The Rich Roll Podcast - Mastering Mindset: A Deep Dive On Mental Toughness
Episode Date: March 3, 2022It’s easy to look at top performers, elite athletes, and those crushing outrageous achievements—and conclude that their success boils down to sheer genetic luck, supreme talent, or unlimited resou...rces. While success can be significantly influenced by those variables, all things being equal, the difference between those who manifest their aspirations and those who hold themselves back comes down to one distinct element: you guessed it, mindset. What are the consistent mindsets that allow high-performers to push the boundaries of their physical prowess? How do you create a positive mindset shift amidst a shitty situation? And how do you leverage mindset to achieve your goals? Throughout the last nine years, I’ve compiled a powerful arsenal of potent, life-altering ideas, perspectives and tools on how to cultivate, embrace, and apply a new and more personally meaningful approach to life. Today I present you with our fourth master class installment, which is a compilation of 11 incredible and unique perspectives on mindset and habit change taken from previous conversations—think of it the crème de la crème of the best and brightest ideas on personal transformation ever shared on this show. This deep dive anthology is chock full of big truths on fostering a mindset for success, leveraging gratitude to overcome obstacles, the importance of embracing pain, and why discomfort is the price of admission for a meaningful life. Guests featured in this episode (all hyperlinked to their respective episodes) include: Leah Goldstein Dr. Andrew Huberman Courtney Dauwalter David Goggins Mel Robbins James Clear Mirna Valerio James & Sunny Lawrence Susan David, Ph.D Peter Diamandis: Episode Coming 3/14/2022! Tommy Rivs Masterclass Series: Click here to listen to our first deep dive on the microbiome, here for our second on mental health, and here for our third on addiction & recovery. This is a powerful, and dare I say potentially life-changing gold mine of wisdom. My hope is that it serves as a guide on your journey towards fostering a mindset that will ultimately improve every aspect of your life, and gear you towards a more fulfilling, self-actualized way of moving through the world. To read more, click here. You can also watch it all go down on YouTube. And as always, the podcast streams wild and free on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Enjoy! Peace + Plants, Rich
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The Rich Roll Podcast.
A positive mindset changes you, which changes your ability to deal with the shitty situation
that you're in.
which changes your ability to deal with the shitty situation that you're in.
I'm going to put myself through this much pain and suffering for a few seconds of joy.
It's so worth it, man.
It's behavior first, thoughts, feelings, and perceptions follow.
Mental strength is much more powerful than physical strength. It's in that zone that we have our greatest levels of growth and, yes, discomfort.
But discomfort is, again, the price
of admission to a meaningful life. Our minds are so powerful. So even just like changing the
storyline makes it a whole different game. Just try to find a way to get 1% better each day.
Interrupting the patterns of thought that are holding you back. It is the only way you're
going to change. Mindset is the single most important thing
that anyone can take out of this conversation.
Hey everybody, welcome to the podcast.
Today, we're gonna go deep on mindset
and we're gonna do it through the lens of experience
and wisdom by dint of some of the most successful,
impressive and mentally tough people on the planet.
By way of background for the last nine years,
I have put everything into this podcast
and through conversation,
we have compiled this really powerful arsenal
of potent life altering ideas, perspectives,
and tools on how to cultivate, embrace, and apply a new and more
personally meaningful approach to life. And so, for the fourth time, today we present you with
this very special masterclass episode that anthologizes the best wisdom shared over the
years regarding habit change science, how to overcome obstacles and foster a mindset
that will ultimately improve every aspect of your life.
Because in the words of my friend, Mel Robbins,
mindset changes you.
Your mindset can make you or break you.
It can be so easy to look at the top performers,
the elite athletes,
and those crushing outrageous achievements
and conclude that their success boils down
to sheer genetic luck or supreme talent
or unlimited resources.
And while of course success can be significantly influenced
by all of those variables, all things being equal,
the difference between those who manifest their aspirations
and those who hold themselves back
often comes down to one distinct element.
You guessed it, mindset.
So this is a powerful and dare I say,
potentially life-changing collection of wisdom.
And I can't wait for you to hear it.
But first.
We're brought to you today by recovery.com.
I've been in recovery for a long time.
It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe
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and experience that I had that quite literally saved my life. sobriety. And it all began with treatment and experience that I had
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empathize with you. I really do. And they have treatment options for you. Life and recovery is wonderful. And recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey. When you or a loved one
need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery. To find the best treatment
option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com. We're brought to you today by
recovery.com. I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe
everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment and experience that I had
that quite literally saved my life. And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones find treatment.
And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of care,
especially because, unfortunately, not all treatment resources adhere to ethical practices.
It's a real problem. A problem I'm
now happy and proud to share has been solved by the people at recovery.com who created an
online support portal designed to guide, to support, and empower you to find the ideal level
of care tailored to your personal needs. They've partnered with the best global behavioral health providers
to cover the full spectrum of behavioral health disorders,
including substance use disorders, depression, anxiety,
eating disorders, gambling addictions, and more.
Navigating their site is simple.
Search by insurance coverage, location, treatment type, you name it.
Plus, you can read reviews from former patients
to help you decide. Whether you're a busy exec, a parent of a struggling teen, or battling addiction
yourself, I feel you. I empathize with you. I really do. And they have treatment options for you.
Life in recovery is wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey.
When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery.
To find the best treatment option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com.
Leah Goldstein is undeniably one of the toughest people I've ever met.
At just 17, she donned the bantamweight
World Kickboxing Championship title.
Later, joining the Israeli Defense Force
and becoming a Krav Maga specialist
and an undercover Special Forces Intelligence Officer.
She then embarked on a professional cycling career,
but after being told she might not ever walk again
following a devastating crash,
Leah leaned into her superpower, her mindset,
to aid her recovery and launch a brand new chapter
in her extraordinary life.
In 2021, at age 52 and entirely plant-based, I might add,
Leah became the very first woman
in the 39-year history of RAM,
the 3,000-mile race across America,
to beat everyone, including all the men,
and outright win the solo division.
Here's a glimpse into the power of mindset
when you've been told your physical prowess is over,
that healing will be lifelong
and that achievements will be something of your past
and not your future.
When I reached the peak kind of at that point
where opportunities were handed to me,
I had the mother of all crashes in Cascade.
You start descending and on those bikes,
you can go very fast,
almost up to 100 kilometers an hour,
80 miles an hour.
And as we're descending,
other riders are starting to come up
and I'm seeing like 85, 86.
And then there's a rider kind of coming
on my left-hand side.
And, you know, there's a center line rule
and she kind of leans into me
at 80 kilometers an hour.
I land on my face.
It was a nightmare.
I mean, I shouldn't
be sitting here today based on that crash, right? But being in that position, I mean,
they basically told me that your career is over. Your ability to walk properly without a walker or
a cane will be very limited. And then 100%, you won't be back on your bike again. And that's what
I was left with as I was lying there in the trauma unit. Right, so I believe, correct me if I'm wrong,
like Vela News dubbed this crash
like the most epic crash of all time.
Correct, at that time, correct, yes.
And you were told that you might not walk properly again.
Correct, I mean, I broke my,
both my ischium was shattered,
my hips were broken, my arms,
fingers and toes busted, right?
I was, it's like taking a pretzel
and basically stepping on it, right, you know?
And I can't even explain to you the worst pain I'd ever been throughzel and basically stepping on it, right? I can't
explain to you the worst pain I'd ever been through. Everything hurt all the time, breathing,
blinking, people opening and closing the door, the wind from that, right? It was a tough go.
Wow. How long were you in the hospital? Well, they couldn't move me out of the United States
for, I think, four weeks. And then they transferred me too, Cause I had to be airlifted from the crash to St. Charles and Bend, Oregon.
And then my sister came to pick me up
cause I couldn't, you know,
I was gonna take a big process to drive me back to Canada.
Cause also getting expensive
cause medical is expensive here, right?
Sure.
Okay, so months in the hospital.
Yes.
But you have the gift of these doctors telling you
you're not gonna walk again,
let alone get on a bike and ever race again, right?
So what do you do with that information?
You know what I said to them in my head.
I won't say it on air.
I mean, how do you begin the rehab process?
Well, listen, the only thing I could do
was contract my abs.
That was the only physical thing I could do, right?
But I basically made a promise to myself and I said, I don't care how long it takes or the kind of pain I'm going to go through.
I'm going to get back on that bike. I'm going to race again. And I'm going to come back even
stronger than I did before all this happened, right? And I think it happens to a lot of people
when you're faced with these overwhelming situations, you don't know what to do. So
you kind of buckle. So I knew I had a lot of work cut out for me, but I think everything is upstairs.
It's what you believe in and what you make your body believe that you can do, right? Because honestly,
if I believed everything that I was told even growing up, again, I wouldn't be sitting here
today. Right. But we all have our breaking points too. We do. But your ability to kind of
compartmentalize all of that and just focus on, okay, I can do this. Like how much of your military training comes into play
in terms of having the mental rigor
to just block out the fear and focus on the task at hand?
Well, I think the military has a lot to do with it
because it was part of their job,
even during my military training,
to crack us mentally as best as they can, right?
Because mental strength is much more powerful
than physical strength.
We all know that.
But for me, like at that point,
going back to the hospital,
I mean, how can they say something like that?
I haven't even started my rehab,
you know what I mean?
Just to make that kind of prediction that fast, right?
And I think that's the thing
is that we're so quick to take the easy way out
without being more optimistic
of the things that we possibly can do,
you know, and the possibilities of just going after the things that you believe in. Because
sometimes you're not going to get support from other people. You're going to have to believe
in yourself, right? That's the thing is we're so influenced by other sources. But for me,
I never was, never has been, and never will be. You know, what I want to do and what I'm
determined to do, I'll make it happen. I'll find a way to make it happen. Right. So make it happen, you did. How long was the
rehabilitation before you could get back on a bike? I was back on my bike, race ready in less
than a season. So like- Eight months.
