Digital Social Hour - Surviving Prison, Importance of Masterminds and Losing Everything Multiple Times | Ryan Stewman DSH #247
Episode Date: January 26, 2024On today's episode of Digital Social Hour, Ryan Stewman opens up about losing everything multiple times, the importance of networking and masterminds and what it was like inside of prison. APPLY TO... BE ON THE PODCAST: https://forms.gle/qXvENTeurx7Xn8Ci9 BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com SPONSORS: Opus Pro: https://www.opus.pro/?via=DSH Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
of livestock and stuff because of this.
That's awesome.
So are you selling the livestock too?
No.
Well, actually, we're about to sell the cows.
We raise Wagyu,
and we're actually sending them next week to the market
because the price of beef is through the roof, right?
Yeah.
How much can you get from one cow?
They're running about $3,800 right now.
For one cow?
So that's just to send the cow in.
You could send 100 cows and make $380,000?
Yeah.
Holy crap.
Welcome back, guys. We're here on the digital social hour. Got with me an amazing
guest, someone I've been trying to get on for a while. Ryan Steumann in the building. Hey,
what's up, man? Thanks for having me. Absolutely, man. What you been up to lately? I know you're
with your mastermind, your courses, like all that stuff. I'm up to everything. But the thing I've
been doing the most of lately is working on building and flipping ranches, believe it or not.
Ranches.
So yeah, in real estate, I've been doing this for 20 years.
And in real estate, you go through kind of a progression.
You start out flipping maybe contracts to people for $1,000 or $2,000 a pop.
Then you get a little money behind you, and you might flip a house and make $10,000 or
$30,000 or $50,000.
And then that gets boring. Right. And then you, uh, I started
flipping raw land where we can make, you know, usually you can make five figures on a flip,
six figures to seven figures on raw land. Cause if I have a 5,000 square foot home and I renovate
it, I might be able to add 10 or $20 a square foot to it, spread that out over 5,000. We're
talking 20,000, $30,000. right? But with a ranch, I can go pick
up a thousand acres for a couple of grand market up to 5,000 an acre, put a road on it, something
like that. That's inexpensive. And now I'm selling a thousand times thousands of dollars. So we make
hundreds of thousands and millions that way. And right now, a lot of people are worried about the
state of the economy, whether we're going to go to war and everything else. So I've found a place an hour and a half from Dallas where I live. And in Dallas, if you're anywhere outside of DFW,
if you're trying to find an acre of land, it's $25,000 minimum. But right across the Red River
in Oklahoma, where it's beautiful, I can get them for five to $10,000 an acre. And then I can build
stuff on them. So it's actually been pretty lucrative, fun side hustle. And now we're up to like 150 cattle.
We've got 200 and something elk.
I've got a hell of a lot of livestock and stuff because of this.
That's awesome.
So are you selling the livestock too?
No.
Well, actually, we're about to sell the cows.
We raise Wagyu.
And we're actually sending them next week to the market
because the price of beef is through the roof right now.
How much can you get from one cow?
They're running about $3,800 right now. For bucks right now so that's just to send the cow in so you could
send 100 cows and make 380 grand yeah holy no process it down think how much a wagyu steak
costs though yeah you know you run up the strip here and grab one at any of these steakhouses
and you're paying 125 150 for that steak so huge markup once the butcher gets a hold of it and everything else.
Wow. Yeah. You're not the first person that told me about this land flipping. I think Cole Hatter
is doing it too. He mentioned he made seven. I was with him yesterday and he just made $4
million on an entitlement deal where all he did was pay the legal fees he said was $400,000
to cover the entitlement. So land is where it's at for sure.
Wow. So how do you go about buying land? Is there a site or do you have to go through an agent?
Well, funny story. So I bought my ranch, the Caddo Ridge Ranch, and I did a creative financing deal
with the owner. He wanted 2.75 million. I said, let me give you two and a half million. I'll give
you 500 cash. I'll pay you on a two-year note. Have you paid off? So I'll pay you monthly
every month for two years carried at 0% interest. And at first he was like, well, I want some
interest. I was like, look, you can keep your cattle there. You can keep your horses there.
