The School of Greatness - How To Break Free From Financial Anxiety & Create Wealth
Episode Date: March 14, 2025I'm going on tour! Come see The School of Greatness LIVE in person!Get my new book Make Money Easy here!Money blocks aren't just financial—they're deeply psychological. In this transformative episod...e, I sit down with powerhouse entrepreneurs Rachel Rodgers, Anthony O'Neal, and Mark Matson who reveal how our earliest money experiences create invisible "screens" that dictate our financial decisions. Rachel shares her journey from law school to eight-figure business owner, explaining how she challenges the "money is evil" narrative that holds many people back. Anthony delivers a tactical blueprint for climbing out of debt by casting vision before budgeting, while Mark vulnerably unpacks how his coal-mining grandfather's poverty mindset contrasted with his father's entrepreneurial spirit. You'll discover why millionaires are often unhappy despite their wealth, how to overcome imposter syndrome in high-achieving environments, and the unexpected connection between your purpose and financial abundance.In this episode you will learn:How to systematically challenge limiting money beliefs by collecting evidence that proves the oppositeWhy managing your emotions is crucial for making sound financial decisionsThe five-step tactical blueprint for going from broke and in debt to financial freedomHow to create an entrepreneurial mindset without necessarily becoming an entrepreneurWhy consistency and showing up daily is more important than talent in building wealthThe "destructive cycle of wealth" that prevents even millionaires from finding happinessHow to cultivate an abundant mindset even when your bank account doesn't reflect it yetWhy your purpose must be greater than money to experience true financial fulfillmentThe importance of surrounding yourself with people who believe in you to build confidenceFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1745For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Rachel Rodgers – greatness.lnk.to/1183SCAnthony O’Neal – greatness.lnk.to/1738SCMark Matson – greatness.lnk.to/1675SC Get more from Lewis! Pre-order my new book Make Money EasyGet The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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There are two big things happening at one time that I've never done before I'm going on a book tour for my new book
Make money easy and I'm doing a podcast tour at the same time
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slash tour. Again, bring everyone you know if you're looking
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If someone wasn't raised around the language of money
and they weren't in an environment or a household
that spoke about it in a good way,
maybe they said money, you know,
rich people are mean or bad people,
or their parents always got angry when they
saw someone who had money on TV and associated wealth with a bad person.
How do they break that mindset that not all wealthy people are bad people?
Yeah.
Well, challenge that belief, right?
The way that we change our thinking is to challenge those beliefs.
So like literally write down the thing that you believe and then you know write down all the evidence that you can collect that tells you
the opposite. Like that's how we change our mindset right? You know so if I'm telling myself I'm not
smart I can collect all the evidence well I graduated from law school. I graduated from
undergrad uh summa cum laude right? Like actually there's evidence that I am smart law school. I graduated from undergrad summa cum laude, right? Like, actually there's evidence that I am smart.
You know what I mean?
Let me point that out.
So I think it's the-
So it's being a lawyer of your life.
Yes.
Of that belief system.
Exactly.
Which is something you understand.
Collect evidence to prove what you want to believe, right?
And see if you can find out that it's true.
Maybe it won't be,
but you probably will find that it is.
Cause a lot of our thinking, it's just like,
it's just something, it's a thought that was planted there
in childhood or from whatever interactions we had
that are memorable moment that are kind of stuck, right?
And it's creating this like this neuro pathway
that we just keep walking every day.
We just keep saying that to ourselves.
And so the way we create a new pathway
is we got to start digging that path, right?
To go a different direction.
And the way you dig that path is start collecting evidence of the opposite.
So look for examples of wealthy people who aren't, you know, trash humans.
I hope that I'm an example, right?
And that there are plenty of others out there.
So you know, try to challenge those, you know, just and I think it's just societal views,
it's things that we tell ourselves, I don't know why,
maybe to make ourselves feel better
for not trying to go after what we want.
I don't know why we do it, but we do it,
and I think we can change it.
And I also think there's a different pathway, right?
Like I think there are issues that we experience
as people of color, as queer people,
as people living with a disability or chronic illness
that other people don't have to deal with. And so we might get advice that's like, oh, just do these
steps. It's so easy, right? When it's like, oh, but we're dealing with, I got to take care of my
mother as well. Like I, when I make it, I also have to take care of all the family members who
didn't make it, right? Who need help now that they're approaching retirement, right? Like there's,
there's issues that we have that typically straight white guys don't have, right?
And so that's why I focus on this audience.
And it's also just who is attracted to my work as well.
Right.
I think it's to know your worth in general.
Yes.
And that's applied to everything in life.
Like know your worth with your friends,
with your family, in your partnership,
with your relationship.
Exactly.
Don't sell yourself short in any area of your life.
And you've got to learn to believe in yourself to do that,
which goes back to step one for you.
Exactly.
Is surround yourself with people who've done it
and then learn to believe in yourself.
Exactly.
And that's what I was getting at
is the worthiness and the confidence.
I think sometimes when, you know, when like,
there was probably not a black woman in America
that hasn't worked in a workplace
where she felt undervalued.
And when you do that for a couple of years,
you start to believe that your value is less.
And so I think that it's important that we have confidence
and it's important that we ask for the money, right?
When we put ourselves out there, when we create work
that we charge for it, right?
And demand that people recognize our value.
What if someone doesn't wanna pay it?
They say, okay, I recognize the value,
but that's not the value I'm willing to pay for
because I don't want that value
or it's not a need in my business or whatever it might be.
So goodbye to that person and move on to the next.
Exactly, find who your audience is.
And I think you gotta put it out there
to get those no's to be like, oh, these aren't my people.
Let me actually write my copy or present my offer
in a way that makes them go away.
Exactly. And only attracts the people that are really my people. That me actually write my copy or present my offer in a way that makes them go away. Exactly. And only attracts the people that are really my people, right?
That makes sense. Yeah.
And how does someone learn to feel worthy when they're broke?
Yes. Well, you have to recognize that you are inherently worthy. I was just as valuable as
I am today, you know, 15 years ago. How do you believe that?
20 years ago. When in the bank account and the relationship accounts
don't show that value.
Yes.
Well, I think again, it's environment.
Starting to spend time with people who have confidence
and believed in themselves and starting to,
and what they saw in me, right?
Like realizing what other people see in me
that I don't see in myself.
And you need that reflection back.
And that's why you got to surround yourself.
I mean, I have to tell you, like I've been spending time in L.A.
this week with, you know, black women entrepreneurs that I talk to on Twitter
all the time and like, listen, the way that they will hype you up.
You know, you got this girl.
Exactly. We we hype each other up.
And and that's so important.
You need that. And I've had that since I was a kid.
Like I had friends who would hype me up, you know?
So I think we need that in our lives
and we gotta put ourselves out there.
Be a friend first, right?
And then you'll find that squad
and you'll start to create that community around yourself.
And then there's no way you can't believe it
when you're surrounded by people
who are constantly reflecting it back to you.
I love that approach of surrounding yourself with people that will hype people up or that
inspiring that have already done that.
And I've also heard people say, when I'm in those rooms, I feel like an imposter.
I feel like all these incredible women, if I was a woman in these rooms of women for
this example, but these women have done incredible things.
How am I be able able, why should I,
I shouldn't be in this room,
because they're all amazing.
You know, starting to downplay my talents
because they're all at a different level
or have more experience or have their careers
or financially successful.
How does someone get over the imposter syndrome
of being in the room when they are the,
whatever label they wanna call it,
the least successful financially, the least intelligent, the least experienced, whatever label they wanna call it, the least successful financially,
the least intelligent, the least experienced, whatever they wanna say to themselves, I shouldn't
be here.
Yeah.
Because I don't have X.
How can they overcome the imposter syndrome?
Well, I think it's a process, right?
It doesn't happen overnight.
I think sometimes we think like, just think better thoughts.
And it's like, that's lovely, but that's not working for me.
