The School of Greatness - 95% of Successful People Share These SAME HABITS w/ Thomas DeLauer EP 1406
Episode Date: March 11, 2023https://lewishowes.com/bundle - Upgrade your purchase to a bundle of The Greatness Mindset and access exclusive offers!Today I'm so excited to share an interview I recently did around my new book The ...Greatness Mindset that I felt was so powerful and I wanted to share it here on our School of Greatness feed. Make sure to check out the original episode linked in the description to follow their show and give them some love.Thomas DeLauer is a Nutritionist and Expert in Diet, Cognitive Nutrition and Performance. He is motivated by a guiding ethos of integrated optimization: if you perform better, so does the world. Thomas reaches more than 15 million viewers monthly (on average) through his Youtube channel, where he translates experience and learning from his own health transformation utilizing intermittent fasting and other forms of nutrition into actionable steps for his dedicated community of 2.85 million subscribers.You will learn:The three fears that hold people back.The difference between success and greatness.What self love really means.Plus, so much more!For more, go to lewishowes.com/1406Thomas DeLauer 1383 https://link.chtbl.com/1383-podThe Most Inspiring Story About Mindset & Perseverance You’ll Ever Hear w/ Nick Lavery: https://link.chtbl.com/1359-podJames Clear Habits That’ll Help You Not Waste Another Year Of Your Life: https://link.chtbl.com/1372-pod
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Self-love is discipline.
Exactly.
Self-love is structure and discipline
and organization of thoughts and emotions.
If your thoughts and emotions are all over the place,
there is a wound that you have yet to heal.
It doesn't mean you're still not gonna be thinking
about stuff and strategizing for the future,
but if it's emotionally stressed and triggered,
that means there's a wound that you have yet to heal.
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. What is one thing that comes just top of mind right now?
All the people that you've talked to, what is a common denominator, a trait that people
can try to emulate?
Well, there's two things I want to talk about around that.
And I'll get to your answer there in a second.
But I want to talk about the beginning of success.
What do successful people have in common?
And I want to define success and greatness because I think they're two different things.
I think success is about me and accomplishing goals and dreams that serve me.
I think greatness is about we.
It's about including others in your dreams and being of service in the impact of going
after your dreams on other people around you as well.
It doesn't have to be changing the world, but it can be changing the world around you,
your friends, your family, your communities.
And most of my life, I wanted to be successful.
I wanted to make money.
I wanted to get a good-looking girlfriend.
I wanted to be popular in school.
I wanted to accomplish goals as an athlete, all that stuff.
It was about me, me, me, self-centric.
And I accomplished a lot of those
goals. And I was never fulfilled after accomplishing them. I never felt like, man, I've arrived. I feel
happy. I feel fulfilled. I feel joyful. I accept myself. I never accepted myself still after
accomplishing all these different goals from sports accolades to money and a business and all
these different things. And it wasn't until I hit 30 years old when a number of different things kind of occurred
in my life that got me to reflect a number of challenging instances.
I had a business partnership breakdown.
I had an intimate relationship with my girlfriend that broke down and I just kind of felt like
I was reactive in the world.
So all these things kind of came together to make me realize and look in the mirror and say, and ask myself, who am I really? And why
am I going through so many breakdowns when I look successful on the outside? That's when I had this
kind of awareness from learning from a lot of people that success is selfish. It's for you.
from learning from a lot of people that success is selfish.
It's for you.
Greatness is including others.
At that moment, I shifted from wanting to be competitive,
wanting to be the best, wanting to be right,
and wanting to be number one.
That was my whole first 30 years.
When I hit 30, I said, how can I lift others up?
How can I win and others win around me? How can I collaborate as opposed to compete? And I think we see certain people that are
extremely successful and they are really competitive and they win a lot and
they're right and then they make a lot of money but we don't see what's
underneath that sometimes. And it's the ones we truly are inspired by and are, and admire.
Those are the ones who seem to have a level of peace, seem to have a level of love in
their life.
They have a healthy family relationships.
They've taken care of their health and they're also impacting people around them in a positive
way.
Those are the ones I believe are truly great that can elevate
beyond success into service as well. And that's when greatness happens. And so to answer your
question about what are the great people have in common, the first thing that they all have
is a meaningful mission. I think it's really hard to accomplish anything great of service if you're not clear on a meaningful mission.
Not talking about goals and dreams.
Goals and dreams are great for you,
but it needs to be a meaningful mission to include others.
They all have that in common.
And that is the foundation behind every decision they make,
behind their behaviors, their thoughts, their actions, and honestly, their identity.
Their identity is shaped around their meaningful mission.
So the step one is just getting clear
on what your meaningful mission is.
