REAL AF with Andy Frisella - 756. Q&AF: Accepting Help In Your Business, Tell Family And Friends The Truth & Controlling What You Can Control
Episode Date: August 5, 2024On today's episode, Andy answers your questions on when you should allow someone to help you with your business, how to tell your family and friends the truth about their situation, and the best way t...o take control of the things in your life that will propel you closer to your goals.
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What is up guys, it's Andy Frisella and this is the show for the realest.
Say goodbye to the lies, the fakeness, and delusions of modern society. And welcome to motherfucking reality.
Guys, today, as always, we start off the week getting better.
That means we got Q and AF.
This is where you submit the questions and we give you the answers.
Now, you could submit your questions a few different ways.
The first way is, guys, you can email these questions in to askandy at andyfrasella.com.
Or you go on YouTube in the Q&A episodes and drop your question in the comments.
We'll choose some from there as well.
Tomorrow, just give you a quick rundown.
We're going to have CTI.
That stands for Cruise the Internet.
That's where we put topics on the screen.
We speculate on what's true.
We speculate on what's not true.
And then we talk about how we, the people, have to solve some of these problems going on in the world.
Other times throughout the week, we're going to have real talk,
real talk, just five to 20 minutes of me giving you some real talk. And other times we're going to have 75 hard versus we do have a really good 75 hard versus coming at you guys later this week.
If you're unfamiliar with 75 hard, you can get the program for free at episode 208. Uh, it is the world's most famous mental
transformation program in history, and it is free. 75 hard is the initial phase of the live hard
lifestyle. And again, you can get that for free at episode 208. There is a book available called
the book on mental toughness. You can get that at andyfercella.com. That will outline the entire program, but it has a whole bunch of extra stuff in it too.
Ten chapters on mental toughness, case studies on very famous people who have used mental toughness,
and they explain what it means to them.
Very valuable book.
Not required to do the program, but you can get it if you want at andyfercella.com.
Now, one of the things we do here at the show is we don't run ads on the show. I don't want to listen to someone bitch about what I can and can't say. That's not what
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All right, what's up?
What's going on, dude? Not much. I'm checking the grape out today i see yeah well actually you got a little
mix there yeah i got my this is my pre-workout mix cocktail yep
yep well what all is in that you do megawatt and megawatt, carnitine, alpha-surg, creatine.
Man.
Yep.
It's good, too.
A little jungle juice there.
Yeah.
It's a great pre-workout.
I like it.
What's up with you?
Yeah, nothing much, man.
Just here to help make people better.
Cool.
Let's get into it.
Let's knock it out.
Yeah.
Guys, Andy, question number one.
Andy, just wanted to start with saying thank you for changing my life.
I've been a listener since the original MFCEO days.
Went to my first RTA event in St. Louis a couple of years ago when David Goggins was there.
That changed my life.
It was the day I decided to risk it all and start a company.
Now I have two.
One in agricultural drone spraying and
one in construction. Anyway, thank you for helping me make that push. My question is,
when was it that you decided to accept help in your business? I sort of get the feeling that
you are a, I want to get it done my kind of way guy. So am I. But when do you choose to let someone help you take some of the
responsibility, but yet let them do it in their own way? I know you have to have failure to succeed,
but do you allow your crew to fail on your dime so that they can get better at what they do? Of
course, you are there to help guide them. But how do you know when is the right time to let go of
some of the responsibilities and let
someone take over a bit? It's nerve wracking to not be in complete control, but also I'm too busy
now to not allow someone else to take some of this off my plate too. What's your thoughts on this,
Andy? Well, the last part is the last sentence where he says, I'm too busy to not have people
take some of this off the the plate look you have to realize
that you could only go so far by yourself all right and you have to learn
to get comfortable not just trusting people but helping people learn helping
people grow helping people gain skills and then communicating to them what the
purpose of your business is so that they can apply those skills there. Yeah, a lot of people do like to make all the decisions. Yeah, a lot of people do tend to
do that longer than necessary. You know, when you first start out in business, it is just you. So,
you're making all the decisions. You're doing all the calls. You're sending all the emails.
