Loading summary
Joe Rogan
This episode is brought to you by Tommy John Guys. During summer you want to be sun drenched, not sweat drenched. That's why you need the breathable sweat fighting fabrics of Tommy John. Tommy John's cool cotton boxer briefs are made from the finest USA grown Supima cotton. Supima is an ultra soft premium cotton with long fibers that efficiently pull moisture away from your body and evaporate it quickly to keep you cool and dry. In fact, cool cotton can keep you up to three times cooler than regular cotton. When you pair all that with Tommy John's super supportive contour pouch and no ride up legs, well, you're in for a cool, comfortable sweat free summer. Tommy John is so confident in their products, your first purchase is backed by a no risk guarantee. If you're not happy, they'll give you your money back, no questions asked. Look, there are thousands of other guys wearing Tommy John right now that are way more comfortable than you do. Don't settle for less this 4th of July. Keep it USA grown@tommyjohn.com Rogan for 30% off site wide this episode is brought to you by Manscaped. Look, if you, like me, you've decided to embrace the bald lifestyle this summer, then you already know a clean dome is a powerful dome. And that's why I got to tell you about the Dome Shaver plus from Manscape. This thing is a game changer. They've engineered it just for your scalp, not for your face or your junk. Your head. It glides smooth as hell. No razor burn, no weird patches, just clean, badass baldness. And the Dome Shaver plus features four stainless steel rotary blades designed with skin safe technology to reduce nicks and cuts, delivering a perfectly bald look. While its innovative flex adjust technology assures every blade adapts to the angles of your head and stays close to your scalp for a precise finish. Plus, it's waterproof so you can take it straight into the shower. The Dome Shaver plus is basically the easiest way to stay cool and look badass bald all summer long. Try it risk free with Manscape 30 day money back guarantee. Do yourself a favor, go to manscape.com use the code ROGAN15 at checkout and get 15% off your entire order. Again, that's code ROGAN15 for 15% off your entire order@manscape.com own the summer own the Dome.
Chad Wright
Joe Rogan Podcast Check it out the Joe Rogan Experience Train My Day Joe Rogan Podcast By Night All Day. Yeah, I do too Man, I chewed tobacco pretty much since I was about 13 years old. But, you know, as you get older, you start to try to optimize everything because the world tells you everything's going to kill you.
Joe Rogan
Is chewing tobacco going to kill you? Well, you know, I've heard people getting mouth cancer.
Chad Wright
Yeah, that's the main thing is mouth cancer. And it is. Mouth cancer is a pretty nasty. All forms of cancer are pretty nasty, but mouth cancer can really screw you up. And I think it's the, you know, like the chemicals that they spray on the tobacco when. When they're growing the tobacco. So I don't know, maybe if you grew tobacco organically and then you chewed, wouldn't give you mouth cancer.
Joe Rogan
Probably makes sense.
Chad Wright
I don't know.
Joe Rogan
Well, I was just reading something that 100% of California wines that they tested had glyphosate on them. 100%?
Chad Wright
Yeah, I believe it.
Joe Rogan
Which is just nuts, you know.
Chad Wright
Yeah. That stuff is everywhere. I mean, it's never going to go anywhere because, you know, when I was in the Navy, I lived in Virginia, and we moved out to a rural community. And they grew corn and soybeans primarily in the fields. And nothing else would grow in that dirt. Like, you could walk the rows of those crops, you know, and there would not be a single weed growing in the field. Nothing would grow except for the genetically modified seed or whatever they put out there. You know what I mean? And how long does that stay in the soil? Like, does that ever come. Can you ever get that out of the dirt so that other things could or would actually thrive there again? I guess after many, many years, you could.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, it's many, many years. I had Will Harris from. He's from Georgia, White Oaks Pastures. You ever heard of that guy?
Chad Wright
I actually listened to that episode that you did with him, man. Because I've ordered a pile of meat from them.
Joe Rogan
He's great.
Chad Wright
He is. That was a great episode.
Joe Rogan
And it's a great episode to educate people on, like, how much time it takes to take an industrial farm and convert it to regenerative agriculture. It's not easy. It's a long grind, super costly, not nearly as profitable. And, you know, he did it over a course of 20 years. And we have two jars of soil out there that he gave us. And one of them is a soil from his neighbor's farm, which is industrial farm, and the other one is his. And his is like a dark brown, rich, alive soil. And the one from his neighbor's farm is just pale and dead, and they have to spray all over it and use industrial fertilizer and yeah, it's ugly, man. And then it's gotten so far that, like, to turn it around and try to feed all the people that we have established here in this country in places where nobody's growing food, it's like, it's almost impossible. It's almost like they're stuck with this system of industrialized farming.
Chad Wright
Yeah. I mean, yeah, there's being here in Austin, you know, I don't go to the city much. I live on 700 acres in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. And I come here to the city and, you know, you see the result of packing so many human beings into one area. Yeah. How you gonna feed them people other than. Other than the way that we figured out how to do it? I mean, how you gonna feed them? Right? I don't know, man. Walking around the city, man, it's just coming from where I live. And don't take this as negative. I mean, people love cities. There's cool stuff in cities, right? Like, people get a lot. But me, when I come from where I live, you know, dude, where I'm in the woods every day for hours and hours. I don't go to town hardly ever. I'm a squirrel hunter. I have a little mountain cur. You know, we go out and squirrel hunt for hours every day and. But coming to the city, it's like the air burns my nose. It's like I've been coughing all day today.
Joe Rogan
You really notice it?
Chad Wright
I notice. I can smell it. It smells now we're staying right in downtown. The smell reminds me slightly of Lagos, Nigeria, which it's a hundred x in Legos. It literally burns your eyes and your nose to breathe the air there. But even in Austin, I can kind of smell this sour, you know? And then I'm looking at these poor people, man, like these people laying on these park benches and all this stuff, and I'm like, it just makes you think. It makes you wonder. The humans propensity to stoop lower than an animal. Like we have the propensity as human to stoop lower than an animal.
Joe Rogan
In the worst case scenario.
Chad Wright
In the worst case scenario, yeah. I mean, I understand. There's so much that goes along with the story that those. All the. All of those people have. And it was funny. I saw a lady sitting on the edge of the sidewalk today. She was smoking crack or something. My wife's in recovery. And I said, it's just mind boggling to me, me being a man of the country, to see the human's propensity to stoop that low. And she looked at me and she said, well, I've done it. I said, that's good, man. My woman is so good, brother.
Joe Rogan
She came out of it.
Chad Wright
She came out of it right? I mean, by the grace of God, but.
Joe Rogan
Well, I'm glad you didn't come visit us in la. I would have showed you some real shit. This is nothing.
Chad Wright
I went to LA one time with my buddy, Jesse Itzler. He took me out there when all this stuff started. I got out of the Navy. He said, chad. He said, he. He asked me to come coach him, teach him how to run a long ways. I said, all right, I'll come out there. And me and Jesse became fast friends. He said, I'm going to take you out here to la. He said, I'm going to take you on a few of these interviews with these people. He said, but I want you to realize that if you decide to do this, your life will never be the same. And I said, all right, let's go.
Joe Rogan
You mean, like, do a podcast?
Chad Wright
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Joe Rogan
Jesse's an interesting guy.
Chad Wright
He's one of my. He's one of my biggest mentors. He's one of. He's a close friend.
Joe Rogan
I like that dude a lot. I had him on, enjoyed talking to him.
Chad Wright
Yeah, I love him to death, man. But he. Yeah, he took me out there and LA was. Yeah, it put me back, really. Some of the places that we went were very similar to some of the areas that we deployed to. Just in the smell and the sights and, you know, the way people were living. It was wild, man.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, it's a chaotic environment and you get used to anything, and people that live there get used to it. They don't know what real peace is like, you know, like, when I would tell people why I like mountain hunting, I'd be like, man, it's like a vitamin that you didn't know you needed. You get out in there in the mountains and you smell that clean air and you just feel it, just. Your whole body just goes, this is. This is so much better. This is so much better to live like this.
Chad Wright
It is.
Joe Rogan
I just don't get a chance to do it that often, you know, I don't live in it like you do. Living in it is the ultimate, you know, if you could live in it and then go visit other places, that's way better to live in nature.
Chad Wright
The noise, too. The noise. I don't think that people who live in the city, they've become acclimated to all of the constant noise.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
It's never quiet. But when I enter into that environment, like that noise is doing, it does something to me. Like the traffic and the constant humming, and it just. I feel like I begin to hold this tension within me. I don't know what it's doing to me. I don't know, man.
Joe Rogan
Sensory overload. Yeah.
Chad Wright
But I guess you can become accustomed to it.
Joe Rogan
Well, people in New York City have to become accustomed to it, and they actually like it. They like that feeling of sensory overload. But everybody that I know that likes that is fairly unhealthy. I don't know any, like, real, fit, healthy, active people that really enjoy that environment.
Chad Wright
So why. Why do you. Why? Why? I understand you love what you do, but, I mean, you could build a studio somewhere out in the. Out in the mountains somewhere.
Joe Rogan
Like, why do you probably do that? We're gonna probably build a studio on a ranch next. That's okay. That's the next move. I want to have, like, a tactical course out there.
Chad Wright
Good for you, man.
Joe Rogan
Bass fishing lake. And have it set up and do fun shit with guests, too, because people.
Chad Wright
Are gonna come see you, man.
Joe Rogan
That's what I think.
Chad Wright
It's. I mean, what you've done, man, is so cool. I tell people all the time, if you ever have the opportunity to go and see someone who is the best in the world at what they do, take that opportunity, whether it's a runner, a fighter, a kayaker, or a podcaster. Like, it's so cool to be here and to get to witness what you do, how you do it, the level that you go to to make all this happen. You're the best in the world. Like, that's it. That's so cool for me, man. Like, if we don't talk here, but for 30 minutes, I got to see the best in the world do what he does. And how cool is that, man?
Joe Rogan
Oh, thank you.
Chad Wright
And, like, the hospitality that you have, you know, given me since I've been here, it's just next level. And that's what you see when you get to witness the best in the world do whatever it is they are the best at. You just get to see this whole nother level of proficiency, of skill, of technique, of mastery, and that opens up your mind into, like, what's possible.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, this. I mean, you can go back and watch the beginning episodes. This. It was terrible in the early days.
Chad Wright
Well, I'm a podcaster, too, man.
Joe Rogan
I mean, I know you. I watch your show all the time.
Chad Wright
I've got like 400 and something episodes out and same here when I first started. Yeah, it was awful. But it's so much fun. I love it.
Joe Rogan
I think I found your show because of a video that you did on your Land Cruiser. Because I'm a Land Cruiser nut.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And you were talking about, like, have a truck that will fucking, like, no matter what, will work. Like if. If they throw EMP pulses in the air and kill all the electronics, which is. People don't understand. Like every car everyone is driving has a fucking computer in it. And if something goes on, there's some sort of a power grid failure or some sort of a solar flare that knocks out electronics. It could knock out your fucking car. You have a brick now. It's not gonna work if you don't have a carburetor and you have a car. Like a regular old school car. Yeah, it's not gonna. You know Tucker Carlson, he drives like a 1978 pickup truck. And I go, why do you drive that? He goes, because they can't shut it off. The government can't get this. Got no gps. Got no. He's super fucking paranoid.
Chad Wright
Well, the newest vehicle that I have, and yes, Land Cruisers are my favorite. I become close friends with Daniel at TLC 4x4 and he's done two for me, 100 series and a 60 series.
Joe Rogan
And they did mine too, when they were in la.
Chad Wright
Yeah, man, they're just awesome. And like I said, my favorite part about driving the Land Cruiser is that it makes people smile. I'm not a very funny guy, you know, so there's not many. I don't get many opportunities to make human beings smile, but I can drive this Land Cruiser and people look at it, point at it, they're smiling and like that just. That's cool to me. You know what I mean?
Joe Rogan
Especially 60 series. I think there's just like a core group of people who love those things.
Chad Wright
Yeah. And you don't see them when I see one.
Joe Rogan
I slow down, I check it out.
Chad Wright
Yeah. But the newest vehicle that I have, and I'm a car guy now, I was poor most of my life. I'm still fairly poor. But, you know, I got enough money, I can buy the cars that I want now. And the newest car that I have is a 1997 Dodge diesel truck. I have 297. I have an OBS Ford, it's a 97 with the power stroke diesel. I have a 97 Dodge Ram with the Cummins diesel. Because those are the two best diesel engines undisputedly that have ever been produced. I have the 100 Series Land Cruiser. Actually, the 100 Series is a 98, but I kind of gave that to my brother, so I can't count that. The 60 series is an 84. I have an 86 Toyota they call pickup. It's a Hilux.
Joe Rogan
Mm.
Chad Wright
I don't know if I'm missing something, but I love, I love old cars, man.
Joe Rogan
Those old Toyotas are bulletproof. They never break.
Chad Wright
That's my squirrel hunting truck. Yeah, it'll go anywhere. You know, why am I going to go spend $30,000 on a side by side? I can get in this Toyota truck and I can go anywhere. You can go in a. In a side by side.
Joe Rogan
That's true.
Chad Wright
That's my squirrel hunting truck.
Joe Rogan
So is squirrel hunting the most hunting that you do?
Chad Wright
I love it. I do it every day that I'm at home. I squirrel hunt every day.
Joe Rogan
How much squirrel do you eat?
Chad Wright
Well, I eat squirrel on special occasions. I give away a lot of squirrel meat. You know, I'm blessed enough in life now that I can eat rib eye steak. I give away a lot of squirrel. I don't kill all the squirrels that we tree either, really. Since a young age, I was introduced to hunting with dogs, tree dogs specifically. And there was something about a tree dog that just stirred this passion within me. It is the only thing that has stuck with me from childhood, young childhood, the first tree dog I ever walked to. I mean, I was, I didn't even know I should probably shouldn't even have been in the woods, but I followed my uncle to a coonhound tree down in a swamp. And it just, even at that age, it just stirred something in me. Like this is some sort of primal instinct of partnering with this dog in this chase. And I've done it even up until now. And it's just, it's a unique experience, man. And the great thing about dogs, hunting dogs too, is the breeding aspect of it. That's a lot of fun. So not only are. Do you have your best friend, you know, my little mountain cur, her name's Wendy. She stays in the house. She's my best friend. We hunt every day together. But. But now I get to breed her. I get to select a mate. And over the course, I'm hoping over the course of the next 30 years or so, I can breed in these specific characteristics of this type of dog that I value. And so that's fun. You know, not only is the hunting fun, but the breeding is fun. The training's fun. Everything about it is fun. And you take a group of guys out squirrel hunting, man, and it's a blast because you don't have to be quiet. Look, man, you just. You're out there in the woods on four wheelers. Everybody's got shotguns. You know, you get to the tree, you, here's this dog just hammering a tree on this tree. Ow, ow, ow, ow. Everybody surrounds the tree and that squirrel gets nervous and he starts timbering out, going tree to tree. And you got five or six guys with shotguns blasting away, and everybody's cutting up and laughing. I mean, it's just a blast, dude. But that's my thing, you know.
Joe Rogan
That's a funny thing.
Chad Wright
I like to. I like the white. I like to hunt whitetails. I like. I get to go on my first elk hunt this year. Oh, wow.
Joe Rogan
Where you going?
Chad Wright
There's a. There's a family out in Utah. They own some ranch out there. I think it's called R5 Ranch. And they wanted to put a hunt on for a veteran. So they partnered with an outfitter called G3 outfitters and they bought a tag, and for some odd reason, they selected me as their veteran that they want to take out on an elk hunt. Now, I've always wanted the elk hunt, man. I've just, you know, I've just never made it happen. There's a lot that goes into it, as you know. Yeah. And so they're taking me to New Mexico. They bought a. Some tag from a landowner, and they're gonna take me out there. Elk hunt.
Joe Rogan
That's a great spot. New Mexico is a great spot for elk.
Chad Wright
He sent me some pictures of some of these bulls.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
I said, what an animal.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. New Mexico's got some crazy genetics, too. There's. There's two. There's. There's a guy who explained this to me that there's really two different besides like, tule elk and Roosevelt elk. There's Rocky Mountain elk and then there's Yellowstone elk. And the Yellowstone elk are an older breed that has a larger antlers, a bigger animal. And you find a lot of those in Arizona and you find a lot of those in New Mexico.
Chad Wright
So where we're hunting at is right. It is on the border of Arizona and New Mexico.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. So I bet you have great genetics out there.
Chad Wright
You know what, man? I can't believe it. I. I can't believe this is the first that my going to be my first elk hunt.
Joe Rogan
Are you rifle or boa?
Chad Wright
It's going to be rifle. Now Now I'm a big. I'm a big archery guy, too. When I hunt white tails. When I started hunting whitetails, that was what I did, was bow hunt and still bow hunt quite a bit. But. But this is a rifle hunt.
