Episode Summary – SPECIAL FATHERS DAY EPISODE – JUNE IS NATIONAL CANCER SURVIVORSHIP MONTH. In Episode 83 of the Shining Brightly Podcast Show (links in the comments), titled IRON DAD AND THE LIFE WE LIVE, my guest is Paul Weigel, an amazing dad, triathlete and stage IV colon cancer survivor - like me. Shout out to the Wolfpack at Man Up to Cancer. Paul tells of his diagnosis, treatment and survivorship. He shares his happy place doing Iron Man triathlons (yes 2-mile swim, 100-mile biking and 26.2-mile marathon run to finish. He is the author of Iron Dad as he tells his young daughter what he is experiencing and living through as she wants to support him, his advocacy and bring awareness and raise money for colorectal cancer research. Come listen, download, share and review this special show. Happy Father’s Day to all the dad’s out there, the best job of all time!
Mentioned Resources –
About the guest –
Paul Weigel is an author, keynote speaker, spokesperson, and communication consultant. He is an eleven-year cancer survivor, a six-time Ironman triathlon, and a dedicated dad. He holds a Master of Arts in Communications from Arizona State University, a Master of Business Administration in Organizational Development from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Puget Sound.
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.
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LinkedIn - https://wwwlinkedin.com/in/howardsbrown
Instagram - @howard.brown.36
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Hello, it's Howard Brown. It's the Shining Brightly
Show. This is the Father's Day extravaganza. I have an amazing
guest, Paul Weigel. How are you, Paul?
I am great Howard, how are you? Happy Father's Day
Happy Father's Day to you as well. Oh my god, I'm
so happy. I have to tell you. We've sort of known about each
other. And then we got to meet out at the CoLo guard Golf
Classic back in Arizona for March colo rectal cancer
awareness month. And I just was amazed by Paul because he didn't
come alone. He brought his 12 year old daughter. She's 12.
Right?
She was 13 at the time. Yes. He's
13. Yeah, yeah. Okay. She's She's 13. And it was
just I was like, you know, you bring your daughter to this big
golf tournament, where there's advocacy going on. And the
golfers are playing in honour of patients and caregivers and
people that have passed. And it's just incredible. So I got
to sit down with Paul meet his daughter, get to know him a
little bit and then wanted to invite him to the show because
he's got some big things happening. So it's really,
really important that we get your message out and you've got
so many cool things happening that that I want to share with
my audience. And the first thing is, let me tell you just a
little bit more about Paul. So Paul Weigel is an author, a
keynote speaker, a spokesperson and communications consultant.
He is an 11 year cancer survivor, a six time Ironman
triathlete, and a dedicated Dad, that's the most important job of
course,
that's the most important job.
Political Science from the University of Puget
Sound. So he's an educated guy, right. So this is really great.
And the fact that we are both, you know, colorectal cancer
survivors makes it even more special to show the world that
it can be done now we both got knocked down really hard. Our
lives came to a screeching halt when he got those, you have
cancer diagnosis as well. So Paul, let me ask you a question.
How do you shine brightly each day?
Howard it's funny when you said what is most
important how I shine brightly every day, is my time I spent
with my daughter. As you mentioned me bringing her her
with me to the colour guard classic and seeing life through
her every single day. And getting a chance to see and
learn from her allows me to shine brightly a little bit more
exponentially every day, every single moment. So really,
anything associated with my kiddo allows me to shine
brightly.
I love that. And I have to be Pollack goes fast,
because, you know, my daughter was a freshman in high school
when I got diagnosed with stage three, and then a year later
metastatic stage four colon cancer. And it went fast. Right?
I didn't was not guaranteed that I see her graduate high school.
yet. I saw her graduate college. And she's actually started her
career as a TV reporter in Missoula, Montana. So I don't
get this year except I watch her on TV on the app a couple times
a week so that you know that that is the shining brightly
time. I love that. That's amazing. Why don't you share
just a little bit about you know who you are and your background
a little bit? Sure.