Now, if you're 20 years old, you may not know
what you wanna do for the rest of your life.
So this is seasonal as well.
This could be you're in college
and you just wanna have a, you wanna finish school
with great grades, you wanna be healthy, you wanna have great friends, and you just want to have a, you know, you want to finish school with great grades. You want to be healthy. You want to have great friends and you want to have skills to get
you ready for the next thing. It could be, you know, when I was broke on my sister's couch after
playing professional football and got injured, I couldn't think past how do I just get off my
sister's couch and make enough money to have my own apartment. So my mission was like, I need to
get some skills to just make some money so I can live on my own. That was the season of life until
I felt secure and safe enough to dream differently and bigger than that. But that is step one,
is discovering your meaningful mission. Now, a lot of people, when they get clear on that,
they still have doubts and insecurities that hold them back from taking action and actually accomplishing it or pursuing it.
And what I realized from all the interviews I've done and my own personal mistakes and
lessons and experience is that there are three main causes of doubt.
And I think doubt is the killer of dreams.
And there's three main causes of that.
The first is the fear of failure.
When you ask people if they're afraid of failure,
most people raise their hand.
The second one is the fear of success.
And I never understood people being afraid of success
because I always wanted to succeed.
So I wasn't afraid of it.
But when I ask a room of people,
are you afraid of success?
A lot of people still raise their hand.
And what I realized is that people are afraid
of the weight of success, a lot of people still raise their hand. And what I realized is that people are afraid of the weight of success, the pressure, leaving
their friends and family to go pursue the success.
People judging them.
Now you have money or success, people wanting more from you and pulling at you.
Can you trust people?
All these different things and pressures that come with success.
The third fear that holds you back is the fear of judgment,
the fear of other people's opinions.
This might be your parents judging you for taking actions
on something you really want to do,
and so you don't do it to keep your parents happy.
It could be friends, family, with society,
whatever it may be.
The opinions of other people holds people back
from pursuing what they want.
And at the core of all three of these things
is a little thing called I am not enough.
And most people don't feel like they are enough.
They don't accept themselves.
And if we don't accept ourselves
for all the crazy stuff we've been through
from our childhoods,
and everyone's got different stuff we've been through,
different traumas, whether it be big trauma, little trauma,
different shames, guilts, things we're not proud of.
If we can't come to a place of acceptance
of where we've been,
not saying it's okay the things we've done,
if we're not proud of them,
but at least have compassion
for the person we were at that time,
forgive ourselves, accept where we were,
and improve upon it,
then it's gonna be really hard to have
the authentic confidence to pursue the meaningful mission.
And I think that's what a lot of people lack.
They lack the authentic confidence.
We can fake it, but there still might be something missing.
We can achieve, but there's still like,
I know I'm still guilty of this, I still feel shameful. I still feel insecure. And so it's not until we can learn how to cultivate
the inner peace, which I believe is the biggest currency, until we can get that inner peace,
then we can have the presence and the poise and the grace to pursue what we want authentically.
And that's really been a lot of my findings from just personal
mistakes, from learning the lessons the hard way over and over again, and then just researching
with all these interviews. And even a fear of being authentic.
It's huge. I think that's a real one too.
Are people going to accept me? Yeah.
Because most, you know, I never thought people would accept me if they truly knew who I was
most of my childhood. And a lot of it
was conditioned from just playing sports and having, you know, kids and society and whatever
it might be, people picking on you and making fun of you for the littlest things. So if they actually
knew my shame, my insecurities, my guilts, my fears, would they actually accept me or would
they use it against me and make fun of me more? You know, it was a fear of like being alone, being like never accepted.
And that's one of our biggest fears.
And so how could we be fully authentic
if we're already made fun of stuff
that is like little things?
And it takes a lot of emotional courage
to put yourself out there authentically
and be criticized, judged,
and potentially made fun of by people.
It takes a lot of courage.
It's extremely challenging.
And that's why a lot of us put masks on.
We fake it and try to make it that way.
But I think it's really hard to fake it until you make it.
I think you must face it and embrace it.
And then you can start to make it in a way
through your authentic expression.
So that's something that I think people should think about. But it takes a lot of emotional courage to be authentic.
I mean, you essentially faced, whether you realized it or not, your worst possible fear,
because so much of your stock and validation was wrapped up in yourself as an athlete.
100%.
You literally encountered probably the worst possible thing that could happen where you
are unable to do that anymore.
So you had to face facts with, I no longer can seek, whether you realize it or not, validation
from this avenue.
And that was my whole identity.
Your entire identity was wrapped up in that.
And that is so common for young people regardless, right?
