The School of Greatness - How to STOP Letting People Walk All Over You (5 Real Strategies)
Episode Date: November 26, 2025I'm opening up about a painful truth I learned the hard way: the more you try to please everyone, the less people actually respect you. I'll share a vulnerable childhood memory of literally paying kid...s five dollars just to hang out with me, and how that wound shaped decades of people-pleasing behavior that drained my energy and fractured my sense of self. Through five powerful strategies, I'll walk you through the exact process I used to stop being a doormat and start commanding real respect. You'll discover why saying no is actually the most loving thing you can do for yourself and others, how silence after stating your decision holds more power than any explanation, and why the people who get frustrated with your new boundaries are exactly the ones you need to distance yourself from. This isn't about becoming cold or aggressive, it's about speaking with kindness and clarity while refusing to sacrifice your peace to keep others comfortable.Make Money Easy: Create Financial Freedom and Live a Richer LifeThe 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:Reclaim your power by owning your no without guilt or over-explaining why you can't take something on right nowTransform how people treat you by speaking with certainty and dropping the apologetic tone that invites others to walk over youBreak free from the exhausting cycle of justifying every decision and discover why silence after stating your boundary commands more respect than any explanationIdentify the one area where people are crossing your boundaries right now and take immediate action to match your words with decisive follow-throughAudit your inner circle to double down on relationships that lift you up while creating distance from the energy vampires draining your life forceFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1855For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Scott Galloway – greatness.lnk.to/1854SCTony Robbins – greatness.lnk.to/1840SCLewis Howes [SOLO] – greatness.lnk.to/1828SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Welcome back, my friend, to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes.
And if you are sick and tired of letting people walk over you and feeling disrespected, then this
is for you.
And you know why people walk all over you?
Well, it's not because they're stronger than you.
It's because you haven't set the rules.
The rules matter.
And here's the truth.
Respect doesn't come from being liked.
It comes from showing people how to treat you.
That's right.
And I used to get this wrong all the time.
I used to love everyone to like me and be happy with me all the time.
And that's where I failed every day.
I thought if I say yes to everyone, if I helped everyone constantly, and if I avoided conflict,
if I kept everyone happy and keep the peace around me, then I would earn their respect.
But, unfortunately, the opposite happened to me.
The more I tried to please people, the more I tried to make everyone happy, the more
I tried to get everyone to like me and be their friend, the less people valued me.
So what changed?
Well, I built habits that protected my boundaries.
And the moment I did, people started treating me differently.
In this episode, I'm going to be sharing the five strategies that helped me stop being walked
on and will help you earn real respect also.
And again, if you feel like you are sick and tired of
not feeling peace with the people around you. It's probably because you try to make everyone
like you, love you, respect you, but you've been doing it the wrong way. And the first strategy
to this process is to own your no. Own your no. Most people are afraid of saying no,
but this is what you need to step into. If you can't say no, your yes means nothing. Now,
boundaries aren't walls to keep people out.
They're gates to protect what matters most.
And the difference between successful people and really successful people is that really
successful people say no to almost everything.
I love this quote from Warren Buffett.
And I used to think saying no would make a lot of people dislike me.
So for years, all I would do is just say yes to everyone.
If they ask me for a favor, yes, what do you need?
If they ask me to give them endorsement on something, yes.
I'll do it. If they asked me to promote them, sure, I got you. Whatever it was, I'd say yes to someone
else. Whenever I did that, I was saying no to myself, especially if it was distracting me or pulling me
away constantly from taking action on the things that I needed to be doing in that moment.
And the moment I started practicing no, with clarity and kindness, people started respecting me
differently. Now, I didn't always get people to like that, you know, right when you start creating
boundaries, especially if you've been a people pleaser your entire life, let me know if that's been
you. If you've ever been a people pleaser and you start creating boundaries, it rubs people the
wrong way. People don't like it. Some people will respect it, but some people get really frustrated
with you. And this is a test. This is a test for you to say, okay, I ruffled some feathers.
People started saying things about me that I've changed.
And you have to see if you're willing to step forward and own your power and be okay with the mess of people not liking you for people to respect you.
But it's very uncomfortable when you first start practicing it.
That's why it takes time.
It takes reps.
It takes consistency to develop that respect muscle by saying no to people.
And again, I said with kindness and clarity, I didn't say be a jerk.
