The School of Greatness - Dean Graziosi on Overcoming Trauma and Unleashing Your Inner Greatness EP 1462
Episode Date: July 1, 2023The Summit of Greatness is back! Buy your tickets today – summitofgreatness.comThis powerful conversation was originally recorded for Dean Graziosi’s show, Own Your Future. We loved this conversat...ion so much we wanted to share it with our listeners on The School of Greatness. Be sure to follow Own Your Future wherever you listen.Some kind words from Dean himself:"Get ready for a vulnerable, powerful, and authentic conversation with my dear friend Lewis Howes.Grab Lewis’ new book The Greatness Mindset at lewsihowes.com/gmbook Lewis is a New York Times best-selling author, keynote speaker, and industry-leading show host. Howes is a two-sport All-American athlete, former professional football player, and member of the U.S.A. Men’s National Handball Team. His show The School of Greatness is one of the top podcasts in the world with over 500 million downloads. He was recognized by the White House and President Obama as one of the top 100 entrepreneurs in the country under 30.But more than that… Lewis is a dear friend and I’ve had the privilege of watching this man grow and evolve into a truly GREAT man. He’s got that “humble power” that some of you may have heard me reference before. The ability to be confident as a man and what he knows, while still having the humility to ask for help, to know the work is never done, and the courage to become his greatest self."This episode is full of insights that will leave you feeling empowered, encouraged, and excited to step into your GREATNESS.In this episode you will learn,What it means to take authentic ownership of your life.How to use your painful past and turn it into a positive future.The number one skill that every human being should learn to master.Why mentorship, coaching, and asking for help is one of the greatest things you can do.How to direct your “inner beast” and use that strength for good, not self-sabotage.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1462More episodes with Dean and Lewis:MILLIONAIRE SUCCESS HABITSMAKE AN IMPACT AND NEXT LEVEL SUCCESS
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Calling all conscious achievers who are seeking more community and connection,
I've got an invitation for you.
Join me at this year's Summit of Greatness this September 7th through 9th
in my hometown of Columbus, Ohio to unleash your true greatness.
This is the one time a year that I gather the greatness community together
in person for a powerful transformative weekend.
People come from all over the world and you can expect to hear from inspiring speakers like
Inky Johnson, Jaspreet Singh, Vanessa Van Edwards, Jen Sincero and many more. You'll also be able to
dance your heart out to live music, get your body moving with group workouts and connect with others
at our evening socials. So if you're
ready to learn, heal, and grow alongside other incredible individuals in the greatness community,
then you can learn more at lewishouse.com slash summit 2023. Make sure to grab your ticket,
invite your friends, and I'll see you there. There's a beast inside of me and I have learned how to tame the beast. I've learned how to calm the beast. The beast comes out when there's a beast inside of me, and I have learned how to tame the beast.
I've learned how to calm the beast.
The beast comes out when there's a lot of emotional or psychological
wounds or responses or pressure, and we don't need that physical or reactive beast to come out.
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.
Welcome back to the Own Your Future podcast. i'm so stoked today for the guest because you know
it might sound like i say this a lot but i mean it when i say this isn't just an amazing man who
was all-american in two sports played professional football multiple new york times best-selling
author top keynote speaker he's one of my dearest friends. You know, how do you classify a dear friend? In my opinion, a dear friend could be someone you see all the
time or someone you see once a month, once a week, once a year. But when you see somebody
where your heart feels full, someone who truly cares, if you understand the definition of
reciprocity, this man lives it, breathes it. And I'm so excited about the new book he just came
out with. It is changing lives all over the world, but more so I'm just really happy to hang out with
my friend, Mr. Lewis Howes. What's up brother? My man, Dean. Thanks, man. Yeah, I know we,
I wish I could, I wish we were in the same city so I could see you every month, but
every time I get to, I get to spend a few days with you, I just want to soak up all the time
we have together. So I appreciate it. Nah, you know, Hey, listen, before we get started today and we're
going to have an amazing interview and I want to talk about your new book. I want to talk about
you moved into your new house. I love the relationship you have. I love watching your
evolution. And I think what's so inspiring Lewis is sometimes, listen, you have one of the top
podcasts in the world, over a half a billion views on your YouTube. I mean, it's amazing. And your downloads and listens on your podcast, all of that is amazing.
But sometimes when you're out front, people may assume you got everything figured out.
And I think the greatest gift and the greatest thing you've given to so many, before we get into
some really great questions, if you're listening today, no matter where you are, it's great when you see somebody, myself included, and so many others around the world,
but watching Lewis, I've watched you transform, brother. You've always been a good man. Since the
day I met you, maybe nearly a decade ago, I've always been, man, what a good man. But I've
watched you look into your weaknesses and say, hey, I don't want to bring that with me into this
next relationship or to this next business evolution or this next book. How do I become a better version
of me to help, help people on the outside? And I've watched you do this. And so many times you
could say, Hey, professional football player, professional, this making good money. You know,
lots of people want to, want to be your friends or you could say, I'm good. I'll stick
here. And what I love about you is you, you never stopped growing. You never stopped learning.
You're afraid. You're not afraid to admit where your failures are. You bring them up in public.
And, um, I don't know. I just want to say watching your growth and watching the amazing
relationship you have right now. Um, it's really inspiring. And, uh, I just want to give you some
kudos, brother. I appreciate it, Dean.
Well, again, it means a lot to me.
I received that.
And I, and I, and I really believe, I'm not just saying this to throw it back at you,
but I really believe that having wise mentors in my life throughout, you know, from my teens
as coaches and then in my twenties in the business world and guys like you who have
a lot of success at different levels. Um, for me, that's, that's
the models I look at people that have got it figured out people that have also struggled and
had challenges and overcome them and come out better on the other side. And that's why I think
people should be listening to your show and watching the stuff you do because you're a great
model of that. And so I just try to look for those models. I know Tony talks about finding a model
and really try to learn and soak it in
and listen and ask interesting questions and say okay let me go try this yeah see if this works
well you're really good at it man you're really good at it and uh and and i i share that before
we get started with kind of a first question it's fun interviewing people that i know personally
because i think i can ask some stuff that most people don't. So I'm hoping to share something you maybe never heard Lewis Howes share before today, which is cool.
