April 19, 2025

Experiences Over Stuff: Living My Best Life

I’m enjoying a quiet evening of reflection, thinking about what really fills my days with joy. Growing up on that Indiana farm, life was lean—farming and construction kept my family busy, but we didn’t have much in the way of fancy things. Yet, those years were rich with experiences that shaped me more than any possession ever could. That’s what LivinBestLife.com is all about: chasing moments that matter over stacking up stuff.   My brother and I turned our huge front yard into a battleground—football, ‘home run derby,’ and barn basketball were our treasures. No Xbox, no smartphones—just us, a hoop, and a ball. Those challenges built tenacity and taught me to savor the journey, lessons that stuck with me from my days under Coach Jay Hunsucker’s guidance to my adventures honing my golf game, snow skiing, motorcycling or grilling with friends. Sure, I’ve owned a ‘dream’ sports car and a top-notch stereo in my younger days, but the thrill of a deal closed or a mountain conquered outshines any material high.   I’ve always been wired for experiences: deal-making, travel, trying new hobbies like brewing beer or playing drums. Johnny Carson once said, “Money gives me the freedom to worry about the things that really matter,” and I get that.   Accumulating wealth or gadgets can be a trap; it’s the freedom to live fully that counts. My career in sales and marketing taught me that true satisfaction comes from solving puzzles with people, not from the paycheck alone. And raising my kids? Watching them grow through shared adventures—rifle instruction, zip lines, snow skiing, fire pits—beats any heirloom I could leave behind.   I’ve learned that ‘less is more’ – material things fade or break; experiences shape who we are. I’ve seen how chasing ‘more stuff’ can lead to health struggles like obesity or depression, while getting outside, eating whole foods, and swapping ideas with others lifts the spirit.   So, I’m curious—what experiences have lit up your life more than any possession?   Drop your stories in the comments below. Let’s build a tribe that values living richly through moments, not just material gains. Here’s to chasing what truly matters!  

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Shear Brilliance: The Day I Became Indiana’s Sheep Trimming Champion

Back in 1976, while the world was watching Rocky and America was celebrating its bicentennial, I was making history of my own… one sheep at a time. Take that however you will…   That’s right. I was crowned Indiana State Sheep Trimming Champion. Let that soak in.   Most people peak in high school sports or land a starring role in a school play.   Me?   I rose to fame in a livestock barn, clippers in hand, sweat on my brow, fluff flying like cottonwood in July.   Somewhere between 4-H meetings and wrangling 400 sheep on our family farm, I discovered I had a real gift—not for showmanship or sales—but for shaping wool into high art.   My personal form of ‘Shear Madness’. From the Fleece Up: A Farm Boy Origin Story   My dad (for reasons unknown to me) decided we would raise sheep. We had lots of them.   And like every good farm family, we entered our best into the county fairs. My siblings and I were part of the great 4-H tradition, learning life lessons through livestock—and the fine line between a blue ribbon and “maybe next year.”   Trimming a show sheep isn’t just a haircut. It’s a performance. An audition for a woolly Oscar.   You need the finesse of a sculptor, the eye of a tailor, and the stubborn resolve of a mule. One wrong flick of the clippers and suddenly your sheep looks like it lost a bar fight with a weed whacker.   But I had the touch. I had the form. I was… the sheep whisper?   And in 1976, the judges agreed. The Golden Clippers   There was no televised award ceremony. No trophy girl in sequins handing me a bouquet. But there was a trophy! And a memory that stuck tighter than lanolin on wool.   To this day, that win remains one of my most obscure—but most beloved—titles. Right up there with “Dad,” “Wellness Coach,” and “Guy Who Trains Like He’s Still in His 30s.” What Sheep Taught Me About Life   Here’s the thing. Trimming sheep teaches you a lot about people.   Fleece and Fame: My Platform for Sheep Jokes   Of course, now that I’m an “award-winning trimmer,” it’s only right I use this platform responsibly.   That means giving the people what they want: tasteful, possibly inappropriate, sheep humor.   “Why don’t sheep shrink in the rain?”Because they use woolite.   “What do you call a sheep covered in chocolate?”A candy baa.   “What do you get when you cross a sheep and a comedian?”A baaad joke.   Okay, okay—I’ll stop. (But I won’t promise I won’t shear some more in future posts.) Full Circle: Still Livin’ Best Life   Believe it or not, that moment—standing proud with a clipped sheep and a ribbon—helped shape the way I approach life now:   And if all else fails, remember this:   You don’t have to be flashy to be legendary. Sometimes, all it takes is a sharp blade, a steady hand, and a sheep that trusts you not to buzz its backside too close. Until Next Time…   May your clippers stay sharp, your memories stay funny, and your stories get better with time.   And yes, I still have the trophy.   🐑✂️Brian

