The School of Greatness - How To Rewire Your Beliefs To Manifest Abundance
Episode Date: June 2, 2025Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Vulnerability becomes the pathway to abundance when I share my most personal transformation story during my Mak...e Money Easy book tour keynote in New York. I break down the walls between my deepest childhood wounds - sexual abuse at five, my brother's imprisonment, and the crushing poverty that forced me to scrounge for loose change just to buy friendship - and my journey to understanding that true wealth isn't just about money in the bank. Through raw storytelling about living on my sister's couch while battling fears of public speaking, reading, and even salsa dancing, I reveal how I discovered the four distinct ways people live with money. This keynote will transform how you think about worthiness, belonging, and what it truly means to feel safe at home within yourself, especially for anyone who has ever felt "not enough" or struggled with the gap between external success and internal peace.Support your journey toward greatness:The Greatness Mindset: Unlock the Power of Your Mind and Live Your Best Life TodayThe Mask of Masculinity: How Men Can Embrace Vulnerability, Create Strong Relationships, and Live Their Fullest LivesThe School of Greatness: A Real-World Guide to Living Bigger, Loving Deeper, and Leaving a LegacyIn this episode you will learn:The four ways you live life around money and why having wealth without inner abundance becomes more dangerous than being brokeHow childhood wounds of abuse, abandonment, and unworthiness shape your money beliefs and sabotage your successWhy overcoming your deepest fears - public speaking, writing, dancing - becomes the gateway to building unshakeable self-beliefThe difference between being financially broke but emotionally rich versus financially successful but spiritually bankruptHow your internal wounds get magnified when you gain success, and why Olympic gold medalists often fall into depression after achieving their dreamsFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1779For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Muniba Mazari – greatness.lnk.to/1684SCMark Manson – greatness.lnk.to/1750SCDr. Caroline Fleck – greatness.lnk.to/1774SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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My friend, welcome back to the School of Greatness.
I'm excited about today because I'm sharing something a little bit different than I've
ever shared, I think, here in over 12 years of the School of Greatness.
I'm sharing a live speech that I gave.
Now, for those of you who've been on this journey with me for a while, you saw that
I had a book come out a couple of months ago called Make Money Easy.
And I went on a book tour.
And maybe some of you were there.
We had an amazing time.
It was seven cities in like 10 days all around the country. It was, I think maybe two
weeks or three weeks after I had just gotten married. So I've had all these amazing life moments
happening at the same time from a wedding, getting married to traveling back to Los Angeles, to launching the book, then going on tour for a few weeks,
and getting to meet so many people in person
was just such a beautiful season of life.
And I wanted to share this speech that I gave
while I was on tour.
And this is from my New York City stop,
because I realized that it resonated
with so many people.
A lot of the times on this show, I interview other people and I ask them This is from my New York City stop because I realized that it resonated with so many people.
A lot of the times on this show, I interview other people and I ask them about their life
story and about their lessons and what greatness means to them and how they overcame challenges
and all these things.
But so many people come up to me and say, Louis, please share more of your lessons and
your stories from your personal life, but also from all the wisdom that you've learned
from the last 12 and a half plus years on the School of Greatness.
So in this conversation, you're going to hear me sharing some of my most personal stories from this stop in New York City about childhood trauma, the pain of watching my brother go to prison and what that did for us. invisible story of unworthiness that I carried for so many years and these wounds that shaped
my belief about success, money, love and relationships until I made the conscious choice to start
rewriting and rewiring these stories and these beliefs.
And in this conversation, the speech that I shared today, this episode, it's going
to show you what's possible when you stop hiding from your past and start healing it.
And I'm going to share the unconscious connection between emotional wounds and your financial reality.
So if you feel like you're not where you want to be financially, there's a few different areas right now for people.
People feel stuck like they're, they've hit a ceiling of their financial opportunities.
They feel like they're only making a certain amount every year. And they also feel like they
have a stressful relationship with money. So there's a couple of challenges that people have.
It's one, they want to learn how to earn more. And two, they want to learn how to have a better
relationship with it. So they want to feel more in harmony with money when they spend it, when they receive it, when they earn it, when they have to pay it for the things they love buying, when they have to pay for the things they don't enjoy like taxes or interest or insurance or things like this.
And how can we really have a different relationship with money?
