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“Embrace vulnerability,” with psychotherapist and musician M Brady on More Than Work
Episode 44th September 2024 • More Than Work • Rabiah Coon
00:00:00 00:43:38

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In this episode of More Than Work, host Rabiah interviews M. Brady, a psychotherapist and musician, who shares his journey from being a professional tennis player to discovering his passion for psychotherapy and music. M discusses his long career in therapy, his struggle with anxiety and vulnerability, and how these experiences influenced his album. He also reflects on the impacts of early humiliations, the importance of creativity, and coping with personal losses. Throughout, M emphasizes the value of embracing vulnerability and taking risks in life.

00:00 Introduction to More Than Work Podcast

00:34 Meet M. Brady: Psychotherapist and Musician

01:29 M's Journey into Psychotherapy

02:48 The Intersection of Sports and Psychology

04:43 Overcoming Personal Challenges

08:29 Exploring the Concept of Unprocessed Losses

18:14 M's Return to Music

25:35 Discussing Musical Influences

28:17 Challenges of Performing Live

30:01 Overcoming Personal Barriers

33:15 Inspirations and Advice

35:47 Fun and Personal Questions

40:46 Closing Remarks and Contact Information


Note from Rabiah (Host): 

I’ve been slow to edit podcasts this year. But I still have a passion for sharing others’ stories. Thank you for sticking with me and there are over 100 episodes in the backlog so you can listen to more if you haven’t already. I’ll be setting up more interviews and getting more episodes out soon.

M. Brady is exactly who I was looking for when I started More Than Work. He has a job but he also has a passion, and he is pursuing it in his own way, in his own time. I related to this as I thought about comedy lately. M was very open about his past and what he went through to get to where he is today, the creator of an EP, in addition to being a psychotherapist. I was tempted to sneak in a little therapy when we chatted but resisted! Enjoy the listen and check out the tunes! 

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Find M Brady

Website: mbradymusic.com 

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6JpYhnIRsYXjORa8FL2uCt 

Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/ca/artist/m-brady/1724662113 

 +++++ 

More than Work Facebook, Instagram, Twitter: @morethanworkpod Please review and follow anywhere you get podcasts. Thank you for listening. Have feedback? Email morethanworkpod(at)gmail.com!

Transcripts

Rabiah Coon:

This is More Than Work, the podcast reminding you that your self worth

Rabiah Coon:

is made up of more than your job title.

Rabiah Coon:

Each week, I'll talk to a guest about how they discovered that for themselves.

Rabiah Coon:

You'll hear about what they did, what they're doing, and who they are.

Rabiah Coon:

I'm your host, Rabiah.

Rabiah Coon:

I work in IT, perform stand up comedy, write, and of course podcast.

Rabiah Coon:

Thank you for listening.

Rabiah Coon:

Here we go!

Rabiah Coon:

Hey everyone, welcome back to More Than Work.

Rabiah Coon:

I am really excited because this guest actually came to me via one of my favorite

Rabiah Coon:

podcasts and fellow squadcasters, Pam Uzzel, who does Art Heals All Wounds, and

Rabiah Coon:

he was a guest there, and he's a guest here and so maybe if you really love him,

Rabiah Coon:

you'll go listen to him over there too.

Rabiah Coon:

Because I'd love to give Pam a shout as well.

Rabiah Coon:

But it's Michael Brady.

Rabiah Coon:

He is a psychotherapist and musician.

Rabiah Coon:

And as a musician, he's M Brady, but we'll call him Michael for this one.

Rabiah Coon:

So thanks for being a guest on more than work, Michael.

Michael Brady:

Thanks for having me.

Michael Brady:

Great to be here.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

I'm glad to, glad to get to meet you.

Rabiah Coon:

I know I put you through it to schedule.

Rabiah Coon:

So first of all, where am I talking to you from today?

Michael Brady:

Well, you normally would find me from the mountains of western

Michael Brady:

Massachusetts, but I happen to be in South Carolina at the moment, visiting

Michael Brady:

my daughter who's in college down here.

Rabiah Coon:

Nice.

Rabiah Coon:

Okay, cool.

Rabiah Coon:

And of course, um, I'm in London, but sound like this cause I'm from California.

Rabiah Coon:

So first of all, I think I mentioned you do psychotherapy.

Rabiah Coon:

Let's just talk about your, you being a psychotherapist and how long you've

Rabiah Coon:

been doing that and kind of what, just what you want to tell, tell me about

Rabiah Coon:

that work and what it does for you.

Michael Brady:

Sure.

Michael Brady:

I've been a practicing psychotherapist since I was 30.

Michael Brady:

I'm now 63, so I've been at it for a while.

Michael Brady:

And honestly, it's, it's, I begin by saying it's just a true honor to be

Michael Brady:

able to sit with people and, and share their lives in such an intimate way.

Michael Brady:

It's, it's, it's really quite a remarkable experience.

Michael Brady:

I pinch myself most days and go, I actually get to do this for work.

Michael Brady:

So it's something I'm really grateful for.

Michael Brady:

And it's really a lot of, a lot of meaning.

Michael Brady:

It also became the inspiration, for the record that I made and, as

Michael Brady:

well so we'll get to that later.

Rabiah Coon:

Awesome.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

And so, I mean, I, I just, I'm pretty open about it that I've

Rabiah Coon:

been in therapy for many years off and on or with different people.

Rabiah Coon:

Did you decide to go into therapy to help people or how did you decide

Rabiah Coon:

to go into that as a profession?

Rabiah Coon:

Cause even you went into it 30 years ago and I definitely think that the

Rabiah Coon:

landscape has changed and how people talk about mental health so how'd

Rabiah Coon:

you decide to go into that years ago?

Michael Brady:

that's a great question and, you know, honestly,

Michael Brady:

I, I sort of wish that many clients when they're interviewing

Michael Brady:

therapists, great question to ask.

Michael Brady:

I had one person ask me exactly that.

Michael Brady:

And, and the story I told that person, and I'll tell you now is, I got

Michael Brady:

interested in psychotherapy mainly because, I was a professional tennis

Michael Brady:

player in my previous life and I came to understand really clearly that the

Michael Brady:

role of the psychology obviously plays in one's realizing one's potential.

Michael Brady:

And, and I think, hopefully most therapists have gone through some sort

Michael Brady:

of suffering themselves and which has basically, moved them into therapy.

Michael Brady:

And I, I wouldn't see a therapist, frankly, unless they've been in therapy

Michael Brady:

themselves extensively, because you just, until you've been on the other

Michael Brady:

side of the couch, you just, you can't really know what it's like A.

Michael Brady:

And B, you want, you want someone that's kind of been there to

Michael Brady:

sort of mind the landscape of, of sort of their inner worlds to, if

Michael Brady:

they're going to help you as well.

Michael Brady:

So, um, that's, that sort of led me initially as I had sort of a fall from

Michael Brady:

grace and in my, in my tennis career.

Michael Brady:

And in my sort of attempt to sort of find my way back into the best of

Michael Brady:

my game again, I got fascinated by all sorts of different avenues into

Michael Brady:

helping myself realize my potential.

Michael Brady:

And hopefully that's what I do with my clients as well.

Michael Brady:

And it's become not only a personal interest, but really a passion as well.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

Well, in sports, I mean, I have a nephew who plays baseball and he's amazing.

