Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - YAPCreator: How to Stay Motivated and Avoid Burnout as a Content Creator | Presented by OpusClip
Episode Date: January 8, 2025Staying motivated as a content creator is no easy feat. Despite balancing a corporate job and a podcast, Hala Taha made the most of her limited free time to grow a LinkedIn following of 60,000 in just... one year. Today, she’s a top LinkedIn voice with over 260,000 followers. In the third episode of the YAP Creator Series, Hala unpacks powerful strategies for consistently creating content without burning out. Featuring insights from top minds like Jenna Kutcher, Jeff Haden, and James Clear, you’ll learn how to build habits, celebrate small wins, and embrace sustainable growth. You’ll also discover how tools like OpusClip can fuel your creativity and streamline your workflow. In this episode, Hala will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:15) Getting Started as a Content Creator (04:01) Creating Motivation Through Effort (14:00) Building Habits for Long-Term Success (19:31) Avoiding Burnout and Setting Boundaries (29:37) Trusting Your Gut and Intuition (30:50) Balancing Hustle and Peace (33:05) The Importance of Rest (34:41) Understanding Gap and Gain Thinking (37:44) Measuring Progress and Setting Goals (51:58) Cultivating Luck and Authenticity Try OpusClip for FREE: Visit https://www.opus.pro/clipanything Resources Mentioned: YAP E242 with Jenna Kutcher: https://youngandprofiting.co/40oy6TK  YAP E148 with Jeff Haden: https://youngandprofiting.co/4fMo2sm   YAP E265 with James Clear: https://youngandprofiting.co/4j4khkC YAP E301 with Dr. Aditi Nerurkar: https://youngandprofiting.co/3PopqGy YAP E130 with Jasmine Star: https://youngandprofiting.co/4h50Qq5 YAP E206 with Benjamin Hardy: https://youngandprofiting.co/4j5nbpm YAP E311 with Case Kenny: https://youngandprofiting.co/4a6KXNz 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/yapYAP | Young and Profiting 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/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today's episode is sponsored in part by Airbnb, OpenPhone, Shopify, and Rocket Money.
Hosting on Airbnb has never been easier with Airbnb's new co-host network.
Find yourself a co-host at airbnb.com slash host.
OpenPhone is the number one business phone system.
Build stronger customer relationships and respond faster with shared numbers, AI, and
automations.
Get 20% off of your first six months
when you go to openphone.com slash profiting.
Shopify is the global commerce platform
that helps you grow your business.
Sign up for a $1 per month trial period
at shopify.com slash profiting.
Rocket Money is a personal finance app
that helps find and cancel your unwanted subscriptions,
monitors your spending, and helps lower your bills
so you can grow your savings.
Sign up for free at rocketmoney.com slash profiting.
As always, you can find all of our incredible deals
in the show notes or at youngandprofiting.com slash deals.
Hello, young and profitors.
Welcome to episode three of the show.
I'm your host, Rebecca.
Today, we're going to talk about how to make money
from your savings.
And we're going to talk about how to make money
from your savings.
And we're going to talk about how to make money from your savings. And we're going to talk about how to make money from your savings. And we're going to talk about how to make money Hello, young and profitors! Welcome to episode 3 of the Yap Creator series presented by Opus
Clip. In this series, we're diving deep into the art and science of content creation,
how to create, connect, and thrive as a modern day creator. It's the start of the year
and it's time for goal setting for everyone. And in order to achieve our goals in 2025, we need to stay motivated and consistent while
not burning ourselves out.
And that's exactly what today's episode is all about.
While this episode is tailored toward content creators, it's actually relevant for all
entrepreneurs because it's really just about mindset, motivation, and building up momentum.
Whether you're building an online platform or your company.
We'll feature past YAP guests, Jenna Kutcher,
Jeff Hayden, James Clear, Dr. Edith Nourocar,
Jasmine Starr, Benjamin Hardy, and Case Kenny.
Guys, this one is gonna get pretty deep.
We're gonna cover everything from motivation loops
to habit building and gap and gain thinking.
There's so much content to get to,
so let's jump right into it.
Starting out as a content creator is no small feat.
You're juggling everything, coming up with ideas,
filming, editing, and promoting,
all while trying to grow an audience.
In the beginning, it can feel like you're shouting
into a void, and that can be incredibly discouraging.
The truth is, consistency builds credibility.
Every post, video, or podcast you put out
is another brick in the foundation of your personal brand.
But in order to be consistent,
you first need to get started.
Here's Jenna Kutcher,
one of the most successful podcasters in the world,
who is also in my YAP Media Podcast Network,
on letting go of perfection and taking action when it comes to getting started as a content
creator.
At the beginning my show was interview only which did not work out well for me.
I recorded it from the front seat of my parked car in my garage because I was
worried my dogs were gonna bark. I didn't even own a microphone. I had iPhone
headphones and I was like,
all right, let's just do this.
And so I committed to doing it for 90 days,
and I was like, let's just see how it feels.
I can always quit it if it doesn't work,
if I run out of things to say.
And here we are years and years and years later.
And it's evolved.
And I think one lesson from this is that so often
when we start a new project, we overthink all the things
that don't really matter.
I remember worrying about, like, the cover art, the title.
How am I going to sign in and sign off of every episode?
How long is it going to be? What is the format?
When is it going to be published?
All of those things have changed and evolved
over the last seven years,
and my show has stayed consistent, right?
And so one thing that you brought up
is, like, so many people don't actually dive in and do the thing.
We think about all the things around the thing, whether
you're writing a book or starting a podcast or starting
a business, you fixate on all the decisions you have to
make instead of doing the actual thing, which in my case
was sitting down and hitting record.
Once I did that, the rest is history, but it was so easy
for us to overthink all those things.
So my podcast started as an experiment
and we're still going strong 100 million downloads later.
Like Jenna said, when it comes to getting started
as a content creator,
whether it's on social media or podcasts,
you really need to just get started and experiment.
It's okay to evolve over time and get better as you go.
To be a content creator, you must create content consistently.
I find that if I'm having trouble getting started on something,
I just tell myself I'll do it for 10 minutes.
Before I know it, that initial ick and anxiety of getting started just melts away
and the task seems more manageable once I actually dig into it for 10 minutes.
It's not as scary anymore and I end up working on it for longer and getting it done.
So just start for 10 minutes.
Tell yourself, I'll just do it for 10 minutes.
Now getting started is easier said than done for a lot of people.
So many people feel that they can't get the motivation to get started.
