THE ED MYLETT SHOW - If You Feel Like Giving Up on Your Dreams, WATCH THIS! | Ed Mylett
Episode Date: April 4, 2026What if the biggest things holding you back aren’t outside forces… but the subtle patterns, beliefs, and habits quietly working against you every single day? In this mashup episode, I’m bringin...g together powerful conversations with Tom Patterson, Dr. Taryn Marie, and Jay Shetty to expose what’s really standing between you and the life you’re capable of living. This is not about surface-level motivation. This is about identifying the hidden forces that are stealing your confidence, your peace, and ultimately your potential. Tom Patterson shares what it takes to keep going when life tests you at the highest level. His journey is a masterclass in resilience and perspective, reminding you that adversity is not the end of your story. It is often the very thing shaping you into who you are meant to become. Dr. Taryn Marie brings a deeper emotional and psychological lens, helping you understand how your internal world, your thoughts, your self-talk, and your patterns are either empowering you or quietly sabotaging you. And Jay Shetty breaks down something we all struggle with but rarely address honestly. The way we compare ourselves, the way we judge our progress, and the way we define success can either fuel fulfillment or create constant dissatisfaction. When you start to understand these patterns, you begin to take back control of your life instead of reacting to it. Throughout this episode, I’m challenging you to raise your awareness. Because once you become aware of what’s holding you back, it loses its power over you. Whether it is discouragement, comparison, or limiting beliefs, these are not permanent conditions. They are patterns that can be broken. And when you break them, everything changes. This is about becoming intentional. It is about stepping into ownership of your thoughts, your energy, and your actions. Because the truth is, the life you want is not as far away as you think. You just need to remove what is standing in the way. Key Takeaways: Why awareness is the first step to breaking the patterns that hold you back How discouragement quietly robs you of confidence and momentum The hidden danger of comparison and how it creates unnecessary unhappiness Why your internal dialogue shapes your external results How resilience is built through adversity, not comfort The importance of taking control of your emotional and mental state Why fulfillment comes from alignment, not constant achievement I want you to walk away from this episode with a new level of awareness. Because once you see what’s been holding you back, you can’t unsee it. And that is where your power begins. 👉 SUBSCRIBE TO ED'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL NOW 👈 → → → CONNECT WITH ED MYLETT ON SOCIAL MEDIA: ← ← ← ➡️ INSTAGRAM ➡️FACEBOOK ➡️ LINKEDIN ➡️ X ➡️ WEBSITE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Edmireland Show.
Hey, everyone, welcome to my weekend special.
I hope you enjoy the show.
Be sure to follow the Ed Milet Show on Apple and Spotify.
Links are in the show notes.
You'll never miss an episode that way.
Now on with the show.
Welcome back to Max Out, everybody.
I'm fired up about today's topic
because we're going to talk about one of the things
that I think is the most important things
as it relates to winning.
And it's one of the things that you can decide you're going to do,
without any natural giftedness because it's the number one talent you must develop in order to win and it's not talked about on social media
You're not going to get it in a personal development tape and a peak performance program
Self-help and any of it remember this the best ability is availability
Did you hear that the best ability is available that you were available to win not enough people understand that this is an actual skill and talent
Most people in business or in life whether it be relationships or the financial
part of their life they're always looking for these little tips and skills that
you should develop how to communicate better how to be a better listener how to
suppress your ego how to influence people how to transfer energy all these
things that I teach how to deal with failure but I believe the greatest
talent that you can draw a line through all the people who have won not all
the people that went in business or life are unbelievable transfers of energy
not all of them can close not all of them can persuade not of them are great
listeners not all of them even dealt well with adversity they did that the
majority of the time, but all of them have in common, they develop the talent, and yes, it is a
talent, it is a skill of not quitting. I don't think most of you right now that are struggling
in your business life right now are giving yourself enough credit for this incredible talent you're
developing, which is resiliency, which is the ability not to quit. Listen to what I'm telling you,
if somebody has built multiple different companies, I've coached some of the top athletes,
entertainers, business people, and politicians in the world. And I'm telling you that even in my
own team when I hire people. I look for resiliency and a notch above that is the talent is the skill
of not quitting as the number one thing that I look for. And many of you right now listening to this
possess the number one skill necessary to win and don't give yourself any credit for it,
which means it's not helping build your confidence. It's not going to the bank of crediting for
your identity. And so although you possess this incredible ability that so many people in the
world don't have and don't possess, you have it.
and you don't value it, you don't prize it,
you don't give yourself credit for having it.
It ought to be where you draw the majority
of your confidence from, the ability to say,
I don't quit, I'm resilient, I own the number one skill,
the number one talent required to eventually win,
I already have, I can't quit.
You'd have to kill me to get me out of chasing my dream, right?
So number one, I wanna point it out as the number one gift.
The best ability is availability.
Do you have it?
Have you decided to have it?
Is it something you're gonna possess the rest of your life?
and those of you that do have it already, I need you to take an inventory, be aware of it,
and be intentional with crediting yourself as you're listening to this or watching it today,
into the bank of your self-confidence, into the bank, into the deposits you make in your identity,
because it has everything to do with winning.
Every guest you've seen on my show, all the people that I've coached all have different talent, skills, and abilities.
What's the one they all have?
The ability to stay present, the ability to stay in the fight, to have not quit.
quit. You'd think, well, that's not a big deal. Really? Because as I've been talking,
millions of people made the decision to quit on their dream, just as I've been talking to you.
The rest of the day, millions more will. Tomorrow millions more. Every day, literally millions of
people quit on one of their dreams, their dream relationship, their dream business, their dream
body. So quitting has become the number one habit in the world by people that end up losing.
And I'm telling you it happens every day, every second, everywhere. Just the fact that while I've been
speaking, you're still after your dream, you're ahead of them. You don't give yourself enough credit
because eventually what I found, it looks like winnings this huge competition. But every day,
every week, every year, every decade as time goes by, you're going to find that you're competing
with a smaller and smaller and smaller group of people for your dream because so many of them will
just quit. And by the way, many of them that quit will possess talents, maybe even gifts you don't
have. They're incredible ability with people. They're incredible strength. They're incredible
brain and they'll quit with all this giftedness, but you got the talent. You have to learn to
distinguish between something that is a talent and a gift. You can develop skills, you can develop
talents. Gifts are something you're born with, but the people that I see that win long term
are the ones who develop the talents and skills required to win. Business and life's a lot like
a pinata. You know, I was at a barbecue, a birthday party for a five-year-old a while back,
and they did a pinata. I've seen the pinata before. And it's an unbelievable metaphor for
life. In fact, we ought to call today, life is like a pinata because it really is. If you look at
these kids at these parties, any of you've ever been to a pinata, you can picture it. They got the
pinata up there. And what do they do? It's just like in business and life when you start something
new, a new relationship, a new body, a new pursuit, a new business, right? What do they do?
They take this little five-year-old and they blindfold them. They blindfold this little guy, right?
And he can't see. He doesn't know where he's going. And then they spin him around.
He gets completely disoriented, right? And then they hand him a bat.
It's scary when you watch it.
Don't you? Picture these little kids, right?
You blindfold them.
They spin them around.
They become disorientated.
Does that sound familiar to any of you that are trying to build a business right now?
You're completely disoriented.
You're blind.
You don't know where to go.
They spin this little guy around.
They hand them a bat and they go, hit the pinata.
And the pinata's over to the right.
They're swinging to the left.
They're just whiffing, right?
They're not even in the right direction.
And then finally, what do you do?
You grab the little guy or the little girl and you turn them and you have them face the pinata.
They were completely disorient.
In fact, they were doing more damage to the people.
around them in the beginning with that darn bat you gave them because they're so
disoriented a lot of damage was done before they even faced the actual pinata
they've been blindfolded and spun around right they're completely disoriented
doesn't that sound familiar it's just like building your new business it's just
like trying to transform your body it might be just like this brand new
relationship you've got and in fact the people around them are in danger in the
beginning when you give these little guys this bat maybe that sounds familiar
maybe right now you're at this stage in your business or you've been
there before where there's been more damage done than there's been progress. You know what I'm
talking about? The people around you have been more hurt by your new venture than benefited from
it. Your relationship with them is not as good. Maybe financially you've hurt them or feel like
you have. There's been a lot of damage. But what do we do with these little guys? We eventually
take the little girl, a little boy, and we point them in the right direction at the pinata.
That's when you find Ed Milet's podcast. You find his teachings. You find his YouTube channel
or someone like me and I can point you in the right direction. And then what do these guys
you, they take the bat, and they're hitting the pinata as hard as they can, and they're hitting it, and they're hitting it, and they're hitting it, and no candy comes out. And they get tired, don't they? And they just, they can't go anymore. So what do you do? You get help, and you add a teammate, you add a friend, you take the blindfold off of you and you get a little help. That help could be a new recruit in your business, a new employee, a new vendor. It might be a new mentor. And we put the blindfold on them. We spin them around, and then they're disoriented, they're swinging, they're not even hitting the pinata yet. They're hurting the people around. They're hurting the people around. It's,
them then what we do we take them we point them in the right direction now they're following my
show or great teachings and they hit the pinata as hard as they can no candy comes out you take
another child new teammate new recruit in life right but in the pinata says another child you put a
blindfold spin them around and they hit the pinata and they're hitting it as hard as they can
and it feels like no progress is being made no candy's coming out right and eventually they're kidding
it and hit it and they get tired and you think man how often they think this pinata what happens is
Sometimes the first few kids who hit the pinata, they kind of disappear from the party and start playing somewhere else.
Maybe you've had that experience in your business.
Some of the people you start with, they may not finish before the candy comes out.
They may not be there.
May not be there to celebrate.
Some of the initial people disappear, and that could cause you to want to quit.