You know? I think first of all, challenge that belief when it comes into your head. When you
have that thought oh I'm going into this room and I'm excited about it but I'm intimidated because
I don't know that I belong there and really just check the receipts. Are you sure you don't belong
there? Like think about who you are as a person. What do you have to offer the world? What is the
value that you bring? What do people ask you to do that is valuable? What do they ask you advice on? You really
just start to check your own receipts to see like, really, is that true? Because usually
the people who have imposter syndrome are people who have a very long and impressive
resume. And I wrote about in my book how Maya Angelou and Michelle Obama, these are people
who have imposter syndrome, like way far into their career,
they felt like they didn't belong in certain rooms, right?
Exactly, it's like, what?
That makes no sense.
And it's true for us as well.
Like we'll think that we're not valuable
or we'll have that same imposter syndrome
and other people are like, are you crazy?
Like you're amazing, you know, like you're bugging.
So I think-
If someone's in the room
and they're gonna remember this conversation
that you share here,
and they're about to be in a room
with a bunch of powerhouse, whatever, individuals
that they wanna be around.
And they're like, this is the first time
I've been around this group of people,
I'm terrified, I'm nervous.
What can they remind themselves in that moment
when the Oprah of their industry is talking to them
and they are potentially a nobody in that space,
they're on their way up or whatever,
what can they remind themselves?
I would say like, they should ask themselves,
what do I love about myself?
Right, like I'm funny, you know?
I'm smart, I'm strategic, you know?
I have great fashion sense, right?
Like, whatever it is, what is something
that you love about yourself?
And think about how you're bringing that energy
to that room, right?
And just recognize that that is a lie.
And it is a practice.
I used to be such a mean girl to myself in my head
every single day.
What did you say?
I said that I was not smart, stupid.
You know, I said that like that I can't figure this out.
I'm bad at business.
I'm not good at making money.
I'm not good at practicing law,
which is what I did before, my current business.
I'm a bad mother.
I mean, I said every cruel thing that I could possibly say.
What did that do for you?
I mean, it made me feel bad, right?
Like it made me feel bad and it made me want to go
get under the covers for three days.
And sometimes I did, right?
And then I would get my back up and go back to work
because I had to, because I had kids to support.
But I would do that too.
And what helped is meeting women who believe in themselves
and just being around that energy.
They, it's just like that energy is gonna bring you along.
Cause I think sometimes we think like,
oh, I have to do all of this in my head.
And once I fix it in my head,
then I can go be around people.
No, no, no, you need to go be around people
cause that's what's gonna fix it.
Being in that environment, our community,
our environment, it affects us so much.
It does.
So it's so crucially important to be surrounded
by positive people who believe in possibility. Yes. So that's so crucially important to be surrounded by positive people who believe in possibility.
Yes.
So that's what I would say.
And when I'm going to enter rooms,
I go into intimidating rooms all the time.
And I think now I just think, I'm just going to be myself.
And if myself isn't good enough in this room,
then I don't want to be in this room.
Right.
Next.
You know?
Next room.
Next room. And do you think money buys us happiness?
No.
I think, but I think it buys a roof over your head,
which is happiness, right?
Like, so, you know, sometimes people,
when people talk about like money doesn't matter
or whatever, I'm not beholden to money,
or they think it's a moral high ground to act like,
I don't care about money, right?
So like, you feel better about yourself because you don't care about money and your nose is act like, I don't care about money, right? So like, you feel better about yourself
because you don't care about money
and your nose is in there
because you don't care about money.
I'm just like, this is a person who has never been poor.
You know, like this is a person who is not aware
of the real economic situation for so many people.
And I think if you are aware of that,
then you recognize that money is a powerful tool
that enables you to take care of and feed your children, that enables you to house yourself,
right?
Like, just like the baseline, I have been in a place for many years, my family was,
and then I was as a young adult, where like, you know, my like electric went out, right?
And we didn't have lights for a week until my mom got paid again. Or where,
you know, we didn't have food or we were on food stamps and I'd be embarrassed to use it and there's
only certain things we could buy with it, right? Like I've had that real financial insecurity and
I think anybody who has had that understands that money is very important. Like the idea that it's
not important is complete nonsense, you know? And it's like, that's the reason you're telling yourself
that I would love to coach that person
and dig into why are you telling yourself,
why do you have that story?
What is it doing for you, right?
Because the reality is, is that money is an important tool
in the way that our society is organized today.
And so we need it and we need to learn how to get it.
And that's exactly why I do what I do,
to teach people how to get it
and show them that it is possible
for you to create it on your own.
But yes, this idea that money's not important
or whatever, money is for bad people.
I'm like, look, money pays the bills.
Okay?
Like, let's get back to basics here.
All right, I think y'all are forgetting something.
And then once you have that baseline level of security,
you can decide, do I want more?
And if I do, how much more?
And here's what I say all the time.
You know, when people are like, well, how much is enough?
Right?
You're a millionaire or your business is making
X amount of money.
Like, isn't that enough?
Why do you still strive for more?
And I tell them, because I am black.
Because there is a huge wealth chasm in this country.
And as long as my people need money,
I'm going, and I'm good at earning it, I'm to keep earning it and then put it where I think it belongs.
There's a certain amount of security I want for myself and my children, and frankly, I
feel like I have that at this stage.
I've done that part.
It's like, check.
Now, the next thing to do is how can I spread it around?
How can I have it be making change for people and change people's lives? Because I recognize money changes lives.
And so I think it's important to just recognize
money is neutral.
It's not positive or negative.
It's a tool and it's how we use that tool
that determines whether something bad happens
or something evil happens
or if you have a positive goal with it.
Yeah.
Have you met a lot of millionaires who are unhappy?
I've met millionaires who are unhappy.
And I know plenty of happy ones.
You know what I mean?
Like, I think there's both.
And I think it's like, I mean, here's the benefit, right?
If you're a millionaire and you're unhappy,
you could probably go purchase some therapy.
You can maybe go to a retreat, right?
Like you can spend some money.
Take some time off.
Right.
You can spend some money on figuring out
how to solve that problem.
I don't think it's money in itself
that's making them miserable.
Really?
You know, maybe it could be,
but maybe it's just because they're choosing
to make it their master instead of really
leading their own lives and directing their own lives.
Like you were saying, right?
Like living in LA, right?
Everybody's got a Ferrari or a Lamborghini or something and you got a scooter.
I drive in a scooter. Scoot down the street with a smile on my face. Wave at the guys in the Ferrari.
I want what that guy has. You know, it's like.
Yeah. But see, that's where we get into trouble is if we're like, oh, because somebody else has it,
I have to have it. It's like, do you want it? Is that something that you even care about?
I think one something because you want it, not because you have it. It's like, do you want it? Is that something that you even care about? You know?
One something because you want it,
not because you're trying to impress someone else
or show off or keep up.
Or you think you should want it.
Yeah, or because your friends have it,
you're supposed to buy it.
Yes.
You have four kids, right?
Yes.
Four kids.
What are the main themes that you teach your kids
about money from all these different age ranges? You know, if you could share three things that you teach your kids about money from all these different age ranges,
if you could share three things
that you teach them consistently at home.
Yes.
Whether it be a simple or profound principle,
what are those three things that you talk about
on a consistent basis with all of them?
Well, I like to teach them about consistency,
which I think is about money.
It's huge.
Yeah, like you gotta show up
and you gotta do this every day.
And it's like, you did it for five days
and they're like, well, I did it for five days.
Why can't I get credit for that?
And it's like, that's great.
But this is the kind of thing where you gotta show up.
So teaching them really about habits
and about like having a work ethic.
If you want something,
are you willing to put some sweat equity into it
so you can have it?
And so teaching them that, I think,
is a core money principle.
And then I also teach them about business.
I teach them about entrepreneurship,
that you can create a business and sell anything
and make money from your own creative ideas.
So I want them to learn that.
So my daughter is always making books
or she's making little gifts for people for their birthdays. And she's an artist and I want to teach her to value her art this
beautiful thing that you created we can hang it on the wall and that adds value
to people's lives so you can charge for that so just having those conversations
and showing them even things that they're creating now have value
absolutely or things that they're willing to do like my son is like very
techie so I'm like, the remote's not working.