I'm just now at the age of 34 getting to a point where I'm starting to no longer wrap my identity under that. So it's easier said than done. But did you realize that
you were head on facing probably what is inadvertently your biggest fear or was?
Man, I knew I felt stuck. I felt like depressed, not like it wasn't like depressed, but I felt like
who am I if I don't have this skill to
lean on it was a crutch it was something i was good at and now i can't use that as a tool of
connection of validation anymore so i'm 23 about to turn 24 i hadn't graduated college yet because
i left early to go make professional football.
I really didn't learn anything in school.
Very little things that I remember from classrooms.
You know, I learned from interacting with people and sports teams and things like that,
but I don't remember much from school itself.
And I think because it was so hard for me to pay attention,
it was so hard for me to read and comprehend,
I would read a page and I don't remember anything I read,
so I'd have to read it over and over again.
15 minutes would go by and I'd be like,
I'm just gonna give up.
I was very poor on testing,
so just no matter how hard I tried,
I just couldn't grade well.
So my confidence was low in school.
And that's why I put all my focus on sports.
So when it ended, I was at a point where I was like,
what, who wants me on their team in life
if I can't provide this skill?
And I didn't know what my skills were.
And I went down a path of seeking out people
that I was inspired by, people that had talents
that I was afraid to acquire.
And I started getting mentors early on.
I started reaching out to people on social media, LinkedIn, and using these tools to connect with people and ask them questions.
And they kind of coached me like I was using life as a sport.
They would coach me and say, OK, for the next three months, I want you to try this.
For the next year, I want you to do this.
Whatever they told me to do, since they had already accomplished these certain things, I was like, months, I want you to try this. For the next year, I want you to do this. Whatever they told me to do,
since they had already accomplished these certain things,
I was like, okay, they know what they're doing.
I'm gonna follow it 100%.
One of my biggest fears was public speaking.
I could not stand up in front of a group of five peers
and talk for a minute without stuttering, stumbling,
sweating, feeling insecure,
feeling like they were gonna laugh at me.
So I met someone who was a professional public speaker and I said, what can I do to overcome this fear? He said, join Toastmasters.
It's a public speaking class and do it every week for a year. And I was like, done. And that's what
I did every week for a year. And it was the most embarrassing feeling probably of my life, standing
up and giving my first speech because I hand wrote
the entire speech. I had to give a five minute presentation and I gave it in front of an audience
of people that were 10, 20 years older than me, all better professional speakers. I could not
look up at anyone's eyes the entire speech. I had to stare down and read word for word because I was
sweating and I was so scared about how I looked.
The opinion of other people was my big fear.
Not failure and success, but it was really judgment.
And I remember doing that first one and being like, okay, I'm still alive.
You know, it's like you emotionally feel like you're going to die.
But I was still alive.
And I said, all right, I've gotten over the hump of starting it. Let me just show up every week. And by the end of the year, after
every week training and filming myself and watching the films and getting feedback and getting coaching
and trying new things and taking risks, the end of the year, I got a standing ovation from everyone.
I didn't need notes. I didn't need any props. I could just stand in front of people and connect with them. I started getting paid to do public speaking after that year.
So what was my, one of my biggest fears became a superpower today. Something that I get paid a lot
of money to go do. Something I get requested to do all the time. If I had not faced the fear and the insecurity all in, something I talk about in the book, I want
people to write a list of their fears, their biggest fears. I call it the fear list. You make
a list of your biggest fears and you start going all in on them until they become a superpower.
When you do that, you will become way more fearless when you do that. So I did this with
public speaking and I did this with so many other things over the years that supported me and kind of just having this tool belt of
emotional skills and belief and confidence that I can take on anything knowing that I will embarrass
myself, that I'll feel embarrassed and that's okay. And I'm still going to be alive and survive. And it's going to help me
when I get through that embarrassment and know that it's going to be a skill and a superpower
and not a fear of mine that holds me back. And I think a lot of people aren't willing
to embarrass themselves enough because it just doesn't feel good.
Yeah. But anything that's worth working for oftentimes doesn't feel good.
I know, man.
Doesn't feel good to go to, man. Doesn't feel good to go to the gym.
Doesn't feel good to maybe eat something healthy when you have something delicious like pizza or Snickers.
Right?
So it's easy to forget that, yes, all these things we have to work for.
