The School of Greatness - Why Your Retirement Plan Is Wasting Your Life | Bill Perkins
Episode Date: June 5, 2026The real mistake isn't spending too much. It's dying with money you never used. Bill Perkins built a career generating over $2.2 billion in trading profits as a hedge fund manager. His book Die With Z...ero reframes what money is actually for. Money is a tool, not a goal. Every dollar you hold at death represents life energy you spent earning it and never converted into something real. The question isn't how much you save. It's whether you're using your wealth, your health, and your time together, in the right order, to get the most out of your one shot. That's where memory dividends come in. When you invest in an experience, you don't just get the moment. You get a return every time you recall it, tell the story, or relive it in conversation. The joy compounds long after the trip ends. But timing matters more than most people realize. Your ability to convert money into meaningful experience decays as you age. The adventures your body wants now won't be available at 72. Life is like Tetris. Get the pieces in the right order, and you get everything. Delay too long, and the window quietly closes. Die With Zero: Getting All You Can from Your Money and Your Life Amazon Ebook Audiobook Bill on X Bill on Instagram In this episode you will: Understand the Die With Zero philosophy and why every dollar you die holding is proof you worked for no reward Discover the memory dividend concept and why investing in experiences now pays compounding joy long after the moment passes Learn the time bucket framework for getting your biggest experiences in the right order before your body, not your bank account, makes the decision for you Identify the biggest psychological crime around money: fearing you'll run out instead of fearing you'll waste your one life Build the belief, mindset, and consistency that Bill Perkins says are the three keys to earning more and actually feeling fulfilled by what you have For more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1937 For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960 Follow The Daily Motivation for essential highlights from The School of Greatness More SOG episodes we think you’ll love: Lewis Howes Solo [$0-1M Blueprint] Mrs. Dow Jones Myron Golden TOPICS Bill Perkins, Die With Zero, memory dividends, time buckets, life is Tetris, scarcity mindset, net fulfillment, legacy and inheritance, Your Money or Your Life, financial fulfillment Get More From Lewis! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Welcome back, everyone at the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guests.
We have the inspiring Bill Perkins in the house.
My man.
Good to see you, brother.
Great to see you.
Great to see you, man.
For those that don't know you, you have done amazing things in business and financially
over your life.
You have, as a hedge fund manager trading mostly natural gas, you've brought in over 2.2 billion
in profits for your businesses.
You've personally brought in over $600 million to you individually over the years.
And you've had an incredible experience unlocking financial freedom for yourself and
showing others how to do that as well.
And a lot of people struggle around the idea of money.
I mean, the idea of how do I make money?
Am I deserving of more money?
Is money good?
Is it bad?
What do I do with my money?
Do I save it for a rainy day?
Do I keep it all until I retire when I'm old and can't move?
Do I give my money to my kids?
Do I give it to charity?
What do people do with their money?
You've had an inside look around some of the richest people in the world,
some of the biggest celebrities in the world, massive personalities.
And you've seen the good, the bad, and the ugly.
And you've also experienced the good, the bad, and the ugly around what money can do for people.
Right.
I'm curious, where did your fascination with wanting to make more money come from originally?
And what do you believe was the true unlock for you from not having a certain amount of money
to it becoming an abundance that started to come your way?
What was that moment where you started to see it unfold and unlock in a bigger way?
I think it was when I was younger when I didn't have any money and I was out trying to conquer things.
And I was having, you know, lots of thoughts about what is it all for?
What does it all mean?
I was a screen clerk, which is basically a peon, assistant assistant peon.
And when you're in Manhattan, you can't swing a dead cat without hitting a millionaire, right?
Very rich people.
But when I was younger, I was like, oh, they're old.
Now, they were younger than the age I am right now.
I'm 54, right?
But when you're growing up, I was like, oh, gosh, what are they going to do with the money?
buy another car and drive their kids to school? Like, what is use of it? For me, it was all about
the girls and the parties and stuff like that, things that a 20-year-old, 21-year-old or 22-year-old would
think. But, you know, the more I thought about it, and books I read, like, Your Money or Your
Life, which was a very influential book for me, the money wasn't the goal. The life was a
goal. The fulfillment was the goal. And so once I realized, money was the tool. Yes. Money is it's like
hammers and saws, right? Like you can keep buying hammers and saws. You can go to the hardware store,
but the hardware store, the tools that you get out of there, that's not the goal. The goal is
the house and the things you build. Right. And so money is the tool to build your life, right?
To give you the experiences you want with your friends or hedonistic or charitable. It doesn't
matter the type of experience. It's just money is just one of those tools in your toolkit.
And so once I started to think about that, that I wanted to have an adventurous life,
a life with scars, a life with mistakes, a life with risks. You know, money had its place,
right, in building the life that I wanted. And so I think that's when I started to unlock
kind of my fearlessness, my risk-taking. I'll go anywhere.
to try and acquire this tool to build the life I want, but really it's about building the life I want.
And, you know, trying to figure out what kind of life I want.
You know, like, you know, a lot of times I think I'm building the life I want,
but it was really what was advertised to me.
You know, you're young, you're impressionable.
It's like, oh, I want my life to look like a rap video or I want my life to look like this, right?
And then I do it, and I'm just like, oh, I don't, this is not really me.
This is not really fulfilling to me.
And so I've had many journeys about what will fulfill me and what the money.
for, but ultimately it's just one variable out of what I would call the three variable,
is your wealth, your health, and your time.
Like, how do I allocate those resources, right, over my life to get the most fulfilling life?
And so I think a lot of people look at money as the goal, and it's not even close to the
goal, right?
The goal is a fulfilling life.
And so is there a calculation or a formula and how to develop a fulfilling life?
where money is a part of that equation?
Yeah, I wouldn't say there's like a formula like do this,
multiply by that X-1-Z, but there are mental models, right?
Like how to think about it.
Like what the first unlock is like what tools, you know,
I'm in this organic spacesuit, right?
And I have a finite time here on Earth.
What tools are at my disposal, right?
Well, I got my health, right?
But this spacesuit is going to decay and die.
Right? So that's how much time I got in my health. And there are things I can do. There's many great books, many great authors and things you can do to maintain this spacesuit as long as you can and be healthy. Right. There's time and time management and mainly the time to the grave. But also the time in between seasons of your life, right? Because as you start to pick out the experiences you want to have in your life, they kind of obviate other experiences. You know, I use very crass examples. Like the time to be going out to the
clubs and dancing with glowsticks is probably before you get married and have kids.
Right.
And so if in your life, over the totality of your life, you want to have that experience,
it probably goes into a time bucket pre-marriage, right?
Not after marriage in order for you to get the maximum fulfillment score.
Right.
And then the spending of money, right?
Like, when I go to work, I try my best to attribute what am I working for, right?
What is the money for?
What do you think about when you're doing that then?
Well, I think about one survival and the lifestyle that I have,
the things that I normally think I'm going to be doing for now until the day I die.
But I think about the activities, how they will change as my life changes, right?
I mean...
Give me some examples in the last five years to where it'll be different five years from now.
The going to the club in closed sick days, they're fading.
I still go.
I like to be young, but they're not as like, everything.
every weekend, boy, where we go?
