Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - YAPClassic: Leila Hormozi, From Six Arrests to $100M Networth by Age 28
Episode Date: October 11, 2024After her parents' divorce, Leila Hormozi’s mother spiraled into alcoholism, forcing Leila to grow up fast. Later, when she moved into her father’s more stable home, she became an angry, rebelliou...s teenager without direction. She partied excessively and was arrested six times in 18 months. But a heart-to-heart with her dad sparked a self-development journey that transformed her into the successful entrepreneur she has become. In today’s episode, Leila shares what she has learned about creating lasting behavioral change and becoming the person you aspire to be. Leila Hormozi is an entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist. She co-founded Acquisition.com with her husband, Alex Hormozi. By the age of 28, she had amassed a net worth of $100M. In this episode, Hala and Leila will discuss: - How Leila’s turbulent childhood shaped her - Her rebellious teenage years - The moment that propelled her to change - Why you must act first - Ditching entertainment for education - Channeling stress and anxiety into learning - The top two lessons she learned as a salesperson - The importance of being uncomfortable - Building the “GSD” muscle - And other topics… Leila Hormozi is a first-generation Iranian-American entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist. She is the CEO of Acquisition.com and is known for her expertise in scaling businesses by building flexible infrastructures and effective management systems that foster great workplace cultures and high performance. Following a successful turnaround business venture, she and her husband, Alex Hormozi, packaged his process into a licensing model that scaled to over 4,000+ locations in 4 years. Simultaneously, she launched and scaled three companies, generating $120M+ without external funding. Connect with Leila: Leila’s Website: https://www.acquisition.com/ Leila’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leila-hormozi-32a580a5/ Leila’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/LeilaHormozi Leila’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/leilanhormozi/ Leila’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/leila.naghshineh Sponsored By: Airbnb - Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at https://www.airbnb.com/host Fundrise - Add the Fundrise Flagship Fund to your portfolio in minutes at https://fundrise.com/PROFITING Mint Mobile - To get a new 3-month premium wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, go to https://mintmobile.com/profiting Working Genius - Get 20% off the $25 Working Genius assessment at https://www.workinggenius.com/ with code PROFITING at checkout Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at https://youngandprofiting.co/shopify Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at https://indeed.com/profiting LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Top Tools and Products Of The Month: https://youngandprofiting.com/deals/ More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media's Services - yapmedia.io/
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What is going on my YAP fam?
It is a YAP Classic Day and we're traveling back to 2022 for part 1 of my 2 part interview
with rock star business mogul,
Leila Hermosy.
This was episode 202 that we did in 2022.
Leila is a first-generation Iranian-American entrepreneur,
investor, and philanthropist.
She started her career in fitness,
and today she's widely known as a scaling operations
and management expert entrepreneur.
She acquired a net worth of $100 million
by the time she was 28 years old.
Now, I should have said 28 years young
because damn, that is young and prophetic.
But before she was a millionaire,
Layla was a rebellious youth
who once got arrested six times in a matter of 18 months.
And in this episode, she shares with us
how mentors like Tony Robbins changed her life
and how she met another rock star,
her husband, Alex Hermosy,
and how we can all make lasting behavior
in order to become the people we want to be.
And speaking of becoming the people we want to be,
I remember Layla told me a story
about letting go of her past.
She had a difficult relationship with her mother
and her mother was an alcoholic
and for a long time she hung on that.
And she actually learned that your memories
are often really inaccurate.
And that means that her past with her mother
could have been worse or it could have been better.
So if she doesn't even know what it was,
why is she holding on to memories
that might not even be true?
Now, that part of our conversation literally stayed with me.
I thought about it so many times
and it's helped me get over things
that have happened to me in the past.
So I hope this conversation is just as life-changing for you.
Let's jump right into my conversation with Leila Hermosy.
So Leila, when we look at personalities as adults,
we can often drive the reasoning behind
our strongest personality traits from our childhood, right?
We can often see the experiences that we had as a childhood
sort of shape us as we're an adult.
So you are an extraordinary example of an entrepreneur.
So I'd love to understand
what were your experiences growing up?
How do you think they shaped you
as the entrepreneur that you are today?
I think it's experiences and also lack of experiences, right?
And so if I look at what I had as a child
and what I didn't have as a child, which I'm
really grateful for because it's made me who I am today, I didn't have a very present mother
figure after a certain point in my life.
My parents got divorced when I was young.
They got divorced.
My mother kind of went off the rails, you know, into alcohol and drugs and just not
down a good path.
And I still continue to live with her during that time,
because when my parents were married, my dad was always at work. And so I wasn't really close with
him. And so when the divorce came, it was kind of like, you're going to live with mom, because she
was a great mom up until that point in my life. But at that point, a shift took. So my sister,
actually, at that point, it was six years older than me, left the house. It was time for her to
go to college. And then my dad left because they were getting divorced. And so it was me and my mom.
Then her dad died. And that really set her off. And so that was when
she went down a not great trajectory into alcohol. And I witnessed it as a young kid. There was
quite a bit of like a lack of leadership because I went, I would go to my dad's, I think once every
two weeks in the beginning, but I hid what was going on for my dad because I was afraid that I
would have to go live with him. at that point I didn't really have a
relationship, which is crazy to say because like now I'm so close with my
dad, he's amazing, but at that point we didn't have the closest relationship and
I was a kid and I just wanted to be near my mom and so she kind of continued down
this spiral with alcohol and I tried to, I think that honestly what happened was
that I became the parent in the household at a very young age.
And so she kind of turned into or regressed into acting more like a child.
And so I naturally turned into acting more like an adult.
Like I would clean the house. I would take care of the animals because we had like a ton of animals at that point in time.
I would take out the trash. I would make sure there was food.
Like I would take care of myself. So like I would go to my friend's house. I would get food there.
Like I would make sure like I was taken care of. I got my homework done on my own, I went to bed
on time. Like, and so I learned it at a really young age. I think that was between the ages of,
with all that happening, I want to say between nine and then ended when I was 15. You know,
it was a lot of her not coming home, being gone for days on end, when she was home being drunk
and not present, and me having to during that time
learn to be an adult. And so I think it really accelerated that process because I actually don't
think that I would be who I am today if my parents had stayed together.
Wow.
Like I think both of them were very much like they came from the generation that became helicopter
parents. And so like I think that if they had stayed together, I probably would have been,
I don't know if I can say bad words on this podcast. I would have been a pussy. Honestly,
that's what I think. That's what comes to mind. I'm like, I think I just would have been kind of
like, really like sheltered my whole life. And so I'm really grateful that it happened because
what inspired within me was a motivation that I don't think I otherwise would have had. And
I'll tell you the moment that I had this happen was I was sitting in the office of my childhood home.
And my mom, it was like 3 a.m.
She had told me she was gonna be home
multiple days in a row, wasn't home.
It's 3 a.m. I'm calling her.
I'm like, are you dead?
Like, just tell me you're alive, right?
And at that point it was just like,
I just wanna make sure she was still alive.
That was all it was.
And I was sitting there
and I called her like 10 times in a row.
And I remember I put down the phone and I was like, this woman's not going to answer. I was like,
and I am not going to change this woman. And I'm not going to change the situation. And like,
I get chills every time I think about it. I'm like 10 years old at this point. And I remember
thinking to myself, there's nothing I can do to change my mom. I can't change my mom. But I can't
change my current situation and my life.
And in that moment, I remember making a choice, which was one, the rest of my life will make
up for how shitty this is.
