Featured American Mule Mr. March 2017 Austan Found
Featured American Mule. Mr. March 2017: Austan Found.
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Featured American Mule. Mr. March 2017: Austan Found.
Read MoreHer name is Andrea but she is known mostly by her friends and close community as Drea. She traded in rainy days in Portland, Oregon and now resides in sunny Arizona which we often call "The Copper State." When Drea is not spending time as an involved mother of two active boys, she works as a personal trainer and Specialist in Sports Nutrition helping others reach their personal fitness goals. She told us her favorite activities besides spending quality time with her two boys are hiking and “talking walks.”
We were impressed with Drea's vibrant and uplifting personality shown through her social media account on Instagram. We asked her why she believes people may be attracted to her talents or what she has to say online. She said, “I am still building my following and trying to find my voice here on social media, but I believe people are attracted to my talents because I don't hide my struggles. People can relate to the things I go through. I believe we find strength in struggle and we overcome to help guide others through. So I love being there for and helping others find their way!” Drea is one hard-working “mule-motha” with the desire and heart to put others first before herself. She believes in the importance of being a physically strong individual in order to help others. She inspires us because she puts in the work both in and out of the fitness room to show for it.
We asked Drea, “How did you get to where you are and what has made you successful in business and in your life?” She responded with, “My faith and personal relationship with Christ is the reason for any and all of my success. I grew up 3rd in a family of 11 children, so finding my place has always been tough. I moved out at 15 and worked while completing school. I am newly divorced and again finding my way. My desire to provide for my children and hope for them to see me successful drives me to do my best each day.” She is also inspired by her father who worked hard daily to provide for the family. Drea believes life is a gift and chooses to not let a single day be taken for granted.
Drea believes the American Dream exists more in society today than ever before. She believes there are opportunities all around to create your own life and future path. She tells us that the bare bones interpretation of the “American Dream” is the ability to dictate your own future and live however you choose. Drea also tells us that one way to head in a positive direct towards your goals may be to surround yourself daily with people who have-your-back! She suggests finding people who believe in your silliest, off-the-wall ideas and who love and support you no matter what.
We asked her what future plans she is working towards. She said, “I plan to compete in bodybuilding in attempt to become a pro. I am blessed with a coach who sees potential in me and I hope to use that as a podium to help others transform their lives and reach their health and wellness goals.”
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This month's featured mule is all about pure mule stubbornness with a determination to never give up.
Born in Phoenix, musician and lead singer Cori Rios puts in the hard-work for the kind of life he desires. Watching a performance by Rios, one may think it's all fun and games to be the lead singer of an original music group. Afterall, Rios and his group- The Hour Glass Cats can 'bring the house down' with an upbeat party for hours. Rios wants to set the record straight by telling us that he has been working relentlessly for over five years to get to the point he is now.
As a working musician who receives regular compensation for his work with the band as well as his solo work, Rios wants to inspire new musicians to never give up. Claiming to be a musician is one thing... getting paid on a regular basis for being a musician is another. Rios tells us: "I'm a working musician. I play a lot of Corporate events, weddings, restaurants and hotels to fund my musical addiction. I occasionally work as a server when I need the extra cash flow. I'm an avid adventurer. I travel as much as possible and like to get my nature on. Snowboarding, Skateboarding, Hiking, Gardening, Camping are some of my favorite activities outside of music." Rios firmly believes that stubbornness has helped him. "If you want to be a musician, or even an entrepreneur , you kind of have to be stubborn. Lots of people would normally give up after years and years of things not working out or not getting the appreciation you think you deserve. Stubborn people will not give up. It's in their blood."
When taking a break from weekly gigs, Rios is inspired daily by nature and the outdoors. "Going on a hike and finding a giant tree or a saguaro growing on the edge of a mountain cliff with no stability has always reminded me that things can be hard but you can't let that affect you." He also leans on his friends and family and says they are the most supportive people in the world.
