Episode 41
The Story Teller – “A Positive Social Change Agent” With Buddy Thornton
Come meet a POSITIVE SOCIAL CHANGE AGENT!
In Episode 41 of the Shining Brightly Podcast Show, meet Buddy Thornton who is a Renaissance Man. A proud Vietnam Veteran (thank for your dedicated service), 27-year professional bowler, mediator, author of lots of books including the Slippery Slope, speaker, writer and very importantly a book editor for many including a collaborative co-authored series called The Art of Connection – 365 Days of Gratitude (volume IV coming out in January 2024). Get STARTED TODAY – “write from your heart and soul with passion”! Authors need to be speaker and speakers need to become authors. Please listen, watch, download, share and review this fun episode about story telling to share your own stories, messages and life experiences.
Mentioned Resources
Amazon Author - https://tinyurl.com/BuddyThorntonBooks
(The Slippery Slope and The Art of Connection)
Linked - linkedin.com/in/buddypscapro-gcudoc1955
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/buddy.thornton.395
Website - bctmediationsplus.com (Mediation Company)
Email - buddypscapro@gmail.com
About the guest – Buddy Thornton and spouse, Sharon, plus their large extended four-generation family have lived in Arizona since the late 1980s. Buddy is a Vietnam-era veteran, earned his BS in Allied Health Sciences (UW-Milwaukee 1984), his MA in Human Services Counseling and Executive Leadership (Liberty University 2014), and is a doctoral candidate pursuing his Human Services doctorate. Buddy has numerous certifications and actively serves on multiple boards in an advisory capacity. Buddy is the creative mind behind the Slippery Slope series and the author of Book I, Contemporary Society Through the Lens of Applied Ethics, and Book II, Contemporary Society Through the Lens of Applied Morals. Book III, The Optimal Journey to Oneself-Teen and Young Adult Edition, and Book IV, The Optimal Journey to Oneself-Parent-Teacher-Caregiver Edition continue the series. Buddy brands as "The Positive Social Change Agent Pro" and has been invited to be a Keynote Speaker and Program Presenter (Conflict Management, Parenting Dynamics, Cross-Cultural Topics), with one notable global invitation to Da Nang Vietnam in November 2017 and invited to speak on cultural topics at the IIRP World Conference in Bethlehem, PA-October 2019. Buddy is a featured regular participant on the Impact of Educational Leadership podcast hosted by Isaiah Drone III.
About the Host:
Howard Brown is a best-selling author, award-winning international speaker, Silicon Valley entrepreneur, interfaith peacemaker, and a two-time stage IV cancer survivor. He is also a sought-after speaker and consultant for corporate businesses, nonprofits, congregations, and community groups. Howard has co-founded two social networks that were the first to connect religious communities around the world. He is a nationally known patient advocate and “cancer whisperer” to many families. Howard, his wife Lisa, and daughter Emily currently reside in Michigan, and his happy place is on the basketball court.
Website
Http://www.shiningbrightly.com
Social Media
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/howard.brown.36
LinkedIn - https://wwwlinkedin.com/in/howardsbrown
Instagram - @howard.brown.36
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#books #author #best #seller #writing #editing #bookawards #entreprenuers #coaching #speaking #business #change #positivity #motivation #education #inspiration #podcast # listen #download #share #review #collaboration #gratitude #shiningbrightly
Transcript
Hola, it's Howard brown. It's shining brightly. Oh
Howard Brown:my goodness. You're maestro, the mic is back. Oh, you're gonna
Howard Brown:love this guest. I've got Buddy Thornton here today. And this
Howard Brown:guy is so interesting. He is a book editor, a book author, a
Howard Brown:ghost writer, and so much more. He's a renaissance man, buddy.
Howard Brown:How are you?
Buddy Thornton:I'm doing great, Howard. And I really appreciate
Buddy Thornton:you inviting me on your show.
Howard Brown:I appreciate it. I'd love for you to just share,
Howard Brown:give us a quick background a little bio on yourself for for
Howard Brown:my listening audience.
Buddy Thornton:Okay, well, I have a doctoral education from
Buddy Thornton:Grand Canyon University, obviously. I mean, I have a
Buddy Thornton:master's in a bachelor's. I'm a great grandfather, I have 10
Buddy Thornton:grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. And, you know, I
Buddy Thornton:have been married almost 50 years. And my lovely wife, you
Buddy Thornton:know, supports everything I do. She's been retired for about 17
Buddy Thornton:years. She just wants to be the loving, great grandma. And I
Buddy Thornton:give her the opportunity to do that. And so I Oh, I also have
Buddy Thornton:to work I go. And that's why I'm here. And, you know, it is what
Buddy Thornton:it is.
