The Game with Alex Hormozi - Find Something Worth Suffering For | Ep 950
Episode Date: March 5, 2026Download your free personalized $100M scaling roadmap in under 30 seconds: https://www.acquisition.com/roadmap?el=yt-alex-486r&htrafficsource=youtubeThe idea of "following your passion" often misl...eads entrepreneurs into thinking they should only do what they love. In today’s episode, Alex Hormozi breaks down this myth and explains how passion is about finding something meaningful enough to endure the hardships that come with it. From grinding through sleepless nights to tackling a plateaued business, Alex emphasizes that all life paths come with challenges. Success and failure are on the same road. The difference is the willingness to keep going, even when it hurts. Find something worth suffering for and embrace the pain because it’s the price of progress.In this episode:00:00 The true definition of passion07:00 Reframing life experiences to embrace bad things09:20 Be passionate about why and how you do what you do16:05 Embracing suffering as the cost for personal growth17:33 Lessons from Mexico and sleeping on the gym floor23:35 The secret to enduring suffering and achieving successMore Value:Discover The Easiest Business I Can Help You Start (Free Trial): https://www.skool.com/hormoziJoin The In-Person Scaling Workshop In Las Vegas: https://www.acquisition.com/o-vegasGet the $100M Book Bundle: https://shop.acquisition.com/pages/100m-book-bundleTake the $100M Lead Generation Course: https://www.acquisition.com/training/leads?hsLang=enLearn How to Make Offers People Cannot Refuse: https://www.acquisition.com/training/offers?hsLang=enFollow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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People want to follow their passion, but don't even know what it actually means.
So the root of the word, Pacio, is Latin for suffering.
So it's not about doing what you love.
It's about finding something that you love enough that it's worth suffering for.
And so pick something worth suffering for.
And what's interesting about this is that the first usage of the word passion
came from Passion of Christ, which was literally Jesus Christ's crucifixion story.
And so it's interesting that this has been bastardized into
following your passion means doing what you love.
And the reason I'm making this video is because
because I had a young man stopped me,
say that he quit his job, went all in on entrepreneurship,
but then he didn't like what his life looked like.
And so he asked me what he should do.
And the reality was that he quit
because he thought that he was doing something wrong
because he wasn't loving every second of it.
So here's the big problem.
Your passion only exists in the vague, not in the specific.
So even if you start a business around
what you believe to be your passion,
95% of what you do every day,
if you're successful, will not be
your passion. You'll just have very brief moments. Well, you'll do that specific thing, if at all,
and then assuming that that thing never changes, which it will. And so this kind of like passion
window is very short-lived, or it's only possible as an employee where you actually stick to doing
the same thing every single day within kind of a larger machine, or a solopreneur that chooses not
to scale, not a business owner unless you choose to love business ownership as the thing you're
quote passionate about, which means that you're willing to suffer for it, right?
And the ultimate version of this comes at the very end.
If you keep doing the thing that you are, you know, that you suffer for for a long creator time, eventually you can get to true ownership where something, you know, operates on its own and then you have all your time back, right?
And so let me give an example.
So I run every month, I meet with 10 entrepreneurs.
It's the most expensive, quote, service that we sell.
It's obviously unscailable.
But I meet with bigger businesses.
So usually the average business size around 10-ish million.
And we meet in a group of 10, and I meet with them.
and it's something that I absolutely love doing.
I look forward to the days whenever they're coming up,
but I would absolutely hate it if I had to do it every day.
And so how can that be true, right?
How can I love something?
But if I did a lot of it, I would hate it.
Well, it's like, well, I love, there's a certain pizza place
that I love going to once or twice a year, and it's amazing.
If I was forced to eat it every single meal, I wouldn't like it as much.
And so we have this misconception about following your passion.
And in both scenarios, if you do the same thing all the time that you quote,
love, you'll stop loving it because you'll get so much of it.
The fact that it's rare is what makes you love it.
And if it stays rare, then it means that the vast majority of your time, you're not really doing it.
And so it's just a complete myth.