My name is Paul Weigel. As you mentioned, I am
an 11 year colon cancer, colorectal cancer survivor. I
when I was 43 years old, got diagnosed with a tumour about
the size of your fist at the junction of my rectum and my
colon. Like you I was originally diagnosed as a stage three colon
cancer. And very quickly went into treatment. You know, one of
the things for me, I was in my I was in my early 40s when I got
diagnosed, and I had had symptoms for years. And I talked
with my doctors, and my doctors hadn't totally paid attention to
it. In part because as you mentioned, I was an athlete, I
was doing all these other things that doctors would not assume
that I would be ill in any type of way. And yet I was getting
more and more incrementally sick. Now I'm 10 years later, or
now 11 years later. And as my daughter has gotten older, she
was three when I was originally diagnosed. And as she's gotten
older, she started asking some more questions about what that
time was like. What did it mean to be a patient back then? And I
was able to pull together this book and start I've been writing
this book called Iron dad. And it really has become this
wonderful A testament to her of how important she has been in my
life. And how great my life is now moving ahead 10 years later
with her apartment,
I It's an amazing story, the fact that she's taken
such an interest in your journey that way. And also, the fact is
the iron dad stands for a bunch of things. There's a lot of
symbolism in that, right. And so one of the things that you your
happy place happens to be triathlons. And so you've run
six, and you ran some before you're sick. And now you're
running after that's incredible as
well. But we're, you know, Howard, we're all
incredible. And that, and that may be part of the shining
brightly part. For me, when I had done my first Ironman
before, before I was sick, and before my daughter was born, but
when I did an Ironman triathlete six months after finishing
chemotherapy, and part of that was because we've talked about
the relationship with my kid, and with Natalie, that I wanted
her to see an experience that love and that passion for me,
too. And I've continued to do that. years later. And this
year, actually, as we're finishing this recording, I've
just finished to half Ironman, and then in October, I'm going
to be doing another full one. Because there we life is about
living and life is about taking it and pushing ourselves to new
limits. And so many of the lessons I learned while going
through treatment, have been lessons I've learned through
work, but if allowed me to continue and persevere through
things like the race, so I'm very lucky to for those who are
religious, I've been blessed. For those who are not I'm very
lucky.
Yeah, so it's funny, I say the same things. I
look in the mirror. My mantra is, I am blessed. I am grateful.
And I am lucky to be alive. Let's go help you. Today. Let's
go help people. Yes. So
we'll be going and helping people. Dan has been a
big part for me. As you know, I had written this book for my
daughter, ultimately. And it's only in January, I started
talking about does this story make sense to help make people's
lives better. And all of a sudden, people started saying,
this is a good message about fatherhood, and really helps
people think about being ill or taking care of their own health
in a different way. So each day for me has been tremendous as
I've gotten the chance to be able to talk about being a
survivor about having hard conversations with your doctor,
about being your own healthcare advocate. And that has been a
really neat exploration. Every day that I'm just lucky,
blessed, all those different things.
So it's, we have so many. We're aligned in so
many ways that so many parallels because we have daughters. And
also I have been playing basketball my whole life. And I
had to prove to myself that I actually played basketball
during treatment with a chemo port. not advisable. Okay,
doctor, so what are you doing? It could get pulled out, you'll
bleed out of the elbow right there, right? Just yeah, I would
protect I would cover it up with my hand. But again, I had to
prove to myself and I, we that's our happy place. And you have to
go to your stress free zone. And I tell everyone, I don't care if
it's meditation, or yoga, or cooking or travel or hiking,
find your happy place or art. And go there, schedule it in go
there often. And the fact that you and I both before and now
after living through what we have lived through, in as far as
you know, radiation, surgeries, treatment, and chemo and all the
side effects, and we're still doing it. That's cool, man, that
is really true as well. And I'm just so I'm so impressed, Paul,
that is just incredible. Now, I do want to shout out a little
bit. So Paul and I, we've decided that because we're so
blessed and grateful to be alive. We take time and we
actually I'll give shout outs now. So we both have done great
volunteer champion work with the Colorectal Cancer Alliance.