Joe Rogan
I love bow hunting. Rifle hunting is great. It's most effective, most efficient way to hunt. But there's something about having to get inside, you know, 70, 80 yards, sneaking up, executing a perfect shot.
Chad Wright
Now, you're a Hoyt guy too, right? I have been, too, all my life.
Joe Rogan
They make amazing, amazing bows.
Chad Wright
My wife. My wife, a couple years ago, bought me that RX7.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
With the carbon. Carbon fiber riser. I always wanted a bow with a carbon riser because I remember hunting so many hunts in the Southeast. Whitetail hunts. Walking into the stand and your hand just getting so cold.
Joe Rogan
Right, right.
Chad Wright
Carrying that bow around.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, that's the difference. Carbon doesn't get cold like that. Like. Like aluminum does.
Chad Wright
Yeah, that's the main reason I wanted one. But it's been a great bow.
Joe Rogan
This episode is brought to you by Universal Pictures Nobody 2. A couple years ago, Bob Odenkirk showed up out of nowhere as an action star in Nobody. Now he's back in. In the sequel to nobody 2. This time, Hutch tries to go on vacation with his family, and all hell breaks loose. It's a real delight to see a guy like Odenkirk kick some serious ass. Produced by 87 north, the same team behind hits like John Wick, Bullet Train, and the Fall Guy. Don't miss Universal Pictures. Nobody too. Only in theaters August 15th. Yeah, yeah, they make them better every year. And I don't know how the. They do it every year. They just tune a little bit of this and change a little bit of that and adjust the cams and just.
Chad Wright
They've probably got it mapped out for the next ten years in advance.
Joe Rogan
Oh, they do.
Chad Wright
They could go ahead and make the best one. They just, you know.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, it's incremental improvements based on, like, how the industry is going. But we went to the Hoyt factory. I've been to the Hoyt factory a few times, but we went recently and showed the process that they make those things. It's so incredible. It's all these, like, super sophisticated computers and machines and CNC machines. They're cutting the aluminum and, you know, they have like, so many different steps to make sure that quality control is perfect. And. Yeah, you know, at the end when you get it, you really appreciate it. And they're so smooth now. Like, I've been bow hunting for 12 years now. 13 years. 13 years. And just the difference in 13 years is crazy. Like if I go back and pick up one of my old bows, it just feels archaic.
Chad Wright
Yep.
Joe Rogan
They're so smooth now. The draw cycle so smooth. And they're so dead in the hand when you fire them.
Chad Wright
And those parallel limbs and their. So short and compact. You know, the old bows we used to shoot back in the day, the, the old Viper text and all that from Hoyt and Matthews had the old SQ2s and Q2s and they were just long and, and unwieldy in the, in the stand. And you know, you know, you can make like you said, 100 yard shots now with a compound bow back then. I mean, there wasn't nobody shooting in bows at 100 yards.
Joe Rogan
No.
Chad Wright
Because they just weren't tuned, I think, so finely as the bows that we have today. I mean, that RX7, man, every time I shoot that bow, it, it amazes me at how that arrow is just flies like a laser beam. I'm like, good night, man. Yeah, it's a cool. Have you ever shot a stick bow?
Joe Rogan
Yes.
Chad Wright
Okay.
Joe Rogan
I'm not good at it though. I shot it on vacation once. I was shocked at how bad I was because I'm so good with a compound.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Trying to figure out where to aim, where it goes and do all this and how to let loose.
Chad Wright
Right.
Joe Rogan
It's. I have a buddy who hunts exclusive. My buddy, Ryan Callahan. He hunts exclusively with a homemade bow. He's got a, like a long bow that he made. I don't know if he made this one. I know he's made them before, but, you know, it's those real simple bows. I'm like, why? You can't even get much energy out of that thing. But it's the extra challenge.
Chad Wright
You got to get real close.
Joe Rogan
You got to get real close and be real accurate.
Chad Wright
Yeah, I went, I took mine on a mule deer hunt up in the Wasatch Range in Utah two years ago. And yeah, I mean, you, you got to get within 7 to 10 yards of that animal with it. With a longbow. Yeah, I mean, I do, I do. Anyways, you know, Fred Barrow, he might could have made a 20 or 30 yard shot, but, you know, you gotta get, you gotta get right in their laps. And we were, I was on public land. It was a wilderness area. That's where I like to hunt. I mean, I like wilderness areas. That's the highest designation of preservation that Congress can award to a piece of Land. So if you're in a wilderness area, you know, there's not gonna be no horses, no mechanized tools. Nobody's gonna be clearing trails with a chainsaw up there. If you ever want to go in the backcountry, find a wilderness area. Not a national park, not a national forest, find a wilderness area. But we were watching these mule deer, and, you know, I'd watch them in the morning. They'd get up and feed when I'd wait for them to go lay down. And then you had to move on that mule deer and use the terrain. Put the terrain between you and him. And they'd be bedded down, and you could get with. The closest I got to one was about 5 yards, and he was bedded down under a tree, just kind of out in this big old rock. I was way up in the mountains, big old rocky area. Well, I stalked all the way up there to him, and I got about five yards from where I last seen, where I saw him be down at. You know, I lost sight of him when I started the stalk, and I got impatient, and I got there, and I was laid down up against the rock, and that tree was right there. And I thought, you know, it took me about an hour to stalk over here. I said, I wonder if he got up and moved. And I peeked my head up over that rock, and that big son of a gun was just looking right at me. I'm talking about eye to eye. Five yards. He jumped up and tore out of there. That was the closest I got to killing one. But if I would have just laid there with that longbow and been patient and wait, waited for him to stand up off his bed, yeah, I could have drew and shot him right there.
Joe Rogan
Well, he's probably already alert. He probably heard you.
Chad Wright
I don't know if he heard me or not. Yeah, I had the wind. I had the wind.
Joe Rogan
Ears are so good.
Chad Wright
I had shoes on. But, you know, I'm stalking across big, big granite, you know, rock slabs and stuff. So it was pretty quiet. I mean, there was no indication when I picked my head up, he was still laying there on bed. There was no indication that he knew I was there other than when he saw me peek my head over the rock and stand up and tear out of there.
Joe Rogan
You know, they're the most difficult to hunt because they're just dealing with mountain lions all day long. And they're just always like. And they'll jump the string quicker than any animal other than, like, the craziest ones are Axis deer. Have you ever Hunted axis deer.
Chad Wright
I haven't no.
Joe Rogan
Axis deer evolved with tigers. So there. They move so fast. I had a video of an axis deer that I shot at at 70 plus yards and with a lighted knock. And you see the arrow long. I mean, his arrows going 290ft a second. You see this arrow launching towards this deer. And this deer is feeding in the field, totally broadside. He hears the arrow within 10 yards, ducks down, hauls out, and he's gone by the arrow. Got by the time the arrow got.
Chad Wright
He hears the arrow in flight.
Joe Rogan
Exactly. He had no idea we were very far away. That's why I took the shot. It's one of the things with those animals, like, you're sometimes better off taking a long shot than a close shot because they hear that bow go off and they just duck and go. I mean, they're not trying to duck under your arrow. What they're trying to do is load up their weapons or load up their legs, rather get super low so they can launch themselves forward and gone. They're just trying to take off as quickly as possible. And that means dropping down. And when they drop down, arrows go right over them. But this one was so fast. Within 10 yards, he was nowhere near the arrow. His ass was over here. The, the, the, the vitals where I aim for was right here. He was already over there. He was two feet away from it. And he didn't start moving until that arrow was 10 yards away.
Chad Wright
Where was that at?
Joe Rogan
That was in Hawaii.
Chad Wright
Hawaii. Okay.
Joe Rogan
Lanai is a crazy place because Lanai has no predators and it's a small island. It only has 3,000 people living on it, but it has 30,000 deer plus.
Chad Wright
So they want you to kill.
Joe Rogan
They want you to kill them. Kill them as many as you can. They have people that are snipers that go out there at night. And everybody on the island eats. Good because it's the best meat. Axis deer is delicious if you've ever had it. It's right up there with elk. It's fantastic meat. And they're just completely overpopulated, so they have to do it. So people hunt them there 365 days a year. So high pressure. So they're used to, like, they're always with their head on a swivel, always looking around for a hunter.
Chad Wright
That would be a fun hunt. That would turn you up.
Joe Rogan
Oh, it's great. Before elk season. Yeah, that would turn you up because you'll get. If you blow a stalk, you get another stock in 10 seconds. Like you're on Another animal. And you're in these fields that used to be where the dole plant grew pineapples. So it's kind of a weird ground. Like I guess the way they would farm pineapples, they would put like a layer of plastic down and then the soil would be above the plastic. So everywhere you go it's weird. You see like almost like garbage bag plastic underneath the dirt all over the place.
Chad Wright
I'll be darn.
Joe Rogan
And these animals are you like you'll sit on the top of a hill and look down on a field and you might see 600 axis deer wandering around this field.
Chad Wright
Good night.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. It's crazy. It's crazy. It's so unnatural.
Chad Wright
But is that. Are they. Are they're not native?
Joe Rogan
No.
Chad Wright
Okay.
Joe Rogan
They were given to King Kamehameha by I think the king of India, whatever the ruler of India was in the 1800s. And they gave and they've had them on this island forever. And they're just completely overpopulated. Yeah, they're all like all over the place. And big ones too. Oh, it's a great hunt. It's a great. If you have a rifle, it's a no brainer. It's like you're 100% gonna get a deer. But if you got a bow, I mean I went out there with Cam Haynes and Remy Warren and Adam Green Tree and all these just like bonafide killers who like world class hunters.
Chad Wright
Cam's best in the world.
Joe Rogan
Best in the world. And we. And John Dudley was there too. We went out there and we were there for like six or seven days and everyone was successful. And then we made a podcast about it. Blew up the outfitters. A great place to go hunt. You stay at the Four Seasons. Incredible food, amazing amenities, beautiful, beautiful resort. And then you get to go and hunt in this incredible place. But after we left, he said they had 150 people come within that season from, from then until the time we went back the next year. One guy was successful with a bow. One. One night man. And you have so many opportunities, but they're so fast. And if you.
Chad Wright
Bad odds.
Joe Rogan
Bad odds.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Well, you have. Here's the deal. Don't try the morning. I use. I've hunted in the morning and I've been successful. But it's too quiet. You really want to go in the afternoon because in the afternoon you get a lot of wind.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And you know, you just gotta pick your spots and play your stalks correctly.
Chad Wright
Have you turkey hunted?
Joe Rogan
Yes.
Chad Wright
Okay.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
Eastern or, or what? California.
Joe Rogan
It was In California.
Chad Wright
Okay.
Joe Rogan
It was Miriam's or probably it was in the. The. The wine country up there. I went up there with Steve Rinella.
Chad Wright
Okay.
Joe Rogan
He took me to our county. It was fun.
Chad Wright
You know, his buddy's a big squirrel hunter. Steve's buddy's a big squirrel hunter. What's that guy, Clay Newcomb? Yeah. He's got a bunch of feist dogs. He. I think he hunts off of mules.
Joe Rogan
Yes.
Chad Wright
I tell you what we ought to do. We ought to set up a big squirrel hunt with everybody. With me, me and you and Clay and Cam and. And we'll just. We ought to set up a big squirrel hunt.
Joe Rogan
I'll do. I've had squirrel once. He cooks some squirrel up for us.
Chad Wright
Boy, if we could get him to come in and cook, too, that would be outstanding. It would be because I have a hard time making this wild game taste. Taste worth a flip. Do you? I'm just not a good cook.
Joe Rogan
I noticed that. I was going to talk to you about your steak cooking. We got to work on that.
Chad Wright
Yeah, I'm just not much of a cook, man.
Joe Rogan
I want you to cook a steak on a Traeger. And I was like, listen, the way to cook a steak on a Traeger is you can cook a steak on a Traeger. Like, you could cook, like, if you have a roast. Like, you can cook a good roast on the Traeger, but the reality is you need to be able to sear it. And so you can't really sear things on a Traeger. And I saw what you did. You tried to turn the temperature up real high and then cook it at the end. The key is get it on a frying pan. Like, get it low and slow on the traeger. I like 225 degrees with the super smoke. Get it nice and smoky, get it up to 120 degrees, and then cast iron skillet, get that motherfucker hot. Put some beef tallow in there. It's like 90 seconds on each side.
Chad Wright
Seals it up perfect. Now, do you do much of your own cooking?
Joe Rogan
Yeah, I do almost all my own cooking. Okay. Yeah, I cook a lot.
Chad Wright
Does your wife cook?
Joe Rogan
Yeah, she cooks, too.
Chad Wright
Yeah, my wife cooks. I'm so blessed that she cooked because I've got a long ways to go. I actually made a goal of mine I've been working on. I cook for her one night a week, and it's worked out a few times, but I'm learning. I appreciate that tip on the steak.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, the tip on the steak. It's reverse sear is what it's called. And I learned that from whiskey bent, my friend Chad. Whiskey bent barbecue. And he said, if you really want to cook a steak correctly, he goes, you want it to be slowly cooked and then sear the outside. A lot of people try to sear it first. He's like, I don't agree with that. I think the way to get the juiciest steak is to slow cook it and then sear it at the end. The reverse sear method.
Chad Wright
Well, I'm gonna try that when I get.
Joe Rogan
It's the move.
Chad Wright
My cousin raises all the cows we eat.
Joe Rogan
Oh, that's cool.
Chad Wright
My mama makes all the bread we eat. My wife grows all the vegetables that we eat. I'm gonna say seasonally. You know what I mean? Seasonally. My cousin raises all the cows. You know, we get our water right out of the ground. I take buckets of water once a week, go collect water. Comes right out of a spring. Some old rednecks found a spring back in there and ran a PVC pipe out of it, you know, and so we just go there and collect all our water.
Joe Rogan
So you're totally off the grid.
Chad Wright
Well, you know, we'll order some stuff from the grocery store, you know, just. It will.
Joe Rogan
But your home is totally off the grid.
Chad Wright
It wouldn't be hard at all to ramp things up to the point that we were 100% eating what we could produce as a family unit. No one person, like, no one person is going to produce everything that they need for them and their family to eat. It's my cousin. He raises cows. So we know where they're coming from. We know how they're living. We know what they're being fed. Like I said, my mama makes bread. My wife can grow anything. It's an effort, you know, I hunt. I can bring in wild game meat at any time. Everybody thinks about when the apocalypse comes, you know, you think you're gonna be eating all these deer and elk and stuff. You're gonna be eating squirrel, buddy. Squirrel. And birds. Maybe a possum every now and then. Deer's gonna be gone quick, probably. You know, small game. A smart. If you want to really subsistence, you know, get your meat from the wild. You got to be able to hunt small game. Squirrels, rabbits, coon, possum. You got to be able to hunt them. You know, you go out and try to hunt a coon without a dog, you ain't going to kill no coon, right? You know, I can take a good dog and kill 10 coons in an hour. If I'm.
Joe Rogan
What does raccoon taste like?
Chad Wright
Raccoon is pretty greasy. You gotta. Again, you gotta cook it right. You know, so much wild game other than elk. I found elk seems to be really, really good. Even if you're not a skilled cook. Yeah, you know, to me anyways, it's the best wild game meat I've ever ate. Yeah, but, but like these squirrels, coons, things like small game, even rabbit, they can get real tough, you know that? You can.
Joe Rogan
Is that raccoon, Jamie?
Chad Wright
Yeah, that's coon right there. You cook it in a crock pot. A lot of these small game, you. You slow cook it, you know, and that kind of helps keep it moist and break it down. Yeah, but anyways, man, I'm all over the darn place.
Joe Rogan
And you probably have to cook it to a high temperature too. Raccoons probably get trichinosis, right?
Chad Wright
I don't know if a coon does or not. I've killed a bunch of bears and I know they do. They do, yeah. That's the one thing I didn't like about bear.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, me too. It makes me uncomfortable.
Chad Wright
I killed. I've killed two black bears. Both of them with my bow. Both of them about £500.
Joe Rogan
Those are big black bears.
Chad Wright
Big, big black bears.
Joe Rogan
Are these Georgia black bears?