Your, your guys can just treat it as if it's your own. I'm going to be back in Dallas most of the
time anyway. So treat it as if you're there. I need somebody to run the ranch anyhow. And so
about two or three months into running this place, I poured a road and built bridges and all this stuff
to be able to cross the creeks through there.
Wow.
And spent like half a million dollars renovating it,
making it even better.
Dang.
Dug lakes deeper.
I've got 14 lakes.
I made a place where we can have a good time,
but at the end of the world happens, we got food.
Oh, a bunker?
Yeah, we got everything.
A house, a storm shelter, barns, everything.
And so he comes up to me and he says i really i've been watching your social media but this is the power
of social media it's just a um a guy that's in the middle of nowhere oklahoma okay and he says
i've been watching your social media because i looked up who you were to make sure you could
pay the bills on this ranch deal that we're doing. He goes, I really like what
you're saying. You know, a lot of people with money in Dallas, I know a lot of farmers with
land out here. I know land rich, money, poor people, you know, cash rich land, poor people,
let's do something together. Yeah. So we went and bought a ranch that was 1200 acres and we put
a hundred thousand dollars down. What I'll do is I'll go get a contract on the property for six or seven months,
which is normal in a land deal. So I got six or seven months to market it before I even got to
buy it. Wow. And I'll say, Sean, you want a ranch? I'll pour you a road, dig you lakes,
whatever you want. We'll put it all in the final bill that you take to your bank or that we own
or finance or whatever. That's amazing, man. Seems like a great opportunity. Yeah. Like I said,
it's fun. I get to take my kids out to play with cows now and fish and you know my friends go hunting shooting pigs on my ranch all the time so is
that big yeah it's big i have 400 acres on my ranch holy crap that's yeah it's a good size
take you about two and a half hours to get around the whole thing just to walk it you don't want a
four-wheeler oh drive it oh damn that's just huge wow one thing i really admire about you is how
open you are with people.
You're open about your past.
You're also open about making money and losing it again four times, right?
At least.
Yeah.
And I just experienced that last year.
I thought I was invincible, right?
But it seems like when you have these high highs, there's some low lows coming, right?
Yeah. I call that the force of average, Sean.
For audience simulation here,
let's assume this blue planet that we're on is in the black skies around it.
It's like a server, like with Google,
and the little blue light that comes on
on each one of those servers.
You know what I'm talking about?
So let's assume that maybe we're in a simulation,
and if we were in some sort of simulation,
we'd have to have an algorithm
that managed the software that runs the simulation, right? AI and all this other stuff, much like meta or Google or anything else.
I call that algorithm that runs this planet, the force of average. And so if you're a homeless
person on the street here, people will give you a free hamburger. Starbucks might give you free
coffee. The city will offer you free shelter. And I'm not saying that's an easy life or that
some people don't have whatever excuses or instances in their life but society will try to do anything to promote
you to go from homeless or substandard just to be an average right uh when you're average they try
to get you in debt and keep you there you know get that job for 80 grand a year and they go get
you a car payment a mortgage have two kids and tax bill, and all this other stuff, right? It just tries to, man, you can never take that risk because now you're locked
into debt and slavery to banks, right? But for those guys like you and I, we push for greatness.
And when we push for greatness, the force of average has a magnetic pull, a gravitational
force to try to get us to stop chasing greatness and go back to average. Sometimes that's divorce.
Sometimes that's losing all of our money. And it's a test to see if we really want it. But the force
of average is our enemy. And if you have an enemy, you have to understand what its weapon is, right?
In the art of war, it says, know thy enemy, and then pick out its most powerful play that it can
make. And so the force of average, its job is to distract us. It keeps us distracted
at all times. Here's this investment. Oh, here's this new thing that you might be able to do.
Here's another shiny diamond that you can chase that's going to take you away from the main
diamond that was paying for the shiny ones anyway. And that force of average distracts you. But we
humans, we're born with a superpower. It's focus, right? We're born with it. And when I i say focus i don't mean the ability to stare at something i mean the ability to have a vision
and the faith to have action to make that vision a reality like focus you know when you first started
uh doing the jersey thing i know you were dming me all the time and i know you were dming thousands
of people let's build a jersey together dude you were focused and in the zone yeah i bet sometimes
you wish you could channel that energy back right for? For sure. I know I do too. There were nights when
I didn't sleep till three in the morning, then I wake up at five ready to go again. I was so
jazzed to be an entrepreneur. I miss that, right? But everything I focus on is now a reality.