Howard Brown:Did you did you have any other types of careers
Howard Brown:moving, you know, moving around as far as in your life and
Howard Brown:things like that?
Buddy Thornton:Well, I am a Vietnam veteran. A lot of people
Buddy Thornton:do know that though, because I put that in most of my writing.
Buddy Thornton:And certainly on my bio page. What a lot of people do not know
Buddy Thornton:is that I was a professional bowler for 27 years. And, you
Buddy Thornton:know, because of that I almost virtually have never had a job
Buddy Thornton:job. I've always worked for myself. But you know, 27 years
Buddy Thornton:on tour, and I'm almost 70. So, you know, and a lot of people
Buddy Thornton:would never realise I'm almost 70. But I think the PBA and the
Buddy Thornton:fact that I still love and enjoy what I'm doing, I plan to keep
Buddy Thornton:on doing it. As long as I enjoy it. That's my key.
Howard Brown:That's an awesome share that you're a pro bowler
Howard Brown:and thank you for your service as a Vietnam vet. I have to tell
Howard Brown:you, I grew up in Boston, and we had candle pins. And you got
Howard Brown:three three balls, or a little straight candle bends and and
Howard Brown:that was a birthday party back. But you know, before the digital
Howard Brown:age, that was an amazing birthday party to go bowling and
Howard Brown:pizza.
Buddy Thornton:Well, let me give you another little hint I
Buddy Thornton:spent in Boston while I was in the Navy. Okay, and I not only
Buddy Thornton:played piano pins, but then when I went south of Washington DC, I
Buddy Thornton:also played duck fins. Yeah. So I've tried all three different
Buddy Thornton:types of traditional bowling and I'll stick with the big ball if
Buddy Thornton:you don't mind.
Howard Brown:Yeah. So where did you develop this passion for for
Howard Brown:writing and books and editing? Where did that come from?
Buddy Thornton:Well, you know, luckily, my mother was very
Buddy Thornton:insistent on me being educated. And back when I was going
Buddy Thornton:through schooling in the 60s, they had a thing called the SRE
Buddy Thornton:reading programme. And I went through the SRE reading
Buddy Thornton:programme, and I got to where I could read 1300 words a minute.
Buddy Thornton:And so even when I was in the Navy, when I all throughout my
Buddy Thornton:entire marriage, I've just always been a consumer of books.
Buddy Thornton:And I can love to get on stage, I love to tell stories. That's
Buddy Thornton:one of my passions. And so people were like, you know, you
Buddy Thornton:should be writing, as well as speaking. And I just didn't
Buddy Thornton:really gravitate to that real quickly. But then I went to
Buddy Thornton:speak with another gentleman from the East Coast. And he
Buddy Thornton:asked me if I would look over one of his books. And he's
Buddy Thornton:written 12 books. And I got to the point where it's like, oh,
Buddy Thornton:yeah, let me look at your book. And then I started doing a
Buddy Thornton:little editing for him. And then it turned into a full blown,
Buddy Thornton:hey, I'm sending you my book nine, can you edit it and send
Buddy Thornton:it back to and, you know, he never changed anything after I
Buddy Thornton:edited it. So I decided, You know what, I am going to write
Buddy Thornton:my first book, I wrote my first book on ethics. And it took me a
Buddy Thornton:long time to write it because I was trying to be a
Buddy Thornton:perfectionist. And I sent it off to be edited. And it took the
Buddy Thornton:editors over seven weeks to get it back to me. And in that seven
Buddy Thornton:week time, they only found seven errors to offer to correct. And
Buddy Thornton:so I asked them, I said, seven weeks to find seven years. They
Buddy Thornton:said, Yeah, we thought something was wrong with our software. We
Buddy Thornton:were looking at something wrong, we were missing something. So we
Buddy Thornton:kept going over it and over and over. And I'm like, I just wrote
Buddy Thornton:it. And you know, and they said, Well, you obviously know how to
Buddy Thornton:write. So when I wrote my second book, I did the same thing, but
Buddy Thornton:they can get it back to me much quicker. And that book was
Buddy Thornton:105,000 words, and they found 12 errors. So I was like, Well, you
Buddy Thornton:know what, maybe I should be editing myself. Maybe that's
Buddy Thornton:another revenue stream. And I talked to Natalie about it. And
Buddy Thornton:she said, Yeah, you should do that. So I edited some short
Buddy Thornton:pieces for her. And then I edited a book a full book. And I
Buddy Thornton:was getting these books back to these people in less than a
Buddy Thornton:week. Which means they were like, it's just just incredible
Buddy Thornton:that You wouldn't be able to do that? Well, I'm gonna tell you a
Buddy Thornton:secret, I do use an AI tool to identify really glaring
Buddy Thornton:problems. But I don't use an AI tool that does the work for me,
Buddy Thornton:I use an AI tool that allows me to pick and choose what's right
Buddy Thornton:and what's wrong. And when I have a question, I go right back
Buddy Thornton:to exactly the way I did back in the 60s and 70s, I open up the
Buddy Thornton:stinking dictionary or the whatever I need to do, and I go,
Buddy Thornton:what's the what's the correct way to do it, I'm not gonna let
Buddy Thornton:a machine tell me what to do. Well, but and we didn't have
Howard Brown:aI right before then. So now this, that's a
Howard Brown:current development, you didn't have that you had to rely on
Howard Brown:your own words in the dictionary and all that sort of stuff as
Howard Brown:well.
