The Jordan Harbinger Show - 632: Jon Acuff | Give Yourself the Gift of Done
Episode Date: March 3, 2022Jon Acuff (@jonacuff) is the New York Times bestselling author of seven books, including his Wall Street Journal #1 bestseller, Finish: Give Yourself the Gift of Done. [Note: This is a previo...usly broadcast episode from the vault that we felt deserved a fresh pass through your earholes!] What We Discuss with Jon Acuff: Why are only eight percent of new year’s resolutions realized? (Incidentally, that’s the same percentage of applicants accepted to Juilliard.) The harm perfectionism causes and what we can do to navigate through it. The Planning Fallacy and how it causes overachievers to fail before even beginning. Strategic Incompetence: why you should deliberately be terrible at some things. Secret Rules: what they are, how they’re made, and how these invisible scripts affect our lives (and what we can do about it). And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/632 Sign up for Six-Minute Networking -- our free networking and relationship development mini course -- at jordanharbinger.com/course! Every week on My First Million, hosts Shaan Puri and Sam Parr dive deep into different business opportunities and explain how to pounce on them — basically spoon-feeding you interesting businesses you can start tomorrow. Check it out at HubSpot or wherever you listen to fine podcasts! Like this show? Please leave us a review here -- even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
I've never met somebody who's like, I sat down and watched Narcos.
I ended up doing burpees.
I don't even know how it happened.
Like, we never accidentally or naturally do things that are good for us or productive.
That means we have to be deliberate.
We have to be intentional.
And so I would ask people who have a lot of noble obstacles, well, where are you going?
And if you know you're supposed to write a book and you say, well, as soon as the garage is cleaned,
what are those two have in common?
Welcome to the show.
I'm Jordan Harbinger. On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets and skills
are the world's most fascinating people. We have in-depth conversations with scientists and entrepreneurs,
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and each episode turns our guest's wisdom into practical advice you can use to build a deeper
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here on the show. Just visit jordanharbinger.com slash start or take a look in your Spotify app to get
started or to help somebody else get started, which again, I always appreciate. Now today,
one from the vault. On this episode, we're talking with my friend John Aikoff, author of Finish.
Give yourself the gift of done. This is a book about perfectionism. What it does, the harm it
causes and what we can do to navigate through it, we'll explore a concept called the planning fallacy
and how overachievers like many of us shoot ourselves in the foot before we even begin, a concept
called strategic incompetence and why you should deliberately suck at some things, and we'll
uncover secret rules, what they are, how they're made, and how these little invisible scripts
affect our lives, and what we can do about it. So enjoy this deliberately imperfect episode with
John Acuff. And by the way, if you're wondering how I managed to get these amazing folks on the show,
it's always, always been about my network. And I'm teaching you how to do the same, how to build
your network for free. It's a free course. I don't need your stinking credit card info or anything
like that. Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. The course is about improving your networking and your
connection skills, of course, but also inspiring others to develop personal and professional
relationships with you. It'll make you a better connector and a better thinker. That's at
Jordan Harbinger.com slash
course. And by the way, most of the guests you hear on this show,
they subscribe and contribute to that same course.
So come join us.
You'll be in smart company where you belong.
Now, here's John Acuff.
So tell us about your new gig here,
because Doover is what we heard about before.
You had that book about starting.
Now you've got a book about finishing.
Dare I say a little predictable,
but here's the problem.
You got a book about starting.
Obviously something did or did not happen
now that you have a book about finishing.
So what's going on here?
I had so many people come up to me and go, hey, no offense.
I like your book, but I've never had a problem starting.
I start a million things.
Starting is easy.
How do I actually finish?
And two years ago, I didn't have an answer.
And so that's what kind of kicked off this idea was, all right, well, why do 92% of New
Year's resolutions fail?
Like, why do people get P90X and do four days?
Like, why did diets fail the third week of January?
And so that's where this book came from.
I thought the start was the most important thing.
And it is important.
It's just not as critical as the finish.
Like, nobody gets a medal in the middle of a race, or they shouldn't.
If culture's doing this job, you shouldn't reward middle.
You should reward finish.
That's true.
But our psychology kind of doesn't want to do that a lot.
I think every person has unfinished stuff that they kind of have a little bit of shame
over.
High achievers have this even more so I've noticed.
And maybe that's just anecdotal data because that's who I'm surrounded by,
these overachiever of, you know, law school nerds and entrepreneurs.
but it seems like people who do really well in life generally
also have a lot of unfinished stuff,
and you hear about it all the time.
It's an element of shame.
Everybody's got that skeleton.
Everybody's got P90X, or as I like to call it, P4X,
because that's about how long I lasted.
Exactly, until you get yoga.
And then, like, in the 90s, everybody had bowflex.
And they're like, I'm going to get ripped with this thing.
It's got like limbs and, like, bows,
and now you use it to dry laundry in your garage.
I think part of it is that, culturally speaking,
We celebrate the beginning and we say things like, well begun is half done, which sounds good on
Instagram and like an entrepreneur is like, hey, and buy my webinar, you know, and then you go,
what does that mean?
If a doctor said to you, as soon as I've made your first incision, I'm half done with your surgery.
You'd be like, well, that's not how anything goes.
Like, where did you get your degree?
And the other thing is like, we go, the hardest part of any journey is the first step.
You're kidding me.
We have launch parties, Jordan.
There's no middle party.
I've never been to a party where the guy was like, hey, it's the suckiest.
part of the project, we're going to have a middle party. We celebrate the beginning, we ignore the
ending, and then the middle we quit. Yeah, there's launch parties. There's no, I'm done with my book to our
party. The first step is a dream, dude. And like Derek Sieber's talks about this where the problem is,
if you tell somebody your goal the wrong way, you actually don't do the goal. So what happens is I go,
Jordan, I'm going to run a marathon. And you give me pre-congratulations. You go, dude, you're so brave.
I couldn't do that. You're so disciplined. And I get dopamine, and I don't actually run because I got
enough dopamine. The whole thing drives me nuts. It's true because we're really getting the validation
we were looking for by getting that pre-validation. People get insulted by it. I very rarely will do a new
podcast. And the reason I won't do one is I don't know the stats you probably do. The majority of
podcasters quit in X amount of months because it's hard. The idea of doing a podcast is so easy.
The reality of doing a podcast is not as easy. I'll tell you right now, I have the same policy.
People go, I would love to include you in my launch.
And I'm thinking, I would love to give that opportunity to anyone else.
I used to do that.
I used to go, great.
Wow, I'm really flattered.