But secondly, I think it gives everyone hope because all of us have our back against the wall
at some point, or maybe while you're listening. The last three years have been a blur to some
people. They keep moving the goalpost. Every time you think you got the game figured out,
they change the rules. And media is telling us we should hate each other
and be so far apart when I think most of us are more alike than apart. All these things cause
uncertainty, cause fear. And when that happens, people stand still. And I love doing this podcast.
I love we're here on Own Your Future because, man, if you don't own your future, someone else is
going to. And interviews like this, remember, take what serves you today, throw the rest away. But if
there's one thing today where you go, oh, that's what I need, then take it and run with it. All
right. I'm going to ask you a really simple question because I love the answer because
they're always different. We're calling this the Own Your Future podcast because I did a challenge
a few years ago called Own Your Future and it went monster i mean a million people signed
up and everybody loved the tagline if i don't own my future someone else will it's like oh that is
so to lewis howes when i say if i ask you what does it mean to own your future at this time of
your life not a year ago not five years ago but what does it mean to own your future? It's interesting because over the last few years, I've had an emotional coach guide me through a healing journey, guide me through
really looking at the details of where I felt triggered or where my nervous system would be
reactive as opposed to responding out of love. And over the last few years, I've had different
words of intentions for each year going into the new year. And over the last few years, I've had different words of intentions for each year
going into the new year. And this year is all about authentic ownership. So I love that this
is about owning your future because this is the year of authentic ownership for me.
And when I think of own your future, I think about remembering your future. A lot of us have
memories of the past and those memories keep us stuck in the past if we haven't created new meaning around those memories.
I know you had a very challenging childhood.
We've talked about these things publicly and privately about how they affected us.
And when we have memories of the past that keep us stuck in the present and in the future, that doesn't serve us.
So I love this idea of owning the future and truly remembering the future of who we want to be in the future and drawing that in closer now.
That's what I think about when I think of owning your future is about remembering.
And instead of remembering all the negative from the past, create new meaning, heal that past so
you can start having the space, the clarity to have a vision of the future and draw it closer
to us now. Man, it's so good. And if you don't mind, I want to, again, I love being with a friend because I
feel like I could just be me and ask some serious questions here. I love that because I just shared
something the other day. Sometimes we're under pressure, Lewis, when things aren't going perfect,
the old version of us can come out. Yes. i'm a parent i hope you get to be a
parent today um that we can't wait just so that's another story my wife who you know dearly is like
when right so anyway we can talk about that on another podcast um but i want to tell you something
i'm a parent of a 16 year old-old, 14-year-old,
a three-year-old, and a five-month-old.
This past weekend, I did something special for my daughter.
I have this amazing relationship with her.
And I want to raise, you and I have talked.
I know the relationship you had with your dad.
Sorry, you lost your dad.
I remember all the emotions and some of the deep conversations and we compared some things.
And I know about the learning disability.
We have so many things in common. And sometimes that's when we look at it right those problems become our strength our
wind kind of anchor you got to switch it right the other thing i wanted to share though is sometimes
i decided to parent differently than my father and i grew up mostly with my dad divorced parents
since three mostly with my dad my dad being the youngest of 12 this will get someplace i promise
everybody and then we get to some business stuff um but being the youngest of 12 this will get someplace i promise everybody
and then we get to some business stuff um but being the youngest of 12 my dad was physically
abused mentally abused never got help old school italian and and raised me differently i was always
nervous and he screamed a lot and would make stuff and very violent i'll leave it at that
this weekend i've parented different my daughter's whole life she's 16 i'm
the most i'm so proud of this woman i'm proud of her values i'm proud of her character she's in
10th grade she made varsity she's pitching for the varsity softball team wow that's great puts
her heart into something she does it but there's a couple things 16 year olds i just ask her a
couple things one read a book a week or read two hours a week of a book i choose and keep her room clean the other night
i got it so i'm gonna it's gonna all gonna land here the other night i i surprised her and her
friends and got a i got a box for her and her friends of the softball team to go see taylor
swift they had the time of their life the next morning i just asked her to make sure her room
was clean and before she left she left the room was clean. And before she left, she left.
The room was an absolute disaster.
And it happened to be one of these weeks, Lewis, I put in seven days.
You know, you're in the middle of it.
You're promoting your book, traveling all over.
You're jumping on planes.
You barely sleep.
I just had one of those weeks.
And I was at my wits end.
And something triggered in me, like my dad would would that I didn't appreciate it.
I did all this for her.
I asked her one thing to clean her room and I called her and I literally unloaded on her using swear words, profanity, anger, exactly like I got treated three days a week.
I have not done, Lewis, I don't know if I've ever done it before.
And the only reason I'm sharing that is I, now we went to dinner last night.
We made up. I told her about my past. I told her we are bonded deeper. And I gave her my
word. It would never happen again. She was wrong, but I told her, don't you ever let any man talk
to you that way? Even your father. Right. Wow. But I wanted to share that for a reason. And then
I want to get to the real question I had is because I've not seen that version of me. I work
on personal development every day. I'm with you three or four times a year. We're working on, I'm partners with Tony Robbins. I've written multiple
books on it. I listened to personal development every day. Your book is literally slated. I
started it this morning. I fricking absolutely love it. This is what I do. I live it. I breathe
it. And still under pressure after a tough week, after a trigger and a snap i unloaded on my daughter like a
like i hated as a child so as you share focus into the future that was a long question i apologize
but i wanted to get to it yes focus on the future not the past sometimes the past is sticky like
velcro and and pressure can bring it out what advice can you give to people? Say, I want to focus on my future and owning my future.
But Louis, you don't understand.
Well, I think it's really,
I think it's really inspiring how honest you are about that
and how you kind of unleashed
and were the worst quote unquote version of yourself
emotionally on this phone call with your daughter,
but how you also reconciled it.