Like not having feeling like you have a parent figure, right?
Like watching them like degrade their lives, like go down the drain.
It sucked.
And I was always stressed and it felt like it was living in a constant state of fear.
And so I remember thinking like, I have to make up for this later on,
and I wanna be an inspiration to others
who are in similar situations.
And I don't know where that came from,
but it was just the first thought that popped into my mind.
And then the second thought that came with that was,
I will no longer sacrifice my life for hers.
Because what I was doing at that point
was my whole life revolved around
making sure my mom was still alive,
making sure that she wasn't drinking too much, hiding the bottles,
pouring them out, like doing all that.
And I realized that I couldn't do that anymore.
And so within, I think, a matter of months, she actually kind of went even further and
further down and ended up calling the police one day.
They came and that was the last time I ever lived with my mother.
I went to go live with my dad after that.
So that was after about five or six years of living with just her in that condition.
And it was actually really weird because going to live with my dad was very uncomfortable.
And the reason it was uncomfortable is because I had parents.
And I felt like for those years that I was living with her, you know, I would see my
dad once every two weeks for a day or two, but I felt like this huge portion of my childhood,
I didn't have any guides, I didn't have any parents,
I didn't have anyone watching over me
in the sense that I didn't feel supported.
It was a very tough transition.
I think I rebelled a ton.
It took me into a very angry place.
I had a lot of anger for the fact that,
one, I felt like I knew how to parent and lead myself,
but now I had to be in this household
where I had siblings who I didn't really know well. They're my step siblings,
right? Not like they're bad or anything. They're just, you know, I'm around them. I'm the youngest
also. So everyone treats me like a kid. And I'm thinking to myself, I've been taking care of
myself for the last five fucking years. And so it felt very much like in reverse, like these
things should have happened in the opposite order. And so it turned me into a very angry teenager.
You know, I started kind of going down the path of just rebelling
against anything my dad wanted me to do.
I'd always been, despite everything with my mother,
like a very good student.
I still was a very good friend.
I was like a very, I had a lot of integrity
and I kind of started going in the opposite direction.
I started drinking, I started sneaking out.
I started doing a lot of stuff,
but it was intermittent because that was during high school. And there's only so much you can do. And so I think that it kind of, you know,
snowballed when I got into college, because I remember that right after I graduated high school,
the feeling of freedom I had, you know, being like, I now don't have authority anymore over me,
and still having this intense anger inside of me, and also anxiety, going into college.
And it just manifested in first getting invited to parties, and then going and drinking too much.
And then going to parties, not just on the weekends, but on weeknights. And then it was like,
you're partying all the time, you're drinking all the time. And that led to me getting arrested
six times in 18 months. And people always ask, what did you get arrested for? I'm like, literally
just all alcohol. It was all alcohol related. And so it put me in a really dark spot
because I'd spent the better part of my life up until then
being this almost like hero to my mom,
being like the parent figure.
And then it was like the moment that I got out of the house
and I went into college and I had access
to all of these things,
it was like 18 months of just ruining my body and myself and losing a lot
of respect for myself during that time. And it got to a point where there was an incident
where I think I passed out on someone's deck and the police found me. And they took me
to my dad's house. And I remember I woke up in my dad's house and I was like, oh, fuck.
You know, like, what did I do? Right. I was living on my own at this point. And I remember I woke up in my dad's house and I was like, oh, fuck. You know, like...
What did I do?
Right, I was living on my own at this point.
And I was like, I'm at my dad's house right now.
And I don't remember what happened.
I was like, this is not good.
And I came downstairs and my dad was like, almost in tears.
And he sat me down, he was like, listen.
He was like, I'm not gonna try and change you.
And I'm not going to try and tell you
you shouldn't do these things.
Like, you're out on your own now.
He's like, but I'm just telling you.
Like, I think that you could kill yourself
if you continue with this behavior.
And that was really hard to hear from my dad
who I have so much respect for.
And he's such a good person,
he's always tried to be the best parent possible.
And it was in that moment that it was almost
like a flash came in and I was like,
who was that little girl?
Like remember that little girl
that was sitting in the office with her,
you know, of her mom's house,
who just wanted to be a better version of herself,
who just wanted to be an inspiration to others.
And all of that almost seemed to like flood back into me
and it fled back again, I think in the form of anger,
which again is interesting,
but it's a theme you'll see here.
I was angry at myself,
but I think that it was a very useful emotion for me at that time because I was angry of where I let myself go,
that I'm so smart and knew better and still went down that path. And I used that anger to fuel
myself to lose 85 pounds, to get good grades in college, to start pursuing self-development,
personal development outside of that, you know, start pursuing mentors.
That was really what propelled me to turn my life around,
was that moment sitting there with my dad,
feeling just like, honestly, like a piece of shit.
Yeah.
I hate saying that, but I just felt like a dirtbag.
I just felt so bad about myself.
And I was like, I have to see out what I said I would do when I was younger.
I want to become that person.
And this doesn't have to be the end.
Like I was like, I'm young.
You know, at that point, I'm 19.
I'm like, I can turn this around.
I did all that in 18 months.
Imagine how fast I can go.
And so it really was that.
It was channeling some of the same emotions to go in the opposite direction.
And that was what really propelled me to change
my life. And really, I think I have a strong focus on behavior change because I've done
it so much for myself. Yeah. And I think a lot of the reason I'm drawn towards leadership
is because I think that I have learned to lead myself over the years. And I've also
learned to lead myself out of a bad spot. And I think that a lot of people, especially nowadays,
with social media, nobody wants to talk about their set spot. And I think that a lot of people, especially nowadays with social media,
nobody wants to talk about their setbacks.
And if they just want to show that they're perfect,
and they don't want to show that they fucked up.
And I want to share that I've fucked up.
And you can still come out the other side.
Like there's still time.
100%.
I mean, there's so many lessons to be learned in this story.
And I also was like party aunt.
Me and you are both of Middle Eastern descent.
We were locked up in high school, right?
Like they don't let us date, do any,
I mean, for me at least,
like I was locked up during high school.
When I went to college, I was in party mode,
but like you, I ended up turning it around
when I was like 19 and kind of getting back on track.
And it's not too late.
And like I mentioned to you before,
we really started recording.
Most of my listeners are male. They're young male listeners. And I had Scott Galloway on the show
who's a New York NYU Sturm professor, best-selling author, huge podcaster. And he always talks about
men are in trouble right now, young men. And he told me some troubling statistics. He believes
young men are struggling to compete because women and men now have an equal playing field
in terms of education and business.
So soon two women will graduate college for every one man.
Male earnings are declining.
It's leading to lower marriage rates,
lots of other problems.
And in general, I feel,
because my young male listeners reach out to me
and DM me and send me voice notes all the time
about how they're so unmotivated, they're unfocused, they can't stop partying, they're playing
too many video games, they're not joining communities, and they're just lost.
And I feel like this point in your life, you did turn it around and you did, you know,
go on this self-development journey.
And so I really want it to unpack what you actually did
to get yourself out of this party mode
and to turn things around.
Yeah. I started listening to Tony Robbins and Jim Rohn,
which now it's kind of funny.
I think they're probably outdated at this point
and the younger generation doesn't listen to them.
But I learned a lot from them.
And one of the first things was, what am I consuming
and who am I hanging out with?
And so the first thing that I did was I stopped watching who am I hanging out with? And so the
first thing that I did was I stopped watching Netflix. I remember I got rid of my subscription.