Eight months. Wow. But every day, I was better than the day before and just staying positive.
And honestly, I swear to God, being in that positive mode,
I could feel things starting to bind.
Because when I went to get re-X-rayed
at the general hospital in Vancouver,
a couple of months later,
they were floored at how fast I was recovering, you know?
And you attribute that to just being in motion.
I think motion and mentally, you know what I mean?
And just determined that I am gonna get out of this.
Yeah.
So from the wheelchair, then like, how do you,
I mean, are you walking with a limp?
Like how is-
Oh yeah, no, it goes from wheelchair to a one crutch.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Bopping away.
And then it was even wheelchair to wheeling to my trainer,
which was on a, you know, my, on a bike, whatever.
And it took me like 40 minutes just to get from the wheelchair,
just to sit and be comfortable on the bike because it was the flashbacks.
Despite the age-old adage, you can't teach an old dog new tricks,
what if I told you that you actually do have the power to change your brain
and reprogram your perception, irrespective of age.
Meet neuroplasticity overlord, Dr. Andrew Huberman.
A neuroscientist and tenured professor
in the Department of Neurobiology
at Stanford University School of Medicine,
Andrew specializes in the brain's inherent ability
to modify itself based on experience and the many ways we can
advantageously leverage this process. Here's a quick lesson on how to shift your perspective
and sharpen your mindset through behavior.
It's incredible because if you think about sensation, perception, feeling, thought,
and behavior, actually the way to control our nervous system and feel the way we want to feel is to run that
backwards. Behavior, thoughts. So if you change your behavior, then generally your thoughts,
your feelings, and your perceptions change. And everyone tries to come at it from the other end.
I really think that if neuroscience has anything to offer, it's some understanding of what the underlying chemicals
and neural circuits are.
But the sooner that the human animal,
the human species can start to understand
that our feelings and our thoughts and our memories
and all that is very complicated,
but that when behaviors are very concrete
and they are the control panel for the rest of it,
I don't wanna relegate feelings. Feelings are of it. I don't want to relegate feelings.
Feelings are extremely important. I don't want to relegate perception. They're extremely
important. But when it comes to wanting to shift the way that you function to get better or to
perform better or to show up better or to move away from things like addictive behaviors,
it's absolutely foolish for any of us, me included, to think that we can do that by
changing our thoughts first. It's behavior first, thoughts, feelings, and perceptions follow.
Mood follows action. Mood follows action.
This has been my mantra forever, and I swear by it. And now the science establishes that this is
indeed the case. And yet our programming, our default hardwiring
is to put us in this place where we want to ruminate on all this stuff and wait until we
feel like doing something before we do it or check our motivations for it. But anytime I'm in a funk
or I want to change my state, I have to move forward. I have to do something with my physical
body in order to shake things up
and rearrange whatever's going on mentally. And it works every time.
It works every time because the brain circuits, meaning sets of connections and chemicals,
they're there from birth, they're there your whole life, and they were designed for that.
So in 2018, a graduate student in my lab published a paper in Nature showing that
in the face of a physical threat, there are three options. You can obviously freeze, you can retreat, or you can move forward.
And the moving forward response actually triggers activation of a connection in the brain to the
dopamine circuitry of the brain and makes it more likely that you're going to be able to move forward
in the future. Now, what was interesting to us was that not only is forward action rewarded at a neurochemical level, which
then sets you up for more forward action, but the highest level of agitation and stress was associated
with moving forward. We always think, well, if I just calm myself enough, I'll be able to move
forward. But it's the exact opposite. And so people who are
paralyzed in fear or that have a hard time initiating, sometimes the key is to raise the
level of stress and agitation. This is why deadlines are so effective. This is why fear
is so effective. This is why that deer gets up out of its nice little den and starts to move because
it feels a certain level of agitation. If that agitation isn't high enough,
we will not move forward.
And so, especially in the US,
you know, we have a culture in which,
you know, these ideas around stress
is that it's terrible for us.
When in fact, stress is designed to move us forward
towards these action steps that are rewarded,
which then move us forward and so on.
So what is the process of combating that monkey mind that is running
whatever narrative that's keeping you stuck? It's easy to say, just move, you got to take the action.
But a lot of people still, despite understanding that, intellectualizing that, are unable to
are unable to basically act as if.
Some people are just hypo aroused. They're just not motivated enough.
And those people would benefit greatly
from cultivating practices like super oxygenated breathing.
So this is something along the lines
of like two mode type breathing.
So rapid, and we look at this in the lab,
we're actually running a human study on this now.
So 25 or 30 deep breaths through the nose
and out through the mouth,
then exhaling the breath and holding,
learning how to self-generate adrenaline.
That's what you're doing when you're doing that.
Some version of the Wim Hof technique.
That's what that is.
Brian McKenzie talks about.
Some people are so agitated, the monkey mind,
they got too many things going on and they're thinking,
okay, they're trying to sit down and write. I suffer from this. And I'm feeling like, wait,
I've also got this person I need to connect with. And I'm kind of being drawn off course by not
being able to put the blinders on. For people that have that issue, I think learning how to calm the
nervous system is very powerful. And a physiological sigh is two inhales followed by an extended exhale.
So it's like, it's not just a deep breath,
it's two inhales followed by an exhale, okay?
And what that does,
and this has been shown several times now in humans and other species as well,
is it dilates the little sacs of the lungs.
And that second inhale dilates them a little bit more
and it pulls a little bit of carbon dioxide
out of the bloodstream so that when we exhale,
we offload the maximum amount of carbon dioxide
and it perfectly adjusts the ratio of carbon dioxide
and oxygen in the bloodstream and lungs.
And sometimes it only takes one
of these double inhale exhales.
Sometimes somebody needs to do two or three,
but that's the fastest way
to bring the autonomic nervous system
down. A lot of people need such a tool because I think we talk a lot about meditation and tools
for calm. And I can go to Esalen for a weekend and get a massage. I'm going to feel very good.
But then when I'm thrown back in real life, I need something that's going to work in real time,
what I call a real-time tool. Everybody should have a kit of tools that they
can use to bring themselves down and ramp themselves up. And then what people don't
realize is that mental focus follows visual focus. Blind people, it's slightly different.
It follows auditory focus. But in most people, your visual focus, as you bring that into really
sharp relief, that image of your book,
and you stare at it, you're going to feel some agitation and your mind's going to be
jumping all over the place.
But if you wait just a couple minutes, the rest of the world will disappear.
I think this is sort of like the flow state people are looking for.
But remember, the gate of entry is you have to wade through some sewage before you can
swim in clear water.
That's the way I always think about it.
But the visual focus is what brings
the rest of the brain into cognitive focus. And people in the martial arts understand this.
You've probably experienced this running when you're feeling exhausted and you can just
concentrate on one milestone and get there. What you're doing is you're linking that to
the dopamine circuitry. You're saying that thing is the milestone, not winning the race, not some other thing outside this immediate environment,
that thing. And when you're able to start capturing these peripheral circuits, meaning the body,
the diaphragm, the visual system, then you start getting past this whole idea of mindsets. And it
really becomes about the body setting the mind. And this is where I think when you say action leads the rest, right?
What you're saying is grounded in real neurobiological data.
Next up, we're gonna hear from the humble master of grit
and boundary busting physical prowess, Courtney DeWalter.
Arguably the world's best ultra runner,
Courtney's recipe for success
isn't about cutting edge training plans,
coaches, or carefully honed nutrition.
In fact, she actually abides by none of these.
For her, it's instead found in seeking out
and celebrating what she calls the pain cave,
that deep place of physical discomfort
that most go to great lengths to avoid. In this clip, Courtney
shares a few of her mindset techniques and tactics that have propelled her superhuman feats of
endurance and exactly what it means to carve a path through your own pain cave. When you go to
sleep at night, like, do you ever ponder, like, what is the differentiator between you and your fellow competitors?
No, I don't ponder.
Oh, man.
I mean, I think, like, everyone can be pushing themselves.
So I can't compare, like, what it's like in someone else's body or head and then what's going on in
mine so I have no idea but I do know like I enjoy that place that we get to go to in these ultras
where it hurts really bad I think that's pretty cool and uh I mean that's gotta help like not avoiding it, but wanting to get to it has gotta be like factored in there
somehow. Yeah, sure. Okay. Let's go a little bit deeper. Tell me a little bit more about
what that is when you reach that point or that limit or that place where you feel like you can't
put one foot in front of the other?
What is the lesson that you find for yourself in that?
So I call it the pain cave, that place. And I guess probably four or five years ago,
I viewed the pain cave as this place that you should try to put off as long as possible
in a race.
Like make your pain cave be as far away from you as you can.
And if you arrive to it, then you just sit in it and you try and survive the pain cave.
But in the past couple of years, I mean, it's just a mindset, right?
It's like all in our heads, this thing.
And in the past couple of years, it's been the place I want to get to. So
like changing it to a place where I get to celebrate that I made it there. And then
that's where the work actually happens. So making the pain cave bigger is how I view it instead of
like pushing the pain cave away. And I think, I mean, our minds are so powerful. So even just like changing the storyline
makes it a whole different game.
Right.
So what is the story that you,
like what is the script that you flip
when you're in that head space and it's getting really hard?
Yeah, it's like perfect, this is what we wanted.
Like now we get to actually do the hard work
of making the cave bigger. And so it's like
picturing a chisel and just like making tunnels in my pain cave in my brain.