My eight year olds, and he's been doing this since he was six.
He's like, mom, just give it to me.
And he like fixes it all.
So, you know, he has that natural skill.
Like it's obviously a natural skill.
Who taught him?
I didn't teach him nothing.
I don't even know how to do it.
Maybe he learned by watching my husband.
I don't know, but you know, I want him to see that like,
oh, your ability to come in and fix that for somebody who doesn't know how that
That adds value. That's that's something you could charge for if you wanted to in the future
um
So like teaching them that and asking them to do things and telling them like, you know
If you do xyz, I will pay you so I negotiate a lot with them
So, you know, it's like we did this family photo shoot
Recently and my
son absolutely hates taking photos. He hates getting dressed up. He hates the
whole production of it. And so I'm like, okay, so you do this for mommy and you
make sure you smile in all of the pictures and you have to like not like
untuck your shirt and do all those things. And if you do all of that then
I'm going to allow you to play video games tonight for two hours on a weekday.
Wow. So like, deal.
And then we shake hands.
And then there are times where he tries to go back on the deal, you know, and he
makes deals with his sister too.
They and like, he'll try to go back on it.
I'm like, no, no, no, no, no.
If you make a deal, you have to stick to it, you know?
So making sure that he understands that if you say, if you give your word on
something, you have to back that up.
Yes.
So so teaching them that, I guess, is another part of the money story.
And I like them to just it's so funny.
My husband, I will go for walks or whatever, and we'll be talking about business.
Is my husband is a CFO.
And so we're having business conversations.
And my daughter's hanging out with us listening in.
And my husband's like, yep, you stay right
there and listen to all of this, you know, soak it in.
So teaching her just about like the different strategies that we we try and you know, marketing
moves are making or whatever different investments that we're making and why we're doing it and
explaining that to her willing to have that conversation, you know, like we bought a beach
house.
Let's talk about how, you know,
we're only gonna use it for the summer,
but we're gonna rent it out during the other parts
of the year, and that's gonna cover the cost
of what we're paying for the summer,
or like what we're paying for it all year long.
So this is the strategy, and explaining it to her
so she can start to see, and it's like,
it's repetition, right?
It's us having those conversations
over and over again over time.
And there's something about the eldest daughter,
I don't know what it is,
but she's gonna be running this whole empire.
That's great.
Can already tell.
That's great, that's fun.
What do you think is the difference between
a rich mindset and a poor mindset?
Yeah, well, I think it's just about seeing opportunity
and feeling expansive and seeing abundance
versus seeing everything as small and not possible.
And like, does it cut off your opportunities
or does it create opportunity for you?
You know?
So I think that's the difference, right?
And just making decisions that are going to
create more abundance in your life. And sometimes it's the opposite of what personal finance people say, right? And just making decisions that are going to create more abundance in your life.
And sometimes it's the opposite of what personal finance people say, right? Like personal finance
people are always like budget, budget, budget, budget is king, budget is ruler, right? Like you
are beholden to the budget, nothing else rules, never go outside the budget, blah, blah, blah,
right? And it's, I think it's more than that. I don't think it's just about, money is about, yes, you have a balance sheet,
you do math, money is math as well,
but it's also feeling, right?
So like the advice that's always given to women
about like, don't stop buying lattes,
stop buying shoes, cut coupons.
It's like, that doesn't make me feel rich.
That doesn't make me feel abundant or feel wealthy.
It makes me feel broke if I can't afford to buy a coffee
when I have a good job and I work hard every day.
You know?
So what does make me,
but if I buy a latte every day
and that makes me feel fabulous
as I sit and drink my latte
and think about whatever it is that I'm thinking about,
when I have that feeling,
I'm more likely to create things
that will add value to the world and get me paid.
You know?
You're more excited, passionate, abundant, feeling.
Yes.
Energetic and that energy attracts opportunities.
Yes, that's right.
So do the things that bring you joy.
Yes, and I'm not saying like, oh, go buy a Lamborghini.
You know, if you don't have Lamborghini money, right?
I'm not saying do that, but like,
how can you find ways to feel abundant every day?
And it's not just that, it's like, you know,
I was staying at a place,
it was not an expensive place in Laguna
a couple of weeks ago.
I'm sorry, a couple of days ago.
And you know, it's like not a fancy room at all,
but it had this gorgeous ocean view.
And I listened to the ocean as I fell asleep.
Like that is abundance.
Right?
And I went for a run like along the beach.
That was amazing.
It cost me nothing to go for that run.
You know what I mean?
So it's like sometimes it's just sitting outside and petting your cat
and being in the sun and taking a few minutes for yourself
makes you feel abundant.
So it's not always dollars, but finding that way to just sort of attract
that and to feel like spaciousness, like I have time, I have
you know the ability, right? I have creativity, you have a wealth of things. And the reality is,
of like if you live in the U.S. you have a lot more than a lot of other people around the world,
right? So you are rich, right? Whether you think you are or not living in this country, for most
people. And so if that's the case, right, how can we start to think that way?
Why do we lack the perspective?
You know, it's-
Yes, I think it's, you know,
all of the things that we're inundated with every day,
like the different media,
might be the shows that we watch, you know,
like people joke about like watching a sitcom
and like somebody, you know, she's a waitress,
but she has this fabulous apartment in Manhattan.
It's like, really?
Right, right, right, right.
How does that work?
So I think it's sometimes the things that we expose
ourselves to and we can just choose to expose ourselves to other things right? We can be exposed
to a lot of things that tell you like oh you're not good enough or you're not smart enough or
you're overweight or you're whatever all kinds of messages that we get every day and so you got to
curate that. You know curate your Instagram feed right? Curate who's in your ear. If you have somebody who, you know, if your mom or your friend
from childhood is always making you feel like you're broke, stop talking to them. Like talk to them.
I mean, I'm not saying cut them off, but like maybe don't be on group chat with them every day,
you know? But be on group chat with people who have that abundant thinking, right? Who are thinking expansively.
And also, you know what makes me feel rich?
Saying no, makes me feel rich.
Like we just talked about, right?
Like having boundaries and somebody asking me,
do I wanna do that thing?
Whether it's a money thing or not.
And just saying, no, I don't wanna go to that party.
Or no, I don't wanna do that thing.
And just feeling like comfortable doing that.
That feels abundant, you know?
And that creates more space for abundance in your life.
So.
That's cool.
And what would you say the biggest insecurities
or challenges you face now at your stage
after I guess 13 years in business now, you know,
crossing the 100,000, crossing the seven figure mark
and beyond, what's the challenge for the next level for you?
Yes.
Okay, so like we just hit eight figures.
And here's something that I just caught myself doing
is being like, well, I know how to run
a seven figure business.
I don't know how to run an eight figure business.
I don't know how to run a $10 million business.
And it's like, that's not true actually.
Like maybe there are some things that I don't know
about this next phase, but that doesn't mean
I can't figure it out.
Or, and it doesn't mean that there aren't things
that I do know.
So I've had to like, this is an ongoing journey, right?
Where you're having to constantly correct yourself
and say like, stop talking like that,
because that's actually not helping anything.
So what do you know, right?
What evidence do you have that you are the right leader
for this organization during this next phase?
You know?
Because I think being a founder and an entrepreneur creating something is different than continuing
something and continuing to scale it.
And I've seen this happen with some of my peers too, like your company gets to a certain
size and you're like, should I even be CEO anymore?
Maybe you shouldn't, I mean, or maybe you should, right?
Maybe it's just imposter syndrome.
So I think that's one of the things
that I'm kind of dealing with.
And I also think something that I recently went through
that I feel like I'm coming out of
is trusting myself with this amount of money.
You know what I mean?
You've never had this much money before.
Exactly.
So what do I do with this much money?
Yes, exactly.
Which investments should I be spending it in?
Am I spending it the right, wrong prices?
Interesting.
Yeah, and I've had like, you know,
you have different financial advisors that you go to
or you're supposed to get advice
and they tell me to do things or they don't,
here's the interesting thing.
They tell me to do things that I don't wanna do
and then the things that I do wanna do
and I do get excited about investing
and they tell me not to do it.