I started watching YouTube. I started watching, there was different platforms at that point
of online videos. I started watching Tony Robbins, Jim Rohn. I started listening to
Rich Dad Poor Dad. I started pouring myself into education rather than entertainment.
That was the first thing that I did. And that was a swap I made in my head.
I was like, no more entertainment, only education.
For now, this season.
Does that mean I can't watch an episode
of something later on?
No, but for right now, I've had so much momentum
in the wrong direction, I need to get momentum
in the right direction.
Inertia is real.
And so I was like, I need to turn this around immediately.
So I went all in on self-development
in terms of Tony Robbins, Jim Rohn, Rich Dad Poor Dad. So it was a lot of behavioral change mindset and even money beliefs
because I felt like I didn't have the best beliefs around money.
The second thing I did was looking at all the people I was hanging out with and really doing
an audit of, do these people want me to succeed or are they feeding the bad habits I have today?
Not because they're toxic, I hate that word.
I'm like, when people are like, they're toxic,
I'm like, fucking, you set some boundaries,
we're adults, right?
Like, just set boundaries.
And so I was like, here's my new boundaries.
Some of these people I'm not friends with,
some of these people I see once a month,
some of these people I only talk on the phone to.
And I wrote it down in my notebook,
what I was going to do with all of my friends.
And I don't even think I've told any of them that to this day.
And a lot of them probably don't have the best things to say because I kind of disappeared
from the face of the earth for a while.
But I knew that's what I needed to do because I just knew that at that point, I was such
a people pleaser.
Like I wanted to, it's almost like you want to excel in anything you did.
I also wanted to be the biggest partier that could drink the most.
That was the coolest that could throw the biggest parties.
And so it's like, I needed to channel that somewhere else.
I need to get around people who didn't think
that that was something that would drive status,
but instead thought that was something
like you look down upon.
And so then I started saying, okay,
who are the people that I wanna get around?
I realized I didn't have any at that point.
There was nobody in my inner circle
that I felt like would contribute to my growth.
And so this was while I was in college, right?
I was like, I have to move.
Like I can't right now, I'm going to graduate.
But I set my eyes on it.
I was like, I'm moving to California.
I remember I decided it one night when my friends all went to the bar and I went with
them sober.
And I was like, I'm so fucking over this.
Because I was trying to still do some things with them.
It was like once a month I'd go out and I'd be the DD or whatever. But I was like, I'm so fucking over this. Cause I was trying to still do some things with them. It was like once a month I'd go out
and I'd be the DD or whatever.
But I was like, I hate this.
I would rather be doing something
that was driving me towards my goals.
Not doing something just to like maintain friendships
that are pretty much at surface level now.
And so it was that night, I remember I told my friends,
I said, you guys are moving to California after I graduate.
And they were like, what are you talking about?
I was like, yeah, I've decided. I like decided in that moment. And then I told everybody that night, I told everyone I'm moving to California after I graduate. And they were like, What are you talking about? I was like, Yeah, I've just decided. I like decided in that moment. And then I told everybody that night,
I told everyone I'm moving to California after I graduate, I'm moving to California after I graduate.
And then that was it. And so after I graduated, that was the biggest, that was one of the biggest,
if not the most, like the unlock for my personal growth was I moved all the way across the country
when I didn't know anybody, I didn't really have a plan. I didn't have anything over there waiting for me. And I didn't know how
I was going to make money or how I was going to make it work. And I'm like a young woman.
It's not like I'm like, I'm 20. When I went over there, I think I was what 21. And that was what
stirred up so much for me because I think a lot of people like, tell me the books that you read,
tell me the stuff. What I did was I put myself in a situation
where my back was against the wall
and I was insanely uncomfortable.
Like to the point where like when I would move there,
I remember on a weekly basis having panic attacks.
I didn't know anybody, I didn't have any support system.
I didn't know how I was gonna make money.
I mean, it was terrifying.
And not to mention I bought or I signed a lease
for an apartment online that ended up
being like in the ghetto with like, you know, barbed wire on the fence and shit.
So I get there and I'm like, I came to walk in my own neighborhood.
It was a really unsettling experience.
And I quickly learned that I had to make it work for myself.
Nobody could do it for me.
No amount of affirmations and mindset work was going to go do the work.
And I think that that is where a lot of people go wrong is it's great to have positive things
you say to yourself.
It's important in much of a sense that you talk to yourself like you're your best friend.
Yes.
But if you take no action, none of that matters.
And I think that a lot of the times nowadays, people are spending so much time in their
heads.
That's what I feel like this generation is doing.
They spend more time in their heads than they do taking action.
Feelings and beliefs can follow the action.
If you can just get yourself to take action when you are scared shitless,
you will change your thoughts and beliefs.
You can act despite not believing it's going to work.
And that is exactly what I did.
I didn't know how I was going to make it work.
And then I went and I applied and I worked at,
I applied to every gym within walking distance of my apartment. And I got accepted to all of them, how I was gonna make it work. And then I went and I applied and I worked at, I applied to every gym within walking distance
of my apartment.
And I got accepted to all of them,
but I was like, they're like,
oh, you have a three month training program,
you get paid like $9 an hour.
And I was like, fuck no,
I'm not gonna not be able to pay my rent.
So I went to the only gym that was like,
you can make money immediately,
which was 24 hour fitness.
And that was where I learned how to sell.
But then you have to understand, I went there,
having only knowledge of like how to lose
weight, nutrition, whatever I learned in college that didn't really matter.
I go there and they're like, you need to go sell some shit if you want to make money.
Like you go get your own clients.
And I was like, oh shit.
Again, my back stands against the wall.
I'm like, what do I do?
Like I'm not a salesperson.
I never identified as a salesperson.
I was like the last thing for it.
It kind of disgusted me even the word.
And I was like, fuck, I have to,'s what else am I going to do? And I remember the first time
that I approached him on that the gym. I was terrified. And I went up to this woman, they were
like, go talk to people on the ellipticals on the gyms that you see not doing things, right? Whatever,
go try to get them to your clients. And I went up to this woman, I was like, excuse me. And she was
like, she looks at me, she stops, and she goes, fuck off.
And that was my first experience.
There's just rejection from day one.
So it was really hard, but that feeling of stress
and anxiety, I channeled into learning.
I was like, I cannot, I won't, no amount of thinking
is going to get me out of this situation.
I need to learn these skills, and I need to become this different person in order to get
out of this situation.
And so I took all that anxiety and all that stress, all that frenetic energy that I had
and I poured it into learning.
I poured it into learning sales.
I poured it into learning how to retain customers.
I poured it into learning how to become a teammate because I didn't even know how to
do that.
And that was what I spent a lot of my time doing. And so I think that a lot of the times
when people are asking about self-development
and personal development,
I think that there's a piece missing,
which is a lot of people believe
you have to have, you have to think a certain way
and you have to believe something before you do it.
And that's just never been the case in my life.
If you had told me, like,
did you believe you were going to make all this money
by the age of 30? Fuck no. Like, no. And then they're like, the case in my life. If you had told me, like, did you believe you were going to make all this money by the age of...
Fuck no!
Like, no!
And then they're like, do you believe that acquisition.com is going to become a billion?
No!
But I'm doing it because I know logically that it makes sense and I'm capable.
Yeah.
Does that make sense?
100%.
It's like this small, consistent action, taking action.
And I say something really similar,
and I say it when it comes to rejection.
I've been rejected a lot of times.
Like I almost had a show on MTV, I got rejected.