I think it's, you know,
I love the thing about Wayne Dyer where he used to tell a story. I
don't know if you remember this story, but he used to tell this story about, you know, an orange
and he would take it out on stage and he would talk about this orange and he'd say,
when you squeeze an orange, when you apply pressure to an orange, what comes out of the
orange is orange juice. And when you apply pressure to a human, what comes out of the human is what's inside. And, you know, that might have been there in your past, that, that anger and
frustration. And it came out in that moment because you had a ton of pressure and it sounds like it's
the only time that's happened. And it just might've been, you also got like punched in the
face by your son. You're like beaten up. You had a black eye. So it was like, you have all this
pressure happening at once.
And I think that's just hard to manage.
And it's hard to expect that we're going to be perfect under pressure all the time.
And by the way, my three-year-old jumped off the couch.
I didn't get beat up by my older son.
But my question to you is, I know your past.
Only because we're dear friends.
And we don't have to go there today.
But I know the disability, you know, learning disability, I know the relationship with your dad. I know the
insecurities that no one saw. How do you not let that come out in your life when you're the orange
being squeezed? There was a moment where, I don't know, about a week and a half ago in the middle
of my book launch, where I had a moment similar to that, where I was like, everything was coming apart. And it felt like internally, because I couldn't control the
externals and things weren't following. They weren't happening the way I wanted to.
And I remember I had my phone in my hand and there was a moment in me where I wanted to throw it
against the wall. And I remember having this moment where I was like, okay, I really want
to throw this and scream right now. And Martha was in the room and there was nothing she did or said. I was just kind of in a frustrating moment of
stuff happening. And I, and I literally remembered the future. I remember the future. And I was like,
what is the highest version of me? What would he do in this moment? Now I had to have a moment
of clarity to stop myself, but I wanted to, because that's what I used to do in the past.
I used to react with anger. This is what I wanted. And, and, and I think the reason why the only reason why I didn't
throw the phone, yell and explode, it doesn't mean I wasn't frustrated and kind of like huffing
and puffing, but I wasn't explosive is because I truly believe is because I've been on a healing
journey. And I've, for the last two years, over two years now,
almost every two weeks,
I have an emotional coaching session
with a trained emotional coach.
I, like you, I can go to the gym
and have a great coach guide me in workouts.
I can have a nutritionist coaching me.
I can have a business coach, which I've got lots of them.
I can have all these different coaches in life, but a lot of us don't have emotional
coaches and we can read and listen to podcasts and go to events and all these different things,
which are all incredibly helpful reminders and tools.
But I truly believe the emotions and the way we think are running in our body and our minds
constantly.
Our nervous system is always on, you know, on guard.
And if we don't have a coach guiding us or some accountability or some something beyond
books and podcasts and tools and events that are all awesome, then there might be moments
where we react.
And again, this doesn't make us bad or horrible.
I have compassion for myself. I have compassion for myself.
I have compassion for you.
If we're screaming, we fall off the track.
We're not perfect.
We're human beings.
We're going to be out of integrity at times.
But what has worked for me is having an emotional coach and knowing that every two weeks, I'm
going to get to process.
I'm going to get more tools.
I'm going to get to have catharsis.
I'm going to get to calm my nervous system and continue to own and remember my future of what my vision is and keep
that closer to me now. And that process of consistent emotional coaching has worked for me.
Now, I, like you, have done many meditation retreats. I've done many workshops. I've done
all, you know, cold therapy, everything you can think of.
I've probably done it.
And they all work great, but it's the consistency of the emotion.
I mean, it's just like going to the gym, right?
I mean, we, as you said, we have to train our emotions.
And I just want to, I want to stop for a minute and just share what you said, because I'm
going to take this Lewis is in the moment.
what you said, because I'm going to take this, Lewis, is in the moment, if I would have remembered the man that I've been working to be and the man I've become, the father I want to continue to be
better in the moment, I have goosebumps. That is something I hope every single one of you heard
and take away because we all get red. We all get in the moment. And I feel like we're in the red,
man, we go right back to the person we've been running.
That's owning our past, not owning our future.
And I love what you said.
You took a moment.
And that's because you're in this every two weeks.
You're doing this, coach.
You took a moment and go, is this the man I want to be to Martha?
Is this the man I want to be to my future children?
Is this the example I want to be to friends?
Is this the person I want to be when I look in the mirror?
And that is a practice. Thank you for me. when i look in the mirror and that is a practice thank you for me and i hope all of you that is a practice i will be more because i haven't gone red like that in a really long time in fact i didn't even
know it was still in me lewis wow and so with that thank you thank you for being there's a
yeah of course and there's a beast i was just telling this to Martha yesterday, actually, you know, I was like, there's a beast inside of me. And I have learned how to tame the beast. I've learned how to calm the beast. But that doesn't mean that if I see something unjust, that in my mind, I can think crazy thoughts and think I want to go destroy this person or I want to go defend this or I want to go unleash my power and will against something or I want to go
destroy something like I have these thoughts and you know in some ways I'm glad there's a beast
inside of me for if I ever need to protect myself physically but we go through these you know the
beast comes the beast comes out when there's a lot of emotional or psychological wounds or responses
or pressure and we don't need that physical or reactive beast to come out i would bet to say you
have and and i think myself and everybody listening right now or watching right now is
it's good to have that be especially if you tame it because the power of that beast is why
when someone says oh no podcasts are hard to do. No, I don't care. I'm
going to have a top podcast in the world. The beast came out, but the beast came out in a polite,
elegant, I'm not getting up. Yes, loving, loving way.
Right. Like when you go through and you say, hey, relationships are hard, but the strength,
the tiger in me, I'm coming out and I'm going to do what it takes to attract an amazing woman
and have a really great relationship. This beast come out me, I'm going to write a book and, and, and travel all over the world, do whatever it takes to make
it a New York times bestseller. So I can change lives to get people a new mindset. I think,
I think it's not just taming. I think we have the beast. And I think we all do is how do we
use that as fuel? Not the thing that can hurt us, right? I think in my life,
I'm not the same size. I always joke when I'm with you, it's like I'm five, seven and a half,
but I have an inner strength that I've learned to really target and point the arrow in the right
direction. And I think that's a great lesson for today. I didn't know we were going to go down
that road is we all have that hunger. We all have that beast, whatever you want to call it,
that inner hero. It's just, how do we spend the right energy how do we point that that arrow in the right direction
and unload it for a bigger future rather than dragging you backwards exactly and it's funny
you talk about you know you're five seven and a half and i love you throwing the half you know
anyone who's when you're five seven you throw in the half dude i get it it's funny because uh the side note here there was a guy that came up to me the other day at the gym he goes man you're 5'7", you throw in the half, dude. I get it. It's funny because the side note here, there was a guy that came up to me the other day at the gym.
