The School of Greatness - 593 5 Years of Greatness

Episode Date: January 24, 2018

"IT'S ALL ABOUT LIVING THE ADVENTURE OF LIFE AND DOING IT TOGETHER." Wow. This week marks the 5 year anniversary of the School of Greatness podcast. I took a minute tonight to reflect on the... incredible gift this show has been to me and I was overcome with gratitude. I could never have imagined what this show and these conversations and these relationships and this audience would become when I started this little project. I would love to hear from you this week -- how has the podcast impacted your life? How long have you been listening? What have been your favorite episodes? Has anyone listened to every single episode? At the end of the day, the best part of this whole experience is you -- the audience. There's no show without you. I'm so grateful you've listened and stayed with me on this journey. "It's all about living the adventure of life and doing it together." When I think about the inspiration we've heard, the lessons we've learned, the value we've gotten, and the people we've met through this show, I am so humbled. And this is just the beginning. While I am always looking forward to what we can create even better, I knew it was important to take this moment and acknowledge what we have created together so far. I am truly honored to be in this journey of greatness with you. To celebrate this milestone, I wanted to highlight one top episode from each year of the podcast. I added a little commentary before each one and shared my thoughts about the show as a whole. So thank you again and here's to another 5 years of greatness in Episode 593. In this episode you will learn: How Tim Ferriss prepared for big keynotes Tony Robbins' morning priming ritual and book recommendations Alanis Morissette's definition of true success Why Chris Lee believes in the power of visualization so strongly How Mel Robbins became a confident master of her fear Plus much more…

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to a special edition of the School of Greatness podcast, Five Years of Greatness, on episode number 593. Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, 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. Martin Luther King Jr. said, not everybody can be famous, but everybody can be great because greatness is determined by service.
Starting point is 00:00:47 Wow, guys, this week marks the five-year anniversary of the podcast. So we wanted to celebrate this amazing milestone with a huge thank you. And we picked one popular episode from each year of the podcast to highlight. and I'm sharing my thoughts on why each episode went so great. Again, for me, this started with an idea. This podcast was literally an idea. When I moved to LA, I was sitting in LA traffic, and I felt stuck in my life. I felt stuck in a relationship I was in, in a business partnership I was in, and just in all the things about my health and my life. I just felt stuck. For some reason, I was achieving a lot on the external world, but I felt like I was missing something on my internal world. So I said,
Starting point is 00:01:37 what could I do to continue to learn more, to develop myself, my mind, my soul, my energy, but also give back to the world to let others learn from what I'm learning as well. And that's where the School of Greatness was created. It was from this idea to continue to grow myself and then serve humanity by sharing these powerful insights and conversations with the most inspirational humans in the world who are at the top of their game in sports and business and science and to reveal the keys to greatness. And this is what we've created together.
Starting point is 00:02:13 You know, again, after five years, over 50 million downloads, some incredible interviews, some powerful moving moments, so many emails that I've received from you and thousands of people who've messaged in talking about these different moments of the podcast over the years that have shifted things for them, that's transformed their attitude, their mindset, their life, their health, their relationships. So many incredible healings and results that have resulted because of this. It just continues to humble me and bring me so much joy and gratitude to continue on the podcast. So we are five years in and I feel like we're just getting started. We're continually growing and we couldn't do without you, the greatness community. All right, guys,
Starting point is 00:02:57 I want to dive into this again. I'm so grateful for so many of you that continue to listen and we just continue to grow month after month. It's just growing and growing and expanding. And I want to believe that it's because we're getting incredible guests on who are sharing these powerful nuggets, just like you're about to hear right now. So I thought I'd go back in time and reflect on some of these moments and what they meant to me and how they really helped so many people who are listening to the podcast. In year one, one of my top episodes,
Starting point is 00:03:31 one of my favorite guests was a guy that really helped me early on without even knowing it. He wrote a book called The 4-Hour Workweek over 10 years ago. His name's Tim Ferriss. And I remember wanting to have him on really to thank him for all that he did for me
Starting point is 00:03:46 to writing that book and being a catalyst of ideas and possibilities in my mind. And it was the trajectory of me launching my online business. So without Tim Ferriss, I probably wouldn't have had a podcast because I wouldn't have even known anything about this online space. But in this section, really quick, it's about three three minutes Tim talks about how he prepared for his big South by Southwest presentation years ago and how he really got amped up for this also why Tim never rehearses a keynote all the way through we talked about him rehearsing his keynote in front of his friends and he also talked about why he drank two Diet Cokes before he speaks so let's go ahead and dive into this blast from the past,
Starting point is 00:04:25 year one of the podcast with Tim Ferriss. If it is something that I can rehearse, then I will rehearse. And I remember the first time I had a keynote opportunity at South by Southwest, which was a huge opportunity for me. This was probably 2007, something like that. And I had between 45 minutes and an hour to give a presentation. The first thing I did was I broke the presentation down. I mean, this should sound familiar, right?
