Digital Social Hour - nick
Episode Date: December 14, 2024Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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When you think about like community
and advancing people towards a common goal,
you realize like business is very, very similar
of painting a vision and inviting people into it.
I learned so much in those years.
And it was a big organization.
We had 10,000 people every weekend.
So I was managing an eight figure budget when I was 22.
Just got exposed early to like business and stuff.
you know, an eight figure budget when I was 22. Just got exposed early to like business and stuff, yeah.
All right guys, Nick Cavuto here.
We are in Nashville at your spot.
Thanks for having me, man.
Absolutely, bro.
Thanks for coming on.
Yeah, dude, I'm super pumped to be here.
Appreciate you.
Insightful episode, former pastor.
Yeah, man.
Yeah.
So when I was 19, I fell out of college for the second time.
And so I called my dad and said dude
What do I need to do?
My dad's been my spiritual mentor for my whole life and he's like listen, buddy
You got to learn how to serve like this gonna be a season for you to learn an important lesson
That like you can go through the muck, you know of life
But as so as long as you're in service to other people man, everything's gonna work out
but and so yeah, man, that's where I started, you know, and
It's been a cool journey. I learned a lot about business, a lot about marketing being in ministry.
I think because if you have to sell Jesus, that's a complicated issue.
And second.
And secondly, when you think about like community and advancing people
towards a common goal, you realize like business is very, very similar
of painting a vision and inviting people into it, whether you're leading a team
or whether you're leading a tribe of people towards a common goal. I learned
so much in those years. And it was a big organization. We had
10,000 people every weekend. So this is not like grandma's
church of 42 people, you know, that's a mega church. It's a
mega church. It was a it was a huge deal. Five services every
weekend of hosting over 1000 live events. Yeah, every
weekend. It was an operation man. But I was managing a, you
know, an eight figure budget when I was 22
So just got exposed early to like business and stuff. Yeah. Yeah, you worked your way up from volunteer to second-in-command, right?
Yeah, dude. So when I started I just showed up and I interned for two years. I worked there full-time
I interned just slugged it out. No pet no pay for two years and just showed up every day
You know and it's interesting because like when you just consistently show up and you do
a great job, you don't make excuses. You're a champion of
the vision. You get spotted, man. And so they just saw me and
I just grinded it out. And they were like, Hey, we need someone
to step up next to this gentleman who's a public figure.
And we need someone to like be number two and help him. And so
it's technically in like an executive assistant role I
started. And it very quickly became that I was essentially
running the whole operation for him.
So that he could be talent essentially
and be able to show up and love on people
and do what he does but it was a really cherished position.
I had a lot of fun doing it.
That's impressive man.
A lot of people wouldn't do two years of work
when they'll pay.
Yeah.
I didn't really have a lot of options
and I think that was part of it.
And in addition, I was committed because I could see
something that was unique about the positioning
of where I was and I think when you have a sense
of gratitude and you're established in something
that's so unique and you feel like man,
there's a mission here, there's something I can really
buy into about the thing that I'm doing.
You just kind of trust the process and that's always been,
I think really my operating system has been rather intuitive of just like feeling things out of trust the process. And that's always been, I think really my operating system
has been rather intuitive of just like feeling things out,
trusting the process, and then just showing up
and executing.
I think we over complicate things as humans so much.
But when you just give 110%, man,
and I tell people all the time,
like you don't have to give 1000% better
than the next person.
If you give 10% better consistently, predictably,
over time, you're gonna become the most trusted person in the room. Right.
And that's the trust equation. The trust equation is three things.
And this is so valuable. It's number one. Are you credible? Like,
so do you have integrity based on the things that you say? Number two,
are you reliable? So can I count on you to show up even in the hard times,
even in the good times? Like, are you consistent in the way that you show up?
And number three has to do with deep connection.
Most people have one of the first two but they lack the last one and that's all over a self-orientation
Of the person who you're serving alongside of and so I realized very very early the trust equation be credible be reliable And have a deep connection a deep personal connection to the mission that you're on and that's a complete unfair advantage
So people just get that right it produces so much quantum leaps in business
and life and relationships.
It's truly everything.
That deep connection is rare to find in people actually.
It is man.
Cause usually, you know,
people are just kind of looking out for the moment
of what they need.
But when people can just take their time, go slow,
respond to the invitations of life,
to see opportunity,
to make a contribution that's meaningful.
You can feel it, it's different.
People are smarter now, man.
Like the frequency that people are on
is just very different than it used to be.
Yeah, would you say humans are innately selfish
and they have to learn how to be more giving?
Yeah, I mean, I think that you're either in survival mode
or you're in connection mode.
So people are born and depending upon the structure
of potentially their early life,
they're either neurologically starting to become wired for survival in the future or for connection
in the future. And it's funny, the most disconnected people are the most in survival mode. And so the
other ones, I think, who really seek deep connection with people, they're not really overly concerned
about like the basics. They're focused on like.
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A bigger vision in the future opportunities and what that might look like.
So I've just noticed that.
No, I've noticed that some people get thrown off by how giving I am in certain situations
and they were just in survival mode their whole lives.
Like they're closed off, you know, so for you to give them something for nothing in return,
it throws them off.
Oh, totally, man, totally.
Yeah, it's giving without expectation,
return has been a big thing in my life,
but I have started learning from Dave Meltzer, our friend,
you know, my mentor, just learning about like,
not only being open to receiving,
but in the process of giving,
you realize like the more you give, the more you're given.
It's not about receiving,
it's the quantifiable multiplying factor
of being a good human.
Then trusting the process that as you give,
out of a place of true generosity,
generosity begets generosity.
They've even done studies recently,
and typically in a year that you give a charitable gift, you earn 1.8 times 7 higher than you do a year without Wow. Yeah, that's actually crazy
Yeah, and then that's so as a new site was just released this year
I need to look into that that basically proves in karma though. Absolutely, man. Absolutely, you know
It's a simple concept. So very simple and people will not give even even if you don't have money
There's other ways to give absolutely man
If people want to change the world,
encourage five people a day.
The world's starving for a sense of encouragement.
You know, when you just drop into somebody
on DMs on Instagram and just say,
hey man, I just want you to know
you're doing so much better than you think you are.
I'm cheering you on, I believe in you.
