Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Tim Storey: The Mindset Shift That Turns Setbacks into Extraordinary Comebacks | Human Behavior | E370
Episode Date: September 29, 2025A resilient mindset is forged in life’s toughest moments, and Tim Storey knows this all too well. Despite growing up in poverty and losing his father and sister at a young age, he refused to remain ...stuck in pain and limitation. With guidance from mentors and the power of self-motivation, he rose above hardship and has become a renowned speaker and life coach, transforming the lives of both celebrities and everyday people. In this episode, Tim shares how to develop a miracle mentality, turn setbacks into extraordinary comebacks, and build the right mindset and habits for growth. In this episode, Hala and Tim will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (02:52) Overcoming Life Interruptions at a Young Age (10:20) The Miracle Mentality Framework (20:44) Exploring Good Ideas vs. God Ideas (31:22) The Psychology of Audience Connection (39:14) Miracle or Mess: Evaluating Life Decisions (44:13) The Law of the Harvest: Building a Mindset of Positivity (50:56) How to Transform Setbacks into Comebacks (58:50) AI Insights and Success Lessons for Entrepreneurs Tim Storey is a culture-influencing thought leader, life strategist, author, speaker, and counselor. He has been labeled the “Original Comeback Coach” for coaching high-profile individuals in seasons of recovery and discovery. Having spoken in over 80 countries globally, Tim inspires people of all backgrounds with his Miracle Mentality philosophy, encouraging self-improvement, mindset shifts, and personal transformation. Sponsored By: Airbnb - Find yourself a cohost at airbnb.com/host Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/PROFITING Shopify - Start your $1/month trial at Shopify.com/profiting. Mercury - Streamline your banking and finances in one place. Learn more at mercury.com/profiting Open Phone - Get 20% off your first 6 months at OpenPhone.com/profiting. DeleteMe - Remove your personal data online. Get 20% off DeleteMe consumer plans at to joindeleteme.com/profiting SKIMS - Shop SKIMS Fits Everybody collection at SKIMS.com Policy Genius - Secure your family’s future with Policygenius. Head to policygenius.com/profiting Masterclass - Get an additional 15% off any annual membership at https://masterclass.com/profiting BitDefender - Save 30% on your subscription at bitdefender.com/profiting Resources Mentioned: YAP E95 with Tim Storey: youngandprofiting.co/MiracleMindset Tim’s Podcast: bit.ly/MMWTS-apple Tim’s Instagram: instagram.com/timstoreyofficial Tim’s Facebook: facebook.com/TimStoreyOfficial Tim’s Website: timstorey.com Atomic Habits by James Clear: bit.ly/A_Habits The Life of Michelangelo by Ascanio Condivi: bit.ly/LifeMichelangelo Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap YouTube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Startup, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Human Nature, Human Psychology, Critical Thinking, Robert Greene, Chris Voss, Robert Cialdini
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9th so happy shopping and get to it we get about 50,000 thoughts a day in those thoughts you have to be
very careful because that thought can now become a choice I believe that the miracle mentality
is innate but it can grow you have to go from believing in miracles to expecting miracles
Tim's story the world-renowned original comeback coach is back on yap with nuggets of wisdom
that will shift everything you think you know about adversity from coaching Robert
Downey Jr. to guiding Oprah, Kanye West, and everyday people, Tim has mastered the art of
transformation. Compassion is a key that opens the door to a miraculous life.
A lot of setbacks that young people are feeling right now are financial. How do you think about
financial setbacks? A lot of people's expectations are too high. I think that you need to
start being a little bit realistic. And here's how it works.
you talk about this idea of good ideas versus God ideas, how you know whether it's a good idea
or a God idea. A good idea may come to pass, but a God idea will come to pass. Nowadays,
everybody wants to be a creator entrepreneur. Everybody wants to build an audience. You've been doing this
for decades. How do you connect with an audience? What I do as a speaker, as a communicator, is
Yeah, fam, what if I told you that your biggest stepback is actually setting you up for your greatest comeback?
Tim's story, the world-renowned original comeback coach, is back on Yap with nuggets of wisdom that will shift everything you think you know about adversity.
From coaching Robert Downey Jr. through his darkest moments to guiding Oprah, Kanye West, and everyday people.
Tim has totally mastered the art of transformation.
Today we're diving deep into how to cultivate a miracle mentality, shifting from the mundane
messiness and madness of life into the miraculous by mastering your mindset, moving with
patience, and leading with service-first relationships so you can turn life's interruptions
into your greatest opportunities.
But before we get into it, please follow this podcast so you never miss your weekly
dose of inspiration if you're a new listener.
Tim, welcome back to Young and Profiting Podcast.
What a privilege to be on this podcast, because this podcast, everybody wants to be on it.
Thank you so much. And this is your second time around. Last time we talked was five years ago. And I can't even believe it because it feels like yesterday. I remember when I interviewed you. My podcast was on the come up. I think I was interviewing you in my mom's basement at the time.
I think so, yes.
Yeah. So it's just so funny how things have changed. And last time that we talked, you told me about your childhood. And since it was five years ago, I figured I really want my listeners to be introduced to you, your background. So you told me that you grew up in Compton. You lived in a two-bedroom apartment with seven people. You guys used to cram into a Volkswagen or something like that and cram into a little bug car. And something you didn't tell me about in the last conversation, but I read about recently.
is that you thought of yourself as a king in poverty
and that you had a big imagination at the time,
even though you had some unfortunate circumstances.
So talk to us about how you used your imagination at that time
and you were able to see the possibilities,
even though you grew up in a bit of a disadvantage.
Yeah, so I'm the youngest of five children.
My mother worked at a donut shop called Winchell's Donut Shop.
My father worked at a place called Beth Lamb's steel.
Mother's sixth grade education, and she's Spanish,
and then my father is Cuban black.
And it was very interesting that the fact that we lived
in this two-bedroom cramped and crowded apartment
with seven people, I'll never forget what my mother said to us.
She said, we might be lower income, but we're not lower class.
So everything about our little apartment, the standard was high.
Like you never saw dishes piled up.
The trash was always thrown.
The house was always clean, even though it was so small.
So we were really prospering where we were planted.
But I started to get turned on to Walt Disney movies.
They would do these Walt Disney movies on Sunday nights.
And I would watch these.
and my imagination would just go wild.