You're building all the relationships. But as you go, you have to realize that you can only go so far without anybody actually helping you. And your goal should be to surround yourself with people who are better at the things that you are not great at so that you can have a great organization overall. Right. Like, I don't know how to create graphics or create, you know, animations,
but those are things that we use in our companies every day. So I have to find people that are great
at those things. And then we have to merge their vision with my vision. And then eventually they
learn and then they start running the direction that we need them to go. Now, in terms of letting
them make mistakes. Yeah, man, you know, it's very important that you understand this as a business owner or as a leader or a manager of an organization.
If you fire someone or get rid of someone every single time they make a mistake, the person that you bring in behind them is likely to make the same mistake again.
So that means it's going to cost you twice all right and if you fire the second person the third person is going to make
the same mistake again so you have to think this out logically would you rather have the person
who works with you who you like who you trust who you know is skilled who's made a mistake and then
is it going to make that mistake again or would you rather replace
that person every time and continue to pay for the mistakes over and over again the answer is obvious
so we have to understand that mistakes that people make quote unquote to use his term on your dime
are actually investments in that person's skill set investments in that person's um progression
and and increases their stock value to the organization but that's only if they learn
from their mistakes if they come and they make the same mistake over and over and over again
that's where you have to make a change so um that's pretty much it man man. You know, it's not a natural thing to go from, you know, being on your own to having employees. I remember, you know, the it took us five years to do that the reason it
took us five years to do that is because we thought that people were going to show up late
we thought people were going to steal we thought people were going to treat us wrong we thought
people would treat the customers wrong guess what that happened okay and that happened multiple
times and what we did what it allowed us to do was create systems
so that couldn't happen. And then we were able to scale the business out. So you have to understand
that there's tons of value in this process and you're not going to eliminate someone else's
mistakes. You just have to understand when is the time that we're going to have grace with that,
use it as a learning
experience, help them grow, evolve, get better and become a stronger asset. Or when is the time
that we're going to have to make a change? And when we have to make a change, it comes from
someone making the same mistake over and over and over again, showing apathy about learning from
that mistake and then just not getting any better. So that's my answer on the, on the whole concept
there. I love that. I got, I got two questions for you on this. So, so the first one, would you say
that, you know, if, if you are an entrepreneur, you run a team, you know, you have a little,
you have a business, would you say that the, the, the biggest problem or the big, the reason why
people would have an issue trusting other people is because that leader, you didn't, you didn't
invest in their
skills at all. Like you're scared that they're going to fail, but that's really like a you
problem. What do you mean? Like if I'm the CEO, I own a business, right? And I'm scared to kind of
like, you know, delegate and push some tasks off on people. Is that saying more about me and my
inability to kind of like raise those people up like it's well look that's not a natural
thing that's what i'm saying like who do you who do you trust the most i trust myself right
and it takes when you have all your money and all your effort and all your time and your entire life
invested in this business in this project and your your ass is on the line every day it's very
difficult to give that over to someone else knowing that they could screw up and cost you.
And fuck it up.
Yeah.
But here's the thing we have to understand, bro, is that very few mistakes are fatal.
Very, very, very few.
Almost everything can be corrected, right?
So, you know, allow people to make some mistakes.
Correct them.
And as long as they learn and make up for it, it's an asset to your team.
Yeah, I love it.
There's a second follow up to man, because you've met, you know, thousands of other entrepreneurs, right?
All different levels.
You've seen this game at all different levels.
You know, I feel like this might just be me looking from the outside inside.
Right. just be me looking from the outside inside right but like i feel like you know i've met people
who've owned businesses and they almost have this like like this this this weird attachment on their
business like it's their baby right and when you're trying to you know build a massive company
at what point do you transition that like this is not just my baby this is our baby and no my vision
that i originally had is great but like this is
our vision now like when do you start when do you make that transition well it's not really a
transition dude it's just a way of of thinking you know and i agree with you a lot of people do
get overly emotional about their business because of what i just said a minute ago it makes sense
well yeah bro look most employees that work for, I'm not talking about a big corporate
organization, you know, Amazons and shit like that, because they're so far removed from the
ownership that they can't really understand how that person would feel about it. But you got to
understand if you're a regular, like say regular person running a small to mid-sized business,
bro, that's everything. You've invested your nights, your weekends, you've foregone all kinds of normalcies in
your life.
