
BRAD SEAVERS DAY
Brad Seavers, wow what do I say about this guy to do him justice? Brad is kicking this 30 day adventure off for reason. Well many reasons I guess, but basically because I am more astounded by him every day I get to know him. His story (which you will read later in his own words through 12 questions) is although not a secret, and even a though I call him friend was something I didn’t fully understand the depth of until now.
Racing takes you a lot of places and in front of a lot of faces but I find it’s rare to really connect and bond with someone outside of your own teammates. You never get much time together, everyone is always busy, and you just never get to sit down together, take a breath and find out who some one really is off the track. I can’t speak for Brad, but for me, it never felt that way, there was never much of an incubation period for getting to know him, it was just kind of already there. After the formalities of introductions to each other, and working in the shop for a week, we were just friends. No deep questions of personal history or the usual interview style of early friendships at least to my memory. I knew pretty quickly this dude was legit, he was real, he was honest and he was true to himself, which allowed him to be true with me, as well as everyone else.
I met brad around 2011 during the TORC OFFROAD season while our team rented his shop as an interim base while racing a few of the northern races in our circuit. I was racng out of California at the time and we needed a place to shorten transport time and lengthen prep time on the truck. When I left to drive out to Rib Lake WI, all I was given was an address, and a phone number, I hadn’t even spoken to Brad on the phone and this place was in middle of absolute nowhere from what I could tell by satellite (google Rib Lake WI) and I was supposed to be there for 4 weeks! When I finally got there some 42hrs later, I called, and no answer. I wasn’t even sure I was in the right place. Just a steel metal building with a flamed-out mail box out front. Oh…... and a car, unlocked, windows down with the keys in the ignition, parked by the man door. After waiting an hour so I finally gave up, unloaded a side by side and drove it the 30 min into town on the highway to find a hotel. After Checking in and unpacking, my phone rings, it’s Brad.
“Hey man sorry I was out water skiing I didn’t expect you guys in this quick, I see the truck but, where are you?!”,
“No worries, I’m at the hotel bout’ to grab some dinner”
“Oh good, how’d you get there? The hauler is still here.”
“I unloaded the Rhino and drove into town” I laughed
“Holy fuck dood’ (Wisconsin accent and trademark regional saying) ‘that’s a long way!! Didn’t you see my car there?! I left the keys in it for you. You should have taken it”
What?!
Who does that? Who leaves their personal car for a stranger to take god knows where, for a guy he’s never spoken too, never met, and never even seen?
BRAD DOES THAT!
That’s Brad, perfectly in a nut shell, so genuine, so trusting, so willing to help you out.
I had never met the guy in my life, never spoke to him on the phone and he leaves his personal car there with the keys in the ignition for me, a complete stranger. God bless him. But there was no way I could take anything from someone let alone a car?! Without asking?! From someone I’ve never met?!!
After knowing Brad, now this all makes perfect sense. That’s just how he is, he would literally give anyone the shirt off his back or even hat on his head even if he needed it more than they did, which if memory serves me correct I saw him do with a race fan.
We just ran out of our super popular “flat biller” race team hats and he literally JUST got his, as young kid came to buy one, the boy asked our driver, (who was wearing one of the hats) if we had anymore left, as the driver was saying sorry, no, Brad jumped up and said “here have mine, free.” “You gotta take care of the kids man” as he walks back to his work.
Those moments stand out to me when I think about Brad. He always seems to do the kindest most genuinely right thing in the moment.
Another year later, no longer working out of Brads shop, and each of us only having enough time for the typical “hey how ya doing buddy?” phone calls, the team was back racing in Crandon, The big house, the last race of the year. Brad came out to help us crew that week. I was with my then fiancé and it was my turn to break down the canopy and drive back home to California, which was cool cause we planned on making a road trip out of it, but left just one guy, my finance, and I, to break everything down and pack up in trailer.
Again, Brad came through without asking.
“Hey man if you need some help breaking down, I can call a few buddies and we can all bust this out really quick?
A FEW he says, lol. I kid you not, he made maybe all of 3 phone calls and 50 people showed up within minutes. What usually took me 4 hours to do took 40 minutes.
You see, Brad is the unofficial mayor of Rib lake and Crandon WI. The guy literally knows everyone and everyone flat out LOVES him. For obvious reasons. The guy has a heart the size of a dump truck, the humor to slay a room of a thousand people, the energy and spirit of the Tasmanian devil and roots to hold it all up. Getting to know Brad over the years you’d never assume the story you are about to read, it’s extremely rare this day and age to meet a person who has been through so much and has every right to be selfish and look out for he and his. But yet despite all that, is so willing to give, so positive and so willing to help, and to do it all only because he sees you need it, even if you are too stubborn to ask for help. Brad Seavers is a doer.
