Wake Up to Wealth - The Hustle Behind WallStreet Trapper with Wallstreet Trapper
Episode Date: July 31, 2024In episode 21 of Wake Up to Wealth, Brandon Brittingham interviews Wallstreet Trapper - featured on Breakfast Club, Ellen DeGeneres, Black Enterprise, Yahoo Finance and more - to discuss his remarkabl...e journey from adversity to success in the stock market. Trap shares his personal story of overcoming challenges, including being homeless, going to prison, and finding his way to financial freedom through the stock market.Tune in to gain valuable insights on resilience and the true path to success.SOCIAL MEDIA LINKSBrandon BrittinghamInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mailboxmoneyb/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brandon.brittingham.1/Wallstreet TrapperInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/wall_street_trapper/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WallstreetTrapper/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wallstreet-trapper/Youtube: @WallstreetTrapperWEBSITEBrandon Brittingham: https://www.brandonsbrain.org/homeWallstreet Trapper: https://wallstreettrapper.com/
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This is Wake Up To Wealth, a podcast dedicated to helping you change the way you think about
wealth. And now, here's your host, Brandon Brittingham.
What's up, everybody? I am here today. I'm super excited because I happen to be in your studio. Come on, man. I'm here with Trap,
Wall Street Trapper. And man, I'm excited. I'm excited because, you know, all the stuff you've
been doing. But I'm super excited to have you on the show today. And thank you for taking your time
with me. Yeah, man. Yeah, man. I just, you know, when I first met you, man, you was opening,
just sharing information with me, seeing what you could do to help. So, you know, when I first met you, man, you was opening, just sharing information with me, seeing what you could do to help.
So, you know, anytime I can bring any value to whatever you got going on, man, I'm here, man. So I appreciate you for having me for sure.
Thank you, man.
Yeah. So I don't want to talk about success right away.
OK, I want to just because like what i always kind of go to is like people will
see somebody see you on social media they'll see me on social media and they think you know it
happened we woke up and we were successful yeah and i also i've just seen over the years some of
the most successful people i've ever met uh it was because of the adversity that you had gone through, right?
So if you wouldn't mind, because what you've done is remarkable, but I really want people
to hear what happened to get you to this point.
So I always say that you can't negotiate the necessary.
The adversity is needed to add seasoning to your life.
You know what I'm saying?
So just born and raised in New Orleans.
I saw my mama get shot when I was about nine.
She survived.
At 13, my mama went to prison.
My grandmother passed away.
So I was homeless for a couple years.
At 16, I went to prison for attempted murder. And that's when I learned about the stock market while I was homeless for a couple of years. At 16, I went to prison for a tent murder.
And that's when I learned about the stock market while I was in prison.
This guy I met and that he told me he was just like, man, y'all, y'all playing the wrong game, bro.
You know what I'm saying? And then from there, it wasn't that he told me about the stock market.
He just said wealthy people do three things. They know how to start working for money, learn how to let their money work for them so they can buy back their time and give value to people.
And then he said the number three ways to build wealth was invest in stocks, create a business, buy real estate.
And I was about maybe 18 when he told me that um and then so the rest of my time in prison i really
spent a lot of time just learning about the stock market because i felt like you know just being a
dude from the hood man black like i ain't see success right you know the only successful people
i saw was really like the hustlers you know i'm saying so that's kind of what i looked up to i was
too short to play football or basketball.
Right. So I was like, all right, this is my way out.
And I think during that time, man, you really don't put too much value on your life.
You know, you just won't survive. And, you know, we get equipped with the tools to survive, but not the tools to be successful.
And so in prison, I just had time to study the game. And it made sense to me.
The market literally was a reflection of the streets.
Same thing.
Product, service, marketing, branding, supply and demand.
And I was like, oh, I get that.
It's the same thing yeah and so my idea was initially i could use my street money
clean it in the stock market and i'll be all right sure you know you always try to think about how
you can outsmart the game you never think about getting out the game it's just how can i outsmart
the game and so i came home and i you know, telling my homies about it.
Like, bro, like, we went Polo and we went Timberlands.
Like, that's owned by a company called VFC Corp.
We went Fendi.
That's owned by Louisville Tomahawk Hennessy.
We went Nike.
Like, we drink, you know, Hennessy.
So all that's owned by certain companies.
And I was like, bro, like, yo, we can really own this.