You actually visualize that? Yeah. Super visual.
Yeah. I like that. It makes it very visceral and like real. It's not just a mantra and mantras are great. I'm sure you have mantras,
but actually creating that three-dimensional image
in your mind.
Yeah, and all, I mean,
it's just telling myself a different story
about that place where it hurts so bad,
you know, where before it was like surviving it.
And now it's like, this is so cool.
We made it here and now we work.
Yeah, it's funny. I've been doing this podcast thing for a couple of years. It's like, this is so cool. We made it here and now we work. Yeah.
It's funny.
I've been doing this podcast thing for a couple of years at this point.
And I've had a lot of people on who have done hard things
and I have psychologists and psychiatrists
and mindset experts.
And everybody kind of comes to the table
and they're like, this is how you do it.
And it's like step one, two, three.
And like when your mind does this
and you're just like, well, I just, you know, like you just, it's very refreshing because what it does is it dispels
this myth that it has to be complicated or that there is a right or a wrong way. Like you're just
embracing life and all its colors and have figured out this thing that works for you.
But it's welcoming to people because you're saying like, look, you know, I'm doing this.
You can do this too.
Like there's a, I mean, welcoming to repeat myself,
I think is what it is.
Like you're creating space for other people
to see greater possibility in themselves
because of that relatability.
Well, thank you.
Yeah. That's very kind.
Yeah, no, I think it's powerful.
It's really powerful.
In the equation of mind versus body,
like how do you think about that?
Like how much of it is physical prowess versus mental grit?
It's both for sure.
And I think in an ultra,
it trades back and forth between the two.
So like maybe for a while, your physical has to
pull more of the weight because it can. And then if that's giving out, maybe the mental takes over
for a while. So I think they tag each other out back and forth where you need them for sure.
Physically, it's hard to run this far, but mentally you can move your feet
much farther than you think. Right. Yeah. Ultimately, I think the differentiator is in
the mental game because everybody, especially at the elite level, is training really hard.
And there's only so much training that you can do before you get injured or you over-train,
so when you tow the line at the starting line,
you can be assured that everybody
who's a threat to your dominance
has put in the work that you've put in, right?
So the person who's gonna win,
it's gonna come down to who's gonna crack mentally
when the tough gets going.
Yeah, and like who can problem solve efficiently
or not let problems that come up
ruffle their feathers too much.
I think that's huge in ultras.
Yeah, just being able to maintain
that positive disposition rather than,
oh no, this is terrible thing, awesome.
This is what it's about, right?
Yeah, exactly.
How do you keep a smile on your face
and tell jokes and do all that stuff
when you're so freaking exhausted?
Jokes help everything.
Yeah.
That's part of the strategy.
Sneaky.
Yeah.
Mastering mindset begins with expanding your sense
of personal possibility.
That is the hidden key that unlocks reservoirs of potential and ultimately
sets you on the path to becoming the best version of who you are.
I can think of no better exemplar of this truth than the mighty one himself, David Goggins.
of this truth than the mighty one himself, David Goggins. Often referred to as the toughest athlete on the planet,
David is the only member of the US armed forces
to have completed SEAL training, including three hell weeks,
in addition to the US Army Ranger School
and Air Force Tactical Air Controller training.
His remarkable feats of strength
include finishing near the top
at dozens of the world's most grueling endurance races,
including the Hurt 100, the Leadville 100,
the Moab 240, Western States, and many more.
But perhaps David's greatest accomplishment
is that throughout his life,
he has faced and overcome a succession
of just seemingly insurmountable obstacles
to become the man he is today.
Obstacles like asthma, sickle cell anemia,
psychological and physical abuse, obesity,
and even a congenital heart defect
that often left him competing and winning
on a mere fraction of his actual physical capabilities.
All of which is of course chronicled in his fascinating memoir, Can't Hurt Me.
Here is David Goggins.
So think about this.
I put everything on David Goggins to be a Navy SEAL.
It's like going to the crap table with your last thousand dollars.
And you say, you know what?
I'm going to put everything on black.
And hopefully I'll win. If not, I'm broke.
I put my whole life
a guy that was scared of the fucking water,
a guy that could fucking tell himself how to read and write,
on being one of the hardest
motherfuckers on the planet. Think about that shit.
A guy that came from nothing.
I put my whole life
on I'm going to go out here and put everything
on David fucking Goggins to be a Navy SEAL.
Not to go be a fucking Boy Scout or some shit, a Navy SEAL.
And I look at that, and I did all this shit just to get the opportunity to succeed.
That's what people don't fucking understand, man.
If people see the end result, I remember that guy saying, my God, man, I can't believe what the fuck I've just done.
I put everything, ruined relationships, ruined this, ruined that, put everything on the fact I have to become someone in this world or I'm no good for anybody.
And where does that come from?
Where did that compulsion, that drive?
It comes from a disgusting place of not being fulfilled in your life, of afraid of dying, having never accomplished
anything. That's a fear that some people run away from, that people don't want to face.
When you have a real fear of dying and being just another person, that I live to pay the bills,
I made a thousand dollars a month. This is my life. I sprayed for cockroaches, man.
If that makes you feel good, that's great.
It didn't make me feel good.
I wanted to the first time in my life, after 26 years,
it was 24, 25, wherever I was, I wanted to feel good about myself.
And that was the ticket for me.
Yeah, I mean, you have this huge reservoir,
this capacity to leverage pain and circumstance
to drive change within yourself.
Right.
To be able to not be a victim, but to look at pain as your friend, as a catalyst for
growth.
And I think there's a lot of people out there.
Look, if you're in enough pain, that's going to move the needle for you.
There's a lot of people out there that are in just enough pain where they're willing to just settle for what they have because they're not in enough pain to change.
And the fear of change outweighs the pain of their daily existence.
You know, the one gift I have with all that being said, what you just said there, is I have the ability to see the end before the beginning even begins.
And what that means is I know that to get to the very end, I can see it right now.
So before I went to Bud's and I was losing all this fucking weight and shit, I saw myself walking across the fucking stage at 191 fucking pounds.
That's what I had to get to get into the door.
I saw myself six months, a year later, whatever it's going to take
me to do. I saw myself walking across that stage, getting that fucking certificate of graduation
from Bud's. And I was able to be there at 300 fucking pounds. And that feeling that I was
nowhere near that fucking feeling. I was able to put myself there a million times every fucking day. And that feeling of like, my God, that is going to feel fucking amazing.
That's what made me suffer.
That's what allowed the pain to be real and say, this is worth it.
I want to feel for this fucking next 18 months.
It took me 18 fucking months to finally become a Navy student, to finally just get through butts.
18 months.
It's six months.
It took me 18.
months to finally become a Navy student, to finally just get through butts. 18 months. It's six months.
Took me 18. That's woke me up every fucking morning was I'm going to put myself through this much fucking pain and suffering for a few seconds. That's all it is. A few seconds of joy.
And it's so fucking worth it, man. That's what people don't get. So I'm able to put myself at
the finish line, even though I have no finish line, but at the finish line of an event before I even start the motherfucker to say,
how are you going to feel at the end of this? Well, visualization is one of the challenges.
And part of that is not just visualizing success or living in the reality of achieving what you're
setting out to achieve, but also visualizing how you're going
to navigate all the obstacles that are going to get thrown in your path. Right. Visualizing is my
biggest tool of life. That's why I've been able to put myself in cold water, put myself in a
hundred mile race millions of times before I've done it. And I've able to go through the race
and see how I'm going to feel at mile 50, almost to the exact feeling.
Right.
So when it comes up, it's no surprise.
It's no surprise.
I've already done this a million times.
And that's the one thing I practice and practice and practice and practice overnight.
But also, the most important thing is I practice that feeling of accomplishment that I'm going to have and it's all sitting down with. The crazy thing about the ASVAB story is that in addition to having to pass this test and get that 50, you also had to lose
100 pounds in like, what, like 30 days or some crazy short period of time? No, it was less than
three months. Right. Okay. Three months. But you compartmentalize these two tasks and say,
look, the first thing I got to do is I got to pass this test because the weight
doesn't matter if I don't get that 50. And you shelved or put off losing the weight to focus
on the academic end of it until you completed that hurdle. And then you looked at the weight stuff.
I'm like that now to this day.
You still got it done. It's like being focused on one thing at a time.
I have to be very present in everything I do. Like right now I'm with Rich Roll.
I'm not thinking about shit, but Rich Roll. and what the fuck's coming out of your mouth right now. That's what gives me a huge advantage in life, especially today in this day
and age with so much shit going so fast and everybody wants to keep everything going,
everything up and everything. I want to be the greatest multitasker of all time, not me.
I want to be the greatest multitasker of all time, not me.
If I put my 100% into what's in front of me, I will destroy it.
If I'm out here just multitasking and shit, I'm going to half-ass everything I do.
So it is the most important thing in the world to me is being focused at the task at hand. And it's getting harder and harder to do that because there are so many distractions,
and it's so easy to distract yourself.
Yes, it is.
You don't ever have to be bored again with these things in our pockets. No, but the one thing I'm most scared of in the world is losing
touch with the best thing in the world is your mind, your mindset, how you can picture yourself,
how you can focus, how you can drive, how you can put yourself in so many situations to get out of
it. Because those headphones we listen to, those phones that we Google to find information,
there's so many situations in my life where that shit's not going to help me.
It's not going to help me.
And you're able to just turn that off.
So fast.
Because I know what's helped me.
None of that stuff has ever helped me.
None of that stuff has ever helped me.
What has helped me has been me alone, getting my shit together, and being accountable for who I'm not and who I want to be.
That's the only thing that's helped me.
There is no one quite like David.