I didn't say, you know, put people down to get them to respect you.
Kindness and clarity.
You can say, no, this doesn't work for me right now.
And maybe in the future, feel free to reach out.
But that's what we need to be doing.
And I want you to pick one request today that you would normally say yes to out of guilt
and instead say, I appreciate you thinking of me, but I can't take that on right now.
Oh, watch what happens.
Watch what happens.
Someone that's going to reach out to today to ask you for.
for money. Say, I appreciate you thinking of me, but I can't take that on right now.
Ooh, someone's not going to like this. They are not going to like you saying no to them
if you've said yes over and over again. If someone says, hey, can you pick up my shift?
And you always pick up their shift, but you never take care of your health and you miss out
on your gym exercises because you're always saying yes to someone else. Say, no, I can't pick
this up for you right now. But thank you for thinking of me. If they ask you to babysit,
whatever it is, something you normally do out of guilt. Now, if you
want to do something. If you generally want to in this moment, then sure, do it. But if you feel
like you're you feel bad, or you feel like you're getting taken advantage of, or you feel like
you're doing it out of guilt, that's not respect. That's not power. That's fear that you're living
into because you don't want someone else to not like you. But I'm telling you, the more you
disrespect yourself by saying yes to others, by doing things you don't truly want to do authentically,
you're living a lie. You're living out of integrity and out of alignment with yourself and with
your highest version of you. And you're doing something you really don't want to do. And that is
out of alignment. And whenever you're out of alignment with yourself, you're fracturing yourself
psychologically, emotionally, physically, something is getting fractured because it's not in alignment
anymore. So we have to reclaim this energy. We have to reclaim our power back. And this doesn't
make you bad and wrong if you've been doing this for a long time. It just means this is the
awareness that you needed right now. This is the reminder to take your power back, to step into
that self-respect so that you can create boundaries with others and create respect within them.
Now, they may not like you. They may not enjoy this. They like the version of you that they can
always count on that's going to discount yourself to help them with something. They like that
version of you. But no more. You're killing that version of yourself that has been weakened by needing
people to like you, to love you, to what you think is respect you, but really they're not
respecting you. They're taking advantage of you. And you're allowing it. This doesn't make them
wrong. They're not bad people. They've made a request and you've always said yes. This is just time
for you to start doing something differently. And again, something you would normally say yes to today,
I want you to say, I appreciate you for thinking of me, but I can't take that on right now.
You can say it kind.
You can say it with clarity.
You don't have to be aggressive and mean and say, you always take advantage of me and
screw you.
You don't have to do that.
You can just start shifting things.
And the more you shift, the more the relationship will shift within you and the relationships
will shift around you.
And I want you to take this on.
I want you to start taking action right now because you're going to start to see monumental
shifts in your life.
you're going to start to see incredible energy show up inside of you that you've never had before.
You're going to have incredible power that you've never possessed before
because you've never had the courage to use your words courageously to create a healthy boundary.
And this comes from psychological wounds, emotional wounds, never feeling like you were enough,
whatever it might be. I had this for decades, my friend.
I know how this feels, and I feel for you if you're feeling this right now.
If you felt like you've been walked on, if you felt like you don't have the respect you
want, if you felt like you've been giving and giving and giving and giving and you feel like you're
getting taken advantage of, that's how I felt most of my life.
And I did it out of survival for many years to try to survive psychologically.
And I just kept that habit up for a long time.
And it doesn't make me bad and wrong or you bad and wrong if you've been doing it.
it too. I want a better life for you. And I'm going to tell you right now, when you start making
these decisions to say, no, you're going to ruffle some feathers. So be fair warrant. But that's
what's required in order for you to gain self-respect back. And this is about you getting
self-respect first before others give you the respect that you're looking for as well. And there's
ways to go about this. You can still be a loving, kind, compassionate human being and communicate
in a different way. But you might have to be willing to risk this, you know, fear in your heart
and your stomach and your throat thinking, ah, what are they going to think about me? Well, some people
aren't going to like it. Some people are going to say, good for you. Good for you for stepping up
and taking back your time. And other people are going to be frustrated. And they're going to try
to use it against you and say, you're not being a good friend. And you're not, you've changed.
You're not the person I could count on once before. Don't buy into their manipulation.
don't buy into their guilt tripping, that is not a high quality that you want to have in a
relationship with someone. You want to say, hey, listen, I've been doing this for a long time.
