The School of Greatness - The Mindset Mentor: How to CONNECT to Your FUTURE & ATTRACT Your Dreams Effortlessly (It's SIMPLE!)
Episode Date: April 3, 2024Today we have an incredible guest, Rob Dial, a master of personal development, podcasting, and building a successful brand. Rob has been consistently growing his business and podcast for over 9 years,... and today, he's here to share his wisdom with us. We'll dive into the '6 month roadmap' to success, uncover the three energies blocking us from achieving our dreams, and explore how passion fuels our journey. We'll also discuss the necessity of drastic lifestyle changes for redefining success, the obsession with immediate results, and the challenges of staying focused on our goals in today's distraction-filled world. Get ready for an episode packed with insights to transform your life and achieve greatness!In this episode you will learnthe value of consistency in building a business, personal brand, and podcast over 9+ years, along with a '6-month roadmap' for personal success.about the three energies that block people from achieving success, love, and fulfillment, and how to overcome them.how to distinguish between passion that fuels and gives energy, and when drastic lifestyle changes are necessary for redefining success.about the psychological impacts of judging others, the importance of mindset around money, and practical steps to cultivate an abundance mindset.strategies for healing your relationship with money, unlocking abundance, and the number one story keeping people from financial freedom.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1597For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Ali Abdaal – https://link.chtbl.com/1557-podPatrick Bet-David – https://link.chtbl.com/1547-podJohn Maxwell – https://link.chtbl.com/1501-pod
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Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes and today we have an incredible show
with Rob Dial, a master of personal development, podcasting, and building a successful brand.
Rob has been consistently growing his business and podcasts for over nine years and today he's
here to share his secrets. We'll dive into the six-month roadmap to success, how to uncover the
three energies blocking us from achieving our dreams
and explore how passion fuels our journey.
Get ready for an episode packed with insights
to transform your life and achieve greatness.
He said, the problem is Rob, you're acting like a victim
and you're making all of these excuses.
Your life will not change until you decide
to be the CEO of your life.
That was the most probably life changing moment
that I've ever had in my entire life because I was like, I get it. We have the inspiring Rob Dial from the CEO of your life. That was the most probably life-changing moment that I've ever had in my entire life
because I was like, I get it.
We have the inspiring Rob Dial
from the Mindset Mentor in the house.
I think we've been taught goals incorrectly.
Instead of having to like white knuckle our way
to our goals, which I did for years,
and push, push, push, and bash my head into walls
and just go anyways.
Instead of having to push,
I can actually feel pulled towards my goal.
We are so incredible as humans our brains
are so incredible that you and i right now can sit in this moment in your basement and think about a
future and no matter what that future is our brain can actually make our body feel the feelings of
it's happening right now the problem is the universe is abundant and i think scarcity only
lives in the human mind i would be afraid to check my bank account because there was times when i
checked my bank account and it was not enough.
There was negative money in my bank account
many, many times.
What would you say is the number one thing you did
to heal your relationship with money
and start bringing in more financial abundance?
What do you think are the three energies
that are blocking people the most
from success, love, and fulfillment in their life?
I think the main thing is...
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Rob Dial
from the Mindset Mentor in the house.
My man.
What's up, buddy?
Good to see you.
Good to be in your new studio.
Welcome.
Yeah, this is great.
New studio, home studio.
Pumped about this.
We're in your basement.
This is exciting.
I know, the greatness basement.
Yeah, that's where we're doing it.
And I'm excited about this because we just made an announcement recently for you joining
the Greatness Network.
So welcome.
You're the first member of the Greatness Network.
Thanks, man.
Excited to see what we're going to build as the hub of inspiration.
So I want everyone to check out your show, subscribe, check it out.
Amazing content you've been doing for eight years now on your podcast, right?
August will be nine, yeah.
Nine years, man.
There's not many of us who've done it for nine plus. When I started, right? August will be nine, yeah. Nine years, man.
There's not many of us who've done it for nine plus.
When I started, it was like you and Tim Ferriss.
I don't think there's anybody. I know, right?
Joe Rogan.
That was about three of you guys.
That's it.
And it's been an interesting journey over the last nine years for you.
Yeah.
And you also coach a lot of people.
So you started your show, but you also have a business where you're coaching people, helping
entrepreneurs grow, but also helping individuals transform their life. And the thing that I've been feeling recently in the world is
a lot of people feel stuck with their life and they don't think they have the ability to change
within a six month window. They feel like change is so far away. It's like, ah, just, I don't know
how long it's going to take me until I start making more money. How long it's going to take me until I can start
getting in shape. It's like, I keep trying, but it's so hard. How long it's going to take me
until I can start feeling more loved and so I can start attracting the people I want in my life,
better friends, relationships, how long it's going to take me. And I'm curious if you could break down the last,
you know, nine, 10 years of all this work that you've done. And if you were to give someone a
roadmap on how to completely change their life in the next six months, what would they need to do?
Is it a different way of thinking? Is it focusing on your fears and eliminating those fears? Is it
having a step-by-step plan? What
would you do to transform someone's life in six months? So they feel like they actually are seeing
change. Yeah. I mean, I think that first off, that's like probably the best question. Cause
that's majority of the mindset mentors, like steps of all of this, just different podcasts.
I'm like, okay. When I, when I wrote the book that I, that I just got out last year, I was like,
what do I do? Like, if I look at 1400 episodes of the mindset mentor podcast, like, okay, when I wrote the book that I just got out last year, I was like, what do I do?
Like, if I look at 1400 episodes
of the Mindset Mentor podcast, like what is it that I do?
And it's more than anything else,
it's how to understand yourself so you can take action.
Like the original title of the book
was the psychology of taking action
because I find that so many people have trouble with it.
And I had a lot of trouble with it.
And so like, it's interesting,
like we can look and say, oh yeah,
like we both have successful podcasts.
It must be so nice to have a successful podcast.
But it's like, there's a lot of fears
that come up in doing this.
I'm like, we have to put ourself out there.
That's a lot of judgment that comes from it, right?
I think the first thing that's probably the most important
is like what feels right.
I don't know about you,
but I didn't start a podcast for money.
And when you start a podcast,
there wasn't no money.
When I started podcasting-
There's no money for the first five, six years.
There's no money.
There's no, I don't even know
there was a way to monetize it, right?
So there was like, it wasn't a money thing.
There was a part of me that was like,
what feels like the thing that I want to do?
And for me, like I actually felt obligated
to start the Mindset Mentor
because I was, the exact moment that it happened.
I can tell you exactly what happened.
I was in Jason's Deli with my girlfriend at the time, now wife.
And I was sitting there and it was like, it was like a movie where it was like a fever
pitch where it was like, I started getting really stressed out, really anxious.
I was looking around me and there was all these people that were like yelling at their
kids and they were, you know, just seemed like they were, I don't know if it was reality
or if it was just in my head. And it was like, everyone looked like they were i don't know if it was reality or if it was just in my head and it was like everyone looked like they were miserable
around me and i was like feeling all of it and this is like the beginning of 2015 so nine years
ago right and i look at lauren and i go i think i'm gonna start a podcast and she's like what is
a podcast right like she didn't really know what it was back then i was like i had this microphone
this exact one that we're using a sure smure SM7B, because I'm a musician.
So I had the setup.
And I was like, I have things, I have traumas that I've overcome in my life that self-development helped me with.
And I want to try to, I feel obligated to teach that to people.
And it just felt right, which is the most important thing.
And so I think the first step is
don't ever chase money. I heard a quote, I think it was from Oprah, where she said,
follow your passion, money comes second, money always comes second. And so I think a lot of
people always go money first. How can I make money right now? And I think the thing about it is if
someone follows passion, the money might not be there right away. But I think that if you fast forward five or six years, you go, oh my God, I didn't expect it to be this good. Right? Like when you,
you might have some patience though. That's the problem is most people want it right now.
They want it now. They're real bad with delayed gratification. And so I think the first thing is
the feeling, like what feels like the thing that you want to do. And I think a lot of people don't
give themselves enough space and silence to be able to think. Like a lot of times we're keeping so busy. We're
always on Instagram. Like I recently deleted Instagram completely from my phone. Everything
I run through my team just because I want more silence in my life because I personally believe
just from, you know, I'm not religious in any sort of way, but I believe that God, the universe,
life speaks in silence. So the more silence I can have,
the more clear I can be on what I'm supposed to do.
And so whenever I've been in silence and I get a feeling,
I trust that feeling like really deeply.
And I'm okay going into whatever darkness
that might be in front of me and not knowing the path.
So I think the feeling's the first thing.
Interesting.
The second thing-
You need space and time to be able to feel-
A lot of space and time.
Analyze and assess your thoughts and feelings.
Yeah.
It's kind of like you felt called to do something.
And it was kind of either nagging you, calling you, pulling you to do this because you kept listening to the voice inside of you that said, do this thing.
Do this thing.
You didn't know why.
Right.
But you felt excited about it, nervous about it, but also like this is something you're supposed to do.
And maybe you fail, but it's something you're supposed to do.
Yeah.
And the thing about it that I think is important for people to understand is your passion doesn't always have to be your paycheck.
I think a lot of people get that misunderstood.
Like I think you and I are probably two of the luckiest people out there.
We get paid for doing something that we're so passionate about.
Like it is what we love to do.
And for some people, it's not always that way.
And so if someone's looking, there's two different paths.
Someone's looking to make money.
Well, what's something that you could do
that could make you money that you could at least enjoy?
If someone's looking for passion,
it could be something completely different.