So if his message is resonating with you today,
please remember that you can find the links
to these full conversations in the description below
if you're watching on YouTube
or in the show notes on the episode page at ritual.com.
My next guest is coming up right after a few brief words
from our sponsors.
On deck is the multi-talented hyphenate
and queen of grounded science-backed personal transformation,
my friend, Mel Robbins. Mel is a former lawyer turned CNN legal analyst turned mega best-selling
author and talk show host. She's a powerhouse and one of the most widely booked public speakers in
the world. She recently graced the show with a powerful primer on moving through the world
with greater confidence.
Here's a slice of that magic.
Like, here's the thing about mindset.
A mindset will not change the shitty situation you're in.
A positive mindset changes you,
which changes your ability to deal with
the shitty situation that you're in.
The only way to shift out of any of these kinds of scenarios
is to take an action first, right?
As hard as that is.
And the emotions, the perceptions,
all of that follows action, not the other way around.
100% true.
So how I discovered this in my life
is during this horrible period in life.
So 2008, every morning I would wake up
and I would immediately start spinning
the negative thoughts.
We're fucked, I hate my husband.
How did we end up here?
I can't believe I did that stupid ass show.
I've made so many mistakes.
I should just flush my life.
The last 40 years down the toilet.
I'm so embarrassed.
I'm the world's worst mother.
I'd stare at the ceiling.
I was like a human pot roast marinating in fear.
And then of course the anxiety would wave up my body
and pin me down to that bed and I'd hit the snooze button.
And I would hit the snooze button
four or five times a morning.
By the time I woke up, the kids had missed the bus.
So we got three kids under the age of 10.
Chris was long gone because he's a very smart man
and he did not wanna be in the house when I was awake.
And he was trying to fix the situation that they were in.
And I would literally scream at the kids,
get them in the car.
And from there the day was just horrible.
And then every night I would do the same thing.
I'd say, that's it.
Tomorrow morning, it's gotta be the new me.
Everybody that struggles with addiction
does this exact same thing.
Tomorrow, I'm not drinking.
That's it.
I'm done with this.
And then the next morning,
it's the same fucking pattern of negative crap
that you're doing to yourself.
And this is exactly what you talk about all the time.
It's not the what you need to do, it's how.
How do you make yourself do the
things that feel hard or scary or don't seem like they're going to work because you're resigned and
you're stuck in your patterns? That was me. I knew I needed to get out of bed. I knew I needed to
stop drinking. I knew I needed to look for a job. I knew this wasn't Chris's fault and I needed to
stop screaming at him all the time, but I wasn't doing any of those things. I didn't know how.
And so this was the moment I created the five second rule.
I'm sitting in front of the television
and I am watching TV.
The kids are in bed and I'm drinking bourbon
and I'm probably on like my fourth Manhattan
and I'm having my nightly pep talk
and I'm going, that's it.
Tomorrow morning, it's the new me.
I gotta wake up.
I gotta do this.
I gotta do the other thing.
And all of a sudden, Rich, honest to goodness,
I see a rocket ship launch at the end of a commercial.
And I go, that's it.
Tomorrow morning, I'm launching myself out of bed
like a rocket.
And that was the beginning of the five second rule.
What's so interesting about that,
you talk about like hitting your bottom
and this is a bottom for sure.
But in that kind of reckoning where the pain
of your current circumstance exceeds the fear
of doing something different,
no matter how small that difference is,
there's like a crack in the universe,
like a little opening, right?
Where you have just the slightest bit of willingness
that you didn't have the day before.
And even the tiniest action,
whether it's picking up the phone to make a call
or counting back down from five,
when you look back now, it's like,
I did a couple little things that changed my life forever.
This incident, obviously changed your life forever.
And it's kind of amazing in a beautiful, mystical way,
how that occurs.
Well, let me tell you my intention for this conversation,
that you listening to us have this podcast be that crack
that lets some light in and becomes a sliding door
that you might just see,
oh, wow, maybe if that phone call I'm avoiding
or counting backwards, five, four, three, two, one,
or high-fiving myself in the mirror,
even though I don't think I deserve it.
And I think it's stupid and I'm a failure.
And why is this gonna help that you try it?
Because I think that any change in trajectory
was just a moment.
And for me, that moment was when the alarm went off,
I just counted backwards,
like NASA launches a rocket, five, four, three, two, one,
and I stood up.
And do you know what my first reaction to it was?
This is fucking stupid.
Correct.
Resignation.
Yeah.
It was immediately like, okay, so you can get out of bed.
So fucking what?
You're $800,000 in debt, Mel.
How is this gonna help?
And thankfully I thought,
well, what the hell do I have to lose?
Why not just for one day,
anytime Mel, you know what you should do,
but you don't feel like it.
Or anytime your emotions start to hijack you
or anytime you feel afraid or anxious or whatever,
why don't you just count backwards and see what happens?
And that's what I did.
And I haven't looked back.
But so here's the other thing that that taught me.
It's what gave me that sort of high five attitude,
this mantra, because as I was schlepping through airports
and I'm thinking I'm the world's biggest failure,
I kept saying this to myself on repeat. There is no way, Mel, if you've worked this hard
that you will not be rewarded.
You have to believe that this moment is preparing you
for something amazing that hasn't happened yet.
Keep going.
You have to believe that this moment is preparing you
for something amazing that hasn't happened yet.
Keep going.
And so I repeated that over and over and over
and over and over again,
as I wanted to throw in the towel,
as I would start to bash myself,
as I would start to feel sorry for myself
and be like, nope, there's just no way
I'm gonna believe that something amazing
isn't gonna happen.
I've worked too hard.
Something amazing that hasn't happened is coming. And when you get yourself into that mindset, it creates a sense of
resilience and momentum and resolve that you need in order to keep going when the shit hits the fan
or when you feel disappointed or when life is beating you down. And that was the other gift of that moment is
developing a little tool to flip my mindset when I wanted to start to feel sorry for myself.
And part of the genius of this is that when you start counting backwards, you've already committed
to taking action. So the counting itself moves you from a bias towards thinking toward a bias toward action. And the more you
repeat it, the more you break the pattern of thinking and you program in a pattern of taking
small actions. It creates agile moves and agile mindset. So that's one thing. The second thing
that's crazy cool about this is that the reason why it's so fucking hard to change is because
you talk about changing
with the prefrontal cortex.
You're conscious when you sit in your therapist chair
or you're listening to me and Rich,
and you're using this sort of strategic part of your brain.
The second that you're in a situation
where you're procrastinating
or you're thinking negative thoughts,
it's your subconscious that's in charge of you.
And so in order to change, you have to interrupt subconscious patterns. You see, the five-second
rule isn't just some dumb counting backwards thing. It is a form of metacognition that interrupts the
pattern stored in your subconscious brain. Counting backwards requires you to focus,
which flips on your prefrontal cortex. It gives you a moment of
control over what you think and do next. That's the genius of it. And the reason why I'm so
fucking passionate about this is not only because kids can use it and senior citizens can use it.
You don't have to have any kind of education or speak any kind of language. It works for anybody
that uses it is because I am now standing with millions of
people that have tried it. And we have pediatricians around the world that are using it to help kids
interrupt thoughts that trigger anxiety, veterans organizations that are using 54321 to help
reprogram responses to triggers. We had an entire wing of a Pennsylvania psychiatric inpatient nursing unit show up at the talk show
to tell me that of all of the tools that they give people that have an inpatient commit,
the single most positive and effective tool is the five-second rule. Because it is simple,
you remember it, and it immediately interrupts the negative and suicidal ideations that torture people.
And speaking of suicide, we know of 111 people
who have stopped themselves from taking their lives
by 54321 asking for help.
So I am here to tell you,
I don't give a fuck how stupid you think this is.
I want you to try it.
I want you to share it with people
because interrupting the patterns of thought and behavior
that are holding you back
and pushing yourself to take action
or to think something different,
it is the only way you're gonna change.
And this is a tool that's gonna help you bridge that gap.
Boom.
We just found the clip.
Pull that clip.
Why is it so hard to overcome negative patterns?
Well, James Clear,
New York Times bestselling author of Atomic Habits,
says the problem isn't you.
The problem is your system.
One of the most popular episodes to date
in the history of this podcast,
James graced the show back on episode 401 and taught us new ways to perceive behavior change, starting with the 1% better rule.
Here's a glimpse into that exchange.
with a couple things that people can take away to perhaps kind of tweak how they look at and think about the habits that they're trying to change in their own lives,
and some simple steps to get them started making better decisions. Sure. So I'll give you one mindset shift and one practical application.
So the mindset shift, and this kind of lies beneath the entire conversation we had today today Is to just try to find a way to get one percent better each day
it doesn't need to be something radical it doesn't need to be something huge, but
Habits are easy to overlook both good and bad on any given day because they don't seem like very much the difference between
Studying spanish for an hour tonight and not studying at all seems
like nothing because it's like, well, I still didn't learn the language.
And the difference between eating a salad versus eating a burger and fries seems like
nothing because your body looks the same in the mirror and the scale is the same at the
end of the night.
It's only once your habits have compounded over two or five or 10 years that the full
impact of those 1% choices, 1% better or 1% worse, becomes fully apparent.
And if you can understand that concept and internalize it, then you can start to see
the importance in your daily actions and in your daily habits and why those are so critical.
So that's the first thing, is just try to find a way to get 1% better.
And the second thing, just a practical application, I would encourage you to try to apply the two-minute rule.
Think about whatever habit it is that you're trying to build and scale it down to just the first two minutes of the behavior.
What is the thing that you can do that can initiate it?
Don't think about it as the overall habit.
Think about it like a gateway habit or an entrance ramp to a highway.