But eventually what happens with that pinata, even though these kids are hitting the pinata and they're teaming up, they're all working together to try to make this candy come out.
It doesn't look like it, but each shot on that pinata,
is putting them closer to the candy.
Even though it doesn't seem like it,
even though you can't see the candy,
every blow is like a compound pounding effect.
That pounding, compounded by multiple people,
eventually can create a breakthrough.
But what most people do is they leave the party
before the candy comes out.
That's true in business.
Most people quit before the candy comes out.
They don't stick around long enough.
They got spun around.
They get disoriented.
They might hurt the people around.
They get pointed in the right direction.
and they think they're making progress, then they don't.
They think they're making progress, then they don't.
And eventually, because no candy's coming out, no money, no change body, no amazing relationship,
they stop swinging the bat at the pinata.
But if you stick around for the party long enough, you know what always happens with a pinata?
Eventually someone hits it and bam, the candy comes out everywhere,
and everyone celebrates and gets all the candy and dives on it and celebrates.
Here's what I'm here to remind you of today.
You've got to stick around long.
enough for the candy to come out. You've got to wait for the candy to come out of that
pinata called your life, called your business, called your body, called your relationships.
The vast majority of people in life don't stick around for the candy because they think as
they're hitting the pinata of their life, they don't think they're making progress. It doesn't
feel like progress. But I'm telling you the number one ability is availability. And if you keep
swinging away every day, even though it doesn't feel like it, you are getting closer to the candy.
You're getting closer.
It just doesn't feel like it.
You know what I had?
I had the ability to keep hitting the pinata in my life
to stick around long enough.
And by the way, when you eventually win,
it's not just you that gets all the candy,
that gets all the victory, that gets all the money,
lots of people around you,
many of which who you were hurting originally with that bat,
many of them who were trying to talk you out of it,
they get to celebrate in the candy too.
My prayer for you is that you begin to think
Think about this analogy, the pinata of your life, the pinata of your business, the
pinata of your body is you're swinging away, I'm here to tell you, even though it doesn't
feel like it, you're getting closer to the candy.
And if you can add more people to celebrate, it's okay that you feel disoriented.
It's okay that it feels blinding and you don't know exactly what direction to go, just like these precious
babies with the pinata.
It's okay that you miss it once in a while.
It's okay that you get tired once in a while.
but as long as you keep after it and you keep pounding away, that compound effort of your pounding,
I can promise you there's candy someday.
And everybody around you will jump on it and celebrate.
That's my wish for you.
Today, as you listen to me, of all the skills I'm going to teach you, that I've taught you.
And if you've not listened to my other shows, I teach you about listening, transfer energy,
how to close, how to change your identity, how to live blissfully dissatisfied, how to unlock your success code,
all of the very detailed things I teach.
today is the most important thing is that as you learn all these skills, it'll help you with the blindness.
Every single skill you learn, you'll see clearer and clearer and clearer.
But if you don't develop the talent, the number one skill in the world, which is to keep hitting the pinata and to stick around until the candy comes out, because here's the deal, someone's going to get the candy in life.
There's always candy in life. That pinata eventually always breaks down.
Do you want to be the person who was there in the beginning hitting as hard as you can,
could and sacrifice it and maybe hurting the people around you and never get the candy? Or are you going
to get something for your pain? Are you going to get something for your effort? Are you going to get
something for this sacrifice you're making? You've got to get something for this pain. You've got to
stick in the game until the candy comes out and then we all get to celebrate. That's what I want you
focused on today. I promise you there's a pinata in your life and right now many of you feel blind
and disoriented, maybe even hurting the people around you. Some of you are past that phase and you're
hitting your thing hard every day, but there's no candy yet. I promise you there's going to be a
payoff for you. And that's my message for you today. Very short intermission here, folks. I'm glad
you're enjoying the show so far. Don't forget to follow the show on Apple and Spotify. Links are in the
show notes. You'll never miss an episode that way. All right, welcome back to the show, everybody.
Today, I have one of the great American entrepreneurial stories of our time. And in fact,
the gentleman and his wife that started this company, they're one of the main sponsors of our show.
because it wasn't the reason I had him on, but we've been doing ads for Tommy John forever.
They're my favorite ads to do because I'm a raving fanatic, not just a client because that's what they have.
But over the last little while, mutual friends have introduced the two of us, and I've been really captivated by this man's brain.
And so today's really going to be an entrepreneurial and business master class with somebody who's in the throes of doing it right now,
building one of the great American worldwide brands, actually, you know, one of the brands that I hear all the time from other people.
And I want to pick his brain about that and life in general.
So Tom Patterson, welcome to the show.
Thanks, Ed.
It's an honor.
I'm so grateful to be here.
You've made such an impact on me, my family, my marriage, my business, and I just love you giving your gift to millions of people.
And just I feel like I was one of the first, Aaron and I were one of the first thousand followers of your podcast back when you started.
And just to see where it came and gone to is just incredible.
So an honor to be here.
Thank you for having us.
you have a great deal of humility.
When you meet you in person, you're very humble for a man who's accomplished so much in his life.
And I think, and this is the after guy that I meet.
I watch people closely, like that dinner that we went to together that night.
Like, I act like I'm kind of socializing, but I really sized people up and study them.
And, you know, you had been sort of, I've been heard about you over the years from different friends of ours.
But I watch you, even today, even right when you walked in here today, both you and Aaron have a high,
degree of humility and that's after success so if I go back and I think okay it's
2008 I bet that humility existed then too yeah but I wonder if when you were
starting because humility usually sometimes can be connected to lack of
confidence their brother and sister sometimes did you have like this
traditional imposter syndrome like what am I doing this isn't going to work did you
how did it affect you like during bad times like I knew I couldn't do this and
even do you have it now at
this huge stage where you built this massive brand. Yeah, I think I think like you, um, for me,
it was developed through sports. I play three sports in high school, Smaltan, South Dakota.
And I think when you get used to failing, you create this resilience, right? And my grandpa
always said, you know, when I'd be down about failing, he's like, Tommy built a character, right?
Character's built through resilience. That coach is pushing me, pushing me. And, you know,
if you get pushed, you exceed where you think you can go, which increases your character.
capacity to grow. So for me, character was really built through sports and resilience. And I think
when you push through and you start to have success, for me, there's just a level of being grateful
for where you've come from and like what you've done because everybody has their story and the challenges.
But at the moment, you don't think like we're in this 500 square foot apartment or offices in our
bedroom. You're just focused on where you want to go. But I think when you get there, like you don't
forget, like just driving here today in West Hollywood.
I was thinking about all the time I spent on the 10 and the 110, going to our underwear factory
in Compton, our undershirt factory in Chinatown, and then on the way back to our apartment
in West L.A., calling Nema Marcus stores I wasn't in to see if they had the product.
Wow.
And then the buyer would call three days later, said, hey, Tom, we're getting calls from other markets.
Can you guys put us in more stores?
So I think being effective with the time, but for me, it was, I think it comes back to the
sports part and just being a competitor in those disciplines that you develop by being part of a team
and being pushed beyond where you think you can go, which increases your capacity to grow.
But the last thing I'll say is I really continue to put myself in rooms where I'm intimidated.
Right.
Like John talks about John Gordon, Iron, Sharpen's Iron.
I feel really dull going into rooms.
I love being in those rooms too.
And there's just something about the energy and what you can learn and being around
people that are just doing exciting things, but I think there's a common thread, like a common cloth
that everybody has been cut from.
I think one of the common threads you nailed is competition.
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It's one of the things that's like not in most of the textbooks if you go to get an MBA or you go to business school or even in conversations even on my show.
I'm surprised by how few people bring up competition and being competitive.
I think it's one of those factors that's invisible that if you cut someone open that's really one in life, they have a competitive streak in them.
And sometimes being competitive helps distract you.
from how crappy your current situation is now.
Like if you're just competing day to day to get more shirts sold, more stores you're in,
more distribution, that competitive thing going on, you kind of forget, wow, we're broke right now.
And I think that's a major driver.
It is for me, too.
I'm a competitive dude.
This podcast, I know how many downloads it gets every single damn day, right?
I want to compete.
I want to be the best.
I want things to do well.
Having said that, I almost quit a bunch of times, too.
And I'm curious for you, was there a moment where you started to raise your hands?
hands and surrender, or did you never have a quitting moment in your career?
I wouldn't say there's ever been a moment where we thought this is it. There's no way out.
I've always felt there's always a way, right? And I think a lot of ways, like the story of
Tommy John, we've been like this Rumba vacuum, right? We just hit the corner, we bounce off and
figure out the other way forward. And I think it comes back to that resilience that you were talking
about. But I remember back in 2013, we had an investor that said, hey,
The company's not growing as quickly as we want.
You guys should really think about selling the company.
Make a few million bucks, move on to something else.
And it just, like, I felt like I was sick to my stomach.
It just something did not sit right with that comment.
And this is, and I was like, really?
And I thought about it for a minute.
Should we sell it and be out?
And then three months later, it was our lightning in the bottle moment.
Howard Stern talked about her underwear, how it changed his life.
if you can imagine a day without Tommy John.
But I think a lot of times entrepreneurs are at that point,
and they're right about to break through.
And someone gets in their ear, or you were talking about yesterday,
discourages them.
And who is that speaking to them?
I think your gut and your intuition is God speaking to you,
and the longer you're in business,
that gut bacteria gets stronger where you read the signs.
And I think had that happened two or three years earlier,
we might not have.