And all these
things are tied to our money story in our past
wounds and this is some of the research that I've
been doing over the last few years that I just
found this fascinating because I always had an
interesting relationship with money where early in
my life I was afraid of it. I was scared of it. I
didn't know how to make it. I didn't know how to
receive it all these things, but I knew I wanted it. And then as I didn't know how to make it. I didn't know how to receive it, all these things, but I knew I wanted it.
And then as I started to learn how to make money,
I was excited about it.
It was thrilling, and I felt like,
wow, this rush every time I'd make it.
But I also had some underlying wounds tied to it
that made me feel like people were taking advantage of me
or that if I wasn't making as much money
after a few months, then something was wrong with me.
So I had this negative relationship with it also.
And so you could be really good at making money, but also not
feel good about yourself.
And I wanted to understand why.
And I wanted to dive deeper into my journey, studying this with others
and really starting to heal because I realized that these triggers were
still coming up for me, even in the last couple of years as I was writing this book.
And so we're going to talk about this why healing your past is essential to rewriting your money story, how this trauma can create a false identity and how to break free from it.
And really what I discovered about worthiness after years
of chasing success.
So it's going to be an amazing episode.
I really hope you enjoy it because this was a fun experience for me to start
opening up and sharing on stage for audiences around the country about
how to make money easy.
So I hope you enjoy it.
Let me know your thoughts about this.
Make sure to share it with a friend or two and get their feedback, get their insights and ask them what opened up for them.
And again, if you haven't left a review yet over on Apple or Spotify, please leave a review. Let
me know what you enjoyed about this episode. I'm so grateful for you and let's go ahead and dive in.
I'm excited to be here. I'm grateful for you guys and I want to share a story with you. I want to
share a story with you and I'm curious if anyone can resonate with this story.
When I was a young boy,
I'm gonna make sure this slides back,
yeah, when I was a young boy,
I had many memories that created wounds within me,
that kinda shaped my belief,
that shaped my story about who I thought I was,
where I thought I lacked worthiness, and I had a lot of insecurity and self-doubt growing up.
Now, this is a photo probably around the time when I was seven or eight years old, and by this time,
one of my first memories as a child, not to get, you know, not to bring the energy too far down, but one of my first childhood memories
was being sexually abused by a man that I did not know
when I was five years old.
And it implanted a wound within me
that stuck with me for 25 years of my life
until I started the School of Greatness
and started kind of going down this healing journey
and really reflecting, looking at my ego, allowing myself to heal
and grow beyond the pains of the past.
And that was one of my first memories.
It created an implant, implanted into me this idea that I'm abusable, that I'm unworthy,
that I'm not enough.
And I don't know if anyone can relate to that feeling.
I'm not talking about the abuse side of things,
but just the feeling of feeling unlovable,
unworthy, or not enough.
I'm not sure if anyone can relate to that ever growing up.
They just didn't feel loved or worthy or not enough.
Am I the only one pointing my hand out?
Just making sure.
Am I the only one who's ever felt that way?
Okay.
Checking if you guys are still with me, all right.
That happened at five and around eight,
my brother goes to prison for selling drugs
to an undercover cop.
And he went to prison for four and a half years.
Coming from a small town in Ohio,
this didn't really happen in the neighborhood.
It was the first person that I ever heard of
that went to prison that I knew in the neighborhood, right?
It was a very challenging time,
as you could imagine, for my parents.
My parents felt a lot of shame, a lot of sadness,
a lot of loss, a grief.
He was sentenced six to 25 years, and he was 19 years old.
And so it was like this devastation.
It was like, he was one of the top classical violinists
in the world growing up.
He was a child prodigy.
And then he got into some trouble to house state.
He was like just doing weed or whatever,
selling a little weed to friends,
and then someone got in an undercover situation
and asked him, hey, can you get LSD?
So he's like, no, I can't, but they kept pushing,
and it happened to be an undercover cop
trying to just figure out how to get people, I guess.
And it was six to 25 years,
because it was the war against drugs back in the 90s.
I don't know if anyone remembers that.
And he got out in four and a half years,
and he's gone on to have a beautiful life since then.
But the pain and the sadness
that was in the energy within our home
was evident every single day.
My parents didn't have a lot of money anyways,
but all the money they did have went to legal fees,
went to trying to figure out
how to navigate this whole world.
Every weekend, we would drive to a prison in Ohio
and go visit my brother and sit in a room
with other inmates and their families.
