The School of Greatness - The Mindset of Success in Marriage & Business w/Tom Bilyeu EP 1095
Episode Date: April 9, 2021“We don’t create momentum by talking, we create it by doing.”Today's guest is Tom Bilyeu. Tom is a billion dollar entrepreneur who built his success from the ground up. He is the CEO and co-foun...der of Impact Theory, a media studio created to influence the cultural subconscious by producing empowering non-fiction & fiction content across multiple mediums. Tom also was the co-founder of Quest Nutrition, which he helped grow to be the 2nd fastest-growing Inc. 500 billion dollar company by 57,000%.In this episode Lewis and Tom discuss the types of personalities that Tom feels are intoxicating, the keys to relaxation and relationships. advice on marriage and creating rituals for success. Tom’s master plan to become bigger than Walt Disney, and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1095Check out his website: www.impacttheory.comThe Wim Hof Experience: Mindset Training, Power Breathing, and Brotherhood: https://link.chtbl.com/910-podA Scientific Guide to Living Longer, Feeling Happier & Eating Healthier with Dr. Rhonda Patrick: https://link.chtbl.com/967-podThe Science of Sleep for Ultimate Success with Shawn Stevenson: https://link.chtbl.com/896-pod
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This is episode number 1095 with Tom Bilyeu.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Frank Ocean said, work hard in silence. Let your success be the noise. And Mark Twain said,
the secret of getting ahead is getting started. My guest today is my friend Tom Bilyeu. And Tom is an incredible entrepreneur who's built his success from the ground up. He's the CEO and co-founder of Impact Theory, a media studio created to influence the cultural subconscious by producing empowering nonfiction and fiction content across multiple mediums.
He was also the co-founder of Quest Nutrition, which he helped grow to be the second fastest growing Inc. $500 billion company by 57,000%.
And in this episode, we discuss the types of personalities that Tom feels are intoxicating,
the keys to relaxation and relationships, advice on marriage and creating rituals for success,
the one question Tom always asks himself when he makes mistakes,
Tom's life beliefs, rules, and thoughts on identity,
and his master plan to become bigger than Walt Disney. I'm excited about this. I hope you enjoy
this as much as I do. If you do enjoy it, make sure to share this with someone that you think
would be inspired as well. You can copy and paste the link wherever you're listening to this or use
lewishouse.com slash 1095 and text a few friends or post it on social media. As well, if this is
your first time here and you're enjoying it click the subscribe button over on apple podcast
or spotify right now and leave us a rating and review sharing the part of this episode you
enjoyed the most okay in just a moment the one and only tom bill you
welcome everyone back to the school of greatness very. Very excited. My man, Tom Bilyeu, is in the house.
Good to see you, brother.
Good to see you too, dude.
I am really happy to be here.
Very happy.
You know, the last time you were on was five years ago.
Are you serious?
2015.
Whoa!
Five years ago, you were on the show.
That doesn't seem possible.
It feels like two and a half, three years ago.
Yeah, I would have said three.
Three is believable.
What do you think has been the biggest accomplishment you've had in the last five years and the biggest lesson you've learned
since that previous interview? Well, I cannot believe that. So if it's five years, I hadn't
even started impact theory yet. So that's crazy. Dude, that's insane. Co-founding impact theory
with my wife. Wow. And very specifically because it's with my wife. That, I will say, is my biggest accomplishment by far.
What was the second part of it?
Biggest lesson in the last five years.
So I'm at a place where it's more,
I won't say that I'm not always sort of updating my way of thinking,
but the big model of my life is pretty stable now. So I would say that how well the things that I have cobbled together work in high pressure
situations. You mean like your values, your principles, your frameworks for life, how to
deal with your emotions. That's probably the most important one. Like when things are really going
haywire, like how do you center yourself? And I learned very early in my business career that the thing that, because I looked back,
there was a bunch of us at Awareness Technologies that were given the same spiel.
Don't think of yourself as an employee.
Think of yourself as a partner.
If you act like a partner and achieve certain results, why should we make you a partner?
And nobody did it.
And so I was just like, why am I the only one that's doing this?
And I realized that my
ability to self-soothe was a huge part of that. So other people would get upset. They would derail.
They would take their eye off what they wanted to achieve because they were frustrated or whatever.
And I could just bring myself back to center. Now, those are pretty small tests. And obviously, as things have gone on, you start dealing with big numbers. You start to realize, is this real? Like, is this,
can I actually center myself when, you know, say, hundreds of millions of dollars are at stake?
And then it's like, okay, this still works. And that was very encouraging, very encouraging.
Because when you get a test that's sort of way beyond
where you've been tested before, you're like, how's this going to work? So that was pretty
extraordinary. How do you soothe under chaos for yourself? The big thing for me was recognizing
that I'm having a biological experience and that I need to understand the brain, like the brain,
not just the mind, which is incredibly important, but the brain. What is the brain doing? How does it hijack me?
What is neurochemistry? What triggers it? Like, what are all the things that evolution has sort
of primed me to do? It's what I call the physics of being human. So if you are a human, sort of
regardless of intellect or experience or upbringing, there are a certain number of things that are true. They're as universal as universal is going to get.
And look, nothing is perfectly universal, but some things are really close, like an internal dialogue
and an internal dialogue that skews negative, right? Which is where most people start. You get
people like Kanye on one end who just cannot see themselves doing anything but the best ever, the greatest and all that.
And then you get people who actually don't have an internal dialogue.
Like there are no words going on in their head, which is crazy, but nonetheless true.
But the vast majority of us live in a place where you have an internal dialogue and that internal dialogue is largely negative.
And so once you know, okay, cool, this is a trick of evolution.
And my brain, this is a trick of evolution. And my brain,
this is a guy named David Eagleman gave me this insight. He's a neuroscientist. This is so
powerful. Lewis, I hope it hits you the way it hit me. And he goes, think about this. Your brain
is enclosed in a dark box. Light never touches your brain. Sound never reaches your brain. And
everything you experience as being in the world out there beyond you is all happening in your brain.
It is a virtual reality that your brain creates for you.
And so I was like, my obsession with the matrix.
And I'm like, oh, my God, even though I don't think we're actually living in a simulation, your brain is creating a simulation of the real world.
And I forget there's a I had a physicist on the show.
simulation of the real world. And I forget there was a, I had a physicist on the show and he said, Tom, objective reality is the number of photons reflecting off of any object.
That's reality. But you don't perceive it like that. You look at something, it's like,
this is gray. That's why your shirt is sort of green. And like, you just perceive it like that.
And so your brain is not making any attempt to represent reality your brain
is making an attempt to keep you alive and help you navigate the world and I
just thought oh that's so interesting so knowing the heuristics that my brain is
using the rules of thumb the shorthand it's not true but it has this massive
influence on my life so something bad happens and you take it on as negative
it makes you feel badly about yourself
and so i just put in all these rules of like well that's not objectively true so if i'm not worried
about objective truth what should be sort of the the north star and for me the north star became
utility what's useful and so once i shifted away from trying to like be objectively true about
myself realizing i'm probably not gonna
ever nail that but i can get to something that's very very useful and so then i wrote my my beliefs
down and sort of started thinking about value system and um and i will end this rant with
one thing which is recognizing that brain plasticity is real. And so much of who we are, let's say it's roughly,
science says it's roughly 50%, this is not me making it up, that 50% is hardwired and you're
not going to be able to do anything about it. But 50% is insanely malleable. And I love this quote
so great, that you can't make a racehorse out of a pig, but you can make a really fast pig.
And I thought, okay, cool. So maybe I'll never be a racehorse, but I can make a really fast pig. And I thought, okay, cool. So maybe I'll never be a
racehorse, but I can be a really fast pig. And so whenever I'm feeling badly about myself or
something knocks me off center, I just come back to that idea of what's useful. How do you move
forward? Like, even if you're not going to be the greatest of all time, does it benefit you to act
as if you could become the greatest of all time if you pour yourself into it. And so I don't know that I'll ever end up
being the greatest anything, but dude, acting like I can,
and like really practicing and moving through the world
like I can become the greatest has propelled me forward.
Yeah, because acting like you can't won't get you there.
Yeah.
Won't make you good probably or great
if you're constantly obsessing over why I'm not good enough
or why I'll not good enough or why
I'll never become great. So acting like you can at least gives you a much better chance of getting
somewhere than nowhere. 100%. It's what I call the only belief that matters. The only belief that
matters is that if I put time and energy into getting a new skill, I actually will get better
at that thing. And if you then extrapolate that and say, and
skills actually have utility, they matter. So knowing how to build a business that doesn't fall
or build a business, build a building that doesn't fall down is very, very useful. Or build a business
that doesn't fall apart. Yeah, that too, right? So those skills actually let you do things. And so
that's become sort of my obsession is getting people to understand you don't read a book to check a box
you don't go to school to impress your parents you do it because the skill that you will acquire
lets you do something in the world that other people can't do or you wouldn't be able to do
and that has a material impact on your life yeah i feel like you and i are very similar in the fact
that we talk about skills a lot acquiring new skills and i think when you have a down phase
or a breakdown phase that's when you should think
about what are the skills I'm lacking that could benefit me so this doesn't happen again. I remember
my early 20s, I had a lot of free time because I was broken on my sister's couch. I just obsessed
over skills. And when you learn a skill that is hard that you don't think you can accomplish
and you actually master it, for me, I feel unstoppable. I feel like I can accomplish anything.
I feel like even in a setting where I feel uncomfortable,
as long as I know in the back of my head,
I've got these other skills
that maybe they don't know about
that I can pull out at any time,
it just make me more confident.
I don't know if you feel the same way
about acquiring skills.
100%.
Yeah.
And it's interesting.
And I know you talk about it.
So some people in your audience audience I'm sure have a sense
but I think of you very differently
than they think of you.
So I don't think of you as on-air talent
though you were obviously very gifted at that
because I've spent so much time with you
outside of that
like talking strategy
around how do you grow a podcast?
How do you get good at YouTube?
How do you build a business?
Like whatever
and seeing how adept you are at those
skills, like that's where it gets interesting. So that people understand that all the things you
talk about, all the training that you do and stuff, it isn't the part that they see. Like
the school of greatness is sort of the tip of this very large iceberg of skills that you're building.
And that to me is the fascination. When you're not focused on the tip, but you're focused on actually building that foundational set of skills,
what you can do with your life
and what you can make as the tip of the iceberg
that other people will recognize
becomes really, really interesting.
It's interesting.
My skill was never,
I'm a good interviewer or a host or anything.
I never learned that skill.
My skill was,
actually my fear was connecting with people. And as a teenager, I learned that skill. My skill was, actually, my fear was connecting with
people. And as a teenager, I learned that in order to become successful in my life, I had to learn
how to connect with people and build relationships. So I turned a fear into a superpower of building
relationships. Then translating that into, okay, let me interview people was another thing I had
to learn, but it was never my gift from birth. It was a skill I had to acquire and overcome.
What was the greatest fear in the last five years
that you had to overcome
that has now become a skill or a superpower for you?
I think the only thing
that I've sort of thought through like that
is I feel like Kobe Bryant
when he split from Shaq. And it was like he wanted to he obviously had
won a championship with Shaq but could he win a championship on his own and so my last company
was so successful but I did it with two partners and so now to have a new partner in Lisa it's like
okay can I also lead this team to a championship and so that drives me in a way that I find so fun of like, okay, cool.
Hey, as a part of that group smashed it, but can I do it over here? So that like reinvention,
you know, trying things and letting myself feel the weight of like, Hey, you gotta, you gotta
prove it, buddy. Like, you know, you had a big success once. Can you do it again? And so doing that under
new circumstances, to me, I love that. I love the excitement of, can I? Will he? Won't he?
So that's a lot of fun. But that's something that I think if I thought about the world
differently. So I don't value myself for achieving it. So whether I achieve it or not is irrelevant.
But showing up every day and sincerely
pursuing it is what i value myself for and i like to feel that sort of weight of like hey maybe you
won't maybe you're gonna fail maybe like it was only you as a part of this collective hey you did
a great job there or maybe it was just that moment in time yeah yeah yeah like you you rode a wave
but like over here can you create something from scratch can you repeat it
so yeah that it's not it's not i don't live in a space of letting that be a fear sure sure but
it's like that is it's a cousin of that feeling i think it's exactly something yeah where do you
think uh all success starts with well the fast answer is mindset. Going back to the only belief that
matters, you said it. The way you act is ultimately all that matters. And the way you act follows what
you allow yourself to believe. Or maybe a better way to say it is what you choose to believe.