By the way, can I just say,
something on that. That's one of the smartest things ever said on the show. And the other thing
you just said, because you say a lot of things brilliantly in little sentences. So I want to make
sure I, I want to acknowledge something you just said. There are millions of people who were
one or two steps away from becoming millionaires that never got there in their life because they
quit that one or two steps away. It's incredible. You know, one of the things someone asked me one time
is, what do all of the very successful entrepreneurs of the entrepreneurs you've had on your show
have in common? I said, well, they're all very different. But one thing,
actually have in common. This may seem obvious. They didn't quit. So many people quit one or
two steps away because it feels so far away. And I always say that people don't lack vision.
They lack depth perception. They think they're further away than they are. And so it's easy
to quit if it's far away. But the truth is, usually if you've worked really hard, you're one or
two steps away before you quit. I totally agree with you on that, man. Really, really good.
Very short intermission here, folks. I'm glad you're enjoying the show so far. Don't forget to
Follow the show on Apple and Spotify.
Links are in the show notes.
Now on to our next guest.
If there's a time in our culture where we need to know more about resiliency, it's right now.
I'm a big believer that it's one of the most important personality traits to having a blissful and successful life is the ability to learn to be resilient.
And then this lady comes along in my life and I'm like, I've got to expose her work to the world because she's been doing this work for so long.
And so my guest today has a new book out called The Five Practices of Highly.
resilient people, why some flourish when others fold, and that is something we really are going to need to know a lot more of during this time. So, Dr. Taryn Marie Staiskel, welcome to the show. Finally, it's great to have you here. Oh my gosh. Thank you so much for having me. It's such an honor, and I'm delighted to be here as your guest. Yeah. Well, you're going to help a lot of people today because there's going to need to be even more resiliency inside people's spirits over the next three or four or five years just to navigate the world that we're entering right now. And you have a really interesting story. I think it's
probably important. When someone's great at something, I always want to know why are they great at this. Was
there some catalyst? Was there an event that says this is going to be part of your life's work?
And in your case, resiliency was sort of something that landed on your plate. And you talk about
that in the book. Like, that's actually more common than not. But tell everybody the story of where
you had to learn your first lesson about resilience because it's really, it's pretty emotional and
something everybody I think will be remembered. Yeah, absolutely. So I think something important to start
with here, and this has come out of my work, is this idea that resilience is really the essence of
what it means to be human. And that's a powerful place for us to start, I think, Ed, because so
often we've talked about resilience as being something that's outside of ourselves, something
we've got to go find, something we've got to cultivate. For some people, there's this sense
of dread around resilience, right? Like, it sounds like a nice idea, but then the closer I get,
am I going to be found out?
Am I like a resilience imposter?
Do I not have enough resilience?
So there's a, there's sort of an ambivalence, I think, for some people around resilience.
So I think we get to start in this place, foundationally, of saying, actually, resilience is the essence of what it means to be human.
And it lives within all of us.
And we don't have to go out and find it, cultivate it.
And I know that because for you and for everyone listening, we've lived.
through every disappointment, every loss, every turn of events, every crisis, every health diagnosis,
and we're still here.
Do you think people have a resistance to it because they're like, well, if I have to have
resiliency, that means adversity is going to come my way.
And I'd rather just have a life where I live in this space of disbelief that there's actually
going to be adversity come my way regularly and constantly in my life.
I love that question.
So another foundational element of this is this idea that challenge.
change and complexity, or the three Cs, are actually the fabric of what it means to be human.
It's not the exception to the rule. It's part of what it means to live as a human. And I think
once we think about resilience as being the essence of who we are, it lives within us. It's
not something that we can be wanting or we have to go out and find. And then when we say,
okay, the three Cs are actually the fabric of what it means to be human, then we get to stop
feeling bad every time adversity shows up in our lives because we think we should be more strategic,
we should be more visionary, we should be more thoughtful, we should make better decisions,
right?
Or we think, gosh, I thought I was a good person, but all these bad things are happening, so maybe
I'm not, right?
But then if we say, ah, this is the fabric of what it means to be human, so now I get to
move beyond this idea of feeling shame or us shamed and embrace the fact that these things are here
to teach us.
What was the first thing that taught you?
Because this is, I'll be honest with you, when I knew you're going to be on the show,
I prepped like a psycho for my shows.
And I could not get this visual picture of this story of this little girl out of my mind.
So even when you walked in here and I met you, the first thing I thought about was how proud
I am of you of doing the work you do based on where I know sort of even the notion of it was
born out of.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love that you shared that.
So, you know, you've written a couple of books.
This is my first book.
And so this process actually taught me where resilience started.
So if you had asked me a year ago, you know, when did this start?
I would have talked about my graduate training, you know, my fellowships, the people that I
worked with.
And in writing this book, I realized that, you know, resigning.
resilience found me a decade earlier than I had thought, right? It already lived within me as my
essence of being human. And so, you know, this all started, you know, in essence one morning when
I was getting dressed before school. And I was a 14-year-old girl. I was in high school.
And I had a ground floor bedroom with two windows. And I had my stereo on. I was, you know,
playing music. It was dark in the morning in the Midwest.
For those of you who don't know what a stereo is, you can see us after.
We'll talk to you about VCRs and butter churns.
I didn't even think about that.
Yeah, we didn't always play music from our phones.
Just, you know, side note.
So I had my stereo playing, and it was like the fall.
So I had my window cracked, and I went over to turn off my stereo, and there was this face at the bottom of my window.
And so in my 14-year-old mind, I'm like flipping through all of my window.
of my experience rolodex, if you will, like, how do I make sense of what's happening right now?
And I thought about this experience with my dad where he'd been outside playing a trick on my brother
and I. So I was like, dad? And he was like, take off your clothes. You're beautiful. And I was like,
not dad. Not dad. So I had this experience like if you watch a horror movie and it feels like
everything's sort of like closing in, right?
So I like bolt from my room and I'm calling for my parents.
We make a police report.
And the police officer says to us, you know, essentially probably nothing to worry about here.
Just someone passing through the neighborhood of fluke, right?
So I'm feeling afraid about this, right?
But every time I feel afraid, I remind myself what the police officer said.
So fast forward about eight months.
my parents are now out of town.
I keep this window where I saw this man and this face like shut tight.
There's another window on the other side of my room that faces the back of the house, right?
And so I just tried on some new clothes that I got at the mall, standing in my bedroom naked, and I hear his voice again.
And he said, I've been waiting a long time for this.
And that was the moment where three things happened for me.
The first thing was my childhood bedroom, which should have been the safest place for me, became profoundly unsafe.
I was naked in front of a man for the first time.
And three, I realized this wasn't a fluke.
This was someone who was tracking me, who was targeting me.
So I start to call for help again, right, because I'm naked.
And we had some babysitters staying with us that had two little kids.
and for anyone who has little kids,
you know that the bedtime routine can be kind of crazy.
So they were upstairs doing the bedtime routine with their kids,
and they couldn't hear me calling for help.
And so from outside the window, he says,
no one's going to come and help you.
And you know what, Ed?
He was not wrong.
He was right.
So I had this phone in my room, not a cell phone.
It was a, you know, a telephone line.
And so I picked up the phone and I called the police myself.
And so we went through a few more series of experiences like that.
And then when I was a freshman or a sophomore in college, my mom called me and a neighbor of ours had been arrested for brutally assaulting and raping a woman, another woman in our neighborhood.
And, you know, while it was never proved out, you know, in the court of law that this was the same person,
He lived four houses away.
And, you know, faced, you know, across a park, my parents' house, he came all the times that he came.
There were a few more, you know, my parents weren't home.
And, you know, I went on and went to graduate school.
And in my training as a marriage and family therapist, I was reading the diagnostic criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder.
And I realized.
I meet the diagnostic criteria for this.
This is me.
Who would have thought that that moment of some resilience
when you're this little girl, really still a young girl,
would lead to what's going to be a New York Times bestselling book?
It's led to you coaching all these different people
in the corporate space on leadership
and being more functional in these different things.
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When I'm wondering, when I see somebody sometimes,
I always go, man, they're one of the most resilient people
I've ever met.
But based on what you said,
you're saying this resilience lies within
all of us. This is important for someone to hear. I think so. And so this person isn't necessarily
more resilient than somebody else, but what you're suggesting, because this is really
awesome if it's true, is that what they've done is they've just tapped into their resiliency to an
extent greater than another person that I know. Meaning they don't have a superhuman trait about
them. They've been able to tap into it or access something that exists within all of us to an extent
better than other people. True? True. Okay. That should give everybody hope.
as they go through difficulties in their life.
That was a great conversation.
Be sure to follow the Ed Milet show on Apple and Spotify.
Links are in the show notes.
You'll never miss an episode that way.
Welcome back to the show, everybody.
So today I've got a really difficult question for you.
Is your will to win for sale?
You know, I really believe that of all the things that comes down to in life
about winning and making our lives the masterpiece that we want them to be,
I really believe Will has a lot to do with it.
And the people that I've been around in my life, they have strong faith, obviously, but there's a part of them that has this will to win, this will to want to be somebody that's extraordinary.
And for most people in life, I think when they take enough failure or enough setbacks, they will sell their will to win.
You know, it's an interesting thing in life about winning.
I just want to discuss this with you today.
You know, you have to really decide right now and early on in the journey.
that you can't be bought.
You can't be bought with enough success,
and you can't be bought with enough failure.
Most people at the end of the day quit on their dreams,
usually because there's just so much rejection
and so much failure and so much letdown.
You know, I would love to tell you that winning is pretty
and that making your dreams come true for your family is beautiful.
But man, I've got to tell you, on the journey for me,
there was so many setbacks.
So many times I thought I had it going and then I didn't.
I thought we were going to make it and then maybe we weren't.
So many people that I thought would be there at the end that weren't.
There were people like you probably have had in your life that you really, really trusted that then let you down and hurt you.
Dark nights, sleepless nights, some really difficult mornings with a lot of anxiety and trepidation.
You know, if you're going to win, you're going to carry the emotional burden of your business, of your family.
