Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - I showed up. What happened next changed everything...
Episode Date: August 26, 2025Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyJoin our community of fearless leaders in search of unreasonab...le outcomes...Want to become a FEARLESS entrepreneur and leader? Go here: https://www.findingpeak.comWatch on YouTube: https://link.ryanhanley.com/youtubeHanley reflects on his recent trip to Greenville, South Carolina, where he attended Mick Hunt's Lead Loud series leadership event.He emphasizes the importance of showing up for friends and loved ones, sharing insights from notable speakers like Chris Voss, Nick Nanton, and Les Brown.The discussion revolves around intentionality in effort, embracing uniqueness, and finding fulfillment through helping others.Ryan encourages listeners to cultivate meaningful relationships and be present for those who matter in their lives.Episodes You Might EnjoyFrom $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideMagai: All-in-One AI for Professionals: https://link.ryanhanley.com/magaiTaplio • Grow Your Personal Brand On LinkedIn: https://link.ryanhanley.com/taplioKit: Email-First Operating System for Creators (formerly ConvertKit): https://link.ryanhanley.com/kit--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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What is up, guys?
we have a very unique episode for you today.
I had backstage kind of VIP access to an event last week run by a buddy of mine, Mick Hunt,
and that allowed me to spend time with Damon John, Les Brown, Chris Voss, among many others.
And on the way home from that event, I recorded into an Instagram live my biggest takeaways.
And what I wanted to do was share with you those takeaways here on the podcast because what ended up coming out the other side, I thought, was while stream of consciousness, a kind of breakdown of what it means to actually be successful when you go behind the curtain, right?
There's advice that's given to the audience and there is what's talked about behind the curtain back in the green room before these individuals go on stage.
and I wanted to give that to you as I was there interacting with them,
talking about my own business, sharing ideas.
It was absolutely incredible.
Huge props for Mick Hunt and his lead loud series.
So the visual here is going to be less than quality.
But you can, you know, there is a visual.
But what I hope even if you're watching on YouTube is that you take away the audio
and the major message from this episode.
Guys, I love you for being here.
I appreciate you for being here.
and if you enjoy these kind of stream of consciousness type episodes,
the best way to get more of them is to follow me on Instagram.
I have a link below.
I do a live about twice a week now.
Just pop on a live.
It's usually in the evening, talk through a major idea,
something that I worked with with with a client
or something that happened in my company, Lenkora.
And we kind of break those concepts down live, answer questions, Q&A.
If you enjoy that format, head over to Instagram.
And then versions of that that end up coming out in a way
that I think works for you here on the show.
I'm going to post for the podcast.
So love you for being here.
With that, I'm going to get out.
And again, I apologize for the visuals
if you're watching on YouTube.
If it offends you so much,
scroll down, there'll be a link.
You can catch the episode via all the audio podcast platforms as well.
All right, I'm out of here.
I'll catch you on the flip side.
Peace.
What is up, guys?
I am driving from Greenville, South Carolina,
back to Charleston.
I was just in Greenville for the very first time, absolutely lovely town.
Just nice people, beautiful, friendly.
You're walking down the street.
People are passing you, making eye contact, saying hello, how are you, random people,
you're never going to see again.
It's just wonderful.
Greenville's wonderful.
So why was I in Greenville?
Every year I go to Charleston because my father has a condo in the outside of Charleston.
area and I bring my boys down and we do like a nice little beak and the beach and all this kind of stuff.
My buddy Mick Hunt, infamous producer of the Mick Unplugged podcast, had his Lead Loud leadership
series event in Greenville.
It was about three hours from Charleston.
And because I was going to be down here and the event date was the same week as I was going to be
down here, I decided to swing over for a day and a half to spend.
time with some of my friends and be part of this series which was absolutely phenomenal
make was on a hell of a show his network is so dialed people that he had there were incredible
chris boss nicknettin less brown demon john just wonderful and more and so many more just
just a wonderful wonderful lineup of people who just really pushed boundaries it got me thinking
about so much of what I do every day, how we show up in the world, how we want to show up,
who we show up for, really important.
And I got to spend time with a few friends that, you know, you just don't get to spend
enough time with people.
You know, they live in other places.
They don't live near you.