Buddy Thornton:Now, I'm actually editing for three
Buddy Thornton:different publishing houses. And I've done a steady stream of
Buddy Thornton:business in that on that side. But my gift 1300 words
Buddy Thornton:submitted, and I can edit and create incredibly fast as well,
Buddy Thornton:as well as be very competent. Well, I
Howard Brown:have to tell you, being a first time author, and
Howard Brown:learning this now, since last October, and going from cancer
Howard Brown:to COVID, and actually being a published author, and I'm
Howard Brown:learning. So I'm learning from folks like you, as well. And I
Howard Brown:love the shout out to Natalie McQueen and to Robert and Renee
Howard Brown:Jones. That's how that we've been connected and that
Howard Brown:intrapreneur group and, and Natalie, with her publishing
Howard Brown:house and things like that, what, what would you say to
Howard Brown:someone that because during COVID, people had a lot of
Howard Brown:little more time on their hands, what would you say for a first
Howard Brown:time author, which was some some advice that you'd give to them?
Howard Brown:I have one piece of advice, I want to hear what you as the
Howard Brown:expert has to say?
Buddy Thornton:Well, it's easy for me. Yeah, right from your
Buddy Thornton:heart, right with passion, let your soul and your heart do your
Buddy Thornton:staking for you. If you get muddled up in your brain, like
Buddy Thornton:most humans, were very imperfect. And we probably
Buddy Thornton:wouldn't even write the same sentence exactly the same way a
Buddy Thornton:month apart. So you gotta write everything from your heart and
Buddy Thornton:soul and just get it on paper. If even if you're not getting a
Buddy Thornton:paper, you know, get on the zoom by yourself and record it and
Buddy Thornton:then take the transcript and use the transcript. And you'd be
Buddy Thornton:surprised when you come from the heart and soul and you just do a
Buddy Thornton:brain dump, you just get it out there. There are going to be
Buddy Thornton:tidbits that you never would have put in if you had written
Buddy Thornton:it purposefully. Now there are some people who say
Buddy Thornton:intentionality is important. And I do I do focus on your topic,
Buddy Thornton:don't get way off in a rabbit hole or you know, don't do
Buddy Thornton:things crazy. But you have to write from your heart and soul.
Buddy Thornton:And if you need to edit something out, it is out. But
Buddy Thornton:make sure it's all in there first.
Howard Brown:I think that's great advice. And my advice is
Howard Brown:just get started. Because take that positive step forward,
Howard Brown:because I call myself the least likely author. And I did it non
Howard Brown:traditionally by zoom. And those transcripts did become drafts,
Howard Brown:the drafts did become chapters and the chapters then became a
Howard Brown:manuscript now, but you can't really publish a book too well
Howard Brown:without a manuscript. So you need some of the basics there to
Howard Brown:be able to do that. The other lesson that I'm learning is that
Howard Brown:when the book is complete, and a book cover matters, and
Howard Brown:authenticity matters. And vulnerability matters. Once you
Howard Brown:actually press that go button, and it's available on
Howard Brown:amazon.com. That's when the woodwork starts, buddy. That's
Howard Brown:when the marketing starts. That's when your brand actually
Howard Brown:needs to be on display. And that's where you said something
Howard Brown:back in the greenroom a second ago is that that's where an
Howard Brown:author learns to become a speaker, and has to learn how to
Howard Brown:become a speaker, tell it tell it tell us about that.