Like a person who hasn't done that could not possibly understand what you've been through
to have that business.
So it's natural for someone to like hold on to it.
But the thing is, is that if you want your business to become great and you want
it to really scale you have to share that quote-unquote ownership feeling with your entire
team this is us this is what we're doing this is our mission this is what we're going to build
together and and when you do it like that you know because most companies never do that and if they
try to do that they
don't really mean it um it creates something pretty special that can grow pretty quickly you
know what i mean um i think the biggest thing that entrepreneurs struggle with is knowing that
entrepreneurs think differently than entrepreneurs they're a different kind of thinker. So while an entrepreneur might think, you know, I have to own my own business to feel
validated or be successful, there's lots of entrepreneurs that are going to say, bro,
you know, I don't want all that shit, but I want to be a key fucking player in an awesome
winning organization.
I don't need to be Jerry Jones that owns the Cowboys, but I want to be Emmett Smith, a
Hall of Fame player.
You know what I'm saying? And that's the mentality of most people. And true entrepreneurs
have a problem connecting that because, dude, we only know and see the world through the way
that we think in our perspective. So for the longest time, I couldn't understand
people that didn't see it like me until I had someone pointed out to me.
I had this lady who was an executive at Domino's Pizza that I got to meet 15 years ago.
And we were having a good conversation.
And she was like, hey, she's like, you need to realize this right now is that you're the anomaly.
Most of these people are not going to think like you.
They don't want to invest their entire lives in this.
They want to contribute.
They want to do something valuable, but they don't necessarily want to own that entire
risk on their back because as you know, that's a crazy amount of pressure and it is and not
everybody's built for it.
And that's why I get so upset about the way that the internet culture is painting this
picture for every single person as if they're an entrepreneur. Entrepreneur is the hardest path you will ever take for a career.
It is infinitely harder. It's not even close. It's not even comparable. It's entrepreneur and
everything else. It's entrepreneur and pro athlete that it's entrepreneur and fucking
every, everything, everything else you think is a high-earning job or a prestigious job
YouTube influencer of all this shit
Running an actual organization and building it from the ground up is the hardest fucking thing you could ever choose to do with your life
Period and not everybody wants to do that because it does consume your entire life. That's reality
And the guys that do it
They love it. They're like, bro, this is
awesome. I love this. Right. And then the regular people who aren't built that way mentally, they
look at it and they're like, I don't want to give all that I want to have about, bro, you're just,
it's okay. We see the world differently. You know, it's hard for people to understand
that there are people out there that actually love that life.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I love it, man.
So we have to always just think, dude, what are we trying to do?
What is our mission?
What is our goal?
Where are we trying to get to?
And how can I utilize the people around me and get them involved and get them to want to do what we're trying to do in a way where it makes them feel fulfilled
and it makes them happy and it builds a career for them.
So I truly think one of the biggest keys about building a successful organization is really just building it for the people around you.
That's what it comes down to.
And that took me about 15 years to figure out in business.
I love it. Guys, guys any question number two Eddie as I've grown I've tried my best to build the people around me in the process the
problem I'm having with family specifically is that they take what I
say the wrong way and start to play victim my question to you is have you
ever made any adjustments to your victim. My question to you is, have you ever made any
adjustments to your delivery to get people to listen? They need my help, but I don't want to
push them away with the way that I deliver the message. So people that you really care about,
do you change the delivery? I mean, what's your outlook on that? No, I think if you really care
about someone, you tell them the truth. I think if you really want to be kind to someone, you tell
them the truth. I think if you really want the best for someone, you tell them the truth. I think if you really want to be kind to someone, you tell them the truth.
I think if you really want the best for someone, you tell them the exact truth.
The truth doesn't have to be mean.
That's what people don't.
They have this mentality where they say, oh, I got to have a hard conversation.
What's hard about telling someone the truth about where they need to improve when you care about that person?
Don't you want the best life for that person?
Don't you want them to win?
Don't you want them to be successful?
If you did, then why would you hesitate
to tell them how they could get better?
Now, if you do feel like you are criticizing them
in a negative way, or if it comes across that way,
that's one of two things.
