REAL AF with Andy Frisella - 927. Q&AF: Prioritizing Yourself, Outgrowing Old Circles & Good To Great Leadership
Episode Date: August 25, 2025On today’s episode, Andy answers live call-in questions on how to prioritize personal growth as a giver, the best way to upgrade your circle to find friends who push you further, and how to lead wit...h impact when new to leadership.
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What's sleeping on the flow
Now my jury box froze
Fuck a pole
Fuck a stole
Counted millions in a cold
Bad bitch booted swow
Got her own bankro
Can't fold
Just a no headshot case closed
What is up guys
It's Andy for selling
This is the show for the real
What?
We're here
It's me and DJ
We're gonna answer your questions
Uh be sure to call in
1-800
We don't fucking know
All right, let's just start the show off like that.
This is Q&AF.
This is where you submit the questions
and we give you the answers.
Now, you could submit your questions
a couple different ways.
DJ, why don't you tell us how they can do it?
Yeah, I can do a few different ways, guys.
You can email these questions in
at Ask Andy at Andyficella.com.
You can also...
Go ahead.
Sorry to interrupt you.
That's fine.
I didn't realize you were going to be on your game.
No, that's fine.
That's fine.
You guys can also call Andy's number directly.
It's 314.
I'm sorry.
No, man, check the description down below.
There's a link there you guys to sign up.
You can also submit your questions in the comments of Q&AF episodes.
And what else do we have, DJ, this week?
We got CTI.
CTI.
What's CTI stand for?
What used to stand for something, but I think we've taken it over and it means cruising the internet now.
That's correct.
Yeah.
So go ahead.
I'll just let you finish.
I'm on the game.
I'm on my game.
All right.
Tell them what's up.
We got CTIs.
That's tomorrow.
Tomorrow's current events, a little bit of everything.
We just pull up headlines to talk about it.
Other times you guys tune in.
See, these are shows within the show.
There you go.
You know what I'm saying?
That's right.
Yeah.
And he's got real talk sometimes.
That's when Andy just gets on here and riffs, you know.
You know, says what's on his mind, 15, 20 minutes.
You guys love those.
And then every now and then we get some special sauce in there,
a little terriaki with 75 hard verses.
where people who have completed 75 hard or the Live Hard program
come on and tell us how they went from shit to Shinola.
That's correct.
Yeah.
Good job.
Thanks, ma'am.
Yeah.
So what else?
There's also a...
Oh, there's a fee.
No.
Oh.
You can get the Live Hard program.
Oh, yeah, Live Hard program.
If you want to learn more about it, you guys can listen to it for free on episode 14 on
the Real AF feed.
No, that's episode 208 there, bro.
But, yeah.
I saw the first one.
No, you could do it at 14 or 208.
It's free.
It's free.
It's free.
It's free.
It's absolutely free.
And what else is not free?
What's not free is, you know, for those of you who need a little bit more juice, you guys can buy the book on mental toughness written by your boy, Andy Friclella.
You guys can find that online at Andy Friclella.com.
There you go.
That's pretty shitty.
Damn, was it?
I mean, you've only heard that 4,000 times.
I thought it did pretty good.
Yeah.
you know what hey now I know you're now I know you're certainly not paying attention
talking over there well I forget the episode yeah yeah a lot of free good fucking
shit in those there's yes there is you're gonna make up for it yeah all right all right
like we said today is Q and a F and we're gonna answer some questions and make you guys
better I guess we'll go ahead and get on it don't forget to pay the fee the fee is
very simple that makes you laugh it makes you think it gives you a new
perspective if you learn something which you will today for sure do us a favor
and don't be a ho and show the show guys yeah yeah girls DJ has steal your
bike I'm gonna steal it all right what's happening man what's going on bro that's pretty
good yeah thanks man yeah thanks yeah I mean to be put on the spot you know it wasn't that
bad oh yeah it's good wasn't that bad yeah I got some good ones for you oh yeah oh yeah
you do yeah see I could do DJ better than he can do me
Yeah, that was good.
That was good.
Yeah.
That was good.
All right.
Well, let's make some people better today, dude.
Let's get right into it.
We got some, we got some calls lined up, got some right-ins.
Let's start with a call.
Okay.
Yeah, let's get our, let's get Jesse on the line.
Now, full transparency.
I don't know if this is like a guy, Jesse or girl, Jesse.
It's all right.
We can handle it.
It's Jesse.
Let's give a Jesse a call.
Hello?
Jesse.
It's a guy.
Hey, Jesse.
What's up, what's up, man?
What's going on, bro?
How are you?
Doing well.
Doing what yourself?
I'm not doing too bad.
Not doing too bad at all, man.
Where are you calling from?
Georgia.
Specifically, Gainesville.
Gainesville?
Yeah, Gainesville, Georgia.
Is that too close to Atlanta, is it?
Maybe about 45 to an hour, somewhere on there.
Oh, okay.
That's not bad.
It's far enough to not get hit by a stray bullet.
Or, or, yeah.
I'm sure man it's changing up there so what's happening jesse how are you bro what's up and you
do well do well man yourself i'm doing great it's it's it's a great day to have a great day
it is it's beautiful outside yeah so what can we help you with brother what's going on
um a lot man um but more specifically or just to speak in general terms um how would you
you take care of yourself when everybody around you want the piece of you they're always asking for help
help me do this help me that can you help me with this you know kids wife friends family so how could
you keep yourself in check and straight to give the best for everybody else oh man I think a lot
of people struggle with this dude but it's very simple and I learned this lesson um I don't know
it took me to us probably in my late 30s to really learn this lesson
You know, when you have responsibilities, and for me, yes, I don't have kids, but I've got
family, I've got businesses, I've got people that depend on me, and when you're someone
that cares about those things, it's very, very hard to put yourself in front of those things.
