The School of Greatness - 1087 Mastering Relationships, Marriage & Sex (The SPIRITUAL Keys) w/Pastor Michael Todd
Episode Date: March 22, 2021"Greatness is actually fulfilling what you’re called to do."Today's guest is Michael Todd, the lead pastor of Transformation Church. His driving passion is representing God to the lost and found for... transformation in Christ. His sermons have been viewed over 50 million times online and he recently wrote the book Relationship Goals: How to Win at Dating, Marriage, and Sex as well as Relationship Goals Challenge: Thirty Days from Good to Great.In this episode Lewis and Michael discuss why we should be focusing on progression not perfection, the three main qualities every relationship should be founded on, how to start believing in yourself and all you have to offer, and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1087Read Michael's book: www.iammiketodd.com/relationship-goals YouTube: Transformation ChurchYouTube: Represent TVCheck out: https://www.speedoftrust.com/ The Power of Erotic Intelligence with Esther Perel: https://link.chtbl.com/732-podFind Lasting Love with Matthew Hussey: https://link.chtbl.com/811-pod
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This is episode number 1087 with number one New York Times best-selling author, Pastor Michael
Todd. Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned
lifestyle entrepreneur, and each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you
discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin. how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Joyce Meyer said,
we can improve our relationships with others by leaps and bounds
if we become encouragers instead of critics.
And Paulo Coelho said,
when we love,
we always strive to become better than we are.
When we strive to become better than we are. When we strive to become
better than we are, everything around us becomes better too. My guest today is my new friend,
Pastor Michael Todd, and we had an amazing time together. He is the lead pastor of Transformation
Church. His sermons have been viewed over 50 million times online, and he recently wrote the
number one New York Times bestselling
book, Relationship Goals, How to Win at Dating, Marriage, and Sex, as well as Relationship Goals
Challenge, 30 Days from Good to Great. And in this episode, we discuss why we should be focusing on
progression, not perfection, how to heal your relationships from past issues and traumas,
what happens when you're working on yourself, but your partner is
holding back. I know that's hard for so many. The three main qualities every relationship should be
founded on, how important therapy or counseling is for your relationship, even when things are
great, how to start believing in yourself and all that you have to offer, this and so much more.
I'm so excited and make sure to share this with someone that you think would be inspired
by this as well.
You can copy and paste the link wherever you're listening to this or send people to
lewishouse.com slash 1087 as well as make sure to subscribe here on Apple podcast or
Spotify and leave us a review of the thing you enjoyed the most about this episode.
Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Pastor Michael Todd.
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness. We've got the man, Michael Todd,
in the house. What's going on, my friend? Excited, man. Excited for this. We've been
connected through a bunch of different mutual friends who've tried to connect us for a while.
You're here in town, so we finally got to Kang. It's like a year and a half into making it.
We had an amazing conversation for 30 minutes before that I wish we were recorded, but now
we can do it all over again.
Let's go.
You've got an amazing book called Relationship Goals, How to Win at Dating, Marriage, and
Sex.
Yeah.
And this kind of challenge book, which is cool too, Relationship Goals Challenge, 30
Days from Good to Great, where you're talking about all things relationships.
But first, I want to learn more about how you got into being in a good to great. We're going to be talking about all things relationships. But first,
I want to learn more about how you got into being in a good to a great relationship. And were you always great as a man in relationships? Or did you have a dark past where you were a liar,
cheater, stealer, have all these negative thoughts, thinking about other women? Did you do
all that as well? Yeah. So I think number one,, the answer to the question is, yes, I was the guy you did not want to bring home.
I was not a good person. I had allowed a lot of images, cultural pictures of success as a man in relationship to define who I was.
I wanted the multiple people I wanted to be with her, with her, with her, with her,
like all of those things. All of it. I was, I was, I was warped in my mentality because of what I
had seen, what I thought success in relationship was and what I experienced. And so, uh, yeah,
I was, I was in a place that was not healthy relationally from a young age.
And it didn't help that there was nobody actually talking about it.
Right. So it was that was that more cultural or was that more parenting style?
I think it's all was it. I think it was. I have an amazing set of parents.
My parents have been married for 40 plus years. Um, uh, people who were raised us
in faith and go to church every Sunday. But one of the things that I tell a lot of people, um,
that didn't have a strong faith background is a lot of times we're in the same place when we get
25 anyway, because, um, there were a lot of things that weren't talked about. Even if you went to
church and you did all this other stuff, it's like we didn't talk about relationships. And so only rule they gave us is don't have sex before you got
married. Oops, like that one up like and there was no more communication. And so I was left in this
in this huge, intriguing world to try to figure out my path to what successful relationship look
like with no playbook, with no instruction,
with nobody giving me authentically what it looked like. And then I had all this perversion
and wrong thoughts and ideas that were a part of my journey. And it was just a mess. And
the reason that I'm sitting here today is weird because I went through this journey of discovering how relationships should work and why they didn't work this way and why the thought process I had were wrong.
And why did my addiction to pornography change the view of how I saw beautiful women as opposed to this?
beautiful women as opposed to this. Like it was going through all of these different things.
And I was able to do that and repair and strengthen and renew a relationship with the same girl that I was with from 14 years old to where now we've been married 10 years. We lead
a very large organization that helps people be able to discover purpose in their relationship.
And I'm more in love today. I was telling you outside with no cameras on how how fulfilled and excited.
And I'm wearing my wife right now on my T-shirt. Somebody's like, why are you wearing your wife?
I was like, I wear luxury. You know what I'm saying?
But I mean, in my mind, it's like I have totally transformed from where I was to who I am now.
And that took a long journey of discovering through faith and a lot of wisdom.
Are there any moments over the last four years since you've grown in more popularity, social media, your own church, the world that follows you.
There are moments where those thoughts of, that's an attractive moment.
I wonder what that would be like.
That's interesting over there.
Have those moments, have those thoughts come in at all?
And if so, how do you transparently communicate that?
Do you hide that from yourself and your wife?
Or what do you do to stay focused? Yeah. So my nature
comes from human nature, right? I'm a man. When I got married, everybody didn't get ugly. And when
let's be very clear, like there are things that we desire. We like, we see all of those other
things. The difference is I have disciplined myself. I've become a disciple, a disciplined one is what that word means.
And it means that you can see something that is good, that you do like, that you do want,
and you have been able to beat your body into subjection or beat your mind into subjection
or do the reps enough times to know that that cake look good,
but that's going to cost me for my end goal. And that's for me is the thing that I bring to every
area of my life. That may look good. That business opportunity may look good. That partnership may
look good. That person may look good, but is that going against what I want my end goal to be?
Or is that actually going to help me get to that thing? And I think a lot of people are so driven
by their desires that they don't become disciplined. That my desire has more control over
me than the thing that I've disciplined myself to do. And it's crazy because our culture tribe is
like, do what you feel. No, you can't always do what you feel because there's a cost and a consequence
to doing what you feel. And I think a lot of times, especially a lot of faith leaders try
to negate the feeling. The feeling's real, but your reaction to the feeling is where your
discipline comes in. And I think a lot of us have to become more focused on creating small disciplines every
day that allow us to reach the end destination. My dream is to be married to one woman for my
entire life, for my four kids to look at me and say, this is not a man who followed just his
desires, but he was disciplined enough to challenge himself every
day with social media, with the world around, with everything at his fingertips, that he was so
strong that he took my mother who bodies changed, whose, whose moods changed, who doesn't look like
what she looked like when they first met, she looked better. And like, but he stayed with that and showed us how to love somebody. It doesn't take a great man
to learn how to love multiple women. It takes a great, great man to learn how to
meet the needs of one woman for a lifetime. Wow. And those are the things that for me,
that's the goal. So when I see something pretty that walked by, my God, that was nice. God,
you're good in all of your creations. But me and my wife have developed a open relationship
of communication that we understand like, y'all, like you're still a human, but you're a human
that has become disciplined. And my disciplines now help me reach my destiny and I think that's where
um you can literally apply that to any eating like it like everything any money spending money
everything that's that's what I'm at what um so how does the communication work let's say you're
together yeah and you see God's creation in front of not her and you're like oh that's that's a good
creation uh-huh well that's
attractive that's interesting will you openly communicate is there transparency or and will
you talk about it openly or does that not work so me and my wife have been together long enough
that she knows like she's like would you look at her like i you know what i didn't see it like you
know and the same thing with you know i'm saying i don't got a six-pack yet but you know what I'm saying there's certain things that are attractive to her and we have a lot of
joy in our relationship and and a lot of fun like and so I usually make jokes about it I make light
about it it was like oh oh so you think that he looked better than me or like I'll do that but
it's a way of us making sure that we don't isolate our feelings. At the moment you start isolating what you actually feel, that is the crack that starts dissension.
What do you mean by isolate?
When you start isolation is what I call the enemy's playground.
When he can get you on or anybody can get you in your own little world on an island isolated.
This is how you really feel.
But you act like you
don't feel that and all that other stuff that's when so many deceptions wrong thoughts coping
mechanisms start in isolation the only reason a lot of times we do things to cope is because we
didn't know where we could go to actually do it in a healthy way shameful we feel shameful this is
wrong and so when you get isolated well i, I only, I only, that made me
feel good for this moment. I had to pop that pill just to make it through the day. I had to drink
that drink to be able to go here. I had to look at that website just to bring down my, like,
and then it starts that isolation coping mechanism turns into habits. Habits didn't need to be fed.
Then you start making room for your habits and then addictions. Yeah. And then they turn into addictions and now your addictions rule your life and now
you will look at something that you chose and that you really want to be
good and you don't even have power to say yes to the right thing and no to the
wrong thing because in isolation you form this whole thing that now you have
to feed so it that seemed like a lot for just a little thing, but that's why it's so
important to have in your relationship communication to be able to talk about things that are real
in unity. And I believe there's a commanded blessing on a relationship when there's unity.