One, your delivery is off and you need to get your intent right. Usually people understand and can
feel someone's intent. So like if I were to correct someone, even if it's somewhat from the
outside harsh, that person can usually feel the intent behind it, which is, hey, I want you to get better. And that's how it works. But a lot of operators, leaders, CEOs, et cetera, managers,
they don't have the right intent. Their intent is still about them and how they're going to perform
and how they're going to hit their metrics and how they're going to get paid. So when they
criticize someone, it's like, hey, dude, you're a piece of shit.
You're fucking costing me, blah, blah, blah.
That is not the right intent.
The right intent is, hey, bro, you're fucking up right here.
And the reason I'm telling you you're fucking up is because I want the best for you, okay?
You're doing this, you're doing this, you're doing this, and we need you doing this.
You want to be good?
Yeah.
All right.
Well, this is what you need to do and and dude uh if you have
it that if you if you present the conversation the right way i've found that the harshness of
it is almost irrelevant now are there times where you go a little too hard yeah absolutely
what should you do in those times well that's when you come back an hour later and you say hey
listen dude i love you man i appreciate you i want you to win that's when you come back an hour later and you say, Hey, listen, dude,
I love you, man. I appreciate you. I want you to win. That's why I'm saying it's not personal.
If it came across personal, uh, the only thing personal here is that I want you to get better.
Okay. And people fucking respect that. And a lot of you guys are so fucking soft and so afraid to say anything. Like if you think you're going to build a successful organization, when you're afraid to have conversations with people, because you're gonna build a successful organization
when you're afraid to have conversations with people because you're afraid they're
gonna be mad at you you're not gonna do very well dude you're actually you're
not gonna make it at all so that that comes down to us adjusting how we look
at these conversations and how we should look at these conversations where criticism is involved is that
we are having this conversation because I want my person standing here in front of me who I care
about to get better. And if they get better, we all get better. So it's about changing the
perspective of the conversation. Like this whole, I got to have a hard conversation with bro.
You're setting it up to be hard. What's hard about that? What's hard about telling someone,
Hey man, I want you to do this and this. So you'd be better. What's hard. I mean,
that, that shouldn't be hard that like, if you actually care about them, you should be jumping
at the chance to say, Hey dude, I noticed this. I noticed this. You know, if you're a peer,
if you're a peer of someone, you're the same level of them and you're building an organization, holding someone accountable to
their performance is a tremendous asset that you could have. Like, dude, peer-to-peer leadership
is one of the most valuable skill sets and people don't understand that they can even lead that way.
They think to be a leader, you got to have a title.
Dude, to be a leader, you lead and then you get the title of leader, right?
You lead first and then eventually people recognize you as the leader. They don't come around and say, you're a leader and now you need to go lead.
That's not how the fuck it works.
The best leaders in the world got put into leadership roles because they were leading
before they were actually named the leader.
That's the truth.
Nobody gets elected president without some sort of evidence that they're a leader.
Nobody gets to be CEO without some evidence that they're a leader.
They were doing that before.
And that's actually the key to your entire career.
Whatever position you want, wherever you were trying to go,
whatever you were trying to build,
you have to do that before you actually get told that this is your role.
You see what I'm saying?
Yeah.
You think great artists were not artists before they were considered great?
Right.
You see what I'm saying?
They were doing that for a long time.
So you have to decide where you want to go, start doing it, and eventually you'll become that.
And a lot of people think it's the other way.
They want someone to come along and say, you're artist oh now i'll start now i'll start yeah
right masterpiece yes yeah dude and that's not how it works people got it backwards i want to
ask you on that you talk about peer-to-peer leadership and that accountability aspect why
do you why do you think so many people have issues with holding you know friends or family or peers
accountable well i think it's because what we talked about a minute ago,
they're afraid of some sort of personal backlash.
They're afraid of them not liking them.
You know, the idea of not having people not like you is insane.
Like, you don't like everybody,
so you think everybody's going to like you?
Like, you know, if you really just think about it,
like, there's a whole list of people I don't fucking like. You know what I'm saying? So I don't expect everybody to like me. I'm sure there's a list of people that don't like you like you don't if you really just think about it like there's a whole list of people i don't fucking like right you know i'm saying so i don't expect everybody to like me i'm sure there's
a list of people that don't like you yeah i assume there and i assume it is what it is but i also
assume that that's okay you know what i'm saying like this is america bro you don't have to like
me you can think whatever the fuck you want i'm gonna do what i'm gonna do i'm gonna help the
people around me uh and and quite honestly um if they don't like me and we still accomplish the goal, I'm okay with that too.
