The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Nick Vujicic On Overcoming Extreme Adversity, Depression, & How Our Hardships Can Become Our Strengths
Episode Date: October 20, 2020#302: On this episode we are joined by Nick Vujicic. Nick is an Australian-American born without arms or legs who has become a world-renowned speaker, New York Times best-selling author, coach and ent...repreneur. On today's episode we discuss how Nick overcame extreme adversity and how you can too. We also discuss how to overcome depression and how the hardships we face in life can actually become our strengths and sources of inspiration. This episode is brought to you by Elemis x The Skinny Confidential For the first time ever The Skinny Confidential has launched a n extremely limited Co-Brand with the iconic skincare brand, Elemis. To check out the collab and make sure you are able to grab the cobranded product before they run out head over to www.elemis.com and enter promo code skinny20 for 20% off all Elemis products. This DOES NOT APPLY to the co-brand but it does apply to regular products. To connect with Nick Vujicic click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by Avocado Green Mattress Avocado green mattresses are better for your health and better for the planet. A natural mattress is more sustainable and responsible. It’s an essential piece of a conscious lifestyle. After all, you spend roughly one-third of your life in bed, on a mattress. Detoxing your bed, then moving on to your bedroom, and ultimately your home, can be liberating. Visit www.AvocadoMattress.com and use the code SKINNY200 for $200 off Avocado’s NEW All Latex Mattress and Luxury Organic Crib Mattresses. Valid now through November 30, 2020. This episode is brought to you by Brooklinen Brooklinen sheets are the perfect place to start making your mornings great. They offer sheets for every season using the most luxurious materials without the luxury mark up. Brooklinen is SO confident in their product that all their bedding comes with a lifetime warranty! To Get 10% off your first order and free shipping use promo code SKINNY at Brooklinen.com This episode is brought to you by Pique Tea Ever since I discovered Pique Tea, I’ve been obsessed. I now incorporate at least a cup of Pique into my daily routine and it’s really been increasing my productivity levels. Pique Teas are made from organic high quality tea leaves and ingredients sourced from around the world, delivering up to 12x more antioxidants than any ofor heavy metals, pesticides and toxic mold so you know you’re getting the best stuff. Use code “SKINNY” for 10% off piquetea.com. They rarely (if ever) have sales so you’d definitely want to check this out! P.S. This discount does not apply to their fermented pu’er due to their limited quantity.ther tea. What’s better is that they are all Triple Toxin Screened Produced by Dear Media
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This episode is brought to you by Elemis and get excited because it's Elemis times the skinny
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2020. On that note, let's get into the show.
She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire. Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride. Get ready for some major realness. Welcome to the Skinny Confidential, him and her. I think people themselves are their greatest limited factor.
And it's that mindset.
And it's that wanting to live.
Wanting to love yourself.
And wanting to believe that you are here for a greater purpose.
Hello, everybody.
Bringing in that Tuesday energy.
That clip was from our guest of the show today, Nick Vujicic.
And on this episode, we have a plate full of inspiration for you.
If you're feeling down and out, you're feeling like you're having a tough time,
this is the episode for you.
For those of you that are new to the show, my name is Michael Bostic.
I am a serial entrepreneur and brand builder.
Most recently, the co-founder and CEO of the Dear Media Podcast Network. And next to me,
swiping on her phone, not yet super engaged with me, is my wife and co-host, Lauren.
What are you doing here? Well, you didn't bring me coffee.
Come on, get it together. We got to bring the energy to the people.
This is what you do. You bring yourself coffee and you didn't even bring me a peak tea or a coffee.
Well, this one's from a lot earlier.
It was before you were awake and it's soggy and old and done and you don't even want it.
You don't want this nasty coffee.
Okay.
So let's talk about who our guest of the show today is.
Like really let's dive deep because he was so inspirational.
I'm so excited for this episode.
I love stories about people who have beaten all the odds and lived their life on their
own terms and helped other people and inspired people. And that's what I got out of this episode.
Nick is an incredible character. He's an Australian-American that was born with Tetra
Amelia syndrome. It's a rare disorder characterized by the absence of arms and legs. So yes, you heard
that right. Nick was born without arms and legs. He tells the story on the show. His parents,
you know, they did an ultrasound in Australia. They looked, the doctor actually didn't even
identify that he was missing his arms and legs. And when he, when he came out of his mother,
is that the right way to say that, Lauren? When he came out, they discovered it then. And so,
you know, he's had to live his entire life without the use of limbs. And he's really,
really inspirational what he's done. He's built a massive career. He's made a beautiful family.
He's got four children and it's just a really inspirational what he's done. He's built a massive career. He's made a beautiful family. He's got four children.
And it's just a really inspirational story.
And I think it really provides a lot of perspective on the challenges some people face in this
world and how to overcome them.
Another plus of this episode, too, is that he is a motivational speaker.
So he's very, very good at getting on a mic.
And sometimes, you know, we interview all different kinds of guests and you never know how comfortable someone getting on a mic. And sometimes, you know, we interview all different
kinds of guests and you never know how comfortable someone is with a mic. And Nick just happens to be
so eloquent and so smart, so thoughtful and so compelling.
With that, guys, without further ado, let's welcome Nick Vujicic to the show. this episode is brought to you by peak tea recently i found out my blood type and i realized
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This is the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
We got to come visit you in Dallas.
Come.
It sounds very, very interesting and intriguing, and it sounds like it's pulling me towards
Dallas. So we'll definitely come see you.
Nick Vujicic.
That's how you do it. Correct. Did I say it right?
I hope so. No, you did perfect.
Okay, perfect. I know. I like to
get the names exactly right when we do this.
It's just one of those things. No, I get it.
It's all good. Four kids.
Four children.
A seven and a five-year-old son.
Okay.
And they've started school straight up on the gun, a private charter hybrid homeschool,
which is what we had out here anyway.
Explain what a private charter hybrid is.
So it's a classical Christian education where you can opt out of going there every day.
So you do two or three days at
school and two days at home. So they do that in Texas. I like that a lot. That's kind of what
we're doing before we shut down. That's what we were doing at this company was like some days you
can come in, some days you can work from home. And I found that it was very, very productive.
The whole team was loving it. We've been doing that for several years and in fact before i met my wife she was actually helping her boss do the homeschool part for her kids and how old are the two others
no they have we have twin girls oh my god we have identical twin girls you're a busy guy
dude we're done though uh and they're nearly three in december and how are they? They're amazing. Like how they doing?
Loving it.
Loving the new pool that we have there.
It was a bit like I was wondering if Texas is going to have a second shutdown,
then there's going to be an economic correction like out here in California.
But Texas ain't doing that.
Texas sounds fun.
You actually breathe a lot easier.
And I just want you to know, I'm an Aussie.
You don't say.
California is in my blood.
Like I'm a dual citizen, US, Australia, swore I would never leave California.
Every time I left Dallas, my wife never brought it up.
But I just told her, babe, for the record, I will never move to Dallas.
I don't like the heat which we just fixed finished i don't like the mosquitoes which i can't kill because i have no hands and like i just those
two things and the climate here is beautiful but man i have not missed california for a minute. How bad are the mosquitoes?
Mosquitoes eat her alive.
Yeah, me too.
Well, it depends on the week.
Depends on the rain.
I'm loving the rain.
We've had a whole annual fall of a Californian annual fall in like freaking six weeks.
What is your setup in Texas?
Like, do you have a garden?