And then the idea of ownership started, like, clicking in my head.
Like, you're the only way to be wealthy is you got to own some shit.
And so, that was it.
It just clicked for me.
But then around 2014, I had caught another charge in 2012.
And they kicked my door and they got 10 pounds of weed,
$10,000,
a.223,
a.40,
extended clip,
and 100 X pills.
And so I was just like,
all right, it's over with for me.
Yeah, yeah.
I got blessed.
They kicked in the door with no search warrant.
And I got found out guilty
because of the fruit
of a poisonous tree.
And that means
anything you come in my house
and you don't have
a legal right to be there,
everything is null and void.
Sure.
So that was like,
ah,
but I still ain't
want to give up the street.
So I was like,
all right, I'm broke.
So I went to
just robbing dope dealers.
That was the new lick.
That was the new,
cause you,
again,
it may sound weird,
but you never think of getting out the street.
Cause it's all you really know is what you feel comfortable with.
Right.
And it's hard to tell somebody who from the street,
from that magnitude where I was to go get a job.
Cause I felt like that was the next thing to prison to me.
You know what I'm saying of course
and so um me and my homie got in a situation and I almost got killed and then I told my homie like
bro that's a wrap like I ain't doing this no more I don't already did time I don't know I
got shot I almost got killed I got found out. Ain't nothing else for me to do in the streets but go back to prison or get killed.
And, you know, I was like, nah, bro, I don't want to do that.
So I gave him whatever we made from that, and I just started working.
And I just said, at least I could just go in on the stock market.
Right.
So that was about 2014.
So from 2014 to maybe 2018,
I just took it really, really serious.
Started talking about it on Instagram
from a friend of mine.
Was like, nah, you need to teach people on Instagram.
I'm like, I didn't think nobody wanted to hear about it.
Right?
Nobody want to hear about no damn stocks.
You know that?
When we doing Instagram, man, we show off.
And we, yeah.
So got on the gram, started talking about it.
And people started gravitating to it.
Pandemic hit, everybody was inside.
Everybody wanted to learn how to make money.
And people had been rocking with me
and then it just got, it just started growing from there, man.
Wind up doing the Ellen show,
wind up doing the breakfast club,
wind up doing a swing in the morning.
All of that came from me just consistently putting in work.
And then this year i had my first
million dollar trade and so you know it kind of just consistently just taking over the market
but also just being transparent like really showing people the wins and the losses and not
a lifestyle but that was a byproduct of where i was from like where i was
from you hesitant about showing lifestyle style in new orleans because you become dinner yeah
you know i'm saying you become the thing that everybody won't eat because so many people
starving yeah and so the lifestyle thing never was for me it was just showing people that and so bro
here we are now bro you know some years in the game and man it's just i find so
much joy not in seeing people make money because that's the goal like this could be the ticket to
your freedom for me so that's why i'm just all in on it bro so um you prompted two questions
i'm gonna ask you the first one. Yep.
So a lot of people, when it comes to social media,
uh,
and I tell people all the time how powerful it is,
but a lot of people were,
we were so manipulated by instant gratification,
right?
So you started and you know,
how were you posting once a day?
What were you doing?
And like,
when did you see
traction because it wasn't the first fucking day you went on social hell no and now i mean now
your shit is crazy yeah right so but there was a gap in between and how long was that gap so one
of the things i did was in the streets taught me this was always before you go into anybody hood
and hustle you got to pay attention to like who hustlers are, who the robbers are, who the jackers are.
Excuse me, who hustling what.
And so what I saw on Instagram was there was a bunch of pages that had information, but nobody would show their face.
No face, yeah.
Nobody was talking.
Nobody was going live.
So I was like, you know what?
I'm going to go live every day yeah i had a friend of mine that knew how to work canva and so i would tell her what i wanted to
put on it right right so she would go make the canva little things for me i'll give her like
five or six ideas and she'll make them for me and it wasn't the best yeah but i would use them
and then i would write down what I wanted them to be in them.
And then I would go live and talk about it.
And so probably that first year, again, you start the page with no followers.
Right, yeah.
So that first year, I think I gained about maybe 15,000 followers.
Which that's still.
Yeah, that was rapid.
That's still a lot.
That was a lot.
