Coverbild der Sendung The Fort Builders Podcast

The Fort Builders Podcast

Podcast von Lance Johnson

Englisch

Business

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Mehr The Fort Builders Podcast

The Fort Builders is a story-driven podcast about how we become who we are.Each episode explores the human journey behind the work — beginning in childhood and following the non-linear path through early influences, defining moments, setbacks, growth, and perspective. Rather than focusing only on accomplishments, these conversations dig deeper into the experiences, relationships, and seasons that shape identity and impact.Host Lance Johnson brings a unique lens shaped by years in engineering, real estate development, entrepreneurship, public service, and personal reinvention. From building forts as a kid to navigating business growth and loss during the Great Recession, Lance approaches each guest with curiosity and humility — seeking to understand not just what they’ve built, but who they’ve become.The Fort Builders is grounded in a simple belief: everyone started somewhere, everyone has walked a different trail, and every story carries value.Through thoughtful, unhurried conversations, guests reflect on:What they were like as childrenEarly influences that shaped their directionMoments that changed themValleys that refined themThe work they’re building nowWhether the guest is a community leader, entrepreneur, creative, public servant, or someone quietly making a difference, the goal is the same: uncover the deeper story beneath the surface.This podcast is for anyone who believes life isn’t a straight line — and that success, failure, and growth are all part of becoming.It’s an invitation to slow down. To listen. To reflect. And to recognize that we’re all still building something meaningful.Welcome to The Fort.And thank you for your time.

Alle Folgen

14 Folgen

Episode TFB 012 - Part 2 - The Process of Becoming w/ Stephanie Bessent Cover

TFB 012 - Part 2 - The Process of Becoming w/ Stephanie Bessent

In Part 2 of this conversation on The Fort Builders, Stephanie and I continue unpacking the experiences, responsibilities, and transitions that shaped who she’s become. And what stands out in this part of the conversation is the honesty. We talk more deeply about confidence — not as something that suddenly appears, but something built gradually through experiences, setbacks, responsibilities, and learning to trust yourself over time. Stephanie reflects on the pressure many people feel to hold everything together while simultaneously trying to grow personally, professionally, and relationally. There’s a tension there that a lot of people will recognize: trying to meet expectations while still figuring yourself out in real time. This conversation also explores identity in a deeper way. How life changes you. How priorities evolve. How certain seasons stretch you in ways you don’t fully appreciate until later. And through all of it, there’s an important realization that surfaces repeatedly: You don’t become who you are all at once. It happens slowly. Through experiences. Through challenges. Through moments that force growth whether you feel ready or not. What makes Stephanie’s story compelling isn’t perfection or a dramatic turning point. It’s the reality of continuing to move forward while carrying responsibility, uncertainty, ambition, and growth all at the same time. As we often talk about on The Fort Builders, most of the important building in life happens gradually — layer by layer, season by season. This conversation is a reminder that becoming isn’t a destination. It’s a process.

21. Mai 2026 - 52 min
Episode TFB 011 - Part 1 - The Process of Becoming w/ Stephanie Bessent Cover

TFB 011 - Part 1 - The Process of Becoming w/ Stephanie Bessent

In this episode of The Fort Builders, I sit down with Stephanie Bessent for Part 1 of a conversation that covers far more than career paths or accomplishments. This is really a conversation about growth. Stephanie shares the experiences, transitions, and challenges that shaped her — from early influences and expectations to navigating adulthood, leadership, motherhood, and the constant tension of trying to balance multiple roles at once. What stood out to me throughout this conversation is that her story isn’t built around one defining moment. It’s built through layers. Through adapting to change. Through learning confidence over time. Through continuing to move forward even when things weren’t fully clear. There’s an honesty in this conversation that I think a lot of people will relate to — especially the idea that growth often happens while you’re in motion, not after everything is figured out. We also talk about identity and expectations. How people evolve. How priorities shift over time. And how the version of yourself you become later in life often looks different than the version you originally imagined. Stephanie talks openly about navigating responsibilities, leadership, family, and personal growth — and how those experiences gradually shaped the way she sees herself and the world around her. This episode doesn’t feel like a conversation about arriving somewhere. It feels like a conversation about becoming. As we talk about often on The Fort Builders, most of us are built gradually — through seasons, transitions, and experiences we don’t always recognize in the moment. Stephanie’s story is a reminder that growth rarely happens all at once. It happens layer by layer. And sometimes the process itself is the story.

14. Mai 2026 - 46 min
Episode TFB 010 - Mindset is Everything with Ezra Vedral Cover

TFB 010 - Mindset is Everything with Ezra Vedral

In this episode of The Fort Builders, I sit down with Ezra Vedral — linebacker for the Kansas Jayhawks and a civil engineering student — to talk about what it really takes to pursue two demanding paths at the same time. From the beginning, Ezra made a decision: he wasn’t going to choose between football and engineering. He wanted both. And more importantly — he believed he could do both at a high level. We talk about what that actually looks like on a daily basis. Early mornings, long days, constant demands — and the reality that balancing both requires more than just time management. It requires a mindset. Ezra shares how that mindset shows up in both environments. On the field, as a linebacker, he’s responsible for reading the offense, communicating, and making decisions in real time. In engineering, he’s working through complex problems, learning to push through when things don’t make sense, and finding solutions when there isn’t an obvious answer. And while those worlds may seem completely different, Ezra sees the connection clearly. The same approach applies to both: Stay disciplined. Keep working. Don’t quit when it gets hard. We also talk about the sacrifices that come with it — the time, the missed social opportunities — and why he doesn’t really see them as sacrifices. Because for him, the payoff is worth it. There’s also a leadership component to his story. Whether it’s on the field or in group engineering projects, Ezra has learned how to communicate, hold people accountable, and help move a team forward. What stands out about Ezra isn’t just his ability to manage both. It’s that he’s chosen not to compromise either. As we talk about often on The Fort Builders, we’re all building something — through the choices we make and the standards we hold. Ezra’s story is a reminder that sometimes the biggest decision isn’t what you choose. It’s deciding that you’re not going to choose at all.