I would just picture myself doing wonderful things, creative things.
So I asked my mother about this recently.
She said, Tim, you were only like five and six years of age.
So I was what I call thinking big in small places at a very young age.
And I know that you had a bunch of life interruptions,
such as your father passing away when you were young,
your sister passing away when you were young,
First of all, why do you call those things life interruptions?
I think that what happens if you could look at your own life, because I know your story,
is that many times we can have momentum and we have this momentum and we feel like, man,
I have momentum, I have rhythm, I have force.
And then all of a sudden, an interruption comes.
The word interruption, if you were to break it down, really means a disturbance.
It's like a knock on the door that you did not expect.
So this life interruption was my father went to get my mother food,
and he had called the restaurant, was on his way,
a man ran a red light, not on purpose, ran a red light,
hit my father in his car, and my father died instantly.
So now we're really in trouble.
But we had moved from a two-bedroom apartment to a three-year-old.
bedroom little tiny house. So we were stepping up. But now the head of the family is taken out.
And my mother did not drive. Her first language is Spanish. She speaks very broken English even to
this day. So, Hala, we were in trouble. We were really like sitting in a setback at that time.
So how did you guys come out of that? How did you start first getting into speaking? Because I know
since you were like in your 20s, you were speaking on stages internationally in front of tens of
thousands of people. So how did you go from living in poverty, losing your father, having an
immigrant mother, and then making it to the big stages? As you know, with your life, everything is
a process. So I was fortunate enough to have school teachers and coaches that really believed
to me. So my sixth grade teacher asked me to stay after class one day, and I stayed after
to class and he says, hey, he called me Timmy, Timmy's story. Timmy, because you are so brilliant,
which I never heard anybody call me that, because you are so brilliant, I want to know if you
want to check out some books for my personal library. He said, this is not for extra credit.
It's just to stir up your brilliance. What sixth grade teacher tells somebody that? So he pulled out
his briefcase. There were briefcases back then, kids. He pulls out a briefcase.
And in there is three books.
One of them is on the life of Michelangelo.
And I had heard of Michelangelo.
I'd seen a documentary on him, and I took that book.
And that teacher did so much for my life
because he branded me brilliant.
And when he branded me brilliant,
I didn't push away the label.
I just stuck it on myself.
I never told my mother when I went home.
I never told my sisters when I went home.
Oh, my God, my teacher just said I was brilliant.
I never told anybody about it, but I didn't want to let down that teacher for what he said about me.
So I decided to keep my standard real high.
Now, what if somebody's tuning in right now, they don't have a mentor who's calling them brilliant?
How can they instill really positive labels on themselves to help them move forward?
So this is one of the things I'm loving that you're doing, because I remember you way back when you started so many years ago,
I know your whole background in what you did in radio
and your aspirations to do TV and then doing TV
and all the things that you've done.
And I love the fact that now you are mentoring
and you're tutoring people on so many different platforms.
So I think that there are three ways that we learn.
If they don't have the sixth grade teacher saying you're brilliant,
here's three ways you learn.
Number one, education.
Number two, conversation.
Number three, observation.
So now, through Hollis platform, or through my platform,
we can educate you to be smarter,
more wise, more knowledgeable on a lot of subjects.
So that's education.
The conversation is what we're doing even on the podcast,
where they're hearing different conversations
or coming to one of our events
and conversing with us.
The observation is a key.
I begin to see people's lives
that I admired,
and I said,
I want to take a little bit of him,
a little bit of her,
a little bit of them,
and I want to bring that into my life.
I saw classy men
and how they treated women.
I said, I want to be that way.
I saw men that were great listeners.
One thing you'll learn about me
when we get to be around each other
more and more in person. I'm an amazing listener, which a lot of people are not. So through observation,
I learned a lot and I grew a lot. So education, conversation, observation. So you get on these
big stages and you become successful. You step into your brilliance. You start speaking. Life seems
really good on the outside. You know, you're on stages in front of 50,000 people. But in the
background, you weren't perfect. You say that you were living in the mode of mess and madness
in the background. So talk to us about that and how you end up evolving into having a miracle
mentality. So I think that the fact I went to seminary, so my doctorate is in world religion,
master's is in psychology. So when I went to seminary, I went there to become a cool mother
Teresa because I was very influenced by what she did for the orphans. I go to seminary. I'm
minding my own business. And as you know, some things in life, you decide some things you
discover. So when I was in seminary, I discovered that I had a gift to connect with people
through language, to communicate, that I communicated in a way where it drew people. And this
started when I was only 18 years of age. Then by the time I was 20,
I was already speaking to thousands of people in America,
but at 20, I had 13,000 people come and see me in Nigeria.
I had 20 years of age.
I had 14,000 people come and see me in Serbia, Indonesia.
So that was really different because I did not expect that.
I expected to help people in inner cities,
create inner city programs,
get NFL players, NBA players, maybe entertainers, to help sponsor me.
That's how I saw my life.
So I did not know that I was going to go from A to Z so fast.
And if I was to do it over again, I would say I went too fast.
Why do you think that you went too fast?
And also, why do you think that the international community is really gravitated to you
where you got such a big fan-based internationally first?
One of my friends who's quite successful, a very well-known actor, he called me Forrest Gump.
He's like, Tim, people like you so much.
They just want to do things for you.
So that's what happened.
I really have a servant's heart.
My motives were pure.
I just wanted to help people.
And people saw that.
Big NFL players, NBA players, movie stars early on.
So they started opening up these doors for me.
So I think that as a person that came from what I came from from a lower income family
to now all of a sudden you're eating lunch with these really powerful people at the
Polo Lounge and you're super young.
Pride was not the challenge, but feeling overwhelmed was the challenge.
It was a lot fast.
It did not cave me in.
There was not some huge crisis that hit me.
I did not step into addiction, but I definitely felt the pressure.
You've categorized life into four different categories.
So let's use your own life as the example.
So you say there's the messy, the mad, the mundane, and the miraculous.
So how would you categorize what you were feeling at this point in time in your 20s
where things look great and your career is skyrocketing, but the foundation is not there?
The mundane is what I consider the status quo, the regular, the common, the normal.
We still have to do mundane things.
I still take my clothes to the dry cleaner.
I still throw out the trash.
I still do a lot of mundane things.
I have to go to the DMV sometimes.
That's the last thing I want to do, right?