I almost was a host on Hot 97, I got rejected.
Almost got rejected at series six.
And I always say, the reason how I became successful
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And it sounds very similar to what you're
saying.
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at workinggenius.com using promo code profiting. Let's move on to your sales skills because you
say that you knew nothing about sales when you went to California,
but you ended up being the top selling personal trainer
in your region, I think, within a year.
If you didn't have any sales experience previously,
you said you got it from experience,
I guess what would you say your top things
that you learned as a salesperson during that time was?
Because now you've carried that skill
and used it in multiple ways throughout your career.
I think that there's two things,
because Alex and I, when we met, for example,
we both had sales aptitude,
but we sell completely differently.
And I know that because we sold side by side
for a year with each other.
And our conversations sound completely different,
and we both had around the same closing rate.
Most people can sell things that they believe in.
And so I think that a lot of the times,
people are trying to,
like if you look at the mechanics of sales, we're trying to fake belief.
Like salespeople, sales training is often faking belief in the product.
When I think I found a product that I believed in, which was personal training, nutrition,
you know, losing weight, like I truly believed in that.
And that was the first thing.
And that's why I advise a lot of salespeople to reach out to me.
They're like, I just, I'm not getting it.
I'm like, do you believe in the product? And they're
like, fundamentally, no, I'm actually, you know, there's like a vegan selling meat or
something. Like it's just, it fundamentally doesn't match with their belief systems. The
first step is that you have to make sure that you are being integrist, which means like
what you think, what you say, and what you do are all aligned. And so for me, the one
thing that I realized by speaking with different people, especially,
I think my boss at that time, he was a sales manager, he was really good.
He was like, Layla, do you believe in this?
And I was like, absolutely.
He's like, well, then why do you not feel convicted to try and get people to buy it?
And that was the unlock for me was if you believe in something and you really know it's
the right option and the best option for somebody, I'm obligated to try and get them to buy it.
Because I'm thinking, I'm like, to try and get them to buy it. Because I'm thinking,
I'm like, what other options do they have? Not many. This is the way that it actually has to go.
It's the hardest and it's the most expensive, but it's definitely the best. And so I think that it
was the first one is having integrity about the product that you're selling, which sounds super
cheesy. It's not tactical at all, but a lot of people are very misaligned. You'd be surprised
if you don't feel that message to me and they say, I'm just not selling. And then I said, do you even believe in the thing? They switched jobs and then they're the top closer. And that sounds super cheesy, it's not tactical at all. But a lot of people are very misaligned. You'd be surprised if people messaged me
and they say, I'm just not selling.
And then I said, do you even believe in the thing?
They switched jobs and then they're the top closer.
And that was the first thing for me was,
I had done it myself, I had lost all the weight,
I had seen how it changed my life.
It's not hard to preach that to other people.
It's not hard to try and sell someone that
because I would if it wasn't paid.
Yeah, you need that conviction
so you have the confidence when you're selling. Otherwise people can just see right through you.
100%.
And if you really believe in it,
the conviction comes naturally.
You don't have to fake it.
But the second thing that I did learn that was a skill
was having the right frame for the conversation.
Because a lot of people who really believe in a product
are still people pleasing while they're trying to sell.
And so because they're trying to get that person to like them rather than trying to get that person to buy or to make a
decision, that's what they're really doing right. They want the person to like them more than they
want the person to buy or make a decision. And so they're trying to tiptoe around it.
I had to make that frame shift and I realized I have to be the authority. Just like if someone's
the leader in a business, you're not going to be liked all the time. It's important though, that you're able to positively influence people in the
business. Does that mean they're always going to like you for it? No. But will they be better for
it? Yes. It's the same in sales. And so I had to learn how to develop more confidence and more of
an authoritative frame within myself. How I spoke, how I led, how I led the conversation, I didn't
let them lead the conversation. That was the biggest unlock for me,
was realizing that I have to be the one leading them
through the conversation.
I'm the authority in this conversation.
And I should be, because I actually give a shit.
Yeah.
Like who better to be an authority
than someone who actually cares about the person
on the other side?
Yeah.
So it's like telling them something like the truth,
even though it hurts,
and it's not gonna make you the most liked person,
but it's gonna help them accomplish their goal.
A man could never say this to a woman during a consultation.
But the amount of times I said,
when's the last time you had sex with the lights on?
To a woman, because I knew she didn't,
because I wouldn't have either when I was fat.
Nobody wants to see that.
You don't wanna see it yourself.
I was like, when's the last time that you put on clothing
in front of a mirror?
Wow.
Because they don't. If someone's that overweight, they don't even look of a mirror? Wow. Cause they don't.
If someone's that overweight, they don't even look in a mirror.
It's those questions that though they hurt and they don't feel good in the moment, I was like, that is what's going to make someone, that's what's going to
get someone to make a decision that's going to better their life.
And I think the difference between manipulation and influence is
manipulation is getting someone to do something that's detrimental to
themselves, whereas influence is getting someone to do something that is
beneficial for themselves and in line with their own personal goals and autonomy.
That was really the one piece that I needed
to succeed in sales was understanding
that I was the authority and I had all the evidence
to back that I should be the authority.
And I also had the give a shit
where it made sense to me to be.
Yeah, makes total sense, great advice.
So let's talk about your agenda at one point to find a man, right?
I heard a story, I've heard you say the story, that you were doing a bumble date every single weekend
because you realized that dating was sort of a volume game and then you met Alex. So I'd love to hear that story.
Yeah, so I'll tell you how it started, which was I actually worked at 24. And my boss at that time,
who was a sales manager, he was like, I told him, I was like, I got on Tinder and Bumble. I was like,
Tinder is disgusting, but Bumble seems fine. And he was, I remember I said like, you know, I'm going
to try and go on a date every couple of weeks, something, something. And he said, you know,
Leila, he's like, I think dating is a lot like sales. I was like, how? He's like, well, I think
it's a numbers game. Like think about how many consults you have to have with somebody in order to get a client.
I was like, yeah. He's like, well, how many dates do you think you have to go on in order to get
somebody to be a boyfriend? Maybe even more. And I was like, he's like, and I remember he said this,
like, don't you think that dating would be very good practice for sales? And I was like, how so?
He's like, well, you're meeting strangers. You're having to basically sell yourself to them.
And you're in uncomfortable situations. And I was like, how so? He's like, well, you're meeting strangers. You're having to basically sell yourself to them and you're in uncomfortable situations. And I was like, so he essentially
sold me on this concept. And so I said, okay, well, how do I, how do I work leads right now
in my sales job? Okay. I'm just going to do that. But for dating, which was, you know, I had a time
set aside every day or it was like for an hour, I called all the leads and whatever, maybe more
than an hour and I would bang the phones and whatever, maybe more than an hour.
And I would bang the phones.
And so I said, okay, what can I commit to for dating?
I have my lunch break every day.
It's minimum 30 minutes.
I will just literally swipe and do nothing
but swipe while I eat for 30 minutes.
And so that was what I did.
And that was what I promised myself.
I said, my goal is to get a date a week
if I swipe for 30 minutes.
And so that's what I did.
And I started going on dates and a lot of them sucked.
Like I had one guy trying to sneak me into a movie theater,
not telling me because he didn't want to pay.
I had like another guy who took me to a dinner
and then told me he would wish I wouldn't talk.
I mean, like I had so many bad dates.
The difference was that I didn't let it discourage me
from going on another one.
And so I talked to a lot of women now and they asked me about this and they're like,
listen, Layla, I did that for three months.