I trust that there's a greater plan for your life
and I can see that you're working at it every day
and I just want you to know you're doing so amazing. Absolutely. And I just want you to know, you're doing so amazing.
And I'm proud to be your friend.
Dude, game changer.
People just don't take the time to slow down enough
to do that.
And that's not, I'm not passing judgment by saying that.
I'm just saying our world is not wired
with intention at that level for most people.
But dude, in the hardest times in business for me,
in COVID, I lost a million dollars in two days.
So just completely wiped out two of my businesses.
Well, one of the businesses I worked with
elective practitioners,
so it was a marketing agency that I had
long, long time ago.
And then one of the other businesses was live events.
So if you remember 15 days, the flatten the curve, right?
So practitioners couldn't practice
unless they were like,
unless it was like a mandatory procedure,
life and death, elective practitioners got wiped out. And then live events, you
can meet with people in person. So you had to cancel an event you were playing
on having? Yeah, well, it was a mastermind that was predicated on a live event.
Wow. So everything got wiped out overnight. And so here I am going like,
all right, God, this is your problem. Because I'm not going to try to solve
this in my own strength. And part of that process was I had a mentor and he said,
dude, I don't know what to tell you.
This is unprecedented times.
This guy runs like a hundred million dollar company.
And he's like, just go encourage five people a day.
And I did it Sean.
And I did a half a million dollars in sales 35 days later.
Wow.
No, it's crazy.
Out of the 35 people who bought
that I ended up doing this half a million dollars in sales with none of them were
the people who I encouraged for the 35.
Really?
Wow.
Isn't that crazy?
That is nuts.
And that is truly an example because the heart of service
versus selling the heart of services,
I'm here to make a meaningful contribution.
So it's not about you and what you can do for them.
It's about truly showing up and being present
and available and people can feel the difference.
They can feel the difference if you're in need
or if you're in service.
And that's what changed so much for me, man,
because it was that lesson when I was 19,
my dad said, you just gotta show up and learn how to serve.
It had a boomerang effect to one of the hardest times
in my life as an entrepreneur going like, now what?
And I went back to the basics of just go serve.
And so that's what I did, man, and it worked.
It's crazy.
What a mindset shift,
because a lot of people don't think in terms of service.
Yeah, and even if they do,
it's the giving and the getting thing, right?
It's not give and then the more you're given.
And a lot of people say like in different circles,
like, well, God won't give you more than you can handle.
I say it's total bullshit.
He won't give you more than you can manage. So the question's total bullshit. He won't give you more than you can manage.
So the question is, can you manage the abundance
that can be poured into your hands?
Like, cause if you can't, you're gonna lose it.
And I don't know about you,
but if you're like have a money manager and you're like,
all right, I'm gonna give you a million dollars to manage
and they blow it and then you end up with zero.
Do you think they're gonna give you more?
No, absolutely not.
So the reality is when you can manage what you have,
even if it's slow and predictable,
money is a currency, it's a current, it likes to move. And
it likes to have a transactional type of pattern in its
relationship with people and other things. So what's neat is
like when you're starting to focus on like this whole idea of
contribution and giving and maximizing potential and
opportunity. I've just noticed in my life, like that's how it functions, man.
I want my current to be generosity.
I want it to be of service.
I want it to be a meaningful contribution.
I love when I have to make sure that like,
on our teams and the people that we serve with,
knowing that like I'm championing making sure
that their family is good,
that their opportunities continue to get better
every single day.
It used to be scary.
And now I've learned like it's actually what an honor.
It's a completely different perspective.
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CMOs do have that fear of not reaching
certain KPIs and goals, right?
Yeah, I mean, I built my whole career predicated on results.
I just don't know anything different.
So that's like the good part of it.
I never believed in brand awareness.
I never believed in just, well, we got you 200 leads.
What the heck happened?
Because I know how everything attaches to the next thing.
So it's always been about results.
And since I ever have been in marketing and business, I always said the only KPI is ROI.
If we're not creating a return on investment for you
in every company that I've had, I always say,
if we can't two to five extra revenue in the next 90 days,
we'll fire ourselves.
Wow.
Absolutely.
Because dude, you and I know, right?
Like if we're dragging an anchor under a speedboat,
a business of this thing we're trying to develop,
why would we wanna be contractually locked into something
that's not serving us?
Again, it's the reversal, because it's not about me.
It's about the contribution that I make in someone else's
life or in their business that affects them and their kids
and their partners and their employees.
So if I'm not making a meaningful contribution,
like I deserve to be gone.
Absolutely, 100%.
So you got very high standards for yourself.
Extremely, and for my team
and for the people I serve alongside of.
Because at the end of the day, I think that's integrity.
So do the right thing
and also be focused on producing results.
That's what matters.
And now you're one of the top CMOs in the world.
Somehow.
I mean, dude, it's crazy.
I remember when I was doing something in Fortune 500,
I was managing over a billion dollars worth of products for a four billion dollar fortune 500 brand and um
I was half the age of anybody else uh in the whole entire marketing department
There were 70 of us so it wasn't a huge team
But I just got a lot of permission man in my life
I've seen it over and over I get permission early and I think I take just really seriously the things that come to me
And that's part of that mindset that god won't give me more than I can handle.
So I have the confidence and the confidence
to back up whatever it is that I'm facing.
And then in addition, I go like, all right,
God give me the best capabilities that I have
that you've wired inside of me and with your help,
I'm gonna hold this thing
and manage it the best way that I can.
So like failure is not an option.
It's just not even on the radar.
It's just, if I commit to doing it, I will find a way.
That's how I've always been wired.
When you were half the age, did you feel a lot of judgment
coming your way in that culture?
Not really, I mean, I broke a ton of records
in the organization and that was fun.
I think honestly, in the corporate speed,
it's just very slow.
A lot of people, I say, they sink in their chairs every year.
It just gets like that divot in the seat gets lower and lower.
And so I felt excited to be able to create some breakthroughs
and I think to show that there's a new way of doing things.
I'm an innovator at heart.
Right.
It's what I love to do.