And I'm like, well, but that's the thing I want to do.
And to me, it makes financial sense and they tell me not to do it. And I'm like, well, but that's the thing I want to do. And to me, it makes financial sense.
And they tell me why they think I shouldn't.
And I'm like, still wanna do it though.
Can you give an example?
Like, okay, like buying this beach house this year, right?
That is something, and I bought that beach house
for my family so that I was just imagining
being on the beach with my kids like all summer long.
And we live in a landlocked area. I love water. I like being near water. And so it was like,
this will be absolutely amazing. And we usually go like one or two weeks to rent and it's so
expensive. And so I'm like, why do that? We could buy something, we could rent it. And then we could
use it during the summer. And it was the best summer ever.
So you were there the whole summer?
All summer long, my family came down,
my friends came to visit.
Beaches, beach houses attract people.
Of course, was this Florida or where is this?
This is in North Carolina.
And the beaches in North Carolina are amazing.
So, you know, we've had an amazing time
at this like expensive piece of property
that my financial advisor told me absolutely do not buy.
But the value in it was really like-
A rich life, a rich feeling.
Yes, that was it.
Which probably allows you to think bigger
and expansiveness in your business.
Totally.
Your family is, you know, feeling joy and love.
Exactly.
And it doesn't have to make money, right?
I have other ways to make money.
I can, if I can, and I can break even on it.
So I'm like, I could have all of this amazing time
with my family and it allows me to be generous.
Like one of the, I just invested in a startup,
which is another thing that I was feeling
uncomfortable about, you know?
And so the founder was like just on this like big work sprint
and doing so much to get this company up and running.
And she was like, gonna go on a vacation.
She asked me where to go in North Carolina.
And I was like, oh, come stay at my beach house.
And just like, you know what I mean?
Like being able to do things like that is,
that's cool.
It's awesome.
And I've done that for a couple of friends now
and it just feels so good.
So I think it was worth it.
It may break even, it may make me a little bit of money,
but like that's okay.
And I had it, I could afford it.
I had the money to do it.
So it's just like,
I've had to learn to listen to my own voice.
Here's the other thing that happens to me a lot
with financial advisors and like accountants
and like all the financial people,
not all of them, but most of them in my life.
They all are like, well, in order to do XYZ,
we'd need to make another million dollars
or we need to do this or that or whatever.
And it's like, that's not possible.
We can look at that for next year or the year after.
And I'm like, oh no,
I'm gonna go make that million right now.
Let's go.
Right now, yeah.
And they're like, we shouldn't be doing that.
Like that's not possible, right?
Like you're gonna break the business, right?
Like.
They're too conservative.
Exactly.
And I'm just, and they don't believe me.
And I'm like, I want you to look at the P&Ls
for the last three years of this business
and then come at me again and tell me that I can't do it.
Like, what are you talking about?
Of course I could do it.
And I'm like, here's the problem.
It's happening inevitably, right?
We are naturally growing.
It's just ramping up.
Exactly.
There's an audience there.
There's more and more people interested
in what we're selling.
It's happening anyway.
And that's the other thing.
We create these projections and they're like,
we're not gonna hit those projections.
And I'm like, your projections are too low.
You need to go with mine.
And inevitably, we always exceed it every year. And then I'm like, your projections are too low. Like you need to go with mine. And inevitably we always exceed it every year.
And then I'm like, it becomes a problem
because you actually can't plan, right?
If you're like really undershooting.
So then you grow too much,
you don't have enough team to cover it, right?
Like all of those things.
So learning to trust my own instincts
over all of these so quote unquote experts.
And they are experts
and they definitely advise me on different things.
But when it comes to like my own skill set
and what I know I'm capable of doing,
I'm just like, mm-mm.
And there was actually somebody I fired
because they just kept saying, that's not possible.
You know, really, you know, you should be more conservative
blah, blah, blah.
And I'm like, goodbye, get out of my ear.
You're not helping me.
You're not putting me in the space of abundance.
Yeah, it's true.
What was the mindset shift for you
from going from seven figures to eight figures?
Like what did it take?
Yes, well it took.
Is it tactical?
Is it mindset?
Is it a team?
Is it systems, processes?
What was that?
Yes, I think it's all of that.
But I think a big part of it is learning how to not do
and learning how to lead.
That is what takes you from seven to eight,
is learning how to have a team, delegate to them,
remove yourself from the day to day
and recognizing that the more you remove yourself
from the business, the more it's going to grow.
Because usually, if there's something dependent on me,
I am absolutely holding it up.
What I do, it's like, you have to keep redefining your role in a company, right? If you're the CEO, then it's like, how does your CEO role change over time when you've
hired a COO or you've hired other leaders on your team and you've got this team of copywriters and
all kinds of people, coaches on my team, right? Like let them do their thing, right?
Learn how to get out of the way.
You've hired smart people, let them do it.
So really removing yourself and learning how to lead
and have a vision and say, hey y'all,
here's where we're going.
Here's where we're trying to go in the next three years.
Let's talk about how we're gonna get there.
We'll figure out the how together.
And these are the goals we're gonna hit this year.
And then just let them go and be there to coach them and support them
right you know and help them step into their own leadership help them solve
the problems you've solved like learning how to delegate or learning how to
protect your time now you got to teach them how to do that sure so that's
that's what that phase was and what what the next phase holds, I have no idea. Probably even more of that. More of that, yeah. Yes.
I think debt feels daunting for a lot of people.
Yes.
And if you were broke today,
and if you were in debt, let's say,
let's say you made a bunch of
challenging financial decisions.
You made all, you know,
your mistake journal is filled up to the brim.
Yep.
And you're broke and in a lot of debt
Yep, what is the exact process you would take then from going from broken in debt to creating a financially free life? Oh
I get excited about this. All right, very first things. I'm stepping back and before I even look at my debt
I'm talking about okay where I want to be within the next 12 months after 12 months, next three years, five years.
So you're thinking game plan first.
I'm getting the vision for the next five years of my life.
So if I say, hey, listen, I want to be in California living in my dream home, debt free,
like whatever that vision is, I'm casting that vision.
Below that vision, I'm writing down the why.
One of my good friends, Pastor Darius Daniels mentioned something. mentioned something he said man if your why doesn't make you cry then
the price of commitment for the next five years is gonna make you cry let's
go and it's gonna make you quit and so for me once I write down the vision I'm
gonna write down a why why don't want to accomplish this vision so if I'm
drowning in debt and I know I want to be out of debt I'm gonna be in my home why
do I want the home?
I don't want the home just because it's nice sitting on the beach.
I want the home probably because you know what man growing up me and my kid me
and my siblings had to share a room right?
You know what?
We never were a homeowner.
Maybe I'm the first homeowner in my family.
So I'm getting a deep enough why that when it gets hard when I feel like giving
up it's going to make me cry and make me push through.
So I'm doing that.
So that's number two.
Then number three, I'm looking at,
I'm pulling credit card,
I'm pulling up the last three months of my bank statements,
and I'm getting on a very detailed budget.
I'm writing down everything,
and I call this a zero-base budget,
but for me, I know a lot of people get turned off
by the word of budgeting, so I call it,
what's the vision now I have for my life?
What's the vision for my money? So if I'm saying, okay, cool, I want to be debt
free, well, I got to go look at my credit report. I got to pull Equifax TransUnit Experience.
I got to pull the last three months of my bank statements. And this is something I do
on a regular. Lewis, I'll get five highlighters, different colors, and I'll go do a highlight.
Okay, food is one color. And I want to see how much money over the last three to six months have I spent on
food. Wow. And if I'm seeing okay dang I was talking about Barbara he spent two
grand on food in one month. Wow. Just eating out. Am I two grand? I'm like bro it's just you.
What are you eating for $2,000? Wow. I'm like I know know it's expensive out here in the streets, but it's not that expensive.
So I'm like, two grand in one month, okay, we need to cut that off by like three fourths.
You need to be down to $500 including groceries and eating out, boom, when it's this you.
So like I'm highlighting everything and I'm assessing, making sure that I know exactly
where my money is going.