Like, what's going on, right?
So those dollars are spent, you know?
They're pretty much useless, right?
And I like hiking.
I like traveling to different places and seeing different cultures.
And so I do a lot of like physical activity while I'm there.
You know, when I used to go, when I visited Paris and I was there for the summer,
I used to take a leisure learning class and I'd put my books on my back and I'd walk to class about three or four miles.
and then walk around the city with the students, etc.
I cannot do that enjoyably today.
Why not?
My back.
My body is deteriorating.
I can do six miles.
I can do it, but it's not enjoyable.
Right?
It's not like I can't do it.
It's not as enjoyable.
It's not as fulfilling to me.
And so a trip to Paris,
walking around eight or nine miles,
my knees start hurting, a little swelling, etc.
I don't get the same exact fulfillment that I did some time ago.
We could just draw the line out.
That's going to shrink and shrink.
shrink and shrink, right? And so I know that trips that involve that type of activity, I need to be
spending that money today, not in the future. Right. Right. And so these are the type of things,
you know, I think about like, okay, the physically demanding trips and fulfilling things now,
I need to be doing those now, getting those experiences under my belt now, and not be pushing
them out until I'm 66, 76, 72, 82, 81, if I may get that far. Right. And so I think a lot of people
will look at the, you know, on autopilot are not thinking about these things. They think they're going
to retire one day and then their life is going to look like a carnival commercial. And they have
perfect health when they're 60. No. No. Well, I mean, even perfect health when you're 60 is a lot
different than perfect health when you're 40, 50, 20, 30. And so as your health declines, naturally,
activities that you can do or that you will like change.
Right.
And so you don't need money for those experiences.
Right?
In the future, you need them now, right?
I imagine if I'm anything like my parents and my ancestors,
I'm going to enjoy just visiting grandkids,
you know, talking about the old days, et cetera.
And so what I'm trying to do is create what I call memory dividends.
Having an experience now,
not only do you get enjoyment from the experience when you do it,
you get a piece of that enjoyment every time you bring it up.
Every time you discuss it.
Like, I went on this trip and this happened and we got stopped by the security guard
and we had to sleep overnight and we met this other couple and it was great.
We had a good time and you tell that story.
And that creates another experience which also gives you joy.
And so when you invest in experience,
not only do you get the joy of that experience and the fulfillment of experience,
but you get what I call the memory dividend every time you access that experience through your memories.
Right.
And much like investing in a bank or a stock that pays dividends, investing in an experience pays a dividend.
And so these mental models, right, like, you know, it's a lot to remember, right?
Like, oh, what do I do an experience now?
I just come what a formula, formulaic way of thinking, not a formula of like, okay, how do I think about the totality of my life?
What experiences belong where?
and what will be the most fulfilling for me.
So if someone's in their mid-20s, early 30s, right?
They're in this kind of 10-year range.
How can they start thinking about this?
Maybe they've just said, you know what, I'm just hustling.
I'm going after money right now or a career just to make money,
then I'm spending it all.
I don't really have much in savings yet,
but I know I should be investing.
But how can they start to think about the formula for their life
in terms of maximum enjoyment or fulfillment,
these memory dividends, which makes a lot of sense to me, without being broke the entire time.
Right. So for each person and each profession, right, like there's certain situations where
people have pensions, guaranteed jobs, et cetera, and career progression, right, where their salary is
going to be going up. And they're also going to have their own health, right? Like,
they're very healthy and not that healthy, et cetera. And what they're trying to do is thinking about,
okay, what experiences in the 20 to 25 bucket or 25 to 35 or whatever, any way you want to break it up,
what experiences belong now, okay, that I should be doing now and gifting the memory dividends
to my future self.
Interesting.
Or what things am I doing now that are robbing my future self from stability,
you know, and in causing worry, right?
And so there was a period in my life when I was in my 20s.
I was C-Song, right?
I was like saving too much.
I was borrowing from my poor self to give to my future rich yourself, which did not make any sense, right?
Right.
And then I went from the, I'm going to party and going crazy and I'm spending every single nickel I made, right?
To creating future instability for myself by not saving.
And now so for each person, their career path, their earnings potential, etc., that will be different.
But the thing is to get off autopilot and be thinking about it.
Right. And maybe you're fumbling your way through it for a year or two. You're like, okay, I'm not sure what it's going to be, but I'm paying attention to what I want right now in the future.
Right. So, you know, people will have other experts like a financial planner. You know, a lot of times the financial planners are about let's maximize the money.
be like that's not the ultimate goal the goal is a maximize fulfillment and so they will keep you safe
and maybe you'll save a certain amount of money but you're the driver you're responsible for your
own life and so if you want to be intentional and get the most out of your entire life and each time
period you have to think about okay is backpacking now through europe is this the period to be backpacking
or is it 20 30 years from now is this is this a trip or an experience or you know
or charitable thing that I need to be doing now, or is this something that I need to be doing
later in my life, right? Just that thought process by ordering your life properly will help you
have a more fulfilling life. Yes. What do you think is the biggest psychological crime someone can
make when it comes to their money? I think the biggest psychological crime is people fear of running out
of money instead of fear of wasting their life.
And so, you know, they have this fear of embarrassment of like, I'm going to run out of money
and I'm going to be broke or I'm going to do X, Y, Z. Instead of fear, like, I am wasting my life.
I have for the, we were talking about the 20 to 30 bucket, I'll just, you know, this is it.
This is the only period I'll be 20 to 30. There are certain activities, experiences that are
meant for this bucket, right? People are marketing services.
products to you. You know that they're there, right? Like, I don't want to do them. Like, go have
fun, right? But, but, and you only get one shot, one go-around, you know? And so,
and they're worried about, you know, in the 30-40. So I think people worry about embarrassment,
what other people think, judgment about their lifestyle or them failing in the future, etc.,
as opposed to worrying about, like, I don't want to waste this ride. And it's not even
the ride for the whole life. Every single period of your life.
So if you're a parent with small children, not wasting that period, with teenagers,
I know a lot of us would like to waste that period, just be like, get into this period,
but that period.
And then, you know, eventually you don't have kids in a house anymore.
And that's a different period of your life.
And there's different activities and different opportunities that go.
And I often say life is like Tetris, right?
Like, if you were in heaven, let's assume this heaven, and you're about to come down to earth as a human being
and God's like, here's the bucket of experiences.
And when I use experience, I mean choices, right?
I mean it in the broadest sense, hedonistic, charitable, whatever.
And you're like, oh, the infinite bucket of experiences.
I'm going to go hiking.
I want to do tennis a thousand times.
I want to have sex a jillion times.
I want to do all these things.
You're throwing them into the experience.
I want to start a business.
I want to go school, blah, blah, blah.
And it's full.
And God goes, great.
You can have all those.
You just have to get the order right.
So life is like Tetris.
You remember the game Tetris, so you had to get the shapes right?
Life is that way.
Like, if you don't have the experiences at the right time,
they run to interfere with each other,
or your ability to doom disappears.
So you can have all the money in the world, right?
When I was in St. Petersburg, Russia, this was before the war,
a beautiful city.