But yeah, there was there were certain moments of where I was
like, y'all don't even understand like what's happening
here. Like how no one's asked me how I got the results. It's
just like, can you take on more and do more? Yeah. But I figured out very early, like, it was gonna, I'm a
fifth generation entrepreneur. I mean, my dad was a street
pharmacist, but he was you guys, you know, put the two things
together. But what's neat is like, I've always had that
wiring, that like, if I can exceed whatever the container is
that I'm in, then I'll be like a fish and jump out.
Do you believe entrepreneurship is something you're born with?
Or you could learn it.
I think the willingness to win
is something you're born with or you're not.
And to be an entrepreneur,
you have to be willing to win and sacrifice
more than you could ever imagine.
It's death by toothpick.
That's how it feels.
There's an intensity around entrepreneurship,
like true entrepreneurship,
of really burning the boats
and being able to pull it all in and call it all in.
That is an innate thing that I think people
who cross that chasm of just survival into connection,
into building something meaningful that they have.
But I've mentored over 500 entrepreneurs.
I've interviewed thousands of entrepreneurs.
What I've noticed over and over,
they have the greatest untold stories.
The things that they've had to give up,
to give up, the entrepreneurs who have had to go to jail
for their kids just to have visitation rights.
I mean, I could go on and on about the stories
of how they've overcome hardship through,
you know, I had one client, she's 14 years old,
had an abortion and she's been carrying this thing
her whole life.
What's so interesting about entrepreneurship
is I truly believe that it is the best spiritual experience
that we have on earth.
Because you have to defeat the previous version of yourself
so many times in order to ascend,
to make that contribution that you have in your heart,
that you know that's possible for you to do,
you have to fall on your sword a thousand times.
Right, while getting judged by everyone around you.
Absolutely.
And what's so cool in the way that I beat judgment, because that was an
early thing in my life of like, having a lot of growth and a lot of everywhere
that I went, I was like the young buck who was rising up, you know, passing all
the ranks. And I'm kind of a classic classic optimist. So like, I don't judge
people that way. So I don't perceive that I would be judged that way. But it
definitely happened. But what I learned is the less that I judge myself,
the less that people judge me.
And so when I just stopped judging myself
and looking too introspectively at situations
and just being grateful that I even got positioned there,
I started to notice that that sense of judgment
from other people wore off really, really quick.
I almost became completely oblivious to it at that point.
Wow, so you were just really in touch
with your identity at that point.
Yeah.
And I think it's just I'm willing to do what it takes.
I'm willing to show up.
I'm willing to put in the work and get results.
And at the end of the day, that's a scoreboard to me.
It's not people's opinions.
People's opinions about so many things.
But what really matters is how I have an opinion about myself.
And those are the standards that I hold.
And I care about what my wife thinks.
I care about what my kids think. I don and I care about what my wife thinks, I care about what my kids think.
I don't really care about what anybody else thinks but I care about also keeping my word.
That's the highest thing is the integrity to allow myself to perform at 95%.
I don't say 100% because nobody's perfect but part of not judging myself is being okay
with making human error but human error is about 5%.
So I try to make sure that I stick around 95.
Yeah, if someone was perfect,
that wouldn't make sense to me.
Yeah, even AI isn't perfect and that's robot.
Yeah, AI man, that's a whole other podcast.
How'd you meet Adley?
Yeah, so Nick Lauer, who's a buddy of mine,
I've invested in his business, Short Form Empire.
It's interesting, I spoke at an event
and my buddy, Sean Kaplan, had an event
and I went and spoke about my story
of how my kids survived a school shooting.
And I talked about, you know, internal belief systems
and how that impacted our family.
And we'll talk more about that, but I spoke at an event.
Nick came up to me after and he said,
hey man, I know it's kind of out of the box,
but one of the things you mentioned was during COVID
and that time 21, like just thereafter,
I started a short form content agency.
We got to 125 clients in four months.
Absolutely exploded.
It was amazing.
And he was like, I'm on the come up.
He's 18 years old at that time.
And he's like, I'm just trying to figure it out.
Will you mentor me?
It takes so much courage to like walk up to somebody.
He was like, you know, it made it easy.
We have the same name.
So I had an easy point of connection with you to have the conversation.
And when he came to me again, generosity, because
generosity, so I just flow with it, right? I'm like, dude, I
would love to absolutely whatever you need, man, I'm
here for you. And so we met, and he said, I would love your
help. And I said, great. And in the first 30 days, we doubled
his business. And then just quantum leap after quantum
leap, it just kept growing and growing and growing. We started
adjusting his offer a little bit and getting him with more high
performers and less out of just editing and short form and more into like in
person shooting.
And, uh, yeah.
So we became business partners back in, uh, in March of 24.
And, um, yeah, now we're absolutely crushing, dominating.
And so what was interesting is in the growth pattern for Nick, I posted one of
the videos of me speaking, at least on an Instagram and said, I got to talk to this dude who's been coaching you and, and mentoring you.
And so they brought me in and, uh, and that's how I'm at Adley and just said,
Hey, like I'm just, my hands are open. This is my position. Whenever I walk anywhere,
like into opportunities, into business, into friendships, I have open hands better as an
open hand than a closed fist. A closed fist is a fighting position.
I'm not trying to fight anybody.
So what is this?
Well, it's an energy conduit,
because that's how you can give and receive.
That's how you can give and be given more,
is by opening your hands and holding a posture
of what service?
How can I support?
How can I help?
And that's just what always has worked for me.
So I shadowed for four hours, you know,
on like a random Wednesday.
And at least I really think we can use your help.
And so then I talked with her and her husband, Blake,
and here we are, dude.
The rest is history.
The rest is history.
I love that, man.
I really love that openness.
Yeah, yeah, that's everything, man.
Opening your hands, it really opens up everything
in your life that you could need or want.
It's a beautiful thing.
So you're very focused on relationships, like's important to relationships or rocket ships, brother
Yeah, they will take you places that you never dreamed you could get
and I think part of that is truly being a good person and
Having integrity being that that trust equation credible reliable deep connection. It's got to be authentic. It's gotta be true
Yeah, you never know where people will end up, man.
That's true.
A lot of people try to form relationships
purely based off money.
And I think that's a mistake
because you could catch someone early on their journey
and they can help you five, 10 years down the road too.
Oh, absolutely, man.
Absolutely.
There's been a lot of people who I've helped
and coached along the years
and then ended up pulling them into opportunities and gigs.