And, you know, Chris Paradiso, Darren Ramos, Taryn Moore, meet some new friends that I,
you know, hadn't ever met before, incredible people.
and so it was worth a trip
wonderful time
and I just wanted to share
some of the things that I took away
for this event that I thought were really important
I'm not going to spend too much time
looking at the camera so you guys want to ask questions
or whatever like I'm driving so it would be inappropriate
for me to be staring at the camera
I've got to keep my eyes on the road
so I'm not going to spend really
I'm not going to look at the comments or whatever I'll answer
whatever questions you have maybe on a future live
or I'll look through any comments
so if you have any questions
on whatever leave them I'll get to the
after it, but just for versus
the safety and the fact that it would be completely
irresponsible for me to be staring at my phone with driving,
I'm not going to look at the phone, I'm just going to
keep driving, but I want to share
with you guys, and mostly for myself.
So this is a very selfish live that I'm
doing right now. I just sitting in a car by myself,
I got two and a half hours ahead of me.
And I just couldn't get
some of these thoughts out of my head and
figure out if I can help any of you guys
get to you guys thinking that's wonderful, but
mostly I just wanted to capture it from myself
before I lost. The first thing,
that I was how important it is to show up, right?
My friend, my very good friend,
Mick Haunt, is doing an event.
I could not show up, and would he still be to my buddy?
Yes, he would.
I'm in South Carolina,
and it just so happens,
that he's having an event in South Carolina,
where he lives,
in South Carolina,
the same week that I'm going to be in South Carolina.
And if any of you watching, you don't know,
I live in New York.
It's important to show up for you.
your friends. It's important to show up. People give lip service to being friends, being buddies,
being bros, bras, whatever you call each other. But who shows up? And look, I'm not always the best.
I try the best I can. I try to show as much I can and no one's perfect. It's right. I got two young
kids. I got obligations. I got things that I got to do. I got my own business that I have to run.
It's like we can't show up for everything. But when you can, you need to show up.
As often as you possibly can, for the people that matter to you, for the relationships that matter to you.
And this is something I think I need to get better at.
I can easily get lost in my own work in particular, in my own life for sure.
Excuse away different things that I feel like I should be going to, people who I should be supporting,
because I'm busy or the kids got something, whatever.
And I think we all have to look in a mirror and ask ourselves,
would you want that person to show up for you?
And if the answer is no, then you shouldn't even be considering.
If you don't wouldn't care if that person showed up for you,
then don't even think about it.
Hell yes or no, right?
But if it would matter to you that that person showed up for you,
you need to show the fuck up for that.
Or you shouldn't, or you do not deserve to be bothered when they don't.
Right? We all want people to show up for our shit, but then we never want to make the time.
And, well, I don't, well, I wouldn't love to think that I'm that kind of person.
I think it's important to look in the mirror and make sure that if that's who you want to be, the kind of person who shows up as often as you can.
You need to do that.
Even if it's inconvenient, even if it is a three-hour and 15-minute drive across a state that you don't know anything about, that away from your family,
Because your buddy's putting on an event and it's important to him and it's a wonderful event even if they would still be your buddy if you didn't show up
Showing up matters
Showing up matters a lot more than I think we give a credit
I know for a long time
I probably didn't give showing up enough credit, but at 44 going on 45
Looking at the relationships in my own life that matter
looking at the type of life that I want to live moving forward.
I just, I look at the idea, I look at showing up and I just say,
this is probably one of the more important aspects of fulfillment, purpose, satisfaction, connection.
You know, all we really have are our experiences in our relationships.
All the shit you have, your car, your house, fancy watches.
Those are great. I love all those things. Don't get me wrong. I love my... I drove a big ass Tahoe. I fucking love it. I love my house. I can put it in redid the inside. It's beautiful. It's unique. It's mine. No one else has the house that I have. And I love it. I have a nice watch on it. I think it's beautiful. I love wearing it.
But none of that shit matters. Like in the end, when you're right, it's your relationships, the connections you have. And it's the experiences that you share with those people.
And I think that we often give lip service to showing up and we don't execute on it.
And if I took anything away from the last, right here for 36 hours,
it's that showing up is incredibly important.
Incredibly important.
I won't forget the laughs.
I won't forget the stories.
I won't forget the little one-liners or just the emotions associated.
See, even if I do forget the one-liners, I won't forget the emotions that I felt.
I won't forget literally having tears streaming down my face listening to Les Brown.
Talk about what it means to be hungry and his why and how that drove him to be the success that Les Brown was, is.
It was incredible.