And everything you've talked about directly also translates into people that are at this pivotal point of making a decision about their
health too. Like you talk about the fear of success. I can't tell you how many people I
have talked to, myself included, when I went through my transformation, I was afraid of losing
weight because weirdly enough, I was worried about what my group of peers would think about me if I
suddenly started eating healthier and if
I got better than them at being able to just feel comfortable in my own skin and
then be confident right there was and they've talked to a lot of people that
way where it does hold them back they are comfortable in their social circle
they don't want to be the one that breaks out of that because there's a
level of comfort there and there's that fear of becoming successful
within their own actual diet and health. And sometimes it's happening unconsciously. You
don't really realize it's going on and you start wanting to make these, you know, you know that you
need to make a change with your health, but there's this pressure that you're feeling and this fear
throughout doing it or the fear of failure of failing a diet
Yeah, like not saying that everyone should go on a diet or should automatically like change their lifestyle
But the people that really need to
They're aware of it. And you know, it's like you you don't look at someone that's
Morbidly obese, you know that that person that is morbidly obese looks in the mirror and knows that they're morbidly obese
And you know that they're most often they're not living their life like a total slot.
Usually they are making the best steps that they can.
They're not like, I'm not a glutton.
Like I'm not going out and stuffing my face,
like trying to be this way.
But they realize that, well,
if I start making this like concerted effort,
like I put myself under a lot more scrutiny.
Like what if I do it wrong and I fail,
then where do I end up? And that holds so many people back. And a lot of times it's just,
just doing it. Like some form of changing your life, whether it's nutritionally, whether it's
mindset, the first step is like, what do we always say? Minimum viable product. Like, I don't care.
Like just make one step towards it. One step towards it to face that fear.
How long did it take you until you faced the fear of,
you know, starting to eat differently
and train differently,
starting to lose the weight that you had on?
How long did you have the weight on
before you started to make that decision?
Yeah, I mean, I was overweight for a couple of years.
So, you know, although I can't say I have the experience
like people have been overweight all their lives, you know, it was long enough for me. And what the catalyst
was for me was I had gone through the drive-thru at Jack in the Box and I was parked in a parking
spot, stuffing my face with Jack in the Box tacos. And I was on the other side of town
thinking that no one would see me, thinking people like like an idiot like thinking like oh
i'm hiding here stuffing my face and an acquaintance of mine not even a close friend
drove by on the road and he saw me looked in my windshield and saw me eating and he nonchalantly
waved like oh there's just thomas just doing his thing whereas like in my mind i thought it was
going to be this i got caught like massive fear like oh my gosh but he's gonna tell everyone it was so
nonchalant for him that it made me internalize and realize wait a minute like what I think is
a giant deal to people about how I live my life now it's actually not and that actually made it
worse because the fact that it was so nonchalant and so just there's thomas eating tacos it made me realize like this is how people see me
like what could be worse than this wow so i liken that to like if you're living in the status quo
and you're really wanting to break out like what could be worse than that like and not saying that
your life isn't good or decent living where you're comfortable like they're sure you can have comfort
you can have good things you can have good family you can have a good support but the risk of failing is oftentimes much less than staying where you are i
know and that's what it was for me like i was comfortable and then when i realized that like
wait a minute like this is this is life this is what people see me as well that sucks something
needs to change yeah is that when you started that was it really yeah it was like it was a
jack-in-the-box acquaint like, it was a quaintance.
Yep.
It was literally eating one of those translucent tacos that are so greasy that they're practically
see-through.
Yeah.
What happened?
Was it like a, was it a quick thing right up?
Like a huge transformation and discipline right away where you're extreme or is it a
slow build?
It was slow.
It was slow.
In fact, uh, you know, know it's i went into intermittent fasting first
before i ever did any low carb or keto because for me i'm an all-in type of person so it was easy for
me to just say you know what just just like right like don't eat do this and kind of like develop
a system then i realized it worked and it was yeah so i mean that was and it wasn't even this
aggressive change and that's what i try to instill upon people too and like what exactly what you're
articulating it's like you don't need to just like flip this switch and become a
different person overnight it's like these these little steps that little step it didn't hit me
hard in that moment it hit me hard about a month later where i actually texted that friend and
said hey thanks for wow and he's like dude i barely even remembered that like what i've seen
you like because it was just life to him.
So it's so crazy, the little things that happen in life that, like, that was life-changing.
Like, who knows where I would have been if that dude in the green Toyota 4Runner didn't just be like, what's up, Tom?
You remember every detail about it.
It was that life-changing for you.
Wow, man.
That's cool.
It's wild.
How old were you?
I guess I was, let's see, I would have been 24. 24, wow. That's wild. How old were you? I guess I was, let's see, I would have been 24.
24, wow.
That's wild.
Fortunately, like I've mentioned before, I was young enough to bounce back.
Of course.
It would be much harder now, and I recognize that.