Do you have like, what's your like day to day? Do you go outside? Like what's what's your deal we used to have that in california this is not part
of the interview right this is a pre-interview no we're just talking oh we're just shooting the
shit i love it it's almost like we're at happy hour with each other that's literally how we do
it should i then add some more hand sanitizer here we go. So we used to have a beautiful garden here in California.
No, we don't have a mature garden over there yet.
No mature trees yet.
But eventually, step by step, we got to get the kids a playground first.
Okay.
Yeah.
But it sounds like it's a lot of nature.
We're in the farmland.
Yeah, we got an acre out there and there's farms.
You actually don't feel like you're in a city downtown anywhere.
And we're 35 minutes from downtown. But it's probably, it's also like probably a nice drive,
like 35 minutes driving in LA is a pain in the ass because you're just stuck bumper to bumper
looking at the back of somebody's car for whatever and all the buildings and trash everywhere. So
it's like, you know, I always say like 35 minutes driving out in the country is much different than
35 minutes driving in the city. No, it is.
I mean, you've got 10 minute country
and then you go into freeway
and you're downtown 20, 25 minutes to Penn Zone.
There's some traffic, but nothing like LA.
Like it's beautiful.
For me to go through DFW airport compared to LAX,
I mean, they're one of my fingerprints here and everything.
Oh my God.
I'm joking.
So let's-
I thought you were serious for a second i
was like what i was i was gonna wait and see if that one went on your head so let's let's sometimes
things go over my head let's get into the interview portion so for those that are unfamiliar with you
let's get a little background let's talk about how you got here how you left for texas and and
what you're all about here and we're gonna give us the background your childhood first of all
thanks to thanks to ed my let fat fat for like making this connection ed my let i fucking love
you ed i love you too everyone has a crush on everybody who listens to this show loves it i
love ed my let so a background i was born in 1982 to boris and duska voychich who actually fled
yugoslavia in 1960s My grandfathers were both in prison for
their faith. Talk about oppression and rules and regulations and different doctrinal values
compared to the government. Anyway, my parents were poor, went through refugee camps, met in
Australia, got married, and I was their firstborn son. They had no idea that I was going to be born
this way.
My mom actually was a nurse and she delivered hundreds of babies as a midwife. So she knew everything about medicine and birth and pregnancy and all that. So she was extremely careful.
No thalidomide, no wine, no caffeine, nothing. She was extra, extra careful. And she actually
told my dad something doesn't feel right. Anyway, they did three ultrasounds and every time they did
an ultrasound, they got so excited that they didn't check that I had arms and legs. So when I was born,
the doctors held me low enough. And the nurses started like, oh my God. And they held me so low
that my mom couldn't see me, but my dad did see my shoulder. And he nearly fainted seeing my
shoulder and no arm. They took me to the corner of the room and my mom's like, what's going on?
She heard me cry. She knew I was alive. That's a good thing. And then they took me out of the room
and they basically were told, sorry, we didn't pick up an ultrasound that you had a child with
no arms and no legs in your womb. Sorry, we never gave you an opportunity to kill him how does that
happen how do they miss that i 1980s i don't know australia i don't know it to me they said we
didn't give you an opportunity to abort yeah to abort because you know horrible okay so that's
the quality of life right so little did they know what kind of quality of life I would have, which is why I'm quite
a megaphone going to be very loud for pro-life next year moving on.
And I'm not doing the motivational circuit anymore, going around the world anymore.
There are some deep things that I believe in that now I feel like I'm a poster child
for to help people know that everyone has value and give everyone a chance. When you don't get a miracle, you can still be one.
And yeah, I'm going to say I'm thanking God that they didn't see that just in case. They didn't
know that I'd walk and I have a little foot. For those of you watching on the bottom left of my
torso, I've got a little foot with two toes, which now I can type 53 words a minute on a normal computer.
Shut up.
After two cups of coffee.
Yeah.
Holy shit.
That's cool.
It is cool.
It is cool.
Little did they know that I'd walk around and swim and golf and fish and skydive and all these kinds of things.
You know, it was hard going to school.
First one, actually special needs child to go to the mainstream school of the Victorian education system in Australia.
I was on TV, young citizen of the year, trailblazing special needs integration into the education system.
Bullying was hard.
Talk about that a little bit because bullying, online bullying, whatever it is, is still happening every single day, all day long.
So can you talk about, like, actually go in depth about it?
I mean, I would come home crying saying, mom and dad, why was I born this way?
And they didn't know why.
I mean, the doctors didn't know why.
They didn't know why.
Lady Gaga don't know why I was born this way.
And did you remember that song?
I just want to make some people laugh because we're about to go deep.
But the bottom line here is I felt like it's not like one day I woke up and I looked at myself in the mirror and
said, you know, what happened? You know, like I knew I had no arms and no legs, but no one thought
or made a big deal until I actually went to school. So I already had a brother and sister
born after me with arms and legs, 24 first cousins around me as my community.
Then I went to school and people laughing at me.
People, whatever.
Calling me names.
Not being, you know, X'd out of a group, right?
And then I'd actually find myself in the garden at school alone.
Pretending that I'm just looking for stuff, but I just don't want to see anyone.
Don't want to talk to anyone. I had a lot of complexes in my elementary school years where I had a teacher aide to take me to the restroom,
but I didn't want a stranger to see me naked. And so I actually would not go to toilet the whole
day at school. So I learned how much to drink during the whole day. So then no one, no stranger
would. So there were those things that I had to really overcome.
Then I'm trapped talking to a teacher who don't even feel like being there while the kids are playing something that I can't play.
And then I'm realizing, wait a second, you're not here for fun.
This is your job.
Mom and dad have a job.
I'm not going to get a job.
I'm just a burden to everyone.
I can't do everything.
And I'm going to be picked on for the rest of my life.
Girlfriends, boyfriends, holding hands. I'm not going to get a girlfriend. I'm thinking at age
eight, I'm never going to get married. Even if I got married, I can't even hold my wife's hand.
Even if I had kids, I can't even hold my kids when they're crying. What kind of a father is
that going to be? What kind of a life do I really have? My mom and dad helped me to believe that
there was a creator and having
faith in God and believing that there's a greater plan for your life. I'm like, but what the heck?
Where is he? And I didn't understand. And so I hated the idea of a loving God for many years.
And I went to a climax of depression where I attempted suicide at age 10. I had thought of
suicide for two years into that.
I'm on the kitchen counter watching my mom cook and I loved it. It was therapeutic. It was safe.
It was rhythmic for my own fear and anxiety of life. And then I'm trying to think like,
what if I just snap my neck here and just try to jump off and pretend that it was an accident,
but I got to make sure that I actually kill myself and not just get paralyzed i mean there's one thing worse than
having no arms no legs then i can't move i still can move so then i actually decided i'm gonna tell
dad dad i would just want to soak in my bathtub and it was the first time i looked at the bathtub
as my coffin we filled it up with six inches of water i turned over three times trying to choke
on the water trying to figure out how much air do you holding your lungs before you let it out and
then start choking on the water it was scary it was very scary and on the third attempt of rolling
over i was stopped by one thought and it was the visual in my mind seeing my mom and my dad and my
brother crying at my grave wishing they could have done something more and they did nothing but love me my mom and dad there was there was strong there was strong i think they they disciplined me they
got that belt on my butt when i you know made some trouble and they found my fingerprints and stuff
but when i go to a store and i want something they would never give it to us they knew as refugees as
kids you never give your kids everything you want, when you want it,
how they want it, because they're never going to be thankful for anything. They never gave that to
me. I vacuumed the floor for $2 a week. I bought my own stuff. If I wanted toys, if I want to give
money to an orphan, which is what we were told to do one day, I was doing that as a kid. So
they didn't give me any slack, but they did love me all the
way through that. The first turning point out of depression was age 13, playing my favorite sport,
soccer. A guy kicked the ball to me. I jumped up in the air thinking that was a cool thing.