So that's mundane.
The messy is interesting.
I don't think anybody wakes up and says, you know what,
But 2025, let's make this a really messy year.
So messy means, as you know, disheveled, disorganized.
But people can be messy in many areas of the life.
Messy in their mindset.
Messy in their finances.
Messy in their habits.
Messy in their relationships.
So you have the mundane, the messy.
And then you have the madness, the chaotic.
I would say that my life has only been in the chaotic once,
and I needed people to help pull me out of that.
But then the fourth phase is the miracle side.
That is extraordinary, uncommon, not normal.
That's how you live.
If I was life coaching you, which I'm not,
I think you've learned how to master your mundane,
you learn how to deal with the madness,
and I think most times you have a miracle mentality.
So for those who aren't familiar with miracle mentality,
which, by the way, is the name of your new podcast,
which everybody should go check out,
how would you describe a miracle mentality
and how does it show up in day-to-day?
So a miracle is something extraordinary, uncommon,
not regular, it is supernatural.
Little kids believe it miracles.
That's why a little girl may want to have a certain type of party that is very miraculous.
So if I go speak at an orphanage, I'll say to little girls, what do you want to be?
A princess, a queen, or if they're like five, six, seven, Beyonce.
Everything is over the top.
Little boys, they play with things like Spider-Man, Batman, Iron Man.
I've never asked a little kid, what is the name of that toy?
It is a loser man toy.
I love him.
He loses every time.
No, everybody that's a little kid, they have this miracle mentality.
They have imaginary friends.
So I believe that the miracle mentality is innate.
I personally believe that God put it in our DNA that we have to quote someone you probably
like to, Kendrick Lamarck, because I know you like music like that too.
I believe that we have royalty in our DNA.
And so that's why my little sisters, when they were little, and I was little, said that
I would call myself the king, and they would call me the king, because I was acting like the
little king, yet we were poor.
So the miracle mentality is innate, but it can grow.
You have to go from believing in miracles to expecting miracles.
And that's what I learned to do very early in my life.
When I think of miracles, I think of something like really extravagant, that's magical.
Can you help us understand what regular day-to-day miracles could look like?
Yeah, a miracle is me working with you.
So I've always liked you just so you know.
I remember even when you were on Clubhouse, and then I remember when you interviewed me.
Probably a week after you interviewed me, I had you on my mind.
I'm like, someday I like to work with you.
So this is an interesting thing.
is that in my kind of world,
because a lot of what I do is in Beverly Hills,
on a monthly basis,
somebody's telling me of what they could do for my brand.
So when we decided to do a podcast,
when we decided to do some other things,
when we begin to look at what you've done for your company,
there was no question,
you are becoming masterful at this.
So I would say that a miracle is me connecting with you.
So sometimes it's just a connection,
but that connection evolves and evolves and evolves.
It's like when I connected with Oprah Winfrey.
Gail King was trying to get me with Oprah,
and then the great Quincy Jones was trying to get me with Oprah.
But I didn't know that me meeting Oprah 17 years ago
would take my life into the,
the craziest places that you can imagine
with Oprah Winfrey herself saying
I will open up so many doors for you
just because I love you
and that's exactly what she did.
So sometimes miracles are just in connections.
I've got so many follow-up questions.
The first one I'm going to ask is
you've gotten so many really, really powerful people
to like you and take you under your wing
and work with you.
How are you so likable?
What is your secret to being such a likable person?
Give me two reasons why you like me
and then we'll go from there.
You're very kind-hearted.
You want to help people.
Okay, so I think you probably hit the two.
I think that this idea of being the guy was never how I felt.
The idea of it being for me, what do I get out of this, was not for me.
So I started seeing a psychologist when I was 24 years of age, and not because I was in
trouble. It's because I was in over my head. So much good was happening. I sought out a lady who taught at
USC who was just brilliant, who ended up working with me for like many, many years. And one of the things
she said, she goes, it's as though you don't really know who you are and how you affect all of us, Tim.
And she says, maybe God allowed you to have that blind spot. So I think the fact that my motives
are pure. I want to serve people. I feel like my heart is right. I want to lift up other people
more than thinking about myself. That in this case, I think you reap what you sow. Because you're
right. From Steve Harvey to Oprah to David Galad, who's one of the greatest managers of all time,
for these people to come into my life and now you and say, hey, let's say, hey, let's be. You're
Let's go there.
I think I'm reaping maybe what I've sown a little bit.
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So you were just talking about how you had a gut
instinct when we first met like, oh, I'd love to work with her
in the future. And I know you talk about this idea of
good ideas versus God ideas, which I just love
because in pop culture right now,
everyone's talking about getting downloads, right?
There's lots of talk about getting downloads from the universe
about your next project, your next company.
Talk to us about how you know whether it's a good idea
or a God idea.
Describe each one.
We all get ideas.
Studies have shown, which you are aware of this
because you're a person who's very educated,
that we get about 50,000 thoughts a day.
So 50,000 thoughts a day try to come into our minds.
So in those thoughts, you have to be very careful
because that thought could now become a choice.
So let's say you go by Krispy Kreme
and they have the red light flashing hot.
So just because you have the thought
doesn't mean you should go into the Krispy Kreme parking lot
and get the donut.
Or just because you meet a certain man
doesn't mean you should date him.
If I meet a certain woman,
doesn't mean that I should date her.
So we get these thoughts that could be good ideas
but also believe that there are something that are God ideas.
So what is a God idea, Tim's story?
A God idea is something that is God inspired.
Okay, so here's what's awesome,
because there's some people that are watching today
that do not believe in God.
So if there was a God,
and if he was and is who he says he is,
which is omniscient, all knowing,
so if this omniscient god this god who knows everything gives you a god-inspired idea that i call a revelation
if god gives you a revelation it's god inspired and then it's also god endorsed so what i personally
believe is that a good idea may come to pass but a god idea will come to pass so let me say that
again slowly. A good idea may come to pass. A God idea will come to pass. So I like to operate
my life by God ideas because I sure do hear a lot of good ideas. I was just getting a little
a bit emotional because as you were saying that, I was thinking about when I first started my
podcast, people would be like, why are you starting this? What do you want in five years? And I used
to say, I want to have the biggest podcast network. I had no idea what that even meant. And kind of
organically, over the last five years, I built the biggest podcast network piece by piece until one
day I just had a network. And it just happened so naturally. It did feel like it was just
something that I was pulled to. Is there something in your life similarly where it was a God idea?
tell us a story about a God idea that came to fruition.