Right. And the force of average knows that. So it tries to keep us distracted to where we don't
have to go through that. That's what we go through these ups and downs. But I've got four things that I focus on every day. That's been able to keep me
in a linear direction as opposed to going up and down. And that's a grateful mindset,
my genetics, health and fitness, my grind, which is my job, making the money and everything else.
And then the group of people I surround myself with. And if I'll focus on those four things
every day, I have
a dollar amount I have to make in my business. I have a time that I have to invest in my family
and friends. I have time that I have to invest in the gym. And then the mindset of listening to
books, podcasts, conversations that I've had to be grateful. I'll focus. I even have a gamification
in my phone, how I do this. We call it the G code, but I, and, and, and I've been doing it for a long
time, but that's allowed me to avoid those lows because I get right it the G code, but I, and, and, and I've been doing it for a long time,
but that's allowed me to avoid those lows because I get right back the next day focused on what
matters most. I really love what you said about focus. Cause that's what got me to where I was.
Right. Absolutely. And then I started investing in all these industries. I had no experience in
all these shiny objects lost at all. Right. And if I just focused on what I was doing,
I wouldn't be in that situation. It happens. That's the force of average. That's at its finest. Yeah. Right. It's a, Hey, look at
all these other things that, and it makes you think, Oh, you'll get even richer or, Oh, you'll
be even more dialed into this many things. And it's all a joke. Yeah. I I'll never invest in
a restaurant again. I can tell you that. And people ask me all the time. They say, well,
what are you working on? What are you excited? What's next for you, man? We're just getting better at the same thing we've been doing
for 13 years. That's all. Sales, right? Because I know better, right? It's sales. So what we do
is what I do specifically with our Apex program is the sales is like the sexy part of it. The
get money is the best part. But what we're really trying to do is help entrepreneurs get money so
they can become the greatest version of yourself. You got to get money first. It goes God, air, money. And everybody else says,
oh no, it's family, blah, blah, blah. Your family will starve and die if you don't have money.
It can't be that way. In the hierarchy of needs as a human being, in America at least,
it has to be that way. And so when you start focusing, now it doesn't mean that it's money
over family, but my wife and I have an agreement. If I got to go make money for the family, I might miss a birthday.
You know, something might come.
It doesn't happen often, but something like one time I had to go to an event with Ed Milet
on my son's birthday.
It was the first time that I ever missed his birthday.
But it's like, hey, money calls.
These people pay good money.
This is good social media content and everything else.
I got to go.
And that's how we're able to pay for this elaborate birthday that I'm about to miss. And so when you get focused on making the money,
what happens is it takes money to make you a better person. You and I, we've invested millions
of dollars in ourselves, not in our businesses, but going to events. I've seen you at events for
years, Sean. And I know that if I paid money to be there and you paid money to be there,
I know you're investing in yourself. I seen you in multiple masterminds
over the years that I pay as well as you. So, you know, investing in yourself in the same with
your health and fitness, right? And good food costs more money. Yeah. Health supplements cost
money. I buy stuff from Andy for sell over first form and I probably spend $300 a month on
supplements and protein bars and
stuff like that for it, right? And sure, that replaces some meals and junk food that I wouldn't
eat otherwise, but still, that's expensive for a lot of people, you know? And then if you take
hormones or peptides, you might be talking another $500 or $600 a month, right? But if you don't make
money, you can't fight the aging process with those things to get ahead. So that's what we do.
We help people figure out how to get the. So that's what we do. We
help people figure out how to get the money, sales, marketing, whatever the case. And then we say,
now let us show you how to use that money to have the greatest life possible. I love that. And
you're teaching tens of thousands of people, right? Yeah. We got 3000 members right now,
but yes, we've had over. So last in July, we broke our hundred thousandth customer.
That's insane. So, and that's over a 13 year period.
Incredible.
And your top 1% of students,
what character traits are you noticing
that they have in common?