You know, like I always tell a story,
I had a lady who was in one of my coaching programs
one time and she was like real depressed.
And I was like, what do you love?
Like, what's a moment in your life
where you felt like so much energy?
And she's like, I have horses and we had special needs children come over to my farm and got to like do therapy with the horses. That's one of the most
alive I've ever felt. And I was like, but she goes, and then she goes, but I can't make any
money doing that. And I said, what if you just had a job that you enjoy, you spend time that
it pays your bills, but it gives you more free time to be able to help these children. And she's like, that feels good. And I was like, there might be something down the road
where you might figure in three or four years that it'll make you money. But really what it is,
is like, how can I enjoy my life more? And it, and so for the first thing I think is the feeling.
The second thing for people is you have to understand, like you literally have to become
a different person. And that's what's scary for people is that I have to be different.
Like if I go back to Lewis 12 years ago, you're not the same Lewis as you were because you
had to become and mold yourself into a different person.
I feel like I'm a different person as well.
I don't think our, my podcast could be where it is now because I wasn't good enough to
be here.
Right.
But years and years and years and years and years of work, 1400 podcast episodes allowed me to get to the point where I can speak in a way that I guess is better than the way that I used to or more concisely, more value. But it doesn't just come like that. I think that's part of the thing is that you'll see incremental changes. And I truly believe the longer the time goes on, the more I believe in like the Chinese bamboo story, which is, you know, you plant the seed, you water it first year,
nothing, second year, nothing, third year, nothing, fourth year, nothing, fifth year, nothing, six
year, it grows 80 feet in about six months. And they say, they say sometimes you can like literally
watch it grow. Wow. I feel like it's the exact same way for success where it's like, you have
to find the path that you're okay with going down that you feel good about that you are passionate
about. And I feel like eventually the
universe kind of comes to your side and conspires with you. If it's like, Hey, this is the thing
that gives you energy. I think that's the other way that God speaks is like through energy. Like
if I get energy, I'll 100% have more energy after this podcast than before, because I love doing
this stuff. Like this is what lights me up. And I think that's how, when you look at the entire
universe, it's all energy. I think that's, that's us being like, okay, if I'm silent, I can hear the messages
and I can start feeling the energy of what gives me energy. And I think that's the stuff that we're
supposed to be doing with our lives. How do we know when something is fueling us and giving us
more energy? I mean, I think it's usually quite apparent, right? So there's some people you get
around and you're like, there's some people you can think about getting around and you're like,
oh man, you're like drained you already feel your energy getting
drained from it right so it's like uh i've always heard like people are like they're either batters
or they're vacuums they either suck energy from you or they give you energy um i think there's
also you know things that we do that are batters and vacuums you know i think i think people
underestimate uh how much energy it takes to go to a job that you hate. Like to drive, to drive, to think about how much you hate this.
Right. You got to wake up in the morning. And I did this for years, right? I did this for years.
I had to wake up in the morning. I had to get myself ready. And the whole time I was like,
I don't want to go to this job. Like my, I remember just one of my bosses just hating this
guy. Right. And he was just so rude to every one of the sales reps, all of us. And I had to
get myself ready. I had to get in the car. I had to drive there. I had to walk in. I had to put on
a face like I wanted to be there for nine, 10 hours a day, every single day. It takes more
energy to go to a job that you hate than to build something that you actually love. And I think
that's what a lot of people need to actually start to understand. And, you know, Alex Ramosi put up
a post a little while ago and it was like, most people say they want
more free time to build their business, but they have a full-time job. And he said, if you look at
it, you have 104 days a year. If you have 52 weeks times two, you have weekends, you have 104 days a
year to build the thing that you're actually passionate about. 104 days. Yeah. And it might
take a lot of days. It's a lot of days. That's almost a third of the year.
You can get a lot done.
You can get a lot done in 104 days.
And so it's like,
sometimes you do have to go out of balance
to go back in balance.
If you look at the beginning stage
of growing your podcast,
there was a lot of hours, I'm sure.
And there's probably a lot less hours now
where you're able to,
you went way far this way
and now you're way far this way
if you want to be that way. And you can go back and forth between it. But I think that people just
need to be aware of like, all right, being in this, around this person, do I get more energy?
Do I, do I feel like they're sucking energy from me? Doing this task, do I get energy from it?
Do I feel like it's sucking energy from me? Like one of the things, I had a podcast episode come
out the other day about how ADHD is a superpower.
And this is one thing I think like I hate some of the words that are used.
Like it's a deficit is what is like as something is wrong with me if I have it.
Attention deficit disorder.
Right.
Attention deficit disorder.
Like there's something wrong with my brain.
When in reality, if you look at somebody who has ADHD, when they find something that they're passionate about, they have what's called hyper-focus. Like they can zone out the entire world.
And obsess.
Yeah, right. And so what really ADHD is, is a low meter. Like I can't do this BS. Like I'm
not going to do this anymore. Or I'm just not excited or interested in it.
Right. And so it's putting that energy towards what you are excited about.
Right. And most people are like, well, I'm just distracted. I'm like, actually,
you just don't like what you're doing.
And you have a brain
that just can click it off
and be like,
this is not what I'm doing.
If you can find something
that you become hyper-focused at
and you can zone out the world,
go for that thing.
That's the thing that gives you energy.
I think my entire childhood of school
was ADHD
because I just could not focus
or pay attention the whole time.
It's interesting
because I grew up very dyslexic also.
I used to feel like it was the greatest, I don't know, deficit for me.
I used to feel very insecure because I could not read
and comprehend what I was reading.
Yeah.
And in eighth grade, I had a second grade reading level when they tested me.
And it was just always terrifying to read aloud in class because i would
skip words and i couldn't understand it but i think that deficit or inefficiency in me with
that allowed me to focus on other areas of my life where i became very you know uh proficient
in it's what allowed me to find something else and become a master in other ways. But it was a struggle for 18 years, man. Yeah. I mean, I've, I'll be honest with you too.
Like I've, there's many times in school when I felt like I was stupid. I remember I switched,
we lived in a bad part of town when I was younger. And then we moved from second grade
into a better part of town, a little bit better. It wasn't great, but it was still a little bit
better part of town. And we had these, it was a small school. We had split classes, which means that second graders and third graders were
together. I was in third grade. And I remember sitting in the room trying to figure out how to
read. Like I wasn't taught to me. And I was in third grade. I couldn't figure it out. And all
the second graders were reading out loud. And I was like, these kids that are younger than me can
read and I can't read. I must be stupid. And so I think that, you know, my sister homeschools
her children and she's never forced reading on them because she, and she's taught me a lot through
this. She's never forced reading on them. And she's like, when they're ready to read, they'll
read. And one of her kids didn't start reading until he was like 10, 11 years old and wasn't
into it. Now he reads more than all the other kids, but it was never forced on him. And so
I think it's super important for anyone who has children out there to realize like sometimes it just takes time for your children to catch up and your brain to change.
But there's, I don't believe in using the word deficit because then we automatically think
there's something wrong with me. And if there's something wrong with me, I have that identity and
that identity can go with me the rest of my life. So I heard you say we should start with,
you know, silence and our awareness first, right?
Should we be thinking about, is that a mindset thing?
Or should we be thinking about habits, vision, goals?
Like if we're really trying to transform in the next 3, 6, 12 months, what are the next steps then around that?
Do we have to change all of our habits and be extreme?
Do we need to change our vision or get clear on something?
Yeah.
What is the steps we need to do after that? Yeah, I mean, first off, you kind of figure out
what it is, or at least feels right.
And then there's a... Energetically.
Right. And there's a really great book
that's now a children's movie that came out.
It's called the, if I remember the order,
it's The Boy, The Mole, The Fox, The Horse.
There's a part of it where the little boy is in the forest and he's
like, I can't see my way out of the forest. And the horse is like, can you see the next step?
And he said, yes. He said, just take that. And it's like, I think that people who overthink,
what happens is, and I tend to do this and my wife is a really big planner, so I've seen it in her,
is we decide we want to do something. And then we think about everything that has to be done to get
there. I used to sit down with people and be like, let's make your 10-year goal. And then we think about everything that has to be done to get there. Like I used to sit down with people and be like, let's make your 10 year goal. And for some people,
that makes them excited. For someone that's a planner, they see all 3,650 days today and they
all have to be done. And so they actually become like demotivated by a 10 year goal.
And so I think it's important. And I actually put this in my book is, I think we've been taught
goals incorrectly. I think it's good to have a goal like this year,
I want to be here at the end of the year. But that's a results based goal, which is from today,
I want to be here. That's a result. From there, I think what we need to do is then forget about
the results based goal after we create action based goals, which is what are the actions that
I need to take every day incrementally to get me there. And if we just take the right actions,
then eventually we're going to get there. And so like, for instance, we've talked a lot about podcasts
today, right? So it's like, I want to have a podcast doing a million downloads a year in a
year. Okay, cool. You can look at that and be like, I'm at zero right now. Oh my God, that's a lot.
Well, what do I need to do in order to get there? And you break it down incrementally and just take
your action-based goals. And as long as you get those done every day, a checklist of two or three
things, okay, I recorded a podcast today. For me, it was like, okay, most people put out one podcast
a week. I'm going to put out three because then I will get three times better within a year. That's
just the way I thought about it. I'll just be three times further in a year. And so I'm going
to sit down and say, okay, I need to get three episodes done this week. I need to plan three episodes. I need to record three episodes. I need to get
those done. Don't worry about the results because eventually the results are going to come. And so
it's like, what's, what's important is, are you heading in the right direction for the goal that
you want to actually hit? Are you taking the right action? And then the thing that you just have to
let go of, which is hard for most people is a time. Time's going to work itself out. And so goals are super simple. There's the direction,
there's the action, and then you just let go of time and eventually you get there. Sometimes you
get there sooner. A lot of times you get there later on down the road, but as long as you're
heading the right direction, you will eventually get to the destination that you're shooting for.