Starting point is 00:04:57 This is just like Deacon's thing. So I took the presentation and I broke it into three parts. And that meant there were going to be kind of three acts to the keynote. And then I would have a very short introduction and a very short conclusion. So it was like one to two minute intro, act one, act two, act three,
Starting point is 00:05:17 one to two minute outro. And what that allowed me to do was rehearse each act by itself. So I never rehearse a keynote all the way through, start to finish, to begin with. I will rehearse each of those acts or each of those segments until that segment is smooth. Then I'll move on to segment two and rehearse that until it's smooth, and segment three until that's smooth, and then I'll do them all together. smooth and then I'll do them all together. Uh, and, uh, in the case of South by Southwest, what I did, and I don't do this every time, but it's, it, it will maybe be, uh, funny for people to hear is I was staying with all the hotels were sold out. So I was crashing at a friend's house
Starting point is 00:05:57 in Austin and kind of out in the boondocks and he had a garage, he had a big garage and he had three chihuahuas of different sizes. It was like a giant chihuahua, a tiny chihuahua, and a medium-sized chihuahua. This isn't a fairy tale. I'm going somewhere with this. My friend had to go to work, and so I was kind of home alone until I had to head over to the conference center to do this keynote. So I rehearsed by giving the keynote to these dogs.
Starting point is 00:06:24 Check it out, if I was really animated and like compelling as a speaker, of course, I don't understand what I'm saying. But if I was really animated and compelling as a speaker, they would sit there and watch the whole thing. It was hilarious. If I got monotone or like looked down at my feet or didn't make eye contact,
Starting point is 00:06:41 they'd just start wandering off. So I rehearsed it with these chihuahuas. That's an example for a keynote. I have a format that I follow. I have a way that I rehearse. I have rituals. For instance, I don't usually drink diet soda for a lot of reasons, but in this case, before I do keynotes, I will drink two Diet Cokes.
Starting point is 00:07:02 I guess they're probably 12 to 16 ounces each. And that's the reason I do that is primarily ritual. It's not because I need that to be the only way I get the caffeine. It's because that's what I did for years when I had really good keynotes. And I just decided that was going to be my ritual. If you're a big fan of Tim, make sure to give him a shout out over on Twitter or Instagram and let him know what you thought of that moment. And year two, we dive into another massive guest. And I remember when I first met Tony Robbins, I was a teenager at one of his conferences and he stood over me next to me at one point he walked down off stage and he walked into the audience and I was sitting there and it was almost like he was
Starting point is 00:07:53 walking right at me and he stopped right next to me and he actually didn't look at me and I don't remember what he was saying he was saying something about mindset probably and he was saying. He was saying something about mindset probably. And he was shouting it out to 15,000 people who were captivated about what he was about to say. And I can't remember what he said, but I remember the way he made me feel in that moment. He showed me someone with so much confidence, so much poise, so much passion for his mission and to serve that audience that I said, one day, I want to be able to have that type one day, I want to be able to have that type of passion. I want to be able to have that type of purpose and mission. And I got to have him on. I've had him on a number of times now and got to connect with him a lot more. Love what he's been up to, but this was the first time. So it was a very powerful moment for me to be able to
Starting point is 00:08:40 meet him in person for the first time after that and share with him that story. meet him in person for the first time after that and share with him that story. And in about four minutes here, he talks about why you should skip a meal, but don't skip reading. And you should always be feeding your mind. We talk about why fear is physical. His primal ritual, cold plunge, and the three books that he recommends. Let's dive in with Tony Robbins.