And one of the things about Europe is, like,
things they allow you to do would be completely illegal.
in the United States. There's not like safety laws or whatever. So you can climb these steps,
walk around the churches, and then walk around the balcony. It's beautiful. It's amazing. It's like,
wow, I can't believe we still get to do this. And it was like 115 steps. I remember it was an odd
number. I think it might have been 111. And there were like six or eight tour buses of senior
citizens, you know, coming and go see the museum and in this church. Not a single one
climbed those steps.
Not a single one.
So their trip to St. Petersburg
was entirely different
than my St. Petersburg trip.
Their experience,
the information they got the process,
the things they got to see
was totally different.
I'm not saying it wasn't enjoyable,
but perhaps at a city
that allows you to roam around
and do these things
and go on cliffs
and overlook type of things
and you enjoy it,
perhaps that trip
should have been taken
much earlier.
Wow.
And so,
you know,
that's an example of getting the order right. Yes. Getting the order right and making sure you're
using your money at the time where you're able to use it the most effectively. Yes. It's getting
the most out of that tool. It's getting the most out of that tool. Right. The tool of money.
Your ability to convert your money into meaningful, fulfilling experiences decays over time. So,
you know, your brain reaches mental maturity around 28. Your body is physical maturity around 33.
So if by and large, if you were in the best shape of your life at 33, that is the top.
Then you go into plateau and decline.
I will never ever, unless, you know, new technology and gene therapy or whatever, but be in better shape than I could have been at 33.
Right?
It's over.
It doesn't mean you can't be in still great shape to your age.
No, no, it's going to be in great shape, but I'm just saying my ability to do certain.
Like, listen, I can get, I was recently.
You're not playing college football anymore.
No, no, no, no. Last year I was like one in like great shape. I got down to like a 9% body fat. My cardio
V-O-2 was over, but my my lazy 28 year old self will smoke myself in a race.
Really? Like smoke myself, right? Like he just doesn't need to warm up. No, no, not stretching
anything, right? And so and then on top of that, if I race them, I'm sore afterwards. Like my
means hurt. You need to recover for a week. Yeah, cartilage, you know, in the back is kind of, you know,
all those things. Right. He's just hopping around.
you know, no sleep, able to do whatever.
Yeah.
That guy, he's so lucky.
He just doesn't know how good he has it.
You know?
And so, you know, I think about these things.
And, you know, sometimes there's very small things.
Like, I was at a place where my friends were going to go weightboarding at my 50th birthday.
I was, you know, I'm generally a lazy guy.
I'm laying on the beach.
I'm like, I don't want to go.
You guys go, whatever.
And then I thought about it.
I said, when am I ever going to have a chance to go weightboarding in the future?
We're here.
We're in the Caribbean.
there's a wakeboard boat there.
When's the next time there's going to be a wakeboard boat?
Maybe two years from now, three years from now.
And I thought about my back.
You know, once your cartilage starts going, it just keeps going.
I thought, this may be the last time I'm able to go wakeboarding and enjoy it,
and I'm going to switch to another physical activity.
So I got my lazy butt off the beach and said, I'm coming.
I did a jump.
I landed a jump.
I was happy, you know, surfed.
And that was the last time.
I will ever go wakeboarding
because of the speed of wakeboarding.
And so now I wake surf,
which is a lot slower speed
and I can do it later in my life.
But my wakeboarding days are gone forever.
And had I not done it at that time,
it had been years before,
but I'm wakeboarding.
So I got all the enjoyment,
all the memory devons of that trip,
hanging out with my friends, etc.
But that's it.
The wakeboarder bill is dead.
But now you have that memory dividend
that you can tell this story to me
and you can think about that story for the rest of your life.
Yes, and I can also use it as a teaching tool, right?
So for people who are still, you know, got all their cartilage, all their cartilage and
no broken bones or anything like that, like, hey, you know, the time is coming where whatever
activity it is, it will be the last time for you.
Yes.
And you'll be moving on to other activities, right?
So I'm a wig surfer, you know, maybe golf, whatever.
Maybe you're just a boater eventually, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Your book has really taken off in the last few years since it came out.
It's called Die with Zero, getting all you can from your money and your life.
And I want people to get a few copies of this because I think there's been this misconception
of like make as much money as you can and save it for as long as you can so that you can enjoy the rest of your life when you retire at 64 or 72 or whatever the retirement age is, right?
This kind of concept, save, save, save, and save.
invest, which I'm a big fan of saving and investing.
Yes.
So that it will pay me dividends now and in the future.
And so I won't stress or have worry about money.
But I think people take it to extreme sometimes.
Correct.
And they don't enjoy their time.
And they get the bucket list and the time bucketing backwards.
Correct.
And so why should we be thinking about die with zero?
And the idea of having nothing when you die for some people seems selfish.
You know, what about leaving money for my kids or for charities or, you know, am I going to leave my family with nothing?
What does that say about me and my legacy?
Right.
So what is your thoughts around, you know, these 17 questions I just asked around, you know, how we should be thinking about money for retirement?
How we should be thinking about money for leaving it behind?
how we should be thinking about legacy
and how does having money in the bank
when you die connect to legacy?
What's your thoughts on that?
So I'm going to go first,
which is on everybody's mind
and one of the number one questions I get
is like, what about the kids?
And there's a chapter called,
what about the kids?
And it's about charity and kids.
And so the same laws of physics
that govern your body,
govern your kid's body.
Okay?
So they're going to grow,
their brains are going to eventually mature.
trust me parents, their brains will eventually mature. How many kids do you have? I have too. I have to 16 and 19. And their
bodies will reach physical maturity. And then they will plateau and start to decline. So if your body is
unable to convert the money into meaningful experiences as you age, right? Like your physical ability to either
enjoy them or do them goes down. The same is true for your kids. So actually,
giving a smaller amount to your kids at an earlier age will be more impactful and more fulfilling
than waiting to you kick the bucket and they're 66 or 65 or 60, right? And two-thirds or more
their life has gone by. Right. Um, so what I advocate for is that be intentional. You want to
give your, your kids fulfillment, a fulfilling life and choices. So,
So whatever you're going to give them, you know, some people are like, I'm not giving my kids anything.
They got to make it.
I got to make it.
They had to make it.
But whatever you're going to give them, give it to them at the right time.
Timing is important.
And so I advocate, you know, somewhere between 25 and 33, right?
Some kids are very mentally mature and they can handle money when they're younger and, you know, it's going to be fine.
And some are a little bit later in life, right?
But at a certain point, it's their life, right?
you've done your best to prepare them to navigate the world.
They're their own person.
If they want to light it on fire, let them light them on fire.
They want to do this, you know, and they're industrious, etc., let them do that.
But it's their adventure.
And so, and that money has the most impact when you give it to them then.
And also your legacy, you know, people like, I'm working hard for my kids.
You know, they're 60.
I'm working hard for your kids.
Like, well, part of the legacy and the fulfillment from your kids is spending time with you.
moments from you. Not you going to work. You with them. Memories with them. So in some situations,
in a perverse way, you're going to work to make more money to give your kids when you die,
is actually taking away from the fulfillment and diminishing your legacy. Interesting.