He goes, man, you're so tall.
And he was probably, I don't know, your height, somewhere around there.
And I go, you know what?
This has happened to me multiple times where guys come up to me and they're like, man, can you give me a couple inches?
And I always say this.
I go like, you know, the shorter guys always get the hottest wives.
They always make more money. They're always smarter, funnier, more intelligent than the tall guys.
So, you know, and he's like, yeah, but I still, I still want a couple of inches.
Yeah, no, I will.
Thank you for that.
All right.
Well, thank you for being involved.
I got a couple other questions I had written down for you in a world gone mad, which I'm 54
and I've been through a lot.
I've been through transitions.
I've been through a lot of stuff,
shifts in market, recessions, all those things.
But I've never seen a time kind of so uncertain as this
in the meaning of questioning ourselves
and feeling polarized and feeling like confused on the way things are moving
and the way people think. And are we really unalike? So long story short, I feel like it's
an uncertain time. Simultaneously, don't know where the economy's going. Currently, as we're
recording this, we got banks. A couple of banks went out. Could be they're predicting another 200
banks are going to go out. It's a shifting time. So in that, people can tend to, and you know, this is our study, people can tend to
not realize it, but back up into the goal, sit on their hands and go, hey, let me just see what
happens. And you can't own your future by seeing what happens. This is not a time to play small.
It's not a time to blame. It's not a time. It could be the last president, could be the current president, could be the next one, but blame has never solved anything. So I want to ask you a
question. Do you remember a moment in history? Maybe it's always been this way for you where
you decided to take complete ownership for your future. Meaning if stuff goes right,
that's on me. I did that. But when it goes wrong, it's not the partner or the relationship you're in or the government
or the president.
There's no way you've had the success you've had in all areas of your life without you
being complete ownership of your outcome, even if someone screws you over.
Was there a moment?
Was it a slow ride?
I'd love to hear that.
I think when the last recession happened, 2008, when I was on my sister's couch,
recovering from an injury to football, I was there for a year and a half.
And I remember my sister, after about a year and three months on my sister's couch,
she gave me an incredible gift.
She said, Lewis, you got to start paying rent and you need to go get a job.
And at that point for a year,
year and three months, I was kind of moping around, just like mooching off of her, just getting free food, living for free, not taking ownership of my future. And that was a great gift
she gave me where she was like, you need to either pay rent or you need to move out. So you've got
to get a job. And I remember applying for jobs online. This was back in Craigslist days, 2008.
So I was applying for jobs in Craigslist and I found a job opportunity.
I was like, I think I could like this job.
And I got an interview.
And I remember opening the door to go out of my sister's house to head to this interview for the job interview.
And I could not take a step outside of the door. I had the
door open. I was looking out at the car that I was going to take to go there. And I couldn't
take a step on the steps to go down into the sidewalk, into the car. Cause I started to see
the future of me taking this action. I started to see like, I'm going to land this job. I had
a big ego back then. So I was like, they're going to love me. I'm going to get this job.
It's going to be easy. And then I'm going to work really hard. I'm going to land this job. I had a big ego back then. So I was like, they're going to love me. I'm going to get this job. It's going to be easy. And then I'm going to work really hard. I'm going
to climb this ladder in this career. I'm going to work my way up. You know, it's going to be
awesome. And I just saw five years flash by and I was like, this is not really what I want my
future to be. It wasn't bad. It just wasn't the exact vision. And that was the moment I took full
ownership. I was just like, I'm going to overcome all the fears. I'm going to learn these skills.
I'm going to get more mentors.
And now I've got to figure out how to make money on my own.
And that's when I, I think that's right around the time I learned about you.
And, you know, I think I met you like within that next year, I think, at Josh Bozzone's
event.
I don't know if you remember that.
Yeah, I remember that.
On a boat in Austin.
Yeah.
On Lake Austin or whatever.
And I just said, okay, I need to learn.
I need to learn from mentors and I need to get new skills, new tools and overcome these fears.
That was one moment where I said, you know, I'm going to take full ownership of my life.
And I remember saying to myself at that time, I will never feel vulnerable in another recession again.
And so I prepared myself for 2020. And I said,
this is going to happen. And when I was with you and Tony, I think the year before it was
in October the year before, I think in 2019, we were in Fiji. And you and Tony were saying,
winter is coming. We didn't know it was going to happen that quickly, but it came.
And I remember saying, okay, I'm ready for this. And I owned that moment even more. I went
all in on saying, how can I serve? How can I give to my community? How can I find new revenue
streams? How can I show up in different ways? And so 2008, 2009 was the first moment. And I just
said, never again, will I be unprepared for whatever comes my way. And I've had that mentality
of just making sure that I,
you know, I saved my money, I invest my money, I diversified, I continue to overcome challenges,
I continue to learn new skills. And I think for me, the most important thing is I continue to
have coaching and be coachable to be able to adapt and be flexible in these moments of uncertainty.
And over the last few years, it has been stressful with all the
uncertainty in the world, not because of what's happening in the world, but more because I was
in a challenging relationship and dealing with that. But I had peace outside of that with
navigating the business stuff. It was more like I still had demons inside of me I had to heal
and mend. And that's where the coaching gave me
clarity to create that freedom and peace within me. And now I just feel a sense of peace with
what's happening in the world around me while being in the middle of a book launch, moving into
a new home and doing all these changes. I've never felt this much peace in general. I had that one
moment where I was kind of under pressure and wanted to throw my phone. But in general, I felt very peaceful over these last couple months with all these big changes and things
happening. And I think it's just I keep making the decision to own my future, to remember the
future of the highest version of myself that I want to be and trying to step into that daily.