6. Mai 2026 - 1 h 10 min
Episode TFB 009 - Character Won First with Coach Bryant Wright Cover

TFB 009 - Character Won First with Coach Bryant Wright

In this episode of The Fort Builders, I sit down with Coach Bryant Wright — a longtime cross country coach who built one of the most successful programs in Missouri. But this conversation isn’t really about running. It’s about what he built through it. Coach Wright didn’t start with championships. In fact, early in his career, he stepped away from coaching altogether before eventually returning and taking over a program with a simple goal — see what could be built over time. What followed wasn’t instant success. It was a deliberate process of building culture. We talk about how he approached leadership — starting with a question most people don’t ask: Why would anyone listen to me? From there, he built a system centered on character, effort, and accountability. Every athlete mattered — not just the fastest ones. In fact, one of the most telling moments came when a college coach visited practice and wasn’t impressed by the top runners… but by how hard the slowest runners were working. That didn’t happen by accident. Coach Wright built a culture where: * Belonging came before performance * Effort was the standard for everyone * And accountability traveled sideways — from teammate to teammate We also talk about the idea of 100% — not just in performance, but in how athletes showed up as teammates, students, and people. And how those lessons didn’t always click until years later, when former athletes realized what they had actually been taught. There’s also a deeper layer to his story. Coach Wright shares how his upbringing — including watching his father go through a major life transformation — shaped his understanding of leadership, character, and what it really means to be a man. And toward the end, we talk about what comes next. After retiring, he’s now focused on how to take what he built locally and share it more broadly — helping other coaches and leaders impact more people beyond just one program. As we talk about often on The Fort Builders, building something meaningful isn’t always about what you produce. Sometimes it’s about who you shape along the way. Coach Wright built champions. But more importantly… he built people.

29. Apr. 2026 - 1 h 20 min
Episode TFB 008 - Subject. Transformation. Joy with Stephen T. Johnson Cover

TFB 008 - Subject. Transformation. Joy with Stephen T. Johnson

In this episode of The Fort Builders, I sit down with artist, author, and educator Stephen T. Johnson. Stephen’s work spans more than just one medium or one audience. From award-winning children’s books like Alphabet City, to large-scale public art installations in places like New York, Los Angeles, and Dallas, to gallery and museum exhibitions — his work shows up in ways people experience every day. But what stood out to me in this conversation wasn’t just the scope of his work. It was how he thinks about creating. Stephen uses a simple framework — Subject. Transformation. Joy. It starts with something ordinary. Something you might walk past without noticing. And through his process — whether it’s drawing, collage, mosaic, or sculpture — he transforms it into something that makes you stop, look again, and see it differently. That idea of transformation shows up everywhere in his work. In his children’s books, where everyday objects become something unexpected. In his public art, where spaces people move through every day become something more meaningful. And in his teaching, where he helps students not just learn technique — but learn how to see. But there’s also a more personal side to this. Toward the end of our conversation, we came back and revisited a moment Stephen mentioned earlier — being called out in class. It’s a small moment on the surface, but the kind that sticks with you. The kind that shapes confidence, awareness, and how you show up moving forward. We ended up digging into that a little more, and it turned into a meaningful reflection on how those early experiences — even brief ones — can stay with you and influence your path in ways you don’t always recognize at the time. We left that in as a bit of bonus conversation at the end. Because as we talk about often on The Fort Builders, the story isn’t just what you build — it’s what built you. And sometimes those moments are smaller, quieter, and more personal than you’d expect. Stephen’s work is about transformation. But like all of us… that process started somewhere. About Stephen T. Johnson: www.stephentjohnson.com [http://www.stephentjohnson.com] Stephen T. Johnson’s visually arresting and conceptually rich body of work forges connections between words, objects and ideas.  His art spans a broad range of concepts and contexts and can be seen in site-specific public art commissions, gallery and museum exhibitions, and original award-winning children’s books such “Alphabet City,” a Caldecott Honor and a New York Times Best Illustrated book of the year.   His drawings and paintings are in numerous private collections including those of musician Paul Simon and actress Cherry Jones, and in the permanent collections of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the New Britain Museum of American Art in Connecticut, and the National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C.   Among his public art is a 66-foot mosaic mural at the DeKalb Avenue Subway Station in Brooklyn New York, a 58-foot mosaic mural at the Universal City/Studio City Metro Station in Los Angeles, California, and 33 glass panels for the Dallas Love Field Airport, in Dallas, Texas.  ----------------------------------------

24. Apr. 2026 - 1 h 26 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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