Rabiah Coon:

And he has this kind of mindset that I find interesting, but I, I was talking to

Rabiah Coon:

him about, I heard about the yips, like,

Michael Brady:

Yeah,

Rabiah Coon:

when people kind of lose their ability to play like a pitcher

Rabiah Coon:

really is where it relates mostly and I thought that was interesting.

Rabiah Coon:

And I do stand up comedy and I know there's a mindset you have to get into

Rabiah Coon:

as well because sometimes you'll be on stage and just forget what you were

Rabiah Coon:

saying or something, which is similar to the yips I'd say it's the comedy yips.

Rabiah Coon:

But, what was it for you if you want to share with tennis that?

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

What happened or that occurred that got you into more delving

Rabiah Coon:

into the psychology of things?

Michael Brady:

Sure.

Michael Brady:

Well, um, I won't give you the gory story, but the, the long and short of

Michael Brady:

it is, is that, , I had sort of lived a somewhat of a charmed tennis life.

Michael Brady:

The game had come quite naturally to me and sort of little did I know, but

Michael Brady:

actually I sort of played in what sports psychologist called a flow state for

Michael Brady:

the early part of my career, which is that sort of state where you're

Michael Brady:

just locked in, you're super present.

Michael Brady:

Um, you're not really concerned about winning or losing.

Michael Brady:

You're just absorbed in your senses, you know.

Michael Brady:

Movement is like a dance.

Michael Brady:

It's this, it's this incredible place that, that, that, you

Michael Brady:

know, one of the terms is called the sports peak experience, the

Michael Brady:

highest expression of that state.

Michael Brady:

And what I didn't realize is from when I started playing from 11 to about

Michael Brady:

16, I played in that state naturally, and I didn't really know better.

Michael Brady:

I didn't know there was another state until I had a series of events that

Michael Brady:

happened, that basically resulted in me having this fall from grace from being

Michael Brady:

one of the better players and nationally ranked player and all that kind of stuff

Michael Brady:

into sort of basically being a has been

Michael Brady:

over the course of a year.

Michael Brady:

I mean, essentially the short version of the story is, is I qualified

Michael Brady:

for the national championships and ended up showing up a day late

Michael Brady:

because I got the dates wrong.

Michael Brady:

And in an order, if you don't, you don't show up for the national championships,

Michael Brady:

you don't get a national ranking.

Michael Brady:

And so if I had showed up, I would have probably been top 50 in the

Michael Brady:

country, which means scholarships.

Michael Brady:

It means coaches.

Michael Brady:

It means all sorts of things.

Michael Brady:

So that really rally from a time when everything came easily.

Michael Brady:

And then I had a couple other events.

Michael Brady:

Bottom line is that I just sort of lost my way and, pulled back from tennis and,

Michael Brady:

got involved in the drugs as my way of coping with a series of disappointments.

Michael Brady:

And I sort of went off the rails for a couple of years and when I finally woke

Michael Brady:

up, if you will, and sort of rededicated myself to tennis what I discovered was

Michael Brady:

that I'd sort of lost that flow state.

Michael Brady:

It became more mechanical.

Michael Brady:

It became, I got more attached to winning, didn't

Michael Brady:

play in my senses as much.

Michael Brady:

I got more conservative.

Michael Brady:

This game wasn't as creative.

Michael Brady:

You get the idea.

Michael Brady:

So I ended up spending really next.

Michael Brady:

eight or nine years really just trying to go find that state of consciousness again.

Michael Brady:

And so to do that, I studied Buddhism, I meditated, I studied Zen art, I got

Michael Brady:

involved in all kinds of things, that, you know, really helped me tap in and

Michael Brady:

really helped me realize my potential.

Michael Brady:

Again, I didn't quite fall back into that same state as much as I did when I was

Michael Brady:

younger, but, um, I learned a lot trying.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

And thanks for sharing that.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, I know there's a difficult thing in kind of going back and

Rabiah Coon:

looking at something like that.

Rabiah Coon:

Especially when It's not a place you are anymore, but I think sharing that kind

Rabiah Coon:

of part of our experience or journey, I always feel cheesy saying journey,

Michael Brady:

I hear you.

Rabiah Coon:

like, you know, it does, does matter.

Rabiah Coon:

And certainly I think a lot of people could probably relate to things just

Rabiah Coon:

changing in their early adulthood and having to find their way.

Rabiah Coon:

And so you have an essay on your website, which we'll be

Rabiah Coon:

linking to eventually anyway, in the show notes and then later on.

Rabiah Coon:

But, um, so I did read a little bit, so I'm asking a leading

Rabiah Coon:

question now, basically.

Rabiah Coon:

At what point did you also have an experience with music that

Rabiah Coon:

kind of correlated with this, you know, experience with tennis?

Rabiah Coon:

And I guess just get into that and that'll get us into, to your

Rabiah Coon:

experience with music overall.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Michael Brady:

that sounds like a good segue and you're, you're correct

Michael Brady:

to sit to hear them as all related.

Michael Brady:

And I think one of the things that maybe we'll get to in this conversation

Michael Brady:

that things relate all the way back to when we're actually much easier

Michael Brady:

and they sort of build on themselves.

Michael Brady:

But to sort of take you to the story, I was 25 years old.

Michael Brady:

I was, recovering from an injury on the tennis tour.

Michael Brady:

So I was taking a few months off.

Michael Brady:

And I was living in the same town as my brother, who's was

Michael Brady:

in an indie rock band in town.

Michael Brady:

And, I came to learn that the bass player was leaving the band in

Michael Brady:

four months and I had played guitar casually for a number of years.

Michael Brady:

And so I thought, oh, you know, I didn't play bass, but

Michael Brady:

I got enough finger dexterity.

Michael Brady:

I can learn the bass.

Michael Brady:

I mean, how hard can it be?

Michael Brady:

So I, I practiced furiously for the next four months to the point

Michael Brady:

that I could actually play all the songs pretty confidently.

Michael Brady:

However, when it came to actually playing live, that was another matter altogether.

Michael Brady:

I was actually feeling pretty confident walking into the audition.

Michael Brady:

As I say in my essay, you know, as I was driving over there, I heard

Michael Brady:

that Birds song, "So You Want to Be a Rock and Roll Star", and I said,

Michael Brady:

ah, the gods have lined up for me.

Michael Brady:

This is an omen.

Michael Brady:

It portends my success today.

Michael Brady:

Um, so I was really feeling pretty good, but then I walked into this

Michael Brady:

old ramshackle garage, which was the location of the audition.

Michael Brady:

And, and then once I saw that open space where the bass player was going

Michael Brady:

to stand, I suddenly started getting this anxiety sort of building up in me.

Michael Brady:

I thought, ah, this is no big deal.

Michael Brady:

I can handle this.

Michael Brady:

Um, but that anxiety quickly turned to a full fledged, uh,

Michael Brady:

severe, severe panic attack.

Michael Brady:

I'd never had one before, never had one since.

Michael Brady:

I was literally, my legs were convulsing.

Michael Brady:

I thought, am I having epileptic seizure?

Michael Brady:

What's going on?

Michael Brady:

Um, in any event, I was so incapacitated that I literally couldn't, I had to

Michael Brady:

sit down cause I was shaking so much.

Michael Brady:

I couldn't, my legs, my arms were shaking.

Michael Brady:

I couldn't play the bass.

Michael Brady:

There was no way.

Michael Brady:

So I, I left that audition without playing a note.

Michael Brady:

And , so as you can imagine, there's a lot of embarrassment.