When you look at different people that you've interviewed, and yourself included, bringing it back to health, weight loss, things like that,
if you had to put a number, not throwing anyone under the bus, so we don't say any names here,
what percentage of people that are really achieving a level of greatness, what percentage
of people make a concerted effort on their health? Well, I don't think you can truly be great unless
you're healthy personally. So you can succeed and have accomplishments, but I don't think you can truly be great unless you're healthy personally. So you can succeed and have accomplishments, but I don't think you can be great.
You can have money in the bank, but I don't think that's great if you don't have quality
health and quality relationships.
And again, I don't think we all need to look perfect like you, you know, with the six pack
of there.
But I think it's at least being, you know, having a reasonable hold over your nutrition, your health,
your movement, taking care of yourself, your emotions, all the energy inside of you. And I
think, I think a lot, so I don't look at people as great unless they are in the journey, in the
process of consistently working on the relationships and the health. Again, they don't need to be
perfect, but they're in the journey. Again, they don't need to be perfect,
but they're in the journey.
Yeah, no, not suggesting that what percentage of people
are logging every calorie they consume
or practicing a specific style,
but the fact that it is within their scope,
their daily scope.
It's 100%.
I think that, yeah, the ones that are truly great
are focused on that and relationships.
I think there's others that I've interviewed who are extremely successful and accomplished, but I may not look at their
full life as like, wow, they've got it all figured out. You know, it might be certain areas of
greatness, but I really look at like the whole human being wellness as great. Well, and it's,
it's interesting because if you look at the blue zones, for example,
and people rain on the blue zones because for whatever reasons,
I think the nutritional aspect of the blue zones is one of the smallest aspects.
It's the community. It's the community, the activity.
The purpose. The overall just holistic look on lifestyle.
The holistic look on health. They don't even realize they're doing it.
So it's like when you liken that to people
that have achieved a significant level of greatness,
it's like it's just part of who they are.
Just like, yeah.
And so it's like you could say
someone that's living in Okinawa, Japan,
it's like, well, they eat sweet potatoes,
they eat fish, they eat tofu.
And so that's what I got to eat.
And you know what?
There are some common
denominators with the different blue zones that follow that sort of Mediterranean kind of flair
that I think makes sense. But I think it's a perfect storm of that along with the community,
the walking. And it's so funny because the journals put such an emphasis on what they're
eating. And it's like, how come the journals aren't putting the emphasis on the community
and the love and just the
general activity and how they live their life.
Yeah, and you're integrated in society from childhood to the grandparent.
You're not just left to go be in a home by yourself or something.
You have community with you, you have friends, you have family, and you have activities that
you have purpose tied to it.
I think that's important.
Yeah.
Well,
and speaking of purpose,
like,
you know,
it was just on your podcast and we kind of did a two for here,
however,
recording.
And if you haven't checked it out already,
check out,
uh,
assuming it's,
it probably has aired by now,
but you asked me,
uh,
about my level of sort of feeling of purpose,
fulfillment,
uh, level of almost greatness if
you will like and how i see myself on a scale of one to ten and yes i probably conservatively
answered a six and a half you know i'd say like possibly closer to a six sometimes right it's like
and that was an interesting question i'd never been asked that and if i had it's been i said i
said the scale of self-love and inner peace yes Yes. That was the scale. You said like a six and a half, so.
Yeah, and it's like, you know, the level of self-love,
my level of self-love is,
it probably is around a six and a half.
And I say that not to be like,
hey, like don't do what I say
because I don't love myself all that much.
I say that to let my audience know
and people that are watching this video that,
yes, like on the surface, I'm in great shape
and I have success and
this and that but like I'm working on my self-love in a different way and this level of validation
that you get from different things and when you look at yourself in the mirror and you see that
you know it's it's okay to accept the number that you're at and I wanted to ask you and save this
for this video like when you ask that question to highly successful or highly great impactful people, I'm sure you've seen it across the board.
But would you say that more often than not, people are answering on the higher end, on the lower end?
A lot of people shock me.
And they answer not necessarily on the low end, but they answer lower than I would expect.
And one person uh he
said it publicly on here his name is emmanuel ocho he said i think he before he kind of got
more famous and more financially successful and more platform and more audience in the last couple
years i said where were you at on the scale before like things took off for you in those areas and i believe off the fact check i
believe you said he was like an eight yeah right and then i said where are you now after financial
success you know massive audience and platform and connections with celebrities and all this stuff
and i believe he was like a six or six and a half. And I was like, that's really interesting. Before you
accomplished a lot of things and become well known, you had a higher sense of self-love and
inner peace. After in the last couple of years, it went down. And I was asking him about it and
he was just like, you know, there's a lot of pressure that comes to this. There's people
coming after you. There's criticism. There's this and that. And I criticize myself more.
I check everything I'm doing to make sure it's all okay.