Brad, you my FRIEND are an example of human generosity and the tenacity of the human spirit, and even with all the negativity in the world, continue to fight, stand up and do what’s right. As well you are an embodiment of giving, in the realms of love and true friendship. I salute you my friend! May we have many more years together!
Thank you for taking the time to be so open and share your life with me and the world! Thank you for being in my life, I love you man!
12 QUESTIONS WITH BRAD SEAVERS:
I’m Brad Seavers, from Rib Lake WI, motorcycle racer turned auto racer.
We all have a story to tell. I am sharing mine in hopes that it will give you, or someone close to you, the courage and strength to move forward and find the better path that’s out there waiting for you!
The first emotion I recall as a young child (3-4 years old) is that of fear. I remember watching my parents fight and my father going into a drunken rage…something that would become all too familiar throughout my life. By the age 12, I had lived in fear almost every day of my life and believed this was just normal childhood. The fighting, drunken rages and fear continued into my teenage years. I began to realize that this was not the way it was supposed to be. I watched other kids growing up around me with smiles on their faces and participating in sports, going to games, dances, family events and living with no fear. Most of them loved doing things with their father. I experienced a few of those joyful days, but most often, those joyful days turned violent. Through it all, my father had the best of intentions.
By the age of 16, I fell into a state of anger and tried to cope through the use of drugs and alcohol. This became an everyday event. It may be hard to understand this next statement, but the drug and alcohol abuse made my state of anger feel good in peaceful kind of way. It was easier to live in anger then it was to live in fear. My alcohol and drug use continued into my late teenage years. Between the ages of 18 and 20, I failed many times in my attempt to better myself. A career in the navy fell short and I was relieved of my duties in a very short time. My violent ways (fighting and rages of anger) were occurring almost every day. The more I failed, the deeper I would fall. I felt alone in my struggles and unsure if I would ever find a way out.
On March 11th 1991, I came home completely wasted and angry. My mother, with tears in her eyes and a broken heart, apologized. She told me she wasn’t disappointed in me but that She was sad for the things I had to deal with throughout my childhood. She was sad to see me falling into the same way of life that had destroyed us from the inside out. She cried and blamed herself for letting this happen to me. She said, “You have grown up to be the very thing you have feared most in your life.” That night, March 11th 1991, was the biggest night of my life. I decided I was not going to let my mother take the blame for my life or ever make her feel that this was her fault. I checked myself into drug and alcohol rehab. It was there I found the tools and program that would change my life forever.
After two years of sobriety, I still carried an anger within me for the way my father was. I feared him throughout my childhood and adolescent years. By the third year, I started to understand my father and the disease of alcoholism. My father grew up with an alcoholic mother and fell victim to the disease himself. My sobriety led me to a feeling of compassion where my father was concerned. This was a feeling I had not experienced since I was a young child. I started to love my father and stopped blaming him. Alcoholism is a disease like cancer. You wouldn’t stop loving someone because their cancer made your childhood less then desirable, would you? Even though, to this day, the disease continues to have a strong hold on my father, I have let go of all the anger I felt towards him. I am still very angry at the disease, for not only stealing my childhood but for robbing my father of a good life. I hope someday he can find the strength to live his life without the dependence of alcohol.
How did racing help me? My first year sober, I couldn’t seem to stay focused on the task at hand…staying sober. With a love for motorcycles, I soon found myself purchasing a 1989 Suzuki RM 125. Shortly after, I signed up for a Motorcycle Ice Oval Race. That first race left me with two things: a first-place finish and an addiction I didn’t have to overcome! I had no idea that racing would fill so many voids. Family, racing buddies and that raw feeling of adrenaline was something I could not step away from. Oval dirt track and ice racing became my family and my life. I raced motorcycles from 1991 to 2007, and retired with nothing but respect and a love for the sport that I thought would last forever. It was a very big part of my sobriety. On September 20th 2007 I was racing at a track that I raced at for ten years – Marshfield Super Speedway – a ½ mile asphalt track. It was a fast place to race and the fans absolutely loved the thunder bikes and the steel shoes throwing sparks for 100 feet. Who wouldn’t love riding wheelies and dicing it up inches away from many fast racers? Crazy fun! That same day would be the end of my racing career. I was out for practice awaiting the last race of the season. After warming up the tires, I started to put the power to the track. The bike felt incredibly fast. With every lap, I drove it in a little further each time. Entering turn one, I threw it in extremely deep and the bike felt great…but then disaster struck. At 86 miles an hour, nearing turn two, the frontend washed out on me. I was thrown from the bike and slammed to the asphalt. Like a rocket, I slid head first into a cement wall that shattered my neck, broke my back and cracked my shoulder blade. The bike slid into me breaking my hip between the wall and the 225-pound machine. I couldn’t move but was completely aware of what had just happed. No feeling. No movement. I told the track workers that my neck was broke.