I think that first year i gained about
i gained about 15 000 followers but i was going live like in the morning so i would do stuff like
when a bell when the opening bell come on for the market i would go live so you were consistent
every super consistent that was it every day i will post and then i will go live when the market
open it will be called opening bell with trap yep and. And then I would use like what they use on CNBC.
Yeah.
It would be at lunchtime.
I would go lunch money with trap.
So it was more than once a day.
Yeah, it was lunch money with trap.
Yeah.
And then at the end of the day, it would be closing bell with trap.
Yeah.
And then sometimes 2 o'clock in the morning, I would show people me researching the company.
Yeah.
So I just was doing what none of the other pages was doing.
Right?
They had information and the graphics looked amazing. So I just was doing what none of the other pages was doing. Right? They had information
and the graphics
looked amazing.
But it was a faceless page.
But it was a faceless page.
So now people
are asking questions
and another thing
I would do is
I would go to people's pages
that had all the followers
and I would go answer
every question
in the comments.
That's smart.
All day.
That's all I did.
Yeah.
I had to quit the job.
Yeah. So I was like, this is what I'm doing. Yeah. So I would. I had to quit the job.
So I was like, this is what I'm doing.
So I would just answer all the questions and the comments.
I had a list of like 15 pages
from CNBC on down.
Bloomberg, you know, the faceless
pages. I'm in everybody's comments
all day. And then the name was Wall Street Trapper.
So it kind of was like a good name.
Yeah, it stuck out.
So that was, at least that first year was just grind work yeah all grind work and still
to this day i follow the same method because people still don't go live so you just one thing
you just said that a lot of people in the journey of being an entrepreneur where i think people fuck
up is they get away like what you just said is such a
valuable piece of advice you didn't stop what worked no you found that at work you kept doing
it for some fucking reason most entrepreneurs including myself i've done it you do something
that works really well and then we feel that we got to change it and you didn't and that's worked
really well but one of the things that you said for everybody listening to
this is like you put in the grind you put in the work you were consistent the hardest thing for any
human being to be is consistent yeah and i wonder why that is because if you really want something
you know the goal is to always just outwork everybody right right but in your consistencies
you got to be paying attention yeah because you can
consistently be doing the wrong shit facts you know i'm saying that's why you ain't getting no
no movement right if i'm consistently working out the wrong way uh you know not eating and i ain't
gonna see no results right so for me and i think i think my greatest advantage is because i'm from
the streets bro i'm not gonna lie Because the streets always make you pay attention.
Like, you always on alert.
You always on guard.
And you know somebody is always going to take you out.
Somebody coming on the block trying to outgrind you or outwork you.
Right.
So, for me, it was like, I'm not going to let nobody go live more than me.
Like, I would do stuff like a company would have an earnings call.
I would go live listening to the earnings call and break down what's being said in the call.
Because I knew that the average person, they don't understand that.
Yeah, yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
So I would do it with CNBC.
I watch the CNBC.
I know the average person don't understand what's going on.
But guess what? If I get on there and I start breaking down what's going on, it's like, oh, that makes sense
to me. Yeah. So, I mean, another key, you know, serious gem you gave is, you know, you, so when
did you start like offering something to your audience to buy? Was that right away? I waited a
year. So for everybody listening to this that's
why i asked that question yeah so you gave value away for a year for a year a year straight just
gave value yep i thought you just i'm just gonna deposit a ton of education to the market then i'm
gonna come back and ask for the sale it's like the streets yeah sample packs yeah but most people
would not be willing to do that for that long yeah a year a year and then
when i did drop something it was an e-book the shit went crazy it went crazy and okay now and
i still didn't understand again i didn't even understand how the internet thing worked right
you know i'm saying so i had an e-book with a with a paypal link attached to it
i had an e-book with the paypal link attached to it but i i did that for a year
straight you sold a rack of them i sold a lot of them and then before i even dropped the course i
dropped four ebooks right and then i here's the crazy part there's evolution i had dropped four
ebooks while she trapped 101 while she trapped 102 Trap 103, and then Pay Me In Equity. And then I was like, all right, now let me take it to another level.
I still didn't have the course idea in my mind.
Right.
It was get all four e-books and a phone call with me for $297.
Damn.
Back in the day, did people get that?
What?
Did you give that away?
I was doing 10 calls a day.
Bro. I promise you. You gave away? I was doing 10 calls a day. Bro.
I promise you.
You gave away a lot of value.
I promise you.
I was doing 10 calls a day.
