(dramatic music)
- This is becoming undone. - Yeah, that morning I was in hotel in downtown Chicago. It was preparing to spend the whole day with the Paul basketball. So I had taken the train up there.
You had a great day with coaches on the previous day. That morning I got that text. Type A and me is going, "Come on, babe, I'm in Chicago. I'm taking the train home tomorrow. I got stuff to do."
Then more I looked at it and more I talked to the coach.
โI'm thinking, "I think I need to go home."โ
And so we made the decision to do that and flew home and it really did turn our world upside down. And then he comes in, the ER doctor, it says,
"What I thought I saw on that first one,
this is what I see, this is what cancer looks like." Once we got to the end of those infusions, we could tell things were not getting better any time soon. So that's when we began to discuss his retirement, the right thing to do.
And at the more we talked about that and finally landed on a date being May 30th, I said, "Yes, that's it. I am Roger Light and I am undone." (dramatic music)
Hey friend, I'm glad you're here. Welcome to yet another episode of Becoming Undone, the podcast for those who dare bravely risk mightily and grow relentlessly. Until we broke, so speak your author, Professor,
and performance scientist. I spent much of the last two decades workings on athletic trainer and string coach
โand the professional, collegiate, and high schoolโ
sports settings. And over the years, I've grown more and more fascinated with what sets high achievers apart and how failures that can suck at the moment. Can end up being exactly the push we needed
to propel us along our path to success. Each week on Becoming Undone, I invite Newcast to examine how high achievers can transform from falling apart, to falling into place. I'd like to emphasize that this shows entirely separate
from my role of Baylor University, but it's my attempt to apply what I've learned and what I'm learning and to share with others about the mindsets of high achievers. (upbeat music)
Welcome back to another episode of Becoming Undone and today we're talking about what happens when life changes with a single text message. And nothing is ever the same again. My guest today is Roger Life,
the first repeat guest in the history of this show,
and it's fitting.
โRoger was the FCA director at SAU Carbonale,โ
when I watched a sure nearly 30 years ago as a midsemester transfer my junior year with a broken heart and broken dreams. He and a really special group of friends were instrumental in helping me put my life back together.
And it was an honor to have Roger aboard the episode 40 of this show. You can check that one out at UndonePodcast.com/ep040. When Roger and I first talked in that previous episode, we discussed calling, ministry, and the lifelong work
of pouring into coaches and athletes. But since then, Roger's lived through a season that brought everything into sharper focus. His wife Sharon's cancer diagnosis, the long road of caregiving, the grief of losing her,
and the disorienting transition into a completely different chapter of his life. And yet, even in the midst of all that loss, Roger's story is not one of despair. It's one of honesty, surrender, faith,
and the slow rediscovery of a purpose, both the familiar and the new. Apologies up front that I had an unknown microphone failure at the time, so the audio quality on my end of the conversation is not up to my standards.
But I want to ask for your grace and understanding and I humbly request that you stick it out because this interview is one I'm particularly proud of. With a guest, I love with my whole heart. This is a conversation about what really matters
when strength fails. Plans collapse. And love is asked to become something deeper than words. I'm grateful that you're here for it. I hope you'll enjoy my conversation
with Roger Lipe in episode 152. Let's get into it. - Greetings, and welcome back to coming on Dawn's podcast for those who dare, Ray Blubes, Miley, and role relentlessly.
I'll tell you, he grows. What do you mean today, I'm happy to say,
you are our first repeat customer, Roger Lipe.
- Thank you, Roger Lipe. - My pleasure, you're all to be with you. - We're all connected last week, you are in town. In the phase of life where your schedule is flexible and you can come and go kind of as you please,
it's at your schedule. And you'd share with me that this wasn't necessarily the season you would have chosen even a year ago. But you've navigated through that and you've got a purpose last time done.
And I can't think of really a life being lived in a way that's better reflected about the theme of this show than what you're doing now, so I'm excited to get in to your story.
- Thanks so much, I'm appreciate it.
I've got to say honestly, hearing every single episode
โof your podcast has been a tremendous encouragementโ
to me in this whole process of rethinking and becoming unden and okay, what's next? And how do we move ahead? Those things have been incredibly informative
and sometimes challenging and always encouraging.
- Yeah, well, I appreciate that. Your first episode, we really kind of went away back, we talked about your ministry at Southern Illinois University and have instrumental that was for me personally.