You've done a little more work with fight CRC than I have but
great organisation, they plant flags on the Capitol and they're
big into grants and research and advocacy at the government level
and then also Man Up To Cancer This is really cool place is
incredible. It's it's all psychosocial help for men
because men tend to isolate men don't get screened men are
tough. We're macho, right? This is an amazing growing community
of really caring guys that I've got your back and some of them
are like Paul and I that are five steps ahead on our healing
journey. Others are just starting out and got the bad
news of having cancer and I found it to be a very cool place
and in Arizona at the colocar classic got to meet in person
like 2025 Guy It was really quite incredible. So shout out
to there for that as well. What I want you to talk about though,
is is the book because you actually in talking to your
daughter, and explaining to her kind of what's going on there.
So give me the you know, it's kind of the genesis of the book
and, and it's coming out soon, in a couple of weeks. So I think
we're at mid June. So talk about this.
The book has been really an 11 year really an 11
year labour of love, right? That, well, I was going through
treatment being diagnosed at the advanced stage, I was I mean, it
was stage three, and that there were some signs that I might be
a stage four patient, and that I was incredibly concerned that I
was not going to be around very long. And so as I was going
through my treatment, I actually wrote a blog. And that blog guy
showed all my different experiences, my time, my time
how I felt, when I was dealing with at work, while I was
dealing with side effects, trying to balance out driving,
we lived in Seattle at the time driving into work working part
of the day, then driving across the city to get radiation and
chemo, then driving back home to try and be a dad. And so it
started with this blog. And then, you know, being a cancer
patient, as you know, Eric is hard. And and to have that
ongoing conversation for so long was was overwhelming for me. So
what I did was I actually I took this blog I had and I packaged
it up, I certainly had it printed out. But I took my
digital copy. And I put it all on a shelf. And I was like, I'm
not dealing with this for a long time, until I'm really ready to
tell my story. And then as Natalie has gotten older, and as
some of these things that they continue to explore on, on on my
test finally were cleared. And I was finally given my no evidence
of disease card. I call it my no cancer card. Nine years later,
that I felt that I was in a position that I could really
tell the story. And, and so ultimately what I did was I took
this blog and I started saying, now how can I explain to Natalie
some of this time, and as I started writing it, I realised
that I took a step back and started explaining how important
she was to me in my life. And and some of the trials and
tribulations I had before she was born. And then the fact that
once she was born, I had something to live for. And when
we were going when I was going through treatment, I found it. I
thought so many times to myself, if I had been diagnosed just
three or four years before before she was born. I don't
know how much I would have had to fight for. But that all the
sudden I really had her to fight for that was an inspiration that
helped me to shine brightly to help me have hope and to feel
like I had something to go for. And the book continued to evolve
into what's become iron dad, as you said is a complex answer. It
talks about being Yes, being an Ironman triathlete, but it also
talks about the perseverance of getting through life every day
as a parent and, and doing the different things that we need to
be engaged for our daughters, whether you are watching your
daughter on on a download, or whether I'm watching my daughter
during her middle school graduation. So the book has
really become it started as a blog 10 years ago, it's evolved
as Natalie started asking questions, and then has really
morphed into a story that hopefully is inspirational for
others. That's we're dealing with the issues of colon cancer
now. That was one of the things that has been fascinating to me
in the last few years. You know, when I got diagnosed 10 years
ago, we didn't talk about colon cancer, we didn't have many of
the things that were was going on. And in spite of the fact
that we've made so much progress and colon cancer awareness or in
discussions with doctors, we are still so far behind in terms of
what we need to do to make sure doctors and patients are aware.
So I'm wanting to really to be able to help share our stories
so that people are having those conversations with those doctors
and are being more aware of what's going on with their body.
I want to stop right there. Pause for a second
because first of all the people that are on video will see that
and when they see a copy of your book you have you're holding
your daughter's hand and a heart on top of the iron dad. And yes,
this is why This is such an important Father's Day issue,
because relationships, okay dads with their children, dads with
their spouses, significant others family members, but when
you get this cancer diagnosis, emotionally, physically,
sometimes financially, your career and in relationships,
that all gets thrown into a blender sometimes. And I will
tell you this at over 153,000 in the US who will be diagnosed,
maybe 2.2 million worldwide. Okay, a third of those patients
will actually die this year from colorectal cancer. It's the
number one killer for men. Number two, killer for women
under the age of 50. This isn't an old man's disease, grandma
and grandpa's disease anymore. And so, the one thing that I do
you see me walking around with my blue sneakers, and I'm always
wearing blue, I have a blue shirt on today. But I actually
what I do is I want people to get screened, and you do too,
right, don't get this disease don't get it? Well,
and that's the part that getting screened is is so
easy, and especially when we're looking at, I had symptoms for
five years before I got diagnosed. And I've even talked
with my doctor. And if we had just done some of those
preliminary evaluations, that helmet that we would have found,
like cancer when it was an early stage or even a polyp. And that
I wouldn't have had to go through all this. But there's
still so many people all the time that they're they have
symptoms, and if they don't end and talk to the doctor, their
lives will be saved. So absolutely the more chances we
get for people to think about getting screened, the better.