Because here's the truth
You cannot manage your money if you're not measuring it
You can't really understand what you're doing and where you're going if you're not tracking what it's doing
And for the majority of the people who are watching this show
I'll say I won't say the majority Maybe with the school of greatness we're we're gonna say a majority of y'all should be winning.
For those of you who are watching this show,
a lot of us are probably saying,
dang, I just got paid last week,
but I don't know where the money went.
And it's because you're not managing it well
because you're not measuring where your money is going.
So that's number three.
I'm gonna list out everything and watch this.
Before I put it on the budget, I'm gonna write it out.
Yo, I owe this bank this, I owe that bank this. I'm gonna write it out yo I owe this bank this I owe that bank this I'm gonna list out every every all the debt out
of all the debt I'm gonna list out all of my monthly expenses then I'm gonna
take that information and I'm gonna put it on this budget and here's the truth
if we're gonna be honest it is gonna frustrate you yeah it is gonna make you
feel depressed a little bit you're gonna feel discouraged a little bit because
what's gonna happen is you gonna see you have more debt than you have income.
That's gonna be my number four.
Once I see that I have all this debt, I'm gonna measure, okay, what is the income strategy
that I need to come up with that is gonna create margin to help me pay off my debt?
And I tell everyone that's gonna be a job.
And instead of getting a second job
listen man the content creation space I just think right now is a healthy place
to get into because I think a lot of us have a lot up here that people were paid
to have and so like for example I had a school teacher come to me and she was
like man Anthony I'm in two hundred and thirty eight thousand dollars in debt
oh a hundred and forty of them are is her student loans because she has a
doctorate. Yeah. Then two of them are cars her and her husband then the others
just credit cards and stuff from here. I said okay all right let's write it down
and so as I was talking with her I said listen she said I'm making another job
working at Walmart part-time. I said's a that's not a good good use of your
time I say why not you're a schoolteacher why not go home you're
making good money over here why not go home and create maybe a course or an
academy that helps get kids ready for the SAT I just I what do you mean I say
why not use the skills that you're giving
to the job, to the school system,
and build a side business that now parents can buy
to help them get ready for the SAT?
She was like, Anthony never thought about that.
So she went home and she started dreaming with her husband.
Well, she came back to me.
Not only did she come up with a business
that is gonna help kids with the SAT,
but she also came up with a business
that helps school students in school to be a teacher
to help them graduate in college.
A year later, her side business is paying her more
than what the school teacher is doing
because she took her wisdom and her knowledge
and turned it into a side business.
So not only is she creating more income, now she's able to use the tax benefits that the
wealthy are using.
And I said, okay, are you going to quit your job?
She was like, no, because my side business is funding this thing.
I honestly love teaching students.
So what happened?
Husband quit his job.
He runs the business.
Wow.
He does all of the marketing. He does all of the marketing. He does
all of the stuff and this is what I love. It puts them back at the head of their table.
Yes. Because now it's like, wait, we're now controlling our life. Now she went from having
to be a school teacher to wanting to be a schoolteacher. She went from having to
work to you know what I love what I do. Yes. And that's the freedom that you have
when you're at the seat at the head of your table is that you get to decide
what you want to do in a direction or wherever you want to go. What would you
say is the number one piece of financial advice you're seeing online that people should ignore?
You know, there is a there's a lot, you know, is that just what I'm like, man, it's so many Lewis and I could say.
But I think the number one financial advice that I would say
and I talk about this in the side of the boat that I would ignore
is that everyone has to be an entrepreneur.
Ignore that. Ignore that.
Ignore that.
Yeah.
Because that's not the case.
I think everyone should have an entrepreneurial mindset,
but not everyone should be entrepreneurial.
Because if you want to be a,
when they say be an entrepreneurship,
what they're talking about is,
they're selling you, hey man, I could work on the beach.
Hey man, I'm finding the private jets. Hey man, you know, I'm able to go buy this G
wagon and ride off 100% of it because it's over 6,000 pounds. They're lying to
you. I've been doing this for four years and me, you know, have several
conversations offline. This entrepreneurial world is not for
everybody and it's frustrating and I have not to this day worked on the
beach. You worked in a career before and now you're an
entrepreneur now. Yes and if I'm being honest in the corporate America space in
the corporate space man I'm working harder today than I was then. Of course.
Right so I'm not flying on private jets and just not working for a month or two.
That's not happening. And so I think some of the worst advice is looking at these enforcers
and they're selling you on, hey, I can coach you to be your own boss and you'll be working
at the beach. And that's saying it can't happen. Because have I gone on vacation and worked?
Absolutely. But what I am saying is out of three hundred and sixty five days a year
These people say you only got to work 20 of them. That's a lie
And so I think for me it's it's really we got to start teaching how to how to have the entrepreneurial mindset
But not everyone is called to be an entrepreneur
Because I think I need a real good assistant if I'm going to be effective.
And I think people are made as a Christian, I do believe people are made to be the number
two, the number three, the number four, to be the team player because an effective business
cannot run without effective team members.
And you can be just as wealthy, you can be just as successful if you are living the authentic
life of yourself.
I think one of the greatest mistakes of that I see in people, especially this
younger generation, they want to rush to be their own boss, but they haven't
really done anything to learn how to be an effective boss.
And I'm so grateful that God put me through the seasons of serving in the
church moral, serving in a corporate America space, because I would not be
successful today
if I didn't learn up on any different people.
And I think for me,
I think that is one of the dumbest mistakes
that I've seen people make.
And I think another mistake I saw online,
and it was so frustrating to me,
is take your student loans and go buy real estate with it. I was like,
go borrow money. Take out a parent plus loan. Oh man. Have them sign on it. Have them sign
on it to go buy real estate. And the real estate was just a down payment on loan. It's
not the whole house. I gotta pay double interest now.
High interest on the student loan. High interest on this. I'm like wait a minute. So there's so
many different things man that I can really adjust to. But I think one of the things I learned from
you man, I gotta give you credit for it. I think it was like a year and a half ago Lewis
because I'm always watching your shows and always growing from you your advice and the people you had on and man because of you I have an interchangeable seat at my table. I have an interchangeable seat
between my therapist and my emotional coach and you talked about that like a year and a half I
want to say and what I learned was that my emotions,
I was making financial decisions based upon my emotions.
When my emotions shouldn't be making decisions,
I should be managing my emotions.
But my emotions should not be managing me.
And I've made bad financial decisions
because of how I felt off of my emotions.
And if I'm being honest and vulnerable I've lost out on great relationships oh yeah friendships
because I didn't manage my emotions yes and and I'm like well so when I heard
you say that like bro I got convicted I was like look at Lewis over here preaching
so I step back and started looking
for emotional coaches because I realized,
like man, if I'm being honest, like Lewis,
to this day, I still meet with him,
and to this day, it is still a struggle
for me to control and manage my emotions.
Because when you have that feeling,
you gotta be like, no, this is my emotions.
I cannot make a decision in this state.
And I've made decisions in that state
that has cost me a lot of money.
That has, I've probably lost out on an amazing woman
because of that.
I've probably lost business relationships
and even friendships because of that.
But I think, I hear this often within the world.
And man, if you're feeling bad, man,
just go to the mall and just do some window shopping.
That's your emotions talking.
You know what, man, we tend to go buy things
when we're feeling a certain kind of way.
That's your emotions talking.
And so I would encourage people, man,
to get that interchangeable seat between the therapist
and emotional coach and they work together.
My therapist helps me understand the practical reason of why I made the decision.
My emotional coach is helping me understand why I'm feeling the way that I'm feeling
and how to control that.
How can people start to shift out of a scarcity mindset into abundance thinking when they're just fight or flight survival mode daily?
This is a great question. I'm so glad you asked it early on in our time together.
I was very lucky to have a dad that believed in the American dream.
He built into me, psychologically, the ideals of the American dream.
He gave me Thinking We Were Rich when I was 10 years old and said, read this at least one time every year of your life. But we came from the hills of West
Virginia in the hollers. And my grandfather did not believe in the American dream. He worked in the
coal mines. He worked in the factories, the chemical factories. He basically believed that
money was a source of evil. He believed people that had it were greedy.