Now, again, in no way am I a perfect
human being. I've been, you know, eating tons of junk food these last few weeks while I'm traveling
and off the, you know, not working out as much as I want to, but in general, the inner world is
peaceful because I keep being humble in my ability to be coached, finding mentors, you know, reaching
out for support, like with guys like you and really
not being afraid to reach out for support. I think a lot of people try to do it on their own
and that's what hurts them. I've always been open. I work really hard on my own, but I'm also like,
I need to, I need to answer to a question I have. Let me reach out to Dean. Let me reach out to this
person and get that support. And I
think that supports me and moving beyond all these different challenges of the world.
What a great answer. And I love, you know, I've been saying to myself for probably two decades,
Lewis, there's no one coming to save me. It's a mantra. I probably haven't shared it with the
outside world until about three years ago, but for 20 years, every time something going wrong,
Oh, a partner stole my money
i made a wrong advertising isn't work the the campaign didn't do the launch didn't work i don't
my brain doesn't go oh who i go no one coming to save me i i create this if there's a bad
partnership i brought in the right wrong in the wrong partner i'm in a bad marriage okay i'm
probably half of the problem maybe 60 of the problem of this marriage no one's coming to save me it's on me to fix it and I think this sounds
like I'm patting myself on the back I'm not it was a blessing and a gift that I
just adopted that because when it happened now it's so liberating because
you got no fingers to point like it's that you're not so concerned about what
happens in the outside world because you're mastering the inner game it's on
me this went great I'll take the credit went wrong okay i'll take the blame and i know you do that because i watch you do it and
and i know you reach out hey in a moment here i want to talk more about your book but i see why
your new book's on fire i see why it's so for lack of a better word i can't wait to read the entire
thing is it's because you're what people have to realize when you write a book like this it's not saying lewis has all the answers for the greatest mindset in the world no lewis has a lot of the
answers because he's had life experience does the coaching does the mentor i'm in a mastermind with
lewis at least a couple times here where we're asking questions going deeper and what we get to
do because lewis and i are in the same business we get to impact people
for a living i mean how freaking cool is that i want to ask you about that in a minute but we get
to share our life experience and then find a way to give it to you so hopefully you take what serves
you and throw the rest away so you make that shift so you don't let the red come out and be the old
version of you so you can own your future so you could focus on solutions so you can take complete ownership and we do these things from our heart and the reason i call lewis a
friend is because his his gift is to serve does he want a successful company behind it here's a
secret yes and he should and he deserves it i want to impact millions of lives i still want to
employ my 140 people that that work in the office here because we get to
do both at the same time. So I'm going to share in a moment here and it'll be in the notes,
but go to lewishouse.com forward slash GM book, GM book, lewishouse.com forward slash GM book,
get Lewis's book. We all need it. Listen, it is my practice. I don't, I, I, I don't miss a week. Every single
week I am listening to a book because every book I listened to, I see some of them on your shelves
there, the same ones I've listened to every book I listened to or read gives me something that
helps me become the version of the man I want to be to own my future even more not in an ego way but just
becoming better to have the relationship i have i'm blessed to have the most amazing relationship
i could have ever dreamed of but i had to do the work and i gotta work on it every day right so
go get lewis's book i got a couple questions for you we're in the same business i mean let's just
pull the curtain back we get to deliver deliver, share. You do so much of
it free with your podcast and with interviews and with YouTube videos. I love all your YouTube stuff.
If you're not following Lewis on YouTube, you should. If you're not following his podcast,
you should. But we're in the business of selling what we know, right? You give so much away for free, but you sell a book.
I hope you have a high level mastermind.
I hope you have a monthly continuity that people could be in.
What does it mean?
I mean, neither one of us in school, when we were struggling to frigging read with dyslexia
or whatever it is we all have, would ever thought that people would be listening to
us that would be educators.
But really, we're not educators saying we have all the answers,
but we have some in the swimming lane that we're in.
So what does it mean or what does it feel
or what is the definition to you of saying,
you sell what you know, that's your business.
What's the best part of that to you?
I love it.
And I think I took it a different level from selling what
I know to selling what others know and facilitating conversations. And you're going to say that.
That's what I was hoping for. And for me, it's, you know, I started 10 years ago in the podcast,
you know, I was doing online marketing before that, but 10 years ago, I started my,
my school of greatest show. And I didn't want it to make it about me because at the time I felt like, okay, I didn't have a lot of the answers. I had some answers, but I really
want to go on a journey of, of learning from mentors. So, and that's, I think a beautiful
thing that I know you teach and Tony teaches as well as like, you don't have to be the expert.
You can interview experts, you can interview and, uh, and write about them. You can
storytell about their wisdom and do just as well, if not better.
I think Oprah did this fantastically
for decades. She shined the
light on everyone else. And by doing
so, the light shined
even brighter back on her by everyone that
she facilitated and supported
and lifted up. It all came back
a million fold to her
over the years. And then she became the
expert in the process.
And so that's kind of been my journey is how can I serve and elevate other voices?
And now after 10 years, I feel like I have this authentic ownership of sharing more of
my voice.
That's why for me, this book was the right time because I felt like, okay, now I feel
really confident in what I've learned internally yeah and what I've learned
externally so now I can speak about these things with a sense of ownership with a sense of belief
with a sense of peace that I that I'm not speaking about things I don't know and I'm also
owning what I do know and this really supports me and having more confidence at this this season
and stage after a decade of doing the show I have have to tell you, Lewis, if you didn't write a book, it would be a disservice to the world
because you are, I mean, where did, where did thinking grow rich come from? Napoleon Hill
interviewing 50 of the wealthiest people or more than 50 of the wealthiest people in the world at
that time. How many interviews have you done in the last decade? Do you know?