Well, I mean, if I would have been screened at 40,
we might have not met Paul, but we'll shout out to the coast
guard and exact science folks. So you can poop in a cup and
send it to the lab and then write your tests positive you do
go get a coal colonoscopy, the gold standard snip a polyp and
then you know move on with your life hopefully and not have to
go through the stuff that we've gone through. The next is that
there's going to be over 100,000 in the US in treatment. And you
and I know what that is feeling like so we have the advocacy
organs, and especially colon town as well that walk hand in
hand with 10 is a great group, with the coat with the
caregivers and to be able to have the information to be able
to make decisions. It's a complex thing. And you hear all
these ABC soups of names and acronyms. You got to learn it.
And you got to be a smart patient, smart patients
collaborate with their care teams and their oncologist and
their surgeons to make the best decisions in front of them. And
then lastly, oh, you you mentioned
all of these different groups, whether it's
colon town, or fight CRC, or the CCA or a Man Up To Cancer. That
was something that wasn't around 10 years ago, but I really felt
that I was going through my battle alone. But yes, there
were a couple of small groups in the Seattle area. And they they
were like 10 people and to really have big deep
conversations, especially men trying to talk through what does
it mean to be going through this treatment just wasn't there. And
I felt alone on an island so much of the time going through.
I think that's probably part of the reason I had my blog was I
was trying to get out there and say, This is what this
experience is like, I'm sorry, I interrupted No, no, no, I
was just all good. No, no, this, this is a free
front free format, you know, show so we can talk over each
other. But the last thing is, is that that there's people that
are going to die from this disease, right? And so I always
memorialise when their cancer burden is too great. And they
get called to heaven. You just don't know when that time is up.
So you have to be able to get back up again. And that's the
beautiful thing, Paul, that we prove every day that we can get
out of bed, we can actually live real productive lives be loving
dads, and husbands and family members and be able to be
productive, but also show you what can happen. Okay, it's not
it doesn't happen for everybody and we don't take it for granted
for sure. And so what I wanted to ask you was that you know, in
your book I mean you're basically living your life now
what does Father's Day mean to you and I'll tell you what it
means to me as well.
Eric, you know, every day is Father's Day
I just feel absolutely so lucky every single day to see Natalie
do more and explore and, and, and yes, she is a teenager now
and she can be a total pain. But at the same point I have to note
that I'm around and that I get to see life through her eyes.
One of the things you mentioned a little bit ago of like being
thrown into a blender of my since I was diagnosed my career
change dramatically. I've chosen to pretty much stay at home
working In jobs, so I can see her every single day that I
would, I was the dad who walked her to school and dropped her
off at the door and picked her up or would go on all those
different field trips. So that I want to have every single
experience, in spite of the chaotic world that I've now been
forever immersed into.
I love it. So I Father's Day to me is a wait,
it's one day out of the whole year, and I am with you father's
days every day, right. And I just think it's a way to show
appreciation back to for, you know, being loved
unconditionally, showing a legacy showing what is possible.
You know, it's just, it's important. I want my daughter to
know that, that she was part of the reason that and as you said,
that we that were alive today is that wanting to see them. And
so, you know, I want to see your graduate high school, I want to
see your Graduate University of Michigan, she did, and I put it
out there, when at the right time, I will walk her down the
aisle because life's about making memories. Now. Those are
the important things in life and all that. So it's just so so
important that we do that. And for all the dads out there, this
is your day, sit back, have a cold one, have a hot dog or a
burger. But remember every day is Father's Day and fatherhood.