I'm like, girl, I did that for 18 months.
Get back to me when you've swiped every day for 30 minutes, gone on 60 dates, and then
tell me what you think.
Just like you're looking for the ideal client if you're in sales, dating is the same way, which is you have
your criteria of what you're looking for and you're going on dates trying to find it. And it's just a
funnel that you're trying to continue to work through and through and through. And so honestly,
I just took the same sales learnings that I had, I applied them to dating and I just didn't give up.
I had enough confidence in myself at the time that I was like, there's somebody out there for me.
I know I'm a little weird and I'm a little different.
I really like business, I really like working.
A lot of women at that time,
especially in Newport Beach, California,
it felt like did not, they just want a sugar dad.
But I was like, I will eventually find someone.
So I think having that,
knowing that that was the case and understanding that it was
just a numbers game made it much easier to get
through the emotional ups and downs because I think that if dating is just an emotional game for you,
then you're going to stop.
Because the moment you have a bad date, you're like,
there's no boys out there for me.
I'm like, shut the fuck up.
I'm like, you're saying half the population sucks?
Please, like, I hate when people say that.
All men are horrible.
I'm like, this is called cognitive bias.
You are overgeneralizing.
Your brain is saying, I had one bad boyfriend,
now all men are bad.
That's not true at all.
And then the second piece is understanding that,
I think a lot of people,
what they do is they go on a few dates,
maybe they get in with a few people
and maybe they date somebody for like a month or two,
and then they break up.
And then they take the same amount of time
that they dated the person to get over the person.
And I think that a lot of that comes from social stigma of,
oh, it takes you half the amount of time
that you dated someone to get over them.
I'm like, you know the best way to get over somebody?
Just to go on another date.
Like, what do you do when you lose a client?
You go get another client.
Like, I refuse to believe a lot of the things
that society tells us.
So I was like, am I actually upset about this person
if I dated for eight weeks?
No, but I think I'm supposed to be upset.
And I think that's what a lot of people do. weeks? No, but I think I'm supposed to be upset.
And I think that's what a lot of people do.
And I think the reason I was able to go through
very quickly and find somebody
is because I didn't let that stuff stop me
or drag me down or make the process take longer.
Yeah, so smart.
And I have to say, Leila, I love your personality.
You're so funny and just give such good advice.
I love talking to you.
I think the audience is gonna love this conversation.
So you met Alex, right?
Talk to us about that first date.
What was he like and what did you see in him?
I mean, you had all these suitors
and you decided on Alex.
Honestly, it was tough.
Like, I'll be really real.
And you've probably had this too,
or run into this as a woman who's ambitious.
A lot of guys didn't like that.
Yeah, 100%.
Like a lot of men just wanted me to be a housewife.
They wanted to have kids very soon and all these things.
And I was like, that's just not in the cards for me, man.
Or they think they want it.
And then the real is like, oh, she's going to be more successful than me.
I don't know if I want it.
100%.
So if it wasn't, oh, I don't want you to do this thing, it was, oh, I'll try and suppress
you so that I'm better than you.
Which listen, I don't have anything against people who do that.
I just don't wanna be
in a relationship with them.
When I met Alex, it was interesting
because we matched on Bumble and then Alex,
I messaged him, because it had to be the girl,
I don't even remember what I said,
I was so bad at it, I would be like, hey, what's up?
I never said anything cool, I was kinda nerdy.
So I was like, hey, how's it going?
Or something like that.
And he messaged me, he was like, fuck this app, let's get off this app, can I call you? And I was like, hey, how's it going or something like that. And he messaged me, he was like, fuck this app,
let's get off this app, can I call you?
And I was like, I like that.
Like somebody who's serious about this,
who takes it like literally.
So we get on the phone, I remember the first thing he said,
he was like, listen, he's like,
this is basically like a first date.
So what we're doing right now is we can have our first date
now on the phone, and then later when we actually have
a first date, we don't need to talk about all this stuff
because we already talked about it,
it'll be basically our second date.
And I was like, this guy's efficient,
which I liked because that's kind of how
I was running it as well.
So I was like, this is a good match.
And I remember feeling like, I don't really know,
like this guy's kind of like blunt to the point, harsh.
He's not really flirty, but I appreciated it.
And so we meet for Froyo for our first date
because it's low commitment,
so we could leave if we didn't like each other.
That was the agreement.
And we go and I'm sitting there waiting for him and he comes up from behind me and I remember
he was like, okay, like not smiling.
I was like, what?
Is this guy not even smiling at me?
Turns out, so what some people don't know is I have an entire back piece and I was wearing
a tank top dress and he saw I have angel wings on my back from when I was 18 and getting
drunk and he saw them and I guess like he really doesn't like tattoos.
And so for the first like 15 minutes of the day, he just didn't even look at me.
Like we go in line for Froyo, he's not really looking, making eye contact.
I'm like not knowing what's going on.
And then finally we sit down, we start talking and
I just start asking about his business because he owned some gyms at the time. And then it was like he lit up. And then from that point on the conversation, we talked for I think four and
a half hours. We went on a walk, walked like I don't even know how many miles. It was insane.
And by the end of it, I just remember thinking like the one thought I had was like,
I just want to keep talking to him. Like, I don't even care if we're dating or it, I just remember thinking, like the one thought I had was like, I just wanna keep talking to him.
Like, I don't even care if we're dating or not.
I just like finally feel like I found somebody
who sees reality the same way as me.
I felt like he wanted the same things from life
and was looking for the same things.
And it was just, it was like a breath of fresh air
to talk to anybody, you know, female or male
that actually felt that way.
Honestly, from that point on, it was, we hung out every day.
I think he had to go to like a dinner later that night,
and then he called me after, we talked till like 2 a.m.,
and then the next day, he came to my work
during my lunch break, and then I went to his house
after, and then it was just like, from that point on,
but we weren't working together at that point,
you know, we were just dating.
And I wanna say like two weeks in, he was like, you should really just work for me.
And I was like, because he knew that what I was trying to decide of is like, am I going
to start my own gym?
Or am I going to have an online training business?
And I had opportunities on both sides.
I wasn't sure what to do.
And I was telling him about this decision.
He was like, I think you should do neither of those things.
And instead, you should come do this with me and we'll make way more money than either
of those things. And I was like, yeah, but then I'm working for you. Like,
this is weird. We're like dating right now. He was like, whatever, we've only been dating
two weeks. I remember he said that. And I was like, true, good point. You know, it hasn't
been that long. And I was really torn. But at the same time, I was like, all right, let
me look at all the decisions I've made that have been the best decisions in life.
Putting my back against a wall, putting myself into a situation where most people would fail
or falter, and putting myself into situations that there's risk.
I was like, there's really no better time that if I were to do something like this than
to do it now, because I'm young.
And so I talked to a few mentors, I did a lot of thinking, and I was like, I think after he went,
and he did a launch on his own for GymLaunch,
what was to become GymLaunch,
and I saw that it actually worked.
And a lot of people, by the way, they give me shit for this
because I was like, I saw that he made $100,000
launching this gym.
Of course I want to see that he made money.
I was making plenty of money on my own.