And sometimes that burden emotionally just over time is.
is so difficult to carry that most people will surrender their will.
You know, I really believe that winning has a lot to do with your will to win.
It's not always just, you know, having the right strategy or the right people in place,
although you can't win without them, but at some point it comes down to grit and desire
and toughness and resiliency and relentlessness.
And I call all of those things will.
But for most people, with enough of it, enough setbacks, enough things, they'll just sell
their family's dreams up the river.
They'll call it something else, don't they?
Well, I didn't get along with somebody, or there was this setback, or the economy changed,
or this person screwed me over, or whatever the story is that we come up with, all which could be valid.
But at some point, basically what you're saying is all of that was too much.
And so I've sold my family's dreams up the river.
And I say it to you that harshly because I want when it comes for you, for you to avoid it that strongly.
That I won't let you create a word game that makes you feel like it's okay to take an out,
you know, take the door in the back there and get out of here and quit on your dream.
That's not what you were born to do.
That's not what it was designed for.
Part of the game of this winning thing.
Part of the game of changing your family forever.
Part of the game of changing how you feel about yourself is really difficult.
And it's going to come with all of those things I described and more and shocking setbacks.
Every couple two or three years is going to be a day where you go, my gosh, right?
Like that's going to happen.
And for most people at one point, they just go, that's enough.
That's enough.
And that's why so few people win because theirs is for sale.
See, what I would recommend you do is negotiate the price tag in advance.
See, I believe the price you will pay to make your dream come true, your vision for your life come true,
is infinitely less than the price you will pay if you don't.
The price you pay if you don't make your dream happen, your vision for your life is you live with that forever.
and that price I would never be willing to pay.
I'll pay any other price as long as it's legal, ethical, and moral,
because the price you will pay to make that dream come true is so worth it.
And it is so much less than the price of living with losing forever,
with the life you don't deserve, with the people that you don't want around you,
with all of your music still in you.
So many people pass away with all their best music in them still
because of the setbacks or the criticisms or the things that just didn't go their way.
or their fears holding them back.
You know, price tags of life are interesting.
See, successful people negotiate worth whether something is worth it, not what the price is
or the expense is.
If you're focused on the expense, you're always in a really difficult place.
I'll give you an example.
This is a metaphor, but it makes sense.
When I had no money, right, which was most of my life, when I would walk into a store,
I wouldn't get what I wanted in the store. I would get what I thought I could afford. And so what did I do? I flipped the price tags over. I didn't always just get what I wanted. What's the cost? What's the cost? What's the cost? I'm sure you've done that as well. It's just really one of the real things in life. What's it cost? I wouldn't get the jacket in there I wanted based on what it cost. So that's a scarcity mindset, right? And so instead, when I became a wealthy person, I'm able to walk in that store and get the one that's worth it. What's the one worth it? What's the one worth it?
And in our lives, when we're operating from a weak position, we're operating from a poverty mindset,
we're constantly negotiating the price tag of like, what's it going to cost me?
What's it going to cost me?
What's it going to cost me?
And we focus so much on what it's costing us, the pain we're going through, the price we're paying.
We're constantly focused on the price we're paying that eventually we just go, I can't do it.
The cost is too great.
If you're focused on the cost, you'll eventually lose because the cost is so extraordinary.
But if you switch that subtly and say, is it worth the price?
Is it worth it? You focus more off the cost and onto it's worth than you got it. And so let me ask you,
what's your family worth? What are your dreams worth? What's the pride of living the life that you've
dreamed of worth to you? And once you focus on the worth, you'll probably pay any price. You'll go
through any cost. But you have to negotiate, in my opinion, that price in advance.
I think if you wait till you're in the middle of it, you're in big trouble.
And so I would challenge you today to negotiate the price you're willing to pay in advance,
whatever it is. And then the negotiation is over.
So decide now what price you're willing to pay or not pay for your family.
And just be honest about it.
There's a certain place where I'm going to sell my family's dreams up the river.
You know what? I'm just going to give up.
And that's what most people do.
Like I said, they call it something else.
They frame it differently.
They create a story that makes them feel okay about it.
By the way, the only reason I know this is I've done it myself on several different things.
This guy screwed me over here. That one let me down.
You know, timing wasn't right.
Right? Whatever.
The bottom line is that the price became too great for me.
Had I negotiated that price in advance, maybe that would have never happened.
So if you focus on what it's costing you all the time, which is what you're doing and you know it, it's costing me this time.
It's costing me this money.
It's costing me this experience.
It's costing me this.
It's costing me that.
You're probably going to lose.
But if you start to focus on, is it worth it?
Is the price I'm paying worth it, then you got it. Why is that also matter? Negotiating the
price as you're going through the battle in life takes all your energy and your focus. Isn't it
constantly a drain on you? Is it worth it? Is it worth it? Is it worth it? Is it worth it?
Is it worth it? Is it worth it? Right? What's it costing me? What's it costing me? You're
constantly negotiating. It takes all your energy. It takes all your focus. And so the bottom line is,
it's better to just to decide today.
And I would just ask you, what's your family worth?
What are your dreams worth? What's your life worth?
What price are you not willing to pay?
Hopefully you don't want to do something illegal or unethical or immoral to do it.
But beyond that, what's the price you're willing to pay?
And get clear on it.
And then just stop negotiating it.
Stop doing that thing back and forth, those mental gymnastics that you know exactly what I'm
talking about.
And just decide, I'm going to win.
I'm going to pursue this.
Whatever comes my way, I've already negotiated in an advance.
So although it might be shocking or really painful, I already negotiated that price.
I already negotiated it.
One of the cool things for me, like in my faith, is I know the price has already been negotiated for me.
Right?
Like, it's already been negotiated.
I didn't have to do it.
Remember this.
Change only happens when love is greater than your fear.
When love is greater than you price you're paying.
What I believe you have to do is you have to start to attach yourself to the love you have for other people.
That love, because you're such a good person, is so much greater than the adversity that will come your way.
But what happens when adversity comes, we detach from our love for our family, for ourselves, from the people that we want to help.
And the love part gets diminished and the fear and pain part gets increased.
See, you show me anybody with a big old dream with enough reasons to win, and I will show you somebody who's going to win.
I believe more than anything in life, having big, giant, compelling reasons.
why you want to win.
The why is so much greater than the how or the what.
The why is and relentlessly focusing on that.
When the why is big enough, you'll go through the how and you'll figure out the what.
But in most cases in life, we don't attach those two things.
People say to me all the time, I'm not even sure what will motivate me.
I can tell you.
Do you want to know the two things that'll motivate you in your life?
I'm going to give them to you right now.
You always go, I lack motivation.
I lack inspiration.
I can tell you what they are.
They're your dreams.
or other people. Those are the two great motivators in life. Usually most good people won't do very
much stuff for themselves. They just won't. They're too giving. They want to change other people's lives.
They love other people. They put other people first. Those are the people that ultimately win long term.
So the two things that will motivate you, your dreams, what your vision is for your life, and other people.
Those you that have children, are you really willing to quit on them? Are you? If you have parents that you love,
Are you really willing to quit on them?
Or do you love them more than any adversity that will come your way?
Could you negotiate the price in advance?
Say, listen, it's worth it because my mom is worth it.
It's worth it because my children are worth it.
It's worth it because my God is worth it.
It's worth it because I'm worth it.
It's worth it because if I make this happen,
I can change all these other people's lives
and those lives are worth the price I'm paying.
Once you have the thing and the reason,
the love for what you want,
now you've got the negotiation handled because that is greater than the price.
But when this isn't focused on, when the price is greater than the love, when it's greater than the dream, it's difficult.
So one of the examples of that that I've talked about before is Bella's Wedding Day.
Number one key from Bella's Wedding Day story from that many years ago, 20 years ago, why matters most.
You show me somebody with a big enough why, a big enough reason.
I will show you somebody who will solve for how to do it, for what to do.
I will promise you that.
Why is the most important thing?
You give a father a story like not being there and the picture, the mental picture in my mind of some strange man that I've never met before,
having that first dance and walking Bella down the island or wedding day, I'll do anything to make sure that doesn't have.
I'll do anything to be there.
And I can tell you, I've done just about anything.
In fact, my doctors that I'm with right now, part of that journey of staying.
healthy. Where I found both of them, Gabrielle and Amy, is because I want to be there on that day
and beyond. One of the reasons I'm willing to take this sort of downshift to some extent is,
yes, I'd love to help more people, and yes, I'm going to contribute, and yes, we've got one of the
number one podcast of the world, and I'm one of the top speakers, and my businesses are growing,
and all that matters, and I want to help all kinds. I want to continue to help millions of people
that I've been blessed to help, but not more than I want to be there for Bella's Wedding Day.
And so number one key is why matters most.
And if you say, I don't know what my why is, I can tell you, let me give you a hack to find your why.
Your why will always be your dreams, whatever your dreams are, or other people.
Wies can be distilled down always into dreams or other people, doing something for other people that you love or proven people wrong.
And what I will tell you under the why is that love is the biggest force in the world.
Very short intermission here, folks.
I'm glad you're enjoying the show so far.
Don't forget to follow the show on Apple and Spotify.
We have all the links in our show notes.
You'll never miss an episode that way.
Now on with the show.
My will to win is not for sale.
So that's why I get up and I work out.
That's why I try to do the nutritional program.
That's why I'm taking this break from social media and reducing my travel schedule
because my dream is to be a Bella's wedding day.
And my will to win is not for sale on that.
I've got to be there.
There's no negotiation for me.
It's get up and work out.
It's make sure you take the right nutritional supplements.
If the doctors say slow down, Ed, and take a break for a while, I do it.
There's no negotiation because I belong in that dream.
I belong there with Bella on her wedding day.