Right. So we have to be really intentional and think about what are we trying to do when our kids,
giving our kids money? And, you know, six-year-olds are not kids. You know what I mean? So I think one of the most
assinine things we do or the most autopilot not living with intention things we do is wait till we
die to transfer assets to our kids interesting right and that's the same thing with charity like
charity is now right people are hurting now dying starving whatever the issue is that speaks to you
it is now right so you know i i i give kind of examples as like
imagine the people that donated to, you know, funds for polio, said, I'm just going to wait until I die.
And then more kids have polio, right? You know, there's people, you know, and I just use that
an example. And even if it's into education, the returns on education or a human being educated
right now far exceeds any market return that you can make. So if you are a charitable person
and you identify capital that you're not going to use before you die, now. Right. So how do
do you think about this in your own life then with terms of, you know, you have two teenage kids.
How do you make sure that you raise kids to not rely on you for money and you're not giving
them too much personally?
But you also want to maximize for fulfillment and memories and you, you know, you have a...
So you're going on a sub question.
Yes.
Do you give your kids money or not, right?
And there's books on this, like give them, there's books like, don't give them anything.
And there's books like, give them everything.
How do you navigate that?
Because it's all, you know, you've got an amazing.
an amazing lifestyle, you've got properties, you've got boats, you've got planes, you got,
you put them in the back of the plane, you've got to coach and you're in first class.
They take a greyhound across you.
Like, how do you do it where they're psychologically set up for success, but also rich in
memories and experiences with you?
So by me, quote unquote, making it, right?
I've made my life easier, and therefore their lives are easier.
And they're in a bubble, right?
And as much as I try and, you know, the exposure, I try to.
I try and get them outside the bubble.
But the main thing I wanted to do is raise strong independent women who are kind,
who can navigate the world.
It's the best I can hope for, right?
And as far, you know, the way I look at it is that I have an amount that I want to give them, right?
That is for them to do as they please when they're mature enough to get it.
So it's not my money.
It's in a trust.
It's separate because if Bill Perkins goes out gambling in some poker game,
you know, you lose it.
They're not going to get my, it's not my money.
You know what I mean?
It's their money.
So I don't have to worry about the risk to me,
et cetera,
they're taking care of.
But they don't get to use it.
It's not like a 16 year old
running around in a Ferrari or something like that.
It turns over to them to their control
when they're between 28 and 33.
I think mine is between 28 and 30.
Yeah.
And what does it unlock every month
a certain amount or is it a lump sum that they just...
There's, you know,
there's all...
We're getting to stay in and trust planning,
but, you know,
there's a board that has for health support and maintenance.
They can trust, not me.
Other people can be like, okay, you're going grad school.
We'll give you a little bit of a little bit of a paper grad school, whatever.
But all of it unlocks to them at 30.
Got it.
Okay.
Because I've lived my life.
So I say to my friends like, me, I live my life.
It's their life now.
If I'm going to give it to them, if it's a real gift, it's theirs.
Right.
When they're able to handle it, you know, I'll give it to them.
And they're like, well, what if they can't handle it?
It's too late.
It's not like at 40 is going to help them anymore and their health is declining, right?
So I'm just like, let them have the adventure they want to have with the resources that I'm willing to give them.
So I don't tell people, hey, you have to give you kids money or not.
I just tell them the when.
The when, the when, the when is very, very important.
Yeah, and it's your responsibility, I guess, as a parent to educate, teach, train them to be kind, you know, thoughtful human beings.
Exactly.
And hopefully they're able to make those decisions by then.
and that's in some way your responsibility as well to oversee that up until 30 or whatever that time is.
Well, I mean, it's at a certain point, your job is done.
Right.
And they're raising.
They're on their own person.
They're adults.
They're not going to listen to you anymore.
They're not going to listen to you anymore anyway, right?
Like, you're on the advisory committee.
I'm already, I think I'm already on the advisory committee.
They call you when they need money.
Exactly.
And they need like, I'm on the advisory committee.
And you hopefully have done a good job.
But your job, that part of trying to control your kids.
is done.
You mold through advice from that point on.
And so a gift is a gift.
And my gift is set.
And it's done.
If I come into a windfall and hit the lottery and I feel like, hey, I want to give more to them, I can add to it.
But I'm living intentionally.
Like, hey, this is when they're going to reach peak mental maturity, mental acuity and physical maturity.
This is where they're going to hit plateau, et cetera.
This is when it's going to have the most impact on their life.
right right it's going to have less impact on their life because it can't even convert it
into the experiences they were lit on their life right and so it's their adventure
right their adventure to have i don't want to control people from the grave yes right right
here are the rules i said forth you must do this i'm just like what kind of human being does
that like tries to control another human being with money right i i want them like you've done your
training have the adventure you want to have right and so
And so that's how I think about that.
Now, the having the zero part is, you know, one of the 17 questions.
Yes.
Is if I spend, I have only, the only thing I have is my life energy and that's the time I
have on planet, right, on this planet, the minutes, et cetera.
So if I spend that time going to work, let's say I'm just digging holes, I'm digging holes.
I'm digging holes.
And they give me this thing called money.
It could be chucking shoes, token, it could be anything.
They give me this thing called money.
and then I just hold it
and then I
die with it
I've essentially wasted my time
digging ditches right
I've worked for no reward
right
we can see on his face
that that's assamine right
like no you don't want to go do something
that you normally wouldn't do with all the other
activities you can do on this planet right
almost infinite choices
right
we don't want to go do that
for no reward right
so we're going to
work for something, right? And a lot of us are going to work, you know, some of it, we enjoy
it, we enjoy what we do, we enjoy teaching people, but that reward, when we slice up the reward
part, that is for us to use as a tool in our tool bucket to maximize our fulfillment.
Nobody goes into the hardware, so let me get some hammers and saws and then throws them away,
right? Well, I guess there are some people who buy hammers and saws, put them in the garage
and never use them, right? But that's the, that's what happens with a lot of people, is
they just save, save, save, never use it, die.
Right?
And so I'm trying to stop them from doing that and say, hey, let's think about how we can spend
and use all your assets, your wealth, your health and your time, or focusing on your wealth,
before you die to get maximum fulfillment and the maximum ride.
Yes.
Right?
And so one of the axioms is spend all your money down to zero as close as you can before you die.
Right.
So you do not waste your life working for no reward.
Right.
So in your 20s, you may not have a ton of excess money.
So you're not, you might need to save a little bit in your 20s,
but also experience life and having adventures,
but not be broke and in survival mode constantly, right?
It's like there's a, there's different things you're able to do, right?
Like you're able to go, let's go hiking with my friends.
Let's go biking.
There's a lot of experiences.
You do a lot of free things.
A lot of raging, a lot of, you know, super saver tickets, back of the bus.
House parties, you know.
Jeep pop at the concert.
Those are some of the greatest times in my life.
Backpacking.
Exactly.
Camping.
Exactly.
Exactly.
But you're also saving away for security, right?
The one experience we all want, and, you know, people push back is like the experience
is survival.
We want to be able to survive.
Like, if you're out of the game, okay, then there's no fulfillment.
Right.
So we want to be able to survive and we need a calculator of survival number.
Like, we've got to pay rent.
We got feed ourselves.
We've got to do these things, right?