And what I came to realize, brother, is that if I wasn't able to take care of myself and
I wasn't in the best place I could be, my ability to take care of the people around me suffer.
So I have this thing that I say pretty often and you got to be selfish to be selfless.
And this is exactly what that means.
If you're not fit, if you're not healthy, if you're sick, if you're poor, if you're not
in a place to be able to handle yourself, you certainly can't handle everybody else around you.
So when we think about the natural way that people see other people when they start to take care of
themselves, they start to eat right, they start to train, they start to be dedicated to their
goals, a lot of people around those people will say, oh, you're starting to be selfish.
Yeah, but I'm being selfish so I can do all the shit you want me to do, motherfucker.
So that is a common misunderstanding of the people around you.
And they really won't ever understand it.
But if you actually care, you've got to understand it.
And dude, if you value your sanity and your own confidence and self-esteem and skill set,
you got to take care of yourself first, bro.
Because at the end of the day, man,
And this is really going to rub some people the wrong way, but it's the fucking truth.
Okay.
At the end of the day, most people don't appreciate what you do for them.
They appreciate what you do for them in the moment that you do it.
When you, you know, some time has gone by, they don't appreciate it.
They don't think about it.
They don't give you the credit for it.
And, you know, it's a what have you done for me lately world?
And the problem with that is that when we are.
solution minded and we are people that are empathetic and care and try to be active and help other
people they end up draining all the life force out of us dude to where we don't have the energy
to pursue our own interests and our own development and our own skill set and that ends up
leaving us with nothing that ends up leaving us with no you know emotional energy we're drained
we're frustrated, we're angry, and then also our own life, our money, our fitness, our mental
health, our actual health, we don't have any of it because we gave it up trying to help other
people. And so, dude, if you are someone, and I'm not just talking to Jesse, but if you are
someone who is always being pulled on, who is always being asked to help, who has lots of
responsibility, and lots of responsibility might be just your kids, man, it's all.
different for everybody else. But at the end of the day, you have to understand that if you are
not your best product, you cannot help people effectively to the point of what you would be
able to do. And that was a perspective for me that took me almost 40 years to figure out,
dude. But once I figured it out, man, I got everything that I ever wanted came into my life
personally and then my ability to do good for other people increase exponentially so uh bro
i understand that's a really hard thing especially when you care but you got to realize that if you
don't put yourself first you're going to end up with nothing in the long run right does that make
sense yeah uh that makes perfect sense and i'm assuming that's including learning how to say no right
absolutely it'd be a big part of deal hey listen dude setting boundaries
boundaries and saying no is a huge, huge, huge skill set.
If you lack the ability to say no and you're trying to become more successful financially,
you'll never be able to do it because people can sense that and the asks never stop.
Okay.
That's one thing, you know, but yeah, you have to practice saying no.
And by the way, no is a complete sentence.
you could just say no you don't have to give this big long justification and if someone says why
you could say because i don't want to or because i said so or because i have to do this for myself
and these are acceptable answers and we live in this society that sort of like shames us for saying
no or you know sometimes we're around friends and family that make us feel guilty for saying no
And at the end of the day, dude, it's all bullshit.
And it's all stuff that'll keep you from becoming who you need,
who you want and need to become in order to be, you know,
the best that you can be for yourself and everybody around you, brother.
Right, right.
You struggle with that with saying no?
Yeah, man, absolutely.
Because it's one of those things where it's like I was taught to get first
before I, before I ask or take.
Yeah.
So saying no is not.
part of something that I grew up with, you know.
Yeah, brother.
I do know.
I struggle with it myself.
You know, one of my really good friends tells me this all the time.
He's like, bro, you got to set better boundaries.
You got to set better boundaries.
You got to say, fucking no, fuck these people.
And, you know, he's right.
And honestly, I started listening to him a couple years ago when it came to that.
And it's made my life better.
It really has.
I still struggle with it.
And then the other thing is, is the more successful you become, dude, you realize that you can help people tremendously in a way that is very impactful to them, but maybe not as it doesn't hurt to like give.
Like, for example, right now, like if someone were to get in a hole for 500 bucks or a thousand bucks, that that's not a relevant amount of money for me.
And so I can very easily say, here's a thousand bucks, fix your problem.
But what happens when you do that is a couple things.
One, you keep them from learning the lesson that they need to learn so that this doesn't happen again.
All right.
That's the first thing that you are taking away their lessons in life that are important for them to learn.
And that was one of the most important, uh,
I guess realizations that I have when it came to helping people.
And bro, I still, you know, I'm very generous person, but I don't help everybody.
It depends on the situation.
It depends on what happened.
And most of the time I say no, because the truth of the matter is most of the time it's
the consequence of their own poor decision making.
And they have to learn that lesson.
And then the other thing I learn is that when you save people and from their own
carmic reaction that they've created, you actually step in front of, you know, that that fist
of karma and take that punch for them, you know, then you get that shit unloaded on you. And,
you know, you're not the one that made the mistakes. So we have to learn that, you know,
other people have to be responsible for their own shit, bro. And when you're someone who is helpful
and giving and someone who, who, you know, is just a kindhearted person, dude, people take
advantage of it and it sucks.