And it still is flattering that somebody thinks of you first.
But the problem is, out of 10 launches, nine of them would go, oh, I never actually made it
to launch.
Or I launched with all the episodes that I did.
And then I decided that I was going to write an ebook or do a webinar or, you know,
oh, I'm still working on it.
And I'm like, I recorded that with you a year ago.
What are you working on?
And the answer is nothing.
It's just they thought it would be really fun to talk to entrepreneurs and then nothing happened.
One question, as soon as I saw this book, I thought about this, and I got to ask, did you plan to
write a book about finishing at the time? Or did you actually end up writing the book about finishing
as a result of all this stuff about starting and then not actually finishing yourself?
It was through the experience of I felt like I had launched a lot of boats that never got out of the harbor.
And I wanted to say to people, hey, wait a second, like, this is fine, this is important,
and don't get me wrong, but without this piece,
you just end up driving in circles
and never actually accomplishing the thing.
It was frustrating.
And as an author, the two things people say to you
when you say you write books are, they go,
what's your biggest book that I would have heard of?
Which is so sad because they'd never heard of it.
It's like you never say to a lawyer,
name your most successful case,
I'll tell you if I agree.
Like, it's so humbling.
But then they say, I want to write a book
because 81% of people want to write a book
according to New York Times and less than 1% do.
Wow, 81% of people,
I didn't want to write one before.
Who are these people?
We miss a quarter billion books every year
from people who say, I want to do it.
And you're right, like, the problem is,
scientifically speaking,
you remember incomplete goals more than complete.
So the things, the open loops,
as David Allen would say,
that you have in your head,
way heavier than the stuff you got done.
Like the podcast where you felt like
I could have gone better on that interview,
you think about that more than the ones
where you're like, I crushed that.
So it does cost you, dude, it weighs.
I think I could get 99, 5.
star reviews and then someone sends a one star and I'm like, I'm going to stay up till 3 a.m.
writing a reply to this person if I can find them online, which I will try to do for the next 45
minutes. And then you realize, hey, you know what? Some people just don't like pizza and I don't
want to be around those people, right? Yeah, exactly. Like my wife can't stay in the red hot chili
peppers. There's a lot of people that like the red hot chili peppers. Sorry about your relationship, bro.
We're working on it. Counseling's pretty expensive. That's why I still write books, these lucrative books.
In said book, finish, give yourself the gift of done.
You mentioned we have the same percentage of being accepted into Juilliard for like playing the bassoon as we do of finishing our goals.
8%.
Of course, that's 8% of people who apply.
But in theory, if you have a goal, you're kind of applying to finish it.
8%.
That's really low.
That's a 92% failure rate.
Yeah.
And the crazy thing, Jordan, is we don't change it.
Every year in December, we get wooed back into the new year, new you kind of movement.
and we're like, I'm going to do it this year.
Like, it's going to be different.
And if you say to somebody, well, how will this year's diet be different?
They go, it'll have more beats.
Like they might eat something different, but none of their patterns have changed,
none of their habits, none of their approaches.
I asked the lady at the grocery store, I said, when do people quit their goals?
And she said, third week of January.
I said, how do you know?
She said, that's when we stopped selling kale.
And part of what happens is you blow it once and then you give up.
Like, that's where perfectionism comes in.
All right, let's talk about perfectionism, because this is the Bowser to you.
Mario in this book here. Perfectionism sounds like something that, okay, we get down on ourselves.
When you're in a job interview, you say, yeah, my biggest weakness, I'm too detail-oriented.
I'm a perfectionist, right? I work too hard. That's why I'm jobless, but I give too much.
Tell me, though, what is it about perfectionism that's causing us not to finish things?
I mean, it makes sense when you say it out loud, but in the beginning, shouldn't me having an
awesome plan actually be a good thing for accomplishing my goals, getting into Juilliard and whatnot?
I think an awesome plan is different from perfectionism. Perfectism doesn't exist. So as a goal,
perfect doesn't exist, right? Perfectism totally exists. Yeah, perfectionism exists. Perfect doesn't.
Amazon has never sold a perfect book. They've sold millions of imperfect books people are brave enough to finish.
Like, I made mistakes in every book I've ever written. In one book, I said that Terrell Owens,
the football player, had caught a thousand touchdowns. He's caught a hundred. I was off by a factor of
10 and every jock on the planet was like, hey, idiot. And then I made a mistake and do-over.
I called the sense of the teenage meat ninja turtles stick instead of splinter, because stick is the
mentor of daredevil, splinter is the ninja turtle. Every nerd was like, you lose her, I can't.
So like, you're always going to have a mistake. But the problem is, Jordan, if you say,
my goal is perfect, you'll always get close to it, but never close enough. And even worse,
if you don't hit it, you'll quit. People that struggle with perfectionism, great
on a past fail schedule. If you want to lose 10 pounds and you only lose eight, you didn't almost
get there. You failed by two when you quit. That's where perfectionism is so dangerous.
So you end up with examples like the weight loss thing is great, right? It's binary. So you say,
well, since I didn't lose all 10 pounds, I fail. But isn't the result then fine. You lost eight pounds.
I mean, where's the problem? I always say, here's another example. Perfectionists have the messiest
cars and offices. And you go, no way, they're deep freaks, they're clean. If they're
can't clean it at a toothbrush level,
they quit the whole project.
So they'll be like half coffee cups,
they'll be a mess everywhere.
So that's where it gets people.
And that's where if it's not perfect,
you end up writing a first chapter, not liking it.
You've done this, Jordan, where you have an idea in your head
and before you even write it down, you judge it as dumb
and you don't even commit it to paper.
Is that not normal or healthy or good?
Of course not.
And so that's where perfectionism,
it just prevents your stuff from seeing the light of day
and from getting better.
If you had said, I'm not going to do a podcast unless it's perfect,
we wouldn't be on this episode.
I guarantee this year is better than the first one.
I don't even want you to peak the first time.
I want you to grow into it.
But if perfectionism had been loud enough,
you would have done one episode,
realized it wasn't perfect and given up.
Perfectionism doesn't have room for growth.
That's funny you should mention that.
I know so many people who won't launch their show
because it's not perfect,
which is one of the reasons why you and I don't do
brand new podcast, interviews and things like that
with shows that haven't started yet,
one reason, but I didn't fall victim to that.
And I'll tell you, the reason was not because we weren't perfectionists.
It was because we decided that this was a hobby initially, and it didn't matter at all,
because all we were doing was drinking and talking, and there's no real way to make that
perfect.