Michael Brady:

There's a certain amount of humiliation, but, um, but what's interesting is that

Michael Brady:

I walked away from music after that.

Michael Brady:

But what I was really was walking away from was just

Michael Brady:

like this vulnerability thing.

Michael Brady:

It's like, okay, I've had enough of this vulnerability stuff, with music.

Michael Brady:

And it was different than, I think it's different than tennis, but I was

Michael Brady:

able to come back from tennis because I had a baseline of expertise there.

Michael Brady:

Whereas with music, I really didn't.

Michael Brady:

I was kind of a wannabe bass player, wannabe guitar player,

Michael Brady:

really, to some degree.

Michael Brady:

And so I, I just, I just walked away from it, even though music

Michael Brady:

is one of my great passions.

Michael Brady:

And I got, you know, in the last 20 years, I became a shrink and I was like,

Michael Brady:

I got very curious about what the heck, why, why did I walk away from this?

Michael Brady:

Why did I walk away from tennis?

Michael Brady:

The way I did, like, what's up with that?

Michael Brady:

I come from a good family.

Michael Brady:

I, I, I was pretty resilient in my second part of my tennis career.

Michael Brady:

Um, what is up with that?

Michael Brady:

And so I started researching panic and anxiety, but, but what, what I really

Michael Brady:

got interested in was, this notion of what's called unprocessed losses and,

Michael Brady:

and trying to understand why did I, why didn't I have more resiliency and

Michael Brady:

so all of that sort of led to this, to, to this curiosity about what

Michael Brady:

happens when difficult events happen to people, uh, particularly when they're

Michael Brady:

young and they're formative and their emotional DNA, if you will, is forming.

Michael Brady:

And what I came to conclude was that there's a lot of, you know,

Michael Brady:

what I could call small T events, like small trauma events versus see,

Michael Brady:

the big T traumas we know about.

Michael Brady:

You know, car wrecks, landmines, if you're a soldier that you're, you

Michael Brady:

know, all big stuff, we know what those are like, but the small T events are,

Michael Brady:

are little things that, that maybe we don't process because either We're too

Michael Brady:

embarrassed to admit something happened or, uh, parents don't know what, don't

Michael Brady:

know to talk about it with something.

Michael Brady:

But there's lots of events that can happen.

Michael Brady:

I'll give you a couple examples from my history that just to explain this.

Michael Brady:

Um, I once had it when I first started therapy my therapist said,

Michael Brady:

Hey, tell, give me an autobiography, tell me about your life.

Michael Brady:

I'm like, I can give you my autobiography in 10 minutes.

Michael Brady:

What do I need to go write this stuff down?

Michael Brady:

But when I did write it down, I discovered a couple things

Michael Brady:

that were really formative.

Michael Brady:

The first was I was in a different school every year from

Michael Brady:

kindergarten to seventh grade.

Michael Brady:

And then a new one at ninth And right away I was like, Oh, so this is why I was kind

Michael Brady:

of socially anxious in high school and had trouble asking girls out and so on,

Michael Brady:

right?

Michael Brady:

And it's like, it instantly clicked in.

Michael Brady:

It's like, okay.

Michael Brady:

And then I flashed to another event that, that is amusing at this

Michael Brady:

point, but it wasn't that I totally buried, which is, I don't know if

Michael Brady:

you know about the Pinewood Derby.

Michael Brady:

If you've ever heard of the Pinewood Derby, this is a Cub Scout thing

Michael Brady:

where they give you a block of wood.

Michael Brady:

That's basically it.

Michael Brady:

Little square piece of wood.

Michael Brady:

And they say, go home with your dad and build an Indy race car and come back.

Michael Brady:

And then we're going to race it, right?

Michael Brady:

So I got sent home with this block of wood and neither my dad nor myself knew

Michael Brady:

what an Indy race car even looked like.

Michael Brady:

And we didn't really know much about woodworking.

Michael Brady:

The long and short is we just rounded off the corners and

Michael Brady:

basically had the equivalent.

Michael Brady:

W above we spray painted it black and then painted a little black five on the

Michael Brady:

side and I was all proud of this and until the day you show up at the at the big

Michael Brady:

event right and you have this big table with like 200 cars and then you walk to

Michael Brady:

the table and look around and I see like 190 indie race cars right and they're

Michael Brady:

all have literally no wood left on them they're these teams they've got stripes

Michael Brady:

also professionally painted right And of course, all the kids started laughing

Michael Brady:

and howling at my VW bug, basically.

Michael Brady:

And I just remember that was then the insult injury, when it came time for

Michael Brady:

the cars to race mine, basically the wheels fell off and fell off the track.

Michael Brady:

So incredibly humiliating event for a kid.

Michael Brady:

I just completely buried it, but it's like these kinds of events

Michael Brady:

land and they, they, they set things up and they set things in motion.

Michael Brady:

And then we, I think we just sort of make decisions about

Michael Brady:

how do we not get hurt again.

Michael Brady:

And I think one of the ways that many people do that is,

Michael Brady:

um, They avoid vulnerability.

Michael Brady:

They avoid exposure.

Michael Brady:

Um, they, they create strategies, um, so that they are not as vulnerable.

Michael Brady:

And so anyway, that kind of became my, my decision that I made, I think,

Michael Brady:

post this music experience was like, I'm going to do what I do well.

Michael Brady:

I'm going to do therapy.

Michael Brady:

I'm going to teach tennis after, you know, at that point, um, you know,

Michael Brady:

after my career was over, and I'm just going to avoid stuff that's hard.

Michael Brady:

And, you know, So that's kind of how, how that went for many years until

Michael Brady:

sort of the next portion of the story.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

And I think it is, it is funny because there are those early

Rabiah Coon:

humiliations that you do remember and they're not, you're right.

Rabiah Coon:

they're usually not this big traumatic thing, but they do form what you do.

Rabiah Coon:

I remember for me, like just, I made a mistake in spelling.

Rabiah Coon:

I didn't hear, I'll never forget because it was in like kindergarten or

Rabiah Coon:

something and I was like, They asked you to spell fan and I spelled van

Rabiah Coon:

and I, I was, I mean, I'm a perfect, well, I'm a perfectionist, which

Rabiah Coon:

that this is not my therapy session or we get into that, but I can tell

Rabiah Coon:

you why, but I just remember that.

Rabiah Coon:

They do change the way we behave later on, like you said, which is interesting.

Rabiah Coon:

And I think you finding that out for yourself probably made

Rabiah Coon:

you more compassionate towards your patients, I assume.

Rabiah Coon:

And,

Michael Brady:

Oh, very much

Rabiah Coon:

yeah,

Michael Brady:

Yeah, very much so.

Michael Brady:

You know, what's interesting about these small events is that they actually

Michael Brady:

register in the brain the same way as, you know, Big T, Big stress events register.

Michael Brady:

The brain literally doesn't know the difference if you do a brain

Michael Brady:

MRI of someone with a small kind of humiliation or embarrassment.

Michael Brady:

You would think it would be very different than someone going

Michael Brady:

through a big trauma, but in fact the brain registers the same thing.

Michael Brady:

And what's interesting is that we store those memories and we just sort

Michael Brady:

of make decisions, and sort of the soundtrack for that part of our brain

Michael Brady:

that stores all of our old memories is

Michael Brady:

that Who tune, I won't

Michael Brady:

get fooled again, right?

Michael Brady:

We store those memories like, man, I can't let that happen.