Why do people obsess so much about having results sooner than they, I guess, should have them?
obsessed so much about having results sooner than they, I guess, should have them?
I mean, I think everybody, I get, I do this in my own business, right? Like I'll sit down with my, my VP of operations and I'll be like, okay, here's the thing that we need to do. And then I get
stressed that it's not already done yet. Like immediately I'm like, why did I not know this
thing was already here? Like I want it to be done. It's like, it's going to take three months.
I've got to be patient with this thing. Like nobody expects to go into the gym for the first
time in a long time, wake up the next morning and have a six pack. Like we know that things take
time, but I think that we have been, we have kind of not intentionally, but we've been kind of
brainwashed to, to want instant gratification. Like you, you got that smoothie delivered,
right? You didn't have to leave your house. And some guy came to your house and brought you a
smoothie. Right. And, and if, if I want, uh, we had breakfast delivered to us this morning, we ordered it
last night and immediately got to our place here.
Um, and then, so we're used to it where it's like, I could, I don't even have to pick up
my phone.
I could just say, Hey Siri, you know, what is this thing?
And she can give me information immediately.
So we're so used to getting instant gratification.
It's kind of been trained in us in 2024, but nothing takes nothing.
Nothing that is amazing happens fast.
Like if you're, you know, you say, say your, your wife gets pregnant, right?
How ridiculous would it be if you went up to her and you're like, Hey, listen, I know
it's supposed to take nine months, but like, but like, I want to go on vacation by the
end of the year.
Like, could you get that done in like four or five?
Like she'd smack you if you, if you did that.
Right.
Because things take time, you know, the universe or God builds a baby in nine months. And so it's like,
I can make this, this decision of I'm going to do this thing. I'm going to take the right action,
but the universe or God decides how long this thing is going to take it to you actually get
there. It doesn't matter how long it takes. What matters is today, am I taking the right action to
get me there? One of my, One of my first mentors used to say
something to me that I say to myself all the time, which is, is what I'm doing right now getting me
closer to or further from my goals? If I ask myself that 20 times a day, it just helps me
redirect in the moment to get back on path. And it's super simple. Is what you're doing right now
get you closer to or further from your goals? And I think if you think that on that every single day
and every single moment, is this thought helping me get closer to my goals? For sure. Is this action, is the food
I'm eating helping me get closer to my goals? Is this conversation helping me get closer? Is me
scrolling on social media helping me get closer? Whatever that is, like moment by moment, you can
be thinking and asking yourself, is this part of a process that's helping me get closer to
transforming my life and having the
goals that I want faster. But most people are on such autopilot that they're not willing to,
I guess, brainwash their minds in a positive way to constantly get back on track. Why do you think
it's so hard to stay focused on our dreams and goals today more than ever? Well, because it's
not who you are.
It's not who you've ever been.
It's outside of your comfort zone.
When I see a human, I love people.
I love sitting with somebody and thinking to myself as I'm speaking to them,
I wonder what their childhood was like.
I wonder what their relationship with their parents are like.
I wonder what their relationship with their wife is like.
Because all we are as adults, we're just a set of patterns that we learned from childhood. And so like, if you
meet somebody, one of the things that I think is important is if you meet somebody and you're like,
I don't agree with them, there's a pretty good chance that if you had the exact same life that
they did, you would be exactly the same that they are. Which means I can change myself at any moment
just by changing my patterns
and my thoughts. One of the hardest things that I think people really need to dive into is like,
what is the identity that they have in themselves? Like, who do they think they are? And so,
you know, going back to what we were talking about, like there was definitely times in my
childhood, and I know if you heard, you said it before, where like, we thought we were dumb.
And that thought alone, especially from a child, eight, nine, 10 years old, where like, we thought we were dumb. And that thought alone, especially
from a child, eight, nine, 10 years old is like, I am dumb. I am like, I'm a stupid kid and I don't
understand it. So then I would sit there in class and the teacher would teach something. And I'm
like, yeah, this isn't going through like this isn't, and it must not be going through because
I'm dumb. And so I'm actually reinforcing that at every single moment. When does that pattern break?
For a lot of people, it never does. The good thing is if someone's listening to this podcast,
there's been a moment in their life where they've gone, yeah, I don't like this anymore. There must
be something else. Because for most people, they're still in the patterns that you meet.
And that's one thing that's really important. Like I was, I was driving yesterday and you know, I was driving past a lot of homeless people and, um, and I was like, man, that's so sad because
I, I just wonder what happened in their childhood. Like that's, I'm never judging anybody. I mean,
my dad was, was kind of homeless for a little while and in and out of jail. And so I never
look at somebody and judge them, but I look at them and I'm like, I wonder what patterns
and things happen them to get them to where they are. And I think everyone
just needs to become aware of the patterns that they have. So you say autopilot. There's a study
that Harvard did that found about 48% of what we do is autopilot. Like we didn't even think about it.
48%.
48%. So half of what we do in the day is just very, I'm just going through the actions. And so,
you know, like I love, we've talked about it before, Dr. Joe Dispenza, where
he talks about this as well, where it's like, you could take yesterday and place it on tomorrow and
it will be exactly the same unless you change. Same conversations, same thoughts, same actions.
It's like 90% of your thoughts are the same as they were yesterday. And so I think the first
thing that's important for people is, is the awareness. Like it's, it's simple. There's,
there's two, there's really three steps. The first thing is the awareness. Who am I? What
are the thoughts going through my head? What do I like about myself? What do I want to change
about myself? You develop that awareness. The second thing that you should do is when you find
the things that you want to change and you become aware of them is you got to have some sort of
practice. The practice you decide now, not in the moment. Then you've got to have a lot of
repetition around it to start to change. For me, one of the things I realized in myself that came from my childhood is I was, I noticed about six, seven years ago, I was very judgmental in people. I didn't like it. Like, I don't, I'm like, I love people. Like, why do I immediately see somebody and in my head talk trash about them? Like why? It just popped up and it wasn't, it was a, and I always say, you can't change your first, it was a pattern, right? You can't always change your first thought, but you can always change your second thought. And so I remember
there was one time I was in a grocery store and this guy had that, you know, this huge Bluetooth
speaker at a grocery store ordering, you know, meat in the meat section. He had the big one,
they came across in his mouth and immediately I judge a guy and I forced myself to sit there.
That was the awareness. I noticed, I noticed that was the awareness. I noticed I'm being
judgmental. I'm aware that I don't want to be this way. My practice is I will then take three things that I like about
the person. I'll say it in my head, stop what I'm doing. And I will say it. So I sat there,
I hope I didn't look like a creep, but he didn't know I was there doing it. And I'm looking at the
guy. I'm like, he looks like he's really nice. Um, I've really liked what he's wearing. And,
uh, at the same time, he's got some, he's got like a
really good physique. He looks like he works on himself. And I was like, that was a practice.
And then I was like, okay, cool. Now I can go about my day. So I stopped it in the moment
because I was a pattern that I want to stop and I want to change within myself. And the practices,
I was going to do the three things that I like about them. I said it. And then the last part is the repetition.
So every time I did it, I noticed myself start to do this.
I taught this to somebody who was in one of my groups and she was like, oh my God, I'm
so judgmental as well.
So when I noticed myself judging somebody, I'm immediately going to say, and I love them.
And that's how I'm going to end it.
Wow.
And so then she, like six months later, she comes in and she's like, I was at a coffee
shop the other day and I noticed this woman.
She was like, you know, she was taller than all the guys.
She was just a big boned woman.
She was like six foot two.
And my immediate thought was, holy crap, that's a big woman.
And she said, without even thinking, I immediately went and I love her.
And she was like, and I noticed myself go from judgmental to the love side of it.
She could notice six months in the transition of herself.
She does that for another six months.
She's just going to be able to look at people and be like, I love this person.
I love this person.
And that's what we're trying to do is identify the patterns we want to change.
And then have a practice that we decide of what we're going to do when that awareness pops up.
Why do you think so many people are judgmental of others?
I mean, I could tell you for myself and I could tell you from a lot of people I've worked with is I think we have a low self-worth, you know? And I think that it
was, it was easy for me to bring somebody down because it made me feel better about myself.
Right. And it's easier in the moment to be like, oh yeah, screw this person. Oh yeah.
Whatever it is that I'm jealous of, whatever it is that they have that I don't have,
my low self-worth, they came from, and I could tell you where it came from, from my dad not being around because I didn't feel like
I got my dad's love. My dad was an alcoholic and so he wasn't really around. He passed away when
I was 15 for being an alcoholic. And I always felt, I ended up finding this out years down
the road when I started working on myself, that I felt like I came second to my dad's love.
I came second to my dad's love. I came second to my dad's love to alcohol,
right? And so alcohol- So he cared more about drinking than spending quality time with you.
When in reality as an adult, right? Now that I can look at it, I was like, he had traumas that
he never overcame, but I felt as a kid, he loves alcohol more than he loves me. That's why he's not
showing up for me. And so that's the thought, the subconscious thought that I had. I never was aware of until my 20s.
And so what happened was I, because I felt second to him, I felt second to everybody
else around me.