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The Power of Heroes

They say you become who you admire. And for me, it started with a movie, a name, and a football.   It was the summer before 8th grade when I first saw the movie Brian’s Song. I was just 13, a skinny farm kid in Indiana who hadn’t played a down of organized football yet. But that film—that story of friendship, resilience, and the unbreakable bond between teammates—ignited something inside me.   Maybe it was because his name was Brian.   Maybe it was because the movie tugged at something deeper: the idea that in the crucible of sport, differences disappear.   Black. White. Rich. Poor. City kid. Farm boy.   In the locker room, we all wore the same sweaty, used gear. On the field though, we fought for each other.   That movie planted the seed. My mentors—Coach Jay, Coach Hunsucker, and later Coach Strickland—watered it with discipline, belief, and iron in the form of barbells and morning two-a-days.   But it was my heroes who gave it fire. The Birth of a Bears Fan (And a Football Life)   Growing up in the cornfields of Indiana, you’d think I’d have rooted for the Colts. They had relocated in the middle of the night in 1984; I didn’t care for the way it happened and I wasn’t in Indiana long enough after college to commit myself to becoming a fan.   The team that owned my heart was the Chicago Bears—and it all started with Brian Piccolo. His quiet courage. His friendship with Gale Sayers. That gut-wrenching goodbye. I was hooked. It was why I chose #41 as my jersey number.   And for a bit of irony, the bantam football team my brother played on was the Bears.   And then came Walter Payton.   “Sweetness” wasn’t just a nickname—it was poetry in motion. He ran like he owed someone money and lifted like he was trying to bend time. I admired everything about him: the legs, the lungs, the mindset. He trained like a man who knew the end would come too soon. His ‘Hill’ workout was legendary in the football training circles.   That hit home for me.   Coach Jay’s comment in those first days of my football experience that I had “tenacity” – I latched onto that.   I wasn’t the biggest or the fastest, but I could hit.   I could grind.   I wasn’t afraid.   I learned that effort, attitude, and preparation could beat raw talent if you showed up enough times.   I was also a fan of the Alabama Crimson Tide and Paul ‘Bear’ Bryant; I had dreams of playing for him because of his ability to outwit his opponents and his innovative approach to the game. I was facing headwinds getting the attention of smaller schools in Indiana, which led me to the conclusion that perhaps I wasn’t a candidate for the Crimson Tide. But the ‘Bear’ was always a hero to me. The Raiders Taught Me Swagger   By the time I had arrived to high school, I was reading every magazine watching every VHS highlight tape I could find of the Oakland Raiders (I was in the era before the internet existed). This wasn’t just a team. It was a lifestyle. The Raiders were attitude.   I modeled my mindset after them. I wanted to be feared on the field—not because I was dirty, but because I was relentless.   And if you know me now, you can probably still hear the echoes of that swagger when I talk about training, business, or grilling the perfect lamb chop. Meeting a Raider and Becoming One—In Spirit   In the early 1990s, I met Burgess Owens in person – one of the Raiders I idolized. By then, I was in the thick of my wellness career, starting my own company, learning how to fight for independence just like I did on the field.   Burgess wasn’t just a great football player. He was a man of principle, sharp intellect, and purpose. Meeting him reminded me that heroes grow, too. They evolve. And if we’re lucky, we get to become the kind of person someone else might admire. From Bears to Giants: Loyalty Born of Grit   After college, living in a Maryland suburb of D.C. (where my dad rooted for the Redskins), I went searching for something different.   As a Ball State alum, I scoured pre-internet magazines looking for MAC grads in the pros.   I found Rob Carpenter, a fullback with the New York Giants.   That was enough for me.   Then came Lawrence Taylor—a force of nature—and Bill Parcells, the master tactician. The roster was deep with great players. The Giants played like I wanted to live: with fire, control, and unrelenting resolve.   They became my team (until the Browns relocated to Baltimore as the Ravens. Not quite the same as the Colts leaving Baltimore for Indy but I acknowledge the irony and potential hypocrisy). Heroes Aren’t Perfect. They’re Human.   That’s the thing no one tells you when you’re young (or if they do, we don’t hear the message).   Your heroes may not always stay on the pedestal. Some stumble. Some fade. Some grow into something else entirely. Which is why we’re told not to meet our heroes because we’ll be disappointed by their humanity.   But the ones who last are the ones who made you better.   The ones who: Why It Still Matters   I’ve grown older; I’m reflecting. I’ve built companies, raised kids, lost and gained a lot of things in life.   But that spark? That grit? That love of football, brotherhood, and heroes who lead by example?   Still there.   I think about those days often—not with nostalgia, but with gratitude. Because football gave me more than just bruises and stories.   It gave me my compass. The Power of Heroes   So, here’s:   To Brian Piccolo and Walter Payton. To