Rios has a different view of the "American Dream" driven by the idea that a person's happiness in life is more important than the level of their income. He believes happiness and the "American Dream" go hand-in-hand and that the dream should not be defined or measured by a person's bank account.
Rios was asked to give us some words of advice to pass along to people that may be starting out with a passion for music. "Don't give up. Don't work that desk job that you hate. If you want to work a desk job, cool then love what you do. It's never going to be easy, in fact like 90% of it is really hard and not that fun. It's that 10% though that makes it all worth it. Also, Don't choose a career based off of what others want you to do. You will never be happy. Do what YOU want to do. Even if you end up old and broke you will be a happier person than the one who never did what it is they wanted to do."
This year Rios plans to release his first full-length album with The Hour Glass Cats as well as a full-length album as a solo artist. He tells us that he plans to get on the road to promote his music nationally during the hot summer months. At American Mule, we wish Cori Rios and his band great success. Be sure to follow Rios and his music to catch him performing in a town near you this summer.
This Featured American Mule is all about pure mule determination that resonates note for note when you hear the strum of one of his resonator guitars. Meet Matt Eich of Mule Resophonic Guitars.
Originally from Alama, MI, Eich builds steel and brass body resonator electric guitars for well known talent and famous musicians from all over. These guitars are unlike anything we have seen or heard before at American Mule. They amplify deep sounding weeps of astonishing character with the strike of a slide. The unique sound from Eich’s resonator guitars speak loud and clear for the hard-working American business owner. You can literally hear the talent and determination that went into creating each unique piece.
Words from Matt Eich:
“I build steel and brass body resonator and electric guitars. Resonator guitars were developed in the 1930's. This was before amplifiers and the John Dopyera and George Beauchamp came up with this design to give guitar players more volume. They eventually split into the National guitar company and Dobro guitars, and from what I understand went out of business. Because of that the resonator guitar remained unchanged since that time. Here at Mule, I'm trying to do the resonator guitar a bit differently. Instead of thinking of it as a totally different instrument, I use what I know about building normal wood body acoustic guitars to building these.”
Eich took over the Mule Resophoinic Guitar store and has built it to a flourishing and profitable success with shops all across the United States. We are thrilled to feature his story of small business growth as an inspiration to new entrepreneurs starting out in the U.S.
We asked Eich, “How long did it take for you to build a following and why do you believe people are attracted to your talents or what you have to say?”
Matt's Response:
“I went to a guitar making school in 2003. I graduated and didn't really feel like I was capable of building guitars in anything other than a hobby capacity. I wandered around a bit afterwards and ended up in Virginia at Huss and Dalton Guitars, which is where I learned just about everything I know about building quality instruments. I left there for Chicago because life happened. I was back to working in a warehouse, something I had done for about 5 years cumulatively up to that point. I lost my job during the recession. Now what? I ended up going to see Kelly Joe Phelps play and he was playing a resonator. I left wondering if I could make one, but instead of the typical chrome or powdercoat make it look like the natural steel. It wasn't a business idea. It took me a full year to build the first four, after making a ton of scrap. Ran out of money and went back to factory. Worked there for two weeks and got 12 orders, then 20, then 40 ... I've been running Mule for about four years now. I think people feel connected with my work because that sort of story is more universal than we are led to believe by most craftsmen. We are just as susceptible to hyping ourselves as anyone, even though we like to believe we aren't. I don't try to convince anyone that my guitars can do something others can't, I don't use precisely crafted sentences, or try to convey to people that I was born to do this and am part of some elite club of tradesmen that have achieved perfection. I just build them. They are what they are. I love the act of the work. It's been brutally hard and awesome.”
Matt doesn’t try to embellish or sugar coat his skills with some cliché pitch stating that he was born to do this or that he is spiritually connected to building these amazing guitars. He simply builds them and he trusts his knowledge and skills to build a guitar that is long-lasting and strong. This is the attitude that has made it easy for him to achieve successful results in his journey.