And I understand why people tell younger people or other newer entrepreneurs like, oh, follow your passion.
It's just because it's politically correct and it's easy to say, but it's not the truth.
Right.
And so you're not going to have the perfect amount of sunshine for the perfect amount of time, right?
And so let me reframe how I think through this is that you want moments.
You want good days.
not a never-ending work state of this jolly thing that you love,
because eventually you'd adapt and you would get bored, just like everything else.
And so here's the underline.
You're using the excuse of a lack of passion to disguise your inability to handle difficulty,
to handle being able to repeatedly do things that you don't enjoy
to have something that you do find meaningful have happened.
Real quick, I'm going to show you the exact 10-stage roadmap from zero to 100 million plus,
that less than 1% of companies finish,
I've now done multiple times.
And so I can say with a lot of confidence
that these are the stages
as headcount increases
that you need to get through.
And I broke each of these down
by eight different functions of the business,
what the constraint feels like,
like what are the symptoms of it
when you're going through it?
And then what steps we actually took to graduate?
And we've done this across software,
physical products,
service businesses, brick and mortar,
all of this, and it works.
And it's my gift to you.
It's absolutely free.
And so the link's in the description,
but you just go,
acquisition.com forward slash roadmap, just enter info and it'll spit it right back to you, all free.
And so this is what actually happens in the real world, right?
So unless you get very good at your passion, you will have to do things that you like less
to pay your bills, period.
Like that's real, right?
And then number two, as soon as you are good at your passion, your demand will outstrip your
supply of time and 95% of what you do will not be the thing you love, but stuff that you do
to support the thing you love, which you may indeed not love.
And so the 5% of your passion that's left over will only be there if your passion doesn't change,
which it also will, which means the vast majority of your life you will not be doing things that you are passionate about.
And in the tiny instance you do, it's likely short-lived.
And so let me frame why I think this is so important.
If you were playing a video game and day one, I said, enter this cheat code,
you have max life, max strength, max money, max good looks.
And then you go through the whole game and it's incredibly easy.
What would you do?
You just never play the game.
It wouldn't even be fun, right?
And so we on some level know that we have to suffer.
It's not about winning the lottery, right?
It's not about the outcome.
We can't say, oh, I'm really ambitious.
I won the lottery.
The ambition and the passion go hand in hand in that you were stating to the world and more
importantly to yourself that you were willing to suffer for this thing
because you have deemed it important enough to suffer for.
which is why the striving, the suffering is quintessentially humid and not something to be avoided.
Growing a business is really painful and sucks. Being in a plateaued business is really painful and it
sucks. Being in a decaying business is really painful and it sucks. Entrepreneurship is hard.
Being an employee is hard. Being broke is hard. Being rich is hard. Married people want to be single.
Single people want to be married. I'm not saying all the time, but I'm saying there is suffering
in every path of life.
And so I see the core issue, especially with entrepreneurs, especially newcoming entrepreneurs,
is that they look at their existing state and think, I am suffering and therefore there's
something wrong with this.
I need to change this because if I change this, I will no longer suffer.
But change will also call suffering.
And so it's the fact that you claim there's a problem with suffering that's creating even more
suffering and also sacrificing the thing that you said you would suffer for.
because you're not going to achieve it because you never walk down the path.
And so one of my favorite sayings around this, it's of myself.
It's my own saying.
So it's a bit self-aggrandizing.
But success and failure are on the same path.
Failure is just an earlier exit.
That's it.
To that younger entrepreneur who I was talking to, no matter what path you choose, it will be hard.
And so pick one that pays better if that's what you think is worth it.