So if you're listening
and you got one of those calls
you got a fucking deal.
What?
And here's the thing.
I still have people with me
they don't tell me
I've been with you
since the phone calls.
Right.
Yeah, because they stay with you
because you gave them so much value.
Yeah, they like rob you
which I'm talking about
real phone number. that's real phone number and then zoom dump
jumped off so it was okay phone number and a zoom call put you on the zoom so you had you had all
that's wild so that was my that was it like that was and i was doing eight mind you i had stopped
working because i in my heart i'm a i'm a because you still had another job yeah i was doing eight. Mind you, I had to stop working. Because in my heart, I'm a hustler.
Because you still had another job.
Yeah, I was doing iron working welding.
Got it.
So I stopped doing that.
I said, I ain't doing this no more.
I'm going to do this right here.
And to me, in my mind, man, just talking on the phone with people is,
that ain't hard as going to work 12 hours a day.
I was working 10, 12 hours a day.
No doubt about it.
Seven days a week. And you're doing something you love. Oh work 12, I was working 10, 12 hours a day. No doubt about it. Seven days a week.
You're doing something you love.
Oh, man, I was excited.
So now I was going live saying,
DM me the word phone call
and I'll send you a PayPal link.
Mind you, I didn't know how this was working.
I'm sending you a PayPal link.
You pay the $2.97.
Then you get on the phone with me.
I send you the full e-books. It's me manually and then i i don't know nothing about how this
thing go but all i know was i'm doing a thousand dollars a day i the thing that's remarkable about
that is most people would eat would would would so overthink that whole process they would never
get started. Yeah.
And I think that what's crazy about that is you just said, fuck it, I'm going to do it.
I'm going to let it in.
And then so that just built this,
just, you know, you built this ground
so of an audience and gave away so much value
that then it's like, they'll buy anything you put out
because you've already over-delivered
on so much value.
On everything.
And that was the whole, for me, and here's the crazy part.
It's supposed to be a one-hour phone call.
You was going over an hour.
Probably was going two hours.
Yeah.
I got another call.
Don't talk about you catching me.
I got two hours between the call.
You might get a three-hour phone call out of me for $2.97.
You got four e-books.
And you're like, bruh.
Yeah.
When you dropping this.
And so I met a friend of mine
that said,
he was like,
you need to stop
doing the phone calls.
He said,
the next like
20 phone calls you do,
write down the questions
that they have on you.
He's on a Zoom
and then you create
a course behind that.
Behind that, yeah.
And then that becomes
what you do.
And if you still want to do the phone call
now you charge a thousand dollars you know the number is different so i was like all right cool
yeah and so i did that for a while and i didn't do the phone call i wanted to over deliver right
so i started charging twenty five hundred dollars for one day with me jesus so i would fly out to
you that's cheap All I know was
I ain't working
And I ain't hustling no more
Right
So it was
$2,500
It was called
Meet the Plug
Right
It was called
Meet the Plug
And I was doing like
Three of those a month
Right
Man I felt like
I was winning
Right of course yeah
I'm winning
So I was It would cost, of course, yeah. I'm winning.
So I was, I was, it would cost, it would be $2,500 plus the hotel fee.
Right.
I would book my own flight.
And so I would. So you weren't even netting $2,500.
Nope.
Right.
Nope.
So it probably was netting, depending on the flight, depending, like the first I went was California.
Yeah, that shit wasn't cheap.
That was not cheap.
Yeah.
And I was staying in, I wasn't staying standing no big dog hotel right yeah you know i'm saying so it was like all right but i was you were getting a whole eight hour day out of me we
started like we started at 9 30 when the market came on and we would leave when the market go off
that was my day that was the day predicated yeah 9 30 to 4 30 4 o'clock when the market go off that was the day that was the session yeah we'll do a little lunch but we
will go eat lunch together yeah and i would treat the lunch jesus but in my mind man i'm winning
yeah well the the following you built by doing that yep money can't buy yeah marketing can't
buy yeah do you know what i mean? Yep. And people would,
and I would go live,
I would ask the person,
like,
could I go live for a little bit?
Yeah.
And I would go live
while I'm doing the one-on-one
for like maybe 30 minutes.
Right.
That's content gold.
That's how it,
man,
look,
y'all want to get one of these,
DM me the word.
Right.
And get signed up.
The plug.