So you got to be very intelligent and calculating about how you help because if you help
the wrong person, then they think that it's expected and then you've created a real problem
where now they're going out and repeating mistakes over and over and over again and never
learning the lesson we see this a lot with like people who are hooked on drugs like families who
get someone who's like you know hooked on meth or or fucking crack or something and they'll keep
they'll keep trying to help them and get them out of the hole and get them out of the hole and get
them out of the hole and then what happens they become someone who's understands how to manipulate
people and get what they want and they never work on solving the problem so you're a crutch now
yeah for sure yeah and i was just i was just at dinner with some friends last night and um
we got on the topic and you know there's some they're very successful people and they were on the
topic of a of a person that they know who you know has uh needs but also has been fired from
their job like seven times for showing up late and you know they they don't they don't do their
part and uh you know you just can't get yourself in that situation bro you've got to be smart you got to
understand that not everybody has the same level of integrity that you have and that's a good
thing to have don't lose it just be selective about where you put it out because when you do that
you're giving a piece of you away you're giving energy from you away and the less energy that you
have to work on you uh the the you know the problem compounds about you not getting where you need to
be and not being able to help anybody so that's a hard lesson dude saying no especially when
you're someone that's a good heart of person bro right right that's not exclusive to you
gotcha yeah yeah I mean as you were talking I was I was I imagine a couple scenarios where
you know saying no could have been a benefit um and probably changed the course of my life
as of right now but well yeah so what do you think that means in the future
I got to learn to say no.
That's right.
Because you're already, how old are you?
31.
Yeah.
It's time to learn that, bro.
It's time to learn that.
You know?
That's real, man.
I think the biggest thing, dude, it just get comfortable saying no and not saying anything after it.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, like I, at first people are going to take that as weird.
And it is weird at first.
But you got to condition yourself to say no.
And then, you know, later.
when you're more comfortable, you could start providing a little bit more of a window into why
that reason is, you know, if needed. But bro, you don't need to explain yourself. You don't need
to, you're a grown man. You got responsibilities. You need to put yourself first so that you
can handle those responsibilities in the best way possible with the best product possible, which is
you. And you have to be free to do that. And that's going to require you setting some boundaries
and saying no. Yeah. Yeah. Hell yeah. All right.
I appreciate that. Thank you very much.
You're welcome, bro. It takes practice, dude. It takes practice.
Sometimes when you have to practice saying no, you practice saying no to little things
so that you get comfortable just saying it. You know what I mean? Just look for opportunities
when you're in your day-to-day life and acknowledge those little victories when you say no to
things you actually don't want to do. You know, for me, one of the things that I've always got
caught up in is someone will ask me to do something.
months in advance and I'll say yes in the moment, but I really didn't want to do it. And then
I end up having to like cancel it or back out. And I've just gotten more comfortable just
kind of saying, no, I'm doing my thing. And that's just taking a long time for me to get
there. And I got to tell you, dude, I don't think it's really offended anybody. I don't think
it's, I think people are comfortable. I think this lack of communication is almost in our
own heads you know um we fear what people are going to say we we paint our are the worst possible
reaction in our mind and then you know we we kind of bitch out and you know when in reality had you
just said no they would have probably been like they probably would have said well why not you'd be like
hey because this and it'd be over you know what i mean yeah it's thick man well i appreciate it thank you
yeah brother you bro all right jesse i'll talk to you later dude
I appreciate you guys.
Thank you for what you do.
Thank you.
It's been to help with, not just this, but everything else in between.
Thank you, brother.
We really appreciate that, man.
All right, you guys have a good one.
All right, you too.
I was thinking, I think the most, the hardest part of that process is just saying no the first time.
Because then it's like, you know, you brought up like, you know, somebody that you're being a crutch to essentially.
But it's like the moment you just stop helping them.
Oh, then you're a piece of shit.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Then you got to deal with like, that's the hard.
Like, but I feel.
like, I mean, correct me if I'm wrong, I feel like you only got to do that, like one,
maybe two times, and then you're good.
Yeah.
Then you're good.
Yeah.
Dude, it's, look, man, people got to know they can't step on your toes.
Yeah.
And that's it.
And saying no in a very direct, confident way and kind of leaving it at that sort of sets
that boundary for good.
Oh, yeah.
You know, because like it's so, it's so unexpected for people and they're not used to it
to the point where like when you just say no and kind of leave it at that, they almost think
like well oh fuck are you mad at me yeah right you know no i'm not mad at you it's just it's just no
yeah and once you set that boundary you know people people start respecting it yeah 100%
it doesn't take a long time to set that up no that's real man um it's almost like a perfect
transition we got it right in the kind of let's expand on this a little bit more um guys
andy question number two dear and dj uh my name is mark and i am 32 years old living in the northwest
suburbs of Chicago, Illinois.
I have been making significant changes in my life,
which it's impacted me for the better.
To save a long story,
I will just say I used to be a soy boy beta white knight.
Self-describe, okay.
Who blamed everyone for my shortcomings until 2020 happened.
And I essentially had my coming to Jesus moment.
through listening to you and a few other podcasts, I've managed to see that all the
hills that I was willing to die on were basically BS.
So I changed up my weight training regimen as well and what I was eating, who I was following
on social media.
As I write this, I've cleared up years of brain fog.
I read a lot more than I watch TV and I maintain routine every day, even on the weekends.
The problem that I have, the problem that I've been facing since I started making these
changes is that I've been getting a lot of backlash because I'm not that guy anymore.
I don't drink alcohol, nor do I smoke cigarettes anymore, cold turkey.
I've even gotten to the point where I'm not materialistic as hell, nor do I go out to
eat.
I make all of my food for the week at home.