And at the same time, you know, like when you have a sterling reputation,
when you write a book in nine years, you know, you,
you go nine years later and you ask that one person who you met and now they've
become a mega entrepreneur or a public figure. And they're like,
I would love to man because your reputation precedes you. You showed up,
you did what you said you were going to do.
You operate in high integrity and truly a heart of service.
Those are the types of people that people want to help.
Yeah. And yeah, I've seen that happen in my life over and over again.
I haven't done them all perfect, John. I have him. No one else.
You know, I've learned a lot of hard lessons
about just different seasons of life and how I chose to show up at those times
of when I was either in pain or, you know, whatever.
And that's why I ended up taking a sabbatical. Um, yeah,
this was back in 22 because I was like, I gotta do some internal stuff.
And you said a hundred therapy sessions in, in about a year, in about a year.
Yeah. Every three days basically. Right. Yeah, dude. It was super intense. Yeah.
I mean, 52 days in the year and I did it twice a week.
I met with an art therapist, which was really interesting.
Studied Carl Jung for 52 years. She was in her
70s. Absolute Jedi master, like incredible. Sharon Barnes is
her name. She's in Colorado. And then I met with a PhD who gave
me a lot of tools and resources. One of the most interesting
things that Sharon did is she had me draw with my non
dominant hand to unlock my subconscious. And I would draw
pictures. But it's funny when you're drowning with your
non dominant hand, you literally looks like you're like three
year old. But that's what it's unlocking in your mind is that
stage. So she's like, draw something. I'm like, what the
hell you want me to draw? She's like, well, anything like what
do you mean anything? She's like, just draw. And so I sat
there for like a minute, I'm like, just start drawing. And
then I realized I draw these four trees. And then I sat there for like a minute. I'm like just start drawing And then I realized I draw these four trees
And then I drew this road that went in the middle and this little guy and then this big black cloud of chaos
chasing it and
Then I showed her I'm like, I don't know what this means
And she observed it and she said uh, what do the four trees represent?
And she observed it and she said, uh, what are the four trees represent?
And I was just searching for four in my life. What would I have four of four kids?
And I'm like, Oh, this is super interesting. So I started to realize what it was. She's like, well, what's the road? I'm like, it's the path of life.
She's like, he was a little guy. I'm like, that's me.
What's the blackout cloud? And I'm just like, he was a little guy. I'm like, that's me. What's the black cloud? And I'm just like, chaos.
So what's interesting is I was able to formulate that my kids were here.
Maybe it gives me chills in my arms, dude.
My kids are here, there's this road and this path of life.
And there's this tornado running through the middle of it,
chasing me that's impacting them.
Now it hasn't hit them, it's just impacting them.
It's crossing through them.
And so then we would have a conversation about that. Wow. Isn't that powerful?
That is deep. Yeah, dude. She was Jedi. Absolutely. Jedi life changing, man. A powerful exercise. Yep. Yep. I actually write my,
in my gratitude journal with my left hand just to practice. There you go.
I want to be ambidextrous and I brush my teeth with my left. Yeah, dude.
It unlocks parts of your brain. Right? Absolutely does., it creates neural pathways the that crossover that normally wouldn't and so it allows you to start thinking differently and
Yeah, and I think it's good to do hard things
A lot of people shy away from things because you know, we're wired for survival
Primarily and so we don't want to do hard things that are uncomfortable
But when you force yourself to do especially early you early, you start training your brain that like,
yeah, we're gonna experience struggle.
And suffering's guaranteed, struggle's guaranteed.
And so it's the golden elixir of life.
I'm like, bring it.
I've learned how to be in that position, bring it.
Embrace it.
I love it.
Yeah, I try not to run away from my fears anymore.
I think it's important to address them
as you identify them.
Yeah, absolutely, Man. Public speaking
was a big one for me. Was it really? Yeah. Now I'm a
podcaster.
Dude. Good for you, man. Yeah, that was it. That's a big one
for a lot of people. I think. Yeah. Were you struggling with
that too?
Dude, when I so I grew up in church life from the moment I
was born, you know, my dad was Holy Ghost Pentecostal,
assemblies of God, shout them down. You know, that's the
environment that I grew up in.
So I grew up around professional communicators,
inspirational people for my whole career,
which when I ended up getting into marketing
and then personal branding and then working with
millionaires, billionaires, celebrities, athletes, epic,
and elite entrepreneurs, it was very natural for me
because that's who I spent my whole life around.
So I never had a fear of speaking, but my father did. My dad was a drug
dealer who found Jesus as simple as it is. That was his story. He
lived a life of a lot of contrast. He just one day just
walked away from it and it was done. But what's fascinating is
my dad has an eighth grade education because he dropped
out of school middle school to sell drugs at 13. So he always
had this interpretation when he would go to speak because I watched him my whole life when he'd go to
communicate. He was a minister and stuff in church. And I would
watch him just be petrified. And dude, he'd create those three
ring binders. And just like everything's highlighted, and
it's got to be perfect. And there's always a moment every
time that he was communicating publicly to 1000s of people, he
just would take the thing and just shut it.
And as soon as he did that dude, magic,
it was like everything that poured out of him was so powerful,
but sticking to the script, man, it's suffocated him. And I realized in my life,
I'm like, I want to help that version of my father.
Cause it's Dr. Jordan Pearson talks about it all the time,
rescuing your father from the belly of the well. There's a part of us as men
certainly that wants to redeem the illness and or the, you know, the
afflictions that our father brought on himself or others or us and so it's a
natural thing that we want to do. So I wanted to redeem that part and so when I
got a chance to speak when I was in ministry, this year's a natural thing that we want to do. So I wanted to redeem that part. And so when I got a chance to speak, when I was in ministry,
this year's a crazy thing about this,
I never spoke one time.
Really?
I was always behind the scenes running everything.
Wow.
And that's because yes, age and I was posturing
to be able to take things over
from an infrastructure of operations,
but I also knew I was a great communicator.
But it wasn't until Mike Kim told me,
he said, you're a great teacher.
I said, a teacher?