And at that moment, you had made a big shift to nations of coaches. And so for those who haven't heard that episode, Roger Leiperson, much of his life serving in sports ministry, he's worked alongside athletes,
coaches, teams through triumphant, from very successful men's basketball comes in mind. Football was certainly very successful other sports programs at SAU. But since we last talked on the show,
you've been navigating a deeply personal season
after the loss of your life at 50 years. So even in the midst of that grief, you have processed, you've emerged, and you've come out on the other side, we'll say, but you sent me prior to our show,
prior to your visit in Waco reflection, said you had taken your prolific writer as you say you processed through writing. And I was excited to see that you had actually written it on your phone as it were in some of those meetings.
So I want to pull a quote from what you said me. Earlier in your reflections, you described getting a text for your wife's year, and that simply said, can you come home? I feel like I need to go to the emergency room.
Can you row that moment change everything? It's at the course of our lives for the next several months. And I apologize, this one's going to be impossible for you to get through. - When you think back to that moment now,
how did that single text reshape your perspective on life and on ministry and what really matters? - Yeah, that morning I was in hotel in downtown Chicago. I was preparing to spend the whole day with the Paul basketball 'cause Coach Mullins, who had been with us at Southern Illinois,
was now in assistant at the Paulin. We talked to him the day before, as well as to some other coaches in town, Coach Mike like foot, a formerly a Bethlehem University in Indiana. He and our colleagues with in nations of coaches.
So I had taken the train up there, had a great day with coaches on the previous day, that morning, I got that text. Type A, me is going, come on, babe. I'm in Chicago.
I'm taking the train on tomorrow. I got stuff to do. Then more I looked at it, the more I talked to the coach,
โI'm thinking, I think I need to go home.โ
And so we made the decision to do that. He drove me to O'Hare and I bought a plane ticket and flew home and we had sharing in the ER by 11, 30 in the morning. After that 7 AM text message and it really did turn our world
upside down because after we got to the ER, we did all the stuff that comes if you have shortness of breath, I start ruling out various things and chest X-rays and blah, blah, blah, CT scans. And ER doctor looks at the bottom of this chest CT scan.
And he says, there's some stuff here at the bottom. I don't like, let's get a CT scan of your abdomen. And so they go do that and come back. And we're sitting now. We've been in the ER room for maybe seven hours.
And I'm just ready to go home. I'm tired of the whole process. Makes me feel like a jerk now, but we're dealing with this. And then he comes in the ER doctor and says,
what I thought I saw on that first one,
this is what I see, this is what cancer looks like. And that was our first indication that this might be our battle for the next months or who knows what. And so it did turn everything upside down immediately
because I knew from that moment, this is going to be a hard fight and I'd better be ready for it. - Yeah, you mentioned to me when we were chatting that you spent the bulk of your career being a sports chef,
โI think a lot of people don't really understandโ
of the nature of the job. Yeah, it's Bible studies for teams when things are going good. But you're also the guy that people call when things don't go so that when whether it's tragedy or a big injury, anything that really rocks the team,
You are there for crisis assistance.
- Yeah.
โ- This was really the first time you had been on the receivingโ
and of that aspect of ministry, if you will.
Talk to me through a little bit about how your experiences on the delivery impacted your ability to be on our receiving and when it was you in the midst of brief. - Yeah, 'cause I've been in lots and lots of emergency rooms but it was not with my wife.
It was with many other people and more, most of the time it was a broken leg or an ACL terror or something else like a concussion, a couple of times with coaches with real issues. But this was suddenly way, way more personal than that.
But at the same time, having walked with Dan Callahan baseball coach Southern through his cancer battle and eventually his hospice days and his eventual death and walking with his team through the grief process afterward, I'd walked through a bunch of these things together
with other people and really they did inform my mind
to the process I'm walking into now.
โSo I could see it coming and having been equipped for thatโ
helped me be a little more aware of where we are today and what's coming, what am I experiencing now? How do I make sense of all this? Those that training and experience really did help a lot. - Yeah, I know for myself being in healthcare
that makes me, I've got just enough information about the process to be a really bad patient. And my patience oftentimes with healthcare is really slim and working in athletics. We kind of see how the system can work when it's optimized.