I still want to show up for you, but I need to take back my time and my energy at times,
and I just can't commit to this right now. And again, for a season of life, I needed to say
yes to everyone. When you're struggling, when you've got no career, when you've got no money,
when you've got no contacts, no network. Like, that's how I built my business.
by saying yes to everyone for a couple years, but then I kept doing it and I overextended myself
for too long after that. So know what season you're in. And again, I go back to that quote
that, you know, really successful people say no more than they say yes. So remember that
and remember this strategy. Own your no. Strategy number two, speak with certainty. Respect isn't just
what you say, it's how you say it. And a lesson I want to share with you is that confidence in your
tone creates confidence in their response. So a great quote by Goldie Hahn is that if you squeeze
the sand too much, it will fall out of your hand. So hold it nice and easy. Now, when I used to
mumble or used to say sorry before every sentence, people would, you know, talk over me or they
just wouldn't have the same respect for me, the authority for me because I, my mom says this
to me all the time. My mom is actually staying with me right now. And she goes, you used to mumble
all the time. I can never hear you. And even now, I still kind of mumble. I go back into my old
pattern sometimes when I'm just kind of relaxed, sitting on the couch, you know, hanging out.
I'll just kind of like late at night kind of like mumble and say something.
And she's, you know, a little heart of hearing now in her age.
And she's like, you're mumbling again.
And for me, it's just a reminder.
It doesn't mean it's like bad if it's like 10 p.m.
And I'm tired.
I'm mumbling.
But we've got to be clear when we're communicating so that others can understand us and have a
certain sense of respect for us.
But if you're saying sorry all the time, you know, I have some Canadian friends.
Sorry Canadians, but you guys say sorry all the time.
and my Canadian friends who are listening or watching,
I'm sure you're chuckling right now,
but you say sorry when nothing happened.
Nothing wrong happened.
You're just saying, sorry.
Hey, sorry, how are things going today?
Sorry, let me open the door for you.
It's like, hey, just stop saying the word sorry.
It's all good.
No one's upset at you.
And I tease a little bit,
but, you know, my Canadian friends
will probably laugh at this joke
because they know it's kind of true.
But start to communicate differently.
And when you start to communicate differently, when you speak with certainty with the second
strategy, you are going to start seeing incredible shifts happening in your life.
Once I started dropping the apologies and I'm sorry, and I started speaking with certainty
and clarity, people stopped interrupting and you just started to see a shift in how people
would connect with me in the eyes.
And people would connect me.
I gave this speech recently to a multi-billion dollar company to their live.
leadership team, the CEO and the executives on the leadership team of a global brand.
And I was doing a workshop, a small workshop for 12 with their leadership team.
And I was in front of a little roundtable.
It wasn't a big audience like I'm used to.
It was a small little roundtable, kind of like a mastermind.
And I'm speaking with each one of them, one at a time, connecting with them.
And I was very intentional when I was going into this workshop with them.
I said, I need to be very clear.
These are leaders at the highest level dealing with billions of dollars every year.
And what I could say could help impact them in generating a whole new level of financial
success for them, impacting the thousands of employees in their company, potentially helping
hire more employees and impact more families and lives around the world.
Now, I'm not putting everything I, you know, I said in one hour that's going to do that,
But everything has power.
Everything we do, people interact with has a power, has a presence, and has an intention.
And I stepped into this workshop with an intention.
And I said, my intention is to serve.
My intention is to connect.
My intention is to be vulnerable to open up and to give them a space for them to receive information
to see what is working in their life personally and professionally and what is not
working and that was my intention going in and i was speaking deliberately to each person and connecting
to their eyes and really landing a point on whoever that i was speaking to and holding that presence
just standing powerfully and calmly but using my voice with clarity and certainty and someone stopped me
i kid you not someone stopped me in the middle of a conversation i was having with someone
the person next to someone that I was talking to
and holding connection to,
he just stops and says,
you have incredible eye contact
and you have incredible,
like, it's piercing that you're connecting
with each one of us,
and I'm noticing it throughout this entire hour.
And I said, well, that was my intention coming in here,
to connect presently with each one of you
so that I could serve you at the highest level.
Because if I'm just glossing over each one of you
and kind of like, you know,
my eyes around, and I'm not really landing it, but I'm just speaking around all of you.