The ball hit my foot so bad, I sprained my foot and I couldn't walk for three weeks.
Staring at the ceiling, I'm thinking as
a 13-year-old, man, this sucks. I'm thankful for my little foot and I'm not going to be angry for
what I don't have from this day on. At age 15, I had a spiritual, cool little ripening thing that
was my bigger question as to why I was born this way and that faith element came in and my life then changed forever at school i was 17
and i just got elected on the student government board as a prefect in australia and what is a
prefect for the for the americans that are listening it's like you're the leader of your
like you know you got the president vice president sure the government body basically okay the student body the student body sorry so the prefect and then i'm in i'm in the restroom and i fly by
the janitor his name's arnold 61 year old arnold he looks at me and says you're a prefect i said
yeah he said congratulations i said thank you he said I know what you're going to be. I said, what's that?
He said, you're going to travel around the world and you are going to be a speaker.
He said, let me arrange your first speech. I'm like, you are crazy, dude. Like, no way.
He said, yeah, why don't you talk to that little student body group that, you know,
goes there every Friday and you just share your story. I said, I don't have a story. And I walked away. Next day he said, speak. I said, no way. Like this guy's nuts. He's not leaving me alone.
Three months later, he twists my arm. I said, yes. And I'm finding myself in front of six students.
My palms are sweating. My knees are shaking. I don't know what to say. And just start speaking
from the heart. People are crying. And I'm like, wow. At 17, I'm thinking I nearly ended my life because I felt like I had no hope.
And here I am with still no certainty of future if I'm going to get married, if I'm really going
to blah, blah, blah. But people received hope. And then I started doing speeches and I went to,
I was in the stock market. I learned a lot about financial literacy because my mom and
dad said, you need to be a millionaire. You need to be a millionaire just to survive. Hurry up.
And so I read books. I went to a stock market, went to real estate, and I did a double degree
in accounting and financial planning. And my dad said, Nick, you should start a business and have
your employees to be your hands and feet. Graduated 21. But as soon as I graduated, I went into full-time
speaking. And in that time, I was maturing and going around the world and thinking, man,
there's 2 billion people even back then who only had a handful of food. I'm like, I just want to
do my part. And if I could be paid to help someone be inspired on some sort of level,
that seems like the best job in the world.
Recently, we had a wellness expert on the podcast and on the blog and they were telling us all about
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So who were most of the people, like the kinds of people you were speaking to? Was it people that
were just looking for inspiration or people that were looking for perspective and like what types
of organizations and how did that all kind of start snowballing? So between ages 19 and 23, a lot of it was in the faith sector, where I would talk about
my faith and help people understand that you're not alone, that you can overcome all things.
So that was that.
But then it really pivoted pretty quickly to corporate, market, conferences, big companies,
billionaires that said, I want you to come to
my country, Brazil, several times because I have 60,000 employees and we can't put them all in our
stadium. So now that's morphed into 74 countries. I've been to China 37 times, Singapore 14. I've
met with 21 presidents and vice presidents was able to actually address
10 national governments i just talked to the united nations yesterday that's being showed
next week now i feel even more honored that you flew all the way out here to talk to me
talking to governors and presidents and shit it's my own honor and you guys are quite influential
thank you for for bringing some some help especially in time as times of these and
bringing me along and just allowing me to spread my message that's awesome so that's basically where
i'm at so i help governments bring in now social emotional learning curriculum that doesn't teach
just right at school we don't want to just teach them academics anymore everyone's understood now
we need to teach values we need to teach self-awareness we need to teach principles and help them not just say or hear us say don't do
that because we said so actually give them the canvas to actually think for themselves and as a
school learn from each other have empathy for one another and understand our value as all human
beings and proceed forward. So
I'm now a youth advisor to three governments around the world for anti-bullying and anti-suicide
programs for teenagers all around the world. I love that. I mean, before Lauren's grandmother
passed, you know, whenever Lauren would get down, and Lauren, I don't want to take your story,
but she would always tell her, like, get outside yourself, right? Like, start,
think about other people, get outside yourself. And I think one thing we try to do on this show is to bring on
all sorts of different people to, you know, present all different walks of life and to say,
like, hey, like, maybe you think your circumstance is tough, or maybe you think you don't have,
but like, look at all these other experiences. And there's a way to look at the world in a way
that you have. And I think that we do is an abundant place as opposed to just like this
oppressive negative space. You know, I think if we can have more conversations like that, which is why it's so important
for us to highlight positive people and positive conversations and get away from negative ones,
like I think it's a noble thing to do.
I do believe that a hundred percent.
And I'm going to add a layer to that because what I believe that every single human being
is made of is a soul, spirit, mind, and body.
And one of the biggest things that helped me
to find hope in my life was the instigation of purpose if you can help someone who maybe can't
help themselves which is actually something that we've been doing as a family when we can
whether they can thank us or not it's about you understanding that no matter where the climate of
the world is that you have your place in this world in trying to help someone.
Whether it's just a friend,
you're a friend to someone,
depression and suicide have doubled.
No one has got the stats yet,
but I'm telling you right now,
I've got friends in 43 countries.
I've got governments-
This year or just in what span of time?
Already in six months.
Okay, yep.
Already in six months.
I have 43 friends in,
sorry, I have friends in 43 countries and in
government places they've got data already that they don't want to share yet suicide has doubled
depression has doubled addiction has doubled most of the abuse that was happening in homes
were over summer months when everyone's home what did covid now do to that listen i get in a lot of
trouble and flack and it's on my stories and I leave it up because I'm somebody, if I put something out there, I'm not going to
take it down. It's out there and I put it out. And, but like my whole thing is like, listen,
obviously this is a serious situation that we're dealing with, with COVID, but there's also a lot
of other situations that I don't think people are paying attention to. Suicide, addiction, abuse,
all of these things. And it's like, we want to believe as a, as a population that it's like
all of these things are isolated to one thing,
but everything has a ripple effect. And when you make one decision, many other things are impacted.
And so I'm glad you're speaking on this because it's not that we have to stop doing one thing,
it's that we have to also be aware of what that one thing potentially causes.
Exactly. And whether that's from some organization that makes a blanket rule about something,
or, I mean, just one example i can
look you straight in the eye and tell you some massive massive organizations in the billions
have told me that child poverty has now already in three months gone backwards 10 to 20 years
where he's like we're back in the 90s now like it's sad. And so what I mean with all that is you, yes, going away from the
negative, but finding how you can help rescue one of those 30 million sex slaves, right? And doing
what you can to really check in on your friend, not just text, call them, how are you doing? And
actually overcome your fear of inadequacy thinking that oh what am i going to say how am
i going to encourage them they're going through the same thing put that aside and say no how are
you because i'm i just want to say this before before this is really important for everyone
understand what you see is what you get with me i've got nothing up my sleeves this motivational
speaker that's gone around the world and spoken to 9.5 million people face to face, a billion people in China on TV, a billion people on TV outside of China.
I was on the floor myself, March, April.
I had a numb mind for four weeks.
Two weeks of panic attacks.
My business, for-profit, non-profit's fine.
For-profit business went to zero in January.