There is a level of authenticity that's attractive attractive when there's unity but where there's
separate visions or division like you think about it like this or they think about it like this
that's where everything crumbles and so um how do you get to a place of unity vision if two people
see the world in a different way honesty like there are so many people not actually being truthful about who they are today. Not that
you don't want to be better. Not that there's not more for you, but today you're faking like today.
You're a liar today. You got up and put on a mask. And I always say it to like this, to my
congregation, to the people that listen to me, I say, God doesn't bless who you pretend to be.
He blesses who you really are. Like, and a lot of people try to make this performance thing for like
God and people and my family, because this is what they want. And I was like, there's a blessing
on who you actually are, even if it's not good today, because then you can start from there
and actually become who you really want to be or a better version of who you are.
But if you're telling me, I mean, just think about it. I'm in L.A. right now. I've never been here
before. I don't know where this is. So when you sent me the address to do this, the first thing
my phone asked me is, can I use your current location? What if I told Siri or told the map
that I was somewhere I wasn't?
It would have given me directions.
From the wrong place.
From the wrong place.
And you wouldn't have gotten here.
And I would have never reached this destination and been looking at your amazing smile if I wouldn't have been honest about where I was at.
Interesting.
Even if it's a bad place, even if it's dark, shameful, even if I'm lost, broken, hurting, beaten down, abused mentally,
emotionally, spiritually, if I'm honest about where I am today, that is the only way that I can get to
my better tomorrow. And so when it comes, why are we lying to ourselves so much? Because it is
shameful. And a lot of times we hate that we got there. We had ourselves, we hate ourselves
that we got there. How in the world did I get to this place? How do I need these pills to go to
sleep or to wake up? How in the world do I have to keep kissing their butt to still work at this
job? Like, this is not me. This is not who I want. And so because we have disdain for who we have become, it's like if we acknowledge it, that reinforces that we're actually there and maybe we can't live with that.
And so it's this vicious cycle of faking to make it.
And that's why a lot of people say you've got to fake it till you make it. I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Face it. Face it so you can make it be real so that you can actually move on to there.
And a lot of people are delaying the inevitable. You can't hold up a facade forever.
No. At some point, it's going to crumble. The sad thing is a lot of time it crumbles when it has more people to damage.
A lot of time. Almost always. Right. Yeah. A lot of time it crumbles.
Now I have three children and they're in relationships.
And now everything's dependent on me.
And I've built this empire of podcasting or business or fitness.
And now I'm in this space and place that if I'm honest, it'll cost too much.
May I submit to you, if you're not honest, it's going to cost you too much.
Yeah, I'm already on one, Lewis.
Let me stop.
So have you had to heal in the last 10 years your relationship from stuff that happens every year?
Or is it only stuff from 10 years ago that you guys have to work on?
Bro, you know the answer to this question, man.
I'm a flawed man. My wife is a flawed woman. Um, we serve, uh, an amazing God. We were people of faith.
Um, but he knew we were going to mess up and there was, there was, there was a room in the plan
for imperfection. Like, that's what I always tell people. Cause I'm a pastor and people know I'm a
person of faith and they think I'm just going to throw the Bible at them all the time. And what I always tell people because I'm a pastor and people know I'm a person of faith and they think I'm just going to throw the Bible at them all the time.
And what I tell them, I was like, no, no, no. Just first look at my life.
Like I've experienced amazing grace and now I have to extend amazing grace and I have to receive amazing grace because I'm still going to mess up.
My wife had to forgive me for something before I came up here.
You know what I'm saying? Like this is a daily walk. But that's why I tell everybody the beautiful thing about journey.
If you can get this stuck in your brain and in your heart, really, is that this life is about progression, not perfection.
I know culture sells us perfection. I know your parents may have wanted perfection from you.
I know you've probably required perfection of yourself, but that is the wrong metric.
from you. I know you've probably required perfection of yourself, but that is the wrong metric. This is about progression. How much did you move forward from yesterday to today? Or how
much did you move past? I know you wanted to cuss them out last week, but you only said one cuss
word this week. You know what I'm saying? Or last year it was about being successful. You didn't
take any breaks, but this year you actually took a few days and had soul care and self-care and spiritual enlightenment and getting back in your place of faith.
Like, how did you progress? And I think for me in all of my relationships, especially the one with my wife, the one that I'm in covenant with, I have to know that I'm going to need grace because I'm still figuring it out.
have to know that I'm going to need grace because I'm still figuring it out. Right. Like there's nobody, anybody on earth that says they're a relationship expert are liars. Nobody knows
everything about all relationships. We're just trying to share from our journey and truth that
we've experienced. And, um, I know for me that in the journey that I'm in right now, I make a lot
less mistakes than I made 10 years ago because I've progressed.
But am I going to make more mistakes the next 10 minutes? Probably. You know what I'm saying?
And so it is daily. And yeah, there's tons of healing that has to happen from every lie,
from every deception, from every wrong word that was spoken. I tell people this because a relationship is all about trust.
And this is the thing that people don't really factor in. You can spend decades, years, months building trust. But this is the truth. Trust is lost in buckets, but gain back in drops.
So you could have an entire five gallon bucket of trust built up Yeah But one thing that you never said you would do you do and the whole bucket goes out gone
And now you have to come back in every day drop by drop drop by drop. You don't get a
Trust built back up and that's where most relationships fail is because they lost
The trust and they were not diligent enough to build it back up.
Because it takes a lot of work.
But the problem is you have history with that person.
And a lot of times they would rather start over with somebody else to do the same exact thing
instead of going back and, yeah, it sucks.
Yeah.
No, didn't we talk about this?
You know, I don't, you know, oh, come on.
But no, this is valuable.
And I'm the one who tipped this thing over.
And so I'm going to be the one to be consistent enough or disciplined enough to put those
drops back in.
What's been the biggest lesson for you in the last 10 years of putting drops back in
over a decade plus with your wife?
What's the lesson you've learned as a human being through that discipline,
through that daily drop after breaking trust back in the past? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um, trust is way
more valuable than money. Trust is way more valuable than connection. Trust is way more
valuable. Um, there's a book that I encourage everybody to read. It's called The Speed of Trust. And it basically, the premise is that where there's trust,
everything takes less energy.
It takes less money and it has better results.
But where there is no trust, it takes more energy.
It takes more money and there are minimal results.
And you can apply this to business, relationships.
You can apply it to business relationships. You can provide to your family. And I think our culture is one that doesn't trust. We, you prove to me. And, and, and,
and at the moment that we don't, um, go into situations with trust, there's this disconnection
that doesn't allow people like the vibes, not right. Or all these different sayings. I think
for me, I've learned that trust
is probably a higher commodity than anything else. My greatest relationship, me and my wife,
Natalie don't have to be doing anything, but when I'm in a bed in a hotel with a woman that I fully
trust, it's more satisfying than any platform I've ever been on. It's more euphoric. It's more
when I can say something and somebody believes me and I don't
have to prove it to them, but they know what I'm saying is real. That's amazing feeling. Oh,
what are you talking about? Name the places you get that name, the places you got to make
presentations to make people you pay. Believe you. Come on. Let's be honest. Like there,
because they're still not full trust there. But when you put in so much trust that that person, your yes is a yes and your no is a no.
And they fully trust what you say. Yeah.
When I told my wife that I was going to take care of her and I would never hurt her again.
And to be able to now 10 years removed, we just did a 10 year vow renewal
and we went out to the sand desert. And now it was me and our three kids and we're sitting there
and glass runway it's on YouTube. And we just like, it was just the most beautiful thing to
look into her eyes and say the words unscripted that came from my heart and to look at her and knew they were hitting her heart and
she fully trusted what I said, you can't tell me nothing. There's no feeling like that. And
the sad truth, Lewis, is most people will never feel that. They will never know what it is to
have another human being with your flaws, with knowing the worst about you. I can't hide from
my wife. She knows everything that I do. She knows when I do take showers, when knowing the worst about you. I can't hide from my wife. She knows everything
that I do. She knows when I do take showers, when I don't take showers, she knows when I leave the
toilet seat up or when I put it down. So, you know, like, so in the most vulnerable place,
she knows when I do my workout and when I don't. Like, I can't hide from her. I can hide from
people on social media. I can hide from people that are, that I work with, but from her,
people on social media. I can hide from people that I work with. But from her, I'm vulnerable.
And to know when I speak, she trusts it. It was well worth everything that I had to do.
And what happens if you are 100% in integrity with your word? You're following through,
you're being honest, you're showing up, you're delivering in a relationship, but the person doesn't trust you
after years. And you're like, you have access to my phone. You have my passwords. You know where
I'm at 24 seven. And you still don't trust me. Is that still my responsibility or is that the
other partner's work they get to do? So the beautiful thing about the story that I'm telling
you, I'm telling you from my side. But if you were to talk to my wife right now, there were things
she had to do on her own during this whole process, or she wouldn't have made it. She wasn't
sitting there like prove to me that you wouldn't know there was self-discovery. She was going on.
Do I want to stay in this relationship? Is this worth it? What do I bring? What do I have? What
am I worth? And that's why I tell people all the time, no matter if you're a couple, you're still
single. Like even though you're in a relationship
you still have to be single enough to continue to improve a lot of people stop improving once they
get in a relationship like i got it like that's what i need to do i made it and all that other
stuff but when you are in a relationship there are still two very single people that need to work on
their communication work on their insecurities work on their ability to communicate work like and if you stop developing your singleness in
marriage or in relationship that relationship come on is headed for at
one per one point for somebody to be on another level be like this is not what
we signed up for hey I thought we were partners I thought we were we were doing
this together I thought we were growing and going towards this together. And that's why I encourage people all the time. Like, what have you brought to the relationship lately? Like, what skills have you improved in? What has your emotional intelligence gone to another level? Has your spiritual awareness gone to another level? Has your faith gone to another level? Has your, have you learned a new language? So when we go on our vacation two years from now, we don't get swindled at the,
you know, like what are you bringing to the relationship? And I just would encourage
every couple not to focus on, because when I say this, a lot of times they'd be like,
so you ain't brought none to the relationship in three years, Kathy. Like, hold on, hold on one
second. Like, no, ask yourself,
what have you brought to the relationship?