Buddy Thornton:Authors or speakers and speakers or
Buddy Thornton:authors, or it could be a speaker who doesn't have a book
Buddy Thornton:is like a purse, a business person without a website or a
Buddy Thornton:business card. You know, you really need to put yourself out
Buddy Thornton:there in a way that shows not only competency in one spot the
Buddy Thornton:competency over time, when you get to speak, you get to speak
Buddy Thornton:to an audience, it could be an audience of five, it could be an
Buddy Thornton:audience of 5000. When you train somebody or you put a course out
Buddy Thornton:there, the limitation is the people who sign up for the
Buddy Thornton:course are the people who get together. But when you write a
Buddy Thornton:book, it's like taking what you could do on stage. And it's
Buddy Thornton:putting out there it's a timeless thing that will exist
Buddy Thornton:forever. So you have to a pinpoint the foreverness of a
Buddy Thornton:publication. And then you have to back it up by saying okay, I
Buddy Thornton:did one. Why can't I do more than one? When I was a
Buddy Thornton:professional bowler and I threw my first 300 game on tour. One
Buddy Thornton:of the guys came up to me and he said, You know what your job is
Buddy Thornton:now? And I said, Yeah, he said, Yeah, throw another one. You
Buddy Thornton:have to, you never can rest on your laurels. You have to
Buddy Thornton:understand that one book is a super accomplishment. Only 2% of
Buddy Thornton:people who want to write books ever finish a book. But only 4%
Buddy Thornton:of the people who write a book ever write a second book. When
Buddy Thornton:you're like me where you've already written more than a
Buddy Thornton:dozen and you've got five individual self full books, and
Buddy Thornton:you've got a plan for 24 in two series. It's about out
Buddy Thornton:publishing 1234 a year, because it's what have I done for myself
Buddy Thornton:lately? And then how do I project to the world? Marketing?
Buddy Thornton:For a stagnant one book is difficult. You've already even
Buddy Thornton:said that yourself. That's what if you have a series of books
Buddy Thornton:every time you get to bring another book out, guess what? On
Buddy Thornton:that backdrop, there's your other books, and everyone goes,
Buddy Thornton:Oh, I really love this book. But what about that book, and all of
Buddy Thornton:a sudden, the marketing takes on a life of its own. But if you
Buddy Thornton:don't do the work to get it out there and then continually push
Buddy Thornton:it in people's faces. You're nobody, there's 8 billion people
Buddy Thornton:on this planet, you are what do the numbers on that that's an
Buddy Thornton:infinitesimal amount, you have to fight upstream every day to
Buddy Thornton:get your books out there.
Howard Brown:Yeah. And again, speaking about Natalie McQueen,
Howard Brown:she she really gave me some good learning because she said,
Howard Brown:Howard, you know, you can't really fake it on on Amazon, you
Howard Brown:are an author, you're not an author, you're either listed and
Howard Brown:you have a book by your side. And she said that a book, this
Howard Brown:took three years for me, I hope the next one doesn't. But she
Howard Brown:said, there's lots of incremental space that you can
Howard Brown:do that. So I, my high school coach wrote a chapter for the
Howard Brown:3030 days with America's high school coaches. And we talked
Howard Brown:about how coaching in your formative years how it's such a
Howard Brown:noble profession, and like being a teacher, and then I got to
Howard Brown:write about my coach. And then I wrote a little 200 word essay
Howard Brown:essay, I'd love for you to talk about this book, here, I'm
Howard Brown:holding it up for the people that are just listening, the art
Howard Brown:of connection, this is a collaborative book, and everyone
Howard Brown:gets to write a page. And I actually now there's two reasons
Howard Brown:why I love this book is one, it wasn't like yours to write it.
Howard Brown:And also the ability to I look at it every day. I opened it
Howard Brown:every day. And I read I read the inspiration from it. And I have
Howard Brown:to tell you, the Kindle has been the most amazing thing, because
Howard Brown:it's become a search engine of this amazing community that you
Howard Brown:all have built, that people are helping each other. They're
Howard Brown:joint venturing together, they're being podcast guests.
Howard Brown:It's really kind of cool. And so I'd love for you to talk about
Howard Brown:the the Arctic connection, and 365 days and the new book on
Howard Brown:gratitude coming out.