Yeah, but if you don't mind, I want to go back to you just for a minute.
Sure.
I think that for you, in knowing your story of other people in your family, they went down
traditional education. You find yourself working at Hot 97 as an intern for a long period
of time, not getting paid. You are just hustling. You're like Rick Ross.
every day I'm hustling, every day I'm hustling.
You're just laying the foundation.
So you already had a God idea that you were going to make an impact.
The question is, how was she going to make the impact?
So in the, how is how are they going to make an impact,
you were in what I call the Discovery Zone.
So that was you at the one station.
and then you're working with Angie Martinez
and then you almost work for the one guy's sway
that doesn't work
and then you almost do that one MTV show
that doesn't quite work good
you know why because God was closing a door
to open up the door so if some of those doors
would have worked I would not have the hall of this sitting in front of me
that is running an empire
but look at me you're just getting started
you're like a sprinter who's just finding her stride. I'm going to be super excited to be in this
with you to see what's going to happen in six months from now, six months later, six months after
that. And I'm not just hyping you up. This is something that I know. You're on fire right now.
Oh, Tim, you're so sweet. Tell us about your own God ideas. I knew that you have a movement
lead with love. I want to learn about that and why you decided to step on your own.
Number one, I'm a team player.
I do really well in the second role.
I don't have to be the star of the team.
Like with Grant Cardone 10X conferences,
I think out of the 10 he did, I spoke at 7,
whether I'm doing a project with Tony Robbins
or all the stuff I do with John Maxwell,
the Aspire Tour.
I think I'm the only one besides the owners
who spoke at every one of them
for the last two and a half years.
So I'm thankful for all that, the Oprah Winfrey tour, where she took us around,
all the stuff I've done with Oprah from documentaries to be in her books.
And for all you that are watching, that's not very common because Oprah doesn't bring people
in on repeat like that.
So because of Oprah Winfrey in her backyard, she started challenging me about Tim, you need
to let people feel your spirit.
you need to let people feel your touch you're in with a lot of people let them feel your touch
so i was listening to this and then i was listening to my friend david galad who i've known for
a long time and he started saying tim for 11 years i've been pushing you you need to step out
into your own movement because i'm 82 countries deep i mean i've been 82 countries
countries and not small of the crowds. My biggest crowd is 85,000. So yeah, we started a movement
called Lead with Love because I believe that compassion is a key that opens the door
to a miraculous life. And when you lead with love, watch out. So this is a movement from
masterminds to classes to having people like you teach people like you come and speak
some will be in amazing houses all over the world some will be in comfy little arenas
with 500 people and then some will be massive and what's interesting is people are jumping in
I had one of my friends, who you know, he's worth about $1.7 billion.
He called me out of nowhere.
He said, I've got the money, you got the gift, let's go.
So there's a lot of people that want to back us up, like yourself, using your skill set and everything that you're about.
And thank you, Oprah.
Thank you to some of these other people.
But I will say to the guy that was offering me the money right now, I actually told him,
let's put that on hold.
And he was very in shock.
Why did you do that?
Because I didn't want it to be about that.
I didn't want it to be about, yeah, I got all this money and I can go monetize and go
do this so fast.
I needed to stay true to who I'm really about.
And that's just building things block by block.
But I will bring him in because he's also a very smart businessman.
But I'm excited about Leave with Love.
We have a mastermind coming up very, very soon in Bel Air, California.
And then we do these live events.
And then the mentoring and training, I think, are going to be next level.
Well, I'm super excited to help you build this, to be honest.
I just feel like you're somebody who's so well-known in real life.
Everybody knows your name.
You're really big on Instagram, but I can't wait to bring your message even wider
on LinkedIn and podcasts, I just think you're going to absolutely crash.
So just so excited for your podcast launch.
Yeah, but can I say something before you ask me the next question?
Yeah.
I want to say to you, I want you to really hear me.
Thank you because I feel like you are seeing my brand and understanding my brand.
And the thing that I did not go for before, like if I got off the stage and I spoke
for Ed Milet, and there was 34,000 people.
And if I get off the stage, everybody's hitting me up.
They want to know how I could get them to Oprah,
or can I get them a book deal,
or can I get them an agent, can I get them a manager?
And then one of the biggest hit-ups I get is,
I help build Tony Robbins this,
or I help Russell Brunson with this,
and I could do this for you.
And that is really not a conversation
I ever wanted to get in with people.
So I was just on hold, like,
who could I find that I could connect with
that will understand my essence
that I am here to change people?
What a privilege when Quincy Jones said,
you are the young Nelson Mandela.
Tim, do you understand you are today's pop prophet?
You are the leader of leaders
of people who need to break,
through some of their pain points, trying to find themselves. So I really appreciate the fact
that you pay attention to my voice, my brand, my calling. You're helping to build out my LinkedIn,
which, what did I know about LinkedIn? I'm a humanitarian. So all that research you've done,
you're really helping to change my life. So thank you. Thank you. So,
One thing that I know about you is that when you walk on stage, you command everybody's attention.
You're able to build these communities in real life.
Like I mentioned, you've got so many diehard fans used to go on TV and people were magnetized.
This is why overbought you back on over and over again.
How do you connect with audiences?
And this is especially relevant for everybody tuning in because nowadays, everybody wants to be a creator entrepreneur.
Everybody wants to build an audience.
you've been doing this for decades.
So how do you connect with an audience?
I think that something that's very, very important
and what I hear from people
is they feel like they'll say,
Tim, I feel like you were just talking to me.
Even though there was 8,000 people,
I feel like you were just talking to me.
So that is very much on purpose.
What I do as a speaker, as a communicator,
is I think, okay,
somebody's sisters out there.
somebody's mothers out there, somebody's brothers out there.
I want this message to help change their life
because I know it's going to have a domino effect.
I really work hard on my messages.
So if I'm going to speak 45 minutes,
I study 20 hours for a 45-minute speech.
And I don't have three speeches.
I probably have over 250 talks
that I could give at any time.
So I put that much energy research because it's somebody's mother, somebody's sister,
somebody's brother, and I think that that's what they are feeling.
Because watch, revelation leads to conviction.