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Lessons from the Woods: A Farm Boy’s Tom & Huck Years

Before I learned to drive a tractor, play football, or grill lamb like an Aussie, I learned how to get lost—in the best way possible.   It started around second grade, not long after my family moved to our Indiana farm. My dad had a pond dug out on our land—a man-made slice of heaven carved into a grassy corner where cattails grew, frogs chirped like opera singers, and the water was always just cold enough to keep you alert.   But it wasn’t the pond alone that captured my heart. It was the woods that surrounded it. A tangled, whispering cathedral of trees, vines, animal tracks, and possibility. Becoming Tom & Huck (In My Own Backyard)   At some point during a family trip to Disney World, I wandered onto Tom Sawyer Island. That fake frontier, with its barrel bridges and tree forts, unlocked something in my imagination. Soon after, I devoured Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.   The Adventures Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn were two books that had an impact on me in my early youth.   Those boys weren’t just characters – they were kin.   Reckless. Curious. Always plotting something.   Back home in Indiana, I didn’t need a raft on the Mississippi. I had something better: a stick, a pocketknife, and a few hours before dinner.   I’d leave the house with a “don’t be late” warning from Mom, and disappear into the trees. My dog sometimes followed, but mostly, it was just me, my thoughts, and that pond in the woods – shimmering like a mirror for whatever kind of boy I felt like being that day. Wild Adventures & Serious Business   Out there, I wasn’t a farm kid. I was a frontier scout, mapping out new trails. I was a pirate. A spy. A survivalist tracking game (read: squirrels and imaginary bears).   I built forts out of fallen limbs and abandoned fence posts. Named trees. Wrote secret codes in the dirt. Caught frogs, skipped stones, and had long, meaningful conversations with myself—usually about how to convince my parents to get me a mini-bike.   The thing about woods like those is that they teach you how to be comfortable being alone. Not lonely. Just with yourself.   Even at eight years old, I understood that silence wasn’t something to be feared. It was where ideas bloomed. Where questions echoed. And where you could try on new versions of yourself without anyone watching. The Pond That Reflected Everything   The pond was the centerpiece. I remember standing at its edge, imagining I was on the bank of the mighty Mississippi. I’d practice skipping rocks like I’d seen on Little House on the Prairie or toss acorns at imaginary enemies across the water.   Sometimes, I’d lie on my back and just look up—at clouds, leaves, birds—and wonder about big things: Why do some people live in cities?What makes a good man?Why does pond water taste so weird?   Looking back, those weren’t just idle thoughts. They were the early stirrings of philosophy, curiosity, and the kind of introspection that still drives me today. A Boyhood That Built a Man   That little pond and the woods around it shaped me in ways I’m only now beginning to understand. Honestly, I still see Tom and Huck in the mirror some days—older now, with less hair and a few occasional twinges – but just as curious, still barefoot in spirit, still chasing the next hidden trail. Still Wanderin’   I think we all need a stand of woods in our lives.   A space to step away from obligation.   To wonder again. To explore not just the world—but our place in it.   So if you’re reading this and feeling like life’s gotten a little too paved, maybe it’s time to find your own woods. Or maybe, if you’re like me, the trail you’re on today was actually forged long ago… barefoot, muddy, and humming with the sound of cicadas. And One More Thing…   If you’re ever standing near a pond, and you hear a faint voice yell “Last one in’s a rotten egg!” – that might just be me, still out there somewhere.   Livin’ best life, one barefoot step at a time.   —BrianExplorer. Lambassador. Slightly Sophisticated Farm Boy.  

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