And we're saving for some sort of calamity where I'm unemployed for a couple weeks.
But a lot of times, we're saving for, I want to go on this trip.
I want to buy this house.
I like this car.
I want to get the girl the ring.
You know what I mean?
I want to take my parents on a trip or dinner, whatever it is.
I like to attach the money to activities.
So they're not just working for some abstract chucking cheese token that we never cash in.
Right?
You've been to Chuckie cheese.
So, and so it's like, okay, great idea, you know.
So I first like to think about like, okay, when we're saving for retirement, we're talking
about things, it's like, what's your survival number?
Right?
Because we're working for survival and then everything else is choices.
Everything else is about the brand adventure.
Yep.
Right?
And it's like, okay, what adventures go where in our life?
What timeline?
Where do they go?
Right?
And what adventures will I really be doing in my 60s,
these 80s and 90s, right? Now, they're the Jack LaLanes or like, I'm sure, you remember Jack LaLay?
Yeah, yeah, the guy. The juicer or the... No, no, there used to be a guy when I was growing up
and a old guy. The health guy. The health guy. No, the Jack Jucer. The... Yeah, he would have like,
he would be like 70 years old. Yeah, yeah, of course. I'm sure he was raging in clubs and spending
money on fire as older. But like, like, most of us, you know, will be more, have more,
more relaxed life later in life. Sedentary lives, right? More relaxed lives that aren't really
high in consumption. And the data shows this. Like, if you look at the data, even adjusting for
health care costs, because I go, what about health care? Even adjusting for health care costs,
seniors spend less money as they age in aggregate. Now, you can be, I have, I get asked this
question a lot and I'm going to speculate. They can't. They can't. They're sitting around all day.
They can't spend the money. They can't. They can't. They don't have, they don't have, they don't have,
The energy.
They don't have the attitude or the ability.
Right.
Both.
Right.
It's a pin, I don't want to go flying.
My mom is that way.
We had to basically kidnap her to go to Scotland for her 80th birthday.
She loved it.
It was great, but it was a kidnapping.
But there's a whole year to build up the energy.
She's like, I don't go to plane.
I got to sit.
It's cramped.
It's cranked.
It's a lot.
I don't.
I mean, she had the best time in Scotland.
Right, right.
But they just don't.
You get comfortable with your life.
Yeah.
I tell a story in a book.
I was like, you know, maybe an insensitive gift or a not very thoughtful gift.
Like, remember, I'm young and I'm on autopilot.
I had made some money.
And I was a broker.
And I was like, oh, my grandma's birthday, I would want money.
She's been giving me money since I was kid, like a dollar for each age, right?
I was like, I gave her.
I was like, here you go.
Here's 10 grand.
You know, I gave her 10 grand for her birthday.
And she bought me a sweater.
And that was it.
Oh, my daughter, a cheat, well, later on.
But that was it.
Like, I thought she was going to call up her friends.
We're going to, we're going to Vegas.
We're going, whatever, like, with some adventure.
We're like, and I was just like, and I'm an idiot.
I was a complete idiot.
Like, I just realized, like, oh, wow.
Like, the money was almost useless to her, right?
You know, it was useful as a tool to, like, give other, me a sweater that I'd probably
mean, you didn't mean about the move to Texas, right?
It's not sweater weather, right?
What is the most meaningful thing that,
people who are more seasoned in life want that money can't give them.
Wow.
Well, I would say that money, money, you can't give it to them.
It can be a tool to enhancing experience.
I think what they want is senior people want these relationships, time with their kids,
family, loved ones, these adventures.
You know, I used to say to people, you rarely see people go to movies alone.
We love shared experience.
We're wired to connect.
Right. And so, you know, people have different tribes, different friends, different, et cetera, but they love taking their whole family on an adventure. Now it could just be a picnic, right? And a small one. Like at all levels, you can do that. But you can make it more fun and people talking about it and having, et cetera. So I think, you know, money doesn't give them that. It's their personal connections, but you can make them better. Right? You can make them more fulfilling. You can make it easier for some of your family members. Like, oh, I live so far away.
I can't afford to go, oh, it's okay, I'll fly you.
Right, right.
Or I'll pay for the bus ticket.
Yes.
I'll drive and come pick you up, right?
These are the things I think that money can't particularly give them, but can enhance the experience.
Right.
When you, you know, you were talking about this kind of generational fear of our grandparents
from the Great Depression to our parents to, you know, all these different fears that were
passed down generationally or conditions around money, right?
beliefs around money.
Right.
Save it for a rainy day, retire with money, all these different things.
Which seemed to be, makes sense back then, right?
When maybe it wasn't as abundant or they were in scarcity, right?
Or in survival mode.
So maybe they made sense for a period of time for them.
But it seems like there's more money available now than ever before.
It's more printed physically.
Yeah.
Available than ever before.
That's for sure.
And there's more ways to make money than ever before.
There's more side hustle, side gigs, creative endeavors that people can do to make money.
What was the actual moment where you broke the generational conditioning around scarcity and unlocked it into abundance for you?
Where it converted into money entering your hands and your bank account.
I think it's weird because I was a screen clerk.
I think it was making like $16,000 a year.
and then driving a limo at night to make ends meet.
And my roommate at the time was a waiter.
He was making like $77,000 a year.
And I was thinking, I can always wait tables.
But I wasn't in it for the $16,000, right?
I was in it for a career path to really make a bunch of money.
And so it's a kind of weird thing.
And I was just kind of like, if I lose my ego,
which I had no ego back then, I was driving a limo.
I was driving at night.
I was like, if I lose my ego, I can always get a job.
I can always get a job. I'm not going to be completely busted, right? I might be poor and I've been
broke before, and I'm okay with that, and I've had great times, right? Like, you know, I'm good friends.
We go off, do whatever. But it gave me kind of this freedom. Like, there's this safety net of, like,
I will be able to find something, right? And I remember one of the FCMs, I worked for this guy named Mark,
And he was like, I used to be a garbage driver.
If they shut this place down, I can, I can always drive a garbage truck.
You know what I mean?
Like, so, you know, if I lose my ego about like, I'm too proud to do this job, right,
then I can always go work.
You know what?
There's way more jobs and way more opportunities.
And I don't have the fear of like moving to another place to get the job or going to
another place, et cetera.
You know, it's painful for a lot of people.
people have the fear of going into a new environment and moving,
which I think limits them to only local opportunities.
But for me, I was like, I'll go anywhere for the opportunity.
I'll go to Siberia, you know.
You know, I was one of those dumb, young and vicious people that would like,
put me on the moon, I will trade.
Right.
And so like when I got the chance, I was in New York City,
I left, didn't know anybody, had a mattress and an empty room,
and, you know, I'll be there, you know, sir, yes, sir, let's go.
Right.
And so, and if that didn't work out, so what?
Right.
I don't adventure.
I want, I want the scars.
Like, I want, like, a life with no mistakes to me is a uninteresting life.
An unfulfilling life, actually.
Yeah.
Like, you haven't touched your limits.
You don't know what your limits are because you never failed.
Yeah.
If everything's always working out and you fail, it's like, well, you never touched your limits.
You never really sent this thing.