So one of the things that people feel when I'm taking a stage and mastering it is they're
feeling like, my God, this guy's on fire.
just because Lewis Howes is my real friend.
I'll tell this story.
We were at Grand Cardone's 10X,
and I went up there,
and it was like fire hit,
because the message was good,
and the crowd was up and fire hit.
And Lewis was in the backstage.
He's like,
what the heck just happened?
And it's nice to get the response
from the other speakers that I respect
of what did Tim's story just do there?
So it's a revelation conviction
and that conviction
is what brings that feeling to people.
It's like having the confidence when you speak.
It's not really what you're saying,
it's how you're saying it.
And I feel like you're so good at that,
your tonality, using pauses,
even when you're talking to me right now.
You're just such a good communicator.
Do you have any pointers in that regards?
I do.
I teach a whole class
that you're going to help us push
called Master the Stage
and because I decided
since everybody
was saying such nice things
about my speaking
I said
okay how did I get this good
so I created a whole course
on how to master the stage
and part of it is
to find your own secret sauce
what is your message
like Renee Brown is being vulnerable
are Jamie Kern, Lima is being worthy.
Grant Cardone 10X.
Tim's story, right now, miracle mentality.
So you got to have your own secret sauce,
but then you see what I am doing with my cadence.
My cadence is on purpose, the way I pause.
I give people time to really take in,
and that's through a lot of studying on communication
and working with some of the best communication coaches.
So I work with the best voice coaches.
These Seth Riggs, who's the voice coach
behind Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, Michael Jackson,
on and on and on.
That was my voice coach.
I've had the greatest acting coaches
that you have in Beverly Hills
walking me through step by step.
I've had people like one of my best friends in the world,
Robert Downey Jr., sitting there watching me
speech after speech after speech after speech because he watched me speak for 20 years straight.
And he would say, you know, Tim, you should add a little this or shift a little that,
do a little of that. So I've had some help with it. But it's very intentional because, as you know,
the way we communicate can change people's lives. So what are some actionable things that some of these
people have told you to do? Let's say we've got an entrepreneur who's about to make a pitch to a bunch of
VCs. What are some of the things that they should keep in mind when they're doing this
pitch? I honestly don't think that I can be really beat on a pitch. I think that a lot of the
things that are talked about with sales and pitching is we're trying to convince somebody
of something. I'm like a master. And part of it, I learned from some of the masters that have
been around for a long time, they do very well. And that is, talk about somebody's mother,
talk about somebody's father. Find out, do they have cats, do they have dogs? Find places of
connection and build a bridge. So now it's a connection, it's a conversation, and then let's see
if we can have an exchange. Let's see if we can swap. Like the old days in the farms, let's say
your family had too many horses, and my family had too many cows. So we would swap cows for horses.
And that's what I do with my pitches, is that I'm not coming and trying to get ABC to buy me.
Like, look at me. I'm fancy. You should buy my show. No. What do you need? Your programming seems
down in this area, up in this area. What are you looking for?
And recently at one of the big networks, I was talking to one of the guys, he said, can I break
character for a minute? And he was the head of his division in one of the top three of ABC,
CBS, and NBC. But I won't tell you which one it was. But he said, can I break character for a minute?
He goes, oh my God, you're touching me emotionally. He goes, most people just want something from me.
I go, no, not me.
Because I don't want to be in the wrong place.
I want to make sure I'm in the middle of God's will for my life.
That's so powerful.
So with the pitch, be a good listener.
With your plan, what you have, your idea, be a good listener.
Just don't take me to a great restaurant and just start pitching away.
Ask me about my mother.
Then that's part of being likable too, right?
People like to talk about themselves.
So let people talk about themselves.
and then listen to them and try to make a deeper connection.
Yes, because look at your schedule now, right?
You're moving from boom to bam to boom to bam to bam to bam to bam to boom to bam.
So am I.
I'm running companies.
I'm doing things.
And so I don't want just somebody coming at me and just saying,
how do I sell this to this guy?
No, I want to know you.
What's your backstory?
In fact, I have done business with people
that were not as good as somebody else
just because I like their backstory.
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Let's play a game, Tim.
I want to play a game called Miracle or Mess, okay?
Ooh, I like this game.
Yeah, I'm going to throw out some real-life scenarios.
You're going to tell us, is this a miracle move or a messy move, and why?
You ready?
I'm ready.
I've never played this game.
It's a custom game based on you.
All right, quitting your 9-to-5 job with no savings or plan.
Mess.
Why?
Well, that's something that you would have.
have done in your early days, but very few people are you. What I tell people is that if you have
eight pieces of a pie, just stick with this for just a minute, eight pieces of a pie.
Most people want to just take all eight pieces of pie, throw them away to try to fill in
this new endeavor, those eight pieces with, I'm going to be a life coach, I'm going to be a thought
leader. I'm going to write books. I'm going to have my own podcast. I'm going to be the next
Jay Shetty. I'm like, probably we should keep your job instead of eight pieces of the pie for that
job. Let me have two pieces of the pie to become J. Shetty. But the other pieces you do your job
until you start becoming better becoming J. Shetty and then maybe you go all the way. So it's an
interesting thing, but I got to go Bible on you for a minute. Even Jesus was a carpenter.
Jesus was a carpenter, but he knew he was the king. So yeah, I believe in the nine to five job still.
Okay. Forgiving somebody who betrayed you, even though they never apologized.
The answer is you forgive, but that doesn't mean you bring them back into your inner circle.
you forgive because it's going to be healthier for you.
So when you are offended,
watch how powerful this is.
Like, I love your energy, okay?
But if you started thinking of all the people
that offended you, even when you were coming up,
the offense will put you on the defense.
So the unforgiveness will put you on the defense.
I don't want to be on the defense.
I want to be free-flowing.
I want to be happy.
I want to be the funny guy that I am.
So no, I'm going to forgive you,
but that does not mean you're coming back in my life.
So you're at peace,
but doesn't mean that you need to help that person later on.
Of course not.
No.
And I think that that's what some people,
they get themselves in trouble for,
even with family members.
If a family member has betrayed you,
that's your family member.
But I might just see you at Thanksgiving.