And so suffering is a fixed cost.
right? The suffering on all paths is a fixed cost. And so the secret to getting what you want is doing
lots of things that you don't want. And so no matter what you do, it will suck. And so pick the things
that pay better. The goal is to reframe reality so that bad things are good, not to try and only
experience good things. I'm going to say that again. The goal is to reframe your living experience
so that bad things are good, not to try and only experience good things. It would be like looking
outside and saying every day that it rains, I will be upset. Rather than there are benefits to
rain and there are benefits to sunshine. And so you have to change your frame, not your conditions,
your perceptions, not reality. And so let me give you a hypothetical. What if I told you you had two
options and both rides cost 10 bucks, right? And one ride is one that you want and the other one
is one that you hate. Which one would you pick? They both caught 10 bucks. The thing you hate and the
thing you love. Well, you'd pick the thing that you love. Now let me say, let me give you a
another option, a third option. Lange of you the option that's the thing that you love
unbelievably. Like huge love, it's so, it's so unbelievable that you're not even sure you want to
try to ride the ride because you're not even sure if it's going to finish the way you want,
but it still costs 10 bucks. Which one would you do now? You probably pick the one that you really,
really love, right? So then what if I told you that you're going to suffer the same amount in all
three paths that you pick in life? The thing that you hate, the thing that you think is a moderate
or reasonable goal, or the thing that you really want to swing for the fences for? All three have
the same amount of suffering.
Like, think about it.
You will suffer the same.
You'll suffer regret more here.
You'll suffer difficulty more here.
But you'll suffer the same.
It's a fixed cost.
This is why aiming big is so real for me.
Is that, like, what's the alternative?
Aiming small and also still suffering?
Like, the fears that we have on the downside are not true.
They're just suffering.
And so I say all this to say, delaying your pursuit,
Because you're waiting to find your passion is a fool's errand.
Find something that people value.
Do that thing even though it sucks.
Realize there is no greener grass on the other side.
It all sucks on both sides.
One of my favorite CEOs that I've ever had, Suzanne, used to say,
it's greener on the other side of the fence because it's fertilized with shit.
And so there's shit on both sides of the fence.
You just haven't gotten over and stepped in it yet.
And one of my favorite Chinese proverbs is,
everything must be hard before it can be easy.
And so my two senses, do not try to be passionate about what you do, but try to be passionate
about why and how you do it.
The reason for that is because your why and your how will persist.
They are internal.
You're what the thing you like doing.
You like carving little miniature ships.
You like playing video games.
You like painting, whatever it is.
It's external.
And you have little control over that.
those are treats, those are moments, they can't be requirements.
And so this is from a personal level of me, having gone through a little bit of this myself,
like questioning the reason for working when you no longer need any money.
Right.
That's, you know, whatever your opinion about me, like that is very true.
I do not need to work.
What I had to realize for myself was I am not the goal.
I am the goal in terms of why I want to become, but the self-servingness cannot be the goal.
because you will satisfy your own needs relatively quickly, especially if you get good at anything.
Everyone's bar is different, but you will satisfy it. It doesn't matter who you are. And so that why
has to be bigger than you, or you'll only be able to overcome obstacles that are smaller than you.
And this is why I believe it has to be eternal. And so Victor Frankel famously said,
if a man has a big enough why, he can overcome almost anyhow. And Rogan had this quote that I love
about this, which is a man will crawl through broken glass with a smile. You need a goal worth
suffering for. The goal is your passion, not the path. If you love the goal enough, the path
stops mattering. Right. So let me give an example to make this concrete. Imagine your
future family and your future wife, right? People who go to war fight for different reasons,
freedom, duty, protecting their loved ones, not letting their friends down.
None of this is their love, but they love them enough that they'll do anything, including die for them.
And my definition of love from an operationalizing perspective is that you measure it by what you're willing to give up in order to maintain it.
The man who loves the journey will walk further than the man who loves the destination.
But the man who walks to protect his family will walk until the other man dies.
So let me tell you something cool about this.
So they've done research on this where they have someone get shocked and then eventually they tap out, right, at a pain threshold.
When they told the same people that their loved ones were in the other room and every shock they took their loved ones wouldn't have to, their threshold tripled.
Think about how crazy this is.
And the reason I think this is so relevant is that like if you want to do big things, it will cost you great pain.
And so the why is your passion, not the path.
And so this is where people talk about finding your passion
because it'll get you through the inevitable hard times that come.