And if you both are asking yourself,
that's part of the reason we wrote this book,
Taking Your Relationship from Good to Great,
because it allows people to evaluate
where they're at spiritually, emotionally,
and then be able to say,
what do I need to change?
How do I need to do this?
And that's the only way that you can go
from good to great in any relationship.
My friend Matthew Hussey talks about this.
He talks about relationships from women
on how to really attract the right man in their life,
the right partner.
And he said to me one time,
if you want to find a great partner,
make a list of all the things you want from them
and then become that list yourself. Whatever you want in someone else, you need to become that first and really add that
value to them as well. It's kind of like what I'm hearing you say is, okay, after a year, two,
five, 10 years, you have to keep becoming that list yourself to keep that partner excited or
engaged and trustworthy and connected. And both parties have to be working on that list.
Is that right?
Now, I have a little different perspective on the list because sometimes the list limits you.
Tell me more.
So I tell people a lot of time because specifically a lot of my sisters, a lot of, they make lists.
Now, they got lists.
He got to be 6'5".
He's got to have this amount of money.
But are they becoming the things that they want from the qualities, not the things? The qualities. They make lists. Now, they got lists. He got to be 6'5". He's got to have this amount of money. He's got to do that.
But are they becoming the things that they want from the qualities, not the things?
The qualities, yes.
Yeah, and that's the thing.
Sometimes I do believe that there are certain things that you need to be able to lay out
and really ask yourself, am I becoming those things?
I don't think, though, the package always comes the way you think it's going to come.
And so a lot of times- Like 6'5 and and and all kinds of things even some of the qualities because the thing is
i tell people this you write down what you want i believe god factors in with your mate what you
need to see the problem is like if you ask natalie i'm not what she wanted what did she want she wanted
uh some big uh hispanic uh uh model for lotion like she wanted somebody you know what i'm saying
the typical beautiful but what she needed was me and and when you look a lot of people make these
lists at the beginning of their list but somebody needs to start a podcast interviewing couples who actually made it.
Right.
So somebody, you maybe need to do a series of relationships who lasted for 40 plus years.
That thrived.
That thrived.
Not that stayed together and resented each other.
And not that were business partners.
Right.
That thrived.
partners right that thrived because if you ask a lot of them which I did a lot of research on writing relationship goals the book when you ask them most of
them did not get what they wanted on their list they got what they found out
they needed and the honestly the things that I need I don't never write down on
the list because I need somebody to help encourage me when I want to go have ice
cream instead of stick to my doctor I don't write that down on the list. I just write down, I want somebody supportive.
Well, in my mind, when I'm writing that down on the list, I'm thinking support me in whatever
I'm feeling at that moment. Maybe not support me in what I've decided in a different moment.
And I need that, but it's not necessarily that I want it. And I found out that a lot of times when you rip up the list and start becoming the best version of you that you can be, you will then begin to see that I am now worthy and worth being with somebody who's worthy and worth being with. You don't settle for a lot less. And that's why I called it a relationship goal.
I know it's a proper, a popular term in culture.
But I said people aren't doing good at relationship is because they don't have aim.
Like they're not aiming at a goal that actually is going to produce the greatest end for them.
And so that's my whole thought about it.
I do believe you got to become your best version,
your best self.
But then when you do that,
a lot of times it creates an entitlement in people
that they will dismiss the right thing
because of the wrong package.
And what happens if you continue to be your best version
year after year
and the other person's not willing to go on that journey?
Yeah.
Is it till death do we part?
Even if they're constantly pulling you down and saying, I'm not going to work on myself.
Yeah.
You do all the work.
I don't trust you.
Even if you're 100% honest.
Yeah.
Is it, you know, is that what you do?
There's always provision in a relationship, especially when there's infidelity and there's different
things that have happened that this may be an unhealthy situation that we can't progress in.
I honestly feel, though, a lot of people give up too soon on that. Nothing good ever comes out of
the easy way. There is nothing great, I'll say great. That comes out of easy. If it's going
to be great, there's gotta be some work that goes into it. Some pain. So there's gotta be some pain.
There's gotta be discomfort. There's gotta be, do I got to do this again? Are we still talking
about this? And I really do believe in our society today that we rush into things because we know how easy we can get out of
them instead of taking the time. That's honestly why our written books and done series and millions
of people have watched it because I'm trying to convince people like, hey, like, take this
seriously. It's not just like, oh, we met at the bar. We hooked up. We lived together. Now we should make a life together. And I'm not saying
that people haven't been in relationships that have worked like that. I'm just saying that
if you had to take a test to get a driver's license and be able to drive legally in your state,
it's easier to get in a relationship with somebody, build a marriage,
have kids that are going to affect the rest of us with no actual preparation, no training,
no required reading, no counseling, no honesty. Like, no, like, hey, just before we get married,
let me tell you how much debt I'm in. Hey, just before we get married, let me tell you that your friend and that friend and that friend.
I slept with all of them just because there's no requirements.
And that's why I'm saying if if we don't put that in and build that into the relationships we want, how can we expect it's gambling?
It's like maybe this will work or maybe it won't i think
we can be more intentional on setting a real goal and i believe those goals need to be um
put on principles that have lasted in faith that can last for a long time man what are the main
principles that every relationship should be founded upon bro i wrote a whole book about it
i'm gonna give you three of them three let me give you three of them. The first thing has to be transparency. Yeah. About everything. Everything.
Like I had this thought. Yeah. I looked at this. I did. Any idea? So, so I don't, I'll say this.
You have to be wise because you, you have to, depending on the layer of relationship you're
in right now, if you just meet somebody today and you don't even know if you want to be with them,
I don't think it's wise that you, you, you tell them everything. But I do believe that there's a
difference between transparency and honesty. And many people have adopted the thought process and
the philosophy of being honest, but not transparent. Honesty is when you ask me,
I'll tell you the truth. But until then but until then I'm hiding something
Yes, and a lot of times most of us don't get asked the questions that we need to answer
Those questions are scary. Oh my gosh
They're scary to ask and you don't want to know the answers and you don't want to know a lot of times and and then it
Automatically if the person is not emotionally, um
Secure enough then you're like what you don't trust me
Like there's so many different things that are there and that's why I always ascribe to the philosophy of being transparent. You don't
have to ask me, I'm going to offer it up. I'm going to tell you, hey, when you talk to that
guy at the restaurant, that made me feel some type of way. And it made me really start thinking
about the insecurities of my last relationship and why we broke up. And I'm not asking you to solve it at this moment, but I'm letting you know how that made me feel.
And I'm just going to process with that. There's no question that your mate could have asked to get that response that genuinely, because then they'll say something like this.
response that genuinely, because then they'll say something like this. Are you OK? Yeah, I'm fine.
And the truth is, no, you're not. But I don't emotionally know how to let you know that that honestly, it wasn't really what you did. It's what I've been through.
Yeah. That triggered something in me. And now I'm insecure about what I know I have.
But it's because of what happened to me. Like, sure. But that takes being transparent.
And what I found is when I'm transparent, it honestly provides more empathy from the other person to be able to, man, I'm sorry you felt that way.
Well, what can I do?
And like that then is deepening that relationship more than it is creating a wedge between it.
more than it is creating a wedge between it.
So I would say, number one, transparency has to be the top thing that you have in a relationship. I think that you need to have common faith goals.
I think for me, a lot of things that I found in relationship is a lot of people like each other,
but what their faith is founded on are two totally different
things. And I think you should be equally yoked in the, or equally compatible in the things that
you believe. And when you do that, it's more easy, it's easier to have conversations about
how to raise children, finances. It's easier to be able to go to, for me and my wife, we're
Christians that believe in the
Bible. And so there are certain things that we disagree on and then we can go to the Bible and
we'll be like, okay, but this is something that we believe together. Let's wrestle through this.
Let's work through this. Let's, how does that make you feel? Let's ask somebody. There are so many
problems that have been solved because we believe the same things foundationally in our faith. And I'm encouraging
people a lot of times that when you do that, it creates a foundation that moves past emotions.
A lot of times that triggers. Yeah. It's just like, well, I can't get it and I can't get it.
But then when you go to certain things, love is patient. Love is kind. Love keeps no record of
wrong. First Corinthians 13 is jacking me up right now love
offers forgiveness love Oh love is long-suffering like these are words that we have adopted from a
book that we believe has truth in it and principles to live by and because we're on the same level in that faith, it corrects us sometimes when we
don't want to be corrected. And that's where I tell people the Bible is one of the only books
you can read that when you read it, it reads you like, and, and for us that has helped us.
And so transparency, having strong faith foundations. And then the third thing that
I would say is fun. If if you cannot have fun with the
person that you're in relationship with good luck like good because there's certain things life is
hard it is hard there will be trouble it's promised but but if you can find somebody to look
at in the in the darkest part of the valley and laugh and laugh with them. It happened to me and Natalie on the plane yesterday.
I told you before we brought two of our daughters with us and they're seven and three years old.
And we're on a plane from Tulsa to L.A. three and a half hours.
You can imagine all the fruit snacks and the iPads and all of the crying, crying, just the whole nine.