Right?
Because they're better, the customer's better, and I'm better.
We're all winning.
So we don't always have to get along, bro.
But I find that when you do have the proper intent, people do get along because they know that, you know, like this really, dude,
it's all comes down to intent. I think another issue is, is that, you know, people have a hard
time holding themselves accountable. So if you can't hold yourself accountable and you can't
live with integrity to the own rules that you set in your brain, you're always going to feel
uncomfortable holding someone else accountable. You know, like you get that weird feeling where
like, fuck dude, they might not listen to me. Well, yeah, because you don't
listen to you. You see what I'm saying? So there's all kinds of things that go into this, but
ultimately it comes down to your intent. If your intent is right and you care about the goal,
you care about the person, you know, helping someone get better should be something that you seek to do,
not something that you try to avoid. I love it, man. I love it, guys. Andy, question number three,
question number three, guys. Andy, I love the show. Your message, everything you teach,
brother, is truly changing things out here. One message that I love your take on is controlling
the things you can control. I feel too often people let external things completely take over their lives, regardless if those things are actually taking over their lives.
My question is, though, what was an internal battle that you struggled with, identified and overcame in your journey thus far?
How did you recognize it and how did you defeat it?
Yeah. So for me,
it was food and alcohol. Okay. I could not control my food. Right. And 2014, 15, 16,
here I am running this massive company and I'm 350 fucking pounds and my companies, all of them
are based around fitness. How does that make sense? It doesn't all right and
Something that I came to realize around that time which is ultimately you know
What led to the development of live hard and 75 hard is that if I can't control the basics?
How can I control the big stuff you see what I'm saying and the control of the big stuff comes from?
Your ability to master the basics
So when I looked in the mirror and I saw myself at 350 pounds, yeah, I didn't like it
But I went my whole life where I would diet down and then get fat again and diet down and then get fat again and
Diet down and then get fat again
I did that a bunch of times and it wasn't until I realized that that was a mental weakness that that was a mental
problem i was giving control over myself to things that were legitimately inanimate objects food
alcohol whatever these are not even influential things these are just things this is just a thing
it's a fucking can with some
liquid in it. And when we start looking at things for what they actually are, we break it down.
It's pretty embarrassing. And I had that mental realization where I'm like, dude, you're up here,
you know, giving all this advice, leading these people. And you're, you're a fucking fraud,
dude. You can't even control the basic shit in your life.
And at that time, you know, I was definitely, you know,
on this search of, you know, what's my purpose?
And, you know, mentally, what am I supposed to be doing?
And how do I feel better about myself?
You know, and I thought there was something wrong with me because I didn't feel good about myself.
No, I didn't feel good about myself
because I wasn't exercising basic levels of discipline in my life
Which makes me feel helpless which makes me feel chaotic which takes away all the things that make us feel good
confidence self-esteem
Self-belief these things matter every day to how we feel about ourselves
And if we can't even keep the promises that we make to ourselves,
then we know that on the inside, like that's our, our internal voice. Like, you know, you're full
of shit. Like all of you sitting right there right now, and you're listening to this show,
you know, that fucking a whole bunch of you are full of shit because you're not living the
standard that you know you should live. Okay. And until you live that standard, until you get to that point where you are actually controlling
the things that you know you need to control, you are going to continue to feel bad about
yourself.
So when I discovered that, it changed my life.
First off, I got pissed.
I was like, dude, I can't believe I allow these inanimate things to control my decision
making.
I'm, I'm, I take pride in being, you know, a strong person.
And, uh, I was fooling myself because I wasn't a strong person.
I was lying to myself.
I thought because I had a few dollars and, you know, I was, I had become somewhat successful,
uh, which at the time I was very successful in my mind.
That's a weird dynamic there.
Even at that place in 2014, to most people, that was success.
Oh, yeah.
Compared to where you are now, though, what's the difference?
Yeah, but see, dude, it happened organically because I got control of all the things that I could control.