Chad Wright
No, these are Virginia. There's a place in Virginia called the great dismal swamp. It's about 110,000 acre continuous block of land. That's what's left of it. It's eat up with bears. I mean, I would take my coon dog down, down the swamp bottom. We called it the run. And during springtime when them bears were out with cubs, I couldn't even hardly run my coon dog up and down through there. There was so many bears in there. And them sows would get. They would get, you know, mad at us for being in there and start popping their teeth and making racket. I took a young man with me down in there one time. First time he ever been coon hunting. I was hunting a dog called a leopard cur. And I cut that dog loose in there and he went down in there. Oh, boom, slam, treed. I thought, all right, this is good, because coon hunting can be rough. We walked down in there and I had this man, this young guy with me, he had the rifle. We got up to the tree and I walk up to that dog and leash it up. And I'm fooling with the dog, getting it leashed. Back on the tree there and he said what is that? I said what are you talking about? He said stop and listen. And I stopped and that dog quit barking for a second. And all of a sudden I could hear bark raining down on the leaves above my head. Because it was summertime about that time about a 300 pound black bear comes sliding down out of that tree like it was on a fireman's pole. Landed. I'm talking about that joker. Landed right in the midst of me, him and the dog. And he's standing there, he's just frozen cuz he never been coon hunting before. He's got the gun, he's just frozen. And about the time that bear hit the ground, I snapped the leash off of that dog because the dog was my only chance to run this bear out of our vicinity. And those, these cur dogs are real gritty. They won't back up there. I, I mean they won't back up from nothing. They're like a, like a gamecock, man. And that dog tore out after that bear ran him out. I looked over at that boy, I said what were you just gonna, you've got the gun, you just stood there and didn't. He said well I thought that happens all the time. But that's how many bears was in this area, man. So I'd be out there whitetail hunting, you know, and a big old 500 pound boar bear would come up, you know, I've had him climb the tree that I was sitting in the tree stand. But you know, if a big one came by, it's hard, it's hard not to shoot a big trophy bear, especially with a bow. So I've killed two. But when we kill them bear, I would just. There was a lot of poor, real poor people lived around in there. Well, there was one man named Zachariah. He was about a 90 year old black man, he had one eye. He hunted year round because he had to hunt to eat. We'd see him out in the field deer hunting in the middle of the summertime. Wouldn't nobody say nothing to him because they knew he had to eat. But I'd call Zachariah when I kill that bear. Well then he would call all of his people in the community and we'd take that bear down to the skinning shed and within 10 minutes we'd have 50 people lined up at the skinning shed with grocery bags. And so we would cut this bear up and process this bear. And these, you know, poor people, they'd come down there and get them a big piece of meat. Well, by time everybody was done. They wasn't maybe but one piece of meat left, you know what I mean? Because I don't like bear, but I sure do like killing them.
Joe Rogan
Have you ever had it cooked well done?
Chad Wright
Well, we've cooked some at the house, but I haven't. I mean, I haven't. That's what I'm saying. I'm not a good cook.
Joe Rogan
You just have to learn how to do it. My friends John and Jen, they run an outfitter in their outfitters in Alberta, and they're bear hunters. And I've been bear hunting with them. And they take like a roast and they'll cook it on a trager. They brine it, they put it in, like, they marinate it, and it's fantastic. It's like some of, like better than the best roast beef you've ever had.
Chad Wright
Oh, I know there's a way. There's a way to make it taste good.
Joe Rogan
It's all. It's also in what they eat. You know, if you get them and they've been eating like a dead moose and, you know, and they've been feasting on that for a couple weeks, and then it's rotten and they just. They stink. And that's not good. No, they want to get acorn bears.
Chad Wright
These bears we were killing, they would. They. The reason they were so big, they were eating corn and soybeans.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, perfect.
Chad Wright
You know, now they'd eat a pile of deer guts, too. I mean.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, they eat everything.
Chad Wright
I would. I would gut a deer out there. You know, if I killed a deer, I got it in the woods. I don't get them back at the house. I just got them in the woods. And you come back an hour later and they wouldn't be. Not a speck of them guts left.
Joe Rogan
Crazy.
Chad Wright
I mean, they would eat the fire out of them.
Joe Rogan
Do you know that the early pioneers preferred bear meat and they use deer just for skins?
Chad Wright
No, I did not know.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, like Daniel Boone and all those fellows. They. Those guys, they were bear hunters.
Chad Wright
They wanted to fat.
Joe Rogan
They. Yeah, they wanted the fat and they ate bear meat because they thought it was closer to beef.
Chad Wright
Huh?
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
Well, it is closer to beef. Yeah, I would say. Than deer.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, I would say so. Especially if it's cooked well. It's delicious. It's just. You got to get a bear that's not eating rotten meat and not eating fish and. And cook it right. But if you cook it right, it's fantastic. It's really good. Bear sausage is fantastic. It's all just in how you get it prepared.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
How you do it. Renell is really good.
Chad Wright
Well, see, I got to start running in the right circles with people that can cook. Yeah, that's my problem.
Joe Rogan
My friend Jesse, who owns this restaurant here called Dai Due. What is Jesse's? That he runs a school that teaches people how to shoot hogs, how to butcher them, how to cook them, and, you know, he. He likes old ruddy old hogs, and he really knows how to do it correctly. So this is it. This is a new school of traditional cookery. So Jesse will take people and he'll take them out there, teach them how to hunt, teach them everything about it. How to. How to stalk an animal, how to dress the game, how to cook it and prepare it, and what the cuts you're looking for. And he teaches classes on this.
Chad Wright
How cool is that?
Joe Rogan
It's amazing. I mean, it's a small class because he wants to do it correctly, but he's incredible in that restaurant. If you ever get a chance to go to a Dai Due in town, it's amazing.
Chad Wright
I'm gonna go ahead and tell you. If you can make an old bore hog taste good. Yeah. You have got to be a master.
Joe Rogan
He's a master. He also, like, cooked diver ducks for us, which everybody says are disgusting. And they were fantastic. And he's like, it's all just in the preparation. He marinated them. He slow cooked them on a smoker. They were fantastic.
Chad Wright
All that stuff just takes time, you know, it just takes time. It's so much easier just to. Just to cook a ribeye.
Joe Rogan
Oh, yeah.
Chad Wright
You know what I mean?
Joe Rogan
That's the easiest is. Yeah, it's just. There's something about wild game to me, that's. It's different kind of food. It's. Yeah, it's. It feels different when you eat it. There's more energy to it. Yeah, it's like. It's just so nutrient dense. You eat it, your whole body just goes. You feel it. You know, like you cook an elk steak and you eat that medium rare and you just biting into it and it's juicy and.
Chad Wright
Ah, I can't wait, man.
Joe Rogan
Oh, yeah.
Chad Wright
I hope I get one. I think I got a good chance of getting one. These boys are serious. Yeah. So.
Joe Rogan
Well, with a rifle, your chances are a lot higher. And I know you're a real good shot, so you're probably in it. A guy like you also could shoot accurately at a distance, which is huge. You'll have no Idea you're there, you know, you can, I'm sure you can make a 500 yard shot easy. And if your rifle's tuned correctly for something like that, it's like you got a pretty good shot.
Chad Wright
Have you been, have you been up to the Yukon Territory at all?
Joe Rogan
No, no, I haven't.
Chad Wright
I just got back.
Joe Rogan
What are you doing up there?
Chad Wright
It's been, it's been, you know, it's been quite the journey both on the, on the macro and the micro level to wind up here at this table with you. I spent the last, about the last month sitting with a good friend of mine, one of my biggest mentors in my life. I said I'd sit with him for hours on end while he was dying. And then I had to leave him and I went out to the Yukon. Sorry, man. We need to talk more about that, by the way. And I had, I've got a teammate that I went through SEAL training and all with. He was paralyzed 14 years ago and he wanted to go an adventure. And I said, well, there's a race out there. It's a thousand mile kayaking race. It's the longest kayaking race in the world on the Yukon river. Totally unsupported. He said, all right. Well, he prepared for about two years and we went out there and did that on the Yukon River.
Joe Rogan
Wow.
Chad Wright
And I came home and my buddy died the day I got home. And so it's been a man, it's been a while last month or so. Have you ever got to sit with anybody while they're dying important to you?
Joe Rogan
Not while they're dying.
Chad Wright
I highly recommend. Will teach you so much man about what's important. Has made me grow like, I don't know, man, it just gives me the dag on chills thinking about it. And the crazy thing is, is the type of person I used to be. I would have thought, you know, going and sitting with someone who's dying is a waste of time. Like, I got other things to do. Right? You do too. We got busy lives. Well, this man, he mentored me, hunting and everything, working, all that. His name was Don Tidwell. From the time I was about 13 to the time I left to go become a Navy seal. Well, I did my whole Navy thing. I got out. I reconnected with dawn for a while. But then I started this company, now that we have three of seven project got busy. I have a curse from my military service. I have this unique ability to be able to forget you ever existed when I, you know, when you When I get on some sort of mission and you're not part of that anymore, I can forget you ever existed. And so I lost touch with him because of my own selfishness and been doing this thing for the last four or five years. Well, his wife called me and said, look, he just wants to see you one more time. He's got pancreatic cancer. He's got maybe two weeks left. He just wants to see you one more time. Good night, man. Took a lot of courage for me to go show up in front of him and sit down with him and say, mister, don't. I'm sorry I haven't been the friend to you that you deserve. Will you forgive me? He's laying there dying. He looks back at me and says, son, there's nothing to forgive. I mean, just like. And then from that point, I'd go sit with him twice a week for eight or nine or 10 hours, just sit right there by his bed. I'd read the scriptures to him. He only had a third grade education. We read about the Gospel and we read about the resurrection, and we read about creation. The first thing that you learn, I think, when you sit with somebody that's dying, is that death is the great foe that sits above mankind and scoffs at our wisdom. You get what I'm saying? Death is this great foe. It is the enemy that sits above us and mocks the wisdom of man. Mr. Don had built basically an empire within the community he lived in. He had made millions and millions of dollars as an entrepreneur, couldn't read or write, but he still had to succumb to this process that's coming for all of us. I don't know, man. That just hit me. We think we want to look up at the sky and we want to explain how the cosmos began. And we can't even solve our own biggest problem. We can't solve our own biggest problem, which is death. Right. It's the. It's the biggest problem for all of us.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
We can't figure out how to solve it, how to overcome it. Like, we don't think about this enough. Like, have you ever thought, why are you dying? Have you ever thought about that? Sure. Like, not like I get it. Like, all of us, we understand death as, you know, we go along through this life, and then something happens. We get hit by a car, one of our organs fail, cancer happens, whatever. And we say, that killed us. Right. And that thing did kill us. But your entire life is leading you to that point. Like, why do you have to die? Like it's by necessity you must die. Why? What's killing you? What's killing you?
Joe Rogan
Well, age. Your body stops reproducing correctly. Your cells don't reproduce correctly.
Chad Wright
So why does that happen? What's causing that?
Joe Rogan
Every animal, almost every animal on this planet has a timeline that it exists in. It's probably, it's probably a natural function of keeping a balance. Like all of nature has a balance. And I mean, can imagine if mosquitoes lived a thousand years, what a pain in the ass that would be. No, they get a couple. But, you know, how long does a mosquito live? A week. How long does a fly live? A week. Good, because otherwise we'd be, you know, a deer, a good deer, good deer. That's like the best days of its Life. It's like 13 years. It's done, it's over. It's gonna, it's. It's limping, it's going to get torn apart by coyotes, whatever gets it. Everything has a time. Because if it didn't, then there'd be too many people, there'd be too many.
Chad Wright
Balance would be.
Joe Rogan
The balance would be all fucked up.
Chad Wright
That's. That's a great answer, man.
Joe Rogan
The thing is, there's a lot of scientists that are working on that and a lot of scientists that I've talked to that are treating aging like a disease. So instead of just accepting the fact like, oh, you're 50 now, things are slowing down. Like, well, why are they slowing down and what can we do to reverse that?
Chad Wright
I love thinking along those lines, man. Like, yeah, I love that.
Joe Rogan
At the very least, what it does is improves your performance radically as an older person, improves your physical performance is what was what people would be capable of naturally with no supplements 20, 30 years ago. It's a very different world today. Very, very, very different. And with all the different modalities, all the different things you could do, like hyperbaric treatments, NMN supplementation, red light therapy, cold plunge, sauna, all these different things radically change the composition of your body and your overall metabolic health radically changes it. And then with hormone therapy and all the other different things that you can do, I mean, it's just because of science and because of people figuring these things out. It's a radically different world than it was in the past.
Chad Wright
But is there a solution? Like, is there a fix for death? Like, is anyone searching or even contemplating that?
Joe Rogan
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. David Sinclair is all over that. He's a guy from Harvard that we've had on the podcast a few times that's his primary study. They're treating aging as a disease and trying to figure out what different types of medication, what different types of therapies, what's the root cause of the cells aging and not reproducing correctly.
Chad Wright
It's an ugly thing, man.
Joe Rogan
Oh, it gets rough. Especially if you don't take care of yourself, you know, that's the rough one. When you see people that have been drinking their whole life and then they quit at 75, and you're like, it's a little late, you know, even torturing your body, forcing your body to process poison for decades.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
You know, and. And also just living in cities alone. You were talking about that smell that. That weird smell that you get in cities. That's fucking brake dust and tires and exhaust fumes and doo doo. And doo doo. It's a little bit of doo doo. Not bad. Here. Go to San Francisco.
Chad Wright
I found a turd on the side of the trail today, A human turd. It was a terrible log, too, man. Yeah. My wife went back and took a video of it. You might see it on YouTube in the next couple of days.
Joe Rogan
Okay. Your visit to Austin.
Chad Wright
But, yeah, man, just sitting with him makes me contemplate these things. And for me, obviously, because of my worldview being shaped by scripture, it makes me go to scripture and bounce these questions off of the scriptures, you know, and even I think it was powerful, too, because, you know, I'm sitting with a man who is important to me, who is bearing this burden of death. And by the way he bore it. Well, it was amazing to me that I could go and sit with him, and he would talk to me and take time to spend with me, even in the midst of this terrible process that he was going through. I told him, I said, you could have just laid there on this bed and not said a word to anybody, and nobody would have blamed you. You know, it's scary. It's. It's. You're. He couldn't sit still, you know, and. And because he was in so much pain. It's daggone. Cancer's rough, man.
Joe Rogan
Pancreatic is a bad.
Chad Wright
Yeah, it's rough. But. But then, you know, he had these same questions that I'm thinking, like, why does this have to happen? You know, and then for me then to have to go and search the scriptures and then come to him with the scriptures and share the scriptures with him to, you know, give him some of the answers that he had. You know, it's like I would read a scripture to him and he Would say, because, again, Mr. Don had a strong faith in the message of what we call the gospel, but he didn't know all the other stuff because he couldn't read, right? So I would read a scripture to him and. And then he would say, read another one, read another one. And I was. See, it was the. It was the wildest thing, dude. I've never seen it. I've never seen anything like it before. I've been. I've been following the Lord Jesus for 13 years now. I was reading these words off of the page, not even explaining them to him. I was just reading him these scriptures, and they were manifesting, like, power in him. Like, you could see you witnessed a change in his expression and his attitude. It was like these words I'm reading are manifesting power and hope and, like, literal energy. Like, I would come over and read the scriptures to him, and he would been in bed for the last four days, wouldn't get up for anybody. I'd read the scriptures to him, and then next thing you know, we'd be out on the porch. Like, he'd get out of bed and we'd go walk out on the porch. I'd have to help him walk, right? And his wife kept saying, you're the best thing for him right now. I'm like, no, you don't understand. It's not my presence. For somehow I'm reading him from these scriptures and it's like manifesting some sort of power and hope in him, and it, like, would give him energy in some way. And I. I can't explain. I've never seen it happen. Like. Like, I've never witnessed that before, you know?
Joe Rogan
Well, it's probably even more profound because he can't read. So you're reading it to him, dude. Right.
Chad Wright
Dude. It was wild, man. Like, and I would read these scriptures to him, Joe, and he would say, yeah, I. I understand that now. And, like, we're reading complex things. Like, we're reading about the resurrection, like, the bodily resurrection of all the saints at the second coming of Christ. And, you know, he asked me one of the questions. He asked me, has anybody ever really explained to you what happens when we leave here? You know, because he's wondering these things. Like, I'm about to. I'm about to depart this tent, buddy. What's about to happen? And I'm like, well, the only answer I can give you, Mr. Don, has got to come from these scriptures. And so. And I would read these complex scriptures to him, First Corinthians, chapter 15. And Second Corinthians, chapter 5. And he would. He would under. Like, it would make sense to him in his mind more than my mind could comprehend the truth of what I was reading. Like, that was what was wild.
Joe Rogan
It was like that stage in his life where he's taking it in.
Chad Wright
This veil between this realm and the next realm was getting thin, and he was taking in the truth of this word and processing it logically at a level that I can't process it because this veil for us is still so thin unless you hit that dmt, right? And so I'm witnessing. It was wild, dude. And two, like, crazy things happen. Like, when I'd sit with him, like, every, you know, couple hours, I'd get up and go check in with his wife or something, and we had a camera in the room with him, and we could watch what he was doing. And when I would walk out of the room, you give it a few minutes, and you would see him start to look above him. And he was. He would be reaching like this for stuff above him. And, like, we didn't know what he was doing. We never even asked him. I wish I would have asked him, like, Mr. Don, what are you seeing? Like, what are you reaching for? Well, then back when I would come back in the room with him, he would stop doing it. And then toward the end there, he had a stroke. He was paralyzed. 1. His whole left side of his body was paralyzed, and so he was just. You know, he couldn't sit up or do anything. And then finally, at the very end, when he passed away, he literally sits up out of. He sits up erect in his. Out of his hospital bed, reaches both of his hands straight up like this, and then lays back down and departs the tent.