Athletes get better health care than just about anyone. - Yeah. - There's rarely a delay, there's rarely an expense sphere and it's just not like that for the rest of us. So having that insight sometimes can be good,
but sometimes it can be bad. And one of your reflections you wrote something that really resonated with me and it was just part of the the vulnerability that you wrote there. And I'd like to share how can I,
and man who prides himself on self-reliance, achievement and strength be so utterly inadequate. So for someone who spent decades ministering to athletes and coaches and people who live in that culture, what did experience teach you
about weakness and faith? - That's been the hard thing along this process 'cause I'm usually the guy who's trying to have perspective. I'm usually the one trying to be steady, trying to have myself under control.
And I've got this together and I know what to expect in all that. Suddenly I was in a spot where I couldn't control anything about this process. And that partly frustrated me but it also revealed
my terrible pinch it toward control and all that stuff. And I'm like, you're a jerk. - I've known Roger for three decades. The guy was at my wedding. He was there in some very dark days of my life before then.
When I transferred to SIU from Anderson University. At the time I'd finally given up on my dream of playing college basketball and I'd experience to break up at the end with two year relationship with my then fiance,
all within a few weeks of one another. It was hard.
โBut seriously, I think God that I met Rogerโ
to help me through. And friend, I can tell you this. Roger life is nobody's jerk. But what I hear now, whether in just or not, is Roger, call Roger a jerk.
Twice, he's looked back on this past year
with a critical, even damning eye toward himself
and he's judged himself pretty harshly. Within our conversation of the words of a man who in just a few months went from a single text message to losing his closest friend, his companion of half a century.
And as you'll hear momentarily, he stopped his work moments after that fateful text message. He suddenly retired. He sold the house.
He moved to be close to family and caregivers. He opened it everything at a moment's notice to care for his alien life. To that, I'd offer you the who's of the acts of a jerk and what chances of the rest of us have to offer the world.
What I'd also say is that it's easier to be understanding of others. For high achievers, it can be nearly impossible to be understanding of ourselves. Now, very same gene that insists
that we scrutinize ever behavior and critically assess every act and lead to an unrelenting compulsion
To beat ourselves up for whatever one around us
is probably being inspired by.
โIn hindsight and with time, I think Rogerโ
can see that he did everything he could to help his dear bride in her time of greatest need. But even so, that didn't make it easy. But it just made me stop and take a hard look at myself and no, there's most of this I can't control.
She doesn't need me to control it. So what can I do to serve my wife well along this process? And so it was a real self-awareness moment of, but I don't have to be in control.
I don't have to run the thing. I just need to care for her and along with that, I kind of want to pull that something, I think, it's important for all people. But for men of especially, like,
I always raise to be a provider for my family.
Yeah, my job is an important way in which I serve them. You had just taken a new job, massive career pivot. I mean, yeah, it's still the same amount of work, but you're kind of a new guy. And I hadn't been there as that long.
And then suddenly you're faced with this reality that I've got to cut this visit short, but after that, I don't know that I can continue doing what I'm doing and serve my wife well as a leader. So talk me through what ultimately led to you
making the decision, the tough decision, to actually retire at that time and remove yourself from your role with nation's coaches. Yeah, it was a multi-step process, frankly, because when we first went to see the oncologist in St. Louis,
I was in communication with our leadership at nation's
of coaches about, okay, here's what's happening.
Here's what I think I need to do. And they said, look, you take all the time you need, we'll manage all the stuff. You take care of her as your first priority.
โIn fact, I remember Tommy Kyle telling me,โ
she is your ministry president, she is it. That's all. And so that was in pleasurably helpful. I'm so glad I was where I was with the people I was, because they had a singular focus on that depth of care
that really did help a lot. And so that was early on, and then I continued to do work along the way, until Sharon had had some complications, problem with the heart valve that was going to require six weeks of infusions of antibiotics and that meant three
times a day, I was going to need to be there to infuse her with these antibiotics.
And so the second step was talking with my team
and I said, guys, please, I need to take a leave of absence for this many weeks so that I can deliver all this care for her and please don't pay me, but I need to do this. And they said, well, we're going to pay you anyway, but please take the time and do that.
But it's okay.
โOnce we got to the end of those infusions,โ
we could tell things were not getting better any time soon. So that's when we began to discuss his retirement, the right thing to do. And at the more we talked about that and finally landed on a date being May 30, I said, yes,
that's it. Because for me as Type A boy, I had to figure out, she needs me more than I need to work. Part of that's a matter of station of life. She had been retired for a long time already.