Like I was a 1.2 GPA college
student who fouled out twice an average C student who couldn't pass ninth grade algebra
like a teacher and he was the first one who spoke life into me in that way and gave me an
opportunity to speak and when I did I just saw the mirror of my father going like I didn't need a
script I didn't need a thing I just spoke genuinely from the heart and that proved itself to be amazing. And now, I mean, I've spoken on hundreds
of stages, hundreds of podcasts, did a Ted talk, you know, I have no fear getting up
in front of people and having a conversation, but I have found a way to do that. That's
very unique when it's with a group of people because I don't go pontificate. I saw those
people growing up, you know, think about standard televangelist.
That's what I saw.
So it's the redeemed version of that,
which I sit up there and I'll look at a group of people
and I'll just like wait 10 seconds and they're like,
is this guy having a stroke?
Like what the hell's going on?
And I just go like, so how's everybody doing?
And I'm pulsing energetically the room.
I can feel the anxiety, the uncertainty.
I can feel that someone is struggling
with a severe illness.
I can tell that someone's probably dealing
with a very intense relationship, you know, exchange.
I can tell that someone in that room's been sexually abused.
I can feel it, I can know it.
And dude, I call it out sometimes, I'm dead serious.
But that's the gifting that I grew up with
is that ability to intuitively pulse and sense the room.
So all I'm doing is I'm pulsing,
getting a confirmation on these things,
and then I start calling certain things out.
Wow. Oh yeah, dude.
Imagine calling someone out for that
and they've never told anyone.
It's happened.
Here's the thing, I don't prompt it in a way of where I go,
I know someone in this room has this. I will say something though of like, I know some of you are probably
going through some of the deepest darkest moments of your life right now. And the first thing that
I want to tell you is that you're not alone. The most horrific thing is literally scalling the walls
of hell and going through the deepest, most painful, traumatic, horrible season of your life and not feeling like anyone even cares or knows.
And when someone can be in that room
and they can pulse sense that and then call it out,
you're like, maybe God's real.
Maybe there's something,
maybe the universe has got my back.
Maybe there's something out there,
a force out there that loves me more than my mom does
that is actually caring and seeking to like be on my side.
When you can feel like a force that's way bigger
than humanity and you can even for just one moment,
1%, be like maybe this thing's got my back
because no one knows that but this dude somehow does.
It's not about me, I'm the messenger.
It's about allowing them to illuminate
that there's something greater out there.
That there's a deep basis of faith. Let's just call it,
be it a currency of faith that they can go like,
maybe I do believe that there's something that's greater that has my back.
That can change everything for somebody. So,
and then the conversations that come after always so powerful, but you know,
uh, I'm a hope dealer and a dope healer.
I just have found the way of, you know, in business,
a lot of what I do, it's pseudo.
It's like, I solve operational problems for, you know,
some of the most prominent figures in entrepreneurship
and business and entertainment.
However, how I do that is very unique.
Very.
Because it comes down to the individual
and their personal individual success
and guiding them in the right direction
and being truly a confidant.
You get three different types of people in your business,
you got confidants and those are the people
who are for you, period.
They don't care what you do,
they don't care if you're bankrupt or a billionaire,
they're for you.
And I've always had a very cherished position
with a lot of people for an extended amount of time
of where I'm behind the scenes and you would never know that I was even there.
Unless you saw me like in a picture behind them,
you would never know that that person's success was in duality of what we created
together in co-creation.
And you don't care to take credit?
Not at all, because it's, I think it's collective. It's like,
why should I take credit?
There's so many different people who have contributed their ancestors,
their great, great, great grandparents and the sacrifice
that they made are just as important as the ones that I
did. What I figured out is that I don't want to do things alone.
I'm we're in a season of Avengers. You know, it's
actually my buddy said this really well. He's like, okay,
you're gonna rock solo. Good luck because you're going
against teams of 510 15 100 people. So I'm like'm like if you want to defeat Thanos meaning if your vision is big
enough then you want to collaborate and bring people along on that journey
because Trump right now hell yeah dude dude it's a perfect example but that's
where the world is trending it's trending towards we have to find what's
common we have to find the areas of life of where we have agreeance on the right
things of where we believe the right things
so that we can take all that force of energy
and push it in the right direction.
But it's just so hard to do it alone.
And it's not that fun.
It's not that fun to lose alone.
It's not that fun to win alone.
Like I wanna win alongside the people who I believe in.
It's not fun at all.
I've taken vacation solo, they think it's amazing,
got the nicest hotel and I'm bored out of my mind.
Yeah, dude. You wanna run with people who care,
and where you're up to something that's meaningful,
and that's why I love those Avengers movies,
because you have all these unique characters
with all their unique backgrounds,
but they're all on one core mission,
that they know that they need each other to win.
And I think humanity, when they bind together,
and they go towards something, they have a rally cry,
and they identify a common enemy,
I think that's where humanity shines brightest.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Now you had an interesting relationship
with your father growing up.
Yeah.
Did you feel like making him happy was a big driver
for you growing up in your teenage years and 20s,
making him proud of you?
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, I was really afraid of my father,
and that kept me out of a lot of trouble.
There were many times where we'd be with our friends and doing stuff. And I'd be like, I'm out of here.
Cause if my dad finds out I'm here, like I'm dead.
So he did you fear-based parenting?
I think so.
I think he did the best that he knew how, you know?
Um, and my dad, his own struggles when he was younger and, and, you know, lack of
safety and all these other things and so I
Think a lot of that contributed into it
You know, he's part of a first-generation family in the US and so, you know, like they'd have conscious parenting back then
so
but at the end of the day, I think a certain level of the fear of God and
You know in my life at least I could speak for my story as a kid was actually really healthy.
Like my dad never physically did anything, you know, but there was just like this, don't screw up.
Never academically. It all had to do with character. So I think I can look back on it now and be really grateful for it.
But yeah, you know, you want a healthy balance, even if it's a 5-49, of where I trust the safety of that parental figure
more than the fear of the emotional explosions
and the tyrannical behavior.
And I think it was probably like a 80-20.
Wow.
Which is really like impacted, you know, things.
But I cherish the lessons,
but there's a level of safety there that That's just not there and that's okay.
And you had to go back and address that trauma, right?
Eventually you can't run away forever.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I've had hard tarts with my dad
and talk to him about it.
He's very apologetic.
My dad's very different.