And it was just a lot of sadness, right?
So there was these memories that created wounds within me
and really kind of started shaping my belief system.
Growing up in a small town,
if you have a brother that goes to prison,
all the parents in the neighborhood
wouldn't let their other kids hang out with me
by association, right?
So I wasn't allowed to really have any friends.
I mean, my parents wanted me to have friends,
but no one wanted to hang out with me through association.
And so I had a lot of insecurity,
a lot of self-doubt around that.
And just kind of asking myself, why is this happening?
Do I even matter?
Am I supposed to be here?
Why am I alive?
Just kind of all these questions
that I had around this time.
And there were these kids after school one day
that said, hey, we're starting a club, a secret club.
And in order to be in the club,
you either have to pay money or answer some questions.
And at the time, I was like, I don't have any money,
so what's the questions?
They asked me them, I didn't know the answers.
And so I felt insignificant, I felt not enough
by not being smart enough to answer these questions.
And so I go home to my mom and I say,
Mom, I wanna join this club, I wanna have some friends,
because I didn't have any friends.
And, but I need five dollars in order to join the club.
And she looked at me a little sad because,
not probably because I didn't
have any friends but sad because she didn't have the money and so and she
said okay let's play a game I want you to go over to the couch I want you to
open up the cushions I want you to see if you can find some loose change we did
that for a little bit we went into her you know her sock drawer and tried to
find change loose change everywhere and she and I found enough change that was $5,
which was the entry fee to this club.
This is pre-SOHO house.
This is the entry fee, $5.
And I get a shoe box that she gives me
and it's all the change in there.
And I go back to this kid's house with the shoe box,
like kind of proud that I got this $5.
I hand it to these two kids, and the club was in the basement of the parent's house.
We go to the basement, and they're just playing with their games by themselves for the next
hour, and I'm just sitting in the corner by myself.
I remember feeling very, like the lowest of low.
I'm not smart enough to have friends. Through association with my brother going to prison,
I'm not allowed to have friends.
Paying for friends didn't work
because they still didn't hang out with me.
So I'm just a complete loser,
and what's the point of my life?
It's just kind of like the feeling,
the energy that I had as a seven, eight year old.
It just felt like hopeless.
And my whole goal, essentially,
as my teen years growing up was like,
how do I just fit in?
How do I belong?
How do I get friends?
How do I learn about myself?
How do I believe I'm worthy of this?
How do I believe I'm worthy of receiving love?
All these things kind of shaped my beliefs.
And it drove me to be the person that I was until I was about 30 years old when I realized
that wasn't working either.
And my goal for you guys today is to really assess what is blocking you from feeling free
and feeling abundant in your life. That's my intention of my goal for you today, to figure out what is blocking you from feeling free and feeling abundant in your life?
That's my intention of my goal for you today, to figure out what is blocking you from feeling
free and abundant in your life.
For many years, I was driven to receive, to get, to accomplish in order to feel worthy.
No matter how much success I accomplished,
I still didn't feel worthy, I still didn't feel lovable,
I still didn't feel enough.
And I've realized that there are four different ways
that you can live life around the idea of money.
The first way is to be broke and live with scarcity.
And this is the bottom of the bottom. No one broke and live with scarcity.
This is the bottom of the bottom. No one wants to live like this.
Let me give you an example.
When I was 24, I was pursuing my dream
of playing professional football,
and I went to play arena football.
I got injured, and then I had to go live
on my sister's couch.
This was in end of 2007 through 2009.
I was living on my sister's couch. This was in end of 2007 through 2009. I was living on my sister's couch.
And in the beginning of that first kind of year and a half,
I was broke financially.
I had no money.
I had about 24 grand in college debt,
living on three credit cards, no money.
Financially broke and living with scarcity inside of me.
So I was emotionally defeated, I was a victim,
I was frustrated, I was angry, I was resentful,
I was scared, and I was scarce emotionally,
spiritually, mentally.
And I was living from that place of financial
brokenness and also emotional brokenness.
And those two things are not a good place to be in
Then something started to shift. I started to get out of this victim mentality. I said, okay
I've got to figure out something with my life. I started reaching out to mentors. I started learning about things and online marketing
I started reading books. I started
Developing certain skill sets and overcoming certain fears. One of the fears was learning how to speak on stage.