It took us maybe half a decade before we were like, hey, you know what, this is something
we should focus on because it's working really well, and we should probably turn it
into a product where we release it on the same day every week and maybe actually do one every week.
People always go, we're the early episodes of the show and I'm thinking, don't waste your time,
go to a movie instead. You've iterated every time. You guys sent me an email this time. The first time
I was on, you didn't have a mic recommendation. This time, guess what? You're like, hey, it would be better
for the listener who were trying to serve if you had a better microphone. Guess what? I bought the microphone.
And now every podcast I do, I use the microphone. And so you don't get to continually improve.
if you're trying to aim for perfect.
Right, because you start trying to get the perfect
on the first try, which since you're saying is impossible,
prohibits us from maybe not trying at all,
but at least not going after the first iteration
because why, we're so ashamed that our first try
wasn't perfect, would you say screw it?
People don't like to do things that fail.
It's voluntary failure too.
Let's be clear, like a lot of these goals are voluntary.
You started this podcast, a Boston say to you, Jordan,
you gotta do this podcast.
And so if you're doing a voluntary goal,
people don't wanna willingly increase
their run-ins with failure.
Very few of us are like, I love it, I eat it,
like my haters are my motivators, like it's not enjoyable.
And so we try it, we already feel shame about it.
Like we bring in the shame of,
I wanted to write a book five years ago, I didn't,
I wanted to lose weight 10 years ago, I didn't.
We already feel bad and if our first experience is bad,
our chances of stopping are exponential.
So this isn't about productivity,
it's not about time management,
it's about ditching perfectionism.
You had some funny examples in there of trying to get over perfectionism,
like the yummy cracker of perfection?
What was that all about?
It was weird.
Yeah, it was another really successful productivity book that said,
imagine your perfect dream or goal as a movie,
now then shrink it down to a size of a cracker
and imagine yourself eating it,
and now that perfect movie is part of you.
But you and I, one of the things we have in common
is our enjoyment of making fun of bad advice,
of where people go, like,
you are the solution you've always been looking for.
What does that mean?
No, I'm not.
Like, in most cases, I'm the problem I've always been avoiding.
To quote a great American poet, Creed, I've created my own prison.
So, like, the idea that, like, I'm my own solution.
So I think you and I are, have fun swimming through the Instagram experts that haven't done anything.
If I were you, it would make me laugh when I see people selling courses on how to do a podcast
that don't have a successful podcast.
Those are pretty much the only people
that sell those types of classes so far.
What you're doing is you're monopolizing people's dreams.
You're taking somebody who's vulnerable
and wants to do a podcast
and adding a buck onto that dream.
And so stuff like that drives me nuts,
but the problem is the goal space
is full of stuff that says
have a huge crazy goal that terrifies you.
Like it has to be so big,
it makes you cry in like the fetal position.
Yeah, the big, hairy audacious goal.
And I'm like, actually,
I just have these little ones
that I keep hitting.
What we found is people who shoot for the moon
that go too big almost fail from the get-go.
Like, I'll have people say, I'm going to run
and I'll say, okay, what are you going to do?
I'll say, I'm going to do a marathon.
I'll go, have you done a half marathon or a 5K
or even just a K?
Have you ever run a K?
And they're like, no, I got to do the Iron Man.
I saw a bike commercial.
I'm getting carbon fiber and wearing skinny clothes.
And then they quit a weekend, two weeks in,
because it's so overwhelming.
This is interesting because I see some of this in my life
in some areas and not.
in others, perfectionism doesn't necessarily have to infect every area of your life. Do you find that
it infects certain areas of your life more? Because there are plenty of people who are doing the
perfectionism thing with their podcast, but they have no problem being an awesome athlete and running
in triathlons or running a business. What's going on there? I would say for me, like, my parenting,
I don't try to be perfect because I know it's just friggin impossible. I'm much more the type of guy
that's like, I'll tell my kids, these are the 10 things you're going to talk to a therapist about
someday, so let me save you a lot of sessions.
Like, here are 10 specific things.
I just blew, and I'm sorry,
but, like, that happened.
So, like, I don't try to be a perfect parent.
I recognize that, like, I'm constantly growing as a husband,
so, like, the idea that'll be a perfect,
like, that ship has sailed as well.
But then other things, like writing or public speaking,
I might fall into that.
But part of it is, like, what you're motivated by,
what kind of rules you bring to it.
There's a lot of people that have these kind of secret rules.
Some would say limiting beliefs.
is another phrase, that they bring to a certain topic, like money.
Like you and I both know a lot of entrepreneurs that struggle with a fear of success,
and they get ashamed when they get successful.
And you go, the whole goal was success.
And like 20 years ago, a mom said to them,
people who are rich must have cheated to get there.
And so now in their head they have this thing that like only cheaters win,
and they self-sabotage right when they're starting to go well.
Like it drives me nuts.
You're listening to the Jordan Harbinger show with our guest, John Accom.
We'll be right back.
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Now, back to John Acuff.
Okay, let's talk about secret rules.
I found this in the book to be quite fascinating.
These are great because limiting beliefs,
it's got too much woo attached to it now,
and it's kind of like, you can because you believe in yourself.
If you think it, the universe will make it possible.
And I always think, like, tell that to a cancer victim.
Like, they weren't like, I wish I had colon cancer,
and the universe was like, you have wished it,
and here you will receive it.
Like, ugh.
Oh, man, I wish I could teleport you into a conversation
I had with this guy who was in this book, The Secret.
And when I was like, what about kids who get cancer?
He was talking about how people who get bad things happening to them have done something
somewhere.
And I'm like, okay, so eight-year-old with leukemia, go.
And he was like, I'm hungry.
See you later.
Exactly.
Or like car crash.
Like, you know, it's punishing me.
So the book, the metaphor I use is the cuckoo bird doesn't build its own nest when it's
going to have a baby.
It hides its egg in another bird's nest.
And then the first thing its egg does is hatch first and kill
all the other eggs. So then the mother bird dies feeding this gigantic species. Like if your listeners
go on to Google and say, cuckoo, parasitic bird, that Google images are crazy. I say, how does the
mom not recognize the lie in the nest? And it's the same way that you and I, if we have a secret
rule, don't recognize that there's a lie in our head. A friend the other day, let's talk about the
money one. He said, John, that CEO makes $20 million a year. How do you think he sleeps at night?
I don't want to say, probably on Hungarian down pillows and pretty well, like probably after
eating some peeled grapes. But in his mind, five million was okay, 10 million, now you're greedy.