And my wife is pregnant right now so put
that on top of it so and she's trying to eat and i'm sitting in the chair next to her and something
drops off of her plate and i can just i can see the breakdown just right up ahead like a movie
and i just look at her and just start laughing and she sees me and she breaks out and for 20 minutes laughing we are dying on the
plane not because everything's good because we have somebody to be through and go through
everything with us and that joy i mean literally we got off the plane and all that stuff she said
i haven't laughed like that in so long and And she was just kept laughing about it. And those are the moments that I found,
like I told you a little bit before, but our son, MJ, he's five. He was diagnosed with autism.
And this has been the greatest emotional faith journey that we've been on. He's five years old, still nonverbal. I'm the guy of
faith. I lead a church. I'm a pastor. I believe. And in my home, there's a situation that has not
changed yet. And it's challenged everything. The one thing that has gotten us through, or excuse
me, the three things that have gotten us through are the three things I just gave you. Transparency,
Excuse me, the three things that have gotten us through the three things I just gave you.
Transparency, our faith foundation being the same and being a fun. I wouldn't be sitting here today talking to you on my way to a fourth child after my wife battling depression, me challenging my calling, trying to figure out why is this happening at the moment where everything great in my life is happening.
the moment where everything great in my life is happening.
And it's those three things,
being transparent about how I felt and my emotions and her being transparent about how she felt
and her emotions and having our faith anchored
to something that was stronger than us
and us having fun that I told you before we came in here,
I am having the most fun in relationship.
I'm not faking, this is authentic.
This is the joy that I have to be
because we have decided that there's some principles
we have to live by that most people aren't gonna show you
in reality television.
Most people aren't gonna give you in a blog or a tabloid.
And it has to be lived out
and that's what we're trying to do.
What has been the biggest challenge for you
during the rise of your personal brand success, That's what we're trying to do. What has been the biggest challenge for you
during the rise of your personal brand success,
the church success, the audience growth,
the financial growth?
What has been the biggest challenge emotionally
on how you've handled the emotional weight
with the information about your son,
the stuff with your wife, and everything. How do you
personally manage the emotional weight? So there's a scripture that I go to all the time. And just
because I'm a man of faith, there's a scripture that says, cast all your cares on the Lord because
he cares about you. I have to, I have to offload daily and most people carry daily. They keep picking up more. They
keep picking up more. And every day I go to my secret place of meditation, of, of spending
time with my creator. And I say, Hey, everything that's happening in this life, I'm casting
it on you. Cause you care for me. I'm mentally casting
it. I'm not going to, I got to let that go. I cannot, I can't fix the situation. If I could
pay for MJ to talk, I would, but I can't. So I'm casting it. I have this organization that's
reaching millions of people and I've never led anything like this in my life before. I have people's jobs
and lives and benefits and everything, but I'm casting it. And what ends up happening is it
doesn't make it go away. It just means I don't have to carry it alone. The weight, the weight,
that's where anxiety and pressure and bad decisions and not resting and all that other
stuff comes from. Imagine going to the gym and doing squats,
200 pounds on, you do the squats,
you do your 10 of them, killing, Lewis Howes a beast.
Imagine walking out of the gym with that on your shoulders,
driving with that on your shoulders.
That's exhausting.
Doing the podcast with it on your shoulder.
Can't sustain it.
You cannot sustain it.
And I think the weight of life people feel that
they have to carry all the time by themselves it doesn't mean that i'm not gonna have to squat
stuff every day but i'm gonna squat it and then i'm gonna cast it do you think there's a way for
people that aren't in your faith yeah who don't believe yeah in the same things you believe is
there a way for people to let go of that weight,
even if they don't have the same faith? I believe there's a way to start that process.
I believe the first thing that you have to realize is you're not in control.
No matter what faith, no matter what you believe, where you came from,
make the sun come up 20 minutes early. You can't. Add another hour to the day.
And I think there's this false sense in a lot of our beliefs that make us feel like we're in control of stuff.
There are certain things you are in control of, but there are so many more that you're not in control.
The business felt coronavirus. Who? We didn't. How?
How? Like. And so I think that if you first recognize that you're not in control, then it gives you the ability to see what you are in control of.
You are in control of the toxic relationships you let into my life, why we've been able to sustain and be
anchored is because I made some very hard decisions to do less when everybody was telling me to do
more. I can't control that. My son, um, has to go to therapy three times a week and I can't control
what's happening with this business and with this, but I can control what I do.
So when we went from four speaking engagement requests in 2017 to over 3000 a year later,
crazy nuts. I still did less than five. Really? Because I knew that I couldn't control everything, but what I could control is the pace and that I was graced for. Like, I believe everybody has a pace that they go, that they're graced for.
And anything that you do outside of what you're graced to do, you have to sustain or carry that
weight by yourself. How many people, you got a successful business, but somebody told you, you need to double it. So you started another one and now the other
one's killing you. You were graced to be successful at that business, but because now you've seen some
success and you want to do it. Now you're going to lose your family three years from now because
what was supposed to be enjoyable and now give you freedom to be able to spend time with your wife,
your kids, your, your family, your whatever like that. Now you've put something else you weren't graced for,
and now you're falling under the weight. Those are the things that I really do believe that when
people step back out of this, like, I got it all handled kind of mentality and say, hold on,
I can't control everything, but there are certain things I can control. And they start taking off
the things that they, they, that awaits on their life. Like, and, and putting those aside, I believe that gives
you the margin. This is a big word that people need to adapt in 2021 is margin. Most people do
not have margin for life. They don't have a margin of time, space, mental energy, money, right?
Nothing. So at the moment you're, you're at the brink of everything.
And when life happens, because it's going to happen.
You're going to break down, man.
And this is why.
You can't hold it all up.
This is why somebody that's worth a half a billion dollars can jump off a building.
Because you got everything.
You got all the connections. You got everything.
It's because there was no margin. There was no relational margin. There was no financial margin.
There was no spirit. And I don't know what it is for every individual, but everybody has to be able
to evaluate that in their own life. And I think that is something that is key to everybody being
healthy. I think I heard on an interview you talked about where you had a mentor that taught you about or just told you, hey, listen, as you continue to grow, it's going to be important to have space, time every year that's just for you and family.
Yeah.
When was that?
Who was that?
And how has that process been?
So I am grateful and thank God for mentors, ones that I've met and ones that I haven't met through books and all that other stuff, because you don't know what you don't know.
But you can learn from people who have been there before.
And I became the lead pastor of a church in 2015, Transformation Church.
And shout out to Transformation Nation. Anybody watching, I love you.
Um, and shout out to transformation nation. Anybody watching, I love you. Um, but I, uh, became the pastor of that church. And what ended up happening was, uh, mentor set me down. His
name is Tim Ross out of Dallas, Texas. And, um, this was such a divine moment in my life.
I was 27, 26 when he told me this and I'm about to take over this church. I didn't know anything about leading
this type of congregation. I was a music producer. I was supposed to be at the Grammys. And now I'm
about to be a pastor of a church. I'm like, what in the world is going on? And he said, listen,
you're going to need a month break every year so that you can be able to calibrate
what has happened to you, how to heal from it and how
you move forward. And I'm like, there's no way I can do this. It's February and I'm about to be
over the, be the pastor of the church. And I'm leaving in June for a month. I was like, I'm
gonna come back. There's no church going to be there. The building's going to be burnt down.
All that. He said, no, no, no, no, no. I i'm telling you if you don't take time he's like even if it's not a month whatever you can get if you don't take time to do
this he said you're gonna look up and be somebody you don't want to be and i had the presence of
mind to say all right i trust you i don't know that i'm gonna when i tell you, Lewis, that this has given me more mental clarity about my calling, my relationships, my family, my future, and my success than any other thing.
It's better than meeting anybody.
It's better than networking. It's I get to be with me and my
creator and decompressed and relax and celebrate and grieve and be able to grow. And, and it's
like, it's like being flushed out and ready and open for whatever's next. And it has been the
most life giving relationship goals happened after I was on sabbatical.
Like every great thing that I've ever done came after I took a break.
And it was almost like the blessing of like stepping back and creating margin and saying like I could be working.
I could be doing more. I could do it. But what does it all mean if I gain the whole world and lose my own soul?
My own mind, will and emotions are bankrupt and corroded and and and jacked up.
What does it mean if I get everything but I feel empty on the inside?
And the truth is, that's how many people are living right now. They got it all.
The truth is, that's how many people are living right now. They got it all.
But it's hollow. And every year, like clockwork in the summer, I take a month, month and a half off. I make sure my team is equipped. We build a whole year around it.
And everybody doesn't have that luxury to be able to do that. But you have more than you think you do.
There's two weeks of vacation that you're going to be stressed out.
One of those weeks trying to create a family memory for this one week with a family you haven't seen all year.
That's the hard, the hard truth about it. And now it's a hard vacation. You go into debt for it.
You spend money doing stuff and it doesn't come out the way you could spread that out. And every
Friday is family day and you create that margin. and the first part of the day you spend time by yourself so you
don't choke your kids when you get with them.
And then after school you've planned something like I'm just saying that our society has
become so driven.
So go get it.
So grind.
So all this stuff and people are going to achieve success and lose significance.
They're going to achieve the thing they wrote on their dream board and
it's going to be powder. It's going to be so hollow on the inside. I counsel people all the
time that have everything and more that they ever wanted and they're still searching for more.
How? It's because maybe the focus, we were sold a lie. success doesn't always mean bigger more greater now i know i'm
gonna lose some people right here because everybody thinks success is bigger more greater
but what if success is fulfillment what if success is doing that thing you were purposed to do
even if it doesn't pay a lot what if success, I know this is countercultural, the school of greatness.