I had no clue how to do it and I was terrified
to get in front of a room of a few people and speak
because when I was in school, in eighth grade,
I got tested at a second grade reading level.
So again, I was just in confirmation,
confirmation that I was not good enough
and not smart enough through school. And I struggled, I was just in confirmation, confirmation that I was not good enough and not smart enough
through school.
And I struggled.
I was in special education all the way through graduating high school.
And so that was a fear of mine, the humiliation, the embarrassment of standing in front of
a room and someone not liking me or judging me or laughing at me or whatever.
And I started overcoming that fear by going all in on learning how to do public speaking
by going to Toastmasters every single week.
All right, clap it up.
So you guys know what Toastmasters is.
Every single week for a year,
I started going to Toastmasters
and I started to develop more belief in myself
through the consistency, through the coaching
and the accountability process that I had.
Another fear was literally reading and writing because my senior year in high school, my
teacher was like, you're failing English halfway through.
And she goes, just to let you know, Louis, if you flunk out of English senior year of
high school, you can't go to college.
And for me, I was just like mind blown that I had to pass in order to go to college. And for me, I was just like mind blown that I had to pass in order to go to college.
That's supposed to be a joke, I guess,
but it didn't land here.
And she was like, no, if you get a F in English,
you have to retake senior year.
And I go, okay, this can't happen.
I need to go and pursue my dream and play college football.
And she worked with me every day after class
to help me do basic vocabulary.
So reading and writing was another fear,
huge fear of mine, fear of embarrassment.
And I found a mentor who was a writer of books
and he coached me on how to write more effectively
and I started practicing weekly
with blogs and content online.
And that practice over that next kind of year
gave me more confidence
right and the third thing believe it or not all the Latinos will love this was I
was terrified of salsa dancing you laugh but it's true imagine a tall gringo like
me six-four going into a salsa club this like what am I doing here I don't
understand the language I don't understand the music I don't understand
the culture I don't understand how language, I don't understand the music, I don't understand the culture, I don't understand how beautiful these women are, all these things were intimidating to
me.
And funny enough, there was a period of time where I lived above a jazz club, because my
brother was a jazz musician, he was a jazz musician, and got me at a little apartment
to live above a jazz club.
And every week, there would be a salsa band
that would come and play.
And I would go downstairs,
because I'd hear this music,
and I'd go downstairs and I was mesmerized
by what I was watching on the dance floor.
So every week for three months,
I would go and just sit in the corner like that creepy guy,
just watching all these amazing dancers.
And I would just sit there so intimidated.
But the music just like made my heart sing, made me feel alive.
And I was just like, man, wouldn't it
be amazing if one day I could just do just a little bit
of what they're doing?
And women would always try to invite me
to come out on the dance floor.
And I was just like, no, I don't want to make you look bad.
It was like the fear of humiliation
was strong for me
in so many areas of life.
But eventually I went out on the dance floor,
this one woman just dragged me out there,
and I was dancing with her just like so intimidated
and so worried about being in the middle of this dance floor.
And I was stepping on her feet and I was bumping into people
and I was just like, man, I am like sweating.
I was just like, this is not good.
And after like a minute, she's like,
Louis, she hits my chin, she goes, Louis, look at me.
She goes, look around.
No one is looking at you.
No one cares that you're a tall gringo
bumping into people.
Maybe they did for the first 30 seconds,
but then they got over it and they went back to dancing
and having fun.
No one cares.
Just enjoy the music, have fun.
You don't have to look perfect.
And I went through this obsession for the next few years
of going salsa dancing three, four, five nights a week
and going all in on this fear
until the point where now I could go anywhere in the world,
any country, or any languages, I can go into a salsa club,
I can find the best dancer in a second.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
Show us some love.
I need a dancer to do that look. I like someone who can actually dance to do that.
So I started going around the world and salsa dancing
as a challenge to myself, as a way to like say,
okay, I need to put myself through this fear
over and over again in order to really embrace
this level of belief in myself.
And so the whole point of this second way of living
is I was extremely financially broke still.
I still had no money, but man, did I feel rich inside.
I felt like I was meeting people,
like opportunities were coming to me.
I was dancing, I was creating content,
I was speaking and building this belief inside of myself.
And it just felt like I am living a rich, abundant life even though I really don't have any money.
I don't know if anyone can relate to that, having no money but feeling rich inside.
Okay?
Hopefully that's not right now where you're broke but feeling rich.