And I was old enough to retire. And I thought, she's very security conscious. I'm much less so, but still financial security is an issue. And so I thought, you know what, hang it. This is the right thing to do.
I don't care what it costs. This is right. And so we made the decision to do that. And those decisions, plus others, are why that in here, almost eight months,
from her passing, has me with no regrets whatsoever. I know we did the right thing at every stage along the way. - We'll be back after this quick message. We ever looked in the mirror and thought, what in the hell just happened to my life, in the career shifts,
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Your comeback isn't accidental, it's intentional. Start yours today at scienceofthecomeback.com. Again, in my relationship with other people,
I always feel a sense of responsibility
that I need to help carry them. I need to be for them what they can't be today, or whatever else it is. But in this situation was sharing, there were so many things I could not do if I wanted to.
So utterly helpless, and to me, that feels like inadequate at the same time. And it's just a bear, it just assaults my soul. And so it stripped away some of that bravado that I normally have, some of that natural arrogance
that lets be BS my way through a lot of stuff. I usually lead with my chin and my chest. And here I was just like, I'm just dragging through this thing because it was way beyond my control.
And so I had to trust that God was gonna carry me through this stuff that I'm just clueless as to how to handle.
- And ultimately, I led to two huge transitions, really,
if we think about it, you left your position when nations of coaches and also moved. You vacated your house of many years, your home, of even more years, your carbon rail. And the SMU community and move closer to your son.
So talk me through kind of that progression and how you went from a text message on a random weekday to being in a new state and a new home as a winner, less than six months later. - Yeah, we had paid off our home in January.
โI can't remember if it was before or after the diagnosis,โ
but we were thrilled, we got more good off of us done. That's good. We had thought about someday maybe, if I ever retire, maybe I would, maybe we would move down closer to the kids 'cause being 75 minutes away is not nearly as good
as being 10 or 5 or 15 minutes away. So we'd thought about that in general, terms. But suddenly, it became reasonable and like in April to think about it in concrete terms. What if we did this?
Where would we go? And I saw I started looking at an artist because her capacity to deal with that stuff was just about gone at that point. And so we looked at that moving process
that made sense. I thought this gets her in a position to be better cared for. That's why it's a good move. So getting ready to sell a house and all the stuff that goes along with that.
And then as things continue to get worse, even after all those treatments, because during the treatments, for the infection, the cancer went undreated. But we didn't get chemoed in nothing.
And so it was metastatic cancer and it grew rapidly. And toward the end of that leave of absence, we started discussing, maybe the right thing for me to do is to retire.
So the work can continue without me. And I can continue to care for Sharon in a full-time basis 'cause that's right. That's another part of responsibility. That's the right thing to do, let's do it.
So that's what we chose to do. And I retired and we moved on May 30th to a villa in Jackson, Missouri. Just 10 minutes from my son's house.
โThat's what made it through right place to be.โ
Right. Well, I know the emotions there had to be tremendous.
When we interviewed the first son,
the excitement and the goodness of that opportunity was clearly in the windshield, so to speak. And you were doing great things, and I think it's human nature to grieve that loss. But at the same time, I have to feel like
there would almost be a guilt associated with that. Like I'm supposed to be here for my wife. How can I be selfish in this career thing right now? How did you navigate that transition or were you just 100% all in on the caregiving
and the processing came later? Yeah, pretty much. I stayed so locked in on taking care of her that that occupied all my time and energy and focus. So the loss of work didn't come nearly as starkly as I thought
it might across the last number of years, probably the last five or so. I had started giving away responsibilities to other people for different sports chaplaincy roles at university and other things.
So I've been kind of taking incremental steps away from things anyway and had found it that it was easier to lay those things down than I expected it might be. So that was less painful than it could have been.
I had it been a sharp like, no, you can't come back any more.
That would have hurt a lot more.
โBut because I didn't burn bridges because we left well,โ
that was pretty good. But I think you're right that might be able to focus so tightly on care for Sharon. Frankly, she needed that and there was just wasn't any more space of mind or time to do anything else.
Little allowed me that singularity of focus. Well, I know this this past fall when you came out and spoke at the conference hosted here at Baylor. The emotions were just beneath the surface, like you were doing great things.