You're going to forget this.
And I said, you've got three days of this retreat right now for the end of the year retreat,
and you're going to have a lot of content.
I knew all the speakers he had coming in.
He had massive celebrities and world-class athletes.
I knew who were going to come up after me.
I was the first one or three days.
And I said, my goal is for you.
You're going to have tons of information.
It's going to be overwhelming the next few days.
I just want you to come away with one thing from today
that you'll remember that will help you in your personal and professional life
get from where you are to where you want to be.
And I want to create that space for you.
And that's what I said.
And by doing that, by showing up using my voice,
by showing up connecting with people and being present with them
and speaking directly to them, not around them,
I felt the impact, and they communicated that impact.
And this takes years of practice.
You know, I used to be terrible at looking at people in the eyes.
I used to be terrible at speaking in public.
I used to be terrible at leading workshops.
I used to be deathly afraid of doing any of this because I was a people pleaser
and I was worried what people thought about me.
And I've trained myself to overcome that fear by doing the action
over and over. I went to Toastmasters and studied public speaking every week for a year.
Then I was getting paid to do it for years. And then I was doing it for free and I was leading
big workshops. I was just doing it as much as I can to overcome that fear of insecurity and not
enoughness. And this is what I want for you. I want you to start overcoming the fear of needing
everyone to like you, to say nice things about you, to think you're a good guy or a good girl,
it might be. Instead, we want people to respect you. We want people to respect you, and it takes
a few key things that you can do, one of them being clear with people, being positive,
creating boundaries, but also looking in people's eyes and connecting with them. I'm not talking
about being a weirdo and a creep and like staring at someone the whole time, but I am talking
about being present with someone. And if you aren't able to look in someone's eyes, it means
there's something about you that you're afraid of. You're not comfortable with self if you're not
able to look at another person and just hold a gaze in a non-creepy way. So the action step
for this strategy is instead of saying, sorry, you know, can I say something or excuse me, can I say
something or, you know, say, hey, here's what I think. Here's what I think. Short, clear, decisive.
Be direct. You know, the person next to the person I was speaking to,
who interrupted, didn't say, excuse me, I just want to add something real quick.
He just said it.
He said, you have a powerful eye presence when you're connecting with this.
I really feel it.
And he was jumped in the middle of my conversation.
And he was connected with me.
So here's what I think, short, clear, decisive.
Don't say, hey, I'm sorry, can I add something here?
Excuse me, this and this.
Just be clear.
Be direct.
Be decisive.
Strategy number two.
speak with certainty.
Certainty is key.
Strategy number three,
please stop doing this.
Please stop over-explaining yourself.
And I say this to you
because I wish someone said this to me
for a decade and a half
because the more you justify yourself,
the less power you hold.
It's just plain and simple.
The more you justify yourself,
the less power you hold within yourself.
In confidence doesn't need
a 10 minute excuse. It doesn't need to be like, ah, I'm sorry about this. I'm sorry
and I had to do this. Just say, you know, it's okay. No is a complete sentence. I love that quote
from Anne Lamont who said no is a complete sentence. And listening, you know, if someone asks you
for a request, you don't just have to say no and be done with it. You could say no. I can't
take that on right now. And it doesn't have to be that much more. But for me, man, it was like when
someone would send me a text asking me to do something or an email, it was like I would have
to think about it for hours of how I'm going to reply and how I'm going to reply in a way
so I can make some type of an excuse or some type of an explanation where when they receive
it, they won't get let down. They won't get disappointed in me. They won't be upset at me.
They won't be angry at me, that they'll still like me. It was just like, I was just the weakest
person and how I would reply to people for years. And that's why I just always said yes,
because I wanted everyone to like me. I wanted everyone to think that Lewis is a good guy,
and Lewis, I can count on Lewis, and he'll say yes to anything that I want for him, right? Whatever
it was. But man, was that exhausting? It just drained the life out of me. And the fear of saying no to
people exhausted me even more because I was so afraid of what they would think about me. Again,
I don't know if this is something you've experienced in the past or if you can relate to this
right now, but man, it just sucked the energy out of my body and my soul, just being in fear
thinking of how do I reply to this person who's asking me to do this thing that I really
don't want to do it. So let me try to like make an excuse or soften the blow or talk about
something I've got going on as opposed to just I can't do it right now.
for thinking of about me, but I just, I can't take it on. And again, it would make me look so
unsure and easy to argue with if I was just like, well, maybe I can do it, but I'm not sure
about it. Let me get back to you. It was just like, I would delay, I just need to rip it and ban it
off. I just need to rip it off and stop being scared about what people thought about me.