Michael Brady:

And it's

Michael Brady:

sort of, it sort

Michael Brady:

of gets our protective system engaged and then

Michael Brady:

we create all sorts of strategies to be safe in the world in

Michael Brady:

whatever, in whatever way we do it.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah, for sure.

Rabiah Coon:

And also just you having the panic attack and the way you did, I remember the

Rabiah Coon:

first time I saw someone have a panic attack, it was a friend, like when we

Rabiah Coon:

were in high school and we were at a band outing like for the marching band and

Rabiah Coon:

he just like had a panic attack and it seemed like a heart attack or something.

Rabiah Coon:

And then I know in my later twenties and up to the last couple of years,

Rabiah Coon:

like, um, now know what they are and can stop them in a way, but like that

Rabiah Coon:

there's such a hard thing to have because unless you've had one, you don't know.

Rabiah Coon:

So I think even you having that experience is helpful.

Rabiah Coon:

And I do agree with you about like not going to therapist as a minute

Rabiah Coon:

therapy, because honestly, people I know who are studying psychology, I'm

Rabiah Coon:

like, who are you studying this for?

Rabiah Coon:

Cause you are something else.

Rabiah Coon:

I'm like,

Rabiah Coon:

please get help from someone else.

Rabiah Coon:

Like, please.

Michael Brady:

Yeah, for sure.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah, so it's funny.

Rabiah Coon:

Um, so it, one thing, cause we're going to talk about, I think your album, cause

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, I think, you know, it's, so you're doing the psychotherapy, which

Rabiah Coon:

fulfills you, but it, you know, you got back into music and, I was just thinking

Rabiah Coon:

about when I was going to talk to you, how, cause I was thinking about my, the

Rabiah Coon:

therapist I know, and like, I don't, or that I'm, I've gone to, or, or go

Rabiah Coon:

to, and thinking about like realizing they have a life outside of that.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

It's kind of like when you're a kid and you see your teacher out with their kids

Rabiah Coon:

for the first time and you're like what?

Rabiah Coon:

Like what they're, why are they at the store?

Rabiah Coon:

Why do they have other kids with them?

Rabiah Coon:

And, you know, and I think it's the same with like a therapist.

Rabiah Coon:

I'm like, Oh, I wonder if my therapist likes music, you know,

Rabiah Coon:

we never talked about that.

Rabiah Coon:

And so, um, so this could, you know, this is kind of insightful.

Rabiah Coon:

Like, Oh, they, therapists do have lives.

Rabiah Coon:

I forget.

Rabiah Coon:

But so how did you decide, cause you not only got back into music, but

Rabiah Coon:

you have an album that you've, you've created and that's even a bigger

Rabiah Coon:

step in getting back into music.

Rabiah Coon:

So how'd all that happen for you?

Michael Brady:

Yeah, well, there's a series of events

Michael Brady:

really that sort of led to it.

Michael Brady:

I mean, basically I, I, I've loved music for a long time and it got to a point

Michael Brady:

where a good friend of mine, I had shared that I, that, that had played years ago.

Michael Brady:

And, and he was a musician and someone maybe we'll hear about later.

Michael Brady:

Uh, but he basically sort of encouraged me to start again.

Michael Brady:

And so long and short is I started and I started writing songs and playing.

Michael Brady:

I was still carrying sort of the, the leftovers, if you will, of this,

Michael Brady:

thou shall not be vulnerable, right?

Michael Brady:

The first commandment coming out of experience like that.

Michael Brady:

And so I wrote songs for years and years, but I was like, I'm

Michael Brady:

not sharing this with anybody.

Michael Brady:

I just didn't, you know, there's, there are vulnerable songs are pretty intimate.

Michael Brady:

Um, I've got sort of this, this kind of voice that's very

Michael Brady:

sort of moody and emotional.

Michael Brady:

And, uh, I just wasn't prepared to be that vulnerable.

Michael Brady:

And I've come to conclude you have no business being an artist if

Michael Brady:

you're not willing to be vulnerable.

Michael Brady:

Um, So basically, so for years and years, that was kind of a memo.

Michael Brady:

I had sort of an imposter voice that was like, Oh, you're kind of a wannabe.

Michael Brady:

You're not really a musician, you know, that voice, right?

Michael Brady:

That sort of had a critic voice.

Michael Brady:

Oh, you're to this, you do that.

Michael Brady:

Right.

Michael Brady:

So I sort of, uh, that, that went on for 15 years probably.

Michael Brady:

Um, and about that time I started experiencing this intense cognitive

Michael Brady:

dissonance when I was realizing that, you know, gosh, I'm encouraging my

Michael Brady:

clients to be vulnerable and take risks.

Michael Brady:

And here I am with the skeletons in my own musical closet, if you

Michael Brady:

will, that I'm really not taking on.

Michael Brady:

And I just, honestly, I just couldn't tolerate that and

Michael Brady:

that level of discomfort.

Michael Brady:

And I'm like, this isn't, this is crazy.

Michael Brady:

I have to take this on.

Michael Brady:

And at that point it's also getting older.

Michael Brady:

I'm like, you know, I'm not going to go to my death bed and never

Michael Brady:

have really honored this, this, this music that I love so much.

Michael Brady:

And about the same time, I decided that everything that I was writing

Michael Brady:

about was really not nearly as interesting and as compelling and

Michael Brady:

frankly, inspiring as the stories that I witnessed every day in my office.

Michael Brady:

And so basically I decided, you know what, I'm going to, I'm going to, I'm

Michael Brady:

going to go full on with this thing.

Michael Brady:

I'm going to embrace vulnerability, sort of be the Brené Brown

Michael Brady:

poster child is my goal in life.

Michael Brady:

And so what I decided to do is just make this record and that I would, it was

Michael Brady:

going to be a concept album and it would be written from the first person voice of

Michael Brady:

not my clients, of course, cause I would never write songs of any real clients.

Michael Brady:

Uh, these are all fictional depictions of universal themes and therapy, but of

Michael Brady:

course I'm influenced by what I witnessed.

Michael Brady:

Basically I just have went into character and just started sort of imagining myself

Michael Brady:

being on the other side of the couch and dealing with any number of issues.

Michael Brady:

Um, and by the way, many of my songs on the record are, are actually almost

Michael Brady:

conversations that are intrapsychic conversations, like from one part of the

Michael Brady:

personality, sort of encouraging another part, trying to get up the courage to do

Michael Brady:

something or to confront something and sort of getting pulled both directions.

Michael Brady:

Most of my songs have sort of a struggle and then some sort of

Michael Brady:

way out, some sort of resolution.

Michael Brady:

Sort of folks wrestle with that across a bunch of different dimension

Michael Brady:

dimensions different themes.

Michael Brady:

So some of the songs are you know, there's a song for example called "Rise"

Michael Brady:

that people listen to it Oh, that's a great love song like well It's actually

Michael Brady:

a song from one part of the self sort of encouraging and another part afraid to

Michael Brady:

be out and take risks takes to anxious sort of like me but not about me.

Michael Brady:

Um, anyway So, uh, there's a lot of storylines, but the bottom line

Michael Brady:

was, is that, that, that became the project that I said, you know, this

Michael Brady:

is where I'm going to confront this personal history, this avoidance.

Michael Brady:

And I was just going to really embrace vulnerability and creativity was

Michael Brady:

going to be the pathway to do it.

Michael Brady:

And so that's how it came to pass.