Buddy Thornton:Well, number one, you know, compilation books
Buddy Thornton:are really a a gift from a group as opposed to a gift from an
Buddy Thornton:individual, I try to paint it that way. And beyond the Arctic
Buddy Thornton:connection, we'll get to that. But they're accomplishing books
Buddy Thornton:where people write, like, there'll be 12 authors, or
Buddy Thornton:there'll be 24 authors with two of mine. There's some that deal
Buddy Thornton:with 52 authors. So this you have one a week. And then of
Buddy Thornton:course, you've got your big compilation books that just it's
Buddy Thornton:a simple ask, Can you write one page? Can you keep it within
Buddy Thornton:this framework? And can you use that as your Forever Business
Buddy Thornton:card and get get yourself published? It goes into the
Buddy Thornton:Library of Congress. You know, this is an international best
Buddy Thornton:selling book. It's an award winning book, it was the best
Buddy Thornton:best it was the number one business compilation book that
Buddy Thornton:2023. So you know, it's very important that you understand
Buddy Thornton:the framework of a compilation book. Where else in society, can
Buddy Thornton:you coattail on 364 other people and be considered part of the
Buddy Thornton:fish in that fishbowl? I mean, there are some incredible people
Buddy Thornton:in this book. Now. Yeah, in Book Three, I wrote seven pages, and
Buddy Thornton:I edited the entire book. In book four, I'll be editing the
Buddy Thornton:entire book, and I will have any work from three to probably
Buddy Thornton:seven or eight pages. But the bottom line is, for me, it's a
Buddy Thornton:gift of love to the other people in the book. I want them to
Buddy Thornton:learn from me as much as I learned from them. And I'm like
Buddy Thornton:you I have my Kindle and I literally read a page a day I
Buddy Thornton:stay on the calendar. I like to do that. I wasn't in book one.
Buddy Thornton:But I have Book One, Book Two, book three and I will obviously
Buddy Thornton:have before. It is an inspiration to hear the voice of
Buddy Thornton:other people who are your peers who may even if they're not in
Buddy Thornton:your field, they're still your peers. They're an author of the
Buddy Thornton:book with you. Come on. And if you're a consumer of that book,
Buddy Thornton:what a business catalogue. Do you have you remember rolodexes
Buddy Thornton:Howard. Yes, sir. Hey, guess what? AOC is a modern Rolodex,
Buddy Thornton:it has got some of the brightest, most imaginative,
Buddy Thornton:creative people in the world writing these compilation books.
Buddy Thornton:And AOC is special because it focuses on a very direct line
Buddy Thornton:before gratitude. I teach everybody when I'm doing my
Buddy Thornton:coaching that you get up in the morning with gratitude and you
Buddy Thornton:go to bed with gratitude. Why wouldn't you want to participate
Buddy Thornton:in a gratitude book? I mean, we live for gratitude, don't we? I
Buddy Thornton:mean, 85% of our thoughts in a drought or day are either
Buddy Thornton:negative or very flat. When you get that nugget that becomes
Buddy Thornton:gratitude. Isn't it special? So yes, we need to have gratitude
Buddy Thornton:and being in a compilation book It is such a simple, easy way to
Buddy Thornton:do it. I don't understand why anybody wouldn't invest a very
Buddy Thornton:low amount of money to become an international best selling
Buddy Thornton:author and be able to say, I am, hey, I'm in the same room with
Buddy Thornton:ours. I'm in the same room with Robert Jones. I'm in the same
Buddy Thornton:room with Natalie McQueen. I mean, yes, I work with these
Buddy Thornton:people. But guess what, it's a it is an honour to be on the
Buddy Thornton:pedestal with them.
Howard Brown:I have to tell you, I've realised that now. And
Howard Brown:it was just such a great awakening for me for the art of
Howard Brown:connection because I didn't exactly know what I was doing. I
Howard Brown:came in late for Book Three, and Natalie and I've just reaped the
Howard Brown:benefits of being part of this collaborative now, on so many
Howard Brown:ways. And, and I went on Roberts radio show, and I just, every
Howard Brown:time I see Natalie, I thank her. And I, I've already written my
Howard Brown:gratitude, because I look in the mirror, being a two time stage
Howard Brown:four, cancer survivor, and patient and advocate. I'm
Howard Brown:blessed. I'm grateful. And I'm really lucky every single day.
Howard Brown:And now it allowed me to express that in my brand. And I
Howard Brown:especially love the Kindle, because one click and people are
Howard Brown:getting in touch with me. And that's that's actually again, it
Howard Brown:helped define my brand and who I am and the shining brightly
Howard Brown:movement to make the world a better place. So just so many
Howard Brown:benefits for that. And then I just, I now get to thank you for
Howard Brown:probably only finding one or two areas in my, my posting. So I
Howard Brown:appreciate that very much that you gotta go. Go ahead.