He believed he was entitled to money that he didn't create.
He always viewed it as anybody that had money was a crook.
My dad rejected that.
My dad, by the time he was 10 years old, was an entrepreneur three times over.
He sold newspapers, he sold cloverene salve to the miners where their hands were cracked
and he signed shoes.
So he believed that if you created value for other people, that you would be rewarded with
wealth and prosperity and that people that had money weren't crooks, but they actually
were really hardworking and dedicated, and
he loved this country and the values that it stood for.
Every summer we'd go back to West Virginia and I'd see the people living in the poverty,
and they didn't have physical shackles.
It was a mindset, I call it a screen, by which they saw themselves as victims, a screen, a psychological screen
made out of language, language that you're taught.
And then there's the language or the screen of the American dream.
And most people do look at money as a form of survival.
And that is largely in our DNA too.
For thousands of years,
people had a real hard time surviving. And so money was in property was a form of survival.
But now we live in a relative world of abundance and creativity. And if you can get that screen
of the American dream, you can start to escape that terrible bonds that really imprison you
almost in a world of scarcity.
Two things here.
One, can you explain what the screen is?
Is it a framework of thinking and language around what money is?
Yes.
So it's the way that people can think about it.
Sometimes you create that language on purpose.
Like if I'm going to go be a doctor, I spend many, many years developing language around
what a doctor is, so they see the human
body as very different as someone who doesn't have that language.
Well, we have all kinds of conversations in our lives about money, about the world, about
how money works, how money is created, our place in the world and our relationship to
money.
And money, ironically, having a lot of money doesn't mean you're going to be happy.
As a matter of fact, I've seen a lot of really, really wealthy people, tens, 20, 30s, millions
of dollars and history is rife with people like Elvis Presley, Marilyn Monroe, Howard
Hughes, Prince, people with a lot of money, power, fame, but it didn't do them any good.
It actually helped seal their fate in the end and
became very destructive. There's another thing that you mentioned just before this was, you know,
there's kind of two different mindsets. Your grandfather who worked in the coal mines,
who worked really hard, it sounds like on a daily basis, but didn't understand how to create more
value, whether in his coal mine or somewhere else, and therefore was given what he received,
correct?
Versus your dad, where it sounds like, how did your dad break that mindset from his father,
who he saw probably miserable or unhappy in the mines, and dirty every night, and sick
and coughing?
How did he say, I want to change this without a model of someone showing him abundance?
Well, that's that's great and and go back to my grandfather once his screen was so
strong
It was like they lived in two different worlds is how did the two different dimensions of reality?
His screen was so strong when he was offered an opportunity to grow at Union Carbide
He was offered to be a foreman and have a
crew underneath him. He told them no. Why? Because he didn't want to be part of the machine.
That's evil and bad. He didn't want to be evil and bad in his eyes. So he proved it
to himself that he was doomed to be our money. I call these money demons, these money demons, which we all have at various times in our
life, they take us over and preclude us from doing things that could actually save us.
So he never took that race.
He never took that opportunity to save his family, even when it was offered to him.
And I've asked my dad, I said, how did you? I mean, this poverty, this abject poverty, they would cut the tops off of instant carnation
milk cans and they would hammer it to the baseboards in their shack by the railroad
so that the rats wouldn't come in their house in the wintertime.
That's how much poverty my dad came from.
He only had one pair of shoes a year right before school started and then they were barefoot all summer long. I mean, this was true abject poverty. He said,
I saw a couple examples of people that did have a little bit of money, and they were nice,
and they helped me. And I went to work for them. And I noticed that my dad was wrong,
that people that had money weren't evil, they weren't bad and they were and they were
Actually willing to help and I had a couple good teachers in school that taught me about that
But deep down my dad had and I don't know where he got it
He had a deep-seated belief in capitalism and entrepreneurism
Yeah, so what you mentioned money demons. What are money demons?
And do we all have them?
We all do to a greater or lesser extent.
What is a money demon?
So I'll give you an example.
So when I started my company,
I wanted to help a lot of people.
We managed $11 billion for people all over North America,
500 advisors.
But when I started, I only had three employees.
And I had a demon belief.
It's a belief created in language that then we don't realize that it's only just a screen.
We take it on as reality.
And that reality was that employees suck.
And they're too expensive.
And when you hire them, they don't do a good job.
And the other money demon I had was that I'm not a good manager and I don't know how to
manage people, so I'll just do it myself.
Now money demons are so pervasive because when we have them, we make their self-fulfilling
prophecies and we make them come true.
And we don't look for opportunities that violate our screen.
So I had to look at what I was getting out of it.
What was I getting out of that screen?
Well, I got to play small, didn't have to hire people.
I got to be self-righteous.
I got to be condemning.
You were right all the time.
I'm right and righteous.
I got to gossip about other people, character assassinate.
I got to gossip about other people, character assassinate. I got to be a victim.
It was juicy psychological payoff.
But I also had to realize that if I couldn't change those screens about the world, that
I was going to be doomed never to fulfill my mission, which was to help more people
stop speculating with their money and fulfill their American dream.
And then you have to do a cost benefit analysis and say, okay, am I going to keep that demon
belief because there is payoff?
I can live a normal ordinary life, not full of greatness, thorough set of the best, quiet
desperation, or am I going to break that belief?
And I actually call it do violence to the belief.
Interesting.
I have to actually kill it.
Yes.
I have to kill that belief.
But the thing about money demons is when you kill them and have more money,
they don't disappear. They often morph.
How so?
Well, so after I became successful, then I went through a divorce.
And then I started eventually dating
after some therapy and counseling. And I started dating, and I started getting one string of really
painful relationships after another. And I developed a belief based on the divorce and dating
that what, that I'm not really that attractive. I'm not really that sexy, I got a lot of money,
and that's what women really want from me. And so that I'll never really have someone I really,
truly love and really truly loves me. And then I had a string of dating examples that created that.
And so I had to do violence to that belief. So how does that look like in your mind? How do you kill off the old limiting belief or the demons that keep you small or holding back?
So you have to look at the benefits of getting out of it.
The benefits, and I know it doesn't seem like there are benefits,
but there are benefits to being right and playing small and not taking risks in life.
And being a victim.
And being a victim.
And being a victim of being the martyr.
You advise how many different, I guess, advisors would you say?
Roughly 500.
500, and they're managing portfolios of what type of range?
Oh, gosh.
We try not to have a minimum because we want to help everybody, but there's portfolios
up to 70, 80 million.
Sure.
Okay. but you know there's portfolios up to 70 80 million sure okay but you have this
part of the book page 73 they called the destructive cycle of wealth and you say
yes it's cliche that money can't make you happy songs have been written about
it but why can't money make you happy shouldn't it make you a little bit
happier if you suddenly stumble into say a hundred million dollars you say the
answer is no and it sounds counterintuitive,
but I firmly believe that to be true.
And if money isn't making us any happier,
and most of us have much more than what we need,
why do we work so hard to make more of it?
Why do we spend so much of our lives thinking about money
without even realizing it?
We are stuck in the destructive cycle of wealth,
and learning about this cycle can help you better understand without even realizing it, we are stuck in the destructive cycle of wealth.
And learning about this cycle can help you better understand some of your decisions about
money.
And you say it has five phases, beginning with our most basic human needs.
Can you talk about what this destructive cycle of wealth is?
Why it's important for us to understand it and what we can do to make sure we don't stay in it.
Yeah. So when I realized that I had clients with a lot of money that were very unhappy,
that was my next question. My dad, one of the key strategies in the book is to ask a
good question. And don't try to rush to get the answer. Take your time and really let
it work on you and your subconscious and really think about it. So it took me years to think about this and that the reason it can't make you happy is
because it doesn't fill anything in your spiritual nature that can bring happiness.
It fulfills the survival nature, right?
Yeah. So we all want things and we want things for our survival.
That's instincts.
Food, clothing, shelter, gloves, that kind of stuff.
And then we go out and we obtain things.