I'm not going to go stop to go do something
with somebody who hasn't made any money
or proven a concept. I'm like, I have my own shit, my own business going on. And so once I saw that it worked, I was making plenty of money on my own. I'm not going to go stop to go through something with somebody who hasn't made any money or proven a concept. I'm like,
I have my own shit, my own business going on. And so once I saw that it worked, I was
like, okay, this makes sense for me financially. So it makes sense to take this risk. And that
was when I think the next week, I talked to all of my clients, I talked to the gym that
I was working at the time, and I just got rid of everything. And I had a week
between getting rid of everything and flying out to the first gym to do the launch for
this idea for this company, Gym Launch. And that was really the beginning of not our relationship,
but our partnership. And so if you really think about it, like we only had, I don't
know, six weeks that we weren't working together, like in our entire relationship now, which
has been seven years.
And the rest of it was from that point on, it was learning how to navigate being in a
new relationship with somebody that you're also building a new business with while losing
money, living out of motels, basically eating shit every day.
And it was really hard.
So that was, I was like, I just realized where I was going with that.
I was like, that's the story of our relationship.
I mean, it's so interesting.
And now you guys are such a powerful couple.
And I'm sure starting a business and able to have you guys
bond together, but also, you know, spending that much time
together probably was really tough and maybe felt like
you guys needed your own experiences and things like that.
So I guess, how did you deal with that?
How did you deal with keeping it romantic still,
even though you're business partners?
Oh God, it wasn't romantic at all for the first two years.
It was another, no romance.
It's funny because people ask that stuff and I'm like,
no, the first two years were us trying to not be poor.
Like we were just trying to not go bankrupt at that point.
Our relationship was not in the forefront of mind
So it was really the first year
I think that what we did learn by necessity was how to communicate with each other
I learned how Alex works a lot of people get really intimidated by Alex because what you'll learn if you get close to him is
Like he likes one word answers like he'll be like, okay, you're like you write him a whole novel. He's like thumbs up
Yeah, I thought Alex hated me after my,
I was like, why does he hate me?
Most people think that, right?
He's just like, he's not like you bubbly sweet,
like not like that at all.
No, it took me time to learn too.
I joke with everyone that's on our team.
I'm like, listen, I thought he hated me too
when we first worked together.
And then we got married, so apparently he didn't.
It was really learning how to communicate with each other,
learning like, what are my nuances?
Like, how does Layla behave?
And then how does Alex behave?
And, like, how do we behave together?
The hardest part was that.
And I think when you get into any relationship
and you're under stress,
because we were under intense stress
those first couple of years,
it was learning how to use that to our advantage
to become better versions of ourselves.
Because being around somebody else in close quarters exposes you when you're under stress, how to use that to our advantage to become better versions of ourselves
because being around somebody else in close quarters
exposes you when you're under stress
of where your flaws are or where your weaknesses are.
And I know for me, like one of the best lessons
that Alex taught me early on by just pointing it out
was I was very cold.
And I think that I have substantially warmed up.
I think that if people meet me now,
I seem pretty warm in the beginning anyways. And I was that I have substantially warmed up. I think that if people meet me now, I seem pretty warm in the beginning anyways.
And I was not that way.
I was scared, I was stressed, and I would just shut down.
And I remember one time we were sitting in the car
and I shut down on him because there was something
that he said and I was upset about it,
but I didn't want to tell him.
And he looked at me and he was like,
I just want to let you know that if you keep doing
this cold thing, this relationship won't work.
But it was funny because what I actually thought in that moment, I wasn't angry.
I wasn't defensive.
I was like, you know what?
Any relationship I have in my life, this will be a problem.
Why not solve it now?
He's right.
I am cold.
And I remember that was like the switch for me.
And that was the biggest thing that I had to work on the beginning of our relationship.
And on the other hand, you know, for Alex,
his was probably ego or temper.
You know, he used to get angry pretty easily
and I think under stress even more so.
And typically when someone's angry,
it's like, are they angry at themselves,
you the situation, you don't really know.
But he would get angry and then I would shut down
because he was angry and I was scared.
And so we had to learn that about each other,
talk about it, and then learn how to speak each other's language.
You know, like, if Alex is angry, I know how to de-escalate him.
If I'm stressed, Alex knows how to de-escalate me.
Because we've learned and we've talked about it enough
that I've said what I need and he has said what he needs,
it's a conversation that we have. It's not like I'm guessing.
You know what I mean? I'm not over it.
We're like, what do you want me to do?
You're like trying to figure out
what he wants me to do when he's angry.
I'm just like, hey, when you're angry,
what do you want me to do?
And I think that's been the biggest blessing
of our relationship is the same way
that you would talk with a business partner,
how do we do this in the business?
We've taken that into our relationship,
which is there's nothing that's not talked about.
Like anything to a very high degree.
We talk about every problem, everything we notice.
If we're like, hey, we feel pretty distant right now.
Do you feel distant?
He's like, yeah.
And we're like, OK, let's work on that.
Or if we're like, hey, I feel like we need some space.
I'm just feeling like we are way too close right now.
We've had way too much time together.
I just need a breathing room.
We're like, OK.
And so that's been, I think, what's
been a huge contributor to the success of our relationship
would just be that. Taking those same principles that you would apply to any
productive relationship inside of a workplace and using it in our marriage.
Yeah, that's so healthy.
Like I know a lot of relationships, they do not feel that open in terms of the communication.
Like they just feel so scared to tell each other how they actually feel about things.
So it's so great that you can work through that.
Also, I would say this.
Yeah.
You can either be scared to communicate something
to your partner, or you can be scared of losing yourself
in the relationship.
And it's like, you get one or the other,
which is if you're constantly living in fear
of what your partner will think, you lose yourself.
And so I have always kept that forefront of mind.
I will not compromise, nor will Alex,
who I am and who he is.
I always, and we both really accept each other
for who we are, but it's one thing
that I'm very adamant about.
If there's something that's happening
that I need to communicate how I feel about it,
or I'm dissatisfied with, and same with him,
we will do it, even if it hurts our partner's feelings,
because we both know that we have to put ourselves
and what is true to us forefront of mind, otherwise our relationship will never work in the long run.
It might feel good in the short term to avoid that thing,
but in the long run you're setting yourself up for dysfunction.
Yeah, 100% and total failure. So smart.
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So I feel like this is a really good segue
into behavioral change,
cause you mentioned and Alex mentioned this on the show
that you're the fastest person he knows
in terms of changing your behavior.
And so from my research,
I found out you used to be afraid
of public speaking and now you essentially do that
probably every day as a part of your career.
You also thought you would never be a good manager
and that's literally what you're known for now
in terms of like your management styles.
So how do you continually adapt and change your behavior
in order to succeed?
I think that when a lot of people talk about behavior change,
what they're really asking for is belief or thought change. Because if you think about changing
behavior, that's not very complicated. It's like, don't eat the cookie. But I think a lot of people
want to know how well, how do I not want to eat the cookie? That's what they want to know. Because
people are like, how do I lose weight? I just can't lose weight. I'm like, no, you can't be hungry.
You don't know how to tolerate hunger. That's why you can't lose weight.
And so it's not that I lack anxiety, stress, nervousness.
When we got on this podcast, I was like, my heart was racing.
Really?
Happens every time with every podcast.
If I go up to speak the last speech I did, I got on the stage and I couldn't, my mouth
was so dry.
I thought I was like, I was like, the words for sure won't come out.
Like I get terrified because I care,
because I want to make sure that I do a good job.
I want to feel like I give value to the audience, right?
But what I've learned is to one, not judge myself for that.
And two, I can be nervous.
I can be scared.
I can be anxious and I can still act like I'm not.
And that's the biggest thing that was the unlock for me
with behavior change.