So if you choose to believe that your energy and efforts will result in more skill set,
then you will actually put energy and effort into getting that, which means you actually
will get the skill set. But if you think, well, my talent and intelligence are fixed, so no matter how much I work, I'm never going to get better, right?
I can't be a fast pig.
And if you don't think that putting time and energy into it will yield anything,
then you won't put time and energy into it, and you thusly won't get the skills.
And if you don't have the skills, then you can't do the things other people can do,
and so people just get stuck because they don't have the only belief that matters. if you don't have the skills and you can't do the things other people can do. And so people just get stuck because they don't have the only belief that matters.
So they don't put the time and energy. And so that's like where everything starts is,
are you putting the time and energy into getting better? Yes or no?
Yeah. And when do you get the most angry and reactive? Are there things that make you reactive?
Yes, very much so.
Maybe not angry, but like, this frustrates me. Don there things that make you reactive? Yes, very much so. Maybe not angry, but like,
this frustrates me.
Don't do that.
I think the same.
And I think you're right.
I'm not somebody who's quick to anger
in 99.9% of my life.
You might not scream with anger.
Oh, but I want to, Louis.
That 0.1% really does get for me
exactly where you're going,
which is
when I see somebody accept excuses make excuses
do less than they can and it impacts me so if i'm honest if it's just impacting them i don't get
angry right i feel compassion yeah but when it's like and now you're dragging me down now you're
slowing me down now you're trying to talk me out of something now you're dragging me down. Now you're slowing me down.
Now you're trying to talk me out of something. Now you're telling me I dream too big. Now you're
hurling stones at me or whatever, because of something that you've got on you and I'm freaking
you out because of how I'm moving or what I'm going for or whatever, that actually does make
me angry. So how often does your team make you frustrated if they're not taking responsibility 100% of the time?
Because we have like,
so one thing I learned back at Quest
because we grew so fast
and I just wasn't smart enough at the time,
you're only as good as what you write down.
And you can be small
and sort of communicate everything
in these interpersonal relationships.
As you get bigger, it goes away.
Yeah, and hope people have it memorized or something.
Interesting, you're only as good at what you write down.
Correct, when you're running a company.
Yeah.
In terms of like having a process documented that someone could implement,
not just a simple conversation that you hope they memorize.
100%.
So coming into impact theory, you have to sign,
it's not a pledge, but it's about as close to a pledge as you're going to get.
And it's our culture code document.
And it says things like, you will take 100% responsibility for your job.
You will be expected to look beyond your role.
I mean, just like all these things.
I love this.
And one of them is, I only want to play with hardcore motherfuckers.
And it says, this is not a safe space.
So do not come here expecting people to be kind.
Like, look, here's the thing.
I also expect you to elevate your team and to lift them up and to celebrate them and want them to win and like cheer them on and never worry about whether it was your idea.
The only relationship worth being in, because all relationships are sacrifice.
The only relationship worth being in is where you feel like, whoa, like this person really cares about me.
And I want people to retire at Impact Theory.
At a time where millennials stay at a company for 18 months,
I'm asking them to stay for 40 years.
Wow.
Now to do that, I've got to give you emotional stability.
I've got to give you somewhere where you can build trust,
where people are honest with you.
But in being honest, people are going to be direct. They're going to say hard things in the spirit of, where people are honest with you. But in being
honest, people are going to be direct. They're going to say hard things in the spirit of, I want
to lift you up. I want to see you get better. Because remember, we believe that you can get
better. And if you put your time and energy into improvement, then you actually will improve. And
therefore, you get more out of your life. The company gets more out of your involvement.
But like, I really had to be hardcore about that because, you know, you'll hear a lot.
People say, you know, don't hire for skills, hire for culture or John Wooden, sort of the best explainer of this, the famous basketball coach. I don't look for the best player. I look
for the best fit. That really is true, man. When you get somebody who like you can really relate
to and you can say hard things and they're receptive and they say hard things and you
know, they're coming from a good place. It elevates you. And it's fun to be around, right? As a social animal, we just love that stuff.
So that's huge. But I'm really hardcore on the way in so that once you're in, we can give you
grace. Imagine if you were on my team and I don't, I try never to refer to people as employees. I
slip up from time to time, but I really think of them as teammates. So if you're my teammate and you're like, hey, look, man, I'm really having a hard
time. My girlfriend and I are, we're just in a dark place right now and I'm going to need a
couple of weeks just to go sort it out. Don't even explain. I got it. Cool. I got you. Tell me what I
need to know to be able to pick up the slack for you. We refer to vacations as being sacred. So we
don't have, the only vacation policy we have is
that it's unlimited so do whatever you want get your work done you need to be a high performer
yada yada yada but like if you need the time to deal with your girlfriend the death and the family
yeah yeah whatever take that time be an adult autonomy is huge for me i assume it's huge for
most people so but to do that you've got to, this is the criteria we expect you to meet.
You need to be high performing the rest of the time you're here.
And if any of this turns you off, this is not the place. And it says that in the document.
Like if, if this does not, if you're not prepared to do this, this, this, this, this, this, this,
then this is not the place for you. Wow. So is it literally saying a line? This is not a safe place?
Yes. This is not a safe space.
What does that mean? Not a safe space?
It means that I'm going to make absolutely no effort to protect your feelings.
I'm going to never, ever, ever sacrifice clarity for kindness.
Now, I will be as kind. I want to be kind, dude.
I want you to be kind to me. I want to be kind to you.
My wife is my partner.
I would never want an environment that was tearing her down.
So it's like in the spirit of trying to elevate people.
I'm not a Machiavellian kind of guy.
That's gross to me.
That is such a turnoff.
I want to, like you would treat a friend.
Dude, if you're in a dark time, you're going to underperform and I'm down.
I'm with it.
I will do your work for you to create the space for you to have that moment.
Because I know at some time it's going to be my moment, but that only works if I'm not parasitic,
you're not parasitic. It's going to be hard enough if you don't have ill intent. Now, if you are lazy,
if you have ill intent, if you are trying to milk the system or whatever, then it's never gonna work.
But if it's just legitimately you're going through
a period we will all go through,
which is a very hard time for whatever
the hundreds of reasons throughout our lives
that we will underperform, be in a dark place, whatever.
If at that moment, people lift you back up,
they brush you off, remind you of who you are
and who you can be and they love you
and they're there with you, we all get it yeah but to do that you really have to
have a code of behavior on the way and you just have to like the the every day of it all what do
we expect and i want to be around hardcore people yeah for their own reasons right i don't want to
have to sweat you i don't even want to think about you. Like I want you to go, I want you to go do your thing. I want to do my
thing. I want to be able to count on you to crush it. And you can definitely count on me to crush
it. And then if I need you, I will ask and hopefully you will aid me. And if you need me,
fuck, I'm going to run to your side to help you, but I don't want to micromanage. So like,
I want you to be good
at what you do,
to be getting better every day
for your own reasons.
And there is a certain subset
of humanity that is like that.
If you get them in your company
and you set them free,
they won't all get in the groove,
but 80%,
it's pretty magical.
What's the best hire you ever made?
My wife.
Besides your wife?
There have been a lot, dude.
I'm super stoked on my team.
How about instead of saying a person,
I will give you types of personality
that I find intoxicating.
Number one, somebody who is so convinced
that they're not yet good enough to achieve their dreams,
but so believe they can get there
and are what I call a relentless problem solver.
A relentless problem solver is worth their weight in gold.
I don't need them to be highly educated.
They will educate themselves over time.
Somebody who's not afraid to speak to power,
that is a big deal.
I have a very strong personality
and unintentionally i shut some
personality types down and a quote that i that popped into my mind one day when a person who
shall remain nameless didn't use these exact words but basically said slow down so i can lead
and i was like yeah no that does not someone on your team said that. Yes. Not an impact theory.
But at a point in my life, somebody once effectively said, slow down so I can lead.
And I remember being incensed that this person would allow themselves to say those words.
Like that's so anathema to who I am.
Like I could see myself saying, I can't keep up with you.
You need to lead.
And then I would follow and be the greatest follower that I could see myself saying, I can't keep up with you. You need to lead. And then I would follow and be the greatest follower that I could be. So that notion of like, I want people that make me
sweat. I want people that are like, they're trying to be so good for their own reasons that I'm like,
yo, who like keeping up with this person is intense. That's intoxicating for me.
So the times that most frustrate you,
you have a code of ethics when people come in,
so hopefully you're not frustrated
because they understand their accountability,
their actions, their behaviors, everything.
But what are the times that frustrates you the most
outside of your company?
Ooh, just in my personal life?
Yeah, just in life in general.
Inefficiency is the only thing that winds me up.
It's the only thing that I will say I'm irrational about.
You're reactive too.
You see something and you're like, ah.
Nobody in the outside world would know
because that's just ridiculous.
I recognize that it's an offshoot of something
that's very powerful in my life,
my obsession with always doing things
as efficiently as possible.
But I also recognize that life isn't,
like you can't on my
deathbed. I will never say, wow, I was efficient. Efficiency is useful towards getting to a goal.
And so I prize it and I love it and all that. But my wife has tempered me and shown me that sometimes
just the connecting, just being with somebody, just sitting and being is, is joyful.
Yeah. Not even, not even just enough.
Like it is precisely what the doctor ordered.
And so, and I'm not great at that.
Not having to be efficient all the time at something.
Like I'll give you an example.
My wife on a Saturday will be telling me a story and I'll be like, oh God, please like
narrow this down, like say this faster.
And every single time I have done
that, I have thought that was a really dumb way to handle this moment. Like let that part of your
brain go. Part of this for her is the joy of telling the story. And if it takes her an hour
and it's joyful for her, what does it matter? And having to sort of step in and out, like I've done
everything I can to confuse whether I'm at work or at play. And moments like that, where at work, the efficiency really, really serves me. But now
at this moment with my wife, and we may even be talking about work, but it's in a different
context. It's a Saturday, you know, and just sitting in the kitchen and, you know, enjoying
each other's time. And she'll talk about something that bumps me back into a work mode.
And now I'm just sort of
coveting that efficiency.
And it's just terrible for the relationship.
You know what are the most fun moments for me
of witnessing you in the last six years was?
No.
Can you guess?
I actually have no idea.
I think you saw me.
We're in Puerto Rico
and you were sitting with your wife
on the beach. You're on Puerto Rico and you were sitting with your wife on the beach.
You're on a flatbed chair, sitting back, just holding her, just sitting there looking into
the ocean.
No phone, no nothing.
Maybe you were thinking about business in some way, but I was like, that's a really
nice moment to watch you be calm and be still.
You're making me emotional, Lewis.
No, I'm serious though. This just came to me
because I only see you in Hustle,
Walt Disneyland,
out of the Matrix world,
like let's crush it.
But I was like,
this is a really nice moment
to just witness for a few seconds
you be present with your wife.
And I'm sure you do this all the time
on the weekends and stuff,
but I was like,
I want to see more of that as your friend.
Yeah, yeah.
It can be 10 minutes a week. It doesn't have to be all the time. But this was a beautiful moment that I was like, I want to see more of that as your friend. Yeah, yeah. It can be 10 minutes a week.
It doesn't have to be all the time.
This was a beautiful moment that I was like,
that's what I think the world needs more in general
in their own lives.
I'm not saying that's what you're going to do
because your personality is driven on other things,
but I think it's in some ways healthy as well.
I don't even think you have to couch it.
It is extraordinarily healthy.
I think it's absolutely necessary
in everybody's life, mine included.
Part of what makes my marriage
my single greatest joy is
Lisa is good at what I am not good at.
And so very early in the marriage,
we said, okay, you're the canary in the coal mine.
So I trust you.
If you ever say we need to slow
down, I will slow down instantly. You're more important to me than my business. And she is
never abusive about it. So whenever she says something like, hey, let's go sit on the beach,
I know, be there on the beach with her. I'm not like, hey, she's not looking at me. She's facing
away on the ocean so I can think about whatever I want. No, no, no. It's like that's where you smell the nape of her neck
and you like drink in that neurochemistry of that bond.
How do you silence your thoughts
over the obsessiveness of what you want to create
in the moment of being present
and connected with your partner?
One practice, so I meditate a lot out of necessity.
partner one practice so i meditate a lot out of necessity um and then two is understanding that
when you reinforce a behavior you really start to get something positive out of it so when i'm there like literally yesterday there is a smell that my wife gets on her neck if she hasn't showered in a day. So she might skip a shower on the weekend, right?
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
It is the most intoxicating scent ever.
And scent is the only of the senses that goes directly to the part of the brain,
the emotional center of the brain.