As your parents get older,
it doesn't go for everybody,
but they soften off a bit,
see things a little bit differently.
And that was a massive fight for me too,
because my mom's Asian and a lot of Asian people use academics to further their career
But for me that wasn't what I aligned with so that was a fight for years, you know in high school and college
But now she's the biggest supporter of the podcast Wow, but it took some time to get there. Yeah, what flip for her?
She saw how passionate I was about it
I think and she realized that academics is not the only way
to get success these days.
I think it's changed a lot since our parents' generation
where college actually got you jobs and you know,
it was valuable and much cheaper.
Don't, yeah, absolutely.
It's like 40K a year now.
Oh, just no joke, dude, it's crazy.
And for what, you know?
I'd rather hire Dave Meltzer or Adley to coach me.
Yeah, totally, right? Absolutely absolutely and what about your dad?
Supported me. Yeah, he was an entrepreneur
He had a nine-to-five but he sold books on the side and did very well
So I witnessed that growing up and he was a big inspiration Wow, that's incredible
So I got to experience both which I think is important too and I'm multicultural
So I got to experience the Asian side and my dad's iron. So I got the alcoholic side. Yep. I got to
where I wanted to fit in that. Totally man. Wow. It's important
to get different perspectives. I think a lot of people grow up
in a town and they're still there. Oh, dude, absolutely. And,
you know, and my best friend's Korean. So like, what's
interesting is like he shared with me a lot about, you know,
and I'm Italian, you know, both both sides. And my dad's half British.
So my grandmother like survived World War Two bombs going off like, oh, it's a whole
deal.
Raised herself.
Her parents died when she was like under 12 years old.
Yeah.
So, so much resilience there.
I mean, that's I think what's gotten me through so much of my life is like, there is a part
that wants to continue to make her proud.
Near death experience when I was five years old, I almost drowned in a pool. Wow you remember that? Yeah oh dude that's brutal that's
like it's like hardwired in my DNA at this point. Oh yeah. What happened? So I was in a pool at a
state park and my parents you know and I got four kids so I get this they're just talking to a
couple of friends that they saw and there was actually a girl was probably 17 18 years old. I was five and she had special needs and didn't really realize
what was happening and went to you know just play and I essentially got water
boarded when I was five for about three minutes. Yeah so jumped on me and just
over and over and over and over in the water. Yeah super intense man but that
survival mechanism I think especially at that, I truly believe that it gets coded in your DNA.
Because from that point forward, I've had a no-quit,
survive at any cost, high performance type of attitude.
And so it's been a wonderful thing.
But what's so interesting, man, is I was petrified of water.
And when I was 12 years old, I remember
I was at a campsite with my grandma,
because we would go camping with her every summer
And she's like you want to go down the pool and I'm like grandma, you know the story
No, and she's like, well, why don't we just you know, she it's like exposure therapy
Just I'm gonna very slowly get you to look at the thing
You don't want to see right and we got down there and she would knit hats and scarves for kids who were under
Privileged and she would do it literally all year round and then at Christmas time
She'd give it to all these orphanages and stuff.
And she's the same amazing lady.
But we got down to the pool and she sat down and she's just knitting.
And I'm like, what am I going to do?
Just like staying here all day.
So she's like, so you're going to get in, you know, whatever.
And I'm like, I don't know.
I don't know.
And like, you just like experience that moment by moment, you know?
And then I finally like stay on the edge of the pool
and it's like I'm faced with a decision of like,
am I gonna do this or not?
And she didn't pressure me, she just was with me.
This is such an interesting concept of like holding space
for people who are going through hard things.
You don't, people have a lot of courage.
Sometimes they just need to know like,
are you gonna be there if I die?
Like, if I'm about to die, will you please help me?
And I knew she would. So finally, it's just like, screw
it. What's the worst that could happen? She's here and I just jumped in. Wow.
At 12 years old, I overcame, it overcame the greatest fear in my life.
And so what does that produce in someone when they face other challenges?
And literally that summer when I was 12, I started going, going door to door and
selling candles and just started slaying like this whole new version of me of like unlimited
possibility of optimism to confront whatever realities were in my life, to
just overcome fear became fun.
And, um, I think that was a staple to my success.
I don't know if I'd be the same person today without that experience.
So I've learned how to be immensely grateful for that.
And to also like forgive my parents, you know, I had one of my therapists who I talked to she said well you cherry-pick the story because you don't usually tell that your dad
Jumped in and saved you. Oh
He did he did Wow. Yep. And so that's always been a thing for me of like whenever I tell the story
I was but then at the end of like
My dad was the one who yes, I had a lot of struggle with but he's also the one that like in the moment that mattered
Most he was the one shut up.
So there's that's why there's such an interesting parallel in relationship.
But I believe that like, you know, uh,
fathers are the greatest representation of what can redemption can look like in someone's life.
Uh, and it doesn't have to be a me versus him thing, you know, it can be a
Let's band together and co-create redemption on both of our stories together. And so.
I love that.
I have a very similar story
because my father never showed me physical love.
He never gave me a hug.
I think the only time he did was when I was moving
out of Jersey to LA.
Wow.
And I was 20, 22.
Wow.
That was the only time he's ever hugged me,
never told me he loved me.
And then we found out at six years old,
he got diagnosed with Asperger's.
Wow. So that really messed me up dude because we found out at six years old, he got diagnosed with Asperger's. Wow.
So that really messed me up dude,
because the whole time he did love me,
he just didn't know how to show it.
Wow. You know what I mean?
So that like really got me messed up.
How did, what'd you learn from that?
Like now?
Basically that, like he just loved me so much.
He just didn't know how to express it, man.
And he had so many demons he fought. He was a drug addict and alcoholic. And I think he just got me so much. He just didn't know how to express it man, and he had so many demons
He fought yes a drug addict an alcoholic and I think he just got in his own head. Yeah, you know
It's hard to show compassion and love to others when you feel so much shame
Shame is a prison. Yeah, and it's a prison that will not allow you to
Release the thing that you want to the most and then additionally having some neurodivergent things going on
It's like that's just's just, it's a part of the puzzle
that doesn't allow you to experience what you needed to.
But what's so neat is there's always redemption, man.
Like whenever you look now back at the story,
it's like, jeez, I just wish I would have known sooner.