Buddy Thornton:Yeah, the the main thing I really focused on
Buddy Thornton:and I think people need to do right from the heart. If you
Buddy Thornton:struggle, getting it in the framework, you know what I'm
Buddy Thornton:available for extremely minimal cost, I can help you complete
Buddy Thornton:your page. The other thing is, when you're doing those tags at
Buddy Thornton:the bottom of the page, when you're identifying your
Buddy Thornton:profession, and what you have a passion for be very accurate. We
Buddy Thornton:only allow five tags per author. And the reason we do that is
Buddy Thornton:because we want you to focus on your your passions, we don't
Buddy Thornton:want you to say, oh, obviously I was an architect, I was a
Buddy Thornton:builder. I was, we want you to say, this is what I am. I'm an
Buddy Thornton:author, I'm a speaker, I'm a writer, I'm an editor and I'm a
Buddy Thornton:conflict management professional. Those are my five
Buddy Thornton:tags. And I won't deviate from those because that's me. When
Buddy Thornton:you talk to me, that's what you get. That's that's how I present
Buddy Thornton:myself. I'm not going to change that message now, five years
Buddy Thornton:from now, or 10 years from now doesn't matter.
Howard Brown:No, I love that advice. Now, for those that
Howard Brown:aren't video, you'll see that. But he actually has two books
Howard Brown:that he's displayed over his right and left shoulder, you
Howard Brown:want to tell us a little bit about the slippery slope, and
Howard Brown:then the black and white baseball?
Buddy Thornton:Yes, well, the slippery slope is my series, you
Buddy Thornton:can find it on Amazon, there will end up being 12 books in
Buddy Thornton:that series. And then there'll be a second series that will
Buddy Thornton:follow that which I'll start when I I'll advertise that when
Buddy Thornton:I get started on it. The black and white of baseball and
Buddy Thornton:overcoming bias in baseball in life was written by George
Buddy Thornton:Reiser. He's a coach who actually spent years in China
Buddy Thornton:coaching Chinese baseball players. He said in his early
Buddy Thornton:60s, he's a black author. He's got a grandson who is struggling
Buddy Thornton:with a lot of prejudice and bias in the baseball sphere. And so
Buddy Thornton:he came to me and said, Could you please help me tell my
Buddy Thornton:story? He had a gorgeous manuscript. It just needed a
Buddy Thornton:little nudge over the top. And so I spent about a week working
Buddy Thornton:on it. And I sent it back to him. And what was surprising is
Buddy Thornton:he thought it was going to take two or three months. And when I
Buddy Thornton:got it back to him in a week, he was like, Are you kidding me?
Buddy Thornton:And he read it. And he gave it to his wife to read. And they
Buddy Thornton:both said, we did not believe that Georgia story could sound
Buddy Thornton:like that and could be like that. I didn't take anything out
Buddy Thornton:of Georgia story. I just made it to where it would cross every
Buddy Thornton:racial barrier, every cultural barrier. And it wouldn't reach
Buddy Thornton:into the heart of people and say, This is wrong, why can't we
Buddy Thornton:make it right? And so, you know, immediately became an
Buddy Thornton:international best selling book. I love that all my books are
Buddy Thornton:international best selling books. You have to write at a
Buddy Thornton:certain level to make that happen. You cannot just get that
Buddy Thornton:out of thin air. But at the end of the day, George wasn't a
Buddy Thornton:writer. He was a coach. He was a coach, but he was very well. He
Buddy Thornton:was articulate. He was well spoken. He could write very
Buddy Thornton:well, what he couldn't do as he couldn't put it into the right
Buddy Thornton:place in the perfect framework. So did I do a little bit of work
Buddy Thornton:on the book? Yeah. And I also wrote the foreword because I
Buddy Thornton:love George. He's a great friend of mine now. And I would never
Buddy Thornton:have met him if he hadn't came to me to help me write this
Buddy Thornton:book. And I just, I just believe that's the gift that we give.
Buddy Thornton:The money we make is very minimal compared to the gift we
Buddy Thornton:get of interacting with people that we care about.