I'm going to be kind to you, and I might send you some texts too, but that doesn't mean I'm going to
tell all my inside story and put you on the inside. Okay, investing in yourself with a course or a mentor,
even when money is tight. Do it. Miracle move. I sold my Volkswagen at 18. There was a guy in
Seoul Korea that was doing what I wanted to do, and he was super great.
at running nonprofits and helping people to do this in Seoul Korea.
I sold my Volkswagen to go to Seoul Korea to go to a seminar
when I was 18 years of age.
Yes, sometimes you live from your sacrifice,
sometimes you live from your surplus.
Too many of you are waiting until you get to the surplus.
No, you got a sacrifice.
To get to where I've gotten, I have sacrificed.
I've worked overtime. I've sold things just to get to the places that I needed to be.
Okay. Last one. Waiting for the perfect timing before you take action on your dream.
I know this about you, but I won't give your answer. I'm a plotter. I'm a practical thinker.
So if I'm going to Dubai, I'm going to check the weather so I know what clothes to bring.
I'm going to check the temperature before I just jump.
So a lot of my friends just jump and jump and jump and jump and sometimes they're jumping
in the wrong places.
So I believe in weighing out the matter, looking at the pros and cons, but I am not
afraid of taking a leap of faith.
To be Tim's story, I took a leap of faith.
Yes, for a humanitarian to become well known in all the spaces I'm in and run all these
businesses now, that was a leap of faith. But I also want to look at the facts before I take
that jump. Something about your mindset is that you're really, really positive. You just mentioned
you took a leap of faith. You say that pessimism cancels faith. So talk to us about the need
to be positive. And you also talk about weighing pros and cons just now that it's not like you're
just making decisions without thinking about them. But how do we keep an air of positivity or what do we
need to think about? The mindset is yours to set. When I woke up this morning, it's not like I woke up
on positive. So every day, seven days a week, I don't just wake up and go like, oh my gosh,
I feel amazing. Sometimes I go like, my shoulder hurts.
Who punched me in the shoulder while I was asleep?
So what I have to do is I have to renew my mind.
So two hours a day, seven days a week, I study in the morning.
Two, look at me, two hours a day.
I am a machine in this mind.
It is hard to yank me down.
A fire could start right here, and I won't get dramatic in the drama.
I'll just kind of look and figure it out.
Someone can sue me.
You got to hear this.
One time I was speaking at this big convention, a lot of people, and somebody was suing me
for something I did not do, and they served me in the middle of my talk.
Oh, my God.
So the guy has a vanilla folder, like those orange peachy looking folders, and he comes up with a tie on
in a suit and he goes like this in front of everybody while I'm speaking. He goes, you've been
served like he's shaming me. And I go like this. Thank you for doing your job. I said, let's give
this man a clap. I said, seriously. I said, that took guts. I said, I saw you standing over there.
I saw you looking like if you were going to do jump rope. When are you going to jump in? And I was wondering,
when one of the bodyguards was trying to figure out,
because I didn't know if you were going to come try to stab me,
try to choke me,
because all that stuff has happened to me.
So I didn't know what you were going to try to do to me,
but you were just serving me the paper.
So let's give them another clap.
Sir, if you'd like to stay, you should stay.
I got 20 more minutes in this talk.
I think you'll learn something.
So can you imagine the mindset you have to have
to still stay positive while this guy's serving you papers
in the middle of a talk that they paid you to speak.
Yeah.
So, no, your mindset is yours to set.
And I choose to set my mind on the miracle mentality on a daily basis, no matter what's going on.
Well, let's try to get some actionable bits from that because entrepreneurs, it's a roller coaster.
Things are just up and down all the time.
Things can be really exciting and then drop in a minute.
So talk to us about how we can keep.
a level-headed mindset? What are some practices that we can do? I think you know this a little bit
about me. Did I life-coach big companies? Some of these companies I've life-coached 18 years,
some of the biggest companies in the world. I live-coached some of the biggest AI companies.
So I'm used to dealing with people who want the process. So there's something called the
law of the harvest. In order to get a harvest, you have to follow certain laws.
So if you were to talk to any farmer, and let's simplify the law of the harvest,
is you've got to plow the ground.
It's hard work.
You're plowing.
You don't see the harvest.
You're plowing.
So that's what you were doing when you were an intern.
Okay?
You were plowing the ground.
That's what I was doing when I was a dishwasher, a bus boy, a waiter.
Tim's story was all those things.
I was plowing the ground.
And then you start to plant the seed.
So I would say to all you that are watching, what kind of seed are you planted?
Are you planting seeds and taking Holla's classes that you can take so you can learn and get smarter?
Are you planting seeds in your fitness, planning seeds for your mindset?
So you've got to plant the right seeds.
So you plow, you plant, you got to water.
Water is repetition.
Ooh.
That's why the book Atomic Habits has sold so many copies is because we all know we need to work on our habits.
So when you have plants in your house, it's a responsibility.
You have to water them.
That's repetition.
So you plow, you plant, you water, and then you harvest.
Same thing in your company.
So expect the harvest.
But first you've got to plow, you got to plant, you got to water, then expect the harvest.
So maybe in one part of your company, you're harvesting, the other part of your company,
you're plowing. So you can do both at the same time. So you're saying that you, and I read this
about you earlier, that you study two hours every morning. It's part of your morning routine.
So I have a couple questions about this. How do you decide what you're going to study? Is it based
on what you're doing, your new projects? Is it just for fun? And then out of all the books that you've
read, what are some that you recommend for our listeners? I like to study what I don't know.
So when everybody was talking about NFTs, I was like, what is that?
And so I didn't want to be like somebody that did not know.
So when people were talking more and more about Bitcoin and crypto, I went to my friend
CryptoMagan because she knows all about that.
So I said, you teach me and then what books should I read?
So certain things that I don't know about, even like what Russell Brunson does with ClickFunnels,
when I first saw him speak for Grant Cardone.
I wanted to know, so then I started to study him,
study his process.
So a lot of the things I study, you guys,
is what I don't know.
And then the other side of things I study
is what I want to master.
So there's a few areas in life
where I think I'm pretty hard to be
because it's very Malcolm Gladwell of me
where it's like I put over 10,000 hours,
into mastering certain things that I'm good at,
just like you're putting hours into mastering what you're good at.
So last couple of questions, I want to talk to you about comebacks.
Okay, so you're known as a comeback coach.
Talk to us about what we need to look for,
especially as entrepreneurs.