Everything else goes into a relay station first.
It's the only part that goes directly into the limbic parts of your brain.
So that's why when you smell a barbecue or whatever,
you're like, I'm hot again. And you're just in it. And when that smell
is on my wife's neck, nothing else exists. It is just my wife.
So Lisa, just don't shower every other day. If you wanted to slow down or do something else.
I mean, that's one trigger. It's yeah. So what do you prize, right? What is your value system? So nothing,
not all the business success in the world has brought me the level, the sustained amount and
the amplitude of joy that being in a relationship with my wife has brought me. So I have so much
clarity about what my values are. It's just that they don't often conflict, but when they do,
and my wife says, Hey, slow down or Hey, I need time or, you know, let's make sure we take X number of days off a year or whatever.
I do it. No questions asked, even though I'm sort of hard charging the rest of the time.
And so we do dumb stuff like we shut down for Christmas.
Our impact theory, my wife and I just talked about it this year.
We will always and forever shut down for about two weeks at Christmas.
And I don't expect anybody to work
I'm not gonna be working like go be with your family. Don't think about this does not working for you
Mean actually not doing any strategizing of the mind not taking notes or working on an outline for a potential book
All this is a great character for my next movie anything that's fun. So there is one for you
Yes, so there will be some fun things. I'm sure that I will do. that's fun. But work is fun for you. Yes. So there will be some fun things I'm sure that I will do.
But I'm more off the radar during Christmas than other times.
So you're off the radar for Christmas in two weeks?
It's more productive than most people's entire year on the radar.
Well, so, and we can talk about that because that that i i have gone way way way out
of my way to make sure that i built because so lisa and i had enough success i never needed to
work again so if you're going to work then you might as well structure for two things the moment
like the in the moment joy so doing this hard thing i actually find intrinsically pleasurable
and i will say 40 of my life work life is that is that. 60% is not. But 40% is I would do
this whether I was building a business or not. Getting paid or not for it. You'd love it.
That's huge. And then the other is impact. So if you can make impact doing something that you would
be doing anyway, that's amazing. But really at Christmas time, it is we wear onesies. So I don't
know how much you know about the neuroscience of like how humans biologically
sync up.
If you put three women in a house together, their periods will sync up based on hierarchy,
by the way, of who's considered the sort of dominant females.
It's crazy.
But heart rates will sync up.
Breathing rates sync up.
It's nuts.
So my wife and I, when we shut everything down, even though, yes, I'm still doing fun
work, we dress the same.
So we'll wear matching Christmas onesies.
We listen to Christmas music together.
We dance a lot.
We watch the same movies.
We just do all this stuff to really sync up as much of our minds and bodies as humanly possible.
It's absolutely phenomenal.
I love it so much.
Wow.
How long have you been together now? 20 years? 20 years. Was there a time where you ever thought you'd get divorced? No, no,
no, no. Deciding to propose, I threw my heart and soul into that. I was pros and conning it
because Lisa used to get sick a lot. You were analyzing the whole thing, listing it down.
Yeah, yeah. Project out. Never going to sleep with another woman.
I am, she gets sick and I am not a caretaker.
I don't enjoy, like some people just get off on that.
I do not.
I am not a caretaker.
Yeah.
So I was like, okay, I'm going to be caretaking a lot.
Am I going to be okay with that? Is she worth all these sacrifices?
And in the end, I was like, either I'm never getting married or I'm marrying this woman.
And so once I flipped that switch in my mind, I never looked back.
So getting married was not stressful.
Deciding to get engaged, I really weighed that decision.
And then, so I don't know how much we've talked about this.
So I believe in ritual.
I think it's missing from today's world.
I think we're suffering huge consequences
of the lack of ritual, especially coming of age rituals.
Read this book called The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell. And he said that he thought part of the reason that marriages were ending in divorce was
there was, you weren't a different person before your marriage and after your marriage. So I wanted
to go through a ritualistic scarification. Like killing your old self. Correct. Killing the ego,
the identity, the man you once were and becoming someone new one. So how did you do this ritual? So I hate needles
I never wanted to tattoo so because of the time it was sort of the biggest fear that I had that wasn't life-threatening
I got a tattoo as a ritual. I designed it all this. It was like my sort of credo to my wife and
It's in Greek. So her, you know, not native language
because she learned English first,
but like she's fluent in Greek.
And so there was just all this stuff tied up about,
you know, taking on this sort of new identity
as a unit and all this stuff anyway.
So I get the tattoo and as I'm doing it,
I wanted it to be painful.
And as they're doing it,
I'm saying, I am now a new man.
I'm a different person.
I'm stepping into this marriage.
I will never look back.
Divorce is not an option.
We will be together forever.
Now, admittedly, if she cheated on me, that would be the end.
So it's not like, oh, no matter what happens.
But when I say, we don't even say the D word.
In our house, it's called the D word.
I tease her about everything in the world, but never about breaking up with her.
Ever. I don't
make a joke about it. Nothing, never, because I don't even want that like taste in my mouth
of that idea. And so I've told her, Hey, you get horribly burned in an accident. You and I are
staying together, homie. And I'm going to find a way to be attracted to the scars and all that.
And it's just, that's commitment. And I needed her to know that
because look, one day she's going to be 85 and she's going to be a bag of wrinkles and she might
be beautiful, but odds are at 85, she is not going to be hot. And she needs to know I'm still going
to be with you. I'm going to be into you. I'm going to be more into you then because of what I value
is a shared life. And by the only thing you can't fast forward, right? So yes,
there will come a point
there's going to be
hotter chicks than you.
You never have to worry
about me chasing that
because you and I
are building a life together.
And that's what I value.
So how old were you
when you got this tattoo?
I would have been 26.
26.
Fresh out of USC film school.
You're a professor.
Four years out.
You're a professor.
You're teaching there at this point?
I was teaching at the New York Film Academy.
I've never taught at USC.
Yet.
Yet.
Yes, Lewis.
Yet.
Yet.
I bet someone watching at USC will bring you one of your-
I've lectured at USC though, believe it or not,
but I have not taught.
Yeah, I'm sure you could be a teacher there if you wanted to,
but it may not be the best use of your time so 26
we got this tattoo you read this book power of myth yeah before that yeah and
thought to yourself I need a ritual in order to anchor myself into this
marriage in this commitment into this new identity and not have a way out is
that what I'm hearing you say? Yeah. The last part of that
is not how I thought of it. I didn't think of it as not having a way out. I thought of it as being
completely committed to always making sure that the most joyful thing in my life is this marriage.
And so I'll never joke about ball and chain or anything like that. It's like the most joyful
thing in my life is my marriage. And therefore I will treat it with
the reverence it deserves. I will never neglect it, betray it, nothing. And so it's... Was there
a phase where you were like, man, this is really tough though? Marriage is a series of compromises.
And so in any moment where you're arguing, it's like, oh my God, like, I don't, this is not how
I want to be spending my Saturday. Right.
But never did I think anything other than this is me not being good at something yet.
And so I need to figure out like where was my failure of communication?
Are my emotions running away with me?
Like what am I failing at right now?
And thankfully, that's an idea that i learned very early in my marriage that like if i look at why i was wrong why i created this argument what i could do differently
then i don't have to spend an entire saturday in a fight i can get us out of it and if she's
doing the same thing going what have i done wrong here how could i get us out of this
now you've got two people that are like oh we, we'll actually say, oh, this is that point of no return. We've got one last sort of
stop here before we're just angry enough that we just have to part ways for a couple of hours and
it's going to be a waste. So let's take a second. Let's dial it down, remind each other we love.
We actually say this stuff. And that has been ridiculous.
If you were watching from the outside,
our arguments, I'm sure, look ridiculous
because we're externalizing our internal narrative.
Like, hey, when you said that,
it made me feel like this.
And I know I shouldn't.
I know that's not what you mean,
but it's really triggering and instigating.
So we say all of that stuff.
And that helps us keep everything calm
and remind us that we want to connect
and that we love each connect and you know that we
love each other that's a big thing in a fight does this person love me yes when you know you're right
in an argument but the other person is unwilling to for whatever reason they're irrational they're
reactive they're insecure they're hurt whatever but know in your heart, I am right with this thing, this situation,
and you can't get your partner to see your point of view.
But you know it's going to cause more and more stress and chaos
if you continue to be right.
What is the solution so that you can get back to love and peace?
And are you okay with knowing you're right,
but having to say you know what well
i'm just gonna let this go even though i know this is the truth facts in the world right now
no probably not like i we would need to come to a resolution because that's one of those things
that really confess her if i'm right about something immaterial then i might just be like
what exactly am i arguing about a lot of times in those moments
it's just space it's just like let's just take a minute because a lot of times let's say she's
right and if she gives me an hour i might just be like yeah actually either it doesn't matter or she
actually is right about this and you can sort of once you've de-escalated and you get back to the
the easiest way to explain it is you're at a place where you want them to win,
where the idea of them being right is like you get joyful,
even though it does mean that you were wrong.
It's like you're back to a place where this is,
I would literally die for this woman.
And if I would literally die for this woman,
I can't be wrong for this woman.
Like that seems like a much lower bar.
So you get back to that place of like,
I actually want her to win.
Not necessarily.
I want her to win not necessarily i want
her to win all the arguments i'm just like but her having this win is now i can frame it as a joyful
thing and that helps a lot and i'll say that's probably 90 of the issues just go away when you
both step back you get time to recalibrate your neurochemistry and you can approach it just from
like oh yeah i love you more than anything in this world
and I can actually feel that now
and so I wanna concede anything that's true
and now we get to a point where we can move forward.
Now if it's like, this just really,
like both of us at different times,
I will say this is maybe a particular strength of mine,
is I'll say, no, no, no, we have friction here
and it would be very easy to pretend that we don't.
It will only get worse.
It's gonna manifest in something bad.
Give me an example.
Maybe not something specific in your relationship.
This has become a famous one for us where we were out one night for dinner.
And she was upset that I hadn't said that her new shirt looked good.
And she'd gone to all this effort.
You know, this is a time where I was working a lot, a a lot a lot so we didn't get this is impact theory or previous early
quest yeah and we didn't get a lot of time together when we weren't working i mean making
protein bars together it's time together but it's not exactly quality it's not hanging on the beach
yeah yeah so we were at dinner and she put on this new shirt and she loved it thought she looked
amazing and i didn't say anything and so we're at dinner it's put on this new shirt and she loved it and thought she looked amazing and I didn't say anything.
And so we're at dinner.
It's going to be a key part of this equation in a minute.
So we're at dinner.
Yeah.
She says, you know, what do you think of my top?
And I'm like, it's all right.
And she was traumatized, traumatized and just very upset. You know, we, we have a very little time to come out
and you're not sort of appreciating me. And why didn't you tell me before we came out? And,
and so what I ended up saying was, look, it would have been very easy for me to just gush and say,
you looked amazing. And the reason that I'm not is because if I tell you the truth now
when it's hard, then when you're 85 and I say you're beautiful to me, you know I'm being serious
because it was hard a thousand times before this. And I said, what was true? Why all of a sudden
would I not say what's true? And so I need you to be able to cash that check that I have been honest in a thousand, 10,000 hard moments leading up to this one time where I need you to know, I know it's counterintuitive, but I'm telling you, I think you made the right business call or whatever.
And no, I'm not pandering to you. No, I'm not telling you what, you know, I think you need to hear or whatever. Like this just really is true. Like you you really nailed that and i know it was hard and maybe you're embarrassed but i really think you
did the right thing and i'm very impressed and she'll be able to say whoa okay like that really
is real that's one example another example was what we call the famous tea argument the biggest
fight my wife and i have ever been in was over a cup of tea. And it all goes to insecurities. So it's very early
in our marriage. And we were dirt poor. I never took time off work, but she had said,
we need to take time off. We need to go away for the weekend. Now go away for the weekend for us
is one night in a hotel. That's all we could afford. And so I thought, hey, we're going to pay for a
night in the hotel. I want to be there the second they will let us check in. And I'm going to stay
like extra late checkout. Like I want to maximize it, right, for the money. For her, it was, well,
we get quality time together. And you're taking a breath. And for her to finally slow down and to
have that moment in the morning where
we're about to drive off to this beautiful hotel and it's going to be so amazing.
And I'm sitting there watching her have this cup of tea like I cannot believe that she's wasting
this. I've taken time off work. I'm paying for a hotel and she wants to sit and have a cup of tea
anytime. What the hell is going on? And so
I start reacting like that. Like, what are you doing? This is insanity. Come on, let's go.