And so how do I make myself in the moment feel better than everybody else?
Judge them, talk, not, I wouldn't say anything bad to somebody's face, but in my head, I
would judge them.
I would be jealous.
I would want what they had, whatever it it might be because I need to make myself in
This moment feel better than the other person around me because I just never overcame that pattern at that point in time of
Feeling like I was second
So the way that I make myself not feel second and feel better than and feel number one was I would judge everyone that was
around me
How did it make you feel when you judged others?
And what is that? What do most people feel when
they're in judgment of other people? I mean, we think that it's going to make us feel better,
but it makes us feel worse, right? Like I never felt like, man, I'm so glad I judged that person,
right? I never felt that way. And so it was like, I feel like what happened with me is it was,
it was like a momentary like hit of dopamine. Okay. I'm better than this person. But then in
reality, it made me feel more
disconnected from people. Right. So I felt more disconnected and I started pushing my feelings
away for years and years and years. There was a moment where, where I finally came and understood,
like, I put my walls up so much that I'm letting nobody in at all. And it was ruining all of my
relationships. And, um, and so I, I, I think what I did was I would judge other people
first. I would try to cut them down in some sort of way because I was so afraid of being vulnerable
and being seen because in my mind, I thought with what happened with my father, like you can't trust
being close to somebody, like someone who loves you is going to leave you. And so you can't let somebody in because that's
just, you know, when you look at the root word of vulnerable, it's vulnerable, which means to be
wounded. Right. I didn't want to be wounded. So I would put up these walls and there was a moment
in my life where I was like, do I just have no feelings? I actually thought that at one point.
Yeah. I was like, do I not have feelings for people? And I was like, no, I'm actually what I years down the
road realized I have so much feelings that I, I think a lot of people feel this way. I've had
people, one lady specifically, I remember she's like, I have no feelings towards anybody. And I
was like, actually, I think it is as you have so many feelings, you're afraid of what, what could
happen if you let them out. Wow. Like I'm like, I'm about a half a second away from crying my
entire life. Like I feel things so much.
I was, I swear to God, this is a true story.
I was on the way over here and I was, I was listening to Lewis Capaldi or whatever his
name was.
And I started thinking about like how amazing life is.
And I started tearing up on the way over here because I was like, I can't believe I have
this life.
Like, this is so amazing.
Like, I'm so grateful for everything that I have.
So I'm, I think I'm so close.
And I guess my mom, my mom's very emotional too. Like I'm so close to like emotions pouring out. And as a
man, like we're taught a boy, you know, big boys don't cry, especially in sports. Right. So we
build up walls, build up walls. Things happen with my dad. I build up walls, I build up walls,
but then I get into relationships, ruined every one of my relationships with women because of it.
And so when I started working with my wife on it, like I had to, okay, she's getting close. I need to be okay with her getting close, you know?
So how did you break the pattern with her versus ruining all the other relationships?
Yeah. Like there was, I can literally look back on all my other relationships before her and be
like, yeah, I screwed that up. Yeah, I screwed that up. Right. And I think that's the point
of relationships. And the point of everything is to screw things up so that you can try to get better.
Screw it all up so you can figure it out.
And so with her, luckily, she's incredible.
And the thing I love most about her is she just gives love, right?
And she's this space of love.
And we went to a friend who is inside of, in Austin, about two years into our relationship.
And he's a couples therapist.
And he's like, hey, if you and your girlfriend want to come by, just come on by. And I was like,
cool, that sounds fun. Let's see what it's like. Right. And, um, and what he ended up talking to us about is like, we have two different love styles. Like there's the love languages, which
is important, but we have two different loving styles, which is hers is an anchor, which means
like, she's good. She's, she's in love. Like she's, she's good in love. She shows love,
you know, both of her parents are still together. So there's, there's that aspect of it.
She's secure, right? That would be, and she's very secure. Me on the other hand is I was what
he calls an Island, which is like, I'm okay with being alone. And so the one thing that he said to
me that, that was really interesting is he's like, he's like, it's not just about how you relate to
each other, like mentally and talking to each other. You also have to be very aware of your nervous systems
and Rob's nervous system lights up whenever you come in too, too fast. Like with someone who's
an Island, you take time to warm up in someone's presence. So that was one thing that really helped
us is I'd be sitting, working, trying to grow the business and stuff. She would come in with
all this love and I'd be like, red flag, red flag, red flag. Like, you know, someone's
attacking the fort. Just loving you. Just by giving me love. That was it. Because it was like, I don't
know if this is safe. Right. Because I never felt safe with that. Right. And so what happened was we
started learning like, okay, it takes me a little bit longer to warm up. So there'd be a few minutes
where she would come in, she talked to me and stuff. And then she started giving me love and it was like, oh, now I can receive this.
And so for me, it was just like understanding like, okay, there's her love style.
There's my love style.
There's definitely five love languages that go in there.
And really, I think it's more than anything else is like, I think that when I look at like what love is, like we see love and as on TV is like head over heels and it's more lust than anything else.
And you fall for each other so much love.
What I think love is, is feeling safe in the presence of somebody else where, you know, you have so much to work on and they have so much to work on.
And I feel safe. I feel safe in my wife's presence to work on all of my childhood trauma with her through her in
Being able to try to rewrite that story through her and that's cool. Yeah, and that's that's the way that I see it
What's like I love her. She's amazing. She's like the rock in my life like she's a glue of everything
But at the same time it's like I
Have never felt in a moment
Unsafe and that she doesn't want the best for me and she wants to help me with whatever it is that I'm working sweet
It's pretty nice, but it's hard to is that I'm working through. It's pretty sweet. It's pretty nice.
But it's hard to get there. It's hard. It's hard. You know, it took years of opening up.
Really? We've been together for 10 years now, right? So it's like- 10 years. 10 years. Yeah. We celebrated 10 years last month.
When did it start to switch over for you where you felt emotionally safe in the relationship
with your wife? I mean, it was, it's slowly a process.
Like last month? Yeah. I'm still working on that one um no i would
say probably probably six years man like it took it took time and in the the thing that that i'm
grateful for is that she saw me working on it me trying to get better and me opening up that she
uh didn't leave because like she wasn't getting what she wanted or something like
that. And so I think that, that it was me opening up and it's, you know, it's a relationship. We
both have things that we need to work on. So, you know, there's definitely times where she's
working on things that I'm like the, the one that's solid for her. And so I think that for
me, it probably took like six years. It took, it took until we went, we went and traveled, um,
about three years into our relationship, we went and traveled, um, about three years into our relationship,
we went and traveled for six months overseas. We were completely out of the country for six months
and I didn't realize it, but I was like a make or break a moment in our relationship where she was
like, I don't know if this is going to work. Yeah. And then, and then after she was like,
this is definitely working. She's like, because there was no fights, there was nothing and it
worked. And so she's like, okay, I think that after we came back from that is where we really
were a whole lot tighter.
And so probably about three years in there and then six years where I was like, I'm going
to keep opening myself up.
And I'm sure I'll look back in 10 years to this conversation and be like, oh yeah, there
was still a lot that I wasn't open up to.
So it's like, I feel like I'm the most open, but I'm sure that over years I'm going to
keep finding more aspects of myself that I need to work on.
You haven't arrived yet?
No, that's an important thing, man.
Like I think that everyone listening to this podcast needs to realize like I, for years
of self-development, you know, I've been working on myself now for 19 years is when I first
got into self-development.
When I was 19, I'm about to turn 38.
19 years.
And for, I would say the first 17 years, I was like
working towards a destination of like getting there, whatever getting there was. And now I've
come to the realization of, I hope I live to a hundred years old. And if I live to a hundred,
I'm still going to be working on myself. And it's like, cliches are cliches. Cause I think they're
true where it's like, not about the destination. It's a journey. journey. It's not about getting there. It's about this process of like,
you know what? I'm going to work on myself and I'm going to love myself while I'm working on
myself. And it's a journey. And as soon as one thing, I get better at one thing, there's probably
going to be another thing that I need to work on. What do you think are the three energies that are
blocking people the most from success,
love and fulfillment in their life?
I think the main thing is people feel like they're not good enough.
We feel like we're not worthy of it.
We feel like we're not smart enough, not pretty enough.
When I look at people's paradigm and their identity, they have it themselves.
I always say it's like ice cream, but it's where it's all ice cream is ice cream.
It's just different flavors where it's like everybody's core.
And I've worked with thousands and thousands and thousands of people on this, and I still haven't found one person whose core feeling is I'm not enough.
And if I'm not enough, I won't be loved.
And that's what I found with every person.
The way it shows up in other ways is like I'm not smart enough.
I'm not worthy of love.
I'm afraid of failure. I'm afraid of success. I'm,
you know, I'm not gonna be able to provide for my family. All of those stem back to,
because you feel like you're not enough. I won't be able to provide for my family
because you feel like you're not enough to be able to get there. I feel like I'm going to fail
because you feel like you're not enough to succeed. And so then the next question that
pops up with people is, well, why does everybody feel like they're not enough? And so this is when I say, like, I spent a lot of time in silence.