Everybody wants to be great. But what if great is raising your kids and making sure they're
whole on the inside so that they can do what they've been called to do? Like, and I just feel
like we try to do this one size fits all that everybody has to have a million people on
Instagram and a huge YouTube and be affected
in magazines and everything. And that's not necessarily greatness for everybody. It might
be greatness for you. It might be greatness for me. It might be greatness for the next person,
but greatness for people is fulfilling their purpose. And once you figure what that is,
what God's divinely, um, a wired everybody to do and you're actually
walking in that and that's where for me I am if nobody watches anymore if we
sell no more books if if if nothing happens but I'm with me my wife and my
four kids and I'm helping somebody in their life, their faith walk, their relationship.
I'll be fulfilled.
Wow.
I'll be doing what I know I was created to do.
The sad part about this statement is many people, it's not enough to just do what you were created to do.
You have to be applauded to do it.
You have to have the extras, the audience,
the audience, the money, the everything. I have found out specifically with having a son with
autism that all of it's hollow. It's great. It's nice. It's awesome. But there are things in life
that are way more important than the things that I used to make very important. And now that I've found those
things, I just want to give that away to other people. I want to help them discover what that
is in their own life so that they can win in relationships, win in business, win everywhere
else. And I just feel like that's my mission. What's the biggest challenge you've had with this
opportunity with your son in terms with your relationship, your marriage? What's
the biggest challenge you've had as a couple with that opportunity of your son and what he's going
through? Yeah. I think one of the things that every couple has to figure out for themselves
is how you communicate during trauma. A lot of people have one style of communication when everything's going good. But when there's trauma, your communications change.
For my wife, in trauma, she wants to communicate about it and talk about it.
In trauma, I want to think about it and fix it.
That's my nature.
And that's most men's nature is to try to figure out the person you love is
suffering or hurting, like, let's move on. And so there's been a lot of times that I've had to
learn to just listen and just sit with you and just get down in the hole with you and just say,
I'm sorry you feel that way. And I understand. And that at the beginning of this process was
very difficult for me. It was very difficult for me. I'm like, well, let's let's call every doctor and let's do it like like.
And but that wasn't helping her. What she needed to know is that somebody was with it in her with her at the place she was at.
And so we did probably three, four weeks of intensive counseling.
And when I say intensive, I'm not talking like,
oh, we go once a week.
We went every day for three hours a day
for a week straight.
Just you and her.
Just me and her and a counselor.
Every day for three days for a week,
three hours for a week straight.
What did you discover or what did you heal
or what did you create from that process number one thing that i learned about myself is that i don't like um
discomfort and so i will i will run i will run out of it i'll avoid it i'll fix it let's go on
the trip whatever let's go like and um she the counselor one day said to me, she said,
you're not going to be able to finesse your way out of this one. You're going to have to feel it.
Dang. It's going to be uncomfortable. And then you'll be able to walk together through it.
And I think for me, that was like, nah, there's gotta be another way. Like there's got like,
you know what I'm saying? There's got to be something else.
Why don't you like to feel these things?
I think for me, my mind always works like there's got to be an easier way to make everything better.
And for me, I'm a problem solver.
So what happens when you tell a problem solver, don't solve the problem?
What? Like, don't solve the problem. And I think it's been one of the most powerful things.
It's been strength under control, meekness. I've tapped into another level of power to know that I could do something, but I'm choosing not to because the other person needs this.
When you talk about sacrifice in relationship, that's a lot of times what it looks like.
It's you knowing you could get over this really quick, but doing the thing. So both of you cross
the finish line together. See, a lot of times when there's a problem, the thought process is,
Hey, like you ain't over that yet.
Like that was easy for me to get over. Like, come on. And so then you put pressure on that person.
And there's resentment and frustration and anger. And now you've created another problem that was not even the root issue.
Yeah. And what I've learned right now is that for me and Natalie in this situation, I had to slow down.
is that for me and Natalie in this situation,
I had to slow down.
I had to not sprint across the finish line of whatever that moment was.
And maybe we lost the race, but we finished together.
And my question to people in relationship,
how many times have we won the race, but lost our partner?
Yeah.
Because we wanted to be so done with it and
over it i found that we are so um united and get each other so much more this process has brought
us together it sucks it's horrible i don't wish it on anybody i have a whole nother level of um
um empathy and and uh just care for parents with special needs children and all these
things that I just had no concept of before until it knocked at my door. But me and Natalie's
relationship is so much more galvanized, so much stronger because I had to learn like don't fix it just be in it with her and now
because we I've been in it with her she trusts me with it now now she can be transparent I was just
thinking about that little boy in the park that's playing catch our son doesn't play catch so that
made me think about how MJ doesn't play catch and And I just wanted you to know how I felt.
Used to be, she didn't, she wasn't safe enough to just be able to be transparent like that.
It would bottle up.
And then again, with no margin, as soon as life hits you.
Some explosion.
So what I'm saying, all of these things go with each other.
But what ended up happening because I created margin
for her to be safe with me and she trusts me,
then she could let that thing out. She can cast her cares. She doesn't have to carry it all by
herself. The level of growth and health that has come in me and my wife's life over the past three
years has been insurmountable. And, um, the situation hasn't changed, but our relationship
has. How important is counseling or therapy for couples when they get started?
I've always said, you know, I wish I started a relationship in therapy.
Like going together in the first few months of dating, saying, you know what, we're going to be together.
Let's start therapy then.
Let's do it.
Not when things are troubling and there's challenge.
Let's do it when everything is great.
Yeah.
So I tell everybody.
How important is it in the beginning, middle, forever?
Everybody should be in counseling forever.
Like, and I say it like this.
The Bible says there's wisdom in the multitude of counseling.
Like, when you counsel, that's a place you find wisdom.
Processing out loud.
Allowing somebody that knows how your mind, your emotions, your brain works.
That's not in it.
Be able to just observe and suggest different things.
Being able to understand like, hey, you keep saying the same thing and you don't realize it, but we all see this pattern.
How many someone hold you accountable?
Hold you accountable.
A mediator, yeah.
That is some of, I say it like this, it's a better investment than real estate.
It's the greatest investment.
Your emotional and mental peace,
there's no better investment.
People don't think that though.
There's no greater investment than your emotional peace.
People don't think that though, Lewis.
Man, I will spend any amount of money to feel peace.
And that's why people drive their peace
instead of actually have it.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
Like people would rather buy things they don't want to prove to people they don't like that they actually have
something they don't have. They don't need. And they don't need. Right. To actually get the help,
the soul care, the healthiness, the healing that they actually need. And so I encourage people
because this is a big topic in church as well. Like people, like taboo in a lot of churches is like, you don't need counseling, you don't
know. And I like wear shirts that like therapy and Jesus, like you need, you need to pray therapy
and coffee. Like, like, like I'm just trying to help people understand. And like a practical tool that can help you unpack you 30 years of
trauma 15 years of trauma 20 years of trauma and you think that you can unpack those bags by
yourself you need help doing that and um therapy has been and counseling has been some of the best
investment that me and natalie have made. We're different people.
We're like, no, I'm, I'm dead serious. We are different people. And now, um,
you're different human beings and you're different people because of therapy.
Because of therapy. And now we choose friends differently.
Cause we know now we cannot have good friendships with people who aren't aware of themselves because you can't have a conversation with someone who's like focus on something that that's not even like I can't be transparent with you.
I can't even tell you how you made me feel because you don't even now you're triggered from seven years old because I said something to you and you actually need to deal with that.
said something to you and you actually need to deal with that. And so it has now shaped how we do everything. Like part of our interviewing process is we just ask people, are you in
counseling? It doesn't mean you don't get the job or not, but we strongly suggest to all of our
staff members for our staff members at our church, we paid for two sessions of counseling for every
staff member just to get them to try it. now i got a dm from one of our
staff members um last year and she super fashion person and all this is like i miss all of the
sales that i uh used to basically be able to go to but nothing is worth how i feel right now
the sales the money spinning shopping shoes and going sales. But she's now decided to make the investment in herself instead of the shoes.
And things to make you feel good for the moment.
But things that will actually make and change how you actually are.
For a lifetime.
For a lifetime.
And not just your lifetime.
It shows up in your kids.
Impacting everyone around you.
It shows up in your business. It shows up in everything.
We are a product of the people who raised us.
If the people who raised us were emotionally immature, were emotionally traumatized,
did not know how to communicate when you were going through bad situations.
Passive aggressive.
Passive aggressive. All of those different things.
It showed up in us. And now we're dealing with many of us, three and four generations of trauma.
And that's where you bring that to every relationship.
Like you bring that to every business deal.
And that's why my hope is that people would really start winning in relationships by figuring out principles to help them reach their relationship goals.
What's the thing that you have yet to fully heal?
Me. Wow. It's a good question, boy. You do this. It's like you have a podcast or something.
Um, it's about the school of average here. Yeah, no, it's the school of greatness. Um,
I think the thing that I'm still trying to heal is my performance based, um, scorecard.
my performance based scorecard.
Ooh, tell me more.
I just, I have been raised to think that how good I do is attached to how good I am.
So your self-worth is attached to, good job.
Yep, and nobody expected that and we knocked it out of the water
and it went number one new york time bestseller and it's your first book ever and all like i it
it is a tension for me in all transparency and i don't even know who's watching this so i'm you
this is how i am but it is a tension for me to continually, daily detach who I am and what I'm worth from what I do and what that's worth.
Oh, my gosh.
This is powerful.
I got it every day.
What does that process look like for you?
What do you think about when someone famous calls you and say, you're amazing.
Yeah.
You're incredible.
We want you here. We want this.
How do you detach your ego or your desires or your, I'm something greater than I am,
but not diminish who you are at the same time. How do you do that?
So it's a couple of things for me. The first thing I have to do is be honest that I'm feeling that
most of times, transparency most times we
are now that's just man you know I'm saying a little something I did like no
like I'm getting significance from this yeah such and such saying that this book
chained their life made me feel good so and so reposted about the book target
made relationship goals the front stand book all of the month of February and March. Like
I'm all that, like something came, I felt something, my, my, my meter moved. Yeah.