Until you run so hard where you throw up and you're about to pass out, which, you know, I did in college when they used to make you run, you know, back and forth.
You don't know your limits, right?
Like, you don't know when you're struggling with the weights, right?
Like, physically, but, like, also emotionally, like, until you've said, I love you first and you've gone through the break and you've done every thing you can for the relationship.
Like, you just don't know, like, this is as much as I can give in a relationship.
Yeah.
Right?
This is as much as I can do.
this is as far as I can go figuring out this business, I need to bring in help or partners or whatever.
You know, like all those things. And so, um, wanting a fulfilling ride is the goal, right?
Literally the money. The money is only a tool to get the fulfillment. Now, I have fancy fulfillment
things, right? And they do it. But, and I am learning how to use that tool to drive my fulfillment.
But I'm also learning, hey, from other professionals and other verticals in a health life.
Like, how do I optimize my health?
There's time management books.
How do I optimize my time?
And then even in the web bucket, there's like,
how do I get the better deal to get the same experience
and the same fulfillment points when I go to Greece?
Don't do that hotel, get the Airbnb, it'll be nicer,
and you actually have more fulfillment,
it'll be cheaper, and you have more money for the trip to Japan.
Right?
So I'm just saying, like, at the macro level,
you know, this is how these things interact,
and this is how you should be thinking about the arc of your life,
but then you can go into each vertical and suboptimized.
Yes, absolutely.
And so, but what was that psychological moment for you where you realized, oh, I'm actually good at making money?
Oh, wow.
And not like, okay, I'm making $16,000 a year and I'm working a nice, you know, driving a limo.
But actually, I'm breaking through the generational conditioning that I live in scarcity to now I live in abundance or have the potential to live in abundance.
How did you learn that you were worthy and deserving of more money?
How did you learn that you were capable of generating wealth?
Oh, wow.
I don't know if I learned it or I just believed it and it became.
Really?
So I always tell people like, I think one of my advantages was that I was delusional.
And so they were like, what do you mean?
I was like, like, I believed I can do it.
And that drove my decisions.
Now, that didn't mean I was going to be successful.
I could have easily believed I was done it and just never have done it, right?
Tried a hundred times.
Failed and burned broken, yeah.
But the fact that I had that delusion and that belief that I can do it, that you could
throw me in a desert and I'd have a fighting chance.
I'd figure it out.
I'd drink my own pee.
I'd do whatever.
You know what I mean?
Like, I'm just, whatever it takes.
I'm just going to do it.
Like, I had this delusion that I could do it.
And because of that, the drinking of pee got me.
That's great.
Sometimes you got to drink your pee if you're in the desert and you're trying to thirst, you know, you know, rehydrate.
But, you know, eat the bugs, right?
That delusion sent me to course to try and to learn.
And so when I was learning, it wasn't like I couldn't learn this or I couldn't learn options trading or whatever.
It's like, I can do this.
I can do this because I had this delusion.
And so I think the belief is powerful.
It's very, very helpful.
How did you get that belief?
Most people don't believe in themselves enough to believe they're deserving and worthy
of money, of wealth, of abundance.
How did you get to believe you are deserving?
Okay, so I had a very topsy-turvy relationship with my dad.
He came from a different generation, hard-boiled, right?
He was pre-civil rights.
You know, dreams were squashed.
It was openly squashed and legally squashed.
right like in this and he and in i was born post-civil rights okay and so um one of the things
and i don't want to turn us into a whole racial story but one of the advantages of growing up
in jersey city being black is that people in that period people talk about you you're you're
accused of this why you're people like this you know you're inferior you can't do this or whatever
And so what you develop, okay, the good side of that is you know what people think.
You've been trained.
You know, you know what's true about you and your people and your relatives or whatever.
We're not bad people.
We're not criminals.
I'm not whatever.
I'm not whatever.
I'm not whatever.
You just learned to brush that all off, right?
And my dad was a badass.
And he was like, you can, you know, you can do whatever.
We look at all the adversity we have to deal with.
and we overcome, right?
And so that not giving a what people think
and only listening to your dreams
is a superpower forged in adversity.
And so like I just, you just, so, you know,
a lot of people walk around like,
I don't care what do you think or whatever
and they're thinking this about whatever.
I'm just like, I don't get, I don't get, I don't get.
And like, I don't care.
That's their problem, right?
Like, and everybody cares a little bit, right?
Yeah, yeah.
to the extent that people's thoughts will interfere with my priorities, I care more, right?
But in general, on the not giving a scale, I'm on the further scale because I grew up in a period where, you know, I was born in 69, right?
There's, you know, racial attitudes going on. We're just coming out of the 60s, right?
you know
being having that
and then just having to deal with that
prepares you you know for this period
right of like I'm not afraid to look like a fool
you guys thought I was a fool you know you thought I was full at birth
on skin color you thought I was inferior at birth on skin color
you thought this about me on skin color so
you just don't give it
right and so my dad
and the trainings of being a minority in a city
during that time period
prepared me for like
who cares I'm already a fool
but I'll try
but some people who maybe have grown up in a lot of the
similar adversities or worse
or a little bit less adversities
they might take that adversity and say
well I don't have the skills
I'm never going to be able to do this
and they stay stuck in that
they don't say because of this adversity
I don't care and I'm going to go for it
they say because of this adversity
this is who I am
I think
I think, you know,
I think it's,
I think the victim story is marketed to people.
And if you don't take that more victim story,
I think they would have the same experience as me.
Really?
But, you know, I don't want to go too deep in it,
but I would just say that
it wasn't conscious, right?
You just felt it.
You know, you just had a pride, right?
You're the underdog pride, and it came.
And I guess some people,
they might have, you know,
I was lucky I had a father and a mother, right, who, you know, two college educated parents,
my dad via scholarship and my mom later on in life.
And so if anybody was designed to succeed, it was me.
But there were, you know, when I was let on my own and it's time for me to do it on my own
or, you know, who moves from New York City to Texas to go, you know, like the things,
the decisions I made were kind of this like, it can be done.
You know, when I had not that much experience, but I knew I can recruit people to build in to do this solar development project in the Nevada desert, right, and then sold it to capital dynamics, right?
And me and my friends and myself a good chunk of change and also putting solar on the grid.
Like, it's just this belief that you can figure it out and you can do it.
And so I guess that there are some people who get dealt the clouds of inferiority and it stunts them.
Yes.
And I would I would hope that somebody somewhere along the line flips it for them, you know, flips it for them and says, this is a badge of honor, man.
Like you got nothing to lose, right?
Right, right.
You got nothing to lose.
You got no whatever.
Nobody expects anything from you.
No pressure.
No pressure.
No pressure.
could be your greatest gift. This could be your greatest gift. And so for me, I think it, you know,
my greatest gift was like not giving, and my willingness to look like a fool. Yeah. Like,
I'm just winging life like everybody else. Right. Like, I'm winging it, right? And so,
and I'm trying to figure things out. And I'm, I wrote this book for me. And then I figured if I,
if I can, you know, save my own life, like not waste my own life. And maybe it will be useful to
other people. Yes. Right. But occasionally, I get somehow stuck on autopilot and I need to go back in a
book or my wife needs to remind me like, hey, hey, hey, hey, you know, let's think this through. Let's let's,
let's get off autopilot. Let's get off autopilot. You know, you're doing these things, your playing
speech on life. Like, how is this the most fulfilling thing for you to be doing in your life right now?