I started controlling my food.
I started controlling what I drank.
I started controlling how I exercise, and I started controlling my food. I started controlling what I drank. I started controlling how I exercise and I was, I was diligent about it. And when I started controlling
all the things in my life that I had control of, which by the way, are a lot, it's most of the
things that make up our quality of life. We are in control of, okay. Yeah. We're not in control
of the economy. Yeah. We're not in control of, you know, attacks that happen
or whatever, right? Yeah. We can't control these things, but, and that's why in live hard, there's
outdoor workouts because guess what? We're not always going to be able to control the environment,
but we have to execute anyway. And when we start to control these things, regardless of what's
going on around us, that's what builds the confidence.
That's what builds the self-belief. That's what takes you from this place of uncertainty and
anxiousness and feeling poorly about yourself to a place of strength where you have certainty,
you have belief, you have confidence. You know that it doesn't matter what happens to you.
You're still going to get the job done. And when you're in that place, you're confidence, you know that it doesn't matter what happens to you. You're still
going to get the job done. And when you're in that place, you're very powerful. And when you're in
the other place, you're very weak. Now you could project strength from that place, but it's not
real. And when you go home at night, you just feel like more of a fraud. So if you want to feel good
and you want to feel fulfilled and you want to have true confidence, true belief, and really just set your
life on a path for massive levels of success, you have to learn to control the things that you are
in control of. And the truth of the matter is you are in control of almost everything that dictates
the quality of your life. 98% of it. Now we are very good at telling ourselves, oh, you know,
this happened or that happened or this or that or this. bro, you're full of shit. Okay. Millions of people just like you have gone way further than you with
worse circumstances. That's the truth. And you sit there and you pick apart why you're not where you
are when in reality, you're only not where you are because of a very simple concept. You have
refused to understand that you are in control of all of these things.
And because you don't want to put in the effort or you've been hanging around the wrong people that have convinced you otherwise, you are now at a point where you feel like you're floating through the air and life just sort of comes at me and we'll see what happens.
It's a completely different type of living.
Those people never get anywhere. You cannot get anywhere without intentional control of your environment that is available to you. You cannot get anywhere.
If you float through life and you have that attitude, it's kind of take what you get.
And it's never good because all the people who are living the other way, the intentional way,
they are intentionally controlling their outcome they are intentionally controlling their environment they are intentionally making
decisions that they know and they've built that that mental strength to do so they're those people
take all the good shit and it's what's left over is for the floaters right so um yeah man i mean
this is the whole concept of what live hard's about People think they still think it's a fucking diet
Like I see these trainers
Talk shit on it and they say
It's a fucking diet you haven't even read the program bro
If you were smart you'd use
The fucking framework of the program
To get your clients results
Because they would get 10 times better results
And not only would they get better results
When they get better results
You look better as a trainer.
You see what I'm saying?
So like, it's a mental reprogramming so that you can go from someone who's out of control
to someone who is in control.
And when you live your life in control, you control the outcome for most things.
So, you know, we've been conditioned over and over and over and over and over again for for dude
As long as I can remember in my life
that there was uncertainty in the outcome of our existences because
You know, uh, that's just the way it was like people will say things, you know, and you never really hear
super wealthy successful accomplished people
Say this you always hear people say this. They haven't done
anything. They talk about luck. They talk about circumstance. They talk about all these things
that, you know, I didn't have the breaks. I didn't get this. I didn't get that. Well, that's not true,
bro. What's true is you didn't control intentionally your life while other people did.
Okay. And, you know know that's the mentality that
the masses have about the existence dude think about everybody you know how do they live do they
live intentionally where they control every single decision that they make or do they have the
attitude of well that's just life you know i got this i'll get through it. These are my cards. Yeah. What? Yeah. Where do most people live?
Most people live there.
And I would say it's like 98% of people live there, which if you really think about what
that means for you, someone who's trying to live intentionally, that means that it's unlimited
buffet of success for you because no one else even trying to eat.
They're just trying to, you know, see what they can catch off the dinner table.
You're over there making the fucking dinner.
And you're going to eat as much as possible.
And they're going to get a couple bites of the scraps.
And that's the reality, dude.
And it's more than just success.