Like I wouldn't have maybe formulated the stories
in my head that I did, but that will serve
its intentional purpose in your life.
I believe that. It's been a big lesson because I picked it up from him and even with my head that I did, but that will serve its intentional purpose in your life. I believe that.
It's been a big lesson because I picked it up from him
and even with my fiance, I wouldn't tell her I love you
and I wouldn't hug her or kiss her or show her affection,
but I've learned how to do that now.
That's amazing, dude.
Yeah, it's valuable, dude.
Powerful.
You also went through another crazy traumatic incident
last year with the school shooting with your kids.
So they were at the school when it happened?
They were, man.
I showed up on a Monday morning
dropped my kids off at school and said, Hey, go be leaders
today. That's why I was telling them every day that I dropped
them off. And you know, what's interesting is my office is
directly across the street from the school. So I'm literally
like, you pull out and then you make a left and I pull right in
my office building. You know, that's where I used to be. And
so I dropped them off. You know, and then I was on a zoom call
this dude from Canada. And then my wife called and we
have this rule like you call twice. There's something going
on. That's a good rule. It's a very good rule. Yeah, it's huge.
Because then you always know like it's a you need to pick up.
So I pick up the phone and I'm just like, Hey, babe, what's up?
And I told the guy Hey, one second, I have this rule with
my wife. She calls twice. So I mute him, pick it up. And she's like,
babe, there's a shooting at the school. There's a shooter at the
kids school right now. And I'm like, wait, wait, hold on. I
like I'm thinking I can't even like I'm not even hearing this
correctly. And I'm like, wait, what? And she's like, there's a
shooter at Covenant. And dude, I have never felt whatever all
those body chemicals were in that moment that
hit it's like an insane surge of adrenaline and everything else I just
slammed down my computer I still had her on the phone and I ripped open my office
door and I began running down the hallway actually like shoe fell off I
was running so hard and fast that my shoe flipped off my foot and I'm just
like pushing people out of the way like in the middle of the office run back grab my shoe and I go to the elevator and I'm just like pushing people out of the way, like in the middle of the office, run back grab my shoe. And I go to the elevator and I'm just like pounding the
elevator buttons like trying to get down there as quick as possible. And I pick up the phone
again and I'm like, okay. And on that sprint though, I had like this 10 seconds of adrenaline
hit. And that was reminded this Dallas monk who spent 45 years as a psychologist, and
I was doing therapy, he gave me the greatest lesson in life. And he said, Nick, you know what?
You're gonna have life experiences,
things that are gonna happen.
And if you allow your emotions
to immediately follow your life experiences,
your belief systems are gonna be very skewed.
You're gonna see the world in a way that is untrue.
And so he said, the way that you create the grand filter
to your life to protect the greatest treasure,
which is your emotional consciousness.
So the way that you do that is life events will happen,
but you need to insert your belief systems,
then your emotions.
And that's how you truly guard your heart.
So I was reminded of that, dude.
You know, it's just like the military,
like in the greatest moment of stress,
you wanna rely on your training
and not your nature really, and stress responses.
And so sprint 10 seconds, this whole thing's going on, getting over it, pounding it, pounding, pounding.
And I pick up the phone again and I'm going to talk to my wife and it was like, what is your belief?
Like I just felt it, like what is your belief about this?
And I relied on my training because 100 therapy sessions, I mean what's so crazy to do is I stopped doing that
like all the therapy and the
intensity around that sabbatical two weeks before this happened.
So I truly believe that God prepared me for the whole moment.
And so, um,
she started crying of course. Uh, and, and she said, uh,
I hope my babies are okay. And I said,
our kids are fine. And did you know my honest belief was in that moment?
They're either dead and they're with God or they're alive.
And they're safe.
Wow.
It's one or the other.
You know, the contrast of life in those moments gets pretty crazy.
Yeah.
But I knew that either way that they were OK and pounding pounding that button gotten that thing. She's bawling her
eyes out. I'm talking through with this. And just they're
going to be okay. They're going to be okay. They're going to
be okay. Get down four floor to the first floor bolt out the
front doors. There's all these people. There's literally
police. There's helicopters. It's insanity. It's like the
where the office is. It's a police tapes already down there.
This is like 20 minutes after it happened.
Wow.
And I mean, the police were there
and took care of it in 13 minutes.
So this is about seven minutes after,
like everything was done.
But you gotta remember, like in that timeline,
it's like every second feels like an hour.
So I get down, I'm running,
I'm like sprinting as fast as I can
down to where the reunification point is.
And I see my son with his class walking down hand in hand.
And they had crossed a main road.
They were on the playground
and the shooter walked past the playground
with 70 kids on it.
What?
She could have just turned an open fire on all of them
and didn't, and still to this day, we have no idea why.
It doesn't make any sense.
Whoa.
So we truly believe that God preserved our kids that day
and protected them.
So did she shoot anyone?
She did, she killed six people.
Oh, she went inside.
She went inside.
So it was just targeted attack.
It wasn't like-
Yeah, very, very, it was targeted.
It was intentional.
Jeez.
You know, three teachers and our staff and three kids.
Wow. Third grade.
So it must've been former teachers she had to graduate from.
She didn't, you know, we've got a lot of, you know, additional information
that they don't share, like on the mainstream news and stuff.
Just because we're parents and there's a different level of complexity involvement.
But no, it's just the best way that the detectives and the FBI explain this
after like hours and hours of
answering questions and helping us and answering what they can.
Said it's as simple as this and I know it's hard to hear but pure evil showed up that day. There's no other way to describe it. This person had unique challenges and in the process of that
there was a it seems kind of like there was a former version of who she was that she wanted to take off this planet.
And so someone who's very suicidal and, you know, dealing
with these things and had nothing to do with those kids
and everything to do with like an internal rage about self
and just was taken out on others. So it's a it's a sad thing. You
know there's a certain level of empathy. My wife's father was also murdered when
she was three and this is the second time we've had to deal with this. Most
people don't have to deal with it once, I've had to deal with it twice. But I'm really
grateful to say that my kids are doing amazing. They're so resilient, dude.
Like kids are so resilient.
They're better kids today, I think, because of what happened.
And we've trained them and we've created space
and we've done a lot of therapy
and all the things that need to be done.
