’s in business or personal life. And so typically we’ll start with an assessment. We have a proprietary assessment that we do, and we go through that. We have an initial to our call. And then based on the program, they may choose and I usually do a six month or 12 month. You know, we jump in the coaching process excuse me, one on one. Now where this is all heading, I believe it’s been my experience that men love the one on one because they, they like having another dude to talk to.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:10:36] They don’t always have that where they can have a safe space, where they can really strategize about their life. And but they also like the feel of community. And so where all this is really heading is that I’m in the process of building some small group stuff. So we’re going to do I’m working with an organization called the Christian Businessmen’s Connection here in the Atlanta area. John Posey is the executive director. We’re going to build out some Christian small groups through that. I’m going to build out some small group situations through myself as well. And I think where all this is headed is we’ll do some coaching combined with some mastermind groups where we take people through a 12 month program. And then on top of that, right, because you’ve got to bite, you’ve got to just jump on that elephant and go for a ride. You know, I’m working with an organization right now where we can build retreats and we’ll do some small ones where we maybe do some ten or 12 person guys. But this this organization that I’m working with that really set up to facilitate larger retreats and I’ve done enough of these now where I see tremendous value and just shutting it down for a weekend and getting out with a group of guys and, and, and having God’s voice show up in your life. It’s incredible experience. So there’s I just gave you a lot and I didn’t even give you everything.

Stone Payton: [00:12:05] Well, I really I really applaud. And I’m inspired that you’re going to do some of this group work in this retreat work? Yeah. My frame of reference for that kind of thing, it’s related. It’s not exact. I come from the training and consulting world. Yeah. And I would facilitate classes, but the most powerful classes that we had were ones that we ran as more of a peer to peer experience. Yeah. So I would essentially teach facilitation skills and then would have these folks in our case it was often sales teams. Yeah. And have them actually facilitate different modules or segments of the training to each other.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:12:45] Yeah.

Stone Payton: [00:12:46] So much more powerful than the than the whatever. There’s some big college word for one guy talking to a bunch of people, but when you do the peer to peer thing. Yeah. Oh it’s just, it’s exponential isn’t it.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:12:57] Yeah. You know I look at it this way, I’m just kind of the conductor of the orchestra, right? Yeah. You know, and I. I certainly don’t know it all and never will. That’s okay. I don’t need to be the smartest guy in the room. I just need to bring, you know, the guys together so that we can facilitate them getting in a room and figuring out how to improve their lives. I encourage, strongly encourage, find men finding small groups. Now, you know, networking is. Sure. But that doesn’t facilitate the intimate conversations that sometimes need to be had in a safe place. And so I am a huge believer that you’ve got to have a wingman. And if you can have multiple wingman, that’s really good. That’s good. That’ll keep you out of trouble. Learn from these guys that have been down the road that you want to go down.

Stone Payton: [00:13:53] So I’m sure there are some idiosyncrasies in every individual relationship, every individual coaching process. And I suspect that there are some patterns that you see and you’re like, Yep, here comes that one again. Yep, I’ve dealt with this before. Not that you necessarily articulate that, but are there a handful of kind of common patterns that that you see that it would make sense to share?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:14:18] Yeah. You know, one of the things I’m finding myself talking about more and more is this idea around identity. Now, because here’s the thing. If I meet you. We’re at a networking event. There’s a couple questions that are going to be asked right off the bat. One, what’s your name? So people identify you from your name. That’s a given. No worries there, I guess, unless you don’t like your name. But but the second question people are going to ask is, what do you do? And that becomes an identifying point. So and people will unconsciously put you in categories. He’s an attorney. This guy collects junk. This guy is a dentist. This guy sells insurance and they start categorizing you and see. What happened to me was at one point, I, you know, when I was a stay at home dad, I got a lot of attaboys. Wow. I really wish I could stay at home. In my mind. In my mind I was like, Yeah, it’s great, but. I was raised to be the breadwinner. I was raised to be the man. I need to be out supporting my family. And so I would go to all of these things that I needed to do. And what I identified with was what I wanted to be versus where I was. And that meant sometimes I wasn’t present with my family. I was there, but I wasn’t right. I was thinking about all the things I wanted to do.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:15:51] And that’s dangerous because the most important thing that we have in front of us other than our faith is our family, and they need to be taken care of. And if you’re struggling with your identity, maybe you don’t like the career you’re in or or or where you’re at in life. You know, you need to take action on that because if you don’t, you’re not going to show up present for the people that you really need to be showing up for. And so that’s that’s what happened to me. And I see that happen to a lot of guys. We get wrapped up in our careers and our, you know, and these negative identities that we get attached to. And at the end of the day, and I know this is a business radio thing, but my faith is how I identify and he will drive everything else. And that’s exactly what’s happening in my business. As soon as I let. Go. That hard grip that I had on the steering wheel, you know, and you know, I get better at this all the time and gave it over to him. What I’m seeing is my business flourish and I’m less worried about what’s going to happen on a day to day basis as a result. And, you know, regardless of what business you’re in, I you know, I think it’s applicable.