How can you automate the beginning of the behavior?
This is maybe an important distinction about habits. A lot
of the time we talk about habits, we use the phrase habit for things that aren't actually
habits. Like we'll say something like, I want to build a habit of writing every day. Technically,
a habit is a behavior that can be performed more or less automatically. It's on autopilot.
Writing is about the most effortful, concentrative thing that you can do, right? Like you're going to
be thinking carefully.
You're not going to be on autopilot.
So the habit part of that would be,
I sit in a chair at a desk with a pad of paper in front of me or a laptop.
The habit is the first two minutes, right?
How can you automate the ritual of getting started
and then let the consequence and the effortful,
concentrating work follow naturally?
A lot of people have heard stuff like this before,
like, hey, take small steps.
But even when you know you should start small,
it's still really easy to start too big.
People are like, all right,
I want to build the habit of running.
So I guess I know I should start small,
so I'll only run for 15 minutes.
But even that's like way bigger
than what I'm talking about.
Scale it down just the first two minutes,
automate the ritual of getting started,
putting on your running shoes, stepping out the door and locking the door and if you can automate that and make
that a habit and you do it day in and day out and you're the type of person who always gets
their running shoes on and steps out the door there are going to be a lot of days where you
yeah that's great advice there are some sections that i find really interesting like there i have
a section on genes and habits uh and like choosing oh yeah i had written down to talk about like
genetic factors yeah i mean we to talk about genetic factors.
Yeah.
I mean, we can talk about that.
Let's do it.
All right.
Well, we often don't like to talk about genes in biology because it seems like a fixed characteristic, right?
By saying that, like, oh, your genetics, it seems nobody likes to think like, oh, it's out of my control.
Why bother?
But the truth is the usefulness or the applicability of your genes is highly dependent on context.
usefulness or the applicability of your genes is highly dependent on context. So being seven feet tall is an incredible advantage if you're trying to play basketball, and it's an incredible
disadvantage if you're trying to be a gymnast. And just as that is very obvious with physical traits,
it's becoming increasingly true as we develop more understanding of the link between genes
and psychological traits, or what we would call your personality. And so for certain personalities, certain habits or certain environments might be predisposed to
being really successful, enjoyable or not. I think there's a lot to improve in this area. I think
there's a lot for us still to learn. So in many ways, we might just be in the infancy of
understanding this. But one of the best measures or most robust measures
of personality is the big five. Um, and this kind of like mapping personality traits onto five
different spectrums. The most common one that people know is introversion and extroversion,
but there are other ones as well, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and so on.
And each of these five traits has been linked to some kind of genetic underpinning, some type of DNA.
And so one of my favorite studies on this, researchers took babies that were in the nursery
and they played a harsh noise on one side of the nursery. And some of the babies turned toward the
noise and some of them turned away. And as they track those children, as they grew up throughout
life, they found the ones that turned toward the noise were more likely to grow up to be extroverts
and the ones that turned away were more likely to grow up to be
introverts. Yeah, the extroverts are in the mosh pit, and the introverts are at home watching
Netflix. So again, I think there's still a lot to learn, but there's definitely something going on
here. People, for example, who have higher levels of agreeableness tend to have higher natural
levels of oxytocin as well. And so you can imagine how someone who is high in
agreeableness might be more likely or it might be easier for them to build a habit of writing
thank you notes or of organizing social events where people can be warm and hang out and kind
and considerate and so on. They're that kind of personality. And so there may be predisposed to
that kind of habit. Where it gets interesting is if you can understand yourself at a more,
I guess I'll even call it genetic level, then maybe you can start to design habits that fit you better or design an environment that fits you better.
So one of the examples I gave in the book, and again, I'm still toying with some of these ideas, is for people who are low in conscientiousness, which is one of those five traits, that means that they're less likely to be orderly or less likely to be organized. So if someone is like that, if they're predisposed to be that kind of person, it might really help them to have an environment designed
where things are already orderly or primed or set up because they're going to be less likely to be
the type of person that would just remember to do it or to make a to-do list to do it and so on.
And so maybe if you knew,
oh, I'm low in conscientiousness, you should shift more of your energy and attention to
environment design. Yeah. Yeah. That's super interesting. I mean, in the book you talk about
Michael Phelps, who has a physique that's perfectly suited to him swimming very fast.
And then you have this long distance runner who they have the same inseam, but the proportionality of their
bodies are completely different and he's well-suited in long distance running. They could
not swap places. And the point being that from afar, the casual observer will say, well, of course
he's good at swimming. Like, look at his body. I can't do that. But the greater point that you're
trying to make is if we can develop self-awareness around what suits us best in our predispositions and gravitate towards those environments and those opportunities, then we're putting ourselves in a position where the expression of our genetic makeup can advance us and fuel us and put us in the position that is best for us. In the meantime, you kind of leave people
with this question, which is, what are you well-suited to suffer for? Something like that,
paraphrasing, which is a way of kind of prompting that self-inquiry.
A lot of people try to figure out like, yes, so in that chapter, I offer a set of questions that
you can go through to try to figure it out for yourself. What are you most appropriately matched for?
What environment would suit you?
And one of the key questions, I think, is where's an area where you can handle the pain of the work better than the people around you?
The area where you are more well-equipped to suffer is the work that you were made to do, which is an interesting way to think about it, right?
Most people think about, oh, well, where is it just easy?
Where do I succeed?
But every area requires hard work and effort to achieve some level of success. So the question is not, where is it easy? The question is,
where can I handle the pain? Yeah. It's a different lens through which to look at it,
but I think that that's right. For some people, for whatever reason, people who grow up and become
great writers, writing is suffering,
but they can handle it for some reason. Navy SEALs, it's not easy to be one, but the guys
who can make it, somehow they can handle the suffering of it. Yeah. They're well-suited and
prepared and willing to undergo that for some reason. And I think I used that line, something
similar to that at the end of that chapter, which is at the peak of any field, what you're going to find are people who are both well-suited and well-trained. It's not just one or the other. They have the environment matching and they have the hard work and the effort and the perseverance.
Right. Habits are the compound interest of self-improvement.
I love it. That's one of my favorite lines in the book.
It's a great line. Matt. I love it. That's one of my favorite lines in the book. I think it encapsulates the core idea,
right? That like, um, if you're willing to build those small behaviors and layer 1% improvements
on top of each other, they will compound and multiply the same way that money multiplies
through compound interests. The effects of your habits multiply as you repeat them over time.
And that can be true for you or against you. And that's why it's crucial to understand how
habits work so that you
can, you know, make sure that they're, uh, they're multiplying in your favor rather than to your
detriment. It is time for me to introduce you to the priestess of self-acceptance of body
positivity and fun ultra runner Myrna Valerio. Easily one of the most inspirational athletes I've ever met,
Myrna is a true ambassador of sport
on a mission to empower humans of all shapes, sizes, colors, and genders
to proudly embrace their bodies, expand their horizons,
and own their personal truth.
In this clip, she demands that we broaden our minds
and crush preconceived ideas of what our bodies are capable of.
When that cardiologist told me that I was going to die if I didn't change my lifestyle, I really did make a decision to change things.
I prioritized my day.
I stopped bringing work home, which is really difficult to do when you work in a boarding school.
home, which is really difficult to do when you work in a boarding school. I would get up super early and hop on the treadmill for an hour and then do Pilates and then do awful Biggest Loser
videos. Really, really awful, but I did them anyway because I needed to change drastically.
And so, I mean, and I did. I would work out for five hours a day wow yeah I was really committed to
changing my life in a very drastic way so that's what I did and little little did you know
this entire new life that you live now right who knew was there a breakthrough moment where you
really just embrace this idea that I am a runner and this is like the path that
I'm going to blaze for myself? I don't think there was one moment. I think I just slowly grew into
a running persona. And I never really had any qualms about whether or not I was a runner.
Like I ran, therefore I was a runner. But as far as like the really deep running persona and identifying deeply as a runner, I think that just came about organically.
And then it's always a surprise to me that people who run don't think they're runners.
Because if you run, you use your body for running.
It's something you do regularly.
Then you are a runner.
You are what you do, right?
Right.
Well, we all measure ourselves up against some idealized version of what that means or is.
And the truth is, you know, 99.99% of people that are out running are not, you know, winning marathons and things like that.
This is the greatest participation sport.
You know, as I said, like, I'm just a person who likes to run and I like to exercise.
But on the other hand, I know that there are lots of people who, for whom like this thing
that I'm doing is, seems to be inaccessible to them because they have this idea that a runner
looks this way, a runner runs this quickly. A person who hikes is a certain body type,
a certain race, probably male. And so when they see me, it blows their minds that I'm out there
doing those same things unapologetically and without regard for what people think I should
be doing and where people think I should be doing it. The unapologetic part is a big part of it too. Like you always have this huge smile and you're
the life of the party on the trail. And I think there's this sense-
I don't know about the life of the party.
Well, there's this sense like, oh, well, I'm here, but I really shouldn't be here. Like
the sheepishness that perhaps somebody else who's trying to make this work would feel
in that experience. Well, I definitely, when I started trail running, I didn't know what I was doing.
Nobody does.
Right. I still don't know what I'm doing. But I would just kind of like hang in the back and
listen to the race directors and then go off on an adventure because I always see it as an
adventure. And again, not knowing what I was doing, not knowing what I was in for. But as I became used to that and more comfortable with
that, like the unknown aspect of trail running and anything that you do in the outdoors,
I definitely became more comfortable just being in those spaces.
And that's how I operate in any uncomfortable situation.
I'll hang in the back and observe, learn things.
And then as I become more comfortable, I extend myself more and more when I'm in those situations.