He had this weird, never spoken, never verbalized, like system. And so a lot of times gold books
treat you like a robot. They go, Jordan, if you do these four things in this order, you will
have more productivity. And they forget that like Jordan grew up with a dad that was working on stuff.
And Jordan grew up with a mom that wasn't perfect. And we, you know, had a teacher. Like that teacher,
you fortunately had the strong enough willpower
and personal character to say,
like, you're wrong about the internet
and I'm going to show you.
Some people do listen to that teacher
and made career choices based off of,
I don't want to get involved with the internet,
like it's not going to be around forever,
like better find a safe, stable thing
and we're impacted by that teacher.
And so that's what's really fascinating.
The secret rules that govern us
can either be good or bad then.
There were a lot of secret rules
where teachers told me,
oh, you're not good at this,
you're not good at that.
And for a while, my parents were being told that I had some sort of learning disability,
and they were like, I'm pretty sure he's bored because you're a terrible teacher.
And then, of course, the administration's like, parents always think their child is perfect.
And my mom's like, I'm a special ed teacher.
He's not a special ed kid.
He's doing these different things in your class.
Like, he wants to write the book in Spanish, not memorize the Spanish numbers.
Let him just go do it.
And since I was not well behaved, they didn't go, maybe he's gifted.
They were like, nope, he's just a dick.
I'm sorry to tell you.
But there was one thing when we were leaving middle school,
I was eighth grade, that's when they separated middle school.
There was a teacher that was the French teacher.
I was a terrible student in his class,
but he was also the football coach.
And a lot of the teachers were glad to see me go,
and Mr. Wilson was probably glad to see me go too.
But when we left, a lot of teachers were like,
you know, good luck, see you later, blah, blah.
He goes, take care of yourself, man.
And he had this look and like this head tilt where I went,
oh, wow, he's really worried about me.
Like, he has stayed up at night thinking,
that kid's going to end up in jail or like, you know, I'm going to hire that kid later on to pull
weeds out of my garden or something like that and I'm going to be like, damn.
And I remember that to this day because he was worried for a reason.
He wasn't a dumb guy.
He wasn't some old stodgy French teacher with bifocos telling me to memorize a verb table.
He was cool and smart and he had a great way of teaching and explaining things and he just saw a kid
who didn't give his shit and it scared him because he knew it was wasted.
potential, maybe I'm just wishful thinking here. And that secret rule was, hey, man, you got to
show people what you can do because you're not going to get discovered over here, man. You got to work
your ass off. And what's really interesting to me about that is, I think you know this, but I think
there's times you maybe forget. The crazy thing about a podcast or giving a speech is people come up
and they'll say, this thing you said changed my life. And then they'll say something you don't remember
saying. They'll say, hey, Jordan, I know you don't know me, but that episode was for me. I'm in
Oklahoma, and it hit me right at home, and I know you didn't think about it. But dude, like,
that's what's so powerful about, like, I told somebody today, I would pay to do the job I get
to do. That's how much I enjoy it. Like, I love to speak. I love to write. Like, the podcast is
successful, but there's great joy there. And part of that joy is, you know you're reprogramming
some things that just aren't true. So you're saying to people, hey, I know you think you're not
talented. Have you tried this? Talent isn't one shape. It's a bunch of sizes. The path isn't one way.
and when you have Brian Coppelman on,
he's sharing ideas that people haven't thought of before.
So, like, that's what's fun about our job,
but that's also the power and kind of destructiveness
of having a secret rule that holds you back
at the very last second.
So how do we find out what the secret rules are
and then kind of maybe take the bad ones
and do something else with them?
Is there a practical here that we can execute?
Yeah, let's do three practicals.
So one, you look for a pattern.
People say that all the time.
if you've been in five bad dating relationships, the one thing in common is you.
So I would say, okay, your three last kind of mistakes or failures, what happened?
Is there a pattern?
Is it that right at the last second, you blew up the whole thing?
Or you overshared and it made the conversation really awkward and you left the dinner
party early because you felt like you had been too personal with it, or you rushed three
of your last dating relationships with guys or women that weren't ready for it?
So one, I'd look for a pattern.
The second thing I would do is I would talk to a real friend, a friend that will say,
hey, yeah, I've noticed this.
Sometimes you're so close to it, Jordan, that you can't recognize it.
It's like when you're in a bad dating relationship and you break up and a month later,
you go, she was terrible.
And your friends are like, we tried to tell you.
Ask a friend, like, I heard this idea on this podcast that I like to listen to.
Do you think there's some secret rules I live by that I might not see?
Ask a friend.
And then listen, whatever they say, your job isn't to say, you're wrong.
You're going to get defensive, which is just going to shut them down.
The third thing I'd say is when you find one, ask the question, what does that mean?
So if I said to you, Jordan's success is bad and you said, well, what does that mean?
I would say, then failure must be good.
Like, take the reverse.
Like, so failure is good.
Or, like, I don't deserve a good relationship.
So what does that mean?
I have to date jerks.
That doesn't seem like very good advice.
I wouldn't tell a friend that.
Like, why do I believe that?
So those are three very practical, very easy things you can do.
I like that.
So essentially, we're looking for patterns.
Do we try to listen for the secret rules that we have?
Maybe write them down.
Do you ever do that?
Your head is messy, paper is clean.
So from your head, take down and go, okay, here's what I think.
What does this really mean?
And it's big and scary in your head.
It's simple and clean on paper.
Right.
So you can listen for a rule that says something like success is bad.
And then you can say, you know, actually this is not a good rule for me.
I wrote that down and it doesn't make any sense.
Like you said, you can take the extreme reverse.
and then if you can't spot them
or you want to confirm them,
you can have your friends say,
I've done this with other friends.
We didn't call it secret rules,
but I had a friend say,
am I a bad person?
Because he was going through a hard time.
And I said, no,
but I'll tell you why people are reacting to you
in this way in my observation.
And he goes, wow, I never,
I told him something about,
you know, he's one of these guys
who somehow find the negative.
And he's like,
I was just raised by people
who were always bitching about stuff.
Yeah, so that was his language.
That was his language.
And he goes,
I just never thought
that anybody else could do it.
And he's like, things, you know, really do look bad to me.
And I'm like, yeah, but you live in the same reality
as your wife and kids.
So is it really that bad because they're fine
and you're not and you're getting depressed?
And that was a strange thing for him
because he had to write a new rule, which was,
it's probably not that bad.
And when it seems really, really bad,
ask myself, you know, there was all kinds
of sort of tangents and branches that could come off of that.
But it really changed the way that he thought.
And it was good for me too
because I thought, well, wait a minute.
that was so obvious to me.