Stone Payton: [00:17:17] So does the question, the topic of masculinity, what that really means, how am I supposed to live into that? Should I not worry about that? Does that come up with individuals and groups as well?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:17:30] Well, you know, that is such an interesting topic in this day and age, because I think that, you know, I don’t like. That Hollywood or the news media drive things the way they drive them. But they have portrayed negativity in a very negative way. And so, you know, it’s easy to go on television and talk about, you know, Matt Lauer or, you know, some somebody doing something negative and portray that as while the entire male race is bad. No, no. That’s a small segment of the population. But, you know, masculinity is really you know, I always say, you know, right now we need to have this. You got to put God first. You’ve got to you’ve got to put family second. And and I love putting country third. And then like everything else is like way down the line, but it’s about caring, loving, being purposeful and everything that you do. That’s masculinity. That’s masculinity. Not, you know, beating up your wife or abusing her. I mean, you know, or or the Hollywood movie portrayal of of men beating on their chest and firing weapons, I mean. Granted, that’s kind of fun, but but that’s not what masculinity really is.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:19:03] And so, you know, one of the things that I think is important and it’s why, you know, I talk about retreats and I want to do these getaways, is it’s important to see men, see other men that are vulnerable and that are having intimate conversations around how to be a better man. You know, generationally speaking, I’m 52. I don’t mind sharing. You know, I grew up in a time where if we fell down on the baseball diamond, you know, it was like just, you know, get up, you know, don’t say ouch. Yeah. You know, and and that turns out to be not a very masculine way to handle it. And I’m not blaming my father or I’m not blaming his father. That’s not what this is about. You know, I think that we know more about psychology. I think we know more about what we need from a human perspective. And, you know, masculinity is about being in touch with your heart. That’s a big piece of this because, guys, we do too many things with our head and not our heart. So that’s to me, I could probably go on all day about that, but.

Stone Payton: [00:20:07] Well, you could with me because I because I know I am just I am very enamored with the whole conversation. I’ve got a thousand questions and we’re not going to get to them all this morning, but we’re going to get to some of them. So you mentioned several aspects of life, I guess is like spiritual and family and business. I’d love to get your perspective on on this whole topic of balance. Oh, wow. And I’ve even talked to some folks that that don’t like the word balance and they try to plug something else in there. But I’d love to get your take on.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:20:44] You know, it’s interesting because I love to plug in words and then go out to the thesaurus and then look it up and see. And what I’ve learned over time is that that can be dangerous, because you really can’t sugarcoat certain words that people know a lot about. And so this term balance comes up quite a bit, and usually it’s related to, well, how do I get balance in my business? And personal life is a lot of times where that that I hear that the most. I’ve heard that from my wife over the years in her corporate job. You know, I think balance and finding it is different for everybody. You know, for example, I used to separate my business and my personal life. And now because there’s so much faith work and it’s so much it’s so personal, I don’t separate the two. They’re just kind of all lumped together. And for me, I love that. That gives me great joy and and energy. But for others, I mean, they need to separate them. They need to need to leave their work, you know, at work. And they need to come home and be present with their family.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:21:53] And I think it’s different for every person. But, you know, balance is really tough because we live in a world where I mean, I remember when I first started in business, right? My business phone was on my business desk. Now my business phone is my mobile phone. And that means for some reason, we’ve all taken on this mantra of that means you’re at work 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. And if you don’t respond to my text message immediately, there’s got to be something wrong. And so, you know, it’s important to figure out for yourself, what does all that mean? And if you’re a business leader, I think it’s important for you to spell it out for your team. What does this mean? Where do we draw the lines? Because otherwise people are just going to keep charging ahead because they operate under this assumption that while everybody at my work has my mobile phone number. And so I you know, that means I’m accountable and I need to keep answering stuff. Is that what it means? Have you had that.

Stone Payton: [00:23:02] Discussion with your employees?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:23:03] I mean, do they know where the line is drawn? You know, maybe they need to know because some of them may think they’re on the clock 24 hours a day and that may not be the case. And you know, this is another area that I commonly get into. We need to know how to pause. Just like I just did, you know? Yeah. Yeah. Emphasis on the pause. We need to know how to pause because pausing and taking a break from things helps build margin in your life, helps build up that battery. And so the fact of the matter is, is that we’re not build built to be the hard chargers in with all this technology around us that we’re not built for that most of us don’t know really know how to handle it. We just don’t want to admit to it. Like I’m admitting right now, I don’t know how to handle it. It’s just too much. And so we’ve got to figure out how to take pauses. And so and to me, figuring out what that pause is for you is will help you figure out that balance in your life.