You can't heal what you won't reveal. If you won't acknowledge it, there's no chance of it
actually being addressed.
And so the first thing I have to do is reveal like, whoa, that's, I felt that like there's
something there and then start reminding myself of things, um, that had nothing to do with
what I produced, but who I am, my identity.
And for me, it's my identity.
Give me an example.
So, so like, okay.
Um, Hey, not, I wrote this me, it's my identity. Give me an example. So, so like, okay. Um,
Hey, not, I wrote this New York time bestselling book. I didn't write this New York time bestselling book. I am a person that loves the people around him. That, that is not based on who came around
me and how big their platform is. But I really love the people that are around me. And I have
to remind myself, hold on, not that I just love the people that are around me. And I have to remind myself, hold on, not that I just love the people that are around me.
I am loved.
Like if I don't have another fan, I am loved.
By the people around you.
By the people that are around me.
By God.
By my church.
Like, okay, the internet goes off.
Like I'm loved by a group of people.
Like, yo, I'm worthy.
Like I made a bunch of mistakes in my life and there was grace that was extended to me that that allowed me a second opportunity to do something like I'm worthy to like actually try.
And I'm worth being good i'm worth like i'm needed like not because of what i do because of who i've been
entrusted with i have three beautiful kids and one on the way that need me that need me to be present
not just my presence not the gifts i can give them, but the gift of me. Like, whoa, I am more than what people see. I'm not just a pastor or an author or a producer. Like, there's more to me. Like, and I have to literally out loud say these things to myself and say things like, if nobody else buys another book, I'm good.
Yeah. If nobody else ever invites me to speak, if I never get another podcast, I have purpose.
Like it's disconnecting. Yeah. Like looking at the bank account and not thinking that my actual net worth is my worthiness, because one day that can be gone.
Yeah. But what do I still have?
And that's why I go back to that, that scripture that says all the time that what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?
I got to disconnect to protect my soul. And the soul is my mind,
will, and emotions. I got to protect that. I got to guard my heart above all else because out of
that, that flows everything that happens in my life. I got to protect that. And it is dangerous
to connect my heart and soul to things that are successful in this moment, to things that are
feeding it from a thing. I love all of it. It's great
It's awesome. And it's why I'm here talking to you right now and it's giving me a platform to help a lot of people
But if and when because it's a real win, we're we're we're the voices they're listening to today
But one day there's somebody else. Yeah, and are me and you and drunken stupors in high rises
Because we were connected, so intertwined and entangled to the adulation, to the acceptance, to the applause of people that we didn't even know.
And now we lived our life for metrics. And now the metrics mean that we're not worth anything or we're worth everything.
Right. If you if you live for man's applause, you'll die by it.
Yes.
And how do we believe we are worthy if we don't get all these other outside successes and acknowledgments?
How does someone learn to believe in their worthiness?
Yeah.
Period.
Whether there's success or not success.
Because sometimes people achieve everything and still don't believe in their worthiness. And still don't believe in their worthiness. So how Period. Whether there's success or not success. Because sometimes people
achieve everything and still don't believe in their worthiness. And still don't believe in
their worthiness. So how do we get to that place? So for me, this is an answer that goes back to
what I really believe. And I'm a pastor by nature. I work in all types of different fields,
but there was a place in my life that I didn't feel worthy of anything. And I believe that there
is a higher power, a divine creator.
God, Jesus, for me, is what I believe with my whole heart that transformed my life.
And what ended up happening in this process for me was I was a bad person.
Like how I became a pastor.
Like the whole nine addicted to all kinds of different things, all that other stuff.
And at my lowest moment um i was reading the bible
and for the first time in a long time i felt loved i felt worthy i felt like you know for god so loved
the world that he gave his only begotten son whosoever believes in him could not perish but
have everlasting life and like hold on like all of this happened on a maybe like whoa like hold on somebody while
I was yet a sinner doing everything that was filthy and jagged and raggedy and horrible like
you loved me and I started reading these scriptures and and something connected in my heart I can't
explain it people like that's not real that's not nobody can take this experience away from me
because I know who I was and I know how jacked up I was. And I know
how backwards my thinking was. And I know how perverted I was. And I know how manipulated I was.
The person I am today is only because I found my worthiness in a creator, not from a creation.
A car is a creation, but, but, but there's a creator. Our phones is a creation. But there's a creator.
Our phones are a creation.
That iPad's a creation.
But the creator.
People are people.
People.
Creations.
But from the creator, that's where you only can find identity.
And so I went back and I just went on this journey of discovering my faith and discovering God and discovering.
And what I came out of that with bro, nobody could
ever take anything away from me. I got not happiness. I got joy. I didn't get relief. I got
peace. I didn't get a sexual satisfying experience. I got love. And from that place, I began to take
steps of progression on my purpose. I started started forgiving people do you know what type of weight it is lifted off of your life
when you walk forgiving people it's amazing it is like holding your grudge
heavy man it is devastating but it gave me the ability and the power to begin to
forgive people that I was holding grudges to say sorry, to own up to stuff.
And it's crazy how when you become a better person, moving and maneuvering in the image of Christ, in my opinion, and in my belief and in my experience, it changes everything around you.
I'm able to be a light anywhere I go.
Like people don't have to believe how I believe or anything.
And I come in and I'm like, man, I like talking to you.
I was like, bro, you would have hated talking to me seven years ago.
But let me tell you what happened to me.
And that's where I say, like, you cannot find identity in something that didn't create you.
And if my iPhone breaks, I don't go to Honda to
figure out how to get it fixed. Not because Honda's didn't make something it's because they
didn't, they didn't make that. I would go to Apple. The same thing with me and you, I really
do believe when you need to find the origination, even if you have bad parents, had a traumatic
past, you did things that were horrible. Like when you go back and you connect to your faith
and you see what God says about you, how you're fearfully and wonderfully made, you're the head
and not the tail. You're beautifully and wonderfully made. There's a purpose before
you were even formed in your mother's womb. God knew you and that he has a plan and a purpose
for you. When you start taking off the lies and believing the truth, I'm telling you from that
place, it starts to transform and change everything. And the only reason I'm sitting
here talking to you is because I went through that transformation process and now I'm able to live in joy, hope,
peace. And I just hope that everybody experienced that at some place in their life, bro.
I love that, man. And you said you can't heal what you won't reveal. About eight years ago,
I started to share my shame, the things that I was afraid to reveal. And I wasn't able to
heal. I realized that statement that you said right there is so powerful for me because for
25 years, I was holding on to pain, shame, resentment, anger, frustration. And I've talked
about this many times publicly about dealing with sexual abuse as a child, holding onto that for so
long. It wasn't until I started to share the shame where I was able to start the healing
process. And I think a lot of people hide their shame and it's hard to heal if you're hiding,
right? It's really hard to heal. So how does someone get to a place of sharing, opening up,
revealing so that they can heal when it is so dark, so painful, so traumatic
from something in the past. So this is where counseling comes in heavy, you know what I'm
saying? Or good, in my opinion, godly community, like people who you can tell that won't trash you
while you're peeling back this onion. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like when you're super vulnerable.
And I just, people make circles based on success
a lot of times and networking
instead of making circles based on insulation.
When you have a circle around you,
you need an insulation.
You need people you can be your 100% self with
and they protect
you and cover you, not cover up, but cover you and help lead you to the right place. And for me,
I had that. I had a good godly community as well as we had counseling. And sometimes you've got to
be able to be put in positions that make you answer questions you don't want to answer and
talk about things that
nobody wants to like when they start asking you what's one thing that happened to you when you
were younger and i'd encourage encourage everybody to ask you this what are what's one thing that
happened to you when you were younger that negatively shaped who you are today yeah a lot
of things for me but see if you answer that question honestly, you start opening up things that probably there needs to be some more conversations about.
What happens if we don't open up and talk about those things?
It's the same thing that happens when you put food that was good at one point and you leave it by your bed for three months.
It festers.
It spoils. It spoils.
It rots.
There's some maggots in there.
And then it attracts.
Hold on, watch.
It attracts things that will eat off of it.
This is what some of our relationships look like.
And then it becomes the aroma of your living.
It becomes your environment. It becomes your environment.
It doesn't matter how many millions you spend on the bedroom. If something's rotting in the corner,
it doesn't matter how many Gucci Prada. It doesn't matter how many Maserati. It doesn't matter how many times you 10 X did. It doesn't matter if your soul is rotting, if your love is spoiled, if your emotions have eroded.
And that's what I tell people. A lot of times we dress up something that is completely contaminated. And I just didn't want to live like that.
I was affecting, people could smell
the aroma of my life.
Have you ever met somebody like something?
I don't know.
There's a little.
That's what a lot of us look like spiritually, emotionally,
and in our relationships
is because we haven't dealt with the things.
And it's been there since you were six, seven, 15, 22.
They don't teach us how to deal with these things.
No, no.
And that's why for me, especially in my context, especially in church and business and all that,
I'm like, yo, we got to talk about relationships.
We got to talk about counseling.
We got to talk about inner healing.
We got to talk about our faith.
We got to talk about this because I've seen too many people get to what they thought was the mountaintop and it feel emptier than a different season in their life.
I want to bring it back to jealousy for a second.
Let's go.
Why are we jealous human beings? And is there a place in which we can be completely
not jealous of our partner or someone else? Yeah. So jealousy is our nature. We are all born
with a nature that you do not. I have kids. I don't have to teach them how to be bad.
I have kids. I don't have to teach them how to be bad. Like all of my kids learn. No, mine. I never taught any of my kids those words back to Cain and Abel. It you the first two brothers kill each other over jealousy like it's our nature.
And so what you have to do is fight that nature with the thing that is countered that nature.