They need to find the motivation to kick themselves into high gear. But this is the wrong way
to go about it. I learned from Jeff Hayden, one of the world's top ghost writers, that
getting started is the thing that will actually give you the motivation to keep going. Contrary
to popular belief, motivation doesn't come first. Effort does. Let's hear Jeff's
perspective on creating motivation.
So talk to us about how you can actually create motivation by starting and being
consistent at something. Probably the biggest gap or the biggest hurdle that
people have to cross when you want to start something new is you are starting at a place of no experience,
no expertise, you're kind of at the zero spot in most cases.
And so if you look ahead to where you want to go,
that bridge that you have to cross is incredibly daunting
because it's like, okay, I'm just this,
how am I going to get all the way over there?
And so if you're constantly focused on that end place
Then even little successes that you make early on which you tend to do because you're new so you learn quickly
And you gain some skill fairly fast
They're meaningless to you because compared to what you think you want to be someday. Well, it's nothing and so
the biggest thing for me is
you know, because I struggled
with the first few things I wrote, but then I thought, and I would think to myself, how am I
ever going to be able to do this? Because it takes me way too long. I'm creating decent things, but
gosh, it takes forever and there's no way for me to make this work. And I thought, well, okay, but
I can't sit down and think, okay, I'm going to be Malcolm Gladwell tomorrow or something like that.
But what I can do is just work really hard on whatever is in front of me.
And so I switched over and just said, my goal every time I do something is, all right, I
have this to do.
I need to do it as well as I can.
I need to finish it.
I need to get good feedback from it, which means I did a good job, because
whether I thought I did a good job didn't really matter.
It's what the client thought.
And that's all I can do right now, but that's enough.
And so if I stack enough of those experiences up, then the experience kind of comes.
And so by keeping a short time horizon in terms of my inner feedback loop, then if I worked on a project
one night and it was a short one and I got it done, that felt really good because I set
out to do what I wanted to do.
I completed a task.
It went well.
That was enough to get me to the next one.
And so I just fell into this place of all I need is enough motivation to get to the
next one.
And if I get to the next one and I get to the next one, then suddenly you can look back
and go, wow, I'm starting to come a long way.
Because I'm, you know, you pop your head up every once in a while and sort of look at
where you are and go, wow, that is really cool.
And then you need to put your head right back down again and just focused on next and next
and next.
And so, and then the other part of it is that I'm
not particularly smart. I have a college degree, but I'm not particularly
educated. I don't have anything. There's nothing. I'm decidedly average. Let's
just, let's just say that. So I don't have anything. Well, I don't have
anything special going for me except for the fact that I realize that if I put in
enough effort, there are a lot of things I can do.
And so I'm very much an effort kind of a person.
And so that actually works really well
because I don't think you get motivation from like this,
I'm sitting around one day
and suddenly I have the lightning bolt that says,
I wanna be a famous writer or whatever it is you wanna be.
I don't, that doesn't work. I don't think that kind of motivation, I don't know anybody that has that.
All you really need is to say, I'm interested in writing, let me get started in some fashion. And
through effort, if you work hard at it, you improve because we always get better at things
we work hard at. It is a natural thing. It's just like taxes.
It's a law of the universe.
And whenever you get a little better, that feels good.
And so effort equals a little bit of achievement,
which feels good, which creates motivation for you
to take a little more effort, which means you'll
improve a little more, which feels good.
And so there's this really cool virtuous cycle of effort,
achievement, fulfillment, happiness, motivation,
that you can spin forever and ever and ever
if you focus on doing it that way.
If all you care about is this big end result,
it's demoralizing and defeating,
and you have to rely on willpower alone,
and none of us have that willpower to
do that.
But if you just get that cycle started, there it is.
So motivation doesn't come first, effort comes first.
I love that.
So let me pause you right there because I want to make sure that my listeners really
understand this.
So what Jeff is saying is that you don't want to focus on some big goal because you'll keep
comparing yourself to that goal. You're going to think about where you are now, how far away some big goal because you'll keep comparing yourself
to that goal. You're gonna think about where you are now, how far away that goal
is, you're gonna feel bad and you don't want to feel bad if you want to be
motivated. You want to feel good so you want to focus on these small wins. So how
can we better focus on these small wins? Is there a trick that we need to do? Is
it something we need to reflect on every day? How do we make sure that we're
constantly looking at these small goals and making sure that we need to do? Is it something we need to reflect on every day? How do we make sure that we're constantly looking
at these small goals and making sure
that we're making progress toward our bigger goal?
So process really is everything
with anything that you want to do.
So you do need a big goal, I think.
But your goal, your big goal is just there
to help you design the process that you would use in order to get there.
So, if I, this is a terrible, well it's not a terrible example, but it's an easy example.
Say you want to run a marathon and you've never run before.
So running the marathon is your big goal, but as you said, if that's all you focus on
is being able to run 26 miles and you can only run one, you're going to quit because
it's too far and you feel bad after that run one, you're going to quit because it's too far
and you feel bad after that one mile you're never going to get there. So running a marathon though,
you can back it up and say, okay, what are the steps and stages that I'm going to have to go
through in order to build up the endurance and stamina and speed and all that other stuff that
will allow me to get there? And there are plenty of people in the world who can
Lay that program out for you. So you you know what to do. So the goal
informs the process
Then you just say okay. I've got a whatever it is six month plan. What's tomorrow?
Tomorrow is I'm gonna go run a mile and a half
Cool when you run the mile and a half you Cool. When you run the mile and a half, you can check it off.
You get to feel good about yourself because you did what you set out to do that day, which
if you think about it at the end of the day, the days you feel best about yourself are
when you got done the things that you said you wanted to do.
Where you feel bad is when you didn't.
So you get to feel good about it.
You checked it off.
You had a successful day.
That will give you enough motivation to tomorrow
go, okay, what's tomorrow?
Whatever it is, that's all you have to do.
You just have to do whatever it is that you have to do today.
And if you focus on that, you get to be successful every day, you get to feel good about yourself
every day, and you will stack up enough of those days that every once in a while you
will pop your head up and say, wow, I just did a 10 mile run.
Who thought I could do that?
But before you get too excited and go,
oh, what about the 26?
You gotta put your head back down.
You're not there yet.
And then you say, cool, I can run 10 miles.
That's awesome.
What's tomorrow?
Tomorrow may only be a three mile run
because that's part of your process of recovery
and whatever else it may be.
Whatever it is, if you're doing what you set out to do that day and if that goal is, or
if that process is designed so that it will basically guarantee that if you put in the
effort you will succeed, you're good to go.