Stone Payton: [00:24:12] So how does the whole sales and marketing thing work for for a guy like you? Like, how do you get the new clients?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:24:23] You know, I will. I’ll be honest and tell you, it’s been one of the biggest challenges that I have had to undertake because I’m a men’s life coach. And so that means I’m not accepting women or I’m not working with couples per say. I’m really searching for men and men, interestingly enough. Right. We don’t show up anywhere until we’re completely broken, which is crazy. Don’t do that. You know what I love to be in the position of is is, you know, if you think about Olympic athletes, they’ll spend their entire lives just trying to shave a half a second off or get a half a foot in front of somebody else, constantly working. And and so I want to take and they’re already great at what they do, right? I want to take great people. And I want them to get clear about how they can get better. And to me, that’s really what coaching is. I understand helping people when they’re broken. I get that and that’s how a lot of people come to me. But but it’s really about taking people to the next level. The other thing that I’ve done right is we created the True Man podcast, and so the True Man podcast was an opportunity for people to hear about men’s topics, how to be better dad, how to be a better husband, you know, just how to generally be a better man. And so we take all those topics and I bring guests on and we talk about, you know, in a lot of cases, their story.

Stone Payton: [00:26:05] Oh, that’s great. So it’s not just the Mike Van Pelt Hour. It’s you’re bringing in other folks, getting their perspective.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:26:10] I’m doing some solo shows because I think it’s important to highlight what I do from a coaching standpoint. However, I think what men really want to hear and what they really need is a story from another man. And I have women on the podcast all the time because women have stories too, you know, to have these people come on and tell their story. So, for example, this Monday, well, I, I recently released a podcast and I interviewed, amazingly enough, the best man at my wedding. I was married 26 years ago to my lovely wife, Jill. And shortly after we got married, of course, you know, the Internet was starting to become a thing back then. And my buddy got involved in Internet gambling. He did, you know, of course, back then we didn’t talk about those things. Right. So he becomes an addict. And so on the podcast, I was recently back home in Iowa. That’s where I grew up and we were talking. He said, I love what you’re doing with the podcast. I’d love to come on and tell my story. And I was like, Wow, you can just know once you tell that story, it’s out there, number one. Number two, yeah. I’m proud of you that you’ve gotten to a point where you’ve healed enough that you can come on and tell that story because you can impact the lives of a lot of people by doing that. And so we did an interview and he told his story about how he got into gambling and and where he’s at today. And it’s truly a comeback story. You know, he got himself into trouble. And, you know, he he’s he’s made a great comeback. And so those stories are out there all over the landscape.

Stone Payton: [00:27:55] I’ll bet.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:27:56] And I can’t I can’t bring those guys on fast enough to tell their story, because that’s how we motivate other men to take action. Right. You know, and to me, that’s what it’s all about. And that’s why we started the podcast, so that people could hear those stories and I could bring experts on and provide that value for for men. So that’s one of the big things that I do. And it does it inadvertently creates that know like trust factor from a business perspective that we’re all searching for, that somebody can come on, they can they can hear me, they can hear my guests and they can make a decision. Hey, he sounds like a pretty decent dude. You know, I’ve got some things I’d like to talk with him through, and so that that’s what it’s all about. And of course, I’ve had to get to do all the social media and fun stuff that comes with. Right, right, right. But, you know, other than that, you know, I’m doing a lot of networking. I’m getting involved in a lot of men’s organizations. I mentioned the Christian Business Connection, Pbmc, great Christian business men’s organizations, and there are others out there that I’m searching for. And, you know, I’m always available to come in, in business and work with businesses. And I’m not going to work with you on your your, you know, your business planning or anything like that. I could, but that’s not what I’m there for. You know, I just want everybody to be the best possible person they can be, because that’s how we lead. Well.