And being Indian, I'm not big on eating Indian food anymore, as it does not agree with my
stomach. So with all that being said, my question is, how do I, how do I cut these people off
and tell them that I'm doing this for my own personal benefit? I'm at the point where I really
don't care what they have to say about me. Most of it is done behind closed doors anyway,
but I'm getting really tired of having to explain why I don't go to the club anymore,
or why I don't want to go to this restaurant, because it doesn't align with my new values,
or why I don't stay up to the wee hours of the morning
because I want to get my 4 a.m. lifting.
Always appreciate your insight and thank you for what you do.
P.S., I love the great energy, by the way.
The minute I cracked it open while driving,
I was pulled over by the police,
and I'm not saying that to be funny.
I'm being serious.
A lot of stuff there.
Profiling.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
You got to watch out for that great energy.
I don't eat into your food no more
because my stomach does not agree.
Yeah.
Sounds like he's become full-blown, you know,
domestic tea oh yeah that's right that's right uh that's right hey all right
all right dude look congratulations on all the progress okay that's that's a big change uh you know
going from being someone who's kind of like floating in the wind and bought into society's
idea of being weak and sick and you know broken uh this way lesser version of yourself to pursue
Your ultimate potential and purpose for being in life by creating you into being the best you that you could be is a massive change and a massive victory.
In regards to the people that you feel you have to explain, you said, you don't really care what they think.
Well, you fucking obviously do.
You wouldn't be writing into the show.
All right.
A lot of people say, oh, I don't give a fuck.
But let me tell you something, dude.
The people who say, oh, give zero fucks are the ones that give the most fucks, okay?
So, you have to understand that you owe them nothing.
You, you don't owe them an excuse, you don't owe them a reason, you don't owe them an explanation for why it is you're trying to work out or trying to be healthier or trying to become what it is you're trying to become.
They are going to stay exactly where they are for the next 60s.
motherfucking years, okay? Their best days have already happened. Your best days haven't even
started unless you decide to stay in that circle and do what they do. And you are at a point
where it is time to move into what we call no man's land. And no man's land is not a fun place
to be. In fact, I think you're already there. You're not going to eat. You're making
your food at home. You're sort of isolating yourself. And that is not the best way to do this.
Okay. You have to understand your old friend group, your people who knew you from back in the day,
most of them are not going to come on the journey with you. All right. And then they're going to
blame you and they're going to say you changed and you're not that guy. Well, motherfucker, I went and you
could have came and you decided not to that is not my fucking fault all right and it's not yours either so you
have to understand dude through life as we progress and continue down this path of personal
development and personal improvement making more money getting more fit becoming the version of
ourselves that we want to become in our lives we are going to move through different groups of
friends through our life this idea of having a friend group from high school
or college and staying super tight your whole life really only happens for people who stay in
the same spot when they graduate college or high school or whatever the minute you start
progressing they're not going to relate dude and nothing you say and nothing you explain and
nothing you do the success you build will ever change that all right so you're going to move on
from this friend group.
You're going to politely just stop answering the text or be slow to answer the text
or not answer their calls.
Stop giving them an explanation.
You don't need to give them one.
They'll fucking get it.
And continue down your path.
Now, as you continue down your path, you're going to feel a little isolated, like what
you're explaining now.
But surely and slowly, you're going to start developing a new friend group.
You're going to meet one person who is on the path that you're on.
And then you're going to meet a second.
And then you're going to meet a third.
And before you know it, that old friend group that says shit like, oh, you changed and, oh, man, you know, you're not that guy anymore.
And, you know, you used to be fun.
Don't forget who you are.
Don't forget where you came from.
Instead of people saying that, they're going to be saying, hey, man, how can I help you on this?
What can we do?
hey this will work for you hey that will work for you and now the conversation becomes cool because
it's like you're having these amazing offensive conversations about how you're going to move forward
and how you're going to do these things and how you can build together and work together
and then you're you're not going to have to defend yourself you're not going to have to expend
energy trying to explain because they're going to get it all right and then what's going to happen
is if you continue to level up,
some of these people out of that second group
will go with you, but some won't.
Some will stay where they are.
They'll be happy at that level of development.
And that's fine.
This is not judgment.
This is about what you want for yourself.
And you're going to move on to the next group
and you're going to go through the process again.
It's going to be you and you're not really going to relate
to the second friend group anymore.
And then you're going to meet someone
and then you're going to meet another person.
Before you know, you're going to have an even
a higher network that is even more aligned with what it is.
And dude, the value of the relationships that you have with people who are on the same path
as you is much more fulfilling and much more valuable than trying to defend yourself
against people who don't understand it.
All right?
So you go from anchors trying to pull you back to people who are doing everything they can.
They're picking up the phone.
They're opening up their black book.
they're calling people, they're introing you, they're trying to help you win.
Which one of those situations would you rather be in?
All of us would rather be in the situation where we're surrounded by people who are helping
us do what we want to do.
And that requires us leaving the things that we knew.
Okay.
And if you don't do that, the path will get so hard.