They all wake up early.
They all go to the gym.
They all spend time with their significant others.
They're all married.
Not all of them have kids, but they're all married.
They all spend time with their significant others.
Like, so they invest in family, business,
they're in their health. They're all balanced on the same thing. So they invest in family, business, and their health.
They're all balanced on the same thing, and they're always investing in themselves.
Sometimes it might be an investment like real estate or a car for themselves.
Sometimes it might be a seminar.
They're always reading books.
So it's the same traits that you and I have, right?
The exact same traits.
Take care of yourself.
Take care of your mind.
Take care of your business.
Yeah.
And on the other end, when you see people quitting, what do you think leads to that decision?
You know, the level you quit at is the highest level you will ever achieve in life.
And so many people don't realize that the force of average wants you to quit because then you're
back to average and you go get that job. It's a test. How many times, let me ask you,
as an entrepreneur, how long you've been an entrepreneur full-time? Probably eight years. Okay. I knew it had been a while. How many times, let me ask you, as an entrepreneur, how long have you been an entrepreneur full-time?
Probably eight years.
Okay, I knew it had been a while.
How many times in eight years have you said,
f*** it, I'm getting a job?
Never.
Never?
You never thought that ever?
No.
Oh, dude, I think it every other day.
Oh, you do?
I'm a salesman.
I know I can go make money selling anything, mortgages, real estate.
It just wouldn't be enough and it wouldn't be fulfilling.
Every time, you know, and then I'll get a DM in my inbox.
It's like, dude, thanks to you, I got out out of prison i changed my life and i own a business now i'm like all
right dude no job today but but man i'm just being honest i want to quit all the time really you know
every morning that i go to the gym i've been going to the gym for 23 years every morning that i go to
the gym the first thing that i wake up i go to the gym early in the morning first thing i wake up is
like how can i text my trainer and get out of this?
The first thought that goes through my mind.
Even to this day?
Even today, 23 years later.
Wow.
And you think by now it'd be this habit that I love, and I love the results of it,
and I love how I feel when I leave the gym, but I hate that stuff.
Right.
And every morning, the first excuse pops into my mind.
And same thing with work.
I can take the day off.
I've got money.
I've got employees that
can do stuff i've got all these things going for me i can just just chill for the day play video
games or whatever right yeah and i'm always thinking this so i have to fight it constantly
you know anytime that you have a bad day or bad months you know if i work for somebody i wouldn't
have to deal with all this pressure and again it's just that voice in my head but every time i've got
to be hey you know what there's a dm that slides in it's like man we need people
like you it's like yeah we do i'll get back after it i guess when you say it that way i've probably
had some thoughts but i never would take action on it you know what i mean oh i got two felonies
and uh and have never had a w-2 salary job my entire life. I don't know that anybody gave me a job.
I just have to figure out another lane to drive in.
How long were you in jail?
Three years.
I did state and federal time.
And for $200 worth of, I spent 12 years of my life on parole,
pretrial, probation, and imprisonment.
Wow.
They caught it like you just had in your pocket.
Oh man, you know, I've got a great story. I called a hooker over one night and I was 19 years old. I called a
hooker over one night and went back in the bedroom and I did sell that just being truthful here,
but I was almost out. It was Friday. I'd sold everything. She came over at the end of the night,
had a little bit left over, but I had like scales and paraphernalia right i reached over to do this
line i i was not a user so i reached over to do this line because i'm about to have sex with this
chick and i guess i passed out overdosed and they end up bringing me back to life with those little
shockers and nepinephrine or something like that i don't know i was out right and i just hear the
story my roommate was telling me and then they found the in my room and they found a pistol which it was actually legal the gun because i'm i'm living by myself
and you know all this stuff but mix it with and that takes it to a whole nother level right end
up doing two years of my life in prison and then uh five seven years later after i get out and and
get my life together the police think i'm selling really i'm my life together, the police think I'm selling. Really, I'm doing real estate.
But the police think I'm selling.
I'm back in the same little town.
And there's no way he can get out of prison and be living like this.
He's up to something.
They kick in the door of my house.
They don't find.
But what they did find was another gun.
I like guns and not anymore.