Well, 1400 episodes episodes those aren't all
interviews but probably close to a thousand oh my god literally at a thousand episodes every one
you're like oh crap i gotta put that in my life oh that's good in my health my life my love my
future my finances and and the collectiveness of that oh my god is so rich and and i think what's cool about this industry is before the
internet before podcasts before we could be connected right now we we couldn't be in proximity
so now we're doing this virtually right before that when you wanted to learn something you hope
you got a book or you hope you found a mentor in your town now we have the opportunity to say hey
i want to have a better mindset a guy that
interviewed a thousand people 1500 episodes and now he took and he gets a coach every two weeks
on mindset and he's willing to share his vulnerability sign me up i'll take that right
and it's why it's why we encourage so many people everybody should be sharing what they know whether
it's a podcast of course a book a book, a mastermind, a workshop, literally everybody should, because we all have something that could allow someone to
get quicker through an issue that they're at. Yeah. And I think if you don't feel like,
if you're just getting started, cause I know a lot of people in your audience are probably like
just getting started or they're transitioning from one career and they want to start a side
hustle or start their business on the side or launch an online course. And you may feel like, well, I don't have the training or the tools or the certifications
or the, you know, the years that Dean has or the Lewis house or whatever it might be.
I think it's really interesting, but your perspective on a topic through curating
information can also be a powerful way of teaching. It's your perspective on curating information. I have my
perspective. Again, in the greatness mindset, it's a collection of all the inner, the best of the
best moments of interviews from scientists, neuroscientists, therapists, doctors, you know,
business stars and leaders and things like that. And sharing my perspective of my journey on how
you can be great with your mindset on how you can overcome
your fears, your insecurities, your self-doubt. You might have your own perspective of how you've
done that and other tools and lessons that you've learned that reach certain communities that
inspire certain communities. And there might be a community that you could serve better than I
could serve or Dean could serve. You might have a background in knitting
or in CrossFit, and that's your community. You own it, you know it, and you speak to that
micro-community. But in these micro-communities are typically the most passionate fans,
the most passionate individuals that want to learn from someone in their space. Dean and I
are broader, right? So we reach lots of different communities, but you might be able to impact someone even greater
in a community that you live and breathe
and sleep in all day long.
Whether that's CrossFit or knitting or cycling
or whatever it might be.
But speaking to those communities
from your personal experience
is how you can serve greater.
And again, I think the guy's name is Kevin Kelly.
Is that his name?
Where he's talked about a thousand true fans. You don't need millions of followers on Instagram to make a lot of money. You can get a thousand true fans. You can make a full-time income doing what you love.
Wow. Well, everybody, I didn't pay Lewis for that rant, but that was amazing. And that's,
and you know, that's what we preach from mountaintops, right? One of the things we say
is to own your future, whatever way that is, own it. One great way is to do it through sharing what
you know. Tell tell me hold your
book up again i love the cover it's mine's at home and i forgot to bring it um i love the book i love
the cover let me just ask you one question about that what is your i know a book i'm six in they're
a labor of love and then promoting them is a labor of love what is your favorite part about that book
if you had to pick one thing and say i love love this book, but this one thing I love. Page 201. Page 201. I'll open it up real quick
for you. There's a graph and there's a graph that talks about the six distinctions of a powerless
mindset versus a greatness mindset. And if you just open up page 201 and that's all you do with
this book and you go through these things and you do a self-assessment and you ask yourself, am I living more in a powerless mindset versus a greatness mindset?
It doesn't make you good or bad, right or wrong either way.
Is this serving me?
Is this empowering me?
Is this supporting me to accomplishing my goals, my dreams, to having more love, more fulfillment, and having more peace?
Eckhart Tolle says the number one thing that people want at the end of the day is inner peace.
And I'm a big believer in that. We may think we want money. We may think we want to sleep with
a lot of women. We may think we want all the accomplishments in the world. But at the end
of the day, we want those things because we think they're going to give us inner peace,
acceptance, self-love, that we are enough.
And that's one of our biggest fears, that we are not enough. And when we're driven by not enoughness, we allow the powerless mindset to drive us to accomplish goals. And when we
accomplish them, we still don't feel enough. It doesn't mean we're right or wrong, good or bad.
It just means we still feel insecure and doubting ourself. And I believe self-doubt is the killer
of dreams.
And it's the thing that holds us back the most.
That's my thesis over the last 10 years.
I wanted to interview everyone about how do they overcome self-doubt?
The self, it doesn't matter how much talent, knowledge, wisdom we have.
I know so many people way more talented than me
that lack the courage to act on their goals and dreams.
And I'm like, give me some
of your talent. Give me some of your wisdom. Give me some of your capabilities and I'll do amazing
things with it. But when we don't believe in ourselves, we hold back our gifts, our talents.
And so on page 201, the powerless mindset, I'll just read them out for everyone here.
There's six key things of the powerless mindset. And this doesn't mean you're not a good person and you're not loving and generous. It just means these
things hold you back from acting on your gifts. You lack a meaningful mission. The enemy of
greatness is being unclear, not being clear on what you want for this season or stage of life.
That could be a six month season. It could be six years. It doesn't matter. But just being clear,
I want to get off my sister's couch. That can be a meaningful mission.
It doesn't mean you have to get clear on the rest of your life. It's just where are you heading right now? Lacking a meaningful mission makes you feel powerless, makes you feel like everyone's
against you or you're being pulled in every direction. Your energy is not in focus. The
second thing is being controlled by fear. We're all going to face
different fears through different stages and seasons of life. You know, I'm not a father yet.
I'm sure I'm going to have some insecurities and fears I'm going to have to overcome and face
when that comes. I had to move into my first home. There were some insecurities and fears I needed
to face. But when we're controlled by fear, it just holds us back from acting courageously.
So we need to learn how to do that.
We're crippled by self-doubt. Again, this is the third thing in the power of this mindset. When
self-doubt cripples you, you shrink your masterpiece. Imposter syndrome, they call it in today's world,
right? Exactly. Exactly. And you just shrink. So we have to learn what the root cause of our own
self-doubt is. And I have an entire process
in the book about overcoming that. The fourth thing is, this is a big thing. There's over
20,000 books on mindset and success. And I don't hear a lot of them talking about this,
which is the power of this mindset is when you conceal past pains. Now, I'm not saying you need
to share all your pain
to the world constantly or something,
but if you have a darkness inside of you
that you're unwilling to speak to one person about,
or you're unwilling to write down in a face and address,
that darkness will always chase you.
As you keep running after something
and trying to run away from it,
it'll keep following you.
It'll haunt you.