And I like to get to the heart of it, guys.
I think the more we water down the reason, the easier it is to have the price take us out.
Listen, as I've been doing this video or audio with you, thousands of people quit on their dreams.
Thousands of people quit on their vision.
Every single day, thousands and thousands of people quit on something.
and the reason they quit is the price got too great.
And by the way, that's okay as long as you've already done the negotiation.
But I have a feeling that if I asked you again really closely,
how much if your parents are still here, do you want to make them proud of you or take care of them?
How about your children or your spouse, these people that you love the most?
Maybe it's none of them.
Maybe you have a grandparent who that when you were a little boy or a little girl really believed in you,
really saw greatness in you.
And you want to honor them and make you have.
them proud of you as they've gone to heaven and they're looking down on you and you want to make
sure that you really prove them right, right? I won't let you not focus on that today.
Because if I can get you focused on these people you love or these great visions for your life,
I think that that is greater than the price you'll pay. And so I want to ask you that today one more
time. Are you willing to quit on them? Are you willing to give in? Really, the only way you can
lose in this life is to quit. Only way you can lose is to quit. Now, that doesn't mean you shouldn't
pivot, innovate, course correct. That's not quitting. That's the pursuit of something and saying,
listen, what I'm doing isn't working. The definition of insanity is do the same thing over and over again.
I expect a different result. I've got to innovate. I've got to get a different strategy. Clearly,
I think you should be doing that. That's what my show is all about is about strategy and innovation and
progress. But the truth of the matter is, most people aren't totally committed to their dreams. They're
They're going to stick their toe in it.
I'll stick my toe on it.
As long as it's not too painful, doesn't get too difficult, too uncomfortable,
take too much from me, be too inconvenient,
then I'll pursue it.
But if it gets too inconvenient, too difficult, too uncomfortable,
eh, I'll give in.
Let me give you a secret.
People ask me all the time about the people that have been on my show that are some of the
greatest achievers in life.
What do they have in common?
And I'm going to be candid with you.
Here's what they have in common.
They don't have it all figured out.
I don't have it all figured out.
most everybody, frankly, is pretty screwed up to some extent or another,
and we're all just trying to get through this life and figure it out.
What they also have in common is they didn't quit on their dreams.
And the reason they didn't quit on their dreams is their love of their dream,
their love of other people was greater than their fears for their inadequacies.
But I can tell you that we all feel inadequate.
We all don't feel prepared.
We're all sort of faking it to some extent, aren't we in our lives?
And I know that shocks most people, but I think it should give you hope.
They don't have it all figured out.
I don't have it all figured out.
But what I have figured out is that I'm willing to go into situations I'm ill prepared for
because I want to win for the people I love so much.
I want to win for me.
I want to win for God.
I want to do something great with my life.
And so although I don't have it figured out completely, I don't have all the answers.
And neither does anybody that's been on my show, anybody you've seen on this show as my guest.
Most of them don't have the vast majority of it figured out, but they're better at pretending they do.
and to the extent that they are good at stepping into spaces they aren't prepared for,
but that they can kind of pretend they're prepared for.
They've got this belief in themselves that if I can get in the room, I will figure it out from there.
You know, if you had to know everything required to win in life,
the truth of the matter is you probably would never get started.
If Henry Ford started Ford Motor Company and said,
I have to know everything for the next 100 years for this company,
he would have never got started.
I mean, who's supposed to repair these cars?
There's nowhere to repair them because,
there's no dealerships yet. There's no mechanics. What about all the stuff for the tires? You know,
how are we going to fix these things? Where are they all going to get fuel from? What are we going to do
when there's emissions standards? These things didn't even exist then. He couldn't think through every
logical problem. He had to just get started. If Steve Jobs and Wozniak, when they started Apple,
which was basically a board company, would have thought about, well, what when the internet
comes? What about this, the iPhone phone software? What about the Mac? What about the, they could
never think about all of those things. Things evolve. You just get into the next room and you evolve.
You get in the next space and you evolve.
So you don't have to know everything.
By the way, no one you see that successful knows everything.
But they do have this ability that when they get in the room,
they're not negotiating the price anymore.
They're negotiating their way into the next room.
They're negotiating their way to the next level.
They're willing to take the heat and the adversity.
And then the other thing is this.
You've got to resell yourself regularly on the dream.
You know, once you have a dream, and you know what I'm talking about,
some of you are years into years, right?
Maybe you've just got to resell yourself on the dream.
What it's going to mean when you get there?
What it's going to look like?
How amazing it's going to be.
Project into the future.
Listen, an idle mind really, really is in pain.
It's in jeopardy.
But a mind who's saying, I'm fully focused in the present, but man, the future looks so bright.
The future's amazing.
It's going to be incredible when we get there.
Everything's going to be different.
We're going to have great change.
Our family's never going to be the same.
We're going to get to go to this vacation and see this thing and help that many people and feel that
emotion and have that memory? The truth of the matter is that your dreams in your life are not a
hallucination. I believe they're a gift from God that is a glimpse into what's possible. It's like a
possibility projection for your life is when you look into the future. Dreaming is free,
yet most people don't take advantage of it or they did it once, but they haven't resold themselves
the dream again. Maybe you need to go touch your dream. Take a weekend somewhere where you get clear
on this is where we'd love to live or this is what we'd love to drive or this is how I'd love to serve
in our church and just take a Wednesday and serve one day in your church and resell yourself.
You know, most of life, the truth is, is really selling yourself on things.
You're selling yourself something right now. You're selling yourself your worries and your fears
and you're selling yourself the story of how big a trouble you could be in if this doesn't work out.
It's a sales pitch you're doing on yourself, aren't you? It's a story you're telling yourself.
There's a narrative that you're starting to speak to yourself.
So is the other one. It's reselling yourself on the dream, on the story, on the narrative of where you're going and what it's going to look like. I just feel like in life, a better life is to sell yourself on the future. Sell yourself on how great it's going to be when you get there. Learning to live fully present in the moment. Let me say something. When you're negotiating the price, you're not present. You've projected into the future more pain, more difficulty. You're not in the present. So if you've negotiated it already and you've
block that off in your mind and go, I've already decided I'll pay that price. I've already
negotiated that. That's already happened for me. Then and only then can you sell yourself on where
you're going and what it's going to look like when you get there. And when I say resell yourself,
I'm a big believer that you need to touch your dreams. And so I said this a minute ago,
but I want you to understand it. You got to sell yourself on stuff. So like, for example,
like where I ended up living in my life, I would take a little vacation there on a weekend for like
one night. I'll never forget this. I wanted to live in a day.
Dana Point, Laguna Beach, California, that area.
And so when I would have a win in my business, I would go to one night at the Ritz-Carlton
and Dana Point Laguna Beach.
Just one night there.
And I never had been anywhere like that in my entire life.
And I had the feeling of driving up to the valet in my not-so-great car at the time.
But I remember just the feeling.
It may sound hokey, but given the valet my keys and Mr. Milet, are you staying here?
Yes, your name.
My-Let.
Great.
You write My-Let.
I never forget the first time the guy wrote My-Let on the valet.
tag and he gave it back to me. I saw my name, Ritz Carlton, Laguna Nagle, or Laguna Beach,
and then it said, Milette. And I remember putting that in my pocket. And I remember walking
into the lobby and like the marble floor. I was like, oh my gosh, this is incredible. And I'd watch
how other people walked and talked that belonged there because I didn't feel like I belonged there.
And then I checked into the hotel. And I remember back in those days, I would go play golf just to be
around successful people.
And, you know, my wife would go get a massage and lay out at the pool.
And then we'd have a nice dinner.
And I would just touch that dream just for one night, maybe every eight weeks, just one night.
But what started to happen is I started after time, over time, going, I belong here.
I belong here.
I became comfortable in that dream.
And our mind moves towards what it's most familiar with.
And then I remember the first speech I gave being super uncomfortable.
But I remember the more I did it, the more I felt like, I belong here.
I'm comfortable here. I moved towards what I was familiar with. And it's interesting. The other place that I would go take my many vacations was to the desert, to the Palm Springs Lakeinta area of California. And I would go out to this one resort called the Laquinta resort. I couldn't afford to be there for more than one night. But I'd get a deal on the room, you know, and I would just touch that dream for a night. I remember, wow, these desert nights are so amazing. And then we go out there maybe like three months later later. But I would touch that dream three or four times a year. And I would touch the other one. Do you know that later in life for many, many, many years?
those are the two places that I lived. I lived in that area and I lived in the other one.
And I really believe it's because I had touched that dream over and over again.
Maybe your dream isn't anything like that. Maybe it's to be, you know, full time in the charity or full time in your church.
Go take a day off and serve and just feel like it. Maybe do that every three or four months if you can and touch the dream.
Because we move towards what we're most familiar with and we get in life what we believe we deserve and where we believe we belong.
And so long term, if you're doing this negotiation thing, you just don't believe you belong there.
And at some point, there's going to be enough pain that's going to prove you right.
You're going to go, I knew I didn't belong here.
I knew this wasn't for me.
I knew this was for other people.
I knew I'm an imposter.
I knew I was faking it.
What am I crazy?
And I have to tell you, I have this happen all the time.
Like, I have something I'm doing right now in my life.
It's a very major project.
It's a property that I'm developing.
And there's a lot of difficulty with it.
And every time that difficulty comes up, I go, what am I doing?
Am I crazy?
That's not for me.
That's for someone way wealthier, way more successful than me.
And I have this thing where like I want to surrender, right?
I'm negotiating it.
So I'm not perfect at this stuff.
And so a lot of times when adversity strikes, it's like proving you right.
The price is too great.
The price is too great.
I'm literally going through this right now with something.
And I have to remind myself, I'm reselling myself on the future.