And those old friends, they will call you at the right time when things are.
aren't good and you're naturally wanting to quit anyway and they will convince you to
fucking quit. And then you'll go back and you'll end up being just like them. And I see this
happen. I have seen this happen so many times that I couldn't even count. I honestly
couldn't. This is why I believe most people lose. They cannot break the bonds that they had with
people that they either grew up with or quote unquote feel loyal to we have this thing in
society now where you know if you're not loyal to people from way you're not real you're fake
you're full of shit you bro say whatever to fuck you want okay you stay the same i fucking didn't
if that makes me not real then fucking whatever it is that's what it is i don't care okay
and you won't either because you'll be doing the things that you love you'll be contributing
the things that you care about you'll be becoming who it is you want to be and you'll be creating
what it is you want to create and none of those motherfuckers from back in the old day are doing any of that
shit and by the way if they're cool you could still be friends of them you still might see them out
once in a while you still might see them at a restaurant a couple times a year you might grab a beer
but like dude this is not an all the time thing and people ruin their chances of success by being
too loyal to the wrong people, okay? The person that you have to be loyal to the most is
yourself. It's yourself. And you're not doing yourself any favors by being loyal to people
who are going to hold you back because they've guilted you into, you know, being real, quote
unquote. So look, man, it's a process. Everybody goes through it. You have to go through it if you want to
move on from where you are and you're already doing this you've got three four five years under
your belt it's time to move the fuck on okay so whatever you got to do you can tell them again
but if I were you I just stop explaining it and people will eventually know they'll eventually
say oh well that's what he does and they won't fuck with it so you know well the part that
you said they could have came to yeah they could like you know no
talks about that bro i think about my friends all the fucking time no one talks about you could be here
too man and you know what i thought too man is like the truth of the matter is is that if you really
care for you for those people if you really care for those friends or or whoever it is sometimes
the only fucking chance that they'll ever have to get out of that is to see you fucking get out of it
yes you know what i'm saying like you got to go yeah you got to go and and if you really care
about them show them what the fuck it looks like show them what it takes yeah
They could have came, man.
Bro, listen.
Dude, it hurts, man.
It hurts because you care for those people, bro.
Nah, it doesn't hurt.
It is what it's reality.
It's just real.
It's, dude, when you've been doing something long enough,
you start to just accept things for what they are.
Yeah.
That's, that is what the point of the show is.
It's just, it's a realist mentality.
It just is what it is, man.
And if you don't operate in the what is and you always operate in the what should be,
you can't win.
You'll always be fighting a struggle that you can't win.
So you have to acknowledge things and bottom line them for what they are.
They're going to stay there.
I'm not going to stay there.
It is what it is.
I have nothing against them.
If they have something against me, I don't give a fuck.
And that's that.
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
Dude, listen.
I don't know.
Like, I think you got to get to a point.
And this is part of the reason why, like, you know, developing yourself with discipline
and mental toughness and grit and for,
and all these things because, dude, most people can't say no and can't have a conversation
about boundaries or can't move on because they lack the confidence to do so.
They don't believe in themselves.
And so you have to build that belief in yourself, you know, through a program like Live
Hard.
That's why it's a program that you do every single year because it keeps your confidence
and your self-belief and your grit and your fortitude and your mental toughness
sharpened so that these kind of things don't creep in and throw you off track.
The more confidence you have in yourself, the easier it is to say no to everybody else
because you know that you'll be fine on your own.
And a lot of people that lack confidence feel like they can't move down the path on their own
because they don't believe in themselves.
So, you know, the more confidence you can develop, the easier this whole process is going to be.
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
That's real shit, man.
I love it.
Another call?
Yeah.
Yeah, shall we?
This is Trevor.
That's good.
give uh let's give Trevor a call this Trevor Trevor what's up man this a DJ
what's going on DJ what you tell me man what's going on with you oh man just uh join this
beautiful day trying to get some yard work done where you at Trevor I'm south of St. Louis
just about 70 miles how you doing man I'm doing good bro
where at?
Leesburg.
Oh, Leesburg.
Yeah, just north of Steelville.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
Cool, man.
Proud Bissurian.
Yep.
Yep.
So what's happening, bro?
How can we help you?
Well, this is kind of surreal.
I didn't expect to get called, but man, I really appreciate you guys taking the time to call me.
And, you know, sort of what my question revolves around is you don't know what you don't know.
And you being an entrepreneur, I'm more of an entrepreneur, I work for a company that I'm working to make them a better company.
So I've been putting some leadership positions and I guess I feel like I'm doing really good becoming a leader.
But the question I've got to have is what is sort of that lie or misconception that we tell ourselves when we're in that leadership position that delay us for making the leap from being a really good leader?
to being a great leader.
We tell ourselves we're great leaders before we're actually great leaders.
That's what keeps people from becoming a great leader.
So it's ego.
People believe that if they have a leadership title,
that they're automatically a leader,
when in reality that's not true at all.
In fact,
a lot of people don't understand that they might have the role of leader on their
team but there might be someone else leading your team that technically is below you and this is
where we run into situations like undermining and difficulty to build a team and build a culture
but the reason that those things ultimately pop up is because we think we're better than we are and so
to be a great leader you have to understand that you're not that great okay and that mean that that is
the proper application of humility when it comes to becoming good at something, I know what I'm good
at, but I also know that I could be much better at the things that I'm good at. And that opens me up
to learning. That opens me up to hearing new perspectives or learning new lessons about whatever
the skill set might be. And in this case, it's leadership. So if you walk in and you think
Man, I'm a good leader.
The boss gave me the role a leader.
I'm the leader.
You motherfuckers better do what I say because I'm the leader.
You'll never be a great leader.
The way that you have awareness about wanting to be a great leader is how you become a great leader.
Because you're already humble enough to even ask and say, how can I be better?
How can I avoid mistakes?
How can I X, X, X, X.