And so now we're literally screaming at each other over this cup of tea.
And we were halfway to Santa Barbara and I turn around and we're driving back and something snaps
in my mind. And I'm like, I'm so angry. I'm so angry i'm like this is a waste i'm not even gonna keep going yeah let's
go home this is stupid and so when i actually take the exit ramp and actually get back on and
i am going back home we are actually going back home i was like you're being a child to yourself
to myself yeah yeah i'm like you're being a child and you're
now ruining this is this internally or internally okay and so finally i said this argument isn't
about the tea what are we actually arguing about and so i broke down what the cup of tea meant
and all the things that i just said to you about i never take time off i'm so freaked out about
taking time off from work because I'm
poor. I have made you poor. You are clipping coupons. I'm panicking about spending money on,
you know, whatever, $140 hotel. I'm freaking out. The only way that I can sort of justify
the time and the money is if we make use of every second. And I feel like you're being
disrespectful to my sacrifice. To your money, your time. Right, I'm doing all of this. And I feel like you're being disrespectful to my sacrifice.
To your money, your time.
I'm doing all of this. And she was like, I just want to be with you. I just want to spend time
with you. And a way for me to soak in the moment is to slow down and have this cup of tea.
And I was like, whoa, like I have the chills now. This was like 17 years ago. And I remember thinking,
let's never do this again. Let's always ask ourselves or say we're arguing about the tea.
And so now to this day, you know, 17 years later, we'll say we're arguing about the tea.
What's really going on? And then when you really, it's always insecurity. You get into like, oh,
I'm insecure about something. You've poked on some insecurity that I have.
What is it?
Ah, it's this.
And because we have this whole thing about never weaponize your partner's insecurities ever under any circumstance, even though you could win an argument by hitting them with that insecurity, you can't do it not even once.
And so when you find it and you say it and then we celebrate the other person for
acknowledging that and saying that yes cool okay now i understand where you're coming from
here's why now that you mention it like this is what was really bothering me and you can get to
that now look there's now we're very fast with navigating through the emotional hijack but your
emotions still hijack you it's not like i don't get mad or she doesn't get mad
or we don't sort of miss each other
or like, you know, we're miscommunicating.
But because we have names for this stuff
and we have best practices and, you know, tools,
you find ways to center yourself.
What's your greatest insecurity now
and what was it in the first five years of marriage
and kind of business? My greatest insecurity I think'll always, my greatest insecurity has been the same since I was
like 12. And that's that I'm not smart enough to play with the big boys. Who are the big boys?
Einstein, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Walt Disney, like the people who history remembers.
Walt Disney, like the people who history remembers. And I actually don't know if I have the raw intellect to pull it off. Now, I think that I meet minimum requirements. And so I act as
if I just need to keep acquiring skills. And I have yet to reach a point of diminishing returns.
I still am learning so much so quickly that I'm encouraged that I could accomplish enough to be remembered.
Now, keep in mind two things.
One, I don't think about legacy ever.
So it's a North Star of seeing if I am going to be a fast pig or if I actually am going to be a racehorse.
of seeing if I am going to be a fast pig or if I actually am going to be a racehorse.
But knowing the only thing that I value in a conscious, active way, because clearly my desire to be smarter is tied to something. Maybe it's truly intrinsic and maybe we all have this desire
to be the best at something. Maybe that really is like every single human will live a less joyful
life unless there's some narrow band somewhere something where they're
the best at i'm the best at picking weeds drawing a straight line pouring milk whatever but there's
something right that like have you ever seen the documentary the king of kong no the guy holds the
world record for um donkey kong so that's gonna i gotta watch that right but we all like found his
thing yeah like some niche and you go ultra hard and it's like i'm the best at this so maybe that's good. I got to watch that. Right. But we all like found his thing. Yeah. Like some niche
and you go ultra hard and it's like, I'm the best at this. So maybe that's true. I don't know,
but maybe it is. So you don't want to be great at some niche. You want to be great at something
grand. Yes. But what I'm trying to separate here is I don't consciously value myself for
intelligence that it is proven to me that that is an emotionally dangerous game because all too
often I meet people that are smarter than me. And I'll even define smart, the ability to process
raw data quickly. So I routinely meet people that can process raw data more quickly than me.
There is some subconscious- What type of raw data are we talking about? Like numbers or-
If I said, Lewis, should we think more about the School of Greatness YouTube or the School
of Greatness podcast?
Now, I will come up with a profound answer to that if you let me think about it for two
weeks.
But there are other people that will come up with a profound answer in seven seconds.
And I find that just astonishing.
And I'm so in awe of the ability to think quickly. And because I speak
quickly, people think I think quickly, but I don't. And other than my wife, I don't think anybody
believes me when I say that, but I assure you that is true. I just think a lot. And because I think a
lot, I've solved problems in my own life. And some number of those problems that I have solved in my
own life are useful to other people, but it's rumination. Who are the five icons that you look up to the most, whether alive or dead?
Can I just multiply Elon Musk by two and Walt Disney by three? It's like those two to me tower
over everything, but really the people that I just listed, Walt Disney, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos. Einstein.
Einstein, but even, I'll pull him off,
because he's, while I find that kind of intellect
very powerful, there's nothing in my life
that even hints at that, I've never sort of tasted
that kind of view on the world,
whereas the other guys I feel like I get them,
though I do not compete with them.
Right.
I get them. Steve Jobs jobs if i didn't already
say that like that's an area i can picture him spielberg that to round out i think that's five
if i could mash them all into my brain i would be be a very happy man. A very happy man.
No, but some of those people weren't the, I mean, I think of Elon, sure, okay, Steve
Jobs maybe, but was Walt Disney the smartest or the most creative?
So this is where it gets to separating the-
Wasn't he like an average drawer or something?
He was fired from a job at a newspaper for not being creative enough.
But that's one of those early, sort of who you are early, I don't get too much in a twist about.
Because it was the fact that he spent some ungodly number of hours creating animation in his garage, literally, that just put him ahead of other people. So,
I mean, if you really want to talk about success, success is a large amount of discipline and
timing. And so he had both. He was working in a garage when there was no money to be made,
and everybody said, what are you doing? All the animations played out. Well, animation's dead,
baby. It's dead. And he just loved it enough that he was there and ready for that second wave of
success.
Timing.
It's exactly what happened with Tony Hawk.
Tony Hawk was huge.
And then skateboarding died.
Died.
But he loved it.
And so even when it was just like backyard skateboard competitions, he just kept going and going and going and going and going.
For no money.
For no money whatsoever.
No prestige, nothing.
And then it has this resurgence in the 90s.
And he's the only one that anybody knows
because everybody gave up and so now it becomes tony hawk pro skater and boom he's like the biggest
name by a factor of a hundred so that was the same thing with walt disney he didn't need to be the
smartest he needed to be the one that put in all the time when everybody else gave up and then the
world had to meet him they almost went out of business during world war ii and roy disney sort
of keeps them afloat.
And they do like sort of propaganda films and stuff.
And then they come out of it as like the only survivors.
And because he had been so passionate and working so hard.
And he had that discipline and that work ethic of what he was doing in the garage to innovate.
So you have this guy that wants to innovate.
So he's doing things other people aren't doing.
At a time where not only were there no other innovators.
Everybody else had fallen by the wayside and given up because there was no money and now he was the best of the best and he had that discipline and the work ethic and the timing
met him and it's just you get these so dude i will just say this to everybody watching because it'll
be this will be a time capsule in five years i mapped something out seven years ago that is now coming to fruition.
Lewis, I promise you, I have a vision. People can go watch it right now. I mapped it out. It's called
if you in YouTube type Tom Bilyeu and master plan, I laid the whole thing out. Yeah. And I'm
executing against it every single day. And seven year plan. No, no, no. It just happened to be seven years ago.
It was the first time I said out loud,
this is what I'm doing.
So then, whatever, three years ago,
I said, we need to record this.
So four years into it,
I said, I want to plant a flag
so it's not people having to believe,
no, no, no, I really did have this master plan.
That I have it and people can watch me execute it
and see if I pull it off.
Because I think I know where the puck is going to be and that there's something happening right now in media that's
opening up this a moment of tremendous timing that I'm aimed precisely to be in the middle of
that timing so that I can create another gigantic successful company this one will take longer
because I have to have built something up to be
ready to take advantage of that opportunity that's coming in a way that like when you're selling
something people can eat, it's not the same problem. Although we did have our own lucky
timing there. Yeah. So it sounds like, I mean, you've got the work ethic and the discipline like
Disney. He had timing.
He had timing, it's a question mark.
Because it could have been no one cared.
So it's like, he wasn't more brilliant, it seems like.
He was brilliant, but he wasn't more brilliant.
He was dedicated in a craft that had timing and-
That's why I don't know if my obsession with,
because you just asked what my insecurity was.
That's the truth.
Whether it makes any sense or not is a totally separate debate.
Because you don't need to be smart to be iconic.
It is entirely possible that I meet minimum requirements to become an icon, yes.
I don't know yet.
I don't even think you need minimum requirements.
You don't need that.
You do, you do, my friend.
We both know.
In terms of intelligence.
Yes.
I don't want that to be true, but it is true.
The U.S. military has run the experiment.
They said if you have a below 84 IQ, I think it is,
that they would rather just not have you
because even peeling potatoes, you'll create more chaos.
I don't even know if my IQ,
I don't even think my IQ is that high.
It's not 84.
I swear.
I promise you.
I have no idea.
I promise you.
No matter how much you may struggle with reading or whatever,
your IQ is well above that. And then on top of that, like you're sort of dancing around,
there are other things other than your ability to process raw data quickly, which will sort of
round to IQ. There are things that are just as important, maybe more important than IQ.
I heard this real story once, and I want to do a fictionalized version of this,
that at one point in the US, the guy with the highest IQ in the world lived in the US,
and he was working as a bouncer in a bar and had done nothing with his life.
What?
Now imagine that. A guy who, if I remember the numbers correctly, Einstein is 160,
and this guy was like 220.
Shut up.
So think about that. The average in the US is like 115, I think.
So if 115 is normal and then Einstein is 160,
there's a bigger gap between Einstein and this guy
than Einstein and your average guy.
And the guy was a bouncer at a bar.
Because if you don't meet minimum requirements
in sort of all the areas, social skills,
interpersonal skills, the ability to manage your own emotions, right?
Maybe this guy had suffered trauma and he just could not get himself to a place where he could engage or wanted to engage.
You know, so it's like I get it.
I somehow at some point in my life chose subconsciously to value intelligence.
I'm in awe of it when I see it.
I wish I had more of it.
I don't, I don't cry myself to sleep tonight,
you know, at night about it.
But if there was a button in front of me that said,
you could be the smartest person in the world,
the only thing that makes me hesitate
is would I still be able to enjoy my time with my wife?
Because I used to say yes, I would hit that button.
And then Lisa was like, I know this is make believe,
but if I could put a request that you hesitate
before hitting it,
because she said, would we still relate to each other?
And I was like, I actually don't know.
So if I knew that I would still relate to my wife,
I would pound the life out of that button.
So why is this the biggest insecurity?
Because it is-
Because you're doing pretty well for yourself.
I really feel like I have,
I don't spend a lot of time in insecurity,
but I'm trying to give you a real answer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So when I think about things that still do like,
oh, that sucks,
it's when I see,
like when I look at Elon Musk,
I am not equal parts
because I'm more inspired than I am crestfallen
that I just don't have that ability
to process data like that.
That's astonishing. Like when you see what he's done, I am, I'm going all out to build the next
Disney. And I think I might pull it off, but he's building a company to take people to Mars while
building the most dynamic car company on the planet. And an underground tunnel company, right?
And yes, and SolarCity.
It's like Hyperloop is, he just had an idea.
And so he published what multiple companies are now using to build.
He gave away his patents.
I mean, it's insanity.
The guy is the chief engineer of SpaceX.
He taught himself rocket science.
He taught himself.
He got books and taught himself rocket science. He taught himself. He got books and taught himself rocket science.
That's insane.
So that to me is, I choose to let it be awe-inspiring,
even if there I could only ever be a fast pig.
And who knows?
I'm not running the experiment.
But I think in terms of there are some areas
where you get disproportionate rewards on your time.
If it has to do with verbal or emotional abilities, I get disproportionate return. Me and somebody else could read the same books
and I'm just going to walk away with more. I could give the same number of speeches as somebody else
and I'm just going to be a little bit better than they are. So that's an area where I've really
poured myself into. If you could hit a button right now that would say you are one of the smartest people at, what did you say?