Hopefully you're doing okay.
And then I started to go into the third phase after that.
I started to figure out money eventually.
It took a few years, but something clicked inside of me
after having mentors kind of teach me and coach me
where I was just willing to obsess over it.
I was like, I'll do whatever it takes.
I finally started making money.
And then in a sense, it was just like,
I went all in and obsessed about how can I
make more? How can I get off my sister's couch? How can I save more? And it just became an
obsession for a couple of years to the point where I had millions of dollars in the bank
but I felt emotionally broke and scarce inside because I was afraid to go back to the couch.
So I was taking Greyhound buses around the country
when I had a million dollars in the bank.
I do not, I was taking like, you know,
Southwest, Middle Sea, three connections,
anywhere I could.
When I was like, I've got money,
but I was afraid to spend it,
and I would just be exhausted.
I would stay on friends' couches for years
anywhere I traveled,
because I didn't want to pay on a hotel room.
I had this, you know, I learned how to make money,
but I didn't remember how to feel abundant and rich
with the money.
And so it was almost, almost as bad as being a number one.
Broke with scarcity.
And here's why it's almost as bad.
And I don't know if anyone here can relate to this.
I'm sure a few people will.
The idea of having money in the bank,
say I have six months of expenses, a year of expenses,
a few years of savings, whatever it is,
but feeling insecure, feeling like my relationships
are broken, feeling like my health is out of whack.
For me, that's not an abundant life.
Having money, but feeling broke inside.
And it almost breaks your mind even more,
because when you're broke and you have nothing,
you think, when I have money, I'll feel better.
But when I had money, I was like,
why are all my relationships failing?
Why am I getting in fights?
Why am I still angry? Why am I resent failing? Why am I getting in fights? Why am I still angry?
Why am I resentful?
Why am I holding onto grudges?
Like, why am I starting to get sick?
All these different things started to show up.
And I was like, but I'm making money.
I should be happy, right?
But I lost that abundance energy.
Because as the scale started to improve
in the financial success category, I started to see the insecurity
come inside of me.
Now, how do I manage this money?
How do I navigate this money?
Am I really deserving of this money?
I can't spend it on myself for comfort, can I?
No, because what if I go broke again?
So I have to make sure I save enough.
And if I give it to someone else and if they don't respond in a certain way, then I feel
taken advantage of and abused again, like I was when I was a child.
So all these things were coming up in my nervous system
that made me confuse around money,
and I was just like, I just have to make more,
and then I'll feel more secure.
I don't know if anyone can relate to that at all
in any area where you had money,
but you didn't feel abundant.
A few people, okay.
All the broke people were like, teach me how to make money, I don't feel abundant. Few people, okay. All the broke people were like,
teach me how to make money, I don't care.
You know, I'll take that money
instead of being broke all day long.
Give me that third way, you know, I'll take it.
But I'm telling you, I'm gonna tell you a story right now.
A few years ago, I was living in an apartment building
in Los Angeles.
Before I met Martha, I was living in an apartment building.
Here's another thing.
I was living in a two-bedroom apartment until I was 40 years old.
I was happy with it.
I didn't need a lot of space, but I also wasn't willing to invest in creating a sanctuary
for myself to expand emotionally, if that makes sense.
I had a lot of learning, but I was living in an apartment building four and a half,
five years ago,
and I was on a road trip and I came back one day
and there was a white tent in the valet.
There was a white tent.
And the valet attendant was taking my car
and I kinda just made this kinda quick joke,
which wasn't a joke after all,
and I said, someone didn't jump, did they?
And he looked at me and said,
yeah, they just happened like 30 minutes ago.
And I go, this is the most expensive apartment building,
even though it was only a two bedroom,
it was an expensive building.
And billionaires would live there,
famous actors lived there,
like it was the building to be in LA.
And I go, this doesn't make sense
that someone would jump from this building.
I see these people every day in the common space.
There's a nice gym there.
I see people, and it's like wealthy individuals.
And I was like, why would someone jump?
I don't want to assume I understand
this whole person's life, but the person was worth
a half a billion dollars, and was a very well-known person
in Los Angeles in the entertainment
world.
But it was the day after Father's Day.
And as I learned more about the situation, he didn't have a relationship with his son,
who was a teenage son.
He wasn't married.
And there were other things that came out about his life.