After arriving at the hospital, doctors confirmed the possibility of never walking again. Those were very hard words to hear. After 48 hours and a few surgeries, I was moving my feet. I was blessed to be able to live through this, and even more blessed that I was able to walk. My doctor said I was millimeters away from severing my spinal cord. I thank God, every day for giving me another chance to live my dream. Life is certainly not guaranteed. It was a real struggle not racing over the next few years.
Since 2003, I have worked for the Polaris Race Department. Having this job eased some of the pain of not racing myself, but there was no cure for the void I was feeling. I worked hard over the next five years trying to overcome the huge part of my life that was missing. I did a lot of different things. Some of these included water skiing, working all the time and starting a small business. There was something still missing, and I knew exactly what it was. I also knew I no longer had what it took to be fast on a race bike. One fall night, 2013, I was getting ready to fly out to an off-road race in Reno, NV. I was helping RJ Anderson and his team that following week. Since my flight left early and my parents lived close to the airport, I was staying at their house that evening. With nothing to do for a few hours, I took a ride down to the local dirt track. A few of my friends let me spin a couple laps in their race cars. I bet you can finish the story from here! I fell in love again! I was addicted again. I felt something I never thought I would feel again. It was like a fire in my veins. Within thirty days, I purchased a dirt-modified car and went to my first race. It was the greatest thing ever…the smell of race fuel, the adrenaline and the competition. Every bit of it was breathtaking!
The winter drug on and April 2014 couldn’t come fast enough. I found myself racing three to four times per week. I finished the season with almost 60 races under my belt. I fell short a few points for the National Rookie of the Year Award, but ended up second. Considering I had never raced a car before, this accomplishment was extremely gratifying. My first feature win was one of the most emotional experiences I have had in a very long time. I never thought I would feel this kind of victory ever again after my accident. The crowd yelling, waving and whistling sent chills up and down my spine. Holding that checkered flag was like a dream come true. I was able to get in another 60 races in 2015, and was happy with my progress. Every year of experience offers you another year of knowledge.
Today, it is very obvious to me I am where I need to be in my life. In addition to that, I know exactly why I need to be here! Being clean and sober doesn’t make me perfect, but it makes me who I need to be. Thank you for taking the time to read my story. It is my hope that anyone battling addiction can find the strength to let go and realize that there is a life waiting for you to live it! May you find the courage to open your eyes and heart and live the dream every single day!
I have always fought for the weak and young and will continue doing that till my dyeing day.
If you need more information on me, please go to www.seaversracing.com and check us out. Thank you for asking me these questions I feel honored to be someone that inspires you. we inspire each other.
Brad Seavers, wow what do I say about this guy to do him justice? Brad is kicking this 30 day adventure off for reason. Well many reasons I guess, but basically because I am more astounded by him every day I get to know him. His story (which you will read later in his own words through 12 questions) is although not a secret, and even a though I call him friend was something I didn’t fully understand the depth of until now.
Racing takes you a lot of places and in front of a lot of faces but I find it’s rare to really connect and bond with someone outside of your own teammates. You never get much time together, everyone is always busy, and you just never get to sit down together, take a breath and find out who some one really is off the track. I can’t speak for Brad, but for me, it never felt that way, there was never much of an incubation period for getting to know him, it was just kind of already there. After the formalities of introductions to each other, and working in the shop for a week, we were just friends. No deep questions of personal history or the usual interview style of early friendships at least to my memory. I knew pretty quickly this dude was legit, he was real, he was honest and he was true to himself, which allowed him to be true with me, as well as everyone else.