So the goal informs the process and then all you worry about is, am I doing what I need
to do each step of the way? You didn't start a side hustle and end up with 35 people
working for you by one day just saying, you know, that's what I want to do. You
knew you wanted to create a marketing agency and a podcast. You knew what you
wanted to do, but you broke it down into, okay, but what can I do right now? What
am I doing each day to get there? And then all of those winds stacked up on themselves
and probably made it a little bit easier
for you to keep working that hard
because you saw a path to where you were going to go.
What Jeff told me that day about motivation
really stuck with me.
The conventional view of motivation
is if you fire somebody up enough,
they're going to go out and achieve whatever their target is. Traditionally, they say achieving
success is all about generating the right mindset, and that motivation will trigger you to succeed,
basically. But Jeff overturns this idea that motivation leads to success. Instead, he tells
us that small successes lead to constant motivation. Jeff
believes that motivation is a result. It's not the spark or trigger that gets you started
on your next project. Real motivation comes after you start. Motivation is the pride you
take in the work you've already done, which fuels you to do even more. Motivation stems
from success and fuels more success. So the only thing you need to
do to succeed is to have one small victory to get a head start. Then you just follow
that loop. Jeff calls this the motivation cycle or the motivation feedback loop. The
cycle goes something like this. A small success leads to some motivation, which leads to another
success and even more motivation, which leads to another success and even more motivation. Which leads to another success and even more motivation and you get the idea.
That's why motivation isn't something you have.
Motivation is something you get from yourself after you take action.
Okay, so to be a successful content creator, you need to create content consistently.
You need to take action.
And that means you need to get into the habit of creating content.
The key word here is habit.
And many of you know that I'm one of the top
LinkedIn creators and I've been an influencer
on that platform for over five years now.
And I remember when I first started my content creator
journey on LinkedIn, I was working a full-time job
and I also started this podcast as a side hustle.
So I basically had two jobs, a full-time job and a part-time podcast as a side hustle. So I basically had two jobs, a full-time job
and a part-time job with this side hustle.
And now I was taking on LinkedIn as a third part-time job.
So I really didn't have a lot of free time.
And I decided that I would make it a habit
to create my LinkedIn post on the train
on my commute to work.
So I had a 45 minute commute to work
and that was my only job on the train.
I didn't do anything else.
My job was to post on LinkedIn to decide what I was going to post, to write up the caption,
to pick out my image, to post the content up before I stepped into the office.
Sometimes it also required me to film a video while I was waiting for the train.
And then during lunch and on my commute home, I would do all my comment
and DM engagement. And then I did the same routine five times a week as a habit every
single weekday. And within a year, I acquired 60,000 followers on LinkedIn and I became
an influencer. And fast forward to today, I still post daily while my habits are different.
I have over 260,000 followers on LinkedIn
and I'm recognized as a top voice on that platform.
So small habits can make a big difference.
And nobody aligns to this more than James Clear,
author of the bestselling book, Atomic Habits.
So the heart of your book, Atomic Habits,
is that the idea that small habits can make
a big difference.
Why don't we start there?
Why do you believe that's true?
Time will magnify whatever you feed it.
So if you have good habits, even if they're little and seem relatively minor on any given
day, you'll continue to put yourself in a stronger position day after day.
In many ways, if you have good habits, you're on the right
trajectory. And so all you need is time, you just need some
patience. But if you have bad habits, time becomes your enemy.
And every day that goes by, you kind of dig the hole a little
bit deeper. And so this idea that small habits can make an
enormous difference, what it really is about, is about
emphasizing trajectory rather than position.
You know, there's a lot of discussion about position in life.
How much money's in your bank account?
What's the current number on the scale?
What's the stock price?
What are the quarterly earnings?
We have like all these ways of measuring
your current position.
And then if the measurement isn't what you wanted it to be,
or you haven't achieved what you set out to achieve,
you kind of start judging yourself or feeling guilty for it, or you feel bad about it. And what I'm encouraging
is to say, Listen, just for a minute, let's stop worrying so much about our current position.
And instead, focus a little bit more on our current trajectory. This is why one of the key
things I talked about in Tom McCabbits is getting 1% better each day. Are you getting 1% better or
1% worse? Is the arrow pointed up and to the right or have you flatlined? Because if
you're on a good trajectory, even if it's a very modest gain on any given day, all you
need is time. And if you're on a bad trajectory, even if you're in a pretty strong position
right now, it's not going to end well. And so building better habits, making these small
improvements, it's really about getting you on a path
that can lead to where you want to go.
I really like that question of,
can my current habits carry me to my desired future?
You know, and if they can, then great.
Maybe you just need to be patient and let the days work for you.
But if they can't, then something needs to change
about your trajectory.
And so your habits are one of the things
that kind of set you on that path
and determine how far you're gonna go
and whether you're improving day in and day out.
And so for all of those reasons,
I like to refer to habits
as the compound interest to self-improvement.
You know, the same way that money multiplies
with compound interest,
the effects of your habits multiply
as you repeat them across time.
Many of your outcomes in life, many of the
results that we also badly want to have, they're kind of like a lagging measure of the habits that
precede them. So your bank account is a lagging measure of your financial habits, your knowledge
is a lagging measure of your reading and learning habits, even little stuff like the amount of
clutter in your living room is a lagging measure of your cleaning habits.
And so we also badly want better results in life.
But the somewhat ironic thing is that the results are not actually the thing that needs
to change.
You know, it's like fix the inputs and the outputs will fix themselves, adjust the habits
and you'll be set on a different path and carried to a different destination naturally.
So this concept of getting 1% better each day,
it's really a philosophy and attitude
and approach of showing up,
trying to make some small improvement
and trusting that that little improvement
can compound in something much greater
over a broad span of time.
Well, you heard it from James.
Just like exercising, showing up regularly and putting in the effort in your content creation Well, you heard it from James.
Just like exercising, showing up regularly and putting in the effort in your content
creation, even on tough days, builds long-term results.
So think about it, yap bam.
What habits are you going to do to build in your daily, weekly, or monthly routine to
accomplish your goals as a content creator?
Okay, so we spoke about getting started and staying motivated and building habits.
Now, let's talk a little bit more
about the flip side of content creation,
the dark side, I should say, which is burnout.
It's easy to feel overwhelmed
when you're consistently in creation mode.
And that's why it's so important to set boundaries
and find ways to recharge.
As entrepreneurs, we tend to be proud of our energy levels
and we often even boast about our own resilience
and hustle culture.
But Dr. Aditi Neurocar, a stress expert
at Harvard Medical School, told me that you can be resilient
and still be much more burned out than you think you are.