Yep.
And at the end of the day, I'll send them a PayPal link.
Yeah.
With a calendar invite.
PayPal loved you.
They was loving me.
That's all I knew.
Right.
But I tell people all the time, what you don't know is not a reason for you not to do something.
Facts.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I didn't know how to maneuver around, but I if i kept it simple eventually i'll grow into it i'll bring somebody
in that can show me okay no let's do this i mean just when you went out and did it you didn't
you didn't overthink it nope and that's that's that's probably a good part of your genius yeah
you know what i mean yeah i think people always overthink stuff. Yeah. Something you, just listening to you, I'm going to go off script a little bit.
Come on, man.
I just want to ask this question because this is something that I'm a huge believer in.
So at any time in your journey of what you went through, did you ever feel somebody, a higher power, whatever you believe in, was trying to tell you bro you're meant for
something else yeah that's why i'm putting this shit in front of you yeah to stop right yeah so
i believe did you have a turning point where you found that yeah so i always believed in god
because um a lot of stuff that i've been through i I felt like if it was just me, I would have been messed it up.
Sure.
Right?
And the ability,
and I'll be honest,
I don't,
I didn't think that I was smart enough
to connect the two.
Sure.
Like the stock market
and like the streets,
like who does that?
And so I always,
which is genius by the way.
Yeah.
Marketing.
And if I was to say, I did it by myself, I'd be like, nah, bro, I ain't had that.
Right.
But I know that when I think, when I look back and look at all the stuff I overcame, I was like, nah, I had to go through all of that to get here.
Facts.
Like, this is what makes it relatable.
And so when I look at the market, I always say there's nobody that makes it relatable to that class of people that still wants to be wealthy, that wants to retire right.
And the market is just not designed to speak to those people.
It's designed to sell them a 401k.
It's designed to give them an annuity plan.
No doubt.
It's designed to get on this social security.
That's the way the market is
designed and so i was like no i can't i just got to keep learning but i can also put it in a way
that they can understand and i just think that was the gift god gave me yeah the ability to
to navigate through the minutiae of you know the jar the jargon and be like, nope, here's just what you need.
So what's crazy about that is when you think about it like this, right?
So this is what I believe.
This is, I say this on stage almost every time I speak, is that I believe there's certain
people in this world that are chosen ones.
You're one of them.
I'm one of them.
Thank you, brother.
So we and you get put through more shit.
Yeah.
Because it's for us, it's the classroom to teach other people how to get through it.
So if you think about it, because you came from the streets and you were exposed to stocks, that's how you were able to parallel it.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
And think about it.
If you hadn't gone through that, you wouldn't have been able to make the connection.
Oh, for sure.
And that's why you've for sure been chosen.
Yeah, I know for a fact that that is the relatability factor.
Facts, for sure.
And so I always tell my team, like, yo, this is who we are.
Yeah.
Like, authenticity is our superpower.
Yep.
You know what I'm saying?
Absolutely.
It's our superpower.
We don't have to be, we don't have to be we don't
have to do and i think the thing about that too is now i go against everything that traditional
finance teaches yeah walsh for sure i go yeah which is great yeah i go against everything that
and because it just started making me understand, like, all right,
wealth doesn't care, like, what color you are.
That's correct.
Right.
But poverty don't care either.
What we just talked about before we got on here, money's the equalizer.
And it's the equalizer.
And I was like, you know what?
Let me take away, let me show you for a fact. And it's seeing my mom get shot, not finishing school, not knowing my father, going to prison.
But yet here I am.
You can still be successful, 100 percent.
Right. And I was like, all right.
And so something came to my mind and I looked at it and they said when I started looking at the most successful people in the world, they all broke the blueprint.
They don't follow the blueprint that
is set for people.
You got to be an outlier.
You got to be willing to say, nope, I'm going to
get out the line and I'm going to go
over here. I'm going to go down this path
that not many people go down.
It's going to be some adversity,
but if I can get past that, it's some gangster shit
on the other side of that.
For me, I'm like, nah, I won't just, I won't go meet the adversity because if I play it safe, if I stay here, I'm going to keep, I'm going to keep allowing them to feed me and giving them permission to starve me.
100%.
Right?
And I never wanted that.
So it was now, how do I get people to adapt to that belief system?