I met brad around 2011 during the TORC OFFROAD season while our team rented his shop as an interim base while racing a few of the northern races in our circuit. I was racng out of California at the time and we needed a place to shorten transport time and lengthen prep time on the truck. When I left to drive out to Rib Lake WI, all I was given was an address, and a phone number, I hadn’t even spoken to Brad on the phone and this place was in middle of absolute nowhere from what I could tell by satellite (google Rib Lake WI) and I was supposed to be there for 4 weeks! When I finally got there some 42hrs later, I called, and no answer. I wasn’t even sure I was in the right place. Just a steel metal building with a flamed-out mail box out front. Oh…... and a car, unlocked, windows down with the keys in the ignition, parked by the man door. After waiting an hour so I finally gave up, unloaded a side by side and drove it the 30 min into town on the highway to find a hotel. After Checking in and unpacking, my phone rings, it’s Brad.
“Hey man sorry I was out water skiing I didn’t expect you guys in this quick, I see the truck but, where are you?!”,
“No worries, I’m at the hotel bout’ to grab some dinner”
“Oh good, how’d you get there? The hauler is still here.”
“I unloaded the Rhino and drove into town” I laughed
“Holy fuck dood’ (Wisconsin accent and trademark regional saying) ‘that’s a long way!! Didn’t you see my car there?! I left the keys in it for you. You should have taken it”
What?!
Who does that? Who leaves their personal car for a stranger to take god knows where, for a guy he’s never spoken too, never met, and never even seen?
BRAD DOES THAT!
That’s Brad, perfectly in a nut shell, so genuine, so trusting, so willing to help you out.
I had never met the guy in my life, never spoke to him on the phone and he leaves his personal car there with the keys in the ignition for me, a complete stranger. God bless him. But there was no way I could take anything from someone let alone a car?! Without asking?! From someone I’ve never met?!!
After knowing Brad, now this all makes perfect sense. That’s just how he is, he would literally give anyone the shirt off his back or even hat on his head even if he needed it more than they did, which if memory serves me correct I saw him do with a race fan.
We just ran out of our super popular “flat biller” race team hats and he literally JUST got his, as young kid came to buy one, the boy asked our driver, (who was wearing one of the hats) if we had anymore left, as the driver was saying sorry, no, Brad jumped up and said “here have mine, free.” “You gotta take care of the kids man” as he walks back to his work.
Those moments stand out to me when I think about Brad. He always seems to do the kindest most genuinely right thing in the moment.
Another year later, no longer working out of Brads shop, and each of us only having enough time for the typical “hey how ya doing buddy?” phone calls, the team was back racing in Crandon, The big house, the last race of the year. Brad came out to help us crew that week. I was with my then fiancé and it was my turn to break down the canopy and drive back home to California, which was cool cause we planned on making a road trip out of it, but left just one guy, my finance, and I, to break everything down and pack up in trailer.
Again, Brad came through without asking.
“Hey man if you need some help breaking down, I can call a few buddies and we can all bust this out really quick?
A FEW he says, lol. I kid you not, he made maybe all of 3 phone calls and 50 people showed up within minutes. What usually took me 4 hours to do took 40 minutes.
You see, Brad is the unofficial mayor of Rib lake and Crandon WI. The guy literally knows everyone and everyone flat out LOVES him. For obvious reasons. The guy has a heart the size of a dump truck, the humor to slay a room of a thousand people, the energy and spirit of the Tasmanian devil and roots to hold it all up. Getting to know Brad over the years you’d never assume the story you are about to read, it’s extremely rare this day and age to meet a person who has been through so much and has every right to be selfish and look out for he and his. But yet despite all that, is so willing to give, so positive and so willing to help, and to do it all only because he sees you need it, even if you are too stubborn to ask for help. Brad Seavers is a doer.
Brad, you my FRIEND are an example of human generosity and the tenacity of the human spirit, and even with all the negativity in the world, continue to fight, stand up and do what’s right. As well you are an embodiment of giving, in the realms of love and true friendship. I salute you my friend! May we have many more years together!
Thank you for taking the time to be so open and share your life with me and the world! Thank you for being in my life, I love you man!
12 QUESTIONS WITH BRAD SEAVERS:
- Please provide a brief history of yourself, where you were born/grew up. Or anything else relevant to your unique path that will help people understand where you came from.
I’m Brad Seavers, from Rib Lake WI, motorcycle racer turned auto racer.
We all have a story to tell. I am sharing mine in hopes that it will give you, or someone close to you, the courage and strength to move forward and find the better path that’s out there waiting for you!
