Motivation Daily by Motiversity - TIME IS RUNNING OUT - Motivational Speech By Jesse Itzler [YOU NEED TO HEAR THIS!]

Episode Date: June 21, 2023

TIME IS RUNNING OUT! Stop procrastinating and do it NOW! One of the most motivational speeches by Jesse Itzler. Special thanks to Lewis Howes and Tom Bilyeu for their interviews.https://www.youtube.co...m/watch?v=jeOWjeY7XOM&t=0shttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKJUlY3KgpA&t=0sSpeaker:Jesse Itzler: https://bit.ly/2I6eeNMMusic:Really Slow Motion: http://bit.ly/1ee3l8KPonds5▶Subscribe for New Motivational Videos Every Week: http://bit.ly/MotivationVids▶DOWNLOAD our Top 100 Quotes of All Time:https://bit.ly/topquotesfreepdf▶JOIN our Newsletter for Exclusive Updates, Discounts, and Deals: https://bit.ly/Motiversitynewsletter▶READ our Weekly Blog - https://bit.ly/motiversityblog▶SHOP Official Motivational Canvases and Apparel - https://bit.ly/motiversityshop▶BECOME A MEMBER of our loyal community!https://bit.ly/motiversitymembers Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello listeners, Motivirity is excited to share that we have launched a new podcast called Morning Motivation by Motivore. If you are looking to start your day with positivity and the most uplifting motivational audio, this is the show for you. For today's episode of Motivation Daily by Motivority Podcast, we are sharing a recent episode from the Morning Motivation Podcasts. If you like it, go follow the show. New episodes are being released every week. The link is in the description. Are your parents a lot? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:43 How old are your parents, if you all right? 70. Okay. And where do they live? In different parts of Washington State. Okay. Did you see them? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:51 Pretty often? Once to three times a year. Okay. So let's say they live to be 78, which is the, I hope they don't. But let's say that they live to the average age. So you see them one, one. You said once to three times. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Okay. No, you don't. It means you're going to see him 16. If you see him twice a year, you can see him 16 more times. When you look at it that way, you're like, what? You don't have eight years with them. You have 16 times with them. And that's the shift in my life.
Starting point is 00:01:21 And that's the way I look at things. That's a fundamental shift in the way that I looked at situations six months ago. and it's created an urgency. It's created a need to just, like, not put stuff off and to recognize, like, what's on your list of things that you want to do. So how is turning 50 affecting the way that you think? I'm super curious. It's just realizing that, like, it went so fast
Starting point is 00:01:49 and realizing that there's so much that I want to do and being aware that your 70s are a different decade than your 40s and 50s. Then you have 20 years. left. And when you put it in perspective of how many weekends there are, you know, it's only 52 weekends. And you start to look at it like that, you're like, I'm going to be 80 in 30 years. It's scary. And I got kids. It's scary because there's a lot I want to do. I feel like I haven't done anything compared to what I want to do and the opportunities. So, you know, it just,
Starting point is 00:02:24 how do you manage your time? I never thought like that. I'm going to live forever. And, you know, I'm bulletproof and all that stuff and I'm not. And when you turn 50, shit happens. Friends get sick, you know? You know, take advantage the opportunity that you have at this age and the people that you know to create amazing to build your life resume and sort of talk about all the time, you know. It's like you have the work resume. So what?
Starting point is 00:02:49 That means nothing if you're not building up your life resume. There's only two kinds of moments, man. Like the moments that happen, 9-11, you know exactly where you never forget. that but you didn't control that just happen. There are moments like that where you have no control over that you just remember because they're so vivid. And then you have the moments that you have control over, that you, you know, that you circle, that you create, that you put in a position to happen. And that's, you know, kind of how you build this life resume. And that's what I would tell, that's what I hope my kids do. You know, I hope they have a life filled with memories. I lived on a monastery with eight monks,
Starting point is 00:03:31 four of which have been there for 50 years and 50 years. And I went there for 15 days. I think, you know, the obvious takeaways were just the simplicity of how the monks live is something I think everyone can benefit from. I realize immediately you know already what you're going to miss. You're going to miss your family and your kids and your friends and some of the comforts. You know, I don't want to give away some of the comforts that I had. But you also realize that how.
Starting point is 00:04:01 much, at least I did, in my daily life, how much time I spend and worry I spend on things that are irrelevant. And when I released that, I got so insanely creative and had so much energy. Because like thoughts, worry, all that, it's exhausting. Well, I think like everybody, I feel overwhelmed a lot still, even though I'm older now and I've had some success and failure, but I still have a lot of arrows that come at me all the time. Requests for my time, challenges at work, challenges raising kids. Being in a marriage, you know, is not easy. I mean, we have a great marriage, but it's not easy work.
Starting point is 00:04:45 And it's overwhelming. So for me, I think part of it is always having something big on my calendar that I can look forward to. Every other month, I try to put something on my calendar for a weekend. that I can really look forward to. So it helps me get through the tough times. And I like to have one, at least one really big challenge a year that kind of centers me and keeps me honest.
Starting point is 00:05:11 It keeps me honest. And that's really helpful for me. And then the other thing that I do that really helps is I have a journal. And I just take everything that's on my head and I keep it in a master journal. Doesn't mean I'm going to get to it. Doesn't mean it goes away. But it gets out of my head. and it goes somewhere else to free up space in my head.