And again, I don't know what he was thinking or how he was feeling, but I can only imagine
that he wasn't living an abundant life inside.
And all the money in the world
and all the accolades that this person had
didn't make him feel worthy of staying alive
for whatever reason.
And for me, it's scary and sad to see when you think you have it all, but you have nothing,
that's why number three is kind of a scary place to be in.
And you see this where people get into addictions and alcohol and drugs when they have a lot
of money.
It's like trying to escape from not feeling good enough still so you have more to play
with, which can be scary.
And the fourth way to live, I think, is what we're all more to play with, which can be scary. And the fourth way to live,
I think is what we're all trying to get to,
which is how can we create financial independence,
financial freedom, whatever that looks like for you,
and have a rich, abundant life?
And that's what I want us to be exploring,
to be unpacking this evening,
and it's what we go through in the book as well,
Make Money Easy, about creating that richness of life
inside of you so that you can have the health,
the relationships, the purpose, the vision, the career,
whatever it is you're working on and feel abundant,
feel peaceful, feel whole, feel like you're home.
And I left home at 13 because I didn't feel safe in my home.
I literally left home and went to a private boarding school,
begged my parents to send me away.
They did not want to send me away,
but I didn't feel safe in the environment with them
because they didn't love each other.
They yelled at each other a lot, silent treatment a lot.
I was never afraid for my life,
but it never felt safe emotionally being home.
And I don't know if any of you can relate to that
growing up, the feeling of it doesn't feel safe
because mom and dad don't feel safe.
Even though I know they loved me,
they didn't love each other.
So we didn't have a richness there.
They did their best with the tools they had.
I don't hold a grudge, I love my parents.
But I ran away because I didn't feel safe at home.
And it took me another 20 years until I started to learn
how to be a safe home inside of me.
And I know we're in New York, so hopefully
it isn't too woo woo wooey to say this stuff,
because I know Gabby Bernstein comes here
and other people come here.
So hopefully you guys can resonate with this a little bit.
And it's resonating in some way.
But the memories that we have
and the meaning we give those memories shape our beliefs.
You guys know this.
How many of you have listened to the School of Greatness
podcast before the show?
How many of you have heard of it?
Okay.
So you guys know this.
I'm not saying anything new.
You guys have heard all this before.
Just question, how many of you have met,
how many of you brought some, like,
how many of you brought a friend who doesn't know who I am
to somewhere?
Okay, a few people.
A lot of hands up, I like it.
You guys got good friends.
You got good friends.
Your wife, yeah, it's always a guy that's like,
ah, I got dragged by my wife.
Was in Austin last night and this guy came up afterwards
in the Mean Greed area, he was like, gosh, I hated you at first
because my wife was just always smiling
when she listened to you.
And I was like, my bad, man.
I swear to God, I'm just trying to help people.
And he was like, ah, but then I hated it
because I started liking what you were saying.
And I was like, sorry, man.
So hopefully, whoever's wife brought you out here,
hopefully you appreciate it and it's been good for you.
But thanks to everyone who brought someone
who has no clue who I am, I appreciate you coming out here.
And hopefully this isn't too weird for you
and you appreciate the person who brought you here.
But our memories, plus the meaning we give those memories,
create a belief inside of us.
Like you guys, again, most of you,
the people who have listened, not the friends who are here,
but everyone else, you've heard me say that a lot on the podcast, or you've heard the
guests I've had on talk about that.
These memories and the meaning shape the beliefs.
And the beliefs influence our behaviors.
If I don't believe I'm capable of doing something, I'm probably not going to act in accordance
of this competence.
If I don't have that belief inside of me, I'm probably not going to behave and act and
consistently show up to go generate and manifest and create whatever I'm thinking and imagining
in my life or the life that I want.
And so when I had a lack of belief in myself, my behavior reflected that.
When I had a lack of emotional regulation, my behavior reflected that.
When I was able to learn how to make money from a wounded place, it only expanded my
frustration, my resentment, my angers in life.
The money revealed more of who I was and really the wounded part of my nervous system,
who that was and what that was, what that was feeling.
And when I started to heal in that journey,
I started to remember that I am whole,
I am abundant, I am love.
And the more I receive, the more loved I can be,
and the more I can contain that wealth,
abundance, birthday song, whatever it is,
any generosity, I can receive it and be grateful.
I don't have to reject or be against something.