Resilience and stress go hand in hand. When you think about what is
resilience, the scientific definition is that it's an innate biological ability.
So we all have it and it's that ability that you have to adapt, recover, and grow
when life throws you a curveball or you have a challenge. Now resilience doesn't
function in a vacuum. You need a little bit of stress, that healthy positive
stress for resilience to show itself. What happens though is that that word
resilience, you and I hear it and others who are listening to this conversation
may hear the word and have a visceral response because it's gotten a
really bad rap over the past several years.
The word resilience is a positive connotation, but it feels very negative when you hear it.
And the reason it feels negative now, you're like, oh, don't tell me to be resilient.
It's because that definition has changed and morphed societally.
We've moved away from true resilience towards toxic resilience.
And so what is true resilience?
True resilience, it's like, like I said,
it's your innate biology.
We all have that ability to be resilient.
It honors boundaries.
It honors your human limitations for rest and recovery.
And it really focuses on self-compassion
and leaning into that versus toxic resilience.
Toxic resilience is when you and I hear the word resilience,
immediately you cringe. That's toxic resilience. It's resilience is when you and I hear the word resilience, immediately
you cringe. That's toxic resilience. It's a mind over matter mindset. It's productivity
at all costs. It's like all systems go all the time. It's the energizer bunny here in
the US, you know, just keep going in the UK, keep calm and carry on. Every single society
has some concept of toxic resilience because it's a manifestation of hustle culture.
And so I hope that the entrepreneurs listening, what they take away from our conversation is that you can be resilient and you can still get burnt out.
That's called the resilience myth that people think, oh, I can't be burned out. I'm so resilient.
Those two things, because what you're likely living through
is this idea of toxic resilience,
because we've been taught from a really young age
that resilience is about tolerating a lot of discomfort,
but that's not actually true resilience.
And so I wanna dismantle that idea of resilience
as being toxic and rather lean into your true resilience,
which really honors your need for rest and recovery.
Because then that is how your brain, you know, newsflash that your brain really needs rest
and recovery to be productive and to really be functioning at its optimal level.
Recovery is essential to avoiding burnout, but you can also do a lot for yourself by
planning ahead.
That's why one of the best techniques to avoid burnout is batching your content.
By setting aside dedicated time to plan and create in bulk, you reduce the stress of having
to come up with content on the fly.
Jasmine Starr, a business strategist who helps entrepreneurs build their businesses, shared
with me a powerful system she uses to batch her reels
and TikToks efficiently. So what are your top tips for batching content? So I am producing three to
four reels a week and I'm posting also on TikTok in the same frequency. And what I tried to do is batch all of the content
two days out of the month. And so I'll set aside five hours every other Friday. And what is so
important is to have a plan going in. I know the reels that I want to create. I also write down the
copy for the reel. So it's like, instead of wasting time, like, oh, what are my three tips for this
reel? So everything's laid out, including am I going, oh, what are my three tips for this reel?
So everything's laid out, including am I going to do an outfit change?
Because if I need to do an outfit change, I need to have a total count for the outfits
that I need for that specific time.
And so I go in and I have a document, the reel I want to create, how long I think it's
going to take me to create it, what props that I need and the copy for that reel.
Sit down, create them in real time, save them as drafts or just save to the video,
and then upload when I'm ready.
Jasmine's approach shows how a solid plan and process
can save you time and energy.
If you prepare ahead and you prepare your scripts
and your outfits, you can then streamline your workflow
and focus on your creativity during your batch sessions.
Batching also helps you stay in the zone
because you're not task switching,
which can actually really disrupt your flow.
When you're focusing all your energy
on content creation for a set period,
that will maximize your productivity.
So in short, try establishing a production routine
that you follow for each video, podcast, blog post,
or social media post. When you follow for each video, podcast, blog post, or social media post.
When you follow the same exact process for every piece of content that you do,
it becomes second nature and gets easier over time.
The routine not only helps you produce content faster,
but also reduces the mental load of constantly having to start from scratch.
If you're feeling a bit of creator's block, give Opus Clip a try.
You can use their all-in-one editor
to jumpstart your ideas for your videos.
It's especially useful if you have long form videos
that you wanna chop up into viral content.
Their AI identifies the most compelling hooks,
extracts highlights from different parts of your video
to create short viral reels.
They also have a social post scheduler to auto-post your clips to YouTube, TikTok, Instagram,
LinkedIn, and X so you don't have any excuse not to be consistent in the new year.
You can try it out at opus.pro slash clip anything.
That's opus.pro slash clip anything.
And yeah, bam, every good thing takes time, sacrifice, and consistency.
You are not going to become a top content creator without putting in the time and effort.
However, it does get easier.
And once you put in the reps and once you achieve some success, it's okay to then slow down.
It's okay to start saying no to opportunities and not burn yourself out.
So for myself, I hustled so hard for four years straight.
I worked every weekend. I worked till past midnight. I hustled. I hustled. I hustled so hard for four years straight. I worked every weekend.
I worked till past midnight.
I hustled, I hustled, I hustled, and I built up my platforms and my companies.
But then I realized at a certain point that in order to become my best self, I needed
more rest and more balance.
I needed to work on my relationships.
I needed to work on my own health.
And I put in so much work that my business and my platforms were compounding where I
didn't really need to hustle as hard anymore and everything would still grow without me
working so hard.
I basically hustled enough where I grew everything to a point where I earned the right to slow
down.
Here's Jenna Kutcher again for a second time to drill this point home.
Jenna is in my podcast network and I've seen firsthand her turn down huge opportunities,
thousands and thousands of dollars for the sake of her mental health and joy. She takes it very seriously.
So something else to know about Jenna is that she only does stuff that brings her joy. You only do
things that you want to do. I bring Jenna opportunities all the time. She's in my podcast network where I'll be giving her like, I booked sponsorships for
her and she'll be like, I don't want to do that.
I'm burnt out.
I'm burnt out on IG Reels.
And I'm like, but it's thousands of dollars.
Are you sure?
And she's like, yeah, I don't care.
I'm burnt out.
I'm not doing that.
You can do it.
You can book it in two months or whatever.
So talk to me about that.
Like, how are you able to able to just put your foot down?
A lot of people couldn't just turn down money like that.
Yeah. I mean, first off,
it is such a privilege to be in a position.
Yeah. It wasn't always like that.
No.
Always you've got to sacrifice.
But I've realized and here's what I've really realized is,
if you have listened to this whole episode,
you recognize the power of trust and I want my community to trust me.