This one thing that took my wife a long time to get used to is my silence. Like I'll just go
outside and I'll sit for two hours. She was like, what did I do wrong? Like, that's what she thought
you're like, that was her thing she was working on, but I'll sit there and I'll just think. And,
um, and I'll think for a long time. And the thing that drove me the craziest was like,
why do we all feel like we're not enough in some sort of way? And I have a couple of theories and ways that I think that it pops up. The first thing is that, you know, if you look at a child, if a child, you know, is six months old and you have your drink next to them when you're changing them and they kick it off and they spill coffee all over the ground. You're not going to yell at a six months old, right? If they're one year old, they're learning how to walk
and they knock your coffee off onto the ground and they spill it onto the floor. You're not going to
yell at them at one years old. But at some point, a parent treats a child as if they're an adult
and they think they should know it by now. And this is not me judging parents in any sort of way.
That's the hardest job in the world. But at some point, we all have a break where the parent goes, what are you doing?
It could be three years old.
It could be four years old.
And the child immediately thinks there's something wrong with me because they feel a retraction
of their parents' love, which is the most safety that they can feel.
And then there's a break off.
And the average child is reprimanded eight times more than they're praised.
Because a lot of times, a lot of times parents are trying to keep their children alive. You know, like kids are wanting to jump
off of big walls. And so what we do is we, we parent the same way that our parents did, which
is usually yelling at the child. And so the average child is reprimanded eight times more
than they're praised. Yeah. Fear. Which, which goes to, I'm not smart enough. I'm not good enough.
Eight times more. I'm not doing it right. I'm not doing it right. I don't know what I'm doing.
And, um, and a lot of times we have we have this built into our system after a while of like looking over our shoulder and being like, mom, am I doing this right? Am I doing this
right? Am I doing this right? And we develop this, I don't know what I'm doing on my own. I can't do
this. I'm not smart enough. I need somebody else to tell me what to do. Someone else's approval.
Right. All of that. And so in turn, what happens is we start to develop this, like, I'm not enough. And it's all just different flavors of I'm not enough.
And so what happens is, and I can speak for myself is what made me think that I would finally be
enough is achievement, right? Success. Success. Once I make a certain amount of money, once I
have a certain amount of followers, once I get to this level of success, then I'll finally be enough.
once I have a certain amount of followers, once I get to this level of success, then I'll finally be enough. And then I got there and I realized, yeah, you're still that hurt little boy inside,
right? You're still that, that there's nothing that's different about you. And, uh, you know,
we spoke about this the last time on the podcast where you were talking, we, we kind of spoke about
it and you said there was a guy that was in your, your building that, that just jumped off the
building, right? Super successful. And so we think like, so many of us think that success and money are going to get us a point of fulfillment. You'll never get there. Nothing
external will ever fulfill you. So like my, my path has been external, external, external,
my path from now on, like what I'm working on and it's, it's a daily process is can I feel like I
love myself and I'm fulfilled without having to do anything?
And that's a process.
And that's really hard to get to.
And I meditate on a journal on it.
And I sit in silence and I just think about like, think about how far you've come.
Think about all that you've done.
And even though you've done all of these things and you have stuff to show the world,
you still feel like you're not enough.
Why is that? And so I've been working on that and just being like, you know what? you're not enough. Why is that?
And so I've been working on that and just being like,
you know what, there's nothing that you need to do today.
I can if I want to, but there's nothing you need to do today.
Nothing that you can accomplish today that can make you more of who you already are.
And as you are, you deserve love.
And so instead of going and seeking for that love,
why don't you just actually try to do it right now
in the moment that you're sitting with yourself? And so like there could be three energies, but I think they're
all just different moldings of that one energy of I'm not enough. And so I think that if most people
can realize like there's a meditation I used to do from a guy named Muji and he used to always say,
he said, you have no pockets, you have no storehouse, which basically means like, no matter what you do until the day you die, you cannot be more or less of what you currently are.
And so why don't you just decide to give yourself love and acceptance in this moment without having
to achieve anything and then go out into the world and achieve from the feeling of already
feeling like your whole versus you feel like there's a void inside of you. What happens when we achieve something, when we feel like we're not enough?
I mean, it's, it's usually not that great. Like, I don't know about you. Like I had this moment,
um, two weeks ago, I think it was with my, uh, my VP of operations. And she was like,
she, she was like, uh, she was like, give her a sit back and like, think about what you've done.
And I'm like, you're already laughing. Cause you're like, yeah, I don't even do this enough
either. Right. And she's like, she's like, give her like, think about like, like we were talking
about coming out here to LA and like how I'm on your podcast and all these amazing podcasts,
like things that I've wanted to do for years are like all come. She's like, you wrote a book last
year, like very few people write books. And she's like, have you celebrated last year like very few people write books and she's like have you celebrated any of that and i was like no and she's like why and i was like i mean all of my friends
have podcasts all of them have books so it just seemed like which is kind of a good thing because
it's like the five the people that you spend the most time with like you know i'm spending time
with you you've written three books and i can be like oh my god i'm not good enough because
right but it's like even with all of the all of the achievement and success can be like, Oh my God, I'm not good enough. Cause right. Right. Right. But it's like, even with all of the, all of the achievement and success, there's like, as soon as you get
there, there's the next thing before my book even came out and it was like about to launch.
I already had the idea for the next one. I was like, this is so stupid. Right. Right. Like,
why don't you just sit there first and be like, yeah, you wrote a book. This is amazing. You
never thought you would write a book. It was never a goal of yours, you know? And then, and so that's why I started kind of like tearing up this morning
as I was driving, listening to Lewis Corbaldi and whatever his play is last night. I don't even know
what it is, but I was sitting there, I was driving and I was like, I was like, man, there was a time
when you were sitting in your friend's house that you were renting a room from him. And you were
like, I'm going to start this podcast thing. And first it was me and my friend together. And then he ended up before he launched it. He's like, yeah, I don't want to be a part of it and you were like, I'm going to start this podcast thing. And first it was me and
my friend together. And then he ended up before he launched it. He's like, yeah, I don't want to
be a part of it. I was like, okay, I guess I'll do this alone. But they were terrible and they
were horrible. And I would never, I can look back at that and be like, man, you've come so far.
You've done so much. But a lot of times we're like looking out of the front windshield saying
what's next, what's next, what's next, what's next?
Versus like take a moment every single day to look in the rear view mirror and go, you know what?
I've done a lot and I'm proud of myself for what I've done.
Yeah, I have a photo.
I'm going to pull it up real quick that my sister sent me recently.
And it's of myself when I was probably like five or six.
Oh, my God.
So it's like this little car I'm playing with.
Yeah.
My sister sent a video of me playing with this little toy car.
My grandmother is filming it.
Yeah.
And it's, you know, I was watching this video,
and then she sent me a screenshot of me like smiling at the camera
as this little kid.
And I showed this to my fiance, Martha, you probably won't be able to see it in the camera
here, but I showed this to my fiance Martha the other day.
She goes, wow, I would have really liked this kid.
Like this little boy, I would have, you would have been like a good friend of mine.
I was like, really?
I just felt like I was worthless.
I just felt like I was the youngest.
I was stupid.
Everyone was better than me.
And I just didn't feel like I was enough.
She was like, nah, you had blonde hair,
I was, I would've been attracted to you, right?
And I was like, okay.
But she goes, you know, the interesting thing is like,
isn't it crazy that your soul was in this little body?
And you've transformed and changed over the last,
you know, 35 years now, and this is a past life.
She goes, past lives doesn't have to be you know
before you were born and thinking about like past lives but 35 years ago was a past life your cells
were different the way you thought was different you know your your environment was different
your habits were different it was a past life yeah And your soul has stayed inside of this body that has transformed
and ascended from what it was 35 years ago, five years ago, two years ago, three months ago.
We're constantly changing and evolving whether we like it or not, but we have to ask ourselves,
do we want to change our thoughts and our habits and our actions? And it's crazy to think, like, I never, you know, as a kid,
I'd always dreamed of having a life where I felt loved
and I loved myself and felt like I was able to make an impact
and fulfill dreams that I had, right?
And so Martha, she'll look at me.
She does this with me every week.
She'll look at me.
We'll just be walking down the street,
and she'll just look at me and start crying.
She'll be like, wow, life is so amazing.
Like, we're so blessed.
She starts tearing up and just like, almost every week,
she's like, I'm so grateful for life.
I'm so grateful for the life we get to live.
I'm so grateful we have each other.
You know, we both get to follow and pursue things we enjoy.
I'm like, yeah, it's beautiful.
And I think a lot of people don't recognize,
even when they're in a bad situation
or they're stressed out or struggling,
I don't think people realize how much of a gift it is to experience life.
Yeah.
And you and I both have been in times where we've been stressed out, broke, not feeling
enough, all these different things for years.
And even then, it took me a while.
I remember when I started to shift my mindset and shift my energy around the situations I was in, where I was on my sister's couch, not making any money, had a surgery, and just feeling like, let's have fun with where I'm at. Everything started to change for me
when I shifted that energy of victim, stress, overwhelm.
And it doesn't mean it wasn't still challenging,
but I made it more fun moment by moment.
I made it an adventure.
I think having that mindset really allowed me
to take actions from a more positive state.
Those positive states created more positive results
day by day, which eventually led to something over time that was more positive. And I think
if people can start thinking that way, it will help them to attract what they want quicker.
And you talk about this concept, this exercise called future pacing. And I'm curious if you
can explain what future pacing is,
how we can apply this today to start manifesting what we want in a faster and better way.
Yeah. I started almost, I was like getting a little bit teary eyed when you were talking
about your walks with Martha, because my wife does the same thing. And she like keeps me grateful,
right? Like it's good to have that where she's like, she'll start tearing up too. And I'm like,
what is it? Because she's like-
It's random moments.
What am I?
And then my wounds go, what am I doing wrong?
I'm like, what did I do?