Starting point is 00:09:07 Honestly, there was no internet back in the day. I'm pretty ancient. I used to go to the library because it was the only place you could go. And I would read biographies. I'd read people's lives. And it would make me go, wait a second. As bad as I think it is, the greatest people in the world had it worse.
Starting point is 00:09:17 Sure. So there's something here. So you feed your mind. Jim Rohn used to say to me, skip a meal, but don't skip reading. He said, read 30 minutes a day. I don't give a damn what it is. And today, I don don't skip reading. He said, read 30 minutes a day. I don't give a damn what it is. And today, I don't mean internet crap.
Starting point is 00:09:27 I mean, read something, a biography. Read something that's a strategy. Read something that's going to change your life. And the second thing I tell people is feeding your mind is great, but you've got to also strengthen your body. And you do that as an athlete. Naturally, I learned to do that because fear is physical. You know where you feel it. And if you go work out, if you go lift, if you go run, even if you're out of shape, you just go for an intense walk, that experience alone changes
Starting point is 00:09:49 you. Like every day of my life, the first thing I do before I do my priming, if I'm at one of my homes, I jump in some hot water for fun and I jump in freezing water. And I have, you know, a river, you know, and one of my homes in Sun Valley and I've got cold plunges everywhere else. So I go in 57 degree water, boom. And what it does is like it's teaching my brain, I do, I tell my brain what to do and it does it. It doesn't feel like it, it doesn't want to do it
Starting point is 00:10:10 and every cell in your body is alive, right? So it doesn't have to be like two hours worth of something. It can be something you do for 30 seconds but it's training your body to be strong because a strong body could strong mind and vice versa. The third thing I tell people
Starting point is 00:10:22 is find a role model. You know, it seems impossible until you see somebody who's done it. So Ray Dalio is one of the greatest investors in history. The guy was a caddy, right? His dad was a jazz musician, his mom was a homemaker. He's worth $14 billion. How'd he do that? He found someone to mentor him.
Starting point is 00:10:39 He found multiple people to model. Right, right. You don't always find a mentor, but you find somebody you can model. And when you start seeing that somebody else can do it, and you see they really did, you start to believe, you start to get certainty. And then the fourth thing I tell people is
Starting point is 00:10:52 it's massive action and constantly change your approach. And then it's find somebody worse off than you are and help them. Because when you do that, it gets you out of yourself. And that's what I really have people do. That's what we do at Thanksgiving. We have our basket brigade where two million people get fed. Not the one I do, the one that I get people to do. And it's what I really have people do. That's what we do at Thanksgiving. We have our basket brigade where two million people get fed. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:11:07 Not the one I do, the one that I get people to do. And it's amazing. People go in there and they see, my God, I thought my life was tough, but look at this person's life. It makes you appreciative. It puts life in perspective. Yeah, very cool. Now, talking about feeding the mind. Yes.
Starting point is 00:11:19 If you could only leave three books behind. To who? Three books behind to your kids. Yes. Or the message to the world of like, here's the three most important books that you your kids. Yes. And, uh, or the, you know, the message to your, to the world of like, here's the three most important books that you should read. What are those three books that you only pick three? That's a tough one. I don't know if I can do that, but I'll tell three off the top of my head. I'd say man's search for meaning, Victor Frankl, um, because all of us in our lives are in the experience of extreme stress.
Starting point is 00:11:44 I don't care how much money you have. I don't care how much people love or respect you. You'll have your time. It might be a health issue in your family. It might be something happens to the economy. It's just something happens to all of us. And so to see how people that were put in the most insane, unjust environment, people that were in Auschwitz, how they dealt with that unbelievable situation
Starting point is 00:12:03 and how the ones that thrived in spite of it. And to go through Viktor Frankl's way of understanding how to create meaning in your life, I don't think there's a more important book. I think maybe another one might be As a Man Think Of, because it's a book that you can read dozens of times in your life. It's small and it's the core of everything, as you think, so you are. I mean, obviously the Bible is an extraordinary book or whatever religious document a person believes. I'm personally a Christian, but I tell people whatever you believe, you need to practice it, whatever it is. Because there are many different ways of connecting to what has created us. And then, that's three already, but I'll give you one more.