And the day I learned to simplify this and really have a simple, clear decisiveness without a five-page
essay replying to people, my life started to change. Now, it took me a few months of going
through pain of saying, no, no, no, no, and getting those reps in and feeling that uncertainty
of, is this person going to like me? Are they frustrated with me? And they've always relied on me
and now they can't.
I had to overcome that.
And you might lose some friends,
and that's okay.
But real friends will respect your boundaries.
Real friends will respect your peace.
Real friends will respect your time.
And fake friends will just get frustrated with you
if you're not going to give them everything they want
when they want it.
So an actionable step for you today
is the next time you decline something,
say your decision once,
then stop.
talking. Don't explain. Don't apologize. Don't say I'm sorry. Because silence after you state your
decision commands more respect. It commands more power within yourself, more self-power. And I want you
to take your power back by creating healthier boundaries. So strategy number three is please,
please do me a favor. Stop over explaining. Strategy number.
Number four, match actions to words.
People test your boundaries not by what you say, but by what you do.
Consistency builds respect.
If your actions don't match your words, people will walk all over you.
There's a great quote that says, what you allow is what will continue.
It's an unknown quote.
But again, if you're not willing to start creating different boundaries,
for yourself. The things that have always happened will continue happening in your life.
I remember this is a, man, this is a painful, painful lesson. Painful lesson. Friends asking you
for money. Oh, I don't know if this has ever happened to you, but this has happened to me a lot in the
past. And I have learned painful lesson over and over again, and now I'm clear. I've had different
friends ask me for money. And I once told a friend that I wouldn't lend them any money, but
somehow they convinced me to do it and I caved and it was the worst experience for about a year of
just stress and then they asked me for more money later and it was just like I didn't have the
courage to say no and create a boundary therefore I caved and did something out of guilt that I
didn't want to do and it ruined a friendship in my life it ruined it it really made me feel like
I resented the person for asking me these things for them receiving this I resented myself
for not creating a boundary,
the relationship just got messy,
and it really hurt the relationship
in the process. And again,
it was all because I didn't have a healthy boundary.
And all I needed to do was say,
I love you so much that I can't do this for you right now,
or if I'm going to lend this to you,
if I want to give you money,
I am not going to ask for it in return.
And I know I'm just gifting this to you
and I don't expect you to pay it back.
Because when someone, I would give it to them
and say, I'll pay you back by this time,
And when they don't do it by that time, I get really frustrated.
Specifically, if they'd say, hey, I can't do it by this time, and I'm going to recommit to doing it a few months later, especially when they don't say that and they just forget the time and they don't pay, it makes me feel disrespected.
But I didn't create the respect in the first place by creating a boundary.
So this was a big lesson.
And the more I did this in the past, the more people would just keep asking, keep pushing back their commitments.
and it was just a struggle.
Respect showed up when I followed through with action.
So the action step here is to look at one area in your life
where people are crossing your boundaries.
And you may not even be aware of this right now.
You need to start reflecting on this.
In my intimate relationship, is my spouse crossing a boundary,
in my friendships, my family relationships,
my siblings, my parents, my coworkers, my boss,
whatever it may be.
a network that I'm in, a club that I'm in, associations, is anyone crossing a boundary to me?
Maybe they're not intentionally trying to cross a boundary, but where inside of you does it
feel like someone might be crossing a boundary where you feel like, oh, this doesn't feel good
when I do this.
Maybe I like that they reach out to me because I feel needed and wanted.
But if you're doing something out of guilt, rather than out of service because you really want
to, there's a different energy tied to it.
and you're tying a lack of self-worth when you do something out of guilt rather than a sense of
worth when you're doing it towards service. Because when you have excess energy, when you have
renewable energy and resources, and you say, yes, I can do this right now because I want to
give, I want to serve, I want to be useful, I want to be helpful. That's a different energy.