But whenever you hear someone say that, first off,
I don't think they have bad intent.
I think they just don't think about it as much.
But when you hear that, just remember,
it will get you through the inevitable hard times that come
is the definition of passion.
It is the requisite for it being your passion.
If passion, the literal translation in Latin,
is suffering and endurance, to endure suffering, the passion of Christ, the crucifixion story,
the first usage of suffering in this context, then don't you think that like the thing that
you're going for, maybe it's to set yourself up financially, to set your family up financially,
to move in a better neighborhood, to set your kids up to have something that you didn't have?
Like, don't you think that's worth suffering for, whatever that is for you?
And so like, I want to make duty cool again.
I want to make it cool for like a man to go in a field and work a rice paddy.
and know that they did a job because of who they did it for.
And so for me, my passion, what I'm willing to suffer for, is helping men provide.
It's something that I feel deeply about.
And that's, to be fair, it's not like I don't want women to provide.
I want them to provide, too, but I'm saying, like, what is the closest to my core?
Obviously, business tactic, twerks no matter who's using them, right?
But I see the core components of me and men specifically as provide, protect, procreate.
And I can't help do all of them, to be clear.
Right?
So that's on you.
But what I believe I can't help with is at least one of those three.
And there are many days where I do not enjoy some of the downstream effects of what I do.
But I do enjoy what happens as a result.
And I spend so much time on my books and this content because I think on my deathbed,
it will matter more than any wealth that I accumulate.
And the ironic part about my role is that in order to influence more people,
I need to continue to gain access to increased credibility.
And so our outcomes are inextricably linked.
I have to succeed.
I have to learn the next step so that I can teach it.
And that carries me through the pain of uncertainty
and the failures of my many misjudgments.
And you can become passionate about your work
because you become passionate about what your work gets you.
And I think for some reason,
to talk about it's the journey of the destination.
But like, in some ways, it's about the destination
so that you can tolerate the journey.
I don't think Frodo in his quest to destroy the ring was like, man, I'm not sure if I'm passionate about this.
I think he absolutely was passionate about it.
He was willing to die for it.
He was willing to give up his home for it, his friends for it, his family for it.
And so I think we all on some level strive to have that.
Something that I've been saying to Layla a lot is that something I believe to my bones is that a man must have a quest.
You have to drive towards something.
And so the problem is that we believe that when we see monsters and dragons on the trail,
society is telling us, oh, this is not the right path for you because it's not all sunshine and rainbows and unicorns.
No, that path not only does it not exist, even if it did exist, it would be short-lived and you'd adapt to it because you're human.
And heat onistic adaptation is a real thing. And to be clear, there are elements of my work, of my path that I love. I love writing.
But basically anything besides that, I don't like 10 out of 10 enjoy. I love writing. I enjoy lifting.
Lifting, I would say, is super high on my like enjoyment list. I enjoy eating and hanging out after I work.
workout with people I like. And those are basically my emotional highs. But if I did it all the time,
which I know because I tried to do it, I owned a gym. I started a gym because I thought, oh,
if I eat food with people I like and work out all the time, then my life's going to be happy.
And let me tell you, the most miserable year of my life was the first year I started the gym.
The most miserable. Of the last 15, the hardest year of my life. And so the thing is that you
habituate to the good, but you still suffer through the bad. You get used to it. And so definitionally,
you need something that you cannot achieve
in order to continue to strive, to continue to fight,
especially when you don't want to.
And so I'm not going to speak for women and men,
but especially for men.
I believe that we need to give ourselves permission to earn,
permission to strive, permission to suffer,
and grow as a result of that suffering.
Because the stretch between who you are and who is required,
the person you have to become,
to handle your current struggle is the pain of growth.
and we can't wish for the benefits of growth without accepting the cost or the price of growth,
which is the suffering.
And so you could even say that growth is your passion.