Stone Payton: [00:29:23] I’m glad I asked. And one of the things. No, it’s very helpful context. One of the things that I’m picking up from what you described is, yes, that’s probably a great way to go to market, create some awareness, have people reach out to you. But also your existing clients are probably getting ongoing value from the fact that you’re doing that show, right? Yeah.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:29:48] Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, listen, I’ve talked about it. It has been a thrill of my life to do it. I think what we as 71 podcast in and then you know, we’ve got the YouTube channel going and everything and I’m doing exploring other opportunities. I’m on a couple of other different shows now. It’s funny how this thing just morphs, but, you know, we’ve talked about everything, you know, from marriage. One of the topics I hate to talk about it and you know, I bring it up now because it is other than gambling, the number one problem men have comes in the area of pornography. And I hate to talk about I hate to talk about it, but every time I do it. My numbers spike on the podcast. And so that tells me everything that I need to know, even though I already know the statistics are there. And, you know, so it’s things like that that, you know, most is is it comfortable for me to talk about? Heck, no, it’s not comfortable for me to talk about, but I talk about all kinds of things that I never thought I would talk about sitting in front of a microphone like this. But that’s how we add value to other men. And I think that’s what they’re looking for, is those authentic and those real conversations that help them get to the next level.

Stone Payton: [00:31:12] Yeah. All right. Let’s leave our listeners with a with a handful of Pro Tips. Number one, pro tip gang is if you are finding any value in this conversation at all, and I’m sure you are, reach out to Mike and have a conversation with him. But short of that or preceding that, I don’t know. It’s something we should be reading, something we should be doing, questions we should be asking ourselves just a couple of maybe just actionable steps that those of us who are trying to be self aware and trying to to to live into our purpose and be better people. Just a couple of pro tips maybe come to.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:31:51] Well, listen, I’m going to give you a book and it is a book that is helped transform my life. It’s a book that has transformed the lives of a lot of men. And that is a book called Wild at Heart by John Eldridge. And John Eldridge has a ton of books. His wife Stacy has written a number of books, but I strongly recommend that book. If you’re searching for more in your life, whatever that looks like, if you’re wondering how you can be free in your life and begin to take your heart back and not have all that baggage that we sometimes drag along as men. I recommend reading the book Wild at Heart by John Eldridge. That is a that is short of reading the Bible, I think a book that will give you some of the most in-depth knowledge of of your masculine life that you’ll ever read. So and there, there are a number of books after that, but I like that as a starting point.

Stone Payton: [00:33:00] All right. I got to ask, is there a book in you do you have some designs on on writing a book yourself currently?

Mike Van Pelt: [00:33:07] Yeah. Currently working on a book, as a matter of fact. Yeah. Currently working on a book. And you know, in that book we’ll tell the the true man story. You know, how Paul Bailey and I started a small men’s group? What is the true man? You know, why do you want to become a true man? And so and I’m kind of excited about it because I just had an epiphany here a couple of weeks ago and I’m like, Yeah, we need to this needs to be a roadmap book, you know? And that just comes from Paul and I had taken road trips prior primarily up to ironically enough, I was thinking about this. I’m like, Man, it’s funny how all this stuff comes together. Ironically enough, we used to travel from South Carolina up to North Carolina. Yes, there were coffee shops around the corner, but that’s not why you take a road trip. You take a road trip to get in the car and have these intimate conversations with somebody. But our road trips always evolved around going to this place in Columbus, North Carolina, called, of all things, Open Road Coffee.

Stone Payton: [00:34:10] I love it. Well, when you launched that book, I hope you’ll come back and visit with us and get us caught up on your work and maybe share some insights from the from the book. All right. Let’s make sure that our listeners can connect with you. If they’d like to have a conversation with you or someone on your team, maybe find out about some of these retreats or take advantage of your expertise and counsel and an individual coaching relationship, whatever you think is appropriate. Website, email, phone. Just I just want to make sure that they can connect with you, man.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:34:39] Well, you can always go out to my website, which is probably about to go under under another revamp, but all the information is out there at Truman Life Coaching Dotcom and you can reach out to me at Mike at Truman Life Coaching and give me a call 8642662058. And I love talking and strategizing with guys and we can set up an initial hour and have a strategy call and see what’s going on in your life. And if you need more coaching or if you need me to plug into a group. Let’s do it. Or if you want a book recommendation. I got plenty of those, too.

Stone Payton: [00:35:24] Oh, what a pleasure. Mike Van Pelt, thank you so much for coming in and sharing your story and your perspective. This has been an informing and inspiring conversation I have. What a terrific way to invest a Tuesday morning, man. Thank you. Absolutely. No, you’re doing important work, man. And we sincerely appreciate you.

Mike Van Pelt: [00:35:46] Well, you know, and I I’ve I’ve done a lot of research around what this means, so I don’t take this lightly when I say it. But I’m doing the work that God has called me to do, and I’m enjoying almost every minute of it. And if you’re a business person, you know what I mean by almost.

Stone Payton: [00:36:06] All right, until next time. This is Stone Payton for our guest today, the comeback coach with true man life coaching, Mr. Mike Van Pelt and everyone here at the Business RadioX family saying we’ll see you next time on Cherokee Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: True Man Life Coaching, True Man Podcast

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