Starting point is 00:12:36 I think another one that's important would be understanding the life cycles of humanity. There's a book called Generations. It's a big book. It's, I think, 1,000 pages, 800 pages. Bigger than this book. Much bigger than this book. But it's a book worth reading
Starting point is 00:12:48 because it shows you how as every 100 years, 1,800 years we run through the same cycles. Like what we've just gone through economically
Starting point is 00:12:55 in 2008, happened 80 years before. You can go through 1,000 years of Roman history and you see it. And when you begin to be able to anticipate what's coming,
Starting point is 00:13:03 you know how to take advantage of the season. Some people freeze the death in the winter. People that are prepared might snowboard or ski and have a good time. It's a brilliant book. It's by Strauss and Howe. It's worth reading. Love that guy.
Starting point is 00:13:17 And again, if you enjoyed that section, make sure to share a message over with Tony on social media and let him know what you thought. Year three of the podcast. I'm getting in the groove now, right? I'm finally figuring out that I can interview decently, overcoming some personal challenges and growing a lot more myself. Things are picking up. I'm getting some traction.
Starting point is 00:13:39 People are liking it. And year three happens. And I remember getting the opportunity to interview the incredibly talented, lovely, spiritually guided Alanis Morissette. This woman is a powerhouse, right? She's got an incredible voice, very talented singer, songwriter, sold millions of copies of her CDs and albums. And it was a beautiful experience. I didn't get to do a video interview with her, but we did it in audio in her office in Los Angeles
Starting point is 00:14:11 and really loved connecting with her. And I hope I've connected with her over text actually a number of times since then. Haven't got the chance to hang out in person again, but I really want to connect with her some more. I just loved her energy. So in these four minutes, we talked about how do you handle
Starting point is 00:14:29 when your best work being behind you and how do you deal with that? We also asked Alanis about her definition of success. So let's dive in and connect with Alanis. World records, millions of copies. Not kill herself. Yeah, how do you emotionally handle with like oh maybe my best musical performances or the results of the best performances have are behind me well the results of the best performance is probably a good way to put it because so much of
Starting point is 00:14:59 it has to be around how i define success of course i. I mean, sales numbers. Yeah, sales numbers to me are, and I said this before Jagged Little Pill, during Jagged Little Pill, and still now, they're almost inconsequential. Does it affect money coming in and opportunities? For sure. But opportunities abound for me. Of course. And it really begs the question of what kind of opportunities.
Starting point is 00:15:20 So there are opportunities to do huge TV shows with huge audiences. I've had the privilege of doing a lot TV shows with huge audiences. I've had the privilege of doing a lot of that. I've been doing it recently. I mean, I have access to being expressed. So for me, if I have a sense of self, I'm in my seat, as I call it, and I'm being expressed, I'm being of service, and I'm taking care of myself so that I don't burn out, that to me is the definition of success for me. And then I had to start having some personal fulfillment too because I had professional fulfillment nonstop and I still have that.
Starting point is 00:15:52 You could succeed any time professionally you want to. Yeah. You can get in a TV show or movie. It's the most fun. Performing the AMAs. Yes. Doing a comedy piece with so-and-so. And there's just so many ways to scratch the itch of forms of expression.
Starting point is 00:16:05 So that to me is like I'm a kid in a candy store today. Right. For me, it was about also combining personal fulfillment. So that took a minute. And then now that I have that as well, I'm happy to say, now I just feel like it's about waking up in the morning and knowing what is the imperative. It's about waking up in the morning and knowing what is the imperative. For me, it's service and self-expression, continuing self-definition, deepening intimacy in relationships that were always terrifying in the past and becoming slowly less and less so. And nurturing the ones that are really important to me.