But if growth is your passion, that means that you're willing to do many miserable things in order for it to happen,
which means you're willing to suffer to achieve it,
which means that if you're suffering right now in pursuit of the thing that you find meaningful,
there is nothing wrong with you, you are not on the wrong path.
and this is how it works, and the people who try to tell you otherwise either don't know better
or actively are trying to destroy you. And I do this work because I really do find it the most
meaningful. I put up with plenty of shit because I, like, it's hard for people to comprehend this.
I took out $42 million in distributions before my $46 million exit. At 31, put that in a bank account
and put 5% a year on it. I don't live that fancy. It was an active choice.
to take this on and do this because when I took the year off,
I was very miserable. I had no quest. And I remember being in Mexico.
Layla and I went there for a month or two. I can't remember. And I remember every day,
I would look out this beautiful ocean, this massive mansion that we had rented while we were there.
And I had to think to myself like, what do I find meaningful? What moves me?
And when I say moves me, I mean, calls me to take action.
What is a cause that I am willing to suffer for?
And for me, it's helping younger me out because I know how much pain I was in.
But a portion of that pain was because I had other people in my ear telling me there was something wrong with me for the pain I experienced.
That there was something wrong with the path.
And so they would sow these seeds of doubt and uncertainty into me.
And then that made the path so much more painful because the whole time I was wondering, like, am I, like, I'm going, I for sure.
sure know I'm going through the suffering, but I don't know if I'm doing it for the right
reason. And so I think that if you provide for your family, like, you've won. And most people,
like if we're really being real, think back to the last major life change that you have once it's
stabilized, you're probably close to about as happy as you are now. And I'll make a prediction.
After your next major life change, you'll have a short period of improved subjective well-being,
and then you'll return to baseline. And so, like, if we assume these things,
to be true and our subjective well-being, how we rate ourselves, how we feel day to day is about
the same pretty much no matter what, then that steady state becomes our existence. And so that's the
$10. That's the fixed cost of living. But we can change the reward. We can change what we do it for
or for whom we do it. And I think that's what got me riled up enough to make this video. Like there's
nothing wrong with you if you were pursuing something for the purpose of something that you find
meaningful, independent of how hard it is. To make this real, for some of you guys who are going through
right now, when I was sleeping on my gym floor, I say that in one sentence, I was sleeping on my gym
floor. But what the sentence fails to compress is that, like, that's a turf floor that I used to
get rashes on because it was like covered in sweat and I didn't clean it that often. And when I was
sleeping there, I was barely sleeping because it was underneath of a parking garage. And it was,
had these metal dividers and it was a concrete box. And so these cars would drive over it at all hours
of the night. Usually like kids around my age, because I was 22, driving there who were college
kids or just out of college, parting on the roof. And so I could hear these cars that were like
do-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d- and it was like wig me up. And I would, you know, do the billing until,
you know, sometimes 11 o'clock at night. And then I would have like this adrenaline and this
sweat sleep that I'd go through because there was no AC in the gym because it was in California.
and my first session would be five people would get there at 430s so I'd open the gym at 415 and the thing
is is you can hear that and I remember like I would sleep for around four to five hours every night
but I did that consistently for about six months and it got to the moment like I remember where I could
actually fall asleep leaning against walls and I remember thinking to myself during that period of
my life like anyone who ever has sleeping issues just simply isn't working hard enough I don't think
that's true I for sure think that if you were sleep deprived enough like you will not have sleeping
issues. But I bring this up to say that like I was like I remember showering at the LA fitness didn't
have flip flops and I still have athlete's foot in one of my feet because of what I caught at that
place that I still deal with. And I literally had all my stuff in my car because I drove to California
in my car and all my stuff was there. And so when I say one line of like I slept on the floor
like you know I get it. I understand that because like while I was going through it like I had no
promise that it was going to work. Right. And like I had also given up something that was significant.