And so I wanna share with you guys a few examples,
there's a few videos, and the audio may be a little loud
for a second, they may bring it down
or adjust it for a second, so be videos and the audio may be a little loud for a second they may bring it down or adjust it for a second so be mindful the the audio. There's
a few videos as an athlete I relate to sports related videos these are a couple
short clips the first one really quickly is of a video clip of a UFC fighter who
loses a fight and it's his interview after he loses and then he wins a fight and it's his interview after he loses.
And then he wins a fight and it's his interview after he wins.
It's a quick clip, I'm gonna play it,
and then I'll talk about the next one, see if this plays.
Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow,
and maybe not the next month,
but only one thing is true.
I will be champion one day. I promise. I promise.
Brandon, can you believe this?
Joe, this moment, man this moment is so amazing bro.
Man, but watching, watch me now talking with you, holding this hand, I'm so, I feel so amazing.
Amazing.
Brandon, it seemed like after you submitted him, you walked around the Octagon almost
like as if you didn't believe it.
And then it sunk in.
I worked so hard for this man.
You know, I'm watching now man.
Watching now holding this man.
It is unbelievable. Man, I worked so hard for this, man. You know? Watch me now, man.
Watch me now holding this, man.
This is unbelievable.
This clip...
I'm probably not going to...
So I want you to watch this second clip.
It's another short clip.
And it's of a fighter speaking into existence what she believes.
So watch this.
Introducing first, fighting out of the blue corner,
a mixed martial artist holding a national record.
10 wins, four losses.
She stands five feet five inches tall.
Rose, you shook up the world again.
I did it again, but God did it man.
I really just had to have faith in him and that's what got me through. You shook up the world again. I did it again. But God did it, man.
I really just had to have faith in him and that's what got me through.
You were so focused. Before the fight started, you were standing over there and as Bruce Buffer was saying your name, you were saying to yourself, I'm the best. I'm the best.
I am the best.
I'm the best. I am the best.
So this is, I love these examples.
For me, I love watching these and seeing these examples
and just reminding us visually using sports as the analogy
of speaking something into existence.
And it doesn't mean you're gonna get the result you want
by saying, I'm gonna be a millionaire tomorrow,
doesn't mean it's gonna happen, right?
This is all of them are saying, you know, I'm the best, sprint down the track, you can do this,
one day I will become, and then it's the actions,
the behaviors matching the belief
of this is going to happen.
I'm already believing it, I just need to see it now.
I believe it will happen and so it will happen soon.
It's just a matter of time.
And in this three dimensional world,
we get to dictate when that time happens,
either sooner or later in life,
based on our belief and our behaviors
that match in alignment with each other
and our ability to pursue that.
This is the opposite.
This clip is a clip of Sinbad,
I don't know if anyone remembers Sinbad in here.
Amazing comedian.
And he had a stroke.
Sinbad had a stroke, I don't know if you guys knew that,
but this is him coming on stage.
We cut this clip down to like 20 seconds.
It took him a few minutes to walk from here
to here on stage.
So that's the context of this clip.
And listen to the words that he says
in this quick 20-second clip
I'm gonna tell you something. There's a miracle for me to come out tonight. Even if we walk with that staff. I
Feel good that I can do that because the left side of my body was affected
My left hand my left leg just quit.
Be careful what you talk about.
Remember I did my joke about having a stroke?
Yeah, be careful what you talk about
because you bring it into fruition.
Be careful what you talk about
because you bring it into fruition.
I don't know if anyone can relate to the idea of...
Let's clap it up. I don't know if anyone can relate to the idea of clap it up. I don't know if anyone can relate to the idea of
something bad happening and you remembering,
oh I really thought of myself in not a positive way.
I spoke about this in certain ways.
Maybe I joked about it.
Sinbad used to tell that joke all the time.
God I'm going on tour nonstop and I'm gonna give myself
a stroke one day just by coming out here constantly working so hard, I work like the time, God, I'm going on tour nonstop and I'm gonna give myself a stroke one day just by coming out here constantly working so hard.
I work like a dog.
I don't get any days off.
I'm working so hard.
I'm gonna give myself a stroke.
It might be a joke, but his body started to believe it.
His nervous system felt it
and his behaviors matched the belief
and he brought it into fruition.
He said it himself.
And where the athletes that were there,
and I'm not saying they're like perfect human beings
and they don't have some wounds,
but their belief system matched their behaviors.