Starting point is 00:16:40 Yeah. What are the most important relationships right now? My husband, my son, my community, my best friends they're huge yeah and it's it's a constant every day there's a new thing you know sometimes it's subtle sometimes it's oh they let me rub their back a little longer or oh they cried with me or oh i i asked for help or you know whatever the growth stretch is for me in any given moment that in the past perhaps I wouldn't have done for fear. Maybe I'm doing it a little bit more today. So defining success to me is a multitudinous thing.
Starting point is 00:17:12 It's not just success means winning Grammys, although that is some version of success, according sort of like externally oriented success. So there's internal orientation around success and the external validation. The external validation is dangerous though, because if we're singularly focusing on that, that is an ebb and flow. My whole life I've been loved and hated. People don't give it,
Starting point is 00:17:36 people don't care. All of a sudden they really care this week and then next week they don't care again. and then they hate and there were websites erected on how to punch me out properly. Like there was i mean just the whole continuum of of abject adoration and love and respect all the way to abject hatred wow and and emotional violence so i can't really ride that roller coaster yeah if i'm externally oriented i'm in trouble externally constantly looking for an acknowledgement, a thing to like bring you a feeling
Starting point is 00:18:06 or feeling like you did it. And then you're dependent on it. Yeah. You're always searching for the next big thing. And not to say I'm an island, the whole autonomous movement, you know, God bless the movement of autonomy
Starting point is 00:18:15 and post-feminism and everything, or post-feminism, post-70s really. Yeah. But now I just think, I can't be singularly internally referencing I'm not an island. So I pick the people who I feel vulnerable with. We give each other feedback. They'll say, well, there's a little blind spot there. And vice versa. But we always do it with a tenderness.
Starting point is 00:18:37 And then I'll want their feedback. You like this song? But if I like the song, if I like the chapter, if I like the conversation we're having, I don't actually care what someone else thinks about it. This is just self-definition. I'm not saying this is the height of what all people should aspire to. It's what I love. And that's it. And that's enough for me. Big love for Alanis Morissette.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Make sure to message her over on Instagram if you've been a fan of hers as well. If you enjoyed that section, it's at Atlantis over on Instagram or Twitter. Year four, the big year four. Now, there was one guest I've had on more than anyone else, and so many people kept requesting him to come back on. I think he's been on, I don't know, 13, 14, 15 times now, it seems like. And he always has this powerful episode that people constantly refer back to. And they listen to him over and over again.
Starting point is 00:19:34 And that's the one and only Chris Lee. And he's a guy who has really been transformational in my life. I went to a workshop where he was conducting one time that helped me open up about so many things from sexual abuse as a kid to other challenges I had as a man and just being a better human being in general. And he really called me forth to being better in my life. And in these three minutes, we talk about the visualization process to seeing the result complete and also that your vision becomes a reality. So be careful what you visualize because it just might come true. Let's connect with Chris. So I love this. Yeah. Visualization is actually seeing the result complete.
Starting point is 00:20:21 Before it happens. Yeah. Seeing it. it yeah so when i visualize my business already making over a million dollars a year in profit spreading all over latin america having people experiencing abundance because of this business and because we're a business that operates from outflowing from clearing from integrity then you know we become unstoppable yeah and then you actually see the result and what's great about visualization is that you have something to gravitate towards yeah and the clearer you visualize things the more likely it is to happen it comes from the word vision. So having a clear vision, there's no possibility for abundance without having a vision. Yeah. I think this is a very important part. And it's
Starting point is 00:21:13 something I learned as an athlete about visualization was seeing the play happen before it happens. And I got to practice as an athlete and transition it into business world. And it's definitely one of the most powerful things you can do with anything, seeing the relationship that you want to have, seeing the business, the body, and visualizing the way the vision will look in the future. And the reason why a lot of us fall into the same traps and we keep falling into the same breakdowns
Starting point is 00:21:40 is because what we're doing actually is we're visualizing all the things we don't want right and so we're visualizing how it's going to fail and we're visualizing how it's not going to turn out and we're visualizing that we don't have the money that we don't have the time that we can't and then your vision becomes a reality and so you know i always say that be careful what you visualize because it may come true you got to be very conscious that visualization is something that we use all the time. And in abundance and prosperity, it's a question of channeling it in the right direction. So always have your visualization include what you want, not what you don't want. So a vision would not be, you know, my vision for my life is a life without scarcity and without
Starting point is 00:22:26 pain and without uh suffering because what you're doing is you're bringing all those experiences alive versus my vision for my life is a life of abundant a life of health a life of joy and so you're actually putting and planting into the universe and your consciousness all the things that you want. Yeah, I think it was Mother Teresa that would talk about being for peace as opposed to against war. Right. She never talked about being against something because that would then bring it forth, right? Yeah, one thing is a position. Another thing is a stand.