Where are my obvious things
that I'm not picking up on
because I'm in the middle?
And that's a dangerous game
of self-awareness.
I don't like when I hear podcasts
and they tell you something
that's difficult and they go,
it's super easy,
just raise like a million dollars
next week with your friends.
Like, this is heart work.
So like that's part of it
is most gold books
address the brain
and they forget the heart.
I mean, for me it was,
I used to have a rule
that a speech had to be perfect.
So I'd memorize them.
And one time a client pulled me aside
and was like, hey, I got some feedback.
And he said, 15 people in the review of you said,
you seemed fake and over-rehearsed and mechanical
and with no passion.
And they were right.
And like, it wasn't fun to hear,
but my secret rule of it has to be perfect
has changed into, you know, mistakes make you human.
Like, mistakes have humor in there.
They take the tension out of it.
Like, Yo-Yo Ma talks about that all the time.
Like, once he's made the first mistake,
then he can relax into the humanity of the performance.
And if Yo-Yo Ma's like,
you know what, I'm okay, making a mistake,
I should probably be okay too.
So we talked about the planning fallacy,
overly ambitious goals,
which stop forward momentum.
We sort of touched on
what you call the danger of might as well,
which is like,
well you had a half a cookie on your diet.
You might as well order chili cheese fries now.
Yeah, it's the single French fry principle.
Like I had one,
might as well go over a thousand.
I'll see this happen around the Super Bowl.
People go, I'm going to a Super Bowl party.
There's not going to be any healthy food.
I might as well.
And then that cascades like four weeks later,
you're still living off the chili dip rationale of like,
I've already broken the diet, like, all bets are off.
It really is dangerous because you find yourself going,
well, you know, today I already ate a bunch of crap,
and it's like you do realize that you don't have to eat 8,000 calories
because you already had three, right?
You can recover the day.
Or, I mean, but the flip side is when people will tell me,
I want to run five miles every day.
I only have time for three, so I'll do zero.
Here's a sign, an easy practical sign to your perfectionist.
If you'd rather get an F than a B minus.
If the thought of a C plus is worse to you
that you don't even try, so that's where you know like,
okay, I'm accepting a zero instead of a C minus
because then at least I can say,
well, it would have been perfect if I tried.
And you wanna say a B is way better than an F,
like infinitely better than an F,
but that's where perfectionism is.
Motivation-wise, in terms of getting this stuff done
or strategy-wise, I should say,
you have this concept in the book,
well, you have two concepts in the book
that I thought worked really well together,
which is like the show
shame versus strategy kind of motivations here, strategic incompetence. I'd love that. Can you tell us
about strategic incompetence for a minute? Yeah, so the idea is that you have two choices. And the
phrase strategic incompetence came from this book, two awesome hours, and then I started to really research
the idea. So most people try to do too much. Most goal-setting books will tell you, Jordan, oh, you have
a financial goal, you should have a physical goal and a relational goal and a spiritual goal. Have one goal for
each of the seven main areas of your life.
Like a lot of us have heard this.
But if you were going to learn German,
I wouldn't say, Jordan, you should learn
six other languages at the same time.
Swahili, Norwegian, Spanish.
You go, that sounds terrible.
And so what happens is we add new goals to our life
where what we're supposed to do is say,
okay, as I do this new thing during this season,
I'm going to deliberately suck at these five things.
So as I finish my book,
I'm not going to get four months ahead in the podcast.
I'm going to be committed,
but I won't expect to do these extra things.
The parenting one I used in the book is when we had two young kids under the age of three,
my yard was terrible and I did not care.
Like it could have been on fire.
I was just trying to survive to bedtime.
Like my only goal when I had two kids under the age of three was to get to bedtime.
And like I always joke like every parent has put their kid to bed when it's still sunny out
and like they can hear other kids playing.
And your kids are like, why are using blackout?
Shudders Dad.
And you're like, pipe down.
It's midnight in China.
We're celebrating the new moon.
Like just go to bed.
So I think especially moms you see this,
they talk about mom guilt or mom shame.
When you try to do too much and inevitably fail,
you feel ashamed or you say ahead of time during the season,
I'm not gonna do these three things and that's okay.
So you basically say, F it,
I'm not focusing on these maybe lesser important items
and I'm doing so deliberately, not in the moment.
I'm planning to not care about the lawn.
I'm planning to let the playroom
become a nuclear disaster area until there,
11 and I can force them to clean it out.
It's just, that's the way it is.
Yep, I know there's spiders in there.
Oh, well, that's what's happening.
It's insignificant stuff, but it can be significant in the sense of, you know,
I had a book come out recently.
As I tour to talk about it, I don't hold myself to creating great writing.
Like, I would be such a jerk to myself if I said, I don't care that you're traveling
four times a week.
You still got to find, like, I want you in the terminal D, like in between flights,
creating great pros.
Like, screw that.
Does writing matter to me?
It does, Jordan.
Is this the wrong season for me to think I'm going to get deep writing done?
It is.
And so that's where I argue that if you're in the middle of budgeting season, like, if you're
listening to this right now and you're in charge of like preparing next year's budget,
you might need to say, my inbox is going to get a little crazy because I got to do the budget.
Like the CEO is concerned about the budget, not my email.
Is email important?
It is.
But for this month, for this week, whatever, I'm going to suck at these five things.
and I'm not going to feel ashamed about it.
I love that.
I thought this book was really great,
especially if you find yourself
taking on too much
or bailing on things
because you won't have time
to make them amazing and perfect.
I call them noble obstacles.
You know, the example in the book is
my friend, his wife's like,
clean the garage and he goes,
I'll do a yard sale.
And he's never going to do that.
But he gets to go,
I can't do it until I have a perfectly planned yard sale.
She would love him to throw it all away.
We're talking one afternoon on a Saturday.
Throw it all in a dumpster, you're done.
He's like, no, I got to label it, I got a sort it.
I got to figure out what the HOA says about yard sales.
I got to do, da-da-da-da.
And he feels like, but I'm trying to make us money.
It's like when Brian Regan, the comedian,
talked about the microwave instructions on Pop-Tarts.
Like, if you can't wait for a Pop-Tart to pop out of the toaster,
because the microwave instructions are like microwave on high for three seconds.
Like, whose breakfast is like, I can't have a five-second food.
I need three seconds.
I already have two seconds going somewhere else.
but it sounds so tempting to get the info
and then never go on the vacation,
never do the challenge.
I love the noble obstacles.
What can we do about these?