And if something isn't in alignment,
not only do I feel it, but they feel it.
And so I have had to get so good at discerning
what are the right partners?
What are the right opportunities?
What are the right like sponsorships to take on?
Like, is this in alignment?
And I feel that way with every opportunity,
whether it is getting asked to speak on stages that I would have once dreamt of being on, but now I'm saying no to, or whether it is,
you know, hosting a mastermind or all these things. I could do a million things. I don't want to.
And I think that I'm just at this place in my life where I just recognize that like peace is,
needs to be protected. And right now in this stage of my life,
like my priority is my family.
And anything that I'm saying yes to is a no to them.
And what is the most important thing to me?
And so, you know, turning down things like recording
another social media reel, it's to me, it's like,
but this is more time with my kids or this is protecting
and preserving the integrity of my followers. She'll even turn down things that are a good fit. Totally, totally. She'll turn
down things that are a great fit for her because she's like no my time with my
family is more important. Yeah and I think that like boundaries protect what's
sacred to you and I've just had to relearn this lesson over and over and
over again of like boundaries aren't bad and boundaries like keep what I say most important to me
and they, they exemplify that.
Like what I am saying is most important to me is reflected in my calendar.
It is reflected in my bank account is reflected in the way I show up every
single day.
And so it's,
it's a muscle that you have to learn to flex and it takes time because I think
that, you know, there was a and it takes time because I think that,
there was a time in my life where I got paid $50
to take pictures of a cat and I couldn't believe it.
Like somebody is paying me to do something.
I love this is amazing.
And what a blessing that is.
And the better that you get out listening to your gut
and discerning like, well, this is a great opportunity
but is it the right opportunity for me?
It keeps you in alignment so that you are not passing up things that you should be saying
yes to and that you are not saying yes to things that you should be saying no to.
And so I feel like I just have like a really strong intuition and a gut game and I don't
apologize for saying no any longer because my no is literally just a reflection of like
what is mattering the most to me right now.
Yeah, but let's stick on this mindset. Because yesterday I was talking to Jenna,
I had been working on this crazy presentation
for like three months and I was like,
guys, I killed myself on this.
I worked so hard.
And we were with our other friend, Amy Porterfield,
and she was saying, you know, I'm the same way.
I work really hard sometimes and burn myself out.
And Jenna was like, I don't know how you guys do that
Like I would never do that. I would never choose to kill myself on anything and I
Always a lot of the times take the hard route. I don't know why it's my personality
Why are you like this? Like how did this come about? Were you always like this where you're just like no
I'd rather just have my joy than the money.
I feel like I've realized that like our peace
is so expensive and life is so short.
And I definitely am not anti hustle culture
because I do believe hustle is required
to get the dream off the ground,
no matter what the dream is.
There have been so many points in my career
where I get an idea or I have a project or something
like, yeah, I can hustle.
But if hustle is the only way that you can operate and sustain what you're building, that is not a business. Like you are building a prison for yourself.
And I've watched so many people who have really successful businesses and
really lousy lives.
Like they are rich in their bank accounts and empty in relationships.
And like to me, that's just not worth it.
That is such a high cost.
And I feel like I have had to learn how to discern
like what are my best yeses and like,
what can I say no to without having FOMO,
without having guilt.
And it's interesting because I think becoming a mom
really shifted that for me of like,
anytime I'm away from my kids, I want it to be worth it.
And the only way for me to alleviate mom guilt
was to know that like I was doing work that I love,
work that I enjoy, work that gives me peace,
that excites me, so that whenever I'm working,
I'm not there thinking I should be with my kids.
And whenever I'm with my kids,
I'm thinking I should be working.
It's like the only way to get past that was to just be in total alignment of like,
what do I want for my life?
And I think we focus so much on like leaving a legacy.
But I think in reality, we have to focus on living a legacy.
And I'm like, I want my kids to see the joy.
I want them to see the peace.
And you know, I've had so many turning points in my business where like, I've
just realized that like, money isn't the answer. Like, at times
in my business where I've earned the most money, I've been the
most miserable. And I just feel like there's this threshold of
like, where do I get more joy? How do I derive joy? Like, what
does peace look like? Like when I go to bed at the end of the
night, how do I truly rest?
And it's just been a huge shift and it's not easy
and it doesn't come naturally because I am an achiever
and I am a hard worker and I am driven,
but I'm just at a place in my life where I'm like,
I just wanna enjoy it.
Yeah, I love the way that you and your team handle it.
You guys take Fridays off, right?
Yeah. So they don't work on Fridays.
But you're still crushing it and getting so much done.
You don't have to overwork yourself to be successful.
And you are such a great example of that.
Yeah, there's this quote that I heard that totally
changed my mentality.
And it was instead of asking yourself
if you've worked hard enough to earn your rest,
ask yourself if you've rested well enough to earn your rest, ask yourself if you've rested well enough
to do your best work.
It was by a girl, Nikola Hobbs, I think is her name,
or Nikola Dobbs.
And I heard that and I was like, whoa,
I have been wired of like, I just need to get this done
and then I can rest.
And I was like, what if we flip this on its head?
And it's just been so transformative for me
because I'm like, no, I need to like come into this
feeling rested and well to do my best work.
And that has like totally shifted things.
I love that.
I really love that mantra that Jenna mentioned.
Have you rested well enough to do your best work?
Remember you're running a marathon, not a sprint.
And that marathon is long.
You will most likely not become an overnight success.
It will take you years before you make money.
Because being a content creator is not easy.
And it's easy to be down on yourself and give up
when you feel like you didn't become an influencer
or you haven't gone viral yet
or reached a point to monetize your content.
Benjamin Hardy, an organizational psychologist,
taught me that when you think that way,
you are in the gap.
You are practicing gap thinking,
which is a really unhealthy place to be.
Instead, you really wanna practice gain thinking.
Now here's Ben to explain gap and gain thinking.
I heard you say on another podcast that when you released that book in 2018 that you came
on my podcast to talk about willpower doesn't work.
You actually considered it a failure because it didn't reach New York Times bestsellers
list and that's like every author's dream.
But nonetheless, like when you came on my podcast, I remember thinking it was such a
big deal.
You were such a big blogger.
And we had scored Benjamin Hardy, like episode number seven.
And so you were a big deal to us and to the outside world, but inside you felt like a
failure.
So I want to talk about that.
I think it will give us some color on your journey and help us understand the gap in
the game concept as well.
So I served a church mission from 2008 to 2010
and like going on that that experience was very transformational for me. I grew up in a really
intense environment but ever since I came home from that experience in 2010 I wanted to be a
professional author. Over the from 2015 to 2017 I grew enormously as a blogger and was able to get
a book deal and be able to start providing for my family.