The first emotion I recall as a young child (3-4 years old) is that of fear. I remember watching my parents fight and my father going into a drunken rage…something that would become all too familiar throughout my life. By the age 12, I had lived in fear almost every day of my life and believed this was just normal childhood. The fighting, drunken rages and fear continued into my teenage years. I began to realize that this was not the way it was supposed to be. I watched other kids growing up around me with smiles on their faces and participating in sports, going to games, dances, family events and living with no fear. Most of them loved doing things with their father. I experienced a few of those joyful days, but most often, those joyful days turned violent. Through it all, my father had the best of intentions.
By the age of 16, I fell into a state of anger and tried to cope through the use of drugs and alcohol. This became an everyday event. It may be hard to understand this next statement, but the drug and alcohol abuse made my state of anger feel good in peaceful kind of way. It was easier to live in anger then it was to live in fear. My alcohol and drug use continued into my late teenage years. Between the ages of 18 and 20, I failed many times in my attempt to better myself. A career in the navy fell short and I was relieved of my duties in a very short time. My violent ways (fighting and rages of anger) were occurring almost every day. The more I failed, the deeper I would fall. I felt alone in my struggles and unsure if I would ever find a way out.
On March 11th 1991, I came home completely wasted and angry. My mother, with tears in her eyes and a broken heart, apologized. She told me she wasn’t disappointed in me but that She was sad for the things I had to deal with throughout my childhood. She was sad to see me falling into the same way of life that had destroyed us from the inside out. She cried and blamed herself for letting this happen to me. She said, “You have grown up to be the very thing you have feared most in your life.” That night, March 11th 1991, was the biggest night of my life. I decided I was not going to let my mother take the blame for my life or ever make her feel that this was her fault. I checked myself into drug and alcohol rehab. It was there I found the tools and program that would change my life forever.
After two years of sobriety, I still carried an anger within me for the way my father was. I feared him throughout my childhood and adolescent years. By the third year, I started to understand my father and the disease of alcoholism. My father grew up with an alcoholic mother and fell victim to the disease himself. My sobriety led me to a feeling of compassion where my father was concerned. This was a feeling I had not experienced since I was a young child. I started to love my father and stopped blaming him. Alcoholism is a disease like cancer. You wouldn’t stop loving someone because their cancer made your childhood less then desirable, would you? Even though, to this day, the disease continues to have a strong hold on my father, I have let go of all the anger I felt towards him. I am still very angry at the disease, for not only stealing my childhood but for robbing my father of a good life. I hope someday he can find the strength to live his life without the dependence of alcohol.
How did racing help me? My first year sober, I couldn’t seem to stay focused on the task at hand…staying sober. With a love for motorcycles, I soon found myself purchasing a 1989 Suzuki RM 125. Shortly after, I signed up for a Motorcycle Ice Oval Race. That first race left me with two things: a first-place finish and an addiction I didn’t have to overcome! I had no idea that racing would fill so many voids. Family, racing buddies and that raw feeling of adrenaline was something I could not step away from. Oval dirt track and ice racing became my family and my life. I raced motorcycles from 1991 to 2007, and retired with nothing but respect and a love for the sport that I thought would last forever. It was a very big part of my sobriety. On September 20th 2007 I was racing at a track that I raced at for ten years – Marshfield Super Speedway – a ½ mile asphalt track. It was a fast place to race and the fans absolutely loved the thunder bikes and the steel shoes throwing sparks for 100 feet. Who wouldn’t love riding wheelies and dicing it up inches away from many fast racers? Crazy fun! That same day would be the end of my racing career. I was out for practice awaiting the last race of the season. After warming up the tires, I started to put the power to the track. The bike felt incredibly fast. With every lap, I drove it in a little further each time. Entering turn one, I threw it in extremely deep and the bike felt great…but then disaster struck. At 86 miles an hour, nearing turn two, the frontend washed out on me. I was thrown from the bike and slammed to the asphalt. Like a rocket, I slid head first into a cement wall that shattered my neck, broke my back and cracked my shoulder blade. The bike slid into me breaking my hip between the wall and the 225-pound machine. I couldn’t move but was completely aware of what had just happed. No feeling. No movement. I told the track workers that my neck was broke.
After arriving at the hospital, doctors confirmed the possibility of never walking again. Those were very hard words to hear. After 48 hours and a few surgeries, I was moving my feet. I was blessed to be able to live through this, and even more blessed that I was able to walk. My doctor said I was millimeters away from severing my spinal cord. I thank God, every day for giving me another chance to live my dream. Life is certainly not guaranteed. It was a real struggle not racing over the next few years.