To hear one of the greatest storytellers to ever walk the earth.
to be 15 feet away from that man
and to literally have tears coming down my face
because not just his story
the way his story made me feel about my own life
and the life that I want to live
fuck
never if I'm not here
we will all have that experience for the rest of our lives
if we shared that moment listening to Les Brown for more than an hour
just
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I mean, he was his
good as Les Brown is, he was fucking phenomenal today.
And I've heard Les Brown before, and he was just incredible today.
Incredible.
You'll never get that experience back.
And I want to be the type of person that shows up.
I know that people will classify me that way today.
I would hope so.
That's something that I'm going to cultivate in my own life,
is be more of the person who shows up, shows up for my kids,
shows up for the people that matter that are in my inner circle.
that when they need me, they know
I'm a text message or a phone call away
and I'll fucking be there.
Characteristic of a human being that I feel is
worthy of our time and our attention and our focus
to be the kind of person who shows up
because it's not always convenient and it's hard
and it's expensive.
I mean, all told, getting here, the ticket,
you know, hotel room, food, $1,500, $2,000.
I mean, not nothing.
Here I am.
with this thought in my head that I can't get rid of,
and this outlook on where I want my life to go,
and a notebook full of thoughts and ideas and connections and experiences with people
that I'll never forget.
I would pay way more than two grand for that.
So, but you're rolling the dice.
And the truth is, you're always rolling the dice when you show up.
You could show up for someone, and it could be,
terrible. The van could be terrible, the people could be terrible, it could be a war. But that's not the point.
You don't show up for you. You show up for that. You don't show up for you. You show up for that.
And that's got to be good enough. And everything that you get out of it is bonus. It's gravy.
It's frosting. It's the gloss. Everything that you get out of showing up is the bonus.
You show up for them. You show up to make sure.
that your buddy's got his people in the room.
You show up to make sure that the people who are important to you feel supported,
that they feel protected, that they feel safe, that they feel strong and confident,
that they feel like they got people who got them.
Because when you know you got people who got you, you can go out and do the things.
You can take the risks that you want to take in life that create purpose and meeting and satisfaction and fulfillment.
Very difficult to do that without people around.
So, the first biggest takeaway that I had was the important to show it.
The second biggest takeaway that I had was from Chris Voss.
Chris Voss, the author of Never Spence.
He's formerly the head of FBI, International, the head, the lead kidnapping negotiator
for the FBI for international.
Which is a pretty big job. I've also worked in New York City counterterrorism and
kidnapping negotiation terrorist negotiation partnership with the MI PD.
But I'd say publicly will be most famous for his book, Never Split the Difference
and Worked in The Disgation.
And while his trainings are just hands down the best.
He is the best. If you haven't read, never split the difference.
and you're in business, you are less than you could be.
I built my entire Master of the Clothes,
one called Closed sales process that I used to scale rogue risk
to 1,200 plus accounts, more than 2,000 policies
in a little over two years.
I built that entire process off of the teachings of Chris Voss.
I've studied his work intensely,
and while this is the first time I've ever seen him live,
just thoroughly, thoroughly impressed.
fucking master.
And, you know, of course, I mean, this is a dude who's, you know, speaking on stage to, you know, say 75 people is certainly not as pressure-packed as negotiating the life of an American overseas who's been kidnapped.
So obviously, you know, he's in, I don't want to say a comfort zone, because I know he was delivering.
In a place where he could deliver.
What I took away from Chris was an intentionality of effort.
that if you want to be good at something, you must be intentional in your effort to achieve the thing.
Talk about it, you can pretend.
Unless you are intentional, you have no control of your life.
Must be intentional in our actions, to our goals.
I could go on and on on this.
I don't want to beat it up.
Again, like I said, I appreciate anyone who's listening here.
I'm meandering through this a little bit.
Like I said, this is mostly for my own austerity as I'm driving and just hoping maybe it helps a couple of you guys.
Chris was incredibly intentional in his work and how he got to his philosophy that we should not work for yeses.
We need to work for noes.
It's so counterintuitive to the way most people operate, but it is an absolute unlock to life.
And single-handedly, I built the sales process that I coach, that I teach, that I built my company around,
I built it off the back of his work, what he taught, and never split the difference in negotiation skills.
And I applied it to an inbound sales process, and it fucking raked.
It was just, we were closing 85% of the inbound leads that came in the door.
You know, now I help people take reps that usually.
come in around 20 to 30% close ratio.