It's how you feel about yourself, right?
How many of you feel uncertain or in this place of anxiousness or in this place of, you know, I'm not sure how this is going to work out.
Most people feel that way, but people who intentionally control their decisions and
they've developed the discipline to do the things they know they need to do. And when they make a
promise to themselves, they can do it. Those are the people that feel amazing. Those are the people
that are fulfilled. Those are the people that are excited about life and they're pumped and they want to attack. It completely changes your existence.
And anybody who's actually done 75 hard or the full live hard program or lives that lifestyle
understands exactly what I'm talking about. But people who don't, they're like, oh, this sounds
like hocus pocus. Well, yeah, it does because you, you know, anything's going to sound like
hocus pocus when you've never fucking done it. Right. Yeah, that's real, man. it does because you you know, anything's gonna sound like hocus-pocus when you've never fucking done it, right?
Because I also feel like you know
There's a third class of people and this is like I don't know if you want to call them like this is where the miserable
People will live but people who know that there's something they have to change they like they know it and they don't
They know nothing about yeah. Yeah, you talk about that a little bit? Well, I mean, you said it. They're miserable.
Yeah. If you know what you need to do and you do not do it, every single time you tell yourself in the morning,
today's the day.
I'm going to eat right today.
I'm going to lift today.
I'm going to make these emails today.
And you don't do it when you go to bed.
Your stock in yourself shrinks a little bit every day. And if you do that for years and years
and years and years and years, you beat down your own self image so far that it becomes this little
speck of dust and you cannot even comprehend that you are capable of anything. You see what I'm
saying? So if you beat on yourself over and over and over again, I'm not talking about this negative
self-talk. I'm talking about with your actions. I'm talking about you knowing what you need to do and then you not
doing it. That is intentional degradation of one's own character and belief in themselves.
And it will shrink you down to nothing, to where you think you can do nothing, be nothing,
create nothing, become nothing, and you'll be miserable. That's the reality. But it's easy to change by just understanding and taking ownerships of our lives and saying,
hey man, I'm actually in control of way more than I'm giving myself credit for. And I've
been lying to myself. That's the key. Admit that you've been lying to yourself. It's okay.
We've all lied to ourselves over and over again in our lives. None of these people out here that pretend like they've never done that, they're full of shit.
Everybody does it.
It's called the human experience.
And we are so good at lying to ourselves that it doesn't even sound like a lie after a while.
After a while, it's just the truth.
You know, I can't control what I eat.
I'm big boned.
I'm overweight because my mom was overweight right and and after
a while you just accept that you tell yourself that story even if it's a lie you see
what i'm saying so we have to admit to ourselves and say yeah i have been lying to myself and
that's the first step that is the first step to changing your entire life it's just taking
responsibility for the lies that you have been telling yourself for years
and years and years and then saying, okay, well, what can I actually do?
And that's a dude, you're, you're being born into a whole new world whenever you stop that
and you stop that cycle of lying to yourself and then start taking the actual proper intentful action towards who you want to become.
And bro, every single day, and people will attest to this, that live a live hard lifestyle.
When you wake up in the morning and you know you did exactly what you're supposed to do
the day before, you have this power about you already because you're like, fuck yeah,
bro.
All right.
You might look in the mirror.
You might look at your bank account.
You might look at your life and say, fuck, kind of up but i did what i was supposed to
do yesterday and it gives you this extra power that most people never ever experience even once
which is really sad yeah i mean if you want to learn that program what i'm that's the live hard
program guys like the live hard program will develop the skill set that we are talking about right here.
It will teach you to control the controllables.
It will teach you to have self-belief, confidence, self-esteem in yourself
because you are keeping the promises that you make to yourself every day.
It also happens to get you in shape.
But it's still not a fitness program, and it's still not a diet,
and it's still not a fucking challenge.
It's a program. It's a lifestyle. You can get it still not a fucking challenge it's a program it's a
lifestyle you can get it for free at episode 208 i love it man i love it guys andy that was three
all right guys let's go out have a good week we'll see you on cti tomorrow Box froze, fuck a bowl, fuck a stole Counted millions in a cold Bad bitch, booted swole
Got her on bankroll, can't fold
Just a note, headshot, case closed