So essentially I got a multi six-figure book deal to write a book. I'm living my dreams.
It all happens way faster than I thought in early 2018. Honestly, it was March of 2018. The book comes out.
And I did have way in my head, like I'd built everything up in my head that it needed to be a certain level.
It needed to be a New York Times bestseller. And I admittedly as well, threw so much money at it.
And so, yeah, it didn't hit the goal.
And for probably four or five months,
I was in a very deep depression, very deep slump.
And kind of back to the idea of the gap and the gain now,
I guess I've learned to measure my own self differently.
So the gap and the gain is something I learned
from Dan Sullivan.
I read his little book on the subject,
maybe actually it was in 2018.
I read his little book and I was still blogging back then.
And it was just an idea I loved.
And I thought if I ever get a chance to write books
with Dan Sullivan, I'm going to make this a major book.
And the idea is very simple.
I mean, it's basically the idea that as a person, we all feel happy or sad based on how we measure ourselves
and how we measure our experiences.
The reason I went into a deep depression
after I had made a monumental achievement,
I mean, I'd never done that before.
It was totally new.
And yet I felt like a loser because I was in the gap.
I was measuring what was against what I thought it should be,
which is an ideal. When you're in the gap, you're measuring what was against what I thought it should be, which is an ideal.
When you're in the gap, you're measuring yourself
against your ideals, which are always changing,
always moving, whereas the gain is the opposite.
You measure yourself backward
against where you were before.
Truth was, is I was way further than I'd ever been.
And if I was just measuring myself backward
against my past self, competing only against my past self,
I was radically further than I ever was.
And I just did something huge.
And so I'm learning, and I've learned over the years, to be more in the game.
And it's a far more enjoyable, far happier experience.
Yeah. And I'd love to kind of dig deeper on this.
If you can help us understand the difference between ideals and goals,
and why that matters with all this? So ideals are very, they're very ephemeral. Like they're
not actually tangible. Like, and so like how how I learned it from Dan is ideals
are like the horizon in the desert. Like you can see them out there and like but
every time you take a few steps forward, the horizon keeps going.
And in America, we're actually trained to always be pursuing happiness.
That's even in the Declaration of Independence, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
And so we're very big on ideals in America, which is good.
Like, it's good to have ideals. It's good to be idealistic.
There's nothing wrong with ideals.
The problem is, is that they're immaterial.
Like, I think a definition of ideal is
whatever you believe is perfection.
So when you're in the gap,
you're literally measuring yourself
against your view of perfection.
But back to the idea of the horizon,
that view is never-endingly changing.
Like my former self would have felt like
it was perfection just to get a book deal.
But then once I got there, the ideal changed,
the horizon moved.
And now, and so if you're always measuring yourself
against a moving target, and also a moving target
that by definition is unreachable,
you can't actually reach an ideal.
It's an ideal.
But if you're always measuring yourself against it,
then you never feel like you've moved anywhere.
And that's actually why we wrote the book
is because high achievers by nature have huge ideals,
but they also usually measure themselves against them.
And our culture is trained that way.
Social media trains us to have ideals and to always be comparing ourselves externally.
And sometimes ideals are other people.
But if you're always measuring yourself against something that's way up ahead
and also something that you can never actually reach,
then what that does for you internally is it feels like you've never made any progress at all.
It also devalues everything you've done to that point.
And so whenever you're in the gap,
it does not matter how much you've achieved.
It doesn't matter if you're living way, way, way
beyond the dreams of anything you ever thought you would do,
you actually feel like you've made no progress at all.
And you feel like a loser,
and you've devalued not only your current self,
you've devalued everything that got you here.
And so ideals are beautiful.
They're just not useful as a measurement tool.
They're useful as a direction tool.
Goals are far more concrete.
Obviously you can have goals that you set
that move you toward your ideals.
And so goals are specific.
They're concrete. They're mile markers on a journey.
And then the useful thing to do with your goals is to obviously become increasingly
intrinsically motivated towards the goals you set and even the standards you set for yourself,
that they're less about what anyone else thinks, what anyone else wants. And you actually get
better at doing that when you just start measuring your progress backwards.
So like I'll set a goal for myself.
I've got huge goals for 2023.
But in terms of where I'm measuring myself
and in terms of my benchmark,
like my benchmark for 2023 is what I accomplished in 2022.
Like I accomplished some cool things,
but I'm using that since it's tangible.
Ideals are not tangible.
Like I have concrete evidence of what I did in 2022,
and I can use that not only to propel me forward,
but I can also use that to say, what do I wanna do
that's even gonna be bigger and more exciting?
So you can just measure yourself backwards
and use that as the baseline for what you can do.
Yeah, so I hear you saying a couple big ideas here.
The first one is ideals are a moving target.
You're never gonna get there,
so you're never gonna be happy
trying to go towards those ideals
because you're never gonna actually achieve that.
You can't actually achieve your ideal
and it's always moving further and further
as you become more successful, right?
Second is comparing yourselves to other people.
That never helps in terms of our mindset or happiness.
And then I hear you saying that goals can be tangible
and you can have mile markers,
and it's okay to have goals,
but you need to make sure that you're judging your progress
on those goals based on your past,
not necessarily how far you are from your ideal place, right?
I know I probably didn't say it as good as you, but that's basically what I'm gathered from.
You broke it down beautifully.
I think that this is one of the main problems
with the narratives.
Like there's a lot of narratives
about how you shouldn't have goals.
Obviously, I think it's impossible to not have goals.
I think human beings are, we can't not have a goal.
That's part of being intentional.
But the problem is the measurement.
I mean, even if I had hit my goal,
I would have gone into the gap.
I would have moved the target.
So even if I had hit the New York Times bestseller list
from a gap perspective,
I still would have felt terrible about myself
because I would have moved the target.
The target would have been,
well, why wasn't I on it for four weeks?
Or why wasn't I number one New York Times bestseller?
Yeah, or why didn't I hit number one?
So it doesn't even,
whether you hit the goal or not doesn't even matter.
If you're in the gap,
it will never have been enough
because the target will keep changing
and you're measuring yourself against something that's immeasurable
and something that's external and always changing.
And so, yeah,
whether it's other people that you're measuring yourself against,
or whether it's just your inflated ideals,
that's the point is that you won't be happy
hitting or not hitting your goals if you stay in the gap.
And that's just the key.
Yeah, so then on the flip side,
let's talk about gain thinking.