And we obtain those things, most of us.
But then we want more.
Toyota even had that commercial, oh, what a feeling, you know, when you get to Toyota.
So you don't just want a new car, you want a really nice car.
You don't want a new house, you want a really nice car. You don't want it in the house, you want a really nice house.
So and then when you do get something, whether it's the computer or golf clubs or a purse
or whatever it is, you have it for a while, you obtained it, you felt good about it for
a little while, then you start comparing it to what everybody else has.
I had a boat I bought in Florida when we had a house down there and
it was a 37 footer, 300 Yamaha motors. I loved that boat, had tons of fun on that boat. It
was adventurous, really great. Then one day there was a 180 foot yacht and their dinghy
was bigger than my boat. I'm like, this ain't no boat. I got to get me a bigger boat.
Really?
Yeah.
But whether it's the size of your portfolio, the size of your house, you buy the perfect
house, you think it's perfect, then six months later you're looking at the kitchen going,
these cabinets really suck.
We need to rip these out.
It's just human nature.
And then, so then it brings us around to comparing it to other things.
Sometimes in technologies this way, they always come out with bigger, better, faster, cooler
technology we want.
And then you can lead you back up to this topic, wanting stuff.
So it doesn't fulfill at a deep, meaningful purpose.
And that leads you back to what you mentioned earlier, which is survival.
It's about survival. So if I'm getting this right, we go through the cycle
and you know a lot of people who are mega millionaires,
maybe even billionaires, who are unhappy still.
Yep.
Would you say the majority of millionaires
or billionaires are unhappy,
the ones that you've been around or experienced?
I don't know about the majority,
but I do know there is no correlation.
And I know it from my personal life too, because-
To happiness and having money.
Right, because there's been times
where I had a lot of money, was very unhappy,
had no money and was pretty happy.
So you've also had a lot of money and been happy too.
I would take the latter, the money and the happiness
at the same time.
That would be great.
You've experienced that too. And I have. Yes. But if it's not the money, the money and the happiness at the same time. You've experienced that too.
I have. But if it's not the money, then what is it? And what I've found is it's having a
purpose in life that's greater than money itself. And if you think throughout history,
the people that have changed the world, whether it's Ronald Reagan or whether it's Martin Luther King or whether it's JFK
or whether it's Walt Disney or the Wright Brothers.
You think about these people that have changed the world, they've all had this deep purpose,
sense of purpose and value in their life, so much so that they've even laid their life,
Dr. Martin Luther King laid down his life for his purpose.
That's how strong purpose can be.
And if you'll have a purpose first, then use it to create value for other people in align with their purpose.
And then the more money you have, great.
Because then I can align how I use that money with my purpose in life.
And I can do great I use that money with my purpose in life and I can do great
things with my money.
That brings me joy and happiness and freedom and fulfillment with other people.
But if I have the money without the purpose, it just becomes a burden.
Really?
It becomes empty.
It's so empty.
I need more money, more money, more money for what?
It's an addiction of itself. So it sounds like the greater the
purpose you have, the more fulfilled you'll be with or without money. Absolutely.
Because in fact, if you have a stronger purpose, you don't even need money.
You know, like Mother Teresa, saints. Well, because they feel taken care of by the
community or they know they're gonna be provided for, they're happy with whatever
they receive each day.
It's about their purpose in life.
If I don't have, look, you can live in America for very little money.
Even if you only have $40,000, $50,000 a year, you live better than the king of England did
500 years ago.
You have chocolate, you have air conditioning, you have food, you have running water, you
have healthcare.
I mean, it's a miracle. Everybody should wake you have healthcare. I mean, it's a miracle.
Everybody should wake up every morning in a miracle going, it's a miracle, it's a miracle,
I can't believe I live here.
Of course they don't.
But it's a miracle that what we have and if you only have a little bit of money and you
have a friend in the hospital, you can make a card with a crayon or a pin.
You could go to the hospital, you could sit by them and hold their hand.
You could express your love and affection.
And that's going to be more fulfilling than a Ferrari.
I'm not anti-Ferrari, I got one.
But it's hard for an hour, but it's not, you know...
I call them cookies and toys.
You say you got these toys, and they're fun, okay, fine, great.
I'm not saying that they're bad, but they won't make me happy.
And then food, it's anything you ingest to try to change your mood about yourself and
feel better temporarily.
But they're not permanent.
Right.
This is powerful, man.
I love this You know anyone you and you mentioned early on that we people have these screens and just so I'm clear is a screen kind
Of like a framework. It's kind of like a framework of thinking
Towards money or towards life. Is that your definition of a screen? It is it is it's it's a model a way of thinking
It's a mental model that you have that you...
Here's the critical part, that you don't know you have because it just appears like the
truth and not something that you just made up.
A story.
Yeah, something happened.
I lost money on a house, but I have a degree in finance and accounting.
I'm bad at real estate, really?
That's just being a wimp.
So it's the story that I make up about whatever and a lot of it's money, relationships with
money and it all comes down to, when I run these exercises with people, first you make
a list of your complaints. What's all your complaints about money? And then what demon belief or
relationship do you have based on that complaint? And then where did it come from? What happened
when you were eight years old, the first time you heard your mom and dad yelling about money
that gave you that story that you have about what money is. Because something did happen, but then what you made it mean
is not what is just a story you made up. And you can start to do battle with those and start to
untangle them over time. And then it's kind of like the demon in it, it morphs into other things.
It's not that it only dies for like, hides for 17 years,
then it comes out as something else,
and it changes usually into what your greatest fear is.
So can you give me an example
of you were doing this exercise for yourself?
And I'm assuming you've done this a bunch of times,
or you have an example of something,
a story that you had, a money story,
or a moment, or a memory,
that caused a belief within your screen
that I guess you made decisions
based on for many years until you became aware of it and killed it off.
What would that look like for you?
If you give one example of here's your daddy or grandpa or whatever that might be.
So there's screens, money is people like to try to compartmentalize things in their brain
like, oh, this is money,
this is my relationships, this is my life, this is my whatever.
But money doesn't work like that.
It's got tentacles and it's like a thread that goes through the carpet of your life
and it touches everything.
So when I have a money demon, I also usually have a relationship demon.
When I went through divorce, I thought,
okay, you're going to lose half of all your stuff now, including your company that you built.
So that was less than ideal. That was a money demon. But I also had another money demon,
or relationship demon related to that, is that I had grown up most of my life as an atheist
to that is that I had grown up most of my life as an atheist and took classes in college about how there's no God and all this garbage. And so then when I went through the divorce,
I mean, I was gutted. I mean, obviously it was dark. I'm a bad father. I wasn't seeing
my kids. I'm going to lose my company. It's going to be like, this is going to be the
worst thing ever in my life. I got depressed. And, and then I was
talking to a buddy on the phone. So I lived in a world a screen
is there is no God. And I'm talking to a buddy of mine. He's
probably crying. He's like, well, are you ready? I said,
ready for what? He said, Are you ready to admit there's a God and
it's not you? Oh, and know, like, yeah, I am.
Well, you could have said, see, there is no God because I'm divorced.
Half my money is gone.
My business is gone.
My kids don't like me.
Right.
You could have also gone and stayed in that belief.
Yeah, I could have just stayed there and if there was a God, why would
he let this happen to me?
Yeah.
Right.
Well, I knew because I was a sinner and I didn't believe in God.
I wouldn't let this happen to me, right? Well, I knew because I was a sinner
and I didn't believe in God.
Right, right.
But you know what?
All of the, in this end of the screen,
sometimes can change slow, sometimes it can go fast,
but I knew instantly I could not live in a world
without a God anymore.
Wow.
I just knew it was empty, it was devoid and it was hopeless.
And I didn't have any doubts or questions.
All the intellectual
gymnastics I had been doing my whole life went away. And he said, get on your knees
and let's pray. And I was in that hotel room and started praying. And I went from a screen,
a world of no God to a rule of God. And that's made all the difference, kind of like the
master screen that fits into the other screens.
Wow. The screens are powerful.
And people will literally die to keep their screens like my grandpa did.