And are you still doing the, you've got these running retreats,
the slow as fuck running retreats?
Did you actually do these?
I did.
Did you?
I absolutely did.
That's like the best name ever.
They sold out, you know, over and over again. Because it's like, oh, all the fear that people have,
like I can't do a running retreat.
It immediately tears down a wall.
Right.
Oh, well, I think I can do that.
I can, you know.
I'm slow as fuck.
Right, exactly.
Exactly.
And so, and that.
What are those about?
Where do you do those?
Okay, so.
So yes, they are called slow as fuck trail running adventures.
And I created them specifically to serve a community that is made up of runners.
Some of them are plus size runners. Some of them are plus size runners.
Some of them are not, but everybody's slow.
And by slow, I mean, we don't run 10 minute miles.
What if you're fast and you want to go?
And I tell people, I said, this is not for you.
This is not the experience for you
because we're going to be on the trails.
We will run.
We will walk.
We will take selfies. We will have a picnic. It'll
be a whole day thing. This is not competitive. You should not consider this as training because
we're just going to- We're going to pick daisies.
We're going to play by ear and yes, pick daisies, smell them. We're going to do some sort of
reflection work and we're going to have a good time. So yeah.
How many people?
The very first one I did was 22 people, which was a lot of people.
Do you just do it in your backyard trails or do you go somewhere?
I rent a house somewhere and that's near a lot of trails. And yeah, and I bring people in,
I contract a lot of people in to do yoga, meditation.
I had Roz Mays, who's a pole dancer, come in and do some sensual movement without a pole.
With the goal being that people begin to get more comfortable in their own bodies and in the space that they inhabit.
And they transfer that out onto the trails and hopefully in the rest of their lives.
So that was fun. And so, yeah, so that's what we do.
No mindset deep dive would be complete without a word from my next guest,
the irrepressible James Lawrence, AKA the Iron Cowboy. James is a multiple world record crushing endurance athlete
whose mind boggling feats include
completing 50 Ironman distance triathlons
in 50 days in 50 states,
and most recently completing an absolutely astonishing
101 Iron distance triathlons in 101 consecutive days.
In this clip, he explains how he fosters
his extraordinary mental conviction.
Your gift really is that you're able to suffer,
but you have figured out a way to express that
through these challenges that get incrementally
more and more difficult over the years
that allow you to kind of be in the place
that you're in now.
I didn't say that very articulately,
but you know what I'm saying?
Like this starts on a Ferris wheel for 10 days
and it's not like you're out winning triathlons right away
or anything like that.
Like you have a very different path
into this kind of thing.
I think that is the most beautiful or profound lesson
that needs to be heard today.
Nobody's the expert at the beginning of their journey.
Nobody is.
And you have to meet yourself where you're at today
and that be the expectation.
The hardest thing to do is to start on any journey
because that's where the highest amount of struggle is.
That's where our experience and our momentum and our success is at its lowest.
And a lot of people see the headline, the 100, and think, oh, he's just born to do this kind of thing.
And I love saying it now that you can't go from zero to hundred and miss all of the moments in between.
And everybody has a beginning, middle,
and end to their journey.
But it's the audacity to start
and the courage to put one foot in front of the other.
And I think a lot of people just get caught up
in needing to understand how it's gonna unfold
and they get paralyzed and never actually move forward.
And two, that was beautifully said,
but they're, and this is the bad part about social media, is they're comparing themselves
against what other people are doing or showing that they're doing. And they say, I can't do that
and I'm not good enough. And that's what stops them from starting. And that's tragic to me because
thankfully social media wasn't big when we started and I didn't have basis of
comparison and people like, oh, who are your mentors and who's this and that and who do you
look on to? And I was like, I would not compare myself to what the current standard of excellence
was. And I would go out and try to do what I believe was possible. And here's the perfect
example. At the time when I said I was going to do the 50, the baseline was kind of like the Epic Five, right? And had I
looked at that and said, oh, the Epic Five is the standard of excellence at the time, which it was,
I would have said, okay, I'm going to double that standard to do 10. So why did I go all the way to
50? Because for me personally, I wasn't comparing myself about what others were doing and
accomplishing. I went out and I set the standard of the bar to what I thought I could do. And that's
where people get into problems and struggles is they are now comparing themselves to what they
see the top, top guys doing. And they just get overwhelmed and they don't start. And so there's
two sides to that coin, right? Don't get sidelined by what you see people are doing overwhelmed and they don't start. And so there's two sides to that coin, right?
Don't get sidelined by what you see people are doing
and then don't look what other people are doing
and do what you believe is possible within yourself.
You've got to show up.
You've got to participate.
You have to learn.
And you can't go from zero to 100.
And I couldn't have done what I did mentally
without learning and struggling
and developing and sharpening that thing.
The big question topic,
are you born with it or can you develop it? Nature versus nurture.
Nature versus nurture. And my answer, just based on my personal experiences, it's nurture. You have
to develop it. You have to work on it. Now, we're all born with a different baseline.
Jace would be a great example.
He obviously has a different starting baseline for mental toughness than some other people do.
Now, if he took-
And you're the kid who was on the Ferris wheel
for 10 days to win a prize.
Right, exactly.
So your baseline is probably a little bit different.
Like how old are you for that?
22?
21, 22.
But I took that knowledge from that experience
and then I've really showed up in my life and sharpened it.
Jace has an incredible opportunity
to be something very special in that mindset space.
And I come across, you can pick out,
okay, baselines higher, baselines higher, baselines higher,
develop that talent.
But everybody can develop it
because I'm a great example of this is a mental journey.
I'm not the most physically gifted.
Now you have to,
the other big question is like, how much is physical and how much is mental for what we do or the journey that we're on? And my answer has changed over the years. And you hear a lot of
people have different opinions. It's like 70% mental and it's 100% physical and it's 100% mental. You cannot do what I did
if I'm very strong mentally and I'm a 300 pound man. Mentally, you cannot drag your body through
that experience. And if you're extremely physical, but have a weak mind, I've seen so many athletes that are way more talented than I am
fail because they don't have the mental component of it.
And so you straight up have to be 100% on both of them
in order to accomplish something like that,
or the journey, or push your boundaries or your limits, right?
It's a combination.
You cannot rely solely on one or the other
and allow that to be to get you through.
You have to be so strong at both of them
or it just doesn't work.
Yeah.
It's really a habit or a muscle,
this idea of reflexively putting yourself
into positions where you're going to be tested
mentally, emotionally, physically,
in all of these ways.
And we're in a culture right now where it's kind of easy to opt out of that type of situation.
So you have to almost have a little bit of extra gumption to seek it out and put yourself in that
situation. Sunny always says, and she is not lying when she says it, she says,
if I have two paths in front of me, I'm going to intentionally pick the harder one
because I want to struggle. I want to learn.'m going to intentionally pick the harder one because I wanna struggle, I wanna learn, I wanna grow.
And that's exact opposite of what most people are doing.
So they see two things and go, that's easy route,
I'm gonna take that one.
You're deluded into thinking that the happy life
is the easy life, but the happy life, the fulfilled life,
the purpose-driven life is the life that invites
those sort of difficult situations into your experience.
Well, they're depressed and they have anxiety
and all those things, I'm like, I'm sure you do.
Because you're just taking that easy mountain bike path
that's just soft dirt and all you do is,
you know, there's no challenge,
there's no reason to develop any character,
but they're choosing that, right?
So it's like, well, I'm sure you feel depressed,
like you're accomplishing nothing hard.
So that's
definitely what our culture and our society encourages. It's an easy path. One of the
biggest things you learn by taking the harder path is problem solving. And that's what our team and
Sunny has become experts at is problem solving. That's all we do. We've become master problem
solvers and we've learned how to problem solve
in the face of adversity.
And when you take that path of least resistance,
there's very limited opportunities
or necessity to problem solve.
And so you don't learn that skillset.
And life is about managing adversity
and learning how to problem solve at a high level.
The way we navigate our inner world,
our everyday thoughts, our emotions, and the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves is the single most important determinant of our life success. emotions, gain critical self-insight from our feelings, and ultimately use this newfound
awareness to adaptively align our actions with our values is how we make changes to bring out
the best of ourselves moving forward. This is the life's work of award-winning psychologist
on faculty at Harvard Medical School, Susan David, PhD. Because the tough emotions are the price we pay
for a meaningful life,
here's some evidence-based wisdom
on what it takes to hone that emotional agility.
So my work really traverses emotions.
So both the physical sensations and the physiological sensations and also the feelings.
So when we then construct something that says, I am sad because of something, the feeling,
the thought that we might have, self-doubts and the story.
So my work traverses this whole idea that our inner world, our thoughts, our emotions, and our stories often drive every aspect of
how we love, how we live, how we parent, and how we lead.
And yet, so much of the writing that exists on success is effectively writing that's either
about set goals and achieve them or about the landscape of what success looks like.
But there's very little that focuses, I think, in an evidence-based way, not to say that there isn't any, but in an evidence-based
and research-based way about what it takes internally in the way we deal with our thoughts,
our emotions, and our stories. Right. And I think that begins with really understanding that as
these emotions well up inside of us, as they do,
that they are part and parcel of what it means to be human. They're entirely natural.
And the starting point is really to discern the fact that you have a choice when they arise as
to how you behave, that you don't need to necessarily self-identify with them to the
extent that they become that predictor of behavior that leads you astray.