And what has always been was, I don't need to eliminate feelings. I just need to change my
relationship with them. Most people, what they do is they think, oh, I feel anxious. I feel scared.
I feel nervous. I need to rid myself of this feeling so I can act in accordance with my values
and with the behavior that I would like to have. But that's not the case at all. I need to learn
how to befriend these feelings,
how to live with these feelings,
how to manage these feelings and be okay with these feelings
and still take steps forward anyways.
And so for me, it's always been,
if I'm feeling stressed or anxious or whatever,
and I'm trying to change a behavior,
I just remind myself, you have to level up.
It's above the situation.
It's not about grabbing the cookie or not grabbing the cookie. It's about what's my relationship with hunger. And so for
somebody who's dieting, it's not that you're hungry. It's not that you need the cookie. It's not that
it's that you don't know how to be hungry. You can't tolerate the feeling of hunger in your body.
For people who get stressed with public speaking, it's not that you can't public speak. It's that
you cannot tolerate the feeling of nervousness in your body before you go on stage. So what I do, despite not wanting to, is I force myself
into situations where I know that those feelings will be provoked, and I practice visualizing
ahead of time, the thing's going to happen. I'm going to feel like I'm nervous. I'm
going to feel like I'm going to throw up. I'm going to feel like I'm going to panic,
like whatever it may be. How will I act despite feeling that way? So for example, if I'm gonna throw up, I'm gonna feel like I'm gonna panic, like whatever it may be, how will I act despite feeling that way?
So for example, if I'm public speaking,
I visualize myself having a panic attack on stage
before I'm on stage.
And then I walk through, what would I really do?
Because a lot of people just go,
Jesus, I have a panic attack on stage,
and that's it, that's it for me, right?
I'm done.
Or I'm like, okay, say I have a panic attack on stage,
then what?
If that only lasts for like two minutes,
what's gonna happen the next two minutes?
I could make a joke about it.
I could use it as an example for resilience
for everybody else that's watching.
Like I could make fun of myself.
There's so many things that I could do next
to actually make that an opportunity,
turn that challenge into an opportunity
and then I could continue and give my speech.
Yeah, so like if the worst thing happened,
what would I do?
And how would I turn that around?
Then it makes it not that scary,
because then you're like, well, if something bad happens,
this is my escape plan.
Right, but here's what I will say, it's not even that,
because that's reassuring ourselves, that's saying,
okay, well, even if the worst happens, I'll figure,
okay, well, what if you don't figure it out?
Because that's the other route, which is like, you know, I talked to business owners and they're
like, what if my business does die? And I'm like, okay, then your business dies. Then what? They're
like, well, I'm like, you've like millions of dollars in the banks. What are you going to do
after that? And then they're like, well, I guess I would start another business. And I'm like,
okay, so let's talk about the steps. And so I think it's one talking about what I would do if
the worst case scenario happened, and then also making peace with the fact that sometimes
when the worst case scenario happens,
we don't act in accordance with what our plans were.
And visualizing that and visualizing how I would get over it,
that it would be okay.
So what?
I expect that at some point in my career,
giving a speech or something,
like I'm sure at some point I'll like, nobody will know, but I will have a panic attack on stage because I can get through
it now. I can talk through those things, but I'm sure it will happen. And when it does,
I've visualized it enough times that I'll be okay with it. I'm not going to judge myself for it.
And I hopefully can use it as a lesson for other people to show them that you can do things and be
scared at the same time. And that's really been like my whole life. Like, like, how do you get
rid of the anxiety and all that? I'm like, it like my whole life. Like, you're like, how do you get rid of the anxiety
and all that?
I'm like, it's never gone away.
Like, you're still hanging out next to me all day, every day.
But I've just learned how to live with it
and really act despite feeling a certain way.
And I think that if you're not constantly trying
to get out of a feeling,
the feeling will naturally go away anyways.
But when you're constantly trying to rid yourself
of a feeling, what happens is that feeling sticks. But if you're constantly trying to rid yourself of a feeling, what happens is that feeling sticks.
But if you're not trying to rid yourself of it,
it is much more likely to fade away.
So I wanna stick on something that you lightly mentioned,
which was being uncomfortable, right?
And I know that you say that one of the things
that holds back our younger generations
is that they don't want to be uncomfortable.
I had Wim Hof on the show, he's the Iceman.
He said something similar,
but he talks about being physically uncomfortable
and the importance of that, that we all wear clothes,
we have the temperature control on,
we don't even wanna be cold, that's how far we go with it.
And then we don't even unlock the power of our bodies.
It's hard to work out, so we don't work out.
But I think you take it more
from also a mental perspective.
So I'd love to hear from you in terms of why it's so important to be uncomfortable sometimes.
Yeah, I do actually think that the physical aspect is useful in many ways.
I don't go to the extreme with it.
Like I, I lift and I lift really heavy and hard and I've done that for a while.
And that taught me a lot in life, which is you make the most progress when you're in
a lot of pain under the bar. But I think that it's important because what feels good is often
not good for us. And I think that I've learned that early on in my life, which is most of the
things that feel good for us are not. But if you, this is what a lot of people think. They think,
well, gosh, I don't want to be uncomfortable all of the time But here's the thing is that those things that are uncomfortable if done repetitive repeated enough times become comfortable
And so if you do it in enough areas of your life
It's ironic because then actually everything that is uncomfortable becomes comfortable
And so I think it's just breaking through getting yourself to take that first step because our brains don't like unpredictability. And so the reason anything the first time is so hard
is because we can't predict what happens next.
But the moment we do do that thing,
our brain has a new association,
it has a memory it's going to make, right?
And most of the time, it's not as bad as we think.
And so I think that it's almost a practice
in the sense of I try to do things
that are uncomfortable for me every day,
I try to push myself, I try to not lean into my feelings, not because
I don't want to. I want to like today, for example, like had a not great night last night
and then didn't sleep well because one thing or another that happened at work and then
woke up, had calls at 6 a.m., was going, I was like, I feel like absolute ass. I was
like, but you know what, I'm going to fucking show up here. I'm going to crush it and I'm
going to crush my meetings later. I'm gonna crush my interviews later.
And I think that every time we do that, what we do is we build confidence within ourselves
so that every other thing in our life that's uncomfortable is easier to accomplish.
And so I think it's just a matter of building momentum.
A lot of people are like, well, I just, Layla, I have a really hard time getting uncomfortable.
I'm like, but you've made a habit of being comfortable.
So you know how to make a habit.
Now we just got to make a habit in the other direction.
Yeah.
Which is funny, but it's really like,
you have the power of inertia on your side
once you start doing it,
which is if you start leaning into comfort
more and more and more,
I have a friend that wrote a book called The Comfort Crisis.
You start to do everything in your life
in accordance with the comfort.
And it's called the comfort creep.
That's what he named it.
Versus the opposite direction,
you start to do everything uncomfortably, then it's discomfort creep. You start to notice that every area of your life,
you start to make yourself a little more uncomfortable, and you start achieving more and
more. Because achieving things comes from, like, the only reason that accomplishments feel good is
because we did something that was uncomfortable. And often people think, I have to rid myself of
this discomfort to do this thing. But no, accomplishments without the discomfort don't actually feel good.
And so the reason that successful people are so confident isn't because they didn't have discomfort and did something.
It's because they had so much discomfort and did it anyways.
And so I think for me, it's just always been, I encourage people to get uncomfortable.
I encourage people to also be aware of how to make themselves uncomfortable in a way that they can manage.
It might be, let's try some small steps first.