I'm actually today, tomorrow, I go visit that place just to resell myself on the dream of being there, just to resell myself on the vision.
Because it's so easy when you have a vision and a dream, right, and you have it.
So you establish a plan and a goal.
And then you start going through the stuff.
And you feel like further and further away from the vision and the dream and why you did it in the first place and the inspiration behind it.
And you're more and more focused on the price.
So today's podcast, I literally designed for me.
right it's the price i'm like gosh it's taking a toll on me physically it's taking a toll on me emotionally
right financially yet it's my dream it's my dream and so i've got to come back and go i i love this dream
i love the experiences i'll have with my friends and family more than the price right now stop
negotiating the price ed you already negotiated this price your love for these people in this place and
the memories that'll happen there are greater than your fears and your worries and then i'm reselling
myself by going back because our mind moves towards what we're most familiar with. So if we're
most familiar with our fears and our worries and our concerns, we're going to move towards it.
It's like a magnet. Thoughts are magnets. They pull us towards what we're focused on. So it's
very dangerous to focus on all the pain, all the price, all the cost all the time, because
you're going to move towards more of it. But if you focus on how worth it is, remember this,
cost versus worth, right? Then you can say, my will to win is not for sale. I can't be bought. You
can't be bought with enough success and it can't be bought with enough failure. You know many people
are bought with success. They have a dream. They get a little bit of it and then they're bought. Their
will's gone. They don't want to work like they used to work because they've got a little taste of
success. They got a little taste of progress. Those people end up paying a greater price later when it
goes backwards and they have to start all over again. So don't let success take your will to win
and don't let failure take your will to win. I think basically today my message to you was
you've got to decide right now what you're willing to pay for a price and not.
And once you've decided it, don't revisit it.
Don't revisit it.
Just make the decision that you're going to will this to happen.
Get some prayer about it.
Get some clarity about it.
Feel like you've got a conviction over it.
You know, get your mind empty, meditate a little bit, get clear.
And then ask yourself, is this really my dream?
And if it is, start reselling yourself all the time on that dream,
that it's worth it, that you belong there.
I'm going to say something to you that I want you to never forget.
You belong in your dreams.
Your big, bold, God-sized dreams, those aren't hallucinations.
Those are visions of what's possible in your life.
And I want to tell you, I believe you belong in those dreams.
You do not belong in your fears.
You do not belong in the negotiation.
You do not belong in your worries.
You belong in your dreams, the big ones and the small ones.
But I think especially the big, God-sized dreams.
And most of those dreams are how you want to feel about yourself,
the emotions you want to experience, the memories you want to have.
I believe are the things that most matter to us.
It's not the thing or the house or the this.
It's how we want to feel.
And I believe you deserve to feel that way about you
and never give in to a price that tells you
you're not willing to do it or worthy of having it in your life.
Before we start the interview with my next guest,
just want to remind you all that you can subscribe to the show on YouTube
or follow the show on Apple or Spotify.
We have all the links in our show notes.
You'll never miss an episode that way.
Now on with the show.
This quote by Thomas Edison said,
when you feel you've exhausted all options,
remember this, you haven't.
I love that.
That's the power of one more.
And so I have lived this book in my life.
Like, I have lived this mindset,
and it has changed my life
because I've always been just one step away,
one habit away, one mindset away,
from this amazing life that I'm grateful and blessed to live.
Well, that's the truth, right?
You're right. And I think the great lie in life is that, you know, some scriptures say,
well, where there's no vision, the people will perish, whatever your scriptures are.
Really, do you have no vision? If you ask the average person, you want to be happy or sad,
what's your vision? They'd say, I want to be happy. You want to be rich or poor? Most people say,
I'd like to be rich. Do you want to contribute or make no difference in the world? I want to
contribute. Do you want beautiful memories or no memories? I want memories. So there's a vision.
Our issue is depth perception. We think it's further away than it is. And because we think it's so far,
way, Jay, we create patterns and behaviors in our life that perpetually keep it there.
Ooh. And that's what we do in our life. But what if that's the great lie of life?
And what if the truth is that you're one relationship away, one meeting away, one conversation,
one podcast, one interview, one new thought, one new emotion, one new tactic or strategy
away from completely changing the trajectory of your life. And everyone that you and I know that we
both work with that we're blessed to work with in our lives. The truth is it was one decision,
one meeting, one extra rep, one more phone call, one thing they did that changed their trajectory.
Then the question then becomes, how do I do it? And so the strategies are in the book. But
conceptually, that's 100% how you change your life. Yeah, and you're so right. I was thinking about
this this morning. Last year, I had double hernia surgery on the front. Like, so I couldn't walk
for about a month
and when I said I couldn't walk
I mean like I literally couldn't move
it was like I felt like I was teaching myself
to walk again like that's how it felt
it's really interesting what you just said about how we
perpetually push it far away
I would wake up every morning
and my mind or my
initial mindset was like it will be gone today
it must have gone today
like today it will be fully healed
I'll be fine today and I would wake up
and I wouldn't be
and I would feel like
healing was so far away, it would be like 80% away that I was missing out on the 1% change
since yesterday.
You got it.
Since yesterday I made 1% change.
I wasn't feeling the same pain in my nerves.
I was able to be flexible by 1% more.
And I was missing out on all of that because I was so obsessed with how far I was.
That's the journey.
And what happens is when you live with an expectation that these one mores exist, the reticular
activating system in your mind filters them into your awareness. I call it the matrix in the second
chapter of the book. When you wake up believing, hey, I'm one decision away, I'm one meeting away,
one relationship away. That's not hokey. Your mind begins to filter the people, places,
and things into your awareness. You develop something called sensory acuity. You hear conversations
you weren't hearing. We've all had that experience where we're on an airplane. I can't stop hearing
these people over here. Or you walk in a loud room, but you can hear your own name auditorily
over all the other names in the room. That's because
it's important to you and it matters. You see things. And so when something becomes important to you
and you believe it to be true, the RAS goes to proving it for you. And where I learned this,
ironically, I talked about it in the book, is my father was an alcoholic and had tried to get sober
many, many times. And I'll never forget it, Jay. We were driving to a baseball game of mine.
My dad started crying. I'd never seen my dad cry before. And he pulls the car over. And he still isn't
looking to me, but he's crying. And he says, Eddie. And then he turns.
to me and he goes, I'm going to try to get sober.
And I'll never forget this brother.
He goes, one more time.
And I said, really, Daddy?
He goes, I'm going to give it one more try.
And I said to him, I said, why would this be any different this time?
And he said, never said this to me before.
He goes, because I love you and you deserve a father you can be proud of and you can't be
proud of me right now.
And I think every great thing we do in life is won away, but it's also born.
from love to talk about your book.
When you love people or you love something so deeply,
if that love is greater than what the obstacles might be,
now you got a shot to do it.
Then my dad gets sober.
He comes home from rehab.
I say, Daddy, are you never going to drink again?
And he said, I can't promise you that.
I can promise you I'm not going to drink
for one more day at a time.
Wow.
And he lasted the rest of his life,
stacking those one more days up.
So I know the power of one more.
The other thing, I also know humans can change.
I watched my hero do it.
I watched my dad live my first 15 years.
So I'm in a lot of fights.
Wow.
A lot of lying.
A lot of difficult times.
And then I saw this man transform.
And in life, we're most qualified to help the person we used to be.
And what we think in life, and I hope everybody gets this,
we think the things we're most ashamed of, embarrassed by our divorce, our bankruptcy,
or maybe we've just always been average and ordinary.
This disqualifies me from being successful and happy.
What if that's not true?
What if the hardest things of your life are the very things that qualify you?
I'll give you an example.
You know, my dad got sober.
Somebody helped him.
My dad was going to take his life or lose his family.
And I didn't know who it was until months ago.
Some precious human being whom I didn't know.
And my dad's darkest hour of his life, Jay, said, I'll help you.
I'll help you.
Little to that person know, I'd be his son.
And I'd help millions of people.
And I'd be on Jay Shetty show and we both help millions of people.
And the more ironic thing that this person helped my dad is what qualified them to help my dad.
They were a drunk.
They were an alcoholic.
They at one time were a drug addict.
They at one time were lying and stealing and living in the shadows.
The very thing that person probably figured that disqualifies me from having a successful life
was the one thing that did qualify them to help my dad.
So if you're listening to this and you've had something you're ashamed of or a failure or a setback,
you're most qualified to help the people you used to be.
And that person, that alcoholism, they suffered with their drug addiction, helped my dad live those one more days forever.
That is the best explanation I've heard of how pain turns into purpose.
The thing that brought you down, that broke you down, that made you feel like you were losing everything,
gave you back everything when you used that to serve the people that were struggling with it.
And then there's a purpose.
And, you know, if you can survive the temporary pain and you can survive the temporary pain,
your life and all pain is temporary. I watched my father pass away last year. He was in tremendous
pain. Even our bodies are temporary. Only our souls are permanent. If you can survive the temporary
on the other side of temporary pain, you meet another version of yourself, another inside about
yourself. And that's why it's so important to grow as a person, because the more we grow and
become a new person, we can help those that used to be like us. And that's why you and I are so
addicted to growing and learning and we're curious because if you used to be a broken person
and you no longer are quite as broken,
you can help broken people.
If you used to be broke financially
and you no longer are, you can help people,
whatever you do for living.
At one time you didn't know about it
and now you do, you can help those who need to know about it.
And so you're immensely qualified
if you understand the power of doing one more.
Oh, I love it. I love it.
Tell me about so let's say,
and you probably come up against this all the time,
a lot of the people say,
okay, I'm going to practice that.
I'm with you, Ed.
I love you and Jay.
I'm listening and I go, yes,
I'm going to practice the power of one more.