Is that fair to say? Absolutely. Yeah. So the first point that you make,
which is that they're naturally occurring experiences in us as human beings, is one of
the first things that I explore in both my TED Talk and the book, which is that as a society,
what has started to happen is that these naturally occurring experiences that really are incredibly important signals to ourselves in terms of how we're doing, what's working for us in our lives, what's missing in our lives. and irrational, illogical, all what happens is we receive this narrative from society that says to
us that there are good emotions and bad emotions. The good emotions are the joy and the happiness
and you should chase happiness. And the bad emotions are anger, grief, sadness. And so one
of the most critical aspects I think of my work is starting to really challenge this idea
that they're good or bad emotions. And to really put out that our emotions have evolved in us as
a human species to help us to respond and survive. And when we start getting into the space where we
either block or suppress or push aside emotions, we actually stop ourselves from being our most
effective successful beings. Yeah. This idea that there's a duality is a socially projected notion
that perpetuates that vicious cycle of, you know, unhealth, I guess. Because if you feel sad and
then you know, like, well,
that's a bad emotion, then you're going to then feel shame or guilt for having that.
And you're just digging that hole even deeper and deeper.
Yeah, that's exactly. So it's this fascinating thing where, you know, we have in psychology,
we sometimes talk about type one and type two. And type one is where you start saying,
I feel sad. And type two is when you start having
an emotion or judgment about the emotion. So you say, I'm sad that I'm sad. I shouldn't be sad.
I push it aside. And in some of my work, I, for example, did a survey of 70,000 people. And I
found that a third of us, which is a remarkable number, a third of us treat our normal emotions, emotions like sadness or anger, or even grief,
as being bad. And so we push them aside. Or if we don't do it to ourselves, we often do it to
people we love, our children, we jump to a solution. And I think a critical aspect of
well-being is moving beyond the struggle with our emotions into the other space, which is,
this is how I'm feeling. What do I need to do about this context that I'm in?
Right. To detach from the self-judgment that usually is accompanying that.
Yeah. The radical acceptance of all of our emotions, our grief, our sadness, our anger is a hallmark and a cornerstone of resilience and a cornerstone of effective relationships.
That's not to say that because we feel angry, we have a right to be angry and we should act on our anger or because we feel wronged, we have been wronged. But rather, what's at the core of my work is this
idea that our emotions contain signposts to things that we care about. They're these flashing lights.
You know, if I feel guilty as a parent, it doesn't mean that I should be guilty. But it does mean
that there's a value often that sits beneath that emotion, that I value presence and connectedness with my children, and that I'm not feeling enough of it.
I'm not experiencing enough of it.
So instead of judging the emotion, if we can rather be open-hearted and accepting and compassionate of it, we can start moving into the space where we are able to discern values that are underneath it.
Right. I like the idea that the emotion really sheds light on the extent to which you're invested
in that value. So that guilt reaction really just reaffirms to you that that impulse to be a good
parent is valuable to you, right? And that's an affirming way to perceive what you would ordinarily feel
lousy about. So, again, in the book, what I do is I talk about these four movements. I talk about
showing up, which is noticing your thoughts and your emotions in compassionate ways,
stepping out, which is creating the space, walking your why, which is this, how do we make values
align choices, and then moving on. This is this tiny tweaks as well as this principle. So the idea behind this is that often when in life, whether it's in relationships or at
work, we develop strong levels of over-competence. So the idea here is that you can do your job with
your eyes closed or you know what to expect. And this doesn't mean you aren't busy. You might be very busy doing something in a rote way.
And when we overcompetent, it's a very strong risk factor for just feelings of disengagement
and ultimately a sense of disempowerment.
So overcompetence is very difficult for us.
But by the same token, human beings like comfort and we really struggle
with the opposite, which is over-challenge. Over-challenge in a job is where you keep
feeling like you're being thrown in the deep end. You never know what's going on. The goals
keep on changing. It's again, a very strong risk factor for disengagement. And so the sweet spot
of growth in our lives is where we're neither overcompetent nor overchallenged.
So what we're doing is we are working at the edge of our ability.
So keeping on, again, pushing the boundary, not just for the sake of it, again, in a values-aligned way.
You can take that same idea and you can apply it in relationships.
that same idea and you can apply it in relationships where you're in a relationship where you go out with your spouse, you go to a movie, you know what the person's opinion is of the movie, you know
what they're going to order at dinner, you know what you're going to talk about at dinner. You're
overcompetent in that relationship and it's a risk factor for that relationship. You also don't want
to be over-challenged where you're walking on eggshells. So what do we do when we are trying
to work at the edge of our ability? Usually what
we're trying to do is we're trying to either expand breadth or depth. Breadth might be we're
trying new things, we're moving into environments that are maybe new, we may be instead of going out
with the same group of friends with our spouse every week or the same
movie, we're trying different things. So that's breadth. Depth is where you start going deeper,
where you start developing greater levels of expertise or with your spouse, you start having
conversations that you might not have had for the past 20 years. You know, when you actually ask the
person what their dreams were or what their fears were. So depth and breadth are usually
ways that we start expanding the edge and moving at the edge of our ability. And it's in that zone
that we have our greatest levels of growth and yes, discomfort, but discomfort is again, the
price of admission to a meaningful life. Right. And I think in the book, you use the example of the gymnast
walking on the beam, right?
And as that person loses their balance,
it's their core strength,
AKA their emotional agility
that allows them to then stabilize themselves once again.
Yeah, and it's sort of like,
I had the climber Alex Honnold in here,
who's just brilliant what he does.
And it's so extraordinary what he's able to do.
And I think it really is a testament in many ways
to this principle,
because he doesn't just up and climb El Cap without ropes,
out of the blue, he's been doing this his whole life.
And it's just, okay, one wall,
a little bit more challenging than the last one.
And the same way, Laird Hamilton
can surf this gigantic wave.
It doesn't happen overnight.
He doesn't go from a six foot wave to a 20 foot wave.
He goes from a six foot wave to a six and a half foot wave,
right, taking these incremental little steps
to push that envelope of comfort or discomfort
just the tiniest amount until there's an acclimation
and then you're ready
for the next challenge.
And it's a dishonor
to human imperfections
to sell the narrative
that it's simply something
that happens in one fell swoop
that, you know, just happens.
Right, and that is the narrative.
That's what we read.
We read it and we love
that hero's story
and we believe that
that's how it occurred
because we want these people to be bigger than life.
But they're all human just like we are, you know?
The penultimate guest in our deep dive
is entrepreneur, author, innovator,
and philanthropist, Peter Diamandis.
Recently named by Fortune
as one of the world's 50 greatest leaders,
Peter is the founder and executive chairman of the XPRIZE Foundation, which leads the world in designing and operating large-scale incentive competitions.
On the show, to discuss longevity and to promote his new book, Life Force, co-written with Tony Robbins, by the way, Peter ended our interview, the full version of which we have yet to share.
So consider this a tease with an unexpected monologue on mindset that was so helpful and
insightful, we felt compelled to include it here. So here is Peter Diamandis.
I think mindset is the single most important thing that anyone can take out of this conversation
today, in addition to health. I got religion on mindset over the course of the last decade,
and I've made it the focus. So I mentor thousands of entrepreneurs through an abundance digital,
and I run a CEO executive program year round called Abundance 360, which is part of Singularity
University. And I've focused the entire program around mindset. And there are four mindsets that
I focus on. An abundance mindset, an exponential mindset, a moonshot mindset, and a longevity
mindset. There's gratitude mindsets and curiosity mindsets. We'll come back to the primaries. If I were to ask you what made Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos,
Elon Musk, Mahatma Gandhi, whoever it might be successful, was it the money they had?
Was it the relationships they had? Was it the tech they had? Or was it their mindset?
I would posit that mindset is the most important out of those things. If you took away everything
from them, but they maintained their mindset,
they would regain some portion of it.
And so if that's true, if mindset is that important,
then where are we proactively developing
and honing our mindsets?
Because most of us, including me until this last decade,
have been getting our mindsets from our parents or schools,
God forbid, the stuff we watch on TV instead of like proactively honing it. So let me,
if you don't mind, let me hit on those four mindsets. Absolutely. So abundance mindset
is something I got that out of Singularity University and it got me to write my first book,
Abundance, The Future is Better Than You Think.
And it was the realization that,
oh my God, we are moving from scarcity,
which is we're genetically dialed into scarcity.
We have in our brains, in our genome,
we have a scarcity mindset
because it was where we evolved.
But technology is a force
that turns whatever used to be scarce into abundance
over and over and over again. Case in point, we used to go and kill whales to get whale oil
to light our nights, right? Then we ravaged mountainsides for coal. Then we drilled kilometers
in the ocean floor. And now photovoltaics, we talked about fusion. There's a squanderable
abundance of energy coming. So tech moved it from scarcity to abundance.
We have more capital year on year on year than any time ever. So we're going to hit $100 trillion
in our global economy this year. We've hit the most number of unicorns ever. The amount of
venture capital invested in 2017 beat 2016, in 2018 beat 2017, even on and on and on, even through the pandemic,
this 2021, we doubled the amount of venture capital done in 2020, which doubled 2019.
Okay, let's go on. This past year, what would you think of as more scarce than a perfect diamond,
a four carat, five carat, 10 carat diamond, right? Pandora, the largest jeweler on the planet
10-carat diamond, right? Pandora, the largest jeweler on the planet this past year, said,
we're going to stop selling conflict diamonds or mine diamonds that have social issues, and we're only going to produce manufactured diamonds. And so all of a sudden, diamonds went
from being scarce to perfect diamonds, 8, 10, 20-carat diamonds becoming abundant. It's the
cost of electricity, methane, and water.
And a friend of mine at the company called the Diamond Foundry manufactures whatever gem you
want. Do you want flaws, imperfections? You can do that. And so this is an abundance mindset,
which I'll cap that one off in the following way. If you got a pie and all of a sudden twice as many
people show up for dinner in a scarcity mindset.