Rabiah Coon:

And then the fact that you're, you said you didn't

Rabiah Coon:

share the things and now you are sharing the things and

Michael Brady:

Right.

Rabiah Coon:

that is a big deal, um, to do that.

Rabiah Coon:

And I guess just looking at music in general, I mean, because I'm just

Rabiah Coon:

thinking, you can like music and not do an album, or you can play guitar but just do

Rabiah Coon:

covers, or whatever, so, did you realize that you were a creative person who

Rabiah Coon:

needed a creative outlet like all along?

Rabiah Coon:

Or do you think even tennis or something was a creative outlet for you before?

Michael Brady:

Well, that's a great question.

Michael Brady:

Again, a wonderful segue of sort of adding up the events, um,

Michael Brady:

together, cause you're correct.

Michael Brady:

Tennis at its highest form is a creative experience for sure.

Michael Brady:

And, you know, I, there's a real buzz just sort of locking in to the present moment.

Michael Brady:

like that.

Michael Brady:

And so when I, when I retired, I did start to get sort of thinking how

Michael Brady:

else can I manifest as always been interested in the arts and in music.

Michael Brady:

I wasn't ready to play music yet, but what I did to do is I started painting,

Michael Brady:

um, began, you know, one evening when I decided I hate Hallmark cards, but I want

Michael Brady:

to send out Christmas cards to people.

Michael Brady:

So I invited a bunch of people over and made a shit ton of

Michael Brady:

margaritas and, um, said, all right.

Michael Brady:

Let's get the watercolors out and let's roll people.

Michael Brady:

And so that started a series of abstractions.

Michael Brady:

And then I got fascinated with painting and I painted actually for

Michael Brady:

the next 10, 12, 15 years or so.

Michael Brady:

And so I have a whole, a whole period of my life and it's all I did was painted.

Michael Brady:

In fact, the album cover, by the way, um, that is a painting of mine, um,

Rabiah Coon:

Oh, cool.

Michael Brady:

I did also a bunch of videos that I decided to, um, create

Michael Brady:

sort of art videos to some of the music.

Michael Brady:

And, you know, just to sort of integrate a little bit of my artistic brain into

Michael Brady:

the, into the music world, you can

Rabiah Coon:

So did you do any, sorry, did you do any training

Rabiah Coon:

for painting or did you just?

Michael Brady:

None, no training now.

Michael Brady:

It's just all self taught.

Michael Brady:

Same with music.

Michael Brady:

I've never had a guitar lesson or a voice lesson.

Michael Brady:

Just sort of just follow my instincts.

Rabiah Coon:

how dare you?

Rabiah Coon:

No, I'm just kidding.

Rabiah Coon:

Oh, that's really cool.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, I guess, yeah, it's easier for you to tell people to go for it.

Rabiah Coon:

And if you're putting your money where your mouth is, you

Michael Brady:

Yeah, I like that.

Michael Brady:

And it's, it's truly experience has been honestly one of the most transformative

Michael Brady:

experience I've ever had, honestly.

Michael Brady:

Um, and to embrace vulnerability in this way is terrifying.

Michael Brady:

I mean, it's not like I'm like, woohoo, I get to talk to Rabiah and

Michael Brady:

you it's like, okay, here we go.

Michael Brady:

I'm committed, committed to vulnerability.

Michael Brady:

Let's roll buddy.

Michael Brady:

I'm not someone that really wants to be front and center necessarily.

Michael Brady:

I'm kind of a quiet introvert, but, um, but I also, you know, I

Michael Brady:

felt like I just have to do that.

Michael Brady:

And also, honestly, I feel really proud of the music.

Michael Brady:

I think, um, some really, some good stuff came out of it.

Michael Brady:

And I can imagine if I was listening, I'd be going, Oh God, a music, an

Michael Brady:

album about therapy written from the, this must be some, either some really

Michael Brady:

dark, morbid stuff, or it's like some kind of, uh, kumbaya experience.

Michael Brady:

You um, "We Are the World" to acoustic guitar or something.

Michael Brady:

And actually that was my biggest goal was to not make that record.

Michael Brady:

I really wanted it to have an edge, have it be, you know, kind of moody and, and,

Michael Brady:

but also full of possibility as well.

Rabiah Coon:

I really, I really liked it.

Rabiah Coon:

And what I heard of it, I didn't, I don't know if I heard everything,

Rabiah Coon:

but, um, what I've heard, I've liked.

Rabiah Coon:

And, you know, I just think your experience kind of resonated with me.

Rabiah Coon:

And that's one reason, one reason I was like, when we were in touch

Rabiah Coon:

with each other, it was like, yeah, they would come on because.

Rabiah Coon:

And I don't usually talk that casually.

Rabiah Coon:

I guess I'm talking to you like a therapist now.

Rabiah Coon:

Um, I'm trying to avoid the real subjects and getting to other stuff.

Rabiah Coon:

No, I'm just kidding.

Rabiah Coon:

But, um, but yeah, and then I just, I like music too.

Rabiah Coon:

So I just want to ask you, like, as far as music goes, I mean, the album you made, is

Rabiah Coon:

this the album of music that like you also listen to, or who are your influences in

Rabiah Coon:

general, like, or even favorite artists, I mean, if they're not your influences.

Michael Brady:

Gosh, the list is so long.

Michael Brady:

Um, but, you know, I actually recently had someone who, asked me this, who gave me

Michael Brady:

the highest compliment I could ever have, which was, you know, she said, she said,

Michael Brady:

your music reminds me of "The National".

Michael Brady:

I'm like,

Rabiah Coon:

Oh, yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

Mm

Michael Brady:

died and went to heaven kind of moment.

Michael Brady:

These are one of my favorite bands, and I, obviously it's a very inflated

Michael Brady:

view, but I kind of got a little bit of that sort of dark, some of those dark

Michael Brady:

tones, baritone, uh, uh, kind of sounds.

Michael Brady:

But, and then somebody else said, you mentioned that, that the song

Michael Brady:

sounded like, you know, 11 sort of prayers, um, honoring the human

Michael Brady:

condition, which felt like the biggest compliments that I could have.

Michael Brady:

So The National is a big influence, um, Bon Iver.

Michael Brady:

Richard Thompson.

Michael Brady:

I grew up in my early influence of a Canadian singer

Michael Brady:

songwriter named Bruce Coburn.

Michael Brady:

It was my first big true love.

Michael Brady:

He's, uh, just one of these really super emotional, um,

Michael Brady:

heartfelt singer songwriters.

Michael Brady:

And he's, and I think some of my vocal delivery, I think, came from

Michael Brady:

hundreds of hours of listening to him.

Michael Brady:

So those those are some of my influences, but you know, I'm just interested in

Michael Brady:

anybody that's writing emotional music.

Michael Brady:

I can be moved by really, I mean, I'm sort of referring, referencing indie stuff,

Michael Brady:

but I can be equally moved by, um, some of the minimalist stuff of like Steve Reich

Michael Brady:

and Philip Glass and any music that, that, that creates emotion, I'm there, you know?

Rabiah Coon:

Well, I don't know if you heard the new Billy Joel song, too.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, it was completely He didn't write it.

Rabiah Coon:

He wrote the music, apparently, or contributed some big, big fat chords to

Rabiah Coon:

it, but the lyrics are, are deep, and it's not what he's, I mean, he's done some,

Rabiah Coon:

but they're not his, and, and it, it, um, I don't know, it's interesting when these

Rabiah Coon:

big emotional songs what they can do, you know, and how they can just move people.