I watched the world news on the third
week of january i emailed my family buy your masks now it's going to be gold and stock up
on food because i see things coming before the media comes here and so even with that everything
went to zero and i'm the one who talks about motivation and hope and september may be the first month on my for-profit that i've actually stopped losing
money and i still haven't paid myself yeah and i honestly think and it's hard you are for anyone
that story though and this is what i want people to hear is like you're maybe and that's good it's
starting to see profit but like there's a lot of business that still are not in that position and not even close and maybe never
coming back and maybe never coming back and that is all difficult i my mom's sister lost an aunt
to covid three weeks ago okay she was fresh there's nursing home and but but the bottom line
is this 2020 has been really rough yeah and even the strongest of us were on the floor.
And so I just want everyone to know, take one day at a time.
You have hope.
You have value.
You're not valued on what plan you think you had, your success of whatever.
You, you are irreplaceable.
You are beautiful and you're loved. And you're here for a reason for such a time
as this to still make a difference in someone else's life and with that instigation of purpose
say okay of the crap that's going on in the world of the people that i know how can i try to do
something small i mean look what the janitor did me. I don't think you realize too how powerful it is that you're having these conversations
about suicide and online bullying because my mom committed suicide when I was 18 and
no one talked about it.
And so I was, and I was telling him this the other day, I'm 18, I'm sitting there and like
every, it was taboo.
No one wanted to talk about what happened or anything.
And so I was sitting there alone. So these conversations to me are so progressive and so important to have because there are so many people struggling with people that have lost people from suicide or they're struggling with themselves.
Yes.
I think that it needs to keep opening up and it shouldn't be so taboo. I 100% agree. I 100% agree. And I feel like the next generation, though, will look at me. Can you imagine this visual? I heard someone on a TEDx video. I didn't watch the video, but someone said, can you imagine in 25 years, your own kids looking at you and crying? ever let that happen to all those 30 million slaves for so long how could you not do everything
you can that if we can't help africa can we teach africa how to be financially sustainable and
actually get that food out somehow through education and all this to me, it's like, it's not a burdensome thing. It's like, how can I really
do everything I can, where I understand that the world will always have problems,
but my place in this world, I want to make this world a better place. And what I think COVID has
done is it made us have a deeper conversation with ourselves that we haven't had?
Yes, it has to a lot.
Yes, of course.
It's had and we have to.
There's a lot of people that are forced to look inward now because we've lost a lot of our external, you know, vices, right?
We're just we're sitting at home.
We're alone.
Many of us are isolated.
Luckily, you know, Lauren and I get to have these conversations with people like you and
we're at home together.
But there's there's many of us that are at home and they don't get to get into the workplace and they don't get to be social and they don't have a partner.
And I empathize with those people because it's been a painful place. Lauren and I have been,
like, you know, Lauren for longer than me, but in a, let's say a public space for a long time.
And I've watched this space over the years. Like I've never engaged in the last five years in a
space that's been more negative. And I think it's because there's, it's not because people are negative people. It's
because they're in a pained place. They're in pain. And I get that it comes, but like, if we
can, if we can have conversations that say, Hey, like, let us help you lift you out of your pain
and figure it and show you a way out. Like that's ultimately what I want to be a part of. let's talk about one of my personal favorite subjects my sheets brooklinen been using
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It's awesome. So let's do that right now. I'm going to unpackage four or five steps. Here we
go. So number one, right? When you are just on the floor, and this is not just now, like we're
talking about 48-year-old women who are watching this right now or listening to us who are still disabled and handicapped by what their father told them when they were nine
years old. I tell teenagers all the time, I believe it's worse being a broken home than having no arms,
no legs. It's not about the face of adversity. It's about the actual how you deal with adversity.
And so believing that beautiful things can come from broken pieces still, that's hard to believe.
But here are some steps to help you on that way.
Number one is embrace what you feel. I think one of the biggest struggles when we're in pain
is just trying to oppress that yuck and then how to get unstuck of the yuck. But when my parents
saw me, same thing. They had to go through shock. They had to go through grief. They had to go through confusion.
They had to go through all these things.
And then, number one, so not oppressing and dealing with that.
So if that means journaling, if that means talking to somebody, if that means you can't
even pray for yourself spiritually, ask someone to back you up spiritually and pray for you.
I believe all that's very important.
But to deal with those
emotions somehow, eventually, in that hand in hand, step number two is to give yourself time.
Time. Time is your friend. But there is a time where your spirit awakens and says,
I am sick of being on this couch eating potato chips and being addicted to this and this
and pornography and all that.
And I've lost my job and I don't even know where to begin now.
How do I even begin to have confidence to even start drafting my resume for hopefully
another job that I don't know even exists or not for me?
How do you do that?
You give yourself time and then you listen to Skinny Confidential and a guy without arms
and legs tells you, get up off your butt, go get up, stop that potato chip addiction
and pornographic addiction.
You're better than that.
Get up and don't play the victim card.
Great.
We're all victims in this.
But the people who understand how to make the world the best place we could be are those
who don't play the victim card and say, I'm going to do everything I can. So step number three.
Can we distinguish between that? I agree. We are all victims, but then there is playing the
victim card. Can we talk about that a little bit? Because I think there's a distinction there to be
made. Because it's not saying that we're not all going through a really shitty year, but it's also
saying there's a choice you have there. Yeah. And there's a time where you can cry.
There's a time you can be depressed.
There's a time where you blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But you can't stay there.
Because who couldn't play the victim card?
The 13 children, me and my wife's sponsor in Africa and Mexico, talk about a victim card.
The person down the street who was sexually abused by her whatever, play a victim card.
But it's when you actually intentionally feed your spirit and your soul and your mind with
inspiration.
What are you feeding your mind that either makes you comfortable there that you never
will get out of that dark room?
Feed your mind with stuff like this that you can say, out of that dark room feed your mind with stuff like
this that you can say wow that's an amazing story ed my let lauren michael people who are actually
like you all could have you know everyone's got something but you actually realize it's not about
what you dealt it's how you deal with it And where you realize that if you are sexually abused, it's not the end of your life.
If your mom does commit suicide at 18, it's not the end of your life.
If your business fails and your dreams change or go away, you're more valuable than a dream or success or this or that, you, 10 years, 20 years from now, can find someone else
who is 18, whose mom just committed suicide. And you can say, my mom did too. But this is my
husband. This is my child. And this is our life. My name's Lauren. and i want you to know i'm with you you're not alone same thing
like when i met someone with no arms and no legs and his parents you know found a lot of hope
just meeting my parents can you imagine that was probably powerful wow it was beat yeah
like i could die after that moment and be absolutely happy after that
but little did i know that anyway so that's that so that's that's when the victim card
what are you feeding yourself what are you allowing yourself to get fat on in your mind
right there's fat in the right and that's unhealthy when it's overboard. Same thing with the mind.
And also, I think, too, I like to take inventory of what I'm feeding my mind.
Like, I actually like to dissect, OK, like, is this content serving me?
You know, and whether that's replacing a gossip podcast with something that is really educational
or an audible book
or something that's going to expand my mind.
I think it's important to really examine
what you're looking at.
Like not scrolling through Instagram.
No, I think like that.
I mean, I think, you know,
there's a time and a place to feel those feelings,
but then there's a time, like you said,
to pull yourself out of those feelings
and get back on the horse,
for lack of a better analogy. And to give a chance, if you cannot get out of it, that someone
then comes in your life where you're actually open and listening and you're not in this little
bubble that's watching the news and being terrified and handicapped with fear. Yes. I mean, this,
and the, and the content that we consume right now in the news, like that's a whole another story.