Starting point is 00:05:33 And then I'll just work it off or I'll prioritize it from the master list. But just the act of taking all the stuff that's in your head, putting it on paper in one place where it lives, is like really freeing and energizing. Do you teach somebody to look for those opportunities, to create those opportunities, because everyone's going to hear the no, but 99.99,999% of people just accept.
Starting point is 00:06:01 It's always having the end of the movie in my head and then filling in the script. So I knew I was going to leave there with a sale. I just had to write the script. And the script might change. There might be, you know, call an audible and you might have to rewrite the script. But the end of the script was always the same. I'm going to run 100 miles. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Well, how are you going to do that, Jesse? You know, like, you've never, you're not like a crazy endurance runner. Well, then let's think backwards. But it starts with the end scene in the movie. even the exit. You know, like, okay, we're going to build this to sell. I don't know who I'm going to sell it to. But that's sort of been always kind of the mentality.
Starting point is 00:06:39 And I think the second point to that is once you get over the fear of being embarrassed, no one likes to be embarrassed. But once you get over being scared of being embarrassed, it's super liberating. And it allows you to go into lanes that otherwise you wouldn't go into. And everybody's wired differently. You know, everybody's wired completely. different. It's hard to rewire someone to be, you know, comfortable taking risk, comfortable
Starting point is 00:07:06 with being embarrassed. And I think it comes from having a lot of egg on your face and learning along the way. I've always been like, let me get my foot in the door and I will figure it out. I will hire people that can help me figure it out. I can go to experts to help me, but they usually won't help me get in the door. So let me take the first step. And then once you have momentum, you can ride the momentum. So that's always been my MO, you know. It's always been in everything. You mentioned living with the seal, you know, when Gagans came, all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:07:39 It's just been like welcoming the unknown and being open to whatever comes of it and learning from it. Well, networking's been a big part of my life forever. When I was 24 years old, I wrote 10 letters a day, thank you notes, to anyone that came into my life that impacted. me. And it could be, even if I didn't know you, but I saw your show and I was like, you know what, Tom, you've had some amazing guests. I've really benefited from. I would just write you a handwritten note because, one, the handwritten note shows intent. You have to buy the envelope, buy the stationery, write the letter, lick the envelope, get the stamp, put it in the middle. That's a lot different than him send. It's also memorable. How many handwritten letters
Starting point is 00:08:21 have you gotten this year? So I literally wrote 3,000 letters in one year. And it could be to a doorman, a cab drive, it could be anyone. I would just get their car and I would thank them. That was my form of networking. Even to this day, I have a hot 50 list of 50 people that can help me, that I want to stay in touch with, that I make sure every quarter or so I send them a note. And they always comment on it. You know, like, thank you so much. And it's authentic. It's not, I'm not just writing it to write it. I mean, they have to really have had an impact on me. And it's a meaningful note. It makes me feel great.
Starting point is 00:09:00 And it makes the recipient feel attached to me in a different way. At an early age, I understood the importance of that. The people that you meet in your 20s rise up in their 30s are in great positions of power in their 40s. You don't know in your 20s who's going to make it and who's not. So, you know, you treat everybody properly and respectfully and you stay in touch. and very often those relationships merge their heads years later, decades later.
Starting point is 00:09:33 Pretty much all of us, myself included. We live in a world of routine. Routines are comfortable, but routines can be a rut, and when you're in a routine, the clock goes fast. It goes fast. I was 35 yesterday. When you're in a routine, get up,
Starting point is 00:09:48 gets kids ready, taking the carpool, go work, come out, boom, day over next day. It's like, and then if you don't get out of the routine and take advantage of those, five weekends a year, creating, whatever, you wake up in your 60 and 70 or 50 or 40 or whatever, and you're like, man, my knees messed up. I can't, I always wanted to do that, but now I can't do that.
Starting point is 00:10:08 Man, you know, like, you just don't know. I just said to my wife as I turned 50, like, let's have a big, I want to have a big celebration. This is a monumental birthday, and it's really affecting me how I think, you know. It's like, I didn't think it would, but turning 50 is having a big impact on me. And I said, when I was 25, I had a big party in New York City where I was living. And I want to kind of replicate that.
Starting point is 00:10:31 And she said, wow, honey, you know, think about all the things that you've accomplished in the last 25 years. And I'm like, I appreciate it. But compared to, I haven't done anything. Compared to what I, the potential and what I want to do, you know. And she said, well, then think about the things that you love to do over the last 25 years. What are the things that you love to do? and who have you loved to do them with? And for me, it's been the races, the travel, this, and the that.
Starting point is 00:11:00 Civil look. Put as much of that on your plate as you can with the people that you love to do it with in the next 25 years of your life. And that's sort of my mission statement. We invest so much time in our work resume, which is important. But I think it's equally, if not more important, to build your life resume because that's really an indication of who you are and what you're becoming.
Starting point is 00:11:22 And that's really a true look into your true body of work.

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