If anybody's listening, I don't like them anymore.
I learned my lesson the second time.
But they found a gun and then they sent me to federal prison for 15 months. did they have a warrant uh yeah yeah but it's pretty easy to get a warrant
hey he's a felon he's doing this we suspect he's got this in there he's known for doing this oh
yeah i'll sign off the warrant they went the same judge signed that warrant seven years later that
sentenced me to prison so it was easy to know to go to that judge sounds pretty good yeah maybe
i mean i wasn't up to anything good
the second time, but God doesn't make mistakes. I was with the wrong people. And so I needed to
be placed in prison and I helped a lot of people in prison. I taught them how to clean up their
money and have real hustles. Like you guys are flipping grams and teach you houses and you don't
need any money to do this. Right. And we got time to talk about it. And so that was probably where I did my first seminar
would be in prison if I had to like dial it back to where like,
where did you start teaching people this stuff?
That's where it all started.
It would be in federal prison.
But when I walked in a millionaire,
walked out 15 months later with 25, maybe $50 to my name
and had to live in a halfway house.
My wife divorced me, ran off with the dude
that owned the landscape company that mowed all
the yards of the rent houses i own like crazy wait so where'd all the money go when you were
in prison she sold she she divorced me sent papers and this was the note uh i'm running away with
justin and i'm leaving you and if you don't sign these divorce papers giving everything to me
then i will just burn all this stuff down and spend it. By the time you get
out, I got a year anyway. Whoa. So at that point, what am I going to do? I'm locked up. There's,
I have no family, no nothing. I'm like literally nothing I can do. So,
okay, cool. You know, here's this, I'll just start all over. But here's what I know when I
walked out of prison that day, July 15th, 2008, I knew two things that this was rock bottom, $50, not even a bank account,
not a car, not even the, I had borrowed clothes from other inmates to get the hell out of their
bad situation, going in to live in a halfway house, meaning nobody even wants to take me
into their residence. And, and I did all this time by myself. A lot of people didn't know I was gone
because I told them I was moving to another state to go do mortgages elsewhere. Cause I was embarrassed.
You know, my church people didn't know that I was going away or anything like that. I kept it a
secret. So I couldn't really ask for help. Hey, can I move in with you? What happened? You were
a millionaire. We kind of went to prison. What? No, you can't come with me. I have kids, right?
I already knew what was going to happen. And, and, but i knew that that was rock bottom and i had
got it once i'd already had it once so i knew i could if i i've had a taste of success yeah so if
i just do that same thing again i'll be able to get it again and i'll be able to prove to everybody
but that that didn't dictate who i was and that's exactly what happened man which i'm still pushing
to try to prove that point today love it man how tough was it on you mentally being in prison
because you probably had some life or death situations in there right yeah so uh i start i suffer still
this day from major ptsd from being in there because it's a you're constantly and first of all
i didn't look in there like i look out here i i weighed probably 140 maybe 150 pounds the first
time the second target maybe i weighed 180 white skinny young like i'm
everything that they love you know and uh and and not for like necessarily even on the sexual side
but someone to exploit or whatever but here's the cool thing my whole life unintentionally i've lived
by these core values and and i didn't snitch on anybody and i also didn't owe money on the streets
so when i went in there to do my time there there wasn't, oh, he snitched on Sean,
so let's get him.
He's a snitch.
Or, oh, he touched kids.
Let's get him.
He's a chummo.
Or none of these things.
It was just like he in here doing his own time for his own stuff,
leave him alone kind of.
He's a short-timer kind of a thing.
So I got in a few fights, but nothing major.
And when I went to the federal, well, part of the problem was I had to explain this story
and go through this process like six or seven different times in the state system
because I would get in a fight and they would move me to another unit.
Then I would get in a fight and they would move me to another unit.
I didn't start fights, right?
I'm just trying to stay alive.
But you see the movies when someone's walking down the run in prison
and they're like, oh, fresh meat or whatever, right?
I had to do that seven different times
and explain why I'm here, who I am to a celly seven different times.
I move into different units like, man, a nightmare.
You think once of going through that shock of knowing
which one of these dudes is going to try to kick me or have sex with me
or whatever the case may be as a young man.