It's not. I'm deleting them. Okay. You know, things like that, right? There's more things that are
deep in than that. But I think that early experience and my dad gave me the confidence,
seeing him do it in much harder circumstances. Right. Much deeper clouds of inferiority.
Much more hard not like to look at that. And then other people in life, like, I'm like,
you know, I go places and I get inspired by people who make it. You know, a lot of people,
you know they oh well they had this help or where they they look for the thing that was the one piece of help
but they still overcame a lot I'm like wow I'm pretty lazy like if that person could do it and look at
all the advantages I have you know born in the United States of America growing economy growing
population jobs technology I just was born in such an great error like I'm like I can ride this
wave I could surf this wave I can do it yeah I'm going to surf this wave of life and and navigate it the
I want to go, you know. And so I just had this delusional belief and it happened to work out.
That's amazing. You've been around a ton of wealthy individuals. Yeah.
Billionaires, mega billionaires. And you've also been around a lot of broke people who are in a ton of debt or people who've lost all their money.
You've seen the both sides of the spectrum. From your perspective at this stage, what would you say are the three keys to really making more money and also being fulfilled?
filled with the money you have.
Okay, so three keys to making more money.
I would have to say that on the earning part,
like, you know, there's a lot of people who speak better to making more money,
but I will speak just more in terms of like psychology and belief,
is this belief that you can and you're entitled.
And so when you think you can, you read the book.
you read the business book, you read the so-and-so, you make the attempt, etc.
I, you know, a lot of people will just sit in the stands.
Not go up to bat, they won't take the chance.
Not only will you take the swing, you'll strike out and you'll do it again,
and you do it again, and you do it again, and you do it again.
I was just talking with somebody on Twitter and like, oh, yeah, and I break,
and I'm bankrupt.
Isn't it great that you're bankrupt, and now you can still go out and earn and take another swing?
Lose the ego attachment.
Get the fuck out there and let's rip it again.
Yeah.
You know, and so that's what it is in America, right?
Like there's so many people in failure stories and like Steve Jobs got fired and rehired, you know, like things like that, right?
Like all these learnings that you get like, wow, you went to school.
There's an expensive school, but, you know, let's go.
You got subject matter, expecies.
What's the next thing?
What's the next dream on your plate?
Yeah.
And so when you believe you can, you start to take actions that actually develop your ability to do it.
Yes.
And then so that, that is one.
we've already been talking about it.
You have to, you know, this is a saying,
like never tell your dreams to your parents that you want to do it
because even though they love you,
they saw you as a teenager and you didn't take out the garbage, right?
So they're always like, oh, you're sure you really want to do that?
Is this a safe job?
Like, you have such a good thing going on.
Like, you can just get a job at the post office or whatever.
Like, they are afraid for you, right,
to go on your adventure, they want to protect you.
And they also seen you in your clown years, right?
Not the new bad, bald you, right?
And then also, you know, as much as your friends and maybe some of your peer group may love you or not,
a lot of people behave out of fear.
They don't want to look like an idiot.
They had a great idea.
They had a thing they want to do, and they don't do it.
They tried it and it failed or they don't want to do it again.
They don't do it for it.
So your success exposes their cowardice.
Right.
Say it again.
Your success exposes their cowardice.
Right.
So when you go out and you fail, they're like, see, I'm right not to go do that.
See what he did?
He went out and failed.
See, I told him.
You shouldn't have done that.
That was crazy.
Why did he do that?
Right.
So they feel comfortable in their safe life and they're cowardice.
They didn't go live their dreams or take the risk.
or whatever. But if you go succeed, they're like, I'm a coward. Like, I had a chance to do. I could
have done this. I could have been to work. I could have grinded for a year or two years or no award,
live and eat ramen and been successful, right? So I always say people like success, but they love a
failure. Right? They love a failure because it reaffirms that they're doing the right thing
and you're not cowards.
And so be very, very careful about your mindset
that you're getting from other people.
Right?
And success is not just doing the thing and making it.
Success is living a fulfilled life.
It is about the ride, you know?
A lot of people like say, oh, it's easy for you saying,
listen, I've gone like busted twice.
Like I've been fired, I've been whatever.
And it's been, that has been great.
that has been great losing your money getting fired getting humiliated people talking behind your back
you know he's a clown or he can't do this like it's part of it it's like i learned who my friends
were and who weren't i know who my supporters weren't and who weren't i learned about myself like
do i care or do i not care what things really upset me what mistakes did i what did i mistakes like
where did i get lazy where did i get off track on vision you know um it's about that it was great
And then, you know, here I am on this side of the coin, but like, still would have been great.
You know, I did, I tried to do some huge project in Central America.
Went bustle, vaporized, $10 million.
Gone.
Gone.
Gone.
Like, years, time, meetings, whatever, you know.
And it's gone.
I tried to do an importation project in California.
Learned all about permitting in California, the interest groups, etc.
Gone.
The ride, you know.
and it wasn't like now we have a bunch of money it was like that was a very thing that was all your money
it was like oh we might have to come back on staff here mr. Perkins you know and so I think it's like
really be careful about how you speak yourself and the people you keep around you and who you share
your dreams with wow it's interesting and the third thing oh man third thing um just third thing
consistency.
Take it seriously.
I hear a lot of people like they'll have an idea and they're about to go into the execution
phase.
So ideas are like a dime a dozen, right?
There's no market for ideas that I think Paul Graham says, right?
You can't just go, I'm going to sell you this idea.
No.
You can sell a business.
You can sell the executions.
So like 90 something percent of it is the execution.
And they go in the execution phase and they don't take it seriously.
You know, this is your dream.
this is your life.
You know, people take video games,
simple things, you know, party things more seriously
and then they'll take their dreams, right?
And so if your dream is this business or this idea
or take some way of making money,
and it could just be like showing up for work on time, right?
It doesn't have to be this like,
I'm starting this aren't for an oral thing.
It just to be like, I want to be the best person
being consistent and taking it seriously.
Yeah.
Taking it very seriously.
I think more money comes to you when you show the universe how consistent you are with what you care about.
Use all your resources, like, as if your life depends on it.
And the funny thing is, these are the hours of your life.
So your life does depend on it.
This is your life.
This is the time period.
And some people don't take, you know, I'll see guys come in with pitches or things.
I'm like, did you do this?
Did you use this resource?
Did you do whatever?
It's not like they couldn't have thought of it.
It's not like they couldn't have done it.
They just didn't because they didn't take it seriously enough.
You know?
So you use all your resources.
resources at your disposal to drive your fulfillment. If your fulfillment is this job in making money
or this idea, use all your resources at your disposal to make it happen and take it seriously.
And so I think a lot of people are flip it with their own dreams. I don't know why. And I think
it comes down to the, I've done it before too. I've done it in school. It's one of those things
where you have this fear that you can't do well so you don't try your best. You know what I mean?
Like, they like, oh, I'm a free of failing.
So I'm just not going to do my best.