And is really important. Stable fatherhood matters. And we if
you need help with that, we Paul and I can give you a good
direction. And you don't have to have cancer to be a good dad.
That's for sure.
That is for sure. Well, you know, we, you have
your story of when you were told you had cancer and and when you
heard those words, and I have the same thing for me that when
the doctor told me that I had a tumour, my first thoughts were
all those different things I was not going to see Natalie do what
was like, even going to see her start school, let alone go to
prom or get married or have her first job. And and so it was an
apocalyptic moment to be thinking through. Not what was
not what was I going to miss outside of that, but to see
through her. And so that she has been a wonderful source of
inspiration to me. As we've gone through the last 10 plus years.
I
want to tell you how excited I am for you. Okay,
cherish this moment, you have a will be a published author and
have a book coming out in a couple of weeks, mid June,
right? You started your own podcast, you have your own
platform, you're spreading your advocacy and your message out
there. You're speaking on stages, right? You're a
communications expert. This is this is really a beautiful time.
And I just want to tell you how much I appreciate you sharing
that with everyone to show you that you did get back up again,
you are like me, I'm Humpty Dumpty version three, oh, you're
putting your pieces back together again, but you're
lifting up others and that's what my whole show is, and my
whole shining brighten the movement as well. So I just want
you to take in a deep breath and appreciate this what you're
doing. And it matters, I'm just telling you, it really matters
and, and you and I will help promote each other and, and
share that with it. But I'm very proud of you. It does this is
not easy to be published and to get out there and to share your
voice and your you are a role model for Natalie, but also for
others, and including others that are in the journey of going
through cancer right now to thank you so bad.
I was just gonna say just the you do this, we
both do this. This is a labour of love. And Ben, I know we're
gonna put on our sunglasses here in a second. But we are the FET
but the we are spending a huge amount of time and energy,
trying to help make lives better, and to help people
thinking that there is the power of positivity and there is hope
and there is you can dream and and have a wonderful future and
a wonderful life. And I'm just so happy to be here with you
today. So
right and so let's put on our glasses because it's
the shining bright the spotlight it is the shining bright. The
answer is that it's a team sport. Life is a team sport.
Fighting cancer is a team sport. It's a team sport, and we're a
team. So all the shining brightly spotlight is on you.
Okay, I want to tell people how they should best get a hold of
you. And then share some final inspiration and kick the show
back to me for a close.
All right. To find out more about my book or any of
the things I'm working on just go to www.on Your dad book.com
You'll find different resources there as you mentioned, our
podcasts as well as contact resources for how to get in
touch with me. So thank you my parting words for everybody in
anybody is not only shine bright, but fight like hell. I
mean, be your biggest advocate live your life to the absolute
fullest. That's So what i You mentioned being being an Ironman
triathlete, that's what I'm trying to do every day is push
the edge of that envelope. So that when I'm looking back on my
life, hopefully in 50 years, that my last moments are just of
wonderful, tremendous experiences. I
love it. And I will tell you this for those who
don't know what an Ironman is, you're swimming a mile, maybe
two or and then you're biking. 20 112 112 And then you're doing
a full marathon after that. That is out. I listen, I go two hours
in the basketball court. Paul, that is incredible. You are iron
dad. And I am so happier here. So shining brightly this show is
every Wednesday, you can find me at shining brightly.com and
plenty of information about my book. Also, thank you, Paul.
I've endorsed your book, and I can't wait for it to come out.
And also my speaking if you want me to speak to your and put on a
great show motivational speaker and teach a little bit too. And
then also, my advocacy. My advocacy is so important. And
Paul and I share this cancer advocacy for screening in
treatment and survivorship is everything to us as well. I also
mentor entrepreneurs and then my interfaith work is vital because
we live in a planet where we're all not the same. And I tell
everyone to choose not to hate. And so those are my three kind
of lanes that I play and so find me at shining brightly.com This
has been an incredible show. Paul, you are just a friend and
truly an inspiration. And just remember if we choose and we do
to shine brightly, just a little bit each day for ourselves, go
lift up others in our communities in our
neighbourhoods, yes, the world would be a better place. Again,
Paul, thank you. You've been outstanding. I can't wait for
your book and to check out your show.
Thank you, Howard. Appreciate your time. You are
too