Because a lot of these guys will get up here and tell you oh it was tough blah blah
it's like dude i'm just a normal guy and i'm putting two bad situations having to deal with
this stuff federal prison is completely different though i'm there was good people in there oh yeah
the feds try to silence good people i don't know if you've noticed that lately but i have uh that's
a real thing in there and a lot of these guys guys been locked up pre-social media so you meet people that were you know the senator's aid that knows
too much or the cia operative that that went rogue that they needed to silence and lock away and
military dudes that that were sentenced for for somebody but they're still uh they did it for the
government but how they did it wasn't right so So they put them in these. So it was just a whole different, a lot of white collar guys.
You know, it's funny.
They would, I would see guys that would get caught with meth.
That was the big thing.
A lot of Hispanic and white dudes were selling meth that were in the unit that I was in.
These guys get caught with a couple hundred dollars worth of meth and end up doing 10,
15 years of their life.
Meanwhile, these white collar dudes are still in two,
$3 million and getting three or four years.
I'm like,
man,
y'all are in the wrong day.
Y'all need to talk to each other.
You still talk to anyone from prison.
So,
uh,
one day in early 2008,
I get a knock on myself and I look and it's this giant Mexican dude with
tattoos all over his face like the for the
game clearly right and my cell he goes i don't know what you did but don't bring that stuff in
here right i don't know what i did either and he goes hey wawa wants to see you who's that he goes
follow me so i lived in this seven building and i didn't really go upstairs because i had no business
going upstairs i didn't live up there no need to no business going upstairs. I didn't live up there. No need to go up there. Right. And the guard's not up there. So I don't
know what the hell goes on up there. I get up there, dude. They're smoking weed up there.
They got cell phones, brand new Nike Air Max Rolexes on in prison. Rolexes. They are living
a completely different life than I am. And in floor one is different than floor two. Right.
And I go down to the back of the cell. First of of all i told you i didn't snitch on anybody when i wound up in federal prison later
the dudes that i sold for were both in federal prison oh yeah and they were like hey man he's
a good dude he kept his mouth shut and went and did his time for us what are you doing back here
i thought you cleaned up your life kind of a thing right like i did you're not gonna believe this so the word gets
around that i cleaned my life up so this guy wawa i go and meet him and uh he goes i've got seven
years left on my sentence and i need to figure out how to get out of here and never come back
i've been in here for 17 years they killed my brother on death row. My father's dead. I got to, you know, and he's the gang leader, like the shot caller.
And I'm like, well, let's buy some real estate.
You got money out there or whatever, right?
So I'm teaching his guys how to do these things.
Well, seven years later, he sends me a letter to my office or an email to my office.
And he says, hey, I'm out.
Will you hire me?
We own houses life
is good we did exactly as you told us to and uh we cleaned our lives up our parents have money now
our aunts and uncles have money now that would clean records and everything else he goes i just
need a job i'm on parole i'll come work for you i was like oh hell no man you're like the
for the cartel and stuff you are not gonna come work for me he goes seriously i'll do it for
minimum wage i'll actually pay you the money back at the end of the week if you want it and look i
had like maybe one employee at the time and i don't know how to hire people and i needed help
desperately so i'm like all right yeah come on in right i'm like you'll give me my money back okay
that sounds like a great job i get free labor i love it but he was just returning the favor he
was grateful for what i'd done for him well Well, flash forward. That was nine and a half years ago. That dude's the COO of my companies.
He runs everything. The dude's brilliant. And, and, uh, taught him like he went in prison before
Google and that guy can build websites like Russell Brunson. I mean, just unreal is dedication
and focus and patience to being able to do stuff. And the guy was in there for 20 tons of.
Holy. So he knows how to manage logistics. He knows how to manage stuff. And the guy was in there for 20 tons of, so he knows how to
manage logistics. He knows how to manage people. He knows how to, right. That's a, that's a real
operation. If you've ever sold an ounce of, you know, 20 tons is an operation that's boats and
trucks and logistics and management and middle management, uh, in the cartel setting. So dude,
he works really great for, for people. And he's gone through a bunch of therapy and treatment to get over his ptsd and stuff he's like this is my best friend that's
amazing man so for you and him i feel like those are rare stories i feel like a majority people
coming out of prison they end up worse right yes yes there's few you know there's there's a lot of
people you know have felons that have gotten locked up. They just don't talk about it publicly.