Joe Rogan
Whoa.
Chad Wright
So I started researching this. What the crap is going on here?
Joe Rogan
I wish you asked him what he was reaching for.
Chad Wright
You. You watch. There are. I found this hospice nurse on Instagram. I don't remember her name, but she. She's, like, posting all these videos of people doing this exact thing. They're. And they're reaching for stuff. And she's a hospice nurse, right?
Joe Rogan
Did you save it? Do you have it on your phone?
Chad Wright
I don't. I don't have it. I don't remember. It's a. She's got a lot of following. She's got a big following. Just look. Jamie will probably find hospice nurse on Instagram or whatever, but she posts all these videos of these people.
Joe Rogan
Is this her reaching?
Chad Wright
They're, like, calling out. I don't know if that's not her. But this is another one that's not the one I watch. Death Reach. It's a very common thing. And they're calling out a lot of times the names of loved ones that have passed before them. They're seeing something, like they're seeing into the other realm. Oh, it's that lady on the far right over there. That's the one I watch. She's a little crazy, but I'm gonna go ahead and tell you. She puts out some wild stuff, man. This is common stuff, man.
Joe Rogan
What's her name? Jamie. It says below. Hospice nurse Penny.
Chad Wright
Before their death, when they're able to tell us what they're seeing, when they're.
Joe Rogan
Able to tell us about these visions.
Chad Wright
They'Re almost always above them or up in the corner of the room.
Joe Rogan
But sometimes, as they get closer to.
Chad Wright
The end of life and they're no.
Joe Rogan
Longer able to communicate, we start seeing them reach into the air. So I'm convinced that when they are reaching into the air, they are reaching towards those people who they love, who have died before them.
Chad Wright
That this woman's not a believer. And as far as I know, I don't think. I don't know what her. You know, what. How her worldview is. Is on. In terms of what happens after this. But she's just sitting here showing you, saying, hey, this happens. Yeah, we can't figure out why. We can't figure out what's going on. Obviously, for me, when I see that happening, when Mr. Don sits up in the bed, even though he's literally paralyzed by a stroke, he sits. Impossibility. He sits up in his bed and reaches both hands in the air and then lays down and departs the tent. What do I. I have to believe that, like, his transportation had arrived? You know what I mean? And to witness that, how does that not, like, strengthen? You're witnessing something that's tangible. It's like, how does that not strengthen at least your faith that there is something coming after this? You know what I mean?
Joe Rogan
There's so many stories. And the thing is, people have this arrogant assumption, and this is a lot of. Based on academics and science and this belief that we have all the answers to reality when we don't even really understand consciousness, we don't. Consciousness is a massive mystery. So this idea that we've got it solved, and when I. When I hear people say, when you die, that's it. It's over. Like, how do you know? You're just saying this. You're just saying this. That. That is as much of a belief system as any religion. This. This belief in something that you have no evidence of whatsoever. But there's so many anecdotal stories of people with near death experiences, including Sebastian Younger. Do you know who he is?
Chad Wright
I've heard the name.
Joe Rogan
Brilliant journalist.
Chad Wright
He.
Joe Rogan
Great author, has written some incredible books. He did Restrepo. Right. Documentary about the war. And just an amazing, interesting, very, very intelligent guy. And the last time he was on the podcast, he was telling us a story about he had a medical emergency. Some sort of. Was like a. An artery burst, right, Jamie? Something inside of his abdomen and he was bleeding out on the inside and he was dying. And he got to the hospital and had this near death experience that, like, very, very vivid experience interacting with his father, like just beyond anything that he would have ever comprehended. And came back with a completely different perspective on life and death and like what this is and where that there is something else. There's something out there. And people that have had near death experiences or died and been resuscitated, they come back with the same story over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again. It's not. There's not a lot of variation. There's different interpretations of what they're seeing, but it all fits within the same framework. It all fits within a framework that this is. There's something there. Did you see the video of this.
Chad Wright
Kid a couple of weeks ago?
Joe Rogan
No.
Chad Wright
He's having a wild experience where he sees Jesus. He sees his dead father. Come on. Says it's beautiful.
Joe Rogan
Why is this kid.
Chad Wright
I miss my bow on my haircase.
Joe Rogan
I think he was sick and he's coming out of surgery. I don't know the exact story on.
Chad Wright
What was happening to him. Jesus.
Joe Rogan
This video goes on long.
Chad Wright
It's a 10 minute video, but whoa. Yeah, he's dreaming, all right. He's seeing into a different. He's seeing into the next realm.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, you could dismiss that. You could dismiss that if you wanted to.
Chad Wright
Yeah, you can't. You can, man, but look, man, and I don't even need all these signs and wonders. Like, I don't even need all that, man. I mean, it's great when you get the opportunity to witness things. Like I got to witness with my friend Mr. Dawn and just see his faith and see that the word manifests power in him. Like, it's great when you get to see it, but you can get too carried away with all that stuff too. You know what I mean? It's like I Don't know, man. You know, I'm wondering, Joe, if the Almighty ain't calling you.
Joe Rogan
Calling me how?
Chad Wright
On the phone calling you, man.
Joe Rogan
What do you mean? In what way?
Chad Wright
I'm just wondering. I think a lot of people are wondering what the Almighty is doing, what he's working in. You see, Scripture is dripping with something that's called election. A lot of people get mad about me talking about this. But this truth that we will never choose God, the Almighty, we will never choose to believe. As a matter of fact, Scripture actually says over and over again the whole message of the cross is foolishness. It's foolishness. I mean, seriously, some dude died on a cross. What does that represent to man? That represents weakness. That represents defeat. That represents death. You're gone. The message of the cross is foolishness to man. We will never choose to believe in the message of what we call the Gospel. That is that Jesus Christ died on the cross according to the Scriptures, he was buried, and that he rose again by his own power according to the Scriptures. That's foolishness. And the only way that we can or will ever believe that, like, truly place our faith in that and everything that's contained in that statement right there. Because there's a lot there. You could literally spend the rest of your life meditating on that right there. The Gospel, the what was done on the cross. And by way of the resurrection of Christ, you would never get to the end of it. You would never comprehend everything. You would never search it to its bottom. You will never believe that. And the only way that you can believe that is if the Almighty in His grace basically makes you alive spiritually. Because these things are spiritually discerned. They're not logically discerned. They're foolishness. To man, these things must be spiritually appraised. And so the Almighty, by His grace, makes you alive, literally, spiritually alive, so that then you can discern the truth of not only the gospel, but everything, the totality of what is contained in scripture. It's called the doctrine of election. And so when I say, I wonder if the Almighty's calling you, what I mean is I wonder if you are one of the Almighty's electricity.
Joe Rogan
Oh, boy.
Chad Wright
That'S a lot. And if you are, you better hold on to your britches, son.
Joe Rogan
I oftentimes wonder what's going on and why me?
Chad Wright
Yeah, you must, man. Yeah, you must.
Joe Rogan
It doesn't make sense.
Chad Wright
You must, and I hate. You know, that's a personal thing, man, and I don't. I hope you don't take that as any disrespect.
Joe Rogan
No, I don't.
Chad Wright
It's just, for me, seeing. It's odd how much we have in common, seeing what a special human being you are. Like, it's exciting for me to be able to hope that the Almighty is indeed calling you. Like, that's exciting, dude. Like, literally, I prayed for you last night. Like, I literally. On your behalf, I beg the Almighty to basically make you alive spiritually so that you could have discernment and be able to appraise these things that are in scripture that have seemed like foolishness for so long to you. You know what? They seem like foolishness to me for a long, long time, dude.
Joe Rogan
What changed?
Chad Wright
We're talking about a bunch of wild stuff, man. And I want to.
Joe Rogan
Can I take you back while we're in the middle of this? I'd like to take you back to, like, how you got on this journey of being a podcaster and then to that, because I want to know, like, what is the transition from the SEALs to becoming this guy who's very outspoken on YouTube and starts putting these videos out and things get interesting, and then you very, very religious and spreading that in your YouTube as well. Like, how did this whole journey get started for you?
Chad Wright
Well, I had. I decided I wanted to become a SEAL because I wasn't really good at anything else in life, and I, you know, didn't want to go back to school and all that stuff. That's a whole long story. But I decided I wanted to do that. I finally. I went to join the Navy. They disqualified me. Sent me back home after boot camp. Wouldn't let me go to Bud's. Told me I never would be able to become a SEAL because I had a pericardial cyst on my heart. 7 centimeter cyst on my heart. You can look it up. Research. Navy seal, pericardial cyst. You can read the whole medical journal. I'm the only one. Came back home, paid for my own heart surgery as a civilian, showed back up in the Navy less than a year later, made it all the way through SEAL training unscathed.
Joe Rogan
So what do they have to do? They have to remove the cyst?
Chad Wright
Yeah, they had to cut my chest open and take a big old cyst off.
Joe Rogan
How big is the. Did they have to open your ribs?
Chad Wright
The whole deal about from here to here.
Joe Rogan
Oh, so they go through.
Chad Wright
Yeah, they peeled my pec up. Peeled it up. Cut me open right there and went in there and took that cyst off.
Joe Rogan
How long did it take to recover from that.
Chad Wright
Took me about a year. I was back in the Navy about a year after that surgery, you know, but if it wouldn't have been for that, I wouldn't have made it through SEAL training, man. I didn't even know how to swim, dude. I even know how to swim.
Joe Rogan
That's crazy.
Chad Wright
I was the most unlikely person to ever make it through SEAL training. Okay, hands down.
Joe Rogan
Did you have any background in physical fitness?
Chad Wright
No.
Joe Rogan
Nothing.
Chad Wright
Lord, no, I didn't, man. It took me. It took me two or three months to pass a mile and a half run. Wow. Yeah. Made it through SEAL training, all this and that. Good stuff. I had a very colorful career. Started off real good, got real bad. I mean, I've been through it all. I've been in SEAL training. At the end of our bud's prep phase, you know, I was awarded the Hard Charger Award. You know, everybody selected me. The instructor cadre said, you're the one that's going to make it. I was actually the only one to ever receive that award to make it through that training pipeline. Everyone else they had selected up until that point all quit. But they selected me not based on my physical abilities, but based on the fact that I had had a dang heart surgery just to have a chance to toe the line, to try something that everybody quits anyways.
Joe Rogan
So did you train for the SEAL training? Did you, like, give yourself enough time.
Chad Wright
To get physically fit after that heart surgery? When I went in the first time, I could barely pass the physical standards test that I needed to pass to get the SEAL contract. If I would have went straight through and wouldn't have had that heart surgery, there's no way I would have made it. I wouldn't have been able to meet the physical standards. Once I actually got to buds, there's no way. But when I had that heart surgery and then I finally got to where I could, you know, okay, man, at that point I wanted it so bad because I had to go through all that. You see what I'm saying? I didn't want it that bad until I had to go through all that pain and fear and have my chest cut open and all this crap. But, man, when I came out the other end of that, like I said, man, I was like a game rooster, man. It was like, you look into the eye of a game rooster and he's got one burning hot desire is to fight. I mean, you a man appreciates combat sports. You ought to go watch a fight one day. I mean, just that's what I had, I just had this burning hot desire to. For this thing. Nothing was going to stop me. Made it all the way through, man. I had a lot of ups and downs in my time in the teams. That's a whole, that's, that's a three hour long story. But basically we got plenty of time. Basically, man, I got to my SEAL team and they had slotted our entire team to cover down on Africa and a couple other European countries. And I got so pissed because I'm like, there's a war happening. Like that's the reason I joined. Like everybody that joined wants to go and fight in this war and here now I wind up at this place that's, you know, not going to go where everybody wants to go. I got so hateful and through the course of a couple of years I just got involved in all manner of what I would call sin. All manner drunkenness, sleeping around with women, hurting people on purpose. Hateful, terrible person. I didn't love anybody. And the whole, the downfall of it is I was overseas and we had a range day the night before I had went out and just burned it down, son. I had no business going to the range that day. I'm gonna go ahead and tell you, but what do you do? You get up and go to the range, right? I'm sitting over on the range messing with my gun, pretty out of it and I have a negligent discharge and the guy that's standing beside me is my gunner's mate and it barely skims him in the side of his leg. It was pointed down, thank God. Pointed down. That happened and that was the thing that like, like stopped me in my tracks. Like, holy crap, Chad. If you keep going the way that you're going, you're going to kill somebody. You know what I mean? I mean I was involved in all manner of sin. Buddy, stop me right there. I had to go through a trident review board, a disciplinary review board, a captain's mast, the whole nine yards. Luckily I had a good enough reputation up to that point that I had guys that, that vouched for me. Specifically my sea daddy, Jake Hubman, he wrote a whole long thing. Chad's. Chad's done well. He's, this is, you know, this and that and they presented that and the Navy let me stay in, keep my trident. Well, went back home, moved in with some lesbians. Still continuing on this, this path or this just trajectory of just ugliness, just hatefulness, you know what I mean? But I had kind of started hiding it a Little more, you know, while I was at work, I was like, okay, if I might to go to work, I'm gonna have to square myself away a little bit, you know, tell you how hateful I was. This man, Jake Hubman, my sea daddy, he. He started struggling with alcoholism. Shortly after I had that big mistake. Well, I got back in the platoon, and they told us. They said, well, you know, Jake's struggling with alcoholism. We're sending him off to this rehab program. They said, just leave him alone. Well, remember I told you I can forget people exist? I just forgot he existed. A couple months later, he killed himself. That's what kind of friend I was. That's what kind of person I was. Here's this guy who. That's the kind of person that I still am sometimes. Today, there's literally nothing good in me. I'm convinced of that. Here's this man who had poured so much into me, literally trained me up, taught me the ways of war. It's on account of his mentorship, probably, that I was able to stay alive throughout the course of my career. And I just turned my back on him. When he was going through the hardest time of his life, he killed himself. I don't ever get to make that up. I just ignored him. That's the kind of. Does this describe to you the type of person that I was? Yeah, that's pretty bad, ain't it, brother? I mean, that's pretty bad.
Joe Rogan
That's pretty understandably, selfish, given the circumstances.
Chad Wright
So I get back in a platoon, get ready, deploy again. I'm keeping my wickedness under control, you know, outwardly, but it's still all there, man. Well, we go up to Tunisia, North Africa, and Arabs attacked the embassy up there. When all that Benghazi and that stuff went down, that happened all over North Africa. So we went up there, re secured the embassy. We came back. We left there and came back to Germany to rejock our equipment. Because that mission was over in Tunisia. Came back to Germany to rejoicing, and we were going out to Nigeria. And while we were in Germany, the only way for me to tell you this in just simple terms is we were staying in a barracks that was inhabited by some sort of demon. And that is. That was the genesis of my conversion, of me being made aware that.
Joe Rogan
Okay, so when you say it's inhabited by a demon, like, in what way?
Chad Wright
So I was in there with a couple other guys. I wish I would have wrote all this down. I was laying in bed one night in this place. There was nobody Else in this building. It was just me and a couple. There were me and a guy in one room and two other guys in the room across the hall there. Okay, well, I'm laying in bed, and all of a sudden, I'm jolted awake by something that hits my door. And I lay in bed for maybe 30 seconds. And while I'm laying there listening, I can hear some strange voices echoing up and down the hall of this building that we're in. And so immediately, I get up, open the door, walk out. Nobody's out there. Walk around. Nobody's in the building. Go in my buddy's room beside me. They're both passed out. But it scared me, dude. I was like, what on earth is this? It scared me. And these things. These things would, like, the oven would be turned on, like, these bumps and noises. But more than all of that, there became this oppressive feeling of. Of, like, evil in this place. And the guys that I were with, that I was with in there, they started getting freaked out about it too. We called our senior chief, who had been staying there before us. It was just, like, an old, empty place that guys would come and stay in for a few nights before they left out. We called our senior chief, like, hey, man, did you have any strange experiences in this place? He was like, oh, yeah, yeah, there's some. There's something in there. And so. But. But, like, I remember walking into this place, and I would. There was a stairwell. I would walk up the first flight of stairs, and then there would be a second flight that cut back, and there was, like, a landing up there because we were staying on the second deck. And, like, I would. You know, as a hunter, like, how you have that sense when something is, like, staring at you. Like, you would. I would feel this thing staring at me up there on that landing, and I would fully expect to turn around and see some sort of something up there, and I never saw it in physical form. We started doing this research online about, you know, looking at these forms and stuff about this place that we were, you know, in and finding all kinds of other stuff about it. I'm like, well, whatever is going on here, I can't sleep at night. Like, I don't want to be in that place because it's. It's literally scaring me that bad. And the sanity check was the dudes I was with were getting freaked out, too. And, like, I wish I would have talked to them and written down the things that they were specifically experiencing. Do you remember any of them? So that I would. It's been so long ago, man. Like, the experience that I had was so powerful. Powerful. Like, that just is the one thing that sticks in my mind. But I remember the two guys across the hallway, one of them had to leave. They were going out to a different site. And that dude, the other dude was left in that room by himself. He moved across the hallway to stay in the room that me and my guy were with because he didn't want to. He didn't want to stay in that room by himself.