Something with data?
The ability to process raw data.
Processing data?
Yeah.
Be the smartest or one of the smartest in the world right now.
Or guaranteed to be the same level of intelligence you are for the rest of your life.
Or incrementally better with the amount of process you take.
And be bigger than Disney. Guaranteed. That's so easy. Bigger than Disney. Nothing
brings me more joy than storytelling. Nothing. So why obsess over the... Like I said, I don't know.
I'm not sure that it's smart. I don't know that it's a good use of my cycles, but you're so good
at asking that really pointed question and
and it's tempting to dodge right and just would I give you some BS answer the
truth is for whatever weird reason that I have not been held back enough by to
worry about the thing that I worry about in my life at least some small amount is
my intelligence mmm so it's probably stemmed from growing up I was just
always around maybe it's pure luck.
Maybe if I'd grown up anywhere else,
I would have been the smartest kid.
But I was in a group of friends
where I was not the smartest.
And so I became the funniest.
And that has served me very well.
And you became the hardest working.
And you became...
I haven't tracked enough of them to know.
I was not then.
I will assure you of that.
Now, whether I'm the hardest working of all of us now,
but we're a bit of a Stephen King bunch
where everybody's scattered to the wind
and we have not stayed in contact.
But I do think like that line in Stephen King
that you never have friends like you had when you were 12,
that is true.
Like the friends that I had at the age of 12
was like a magic Stephen King novel.
But unfortunately, I have not stayed in contact
except for one of them,
which is a whole thing unto itself.
He's a fucking fascinating guy.
Wow.
But anyway, they were smarter than me.
Many of them.
Don't you want to not be the smartest person in the room?
Yeah.
You're going to you'll end up in a death loop because I think it's dumb.
I should not be obsessed about wanting to be smarter.
But I'd be lying if I said that I wasn't.
Like it is an area
where, yeah, it would be cool. I won't lie. Right. Right. But I know how to emotionally center
myself. I know how to be beyond grateful for the talents that I do have. I am able to generate an
extraordinary amount of joy with the talent and intelligence. Like if 50% is hardwired and then
the other 50% is making the most of that, I am really having a ball making the most of what I was given.
So I'm good.
But am I insecure?
Yes.
Am I paralyzed by insecurity?
No.
Do I invest in that insecurity?
No.
I don't think it makes any sense to wallow in like, oh, I should be smarter.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm not stuck there.
Yeah.
But that's the honest answer to a very pointed question.
That's interesting. In terms of the thing that keeps coming up for me is
your ability to self-soothe under whatever adversity
or frustration or anger moments in business
with team, with partner,
personal letdowns you might have.
What is the strategy you've learned
from all the people you've interviewed
and your own just personal tests and experiments
of soothing and kind of getting back
to a place of heart rate slowing down,
getting back to a rational state of mind,
letting go of the hurt 12-year-old that's not smart
or whatever it may be
that's hurt in that moment and reactive.
What are those soothing techniques? Besides having a blankie when you're a child and
sucking a thumb?
Well, so I'll get the mechanistic one out of the way.
Meditation is big.
That has been a lifesaver for me.
That's helped me manage stress in very stressful situations.
But the thing that maybe people haven't heard before is I always ask myself
one question. So I have a goal. I know what my goal is. That's very, very important in my entire
rubric. Everything that I say assumes that the person knows what their goal is. Big goal or the
goal just in that moment. So let's say your goal is I want to feel good about myself. So getting
back to center. Okay, I want to feel good about myself, but I just did something to embarrass myself.
And it has real world consequences, right?
It really was embarrassing and it really will stick with me maybe for a year, maybe 10 years.
Maybe this is a thing that now is associated with me forever, right?
It's out in the internet, whatever.
So how am I going to recenter?
I use one question.
Will it serve me to feel badly about myself because of this?
And if it does serve me, and by the way, sometimes it does, like you need that sting of like, oh, I messed that thing
up. I don't want to mess up like that again. And being upset by it, never more than 20% of your
time. But in that 20%, leaning on what I call the dark side to be like angry about it, be upset,
hold yourself accountable and not just let yourself off the hook to be like angry about it, be upset, hold yourself accountable
and not just let yourself off the hook
and be like, yeah, you screwed that up.
You weren't paying enough attention.
Your skillset wasn't ready, whatever.
But nine or eight times out of 10, I guess,
the right answer is no, it's not gonna serve me.
And even if kicking my own ass served me for a little bit,
it's not gonna serve me for long.
So I need to very rapidly transition into forgiveness, into just not focusing on it, letting it go.
And knowing that, so I have a belief that I've consciously instilled in my life that I only do and believe that which moves me towards my goal.
So even if it's true that I'm a moron, believing that isn't going to serve me.
So I just go, okay, well, that's't going to serve me. So I just go,
okay, well, that's not going to serve me. So I need to at least believe I can get better. Okay,
I can get better. Cool. Then I'm just going to focus on that. And that simple reframe pulls me
out of that. And I just, it's a pattern interrupt, right? Using cognitive behavioral therapy language.
I don't allow myself to death spiral about what a moron I am.
You know, it's interesting? I probably spent 27,
28 years of my life, maybe 30, obsessing over being a moron internally, right? Internalizing like, God, stupid, you're an idiot, whatever it was, around a relationship or something in my
business, something. I would obsess about it. And I think when I turned 30, I finally was like,
well, that doesn't really serve me anymore. And I feel like a lot of people in the world continue to obsess about calling themselves
something negative, that they're no good or a moron or an idiot for doing this thing.
And we obsess over it.
Why do you think we obsess so much for decades of our lives until we die?
Most people, it seems like.
You're having a biological experience.
So one of the physics of being human, this is the actual structures of the brain are
designed to do the following.
It's designed to keep you alive long enough to have kids that have kids.
That's it.
Now, you trying to be the the alpha in your tribe is actually very dangerous.
You're going to have to put yourself out there, take risks, try to build alliances, all that. So that's why people are so afraid of making a mistake,
public speaking, doing something that could get them ostracized. Now, in a modern context,
it doesn't make sense anymore to have that fear, but the programming is there.
So also we have a negativity bias. So if you think of it as the sort of snake stick effect,
you are better off assuming that a
stick in the grass is actually a snake than you are to assume a snake in the grass is a stick.
Because if a stick is just a stick, but you react like it's a snake, you look silly and people might
chuckle. But if it's actually a snake and you react like it's a stick, you're dead. So you're
way better off skewing to the overreactive same with negative you are way
better off going lewis you really embarrass yourself you never should have done that you
should have just kept your mouth shut stay safe stay safe baby yourself yes because you are better
off fitting in than you are sticking your head up yeah now if you win the lottery and you become the
alpha male and you get access to more females and you procreate. It's a risky strategy.
But when it pays off at Genghis Khan and it pays off, you know, I mean, he can his impact can actually be measured in the gene pool.
It's insane.
But it's a dangerous strategy, man.
So that's why you have all this like negativity bias.
You're something like five or seven.
I forget what the stat is.
you're something like five or seven i forget what the stat is seven times more likely to believe something negative than you are to believe something positive because if it's positive
then it's just you didn't get ostracized but you don't get a lot more out of it whereas if you
really misstep and you're in danger of being put out of the group you need to address it immediately
and go into damage control have you ever done anything where you felt like,
oh, I really messed up?
I mess up daily.
But I mean like, oh, I shouldn't have said that,
I shouldn't have done that thing,
or I got too much negative comments than I normally get.
Is there a moment you can think of that stands out
where you felt like, ah, I held onto this for a few days
of beating myself up because I knew
I needed to take accountability? accountability you asking about whether I
hold on to something too long or whether I make mistakes where they're there
which was the mistake that was a big one for you were you like okay I had to beat
my not beat myself up but like I had to hold myself accountable for a few days
longer than I normally would to read I don't have a quick answer to that yeah
partly because I don't lash myself for mistakes
and haven't for a very long time now.
I make mistakes routinely.
I've made huge mistakes with building culture.
Really?
Dude, you want to talk trial and error?
Like trying to figure out
how to build a culture in a company
was very, very difficult.
When I used to mentor somebody,
I would do this thing where I would say, they would come to me inevitably and say, hey, I want to be you in 10 years. And I
would say, okay, then I'm going to start talking to you the way that I talked to myself. That was
a mistake. Most people are not ready for that. And like finding a way to stair step them into that
and sort of help them begin to process things that, you know, I've had my entire life to earn
my own respect or in credibility with myself. So then also i could never understand and lisa really had to show me she was like when you speak
people don't hear tom bill you the teammate they hear tom bill you the ceo and it's like she was
like some of your staff has only ever interacted with you when you're on camera and so to you it's
like you have both the sort of you're the
boss, you pay their paycheck, and you're a celebrity. In a very micro way, trust me,
I'm well aware of that. But like, that's the perception that they have. But because I don't
think of myself like that, I don't feel that way internally, that I cannot think that, oh,
when I say this thing, and I'm a very forceful person. So now I'm saying it forcefully, but I
don't want deference. I assume you're not giving me deference, but in reality, that person is hearing the CEO,
this guy could fire me and he's, you know, now he's coming at me hard, which he did ask my
permission to do because I came and said, but it just, it didn't work. So I don't use that strategy
anymore. Just a lot of little things like that where it seemed like I really was
trying to do something amazing, but it was a terrible strategy.
Yeah. What would you say is the wrong way about getting into a business partnership with your
married couple and the right way to do it? What have you learned in the last five years that's
really worked and what has been like,
man, maybe we shouldn't have done a business together
if we would have went down this way?
Yeah.
If your relationship isn't high functioning,
if you don't have insane levels of emotional stability,
a sense of longevity,
you know that you're in this forever
and that you've shown over a certain period of time
that we have the chops to solve disputes. That's the key. The second key is what are the roles? Baby, I don't
care who takes what role, but you better have some roles. So for instance, when Lisa and I created
Impact Theory, we said to the lawyers, make this the ultimate divorce nightmare. Lawyers said, no,
no, no. One of you should take 51%. Trust me. Everybody thinks
that this is all going to be sunshine and rainbows. And Lisa was like, yeah, yeah, absolutely. Tom
should have 51% and I'll take 49. And I said, over my dead body. You are taking 50%. This is
half your company. You have earned over the life of our marriage. You've earned every half of
everything that we have. Like if my wife were cheated on me
with an entire football team, I would still give her half because half of it is hers. Like she has
earned that half and becoming, you know, a horrible wife does not negate that she earned her half.
And so I would, I would just close that chapter. I would give her half and never look back and just
go do my thing. And because I believe that to the core of my being,
and I believe it for two reasons.
One, she really has earned her half.
And even if she hasn't,
the only way to make sure that my marriage
is my number one priority is to say to her,
no, no, no, I trust you implicitly.
If you're gonna burn this business down, do it.
Please don't mess up our marriage.
But like, I don't care about the business
like I care about you.
And I wanna be very clear. And I want my actions to show. It isn't like, oh, no, I don't care about the business like I care about you. And I want to be
very clear. And I want my actions to show it isn't like, oh no, it doesn't matter. But you know what?
I'll just put the 51 down just so you know, the lawyers are telling us no, no, no 50, 50,
but let's be very clear. I will try never, ever, ever to move forward without us agreeing.
And you will convince me. Sometimes I will convince you I am very open.
And she knows me.
I never argue for an idea just because it's mine.
I know where the company is trying to go.
I have built a skill set over multiple businesses in many, many years of being good, not perfect, but being good at knowing which movement is most likely to get us where we want to go.
movement is most likely to get us where we want to go. So my beloved wife, about to be my business partner, if we ever find ourselves at an impasse, I can't convince you, you can't convince me,
we've exhausted our ability to communicate, to move each other, we will every single time go
with my idea. Now, if you're comfortable with that. We're 50-50 though. Correct. But we have roles. I am the CEO. I am the visionary. Interesting. She is an unimaginably good
executor. And she has also amazing visionary ideas, just as I know how to execute. But when
you look at the dominant trait, I am dominant when it comes to vision. She's dominant when it
comes to execution. So if it's something around execution and I think she's crazy, we're going to go with her idea because I know she is
the right person to listen to. But when we get to loggerheads on something where let's say we were
equal, like no one has more experience, no one has proven to be better at this thing,
then ultimately I'll make that call. Because that's your role.
That's my role. Just like you're not going to step on her execution role if she's like, no, we're going
to do it this way.
And her 1% will probably win out over that.
Is that true or no?
Whoever is the right person to listen to, like Jocko Willing makes it very clear.
If you want to be a good leader, you have to know when to follow.