There's a lot of influencers that are good people that are very well-known business people
that did time a long time ago like myself.
This is 20 years ago we're talking about.
But Wes Watson is a great example of somebody who's turned their life around,
come out of prison.
I believe Marcus Barney is telling everybody he's a felon now.
I think he kept that
quiet before, but I noticed he's been talking about it on Instagram saying here, this is what
can happen after prison and stuff. So we're starting to see that because here's what happened.
Here's the reason we went to prison. Andre Norman says it the best. He says, you know,
we all have childhood trauma. And if you don't heal it at nine, it's cute. At 14, it's a crime.
You're not going to jail for guns and you're going to jail because you need attention.
This is how you get attention. You're not going and you got to heal that trauma.
And so, you know, there's, there's a lot of us now that, that when we went to prison,
there was no Ryan Stumann. There was no Wes Watson. There wasn't anybody out there that could,
that we could look up to and go, that guy's been to prison, and he's winning. I can do it too. There was none of that. And now we get an opportunity to be that
for a small amount. And these are people that need us the most because these are criminals.
If we can keep somebody from being selling, putting on the streets, if we can get somebody
like that to turn their life around, America just becomes a greater country.
I love that. Yeah. You mentioned childhood trauma. I saw your parents got divorced at a young age, right? Yeah. So did you experience some, some big trauma there? Yeah. So I was
adopted at age seven. So my mom and dad split and my stepdad adopted me. And I mean, I have a metal
rod in my wrist. My hand doesn't move because of a fight that we got into well seven he was a big dude no I was yeah he adopted me when I was seven uh he's still married
to my mom now okay but yeah it was uh it was rough but uh you know rough childhood being adopted
changing your identity being born one name and now having another name and and what's crazy is my
stepdad that adopted me, he was adopted.
So he don't really know who he is really either, if you think about it, right? And I'm pretty sure
his dad was adopted too. I met his dad a time or two, and I believe that was his story too. Maybe
not. I might be exaggerating one generation, but then I adopted a kid too. So I had to sit down
with my son, Asher, when I adopted him in 2020. and I said, look, son, we changed your name.
It happened to me too.
But here's what I know.
We may not know where we came from or who we really are, but I have personally made
a name for our last name, and it's your job to carry it on to the next level.
And nobody explained that to me, and I'm explaining it to you now, son.
And so it's crazy to think that he's third or fourth generation adopted extra stuman yeah
like none of us no no males really have that name my dad's dad's dad his dad that adopted him's dad
that's a if you look it up there's maybe one or two people on the internet or facebook or instagram
with this name with stuman it's not a common name like you would think it sounds very common
it's not very common at all that's great you. It sounds like a name you hear like Smith or Johnson, but it's
really not. If you go look on Facebook, there's very few people with that name. Wow, that's funny.
I was shocked too because I thought it was just a very common name, but it's really not. Yeah,
man, this has been super enlightening, powerful messaging. Anything you want to close off with
or promote? Yeah, if you want to fight that force of average and you
want to stop the ups and downs in life, you can go to daily G code, daily G code.com. It's free.
I'm not going to email you. I don't have an upsell. I don't have a free course or a paid course to
sell you on that. It's a tool I use to keep score every day with what I focus on. And right now I'm
at like 5,200 points at four points a day.
That's like 1900 days if I've done my math right. So, so I've been at this, no, I'm sorry. It's
903 days. I've been at this for a very long time. It's absolutely changed my life. It's changed
15,000 other people's lives too. So just go to daily gcode.com and sign up for that. And then
you can follow me on social media at hardcore closer
on Instagram and real Ryan Steumann with the blue check on Facebook. Lots of imposters. There are
lots of Steumann's on Facebook. They're me and somebody trying to get Bitcoin out of people.
Thanks for coming on, Ryan. Dude, thanks for having me. Awesome studio, man. I love it here.
Yeah. Thanks for watching guys. And I'll see you next time.