You're like, ah, damn, I got to slice the slices thinner and thinner and thinner.
In an abundance mindset, so it's bullshit.
We're going to bake more pies, right?
That's an abundance mindset.
Every year, it's giving us more and more opportunities, which has been fundamentally the case.
Your competition, forget about them.
There's more opportunities.
Let's go and go in that direction.
An exponential mindset is just the notion
that we're linear thinkers.
Take 30 linear steps, you're 30 meters away.
But our tech world is growing exponentially,
30 doublings, one, two, four, eight, 16, 32.
And 30 doublings, you're a billion meters away.
You've gone around the planet 26 times.
And so in an exponential mindset, it's important to be able to see where the technologies are going
and how they're converging. And so at A360, I work people through the abundance mindset,
give the examples of increasing abundance across almost every single area, exponential mindsets and what
the implications are. A moonshot mindset is the notion that most of the world would love 10%,
would really love a 10% improvement in revenues, 10% more customers. And that's a great stretch
goal. In a moonshot mindset, you're saying, no, no, no, I don't want 10%.
I want to go 10 times bigger, a thousand percent bigger.
And when you do that,
you've got to let go of all your preconceived notions.
The Astro Teller, who's the captain of moonshots
at Alphabet, a brilliant guy,
a friend who I care about greatly,
gives an example that says,
if you're a car company and
your car is doing 50 miles per gallon and you want to get to 55, you can do that. You can
lightweight the car, get better aerodynamics. But if you want to go from 50 to 500, you've got to
start with a clean sheet of paper and reinvent the car. And so the ability to take these moonshots are here because of these exponential technologies.
And when I'm teaching the CEOs that I coach, it's like you want to keep 95% of your company doing 10%.
They're generating the engine, right, that keeps you alive.
And you don't want them
taking moonshots, but you want to find that small team, that moonshot team and take them away from
the main company. And you want to say to them, listen, I don't want you taking 10 percent. If I
see you doing 10 percent activities, you're fired. I want you trying crazy ideas that have the
potential to reinvent our business, right? The day before something is
really a breakthrough, it's a crazy idea. And most companies aren't trying crazy ideas and then
they're stuck in incrementalism. Yeah. The idea of creating a skunk works. Yes. Because every
company, when it reaches a certain scale, falls prey to its own bureaucracy and soon becomes
a dinosaur short of having that level of innovation within.
Which requires a very few hundred year old companies. Yeah. The final mindset that I'm
enamored with, and it's what gave birth to this book, Life Force, to bring it back is the longevity
mindset. And, you know, if you can will yourself to death and you can will yourself to live longer if you have something to live for.
And if you believe you have the ability to live out of pain and have the cognition, the aesthetics, the mobility.
And so a longevity mindset for me is helping people see where this field is going.
is helping people see where this field is going.
One of the things I did, Rich, was I built over the last year an AI engine
that searches the global news,
journals, tweets, magazines, newspapers,
and it finds longevity and health tech breakthroughs.
And it scans it for any dystopian
and it rates it on a quality article.
And I get a digest every day.
It uses GPT-3, uses the OpenAI engine to give me a summary paragraph about 15 different breakthroughs
per day. And so it's my longevity mindset. I'm seeing what's going on in all of these different
fields. And I have zero question about reaching longevity escape velocity.
And you can try it as can everyone else. It's free. It's longevityinsider.org. And at the end
of the day, I get this news that gives me tremendous hope. And because of that, I'm willing
to change my diet, sleep longer, do intermittent fasting.
Right, we're the last generation, right?
Who are like butting right up against the edge
of whether we're gonna make it across the transom or not.
Yeah, right.
All right, well, here we are.
It's the final clip.
I cannot think of a better way to close this deep dive out
other than with some mindset insights
from the poet of endurance himself,
Mr. Tommy Rivers Pusey.
In the summer of 2020,
Tommy, who's a highly credentialed elite marathoner
and ultra marathoner,
who is beloved for his soulful approach to athletics,
to life and to family,
fell gravely ill with an extremely rare and
advanced form of lung cancer that very nearly killed him and most likely would have killed
anyone else. But Rives refused pity. Instead, he doubled down on gratitude. He chose to learn
from his suffering, to expand his capacity to love, and more than anything, see the pain he endured as a teacher.
Here's a slice of one of the most memorable conversations in the history of this podcast.
It's difficult to find the right words to express that kind of gratitude.
it's difficult to find the right words to express that kind of gratitude.
And not just to the, you know, the team that accepted me and was willing to work with me,
but also with just the outpouring of support, you know, and love from, gosh, from so many people.
Oh, I mean, I don't know what your awareness is because, you know, you were where you were, but the outpouring of love and the support online and the community that congealed
around supporting you was unbelievable, man.
It was really a beautiful thing.
And I'm sure you know that, but if you don't know that,
you need to know that.
People love you, man.
And that's a reflection of the way
that you've lived your life.
And to the extent that your experience
has created a referendum on how you wanna live
and how you wanna be and improvements you can make,
you need to understand that you have lived your life
in such a way that people are going to the ends of the earth
to try to find ways to support you and your family.
Yeah, it's, man, people are good.
It's, all we hear is the negative.
All we see is the scandals, you know,
the times that people mess up
and just this obsession we have with finding fault
and that it fosters this, this mindset as though, um, humans are just these fallible,
wretched, cynical creatures. And, and that's one, that's one aspect of humanity, but our ability to,
to do good, to impact the lives of people around us, to help make things better
for other people around us. It's infinite, that capacity, that ability. I think about
humanity. We talk about humanity all the time. Well, we did growing up, at least in my home.
My mom was an artist. My dad, his graduate degrees were in humanities and religion.
And that's fascinating.
I didn't know that, but I'm like, of course.
But growing up, we studied the masters of the humanities.
They were the artists, they were the writers.
And that word became synonymous with like masters of the arts.
They were great writers or painters or sculptors.
And we think about Michelangelo or Bernini, or we think about these individuals that have this ability to capture human emotion, human experience.
That's why we call it the humanities.
Not because, you know, it's not synonymous with artists.
It's that they have the ability to capture the essence of humanity.
Not just have the ability to paint or to be a sculptor, but to actually capture a feeling.
This universal human experience.
And there's this massive, I think about this massive spectrum of humanity.
And on one end is the weak, miserable, wretched aspects of humanity.
But then on the other side of that spectrum is our potential for good, you know? And
we are masters at picking up the broken pieces and recreating and repairing.
And we're masters of redemption.
I mean, we really are.
And we're also masters at deflecting the fact that we have that capacity. We put it on something else or someone else always.
We look at these incredible achievements that humans have accomplished and
our first reaction is, oh, it must be extraterrestrials it must be
something else you know right we couldn't have possibly achieved this exactly because because
if we recognize our capacity as human beings then we also well if we recognize
the achievements of a previous civilization or or somebody else
and if we don't attribute it to oh divine intervention or um
or some unseen force that actually accomplished it then it condemns us as human beings. Then we have to acknowledge the fact that, well, we maybe aren't reaching our potential
as human beings.
And so we're so quick to give something else the credit,
which is great.
I mean, there's obviously it's important to have humility
and to recognize that.
But to face that is to reckon with our
innate power. And if we're living our life frivolously, we don't want to look at that.
Exactly. Yeah. But when we realize, you know, our life is ours to choose, essentially. I mean,
if there's something that we want to accomplish, there's work involved, there's personal
responsibility that we have to take and we have to actually do that.
But it is within our capacity.
It is within our ability.
And gosh, to be able to see that potential that we have as human beings and to realize that that redemptive capacity that exists within each of us is a human characteristic, you know,
to realize that not just the flawed, broken aspects of our humanity, but our potential.
Thanks for taking this ride with me today. I think the question I really want to leave you with
is, what is your potential? And can you ever really know it without the proper mindset?
And I think it goes without saying
that mindset has played a pivotal role in my life
from my days as an elite level competitive swimmer
to piecing my life back together
after a bout with alcoholism that nearly took my life,
then overhauling my entire lifestyle at 40
and reinventing my life several times over,
over the years from lawyer to ultra endurance athlete
to author, podcaster, public speaker,
all of the mindset principles, tactics,
and tools shared in this masterclass
were and continue to be absolutely essential
to my growth and success.
And of course, to my growth and success.
And of course, to the growth and success
of the many guests featured today.
And as sobering a thought as that is for me,
I share it in hopes that you would see my story,
all of these stories, not as unattainable, nor as outliers,
but rather as fuel to inspire your own possibility
for positive personal transformation.
In a masterclass like this, questions should arise.
Has your mindset been your ally
or has it been your nemesis?
What dreams have you been putting off?
What small actions can you take today
to get one step closer to your goals?
I hope you not only enjoyed today's deep dive into mindset, What actions can you take today to get one step closer to your goals?
I hope you not only enjoyed today's deep dive into mindset,
but found it helpful, found it inspiring,
as well as activating.
So let's get out there.
Let's begin applying these mindset tools
to challenge the outer edges of our capabilities,
to celebrate our collective progress,
and of course, support each other's growth along the way.
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Today's show was produced and engineered by Jason Camiolo with additional audio engineering by Cale Curtis.
The video edition of the podcast was created by Blake Curtis
with assistance by our creative director, Dan Drake.
Portraits by Davy Greenberg and Grayson Wilder.
Graphic and social media assets assets courtesy of Jessica Miranda,
Daniel Solis, Dan Drake, and AJ Akpodiete. Thank you, Georgia Whaley, for copywriting and website
management. And of course, our theme music was created by Tyler Pyatt, Trapper Pyatt,
and Harry Mathis. Appreciate the love, love the support. See you back here soon. Peace.
Plants. Thank you.