Let's say we're an entrepreneur.
We had a company that failed.
We're looking to start our new thing.
What kind of mindset do we need to have?
What do we need to think through when we're working on our comeback?
The first thing you have to understand is that a setback is always going to happen.
So I call it bugs on the windshield.
If you are in Florida during certain times a year, if you were to drive from Miami to Orlando,
which is several hours, certain times of the year, there's going to be bugs that hit the windshield.
So some people, they have these setbacks that are like, I don't want setbacks.
It's like bugs on the windshield.
Guess what?
If you're an entrepreneur
and you're starting something,
there will be bugs on the windshield.
People might leave you.
People may try to duplicate your plan.
People might deceive you.
People might betray you.
There's a lot of things that happen.
Bugs on the windshield.
So just realize the setback is coming.
When you are in the midst of a setback,
and I beg you to hear,
because this is where I'm masterful,
you have to become a way,
and go, whoa, okay, what's happening here?
That lady just stole my ideas and went over there.
Or this person just took my money and went over here.
Or I thought this was going to work, and I tried to scale too fast.
So number one, when you're in a setback, you have to become awake.
Secondly, you have to take inventory.
Now that I'm in the setback, where's my mindset?
Where's my thought process?
Where's my energy?
What's my team like?
where's my financial situation like?
So number one, you become awake.
Secondly, you take inventory,
and I'll just give the third one for right now.
Number three, you have to partner with the right people.
So you need people like the two you're seeing on the screen right now
with her and me,
and you need to say, what are their strengths
and how can I partner with them
so they can educate me up and out?
And I know that one of your philosophies is that a
Comeback is not a go-back, because we often repeat the same mistakes over and over again.
So talk to us about that.
I'm just getting impressed with the fact that you know my saying.
That made me feel good.
I said that first to Gail King from CBS Morning News.
We were having lunch in New York in a very nice place.
And I said, you know, Gail, a comeback is not a go-back.
And she goes, well, do you say that all the time?
And I go, no.
She goes, don't forget it.
Write it down right now.
So that is the truth.
I think a lot of times people think,
if I go back and fix this, then I'll be okay.
If I go back and fix that, then I'll be okay.
If I go back and try to fix the relationship with my sister
or my mother or my cousin or my ex,
come back is not a go back.
We have to just learn from our setbacks,
grow from our setbacks, and then just go forward.
A lot of setbacks that young people are feeling right now are financial.
I'm not in this bucket.
I've future-proofed myself in a way,
but a lot of people are graduating college.
They can't get jobs or inflation.
People feel like they can't afford a house.
How do you think about financial setbacks and comebacks?
I think different than a lot of my,
friends that are my real close buddies that we all do these conferences together. I'm a builder.
And I think that a lot of people's expectations are too high and they're trying to get it too
fast. So I think that you need to start being a little bit realistic. And here's how it works.
First you've got to sit and learn. Then you stand in what you learned. And then you walk. You walk it out.
So that's where some of you are that are watching today
is that you want to soar,
but right now you are in the walking,
and you're not enjoying your walking because you want to soar.
But this is part of the process.
The guys that I work with that do really well,
I live coached the greatest minds in the world.
They had to sit, they had to stand, and they had to walk.
Then you begin to walk, you walk, you walk, you walk,
and then next thing you know, you're running.
oh my god my business is taken off i just went from three restaurants to four restaurants
to seven restaurants to 13 restaurants so now you are running you're in passion now most people
will never go to the next phase the next phase is the soaring and those are the people that we
look at and gawk at oh my god look at them and you're gawking at them because they're soaring
You can soar too if you learn to sit, stand, walk, run.
You're going to soar without even realizing you're soaring.
It's not like you just are trying to take flight.
It's just all of a sudden it's happening to you.
You're just like this.
And you're like, what the heck?
It's like when I first started speaking and I look out and I go,
that's Danzel Washington
and I was in my
20s and I was like
this is tripping me out
then I'd go to another city
and I won't say another entertainer
but it's another big one
just as big as this one
and I look and I go
that is, it was a female actress
I was like
this is tripping me out
and then I would go
to these countries
and the presidents would want to meet me
the president is summoning for you
because you're this young leader
So I started soaring, and it was something that I knew that I could not take flight on my own,
but it came through that process of sitting, standing, walking, running, soaring.
And nowadays, everybody just wants to go viral, right?
They just want it to happen overnight.
And I've seen it.
I've been doing this now.
I started my podcast seven years ago.
I started posting on LinkedIn seven years ago.
I remember feeling so jealous I would see these people that.
would just go viral overnight and maybe start a company.
But now seven years later, none of those people are even around.
Also, when people get big too fast, I feel like they burn out or they have no real backbone or a foundation.
It just happened by mistake.
And then they don't know how to keep it either.
You're so right.
And I think that that's why with you, I'm loving that you're growing very, very fast, obviously.
I also believe you're learning how to be steady, line upon line, precept upon precept is how the Bible
talks about it. And so I think that that's why I've been able to last this long. I first started
speaking at 18, and here I am at the stage that I'm at, speaking on the biggest platforms
in the world. I did the world government summit last year. I'm doing it again this coming
year, I'm one of the few Americans that have been invited to speak on that platform in Dubai,
all these unusual doors that continue to open for me, it's not by accident. It's like an
eagle. Right when they think that they hit the highest soaring spot, another gust of wind hits and
goes, boom. So the future is changing. Everybody's talking about AI. I think AI is especially
scary for people who don't have a lot of experience because I think AI is going to really impact
the younger generation. It's going to be 40 and 50-year-olds who are going to be managing
entry-level AI agents who essentially could have been entry-level workers. So what advice do you
have to the young people graduating or people in their 20s and 30s right now? So I would say
about AI, it is
essential learning
because whether or not
here it comes.
It used to be in the old days
if we flew first class.
You went up to the ticket
counter, let's say at American
and let's say in LAX
they know me because that's where I'd fly out of.
So they'd be like, hey, Mr.
Story, oh my God, where are you going to go
next? I saw you on this TV show.
That was cool. So I love
the whole feeling. Okay.
it's not the same feeling anymore.
Nowadays, you are literally tagging your own bags
in many of these airports.
You are pushing all these things,
doing a lot of things you don't want to do
that just seem like a hassle.
So it is essential to learn new things.
So in AI, it is essential learning
whether or not here it comes.
