Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.
Chapter 1: What themes are introduced in the welcome segment?
That's right, the Super Bowl is finally here and my bookie is where you turn bets into bankroll. Almost everybody's going to be watching it and everyone has a favorite team. This is the one game you can have some fun on the back end. It's the one time you can rub some stuff in your friend's face if you know what I'm talking about. So if there ever was a time to get in, it's right now.
Chapter 2: What experiences does Cody Alford share about his military service?
One account, one wallet, bet the spread, live bet the second half, Hit the casino during the commercials. It all lives in one place. Go to mybookie.ag. Now use code UNSUB and get your first bet covered up to 500 bucks. If it doesn't hit, use your bet back bonus token and run it back. Don't just watch the big game. Make it pay with my bookie.
He's optimistic and wants to favorite slur right now, go. Penis.
That's not a slur. Oh, did you do war? No. Worse. You look like Netflix, Jesus. The podcast is ruined. Mission accomplished.
Say hi to Eli. He's racially ambiguous. Brandon, his hair is fucking fabulous. Donut, a dark joke disposition. And there's a fat electrician. Welcome to Unsubscribe.
You can try it. If you don't like it, I'll finish it for you.
It's not a deal. Magnesium, potassium. So it hydrates at the same time. On the count of three, we will pop these tops. Three, two, one.
What were you going to ask me about bush light?
I was going to ask you your opinion on a bush light apple or bush apple, whatever it is.
It's like, okay. As like a novelty thing, if you want to drink like one or two beers casually, but like, it's not something that if I was like, I'm going drinking with the boys, get me an 18 rack of bush apple.
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Chapter 3: How does Cody describe the challenges faced during deployment?
yeah i feel like that's a that's a safe answer you might have just offended the entire midwest if you said you didn't like it period it's not that i don't like it it's just like it's not like you can drink fucking 20 bush lights and you're fine like as one does yeah it's fine then it's water calm down like you have any bush lights it takes to get hammered no but i know that you do i don't know that i do
tonight on unsubscribe we get nick shit how many okay we brought the other two iowa influencers junkyard digs and pew view on and we did more than a 30 rack in two hours it was quite impressive i know it was the whole table was covered yeah a table's worth and i wasn't like belligerently drunk
Before we get too far, I did Cody's job last time. Do you want to do it this time? No, this is anyone that sits in that seat. This is not my job. I'm not doing this fucking job. You're a representative.
Chapter 4: What insights does Cody provide on mental health advocacy?
You're running to be a representative.
Where's that whatever?
I resign already. I resign.
Now, somebody take Cody's job. Hi, everyone. Welcome to the Unsubscribe podcast. I'm joined here today by Eli Doubletap, Cody Alfred, myself, Donut Operator, and Brandon Berberba.
Thank you. Thank you. I've been told when I do Cody's job, it's too nasally.
No, good. Hi, everyone. I said your last name right, right?
It's close. Oh, my bad.
Damn it. I tried.
You got my first one right.
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Chapter 5: What changes did Cody Alford want to make after leaving the military?
you wanted to actually make change when you got out from your lifestyle. Cause you were very conditioned one way. And you're like, let me take time for myself, my family.
I wanted to make change when I was active duty. And for the first time in my life, I was when I was on my medical board. So my whole dream as a young Marine, once I found out that there was like tier one units I could go to. And when I made it over to MARSOC, I applied numerous times, but because of manpower management or something like that, I never got a chance to go.
And then there was this one opportunity where like, hey, no matter your rank, no matter how long you've been in, like if you get selected, you meet the requirement, you can go. I'm like, this is my chance to finally go to selection with no stipulations from my command.
Chapter 6: How did Cody's medical board experience impact his military career?
And so I go to my neurosurgeon. I'm like, hey, bro, like I'm finally getting a chance to go to selection. And he's like, I'm like, I want to postpone this medical board. He's like, okay, but let me ask you this. if you were to go over there, do you think you would be a liability? And for the first time in my fucking military career, I was like, honest, I'm like, yes, I would be a liability.
And that really set me on a whole different trajectory. Cause that was already hard. Asking for help was fucking hard. Fighting for myself was hard.
Chapter 7: What role do psychedelics play in Cody's mental health journey?
So I was already fighting for survival because no one would listen to me. And I was noticing a pattern where I was super destructive. So like everything, anything good I did in the military, I was quickly losing because I was becoming extremely violent. I was having uncontrollable adrenaline surges. Like my central nervous system was just completely crashing, right?
I would be driving in a car with my wife and like miss a turn and like, shut the fuck up. You're like, what are you doing? And she's like, she didn't even say anything. She just looked at me and I would just project this like insecurity onto my wife. I was having all these like blowups all the time. And, you know, and I was really desperate to want to change that shit.
And, um, so it started when I was active duty, which was sick because guys are stubborn. You know, guys won't even ask questions. Dudes will run through a room, um, to get to a buddy, to get to an objective, a target. They'll fucking risk everything for that op, but they will not raise their fucking hands to ask a general question. They won't ask, why are we doing this stupid ass thing?
But they'll fucking run into a machine gun bunker. Same thing when it comes to getting out.
Chapter 8: How does Cody view the importance of self-acceptance and vulnerability?
Like, guys, did you know that you can get on testosterone and your dick can work? They're like, what? I'm like, yeah, I just went to the doc. I said, dude, my dick doesn't work. And he's like, let's check your blood. I'm like, holy, you have low testosterone. They're like, how did you do it?
I'm like, I just asked. Which to my knowledge, isn't there like a correlation, like a direct correlation to like low testosterone in men and like TBI?
1000%. You know, I work for a hormone company called Core Medical Group and it's, It's super sick, and the coolest thing about that company is that we have a core medical group based out of Boca Raton, Florida, and we have a core medical foundation.
And what's really savage about that is we provide a year's supply of blood work, hormone replacement therapy, and concierge service for service members that cannot afford, service members and law enforcement officers who can't afford hormone replacement therapy.
And we've been doing a study the past few years of like, if we can get a man or woman, their blood work done, get their hormones optimized and balanced and get them on some type of like, whatever that is. Sometimes it's testosterone, sometimes it's an estrogen blocker, sometimes it's even a peptide, right?
Or sometimes it's just knowing what's inside you so you can stop building scenarios that aren't even real.
we're seeing their lives change and you know there's this thing called like the operator syndrome of they're calling like you know the tbi all this stuff but like dude what did you expect you're injected with everything known to man that you don't even fucking know when you're 18 years old you know uh day two in the military you're exposed to literally every heavy metal like all the shit that i used to make fun of heavy metals toxins contaminants chemtrails or you
like uh you know organic food on top of that complete lack of sleep with no normal sleep cycle all the things i made fun of are absolutely real and we're exposed to it i remember throwing flashbangs in the shoot house and putting a dip in you know doing a whole entire shooting package shooting thousands of thousands of rounds and eating a subway sandwich sandwich pounding like three monsters and be like what's next i'm going on a mission to after day be dehydrated and every once in a while someone would be like
I'm not doing good. What'd you do? I had five weapons before we went on this 10 mile mission. I took C4.
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