Now, what I find, and this is why you're so great at teaching this,
because you're not teaching it as a gimmick, a glitch,
you're like a little affirmation.
This is like real, it makes sense.
Like it works.
People get so tied to the result that when they try it the next day
and the sales meeting doesn't go their way or the pitch doesn't go their way,
they go, ah, it doesn't work, it doesn't work.
Why didn't it work?
and how should we respond when we fail or get rejected the next day?
Well, it didn't work because you're so attached to the outcome.
I coach a lot of athletes.
I know you do as well.
And one of the things, it's a really nuanced thing in life.
It's great to have goals.
You should have goals.
I want to do this or that.
But in the moment of execution, you have to separate from outcome in the moment that you're
executing and just be present and exist.
I talk about this in the book.
Here's what I would say.
If you're going to win long term, 95% of people have an operating system in their mind
where they operate out of history.
in memory. Oh, I like that. And about 5% of humans operate out of vision and imagination. So the reason
we're so much happier, I believe, when we're children is we have no history and memory. So we
operate of imagination and dreams and vision. But at some age, some people, it's five years old,
some it's eight, some it's 18, some it's 28. They create a history and that history then becomes
the operating system. So even if they take on a new behavior or tactic, they're operating
out of a pattern of thought and belief that's historic and memory-based.
And so the number one thing I would say is begin to operate out of your imagination again,
out of your vision again.
Create from that place.
If you create from that place, now you're not tied to the result in that moment.
You're giving yourself space to imagine and create something new in your life.
I've never heard that in that language, man.
That is so powerful.
You're so right about it as kids that we don't have any memory or history.
so we don't have any blocks, we don't have any limits.
And begin to listen to the people around you.
People say, hey, you're the product of who you hang around.
How do I know if they serve me or not?
Here's one way to just deduce this,
because they could be beautiful people who care about you.
And they might even support you.
But when you're with them, what are you on?
You ever have those friends you're with them.
You're like, you remember when?
You remember.
You remember.
Remember that party?
Remember that thing?
And if your friends are constantly bringing you to the filtration system of memory
and history all the time, think this through.
How often are those friends saying, hey, what are you working on now?
Where are you going?
What's your vision?
What do you want to create?
And maybe that sounds hokey.
But you and I have some of our, both our friends have the most amazing histories,
and you can't get them to talk about them.
No.
You have to work because what are they still doing?
They're talking about now and where they're going.
Their viewpoint in their life is being present and having a vision for the future.
Yeah.
A formula for misery.
A formula for lack of creativity, lack of productivity,
is constantly be in history and memory.
Even if it's good, it doesn't serve us.
And for most of it, it's not good.
And we keep living from it or trying to move away from it.
Create a new future.
Don't move away from the past.
Create a brilliant, imaginative, curious, vibrant vision for your life.
Oh, I love that.
Yeah, we're always trying to create the same past as opposed to a new future.
A new future.
And I find that what's really interesting about that,
all the studies show that nostalgia,
makes us believe that the past was more phenomenal than it actually was.
If you remember that party, you went to a college,
it's better in your memory than it actually was.
If you actually could have gone back and remembered how you felt hung over
and what you broke a bone or whatever happened,
but now in your memory, it's beautiful.
Beautiful, beautiful.
Right? So our memory also is slightly warped of the past.
No question.
It can make things feel much better or much worse sometimes.
No question.
But what's really coming out for me right now is this idea,
that it's something you said a couple of moments ago,
and it sparked a thought for me.
I remember the story that Vanessa Bryant
told about Kobe Bryant after he passed away.
I was fortunate enough to interview him
around three months before his tragic passing.
And she told this story, and she said that Kobe would play
through every injury.
He would play through every pain.
He would play through everything,
even when the doctors and his coaches would say,
stop playing.
And she asked him,
she said once, why he still plays.
Right?
Again, going back to our curiosity,
not assuming you know your partner,
she asked him,
why do you still play?
And this is just her and him.
There's no cameras,
there's no,
she's telling this story,
but at the time,
it was just them to.
He said it's because
there's someone who's paid for a ticket today.
They saved up,
and this is the only time
they're ever going to be able to come.
Maybe a son's,
maybe a dad's brought his kid,
maybe someone's come to the game.
They're a lifelong fan.
And they came today.
And today's the only day
they're going to get to see me.
And if I say I'm injured,
they won't get to see me.
So I'm going to play so that that person
gets to see me play.
And then he goes and wins.
And it's like, that's love.
That's what you were saying.
Love for something is in the present moment also, right?
Love is not just for the past.
And it's funny how important one day is meant.
When my dad got sick, my dad got cancer.
When he first got sick, he goes, hey, my dad was a dude.
He goes, look, I'll fight this one time.
Okay?
I'll do your little chemo and your surgery, but I'm not going to pour poison into my body.
I'm not going to lose my hair.
I'm not going to deteriorate.
I'll give this thing a shot once.
If it doesn't work, I'm out.
That led to eight years of him fighting it.
Chemo, radiation, proton therapy, surgery, surgery, chemo, experimental chemo.
And he did lose his hair, and he was in pain.
And I'd say to my dad, I say, dad, you're suffering so much.
He said you wouldn't suffer.
He said, no, Eddie, I'm in pain, but I'm not suffering.
I choose not to suffer.
And I'm not suffering because I get to see my grandkids again.
And I said, Dad, why are you doing this?
And he said, you only understand the power of one day when you're threatened with never having another one.
I don't do anything for one more day.
Get to be with you one more time.
Give your mom a kiss one more time.
Maybe I'll see one of my granddaughters get married.
And he goes, I'll do anything for one more day.
The beautiful thing is I was actually with Kobe a week before he passed away.
We were in the same gym.
Our daughters played volleyball.
And ironically, that day, I watched Kobe walk out of the gym.
There was only a couple dads left.
It was late at night.
He stayed and I stayed.
And he had his youngest daughter in his arm and he was rubbing his other daughters back.
And I remember taking note of it because I was with Bella at the other end of the gym.
And I remember thinking, I don't hug Bella enough.
I need to hug. No joke, bro. It's in the book. I went, I got to hug Bella one more time every day, not just once a day, plus one more time every day. My daughter's going to get extra hugs because Kobe does that. What if I could have said to Kobe when he got in his car? Kobe, you have one more week. Tell those that you love, you love them. Get it right. Whoever matters to you. Make it right. Call your dad. Make it right. Call your mom. Call your family. What if the day before you could have said, Kobe, have one day left.
And my dad, same thing. I was with my dad when he had one day left. I was with my dad when he had one hour left. I was with my dad when he had one breath left. And when we begin to think of our life that way, the power of right now and having one more moment and one more minute is so beautiful. It's so blessed. It's so big. It's so amazing. Why would we spend that minute in history? Why would we spend that minute in the past when we could be fully present in creating the future?
And so, you know, I think most people think, Jay, everyone else is going to die.
I think they just, I'm never, I'm not going to die.
Or they go, I'll get around to being happy.
I'll get around to making my masterpiece of my life.
I'll get around to my dreams.
I'm going to get around to fixing this relationship that's broken.
I'm going to get around to feeling those emotions.
And then it's another day and another day.
And they keep it in the distance until there are no more days.
And I don't care if you're 18 years old listening to this, 28 or 48.
We don't know if we have one more day or a hundred more days or a thousand more days
But we know this they'll eventually be a time where we don't have any more days
And so why would we spend the ones that are coming looking at the past and so my dad really taught me those lessons and watching him pass away
And that's why I have so I have a whole thing in there of how to get 21 days a week
Run many days I get 21 days a week we still measure time bro like it's 1900
Think about 1900 if I want to get you
a note, I'd have to write a letter out, stick it on the back of a horse's button, 1850, 30 days later you get it.
That was a 24-hour day. Now I can text you in two seconds. We measure time the same way.
So I teach you how to change your time so that you can make that day its maximum bliss. It's maximum productivity.
What's one more that you're working on right now?
Right now, actually, it's an interesting season of my life. I have a TV show that you know that I did with NBC that's called Change that I think has a chance of getting picked up.
But my one more that I'm working on right now for me and my life is my peace.
And so there's this guy, Jay Shetty, that's a friend of mine that introduced me and my family to meditation.
And I'm giving myself the gift of I don't just do it in the morning now.
I've given myself the gift of one more time every single day of just emptying my mind and trying to be fully present.
And it's been work for me.
I've got that busy type of a mind.
But I have found that my peace.
in my life. Most of us, Jay, have all these goals of things we want to do, and they're wonderful.
And I believe in doing that. I think standards are more important than goals because, and I teach
you in this the book, how to set the standards that'll get those goals. But we really don't,
but we really don't want the jet. We don't want the hit song. We don't want the amazing
relationship. We don't want the million dollars. We don't want the, we want how we think it'll make
us feel. And what if we began to become more intentional and outcome-oriented about the things
we feel in our life. And it took me a while, but now that I'm older, when I feel strong,
when I feel blissful, when I feel peaceful, is when I produce the physical things that I want,
not the other way around. And so my one mores are more emotional focus. Most of us, then I'll come
up for air here, have an emotional home. There's three or four or five emotions we experience
on a regular basis. I write about it in the book. And no matter what happens, we find a way,
even if they don't serve us to get those emotions. If your emotional home is fear, anxiety,
worry, depression, anger.
You find a way every week to get that emotion.
But what if that emotional home could become bliss and peace and joy and creativity and ecstasy?
And so I'm working on one more beautiful emotion for my emotional home and for me it's peace.
I love that.
I love that answer, man.
It's good to hear about what you've been saying.
Like, we're not living in the past and you're like in the present.
But to have you answer that question, that peace is your presence.
Like that's what you're looking for.
That's the present.
And it shows that you're using this.
Like it works.
You're doing it time and time again.
And I love what you said.