Because, again, overachievers,
people with really good rational brains,
these folks are, it's hard for me to disagree
because they go, look,
I have my week planned out in 15 minute blocks
just like you do,
and I've got all these things prioritize,
and I have a plan for my learning
for the next 18 months.
And on its face, it's like,
man, you do have all this stuff figured out,
but really a lot of it is just this mirage.
this sort of like sham, they spent three weeks planning out their entire year, but it's not
going to get done.
They just made the plan so they feel like, I'm done.
Now I can rest.
I hired a trainer.
I have to go to the gym.
I hired the trainer already.
No, but that's like bullet journal.
Like if you're spending more time coloring the bullet journal entry than you are doing the
activity that you're writing down in the bullet journal, if you're spending an hour creating
this flowery kind of visualization of your day, but then you don't actually do the day,
it doesn't work.
So I guess I'd say two things.
one asks the question, is it working? Like it's like when people come up to me and they've done this to you,
they'll say, why should I listen to your podcast or why should I buy your book? And I always say,
maybe you shouldn't. I'd rather say, maybe you shouldn't read the free chapter online. Like,
I'm not going to force you. Like, if your life needs it, then go for it. The second thing I'd say is
noble obstacles or hiding spaces that I talk about, a lot of it will go there naturally. I'd ask
yourself, in a week, where do I go naturally with my time? So, for instance, I've never met a human who
accidentally or naturally just starts working out.
Like I've never met somebody who's like,
I sat down and watched Narcos,
I ended up doing burpees.
I don't even know how it happened.
Like we never accidentally or naturally do things
that are good for us or productive.
That means we have to be deliberate.
We have to be intentional.
And so I would ask people who have a lot of noble obstacles,
well, where are you going?
And if you know you're supposed to write a book
and you say, well, as soon as the garage is cleaned,
what are those two have in common?
Like if somebody said to me, I can't do a book until my garage is clean, I'd say, you know, most
authors, like Hemingway, that was his process too.
He was like first step, like go Marlin fishing, drunk, second step, clean out the garage,
third step, write the book.
Like, that's insanity.
I love the idea of, again, strategic incompetence to nip this kind of thing in the bud
and picking things you can either bomb, simplify, or pause, and just say, look, I'm not doing
this until later because it's this huge cognitive drain.
And it's not forever.
Your listeners right now are like, I have all these things I can't quit.
Agreed, but you can ask for help.
You can delegate.
The simplify one, a mom I put in the book said, I can't stop feeding my kids, but I can make easy meals.
Like, and the biggest sham parents do is breakfast supper.
Like, you tell your kid you're doing breakfast supper.
They're like, oh, yay!
And in your head, you're like, I just have to scramble some eggs, you sucker.
Or like, my friend's mom had make your own sandwich night.
You talk about a sham, like, make your own say.
Like, she's outsourcing the whole meal.
And the kids are like, yay, make your own sandwich.
So I think that there are things you can simplify.
And remember, it's for a season.
You and I aren't saying, hey, quit email.
Like, that's dumb.
Like, we aren't saying stop everything you ever do.
We're saying, in this season, be really deliberate about what you do with your time.
This is the Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest, John Acuff.
We'll be right back.
By the way, you can now rate the show on Spotify.
Please do so if you have Spotify.
All you have to do is search for the Jordan Harbinger show in your Spotify app on your phone.
doesn't work on desktop yet, not sure why.
When you search for the show, there'll be three dots in the upper right hand corner.
You click those, you click rate show, and you give us the rating that hopefully we deserve,
or, you know, maybe a better one just to be nice.
Now for the rest of my conversation with John Acuff.
In the book, there's a lot of great stuff that, unfortunately, we don't have a lot of time for,
so I want to touch on some of it.
You talk about making things fun in order to reward yourself.
Do you motivate yourself using fear or reward, and you go through that process?
and you talk a lot about hiding places, email, social media apps, money traps, creative energy
vampires, noble obstacles being one of those. And I want to jump back into that because you do
have some types of noble obstacles that I think are quite funny, such as, okay, I need to eliminate
all my distractions first. Or the if then. Can you go over, the if then is actually funny because
we all do this and it's ridiculous when you hear someone else do it. But when we do it, it's like,
well, mine makes sense. So when you read it, what was your if then? Like, did you have one that
you were like, this is an example of how I would do it?
Actually, this is a great one.
I wanted to start working out with somebody who,
and I won't name their name because I'm still friends with them,
but I wanted to work out with them,
and I worked out a bunch,
and I got in really good shape.
I couldn't even hold onto the pull-up bar for more than, like, 30 seconds.
I went to being able to do 30-some-odd pull-ups in, like, six months or a year.
And I remember he had quit because I got better at him faster than he expected,
and he was kind of leaning on me to be the less fit guy than him
in this arrangement.
And I remember asking him why, and he said,
why I really don't want to get too bulky.
And I remember thinking,
you're at least 30 pounds overweight.
If you're worried about bulk,
it's not going to happen
because you're hitting the gym too hard.
That's for sure.
Yeah, well, so like another if then,
so the if then is like,
if I do this, this bad thing will happen.
So I'm actually being noble preventing it.
So they'll go, I'd love to start a business,
but if I do, then I'll probably become a workaholic
and my wife and I'll get divorced.
So in order to preserve our marriage,
I can't start a business I've always wanted to.
And the wife is usually not going,
don't start it, we'll get a divorce.
Like, the husband's just afraid.
Or they'll say, if I start a podcast,
I'll have to work on it like 900 hours a week
and then I'll get fired.
But yeah, the bulk up one where guys are like,
I don't want to have to buy new clothes.
And you're like, homie, you are like five years from new clothes.
A lot of the people that listen to this show
are entrepreneurs or marketers,
they'll say, if I promote my book,
then I'll become too promotional.
and I don't want to bother people.
So I'll just hide it.
And I always say, that's great.
Just next time write a diary, not a book.
It's funny to me that some of my listeners, when I tweet this out, will go, I didn't know
he had a podcast.
That's awesome.
And you on your end might think, I tell people about it all the time.
Like, how do you not know?
Every time I go to a city for an event, I say, I'm coming, Boston, I'm coming, I'm coming,
I'm coming, I'm coming.
And then inevitably the day after, when I post a picture of the crowd, somebody goes, I wish you
had told us.
And I feel like I overtold.
And so like you have to say, okay, do I have these weird if-thens that just aren't true?
Like a lot of the book is getting rid of the fake rules that really aren't honest.
There is a lot of shaking off, what do you call it, lying to ourselves is essentially what it is?
Self-deception.