And that's another thing that we talk about in the culture document.
You better be prepared to lead, but you also better be prepared to follow.
So I would follow her. Like, I have no no problem with that there's no ego tied up it's just
somebody has to be the tiebreaker when there's only two of you it has to be agreed upon ahead
of time who has the final say interesting and that will force you to cross a line in your relationship
where it's like we're going to say it we're going to write it down there's going to be no uncertain
terms when we don't agree and if it's area by area we're going to say it, we're going to write it down, there's going to be no uncertain terms. When we don't agree, and if it's area by area, we're going to write the areas down.
And then when something falls into a gray zone, who makes the decisions in the gray
zone?
Write it down.
So it's clear.
Yeah.
Very clear.
Now you had 15 years under your belt of building a successful marriage and partnership of trust
and relationship and shared experience together.
What if someone's in the first two years of their marriage?
Would you say it's still a good chance
you'll have a great business experience together
and not crush your marriage in those first?
If your relationship is high functioning,
you'll just learn the lessons in a business context.
So a marriage is way more high stakes than business.
All that's at stake in a business is money.
What's at stake in a business is money. What's at stake in
a marriage is a shared life. And there's no way to fast track that. So you can break up and start
over. But like, let's say you stay together for 10 years and then you break up. The only way to
get to an 11 year relationship is to start back at one. Wow by then, that marriage would have been a 20-year marriage. So it is a,
to me, with my value system, the thing that I protect most ferociously is my wife and my
marriage. So that's just so easy. Now I play for keeps with the business. I'm not just like,
whatever. But it's like, when they collide, you need to know what you care about
in rank order, which I find people have a very hard time doing.
What do you think are, we've heard a lot of the habits and mindset
strategies you have, but what do you think are some things when you feel completely stuck?
And I don't think you ever feel stuck, but in general for people, what are some
habits they can take on along with meditation to help them get unstuck in that moment to at
least stepping forward in the actions they want towards their goal?
So a couple things.
One, you really have to have beliefs and two, rules.
Beliefs and rules and values?
Values will come into play, but just to keep it simple um we can talk to all three if
you want it is the full cocktail is beliefs values identity rules and habits that's like the
the whole thing you can sort of put routines in there but they're so related to habits
um those are what you live by.
That is how I make sure I accomplish what I want to accomplish.
What are your beliefs?
I have 25 of them.
These I've actually published.
So while I don't have them memorized, if somebody wants to know what my beliefs are, I only do and believe that which moves me towards my goals.
I can do anything I set my mind to
without limitation. Then the next one is, I know that's a lie, but that's an empowering lie.
And I do and believe that which moves me towards my goals. But there's 25 things like that. Human
potential is nearly limitless. Sure. On and on. So it's all things to basically get you moving
in the right direction. And the reason that
I bring up rules is they need to have a rule that when they're indecisive, they immediately act.
And I will just promise you, you're going to embarrass yourself because you'll be wholly
unprepared. And there will be times where if you'd sat down and thought about it longer,
you would have come to the right answer. But you didn't because you hit indecision. You have a rule
in your life that indecision equals You have a rule in your life that
indecision equals action. And I will just promise you, it isn't like two to one, it's a thousand to
one. So while there will be consequences, you will suffer consequences for living this way.
But what you will get is so much bigger that it's like, it's not even close. And so in my life,
I don't allow indecision. How many rules do you have? Um, I'm actually, so I, you
know, I got a book deal and I look at a yay seven figure book deal. I turned it down. So I'm no
longer writing it. And every, what I was going to write in that book was going to, it was going to
force me to come up with, to actually write my values down cause I've never done it. So I, it's
kind of like pornography. I know when I see it, I'll get into a situation, I'll ask myself, what
do I value? And because I'm totally unafraid of rank ordering things,
I just rank order them.
So for instance, the one that was really hard to do,
my wife, my business, family and friends.
What order do they come in?
Because you don't get two number ones.
My wife, my business, my friends and family.
That's just being real real yeah so but saying that
out loud that was not easy doesn't mean you're not going to hang out with friends and family
it doesn't mean that i don't absolutely like i'm obsessed with my family and there is
almost nothing i wouldn't do for them i wouldn't die for them and leave my wife alone
but like in a moment of my mom falls in a river
and I have to risk everything to save her,
I would do it 100%.
So, you know, that's easy.
But that's just me being honest about like,
ultimately the order in which those three things.
So why not take the seven figure book deal?
What's that to do with your rules?
Because that is, I love the mindset stuff.
I love it.
And it's changed my life.
And I love watching somebody's eyes light up when they get it for the first time.
And so I created Impact Theory University.
And it is the book book but in lecture form.
And so I've already created that stuff.
Now I know that I would open up
a much bigger market
if I were to make the book
so that those people could go,
oh my God, this stuff is life changing.
And then I say,
you like the book,
you'll love Impact Theory University,
sign up today.
And it would quintuple our business
overnight. I can pretty much guarantee it. When you say no to something that comes with a lot of
zeros, you do so because of your value system. And what I value, when I think about Tom Bilyeu
on his deathbed, if I may speak in the third person, I think of myself on my deathbed. I don't regret not writing the book,
but I regret tremendously not telling stories because I think if I want to impact 100% of the
world, 2% of them can be impacted with what we're doing right now, where you say, think like this,
act like this, it will make your life better. And percent will do it it's amazing now i don't
mean two percent of your audience your audience is the two percent they've selected themselves out
they watch your show so now some ungodly number of them are going to go out and do it because they
belong to that very rare group the 98 though they will not and the i became obsessed with this
because working at quest i had 3 000 employees a thousand of them grew up in the inner cities
and many of them could process raw data faster than I could.
They were smarter than me.
But they had done nothing with their life.
And they were not going to do anything with their life.
Not that would be remembered or anything that even they valued.
And when I boiled down to why not, it came down to they didn't have a growth mindset.
They didn't have the only belief that matters.
So I thought, okay, well, how do I get it to them?
So we created Quest University,
and I would show up early, I would stay late,
I would tell anybody anything they wanted to know
about mindset, building a business, whatever.
And 2% of them did it, and it was life-changing,
and it's amazing.
And I still get phone calls from people who are like,
you changed my life, and it's amazing.
But it's only 2%.
The other 98% are either apathetic
or actively antagonistic to change.
So how do you reach them?
Entertainment.
The punchline is you have to get to the limbic system,
which you do through entertainment.
Movies.
So you tell them stories.
TV movies, yeah.
Star Wars.
Storytelling, yep.
Star Wars affected my life tremendously.
The Matrix.
It's how you sway culture.
So the only way that I'm going to sway culture
with my skill sets, I'm not a musician
would be
telling stories.
So the book
you weren't able
to do the book
because it wasn't
it just took too much time.
Yeah.
Got you.
And now I do admit
I might at some point
cross the bridge
and go hey
this is just taking
Impact Theory University
and putting into book form
get a ghost writer
and get him to do it
like Ryan Holiday
I would have him do it.
It's only sort of been recently
that I've crossed that bridge
because he was going to work with me
on the book,
but that was when I was like,
no, I've got to write every word.
What do you have to?
But now I'm like, man,
just send Ryan into ITU
and say, you know,
spend four months watching all the content
and just write it as a book.
And that might be the punchline.
I haven't thought beyond it.
I'm just so focused on the storytelling.
I hear.
That's powerful.
What are other rules that you live by?
So have you written those down or no?
No, the only ones I've written down are the beliefs.
The beliefs.
Part of what got me interested in doing the book was,
oh, it's going to force me to write down my values and my rules.
So here, I'll just give you a few.
I'm out of bed in 10 minutes or less.
If I've had more than five hours of sleep, I'm out of bed in 10 minutes or less. If I wake up
after three hours of sleep, I'll lay there for two hours trying to fall back. I'm talking about
during the weekday, but not the weekends here. No, even on the weekends. I don't have a hard
rule about it, but rule of thumb, I'm still usually out of bed in 10 minutes or less. So
I'm out of bed in 10 minutes or less. And most everything I'm going to say, just assume I mean Monday through Friday. I'm out of bed in 10 minutes or less.
If I'm awake, I'm either working or working out. So like, spoiler alert, I don't have sex during
the week. That's just like with rare exceptions. That's a no-go. I do hard things.
So at night you don't relax?
No.
I work until I go to bed.
Wow.
Even when I brush my teeth, I'm listening to a podcast.
So legitimately.
You're efficient with all your time.
From the moment I wake up, Monday through Friday, it's very different on the weekends.
Monday through Friday, if I'm awake, I'm either working or working out.
And when I'm working out, I'm still listening to a podcast.
So that one's actually double duty.
Those are like some easy and fast ones that I live by every day.
If I'm stressed, I meditate.
I never blame other people.
I always take on responsibility myself.
I only do things that move me towards my goals. So I'm very
careful about what my goal is. And another rule, my goals must always be exciting and honorable.
And I'll define exciting is just like I'm amped up. It gives me more energy. I wake up excited
to go do that thing. Honorable is it serves not only myself, but other people. Okay. And what
about identity?
How does that play into everything?
That to me, as far as I can tell, there's only one smart way to go about identity.
And that is to adopt the identity of the learner.
So instead of valuing yourself for being something, it's all about becoming something.
Having something or what you've acquired.
Or being smart.
In fact, this is how I got myself out of the death loop I was in my 20s around being smart,
where I was making all these dumb decisions
and I only wanted to be around people
that were dumber than me.
I was actually thinking about this.
This wasn't like some subconscious program.
I was like, oh man, the person is smart.
Oh God, I don't want to be around them.
And so there's this movie called Amadeus
and it's a true story, probably fictionalized,
inspired by Amadeus Mozart's real life.
And there's this real guy,
his name is Salieri,
and he laments in the movie,
and I remember watching this
at probably 17 years old
and instantly going,
this is my life.
And he says,
he laments to God and said,
why did you make me just good enough to realize I'll never be as good as Mozart?
Like you could have made me better than Mozart
or you could have made me so dumb I can't tell.
But when you're like so close,
but you'll never get there.
He said it was too heartbreaking.
And I sucked that into my soul.
And for more than a decade,
I was like, I am Solieri.
And like you with realizing, hey, calling myself a moron is not serving me. I finally had to say,
thinking of myself as the person who's just good enough to recognize that other people are better,
stop doing that. And now start thinking relentlessly about acquiring new skills.
That's it. Like whatever. Be inspired by people that are better than you. Great. That's amazing. But don't sit
there and lament, which is what I used to do, that you're not as good as them. Find out. How
close can you get? Yeah. You know what I realized? Oh, man. My nephew is 16, and he is able to spend
so much time learning new skills right now. He can obsess over something
all day and try this sport and do this thing and read this book and try everything. He's cooking
class. All this stuff is happening and he seems like he's got all the time in the world. Even
though he's in school and homework, but he's like, I'm just going to do whatever I want and learn.
How hard is it for you to learn a really great skill that you want to learn at this stage when you don't have that much time, do you?
We all have 24 hours.
No excuses.
But when you're working so much on the business.
Make sure you align what you want with that.
So what are the things I'm learning?
Yeah.
What are the skills you want to learn?
You ready?
I just, to my wife yesterday, made a proclamation.
Let's hear it.
I'm going to become the greatest writer of
what's called shoujo manga the world has ever seen now shoujo manga is aimed at women it's
typically written by women for women and i am so excited to learn what makes good shoujo manga
for anybody that watches my interview shows they're going to see whenever i have a guest on
that can talk intelligently about the differences between men and women I'm like pinning them down not
because I care sort of intrinsically about the differences between men and
women though I do find it interesting but if I'm going to write this stuff for
them I have to really understand it because people can say what they want
maybe the numbers speak for themselves Louis dude if you have you read a
billion wicked thoughts no oh this is gonna change your life you're gonna love
it so much.
So it's a crazy book.
Jordan Peterson makes an offhanded comment in one of his lectures about, oh, there's this crazy book called A Billion Wicked Thoughts.
And if anybody's wondering if men and women are the same, read this book.
And I thought, oh my God, I have to go read this.
Google engineers are interested in understanding what are people's sexual desires when nobody's
looking.
And they said there's this fundamental flaw Wow that people lie
Because even if you say is the researcher no, no, I'm never gonna tell anybody this is totally anonymized
People like too many data breaches. I'm not sure and they just don't tell you and the engineers are sitting there going
Wait a second. We have search history
We have the data of millions of search men and women from around the world and now let's look at what they search for
Oh, it's fun. They watch dude. It's
Insane, it's so revealing dude. So this book is about goes through what do men and women search for?