Starting point is 00:23:00 When you stand for something and you stand for something, you're standing for something that's positive. When you position yourself, you're against something. And so when you create a vision, it's important that your vision be a stand. What is your vision for the life that you want, for your health, for your finances, for your family, for your children, for your business? You just opened up a business. What's your vision? And the clearer you have that vision, the more likely it'll become a reality. Ah, yes. If you're a fan of Chris, make sure to send him some love over on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, all that, at Chris Motivador. And year five, man, big year five that we just wrapped up when i think back to the last year
Starting point is 00:23:47 have so many incredible people on but i remember when i met mel robbins for the first time and brought her on this episode just blew up you know the video on youtube blew up and it was just such such a profound individual who gave such great insights and confidence and exuded this energy and a level of wisdom that I hadn't experienced before. And we cover a couple of different points, you know, in a two-minute section and then an extra one and a half minute section. We talk about that fear still comes, but I have 100% control of what I think and do when I have fear. Also, where anxiety comes from and how to build confidence and courage. Let's connect with the legendary Mel Robbins. No, the fear still comes, but I have 100% control of what I think and do. So one of the things that is important for me to put on the table is that a lot of times, you know, people look at where you are now. And so they'll see me on television or they'll see that TED Talk or maybe you'll be in an audience of 20,000 people in the American Airlines Center and I'm on stage,
Starting point is 00:25:05 you're like, wow, that chick must have just been more incompetent. I hate her. The fact is, that's not at all how I was. When I was 19, I started having crazy panic attacks. And they got so bad that I took medication and medication was a godsend for me. I took Zoloft for two decades. When I had our first daughter, who is now 17 years old, the postpartum depression was so bad that they put me on Ativan, which turns you into a zombie. And I could not be left alone with her. So when it comes to self-doubt and to how we can torture ourselves with our thoughts, boy, have I lived that nightmare. And as I started to use the five-second rule, which we're going to get into, and everything about my life changed, because when people first learn the rule, what you're
Starting point is 00:25:55 going to learn, what you're going to start doing is you're going to start using the rule to push yourself to do things that are annoying. You're going to push yourself to get up on time. You're going to push yourself to work on your business plan. You're going to push yourself to make calls that are scary. You're going to push yourself to get to the gym. You're going to push yourself to get up on time. You're going to push yourself to work on your business plan. You're going to push yourself to make calls that are scary. You're going to push yourself to get to the gym. You're going to push yourself to speak up more at work. You're going to push yourself to put the booze down. Behavioral, behavioral, behavioral. And then you're going to start to actually use it to change the thinking patterns that are self-sabotaging. So I, four years ago, wondered as I started to see myself go from facing bankruptcy to building, you know, close to an eight-figure biggest. What happened for me is I started to say, okay, this is a really cool little trick to bring out the most powerful side of you,
Starting point is 00:26:40 but can I use this to actually cure myself of anxiety? And the answer is yes, you can. And four years ago, I went off Zoloft and I started using the five second rule, which I'm going to explain in one second, to interrupt the patterns of worry and self-doubt, which by the way, anxiety is nothing more than the habit of worrying, spiraling out of control. And body feelings triggering now the habit of obsessive worrying that turns into anxiety and then kind of escalates to panic. I started using the five second rule to interrupt my thoughts every time I would feel that kind of worry kick in. And because the prefrontal cortex is awakened when you use it, your mind is now ready to take on a totally different thought.