So when you think jealousy, when you think competition, when you think selfishness,
you have to do the opposite of those things. You have to celebrate others. You have to be generous.
You have to give. The only way to put out the fire is give it the opposite thing. And so I found in
my life that, again, you got to be, we can't act like this stuff is not real because we'll never
deal with it.
A lot of people won't even admit they're jealous
of something, jealous that the friend got a new house
or everybody's getting married and they're not,
or jealous that that doesn't even happen.
So those people, they just tuned us out right now.
But for anybody that would actually admit,
hey, there's areas of my life that I wish I had
what they had, I'm coveting those things.
When you start to give what you wish you had, somehow those things begin to come into your life
in a different way, or you don't desire them anymore. And that's how I have found for me
that I give what I desire to have.
It's the principle of sowing.
OK, so when we when we were in a season, I'll talk about it business wise.
When I was in a season of not making a lot of money and was trying to really figure out, like, how am I going to like I want to marry this girl.
I want to do this. I want to save me. I need investments, all that other stuff.
this girl i want to do this i want to save me i need investments all that other stuff and i heard so strongly in my in my time of devotion hey you need to give something to somebody who's where you
want to be they already got it that doesn't matter that doesn't make sense and it was almost like
instead of looking at what they had and trying to be like, I wish I had that. OK, become a part of it. So into it. Give what you desire to somebody else and help their journey.
And it's the principle of sowing and reaping. You you're always going to reap whatever you sow.
So you might as well sow good things because everything you give out is coming back.
Right. With friends like and is coming back with friends.
Like and hopefully it's good friends if you saw a good scene.
But if you didn't, it's coming back with friends. And that was a game changing moment.
And I've become generous. Generosity kills jealousy.
Like when you start helping people, giving to people, networking with people.
And then the other thing that's very practical with jealousy, if you don't see it, you won't be jealous of it.
So many people are jealous because of overexposure.
There are certain things I'm not supposed to know about somebody else's life.
But because of the culture we live in today, I'm jealous of things that I didn't even know existed. It used to be in the, I guess, 50s and 60s, the Joneses, where it's like the neighbor.
Yeah. You saw the neighbor's house and car. You didn't go see everyone's house and car on social
media. And that's where, again, I think we come back to the idea of margin. Yeah. Like there are
days of every week that I cut off my social media. Like there are, there are time periods when I go
on that sabbatical, I'm off of social media the whole month, a month. Are people posting for you though?
No, I think I tell them to go black. Wow. Now think about this when I'm talking to book publishers
and people I've made contracts with and everything like that and telling them, Hey, just, just before
we sign this, I want you to know that, um, once a year I go
black, I won't be posting. I won't be promoting. I won't be doing anything. And I'm telling you,
they freak out. And I said, but I promise you when I do this, it's going to make me more fruitful
in everything else I do. And now any partner that's been with me, they're like, Oh, we understand
now they still scared to do it. But, but, but but but and again I went off the number I was
by the grace of God I was um on the number one New York Times bestseller for three weeks and we
were on the top 10 New York Times bestselling list for 15 weeks in a row I went off a New York Times
bestseller list because I went on sabbatical so I knew I was going to take myself off of the New York Times bestsellers list because I was going to stop promoting my book
Wow, and I did it
Now for some people that would seem stupid for me that was success. Mmm, I was
Unattached. Yeah my work to the results. Yeah was not based on being on New York Times bestseller for 30 weeks.
Never went back on it yet.
Haven't got back.
It's not like I'm trying to.
No.
The fact I'm just grateful the fact that we did it once.
It happened.
But I'm still worth it.
I'm still a good guy.
I'm still loved.
I'm still no matter if I'm somebody in the book publishing world may think i'm nothing
but i know who i am and those are the type of decisions that are countercultural that people
don't understand but that's why i have my peace that's why i'm full of joy that's why when i talk
to you i don't got to put on any type of allure and act like i'm bigger than i am because i'm
acting when all of this is over i'm gonna be good. Like I'm actually go back to the hotel with my daughter, take him to the pool.
I'm actually going to enjoy and be fulfilled in what I believe God has called me to do.
And so it really is one of those things that jealousy many times comes from being overexposed.
So if you would if you would limit your exposure It would help you think about it when horses run in the Preakness and in the Kentucky Kentucky Derby
There's a very inexpensive piece of equipment that is is is very blind
Yes, very
Intentional in fact, yeah and effective to the horses winning blind. And the reason is because if they could see the other horses, they would go into their lanes and be disqualified.
My goodness.
Think about how many of us are distracted and getting ultimately disqualified because we're jealous of somebody else's lane when we already have our own to run.
We got to run our own race.
Come on, bro.
We got to run our own race come on bro we gotta run our own race come on bro and and and for some reason it's not sexy enough to have one lane
you gotta have 10 lanes you want every lane you want the track what what the world you want and
i'm just saying like maybe just maybe i'm not i'm saying i know everything but maybe
the end result of running in several lanes is not the fulfillment and the success that we think it is.
How do you create a financial abundant mindset as a pastor of a church where it's probably, I'm assuming, taboo to be talking money or be thinking let's build wealth and abundance as a pastor, as a church.
You guys have publicly announced acquiring
this $40 million arena center in Tulsa,
which is amazing and creating communities
and opportunities for people there.
How did you one, go from not acquiring a lot of wealth
and an abundance mindset, maybe you had before,
how did you transition that knowing that I am a pastor where people are going to judge me
based on how much money we bring in based on these things? How do you manage that stigma maybe
and also be at peace with creating financial abundance? And how can we learn to create
financial abundance in a spiritual way? Yeah. yeah, yeah. So I love that question.
That's a good question, bro.
I think the first thing that you have to realize is I'm aware of the landscape of most pastors
in the world when it comes to finances, where there's been a lot of abuse.
There's been a lot of misuse.
Mistrust.
Mistrust.
And so the first thing that I did when I came in as a pastor is I decided it goes back to what I've talked about in relationship.
I was going to be completely transparent. Yeah. So like every year we tell the church every dollar, every cent that came in.
We tell them that every dollar that comes in, 10 plus percent is going out in missions.
We let people know what we're doing, how it's going to happen. And you can't make anybody give to a nonprofit.
You cannot make anybody. to a nonprofit. You cannot
make anybody. I mean, they have to do that on their own. We don't make a big deal about any
of those things. We decided that finances would be the fruit and not the focus. And I think that's
something that everybody needs to adapt. A lot of times money and finances is the focus. But I
believe that if you make the focus people, the focus reaching purpose, the focus helping others, then finances is the fruit, not the focus.
Yes. And for us, that has been our entire mission.
When I took over our church, we started in a converted grocery store in the hood of Tulsa.
So, like, I didn't come from this big machine of people understanding.
There was less than 300 people that came to my church and most of them was sitting there like,
he not going to make it. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like, let's be honest. And, um,
and I just told people that this is going to be a generous church. And I remember it. I remember
the day everything changed for our church. I was reading a book by another pastor named Robert Morris called The Blessed Life.
And he was talking about how many churches and nonprofits talk about give to get, give to get.
And really the principle of the Bible and God is give to give, not to get.
Like we're giving just as an extension of love, not because not expecting something.
No, like for God so loved the world that he gave like without an extension of love, not because not expecting something like for God so loved the
world that he gave like without an expectation of return. And I said, that's what we're going to do.
I went to our platform, less than 300 people in our church. And I said, Hey guys, today,
I just really feel that we're supposed to raise money and none of it's supposed to help us.
It's supposed to go out and help other people. And you should have seen the faces of those people. They were like, huh?
Like, what do you mean? Like, how are we going to do this?
And I was like, I just I want us to be a generous community that blesses people in need, blesses other churches, blesses nonprofits and people who are helping with sex trafficking.
Like, let's just do it. And we raised eight hundred and thirty three to 833 8300 and something dollars that day that day
and we gave it all the way and that was the seed that went in the ground that i believe transformed
our mindset around the the thought that it is more blessed to give than it is to receive and
from that point on keeping transparency teaching being teaching, being honest, and then being prepared.
See, this is the big thing people don't understand is preparation is really the avenue that you're ready for the big things that are coming to come in your life.
When this arena came open, it was because we had years of preparation, being generous, giving to people, teaching, and then saving, and then being ready.
And then this $50 million arena came available.
We were able to get it for like $10.5 million and pay it off in six months.
Crazy.
It is crazy.
It's crazy faith.
It's crazy crazy.
It doesn't make sense at all.
The only reason it happened, though, is because we had practical preparation with
principles of generosity. And I think those are two things that everybody can take practical
preparation. You can't give what you ain't had, what you don't have, but then you have to have
principles of generosity. And I was interviewing some people cause I do a series on this every,
um, every year. And I'm in one right now, even as we're taping this, um, talking about
being a paper chaser or a purpose chaser, because most people are paper chasers, but the paper
without purpose is pointless. And, uh, um, I I've been doing a series on that and just helping
people understand that purpose is more intentional than paper. And the crazy thing about it is when
you get in purpose, when you're doing that thing about it is when you get in purpose,
when you're doing that thing,
you were created to get the paper,
the paper follows you.
You're no longer on a treadmill trying to get it.
It comes.
That's our story is that we decided we're going to help homeless.
We're going to help widows.
We're going to help orphans.
Last year,
because of the amazing generosity of the people in our church in one Sunday,
we gave away $3.5 million Sunday we gave away 3.5 million dollars what 3.5 million dollars we paid off people's houses we canceled student debt we
did all of these different things in one day one day one day we bought people who had special needs
um um vans that they could get into their car. We partners with an organization for the homeless
to get shower trucks, to be able to go around and shower. It was nothing for us. It was all to get
now that all came from that $8,300 that six years ago we sold in faith. And that's the thing that
this, my mantra is, I always say, all you have is all you need. Everybody thinks that one day when I have more,
then I can do more.