What does it look like to have gain thinking
or to practice gain thinking?
So I look at gain thinking two ways.
One is it's a way of measuring your progress and measuring your experiences.
So for me, for example, I've had a number of experiences already today,
like even just to this point, and some of them went to plans and some of them didn't go to plans.
But if I'm in the game, I'm measuring what actually did happen and I'm measuring myself backwards.
I'm only measuring myself against where I was before.
And the truth is, is I'm always ahead of my past self.
Even if things go backwards seemingly,
like even if I lose my leg in a car accident, right?
Like a lot of bad things can seemingly happen,
but if you're in the game,
you're finding the gains and you're creating gains from your experiences.
And so I consider it you're squeezing as much juice out of your experiences as possible.
You're also always choosing to become better as a result.
No matter what happens to you, you're in the game, so everything ultimately happens for
you.
So I guess it's really two big ideas.
One is, it's measuring yourself backward against where you were before and always realizing that you're further than you were before
and that the only thing I'm actually measuring myself against is myself,
which is where I was before.
So that's number one is just measuring yourself backwards.
The second one is literally turning everything that happens to you
into something that happens for you.
So anything, no matter what it was, you can actually gain and grow from it.
And if you do, then you're always getting better. So anything, no matter what it was, you can actually gain and grow from it.
And if you do, then you're always getting better.
You're always learning from every experience.
Whereas if you're in the gap, then your past becomes a problem.
Like that's, from like a psychology standpoint, what you need to be happy in the present is you need a happy past and an exciting future.
And the past is literally a meaning. And so the gain is just a lens of using your,
or of transforming your past into more gains, more learning.
Even from your most extreme traumas,
you can learn to turn those into gains
so that you're constantly better and even grateful for them,
which is what psychologists would call post-traumatic growth.
So it's really just those two things.
I'm only measuring myself against myself backward,
and I'm literally turning every experience into
my gain.
Yeah, BAM, I have to say for some reason this second interview that I had with
Benjamin Hardy a couple years ago just really hit different for me. I've thought
about this conversation so much since we had it that I honestly can't believe
this conversation was two years ago because it feels so fresh in my mind.
The first time Ben was on my show was episode seven, which is six years ago now.
And I was literally just starting out as a podcaster.
Now, if I look at the progress from then until now, it is beyond
anything I could have ever imagined.
Cover of podcast magazine, Webby award honoree, dubbed as the podcast princess, now running the number one business podcast network with 6.5
million dollars in revenue last year representing huge legends that I used to
look up to and thought I'd never even meet. Jenna Kutcher, Amy Porterfield, Neil
Patel, Russell Brunson. I mean my past self six years ago would have never
imagined my future self.
But even with all this progress, I don't always feel accomplished.
Sometimes I fall into the trap of comparing myself with others, with other podcasters
who were early adopters and captured more market share on Apple, with podcasters who
seem to get more traffic than me but don't try nearly as hard or don't have as good
as content, People who feel like
overnight successes like Stephen Barlet or Alex Ramosi who came out of nowhere. And even though
I'm a top podcaster, a top 100 podcaster, I want to be a top 10 podcaster. I want everybody in the
world to know my name. And that was always my goal when I set out on starting the podcast. And I fall into what Ben calls the gap.
But really, I shouldn't measure myself this way.
I should be measuring my progress, the gain.
I should be measuring my current self against my past self and not my future self.
And although it's healthy to measure progress looking backwards, it's actually not healthy
to always stay there.
It's better to think about who you want to be in the future.
And Ben told me the best thing to do is to get really clear and connected with your future
self.
You've got to hear this.
This is a really interesting concept in psychology.
Typically the way we look at time is we look at it as past, present, and future,
and we kind of look at it sequentially.
And we also look at it chronologically,
like my past is behind me.
There's no way I can get back there.
My present is now and the future's up ahead of me.
I'll never actually be able to go into the future.
All there is is really now.
From a psychology standpoint,
that's not how psychologists view time.
Psychologists don't view time sequentially.
We actually view it holistically.
So what I mean by that is that the past
is currently existing in my life.
Like, who I'm being right now is a complete amalgamation
of my views of my past, my experiences of my past.
We even today, we're talking about us
having a conversation four years ago, right?
And so like, my past is of course influencing me right now
and my narration of the past, my story of the past,? And so like, my past is of course influencing me right now.
And my narration of the past, my story of the past, the feelings I have toward my past,
the anchors I may have in my past that are unresolved, call it trauma or whatever.
But also my goals are heavily influencing me.
I mean, anyone who's listening to this is listening to it for a reason.
They're listening to it because they feel like this is going to help them contribute
to their goals or help them move forward in their lives.
And so everything about my life right now
is a combination of my feelings
and my perspectives of my past
and also my excitements or my feelings towards the future.
And so they're certainly not mutually exclusive
in terms of being in the game,
but also having a future oriented mindset.
Most people who read the gap and the gain are very future-oriented people.
The gain doesn't stop you, I guess, from having a future.
Actually, in my perspective, whenever I'm living in the gain,
it actually helps me to be more...
It helps me to have a future that's more genuinely coming from my own self
rather than something that's coming from the outside.
Usually, people's goals and they're called their standards
or their ideals actually were fed to them by culture,
by society.
They don't even, you know, the future that they want
actually isn't genuinely intrinsically motivated.
And so for me, tapping into the game just helps me
to stop worrying about the outside world as much,
stop competing with other people.
And so in terms of future self,
I guess I would say in simple terms,
we all have a future self.
What the research shows is that most people,
especially the older they get,
they stop thinking about their future self very much.
Most people, probably 30 and above,
assume that even their future self,
10, 20 or 30 years from now, is mostly going to be the same person they are today.
So most people don't have huge imagination towards their future self.
What the research does show is that your future self is going to be a wildly different person than you think.
Even in 5 or 10 years from now, it's going to be hard to fully predict who your future self will be,
but if you start imagining it, start thinking about it, and importantly getting really connected
to your future self, who you want to be in the future, you can then start using, obviously,
your vision of your future self to guide and direct who you're going to be today, and you
can be extremely intentional about it.
And so, from my standpoint, the best thing to do is get really clear and connected to
your future self, who you want to be, get very specific about that, and then use that as, I guess
you could say, the north star for directing everything you're doing here and now, and
each and every day as you're moving forward, you're measuring yourself against where you
were before.
You're measuring yourself backwards and you're always seeing that by increasingly living
intentionally as your future self, you're always outgrowing your past self.
And I do this daily.
I mean, if I even look at where I was a week ago,
I am not the same person I was last week.