We could do a whole another tangent, but I just i just but i but i a hundred percent agree with you
i mean like and that's why i wanted to make the distinction because it's not like we never say
people aren't victims why we say actually everybody's a victim to some degree of something
but it's like what do you do with that after so imagine this this is really cool actually i've
never thought of this before but just here at the end of your day we almost do a subconscious
conscious without knowing kind of like an update of the day before you go to bed what did what
changed from yesterday nah you still suck you still you're still a failure yeah you're nothing
yeah you failed and you'll never don't let that news go into you no oh something i i was i heard
about blah blah blah that was inspiring i read a book you know i mean
entrepreneurs understand that like me i've i've lost my money twice already last one was 2011
and those who really become successful understand that money comes and goes
and and feelings and depression are real so when you, you embrace it, you deal with it from a healthy level,
then you give yourself a chance to go through that time and arc, but then give yourself a
chance to get out of it. Yes? You mentioned something, but you said your thoughts. Your
thoughts are powerful. Even this morning, I woke up with a negative thought and immediately I was
like taking inventory of my thought and I was like, uh-uh, something I'm grateful for, replace it.
I think that sometimes we tell ourselves all these narratives and negativity and we need
to actually be almost stepping outside ourself and looking at our thoughts and saying, how
are our thoughts actually affecting our day-to-day?
Absolutely.
And that's the reframing.
You hold captive that thought, take that negative
thing out, put in something positive. So I actually grew up learning how to reframe.
And so when I wanted something on the shelf really, really badly, and my mom said, no,
get it yourself. Without her knowing if it was impossible or not, I then found the dignity and found the courage because of my desire to look at
something as an obstacle, as an opportunity instead to know, well, what else is possible?
Because I don't know what's impossible until I know what's possible.
Most of everything I've ever done without arms and legs has already been broken as a
myth of impossible, right?
It's impossible that I have an incredible wife that I have, and I don't have hands to hold her hand, but I realize, you know, I don't need to
hold a hand. I can hold her heart. It's beautiful and amazing, miraculous that when my kids are
crying, I can't put my arms around them, but I realize they can put their arms around me.
It's miraculous to understand that there are many things that other able-bodied people can do,
but man, there are some things that other able-bodied can do that could never do what i do and taking that inventory
and trying and reframing that that this is not just all negative this is an awakening this is
an obstacle that would maybe bring one of the greatest opportunities in your life whether it's
in business or family.
Do you know how many families are breaking right now?
I mean... You know, through the roof, right?
Through the roof because we're facing the music.
But at the same time, there are other families who are seeing this as an opportunity to give
their marriage another chance.
There are parents who are giving their friendship with their children another chance
because they're home and they're with them and they realize, oh my gosh, I didn't even know you.
And some people make that decision to say, I want to try hard to have what we once had. Lauren's been, you know, we just had our first child.
She's been a little postpartum this year. We've talked about it on the show a lot. And she was,
you know, in a, I don't want to say negative headspace, but she was, you know, she was
struggling with postpartum. And I kept reinforcing her like, cause this year has been tough on
everybody. It's been like, if you look at what's happening to businesses and what's happening with
deaths and like all in the election, it's all crazy, but I keep reinforcing like this is the
best year of my life. And people like maybe sometimes don't like to hear about
my framework is this. I had my first child this year. I get to spend all this time with her that
I would never have got to spend because two weeks into this, she was born in January. I went right
back to work. The lockdown forced me to be home with my wife and my child. We have dogs, like I've
got to spend time with them. But like I realized like, holy shit, I would have never had these first eight months with my daughter, first daughter,
if this didn't happen. And so I just keep going through with the framework of that.
And it motivates me. And I think, you know, sometimes people don't like to hear that because
like they say, oh, you're just this eternal optimist. It's like, no, it's not that. It's
just that the other frame of reference would be me saying like, oh man, this is terrible. I hate
being home with my kid. I'm bringing that energy energy to her i don't like being home with my wife
business is tough like you know revenue for this like for everything we're doing right went into
the shit like yeah of course it happened to everybody yeah but i still think like this is
and i keep saying this the best year of my life for so many other reasons even though the world's
in a ton of pain i just i just don't i just don't want to acknowledge that it's negative all the
time i want to acknowledge that it's also all the time. I want to acknowledge that it's also very positive. Exactly. So actually, you've been reading my notes on my palm
cards. The third thing is about the attitude of gratitude. And this year sucked so bad that for
the very first time in my whole life, not only was I thankful for what I had, I actually, it was
so hard that I had to say, Nick, do you remember this variable and that
variable, which really could have gone even worse?
So when it gets really tough, if you have to even bring in what did go bad, but really
could have gone way worse, I've actually had to do that.
And then fourthly is doing everything you can
so i want to also give credit to lewis howes and ed mylet because those were the two people
that i happen to be on their podcast as my plane i mean going straight into the ground those are
two good people to be surrounded by during tough times amazing people are you kidding me and they
inspire me like yeah nick just do a podcast.
Just start from scratch.
And those were the two people that I could pick brains on and have wisdom.
And they inspired me to get it done.
I did it 24 weeks ago.
Is it where I thought it could be?
No.
Do I even know exactly what I'm about?
No.
But I had to do everything I can to then know what is in my control and what is not in my control.
Therein, as a vicious, visionary entrepreneur, I can go to sleep knowing I've done everything that
I can. Because in so much uncertainty, no one's going to tell me what's really going to go on
more than I can actually do. So when you hustle and you do everything you can, and then you accept what
results that is, and then accept what you can't change. Now you're going to be on that path and
back up on that horse. How did you get to that place though? Because I think that's, I 100% agree
focusing on what's in your control and not thinking about what's not. Because if you've done everything
you possibly can, like the reason you can sleep well is because there's nothing else to do, right? Like that's it.
But how did you get to that place being able to accept, you know, your fate, what's in your
control, what's not, and how much work did it take you to get there? Because I think a lot of people
listen like, oh, easy to just say that. But like, what are the tactics to actually snap into that?
So for me, from a personal point, I couldn't do it without my faith in God, believing that up until now, age 37, that when I did not have strength, it was wonderful and humbling to admit I need him.
And because I have that, I have unlimited understanding on the fact that I know very little and I can do very little compared to who he is in my opinion and my belief. So I'm
not alone. And then you go back to the most desirable things in your life that you still have.
I have my wife. We have a bed. We have a house. We have children. We have food on the table. I'm so thankful for life where we were so distracted and even subconsciously already
going to some...
All success is not good because from a mental health point of view, you reframe again your
self-awareness and self-value because of who you think the world thinks of you or what
you think you've achieved or how much money you have in the bank and when that's taken away or even a rhythm or this or that when that's taken away we
realize how fragile we really are as human beings and that's when people start looking inwardly with
the spirit and soul but really be thankful and hold on to i'm gonna take one day at a time i
know i don't feel yet what i want to feel i don't feel strong
dude i'm looking you straight in the eye my first good day of 2020 was six weeks ago
you have no idea and we're in september and we're in september like i've had a really rough time
but i came alive because finally some things are slowly coming together and the holes in
the boat are being plugged.