Rabiah Coon:

Colin Hay is one of my absolute favorite people.

Rabiah Coon:

And he has this great, brilliant sense of humor when he talks, but

Rabiah Coon:

then his songs are deeply emotional, you know, even when they're upbeat

Rabiah Coon:

and I just think it's, it's just.

Rabiah Coon:

It's such a cool way of people expressing themselves, you know?

Michael Brady:

Yeah, no, I agree.

Michael Brady:

I couldn't write a , a happy pop song if I wanted to, I don't think.

Michael Brady:

Uh, I'd like to think that that doesn't mean the music is super dark and

Michael Brady:

depressing, but it's definitely, um, uh, you know, rmotion or go home kind

Michael Brady:

of is sort of my, my, the only way I know how to, to play music or, or sing.

Michael Brady:

So.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah, yeah, and What what are your plans with the album?

Rabiah Coon:

Are you playing live at all or do you want to or what's yeah,

Michael Brady:

Well, that, that, if, if I'm going to really, um, be, if I'm

Michael Brady:

going to go full on, um, vulnerability, that's going to be the next step.

Michael Brady:

The reality is I tried to play live a couple of times and both times my vocal

Michael Brady:

chords basically just seized up honestly.

Michael Brady:

Anxiety just took hold.

Michael Brady:

I was great.

Michael Brady:

10 minutes before I was like, I sound pretty good.

Michael Brady:

Walked on stage and boom, sound like Mickey mouse.

Michael Brady:

Um, So, um, I'm, I'm working up to it.

Michael Brady:

I, I'm sort of committed to playing live and I'm going, I'm going to do that.

Michael Brady:

That's going to be next.

Michael Brady:

Right now I'm just hoping some folks might listen, you know, I, I think there's some

Michael Brady:

interesting music there and, um, I just, uh, obviously trying to be an absolute

Michael Brady:

nobody and have anybody actually have a listen is, is a bit of a challenge.

Michael Brady:

So I'm hoping folks will give it a chance and spread it around if

Michael Brady:

it's something that they like.

Michael Brady:

So right now I'm, I'm, I'm marketing and, and just trying to get it out

Michael Brady:

there, which is very hard to do.

Michael Brady:

It's hard to get anybody to sort of respond to an email or a music journalist

Michael Brady:

to review any music journalists out there.

Michael Brady:

That would be fabulous.

Michael Brady:

But, um, and then, you know, I'm really, I think now that I've sort

Michael Brady:

of had sort of let Genie out of the bottle, if you will, I sort of, I'm

Michael Brady:

super excited about what's next.

Michael Brady:

I've got a bunch of songs that are sort of waiting for me when I'm done marking this.

Michael Brady:

I'm really looking forward to this sort of than to doing this again honestly.

Michael Brady:

It was just so exciting to have my ears and headphones for about three years

Michael Brady:

and and just waking up every morning.

Michael Brady:

Go.

Michael Brady:

How did that tracks?

Michael Brady:

How did that was as good as I thought it was?

Michael Brady:

I was like, I don't know.

Michael Brady:

It was as good as whatever.

Michael Brady:

I just love being in it.

Michael Brady:

You know, it's just an incredible experience.

Michael Brady:

So, yeah, that's what's next.

Michael Brady:

I hope.

Michael Brady:

Yeah,

Rabiah Coon:

cool.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

And I think, yeah, with playing, you can do it once you're ready.

Michael Brady:

Yeah.

Michael Brady:

How did you?

Michael Brady:

Did you?

Michael Brady:

Is it hard for you to get up on stage first time?

Michael Brady:

time

Rabiah Coon:

The first time, not as much, you know, I think just

Rabiah Coon:

because I mean, comedy is different.

Rabiah Coon:

I, it was stuff I wrote and.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, it was, I was nervous.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, I remember, I think it's the most nervous I've been for a gig for sure.

Rabiah Coon:

But I think it was just such a, a thing that I'd put off for so long, kind of

Rabiah Coon:

for, for different reasons than you, I suppose, but like still, like, I

Rabiah Coon:

just didn't think I belonged up there.

Rabiah Coon:

And I thought a lot of it was tied around my body image too.

Rabiah Coon:

And just saying, well, I'm like, no one will want to see me up there.

Rabiah Coon:

This is horrible stuff you say to yourself, you know, like, who's

Rabiah Coon:

going to want to see me up there?

Rabiah Coon:

And they're going to laugh at me.

Rabiah Coon:

They're not going to laugh at me.

Rabiah Coon:

at me and whatever.

Rabiah Coon:

Um, and just kind of, kind of thinking about just myself in different ways and

Rabiah Coon:

that I didn't belong, but then, you know, I think the truth is like, if you're

Rabiah Coon:

there, you belong there, you know, you've,

Michael Brady:

Yeah,

Rabiah Coon:

someone's put you there.

Rabiah Coon:

You put yourself there, open mics, you, everyone's there.

Rabiah Coon:

It doesn't matter if they want it or not, they can show up and do it.

Rabiah Coon:

And I think there's something about the people who can just get up and make a

Rabiah Coon:

complete fool of themselves because.

Rabiah Coon:

They don't, they don't have any idea that they're not good.

Rabiah Coon:

And I think it's the people who are good have a harder time with that.

Rabiah Coon:

I don't know.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, that's kind of a jerk thing to say, but I, I have found the

Rabiah Coon:

people who are really lacking in any self awareness and are really awful.

Rabiah Coon:

It almost, I don't know if they, yeah, they're even aware.

Rabiah Coon:

Cause I've come back.

Rabiah Coon:

Oh, that was great.

Rabiah Coon:

It's like, what were you, where were you?

Rabiah Coon:

You know?

Rabiah Coon:

Um, yeah, that's kind of,

Michael Brady:

I

Rabiah Coon:

very nice, but

Michael Brady:

I know what I know what you speak for sure.

Rabiah Coon:

yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

So I think it's just a matter of like.

Rabiah Coon:

Like when I've talked to comics, a lot of times I'll talk at a gig

Rabiah Coon:

with people and some people will be really nervous at their first time

Rabiah Coon:

or early on and I kind of, and what I do to myself too, is I set my goal.

Rabiah Coon:

And so sometimes my goal is just to perform.

Rabiah Coon:

Like I don't have it in me to do anything else, but just

Rabiah Coon:

to perform and get off stage.

Rabiah Coon:

And I just tell them like, what, what, what do you want to do?

Rabiah Coon:

Like, are you trying to have the best gig anyone's ever had and

Rabiah Coon:

get on the biggest stage ever?

Rabiah Coon:

Are you just trying to go up and say your material?

Rabiah Coon:

And if that's what you're trying to do and you do that, then you've achieved it.

Rabiah Coon:

And so for you, it's like, even if your goal is just to go up and sing one of

Rabiah Coon:

your songs and that's the objective and it doesn't have to, nothing else has

Rabiah Coon:

to happen, it doesn't have to be for people to like it, who cares, that's

Rabiah Coon:

the objective you can achieve it.

Rabiah Coon:

Um, I think when I start to get more in my head about, I want to be the funniest

Rabiah Coon:

tonight, you know, and things like that, where I can't have any control over that.

Rabiah Coon:

Really.

Rabiah Coon:

That's when I get messed up,

Michael Brady:

Yeah, right.

Michael Brady:

That's it.

Michael Brady:

You're just in the moment.