And so learning how to not conceal past pains, it'll keep following you. It'll haunt you. And so learning how to not
conceal past pains, that's the powerless mindset. Defined by the opinions of others, you're probably
one of the best at this, Dean, by not being defined by what others think of you. And it
allows you to have freedom to act courageously, make mistakes and keep going and not worry about
criticism or judgment. You learn with feedback, but it doesn't hold you back. Most
people are crippled by the opinions of others and it makes them powerless. And the sixth one
is drifting towards complacency. And again, there are seasons and stages of life that we should
relax, recover, and all those different things. But when we lack a meaningful mission and we just
drift towards complacency forever, it just means we're not using our gifts
and talents with our friends, our family to the best of our ability. So those are the six things.
Just think about those six things and say, am I living in any of these areas of my life with
these six elements? If so, it doesn't mean I'm bad and wrong. I had all six of these at one point
and they might come up momentarily at different times. And it just means we're more
powerless as opposed to powerful and stepping into the greatness mindset. And I'll just read
them really quickly. These six in the greatest mindset, driven by a meaningful mission, not by
fear, not by anger, not by resentment, not by frustration, but driven by a meaningful mission.
And I want to talk about meaningful. It's more
than just you. It has to include others in the mission that is more meaningful. Um, and a lot
of people don't know in one sentence what their meaningful mission is. We talk about the process
of how to discover that. I just think the clarity gives you focus. It doesn't mean you're really
taking this. I didn't mean to interrupt you for this accomplish. I hope you're really taking this. I didn't mean to interrupt you, but I hope you're really taking this in. I know this is a quick interview and
you're just getting the high level, but these are the fundamentals of life. Everybody's looking for
the miracle, the magic button. They're looking for the invention. They're looking for the mindset
shift. And it's the little things that are the big things. You know, I heard somebody say one time is
small hinges swing a big door. I feel that about mindset. These things as Lewis shares,
you may have heard them before. You may think they're little, but are you actually utilizing
them in your life? Are they a practice in your life? These are the little things that have become
the big things in my life. And I'm so happy. I want to hear the rest of them. And for all of you,
listen, go to Amazon and get, get his book. Like right now, go get greatest mindset at Amazon or go to lewishouse.com
forward slash GM book. We'll put the link in the notes. I am pushing this book. I don't get an
affiliate commission. I'm not doing it for a recipe. I'm doing it because I know this man
and I know we're in a cloudy time in history and we need these types of principles to find our way to find opportunity rather than obstacles, to see
solutions, not the prevention.
And what an amazing time to release this.
All right, you got four more, I think, that I want to hear.
Yeah, yeah.
So turns fears into confidence.
Again, we all are going to have fears at different stages and levels of life, but learning how to turn it into confidence. One of the best ways to do that is to create a fear
list. When we face and look at our fears by writing them down and say, okay, this is my fear list.
And then we say, I'm going to do everything in my power to go all in on these fears until these
fears disappear. That gives us the confidence and it gives us a new skill set when we overcome
those fears. So turn fears into confidence, overcome the self-doubt. Again, you got to get
to the root of what that I'm not enough-ness is coming from and learn how to overcoming yourself
down. Healing past pain. This is a thing that again, for many years I was driven to achieve,
but I was running away from the past pain. And so it kept coming up and I was even
way more explosive, you know, and reactive than you were. I was like that almost every week
on the basketball court or with friends or in business. I was much more defensive 10 years ago
and reactive because I wasn't healing the past pains. I was driven by the past pain to show and
prove and win and accomplish.
And so we've got to heal past pains.
The fifth one is create a healthy identity.
10 years ago, I created a new identity where I used to say, I'm stupid.
I'm an idiot.
I'm a dummy.
I'm, you know, I'm never going to amount to something intelligence wise.
And then I shifted it and created a new contract with self.
And I said, I am a loving,
passionate, wise man. I had an emotional contract with self. And I had to start living into that on a consistent basis and finding ways where I could believe those things as opposed to the past
contract. And the sixth one is you take action with a game plan. So these are all the six elements of the greatness mindset on
page 201 of the book. And I, and I, and I'll, you know, kind of recap it with this. I, I interviewed
this brain surgeon who was an amazing interview. He's not famous, but I think it did like a few
million views. His name was Dr. Rahul Jandial. And he has done over a thousand brain surgeries,
but he's also a PhD in neuroscience. So he studies thoughts in the mind, but he also studies the
brain and understands the connection between matter and what's not material, but spiritual
essentially. And I said, what's the number one skill after all that you've learned
from neuroscience and brain surgeries that every human being should learn to master?
And he said, emotional regulation. Now this is a brain scientist talking about emotions and how much our emotions tie into, you know, causing cancer,
causing pain, hurt in the world and hurt against ourselves. And again, when we can learn to master
our emotions through healing, through processing, through learning new tools, through overcoming fears and self-doubt, and creating new meaning from the past so that the past pains actually add value to us.
And we can learn to appreciate even as horrible and horrific as things that happen,
if we can learn to create new meaning.
I know Tony talks about this with, I think his mom used to beat him and, you know,
put soap down his throat or whatever it was and create new meaning behind these moments.
Then it empowers us.
And we can own our future in the present now
because we've created new meaning from the past.
And I think that's what allows us
to have emotional regulation.
God, so good, Lewis.
I'm so glad we got the chance
to share this with so many people.
And I mean, if you think about,
if you wanna give your future self a gift gift tomorrow if you look at the end of your
life and you wish you could go back imagine how great is is today you can
give your future self the gift of making shifts of making those changes that
we've been talking about thinking about you heard it but what if this was the
day you said I'm changing one little shift at a time, not at all overnight.
Lewis, I love that you wrote this book
and I hope everybody goes out and grabs it and keeps going.
Hey, one thing, I was inspired by you guys
when we were all together in California.
Podcast what I've been doing,
last interview I did with Trent Shelton went really great.
I said, if you have any question you'd like to ask me,
if there's anything, you guys inspired me to do this,
is there anything that I can help you with on your book for business, for marketing, for life,
love? You know, I'm a little bit ahead of you. I'm a little bit ahead of you married to a Mexican
woman. So I'm just a few steps ahead of you there. So if I could give you any advice there.