You're adding to someone else and you're adding to you. But when you're
doing something out of guilt, out of lack, out of not enoughness, it's only going to create
more not enoughness inside of you. It's only going to create more lack inside of you. You're
going to feel more frustrated. You're going to feel more out of alignment. And there might be
a temporary gain from feeling like, oh, this person reaches out to me because they can rely on me
and now I have them in my life still. I feel like I'm needed. But inside your body is screaming at you,
and your body is telling you, stop saying yes to this.
Stop giving your time and energy to this person.
Stop giving this person money all the time
when they just say nice things when they want it,
but then they're not there for you afterwards.
Stop it.
And I need you to ask yourself,
am I enforcing my own rules?
And if not, I need you to change it ASAP.
Right now, today, start making these changes.
And that is the end of strategy for, please,
Please stop over-explaining.
I'm telling you, your life is going to change dramatically when you do that.
And strategy number five, oh, this is a good one.
Surround yourself with people who lift you up.
Please stop surrounding yourself with people that suck the life away from you
and surround yourself with people who lift you up.
If you're always the doormat, you're in the wrong house.
let me repeat that for you if you're always the dormant you're in the wrong house powerful lesson is that
the fastest way to gain respect is to be around people who already respect themselves you are the
average of the five people you spend the most time with i love that quote by motivational speaker jim roan
who said that and when i spent time with people who took advantage of me i shrank in intimate relationships
with girlfriends in the past, you know, with people that I would associate with early on in my
business career, with friends in fricking high school and college that I just wanted to,
that I looked up to and wanted to be in the kind of friend group of.
When I spent time with people who took advantage of me, I shrank.
I remember I, when I was a kid, and this happened, I have so many of these memories as a kid
that I'd want to be around kids that would put me down.
Now, I don't know if anyone else is like similar, that grew up in a similar way, that the people that would like pick on me and bully me, it's like I wanted their approval so bad that I would do anything to try to be friends with them.
And one of my memories that I've shared before on my podcast is when I was a kid, I really didn't have that many friends growing up.
I was like youngest of four.
I really struggled in school.
I was really tall and kind of goofy and gangly looking.
I was in the special needs classes.
And so I just kind of always got picked on and made fun of.
And it just didn't really feel like I had the best childhood.
But, you know, this is not a sob story here.
But this is just me and my internal insecurities
around being around my classmates and my peers growing up in school.
And I remember I really wanted friends.
I was like, no one wants to hang out with me.
No one wants to play with me.
There's my own, like, sad story, right?
And a lot of it was just me and my story.
But I really didn't feel like I had any friends.
And I remember there was these two kind of cool kids
who created this club.
And I was like, I really wanna be in this club.
I was probably like eight or nine years old.
And they said, okay, there's two ways you can enter the club.
And the club was essentially them hanging out after school,
like playing video games in one of their parents' basements.
It was kind of like, that's the club.
Like for two hours, we hang out in this secret club.
But for me, as an eight, nine year old,
it was like his cool thing to do
when I wanted to hang out with these kids.
And they said there's two ways to join the club.
The first way is you need to answer a list of questions.
And there was a few questions and they asked me them and I didn't know the answers to them.
And every time I didn't know the answer to them on a question, I just felt dumber and dumber.
I felt insignificant.
I didn't feel like I was enough.
I didn't feel like I was good enough or smart enough because I didn't have the answers to what seemed to be like basic questions.
And they said, okay, you don't have the answers to these questions.
The second way to enter is you need to pay $5.
Now, $5 back when you're 8 or 9, back in the 80s, the late 80s, was a lot of money.
You know, for me, I was like, I don't have $5.
And so they said, you can't come in the club until you pay.
And so I ran home to my mom.
I said, Mom, there's this club of these kids that are really cool.
And I didn't have the answers to the test to get in, but if I can get $5, they'll let me hang out with them.
And even saying this now just sounds depressing to me, that I was looking for money to hang out with
cool kids around my block.
And I remember my mom kind of looking at me just like, okay, you know, I think she was a little sad.
One, that her youngest son didn't have any friends to hang out with.
and two, that her youngest son needed $5 to hang out with kids, and she didn't have the money either.
We didn't grow up with a lot of money.
Both my parents were working.
We had, you know, they had four kids.
My parents had my brother, my older brother, when they were 20 years old.
So it was kind of like, you know, they were working multiple jobs.