But right now,
do you know how much $5 could change somebody's life today?
And there were many times when I was at the gas station,
if somebody would have put an extra $5 in my tank,
that would have brought me joy.
You could be somebody's answered prayer.
Now.
Right now. Today. Today. With whatever you have. And it don't even take money. means you could be somebody's answered prayer now right now today today with
whatever you have any don't even take money it could be a smile it could be a
smile it can be helping them move it could be like just think about all of
the different things and I've been doing some interviewing of people because
anytime I do a series out I want to feel I want to feel like I know where people
are doing some surveying and do you know what everybody's second dream job is?
Help people be a philanthropist. All right, so what everybody thinks is like hey, I'm gonna do this profession career
Dada da hopefully I can so be so I can give it so that I can give and help people and I said if you
Do not work the muscle of generosity today. it will have, what do you call it?
Atrophy.
It'll have atrophy by the time you're ready to use it.
You'll keep hoarding your money.
You'll say, oh, it's not big enough yet.
I want more.
Yep.
And it's not just money.
It's your time.
It's your energy.
Generosity is not just about giving money.
Generosity is about giving of yourself.
It's about giving time.
It's about having that phone conversation, giving back to somebody who was where you were at like think about what
you would have done to have a call with some of these people you meet with 10 years ago do you
understand what i'm saying so who now looks up to you that if you took 30 minutes out of every week
and or every day and you called a young aspiring and gave them what you had
like what would that that's generosity but many people again we don't have margin for that we we
we've we've made all of these life goals and successes more important than the things that
actually really matter and so for our church we're a product we're living a blessed life because we
bless others and i'm just grateful to be a part of it
Like honestly, it's not something that I'm doing on my own
There's tens of thousands of people that call transformation church their home and trust the authenticity
Authenticity and the stewardship that we have and we get to bless
I'll tell you this last story, you know coronavirus has hit everybody and
There was a couple in our city that had a church and the pastor of the church, five kids, two adopted,
died of coronavirus just a month ago. Oh, man. Small church heard about this story. White family,
nothing, no connection, no affiliation we just heard
about it and she just lost her husband the provider father to all the children
all this other stuff our church last Sunday because we heard about the need
and saw that we could help paid the husband's salary to her for the rest of
the year six months of the year and then paid
their house off wow so that they could have a place to not have to worry and this for me whether
you believe in Jesus or not like our hope is that you would see the love and generosity of a group
of people that doesn't want anything from you and hopefully that would lead you to a greater love. And so again, like
when I say I'm just excited to be a part of it. Yeah. I might be the leader, but like, I'm just
like, yes, for me, it, uh, it's a beautiful thing. You're doing amazing work, man. I got a couple,
a couple of final questions for you. Uh, this was a question I asked you before we started the
camera roll. And I said, what's the thing you wish more people asked you you said why do i do what i do so i'm curious
why do you do what you do because i wish i would have had it i'm trying to be everything i wish i
would have had growing up growing up i wish i would have had somebody who would have been
completely authentic and awesome completely authentic and honest about their journey.
That showed the joys of living a life of integrity.
That actually loved their wife and family.
And were committed to a calling bigger than themselves.
Because you didn't see that example.
I didn't see it.
There was always, anybody great had to be a rapper or an athlete like there was no people that were like
regular people that didn't have some you know amazing gifting and then they made
their life that I just didn't see it that wasn't what was glorified and I
definitely didn't know anybody like personally that was there.
And nobody talked to me about relationships. I went through so much crap just because I didn't
know. And I think a lot of things, um, the Bible says that the older are supposed to tell the
younger and they're supposed to teach. And a lot of times there's not margin for that. So how many,
how many things have you not learned? Not because you didn't want to know but just because nobody at the time
or or was generous enough to actually take the time to share it and so I just
said hey if I ever get an opportunity I'm going to be what I wish I would have
had what would have saved me hurting people, what would have
saved me making mistakes and bumping my head and getting addicted to those things and making those
wrong decisions. Like I'm going to say, and that's why I I'm authentically who I am. I feel like I've
been called by God to, um, help people and help people win in relationships, help people discover their purpose. And that's why I do it because
there's a Mike Todd somewhere that is watching this interview right now and is like, that's what
I needed to hear to make this next decision that doesn't seem big, but it's going to affect me
forever. And that's why I do it. I appreciate this conversation, man. This has been really
powerful. I want to ask you a question. I asked everyone at the end called the three truths.
Okay.
It's a hypothetical question and scenario.
Okay.
So imagine it is your last day on earth many years from now.
All right.
And you've accomplished, given, become everything you've wanted to do.
Okay.
But for whatever reason, it's the last day and you've got to take everything with you
to the next place.
Okay.
So no one has access to your books, this conversation, or your message anymore.
It's all gone to the next place, wherever it goes.
Yeah.
And however, before you go, you have a piece of paper and a pen
and you get to write down three things you know to be true.
The three lessons that you would leave behind.
And this is all we would have to remember your lessons by.
Got you.
I call the three truths. Okay. What would you say would be yours? Wow. That's a good question. I'm going to go with this.
My three truths, all you have is all you need. That would be my first one. I don't believe that God
will ever ask you or require something more than that's in your hands to get to the next place.
My second truth would be progression over perfection.
That if you take a step every day, you'll get to the place that you're supposed to be at.
And then my last one would be Jesus loves you.
to be at. And then my last one would be Jesus loves you. And the reason that that would be my last one, and really, if I only had one, that would be the one is because, um, I believe that
that is the truth that has transformed me from who I was into who I'm becoming. Yeah. I noticed
I didn't say who I am. It's who I'm still becoming. And there's a love that is not like man's love
that can transform everything.
And I think those three truths
take away every other accolade
that I think somebody could have
a really fulfilling life
with those three truths.
And actually it would impact
where they're going to end up. So
that would be me. Michael, I acknowledge you, man, for the journey you've been on,
for the journey of taking chances, for the journey of diving in deeper in relationship
when it's challenging and hard, for your authenticity, for being transparent and
real about the challenges you face even today. I acknowledge your generosity through what you're doing with your church,
with your platform.
I acknowledge your childlike energy, everything about you.
I'm really grateful that you're here right now,
and I acknowledge the gift that you are for the world,
and hopefully we can have many more conversations.
Oh, bro, you're coming to Tulsa, bro.
I'm coming, man.
You're coming to Tulsa.
We're going to make you happy, dog.
Let's do it.
I want people to get your book, Relationship Goals, How to Win at Dating, Marriage, and
Sex.
Yeah.
And this book as well, Relationship Goals Challenge, 30 Days from Good to Great with
lots of different practical challenges and exercises on how to enhance the quality of
your relationship.
So make sure you guys check these out.
You're also blowing up on social media even though you're detached from it.
check these out. You're also blowing up on social media, even though you're detached from it.
I am Mike Todd everywhere, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook. Your YouTube is the same thing?
Yeah. So we have Transformation Church YouTube and Represent TV.
Okay. Represent?
Yeah. So that's our mission to represent God to the lost and found for transformation in Christ.
Like that's what I feel like everywhere I go.
Not represent.
Well, so I kind of, in my mind, I took that word.
I kind of hijacked it.
It's all three of them.
It's represent, represent, and represent.
It's all different emphasis, but that's what I feel like I'm supposed to do, is show God differently, to give him differently, and then to promote him differently.
That's all those different things.
But that's for another podcast. You know what I'm saying? I'll tell you how to do that on the next School of Greatness. Exactly. So we got you on YouTube. We'll have
it all linked up as well. Okay, cool. And the final question then, even though you already
answered it, but let's hear it again. What's your definition of greatness? Man, my definition of greatness is actually fulfilling what you've been called to do.
And to my core, I feel like everybody's wired for greatness.
I don't think that is a select group of people.
It may look different, but it is in your DNA.
And I think that the sooner you discover
who and how you were created to impact the world,
because it's always about somebody else.
It's not about you.
It's always about somebody else.
The only reason you're sitting here
is because you decided in LA traffic,
you wanted to help other people who are feeling like you.
The only reason I'm here is because I've decided
to live a life of service and help people
with what I've been through.
And now us moving in purpose has created a level of greatness.
And we haven't reached the pinnacles if we stay humble enough to continue to do what we're doing right now.
So that would be my definition of greatness.
Michael Todd, my man.
My guy.
Appreciate you, brother.
Love you, man.
This is good.
Thank you, brother.
Appreciate it.
Thank you so much for listening. I hope you enjoyed this episode with Pastor Michael Todd. Love you, man. This is good. Thank you, brother. Appreciate it. Thank you so much for listening.
I hope you enjoyed this episode with Pastor Michael Todd.
Loved the hang.
We got to connect a little bit before and after, and we've been texting ever since.
And I'm just a big fan of his message and his mission and what he's up to in life.
If you enjoyed this, make sure to click the subscribe button over on Apple Podcasts and leave us a rating and review.
When you do that, it helps us spread the message to inspire more people and improve the quality of life for more people around
the world. So make sure to subscribe on Apple Podcasts right now, leave us a review. And if you
want to get inspirational messages every single week and get on our texting list, then make sure
to send me a text with the word podcast to 614-350-3960. And also make sure to check out
Relationship Goals Book
and check that out
if you want to learn more
about the strategies
and the stories
on improving the quality
of your relationships.
And I want to leave you
with this quote from Rick Warren
who said,
Never procrastinate
in showing love.
Don't delay.
Don't put it off.
Do it now.
Oof.
Some good stuff
on love, relationships,
marriage, dating, sex, and all the other juicy
things with relationships. I hope you enjoyed this one. And as always, I want to remind you that you
are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And you know what time it is. It's time to go out there
and do something great.