I've changed a lot. I've grown a lot.
I know a ton of things my past self didn't know.
And so I'm never my past self
and I'm always growing into my future self.
That's kind of how I see it.
So YapBam, who is your future self as a content creator?
What goals will your future self achieve?
And how can you make these concrete goals
rather than chasing an ideal that has a goalpost
that is ever moving and leaving you feeling unfulfilled in a gap mindset.
Write these goals down.
What does your future self as a content creator look like in one year, in five years, in ten
years?
Imagine with limitless boundaries and write these goals down.
Then use these goals to prioritize and plan your actions.
Understand who you want to be and then make your decisions from that lens.
It's your North Star for directing what you do day in and day out.
It's the start of the new year and there's no better timing to set out on new goals.
Finally, I wanted to touch on a concept that might seem a little abstract,
but which is actually deeply connected to staying motivated as a creator.
Luck. Have you ever felt like certain people seem to get all the lucky breaks while you're stuck spinning your wheels?
Well, what if I told you that luck isn't just random?
It's something that you can actively cultivate.
Case Kenny, a writer and mindfulness expert,
broke down this idea beautifully for me
when he shared how luck is intertwined with patience,
action, and authenticity.
I was listening to an interview with you
and James Altucher a couple of days ago,
and you guys were talking about how luck
is similar to faith, which I thought was like
just a really cool way to think about it,
that luck is very similar to how you would think of faith.
How can we make ourselves more lucky?
What are some ways that we kind of can break the rut that we're in, the
routine that we're in to try to bring more luck into our lives?
I like the idea of luck as faith.
And I like the idea of luck and faith and patience being intertwined.
Right?
Like when you give yourself patience, that is saying, I have faith in myself.
Right?
When you're saying, I don't need to rush to do this.
I don't need to conform to someone else's timeline.
I just need to keep doing what I'm doing.
That is faith in yourself and that is what creates luck.
There's a book that I referenced quite a bit that has been passed around a little bit about
the talks about luck.
I'm blanking on the author of it, but it's called Chase Chance and Creativity, the lucky
art of novelty.
And it's basically written by this scientist professor
who was talking about the role that luck has played
in some great scientific breakthroughs, right?
Specifically luck in the lab,
like the invention of pasteurization and Louis Pasteur
and the invention of penicillin.
Like these were like technically like mistakes
that were made in the lab
when they just like randomly did things,
not a scientist who don't know the exact,
but like they randomly mixed things together and something great happened, right?
It was luck.
It wasn't part of the plan, it was luck.
And basically the scientist looked over the years,
over the many decades and centuries of luck in the lab,
and he said, luck is actually categorizable.
It's something we could break down,
and it's something we can't control.
And he said, there's four kinds of luck.
And one luck is the kind of luck that I think we're also apt to identify by.
And for me, I used to think, well, I'm an unlucky person, right?
I've never won a lottery.
I always hit red lights.
Like if something bad can happen, it tends to happen to me.
That's the kind of luck that we need to ignore.
That's random luck.
Like we don't really care about random luck.
We can't control it.
It is what it is.
But there's three other kinds of luck that he identified in the lab
that I think is very immediately transferable to life.
The first was luck that comes from experience
and association.
Basically the more you do something,
the wiser you get about it,
such that in the future you make better decisions.
You're able to quickly form more mental associations
of if this, then that, and
you just have better results.
It's luck that comes from wisdom.
Right.
So for me, it's like with writing quotes, I've written, I don't know, a thousand on
Instagram, I kind of know what people want.
I know what makes people feel seen.
So people like I posted something yesterday today.
It's got like 90,000 likes.
That's a lot of likes.
It's a little bit lucky.
The, the algorithm lucked me today. Well, lot of likes. That's a little bit lucky. The algorithm lucked me today.
Well, kind of, it was just a little bit of association.
So that was luck one.
The other luck was luck that comes from motion.
Can't deny that, right?
The more you do, the luckier you get.
Objects in motion stay in motion,
objects in motion bump into other objects in motion.
The more you do, the more podcasts you release,
the more music you release,
the more cold calls you make,
literally the luckier you get.
People, for some reason, we conflate luck
with being irregardless of effort,
but luck is truly effort.
And then the last luck that he broke down
was luck that comes from like uniqueness,
originality, authenticity,
just the fact that the more real you are,
the luckier you get in the sense that people
can detect that.
Like some of the examples were like,
if you have blue hair, right?
And that's like authentic to you and your expression,
it strikes up a conversation with someone,
oh, and they're an editor for Vogue
and you wanna be a fashion model.
Like things like that luck that comes from originality
and authenticity that in very practical ways,
whether it's a conversation in an elevator
or something you post that shines through,
it attracts the right people and you get lucky.
But it comes from that level of realness.
So yeah, I like thinking about luck in that sense
because I used to really victimize myself
as an unlucky person.
And of course that's not true.
And that's unfair, back to the idea
of that's bold of you and vulnerability.
It's an unfair thing to say I'm an unlucky person.
You could break yourself free of being unlucky by being real,
by leaning on your past for those associations
and then for doing more, of course.
Cases breakdown of luck is such a powerful reminder
that you don't have to sit around waiting for opportunities
to come to you.
Instead, take action, stay true to yourself
and trust that your consistent efforts will eventually pay off. waiting for opportunities to come to you. Instead, take action, stay true to yourself,
and trust that your consistent efforts
will eventually pay off.
And that's a wrap for episode three
of the YAP Creator series.
Today we explored the journey of staying motivated
as a content creator from starting small
and staying consistent, to avoiding burnout
and gap thinking, while practicing game thinking
and focusing on transforming into your future self.
And remember, content creation is a marathon, not a sprint.
The keys define systems and tools that support your creativity and make the process sustainable.
Whether that's batching content, automating your workflows, or using tools like Opus Clip to save time while making awesome content.
I want to thank Opus Clip for sponsoring this series.
Opus Clip's AI-powered Clip Anything
can transform how you create.
Effortlessly discover hidden moments
in your long-form videos
and turn videos into shareable viral content
that resonates with your audience.
They also have a social post scheduler
to auto-post your clips to YouTube, TikTok,
Instagram, LinkedIn, and X,
so you can save your precious time
and stay consistent with your posting in 2025.
If you're ready to take your content to the next level, try Opus Clip today for free
at opus.pro slash clip anything.
That's opus.pro slash clip anything.
Thanks for tuning in, and I can't wait to see you in episode four of the Yap Creator
series presented by Opus Clip.
This is Halitaha, signing off.