You know, within around three months of coaching and working this process and training,
we can add people up over 60 at a minimum.
You know, the ones that really apply it, stick to it, and don't try to be cowboys and,
you know, add their own ad lib ideas into the process or closing worth of 80%.
But it's intentional.
It's very, very intentional.
It is not leaving, it's not leaving your success.
up the chance. It's being intentional with the actions that drive growth, that drive success.
And then being unapologetic about how you get there. The next thing I took away was from a guy
named Nick Nane. Nick is a 20, I think he's a 22 Emmys for his documentaries. He's a songwriter.
Incredibly creative, dude, and seemingly very, very cool, interesting guy. And while I have literally
like pages of pages of notes from his 35 minute talk, it's crazy.
He shared a quote from Sally Hogshead,
Different is Better than Better.
If I had to surmise Nick's position on success,
it was this idea of being different,
not necessarily shooting for better, shooting for different.
Different doesn't necessarily be fake.
Like, I did a chat GPT research study
to figure out, you know, what Looney Tune's character I can
create to fucking stand out.
But like, figuring out who you actually are.
you actually are.
Like you were gifted by God with something.
I think so few of us actually figure out what that thing is.
But if you can figure it out, it's intrinsically different than anyone else.
And that intrinsic different make you so special and so much better than better.
And I wish I wasn't quoting someone else that he quoted to talk about how wonderful I thought,
Nick's talk was, I thought it was phenomenal.
He was just tremendous.
I think to myself, you know, I think about my own podcast right now.
My podcast, I have a YouTube show if you guys don't know.
You can go to a link in my bio, check it out.
You know, we jump around in the rankings.
We're consistently in the top ten of the business category on Apple for the U.S.
You know, we jump around the top ten of all categories.
It's a little crazy, a little different.
I like to curse.
I love conspiracy theories.
I'm a conservative.
Love to bust chops.
I'm sarcastic as fuck.
I'm irreverent and I like crude, crass humor.
Sex jokes are my favorite.
I like all kinds of shit.
I just enjoy
a random, widespread, broad-smoked, stroke,
smattering of,
of topics. I like aliens and I like business and I like politics and I like archaeology and I like
psychology and I like math and physics and writing and philosophy and I don't know what kind of
fucking show can be successful that way because everyone tells me I'm supposed to stay right down some
line and be the business guy and all this stuff and you know who do you think you are Joe
Rogan you know and I get all that kind of shit and I don't know I'm not Joe Rogan I'm certainly not
Joe Rogan. I don't even pretend to be Joe Rogan, but is there not space for another show that just
talks about interesting shit? I get bored talking about business all the time. I do. I love
business. I love sales. I like marketing. But I get bored talking about that stuff. And I love
leadership. I really do. I love talking about leadership. And I love coaching leaders. I really do
love coaching leaders and founders and I do love that work and I I would hope to always do that work.
I truly do love helping leaders who are driving forward who are struggling whether it's self-doubt
or they're stuck in growth or their culture is messed up or they're having issues with their board.
I was talking to a founder the other day.
It was having switches with sport and helping them through that.
And if you guys, guys, if you need help with any of that stuff, I, my passion is helping
people be the best versions of themselves.
I just love it.
If you need help, just DM me here on Instagram,
and, you know, if I feel like I can actually help you through whatever you're dealing
with, I will absolutely help.
But, like, for the show, I hate the idea of being pinned down on one fucking topic.
I just hate it.
And, like, I re-braided the show to Finding Peak because I didn't want it to be my name.
But Finding Peak...
It's open for a reason.
It's not finding peak performance.
It's not finding peak leadership.
It's not finding peak sales.
It's not finding peak marketing.
It's not finding peak fucking aliens or archaeology or philosophy or whatever.
For a reason.
It's finding peak whatever is fucking interesting.
That doesn't mean me.
It means whoever is awesome at something or interested in something or talented at something.
I just want to talk to them and learn more about them.
And I haven't done that.
I've kind of played it safe.
I've kept to the business vein because it's easier,
and then people know what you're about,
and they know what box to put you in,
so it's easier for them to subscribe,
and I don't show my personality as much,
because, oh, you know, if someone sees that you have a Trump sign
in the background, then they're not going to like your show.
Well, shit, if you don't like me,
because I voted for Trump for three times,
I'm fucking sorry.
You may want to ask me why I did,
and it may surprise you why I did,
but I did.
And if you don't like the fact that I have a Trump sign, I also have a fucking Wu-Tang sign.