And kind of a little bit more like stress or worry around things.
And I think that's what caused it to go down.
And, you know, he may be back to an eight now.
This was many months ago.
But I think that's why there is a fear around success for people.
That when you accomplish more and you become more successful yourself, healthier, happier,
more financially abundant in great relationships, you build a platform, you do something worthy
of speaking about, now there's other people looking at you and they have the ability to
criticize you more.
And that can be a fear for a lot of people.
And that can be a weight. It can be a fear for a lot of people. And that can be a weight.
It can be a responsibility that people don't want.
And I get it because I didn't want that pressure
for a long time because I didn't know how to manage it
and navigate it.
And I don't know if you were to ask me what my number was
because I've been thinking about it.
And I would say I'm probably around an 8.3
to 8.7 range consistently. And the only reason why I believe I'm probably around an 8.3 to 8.7 range consistently.
And the only reason why I believe I'm there
is because for the last two years,
I have been doing therapy and coaching on my emotions
and healing my heart from different wounds of my past
every two weeks for the last two years.
It has allowed me to have a lot more self-love and peace consistently. of my past every two weeks for the last two years.
It has allowed me to have a lot more self-love and peace consistently.
It has allowed me to have tools and courage
to stop abandoning myself from things
that make me feel less than internally
and allow myself to love myself
and expand more emotionally and externally.
I don't know if I would be at an 8.2 to 8.7 range
consistently if I wasn't having emotional accountability, support, coaching, and
putting myself in positions that are kind to me. So that's why I would say I'm with that.
Do you think that people, given given the right circumstances can achieve these things without
accountability and external help and that's not a loaded question like you know people that are
you know monks for instance i mean they can go periods of solitude and meditation and
if you were to ask them they might tell their nine and a half or a ten i think i think you i think
you can improve a lot with on your own i think you can improve a lot on your own.
I think you can.
But there's a quote out there that's like,
if you wanna go fast, go alone.
If you wanna go far, go together, right?
And so can you live alone?
People in the blue zones have community, they have support.
And if there's something to that,
that allows them to live longer, right?
Obviously there's nutrition involved,
but they're not like extreme CrossFit athletes.
They're just walking around and having good lives.
It allows them to have more peace inside and live longer.
We were talking about in our interview on my show about managing stress
and how emotional stress is one of the big causes of inflammation.
And inflammation causes more fat and more obesity
and all these different things. So I think you can do a lot on your own if you haven't experienced a
lot of emotional wounds in the past. I think if you've experienced different emotional wounds,
whether big traumas or little traumas. I just think it's gonna be easier
to have guidance, support, community.
It doesn't mean you have to pay for a therapist or a coach.
There's free support groups, there's accountability buddies,
there's friends you can talk to.
And there's a lot of different resources and books
and free guides online or YouTube videos
and things like that, that give you frameworks and tools
to reflect,
to practice things.
It's one of the reasons why I created it
with the book, The Greatness Mindset,
was what's a framework for someone like me
that I could understand it,
that it doesn't feel too out there,
that it feels like if I was 21
and in my peak of being an athlete,
smashing my head against other guys every day,
what is a framework that would support me
in becoming a better athlete, performing better,
achieving more, and also feeling better about myself?
And so that's why I spent the last, really,
10 years of research to create these frameworks
so that I can understand it at 21, at 30, and now at 40.
And hopefully in the future, I'll still be able to use it as a tool
for me. That's great. I mean, with self-love, I feel like there's a misconception. Yes. It's not
self-love and eat whatever I want. Well, that, but also even self-love meaning like, I love myself
so much that it's going to soften my discipline or it's going to soften my...
Self-love is discipline.
Exactly.
Self-love is structure and discipline and organization of thoughts and emotions.
It is...
And again, if your thoughts and emotions are all over the place, you haven't...
There is a wound that you have yet to heal.
It doesn't mean you're still not going to be thinking about stuff and strategizing for the future, but if it's emotionally stressed and triggered, that means
there's a wound that is causing you to feel emotionally stressed and triggered that you have
yet to mend and resolve in a harmonious way. You've yet to reclaim that part of your life that
was wounded. And so therefore it drives you to achieve and accomplish and do things from
more of a neurotic standpoint, as opposed to a peaceful, abundant, loving standpoint.
So you can still create great results on the externally, but may not feel good on internally.