It moves from the physical things into the subtle, into the emotional, into the deeper.
I think that's so profound.
What was that one more that if you didn't do it, you wouldn't be here today?
What was one of those ones that like, ah, like that was the one that convinced me, apart from obviously your father, that you were like, ah, if I didn't do that, I wouldn't be Ed Milet today.
I wouldn't be max out life.
The first business I built was a financial business and I had had some success, Jay, like a lot of people do in life.
And then it went backwards.
And sometimes you get up the flagpole just a little bit and you come back down.
That's an emotional difficulty.
Could be a relationship that was good that's gone or maybe it saved some money.
It's gone.
Maybe you lost a bunch of weight and got fit and you gained it back.
For me, it was my business.
And I called my dad.
It was a pretty wise guy now that he was sober.
And because I could tell you, man, I do one more rep in the gym.
I haven't done 10 reps on a bench press in 30.
years. I've done 10 plus one more a lot, though. I haven't done 45 minutes on a treadmill,
but I've done 45 plus one more minute. Ten contacts a day? Never. 10 plus one more. But the biggest
one more was actually something else. I called my dad and I said, hey, dad, it's not going.
The business is crashing. And I'm running out of money. Our power was turned off. Our water
was turned off, Jay. We had to take my wife every morning. We'd lost our house. We're living in an apartment
now. Then the water got turned off. You can't cook. You can't bathe.
there was an apartment building.
We had an outdoor shower at the swimming pool.
And we were newlyweds.
And I'd have to get up every morning walk down there.
And I'd hold a towel up while my wife took her shower every day outdoors and brush your teeth.
And then she'd switch and hold the towel up for me.
And I'd walk back up to the apartment.
And I was so emasculated, so ashamed, so embarrassed.
And I was living a nightmare selling a dream to everybody.
every day, we can do this.
A lot of entrepreneurs or people can relate in their life.
And anyway, I called my dad that night, and I said, I think I need to pack it in.
I need to go get a job and just, this success thing is not, it's not for people like us.
And my dad goes, Eddie, you don't have to decide you're never going to quit.
He goes, just don't quit for one more day.
See how you feel tomorrow.
I go, dad.
He goes, just don't do it for one more day.
And I got the next day and I still wanted to quit, but not quite as much.
And then I went one more day and one more day.
And I found myself about 30 days later, I didn't want to quit anymore.
And thank God, the one more I did was I went one more day without quitting.
And I'm so grateful I didn't quit on my dream.
Oh, Ed, wow.
That is like, oh my gosh, man.
Like, everything you're just dropping right now, I'm just like, I hope everyone is taking notes.
If you haven't been taking notes and when you take a screenshot right now of where we're at right now,
because that's what you're going to have to listen to again.
So take a screenshot, share it, tell everyone to go to this segment, listen to that over again.
Because I think what I'm hearing, you know, is that this is a lifestyle.
Like, this is a mindset, it's a lifestyle.
It's a every day, every moment way to live.
This isn't just in the big business you're building.
This is me telling my wife, I love her one more time.
This is me making sure I message my mom one more time.
It's me making sure that when I'm sitting here with you, I'm always going to have to ask you one more question.
Because you keep giving so much.
No, but you keep giving so.
Well, that's what you just said.
It will never end.
I think of people feel like they tried a lot.
And then they start building up resentment and like pain and bitterness towards that path.
And a lot of people also that I know, they just think that there are some people that are meant to be.
I agree with this.
And then there are some people that are not meant to be.
That's correct.
And they carry that with them.
And it comes from this like.
Oh yeah, you were meant to be this or that person was meant to have it.
But for me, this is where, and I heard that kind of come up in what you were saying to your dad.
Like, doesn't happen to people like us.
How does this rule?
How does this principle apply to someone who's in that space?
Brother, best question ever.
Because I grew up with no, you have an alcoholic dad or a drug addict or maybe you come from divorce
or maybe your parents just didn't love you enough, whatever it was, didn't tell you they loved you enough.
It's hard to have self-confidence.
I was a little guy.
I got bullied in school.
and I just, and even at this age now, bro, if I'm being completely honest, self-confidence,
we all teach that it's, you know, part of keeping the promises you make to yourself.
But what if you raise the standard a little higher?
You keep the promises you make to yourself, plus one more.
Because for me, self-confidence didn't come easy.
I think in life, ultimately you're going to get what you believe you deserve.
And if you're wound up, wired like me, I didn't think I deserved a lot.
I didn't even have a dad who could stop drinking, right?
I wasn't six foot four.
I don't have an incredibly high IQ.
There's nothing really that impressive about me, nor were people very impressed with me most of my life.
So that was my pattern.
That was my history.
That was my memory.
And so I could wait around until I developed tremendous self-confidence, or I could begin to do things every day that were small.
They're not major.
And over time, when I did those one more calls, that one more meeting, that one more book I read, that one more podcast, not only am I doing more reps, so the likelihood of me being successful is bigger, but I started to convince myself, I'm doing things other people aren't willing to do. Maybe I deserve things other people aren't going to get. And slowly but surely, I started to convince myself, I did deserve it based on what I was doing, not necessarily the caliber of my talent.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. That was the difference.
Yeah, you just, there's a thought I've been having recently and it's that comfort creates self-care, but discomfort creates self-respect.
Oh, boy, I love that.
Right.
Like, it's what you're saying.
I love that.
That the one more discomfort every day, that's where self-respect comes from.
Yes.
You don't.
Great term.
Yeah, you don't start to trust yourself or build self-esteem or believe in yourself because you just say it to yourself.
It's coming what you just said.
You got to then take one more me.
and see what you learn.
You got out there and take one more risk, one more discomfort.
And I guarantee you, if you have a successful or happy friend,
whichever how you would determine that,
and you ask them this, they'd tell you that we're right.
They would tell you, gosh, that's right.
It's right.
And the difference between winning and losing,
happiness and sadness is so small.
It's almost scary to talk about.
But the good news is I think I kind of know what it is,
and it's this one more.
Absolutely.
The people that I know that are the most successful and happy
have more uncomfortable conversations.
Agreed.
They have more uncomfortable days.
They have more discomfort in their lives.
Yes, totally hear that.
But selected discomfort.
But one of the other things that I'm asking from now,
I'm like going into like the people that I know that I'm thinking about,
I can see their faces and I want them to know that I'm asking for them,
a lot of the time one more in the wrong direction.
That's right.
Can also be really misguiding.
sometimes people and I know you're a person of faith too and so we can touch on this
sometimes we're climbing the mountain and we keep doing one more but we're actually going
further away from who we are who we want to be our faith our partners right we know people
who've built multi-billion dollar companies but lost their kids that's right or they've
become famous and rich but they've their partner
cheated on them or you know like really painful stuff and you know people who didn't do all of that
that's happened too like it's it's both ways how does one use one more and make sure it's in the right
direction such a great question i'm doing this now regularly because i've made some of those mistakes
of just and what i do is i check in with myself one more time meaning it's important to ask yourself
what matters to me now see if you we had this conversation 20 years ago the things that matter to me
then are so different than what matter to me now. But a lot of us keep operating out of what used to,
maybe you've achieved or pursuing a dream. And it's really, truly, no longer your dream. It's no longer
your dream. It's, when I was young, listen, we're going to do a podcast. You say, hey, I need you on the
show. People are going to love you. You're going to get recognition. You're going to get,
you're going to get all this acknowledgement. And that would have been my hot button, my need,
you know, I believe in the six human needs. My need was significance and recognition. And there's
nothing wrong with that. It's wonderful. And so that's the button to get me to move would be
significance recognition. Well, I've been blessed the last 30 years or so in my life to have a
beautiful abundance of significance and recognition. It's no longer what fills me. Now you get me
to do an interview, you go, hey, I really think we could help some people. My big button in my life
now is contribution. There was another stage in my life. It's still there. But hey, if you go there,
you'll grow. I still want to grow, but I know me now. Right now I'm in a season of my life
that's contribution. It's giving. It's what fills my heart. And I think it's checking in with
yourself one more time. What matters to me now? What do I want now? What's important to me now?
What season? Maybe you're in a season where you need to rest. Maybe your spirit and everything about
you's telling you, hey, it's time to feed you again. It's time to recharge. If that's the season,
then answer that call.
Don't play out of a past playbook.
And so for me, that's the season I'm in now.
And I'm sure that in five or eight more years, you know, there'll be something else.
But I regularly, on a monthly basis, you recommend it in your book so beautifully about your relationship.
Checking in, you have these strategies you teach about weekly and monthly and quarterly and yearly with your partner of checking in with them.
I also recommend you check in with yourself and what matters to you now.
And so for me, it's a matter of checking in now so that I don't lose my family in the percentage.
suit on my business or lose me.
Yeah.
Lose me.
Who am I anymore?
And I've had times where I'm like, this doesn't feel like me anymore.
Yeah.
And I had at least the ability to at least acknowledge that and make a change.
Yeah.
And I love that you brought up seasons because I feel like no one, and on planet Earth,
we don't have the power to change the season.
But you have the power to live the season well.
That's right.
You can either be in the right now, it's been raining, right?
wherever we are.
It's been like pouring down with rain.
There's all this effort.
You could carry an umbrella.
You can tell how I'm dressed.
I'm definitely not dressed in my usual gear.
Right.
Because I'm dressed for the rain.
I'm prepared.
Yes.
Because that's all I can do.
I can't make the rain switch off.
I can't stop it, right?
Like, I can't do that.
And so I love hearing that you're just learning how to thrive in the season.
And so if your season's telling you to rest, you can't force the season.
And you have to live it through.
You have to experience it.
You know, I think you have to remember one thing, man.
I think it's just easy as a person to forget this.
And I just would love to say this because you have such an amazing reach.