Starting point is 00:27:22 It's a very different strategy than just trying to switch the channel on what you're thinking because you're actually inserting the step that nobody talks about, which is switching the gears in your mind so that your mind can actually take and believe the thinking. How you change your life is one five-second decision at a time, one push at a time. And if you accept the fact that you may never feel ready and you may never feel motivated and you may never feel confident, you may never feel courageous and that's okay, but you can still push yourself forward. What happens over time is as you start to see yourself becoming the person that takes action, that you start to see yourself becoming the kind of person that speaks even though your voice is shaking. You're the kind of person that has a bias toward moving instead of a bias toward thinking. Guess what happens? You build the skill of confidence and courage. She is an incredible human being. If you enjoy her, make sure to send her a message
Starting point is 00:28:16 over on Instagram, Twitter, and let her know what you thought. If you like her stuff and you liked this episode, send her some love. And that is my reflection on five years of greatness. Some of my favorite moments, people that I've had on, I could do a reflection on each individual, but I thought we would collect just one big one from each year or powerful insider moment that I thought would be useful to reflect on. And it's crazy. Time flies. If you would have asked me five years ago where this podcast would be by now, I would have had no clue. All the people I've got to connect with, all the individuals I've got to learn from, partner with, be a part of their lives. It's one of the greatest gifts I've ever been able to receive is to be able to host this podcast and to meet all these incredible human beings who I interview,
Starting point is 00:29:13 but most importantly, get to meet all the incredible beings that are listening on the other side. And I've been fortunate enough that when I travel and do speaking gigs and book tours, that a lot of you come out and say hi. And I'm very humbled and grateful when you do. It's always a pleasure to meet you, to shake your hand, to give you a hug, and just listen to you for a moment to hear about how the podcast has been impactful to you.
Starting point is 00:29:37 For those that see me randomly in the streets, make sure to keep coming up and saying hi. It happens a little more and more now, which is always very kind of you. So just make sure to come say hi. If you listen to the podcast, say hi to me in person. Give me a hug. Shake my hand if you don't want to give me a hug.
Starting point is 00:29:54 But I like to give hugs. And let me know what's been impactful for you. It's truly a privilege and an honor to be able to host this experience for you. truly a privilege and an honor to be able to host this experience for you. And you ask my team, and they will tell you, I obsess over this daily of how we can improve it. How can I can make it better? How can we reach it into more people? How can we continue to inspire people to take the information they're learning from this and implement in their life so that those results just ripple out into the world so that more people want to and implement in their life so that those results just ripple out into the world so that more people want to be better in their lives. It's all about living our best life.
Starting point is 00:30:31 It's all about following and finding our passion and purpose, having deeper, more meaningful relationships, living healthy and inspired, having full energy, living the adventure of life, having full energy, living the adventure of life, and doing it together. You know, I've learned a lot over the last five years. Some powerful lessons. I talk about it in the School of Greatness book. I talk about it in The Mask of Masculinity. I talk about it in The Millionaire Morning.
Starting point is 00:31:00 But I feel like there's so many more lessons to be learned. And I can't wait for each day for what I'm learning because I'm still a work in progress. I've still got so much to overcome. So many things I get to tap into and keep stepping up in my life. And I know that this is only just a reminder and an opportunity for me to stay accountable and to continue to overcome my challenges and work on being a better human being. I love you from the bottom of my heart. It means the world to me that you continue to show up here each week, every Monday, Wednesday, Friday when we release episodes. So thank you if this is your first episode or episode number 593. I'd be curious to see how many people have actually listened to all 593 episodes. I'd love to hear from you.
Starting point is 00:31:53 Send me an email if you have on lewishouse.com. You can just email me there. And thank you guys for all that you do. I kind of don't even want to stop this right now because I'm just reflecting on all the moments of connecting with all of you and everyone that I haven't connected with yet. I hope to connect with you in the future. So if you're listening to this now, please come say hi to me sometime
Starting point is 00:32:18 when we're in the same location and just give me a high five, a hug, and just say, hey, heard the episodes and love it. That's all I need. Just want to know that you're out there. Again, Martin Luther King Jr. said, not everybody can be famous, but everybody can be great
Starting point is 00:32:36 because greatness is determined by service. Again, I love you guys very much. Five years is complete, but our journey continues. And as always, you know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. Thank you.

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