So it's essential.
But it shouldn't be like eating spinach
when you're a kid. Look at it as something that can enhance you. It could upgrade you. It could make
your life better. So it's like learning multiple languages. So AI can be your friend. I'm involved in
some AI companies as a shareholder. I'm starting my own AI company in a whole other sphere.
AI is my friend, but I had to invite it in as my friend.
I want to close out this interview, Tim, with a rapid-fire wisdom round.
So I'm just going to ask you a question.
You're just going to tell me your first thing that comes to your mind.
I just want to pick your brain on all the things you've learned over the years.
Are you ready?
I'm ready.
Best advice you've ever gotten from Oprah or another mentor?
Let's go Oprah, because I think she's one of the smartest people I've ever met in my life.
She's like a walking library.
Her idea was never force the process, let it unfold, that the greats just let themselves unfold.
But she was talking about people like Maya Angelou, who was one of her mentors, Quincy Jones, Cindy Portier, don't force it, just let it flow.
One sentence that you would tell your 20-year-old self.
I would say, don't worry.
you're not going to break out for much longer
because once in a while I get acne
and I was going like,
I'm already 20.
It should be gone by now.
So I tell myself,
don't get impatient with the process,
whether it's who you're going to marry,
how you look,
how you're growing.
Life is uncomfortable.
Life is awkward.
So I would tell my 28-year-old self,
Hey, Tim Story. Be patient. You're right on time.
So you've mentored some of the biggest celebrities, biggest athletes, people who have everything, but they still need coaching.
So what are some of the common threads that people need help with that we can look out for as we become high achievers?
I would say the biggest one is to stay on the yellow brick road.
So watch what I do with this. Dorothy wanted to go back to Kansas.
the Wizard of Odds movie.
She said, how do I get there?
And they said, follow the Yellow Brick Road.
So all these different characters said,
follow the Yellow Brick Road.
But everything tried to take them off the Yellow Brick Road.
So even Toto try to take her off.
The Tin Man, the Scarecrow, the Cowardly Lion,
the Wicked Witch,
where I am a master,
this is where I don't think I can be beat.
I keep people on the Yellowbrick Road.
I can even see when they start to veer off,
and I'll go like this, get back on.
I call it alignment to your assignment
because everything in this world
is going to try to take you on a detour
and distraction.
I'm a master at going like this.
Look, get back on the Yellow Creek Road.
So, Tim, I know that you're launching
a brand new podcast called The Miracle Mentality.
Can you tell us about that
and what you're excited about?
Yes, I'm excited about the idea of
stepping into the podcast world and being able to bring on some amazing guests that are even
different people than I would usually even interview and find out about their miracle mentality.
So it's called The Miracle Mentality with Tim's Story.
So it's about finding like the secret sauce of how people get that miracle mentality in their
own life, whether they're a CEO or whether a person who started a company that failed that had a
comeback are some most famous people in the world. So I'm excited about this podcast, the miracle
mentality that Yap is helping us with and helping us to do it, get it out there, and would
a privilege to be with the best company. Super excited. It's going to blow up. So very excited for you, Tim.
all those links in the show notes.
So I am my show with two questions
that I ask everybody.
You can answer from your heart,
whatever it comes to mind.
What is one actionable thing
our young improfitors can do today
to become more profitable tomorrow?
Forgive yourself.
You may not be what you want to be,
but thank God you're not what you used to be.
Forgive yourself.
You might be four pounds underweight,
four pounds overweight.
You may have made bad decisions
in business or relationships.
forgive yourself. You're a work in progress.
And what would you say your secret to profiting in life is? And this can go beyond financial.
My secret to profiting in life is definitely understanding that I am a piece of the puzzle.
It's like life is one complicated, big puzzle with small pieces. It's not the ones you get when you're five that are real big,
with big pieces, and to know that we are all a piece of the puzzle, but you're a vital
piece of the puzzle. And we need you to be that piece of the puzzle for this world to work
correctly. Tim, thank you so much for joining us. I love this conversation. Where can everybody
learn more about you and everything that you do? The best place to follow us is timstory.com.
my last name is S-T-O-R-E-Y.
So, Timstory.com.
Then you can find all things Tim Story, all the projects that we're doing, and then on
Instagram and Facebook, we're Tim Story official.
Amazing.
Tim, thank you so much for joining us on the podcast.
Thank you.
Yeah, Bam, Tim just offered us so much incredible wisdom about developing.
a miracle mentality. And developing that miracle mentality isn't just about wishful thinking. It's
about using practical strategies. And here are some of my favorites that he shared. First off,
be intentional about the labels that you accept. When Tim's sixth grade teacher called him
brilliant, he didn't just dismiss it. He owned it and he lived up to it. That single moment changed
his trajectory. Next, learn the difference between good ideas and God ideas. Good ideas may come to
pass, but God ideas will come to pass. Tim's success comes from waiting for those really
inspiring moments and then acting with conviction. You also need to build genuine relationships.
Tim doesn't pitch. He says he connects. He asks about your mother, your father, your backstory,
your dreams. Before Oprah opened doors, before Quincy Jones called him today's pop prophet,
Tim mastered the art of good listening and genuine curiosity. When you lead with love instead of an
agenda, people don't just buy from you. They invest in you. Another powerful principle,
follow the plow plant water harvest process. Tim turned down a $1.7 billion backer because
he knew real success comes from building block by block, not from shortcuts. Study like he does,
20 hours of preparation for every 45-minute speech. For entrepreneurs, that means respecting the
order of growth and staying consistent. Remember Tim's comeback formula the next time you have a
setback. Wake up to reality.
take honest inventory, and partner with people who see your potential.
A comeback isn't about returning to where you were.
It's about stepping into who you're meant to become.
Remember, a comeback is not a go-back.
If Tim's miracle mentality sparks something inside of you,
share this episode with somebody who's ready to expect extraordinary in their own life.
And if these insights hit home, don't forget to drop us a five-star review on Apple Podcast, Spotify,
cast box, or wherever you listen to this show.
Catch the full video on YouTube by searching Young and Prof.
You can find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala or LinkedIn.
Just search for my name.
It's Hala Taha.
And before we wrap, I got to give a massive shout out to my Yap production team.
Until next time, this is your host, Hala Taha, aka the podcast Princess, signing off.
Thank you.