Matt believes you can climb any wall as long as you stack up enough work. We can all agree that this is elemental for success and it should inspire us to move forward and persevere.
In his Fall months of free time, Matt enjoys coaching JV football and encouraging the youth in his local community.
We asked, “What inspires you? How do you keep moving forward when the going gets tough?”
Response from Eich:
Inspiration is something I try to stay tempered about. For most when they talk about inspiration it comes from an outside source- someone else, a positive experience, a hope. I'm a professional which, for me, means I'm not driven by that kind of inspiration. If I was, how's my work going to be when it doesn't show up at 7 am? When I want to quit? When something outside my control dumps on my parade? I'm driven by the 'just keep showing up.' I've seen the real effect that has- four years ago I didn't even have a resonator guitar, and now we are finishing up our 205th guitar. When I see someone play one of these guitars and they go into their little zone of listening and hearing new things... there isn't really a word for it. Thats one of those positive moments that remind me theres a bigger picture here than employment taxes and sanding guitar necks. It's not about buying 'things', they aren't objects. It's about people, and the shared experience.”
To Matt, the definition of the American Dream is to have a life that is self-determined. The dream is about being able to do what you love and being able to avoid falling in the category of the individual that does what is “safer” to do even when that is no longer a certainty. At American Mule, we certainly agree with that, don’t you?
Matt Eich plans to continue making more Mule guitars in the future and believes that it works because it’s a very straightforward job. He is excited to see what the future brings and so are we! Cheers Matt! We hope to jam on a backyard porch one day with you while sipping a cold one from our American made copper mugs!
The best way to keep up to date on his shop happenings is on instagram @muleresonatorguitars Main site http://muleresophonic.com
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When I was 15 years old, I experienced a life threatening accident. I was on a family vacation at Lake Powell in Arizona. I had helped my family make a zipline and we all thought it was going to be a lot of fun. While riding it, my hands slipped and I fell almost 30 feet- shattering my lower body and breaking 17 bones in 30 different places. I had three compound fractures where multiple bones had exploded out of my ankles and legs when I hit the ground and made impact.
I was told at the hospital that my right ankle may need to be amputated and that I would probably never walk again. I spent many long and devastating months in bed, followed by multiple surgeries and three years of intense physical therapy.
Through all of the pain, I knew that I had to take control of my dominating thoughts and strengthen what I knew that I believed. I believed that I could walk again. I believed that I could use my experience to dig deep and set daily goals. Quitting was never an option.
Sure enough, I painfully learned to walk again and eventually, I was able to re-learn everything that I did before my accident. I even took up several new hobbies like wakeboarding and downhill skiing.
Today, I am business owner, a husband and a father of 3 awesome kids. I own Lifetime Leather Company and operate it full-time alongside my beautiful wife Shaina and 7 hard-working USA employees. When “things” start to feel hard, I look back on that experience that I had. Overcoming that hard trial and learning to walk again makes almost everything else manageable, including going after my dreams.
I believe in the American Dream and that it’s alive and well! As an American, I feel like it’s my duty to support and contribute to that great dream. I believe that it’s a state of mind and a belief that calls to all souls who yearn to be free. It’s an idea that any race or creed who desires greatness can partake in the abounding wealth and opportunities that reside freely within this great nation. Through hard work, integrity and determination, you can create and build your dreams no matter how big or impossible they may seem to others.
As for my words of advice, for any young Americans who have big dreams and are just starting out ….
There was once a man who dreamed of diamonds. He diligently dug for them everyday on his claim. Finally, years later, with no results, he became frustrated and overwhelmed with doubt. So, he quit and sold his claim for pennies. the man he sold his claim to discovered one of the biggest diamond cashes ever found under a mere 3 feet of soft soil in the very pit he dug for years. He came so close to the finish line, only to quit. The lesson here…don’t quit! You never know when you’re 3 feet away from diamonds. The true champions in life are those who learn the ability to endure. -Ty Bowman
Featured Story: Ty Bowman at www.lifetimeleather.com
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