And that's why I think there's a way where you can bring those together and feel good internally and have inner peace, but still be disciplined and organized and structured and have a schedule because that is self-love. It's
being creative within structure. It's having freedom and organization. And I think that is
the true self-love. You just described like the different regions of the brain without even realizing it. That's what's interesting. You know what makes us
unique as humans is this prefrontal cortex, right? That's like it makes us we
have an enlarged prefrontal cortex and it's only getting bigger based upon the
research, right? So it's like sometimes you think about oh well you know
animals wouldn't have to worry about this and animals are so well yeah
exactly because they're not combating this prefrontal cortex all the time that's driving them to
they have their biological innate need to like succeed be dominant but they're also doing it with
like like for lack of a better way of saying it a lot of less artificial concerns right artificial
concerns that we sometimes create for ourselves that are fabricated based upon our previous traumas,
our childhoods, our fears, whatever.
And when you just describe that,
you're talking about, okay, my strategy, my discipline,
you're talking about them, talk about my love,
and I talk about my compassion,
I talk about my emotion,
I talk about like what drives me to do things
as just innately.
I mean, and that's the way that I've kind of described it
in videos before is,
when you start to understand neurochemistry a little bit, and when I say a little bit, I mean, I'm no Huberman or Atiyah here.
I know a little bit about the brain, enough to know that the amygdala, the prefrontal cortex, the control centers, the hypothalamus, all this stuff.
If you start thinking of your life in these different regions of the brain, there's like an that comes to play like okay it's okay I'm in prefrontal cortex mode
I'm in strategizing mode but then I'm gonna leave this prefrontal cortex mode
here and I'm gonna go amygdala for a minute and I'm gonna really think about
like what I need to do to like be there for my family and you know and if you
start understanding that it's like segmenting your life in a way
to ultimately create harmony.
And if you look at the orchestra, like it's like,
okay, you have the wind instruments, you have,
you don't look at all of them and say,
okay guys, all of you play.
You know, you're like, okay, wind instruments,
you play this, okay, drums, horns.
And then together it creates harmony.
But without that intricate focus
on each section of the orchestra,
you cannot create an orchestrated part.
And it's like our brains are the exact same way.
So people think, well, I don't have time
to get healthier to work out right now.
It's like, you don't have time not to.
Exactly.
You know what I mean?
You don't have time not to,
otherwise you're gonna die young.
Yep, okay, we don't have time for the drums.
There's gonna be no drums in this orchestra.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, it's, you know, you can't, it's not something otherwise you're going to die young. Yep. Okay. We don't have time for the drums. There's going to be no drums. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah. It's, you know, you can't, it's not something that you just say we can do without.
And it's like, everything you're saying is just, my brain is thinking this thing like, okay, well,
this is awesome. How does this also parlay into like physical greatness? Because what is,
you're talking about greatness as a whole, like what is physical greatness? And like,
if I were to ask you, like, could you define physical greatness? And there's no right or wrong
answer. It's just, just, just for all this novelty here. I think, um, I think it starts internally
with peace because I don't think if you like are physically strong and shredded,
but you're emotionally stressed, that's part of the body as well. So for me, physical, I would say it starts with the thoughts in my mind,
since our thoughts impact chemically our emotions and our cells.
So it starts with having great thoughts.
It's being standing at the door of your mind
and being a bodyguard of the critical thoughts
that tend to come in consistently from ourselves
or from others or society and being a guard
and being a porter and saying,
I'm not gonna let you pass.
And I'm gonna only allow the thoughts
that will support my greatness physically,
because they all affect my body.
So let's start with the thinking of having great thoughts.
Loving, kind, compassionate, generous thoughts.
Abundant thoughts.
Obviously, you wanna make sure you're protective
and you're not naive and all these different things.
Discerning thoughts, yes, but not self-critical thoughts, which only hurt you.
Instead, learn to be a great coach, not a great critic.
That's the key.
So start with the thinking, and then it would be the feelings.
I really believe that our feelings can impact a lot of our decision making.
We feel bad, we eat poorly. We feel bad, we eat poorly, right?
We feel bad, we make poor decisions.
We reactive.
We hurt ourselves in relationships.
We do poor actions.
So we want to feel good.
I'm a big fan of meditation or just being in quiet for periods of time and breathing
and just practicing breathing.
But breathing and meditation is hard
and doesn't really work fully unless you learn to heal.
And that's why a lot of the book is about the process
of healing and the research on healing emotions.
And finding the meaning from the traumatic moments,
experiences, events that happened and finding meaning.
It doesn't say, it doesn't mean that they were okay, that they, you want, you wanted to experience those things, but just finding the
meaning so that you can be at peace about it and be able to move from that space. Once you get your
emotions in a harmonious environment consistently, then it's about taking care of the nutritional things and the physical things within
the body. And I think if you can work towards being the best in all those that you can on a
daily basis, understanding that life happens and stuff happens, and it's not about being perfect,
giving your best and having structure around that, that's what I think is physical greatness.