I had a white collar job. And every person that I knew, and this might not be real for some of you,
but every person that I knew when I decided to quit and start my own gym business actually had higher
status than me. So because they all had white collar jobs and I quit to start what most people would
consider a blue collar business. And so I lost all social status that I had within like the girls that I
knew and the guys that I knew because I was no longer like on the investment banking management
consulting path. And like I went to this prestigious college so that I could open up that world
and then instead left everything so that I could become a personal trainer which requires zero
credibility at all. And so like if you are going through your version of hard time, now for you,
maybe it is more sleepless nights, maybe it is physical exhaustion. Maybe it's more the social
stuff of feeling like your peers are getting ahead of you and wondering what's wrong with you.
and like you're for sure sacrificing this time, money,
and taking on this risk,
but you're not sure if it's going to work.
The only thing that I can say is that every single person
who was successful shares that path with you.
And the only thing that I can tell you
they got me through that period of time
was that I committed to not stopping.
I didn't know when I would succeed or if I would succeed,
but I did know that I wouldn't stop.
And that if I didn't stop, that I couldn't be called a failure.
And so that was the big thing.
Like, I realized that if I had to stop,
then I would have to explain stopping.
That still meant that other people's opinions mattered to me,
to be clear.
But if I was like, if I just keep going, I can always be like I'm still doing it.
I'm still doing it.
And as long as I had enough to cover food, which doesn't really cost that much, I was going to be okay.
And so a lot of times the worst case scenarios, I would encourage you to think out in more specificity what really is the worst case scenario.
As someone who slept in the car or slept on the floor, like, you know what?
Just like everything else, it becomes steady state.
Right.
I remember when I was broker and had amazing memories, and I remember being richer and having
amazing memories.
I remember having terrible memories now, having more money, and I remember having terrible
memories then, having less money.
For sure, money will give you options, but it will not really dramatically change your subjective
well-being, because that is very internal.
A lot of us already know this, but we still want to make sure and go get the money anyways.
But I see a man's work as something that's incredibly core to who we are.
I don't know if it's the same for women.
I can only speak to my own experience, but I see my work and what I choose to do with my hands and my mind and my, like every day.
Like my grandfather, who was the person that I was closest with my family, he came here, he was an immigrant, one of nine, born in Macedonia.
He was the smartest of them, so they sent him to boarding school because he was smarter than his siblings, did well, then ran from the Nazis for multiple years during the Holocaust.
And then from there came to the U.S. after being in Europe, after the World War, to start
his practice here.
And then he had to retake all of the exams because another European standardizations mattered
in the U.S.
They had to retake everything again in the U.S. in language he didn't understand.
And so, you know, obviously he became successful.
He had my mother, and my mother had me.
But he would, he and I would sit there and talk and he says, you have two hands in one
mind.
That's it.
And I always thought about that.
we have two hands in one mind. And if we think that like no matter what path you choose,
like poverty is tough, right? And so is growth and so is risk. Like everything sucks.
Right. I tweeted this thing the other day because I was texting someone and says,
everything is hard and no one cares. I like, I am able to make these videos despite some of the
personal cost that it comes that comes with it. For sure, there's personal benefit. But there are
costs and there are benefits. Because when I have those those moments where you're like,
shoot, what if I like go off this ramp and I'm about to die or like you, you have some health
scare because you see a lump somewhere and you're like, oh my God, is it cancer? And it's not
or whatever. Those moments, you like, you do this quick check on your life and you're like,
do I need to change everything about what I'm doing? And for me, when I have those moments,
I look back and I say, like, this is what I would have done. Like, I feel like the work that I do
helps people. And it's something that I find interesting. And so I do it. And much of my day does
not include that. And much of my life leading up to this did not include that. And I've said this
example before, but I will make it again. I thought that pursuing my passion meant being in fitness
and because I liked working out. But me working out with friends is such a very small slice of my life.
And when I actually started a gym and took it all the way to the natural extreme, I'm back at
the beginning again right now with a gym that I can work out with the people that I like and I do
not have a gym business. And so I say this to say that like the suffering will not stop.
Like, we work because on some level we think the suffering will end, and it just won't.
And so I think if you can accept the suffering as the toll that you pay on all these paths,
then at least you get to pick where you go.
And I think that is something worth fighting for.