And what I love about this is the greatest revolutions and birthing in the corporate
world of multi, multi-billion dollar companies, most of them always came from a massive crisis or solving a problem there's
this book by ryan holiday that i've been reading this entire year and i just keep opening a page
have you ever connected with him no i haven't you should he i think you guys would get along yeah
is he in dallas or austin he's in austin he's not far um i think maybe we can all go have a drink
are they close or no it sounds great yeah I'd love to have
a scotch with you guys I would love to have a scotch with you I don't fucking drink scotch
but I would love to have a scotch I drink a lot of scotch I like tequila there's this book that
he wrote called the obstacle is the way and it's so fucking relevant good for right now good I mean
it's just you open a page and it's everything you're saying it's like you have to go through it awesome there's with crisis comes great opportunity yep i love that
you can i can i just say one other thing because on a personal note family was everything
if if i'm i'm not belittling the pain i'm not belittling the suffering i'm not belittling all
the stuff going on 2020 but from my personal point of view one of the other things that i was thankful for that could have gone even worse was that covid did not come that i would have continued
thinking one day i'm going to slow down to be at home full time that was my next question which was
you've spoken about your wife a lot yeah i love oh my god you would you
you want me as a guest no one even knows her story in full yet because i'm gonna come on with
you we'll do a him and her show done okay we're back in november if you want i'm sure and we can
come out there we'll come out there sick we're coming out there in october we used to do like
a traveling road show here we were really yeah we did that's how like this whole thing got started headsets and
going on the country well can we have a scotch while we do an interview with you and your wife
i don't know if she drinks scotch she can have tequila and i have no problem why would we try
and make sure that no video of me has alcohol there but we can just pretend it's apple juice
and no one here just understands that you want some apple, but we can just pretend it's apple juice. And no one here just understands that.
You want some apple juice?
Yeah, we can just say it's apple juice.
Put it in one of those little like apple juice containers.
I would love a little apple juice container.
Little apple juice.
Taylor has one back there.
I don't know what Taylor's doing back there.
Your wife seems like she's someone that you go to as a source of calmness from how you've
talked about her.
Can you just speak on your relationship
and how that's helped you in 2020?
You're spot on.
You're spot on.
So I met her in 2010 in Texas first.
It was love at first sight.
Couldn't feel my legs.
And we got married 2012.
In 2011-
Oh, that's fast.
Yeah.
So we, well, for us, we felt it was great.
We dated for 12 months, six months engagement.
But we met six months prior or three or four months before we started dating.
And get it done, man.
That's what he says.
Get it done.
Get it done.
Yeah, you guys, what are you guys waiting for?
Get it done.
You think you're going to get better?
You took way too long.
I got it done.
I'm in.
I'm in now.
I made it take too long, but I'm in now.
Yeah, you took, you were young, but I'll give you that.
I love this. So anyway, so. Was it love at first, you took, you were young, but I'll give you that. I love this.
So anyway, so.
Was it love at first sight for her too?
You guys saw each other and it was immediate.
Okay.
So 48 hours before we met at the gig where we did fall in love,
her and her sister came to the house that I was at, my friend's house.
And no, that first meeting was not love at first
sight. But oh my gosh, when we did meet at that gig where we were all finally dressed up and I
had my fine shoes on and everything, she came up, she looked at me, I looked at her and I was done.
But she actually had a boyfriend at the time, which was very interesting.
And then when I asked later, are you marrying him? She's like's like no i'm not marrying him like then why
are you with him and she explained this very long story now quick story straight up that guy's
happily married with kids anyway you can ask us all about that when you interview us but let me
just tell you why i bring up pre-marital experiences about her calmness and strength is when we dated 35 days into our dating.
I lost all my money.
And I had panic attacks for 30 days straight.
I couldn't talk to anybody.
And finally, I could talk to her.
I said, babe, I lost all my money.
She said, don't worry.
I'll get a nursing job and support the both of us.
Who is this
woman is the woman i'm gonna marry and for me it was really important that her family would accept
me because my previous relationship her family didn't accept me um what they didn't accept you
for what reasons i wasn't the ideal prince charming for that family okay well that's and
you know what that makes me want to do?
That throw up emoji.
You know the emoji with like throw up coming out, projectile?
I know.
But I still love them all.
Hi.
They might be watching.
The bottom line is she has this strength.
She's half Japanese, half Mexican.
We call that Japsican.
And she's five years younger than me, but she's lived already two lifetimes of pain
and grief and struggle and all that.
Incredible woman.
And she inspires a lot of them.
We have a book called Love Without Limits.
You can buy it on Amazon.
I've authored five books and one of them is Love Without Limits.
And so our story is all there.
Buy it on Amazon, whatever.
But she, when I went through this, she doesn't talk to me because she knows I internalize things.
She prays, she'll look at me, she'll hug me, she'll hold me if I'm crying, which she has done before.
But I just know that she's just, she's with me. She stands by me no matter what stands by me and so even
through this pre-covid november 13th there were some things that was happening in my mind and
heart my spirit about moving out of california never thought i'd move out of california ever in
my life and when she got evacuated in that last november fire that was the last straw that broke
the camel's back like We're moving now.
We're going.
Sold the house during COVID.
Very thankful.
And we were in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
And because her family's there as well,
she's now got her deeper, meaningful, if you will,
childhood friendship with her sister
and her mother's there and everything.
So she is strong. Let's see how that works out. She was there for you. And then it seems like you were there for her mother's there and everything. So she is strong.
Let's see how that works out. She was there for you and then it seems like you were there for
her when she wanted to move. And we feel amazingly surprised that I don't miss California for a
minute. My nonprofit, sorry, our nonprofit ministry, Life Without Limbs, is still headquartered here.
But as much as California was in my blood i am
nervous about the future of california that is a little bit more spiked than some other states
that are not doing what some things are happening here are happening if that makes sense yeah
california is a shit show what do you think the trick to parenting is you have four what's the
trick i love that.
I really liked what you said about how you can't give them everything.
I think that that's so important.
I think it is too.
Yes.
So our boy, he earns money and he buys what he wants.
He just made up his own business plan for the next 40 days and how his goal is.
And because we're making a cubby house above his room in the attic and he wants to chip in you need to bring up your four children four
different ways you need to spend time with each child alone just like i spend time with my wife
alone and you need to be friends with your children and your wife and so one of the marital
beautiful things that me and my wife do is we ask each other every 30 days babe what am i doing well
that you want me to keep on doing what am i doing that you want me to stop doing oh my god i'm doing
this with michael we're starting today talking to the mic if you're gonna do it that's what i love it to do and then what am i not doing that you want me to start doing
like biggest companies in the world they can only change three things a year what if you could ask
your spouse every 30 days those questions because if you really care if you really care, if you really care, it's either your pride or ego that's getting in the way.
And it's a great way to break down your pride and ego when you hear your spouse say, yeah, you really suck at that.
Like, you just, you're going to have a clue.
Every time you do that, it pisses me off so bad.
And you're like, oh, I had no had no idea i'm gonna give just one little one
just little ones that are like little like why do you have to slam the door when you when you get
your boxers out of it i want to know i i want to i want to go into the world with that energy
every time you slam the drawer in the morning to get your boxers out i'm like oh let me ask you this lauren okay would you like me to interview guys
lauren let me ask you this one i love it i don't know if you go through this why do you need to
get a spray tan like a like a paint booth and then get into the sheets and have the sheets look like
a murder scene i'm trying to look good for you there's a little thing we could we could probably
want to go through a therapy session here i'm ready listen we I'm ready we can do that
then with your wife
you guys can give us
a therapy session
and you know
I still want to get
to your fifth thing
oh yeah
of the ways to get out
yes
absolutely
I don't want to
cut you off on here
we can always get to it
but I do
I am interested
in number five
no I love that
you actually brought it up
I'm going to be OCD
about the list
and be like
I need to
I can't
we can't leave it
unfinished
I can't wait
to see you guys
in Texas and just chill it's going to be fun look I'm to, I can't, we can't leave it unfinished. I can't wait to see you guys in Texas and just chill. It's going to be fun. Look, I'm going to
say for the audience here, number five, I think is, is really, really important. I'll morph it the
way that I think is perfect for this audience is take one day at a time and don't be an enemy to
yourself. I think people themselves are their greatest limited factor.