But it was still really fresh and your message to me then or your answer to me was, I'm just going to take some time. I'm still grieving, I'm not going to jump into anything.
And that's exactly what you did.
And before we get into what that had undone is, talking through that space, going from losing your life literally a week after your anniversary to intentionally taking time to reset and to recovery. Yeah, again, having been around a lot of grief
over a lot of years, having grown up in a very big extended family, I mean, I grew up in funeral homes. That's where we saw our cousins and all that. So that process was not foreign to me. But the depth of this was certainly foreign to me.
But still, having buried my dad three years ago and my wife's dad two years ago and others like that, you're going, this, so it's lived in grief a lot. And frankly, I've seen it done badly enough where people either pretend it's not happening.
They shield themselves from it or they deny it or they rush right back into the things they were doing. And they haven't taken any time to really deal with the loss. I wasn't going to let myself do that. I wanted to take enough time to process the stuff
to walk through the ugliness of it and deal with it and start German boy to deal with all the really weeping days and just being kind of really undone on her birthday and some other significant moments through the fall and the winter, I was going to feel that as deeply
as I could because I knew it's part of what takes to heal. So much wisdom in that.
โI think a temptation would be to throw yourself fullyโ
into something else to take your mind off of it. But there's wisdom and there's feeling in allowing those emotions to kind of settle on you. And I know when you were here, like you said, being the strong man and all those things,
we don't love the fact that we're emotional, but it's human, it's it's part of who we are. The upheaval in the turmoil in the lives lives at this point was tremendous. Roger had just departed a position he'd held for decades
as a director of the Southern Illinois FCA for a role with nations of coaches. And suddenly, just a short while later, Sharon gets a cancer diagnosis.
And he takes a leave of absence and ultimately retires
in the house of soul, then they move out of state, leaving the community, the university, their church family, and the lives they'd built in carbon steel. In moments like these, it can be absolutely overwhelming. Sometimes the drugs and alcohols cope.
Others unhealthy relationships. For Roger, he turned to something he'd long enjoyed as a means of processing his emotions. He wrote. And through that writing, he was able to sort through
the sometimes overwhelming flood of emotions that came with this tumultuous season of life. I processed a lot of this stuff I was dealing with in my phone in reflections as the process was going along.
โJust trying to make sense of, what am I experiencing here?โ
And how do I, am I normal or am I a freak? It doesn't really matter. I need to express this somehow. And then I went back and wrote the narrative after Sharon had passed.
But through the, you know, just plain old gut level, I'm just gonna tell you, I feel terribly inadequate today because I can't control this stuff. I'm gonna go ahead and say it. Rather than pretend that it's not true.
Nah, just be real. That helped be tremendously to process grief all on the way that helped me on the back end. I think I was farther down the track by having done that all along the way.
And if I had just waited and been run over by it at the end. - Yeah, I don't know about you, but in teaching and coaching roles, there's nothing. I really, I'll say, hey, but man,
It's like the Hatchel alluded where something I've taught
gets sent back to me and now I have to deal with it
โand show whether or not I really understand it.โ
And I've talked a lot on that show about identity and about how for athlete's oftentimes. They are, they're supposed to be a visual and athlete to describe themselves in two or three words. It's not uncommon to hear almost all player.
You know, or I'm gonna athlete. I mean, that's common. And in sports ministry and in life really, we try to kind of coach that out of people. Like, you're more than just your sport.
You're more than your performance. You're more than 15 points again in five rebounds. In particular, I'm going to say who you are in Christ Tyler's most. Within the span of less than half a year,
you were stripped of your career and your position as a husband and those are two big definitions that we would use. Talk me through the identity piece of this. And when you lost Sharon, what that meant to navigate
that space of being retired and widowed as opposed to new job at Husband 50 years? - Yeah, I mean, I was one of those guys for years talking with players about, no, you're more than this. This thing doesn't define you, what you do, doesn't all that.
But I genuinely believed it and embraced it all along the way. And had to really deal with myself in those things 'cause I could feel it on game days when we won, you know what, I felt really stinkin' good. When we lost, I felt personally responsible.