Michael Brady:

Then let the chips fall where they may after that for sure.

Michael Brady:

for

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

And it's never going to be that bad.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, it just isn't like, I don't know.

Rabiah Coon:

Cause it's just, you know, the thing, the thing I learned in comedy

Rabiah Coon:

the most, and I think it applies to music or anything is like, no

Rabiah Coon:

matter how that gig goes right then.

Rabiah Coon:

You just have to do the next gig.

Rabiah Coon:

If it's the best gig you ever had, you still have to do the next one.

Rabiah Coon:

If it's the worst gig you ever had, you still have to do the next one.

Rabiah Coon:

And that one can go how it goes.

Rabiah Coon:

And that's the kind of beauty of all of it.

Rabiah Coon:

It just kind of keeps going.

Rabiah Coon:

I do want to ask you about one thing, which is Brené Brown,

Rabiah Coon:

because you mentioned her.

Rabiah Coon:

And we just kind of skipped by her a little bit, but Brené Brown was

Rabiah Coon:

definitely one of the most influential people to me in the last decade.

Rabiah Coon:

Although I can't say I always follow what I've read, but

Rabiah Coon:

what was the book that got you?

Rabiah Coon:

Mine was "Gifts of Imperfection".

Rabiah Coon:

What was the book that got you in or podcast or whatever?

Michael Brady:

It was the book, yeah, the book "Dare Greatly"

Michael Brady:

was the book that got me in.

Michael Brady:

And, uh, you know, of course I saw her TED talk that went viral.

Michael Brady:

And you know, I, I kind of knew this stuff intellectually, but I

Michael Brady:

wasn't really ready to integrate it.

Michael Brady:

I sort of knew professionally and all this stuff but when I read it

Michael Brady:

and was really thinking, ready, I was ready to be vulnerable myself she was

Michael Brady:

the voice that put me over the edge.

Michael Brady:

And it was just like, ah, this is, this is, life is short.

Michael Brady:

There's only one way to live here.

Michael Brady:

And I just, it was just like, okay, this is what, this is what I have to do.

Michael Brady:

And she would definitely inspired me for sure.

Rabiah Coon:

Awesome.

Rabiah Coon:

Was your family supportive of you doing the music and stuff or?

Michael Brady:

Yeah, for sure.

Michael Brady:

Well, it's funny because my brother is the rockstar of the family.

Michael Brady:

I have an extreme, extremely talented brother.

Michael Brady:

And so, you know, one of the, one of the other things I was overcoming in

Michael Brady:

this whole project was just like, how can I be making music when my brother's

Michael Brady:

truly an extraordinary songwriter?

Michael Brady:

It's like, uh, but, uh, but everybody was very supportive.

Michael Brady:

And, but the hardest part was for me, it was just overcoming, okay.

Michael Brady:

My role in the family is the shrink and the tennis pro and he's the musician

Michael Brady:

and the creative exec, uh, at a big advertising company, super creative guy.

Michael Brady:

So anyway, overcoming that was a big deal to just kind of

Michael Brady:

transcend my role in my family.

Michael Brady:

It was part of the process.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

That's a big one.

Rabiah Coon:

Very relatable too, like that's your label what are you, what are you doing?

Rabiah Coon:

Cool.

Rabiah Coon:

All right.

Rabiah Coon:

So the one question I ask everybody is just like, do you have any

Rabiah Coon:

advice or mantra you want to share?

Rabiah Coon:

And I know that especially asking certain people in certain professions

Rabiah Coon:

don't like to share advice at all, but like just maybe something that

Rabiah Coon:

works for you that you think maybe will be helpful for other people.

Michael Brady:

I mean, yeah, I won't wax poetic for long.

Michael Brady:

I'll just simply say, I've just learned to not believe in the

Michael Brady:

concept of failure, honestly.

Michael Brady:

I just, I feel like all things are just learning opportunities

Michael Brady:

and, um, you know, uh, life is short, short, take some chances.

Michael Brady:

Don't be afraid to fall down, you know.

Michael Brady:

I have a song called learning how to fall, which is just sort of,

Michael Brady:

that's what it's really about.

Michael Brady:

And, uh, anyway, yeah, that, that's, that's what I would say.

Michael Brady:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

Cool.

Rabiah Coon:

All right.

Rabiah Coon:

So the last five questions I have are called the fun five, and

Rabiah Coon:

they're just asking everybody.

Rabiah Coon:

So the first one is what is the oldest t shirt you have in still wear?

Michael Brady:

This is not hard.

Michael Brady:

Um, I have a t shirt that's black and it has five images of Tai

Michael Brady:

Chi masters in various styles.

Michael Brady:

stages of poses.

Michael Brady:

Tai Chi, as you may know, is the ancient Chinese martial art.

Michael Brady:

And so these are, uh, five different poses.

Michael Brady:

And, A, it looks really cool.

Michael Brady:

And I won't lie, back in my late 20s, when I was searching the world for my

Michael Brady:

soulmate, it was my favorite dating prop.

Michael Brady:

I don't have a dog that I could march down the boulevard as a conversation piece, but

Michael Brady:

I did have my Tai Chi shirt and had the secret fantasy that some evolved person

Michael Brady:

would say, Oh, Tai Chi, you do Tai Chi?

Michael Brady:

And would lead to a conversation.

Michael Brady:

And so, yes, did I wear that shirt relentlessly?

Michael Brady:

I didn't.

Rabiah Coon:

Did it work?

Michael Brady:

I got a couple conversations out of it.

Michael Brady:

I don't know that I found my true love per se, but it was fun trying.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

No, I'll leave it.

Rabiah Coon:

Um, okay.

Rabiah Coon:

So, cause I'm still, I'm still doing that in my forties and, uh, yeah, I have props.

Rabiah Coon:

All right.

Rabiah Coon:

So, uh, if every day was really Groundhog's day, like people.

Rabiah Coon:

I mean, it's not as much now, but during, during, I wrote this question during the

Rabiah Coon:

part of the pandemic when we were locked down, but, um, if it, if it was really

Rabiah Coon:

groundhog, groundhog's day, nevertheless, um, what song would you have your

Rabiah Coon:

alarm clock set to play every morning?

Michael Brady:

Yeah, it's a tough one, but you know what I came to

Michael Brady:

is this, this beautiful piece that the title matches the request here.

Michael Brady:

The title is called "Opening", which metaphorically fits and this is a

Michael Brady:

instrumental piece by Philip Glass.

Michael Brady:

The version I prefer, there's many versions, and the version I prefer is

Michael Brady:

the electric guitar version, because I play guitar, by an incredible guitarist

Michael Brady:

by the name of Sergio Sorrentino.

Michael Brady:

And this is this beautiful, repetitive, hypnotic song, but isn't real new

Michael Brady:

agey, so it's like, you know, cheesy.

Michael Brady:

It's just a lot of movement, very sophisticated, even though it's

Michael Brady:

very repetitive and hypnotic.

Michael Brady:

So that's what I, that would definitely be what I'd wake up to every morning.

Rabiah Coon:

Awesome.

Rabiah Coon:

All right, cool.

Rabiah Coon:

And then coffee or tea or neither?

Michael Brady:

Coffee, always.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah,

Michael Brady:

And finally, my sister has, uh, given me grief for years

Michael Brady:

because I, I drank light, wimpy coffee and she's traveled the world where

Michael Brady:

they only drink strong coffee and she finally talked me into drinking the

Michael Brady:

hard stuff, so I've been converted.