And it was a positive belief system
which allowed them the opportunity
to create something magical in the external world.
And it doesn't matter if you create that
in the external world as well,
you could still be living a scarce life internally
and not feel you're deserving and worthy of the success.
And there's an amazing documentary called The Weight of Gold.
And it's about Olympic gold medalists
who go through extreme depression
or even commit suicide after they win the gold medal
because they were driven out of a wound to achieve,
and then weren't ready to handle
the emotional weight of the success.
A lot of people want success,
but we're not prepared emotionally to be the container
of all the emotions that come our way.
That happens with money as well.
When I was broke, no one called me and asked for money.
No one said, Louis, can you bum me 20 bucks? Because I knew I didn't have it. I started making
money, people started knowing who I am, people see, oh you're on this show or
this thing, and oh people call me from 10, 15 years back in like middle school
saying, hey can I, can you invest in me in me can you do this and when you have a wound of abuse abandonment it feels like
you're getting taken advantage of like oh you now you call me after 10 years
now you want something from me and when you also are a big giver and people
pleaser and you want to please everyone because you want people to like you any
people pleasers or recovering people pleasers here?
When you just want to give and give and give
and be generous but have zero boundaries in life,
speaking from all my past relationships.
It feel, you feel resentful.
I don't know if anyone can relate to that.
You feel resentful, you feel frustrated,
you feel like, oh, these people aren't understanding me.
No one's appreciating me.
I don't know if anyone can relate to that.
It doesn't have to be around money also.
And these beliefs can shape us into acting in a certain way.
And it's interesting, how do we know what our belief is?
There's an amazing author that I love.
His name is Wayne Dyer.
I don't know if anyone followed Wayne Dyer.
And I never got to meet Wayne.
I never got to see him speak,
but I listened to his audio books a lot
and I love his content.
I was a big fan of the power of intention
in one of his books.
And, but he used to give this speech
and I saw it in a video one time.
So I'm just going to share quickly what he said.
There's a photo of an orange up here.
And when, let's see if anyone can get this.
When you have an orange and you squeeze it,
what comes out of the orange?
Anyone?
Orange juice, right?
Does apple juice come out of it?
Grape juice?
Lemon juice?
It's orange juice, right?
And he would say it's orange juice
because that's what's inside of the orange.
And what's inside of you?
What's inside of all of us?
When someone cuts you off in the street,
when someone takes advantage of you,
when someone is ungrateful for your generosity,
when whatever, someone cheats on you, lies to you,
whatever it might be, what comes out of you
is whatever's inside of you.
Do you have anger, resentment, frustration, jealousy,
or do you have love, peace, harmony?
Do you have a rainforest inside of you
that's flourishing with abundance,
or is there a desert of emotions inside of you? What's inside of you that's flourishing with abundance or is there a desert
of emotions inside of you?
What's inside of you?
For a long time, inside of me,
I had a little bit of both.
I had joy and passion and excitement,
but I had these deep wounds of resentment,
anger, frustration, and I had a lot of shame.
I'm not here to have anyone raise their hand
for this question or this statement,
but I opened up about being sexually abused
12, 13 years ago, and when I started doing the research
on sexual abuse, it's one in four in women
who are sexually abused and one in six in men.
And so no one needs to raise their hand here
if you've experienced that,
but a fraction of this room has experienced that.
And when you have been violated sexually
by someone you know, a stranger, anyone,
they take your innocence.
And I had a lot of shame associated with that,
especially being a man in sports.
I didn't see any men talking about
going through sexual abuse growing up.
I didn't have any role models.
No one was on TV saying this happened to me.
So I thought I was the only one in the world.
I literally thought no other boy had been sexually abused because I didn't hear about
it.
And so it was terrifying to really kind of open up and process that.
And I didn't tell anyone for 25 years.
And there's people in this room I know who have not told a soul what's happened to them,
big or small.
And you don't need to tell anyone.
I'm not telling you what to do here.
But what I can tell you is that there's incredible peace
and freedom on the other side
when you allow yourself to heal.
And when you remember you are fully loved.
So I wanna remind you of that.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode
and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes I want to remind you of that. then make sure to subscribe to our greatness plus channel exclusively on Apple podcast share this with a friend on social media and
Leave us a review on Apple podcast as well. Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review
I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve you moving forward
And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.