My dad was for many years while my mom was taking care of four kids by the time she was 30.
just trying to figure things out
and just get ahead in life.
And so it wasn't like they had all this extra money.
It was a lot.
And I remember her checking the couch cushions
and finding quarters and finding loose change
and she grabbed a shoebox for me
and she put this loose change that we found
throughout the house.
She opened up the dressers.
I think she had a couple dollar bills
in there and the rest was changed.
She handed it to me and said,
here you go.
Go join the club.
And I ran back to this neighbor
you know, down the street to this neighbor's house and I brought them the money. I go,
I can join the club now. And I go down and we're in the basement and I give them the money
and they take the money and they go hang out in the corner of the basement by themselves for the
next hour and I just sit kind of alone. So I wasn't smart enough to have friends to know the
answers to some questions. The money I needed to buy friends with didn't even work because
they still didn't hang out with me. Now that created a psychological wound.
inside of me that just said, you're not enough, you're not smart enough, you're not good enough,
you're not worthy enough, you're not lovable enough, you're not likable enough. So it created
this kind of like psychological wound where I felt like I needed to do everything to give people
to like me. And it took a long time for me to unwind and heal from that wound that wound that
made me feel like I wasn't enough. And it took me learning the hard way how to create
boundaries. But I'm telling you, if you are in a situation right now where you feel like
you're not enough, if you're in a situation where you feel like you need to overextend yourself
for people to like you or to be friends with you, I'm telling you right now, that's not true.
I'm telling you, you are enough, you're lovable, you're worthy, you're desirable. But you have to
learn how to do that and believe that for yourself first before you get other people to believe
that. You have to stop overextending yourself all the time. You have to start making healthier
boundaries within yourself and communicating those boundaries, again, in a kind and clear way
with yourself first and with others, second. And when you start practicing this over and over
again, it's not going to be comfortable. It's not going to be easy. It's not going to be enjoyable or
phone the wounded psychology in your nervous system is going to scream at you and say ah you're going to
die if this person doesn't like you for a moment but i'm telling you i feel more free at this season of
my life having less and less friends or having less and less people needing to like me now listen
i have lots of relationships i have lots of quality friends i have lots of extended friends and an extended
the network, but I only have so much time in my life. I'm married, I've got kids, I've got
my business, I've got my team, I've got my passion of pursuing the Olympics, I've got
workout. There's always so much time where I can say yes to people. And the people that
are closest to me right now, I say yes to first. I say yes to my goals and my dreams and the
actions that I need to take on those. I say yes to my team here and my business that I spend
a lot of time at, and we're working to impact people in a positive way. I say yes to my wife,
to my kids, to my family. And I say yes to a few core guy friends in my life that I see once
in a while, we play pickleball, we work out, we hang out, we do activities together. But other than that,
I don't have much time to say yes. I don't have more time in the day to say, yes, I need good
sleep. I need healthy boundaries. And again, when I spent years saying,
saying yes to people that would take advantage of me, I shrank. I shrank emotionally, psychologically,
physically, my energy shrank. And I remember doing a session with Tony Robbins one time in one of
his masterminds. And again, you become the five people you spend the most time with. And I spent
some time with Tony Robbins and a mastermind. And I asked him one question. I remember this
question really transformed my life in a powerful way, what he said. And the question I asked him
was like, you know, I feel like I'm a seven out of 10 in a lot of areas in my life.
And he said, do you want to be a seven out of 10 guy or a 10 out of 10 guy?
But I was like, well, I want to be a 10 out of 10 guy.
And he essentially told me like, you've got to start creating healthier boundaries with
yourself.
And you got to be willing to be unliked by people.
And as a kid who grew up feeling unliked by everyone, by not having any friends,
it just felt like, man, but I really needed everyone to like me to feel safe.
and that was BS. I needed to like myself to feel safe, no matter what anyone else thought about me
around me. Now, of course, I'm not here to dismiss my family and my wife and my, you know,
my best friends, not here to say, screw you to everyone. I'm here to create healthy, conscious
relationships and communicate kindly, courageously, and clearly. But to make sure that I do it in a loving way
with the people closest to me.
And people around me as well.
It's just, how can I be my best?
And I'm never going to be perfect.
And this is not about you being perfect.
But when I started to surround myself with people
who had strong boundaries and high standards,
I leveled up as well.
I learned how to do that for myself.
