yes brake lines are too tight at full droop on the lift. the bracket greg sells is just a 90 degree bracket with 2 bolts and nuts, the bracket mounts to where the brake lines are now, and the brake lines mount to the bracket, the rubber line is basically just rotated so it points straight up instead of forward, i dont think he has it on his site, but it came with my lift kit. i upgraded to longer lines after i tore one of my brake lines. the bracket is easier because you just loosen the line a little to allow you to rotate the block 90 and retighten, so no need to bleed, if you replace the lines you need to then bleed the brakes since you will lose alot of fluid replacing the lines.
here is a picture that has the bracket from when i installed my lift, its in the lower right corner, next to the 2 bolts and nuts.
the bracket is a 10min job, aka 1 burrito but there is a 4 burrito minimum
new brake lines takes an hour or 2 including bleeding, aka 6 burritos.
no lift needed to replace shocks, hell you dont even need to lift the truck off the ground but it does make it a little easier with just a floor jack.
what you need to measure for new shocks, you basically need to measure the distance from both the shock mounting points to get a maximum length and a minimum length between the shock mounting points with the axle at its extreme. simple terms: you need to do the flex test but without shocks installed.
measure the length between the shock mounts on the drivers side shock
New rear shocks: advice wanted
measure the length between the passenger side shock mounts
New rear shocks: advice wanted
imo the bilstein 5125 are ok shocks, but no where on the same level of dampening and awesomeness of radflo/king/bilstein 7100, not to mention all of these are rebuildable and tuneable to your preferences, so you'll never need to buy another shock again, just get them rebuilt and change the dampening if it doesnt suit you.