These are things that people who suck at leadership never ask themselves.
not even aware of it bro so the fact that you're aware of it is a huge deal i think the second
thing that is very important and very true i think people underestimate the leading by example piece
i think they believe that they can lie or skate around it or pretend or somehow trick everybody
around them into thinking that they're doing the things
that they're supposed to be doing and that never works people are much smarter than than people
give them credit for they they're automatically also looking at their leadership with a very
fine microscope okay so like when you combine the attitude of oh they're not going to see it
with their ability to microanalyze every single move they're going to see that you're not
leading by example so yeah that makes sense yeah
bro so like dude most leaders don't do that and it's it's the simplest thing man it's monkey see
monkey do they're going to hold the standard that you hold they're going to do the things that you
do if you pick up the trash they're going to pick up the trash if you hold a standard of a clean
truck they're going to have a clean truck the all these things come from what they observe
and um you know most people just don't do it dude they hear you know the Lombardi quote uh you know
leading by example isn't the best way to lead it's the only way to lead and they think that's
some like abstract bullshit and it's not it's the truth uh and then thirdly dude i think that leaders
also underestimate what their job really is their job is not just to like stand at the front and say
this is what we're doing dude when you're a great leader man you got to you got to work with people
you got to you got to get right in with them and and and you know figure out what drives
them. What's their goals? What is it they care about? What are the things that move them? What skills do they need to learn? Like one of the ways that you can best build a great team is by teaching them skills that they didn't have. And a lot of people aren't willing to do that. But dude, when we transfer as humans our knowledge from our brain into their brain, there's literally nothing more valuable perception wise than we can give another person is our knowledge. So, a
lot of people in leadership they will say things like well that's their job to to learn those
skills yeah but if they learn from you bro how much more are they going to love working with you
how much more are they going to be how much more are they going to want to go to battle with you
when it's time to fucking you know batting the hatches down and fucking go to war like the you have to
do the work of not just leader but coach and teacher and mentor and and big brother sometimes you
know and and that's a that's a thing that a lot of people just aren't willing to invest in their
people with you know they they will say things like oh well they get paid yeah okay well you're
gonna lose bro like it has to be more than that so but man we could go on and on but at the
end of the day brother like I would say that's the top three things really I see people mess up
you know and maybe the fourth thing would go in with the first thing which will be like you
know people's egos thinking that if you're a leader people owe you shit that's not what it is
man you owe them you're working for them yeah you're leading them you're helping them the best
leaders understand that your job is to facilitate the success of your team it's not to sit in the
office with your desk up and act like you you've got a 20 foot dick bro like it's it's i fucking
care about people i'm going to help you win we're going to win together we're going to do the
work together here's what we're trying to do this is how it benefits you this is how it benefits us
as a team and let's go fucking do it and then you you know you you you got to build these guys into
doing that so um but bro i'll give you a lot of credit man because like most guys won't even ask
they won't even ask they're too proud yeah i want to set my team up for the best success in
their life and i think you hit on two things when you're point two and point three are the things
that I'm the most concerned about with myself.
I'm a guy that learned just by going out and doing.
And what I really struggle with, I think, right now is that line of going out and doing it with my team
and also stepping back enough to allow them to struggle to learn on their own.
And I guess maybe that's where I'm concerned is I learn really well by doing it.
If I fail, I learn from that.
And I learned that better than someone telling me.
I guess where I'm concerned is if I'm trying to take that same approach to
somebody else and am I missing out an opportunity to teach them in a different way.
And I guess that's where I was really concerned about how my leadership skills are
affected by what my previous experiences were.
Man, you know, that's a really good question.
And I think there is a lot of ways everybody has their own like quote unquote
leadership style but if we think about what our job is and you said it right away my you know
I want to put my team in a position to win first of all that's another thing I didn't
mention was with the intent like when you have a team and they can feel that you care about
their success as a leader they can feel that intent it makes a much better team but as far as
like the way to teach them I think a lot of people have different ways but but my
way is the one that you described, which is sit down, explain it, give them a couple swings
of the bat, you know, they're going to miss the ball, and then fine tune it, step back,
let them make their mistakes, fine tune it, and then they'll get it. And by letting them
make a few mistakes and learn on their own, you're allowing them to build confidence in their
own skill set, which will pay off dividends long term. Does that make sense?
Yep. That makes a lot of sense.
Yeah, it's, bro, it's fucking frustrating because you're sitting there and you're like, fuck, dude.
Like, this is basic shit, but it's not basic to them.
Okay.
It's, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, the older we get and the more season we get and the more experience we get, that part gets a lot harder because some of the things that make up the foundational principles of your skill set, you've forgotten.
And it's, and it's like speaking Chinese to them.
So, so we have to remember, dude, also as leaders, like,
who were leading and what they've known and and they don't know what we know and I struggle with
this for a long time as a leader I used to get really fucking pissed off when people couldn't do
basic shit but then I started realizing if I just kept my cool and I sat down and say look
why are we doing this why did you do it that way and they'll say well you know I thought this
was the way and I say no we need to do it like this because this and this usually dude
99% of the time they're like oh fuck I got it.