Since 2003, I have worked for the Polaris Race Department. Having this job eased some of the pain of not racing myself, but there was no cure for the void I was feeling. I worked hard over the next five years trying to overcome the huge part of my life that was missing. I did a lot of different things. Some of these included water skiing, working all the time and starting a small business. There was something still missing, and I knew exactly what it was. I also knew I no longer had what it took to be fast on a race bike. One fall night, 2013, I was getting ready to fly out to an off-road race in Reno, NV. I was helping RJ Anderson and his team that following week. Since my flight left early and my parents lived close to the airport, I was staying at their house that evening. With nothing to do for a few hours, I took a ride down to the local dirt track. A few of my friends let me spin a couple laps in their race cars. I bet you can finish the story from here! I fell in love again! I was addicted again. I felt something I never thought I would feel again. It was like a fire in my veins. Within thirty days, I purchased a dirt-modified car and went to my first race. It was the greatest thing ever…the smell of race fuel, the adrenaline and the competition. Every bit of it was breathtaking!
The winter drug on and April 2014 couldn’t come fast enough. I found myself racing three to four times per week. I finished the season with almost 60 races under my belt. I fell short a few points for the National Rookie of the Year Award, but ended up second. Considering I had never raced a car before, this accomplishment was extremely gratifying. My first feature win was one of the most emotional experiences I have had in a very long time. I never thought I would feel this kind of victory ever again after my accident. The crowd yelling, waving and whistling sent chills up and down my spine. Holding that checkered flag was like a dream come true. I was able to get in another 60 races in 2015, and was happy with my progress. Every year of experience offers you another year of knowledge.
Today, it is very obvious to me I am where I need to be in my life. In addition to that, I know exactly why I need to be here! Being clean and sober doesn’t make me perfect, but it makes me who I need to be. Thank you for taking the time to read my story. It is my hope that anyone battling addiction can find the strength to let go and realize that there is a life waiting for you to live it! May you find the courage to open your eyes and heart and live the dream every single day!
- WHAT LED YOU TO CHOOSE THE CAREER/LIFE THAT YOU LEAD TODAY?
- WHAT MATTERS MOST TO YOU, WHAT WOULD YOU FIGHT FOR WITH YOUR LAST DYING BREATH?
I have always fought for the weak and young and will continue doing that till my dyeing day.
- GROWTH OFTEN COMES FROM PAIN, WHAT PAINFULL SITUATION ARE YOU NOW MOST GRATEFUL FOR? OR – WAS THERE A PIVOTAL MOMENT IN YOUR LIFE LEADING YOU TO WHERE YOU ARE NOW
- WHAT DRIVES YOU OUT OF BED EACH DAY? WHAT REALLY MOTIVATES YOU TO DO WHAT YOU DO?
- FEAR CAN BE AN EQUALLY GOOD MOTIVATOR, IS THERE ANYTHING IN LIFE YOU ARE CONSTANTLY WORKING AWAY FROM? (I personally strive and work to keep myself away from mediocrity and the fear of blending in with the masses)
- IN THE QUITE MOMENTS ALONE, WHERE DOES YOUR HEAD/HEART GO? WHAT QUESTIONS ARE YOU ASKING YOURSELF IN YOUR PURSUIT?
- IF TOMORROW WAS YOUR LAST DAY, WHAT WOULD YOUR LASTING LEGACY BE, WHAT DO YOU HOPE IT TO BE? DO YOU HAVE ONE RIGHT NOW?
- WHO IN YOUR LIFE HAS HAD THE GREATEST IMPACT?
- WHAT ARE YOUR CORE VALUES? EVERYDAY LIFE IS TOUGH, AND WE’RE CONSTANTLY FACED WITH DECISIONS. WHAT FUNDAMENTAL BELIEFS GUDE YOU?
- LASTLY, IS THERE ANYTHING LEFY ON YOUR LIST OF TO DO’S? WHAT IS THE BIGGEST ONE YOU NEED TO ACCOMPLISH? WHATS LONG TERM FOR YOU?
- USE THIS SPACE TO PROMOTE ANYTHING YOU ARE INVOLVED WITH, SUCH S CHARATIES AND ORGANIZATIONS. OR ANYTHING YOU FEEL WENT UNASKED YOU NEED TO GET OFF YOUR CHEST
If you need more information on me, please go to www.seaversracing.com and check us out. Thank you for asking me these questions I feel honored to be someone that inspires you. we inspire each other.