Yeah.
But I remember like when this happened
and the first time I had a conversation,
I'm like, our kids will march back up that hill.
The part of the civil war was fought on that hill Wow and I'm oh
there's a lot of history behind it and I'm like our kids are gonna march back
up that hill because these are the things that they overcome that create
them into champions of who they're gonna be tomorrow we're not gonna cower in
fear we're not gonna step back not gonna play defense we're gonna handle what
needs to be handled we're gonna heal and then we're gonna go on the offensive
So if my kids beat death at five and seven, what else are they gonna do?
By change the world. Absolutely a lot of parents probably pull their kids out of that school, right?
A lot less than you'd think. Oh, yeah, because now it's the safest school that you're gonna find in the whole city
It's like Fort Knox. I mean in a good way. It's not you know, it's not like you walk in and you're like, I'm walking into like, you know,
like a prison, you know, like where it's like, it's these layers and layers. It's
extremely secure. And there's very high levels of security and personnel who
are there and on all those things. So, you know, we feel great about it because of
that. And yeah, there's a lot of families who are impacted in different ways. You
know, I'm one of the people who were very lucky to say
like my kids didn't see anything.
My daughter was 10 feet away from the shooter.
Wow.
Thankfully.
Walked past her.
Yeah, I mean that she was safe.
She was basically the distance between a drywall
and you just think about that
and go like this person's coming up a hallway and my daughter is literally on the opposite
side of where she's firing so you know some auditory things like have been
really interesting for for her as she's processed those like no balloons you
know different types of things that like you just got to deal with now and be
mindful of but at the same time our reminder is always like, there were heroes that day, there are people who
love you and people who fought to make sure that everyone was
safe. But Vanderbilt was preparing for 60 casualties, or
at least injuries. Wow. And the teachers were the ones who saved
those kids lives. Really? They were fully trained. They knew
what to do in that type of scenario. Extremely trained.
Extremely. Were they armed?
The teachers?
I don't know how I, I don't think I can answer that question.
I wanna put you at legal complications.
The short answer is yes, there are staff members who,
and obviously now there's a complete
different level of security.
The person who primarily is armed was not there that day.
They're on vacation.
Oh, they weren't there.
They were not there that day on vacation.
But, you know, armed with a pistol and someone's got a rifle, you know,
that would have been a battle that probably wouldn't have gone
the direction that we wanted to.
And this guy is very fearless.
So he would have jumped right in.
But that's just a it's an unfair fight.
And so, you know, a it's an unfair fight. And so,
you know, all things are what they are. But, you know, a lot of empathy, a lot of growing, a lot of learning a lot of
understanding. But yeah,
sad, that's a fear that parents have these days, you know,
sending their kids off, and there might be shooting out of
school.
I think it's a great way for people to awaken of how evil the
world is. I think like we sometimes live in
this fantasy land, like let's care about, you know, certain
issues that don't really matter. I'm like, well, our
kids safety really matters. And there's so many preventative
measures that don't go into like the hyper politics of like, you
know, gun usage and and you know, banning firearms and all
this stuff. There's very practical things, very
practical things that every school district that
they can solve that cost 10s of 1000s of dollars, not millions
or hundreds of 1000s of dollars that can be done. And even just
training, you know, like the dude Brinks br inx. He's part of
a safety security team is a Metro here in Nashville.
And he was the guy who trained the school
and he trained schools.
He got over 750 inquiries like within the first week after.
So what's good is like these situations
as horrific as they are,
what the trend is showing is that people are becoming
more and more mindful of how important it is
to have this solved.
And dude, there's just another shooting at a kid's school
today.
What? Yes. And in Georgia. Oh my god. So I'm just, you know, my
heart's breaking for those people because I know exactly
what they're going through right now. So I'm going to find a way
to reach out to whoever I need to and to try to be a voice of
encouragement. The one thing Sean, I think that was really
interesting and hopefully people who are going through hard
things or know somebody who is that they pay attention to in this part is like we had people who would say hey
Love you praying for you or hey, we're thinking about you. We're so sorry
Let's know if we can do anything. It's the worst thing to say to somebody who's going through literally so
If you understand how the brain doesn't function under that level of stress
The the idea to even answer,
here's what I need you to do for me,
is really, really hard.
And I'm not like, again, I'm not like slamming anybody
who said that to us or to others.
I just wanna give awareness on what to do.
We had a couple of friends, one, my brother,
one of his best friends from high school.
I haven't talked to this girl in the 25 years, you know?
Like, I mean, it's crazy.
We got home after that crazy day and spending five hours waiting and making sure
that our friends and our kids kids were alive. And we showed
up and there was dinner on our front door. Wow. People who have
been through really hard, traumatic things, they know how
to serve people who are going through those because they've
been through it before and have seen what we've seen now, which
is don't ask,
just solve a problem and solve the most basic problem
that you can find.
And so when we got home and dinner was there,
we were like, our kids haven't eaten in like 10 hours,
like simple stuff, right?
And to me, I'll never forget that.
And I'll never forget what she did for our family.
Yeah.
And I hadn't even talked to her in 25 years.
Powerful.
So simple things, when people are going through hard things just solve a problem
That's really practical. Don't ask them how they can't think
So just like solve it and love on him. That's the best I've ever heard. Yeah simple
But yeah people when a loved one passes are like, how can I help? Yeah, nothing don't send flowers either
No, it sounds so crazy
And my grandmother taught me this after she lost her son
She says we had so many flowers that it like dropped like
flowers traumatized me because there were so many flowers just solve a simple
problem right just so simple and it shows because the person who did it I
hadn't talked to in 25 years yeah so again people just know there's a
there's a deepness there that they just know how to serve in
that moment.
And so that's what I'm going to be looking to do tonight is how can I help those people
who are going through a lot of stuff.
I love it, Nick.
Any final messages?
Anything you want to get off your chest before we wrap up?
Dude, it's my only consistent one that I like to tell people, which is if you want to change
the world, encourage five people a day.
People are starving for a sense of encouragement.
And it's such a simple thing that we can do.
And so that's my story I'm sticking to, brother.
We'll link your socials below.
Thanks for coming on, man.
Thanks, man.
Appreciate you, bro.
Much love, man.
Thank you.
See you next time.
Bye.