Joe Rogan
Jesus.
Chad Wright
And so I was literally at my wit's end with this. Like, I was so. Like, I couldn't sleep at night.
Joe Rogan
How long did you stay there for?
Chad Wright
This would have probably went on for about a week. Yeah, this probably would have went on for about a week. We were there for maybe two weeks. And so I called my little brother at my wit's end, because, again, I just told you the type of person that I was. I had no, you know, interest in spiritual matters. I didn't believe in demons or spiritual warfare or God or any of that. Right. But I'm, like, here now. I have encountered something that seems very real to me, and it's not in this realm. Here's some sort of entity that I don't know how to combat. I call my little brother because I knew my little brother was a Christian. I said, well, here's one of these Christians. They'll have maybe a little bit of insight on this spiritual stuff that might be going on here. He said, well, man, I ain't never ran into nothing like that. He said, I'm going to put you in touch with my pastor of my local church here. They were real close. His name is James Cordell. James called me the next day, and I told him what all was going on. Well, he acted like it was no big deal. I said, no, buddy. I said, you don't understand. I said, there's something in here. I don't know what it is. He said, ain't no big deal. He said, put me on speakerphone. He said, I'm gonna walk around. He said, walk around this building, up and down the hallways. And he said, I'm gonna pray. And I put him on speakerphone. I'm walking around this building, up and down the hallways, in my room. He's praying against this thing in the name of Jesus Christ. He says, all right, now, we had a little kitchenette there. He said, you have some olive oil in there? I said, yeah, we got a bottle. He said, take just a little dab of that olive oil and Just dab it on the top of your door frame there. So I did it. Joe. I'm thinking the whole time, this is so stupid, but what else do I do in this situation? Let's try this, right? Let's give this a shot. And I dabbed that little olive oil up there. And we get off the phone. I leave, go to work. We come back that evening, wind down, total, like, peace had returned to this place. Like, I did no longer heard or felt or was experiencing any sort of fear or anything. Like, it all was gone. Like, all of a sudden, it was just like, oh, okay, now I'm just in another little barracks room here.
Joe Rogan
Like, did the other guys feel the same way?
Chad Wright
So this is what's funny. I didn't tell the other guys that I did that because they were all gone when I walked around with this crazy man on speakerphone. Embarrassing. Embarrassing. I mean, in a certain sense, it's still embarrassing to tell that story today again. This is foolishness, man.
Joe Rogan
Right?
Chad Wright
Like, you're asking me to tell this story on this platform like this. It's hard. You know what I mean? Cuz who's gonna believe this? Like, right? Like. But I don't care. I'm just telling you, like, what I remember that experience as. And it impacted me so much that it changed the trajectory of my entire life. And the next morning, we woke up, and my buddy woke up in the room. He said, what's all over the door? And I looked up, and that little dab of olive oil had somehow, like, dripped down and covered the entire door of the room that we were staying in. And you could see it toward the bottom of the door. Like, the drips. Like, the whole door was, like, shiny. And he said, what's all over the door? And I said, don't worry about it, man. I don't know what the crap that is. I was so embarrassed to tell him that I had done that, but it.
Joe Rogan
Was just a dab of olive.
Chad Wright
It was just literally a dab of olive. I don't even know where that fits into the whole experience. I don't even know where or how that fits in. I don't even know what this thing was or why this thing would have been attached to a place. Like, I don't understand that, man. I don't. And I'm again, I'm not, like, big on this whole spiritual warfare thing. But after that happened, all that happened. No more. Nothing in this place. I said, I have got to get my hands on a. On scripture and figure out more about this figure, Jesus, who I heard this man praying in the name of, right? Because there's obviously there was some power like being wielded there by the name of Jesus in prayer. And so I did. I got my hands on a Bible. I started reading in the book of Matthew. I began again through this. This was obviously the experience that the Almighty had chosen to call me out of darkness into the marvelous light of his truth. Open the Bible. I had seen the Bible before. I had heard it read. I had even read it before in the past, but it was never anything that meant I couldn't understand it. You know what I mean? Like, what the crap is this trying to say to me here, right? I began to read in the book of Matthew and I began to. Well, I. For the first time in my life, I realized how all of that applied to me as the hopeless, wicked, ugly, depraved human being that I. Like my mind was awakened to my own state. I didn't realize how ugly and depraved I was. Like, when I passed up on my friend and he killed himself, like, I didn't think nothing of that. I just had this revelation of who I was and why, why I so needed something to save me from that. And when I had that revelation, literally by the grace of God, opening my, making me spiritually alive, able to discern the Scriptures. When I had that revelation, I read about Jesus, his life, his death, why he died according to the Scriptures, his resurrection, what that means for me, I. It changed everything. Like literally, I was made a new creature overnight. It's the greatest miracle that God the Almighty could ever work is taking somebody like me who was literally so useless, making me alive, making me a brand new creature, waking up the next day and being completely changed in how I see the world, how I see myself, how I see the words on these pages, how I see the creator of the cosmos. That's a miracle. Like nothing else that I have experienced in life produced that amount of change nearly instantaneously. And I'll never forget walking down into the little platoon hut like the next day after having this revelation of the Gospel and what it means for me and who I am. And like, dude, I didn't. It's crazy, man. It literally changed my desires like that. That's the miracle, right? Like, how do you change your desire? How do you internally change your desires? Like, I didn't. I had no appetite for pornography anymore. I had no appetite for the foul language that I used. Like, I had no appetite for gossip. Like overnight, literally overnight, like my Literal desires were changed. And that was the ultimately more so than the whole thing that was going on in the barracks and the guy saying the prayer and this thing leaving like that experience of being made a new creature and the realization of what on earth just has happened to me, that was the thing and is the thing that I cling to so tightly like nothing else could have produced that type of change in me but the grace of God and the revelation that he's given me of who I am and who he is. And then as you go, this has been from then to now, just a long and arduous sometimes, sometimes joyful, but process of sanctification, essentially, one of the things that I pray most often is for the Holy Spirit to conform me into the likeness and image of Jesus Christ at all cost. At all cost. Well, first time I prayed that that was hard to pray, man. You read about Jesus in Isaiah 53. What's it say about him? He was a man of sorrow, well acquainted with grief. Conform me into the image of Christ and that process of sanctification is ongoing. My understanding of the Scriptures is ongoing and progressive. Even still to this day, and hopefully to the very day that I depart this tent. It's everything to me, man. No, no, no, no. It's literally everything to me. Some people say, well, Chad, sometimes don't you have moments of doubt? Well, yeah, that'd be a liar. Think about what I believe. Sometimes don't you have moments of doubt? Yeah, I have moments of doubt sometimes. Yeah, for sure, man. But what I realize is that if I could possibly depart from this faith that I have in the Almighty, if I could possibly even depart from that faith, what would I have? I would have nothing. Like, what's the point?
Joe Rogan
This is the fascinating aspect of this that an atheist needs to take into consideration. What you're talking about had a real result. This belief in faith has had a real transformative result on you as a human being. Now, if there was nothing to this, this is all nonsense, and there was a method that you could use, just some sort of a way of viewing the world that would instantaneously change the way you see yourself and see everything, would not that method be explored and wouldn't that be taught? If this is the thing that brought you to who you are now, that's a real thing. Regardless of whether or not anybody wants to believe in Jesus Christ or believe in the Resurrection or believe in the Gospels, it works like this. That's the thing about Christians, like real Christians, and I've been very fortunate to meet a bunch of them. I had a weird journey in religion myself because I went to Catholic school when I was in first grade and it kind of ruined me. They were horrible. This nun, Sister Mary Josephine, I don't remember anybody from when I was six years old, but I remember that bitch, she was so fucking mean, man. And just the experience, the way they treated children, it was so fear based. And I was like, this is not God. God has nothing to do with this. This is people. This is people. And it kind of set a tone for my life, you know, where I dismissed any, any notions that there was some sort of truth in these religions. But the more I've explored, not just Christianity, but many different religions, people are trying to document a truth. And it's very hard to decipher through the tongue of man. It's very hard to decipher when human beings write things down and human being give statements on things. You have to always take into consideration human nature. Human beings are not that accurate in how they depict things. And then you have the problem with translations.
Chad Wright
Truth brother.
Joe Rogan
You have the problem with it going from ancient Hebrew to Latin and Greek and to all these different languages. And then you have the problem with spiritual narcissism. So you have the people that are the conveyors of the message who take on these powers themselves that are above normal men and control people. Before Martin Luther came around and made a phonetic version of the Bible, there's very few people could read and very few people could read Latin. They didn't know what it said. So you had to rely on the priest to tell you everything. When people started being able to translate these things into different languages, it's wonderful. But also something's probably missing. You know my friend Rick Strassman, he's a scholar, he's the guy who wrote that book, the dmt, the spirit molecule, he did these slow drip studies, these FDA approved studies on DMT with people with patients.
Chad Wright
I'm very interested in that.
Joe Rogan
He's a fascinating guy. Well, he learned ancient Hebrew just so that he could read the Bible in its native tongue. And it took him 16 years to do that.
Chad Wright
I believe it.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, he's.
Chad Wright
What an endeavor.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, fascinating guy. I think they were trying, they were writing something down. One of the things that I learned from Wes Huff, Wesley Huff, who's a biblical scholar who's been on the podcast, he told me that the book of Isaiah, when they find it, they found a version of it in the Dead Sea Scrolls that is identical word to word for a version of it that they found a thousand years later.
Chad Wright
That's pretty miraculous.
Joe Rogan
A thousand years.
Chad Wright
Not only that, but, but what about the content of Isaiah? What about Isaiah 53 as it describes the suffering servant? How it, it literally outlines the life and death of Jesus Christ and it was written what, 400 years before the crucifixion. Like even the content of Isaiah, not only the accuracy of the, the translation and the accuracy over that span of time when you compare copies, but even the content of it. How did this prophet write this thing about this person? And it was fulfilled perfectly, literally to a T by the person of Jesus Christ hundreds of years later. Oh, it's crazy. And by the way man, I'm not telling you or anyone listening to this, this what, what we call testimony. Like what, what the Lord's given me experientially in life to share with other people. I'm not telling you this to convince you of anything. Like there's nothing that I can say to convince you in the truth of the Gospel. Like I truly believe that there's no, there's no words that I can use, there's no logic that I can apply. There's nothing that I or anyone else can say to convince you of this. And it goes back to what we started off in the conversation with. Of these things must be spiritually discerned. And it is by grace, God's grace, that we are made alive and able to discern the truth of these things. That's a hard thing to accept. Man like that man is totally depraved. And I can't say anything to convince anyone of the truth of these scriptures, but the scriptures are dripping, literally dripping with that very fact. That's the interesting thing about the Scriptures. They leave nothing for man. It's almost the single thing that separates what's contained in the Holy Scriptures from other religious philosophy. It literally leaves nothing for man.
Joe Rogan
What do you mean by that?
Chad Wright
Meaning there is nothing that you can do to be made righteous in the eyes of the Creator. There is nothing that you can do to save yourself. As a matter of fact, without the grace and the help of the Almighty, you can't even believe the truth. You won't, you won't do it. You are, you are spiritually dead prior to regeneration. You see what I'm saying? When you're dead, if we had a dead man laying on the floor right here, and I said, dead man, hearken unto my voice. There is a hospital a mile down the road. And if you'll get up and walk to that hospital or you'll allow me to take you to that hospital. They'll shock you and bring you back to life. Is he going to respond to that message? He's going to lay there dead, right? Yeah, we're dead spiritually until we are made alive by the grace of the Almighty. It leaves nothing for man. Not a thread. It leaves me not a single thread that I can cling to. And then you look at the whole saga of Scripture. Well, what's this all about anyways? Let's take it all the way back to Genesis, all the way through revelation and everything in between. The whole saga is to glorify the Son, Jesus Christ. What's the purpose in me even being saved? It's so that I can be presented to Christ as his bride.
Joe Rogan
What do you mean by that?
Chad Wright
We, God's people, the whole purpose of our existence is for us to be presented to Jesus Christ as his own people who will glorify him for all of eternity. It's to glorify the Son. The whole saga that was determined by the sovereign and immutable will of the Father. It can be changed. The whole saga, the only purpose of it all is to present and to present this. I can't say this word real well. Peculiar, peculiar people to the Son as a bride, an offering to glorify the Son for all of eternity. The whole saga is to lift up and glorify Jesus Christ. It's the only purpose for me even being saved.
Joe Rogan
And you're convinced of this?
Chad Wright
Well, I think that I'm not convinced of this because that's what I want to believe. Like I'm convinced of this because I'm convinced of the truth of the Holy Scriptures. And again, the entire. When you look at the thing from a 30,000 foot view, I'm convinced of that. Not because why would I want to believe that? Why would I want to. If I wrote this story, would it not give me something to cling to? If I wrote the story, would it not give me some other purpose than just being offered up as a bride to the glorification of the Son, Jesus Christ? If I wrote that story, wouldn't I write it differently than that? Because I'm man, right? I would leave myself something to cling to. Surely this salvation means something more than just that I am part of this special people now, being offered up as a bride to Christ. Surely there's something that I can do in this life, a choice that I can make to believe in this. Like surely I have the power to make that choice. But If I had the power to make the choice to believe in the Gospel of Jesus Christ in and of myself, then that salvation would be coming from me. You see what I'm saying? When you realize you don't even have the power of choice in you, you. You are dead. You will not choose it. When you realize you don't even have the power of choice.
Joe Rogan
So you believe it has to be that this wisdom has to enter you somehow.
Chad Wright
You are entered by what Scripture calls the Holy Spirit, which is the Spirit of God who comes and dwells in you. And that is the entity that makes you spiritually alive and gives you the ability to appraise the scriptures, essentially spiritual things. Because before that, it's foolishness.
Joe Rogan
Have you ever paid any attention to the Shroud of Turin? Have you ever looked into it at all?
Chad Wright
I've just seen it pop up as I scroll through.
Joe Rogan
Well, they used to dismiss it because they used to say they did a carbon date on it and it was only 500 years old. But they've since made some revisions to that. And there's a lot of people that believe because of the wear of the cloth, the age of the cloth, and I think they've done subsequent tests that place it around 2,000 years old, which is really fascinating. The other thing that's fascinating is they didn't even know what the image completely was until someone took photographs of it and then looked at the negatives. And in the negatives, then you get this image of Jesus, not just Jesus, but with the scars and the markings on his back, the part of his body where he's pierced, the piercings on the wrists. And they really do believe that this thing is 2000 years old. And the other thing that's strange is they have no explanation as to how that image was created. They think that image was created somehow from some sort of a burst of energy. It's not stained, it's not dyed, and it's. It's not something that's easily reproduced. Especially if you think about the timeline, if this is supposedly a forgery, like, how would they make an image that would only show up in a negative? And what would be the motivation to fake this in this manner? See if you can get some photos, what it looks like, Jamie.
Chad Wright
You know what I love about what you're saying, Joe? It's just. It's so amazing how the Almighty works in each of us differently.
Joe Rogan
Like, look at this. This is now this image. If you see the original, see the originals to the left, like, they didn't, you know, they saw that and they're like, huh, what is this? But once you look at it with the. The negative. Show the negative again, the black and white. Once you see the negative of it, so you make that larger, then it starts getting very strange because you look at the piercings on the wrist and there's these blood stains in these areas. It's very strange. And it's a very large piece of cloth. I think it's. I think it wrapped his entire body. And so it was like seven feet long. Then they folded it so it's his back and his front. So he was inside of this thing. And this is the image.
Chad Wright
I think it was debunked recently.
Joe Rogan
Was it debunked again?
Chad Wright
I think so.
Joe Rogan
What'd they say now? I remember seeing something about it.
Chad Wright
They found some sort of processes that have been around for a few hundred years that do some sort of this, like, negative transfer.
Joe Rogan
But did they know that 2,000 years ago?
Chad Wright
That's where I think the carbon dating has been readjusted to.
Joe Rogan
Oh, really? What are they saying now?
Chad Wright
I mean, I typed in debunked, and I was looking through a few articles.