it and we default I think a lot of times dude also we default into thinking that people are
being lazy and they're not being lazy they just don't fucking know now sometimes they are being
lazy but most of the time I found they don't know people want to win they want to contribute
they want to be a part of a team they want to they want to do well winning is fun winning is
fun for everybody and it's especially fun for people who've never won and and if you can lead
if you can lead people into like learning a skill and winning as a team bro like that's a big that's a big skill set to teach people because most people never win so uh dude i'll be real with you i think you're setting a foundation to be a tremendous leader i i think you're asking the right questions i think you're concerned about the right things and the fact that you have the awareness is going to mean that you're not going to struggle with that man that where people run
into this learning new skills and becoming better is when they're not even aware they suck
they're not even aware that they need to get better they're not even aware of they just look
they just look at it like this is my job and those people never do well they always struggle
they always go from job to job to job job job job and I never understood it man because like
we spend so much of our time in our work and with the people that we work with why the
fuck will we not want to be the best at what we do you know and absolutely yeah like we're gonna be
here anyway bro let's fucking win might as well win yeah that's what i'm saying and uh and and let's have fun
doing it dude exactly i love what i do bro there's not i would not trade my fucking life for
anybody's life on the planet zero chance i love the people i get to do this with i love what we do
I'm so grateful that I get to do it
I mean dude I get to come in here
I get to work with all these amazing people
who work fucking super hard
who care about people who change people
who then then you know we change people's lives
like dude when I when I think about what I get to do bro
it's fucking amazing and if I were to look at it like
oh this is just my job and I got to show
bro it would fucking suck
like the the difference in perspective
perspective is so massive and if you just acknowledge like hey man I this is something we're going to do if it's not here it's going to be there if it's not there it's going to be there because I got to fucking eat and if you just have the perspective of man you know what this is hard but it could be a lot harder yeah uh and I really appreciate doing this like dude it makes it so much more fun is so much easier to build a team and so like you know I got criticized on the internet uh
Some dude said something like, well, it doesn't look like you're winning to me.
You know, you're at work seven days a week.
Yeah, motherfucker, because I fucking love it.
I fucking love it.
Yeah, I love it.
This person, you can't understand that fun for me is not fun for you.
I don't have fun sitting on the fucking, on the riverbank drinking fucking beers, bro.
Now, once in a while I do, but like that's not my main goal in life.
And, dude, I come here every day, bro.
I get to see gazillion tags of my social.
media of people changing their lives with 75 hard and live hard or the podcast or building a business
or losing a hundred pounds here through our transformation contest like dude what the fuck is more
fun than that like and then doing it with your friends like you you know one of the things that we
talk about dude is is being happy right and a lot of people can't figure out that happiness is like
not this place that we arrive at it's an emotion that we create over and over
over and over again throughout the day that compounds.
And part of what that is, is the people that you do it with and the, and the thing that
you do. And so, you know, when you have a good purpose and you have good people and you
have discipline working for you and you're grateful to do it, bro, it's impossible not to
have fun and be happy. It's impossible. So, yeah, and I know that's a little off track,
bro, but like it all intertwines together, you know? No, I love it, man. Absolutely. I mean,
I stumbled into what I'm doing now, and I love it.
I mean, we always say we hire to retire at our company.
But, I mean, the way I feel about where I work and what I do is I'm here until I die almost, man.
I don't know what else I would do.
Yeah.
I mean, I love this so much.
And I just want to be able to inspire other people to do that.
And that's why I want to be that great leader.
Yeah.
I want to be able to instill that same pride with what they're doing for us.
you know, as a company, you know, we're all winning, but I want them to feel that same pride as well.
For sure, dude. And that's a noble thing. And that's a great thing that all great leaders
possess. It's not just about them. The greatest leaders in the world, it's not about them.
That's like the misconception of great leaders. Like great leaders are almost to the point
where they don't want the attention. They don't want people to notice them. They want people to
notice the team. And poor leaders are kind of like what we have.
running the governments of the world, right?
It's about ego and it's about recognition and it's about, you know, I'm the shit.
I'm the most powerful.
Dude, that's not, that's not even real power, dude.
Real power is changing so many motherfuckers' lives that they tell everybody all the good shit
about you.
You know what I mean?
So, and dude, I don't know about you, but when I die, I hope that, you know, people
will at least say, hey, that guy, you know, he made my life a lot different.
My life would have been a lot different in a bad way had I not come across Andy Versela.
that's what the fuck I want and and you can't you can't fake that you can't you can't half
ask it bro you got to be real you got to invest time in people you got to care about people and
bro you already have these qualities man like I'm actually super excited to hear from you because
a lot of people just they want to be great leaders but they lack the ability to care about
people enough to be great leaders you know yeah I think some of the greatest things I get
to see from my team right now is
not just how well they're doing in work, but I've hired some younger people that have had an
opportunity to learn some skills and I've gotten to see their their personal life grow around
them. And that's been sort of the most rewarding, I guess I would say, outside of work is being
able to see them to kind of transform their personal lives to be able to do some different
things that they weren't doing before. Bro, it's the greatest fucking thing ever. Like, dude,
when I started in business, you know, I was, I was broke, dude. So, you know, obviously when
I'm young. You know, my goal was to take care of myself. I had a lot of cool shit that I wanted to do in my life. And, you know, I live a ridiculously cool life and have for a long time. But my, what I derive value out of and what I get excited about now is exactly what you just said. When I see young people start work, learn, build skills, build a career, you know, move through the chain, you know, get engaged, get married, have a kid.