Okay, if you're terrified of public speaking and you're going to throw up when you get
on stage, let's do some podcast interviews online first, right?
Like maybe let's make some YouTube videos and then let's get a stage maybe six months
down the road.
And I think that you can stair step your way up to your greatest fears or your greatest
discomforts.
And we all have to know ourselves and know what works best.
Some people can throw themselves in the fire
and just like go straight into the most uncomfortable
situation and come out great.
Some people that wouldn't work too well
and they have to stair step their way
into something that's uncomfortable.
I think it's a matter of figuring out what works for you.
Yeah, so I love this topic.
I kind of want to stay here for a little while.
I love the topic of motivation because I feel like a lot
of my listeners reach out to me
telling me like they don't know how to find their motivation and they feel like it's this
external thing.
And they always feel like they need to have the feeling of motivation to get something
done.
And I know that you have said in the past that you don't always stay motivated.
You don't do things just because of the way that you feel.
So I'd love to learn a little bit more about that.
I think that most people don't have motivation
because they don't have enough responsibility.
Go look at the single mom who is raising four kids.
Does she lack motivation?
No, she has responsibility.
And so I think a lot of people,
when they're talking about motivation,
what it really is, is that they lack responsibility.
I am responsible for all of the people that work at my company.
I am responsible for all of the companies that are in portfolio.
I am responsible for an audience that supports me.
That's what I think in my mind.
So am I going to take the selfish action of doing the thing I want to do, or am I going
to take the action of doing the thing that's better for all of them?
And I think that what a lot of people do is they avoid responsibility, which then decreases
motivation.
You don't feel like doing something when you don't have a big enough reason.
Create enough reasons, which is usually people, and you have more motivation to do things.
So it's not that I feel motivation every day, but I have a responsibility to the people
whose lives I have influence over. And so every day when I wake up and I have to make the decision, am I have a responsibility to the people whose lives I have influence over.
Every day when I wake up and I have to make the decision, am I going to do this? Am I going to do this? Am I going to do that? Am I going to do that? That's what I'm thinking with.
I think that for those people who are asking, I just don't have the motivation,
take on more responsibility. You won't even have time to think about how you feel because you've
just got to do it because you're responsible for other people.
And I think that we live in a day and age where people lack responsibility.
I mean, if you even look like the family construct in this country, it's like completely different
than it was a long time ago.
And so we have less pressure to do well.
We have less pressure to stick with our commitments and we have less pressure to get uncomfortable.
But if you're the person that's responsible for many other people's lives, you'll have the motivation much more than you wouldn't. Does that make sense?
Oh, it totally does. I align so much with this. I even wrote down some thoughts about
this and it's like we're very close in terms of what we were saying our approach would
be to this. So for example, you were saying before this interview, you kind of felt like
crap. You didn't really want to do it, but you showed up, right?
Me too.
I almost broke up with my boyfriend last night.
I had a terrible night.
I was like, oh God, like I have to be,
I have my game face on.
But at the end of the day, we have to show up
because that's why we're successful.
Because we show up even when we don't feel like showing up.
And like you, I zoom out and I think,
if I don't show up here, I'm putting my employees at jeopardy. If I don't feel like showing up. And like you, I zoom out and I think, if I don't show up here, I'm putting my employees at jeopardy.
If I don't show up today,
I'm putting my fans aren't gonna have an episode.
Layla gets a lot of money to talk.
I'm not gonna cancel and ruin my reputation with Layla.
It's like all these things, to your point,
like you hit the nail on the head.
I'm responsible for a lot of things.
So the only way I'm canceling an interview
is I literally have strep throat and I can't
talk.
And the other thing I think about is like if I'm physically able to do the show, if
something actually does happen that's bad to me down the line, at least I did the actions
that I could to get myself as far as I could.
And then when I actually am sick, I can be like, all right, I deserve to be sick.
I can cancel this interview, you know? So I think we're aligned there.
I love that.
So interesting.
All right, let's talk about the GSD muscle.
You talk about this get shit done muscle.
How can we build and develop that muscle?
Yeah, I think this muscle comes from having a low thought
to action threshold, if I could put it in right terms,
which is if you think
a thought and then you take action on that thought.
A lot of people don't get shit done because they spend way more time in the thought and
less time in the action.
Now I know how to think, but a lot of the times what I need to do is go take action.
And I think that a lot of the times, and this is like what we were talking about earlier,
it's just a theme that I've noticed, which is people are staying in their heads so much now. It's overthinking,
overanalyzing, and stuff like that. You got to build the get shit done muscle, which the only way
you do that is if the moment that you think about something, you own your power by taking action
immediately. The way that you get more power is you take action on a thought faster than others,
faster than you used to, faster than you did five days ago. And so for a lot of people, it's that.
That paired with being able to face the discomfort.
I mean, like we just talked about,
I think that if you wanna get shit done,
you're gonna be uncomfortable.
And I think that you build that muscle faster
when you put it under tension on a more frequent basis.
And so when I think about the get shit done muscle,
it's like any other muscle,
which is you've gotta go to the gym, you've got to put time under tension, right?
It doesn't matter if you're doing high reps, low reps, weight on the bar, like it's time
under tension that builds a muscle.
It's the same for the get shit done muscle, which is the moment that you realize that
it's, okay, thought to action threshold.
How many more times can you do that in how many situations?
And so what I like to do for myself when I'm trying to instill that, when maybe I feel
like I'm in a season where something happened and it didn't go my way, or I'm scared, or I'm stressed,
or something's happening, I write down what are those things on a daily basis that I can do.
I read it at the beginning of the day and I'm like, these are the small things I'm going to do
to build that muscle today to do my time under tension. It might be a hard conversation with a
coworker. It might be that I have to have a hard conversation with a portfolio company.
It might be a hard conversation with a coworker. It might be that I have to have a hard conversation with a portfolio company.
I start asking myself, what are these things that maybe I'm avoiding or could avoid that
if I were to do today would make me stronger tomorrow?
And that is what the get-should-done muscle is.
And I think that a lot of people don't have it or it's atrophied because they're okay
living with the pink elephant in the room.
I think that if you have a very strong get-together muscle,
you don't have a lot of dirty laundry.
Whereas if you do have a very strong get-together muscle,
there's nothing, like there's no pink elephant in the room,
like there's nothing there, like you have a clear conscience.
That's how I keep my headspace clear.
I don't like having to think about a lot of situations
that are like, I wanna say like not complete, not resolved.
Open loops, yeah.
Open loops, like I don't like having that.
I don't like having, if anything bothers me,
I feel like there's anything off with a teammate,
I just address it immediately.
And so I think that that's really where the muscle is
and what it comes from.
And it's just like anything else, any other muscles,
like time under tension is how you're gonna build it.
I love that.
Okay, so last question to close this part
of the interview out.
What would you give advice to people in their teens
and their 20s, upcoming generations
who wanna achieve the level of success
that you did by your 30s?
What's your main piece of advice for them?
I would say learn to act despite how you feel.
Yeah, big theme of today's episode, yeah.
Yeah, I think it's just learn how to act
despite what you feel because you're not gonna feel good
most of the time when you're making progress
towards your goals.
People congratulate me all the time on the success
of the companies that we sold and the success
that we're having now and I'm like,
yeah, but all the success is propelled
by things that are painful, right?
There are experiences that we're going through.
Right, and so understand that you just have to learn
to act despite how you feel and And feelings are something to acknowledge,
but they're not directives in terms of how to live our life.