Joe Rogan
See, there's people that believe, there's people that don't believe. And it gets weird. It gets weird because there's a lot of people that want to debunk things. A new research shows that the carbon dating of the shroud is fake. Findings that it was the carbon dating that was fake, not the shroud. This is a central conclusion.
Chad Wright
There's a few articles about it being fake, but again, I don't know. I mean, I don't know if they're 100%, like, this is fake, or if they're just haters, you know?
Joe Rogan
Right.
Chad Wright
You know what's interesting to me about the body of Christ, the physical body, like. Like is being transposed onto that shroud, whether it's real or not. Have you ever thought about this? If you think about going back to talking about death and why do we have to die? Why is it a necessity for all humans? Well, the. The scripture tells us that for human, the reason that we must die is because of sin. Right. That started with the very first sin of man and woman in the very beginning. Right? Because Scripture tells us that man was created to exist eternally in the beginning, the human physical form. But when man sinned, a lot of things happened. Death. That's the moment, Scripturally, that's when death entered the equation. So this sin is a big problem. That is the genesis of death entering the equation. And becoming a reality for all men. I wonder a lot what happened when that sin caused death in man. It's almost like it changed man's genetic makeup. It's almost like man was created in the beginning to exist in a physical body eternally. Meaning he had perfect genetics, right? He could exist, nothing decayed. He could continue on for all eternity. He also had the ability to be in the presence of the Almighty. In some way. The human brain could interact with the Almighty. But when sin enter the equation, it's almost like man's genetic code was marred and death entered the equation and we began to age. And it. Even when I think about it along those lines, it's totally theoretical. By the way, that's how we inherit our sinful nature is because the result of sin actually changed the genetic makeup of man's physical body. And therefore, by necessity, he now has to die because he ages. And also we lost our ability to perceive the Almighty and to actually converse with him in some. We lost something in our brain, right? That's why I wonder about that DMT stuff. We lost like we lost some something in our brain that originally allowed us to see into this other realm and converse with this almighty being. We lost the ability to do that because of sin. Which brings me to the body of Christ. The interesting thing about the body, physical body of Jesus Christ, he was the only man according to Scripture, who ever fulfilled the law of God completely and perfectly. Which means his physical body, his literal physical body was not affected by sin, which is the thing that is causing all of us to die by necessity. And I just wonder if that physical body, if the body of Christ, if Christ would have grown to maturity, which he did, which was about when he started his ministry, was full adult maturity. I wonder if he would not have been crucified if he could have lived in that physical body forever, if the aging process would have stopped and he would have never had to die because the effects of sin were not upon him, the curse was not upon him. And it makes me think about that body because they took his body off the cross, laid it in the tomb. When we die, our bodies begin to go through decay very quickly. You've seen that killing animals. You kill something within a few hours, starts to get kind of blowed up, stiff as a board after about a day. It stinks all nasty. He died. They put him in that tomb. He was there for three days. That body didn't decay. The spirit then re entered that same body and that body, that same body rose up and eventually ascended into heaven. He took that body with him into this other realm. It just makes me wonder like what the human body was like in the beginning when we were created perfectly with this mental ability to interact with this other realm, converse with the Almighty, the absence of sin. In other words, our genetics were perfect. The human body was perfect. It would not die.
Joe Rogan
So this is, if you're taking the Old Testament, absolutely and literally. And if you do that. What do you think about evolution?
Chad Wright
That's a great. That's a great.
Joe Rogan
What do you think about.
Chad Wright
I've been thinking about evolution a little bit here lately.
Joe Rogan
The various forms of humans that have been detected, including recently Denisovans. What was that one? Julien's. What's that one? The giant huge headed people. They don't even know how big they were. They think they were quite a bit larger than us. They found multiple types of humans, obviously Neanderthals, but.
Chad Wright
Well, if you can't tell by now. I like to think about things.
Joe Rogan
Oh, I do too.
Chad Wright
It's fun. It's fun. You know what I mean? Like the whole thing I just talked about was like totally theoretical. Like I can't prove any of that. But when I think about evolution, one of the first things that's striking to me is how on earth. Well, first of all, consciousness is a big problem. You mentioned that earlier. Yeah, but, but how on earth did we as the beings that we are, or we could take any being on Earth and use it as an example.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
How do we go through how many millions or do some say billions of life of years?
Joe Rogan
But for life. Yeah. What is life? What, how long ago did life first appear on earth? I think single celled organisms, it's like 3 billion years.
Chad Wright
Now what I'm about to do here is, I'm about to apply some country boy logic here, Joe.
Joe Rogan
Here it goes. What does it say? 3.5 billion years.
Chad Wright
3.5 billion years from life to what we are as beings. Now, now look, are you ready for this country boy logic?
Joe Rogan
I'd love to hear it.
Chad Wright
How on earth did we go through 3.5 billion years of evolution and being shaped by our environment? And here we are after 3.5 billion years and we can't stay around for more than about 75 years and everything around us can kill us. Like if I, if I think about. Now again, country boy logic here. If I think a 3.5 billion year long process of an organism being shaped by its environment, I would like to hope it would produce something a little better. Well, I. Than what we are Today, what it's.
Joe Rogan
Produced is pretty fucking extraordinary comparison to. In comparison to all the other animals.
Chad Wright
Like in human. In human.
Joe Rogan
In humans, yeah. Nothing. Nothing is even close.
Chad Wright
But.
Joe Rogan
And then you have to think of how long humans have been around in this form, at least according to science, they believe it's somewhere in the neighborhood of 300 to 500,000 years. Based on the fossil evidence. It could go further or back. Probably go further back. Eventually they'll probably figure it's like six or seven. But there's a timeline. There's a timeline when Homo sapiens existed and when they didn't exist before. And then there's a bunch of different forms of human. There's a bunch of different hominids, different bunch of. There's, you know, there's Neanderthal, CRO Magnon, there's. There's a ton of them. So what we've been able to achieve in this very relatively speaking. When you think about 3.5 billion, which is a number that you can't really comprehend. You say it, but it's.
Chad Wright
Oh, I agree.
Joe Rogan
It's too big. It's too big. To really wrap your head around, think about the behavior characteristics that you can breed into your dogs in a short period of time.
Chad Wright
Now. Now I am, I am. I heartily agree and believe in adaptation. Yeah, heartily agree. In different forms. Drastically different forms of human.
Joe Rogan
Look at just dogs. Just look at dogs. Your dog came from a wolf. Okay, I have two dogs. I have a golden retriever and I have a spaniel, little puppy that we just got. And both of them also descended from wolves. And it's ridiculous. They have zero killer instinct other than squirrels. My dog Marshall, who kills squirrels, but. And turtles, but he's not a wolf. He's some sort of a new thing that we've created through selection and breeding, and it's forced adaptation over time. It's a totally different animal. Just like we are. We are a totally different animal than Neanderthal. A totally different animal to ancient man. We're just different. We're different in some way. You go, and especially if you go way back to Australia, Pithecine and all these different animals that. These different hominids that were very primitive, much more ape like than us. There's a path. You could see it. It's like there's a lot of mysteries. The big one is the doubling of the human brain over a period of 2 million years. That's a crazy one. One of the things that I always wonder when you're reading, particularly the really Old text. When it gets into like the Dead Sea Scrolls and it gets into the, the, the, the Old Testament and even stuff that's before that. It's like what were they trying to remember? Because you got to remember before this stuff was even written down. It was an oral history for about a thousand years. What was the original story? And that's where I think the truth is. I think there's truth. I don't think these people were making up myths and fairy tales. I think that's a silly way to think about it. I think it's much more likely that some immense events had happened over the course of human history and these people were trying to document it with whatever limited ability to express themselves that they had at the time. Yeah, there's something there. It's just the problem I always have with all religions is man. The tongue of man is human beings and our desire to. We, we use hyperbole. We exaggerate. We change times. We, we change. We. We write things that make ourselves look better than we should. History is written by the winners. It's very difficult to know like what was the genesis of it, what was the original thing that they were trying to write down. But I think there's truth in the original thing.
Chad Wright
Man, you're headed in the right direction. Joe, when you said the problem you always have is with man. Yes, man is indeed the problem, my friend. Yes, you are headed down the right path, man.
Joe Rogan
Well, we are the problem, but we are also seeking solutions. People like you, people like me, people that want to be better people. And there's a lot of people out there that are listening to this. People that want a better world, they want a better society. And they recognize that there's, there's certain things that you can do both to change your life and to inspire others. Like that's, there's a reason for those instincts. They're not necessarily even self serving. A lot of them are community serving. And that's in a way self serving. Because the more healthy your community is, the better you'll feel, the better your life will be. There's reward systems that are built into our tribal nature.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And there's a lot of good to that. And I think like I said before, if you do follow the teachings of Jesus Christ, you will have a better life. If you believe it, you will. And you live by. You will have a better life. But there's that weird jump that you have to make, right? There's the weird jump where you have to, you have to abandon this logic critical thinking and logical mind and accept that there's an extreme value in living this way, and it hasn't been around for all these years by accident. And I really do believe that at the origins. And I just. We all wish we could know. We could hear it. Like, that's the frustrating thing about it. This is all really the word of God. Like, hey, come back and give us a refresher course. How about, you know, like, maybe we're not bad. We just need to know.
Chad Wright
I'll tell you what, Joe, I should just let you talk the whole dang podcast, man, because you are so good, just summing stuff up and getting to the root of questions and things. And, you know, like, you know, you talked about that whole. That transition from just, like, living it out to have a better life to all of a sudden, like, placing your entire hope in this message of the gospel. Like, that's that transition that I was talking about that you can't choose. You know what I mean? Like, so you're summarizing all of this so well, man. And it's interesting to me, too, that, you know, the Almighty has these plans for each of us his sons and daughters, and he leads us each along this path to the ultimate revelation that we are searching for. But every path looks different. And it's so interesting to me to get to hear you speak this way, because he led me along this path that involved this spiritual warfare. What was I. I was a warrior. Like, I understood warfare. I understood encountering an enemy. And that's the story I told you. You know, he kind of led me to this ultimate revelation and to this regeneration along the lines of that. I have to believe that and I have to hope that he is leading you along this path, specifically the way you're experiencing it, because that's how your mind works, man. Like, you're a master. You are intelligent, you understand things. You want things to be somewhat logical and orderly and, you know, like the Shroud of Turin thing or, you know, any of these other artifacts or the Dead Sea Scrolls or something like. Like, I can do without knowing about all that and be just fine, but according to the way the Almighty made you, maybe you can't do without all that stuff and be just fine because you're different than me. You know what I mean?
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
So I want you, man. It sounds so weird because I don't need. We just met, but, like, I want you, man, to be confident in the direction that you're going with the questions that you ask and the way that you search, because it's beautiful, man.
Joe Rogan
Well, thank you.
Chad Wright
Yeah, it's beautiful.
Joe Rogan
I'm blessed with the time. I'm blessed with the time to ponder things.
Chad Wright
Yeah. You know, that is a very big blessing.
Joe Rogan
It is. Because if you're too busy and your life is too overwhelmed with obligations and, and I have a lot of them, but fortunately for me, a lot of my job gives me time. Gives me time to think.
Chad Wright
Yep.
Joe Rogan
A lot of what I do and a lot of these conversations give me time to think. And talking to different people with different perspectives, different life experiences, and what they're trying to figure out. Because we're all trying to figure out, like, what is the purpose of this? Like, what am I doing here? And some of the most miserable, anxiety ridden people that I know have no belief system. Some of the most miserable, anxiety driven people that I know are atheists. And some of the most angry and bitter and attacking and condescending and atheists and also Christian. Yeah, well, there's a lot of Christians that way too. Yeah, well, there's a lot of Muslims that way. There's a lot of Buddhists that way. There's a lot of people that are full of shit. And that's, you know, that's with everything. Like, you can get a good plumber, you can get a terrible plumber, you know, and it's just how human beings vary considerably.
Chad Wright
There's a philosopher that Martin Luther quotes in his book the Bondage of the Will. And this philosopher says, you can make anything out of anything. And he's talking about scripture. You can take the holy scriptures and you can make anything out of them that you want to make out of them. Right.
Joe Rogan
If you want to interpret it in.
Chad Wright
A completely different way, you can make anything out of anything. And that's where we have these issues. You know, people, people love to point out the hypocrisy in the body of Christ, the visible church, Christians, people who proclaim to be Christians, the hypocrisy of Christians. And I would agree with you 100%. There is a lot of hypocrisy. And a lot of what the visible church does is makes what they want to make out of the scriptures in order to control people. I mean, that, that, that has that. That's like huge, man. Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And there's these. Also the issue of mega pastors.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
You know, when you think about a rock star, you think about someone who's selling out an arena. Right. You think about a preacher, you think about like a Joel Olsteen type character, unfortunately, because they're more popular than any of the other ones. And so that becomes. That's a far. It's on the far spectrum. A fringe figure. Yeah, you know, Rolls Royces, private jets, expensive suits. All of it's fucked. None of it makes any sense. None of it seems remotely Christian.
Chad Wright
Right.
Joe Rogan
To amass billions of dollars and enormous plots of land and have huge houses and you're flying around in 65 million dollar planes.
Chad Wright
Dude, you're a comedian. You gotta watch this dude named Jesse Duplantis.
Joe Rogan
Is he a comic?
Chad Wright
Oh, no, he's a. He's like a mega preacher. But, dude, you just gotta watch videos of this dude.
Joe Rogan
Is he off the charts?
Chad Wright
Oh, my gosh.
Joe Rogan
Well, you know, that's how Kinnison started. One of the greatest comedians, if not the greatest of all time, Sam Kinison started out as a tent preacher.
Chad Wright
Well, you know, when people like to point out the hypocrisy of Christians. Like, I get what you're saying, man. Like, and how religion is used to control people in some ways. You can make anything out of anything. But here's the thing. Here's how I would respond to you as a Christian. Yes, you are right. I am a hypocrite. I am a liar. I am a cheater. Now, I'm not really a thief, per se. I don't steal. I covet people. The things that they have, the things of this world I hate, I do all of those things. That's the point in that realization of who I am. That revelation is the foundation of my clinging to Christ.
Joe Rogan
Right, I see what you're saying.
Chad Wright
Like, clinging to do I want to do those things. No, I don't want to do those things. But there is something in me. There is a remnant in me that leads me to do things that I don't want to do. And the things that I want to do, I don't actually do now. Not 100% of the time. Like, that's not my desire. But when I actually. When I do those things now, the difference is my response to them. So, like I told you how wicked I used to be. Well, you know, used to be if I had an argument with my wife, you know, maybe I was rushing out the door and I would. Maybe I yelled at my wife and I went out and got my truck and went to work the rest of the day, I would be justifying my yelling at my wife. She deserved to be yelled at, right? Screw her, man. Like, she's in the wrong now. When I do those things, I yell at my wife. I Walk out the door. It's the same thing that I did before, but I do it now and I get in my car and it crushes me, dude. I'm like, I can't believe I just did the thing that I know I don't want to do, but I did it anyways. It's my response to those things. The most, I think, accurate way or picture to describe this. Remember I told you I woke up the next day and, like, my desires had changed? The most accurate way I've heard this described is if you had two plates of food. You know, you had a plate of the finest food, and then you had a bucket of garbage. You turn a pig loose into the room, the pig is going to go and stick his head in that bucket of garbage and eat that garbage before he eats the food off of that fine plate. Because he likes the smell of garbage. He's attracted to the taste and the smell of that. We have pigs at the house. Like, this is what he would do. He would go eat the garbage before he ate the good stuff. And so that pig, he's eating that garbage, and there's this good stuff right here next to him. And he's not even ashamed that he's eating that garbage because he's a pig. If you had the power to snap your fingers and to turn that pig into a man, that man would then lift his head up out of that garbage, and he would look around him and he would be ashamed that he had been eating that garbage, and he would depart from that garbage and go to the finer food. Right? Yeah. That's what he would do. That's. That's. That's the transition that I tried to describe to you earlier, how I was changed overnight. It was like I no longer desired garbage more than I desired the fine things that the Lord has offered to me. My desires changed. Right.
Joe Rogan
I see what you're saying.
Chad Wright
But we still go back like that. There's a remnant of that pig in us, and every now and then we want to go back and eat that garbage. But we're ashamed. We don't want anybody to see us, and we're ashamed. And it upsets our stomach, and we respond to it differently. And that's. That's kind of the. The change and tying this all back into, well, why don't. Why aren't Christians perfect? They say they preach all this stuff as a preacher or as a teacher. The closer you preach the true literal word of Scripture in terms of standards, the closer you get to that standard, that's portrayed by scripture, the more of a hypocrite you are going to become because you can't meet it.