Howard Brown:And that book has a lesson and it's teaching. I
Howard Brown:have to tell you now buddy, the reason I was excited to have you
Howard Brown:on the show Is that I have now gone through this process, a
Howard Brown:full three year process of, you know, basically doing the Zoom
Howard Brown:interviews, looking at the transcripts, looking at the jet,
Howard Brown:the chapters, we cut out so much in order, you know, this, my
Howard Brown:first book is 300 pages and 62 pictures. And I have such an
Howard Brown:appreciation of the editorial, because without my wife and my
Howard Brown:editor, David Crum, French publishing, and read the spirit
Howard Brown:magazine, my book probably isn't readable. And I think that's the
Howard Brown:gift. The gift is that of an editor is that the book is
Howard Brown:readable. If it is a struggle to get through a book and I've been
Howard Brown:through, you know, I've read some that are been a struggle,
Howard Brown:even on article, I might stop right there and not and put the
Howard Brown:book down and never pick it back up again. And I love the fact
Howard Brown:that the feedback that I'm getting is that it's a page
Howard Brown:turner, and then I can't put your book down, right, because
Howard Brown:that's what you want as an author. And the editorial makes
Howard Brown:all the difference in the world. So I want to actually just tell
Howard Brown:you that you have a magic to you that, that I don't have, and I
Howard Brown:appreciate for people like you that do because if it's not
Howard Brown:readable, it makes it a chore. And you don't want the book to
Howard Brown:be a chore. And there's some books out there. And I'm sure
Howard Brown:you've seen them, they're a real chore to get through. And
Howard Brown:especially looking at my you know, the textbook days and and
Howard Brown:some of that stuff. I was like, you know, you're trying to teach
Howard Brown:kids. And boy, is that really a chore some of those textbooks
Howard Brown:just to get through so we won't get into there as well. Can I
Howard Brown:ask you? What are you reading now who's your favourite author
Howard Brown:and why?
Buddy Thornton:You know, I write nonfiction. So I you know,
Buddy Thornton:and because I'm a researcher, I read a lot of nonfiction. And in
Buddy Thornton:the nonfiction space, I tend to stay in the sciences. So like
Buddy Thornton:Dr. Least Elliot with her book, what's going on in there about
Buddy Thornton:from conception to five years old with children is definitely
Buddy Thornton:one of my favourite books. From a religious standpoint, I
Buddy Thornton:absolutely would recommend Ken Sandy's the peacemaker, it is
Buddy Thornton:one of the best conflict management books that has ever
Buddy Thornton:been written. And it follows the Scripture, but it doesn't adhere
Buddy Thornton:to this, you have to do this. It is we want you to believe in the
Buddy Thornton:story and the and your own ability to decide what's
Buddy Thornton:acceptable versus unacceptable. And then, of course, for this
Buddy Thornton:fiction space, I really do like to read stuff that I know will
Buddy Thornton:never come to be. In other words, I read it strictly for
Buddy Thornton:pleasure. Strictly using escapes, I read like Stephen R.
Buddy Thornton:Donaldson with his unbeliever series. You know, I've read all
Buddy Thornton:of the different variations of the Star Wars, people that have
Buddy Thornton:come out. That's, you know, it's when they say, a farfara away
Buddy Thornton:long time ago, far, far away. You know what? We don't even
Buddy Thornton:imagine some of the things they could do being possible now. So
Buddy Thornton:how could that be right? I like that, because it gives me an
Buddy Thornton:escape, it allows my brain to just turn off and just enjoy
Buddy Thornton:pleasure. And then when I come back to right, I'm completely
Buddy Thornton:refreshed. I'm ready to go. I'm ready to rock. I mean, that one
Buddy Thornton:tidbit nobody will ever know. But I had COVID, three times.
Buddy Thornton:And when I came out of the hospital after having COVID The
Buddy Thornton:first time I was going to be at home for 30 days. Yeah. Now I
Buddy Thornton:had outlined my second book before I went into the hospital.
Buddy Thornton:I had 30 days, and I completed the entire book 105,000 words in
Buddy Thornton:30 days. I wrote the book in 30 days, I gave it to my committee
Buddy Thornton:chair from Grand Canyon University, who wrote the
Buddy Thornton:foreword to look at it. He came back with a couple of
Buddy Thornton:suggestions for chapter five. And I made a few changes. And we
Buddy Thornton:published it. So it was written in 30 days. It was reviewed for
Buddy Thornton:about 40 days. And then it was published. It was written in
Buddy Thornton:September, and it was published by December. And you know,
Buddy Thornton:that's the way you create a book. But you have to know the
Buddy Thornton:topic, you have to believe in the topic, you have to have
Buddy Thornton:passion about the topic. And you have to believe in the people
Buddy Thornton:who give you feedback. Yeah,
Howard Brown:I also got to, I have to tell you that the lesson
Howard Brown:learned it was cathartic for me because going from cancer to
Howard Brown:COVID. I was healing and the ability of what is my memoir, so
Howard Brown:it's 125,000 words. And I had never done this before. So it
Howard Brown:was an all new journey. It was healing for me, because I
Howard Brown:actually in chapter one talked about the lesson that my great
Howard Brown:grandmother, we call her Bobby bhootish, Bertha from Lithuania,
Howard Brown:she came and struggled to get to this country had nothing right.