And this is why I really love being around mentors,
people that are much wise than me
who have gone through the highs and lows,
who have beautiful marriages, beautiful families, beautiful businesses or careers, or they're
making a difference in their communities in a certain way, I really appreciate being around
those individuals because I feel like I can learn and I can level up myself by being around them.
Respect is contagious. And a step that I want you to take today is to audit your circle.
I want you to do this right now. I want you to make a little.
list of the people you spend the most time with, whether it be your friends, your family,
your colleagues, or your peers. And I want you to write a list of who you're, you know,
I don't see my siblings that often. I see them a couple times a year if I'm lucky. So, you know,
I think about my family and, you know, I'll talk to them on the phone, but I'm not around them
constantly. So I don't even have that as like my close circle of people I spend the most time with.
So the people you spend the most time with, your coworkers, your boss, your employees,
think about people in your career, your business.
Are you surrounding yourself with people that are constantly leveling up and growing?
Or are they sucking the life out of you?
Are they constantly playing a victim?
Are they constantly making excuses?
If so, it's going to be hard for you to grow if they're trying to pull you down.
So you've got to keep leveling each other up as well in that community.
your friend group. Are you guys gossiping or talking about nonsense all day or eating unhealthy or going
out and drinking beer every night? Or are you guys doing conscious stuff? I have a group of guys.
We play pickleball almost every week together. That's what we do to hang out. We move our body.
We have fun. We play. And then we have fun conversations afterwards. I don't go out late at night.
I haven't been to a bar or a nightclub in over a decade and a half probably. I don't know the last time
I went out to a bar or a nightclub.
Like, that's just not something I do.
Now, if there's an industry event that's at a bar,
okay, maybe that's different.
But I'm not like just going out and having a drink.
I've never been drunk in my life.
So I wouldn't even go to those places to just hang out
because they're not conducive to my lifestyle.
I want you to audit your circle.
Audit your friend group, your family group,
your peers, your colleagues.
Audit everything.
And I want you to ask yourself,
who makes you feel drained? Who in that circle makes you feel drained? Who makes you also feel the most
empowered, the most inspired? Who's got the most contagious energy that lifts you up? Who's the most
passionate, the most excited, the most grateful? I want you to double down on the people who lift you up.
I want you to invest more in them. This doesn't mean you have to kick everyone out of your life who's draining
you, but you might have to distance yourself with them. Or you might have to have a conscious
conversation with them and say, listen, I'm really trying to shift things in my life.
And I really want to start doing things differently with the people in my life.
I want to start having more empowering conversations.
I want to stop gossiping.
I want to start doing activities that are better for us.
Instead of going out and blowing money at a bar, let's go for a hike, let's go for a jog,
let's go for a swim, let's go for play basketball, let's do an activity together.
Let's go do something where it's just a little bit more fun and start shifting the
activities and the things we do with our time. So double down on the people who lift you up
and start distancing yourself from the people who suck the life out of you. This is the end
of strategy five. Surround yourself with people who lift you up. Now these are the five
strategies that I want you to walk away with. I want to do a quick recap. Own your no. Speak with
clarity. Stop over explaining. Please for the life of you, stop over explaining, especially
my Canadian friends, I love you, but you don't need to over explain. Okay. Number four,
match your actions to your words. Number five, surround yourself with people who lift you up.
And if you practice these, people won't just stop walking all over you. They'll start walking
beside you. They'll start following you even with respect. Remember, respect isn't demanded.
It's trained. Respect isn't demanded. It's all.
developed. And it takes time for you to do these action steps every single day. The more you
practice these strategies, the more your confidence will compound, I promise you, but it's going
to feel a little messy. It's going to feel a little frustrating. It's got to feel a little
people don't like me. I'm telling you, you're going to be alive. You will be safe. Everything
will be okay because you're going to set yourself emotionally and psychologically free
from needing to please everyone around you.
And when you can do this, my friend,
you will become unstoppable in your life
because you won't be drained by saying yes to everyone else.
You'll be able to start to say no
and have peace and confidence with yourself.
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with the one strategy
that really speaks to you the most
that you're going to start committing to today.
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and I want to thank you so much for being here.
It means a lot to me.
And if no one told you lately,
I want to remind you that you are loved,
you're a worthy, and you matter,
and I'll see you next time.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's episode
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that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do
something great.