Joe Rogan
But what you're saying, though, this is what I was getting at. What you're saying is one of the best examples of the power of being a Christian. What I'm talking about is the general perception of people on the outside that don't really maybe hang out mostly in secular circles. Maybe they have a bunch of friends that are atheists and they see religion as this big scam.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And because the most popular versions of religion for a long time is televised religion. You know, that's when you think about people's exposure that aren't religious to religion. What do they, they hear about scandals. They hear about, you know, the, the pedophilia in the Catholic Church. They hear about money that's being inappropriately spent. And so the versions that they get are like, oh, this is just bullshit to control people.
Chad Wright
Yeah, yeah.
Joe Rogan
And they don't hear enough about like genuine transformation stories and like why this is valuable and why it's also valuable to intelligent people because this is always been, this is a misconception or at least a narrative that's pushed out that it's for dull minded people. It's for dull minded people that can't make sense of the world. It's too much confusion to them. So they need a structure which is.
Chad Wright
Totally in alignment with the whole truth that this cross thing is foolishness. I understand that.
Joe Rogan
Well, the fact that you do makes it much more palatable for people too. What you were saying makes more sense to people because like, okay, he's a. Addressing these feelings that I have too.
Chad Wright
Yeah. I mean, you read and I think it's First Corinthians, chapter 2. The apostle Paul is writing like, hey, I didn't come to you with these wise words like trying to convince you of anything. I simply have preached to you this gospel and notice that not many of you who are considered wise, like we're able to believe this because it's literally foolishness until you're made alive. And it was, it's funny. It was by the Almighty's sovereign immutable will that he chose the cross as to be the story of redemption for man. It's funny that he chose the cross and he did it for his own good pleasure. He chose to destroy the wisdom of man by a message that is seemingly foolish. It's so backwards. He chose to destroy man's wisdom, our natural man's wisdom. Right. All the great things that man has done. And known and discovered. He chose to destroy all of that by this foolish message of the cross for his own good pleasure. Because man, in his wisdom, did not know God. When he came here in the body, in the person of Jesus Christ, they actually killed him. He said, I'm going to destroy Yalls natural wisdom with this message of foolishness. Kind of comedic it is.
Joe Rogan
So if it really did happen, it's the most bizarre way to get a message across.
Chad Wright
It's the most bizarre way that you could ever like, literally even imagine, man now.
Joe Rogan
And imagine you trying to explain to people your experiences with whatever you encountered in those barracks. And people hearing that like, so the problem with unique experiences that are completely outside of the norm. Well, what's more outside of the norm than the resurrection of Jesus Christ or Jesus Christ being actually the son of God? Like, imagine trying to explain that to people. They'd be like, what are you talking about? There's this guy, his name is Jesus. Like, shut the up. Like, what are you, in a multi level marketing scheme? Like, what are you talking about, man? This guy want money from you? Like, what is this guy? This guy? Your wife? Like, what's going on? No, no, no, no, man. It's not like that. Like, okay, right, right. But if it really is true, you would be stuck. You'd be stuck with this story. And you can't leave that part out.
Chad Wright
No.
Joe Rogan
You're commanded to tell the entire story. So you have this conundrum. All right, this part is going to sound crazy, but.
Chad Wright
You summed it up well, Joe. You summed it up well, brother.
Joe Rogan
The most fascinating thing of it, but I always tell people, look all that. Look at it. But also know that if you live that way and if you believe that and if you follow those teachings, you will have a better life. There's something to it. There's a reason why people have been doing it. There's a reason why true Christians are some of the nicest, most compassionate, friendliest, charitable people that you'll ever meet. There's something to it. There's something to it. The origin of it all. There's truth in the origin of it all. It's just trying to figure out what it means. And then the translations, even the translations in English that you're reading, the way they communicate is so different than the way we communicate today. So you have to realize the evolution of human discourse over thousands of years. The way we phrase things, the way we describe things, the way we talk about things is all very different. So you have to get scholars who Understand the original way they talked about these things. And what. What, what did. What. Why did they say a phrase this way? What is the meaning of this?
Chad Wright
Isn't it so good that we have men that have dedicated. Men and women who have dedicated their entire lives to that job?
Joe Rogan
You follow that Wesley Huff guy?
Chad Wright
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Joe Rogan
He's fantastic.
Chad Wright
I do, man. It's. I'm so thankful for men like him. RC Spurl is a. Is a. Is one that. I love to read his stuff. He's passed now. Martin Luther, of course, is another one. But I mean, because you think about me, like, what do I spend a day reading scripture? Two hours a day, maybe sometimes three. Like, I'm never going to become the expert. Right. You know, you spend an hour a day or two hours a day doing anything, you're never going to become.
Joe Rogan
No, you'll be proficient.
Chad Wright
You'll be proficient. Yeah. You'll be able to kind of know your way around it. But the stuff that you're talking about knowing, which is stuff worth knowing, you know, that's the meat that we can consume.
Joe Rogan
Also, when you're talking about the Old Testament and the New Testament, you put the two of them together, you're dealing with thousands of pages.
Chad Wright
Yeah, thousands.
Joe Rogan
Thousands of pages of very confusing Scripture, where some of it you're reading, you have to read it three or four times, and you just got to go, okay, what exactly is he trying to say here?
Chad Wright
Because you have to figure out how it fits with the rest of it.
Joe Rogan
Yes.
Chad Wright
Because you can read it in a way, and you're like, this is contradictory. If Scripture is contradictory, it is not from God. It cannot by nature of what. What we know about the nature of the Almighty, what's revealed in Scripture to us just about his. His nature, his attributes. Right. It's one of my favorite things to study the attributes of the Almighty, which we cannot even begin to grasp the fullness of it. But some of his attributes have been revealed to us. And. And so if that is His Word, it cannot contradict itself, because that would go against what we know of as who. Who he is, you know? Yeah.
Joe Rogan
But yet sometimes it does.
Chad Wright
Seemingly. Yeah, seemingly.
Joe Rogan
And again, this is probably the interpretation of man, you know, and this is where it gets problematic. I mean, it is all ultimately fascinating that you have something like the book of Isaiah where they found an older version that they didn't even know existed. It turns out to be a thousand years older. And it's verbatim fascinating. Right?
Chad Wright
It is.
Joe Rogan
But before that got written down, they talked about it for a long time. A long time. And so few people could write things down and so few people could read. That's where it gets weird. But I think ultimately behind it all, they're trying to tell a story. They're trying to tell a fantastic story.
Chad Wright
And I think ultimately, too, I think something you could add to that, Joe, is if what I'm saying is correct in terms of what I believe about Scripture, ultimately there has also to be some divine influence over the preservation of those Scriptures. It's the only way. Right. It would be the only way for the scriptures in their original language to be truly the word of the Almighty to man. The complete revelation of the Almighty to man. Like, there has to be some divine influence for that to happen, Right?
Joe Rogan
But then you have to take it back to the origins of it. Like, what was that? What was that divine influence?
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
What. What were the experiences?
Chad Wright
Was it a converse? Yeah. Was it a con? How did it. You know, we like, we like to. You like to kind of the. The. And here's another thing, man. It all involves faith. It does involve an aspect of faith, like, you know, because we look at the. The letters in the New Testament who were mostly written by the Apostle Paul, and the only way that we can trust that, okay, this is the, the literal message from God to us, but it's coming through a man. Like, how does that happen? Well, we have to believe that, again, the Almighty is influencing man through the power of his spirit in the man to write the things that the man wrote. You know, that's like that. That's why this, this, this belief in the Holy Spirit and of the believer actually being possessed with the spirit of God is so essential. Like, it has to be that way. Or else the Apostle Paul is writing his opinions, right? Or he's writing based off of his experience. You know, you could take it all the way back. What did Pilate say to Jesus? What is truth? Well, you know, what is, like, truth? I don't even know that truth can come from man alone. Because everything that we have experienced is so influenced by our upbringing, by our perspective, by our memory, by so many factors. That's why I hate. Dude, I hate seeing these guys, these former military guys attacking each other, man, about, he did this and he did that and he didn't do this and he did, didn't do that. I'm like, I mean, some guys might flat out be, you know, telling us a fib. You know, I get that. Right? You know, that's not good. But, man, so many so Many people are recounting experiences that they've had in their life and their service and whatever it may be. And like, all of that is shaped by their unique perspective and the way that their mind works. And, you know, it's like, I can't attack. I can't attack a dude for that. You know what I mean? So if we're saying that the Bible is, is. Is truly the revelation, the perfect revelation of God to man, then we have to understand that the source of that, all of that did not come from man in some way. It was wrought by God through man. If that makes sense.
Joe Rogan
It does make sense. And that is the ultimate truth where it all started from. It's just trying to like, sift through the tongue of man to get to whatever that truth is.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And then this thing that will ultimately, I mean, unless some sane technology comes about, we'll never know. We'll never be able to go back in time and figure that out.
Chad Wright
That's a problem, ain't it?
Joe Rogan
It's an issue.
Chad Wright
You know, I talked to my buddy about that while I was sitting, sitting there with him, you know, as he was passing away. And you know, Scripture describes when, when you, when you leave your physical body here on earth, you know, you, Your spirit basically goes into the presence of the Almighty immediately, but in that state, you're unclothed and you don't want to be unclothed. And like, I was, I'm having all these. I lost my train of thought there on where we were going with that. But yeah, man, I forgot the original question, but it was, it pertained to something. Conversation I had with him.
Joe Rogan
Well, you were talking with him about this, this sort of leap of faith that you have to make.
Chad Wright
Oh, yeah, okay. That's what I was talking to him about. I was like, right now, Mr. Don, there is an element of faith in what you believe, and that's a problem. It's hard to explain that that's a problem. But when you leave here, you're no longer going to have to live by faith. Once you get there, you're going to know you made it like. But it goes back to what you were saying. Like, we'll never know. There's always going to be an element of faith in what we believe. Like there has to be, as it pertains to things of God. There's always going to be a certain element of faith. That very faith is the gift that the Lord gives to his elect. The ability to believe like that is the gift. That element of faith that's the gift that I treasure more than anything else that I have in my life. But it's still tough. Remember I told you I have doubts sometimes?
Joe Rogan
Of course. Well, that's where the skeptical person steps in and says, well, this is ridiculous. It's all based on. You have to believe in faith because logically it doesn't make any sense. And so this is the problem with that, is that you're making this assumption that the human mind is flawless and that it could perceive truth. Regardless of your learned experiences, regardless of what you know about the world, you could see truth, even if it's a completely unique thing, you could know that it doesn't exist. Like, there's no way. There's no way, you know? And if it is a puzzle, what greater puzzle than you have to believe something that defies logic? Like if you were gonna. If you're gonna demand faith of someone, you would. You would deliver it in a way that there's. The only way to buy into this is you have to get past your logic, you have to abandon it, and you have to believe something that you've been told impossible. But my answer to that.
Chad Wright
You'll make a good preacher one day, man.
Joe Rogan
My answer to that is, isn't everything impossible? This is the problem with that. The problem is Terence McKenna once said that science only demands of you one miracle. That's the Big Bang. If you believe in one miracle, everything else it says it can explain with materialist science. So the miracle of the Big Bang is way crazier to believe than the resurrection of a human being. That seems more logical. It seems more plausible. People live, people die. Maybe people come back to life. I'll buy that more than. The entire universe is smaller than the head of a pin, and through no process that anybody is adequately explained, becomes everything. And maybe it's a continual process. It happens over and over and over again.
Chad Wright
Well, you like, you like to look into all this stuff. My wife sent me a YouTube video or something the other day. Apparently they saw something with one of these telescopes or something that they look into the cosmos with that has completely, like, destroyed all their evidence of. Yes, their, Their, their theology behind the Big Bang.
Joe Rogan
Yes. James Webb Telescope. Yeah, they're. They're finding. They think that some of what they were interpreting as the initial signals of the Big Bang are not that, that, this. That. Not only that, but the origin, the birth of the universe is far older than they think it was because they're finding galaxies that are far too large and formed that are so far away that they would have had to form far quicker than they thought was possible from the moment of the Big Bang today. So this is extended in some people's eyes, the birth of the universe to 22 + billion years old instead of 13.7 or whatever it is. So they think it's possibly even older. But then there's also questions like the Big Bang itself might not be correct. You might be just interpreting the signals of this part of the space, part of the universe that we just can't see yet because we don't have the ability to see further than what the James Webb telescope can do. So as we develop better and better tools with each iteration, you're going to have a much deeper understanding of the vastness of the universe itself, which may ultimately be infinite. And Roger Penrose thinks that not only was there not just a Big Bang, that there's a continual cycle of these things that happen for eternity, that there's never been a beginning.
Chad Wright
Go ahead and wrap your mind around that.
Joe Rogan
Wrap your mind around that. Because we always want to think in terms of our own personal biological limitations. We have a birth and we have a death. What was the birth of the universe? Well, why, why assume that?
Chad Wright
Why?
Joe Rogan
Because we have this tiny little lifespan of 100 years.
Chad Wright
Even, even when we try to interpret hard things about scripture or we think about, you know, the Lord, we, we even almost always, we put time constraints.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
On him. Like, how do you think without the constraints of time, like in your mind? You know what I mean? It's freaking wild.
Joe Rogan
Then time gets real weird when you get into the Old Testament, like, how old was Noah?
Chad Wright
Well, yeah.
Joe Rogan
What does that.
Chad Wright
They lived a long time, you know, that, that, that kind of goes along with my theory of at the fall of man, literally marring man's genetic code and how that has just kind of progressively gotten worse over time.
Joe Rogan
It's possible. But it's also possible that their interpretation of time was different because they didn't understand calendars, you know, that they, what they considered a year was not what we were talking about. We're talking about a completely different.
Chad Wright
Yeah, yeah.
Joe Rogan
Like we have such a limited understanding just of human civilization. I mean, there's, there's new findings, like, constantly that are completely throwing a monkey wrench into the timeline of human history. And, you know, some of the biggest ones are happening in Egypt right now, where they're finding structures under, through tomography to these use of satellites, they're finding these structures underneath the pyramids that go down 2km deep. Very controversial stuff. But they've repeated it over and over again. There's these, these cylinders and there's coils that seem to be wrapped around these cylinders. They're hundreds of meters deep. And then there's more structures underneath there. They're like, well, what is this? Like, who made this? Like the. Explaining the pyramids themselves is impossible. They try. They pretend people were just smarter than you think. Okay, maybe. But also crazy that you've got this thing that's what, 17 acres in its footprint, 2,300,000 stones. Some of them cut from a quarry 500 miles away, placed hundreds of feet in the ceiling. Some of them are 50 plus tons that they've moved into these positions. Cut perfectly. You can't even. Razor blade in between of them. Set to perfect north, south, east and west. And now you find out there's structures underneath them that might go down 2km. We might have a completely fucked up understanding of human history. And it's very likely we do.
Chad Wright
Yeah, it's, it's, you know, there's a lot of speculation around. I'm sure you have had somebody on to talk about this period of human history in scripture where it talks about essentially these angelic beings.
Joe Rogan
Yes.
Chad Wright
Basically procreating with women. Human women. Yeah. And creating some sort of hybrid race. Men of renown. Yeah. Special knowledge. And you would, it would seem that something like that, when you look at the example and all of the stuff you just talked about with the pyramids, there was. They were getting special knowledge.
Joe Rogan
There was something weird from.
Chad Wright
From some source. I don't know. Like you said, we can't understand it, man.
Joe Rogan
Well, we don't, unfortunately, because of the burning of the Library of Alexandria, we have a limited un Understanding of what was going on. But what, what they did accomplish that's still there today, baffles, just baffles the greatest human minds. They're like.
Chad Wright
What I love about you is you're not afraid to ask these questions, man. And what you're doing here on the show, it's like you're not afraid to dig into anything.
Joe Rogan
Well, I don't think you should be afraid of questions and no one should be.
Chad Wright
But a lot of people's pride, you know, like, keep them from. Yeah, there's that kind of asking those questions.
Joe Rogan
I mean, well, people take themselves seriously, you know. I don't really take myself very seriously, luckily. And I also am not married to my ideas. My ideas are just ideas, and they're not mine. They're just ideas. And I'll entertain those ideas. But if they're Wrong. I'll say, oh, that's wrong. I thought this. This is why. I thought that this is what turns out really is. And I think if you can do that, you'll have a healthier perspective. Just ask questions. Don't be afraid to sound foolish, because there's probably a reason why you want to ask that question. And maybe there's a logical answer that'll make you seem foolish for asking the question, like, oh, okay, now I get it. But maybe not. And there's a lot of assumptions that people cling to, and, boy, we found out a lot about that during COVID There's a lot of that. People just believe wholeheartedly that's 100% not true. And you'll yell at people about it, and you'll change people's lives and you'll treat people like plague rats. And it's 100. You're 100% incorrect. And you've based your entire identity on this information that's 100% incorrect. And then years later, you're still justifying it because your ego won't allow you to admit that you were incorrect. You had made false assumptions, you had gone down the wrong way of thinking, and here you are stuck with this undeniable truth that's right in front of your face. You were fucking wrong. You were wrong. You got played. You can't trust the government. You can't trust the pharmaceutical drug companies. You can't trust anybody that's making a profit off of you. There it is, right in front of your face. And that's the problem with being. With taking yourself too seriously. That's the problem with being married to your ideas. That's a problem. To always wanting to be right and always wanting to sound intelligent.