And she's like, and so it's like-
She's like, life is just so good.
It's so amazing.
It's amazing.
Do you ever think about how beautiful it's like?
I know.
I'm like, oh my God.
Yeah.
Thank you for reminding me of this.
And so, yes, I definitely agree with you.
The thing that is, the reason why I actually changed the name of the book
from The Psychology of Taking Action to Level Up
is because of kind of what you're talking about,
which is my view of the world
is I feel like the world is a video game.
And it happens to work for me
because I'm real competitive.
So I'm like, let me see how I can get to the next level.
And so when you look at like future pacing,
I'll kind of explain it
in the view of the video game itself. So I always look at life as if I'm in a certain level, you know, like I'm at level, I'm at level 37 next month, I'm gonna be a level 38 of this game, right? And at level 37, there's been many challenges that have come to me.
me. And I used to be the same way where I was definitely a victim and I would make excuses.
And I had a conversation with my, when I was 19, I hired a one-on-one coach and we met every single week. And he was trying to help me get better at sales and get better at taking action like I was
supposed to. And I was always late for calls. I was always making excuses why I didn't take the
actions. And then he had a legitimate conversation with me and he goes, hey, if a business fails,
whose fault is it? And I was like, the CEO's. He said, if a business succeeds and somebody's able
to get all thousand employees to go towards one mission, they succeed. Whose fault is that? And
I was like, that's the CEO's fault. He said, now, if you get to the end of your life and you are
just regretting it and you don't like what it's become, and you feel like you wish you would have
done more and you wish that you would have had more potential that you would have brought out to light, whose
fault would that have been? And I was like, that'd be my fault. He goes, but if you get to the end
of your life and it's everything that you wanted it to be, and you saw every single challenge as
something that was built for you to improve and you improve with every single challenge, you get
to the end of your life and you look back and you're like, man, I'm so glad everything I did,
whose fault would that be? And I was like, that would be mine.
He said, the problem is, Rob, you're acting like a victim and you're making all of these excuses.
Your life will not change until you decide to be the CEO of your life and blame everything on yourself, good or bad.
We talked for two years.
That's the only conversation I remember.
All of them were good.
That was the most probably life-changing moment that I've ever had in my entire life
because I was like, I get it.
It's all my fault.
And so with every challenge,
it went from the challenge that would come to me
and then I'd make excuses to why I was folding.
Oh yeah, it's because of this.
And then it became, oh, this challenge is coming to me.
It's my fault.
I need to be the one that ends up
doing something with this.
And so the way that you look at that
of the whole course of
life is I remember, and the way I came up with future pacing is I was planning this in 2000 and
2019 before stuff got real crazy, right? I was going to do a big event in 2020, right? That
didn't happen, but I didn't know at the moment. And so I felt all of these fears. Oh my God,
I'm the only person on my team. I don't have a team. I'm not good with logistics.
I don't know how I'm going to do this.
I got to get people to fly in.
I got to find a hotel.
And all of the reasons why not, which usually happens with us, came into my head.
And I said, okay, let me, this is, I don't feel good.
Let me flip this.
And I was at a coffee shop in Austin at Lazarus is what it's called.
I remember exactly where I was doing it.
And I said, okay, the moment I'm going to write from the moment where everyone's leaving the event. I had 300 people show up to event in Austin, Texas.
This is how I did it. And I started writing from the future version of me that just accomplished
that thing. And I started writing it as if it was just a journal entry. And I started writing it.
And I was just like letting it flow out of me. And then what happened was, it was really interesting.
I got done.
It was like two pages.
I went, oh my God, this is the entire plan.
Like it was literally the entire plan that was hard for me to access because I was in
so much fear.
When I put myself into the future version of myself, it was like all of the down.
How did I do this?
Right.
Which we ended up doing the event just a couple of years later.
So it ended up working, which is what's awesome.
It did. Once again, time didn't work out the way I wanted it to. That's the way the universe works, but it did eventually happen. And so what happens is a lot of times when
we decide that we want to change the immediate feelings of fear pop up because our ego wants
to keep us in the exact same place because that's safe. Change is a threat to the brain. So it's all
unknown. We don't know what's going to happen if we get outside of our comfort zone. But if we can take ourself and put ourself into a future level or into a future where we accomplish this thing and say, I just, you know, if someone's goals make $100,000 a year, I just made $100,000 in 2024. This is exactly how I did it. And just let it flow out of them.
out of them. One thing that I've told people many times, it's really interesting that the feedback I get, some people say that the exact words of, I was still writing, but I didn't feel like I was
writing it anymore. It was just kind of flowing out of me as if I wasn't the one doing it. It was
just God or the universe just flowing out of me and saying, this is what it is. And then a lot of
times people look at it and they go, oh my God, this is the exact plan of how to do it. And then
when you look at that, it gets so exciting to look at that plan where you're like, all right, yeah, I kind of want to take some
action now because now I'm not thinking about the failure of it. I'm thinking about the success of
it. And I'm thinking about what that would be like. So it's just the, the flipping of looking
at the future in fear versus looking at the future in excitement, which is, is really interesting.
One thing I, I, I talk about lot, and I don't know if people truly
get it in their bones, is that we are so incredible as humans. Our brains are so incredible that you
and I right now can sit in this moment in your basement and think about a future. And no matter
what that future is, our brain can actually make our body feel the feelings of it's happening right
now. The problem is we sit here and we go, I'm going to start this business.
And then our brain immediately flips to, well, the business could fail.
These are all the reasons why it could fail.
And we feel the feelings right now in this present moment where there's no problems
of a business failing.
It makes it really hard to take action when you feel the feelings of failure and fear
and anxiety inside of you being broke all of that and so
it's it's a lot harder but we could also sit in this moment and we can this is the what the power
of visualization is and visualize what it could be what we want it to be what it's going to feel like
when we do end up hitting that goal and we can feel those feelings and so instead of having to
like white knuckle our way to our goals which i did for years and push and push and push and bash
my head into walls and just go anyways instead instead of having to push, I can actually feel pulled towards my goal because I'm
being excited by what's about to come down. Um, what's about to come for me because I'm feeling
the feelings of the success versus feeling the feelings of the failure. Interesting. Yeah.
What do you think is every, what do you think is everyone watching or listening right now? What do you think is everyone watching or listening right now, what do you think is the number one thing they need to hear in their lives?
Yeah.
Something that I've been working really hard on that's not the easiest.
You just need to learn to accept reality.
And I find that most of the time what we're doing is we're just, like I just said a second ago, we're kind of like white knuckling our way through life.
And,
um,
and one of the things I've been really working hard on recently is accepting
every aspect of myself.
So for years there was like parts of myself I wanted to change.
Right.
And now it's me looking at those parts and saying,
I love this part of me as much as I love the
other parts of me.
Could you still want to change those parts of you?
Sure.
Well, the thing is when you, when you actually accept them, they start changing.
We think like, okay, what's the next step?
What's the next thing that I have to do?
And so what's really interesting is like, let's say for instance, that I, um, I'm very
selfish, right?
And I'm like, okay, so I've, I've understood this conflict inside of me of selfishness, right? And I'm like, okay, so I've understood this conflict inside of me of
selfishness, right? And I want to change this aspect of selfishness. So inside of me, there's
a conflict, which is selfishness. When I want to change an aspect of me, I create another conflict.
So now I'm fighting two demons at one time, which is the selfishness and the aspect that I want to
change the selfishness inside of me. But if I look at myself and I say, like Alan Watts says this, I think he always says like,
all of us are just rascals. Like there's parts of you that is a rascal. Like there's a part of me
that is amazing. There's a part of me that's loving. There's a part of me that's sweet.
There's a part of me that wants to give love to every person that I meet. There's also a part
of me that is selfish. There's a part of me that's judgmental. And there's a part of me that could be, you know, sometimes like
there's, there's parts of me that I don't necessarily enjoy as much. And I want to change
them when I want to change them. It creates another conflict, which is now I'm fighting.
I'm fighting aspects of myself versus saying, you know what? Yeah, there's parts of Rob that
are selfish and I can see from his childhood why those parts of him exist. And you know what? Yeah, there's parts of Rob that are selfish. And I can see from his childhood
why those parts of him exist.
And I know what that kid was going through
where he said, there's no one else
that's going to be taking care of me.
I'm alone at this.
I need to develop this selfishness.
And I can go, you know what?
I can still love that part of me.
And what's interesting is when you stop resisting it
and you start accepting it,
it just kind of fades away a little bit more.
And it's not about getting rid of it. It's about if it's at a seven out of 10,
it starts getting to a four out of 10, a five out of 10. And so if I can just accept myself fully
and I can go, yeah, there's parts of me that are beautiful. And there's parts of me that are not
beautiful. The outward world is just a reflection of all of us in the internal. There's parts of
this world that are beautiful. There's parts of us that are not beautiful.
And so I can look at the world and be like, I want to change this aspect of the world.
I always go, does that aspect of me live inside of me?
And I'm like, it does.
Okay, so how can I love that part of me?
And so the biggest tip I can give people that I am unconsciously trying to work on as much,
this is what I'm spending the majority of my time in silence is,
is when I identify parts of myself that I want to quote unquote change, instead of trying to change,
can I just accept? And what's really interesting is when you accept, it makes it way easier to love
yourself. Which when I said like, we're all, our biggest fear is I'm not good enough. And if I'm
not good enough, I won't be loved. Whatever we're searching for from the external, we're actually
searching for from ourself. And so what's keeping me from loving myself is wanting to change myself.
Wow.