So someone who's listening to this and the stock
market scares them yeah they're like fuck i don't know what to do yeah give them a piece of advice
you know they're they're starting out obviously they need to come learn from you yeah for sure
for sure but how about the person that's like shit man i'm scared to even buy the course from
you or any other education because i'm just scared of it in general market yep what would you say so so one of the things is
so we do a show every tuesday called trap and tuesday and i think that show is free
three hours if you're listening three hours yeah every two we just hit our 100 episodes
congratulations man that was big right um but just to get in the game, I want you to have some type of education on it.
And the reason why is because the game don't got no feelings.
It don't care if it's your rent money.
It don't care if it's your education money.
It's not going to give it back to you.
Right.
So I never want nobody to just jump in. I want you to go listen to something or somebody, preferably me, that can, I always say, anybody that listens to me, I let them borrow my confidence.
Sure.
Because confidence, like just how we say money is the great equalizer, confidence will be second to that.
Yeah.
Because when you're confident about something something you disregard the option of losing
right and there's so many there's so much data inside of the loss your confidence makes you say
what did i learn from that right oh i'm about to get that's how i am like i lost 120 000 that put
me in position to go make a million dollars so for for anybody that... Hold on. Say that again. There's that and a loss.
I had to lose $120,000
to go make a million.
Facts.
You cannot expect to gain
without embracing the loss.
Absolutely.
You can't negotiate the necessary.
Yep.
Right?
And what happens is
the losses allow you
to build that capacity up
to go to the next level.
Yeah.
Right?
So for me, anybody,
like, I'm not going to tell nobody
to just jump straight in.
I need you to get educated.
Because once you get educated,
there's not a move you cannot make.
Right.
Absolutely.
There's not a move you cannot make.
Like, I can tell you,
yeah, go buy Apple,
go buy Microsoft,
but you wouldn't know
why you're buying it.
Right.
And I'm not a believer in
buy what you use.
Because you can buy, I use AT&T. I wouldn't dare buy that stuff. Right. And I'm not a believer in buy what you use because you can buy.
I use AT&T. I wouldn't dare buy that stuff. I wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole.
Right. You know, I'm saying I wear Nikes, but I wouldn't buy Nike stock. Right.
Right. Stock just plummeted to the 18 percent. Why? Because the company said we are losing our customer base verbatim.
Yeah. Right. So I'm not a person that's going to tell you, yeah, just buy what you use.
No.
Go get educated.
And you understand that what you use is where your understanding level is.
And it doesn't have to be the company you use, but it can be that industry.
So, like, I don't like Nike, but I understand, like, Decker's.
I understand Lululemon.
I understand these new up-and-coming companies that's outperforming
Nike. Right. I don't eat
McDonald's, but I understand the fast food area.
But guess what? I like Chipotle. I like
Kava. They're outperforming
McDonald's and all these other
fab... So it's not so much of investing
in what you use,
invest in what you understand.
That's the pivot.
Got it. You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, that's the pivot.
So I end the show every time the same way.
I ask everybody
the same question.
So I name the show
Waking Up to Wealth.
You've already learned it.
You've been taught
about money wrong.
That's why I named it
Waking Up to Wealth
because I bring smart people
on here like you
to teach people about money
better.
Come on.
So your answer can be whatever it is to you.
Okay.
But what does waking up to wealth mean to you?
Waking up to freedom.
Because there was a time in my life where every day I woke up in a cell and I wasn't always in prison.
Damn, that's powerful.
You feel me?
Yes, I do.
Yeah, you feel me yes i do yeah you feel me and so i was i was confined to
whatever construct based on my ignorance right you know i'm saying you can only go as far as
you have the wisdom to move and so waking up to wealth means not waking up to freedom
and that means i've acquired a certain type of wisdom that allows me to have full control of my life.
So that, for me, waking up to well
would be straight up waking up to freedom.
Well, man, I cannot thank you
enough. I mean, the amount of wisdom
and shit you dropped on me. Oh, man. Thank you,
brother. This one might hit
100,000 down. Come on, man.
I really
appreciate you taking the time with me.
I know you're a busy man. Nah, anytime. A lot of people gave a lot of value out of what you dropped today. Thank you, brother. I know you're a busy man.
Anytime.
A lot of people will get a lot of value out of what you dropped today.
Thank you, brother.
I appreciate y'all, man.
Thank you, brother.
Thanks so much for tuning into this episode of Wake Up To Wealth.
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