Rabiah Coon:

Cool.

Rabiah Coon:

I know.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah, it's American coffee's different for sure.

Rabiah Coon:

All right, can you think of a time that you laughed sorry you cried

Rabiah Coon:

or just something that cracks you up when you think of it?

Rabiah Coon:

And this just entertains me really

Michael Brady:

Yeah, no, no, no, this is an easy one.

Michael Brady:

Um, I don't think I've ever laughed more hysterically, and I still, every time

Michael Brady:

I think about it, it just cracks me up.

Michael Brady:

And this is the scene from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

Michael Brady:

You know what scene I'm going to tell you.

Michael Brady:

It's the, the Black Knight scene when he chops off the arm and

Michael Brady:

blood goes splurting everywhere.

Michael Brady:

Ah, flesh wound.

Michael Brady:

He chops off the other arm.

Michael Brady:

And I just, I just find that to be absolutely hysterical.

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah, there's nothing left

Michael Brady:

Exactly.

Rabiah Coon:

So stupid.

Rabiah Coon:

That's perfect.

Rabiah Coon:

All right The last one which i'll see if this one's hard you've been these

Rabiah Coon:

questions have been easy for you.

Rabiah Coon:

Some people like freak out and that gets cut from the the edit.

Rabiah Coon:

But um who inspires you right now?

Michael Brady:

You know, there's two people that inspire me.

Michael Brady:

I hope it's okay to do two.

Michael Brady:

I'll

Rabiah Coon:

Yeah, of course.

Michael Brady:

Unfortunately, they're both cancer related.

Michael Brady:

Um, the friend that I mentioned earlier, who encouraged me to start

Michael Brady:

writing music again, a wonderful man by the name of Stephen May is

Michael Brady:

my best friend for many, many years.

Michael Brady:

And he actually wrote the instrumental pieces on three

Michael Brady:

of the tracks on the record.

Michael Brady:

And I just sang over him.

Michael Brady:

I sadly, he passed away last year.

Michael Brady:

Um, rare cancer at a too young age.

Michael Brady:

And I mentioned him as an inspiration, A, because, you know, he encouraged me

Michael Brady:

to play music, but really because he's the most creative man I've ever met.

Michael Brady:

And this is a man that, routinely would complete three fully orchestrated

Michael Brady:

songs in a week while he's working on one of his four novels, while he

Michael Brady:

was creating board games while he was doing a cable television show

Michael Brady:

that he was host, this zany show and taking his children amazing adventure.

Michael Brady:

I mean, he's extraordinary guy that just had to create, right?

Michael Brady:

And he just revolved around creativity.

Michael Brady:

It's just inspiration.

Michael Brady:

So he's somebody.

Michael Brady:

And the second person is my mom who's, um, who's fighting

Michael Brady:

cancer right now and just an inspiration to watch her take it on.

Michael Brady:

And just sort of honor the whole process, the sadness, but also honoring

Michael Brady:

sort of the gift of, of the time she has and, uh, being fully alive and

Michael Brady:

not getting stuck in the hard stuff.

Michael Brady:

So those are the two big inspirations.

Michael Brady:

Yeah.

Rabiah Coon:

yeah, well, sorry about the loss of your friend and, um,

Michael Brady:

Yeah.

Michael Brady:

Thank you.

Rabiah Coon:

you're honoring him by continuing to do the music.

Rabiah Coon:

So, yeah, and hopefully your mom gets, gets through this.

Michael Brady:

Thank you.

Rabiah Coon:

cool.

Rabiah Coon:

Well, so Michael, I mean, it's, it's been awesome to talk to you.

Rabiah Coon:

It's been really fun and, just, You're so chill.

Rabiah Coon:

You're so calm.

Rabiah Coon:

So it's, it's just, um, just easy.

Rabiah Coon:

Uh, so I just want to make sure we, we state like, where do you

Rabiah Coon:

want people to go to find you, your website or wherever else?

Michael Brady:

Sure.

Michael Brady:

Thank you.

Michael Brady:

Um, well, my artist name is M Brady.

Michael Brady:

The Michael Brady was taken by another musician.

Michael Brady:

So I became M Brady, M dot Brady.

Michael Brady:

I might add there is an M Brady on Apple Music that doesn't have a dot.

Michael Brady:

So M dot Brady will get you to my, um, record on any streaming site; Spotify,

Michael Brady:

Apple, those are the big ones, obviously.

Michael Brady:

Um, if you want to check out any of my videos, I do have a

Michael Brady:

YouTube channel that you can find.

Michael Brady:

Um, by the search "M Brady music YouTube".

Michael Brady:

And, uh, then my, you can find all of it actually at my website, which is M

Michael Brady:

Brady music dot com (mbradymusic.com).

Michael Brady:

And one of the pieces I'll just mention, if there's any musicians out there

Michael Brady:

that happened to listen to any of the music and find it interesting, or maybe

Michael Brady:

even find my voice interesting, I'm, I'm interested in actually doing some

Michael Brady:

collaboration for my next record where I'm sort of encouraging musicians to

Michael Brady:

send me instrumental pieces somewhere between two and a half minutes and four.

Michael Brady:

And if anybody wants to send me anything that is emotional, a

Michael Brady:

little bit, whatever it moves you.

Michael Brady:

I sort of like the idea of just sort of seeing what appears musically, when

Michael Brady:

a body of music lands, I often have this experience when I'm listening

Michael Brady:

to music and there's a big long intro into a song before the vocals come.

Michael Brady:

And I'm like, I start hearing a melody in my head right away.

Michael Brady:

And then I'm like, don't sing yet.

Michael Brady:

I'm just getting this melody.

Michael Brady:

And they come in and sing, it's like, ah, I wish I just had this.

Michael Brady:

No, anyway, I'm kidding.

Michael Brady:

But I, I, I just love sort of just seeing what appears and it

Michael Brady:

takes me a while to create my own music cause I'm, I'm self taught.

Michael Brady:

So it might take me many more hours than, than someone else.

Michael Brady:

If somebody just hands me some, some music it's like, Oh, boom, we can make a song.

Michael Brady:

So feel free to contribute.

Michael Brady:

You can find a place to, to send me an instrumental, um, song on my website under

Michael Brady:

the collaborate on my navigational bar.

Rabiah Coon:

Awesome.

Rabiah Coon:

Cool.

Rabiah Coon:

Thank you, Michael.

Rabiah Coon:

Really appreciate you being on More Than Work.

Michael Brady:

It was really great to be here.

Michael Brady:

Thank you.

Michael Brady:

All right.

Michael Brady:

Take care.

Rabiah Coon:

You can learn more about the guest and what was

Rabiah Coon:

talked about in the show notes.

Rabiah Coon:

Joe Maffia created the music you're listening to.

Rabiah Coon:

You can find him on Spotify at Joe M A F F I A.

Rabiah Coon:

Rob Metey does all the design, for which I am so grateful.

Rabiah Coon:

You can find him online by searching Searching Rob, M-E-T-K-E.

Rabiah Coon:

Please leave a review if you like the show and get in touch if you

Rabiah Coon:

have feedback or guest ideas.

Rabiah Coon:

The pod is on all the social channels at At More Than Work Pod

Rabiah Coon:

(@morethanworkpod) or at Rabiah comedy (@RabiahComedy) on TikTok.

Rabiah Coon:

While being kind to others, don't forget to be kind to

Rabiah Coon:

yourself.

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