And so when I, when I failed, but I didn't, I didn't really try that hard.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Oh, I wasn't really trying to lift it, you know, like that much.
I wasn't really stretched out or whatever.
And so you're like, you have this excuse that you didn't try hard, so that's why you failed.
Right.
And so it makes your ego feel good.
And I've, I've done that before and I think other people do it too.
I don't know these are the three keys.
I don't know what you could take out of that.
Sure.
I think it's something that, you know, people can take home with and, like, see if that applies to
them. I love this. I'm so excited for people to read this. I've got a few final questions for you,
but die with zero. It's a new approach to looking at your life and maximizing your wealth,
your health, and your time. Getting all you can from your money and your life by Bill Perkins.
Make sure you guys get a few copies of this. I think it's got over 3,000, five-star reviews on Amazon.
So you get a copy there, share it with your friends. I think there's going to be different insights in here
that will give you a perspective on your money and your life that you haven't been thinking about.
This is some of it we've covered, but there's a lot more in this book, so make sure to check it out.
This is a question I ask everyone towards the end.
It's called The Three Truths.
We just ask you three keys to making more money, but this is three truths.
I'd like for you to go into your hypothetical future self as your last day on Earth.
And whether there's technological advances and you live till 200 or it's 100.
It's your last day in this world.
Your space suit goes into outer space for the rest of time.
And you've gotten to experience your life exactly the way you want from this moment until then.
You have an excess of memory dividends, the adventures, the love.
Right.
You wrote it until it all fell off.
I wrote it well.
Okay.
But for whatever reason on this last day, you, everything you've ever created has to go with you.
Okay.
So this book, this conversation, any creation of content in the future, no one has access to it.
Wow.
But you get to leave behind three final lessons.
And this is your last day.
From all the experiences you've had, from the first memory to the last memory dividend,
you get to share three final things in this.
Why don't you ask a softball?
Make it easy.
We've given me a softball here.
Go ahead.
So anyway.
I call this the three truths.
Okay.
What would be those three truths for you on the final day?
Wow.
No matter what the question, love is the answer.
Wow.
You're just on the spot here with these three truths.
Always do your best.
And I learned that from, there's a book called The Four Agreements.
It's my number one recommended book.
but always do your best
and your best is different on different days
but if you do your best
you know
whenever I look back and something
that I say what do you regret
and a lot of people say no regrets I'm like
anytime I have a regret
it's always related to not doing my best
so if I got angry and he yelled at somebody
I didn't do my best I kind of
you're not going to control myself
if I got fired or whatever I didn't do my best
I got to figure that
out, you know, I could have showed up on time or whatever, right? You know, relationships, you know,
that once arrived, I was like, I really didn't do my best, you know? And so always do your best.
Oh my gosh. The last, the final last truth. I'm going to get, I'm going to get technical here
on this one. It's going to be a weird, it's going to come out of nowhere. It's going to come out of nowhere.
Life is movement. Life is experience. Life is experience. Life. Life.
is essentially processing information.
And the more movement and the more information in your process, the more life you will have,
thus the more fulfillment you can potentially have.
So get out there and move.
That's beautiful, man.
I love this.
Again, die with zero.
I want you guys to get a few copies of the book.
You can go to diewithzero book.com.
You go to Amazon, all the different bookstores.
you're also on Twitter, BP 22, I believe, is your Twitter.
If you want that my hot crazy takes, I don't know, I recommend it, but if you want to interact with me, you can.
You got a lot of cool stuff on there on Twitter, Instagram as well, Bill Perkins.
Although it sounds like your social media will be deleted at some point.
It's just me raging, enjoying life, you know, exploring the world.
But if people have questions for you that can go there and connect with you overrun social media and message you.
Yeah.
And definitely read the book first before you have other questions.
So get the book, read it, dive it, and have a conversation with a friend of yours about this book.
And just this isn't to make anyone wrong or make you wrong in your life, but to just question, am I doing things to maximize my memories, my fulfillment, my health, my time, my relationships?
Am I doing the things that my future self will be proud of me doing right now?
And just to ask yourself, and this will give you some of those perspectives.
Yeah, the book is essentially a fulfillment master.
maximizer. That's what I'm solving for. Here's these other variables. We can optimize for those,
but we're really driving net fulfillment. It's net fulfillment over net worth. Yeah, I love that, man.
I want to acknowledge you, Bill, before the final question, for your journey and where you're at
currently, because I know you've lived a pretty wild life, and you've been around a lot of wild
individuals, and you have, it seems to me, gotten to a place where you've found a lot of peace,
harmony, and fulfillment internally. And I think that's hard for,
for people with a lot of money,
even though I think a lot of people think people
with a lot of money are fulfilled and find peace.
Agree with you.
But not all of them are.
And you've been around a lot of billionaires
who have more stress than when they didn't have money sometimes, right?
Maybe some of them have figured it out,
but not all of them.
And I'm not say you have it all figured out,
but you're on a journey of peace and harmony,
which is beautiful to watch.
So I acknowledge you for being on that journey.
Yeah, I mean, it's work.
I'm doing my best.
I'm always trying to work on myself, right?
I have coaches, I have influences, I read books, and I'm here to make mistakes, you know,
and just realize that, you know, you have to forgive yourself. You're human.
Absolutely. Yes. What's your contract, by the way? Do you remember?
I'm a loving, forgiving, caring man.
Yes, you are. I love a man.
Oh, man, you pulled out my contract.
Final?
At nowhere. Do you remember? I know loving, forgiving, caring man.
That's good. That's good, man.
That's amazing.
For those of the underground who know what the contract is,
Fores to you guys.
The final question for you.
What's your definition of greatness?
Wow.
Oh, wow, wow.
I've known.
This is a, you ask the softballs, don't you?
So, you know, I've looked at what you have in your book,
and it's like your special mission, right, in your time.
And I would kind of agree with that.
I think it's a
greatness is
a life lived in integrity
with yourself
with your values
right
when I see something great
and it's like you know
they may not have much
whatever but it was a life lived
in integrity with their values
and their pursuits and their dreams
and so if when I'm being great
I'm in integrity
all my you know my priority is in balance
I'm not skimming I'm doing my
best, I'm in integrity. When I'm out of integrity, I'm not so great. I'm just not so great.
Yeah, exactly. I'm just not. I'm just that guy. I'm like, oh, breakdown. I've had to break down.
And so, you know, and we see that manifest that in different people. People, you know, they're about
forgiveness. You know, I think about Nelson Mandela living in a prison for most of his life and coming
out like, how's this guy so happy and forgiving, you know? Somebody who believes in a cause and like,
I'm, I'm, this is a cause I fight for, you know, women who, who didn't get recognition in,
in earlier times, but believed in what they were doing and, and diligently lived through it.
They believed in the cause or whatever they were working on, whether it be physics or
women's rights or whatever, you know, a life and integrity.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full
rundown of today's episode with all the important links. And if you want weekly exclusive bonus
episodes with me personally, as well as ad-free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our
greatness plus channel exclusively on Apple Podcasts. Share this with a friend on social media and
leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well. Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode
in that review. I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can
support and serve you moving forward and I want to remind you if no one has told you
lately that you are loved you are worthy and you matter and now it's time to go out
there and do something great