buy their first house by their second house like these nice car bro those are the fuck that is the
fucking best thing ever it's the best thing ever so i totally feel you on that bro
yeah Trevor i enjoy you call it in dude why don't you uh call you know call it on a regular
basis bro i like talking to people that got got a little bit of the idea going you know what
saying it sounds like you're doing real good bro
well I appreciate that man
absolutely I'd love to talk to you guys more
I mean DJ Andy you guys
really providing a great
service man I mean I've been listening to the
podcast now for a little over a year
it's really changed a lot about
how I approach things
and how I think about things and I've really
really thankful for you guys
doing this and putting the effort in man
I mean free of charge I mean I share
the show absolutely with family friends
but man I just I really
appreciate what you guys are doing here well bro we appreciate you too because the whole reason
we do this is so that people like you will go out and do exactly what you're doing so it's really
cool to hear this honestly dude like this makes my whole fucking day to be honest so uh i appreciate
you bro thank you so much uh thank you guys appreciate the time all right see you Trevor see you
yeah dude i love that i was gonna ask you i mean because it's very important like there has to be
measurements right in life you have to be able to measure uh your goals whatever it is your weight
loss right you got to use the scale so as a leader what is the measurement of a good leader like
what is that unit of measurement for a good leader i don't know i mean first of all winning i mean
the fucking scoreboard are you fucking winning yeah okay and different different teams have different
cultures you know at the highest level of anything business sports whatever organizations
the scoreboard is the fucking I mean it's no one you're expected to have all the other shit
you know um as you get lower you know there can be more room for development and growth
and it's kind of like when someone starts to work out with weights and they've never worked
out before the amount of growth that they have right in the beginning is is just a lot okay
And then when they become a peak athlete, they can train much harder and get diminishing returns.
And so when you're at the highest level, you know, the returns that you see maybe not be as great,
but they really help sharpen performance to put points on the board.
And I think that when you're, you know, when you're in the phase of leadership of development,
I believe that, yes, points on the board are the most important things still.
but another metric that must be considered is the growth of the individuals and the team
in terms of development of skill sets that they need to win.
Yeah.
You know, it just depends on where you are.
You know, if you're coaching the fucking chiefs, you know,
someone, you know, drops five passes, you know, it's not, the conversation isn't,
oh, well, you dropped seven last year.
It's get to fuck off the team.
You're not good enough, okay?
But when you're in high school and you drop five passes, the conversation is a little
different.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, well, the stakes are different.
Yeah, and it just depends on where you are.
You know, we, you know, we're operating at the highest level here now.
Now, we have graduated the point in our companies where it's, you got to put up, okay?
But that doesn't mean that I don't, that I stop trying to develop.
It doesn't mean I stopped trying to teach.
but before we were like 10 years ago when we weren't here
it was more so taking people in developing and they had
tremendous amounts of growth
it just depends on where you're at what the culture of the team is and what
you're doing but I think the ultimate the ultimate measure of a great
leader is always the fucking scoreboard okay it just is
I love it dude so and that scoreboard could look different if you're a teacher
that scoreboard might be how many of the kids graduated at a certain
percentage right uh how many went on to be successful how many went on to do this if you're the
coach of a football team in high school how many of your players went on to college how many graduated
it's it's i guess what i'm saying is is that it just depends yeah you know what i mean but whatever
your school i will say this you got me fucking points on it i will say this great leaders in my
opinion value the scoreboard and the development of their team and they look at
what the scoreboard says what the growth of their team is and if they're really good
good leaders, they look at that growth across all spectrums of that person's life.
They try to develop that into a high character, high functioning, high contributing human in
society. That doesn't mean they're going to be perfect. That doesn't mean that they're not going
to have flaws. You know, a lot of times when people hear certain leaders talk, they think that
that leader is, you know, presenting themselves as holier than thou, when in reality, there is no
perfection there's always going to be weak points in people's lives and you know that's called
being a human um and a great leader will try to help people work through those things um in my opinion
uh 360 in their life you know what i'm saying hey hey hey bro uh look dude you've been here
it's fucking it's you have three kids at home you've been here every day for two weeks till 10 o'clock
and I know it's because you got three kids at home.
Get your fucking ass home.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
So,
right.
It's,
there's a lot of that kind of stuff.
You know,
hey,
you good?
Well,
I could tell you're,
I could tell your,
you know,
little off what's slipping,
what's going on,
you know,
like that's not in your character.
These are,
these are the kind of things,
and it can't be fake.
You have to actually care.
It can't be like lip service.
They can fucking feel it.
Oh,
yeah.
You know,
do you know,
do you know when you're being sold?
Absolutely.
So do they.
So you got to be genuine, dude.
And I think most of the things in life, like we talk about this a lot, being a great salesperson, being great at speaking, being great at a leadership, being great at running a company, these all start with the proper intent because people can fucking feel it.
You know what I'm saying?
So, yeah, I mean, it's the metric is, it's different for everybody.
You know what I'm saying?
And like Coach Wooden, who's the most successful basketball coach, the most successful coach of all time, you know, he didn't just look at his victory as the points on the board.
I mean, he started with like, hey, this is how we're going to put our socks on.
This is how we're going to put our shoes on.
This is how we're going to run the drills.
And he would gauge success, not off the scoreboard, but off the fucking the effectiveness of the discipline during the practice, which is why the points appeared on the scoreboard.
Right. Same thing Nick Saban does.
Nick Saban talks about, you know, we're not going to practice until we get it right.
We're going to practice till we cannot get it wrong.
That's a complete different fucking standard that most people don't understand.
And when you are of the leader, when you are in a leadership position and you want to really build a great team, you've got you've got to push them to the point where they're not going to fuck it up.
It's become second nature.
It's breathing.
It's, it's automatic.
You know, it's tying your shoes.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, absolutely, dude.
Well, that's some gas for a Monday, bro.
Yeah, yeah, man.
All right.
So, yeah, we'll see you tomorrow, right?
Yes, sir.
All right.
All right, guys, you know the deal.
Don't be a ho.
Share the show.
Went from sleeping on the flow.
Now my jury box froze.
Fuck a pole.
Fuck a stole.
Counted millions in a cold.
Bad bitch, booted swow.
Got her own bank row.
Can't fold.
Just a no headshot case closed.
Thank you.