So, I don't know.
What does that mean?
I also have a number one dance sign that my kid got me.
So I guess I'm just am sick of like not being 100% myself.
And Nick really, like, his talk really like punched me in the face with that.
Like really.
I don't know how to turn that into a business.
And if I'm going to be the best version of myself, that needs to become a business.
I gotta put some thought to that.
Maybe you guys could help me with that.
Hoping any ideas that you got.
But, yeah, Nick really got me thinking.
And then finally, Les Brown's talk.
And Les Brown is fucking icon.
Oh my God, 80 years old.
Absolute legend.
Just up there.
Just crushing.
For an hour plus, crushing.
Crushing.
Just, uh, the dudes recall.
his ability to weave narrative to just own
the less isn't a perfect person
a Google search will show you all the shit
that's going on in his life the good the bad the ugly
but you can't deny what he's accomplished
and you can't deny that the guy figured out
what he was put here to do
and he owned it
and there is something to be said for that
while I love what I do
and I enjoy it I don't know that it's why I was
put here. I feel the most alive on stage. I feel the most alive when I'm in live scenarios like
this. I love being interviewed or having live conversations where there's the danger of not being
able to erase what you said, of having to deliver in real time, of having to search through the
mental library, database, roll-a-dex, figure out how to deliver a message while people are
watching, assuming you know what the fuck you're doing when a lot of times you don't, that's when I
feel the most alive. And I feel the most fulfilled when I see the look on someone's face that
maybe something I said, or maybe someone who I was interacting with, a guest, an interviewee,
a host, says something because of a conversation that we were having that turns them on.
That's when I feel the most fulfilled.
It's a weird thing, guys, and if you're still with me, God bless you, because this has been
going on for a while and rambling, although therapeutic to a certain extent.
So I appreciate you if you're still there.
I've always struggled from a career perspective in so much as I've never cared about my own success.
and I'm not saying that to be humble
I honestly never have
I love to achieve
but not necessarily
because of the accolates of others
I don't win a lot of awards
I've never been on a top 10 list of whatever
not you know
and I don't care to be
I mean if I am amazing
I did win
the insuretech Utah pitch contest this year
startup pitch contest
which is fun
That was kind of like taking candy from a baby.
I get the most fulfillment out of helping other people achieve their success.
It's why I love coaching.
God, if there's just one little thing that you can say to a kid that gets them to hit a baseball pure
and that look on their face when they're standing on first or second,
and they just ripped one, you're right?
they just smoked a ball of the outfield and they felt what it feels like to hit a baseball pure.
Because so few people actually ever experience what that feels like.
There are very few feelings in life like hitting a baseball pure.
And I've sacked quarterbacks.
I've hit three-pointers at the buzzer.
I've hit 300-plus-yard drives.
I've knocked in putts.
done a lot of things.
There are a few things in life
like hitting a baseball pier.
And if I can help that kid get the end of man,
I just, oh, it just feels so good.
Not because of me, I don't, you know, I don't.
It feels good because you look at their face
and you're like, oh my God,
look at the experience that that kid was able to have.
And the same thing with adults.
Or like this guy that I was helping the other day
with this board thing.
He was struggling.
He was having a real issue.
He made a call in his business
and the board member had a problem with it
and was pressing.
And his initial feeling was that the board member,
that it would die down.
And it just wasn't.
And it was starting to become an issue.
And now that board member had started to make suggestions around the competency
of this particular founder.
And what I did was help the founder.
I gave the founder a few tools that he could use in a conversation that he had coming up
with this particular board member to try to squash this issue to get to what the actual problem was.
Because that was, Roddy was struggling.
He's like, I don't know how to attack this problem because I can't figure out what the actual issue is.
And a lot of it was just the way he was framing some questions and that he wasn't empathizing with this board member.
Right.
Like he couldn't put himself in the board member's position.
And I said, look, if you actually want to squash this issue, you can't fight your side.
You have to figure out how to put yourself in that board member's position and understand
where he is coming from.
Because if you can understand where he is coming from
and empathize, sorry, with his position,
then you will understand what his issues truly are
and how you can address them
and hopefully come to a very productive solution.
And I gave him some questions to ask
and a couple, you know, like essentially a mental model
to work through and a way of trying to get him to send that seat.
Long story short, conversation went amazingly well,
issue squashed, no problem.
comes off they go.