What does it tell you about them? Where does this come from? Like it is
Absolutely
Give me the 60-second clip notes of of like a difference between men
and women of this book well so the punchline of the book is that just from an evolutionary
perspective you would expect men and women to have um different to respond sexually to different
things because they have different agendas so guys have two mating strategies. One to pair bond and mate with that person.
And then the other is to basically,
oh God, there's a funny name for it.
It's a rhyming way of basically saying plant and dash.
So you put your seed and then you just bait.
And forgetting what it's called.
And because we have these two strategies,
So men have both those strategies.
Men have both those strategies.
Because for a guy, it's like sperm is cheap, the encounter is cheap.
If the woman has to raise a child, even like the nine months of gestation, the woman has to go through all that.
Men is off scot-free.
So he's always looking for those opportunities where he can just impregnate a female and
then bounce.
And when you think about it as a legitimate mating strategy,
women also use that strategy to attract men.
It's the difference between being hot and being beautiful.
Hot is advertising sexual availability,
whereas beauty is often sort of a more internal thing.
It's about who the person is.
It's the sort of totality.
So somebody can be standoffish and still beautiful,
but hot comes from the allure of they could be accessible.
And that is like,
that's fascinating. And when you think about the things that really turn women on, get ready,
vampires, billionaires, pirates, it's like the number one female fantasy is Beauty and the Beast. Not literally that story, but that archetype of the sort of out of control beastly man who is tamed
by one woman and brought into a loving relationship with one woman why is that dude think about it
you've got to get this like high status male into a monogamous relationship it's like the hardest
thing to do hardest thing to do and it's the thing to get that high status male to not use you
and then leave but to pair bond with you fucking trips them out
right so that and i love that but here like before we go laughing at women guys they're porn genitals
that's it and now if you really want to freak yourself out there is the number of porn that's
like one guy two girls is tiny compared to one girl and multiple men no yes have you not heard of sperm competition
what yes it's this whole sexual selection this shit is crazy wait a minute so guys like watching
porn with two men i won't say like the data shows the data shows they watch way more of it so with
two guys and one girl and do you know do you know how they get a horse like if they want to make
sure that a horse impregnates another horse, they'll have it be around another stud so that there's another male present.
So it's like who's bigger or stronger?
You ejaculate more semen.
If you've just watched another man have sex, if your wife has been away for something like three days, when she comes back, you'll ejaculate more because you don't know who she's been with.
Dude, it's insane. I don't know who she's been with dude it's insane
i don't know like i don't know how much you want to get into this on your show but it is
like a week ago deeper it gets weirder and weirder the farther you go but human sexual selection is
absolutely fascinating and it gives these powerful insights into like how you can sort of feel more
at ease like with your own sex and be able to talk in a way
and feel understood and seen and all that and then when it's the opposite sex there can be like these
misunderstandings and like what the hell's going on and the way that i explain it is being around
other men is easier but being in a mixed group is more productive because you get heterogeneity of
thought so people are coming at it from different angles. It's way more explosive in terms of what you can get done.
It's awesome. And so I always seek out like the different modes of thinking in groups because
it's way more powerful, but I'd be lying if I said that it wasn't easier when I'm in just a group of
guys. With all the things that you've learned from personal experience of marriage and intimate relationship and the psychologists you've interviewed, the books, the billion wicked thoughts, like all these things you've experienced.
If it could boil down a healthy, happy relationship to three things that each partner needs to do and take responsibility for in order to create and cultivate a long-term, healthy, happy relationship. What would you say are those three things?
Number one is the one that everybody's ready for, communication.
Number two is you've got to, what I usually refer to as fill your heart with love,
but I'll say another way, which is want them to win. You need to elevate your partner. If your
partner doesn't feel better
about themselves when they're around you, then when they're not, you are in real trouble.
And then third, lots of sex. But only on the weekend for you. For me. But I make up for it,
Lewis. I make up for it. The whole weekend is just sex. It's not quite crazy like that. The
whole weekend is being around other dudes and then just with your wife zero percent of that it is entirely uh pair bonding sex is a big part of
that touch is a big part of that cuddling is a big part of that sharing something food
watching something together touching while you watch it massage like dude so it doesn't have to be sex but some type of
physical touch for sure and sex sex i do mean that one sex is important otherwise you become
roommates and bed death is like this whole thing bed death yeah and in relationships where you
respect each other you're fond of each other but you're not having sex anymore so sex is important
it's very important.
Those are the three things.
Those are the three.
How do you communicate when you think differently, act differently, believe differently?
Well, first it's important to recognize that we really do overlap far more than we're different.
So the commonalities are so overwhelming that it is powerful.
I mean, there's no human i feel more connected
to or more understood by than my wife um but there is an ease when you're with like-minded guys i
mean you could be with the guys and be like oh fuck these guys are i can't even stand to be around
but there is like a camaraderie and stuff which i'm sure you'll get relaxing yeah yeah it's just
easy right like i don't have to worry about oh i need to phrase this in some kind of way to be more careful about how you might feel i can just say it right and if you had a
problem you can be like dude don't be a dick and so it's like very easy um and women likewise like
they are more protective everyone's included like they're just they default to that they don't have
to deal with you know the neanderthal yeah guys in the group um but there's so much overlap so
anyway lisa and i have
to be thoughtful about like oh yeah you're right i'm the classic one that everyone jokes about is
i'm trying to solve your problem but you just want to be heard right yeah so that's sort of the
easiest one that people be like oh yeah i can totally relate to that so you have to navigate
some of that but um the communicating even when you have differences, just rules and engagement, right?
Like, say, what do we do in an argument?
Do we step away?
Do we keep going until we get to the end of this?
Do we go to bed mad?
Do we not go to bed mad?
Can you leave the house?
Do you have to stay in the house?
Right?
Like, can we name call?
Can we yell?
Can we raise our voice?
Like, if you just say, yeah, like, this is how we fight.
This is fair.
This is not fair.
Like, Lisa and I, never, ever, ever, ever, ever,
under any circumstances, not even once,
weaponize the other person's insecurities.
That's powerful.
Can't do it.
And so that would be such a violation of trust
that we just don't.
Yeah, that's good.
What's the thing you admire about your wife the most?
Man, that's a long list.
The most thing is that my wife has an unbreakable will. And there have
been times where it actually annoyed me because there were times early in our marriage where I
just thought, I'm just going to wear her down and just be like, don't do this or leave me alone
about that or whatever. And I'll be so inhumanly consistent that she'll back off eventually. She'll
just give up. And once she believes in something,
and dude, I need to go deeper on this
because I'm going to get myself in trouble
with a little generalization here,
but there is a book, it's very profound,
and I highly encourage every human being to read it,
called The Gulag Archipelago,
written by a man who was put in the gulag,
the Russian, like, internment camps?
I'm not sure what the right way to think of it is.
The gulag what?
The gulag archipelago. So it's basically what the right way to think of it is. The Gulag what? The Gulag Archipelago.
So it's basically like the groupings of the Gulags.
And he got pulled into the Gulag system
and it's terrifying.
Far more terrifying in terms of number of deaths
than the Nazi concentration.
What year was this?
This would have been post-World War II.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
His name's Alexander Solzhenitsyn is the author.
Real guy, really survived the gulags.
It's kind of like a Viktor Frankl type of book.
Yes, but this guy is enraged.
So, it is, Jordan Peterson wrote the foreword to the, um, the sort of updated reprinting
of it or whatever.
And he talks about how when you're reading it you feel like solzhenitsyn
is screaming for 800 pages or whatever it is it is it's one of the most chilling books i've ever
read like it it's sort of akin it's not quite because the gulags were different but imagine
you're reading the book written by um victor frankl but instead of having found this sort of
beautiful insight he is enraged and points out how
we ended up here this is how you end up creating a system that's so inhuman absolutely breathtaking
book anyway in it he says most people under torture will eventually say whatever you need
them to say but he said there was when you heard that someone was tortured to death he said i'd put
a chip that it was a woman because he said wow once they latch on to something they're not backing down they will
just will not let go it's right and it's right what's right is right and that's it they're
willing to die yes and i was like giving the chills now and i so see that in my wife when i
read that i was like this is my wife like she has this thing of like, when she believes it should be this way
and she's just like, yes.
And at times I lose where good sense
is telling you to back down.
You don't need to die for this.
It's okay to lie and say, yes, you were right.
Like that didn't make any sense.
And truly from the outside,
I would be begging my wife to lie, to give up her principles. you were right like that didn't make any sense right and and truly from the outside it i would
be begging my wife to lie to give up her principles like i want you alive and you you're being
tortured this is crazy but she really would be tortured to death before she would give on that
and and it's like it's it's awe-inspiring wow now it's awe-inspiring until it becomes pathological
and then it's terrifying but like really like, really, really, really?
Because I think I am hardcore.
But that woman, man, once she, like, she has true righteous indignation.
And she just becomes unstoppable.
Wow.
Okay.
So, the Bulag. Gulag Archipelago? Gulag. The Gulag is like their prison.
The Gulag. I got to read this book. If there were only three books you could recommend to people,
that this all the books they could read in their life. This is the hardest thing probably. But
if you're like three books to live a better life to understand the world and to just thrive what would you say are those three books it's not a hard
question but it's one that i'm sure i will answer differently every time somebody asks uh number one
is mindset by carol dweck it's the most important book in the english language uh number two is the
obstacle is the way by r holiday, which is an absolutely extraordinary
book.
And then number three is extreme ownership by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin.
Shout out to Leif.
What is it?
The thing that you think most people misunderstand about you?
That's very easy.
They think that I'm trying to be the next, uh, Tony Robbins and I'm trying to be the next Walt Disney.
Yeah, I get that a lot too.
And I'm like, I love Tony.
I think he's amazing.
Amazing.
I don't want to run an events business
and it's me being the one leading people in that way.
I feel like that's a lot of pressure.
And I'm just not that good at it, I don't think.
Compared to someone like him.
Tony's the goat.
Yeah. So I won't put either of us in that category, but you that good at it, I don't think. Compared to someone like him. Look, Tony's the goat. Yeah.
So I won't put either of us in that category, but you are amazing at it.
And seeing what you've built around you is a reflection of how you're able to influence people on stage.
But more importantly, and this is something that only a precious few people in your audience know, what you're like in person.
Right, right.
And for anybody, and I know you must get this comment a hundred times on every video,
Lewis, you're such a good listener.
What they'll never understand is the way you look at people.
And it's always like that.
How do I look?
You really do have a sparkle in your eye.
You really are like, you're here.
You are with me.
You are present.
There's just something about the way you look when you're listening to somebody that is awesome.
Yeah.
You really do feel heard and
like somebody's present and all that and so anyway i know how that plays out in business as well
so it's like all those things that you can do will only continue to get bigger and as long as you
love it and want to do it it's going to keep going but i certainly get that tony does the thing
and it's amazing and he's still doing it first of all doing it, first of all, so let Tony be Tony.
But yeah, I don't, it's not the game I want to play.
Yeah.
It's incredibly powerful
and it's a necessary part of my master plan
to play in that realm.
But the closest thing, and of course,
I'm not trying to be a clone of Walt Disney.
I really want to be Tom Bilyeu.
So all the people saying, oh, no, just be yourself.
Yes, yes, yes.
I'm just saying.
But that's a model that he's built.
Having a model that helps you have something to aim at.
And also, it's just an organizing principle for people to understand.
And what's the hardest skill that you want to learn?
I don't yet know what's going to be the linchpin thing that I need to know how to do
right now. It is, I'm running a strategy in Hollywood. So Hollywood is known for bull.
And I don't, I don't think it's actually, um, that anybody's doing it on purpose.
Creative things are really, really hard. It's really hard to know what's going to pop.
We don't know. Right. So you want to tell everybody because you're not sure.
You want to say, hey, this could be amazing.
Or this is amazing.
Kid, I love you.
Like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let's do this, man.
I love it.
I love it.
Now, what you're really trying to do is buy yourself time to get feedback from other people
to see will this person keep going, to see if it starts to generate heat.
So you want to get as close as you can and yet push them off.
So you want to create a relationship where you're the natural person for them to turn to when they've
got heat behind them. But you want to like big enough. Yeah. Keep them at arm's length until
they have momentum. Yeah. Like I love you, man. Yeah. Yeah. What you're doing is amazing. You're
a talent. And so I get it. And I don't think it's sinister. I don't think it attracts ugly people or anything like that.
I think it is so difficult to know what's going to hit.
You need to create that sort of weird friction.
So anyway, I come into this and I say, I've already had all the financial success in the world.