And so if I can go, I don't want to change myself. I want to love myself more.
There's so much less resistance to the world and everything just seems a lot easier.
That's big. So stop trying to change yourself. Start accepting yourself and then you'll start
to change.
Right. And you'll start to love yourself. So it's not a lot of people like i want to get better at self-love so i can well i want to get changed so i can love myself right exactly but as opposed
to accepting and loving yourself love knowing you still have work to do love i believe is if you look
at a child love is a natural state of a human, which has accidentally been programmed
out of us, I think through a lot of parents and society and all that stuff. And so a lot of people
are like, I want to work on self-love. How do I love myself more? The key to it is not trying to
change yourself to love yourself. The key to it is to self-love is self-acceptance. If I love,
if I accept all aspects of myself and I stop resisting, the natural state that I flow back to
is just a state of self-love.
And it's love for myself,
but it's also love for everyone else around me.
We're talking about patterns here.
And your whole show, Mindset Mentor,
really gets people in a framework
around how to think differently to support themselves
for success and more peace and abundance. We talked about money
briefly the last time you were on. I'm curious. That video went crazy viral too. Did you see that?
It went crazy, yeah. I like that people like that. That was awesome.
I know. I'm curious, since most of our life is about the patterns we live in
and we're on autopilot, how important is our mindset around money? And what are a few things we can do every
day to start cultivating a different mindset of abundance versus a pattern of scarcity that we've
had our entire lives around money? Yeah. I mean, this is one thing I've worked on a lot, which is
I, and I'm still currently working on it. I'm probably working on it until the day I die. I'm accepting that, right? Is that the universe is abundant. And I think scarcity only lives in
the human mind. Like when you look at, when I sit outside and sit in silence, I have a backyard and
a bunch of trees and some property and stuff. And I always look at it and I go, okay, I'm a part of
nature. I'm not separate from nature. And so there's aspects of me that were the same. And I look at nature and I go,
what can I learn from nature? And I've started like asking myself and trying to figure this out.
And if you look at like an apple tree, right? The point of an apple tree is not to give a human
apples to eat. A point of an apple tree is to reproduce and make more apple trees. And so the
way that it does it is not by, an apple tree does not make one apple to try to make another apple tree. It makes on
average about 800 apples a year that could fall off, go roll down, be outside of the shade of it,
and it could get in the sun and they could turn into an apple tree. That's abundance. If you look
at the universe that we live in, I think there's 200 trillion stars that are
in this universe that's constantly expanding.
There's abundance in everything, all over the place, all the time.
And if you look at like, even just to go to like a human creating another human, I think
it's like hundreds of millions of sperm that men create every single day to go to one egg.
And so it's like, there's an abundance
to try to make this reproducing thing happen, right? So it's like, there's so much abundance
everywhere. What I found for myself is that I was always looking through this like myopic viewpoint
of scarcity everywhere. And when I look through the viewpoint of there's so much scarcity,
then it makes it a competition and it makes it, oh, well, you know, Lewis is making a bunch of
money. He's stealing money from me is the way a lot of people feel like it, oh, well, you know, Lewis is making a bunch of money. He's
stealing money from me is the way a lot of people feel like he, if he succeeds, that means I'm not
succeeding. That's what a lot of people think. Oh, this person just, just became successful.
That means that there's less in the world for me. But in reality, it's not that way at all.
There's so much abundance everywhere around you. So if you're looking through the viewpoint of
scarcity, and this is just a simple challenge for people. If you've, if you notice, yeah, I have a scarcity mindset. I've been looking through, okay, I don't like when this
person succeeds because I feel like they're taking away from me. I don't like when that person,
when, when my, my sister succeeds, because then my, my parents are going to love her more than
love me. Cause there's a scarcity of love. There's a scarcity of everything around.
When you realize that like, there is no scarcity anywhere around you, the only place that scarcity exists is in your mind, then you can start to say,
okay, well, let me actually look and try to find abundance around me. Going back to the example,
if my mom loves my sister a lot, does that mean that she has less love for me? I've never met
somebody who has a bunch of kids and they go, well, I ran out of love for my children. There's
no scarcity around it, but we think, oh yeah, it's a competition between me
and my sister. And we think when someone else succeeds, like, oh, they just made a million,
they signed a million dollar contract. That means there's a million dollars less for me,
right? Money's constantly being used and circulated. And so when you look at it,
you realize that nobody, just very few people take money and just put it into their bank account.
That eventually gets spent somewhere, it goes somewhere else. So it's constantly circulating all the time. And so just because somebody else succeeds doesn't mean that you
can't. There is enough room for every single person in this world to succeed in whatever it
is that they want to succeed at. And so what I would say is, and I think I've been saying a lot
of people with a lot of people is test the validity of your thoughts.
And this is what they say in cognitive behavioral therapy. Test the validity of it. So if I have a thought of there's not enough to go around, okay, let's just test the validity of it. And the way
that you do that, people always ask me, the example I give is, imagine that you're on the
debate team in high school, right? And your whole life, you've been on the viewpoint of there's not enough money to go around. Now, what I want you to do just for fun, just go ahead and try to debate
the other side and say, there's more money than to go around for every single person and just
debate it for a minute and see if you can find any proof that the other side might be true.
Because what happens is our beliefs are just a set of
patterns and thoughts that we've done over and over and over and over and over again.
And because we've had it happen so many times, we believe that that's actually true. And true
means like written into the fabric of the universe, right? Is it true that there is not
enough to go around? Okay, well, let's test it. Let's say, is there a possibility that there's
enough money to go around for every single person? Is there enough love to go around for every single person? There's
enough happiness to go around for every single person. Is there a possibility that there's
enough for every single person? And if there is, your belief is complete BS and there's never been
true in the first place, which is like, our beliefs are like a house of cards. You just
need like one good flick and it all crumbles. And once it crumbles and you see the other side of it,
you go, all right, let me start opening myself up a little bit more to it. And so, um, you know,
like I give like tips and tricks and tactics around it, but I think people just need to
understand is that the most important thing is just what is your perception of life?
And is it possible to just look through another, another viewpoint to see what it could be?
What would you say is the number one thing you did to heal your relationship with money
and start bringing in more financial abundance?
Gratitude.
Being grateful for it.
And this is, and I'll say it again.
I think this is what I said on the last podcast.
But I think that I, for the longest time, had this viewpoint of there's not enough money
to go around.
And I didn't know I had it.
But it was just like scarcity around money because money was scarce when I was a kid.
Right. I remember hearing things like my mom saying, we don't have enough money.
Right. I can't buy you that because we don't have enough money. I did a lot of, I did a lot
of shame around money too. Like I remember the most, I remember the first moment I had shame
around money was I wanted, remember GAC when we were kids that GAC, it was like that came in like
an egg and it was like kind of like a Play-Doh thing.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I wanted GAC.
And my mom was like, we don't have enough money for it.
I was like three or four years old.
I remember throwing a fit, right, on the couch
to the point where she's like, all right, fine, let's go.
We went to Target to go get it.
And I remember feeling so much shame at like four years old
because we didn't have money
and my fit made my mom go buy money that we didn't have. Like go buy it with the money that we didn't have money in my fit made my mom go buy. Oh man, like go, go,
go buy it with the money that we didn't have. So I felt shame. I was like, shame's first was
that feeling around money and scarcity around money because we don't have enough. There's not
enough to buy these things. Right. And so, so for me, what happened was with the scarcity mindset
around money was in every single time money would come in because my energy around money was scarcity. It was never enough. It was, okay, you know, I'd make whatever,
$2,000. And I'd be like, like, I want to make, why am I not a millionaire yet? Why don't I have
a hundred thousand dollars? You know what? I only got 2000. I'm going to, I'm just going to be able
to pay my bills. I don't have anything extra. And so it was immediately because the energy of it
was scarcity. When it would come in, it was scarcity. When I would spend it, it was scarcity. I would
be afraid to check my bank account because there was times when I checked my bank account and it
was not enough. There was negative money in my bank account many, many times, right?
I went back in my old email account a couple of years ago to 2011. And I think in the last three
months of the year, 2011,
I had seven overdraft fees, right? So I know what it's like to not have, to not even have $0,
but to have less than $0 in my account, right? So the energy around money was scarcity.
And then what happened was I remember hearing a podcast one time where somebody was saying, your problem with money is that you think too scarce. Whenever you walk past a penny on the ground,
do you pick it up? I was like, no, I don't. Most people don't because it's just a penny.
But if you pick it up and think, oh my, this is the universe trusting me with this penny.
Thank you so much for this. And I put it in my pocket. If I can be trusted with a little,
well, then maybe I can start to be trusted with a lot more.
And so then with having an online business, payments come in at random times.
And so I would say, I set my notifications on that every time a payment would come through,
I would stop everything that I'm doing. Once again, awareness, practice, repetition.
The awareness was I have scarcity around money. I want to change this. The practice is
I'm going to feel grateful every time this money comes in. So I'd close my eyes and I would say,
God, I'd see the person's name too. So I'd say like, Joseph, thank
you so much for trusting me in your transformation. God, please give me whatever guidance I need to
help this person get to wherever they want to be in their life. That's good. And then I would go
back into what I was doing for the day over and over and over again. So the awareness was I had
the scarcity. I wanted to change it to abundance. I want to change it to gratitude. So the practice was every time a payment would come in, I would force myself
to stop anything that I would do and close my eyes. And I would cultivate the feeling of gratitude.