It's a really good way to put it.
Yeah, and it goes right in line with,
I mean, pretty much every successful physical,
I don't even wanna call them athletes,
but people that just have success
with their overall physical health.
Like they're in great shape, they can do whatever.
They have no problem being able to also migrate
from being a triathlete to deciding to be a weightlifter to just with no like validation being sought out in any one category.
Like there's no, there's also, so, and that comes with emotional freedom, right?
Because they're not getting wrapped up in one thing.
They are free.
They, and you can't flow unless you feel free.
You know what I mean?
It's hard to flow.
and you can't flow unless you feel free.
You know what I mean?
It's hard to flow.
When I think of like great athletes,
like the person that comes to mind when I was thinking about physical greatness
is Usain Bolt.
Yeah.
The guy is a freak athlete,
but he's got so much freedom
before and after his races
and he's got so much love and joy in his heart.
You can see it in the way he's just loose
and he's having fun, he's joyful.
And I think that allows you to be
an incredibly physically gifted individual
with the skills and talents that you have with your body.
But you need that peace and harmony internally
so you can have joy and love externally
with your activities and your body.
That's so dang true.
And with nutrition, it's so nitpicky at times
that I feel like it's difficult for people
that are on the outside looking in,
maybe they're watching our content
and they're trying to learn, they're trying to do the,
and it just seems like it's so the opposite
of this freedom that we talk about,
because they're like, oh, you're telling me
to confine myself to this to that but in an odd way there is a freedom that comes with that
too there's a freedom with accepting that you can eat a certain way or a freedom that accepts like
what triggered you to make these decisions or the freedom to understand why you're seeking comfort
from food. It's
actually the opposite. If you look kind of deep enough as, as interesting and woo-woo-y as it
gets, I've thought long and hard about that as, you know, as people that are really, they don't
want to, they don't want to put themselves in a box with a specific diet. I want to enjoy my life.
I want to enjoy the food. And that is perfectly acceptable, but understanding what it takes to to have the
freedom to make a better decision exactly and enjoying certain types of foods might limit your
physically yeah you know yeah that's an abundant mentality exactly that is being overlooked at that
point like okay what is this holistic look that i can look at this if i make this decision although
it seems like i'm putting myself in a box making this decision is actually allowing you and
warranting you the ability to be freer tomorrow. Absolutely. And it's asking yourself, does this decision,
will my future self be proud of this? Yeah. Does it serve myself in a year, five years,
10 years if I make this decision now? And what if I did this every day? Would this serve me in 10
years? And when you think about it that way, and I love your mantra that food is fuel,
I love having that as well.
It's like, if you can think about these things,
you can think about yourself,
would this support you in the future?
Hopefully you can start to make better decisions.
Yeah, 100%.
When you really understand that food is fuel,
it's not surface level.
Food is fuel for everything.
It fuels your emotions and it fuels how you look at things.
It is as close
to the definition of different colored glasses you could put on your face as you could possibly
imagine because what you eat could absolutely change outside of sleep, the dynamic of like
how you look at anything. You know, if I go and eat something that's causing a bunch of
inflammation in my body, I might look at a situation completely different and that could literally change my life
because it could cause me to react in a different way.
And that comes with like being restricted.
And when you have the freedom to look at things larger,
this makes more sense that way.
But all right, so before we wrap up,
I wanna ask you one really solid question.
All the people that have been on your channel and on your podcast, all the content you've consumed over the years,
what have you taken to heart as the most important, critical piece of health information, mentally, physically, nutritionally, anything?
I mean, it might just be because it's top of mind that the last couple of years I've had so many different neuroscientists and therapists
and research around healing
that the best stuff I've gotten
over the last couple of years
is about learning how to heal the emotions,
learning how to heal wounds,
because I feel like that allows you to,
when you said stress, what did you say?
Stress is like static?
And it's like the inflammation is static,
is what you said?
And so it's hard to get information
passed through static, right?
If it's in your body.
And I think emotional trauma,
even if you don't think you've been
through emotional traumatic stuff,
asking yourself what could have been that
and learning how to mend those wounds
will get rid of a lot of that static.
And that'll allow you to just be more effective and efficient
with your nutrition, your workouts,
and the way you feel about yourself.
And when you feel better about yourself,
you make better decisions.
100%. That's a good answer.
Yeah.
Well, Lewis, where can everyone find your book and where can everyone find you? The Greatness Mindset. You can
get it on Amazon or on my website, greatness.com and the School of Greatness podcast, anywhere
you listen to podcasts. Cool. Well, right on my man, as always, see y'all tomorrow.
Amen. Thanks, brother. You bet. I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards
greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a. I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a rundown of today's show
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