And when he, and I, you know, all I got was a text afterwards and that said, you know,
thank you, but you know, whatever.
Thank you so much, you know, problem solved, all good, you know, with like a couple of fire
emojis or something.
Fuck, I just felt so good.
Bill helped that guy, you know, take this incredible anxiety and stress that he was having
because he was worried that this, this dude was going to like try to kick him out of the business
because it was becoming a real problem.
And once he finally got to the root of what the issue was and acknowledged that he thought the board member's concerns were relevant and real, but that he had considered, you know, blah, blah, blah, you know, the specific thing.
He was back off to the races and everyone was pointing the same direction.
And it just made me feel really good and fulfilled in that, in that conversation.
So I guess the long story short there, long story long since I've been yapping for a while.
We're not driving very fast right now, guys, because there seems to be an accident or something.
So we're going very, very slow.
We're technically doing two and a half miles an hour in a three-lane traffic, somewhere between Greensville and Charleston.
I guess what I took away from less was some soul searching around what I want the second half of my career to be.
I enjoy what I do today, like I said.
I love leading companies, I love helping people.
but all I've ever really wanted to do
was help people become the best versions of themselves
and I'm going to be working very hard
from here on out to figure out the best way to do that
and if you have suggestions I'm super open to them, open to them all
thought a lot about spending more time on YouTube
you know really working on the YouTube show
and really trying to deliver more
authentic value in the way that I want to deliver it to a YouTube audience.
I have the Stubbsack newsletter, which I love to write.
Writing has always been a passion of mine, and I will probably continue to do that.
And I actually have become more and more fond of this channel, of Instagram, of, you know,
of connecting with people and helping people.
And, you know, I had a young guy reach out to me the other day and want some help with sales and sales training.
And, you know, I don't know that I'm going, I don't.
I'm not sure yet whether I'm the right person to help him, but if not, I will make sure
you find somebody, and I love doing these lives, and I think the format, I'm just not sure
necessarily how to turn all these things into a business, what the right way to deliver
that is.
But I don't know.
I appreciate you guys.
Hopefully, if you've stuck with me for any period of time throughout this, you've found
some value in it.
Like I said, I wanted to capture these ideas.
I'll probably export this video.
transcribe it and put into chat GPT and get some notes out of it because I've obviously been
talking for a while but um man it just I and I know Mick probably won't watch this because I'm sure
his attention span isn't as long as this as I've been talking but uh if you're not following Mick
I think his handle here on Instagram is Mick unplugged uh follow Mick hunt he's doing incredible
work and and his podcast is wonderful it makes an incredible guy but Mick is a superman
super connector. And he puts people together that need each other. And if you're not in Mick's world,
I encourage you to connect with him. And if you're not connected with Chris Foss and McNatton and
Les Brown and actually Damon John showed up at the event too, you know, Damon was great. He kind of
came in at the end. Had some really interesting things to say as well. I just think a kind of
kind of pull it all the way back to the beginning.
Showing up.
Just show up for the people that matter in your life.
It doesn't have to be a lot of people.
It can be one person.
It could be your spouse, your partner.
It could be just your kids.
It could be your best friend.
It could be an old high school friend that fucking needs you right now for whatever reason.
Just show up.
God.
The universe rewards people who show up.
I honestly believe that.
I believe that.
I believe that there's a connected.
energy and the universe is always watching.
I think the universe rewards people who show up.
And I'm going to try to be that person more often than I have been.
And I don't know.
I appreciate the hell out of you guys.
I hope this was valuable.
Again, if you have questions, thoughts, comments on anything, please.
When I get to where I'm going, although it'll probably be late, so it probably won't
be tomorrow.
I'll check them out.
Hit them up in the comments.
If I can be of service to you, if you do need help with something that's going on,
If you're stuck on revenue, if you're in a leadership position, I'm in trouble with culture,
I'm in trouble with, you know, sales or growth or internal issues, politics.
If you're just fucking having a hard time, I've been through a lot of stuff.
I've helped a lot of people.
And I would like to do that more.
So just hit me up in the DMs.
We could chat.
And if I can be of service, I will be.
All right?
I appreciate the hell out of you guys.
Right now I'm listening to the Sean Ryan, AJ Gentile, who does.
the Y-Files podcast, fucking phenomenal.
So since we're doing two and a half miles an hour,
and I got about another 200 miles to go,
I'm gonna let you guys go.
I love you. I'm out of here.
Peace.
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