Self-deception, yeah, I knew there was a flashy term for it.
And I want to make sure people don't think, oh, it's a book where I'm just going to find all these horrible things about myself and then feel bad, right?
It's about, like, here's what to put in its place, you know?
Like the fear, reward thing, it's not about saying, oh, you have the wrong form of motivation.
It's about going, oh, the reason it's really hard is you're a bird trying to swim.
Like, imagine if you were bird flying.
Like, that would be amazing.
Like, that's what I think people get out of the book is they go, for 10 years I've been trying
to be a fish.
It turns out I'm a bird, and I'm a pretty awesome bird.
But my mom told me I was a fish.
Like, hooray, now I'm finishing things.
But the best part is as I tour with this book, people hand me the books they've written.
I got a T-shirt the other night
from somebody who was like,
I made a T-shirt company
because I learned how to finish.
Like, this is my first product.
Thanks for doing that.
I love that.
That's what's fun.
Finisher's make things easier
and they make things simpler.
That was something that I took away from the book
and you hammer that home pretty well.
This is an important concept
because we tend to throw obstacles
and hurdles in our way, as we mentioned before.
And sometimes they're time-based
or sometimes they're task-based,
but they're always going to be something
that will throw in our way
whether it's an if then or whether it's turning a garage cleaning into a 13-step project.
And we have to figure out how to be honest with ourselves.
And the book does a really good.
The book does a really good job of being more honest with ourselves.
A lot of us, especially as entrepreneurs and things like that,
it's almost like we're trying to be miserable so that we feel like we're working hard
or we're sticking with things we hate because it's part of this plan.
One concept that I would love to hear more about is the idea that perfectionism hates data.
this is kind of the perfectionism kryptonite, data and measurement.
It's amazing.
And the reason it hates it is that it's realistic, and we're often told, like, dream beyond
bigger than your reality.
Or like, sometimes you've got to jump off a cliff and grow your wings on the way down.
I'm like, that's never how gravity works.
With data, you know, there's a couple different examples, but I like to say data kills
denial, which prevents disaster.
So, for instance, I launched something recently.
And I thought, it's going to be huge.
like we launched it to 10,000 people, I'll get X percent of sales. So few people bought it on the first day.
And fortunately, my business partner said, hey, remember, we always have a small percent on the first day.
The last day is really where we close strong. And if he hadn't had that data, I would have been
disappointed from the results. Data is not emotional. Data is your friend. Data just wants you to make
the best decision. Like, I counted calories for a month. And I was shocked the difference where, like,
I'd go to a steak restaurant and I'd say, can I have horseradish? And they'd say, can I have horseradish?
go, do you want the cream or raw?
And I'd go bring both.
I'd look it up.
The cream was 220 calories.
Raw was seven.
We like the idea that ignorance is bliss.
Like I can eat whatever without consequence.
But data just goes, hey, just so we're clear.
Like, I want you to know this is what's what.
And you just got to be careful.
Like, data didn't ruin the meal for me.
The calories existed.
Data just made sure I knew them.
And I think entrepreneurs especially have a hard time.
Like when an entrepreneur shows me their plan for growth,
and if I go, show me your sales from six months ago.
and they go, ah, no, we're talking about the future, not the past.
I know there's no way.
Like, you're doomed.
I see this all the time, and we talk about this with some of our entrepreneur friends.
We try not to be dicks about it, but basically, you'll hear someone say something like,
oh, well, you know, I have this.
This is going to happen and this is going to happen and this is going to happen.
And you go, okay, like you said, show me your sales data.
This isn't a wee-wee measuring contest.
It's about going, okay, you're going to grow from what to what.
We need realistic stuff here.
And, you know, if I ask, how do I take my show from 3.8 million to 10 million?
It's a different question than someone else going, yeah, how do I get to 10 million?
And you go, oh, what are you at now?
Well, I'm thinking of launching in three months.
Okay, well, let's talk about this in 8 to 10 years.
Yeah, exactly.
Or like I had a friend and he said, I won't mention his name, just like your weightlifter guy.
So my friend was like, hey, I've got to rush, finish my book.
I won't have time for as much editing because I want to launch it at an event.
And I said, well, how big is the event?
He said, 400 people.
I said, okay, I sell 10% of a crowd,
but let's say you're twice as good at me at selling.
So you're going to sell 20% of the audience.
So that means 80 books.
You're going to make $5 a book.
So just so we're clear,
you're going to release a poor quality book
that you have to live with for years to make $400.
So after taxes, 280, and of course he's like,
oh, I didn't, like, but the data is what tells you that.
Like, he was emotional, like, I got to launch it big.
I guarantee there's people that talk to you about launches.
is like, I really have to launch it on a certain day.
And if you go, but why?
Like, what if you added a week to the timeline and it was twice as good
because you were able to Q&A it?
And they go, no, no, no.
Like, it's got to be on this Tuesday.
Like, we've been telling people when you go,
how many people did you tell?
100 Twitter followers?
Then, but why?
Data tells you the truth.
And I'm not a data guy naturally.
Like, I've been an idiot most of my life
where I will work 100% harder on my exercise
and not look at my calories at all.
It wasn't until I started going,
I feel like I might be shooting myself in the foot
with all this case, so.
Like, I don't feel like this is helping.
And then I looked at it and I was like,
I would have to run a marathon every day
to eat what I'd been eating.
It's just helpful, and it's simple.
So how do we get started with this?
What I worry about is, oh good, I need data.
And then someone goes, all right,
I'm going to spend the next six months
researching the type of data that I need,
and then I'm going to find the best program
to measure the data in
and the best ways to measure it.
Way one, way one to two things.
Like, it'd be ironic to become a perfectionist
reading a book against perfectionism.
So I would say if you're at a business, find the easiest things you can measure.
Numbers of times you worked out.
Let's do health real quick.
Numbers of times you worked out.
Distance you ran.
What you ate.
Your pounds.
Like pick two that are easy to measure.
Always do the easiest ones first.
And here's why.
Once you get a little data, you get excited.
Like data's contagious, dude.
I guarantee you started to look at data on your downloads and stuff like that.
And then you and your producer are like, dude, if we do better with two forms of data,
imagine what would happen if we had four.
Start with small, let it grow.
Like I guarantee you didn't do a deep data dive right away,
but now, dude, it's fun.
Like once you get a taste, you get hooked on data.
So start small.
If it's your business, measure revenue, expenses, the obvious things.
I would beg you, beg you,
don't event new forms of data.
Don't try to do 10 forms of data.
You'll cripple yourself.
You'll hate it from the beginning.