And then the repetition, I would do it over and over and over and over again. And over years and
thousands of payments, it just became a thing now where it's like, I have this feeling of so much
gratitude towards it. And what I have found
is that if you can be trusted with a little, you can be trusted with a lot. And that also comes
with like sharing it. And I was, you know, very cheap and I don't want to give anybody anything.
And I was, I was notorious for being the cheapest person out of all of my friends 10 years ago,
a hundred percent. Right. And I was like, I need to change that. I need to start seeing what I
could do. And so sometimes we'll go out and I'm like, I'll pick up the bill and I'll do these
things. And so it's like, you go by people. One of the
things that I've done since I was probably 20 years old is I like to keep water and crackers
in $1 bills inside of my car. So when I see a homeless person, I don't go, oh yeah, I'm going
to judge them for the money that I give them. I say, hey, this was given, I think in my mind,
this was given to me to give to them. And so it's just flowing through me to give them.
So I'm going to give them water.
I'm going to give them crackers.
I'm going to give you a couple dollars.
And what I found is that my brain has started to realize if I can give to this other person
and I can still eat, then there must be an abundance.
I have an abundance in my bank account.
And so that's just been like the way that I've cultivated in myself, the change of scarcity
mindset around money to abundance around it.
Wow.
And it's still something I'm working on. Like it's not, I don't expect it to ever be gone, but I'm trying my best to work through it.
What do you think is the number one story blocking people from creating abundance?
The story they tell themselves. I don't think that most people feel like they are capable or
worthy of success, whatever success means to them. And so I think that first off,
people need to actually describe what success is. For some people, for me, what success was,
was making millions of dollars and stuff. For some people, success might mean being a really
great father or mother. For some people, it might be something different, whatever that might be.
And so I think that what it is, is to say like, well, where is it that I want to be in life? And, and the thing that I love about being
human is you can create anything that you want to create. You know, like I, I don't, I don't expect
that I'm going to be in the NBA, right? I think those times have passed and I wasn't that good.
I was decent. Right. So like, I understand that's something I can't create, but there are other
things that I can say with where I am now in life, what is it that I want to create? If I live to 98, I've got 60 more years. So the next
60 years, what is it I want to create? And then I figure it out. And then I just sit there and I say,
are there any fears or limiting beliefs that are coming up while I'm thinking of this?
And they'll come up and you'll feel them. And then you just start to feel them. And what I like to do
is journal through them. Cause I always tell people like like life life is complex like it's very complex like if i were to say you know what's three plus seven most people
are going to say 10 but if i say what's 246 times 398 most people can be like i don't know but if i
said hey if i give you a pen and paper do you think you could figure it out most people can go
back to like fourth fifth grade and start to do long long long multiplication i still need a
calculator i could see
the fear coming out. I'm an idiot. I'm dumb. I can't do this. So it's like, I know I saw,
I saw a click in your head, but I don't know if I could do that. Right. But if I give most people
a pen and paper and they started writing it out, they could start to go back and figure it out.
Our life is a million times more complex than that math problem. There's thoughts, there's
feelings, there's emotions, there's programs, there's feelings, there's emotions,
there's programs, there's patterns,
there's things that we have to do,
there's other people in our life.
I always say for most people,
like just go to a pen and paper.
Where is it that I want to be?
Where, what do, one of the most important people,
one of the most important questions people can ask themselves
is what do I want?
And to get really clear on it,
just write it out and journal it out.
And then say, ask yourself another question.
Are there any fears or limiting beliefs coming in the way of that? And you write out those fears
and your limiting beliefs, and then go, like I said, try to play the other side for a second.
Is there a chance that this fear is completely false? And one of the things I found that works
with people is to do something, it's called pre-mortem in a business, where when you start
a business, plan the failure of the business and ask yourself how the business is going to fail. Right. I did this when I brought
in my VP of operations. She goes, before you do anything, I want to do a pre-mortem, which is how
does this business fail? And I was like, okay, this is cool. So we planned out how my business
could fail. And then what we did is we had a game plan of everything that we need to make sure that
we worked through so we wouldn't fail. And so it's the exact same thing where it's like, where do I
want to be? I figure it out. I figured all my fears, my limiting beliefs,
how could, and then what you do is you go, what's the worst that could happen if I take this path?
What happens is, uh, there was a study that found that a psychologist did that 85% of what we worry
about never happens at all. The remaining 15%, only 12% of it. I'm sorry, 12% of that doesn't happen as bad as you think
it's going to, which means the remaining 3%, 3% of what we worry about happens as bad as we think
that it's going to. So 32 out of 33 times, it doesn't happen as bad as you think that it's
going to. And so let's just plan out the absolute worst that could happen if I decide to change my
life and take it on a new path and plan out the whole thing and say, what's the worst that could
happen? Now, if I'm going to ask myself that question, what's the next question I need to ask myself?
What's the best thing that could happen? And then I say, is it worth it for me to go and try to make
a change and try to create my life into what I want it to be? Usually you find your fears and
the worst that could happen is not really that bad. And the best that could happen is like beyond
what you could possibly conceive. That's good stuff, man. I want to ask you one final question.
Okay.
You know, in the previous interview we did,
we talked about your three truths
and your definition of greatness.
So people will link that up
so people can go watch that.
You've got the Mindset Mentor,
which I want people to go check out,
subscribe, follow, listen to four times a week now.
Is that right?
We're doing-
Yeah, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday.
Amazing content. I told a friend of mine that I was having you on today he goes man i listen to
his show almost every single day really yeah 20 minute episodes just like great mindset
inspiration so make sure you guys his name is um humble humble humble the poet i'm with a poet
yeah oh that's awesome yeah humble what's up man exactly i need to get a conversation that's my
morning conversation is like listening to your show that's awesome. Humble? What's up, man? Yeah, exactly. I need to get a conversation with him. That's my morning conversation is listening to your show.
Oh, that's awesome, man.
I love that.
So make sure you guys check out Rob's show, Mindset Mentor.
He's a part of the Greatness Network now,
a first show within the Greatness Network.
We're assembling the Avengers of Inspiration.
That's right.
Rob was the one we wanted first on the network.
So you can check it out, part of the Greatness Network.
Got to figure out what Avenger I am.
The Avenger of Mindset? I don I am. The Avenger of mindset.
I don't know.
The Avenger of gratitude.
Yeah.
We got time.
Self-love.
You know, all these things.
Abundance.
Yeah.
But here's a question
I want to ask you about.
You're also all over social media.
Rob Dial everywhere
on social media.
What's your main platform
right now?
Is it Facebook?
Is that where your biggest is?
My biggest is Facebook.
But the one that I'm growing
the most on and that seems to be doing the best is Instagram.
Instagram, there you go.
Instagram's going crazy, we're growing like 50,000
a month at this point.
There you go, man, keep it going.
What is that strategy, reels, videos?
Reels, videos, just trying to put the best content out.
That's right.
I sit down and I plan it, I mean, to make a 15, 30 second reel, I might spend 20
minutes scripting the entire thing. Wow, really? Yeah. I spend a lot of time just trying to make-
It's not just random. You're actually strategizing. I'm strategizing. 100%.
Okay. Yeah. There's a whole lot of strategy that puts in these little things.
It's great, man. Yeah. It's great. Okay. So check them out everywhere. This question I ask you
is, well, actually first before I ask you this, if you guys are enjoying this,
feel free to leave a comment below. If you're on YouTube, leave a comment below, subscribe,
and share your biggest takeaway from this episode with Rob. What was the thing that stuck out with
you the most? Leave that below. You can also timestamp that in the comments so other people
can see what you enjoy the most. So share that below. We'll have Rob's channel linked up as well.
people can see what you enjoy the most.
So share that below.
We'll have Rob's channel linked up as well.
My question for you is this.
If you could step into the future 10 years, you know, you're 38.
Yep.
About to be next month.
There's going to be a lot of changes and transformations that happen in the next couple of years, but also over a decade.
You know, if you think back almost 10 years ago, right before you launched this show,
you were a completely different person.
For sure.
And if you could step into the future and think 10 years out, and you're there right
now, you're 48, imagine your life, everything you've created, failures you've overcome,
the life you've lived, all these different things.
And if you could give your current self one piece of advice
from that future self, 10 years out,
what is it that you need to hear from the future you right now?
48-year-old Rob, what he would say to 38,
he would say,
make more space for yourself,
make more space for your family, focus on loving yourself,
focus on loving your family. I think if I do that, I think the next 10 years are just going
to be amazing for me. I think when you just come from that state, it flows out of you. Inspiration,
creativity, which I think is our natural state. I mean, I've never met a non-creative child.
I think it's kind of programmed out of us.
I think that when you come from that state of,
hey, no matter what happens, I love myself.
And no matter what happens,
I'm loved by the people around me.
Then I'd have no fear of going out and failing
because I've already won.
Right.
Like there's a line of a guy that I listened to
that his name's, he used to be a lead singer of,
uh, surfaces and he's, his name, uh, is, uh, Forrest Frank. And he's got this line
and it says, I just turned a Millie down to be home with my son. Y'all don't get it. I can't
gain a thing if I've already won. Ooh, strong. He's like 27 years old. And I was like, this
dude's got it. And I think if I just have that viewpoint of like, I've already won.
Like what?
Why don't I just enjoy the fruits of it?
Not saying that I'm going to sit back and do nothing.
I don't have that built inside of me, but it's like, I've already won.
Like, why don't I just have fun with it?
That's great, man.
Rob.
I'm in.
Thanks, brother.
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
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I really love hearing feedback from you
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And I wanna 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.