Chad Wright
That's so good, Joe. That's so impactful for me to hear you say that, because I have to share this with you. Of course. I had a. I've told a few of my close buddies and friends that I was coming on the show today to have a conversation with you. And it's amazing people's response when you tell them that you're going to come and sit down to the mighty Joe Rogan, the most powerful man on the Internet. I've heard you called that dude. I'm just. I'm. Don't. Don't be offended by any of that. This is what people say. And, you know, I had so many people tell me now, Chad, when you go sit down with Joe, you better just stick to what you know. And I thought, I'm sitting Here, like, buddy, I don't know a whole lot. Like when you really get down, like what you said, man, you're not attached to your ideas. And a lot of times they're not even your ideas. They're just think about things deeply and you ask these questions and when you live that way, you do, you do come to the realization that, man, there's very little that I actually know when. We definitely find the word or the idea of knowing something. And even scripture tells us any man that thinks he knows anything hasn't known as he ought to know. In other words, as soon as you think you have the answers to most things, you are totally backwards. You haven't known the ultimate form. I think one of the ultimate forms of knowledge or knowing is realizing that you really don't know much.
Joe Rogan
Absolutely.
Chad Wright
And, but it's just funny that you, you talked about that and that was some of the advice I received.
Joe Rogan
But if you only talk about the.
Chad Wright
Things, you stick with what you know.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, but the problem with that is like, you're never going to get anywhere. You got to be able to.
Chad Wright
I agree, man, I agree. And yeah, man, it's people's, people's perspective of what you've built here and, and you know, what you do and what you've accomplished. I think it's just like so skewed, like, just based off of some of the conversations I had, you know what I mean?
Joe Rogan
Well, it's always going to get weird when anything gets large. You know, people have their own opinions and their own perceptions of things that are successful.
Chad Wright
And why do you keep going at this point?
Joe Rogan
It's fun.
Chad Wright
You, you enjoy.
Joe Rogan
I like it. Yeah, that's good. Yeah, I like it. I enjoy it. It's enriching. I like talking to people. I like learning new things, like having interesting conversations, fun conversations.
Chad Wright
What was your first kind of big break as a podcaster, As a pod? I mean, just in general, as someone who's public.
Joe Rogan
I guess the big one was Fear Factor, you know, that was the one that kind of made me famous.
Chad Wright
But what led you there?
Joe Rogan
I was on a TV show before that called News Radio. It was a sitcom.
Chad Wright
Okay.
Joe Rogan
I was on that. And before that I was a stand up comic. And you know, my trajectory has been very slow, which is good. It's healthier for you. You can, you get it better. Like you can deal with it because the worst thing that ever happens is like a 20 year old kid becomes super famous. You're just fucked. You're fucked. You just, you're not going to be able to handle that. You're going to be off the. The rails. You just. It's just too weird. The world is totally different place. Everybody knows who you are. Everywhere you go. Everyone around you needs you. So you have all these talking heads around you that are kissing your ass. Your perception of the world's completely distorted. You never had to truly develop your character. You know, You've. You've got untold wealth, you know, in your teens. Like you can't handle that. Nobody can handle that. No child stars ever make it out seem normal. They're all fucked. It's like cement where you. You mix it wrong. You know, there's not enough water, not enough sand. Whatever it is. The. The formulation's wrong.
Chad Wright
It's.
Joe Rogan
You're never gonna fix it. You're not gonna fix it after the fact it's already formed. And it's a tragedy. But to get fame slowly as long as you're always working on your character. And one of the things that will keep you sane when you're going through fame in particular is voluntary adversity. Like particularly working out.
Chad Wright
Man. That's good, brother. I can relate to that, man.
Joe Rogan
Oh yeah. I know you're big into ultra running and that kind of voluntary advice. I saw you took up Jiu Jitsu recently too, right? That looked fun. It's tiring, huh? For a guy with the kind of endurance that you have. Isn't it amazing how tired it was? Rough.
Chad Wright
Bad rough.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. Jiu Jitsu is humiliating. It's humbling. It's. But there's a lot of power in that humbling. It makes the rest of your life so much easier. Really does that? Jiu Jitsu is a huge factor in my sanity and my ability to stay sane through everything. Is that I'm getting humbled all the time.
Chad Wright
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
I'm exhausted all the time. Dudes are strangling me all the time. You know, it was like you just like. So that kind of conflict was so overwhelming but yet also positive and. And helped me so much with character development. My understanding of myself and what I was able to accomplish if I worked hard enough. It allows you to navigate the. The weird waters of fame so much easier.
Chad Wright
It's. That's really impactful to hear you say that, Joe, because I think that is. Is and has been my exact same experience, you know. And we've been. Do. We've. I've been kind of public for the last five years now. And it's. It's been kind of slow, but. But again it Kind of went big there for like within two years. Like it, the YouTube and stuff blew up to the point that I'm nowhere obviously on the, on the level that you experience in your life, but you know, you can't go out in public without somebody's gonna stop.
Joe Rogan
You're at the level where I know.
Chad Wright
Who you are in all these comments and all this stuff. You know what I mean? But like, but like continuously choosing to do these challenges that like, I don't even know if I'm gonna be able to do it. Like the, the Yukon race, the, the Yukon 1000, we didn't finish that. We went 435 miles and David started having circulation issues in his lower body because he's paralyzed. Blood doesn't flow very well and like his leg is usually the size just of his femur or his bones. And by the third day his legs were the same size as my legs. And he started to develop these pressure sores on his butt which is very, very dangerous for people who are paralyzed just from sitting in that kayak for 18 hours a day. But like we didn't, we didn't complete that, but we were out there like truly in the, in, truly in wilderness, like struggling against not only the miles, but just the environment. Like I love to hear all these hippie people talk about mother Earth. It's like mother Earth will freaking kill you, son. You talk about mother Earth around me. That tells me one thing. You ain't spent much time in nature.
Joe Rogan
Exactly.
Chad Wright
But man, we're out there just like struggling through this. And it, and it became something that for my teammate, it. He physically wasn't in a place that he could safely continue. But like that. So refreshed me, dude.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
Being out there, the experience, the struggle, it's brutal man. Like 120, 130 mile days, 18 hour days in this kayaks. You're getting three hours of sleep, having to cook all your food. It's all self contained. But like I come out the other end of that, man. I'm just like so dialed in. Dialed in, dude?
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
Without those experiences. I agree with you 100 man.
Joe Rogan
I think all men need voluntary adversity.
Chad Wright
I might, I think you need it.
Joe Rogan
I think that's one of the reasons why people are so filled with anxiety and depression and I, I think you need to challenge yourself all the time and I think it needs to be physical. I think it's not just a mental thing. I think people need physical challenge. I think it's a very important part for maintaining sanity.
Chad Wright
It is for me for sure. I have to have something, you know, on the micro level, daily. On the macro level, I have to have maybe two things, big things a year that, that I, that I look at and I'm like, I don't know if I can actually finish that or not.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
You know what I mean? And then it forces me to, to train, to learn, to prepare, to plan. That's when you get. If we want to move toward mental toughness and how this kind of preps you and keeps you going through life. Like that's where all the mental toughness is really built, is through the training process. Like on race day. You shouldn't be getting any more mentally tough on race day. You know what I mean?
Joe Rogan
Yeah. You've waited too long.
Chad Wright
Yeah. But your brain is just a muscle like any other muscle in my, in my experience.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
It's. If you, if you stop exercising it and people want to act like there are people out there, maybe like me or like David Goggins or these people that have become so mentally tough that like we're just good. Like we should be able to show up anywhere, anytime and perform and just crush everyone. That. That's not how it works. Like every one of us, we have to prepare and train and train day in and day out and go through the process in order to perform. That's a never ending thing. But people want to believe that you can just become mentally tough and then possess that and perform for the rest of your life. They want to believe that because they don't want to do the, the work that's required to actually perform at a high, high level. Right. You know, it's almost like an out.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Chad Wright
That people want to take or believe in.
Joe Rogan
Well, this man, I'm glad you're out there. I appreciate you very much. Appreciate you coming in, doing the show. And three of seven projects on YouTube. Are you on anything else?
Chad Wright
Just three of seven project.com if you want to come train with us. That's what I mean. That's my passion in life, is, is not only my faith, but teaching. And everything that we do is we have training exercises, you know, once a month or something. And I'm out there with you, suffering with you.
Joe Rogan
Beautiful.
Chad Wright
And go check it out if you want to come hang out. And Joe, man, I can't thank you enough for your generosity. There's many times during that conversation that you could have made me look like a fool. I'm sure. And you had a lot of grace for me, brother.
Joe Rogan
I enjoyed it very much. Thank you very much.
Chad Wright
All right.
Joe Rogan
Bye, everybody.
Detailed Summary of "The Joe Rogan Experience" Episode #2358 with Chad Wright
Release Date: July 31, 2025
In Episode #2358 of The Joe Rogan Experience, host Joe Rogan engages in a deep and multifaceted conversation with Chad Wright, exploring topics ranging from health and agriculture to personal transformation and spiritual beliefs. This long-form summary captures the essence of their discussion, highlighting key points, insights, and noteworthy quotes with appropriate attributions and timestamps.
Chad Wright initiates the conversation by sharing his long-term use of chewing tobacco and delves into the health risks associated with it. He emphasizes the dangers of mouth cancer, attributing it to the chemicals sprayed on tobacco crops.
Chad Wright [02:53]: "All forms of cancer are pretty nasty, but mouth cancer can really screw you up."
The discussion transitions to the pervasive presence of glyphosate in California wines, revealing its alarming prevalence.
Joe Rogan [03:27]: "I was just reading something that 100% of California wines that they tested had glyphosate on them. 100%?"
Wright provides a firsthand account of his time in the Navy, living in rural Virginia where genetically modified crops dominated the landscape, inhibiting the growth of weeds and other plants.
Chad Wright [04:15]: "Nothing would grow except for the genetically modified seed or whatever they put out there."
They critically examine industrial farming practices versus regenerative agriculture, citing Will Harris from White Oaks Pastures as a proponent of sustainable farming over two decades.
Joe Rogan [04:35]: "He did it over the course of 20 years. And we have two jars of soil out there that he gave us. And one of them is a soil from his neighbor's farm, which is an industrial farm, and the other one is his. And his is like a dark brown, rich, alive soil."
Wright contrasts his life on 700 acres in the Appalachian foothills with the challenges of urban living. He highlights the detrimental effects of city air quality on his health and reflects on the societal issues stemming from urbanization, such as poverty and homelessness.
Chad Wright [06:42]: "Coming to the city, it's like the air burns my nose. It's like I've been coughing all day today."
Rogan and Wright discuss the sensory overload experienced in cities, likening it to environments like Lagos, Nigeria, and expressing concern over humanity's declining moral standards in urban settings.
Chad Wright [10:12]: "It's never quiet. But when I enter into that environment, like that noise is doing, it does something to me."
A significant portion of the episode focuses on Wright's passion for hunting, particularly squirrel and elk hunting. He recounts his experiences hunting with dogs, encounters with bears, and the camaraderie shared with fellow hunters.
Chad Wright [15:43]: "I have the 100 Series Land Cruiser. Actually, the 100 Series is a '98, but I kind of gave that to my brother, so I can't count that. The 60 series is an '84. I have an '86 Toyota they call a pickup. It's a Hilux."
Wright shares a suspenseful story about stalking a mule deer, emphasizing the skills and patience required for successful hunting.
Chad Wright [26:45]: "There was a 300-pound black bear that comes sliding down out of that tree like it was on a fireman's pole. Landed right in the midst of me, him and the dog."
The conversation also touches on the ethics and techniques of hunting, including the importance of using rifles versus bows and the challenges posed by specific animal behaviors.
A pivotal moment in the episode is Wright's heartfelt recounting of his relationship with his mentor, Don Tidwell, and the profound impact of Tidwell's passing due to pancreatic cancer. This experience catalyzed Wright's spiritual transformation and deepened his faith.
Chad Wright [47:03]: "I just showed up in front of him and sit down with him and say, mister, don't. I'm sorry I haven't been the friend to you that you deserve."
Wright describes how reading scriptures to Tidwell provided him with solace and spiritual strength during Tidwell's final days.
Chad Wright [58:55]: "I was reading these scripts to him, and [...] he would say, 'I understand that now.' And it was like these words I'm reading are manifesting power and hope and, like, literal energy."
The dialogue delves into philosophical and theological reflections on death, faith, and the possibility of an afterlife. Wright questions the necessity of death, drawing from his scriptures and personal beliefs to explore why mortality is an intrinsic part of human existence.
Chad Wright [52:06]: "What's causing that? Every animal, almost every animal on this planet has a timeline that it exists in. It's probably a natural function of keeping a balance."
Rogan and Wright discuss the scientific pursuit of treating aging as a disease, with references to experts like David Sinclair, and contemplate the intersection of faith and science.
Joe Rogan [53:01]: "There are a lot of scientists that are working on that and a lot of scientists that I've talked to that are treating aging like a disease."
The conversation navigates through biblical references, including the Shroud of Turin and the Dead Sea Scrolls, examining their historical and spiritual significance. Wright contemplates the miraculous aspects of these artifacts and their implications for his faith.
Chad Wright [113:20]: "I believe it."
Rogan and Wright debate the authenticity and implications of such religious artifacts, pondering their alignment with scriptural narratives.
Joe Rogan [114:21]: "It was like seven feet long. Then they folded it so it's his back and his front."
Chad Wright shares his skepticism about evolutionary theory, arguing from a faith-based perspective about the rapid development and unique capabilities of humans compared to other species.
Chad Wright [120:28]: "How on earth did we go through 3.5 billion years of evolution and being shaped by our environment? And here we are after 3.5 billion years and we can't stay around for more than about 75 years and everything around us can kill us."
Rogan counters by highlighting the extraordinary nature of human evolution and the complexities surrounding consciousness.
Joe Rogan [123:34]: "In humans, nothing is even close."
Both Rogan and Wright emphasize the importance of voluntary adversity, such as physical challenges and rigorous training, in building mental resilience and character.
Joe Rogan [175:02]: "I think all men need voluntary adversity."
Wright resonates with this notion, sharing his own experiences with extreme endurance events and the mental fortitude they cultivate.
Chad Wright [175:20]: "It forces me to train, to learn, to prepare, to plan. That's when you get mental toughness."
As the episode concludes, both hosts express mutual admiration and respect. Wright appreciates Rogan's ability to engage in profound discussions without being dogmatic, while Rogan acknowledges the transformational impact of Wright's experiences and faith.
Chad Wright [177:25]: "It's just funny that you, you're not afraid to ask these questions, man. [...] authenticity in your search."
Joe Rogan [177:43]: "Well, I enjoyed it very much. Thank you very much."
Chad Wright on Mouth Cancer:
"All forms of cancer are pretty nasty, but mouth cancer can really screw you up."
[02:53]
Joe Rogan on Glyphosate in Wines:
"I was just reading something that 100% of California wines that they tested had glyphosate on them. 100%?"
[03:27]
Chad Wright on Regenerative Agriculture:
"He did it over the course of 20 years. And we have two jars of soil out there that he gave us. And one of them is a soil from his neighbor's farm, which is an industrial farm, and the other one is his. And his is like a dark brown, rich, alive soil."
[04:35]
Chad Wright on Urban Sensory Overload:
"It's never quiet. But when I enter into that environment, like that noise is doing, it does something to me."
[10:12]
Chad Wright on Spontaneous Change Post Trauma:
"I was made a new creature overnight."
[60:03]
Chad Wright on Spiritual Awakening and Scripture:
"The scriptures are dripping, literally dripping with that very fact."
[74:35]
Joe Rogan on Voluntary Adversity:
"I think all men need voluntary adversity."
[175:02]
Chad Wright on Mental Toughness:
"It forces me to train, to learn, to prepare, to plan. That's when you get mental toughness."
[175:20]
Episode #2358 showcases a profound exchange between Joe Rogan and Chad Wright, traversing diverse topics with depth and introspection. From environmental concerns and hunting adventures to personal spiritual journeys and theological debates, the conversation offers listeners a rich tapestry of insights. Wright's candid revelations about his struggles, transformation, and unwavering faith provide a compelling narrative that complements Rogan's inquisitive and open-minded hosting style. This episode serves as a testament to the power of dialogue in exploring the complexities of human experience, faith, and resilience.