And it's painful. I hated every minute of it. But I had to keep looking at myself in the mirror and dealing with that tendency. Slowly over time, I was able to cook most of that out of me
to where I rested more and more of my identity. And yes, I love what I do, yes, I love the relationships I have, yes, but none of those things ultimately define me. My life in Christ defines me most permanently, most satisfactorily, without change, without you know,
people say, can you find yourself in the Bible? And for me, when Jesus is baptized in Mark chapter one, he hears the Lord a voice from heaven saying, "This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased."
โWell, that's what I can hear God saying about me.โ
Then every morning, I start that day, that way. I start being well pleasing to him, not because of performance. I just got up, there's nothing done. But who I am as a person, I start that way. And now I get to choose all day, behaviors, attitudes,
speech, that's either pleasing or displeasing to him. I get to choose.
This right here is so powerful.
It's so life-changing, really. The notion that, as Henry Ford once said, whether you believe you can or you believe you can't, you're right, but with an even deeper spiritual connotation, it's a lesson I've had to learn more than once in my life.
When I was at Liberty University as a head football athletic trainer, every day we'd begin our coaching staff meetings with prayer and Bible study. When I arrived on campus, the staff was going through a book called "Tired of Trying to Measure Up by Jeff Fan Vandrin."
I highly recommend. Subtitled, getting free from the demands, expectations, and intimidation of well-meaning people. Then we went through a book called "The Rest of the Gospel" when the partial gospel has warned you out.
All while we were also doing an inductive Bible study in Romans 7 and 8. When I tell you all that, not to overwhelm you with details, but through the process and through the study,
โI came across this idea that who I think I am,โ
influences me more than I could even dream of. For years, I've been taught that I was, past tense, and am, present tense, a sinner, who, as a believer, had been saved by God's grace. The idea here is that he will screw up inevitably,
and when you do, God will forgive you. So you're still at your core, a sinner, you're flawed, you're broken. And what I wasn't really ready for in that time, and what rocked me was this idea, that was supported in Scripture.
And if you use one, Paul writes, Paul and Apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, to the saints who were in Ephesus, and our faithful in Christ Jesus. Not to the sinners of Ephesus, not to the awful human beings,
not to the filthy pagans, to the saints. If I can believe that God has made a new creation,
like he promised, and second Corinthians 5/17,
therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation, all things have passed away, behold, all things have become new. If I can believe that I'm new, that I'm different, that I'm a saint, and just as Roger points out,
My day actually starts and stays, better.
Whether you think you are, or you think you're not, you're probably right.
โAnd now that doesn't mean that I'm flawless,โ
that doesn't mean that I won't screw up. But for Roger, that got him free from the idea of identity and career, even identity and relationship, and help protect him from the self-inflicted wounds, of someone who would struggle for purpose,
after his world had been so mightily rocked. It would take time and prayer and lots of writing, but eventually that new purpose began to come into view. He'd been undone, but he was becoming undone.
- But it's always based on a static line of,
I am always pleasing them because of who Christ is in me. That's a big deal. And so that stuff really helps me be buoyant. I have a sense of joy day to day that is not overrun by circumstance.
It hurt badly, losing share, really badly, but it didn't sink me because I'm carried along,
โI'm buoyant because of my life in Christ.โ
And so, I mean, that sounds pretty, but frankly, it's just a fact. That that's how I'm able to keep going and shortly find a forward look. - That's such a healthy perspective
that is fuel to get you through. It's not baggage that's dragging me down. - Yeah, thinking about what we're not any more as we're trying to become what's next is, the logo of Michael Jordan,
he's not wearing cuff weights on his ankle when he does that move, right? Like he is liberated and free to fly. And I don't know where the analogy came from, but the point is,
a lot of times, our mental space can be baggage. And it's unnecessary weight that we weren't meant to carry. And I love the fact that you were able to rest in that identity in that time.
One of the most powerful reflections you wrote
is described how intimacy changes across the lifetime of marriage from youthful excitement to carrying for a spouse and illness and preserving her dignity and affirming commitment for what?
How to walk in a sham through that season, redefining what love means to you? - Well, as our lives went together and continued to grow and good times bad times, all that stuff, relationships change over time.
And the last, because I mean, one, she had rheumatoid arthritis for the last 19 years of her life really severely. So life was painful for Sharon. I wake up, I feel great every day.
She woke up and pain every day. And so that changed a number of things about our relationship.