He died, he came to visit us only one time at our house in Cincinnati.
It was August, it was a cool for August.
He walked in the front door.
We had about maybe like an 1800 foot square house, it wasn't huge.
He said, how many of, he looked at my dad
in front of his whole family, he said,
how many people did you have to rip off to get this house?
Oh my gosh, that was his first thing.
That was the first thing out of his mouth.
Geez.
His screen, his framework, his mindset,
when he saw something, he said,
you did something wrong to get this.
Yep.
There's no way you could have done something good to be able to afford something like this.
That's right.
And I know my dad wanted me to be proud of him.
That's tough.
And right in front of his whole family, and he said, George, Mary Lou and I were in a
real business.
We worked really hard.
We tried to build a good family for our, you know, a good house for our family and a nice
home.
And he said, well, you can tell yourself
whatever you want, they'll let you sleep at night.
Oh my gosh.
He said, but all I see is a big shot.
You think you're better than me?
And it got really heated after that for about five minutes.
He left, he never came back, and three months later he was dead.
And his little teeny shack he lived at in West Virginia.
How old were you during that time?
About 13.
Wow.
What did that mean?
That's a memory that is still alive in you today.
I'll never forget that day.
47, 48 years ago, right?
That was a memory that your grandfather had with your father and your family.
What psychological screen did you create in that moment
that stuck with you, that benefited you
and one that didn't benefit you?
Yeah.
Well, because money essentially,
that, you know, your dad tried to break a model
of his father's to do something good,
but it hurt the relationship with his father.
That's right.
It caused him, maybe he could think it caused him to die.
Maybe not, but it could be like,
it was so bad that he died alone
because he had no family and he didn't want to be around me.
Whatever he made up for his mom.
So what was the benefit from you in seeing that experience
versus a negative benefit?
The benefit in that was that dad stood up for his family.
Well, that's powerful.
And stood up to his values and what he believed about America,
and about freedom and about entrepreneurship, and about helping other people,
and never expecting anything from expecting anything free or that you didn't earn.
And that always stuck with me.
On the other hand, when I was a kid, I did go through some stuff, you know, I had trouble
studying in school and trouble reading.
So I made up I'm stupid and, you know, I'd ask a girl to the dance and she wouldn't say
no, you know, and I think, oh, I'm not handsome enough.
Or I didn't get to be the captain on the football team.
And so I started like, I'm dumb, I'm not handsome,
I'm not attractive, I'm not man enough.
And that was early on, that was like eighth grade
and I got bullied in school.
And so I had all these, in my strategy,
I heard your podcast with Pivot,
my strategy was not unlike yours,
which was to win at all costs.
Whatever I was going to do, if it's going to be sports, if it's going to be grades,
if it's going to be drama club, if it's going to be whatever, I got to have the lead in
the lead role.
I got to be the captain.
I got to win state championship and discus.
I got to do all this or I'm not worth anything.
It got me through a little bit in life, but it ultimately would be a failed strategy.
Right, exactly.
What would you say are some things people should talk about
before getting married about money conversations?
What questions did you ask your partner
before getting married to make sure that you're
at least setting yourself up in the right track
of a healthy successful marriage.
One of the things is I think both people would want to define what their purpose for money is
and then make sure that those are synergistic and they work together. So give me an example of what maybe yours was during that time. Mine was love, to create love in the world.
And hers was family, love, close second.
So they were very synergistic, they worked really well together. other. She had a belief that her value as a human being was determined on her working
and that if she wasn't working that she wouldn't have any value.
Interesting.
And that was something we had to work through because I wanted to be able to travel, I wanted
to be able to do things with the kids, I wanted to be able, but she, her job,
she was a physical therapist and went from,
the home physical therapy, but she couldn't take time off.
Without thinking she's not valuable anymore.
Well, she would lose her job if she wanted,
if she took as much time as I wanted to take off,
she would lose her job.
And if she wasn't working, she was saying,
I'm not valuable.
I'm not valuable.
Interesting.
And so that was a money,
kind of a money demon we had to work through.
Now I guess she might think,
I'm not valuable for myself,
but also the fear could be,
well, if I'm not working,
he met me when I was working
and providing for myself and independent.
That's what turned him on potentially.
So if I'm not doing that,
will he still be turned on?
Yeah, and what if I turned out being like her last husband and then left her and then she'd given up her job
Right and these she has three kids to take care of and that fear so that fear of being left being abandoned
And then what then what would she have? I mean, it's a it's a real fear though, right?
I mean, it's so she has to have a lot of trust in you that,
okay, I'm going to leave my job and you're not going to leave me.
Yeah.
How does a woman trust a man in that position
who's already been divorced and been wounded,
who's already been abandoned,
who wants to make sure that doesn't happen again,
who wants to provide for their family? how does a woman trust and have faith?
What can she say to the man to feel safe?
I think it's, I think it's a, well, it was,
another interesting thing.
So her ex-husband had told her that,
and this just gutted me when I heard it the first time,
had told her that because she had three kids,
that no one would ever want her.
Talk about a gut punch.
I mean, that was just, we had the first day
we went to Starbucks and had our first date together.
We talked for like three hours.
Just as friends.
Yeah, just as friends from the first period.
And that made me so mad. I was like, and I don't know why, because I never really thought
about getting divorced and maybe it was subconscious, but even from the time I was in college, I
ever thought if I did ever marry somebody that had kids, I would love their kids the
same way that I love them. And I would never let that be an obstacle to having a relationship.
So when he was manipulating her like that
and trying to control her and just making her feel bad
and really depressed about the whole thing,
it really made me mad.
But that was another one of her money demons
was that she had kids and no guy
was gonna want to take that on.
So how did she learn to let go of that
and trust you and have faith?
I think it was just tons of time and therapy and just lots of discussions about things.
And probably your actions matching your words consistently for her, right?
Most of our therapy had to do around the kids.
I'm sure.
This kid's doing this, that parent's doing this, this kid needs that, and this kid needs
that. And then working through all of those,
working through all of those,
we had a therapist once time tell us,
three years to get it all really aligned up
and make it feel like one's family.
I was like,
10 years maybe?
10 years, yeah.
It takes a long time when you have that many players involved.
Now, but also when you got divorced,
I'm assuming it affected your financial situation or your business.
You had to either split or give up a large portion,
or I'm assuming, unless I'm wrong, let me know.
But how did you manage that money demon of,
man, I worked so hard for this,
and now I've got to give up half or whatever it was?
Yeah.
How did you overcome that? How did you, instead of being a victim to that situation,
how did you start to shift and say, and use it for good,
that scream?
Well, once I kind of came out of the sadness of some of the grief
part of it, I was like, okay, now what am I going to do?
What am I going to do to make this mess into a message?
We had a negotiator that helped negotiate the divorce, the mediator, and part of the
mediation was, look, this is my company.
I built this company.
The income you're getting, the benefits, the money, everything you're getting is because
I'm keeping this company running.
Without me, there is no company.
So I'm not going to let you double dip.
I'm not going to give you half the company and half of all the other stuff in addition.
Right.
Because you can just stop running the company.
I'll stop running the company and I'll run it into a ditch.
And then I'm not very great in negotiating, but I was firm on that.
But you're getting a really great deal.
You're going to get going with your life.
You've got lots of great resources to go on and be happy, do your own deal, but I'm not
giving you my company.
And that was, and I kept the company intact.
That was, in retrospect, that was really, really good.
But you gave up a lot of your other,
or you gave a lot of your other assets and cash.
And yeah.
Yeah.
How did that make you feel though,
that screen, did you say, you know what,
this is creating freedom and peace for me
and I'm okay with this?
And I just felt like it was worth it.
Yeah.
I was like, whatever it's gonna take to get through this and move on with my life,
it's just worth it.
I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy.
And if you're looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in
your life, and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it
easier, you want to make it flow, you want to feel abundant money hard in your life, but you wanna make it easier,
you wanna make it flow, you wanna feel abundant,
then make sure to go to makemoneyeasybook.com right now
and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is gonna help you
transform your relationship with money
this moment moving forward.
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