And it's that mindset.
And it's that wanting to live.
Wanting to love yourself.
And wanting to believe that you are here for a greater purpose.
And one of the ways that I did that as a teenager,
when I was going through hell in school, I put a photo of an orphan on my mirror.
Every time I looked myself in the mirror to see how good looking I am, and if I grew an inch
taller or not, that smile of that orphan held me through. And it was more meaningful to tell myself religiously,
I am one day closer to helping that one kid. Didn't know who that kid was. But I knew that
if I could just get through my life and just help one other person not feel what I'm feeling and I can help one other person not commit suicide.
I don't care who they are. I don't care what race, religion, sexual orientation. We all have value.
We may not all agree on many things but what we do understand is that every single person is valuable.
And to give yourself a chance is the biggest decision you'll ever make in your life.
Because people can believe in you, but you need to believe that there are broken pieces that can still be mended together in a beautiful way.
What are some micro things that you do in your marriage that you think make
a big difference overall? I actually feel what's beautiful is that she has time with her friends
without me and I have time with my friend or friends without her. I think that's really
important. It is really important. It's actually more important than most visionary entrepreneurs believe because we get used
to being alone at the top.
And going 400 miles an hour, many people don't translate that and understand that.
But it's not about what you do, entrepreneur.
Same thing with my wife.
There are things that her friends will understand and she'll be able to feel comfortable to
tell them that's going to encourage her or them so i think having friendships outside of that marriage that's
number one no like real like freaking you know same sex you know friendships not you know i
didn't have my wife talk to another guy right just make that clear don't be getting ideas
lauren don't don't do that lauren don't do that, Lauren. Don't do that, Lauren. Now, am I that husband?
I'm not that husband.
But you know what I mean.
Number two is we go out on dates once a week without the kids religiously.
And sometimes it's two hours and sometimes it's six.
Sometimes it's for the whole day.
Sometimes it's a two, three-day trip without the kids.
It's time together.
It's not interacting in the day. It's setting two, three day trip without the kids. It's time together. It's not interacting in the day.
It's setting time together.
And so I think the third one is really asking her, how are you feeling?
And having those religious things.
Like one of the things I do well that I keep on doing is she just got flowers today.
Saying, I'm coming home.
Coming home soon, babe. Or you're looking beautiful. Just to make her smile. I text her every day. I love you. You're beautiful.
She texts me. So thankful to God for you. And that just makes everything okay.
Even when it's not okay, we know we're in it together no matter what.
And how long have you guys been married for now?
Eight.
Eight years. And are you done for kids or you want more?
Biologically, we're done. We made sure the factory's closed.
The factory's closed.
You got the snip?
I didn't.
She did.
Yeah.
How does she get a snip?
Well, she had a C-section with the twins. I'm saying,'re you know you're under the knife anyway oh my god manipulation it is not manipulation wait what do they do i didn't know
that the girl can get the snip what do they do they rip out the ovaries oh come on and i got
the doctor after four kids yes but i mean think i mean that's no it's right there not doing it lauren i will do it
i'm saying this on this podcast i will not do that she's she's got she was having a c-section
you understand that nope she's got a weird perversion of wanting to me to get snipped
i want him i want to watch it i will never get snipped no i don't yeah it freaks me and i'm
thankful we had c-section for her i squeezed a baby out of my vagina you can get
your balls snipped no but we'll tackle one thing at a time we're not gonna tackle one thing at a
time god willing we're still we still have a few more kids in us it's the first one but yeah i mean
that that's something that also keeps you up at night of that snippet but we were out of me we
were so fertile just you know not much more information than that but it didn't you know
by god's grace we were able
to conceive pretty easily i got the doctor to hold up the ovaries across the room to show me not the
ovaries but the tubes you know whatever like good four inches you know not just nipping not just
we do though we do want to foster and adopt one day for sure we want to go heavier like one of
those things like going back
to the beginning of this conversation like how else other people are suffering oh my gosh the
foster care system needs help yeah we've never had anyone speak on that on the podcast i would
love to know more about that okay you need to then interview a woman called lindsey impact
lindsey hadley from hadley impact would Would love to. Oh my God. Done.
You know her?
Yeah.
No, I was with her in Salt Lake City
like 36 hours ago.
We'd love to interview her.
We had breakfast.
She has this
meta campaign going
that is worldwide
to help.
Oh my God.
If she just knew that
right now,
she would be
Lindsay, open invite
on the show.
Bowling her eyes out.
Like bawling her eyes.
I'm like so emotional right now. Oh my gosh. I got goosebumps all over me. 100% we'll do it if we on the show. Balling her eyes out, like balling her eyes. I'm like so emotional right now.
Oh my gosh, I got goosebumps all over me.
100% we'll do it if we get the introduction.
So we met on a panel, of course, in Europe.
And I said, they asked me, what are you passionate about?
And I wasn't supposed to be talking about God or Christianity.
And I didn't.
But I did mention that it hurts me that we have 100,000 churches in America
that represent $480 billion for buildings in churches, okay, that are now empty.
I've been saying this though for years before COVID.
And we have 425,000 children waiting on a waiting list.
To get somewhere.
To be in a foster home and 111,000 children waiting for adoption.
And so she's got this amazing meta campaign called Orphan Myth.
Orphan Myth.
Orphan Myth. Yeah, it's coming out in November 2020. And I'm an ambassador just to help get
the word out. And they're trying to fundraise
just for the last seed money. Bro, she is a mover, shaker. She was the one in 2011 that helped
match the 118. And she's still doing fundraising? Well, listen, all you rich motherfuckers that
listen to this show, go in and look into this organization. It's a good thing to do. Just go to HadleyImpact.com. She helped match Bill Gates' $118 million fundraise concert in Australia for polio.
Yeah.
She is a mover and a shaker.
You would love her.
Great.
Done.
I can't wait.
You know, there's something we talk about all the time on this show.
If this show can potentially have someone like her on and open people's eyes
and also in taking it a step further, potentially have people help her with that organization.
Like I'm in 100%.
And it's not that hard.
Like if a hundred, I'm not asking a hundred families to consider fostering, adopting.
The people already got one or two foster or adopted kids.
Let's help them and resource them and surround them with a hundred families that help tuition for their
kids, that help with free babysitting for their marriage that they can go out on a date
and go from one or two foster kids to five or six.
And so my greatest, one of the greatest inspirations was my previous employee for five years.
He was my caregiver, Peter.
Him and his wife have had 27 foster kids here in Southern California in a span
of, I don't know, seven years.
And their first experience was three sisters who eventually they came in.
There was their first foster children.
And eventually they said, hey, let's take a photo together.
And the four-year-old said, okay. Four-year-old goes to the bathroom, gets naked down to her underpants,
comes back up and says, I'm ready for my photo.
Oh, what the fuck?
Why?
Why?
Because she was in the porn.
In the porn.
What do you mean?
That's probably she's been trained when someone says, let's take a photo.
Someone trained her to take her clothes off.