โAnd thankfully, I think, looking at it now in retrospect,โ
my relationship with her, my love for her became, I think pure her late, because there was no more, hey, I'll do this for you if you'll do that for me. In late in those last months, she had nothing to give. So it required me to give selflessly,
to love, extravagantly, and that stuff I talk about all the time, but I had to do it then. Being, it was important for me to protect her dignity when she was in public to do things that helped her maintain who she wanted to be.
And that sort of thing, I'm not gonna just treat her like some pitiful person. No, no, no, no, I'm gonna protect her dignity, I would care for her. And that led to, again, more eyeball to eyeball.
Simple, I love you, you could trust me intimacy, then maybe we ever experienced that was a beautiful, pass-a-duke look, and I sent it to my wife shortly
after her read it and said, first of all, like,
I'm sorry, that's some conviction layered in there that, yeah, these are the reflections of a man who's lost his wife. I felt guilt in knowing that I've still got some time to fix some stuff, and hopefully do it better.
I've not been doing it, so I thank you for that. - Yeah, that stuff helped strip away selfishness from me in some regards, and there was plenty there, strip away. - Well, I wanna focus on what's next,
because it's exciting, you, your 40 days in the wilderness was six months of taking time, being deliberate, praying over what's next for you. I know you're right in the middle of this launch,
This reveal of your next season of life,
and that's to come alongside, those who are coming
alongside athletes and those that are physically active sports persons, we call them. So tell us a little bit about what's next, what's left on done at this stage. - You know, being at the fourth global
Congress on Sport and Christianity at Baylor, back in late August, early September, it was really helpful, 'cause that kind of launched
โmy period of reflection, and, okay, where are we going?โ
A lot's of assessment, and trying to listen, and pay attention to what's happening. I also stacked up other travel to see friends in college football, in friends in pro football, and friends from having worked with me in FCA years past,
a bunch of other things like that, that kind of started to put some dominoes in line,
if you would, do where I could see,
things are beginning to line up a little bit here, went out to British Columbia, and worked with an athletic department, and their sports chaplains, and that was rich. And some other things like that started to line up,
and I'm going, maybe this is what I should do, rather than work for someone else, maybe I could just make myself available to leaders in sport, in leaders in sports ministries, because Toby, what I'm seeing as happening
is there is a terrible brain drain going on now, as baby boomers like me, retire, and exit organizations, often, the history of the organization goes with them, the values that built it, go with them, a lot of the other factors that are part of how they shaped
the organization are gone, and those old not heads
travel off to the villages or whatever,
and play pickleball every day, but they're not available for that staff meeting when they say, hey, what is, let's ask, he's not there anymore, you can't ask that guy, and somehow they're just like off the map, in a sense,
'cause nobody calls him, and so it's this brain drain, hopefully I can fill the gap for some folks where they say, could we sit and talk with an old guy and think some of this stuff through? I'd love to be that guy, I won't tell you what to do,
but I'll help you think about it and help you arrive at a good answer. So I'm looking at doing some training, some coaching, and some mentoring with leaders in sport
โor sports ministry, because that's what I've worked inโ
for 31 years and I'm great at long-term relationships and really short-term projects. And so if we fit in that kind of profile together, I'd love to be of service to people and can't wait to do it,
and trying to prepare things to be able to make myself available just for that. - Yeah, so folks are interested, hopefully, if they're listening right now, maybe some things are forthcoming,
but if you're listening to this a week or a month down the road, where can I send it, where can they find out more information about what you've got to offer? - This website is going to be crazy, complicated. It's RogerLipe.com, R-O-G-E-R-L-I-P-E.com,
and there will be a web, email address, RogerLipe.com is going to be really complex, but that's how I'd love to have folks engage me, they'll be able to see what we're doing, how we'd like to serve you,
and then how we put it together, you'll be able to find kind of groups we've worked with in the past and can't wait. I hope we'll make a bunch of resources available, and mostly I want it to be a landing spot,
people can come seed, okay?
โThat's what I want, and then let's look to connect.โ
- Roger, I can't thank you enough. I know that Sharon is loved and missed. That's how you honor her with the cows on helmets this year, and a number of other things, so yeah. - Yeah, she's definitely missed,
but I'm so thankful for you and your heart service. It's terribly sorry that you had to go through this, but I know the world's going to place because of the work that you're doing, so thanks again for coming around the show.