I got, I got a question. I got, I got, I got, well, I'm always gonna have lots of questions
for you, but I want to ask you a question. I think it would be, uh, um, resonate for the audience here.
I don't know if you, and cut this out if this, if this is in public yet, but, um, dude, does
your audience know you're, you're doing something with McConaughey?
They will.
They will by now.
Okay.
Okay, cool.
Well, I'll ask this then, because, you know, I won't say what you're doing with him, but
you, you've built a relationship with him.
And I love his speech when he won the Oscars.
Me too.
He said, I'm always chasing the 10-year version of myself, my hero, right?
Yeah.
You're 54 at 64, which I think is Tony's age.
Yeah.
63, 64. At 64, what will your 64-year-old self, 10 years ahead, your future-owned self, say to you now,
but the one piece of advice that you should be stepping into for this next decade?
So to own your future.
Wow, you put it back on me.
What would your 64-year-old self, if you could step into that for a moment and imagine, you know,
how old your kids are, you know, how old your kids
are, you know, now they're, they're 12, they're 14, they're 26, they're 24, they're out of college.
You have a different stage of life. Your marriage is at a certain place. Your business has exploded
even more. You have, you've impacted hundreds of millions of lives on a monthly basis with your
service and your mission. What will your 64-year-old
self say to you now as the piece of advice to own that future and step into it now?
Wow. Dude, I knew you'd put this back on me in a good way. I want to tell you real quick,
a decade ago, almost a decade ago, I was going through some shifts. I was going through a divorce.
I was really worried about my kids because I was a child of nine divorces. My parents got married and divorced a lot. I just was projecting they would feel the same stuff I felt, even though
I'm not the same man, not same situation, you know, you got to go back and do that healing.
And I remember sitting with Tony Robbins. I flew to his house and I was like, I was in a
angst place worrying about my kids. And he just looked at me and I was three or four years away from being 50.
And he looked at me and said something we've all heard.
And you've heard Lewis and I've heard, but it was in this moment that I heard it.
He said, let's talk about all this stuff.
I don't want to know what you're going to do.
I want to know who do you want to become in your 50s?
And it's not profound, but it was profound in the moment.
Sometimes it's the message.
Sometimes it's the timing.
Sometimes they come together.
And I remember I just stopped talking.
And I literally went back to my hotel room after being in his house for several hours.
I just started writing who I wanted to become.
I want to be a more connected man. I want to be the man that attracts an amazing
woman, not just look for an amazing woman to be attracted to me and heal me. I need to heal.
Like you want to become a man. I want my children to feel connected and alive and, and not, not
obsessed on success, obsessed on being a fulfilled human so what can i do to empower and i
just kept writing down what i wanted to become the man that could be friends with his ex but a true
friend so our kids don't feel fragmented and this stuff just kept pouring out of me and as you were
asking me that i'm like wow it's been almost 10 years i need to ask myself again lewis who do i
want to become in my 60s you know i'm 54 i'll be 55 this year but who i who do I want to become in my sixties? You know, I'm 54, I'll be 55 this year,
but who I, who do I want to become? And I would say, I love what I do for a living. I love that
I get the chance to be friends with amazing people like you and, and, and be in a place where I get
to help impact lives. I'm not everything. I'm not getting straight A's and everything, but the areas
that I'm good at, I can help people go faster while we grow a business i would say the man i want to become
i want to make sure that i'm truly a next level present father and husband because i could provide
all the things in the world but if i'm not there for the little things then then i missed it um i
have some younger ones so i'll have some i'll still have kids in their teens. Um, and I, I definitely know that I love
what I do so much that I have to find more balance because I will choose work over anything else
because I love what I do. So thank you for asking that question. Yeah. So you think your 64 year
old self would tell you to find more balance? Yep. Find more balance for sure. Cause I am,
I definitely love what I do. I drive hard.
I drive harder now than ever before.
And I don't need to.
So thank you for that amazing question.
Last thing, last thing.
I'd love to know who in your life,
sometimes there are people in your life that it's obvious to thank.
And there's some people who may have done you wrong
or weren't perfect.
But because of that're the man you are
today so before we end who would you like to thank today for the man you are today i mean well there's
two things that came to my mind quickly this may sound weird but i want to thank i want to thank
this is not a egotistical thing but i want to thank myself for having the courage to overcome all of your, it's interesting in my dedication to my book.
And I didn't know if this would come across well or not, but I'll just read it to you.
And I think when, when, when people see it, don't understand.
I dedicate this book to my younger self for having the courage to carry me through pain,
my current self for facing my shame and learning how
to heal and my future self, because the journey to greatness has only just begun. I love that. So
that's not from ego. That's from doing the work. Yeah. And really like facing shame and insecurity
because I would not have peace internally had my younger self not been willing to have the courage to
dive in and be vulnerable and open up and like go to coaching and therapy and all these things
and really heal because that has given my future self, my higher self that I wanted
to come here quicker. Uh, and that took me a long time to get here, but it's,
I'm grateful for that. I also want to thank all my previous relationships, all the women that,
But it's I'm grateful for that. I also want to thank all my previous relationships, all the women that, you know, that taught me so much.
And even though a lot of them tried to hurt me after we broke up, that gave me spiritual lessons when they would try to say bad things or talk behind my back or say things publicly or whatever to try to, you know, shame me or something.
It taught me incredible lessons about detaching myself and spiritually purging things.
And so I'm grateful for all of them, even though probably none of them are grateful for me.
I'm grateful for all of them.
Well, it took whatever that took whatever, whatever that journey was
your fault, their fault, mutual fault. It took all of that and the awareness.
So you could be in the amazing relationship you're in today. Exactly. Right. And I'm grateful. I get
to see it behind the curtain and it's, it's amazing. Louis, thank you so much. This is amazing.
Go out and get greatest mindset. Go grab that book, go to, um um lewishouse.com forward slash gm book or just
go to amazon grab it once again safe travels i know you're going on a trip tomorrow or today
um today enjoy the trip i appreciate this time i appreciate you brother keep up the good work
and those of you watching at home keep this momentum alive do three things go listen or
download three episodes keep going going. Listen to the next
one. And we do this for you. So if there's anything that Lewis and I shared today that
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And if no one has told you today, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
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