Oh, that makes me so fucking angry.
This is a serious, serious problem.
If you want to unpackage that, that's a whole lot.
I'll even pay you to have me back on to talk about foster care here in America.
But Lindsay is the one that she would tell you what's going on.
But maybe, but here's the point.
This thing deserves a whole dedicated episode yeah
good on you bro good on you i'm proud of you to even think of that because there's not enough
people talking about it yet well it seems like there's a lot of powerful people trying to silence
this subject yeah but it is a whole different podcast meaning like we'll do it you were and
to come from again come from a point of view, you see the negative, see where your positiveness then comes in against the negative.
And not on like, oh, yeah, I agree or this or that, blah, blah, blah.
Do something for someone who can't even help themselves today.
But it goes back to what we were saying earlier about suicide.
If no one talks about it, then it's just like this underground subject that's taboo that makes people feel alone it sounds like it's the same thing
right now is happening with sex trafficking and it sounds like in the foster i didn't know anything
about this until you just brought that up makes total sense yep it sounds like if you knew the
percentage of how many people the government makes money in prison because of the people who are in prison.
And then the percentage of those people who are in prison for something they have wrong.
There's a massive majority who are actually raised and graduated out of the foster care system.
If you just look, that's why it's 40 grand to pay the government out to adopt a kid.
How does the foster care-
Which doesn't seem right at all that if you want to do something like that and help a child,
that you have to pay 40,000 to be able to do that.
That's fucked up.
You should be giving them 40 grand.
Thank you so much for helping them out.
The government should be incentivizing people to help other people and turn them into citizens
that could potentially be productive later.
We got a lot to talk about. Anyway, sorry I interrupted you. No, what are the tangible steps
that we can take in the foster care system to make it better? Like where do you even start to
unpack everything that's wrong? Let me just say one thing that's really important that you said
that's really important that might save a life. Here's a practical way of understanding how to put this in action when Lauren says,
you're not alone. Tell someone that you're thinking of committing suicide and not just a
friend or call a suicide hotline right now, but talk to a friend and say, hey, I've been thinking
or I've been slitting my wrist or these are the drugs that I was going to swallow tonight.
But Nick Vujicic, Lauren, and Michael, they said,
instead of that, there might be hope for me.
Can you help be my friend through this?
That's when someone knows that they got to do something different
for then you to feel that you're not alone.
No one's going to know if you're alone until you tell them you're alone.
So the kids need to start talking about it.
Talk.
And people in pain do talk.
And not only, I also think not only the kids,
the kids who are adults now that have been in the system
and experienced it,
they have to start telling their stories
and talking about it.
Right, exactly.
And if you look at, I'm very into addiction memoirs.
I'm very interested in them and i think that
addiction has been like it's not taboo anymore people talk about it now right and now more
people are getting help there's more people in aa before it was like the secret society that you
couldn't tell anyone the more people talk about something the more the stigma goes away but we
just got to make sure that someone's going to teach them the right principles and values and attitudes, which is why we're very excited about the social emotional learning
curriculum that AIA, Attitude is Altitude, has actually made for school systems. So right now,
we're brokering school systems around the world and some school districts in America,
90 schools in America already have Nick Vujicic videos, curriculum curriculum self-awareness all these principles and values to help walk
through somebody in believing that they're valuable and they're fucking genius i'm so thankful i'm so
thankful so you got to have like a holistic point of view fostering the other question really look
up hadley impact.com Ask them about more orphan myth.
They've actually raised $750,000 of a million.
All they need is not $250,000.
I'm an ambassador of them.
And I told them, I don't want to get paid.
I just want to help.
Taylor, can we include the link in our show notes? Like I said, if you want to set that up, we'll do it.
When the tide rises, all boats rise.
And that's the impact that she's doing.
Because I have a lot of Christian friends and influential, she's asked me, Nick, can
you help us encourage the church to do what the Bible says?
I'm like, absolutely.
That's what I'm supposed to do 100% and then talk about pro-life in 2021.
Well, listen, man, I'm really glad we got to do this. I'm so thankful you pro-life in 2021 well listen man i'm really
glad we got to do this and so thank you you came on this call and we'll do it again i mean like
what we try to do with this audience is introduce people to you know inspiring characters like
yourself and people that have a message and then you know really get a frame of reference but then
keep keep the conversation going i mean that's why i love this medium and this is for everyone
this is not just if you're christian or not this is like everyone so she just asked me hey can you
because you have some friends some influential networks can you help us with this part i'm like
absolutely yeah this this can be a helpful mouthpiece like like you guys are awesome let
me know how i can help you guys because you guys are so nice i would love to share on my stories
what you're talking about when this comes out i'm going to get your number and then if we go we are
going to texas i think we'd love to interview you and your wife again.
I mean, I feel like there's so many facets that we just generally went over that I would
have loved to dive into of this conversation.
It's awesome.
Can you leave our audience with a book or resource that you would recommend?
For where, whoever you're at right now with 2020 out of the five books that I would
recommend you to purchase is called Life Without Limits. Life Without Limits. And I published it
in 2010. I'm now just about to write another book on Attitude and All That. It doesn't matter about
that. But the bottom line is, if you want also weekly information from me go to youtube.com slash nick voyage it's
where the videos of uh my podcast nick voyage podcast which is also on all the other platforms
in audio what's the podcast called just so we can look it up nick voyage podcast okay cool yeah the
nick voyage podcast so yeah we're uh we're so thankful for where we're at and not because of
the quantity or the numbers it's about finding the new reset i mean can you imagine where i're at and not because of the quantity or the numbers. It's about finding the new reset.
I mean, can you imagine where I'm at 37 years old? I'm actually at one of the best times of my life
now. But six weeks ago, remember, even this guy needed some time. That is impactful right now
because you feel like your life is over one day and then five days later, two weeks later,
six weeks later, you can see the light.
Time is on your side.
What's your Instagram handle
and what can they expect from your content there?
Nick Voytich, N-I-C-K-V-U-J-I-C-I-C.
I've got 9 million Facebook fans.
I've got 1.6 million Instagram fans.
I did one video on whatever, TikTok got 2 million
just because I wanted to make people laugh.
But I'll tell you this. I'm trying to still figure out how I use those things.
So are we.
Especially 2020. So what can you expect? I'm not really posting up my children anymore
at all. That's for sure. There's a lot there. And then I'm going to try and just motivate people,
inspire people.
So Monday is Motivational Monday on my podcast, which will then be put on YouTube and Instagram
and Facebook.
Wednesday, I have a leadership, executive leadership podcast every Wednesday called
Leadership Now.
And Fridays are going to be financial Fridays.
And this is like three months from now.
And then Sunday is going to be spiritual
Sunday. So whether you need motivation, or you need leadership, or you want to grow in your
financial literacy and investments, which is what I love to help empower people as well to help
themselves. And then spiritual Sunday, if anyone wants to know more about my spiritual life,
there'll be some posts that I'll be doing that help people. Because I think
it's holistic. This was one of my favorite episodes. Oh my gosh. It was. I love you. It was.
Awesome. There was so much to unpack here. I just think there's so many takeaways that I hope this
audience will take from this episode. And I think what you're doing is incredible. You're helping a
lot of people and we're just happy to be part of it. I I jump on a plane any day you tell me to come out of you.
No, we're coming to Texas next.
All right, I love you.
It's so nice to meet you.
We love you.
The audience, I'm sure, is going to love this episode.
And you're coming back.
Awesome.
I look forward to our apple juice.
Thank you.
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