Howard Brown:And she taught us as five year olds to live a life of kindness
Howard Brown:we can choose to do that live a life of giving, we can choose to
Howard Brown:do that and to heal yourself and then go heal others and on your
Howard Brown:communities. And God I remember that today that she's talking to
Howard Brown:me right now. And for me to actually take that lesson and
Howard Brown:put that in chapter one, right is so special to be able to do
Howard Brown:that. How many times you know, at least in my memoir walked
Howard Brown:back my entire life. And we're going through photos and we're
Howard Brown:going through stories and we're talking about family customs. We
Howard Brown:actually In one chapter, we fight about whose grandmother's
Howard Brown:brisket is better and which recipe is better. So it's just
Howard Brown:cool. And so I love that expressionism of that. And then
Howard Brown:I got to pick, you know who I wanted to write the foreword,
Howard Brown:you talked about that. And there's a book from Dr. Robert
Howard Brown:wicks called bounce. He's probably published 29 books. His
Howard Brown:book said, I read his book, and I said, He's talking about me
Howard Brown:bounces about resilience, right? And I said, He's talking about
Howard Brown:me. And then I do a lot of interfaith work. And the
Howard Brown:actually, Rabbi David Rosen in Israel, I've known him from the
Howard Brown:American Jewish Committee, we do a lot of diplomacy, and a lot of
Howard Brown:interfaith relations. And I live here in Michigan, where we have,
Howard Brown:you know, Muslims, Christian, Jews, Hindus, and we all in the
Howard Brown:same melting pot, and we seem to be able to get along most of the
Howard Brown:time. And so Rabbi Rosen wrote an afterword about my book about
Howard Brown:welcoming people into your tent, know your neighbours, and
Howard Brown:understand the richness of their history and their culture and
Howard Brown:their foods and their diversity. And I think we're lacking a
Howard Brown:little bit in these days, I hope we can recapture that. But boy,
Howard Brown:was that fun to be able to choose the actual people and the
Howard Brown:honour that they accepted, to be able to be part of my book, and
Howard Brown:everyone who endorsed my book, too, it was an ask a personal
Howard Brown:asked that they would actually put their name in or on my book.
Howard Brown:And so what a great thing for me and I, you've now got me all
Howard Brown:excited to get to book too. And to see what I'm gonna do, and I,
Howard Brown:I've already got booked to you, they are they always say if
Howard Brown:you're an author, what's your next book, and you got to have
Howard Brown:that so I do. And so I wanted to actually transition a little bit
Howard Brown:here to the shining, brightly spotlight I'm putting on for
Howard Brown:those that are listening, these magnetic white glasses that you
Howard Brown:know, I do each week, and I'm putting the shining bright the
Howard Brown:spotlight on you, buddy, I want people to know how to find you.
Howard Brown:And then I want you to actually finish up the show with a little
Howard Brown:bit of inspiration and kick it back over to me.
Buddy Thornton:I can do that. Well, if you look at my logo,
Buddy Thornton:buddy psca Pro, and you want to get a hold of me, all you have
Buddy Thornton:to do is put in buddy psca pro@gmail.com. It's very simple.
Buddy Thornton:It comes right out of my logo. I was it was a gifted brand, from
Buddy Thornton:one of my peers about five, six years ago, because of all the
Buddy Thornton:pro social work that I do. And I'm telling you right now, I
Buddy Thornton:wouldn't be doing anything writing, editing or anything if
Buddy Thornton:I didn't believe it was going to be a gift to other people. My
Buddy Thornton:gift to the world is I'm a positive social change agent. I
Buddy Thornton:want to change your perspective, I want to change your life. I
Buddy Thornton:want to change your future. I want to change your family tree
Buddy Thornton:by teaching you how to just be you in an optimal, best way. And
Buddy Thornton:if I can do that for your people, Howard, and they can get
Buddy Thornton:a gift out of your book shining brightly, which is a great book
Buddy Thornton:and I can get gifts from people like me. How much better will
Buddy Thornton:the world be? It's all up to you.
Howard Brown:Oh, I love that. Oh, my goodness. And I will
Howard Brown:definitely have in the links in the show notes. The art of
Howard Brown:connection and the gratitude book is there's still room for
Howard Brown:more authors and all that way you get a hold of me is shining
Howard Brown:brightly.com my speaking the podcast, the book, my advocacy,
Howard Brown:what I care about there is lifting, lifting up yourself and
Howard Brown:lifting up others in our communities. If we do shine
Howard Brown:brightly, just a little bit each day for ourselves, for others in
Howard Brown:our communities, the world will be a better place. And Buddy,
Howard Brown:what a terrific episode. What a great guest what a great message
Howard Brown:you have. And I just I'm very glad to call you my new friend
Howard Brown:and in share this time together. Thank you.