I don't have to think about that.
So I'm only going to play the Hollywood game as long as it's interesting.
It's only interesting to me if I can be real.
So I tell people when I meet them for the first time,
I'm building a reputation and I'm building my reputation by always saying what is true.
And so it may be uncomfortable because if I don't like your project, I'm going to say,
I don't like your project. And my hope is that that will be refreshing and you will always know exactly where you stand with me. And dude, it's coming back around to me. I don't know that it's
a winning strategy yet. I've gotten some early interesting feedback where I'll say no to an early project.
So I'm like, this just doesn't line up.
And then they'll come back a year later and be like, hey, I really like the way you move.
And because I can get things done, which is like my ability to create momentum is sort of my secret superpower.
And people will come back and be like, hey, I see what you're doing.
I see how much you've accomplished in the intervening year.
It's amazing.
And you were really honest. And so i know i can trust you so but i also i had a um an agent
and they just flat stopped calling because in a meeting i was like i'm tired of you guys saying
this you keep saying it every time we meet nothing happens and i'm like what are we doing yeah like
what and i literally said i said stop the meeting what words do you need to hear from me to know
that i'm serious and i'm ready because every every meeting they'd be like, hey, if you like this idea, we should do it.
I'm like, ah.
I'm doing it.
Every meeting I have said the same thing to you.
I am in.
I'm ready to move.
I'm ready to move now.
And I said, maybe everybody else you deal with.
That means let's have another meeting.
It doesn't mean that with me.
We don't need another meeting.
Right.
Let's make it happen now.
Right now.
What words do you need to hear from me?
What did they say?
They left.
What?
make it happen right now what words do you need to hear from me what did they say they left and they they they were visibly annoyed and because i wasn't playing the game in the same way and they
never called me again it was the absolute end of the relationship and i was like fine like you're
not the agent for me if a you're gonna loop around the same thing like we don't create momentum by
talking create momentum by doing.
And if this is a project that's not ready
and it's two years off,
then just say this is a project in two years.
Cool.
But let's talk about the projects that are now.
So I actually don't know.
I may alienate a lot of people.
And Hollywood is very incestuous.
So I try to be in a space
where I can control my destiny,
which is why I'm so obsessed with comics. Because Webtoon is the YouTube of comics. So I try to be in a space where I can control my destiny, which is why I'm so obsessed with comics.
Because Webtoon is the YouTube of comics.
So I can publish.
I don't have to get anybody's permission.
I can build a following.
I don't have to ask anybody.
Building community is what I know how to do.
So it's like that is where I can really focus and control what we're doing.
But yeah, I don't know if the strategy will work.
What do you think you need to let go of
in order to get to where you want to be faster?
Whether it's intrinsic or extrinsic.
I don't think that there's anything holding me back.
So when I think about,
I think that the strategy that I'm running right now
on a long enough timeline ends in the next Disneyney so because now i check that all the time to see if that remains true um because the
obvious thing is i need to stop doing interviews because they take a lot of time yeah a lot of
time a lot of research i mean but they also bring people into my ecosystem so i i run the thought
experiment very frequently of should I stop doing the university?
Should I stop doing the interviews and just focus on creating the intellectual property?
And the reason I don't is twofold. One, the other stuff generates revenue that allows us to
put towards the creation of the IP, which is expensive enough. And then the other thing is
all the breaks that I've gotten, executives that have just given me access that I wouldn't
otherwise have,
are all people that are like,
I watch your show, I love it.
And so if there's ever anything I can do to help,
and it's like, whoa, I've now got,
I've got executives in Japan
that are helping me find talent there.
I've got executives here in the US,
all from the content.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
Lewis, there are people in Mogadishu
who know who you are.
That's just crazy.
So we're living, talk about timing, we're living this. Mogadishu? I promise you, you have somebody in Mogadishu. What's Mogadishu who know who you are. That's just crazy. So we're living, talk about timing,
we're living. Mogadishu? I promise you, you have somebody in Mogadishu. What's Mogadishu? Mogadishu
is a, oh God, is it a country or a city? It's one of the two. And it is my placeholder for someone
from far away. Gotcha, I see. So when you look online, you see that someone's watched here. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I have people from...
Every country.
It's almost every country.
I mean, it's really close.
It'll allow the content to be in.
It's amazing.
So that is extraordinary.
And so you never know who's going to be able to open a door for you.
And because I'm so aggressive about telling everybody what I'm up to,
people DM me all the time. Oh, I might be able to help with. Right. When do you think will be the day
you stop doing interviews? When I no longer need it as a way to get people into the ecosystem.
And I feel I'm having more impact through the stories. Because right now the interviews are
massively impactful on myself and other people. So that it is quite joyful for me and I do love it.
Just when I think about that sort of 98% versus the 2%
and I weigh that up and truly I love interviewing
and I love researching, but I love writing even more.
Do you think in order for you to be Walt Disney-like,
you'll be able to do it by you writing
or by you directing the writers?
Directing the writers.
When I say writing, oftentimes what I mean is just editing.
I'm shaping the story.
I'm working with them.
Gotcha, gotcha.
Yeah, ultimately, every time I'm actually writing a script, something is broken.
I'm too slow.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm a very, very slow writer.
So it's you seeing the script, editing it, being the creative director.
And I understand story structure and things like that and also I just have
Lewis I have so much energy and so much willpower and I can get people excited that I can get projects across the finish line
And that is my ultimate contribution even more than like knowing what's a good story and when a story is ready and who's got talent and who to assign where even more than that just like i love it so much i will drag
my entire team across the finish line if that's what i have to do and and then surround myself
with people that i don't have to drag right yeah so it's like the ability to get a team get them
excited and then also lead from the front and just go, go, go and refuse to give up and do whatever it takes.
And look, we've had success.
Two years ago, I told my team we're getting into comics and they were all like, what?
Even though I had already told them that when we founded the company.
But it's like people get caught up in the day to day.
I said, hey, it's time.
We're officially launching.
People are like, what?
Ten months later, we had a comic.
And now two years into it, we have two of the top 10 spot we only have two
projects active right now both of them are in the top 10 of webtoon sci-fi which is like a the
youtube of comics yeah and they they post rankings and they do it by genre and both of them happen
to be science fiction that we've put out so far and we're they're both they were four and five
that's pretty cool now when they're one and two i'll be much happier but the fact that an unknown publisher has come out of nowhere with
nothing with their first two projects hit four and five it's pretty cool it's pretty cool where
can people follow the the comic side of things they can read the comics on webtoon so one of
them is called hexagon one's called neon future and then on instagram they can follow us at it
comics so if they go to IT Comics on
Instagram, follow you there, then there'll be a link to where they can go read them on Webtoons
or whatever. Absolutely. It's been powerful, man. I've got a couple of final questions for you,
but I want people to follow the comics. They're amazing. I love when you send me the first copies.
They're unbelievable. Follow that. Follow Impact Theory. You have the YouTube show that has been crushing with content.
So follow that.
What are you at, 2 million now, subscribers?
Just under.
Oh.
Trying to get that before the new year.
Like, get that in there.
I don't think we're that close.
Oh, gotcha, yeah.
A few months away.
But make sure you follow that there.
Follow you on Instagram.
Probably one of the most positive accounts on Instagram
with some of the greatest content positive accounts on instagram with some
of the greatest content that i've seen with you and lisa doing a lot of great stuff there as well
follow relationships theory yeah if you want to master your relationships youtube show you guys
are doing amazing on that own channel now for anybody paying attention blowing up it's not
just content in the feed it's its own channel separate yeah it was a smart move yeah it wasn't
getting the love that i thought it deserved because it's going to attract a different audience but i think our content there
is fire it's really good two decades of us like making every mistake you can make and like finding
our way through it is that weekly you do it once a week multiple times a week yeah that's pretty
cool so check that out um how else can we support you man's it. If you've got somebody that's into comics,
please send them to Webtoon.
That's my big thing.
If anybody is trying to change their life,
Impact Theory University is legitimately,
one effort, the most aggressive money-back guarantee
you're ever going to get.
No questions.
If you told me that you didn't get 10 times your money,
I'll give you your money back.
But this is what,
if you want to be successful
at whatever it is that you're trying to do,
this is it. This is all the stuff that they should teach you in school and don't. That's great. There you go. what if you want to be successful at whatever it is you're trying to do this
is it this is all the stuff that they should teach you in school and that's
great there you go and then is there is it Tom Billy you don't come do you have
that yeah we do but it's impact theory calm about YouTube is Tom do you oh
really yeah okay cool so check all that stuff out I'm curious the last time I
had you on five years ago I asked you what your three truths were mmm I don't know if you remember them I'm not gonna tell you that but I'm curious, the last time I had you on five years ago, I asked you what your three truths were.
I don't know if you remember them.
I'm not gonna tell you them, but I'm curious.
I have them here.
I'm curious what they are now, five years later.
Yeah, that'll be fun.
To see if they are.
Very, very interesting to hear.
So if you could only share three things with the world
and it's your last day and we have no access
to your Walt Disney-esque animation studio movie empire,
all that went with you.
All the content you've ever created
goes with you to the next place.
And you can only share three final things.
What would those three things be?
Number one,
the human animal is designed to grow and get better.
You have to put the time and energy in.
Number two,
fulfillment is all that matters. Don't chase money. Don't
chase fame. Don't chase success. The only thing that matters to actually enjoying your life
is to feel good about yourself when you're by yourself. That's it. And getting people to
recognize that, like, if I were to give you one thing that I'm trying to do, it's that.
to recognize that like,
if I were to give you one thing that I'm trying to do,
it's that.
And then number three,
love deeply, man.
Nothing will ever reward you like the connection with another human being.
That's true.
That's true.
Well, all three of those were different
on the previous.
Yeah, I'm not surprised.
So if you want to hear what those three were,
make sure to go check out the other one we did
five years ago. We'll have it linked up below this. Amazing, man. I want to hear what those three were, make sure to go check out the other immune we did five years ago.
We'll have it linked up below this.
Amazing, man.
I want to acknowledge you, Tom, for constantly showing up and leading the way.
You do an incredible job of using your willpower, your mindset, and your consistency showing up and obsessing over the process.
And it's such an inspiration to be your friend. It's such an inspiration to watch you just freaking take over and build something so powerful that impacts the world in a massive way.
And I love that you are willing to take a massive risk on your beliefs and your values and your
dreams and really put something out there like a comic series that maybe isn't the decision most people would make,
but you're doing something based on what you know is going to pay off 40 years from now
and not something that's going to be hugely successful financially or whatever it may be
in this year or moment or a big return right away. And I think playing the long game is one
of your strengths. You know how to execute the short game and a big way to still get results for the long game. And I think that delayed
gratification process is really inspiring, man. So I acknowledge you for that and many other things.
And I really acknowledge you also for being such a committed husband. You know, no one knows behind
the scenes what really happens, but it feels like and it seems
like that you're so committed to this in a world of social media where it's easy to be
distracted in other relationships or in other people all the time.
To constantly make that your number one, I think it's really, that's the thing I think
I'm most inspired by.
So I'm proud of you for leading the way
when so many people are lost in that direction.
Final question for you, man.
What's your definition of greatness?
We'll see if this is the same as well.
To me, greatness is leaving it all out on the field.
Like you can't guarantee results,
but you can guarantee, guarantee like did you really play
to win and this is something that I am a heartbroken for other people if they're
not playing to win and the only reason to not play to win is if you don't think
you can win and you value yourself for winning so my thing is maybe I can't win
I think the odds are actually against me building the next disney but it's such a fun game to play because i only value myself for the sincere pursuit
so greatness to me is not about achieving something it's about playing all out sincerely
pursuing it among them tom bill you thanks man thank you so much my friend for listening to
this episode i hope you enjoyed the stories the lessons the insights the inspiration from tom bill you make sure to check out the comics and magazines
and everything that he's up to over at impact theory and over on social media as well some
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And I want to leave you with this quote from Aristotle who said, we are what we repeatedly
do.
Excellence then is not an act, but a habit.
I hope you are enjoying the constant repetition of great minds that we bring here on the School
of Greatness.
Every single week, we bring you three big episodes three
big insights interviews to support you in your growth in developing your mindset developing
your character the qualities the skills for your life so continue showing up every single week here
and we'll keep bringing you the greatest minds in the world to help you unlock the greatness inside
of you i'm so grateful for your time today and i want to remind you if no one's told you lately
that you are loved you are worthy and you matter and you know what time it grateful for your time today. And I want to remind you, if no one's told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy and you matter. And you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great.