Fall in love with one or two forms
and make better decisions with it and then grow it over time.
I can relate this to podcasting quite easily.
There are a lot of people, since we're on the subject.
I'm not obsessed with this topic, I swear, but they'll start their show and they'll go,
100 downloads, this is great.
Everybody's got to start somewhere the next week.
200 downloads, this is amazing.
At this rate, we're going to be at 100,000 downloads at X number of months, and then week
three, it's like, 220 downloads, and they're like, oh, and then a week after that, it's,
well, our feature expired, and then, you know, we started to stop the promo blitz, so it's at 175,
and then the next week after that it's $150,
and they go, yeah, screw this.
But I would say, like, especially at the beginning,
your data should lead to better decisions, not more shame.
So if you find yourself measuring something
that makes you hate what you're doing,
it's the wrong thing to measure.
Like, the goal of data is to provide you with information
so you can make amazing decisions.
You know, you find the points of data that you go,
okay, when I do this thing, it's so much better for me.
When I know this or when I tweet at this time
or when I focus on this one thing,
it's so much better for me.
Because the problem with the person you described,
the fictional person is,
they never reach out.
That's the other thing about your emotions.
Your motions and perfectionism go,
you're the only podcaster that ever saw a dip in the third month,
and this is indicative that it's time to quit.
Most people won't go,
I'm going to shoot a podcast guy I like, a question,
and he's going to respond back and go,
welcome to the party.
Here's an example.
My daughter's 14.
She started an Instagram page.
She just started a photo-based one.
She's got a new camera.
She wants to do photography.
She invited her friends from the one page to join the others.
She said, Dad, 100 people saw it.
Only one followed me.
And I got to say to her, welcome to social media.
There's so many authors I know that go,
I'm speaking to 100 people today, probably sell 80 books.
And I'm like, that's adorable.
You think 80% of the crowd is going to do that?
Or like, I got an email list with 10,000 people.
Probably have like 9,000 open it, maybe 8,000 click through.
And you're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, dude.
That's what we're all doing.
This is no lie.
I had somebody send out an email for 150,000 people.
It wasn't my list.
It was somebody else's list.
And I was like, dude, how many books did it sell?
He said seven.
And I was like, like, 700?
He was like, no, seven, as in one more than six, one less than eight.
Yeah, that's scary, actually, all those stats there.
I want to wrap with this, though, because I love the meta and the zoom out.
When people aren't finishing something, a lot of it's perfectionism.
A lot of it is what we're mentioning here.
But I think the unasked question is,
what value are we getting out of not finishing?
Because at some level, quitting, not finishing,
leaving things on the table,
has to outweigh the value of actually finishing.
I think that sometimes people, if they are honest,
would say by not finishing,
I never have to get criticized.
You know, Jordan, if I work on a book for 10 years
and I never publish it,
I never have random strangers on the internet
tell me I'm dumb.
That's the thing.
There's this great section,
from Chaucer.
And it's a story of this guy
who builds a boat.
And he builds boats, he's amazing.
But he always tears him apart
at the last second.
And they go, why does he do that?
And they say,
well, he's afraid of the water.
Like, and if he finishes the boat,
he actually has to get in
and go out into the water
and it terrifies him.
If you're afraid of criticism,
you'll almost launch a podcast.
You'll almost write a book.
You'll almost start a business.
But then right at the last second,
you won't.
So that's part of it.
Part of it is if you're always working on it,
people will give you credit
for being like,
you know, you're such a hard worker
and you never actually have to produce.
Or sometimes what people get out of not finishing
is they look noble to the people.
So they go, I just, you know,
I don't want to be so busy.
So I just kind of accept this small life
and people go, you're such a good dad.
And they don't realize you're teaching your kid,
you shouldn't chase your dreams.
If you've been struggling with something for a while,
you owe it to yourself to ask that question
and be kind to yourself with the answer.
Like the answer isn't designed to make you feel like,
I knew I was a loser.
That's what I'm getting out of it,
is I get to be a loser.
The question is designed to give you some information that you can then operate on.
John, thank you so much.
Brilliant.
I love it.
The book title is finished.
Give yourself the gift of done.
I've got some thoughts on this episode, but before I get into that, I wanted to give you a preview
of one of my favorite stories from an earlier episode of the show with John and Mendes.
She was the chief of disguise for the CIA in Moscow during the latter part of the Cold War.
We'd really get into the weeds on how they hid people and hid spy gear in one of the most
hostile espionage environments anywhere in the world.
We invented technology that didn't even exist yet.
The small batteries, for instance, they're in our watches and our phones and all of that stuff today.
They're kind of like Q from James Bond, but it's the CIA.
We could create any kind of character over your face.
Masks that came out of Hollywood, we'd say, great.
Go down to the cafeteria and have lunch.
This is at CIA headquarters where everybody knows everybody in the cafeteria.
and they would go and discover that no one paid any attention to them.
You go, wow, I'm hiding in plain sight.
They were following us just every minute.
The case officer would step out of the car.
The driver would hit a button.
This dummy would pop up wearing the same clothes as the guy that had just left.
Trailing surveillance would come around the corner and they'd follow that car all night.
They never knew.
And if they could get to those people, they would execute them.
They were feeding people into these crematorium.
feet first, alive.
Unbelievable.
A really valuable agent said, I'll work for you on one condition,
and that is that you give me the ability to take my own life.
Eventually, everybody got arrested.
So they arrested him, and we had put that L pill we gave him in the cap of the Montblok
pin.
It was cyanide, and he knew where it was.
And they said, we want you to write your confession.
So they brought him as a boneblock pin.
For more with Johnna Mendes, including some incredible spy stories
that will really perk your ears, check out episode 344 of the Jordan Harbinger show.
John's such an interesting, funny guy.
Obviously, the book was also funny.
There's a lot we left out that's included in the book as well.
He's a very self-aware guy.
He knows how to get himself to do stuff, like writing three best-selling books.
So I'm inclined to trust him, at least when it comes to perfectionism.
And what's really funny about the examples here is, I don't care who you are, when you read these,
you go, oh, yeah, I've done that.
I've done that, too.
Oh, there's a system for that.
I mean, it's just, it's that there's this almost universal tendency to at least procrastinate
or some level of perfectionism.
I think especially among overachievers, like frankly, many of you listening to the show
right now.
So, big thank you to John Acuff.
Links to all things John Acuff will be in our show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Please use the website links when you buy books from any of our guests.
It does help support the show.
Transcripts are in the show notes.
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My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Millio Campo, Ian Baird, Josh Ballard, and
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