- You're kind, I was so proud of Salookie football for putting the SL sticker on their helmet for the whole season, and during the SIH Blackout Cancer, Salookie's Blackout Cancer Day, they did a nice tribute to Sharon during half time,
all of that was so honoring to her, because of her depth of 19 years of investment, young men, wives, and their families, and she momma'd so many of those guys, and would wag her finger at him.
You'd better get to class or I'm not call your mother, and she was just what they needed, in many cases, was a surrogate mom, and we made a pretty dog on good team working together in that environment.
- So many lives changed between the two of you for sure.
- I am Roger Light, and I am undone.
โ- I don't know what part of that conversationโ
hit you the hardest? Maybe it was the text message that changed everything. Maybe it was the honesty about feeling inadequate. - Maybe it was the picture of love, not as convenience or comfort, but showing up over and over,
when there's nothing left to gain.
Here's what I keep coming back to.
In my conversation with my friend and mentor, Roger Light, the most powerful moments in life, aren't always the victories that we celebrate. Sometimes they're the quiet decisions, nobody sees. The decision to stay, the decision to serve,
the decision to let go, the decision to keep going. And Roger's story is full of those moments. I'm thankful to Roger for dropping in, and I hope you enjoyed our conversation. For more info on today's episode,
be sure to check it out on the web. Simple Go Run on podcast.com/ep152 to see the notes, links, and images related to today's guest, Roger Light. Some quick updates about the show,
โwe are currently tied for the best rankingโ
in both education and self improvement categories in show history. We're sitting at number four right now in the world. Around the globe, number four. Super stoked about that.
At the same time, across all categories, we're at number 124 in Apple's top 200. If you wanna follow along and see our progress for yourself, you can now go to undonepodcast.com/rankings, and cheer me on.
Last month we had more than 12,000 lessons. And since the date is blew me away, we've been heard in a staggering 3,146 cities around the globe. All from this borrowed room in Martin Hall in Waco Texas, but I'm not done yet.
If you'd be so kind as a share of the show with a friend, leave a comment or a review, that would be most sincerely appreciate. Before we wrap, I wanna introduce something new. I'll be doing each episode moving forward.
I'm calling it the Teal of the Week. If you've listened into my multi-part Larry Johnson series, you heard my deep love for Teal. It's not just a 90 staple. To me, it's become a bit of a trademark.
It's my signature color. And if you're watching the video, you'll notice that not only is my new studio space
breaming with Teal, I'm almost always wearing Teal.
And that's not an accident. This is a little bit of a hack that I've come to embrace and I wanted to share it with you this week. So I would consider myself a performance scientist. And I try to let the data do my deciding.
And over time, I've learned that the environments that we create right down to how we decorate our space, the lighting that we choose, even what we wear, can influence how we show up. For me, Teal has become a cue.
It represents clarity and energy and focus. It's a small but consistent way that I can signal to myself that it's time to be present. It's time to be intentional. And it's time to do this.
Well, so each week, I'll be rocking a different Teal shirt, usually tied to a team or a program. Just as a way to keep that rhythm and that consistency. So this week, a little bit of info. I'm rocking the Orlando Pirates.
It's an arena football team in the IFL, the indoor football league. And the pirates are a team that are stepping into new chapter themselves. They've relocated in the off season from their previous home in Massachusetts.
I bought a Massachusetts Pirates shirt like a week before they announced the move. But the one I'm rocking in this episode is from the New Orlando identity.
โBut honestly, that fits what we talked about today.โ
New seasons don't always come the way
we expect. But it's how we show up and then the matters. So shout out to the pirates for a successful upcoming season. Know that I'll be clapping for you for Waco Texas. Coming up on the show, I've got former Baylor Bayer
and author of the book, The Left Overs Baylor Betrayal and Beyond. It's now head basketball coach at Midway High School in Waco, Matt Samin. Then I've got former Division 1 string coach and pastor Chris McCormick joining me from Indianapolis.
This and more coming up on becoming undone. Becoming undone is a natural creative production written and produced by me, Toby Brooks. Tell a friend about the show and follow along on Facebook, Instagram, and I think the end
of becoming undone pod. And follow me at Toby Brooks PhD on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Check out my link tree at linkTR.ie/toby Brooks PhD. Listen, subscribe, and we may review it
at the podcast Spotify, I Heart Radio, or wherever you get your podcast. Till next time, friend, keep getting better.


