Your World Within Podcast by Eddie Pinero - 1% Mindset: Why Most People Quit (And You Won't) | Motivational Compilation
Episode Date: July 10, 2026This episode is brought to you by Huel.Success isn’t just about discipline, it’s about removing friction. Huel helps me simplify nutrition so I can focus my energy on the things that matter most.G...et 15% OFF your first order of $50 or more at huel.com/eddie with code EDDIE. New customers only.🧠 Join the free community: https://www.agns.lifestyle/pages/raise-your-standard📖 Get my Free Ebook While the World Sleeps https://eddiepinero.com/ebook🧢 AGNS Code "YWW20" for 20% off http://www.agns.lifestyleMost people don't fail because they aren't talented. They fail because they quit in the middle. The excitement wears off. Progress slows. Doubt creeps in. And that's where most people turn around.But not the 1%. The people who accomplish extraordinary things aren't always the smartest or the most gifted. They're the ones who keep showing up when no one is watching, when motivation disappears, and when every excuse tells them to stop.This compilation brings together some of Eddie's most powerful messages on discipline, resilience, consistency, and the mindset required to become the person you're capable of being.If you're tired of starting over, this is your reminder that success isn't built in the moments you feel inspired; it's built in the moments you choose not to quit.The difference between average and extraordinary isn't talent. It's who keeps going.Listen whenever you need a reminder that your future is built by what you refuse to quit today.📱 Follow Along:Support the Podcast on Spotify - https://spoti.fi/2BLf6pBInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/your_world_within/TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@your_world_within📝 Comment below with what's been holding you back as of late. Would love to help you 🙏🙏🙏#liveinspired #yourworldwithin #motivation
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Sometimes when you don't know where you're going, the best thing to do is go there.
A wise man once stated that an object at rest stays at rest.
And while his rationale is a little different than mine, I'm going to borrow from his premise.
Right?
Because when you move, even if you don't know where you're going, you put yourself on a collision course with something.
You put into existence an entity to react to.
Some call it destiny.
Others call it fate.
I call it simply initiative.
Because if your journey is hypothetical,
you have nothing to celebrate nor correct.
A sailboat can adjust its sails once it leaves the harbor, right?
It can learn from and manipulate its surroundings.
Make sure it arrives at a destination, right?
It learns and adapts along the way.
But from the harbor, it speculates.
It expounds upon a path that might be straighter,
might be faster, might be more thought out and tied together
than the crazy sailors who took off for the horizon,
but in actuality, it goes nowhere.
In the real world, it is stagnant,
and I could be wrong, but I'd make the argument 10 out of 10 times
that the real world is where we want our results.
And my proof?
Well, a journey that started with insurance
and evolved into music, in songwriting,
in audio production, then video production,
then creative writing,
then a sweet spot that kind of combined everything.
A spot that didn't make its way to my inbox
with an exact address.
A spot that required a lot of failure
and lessons learned and disappointment,
But man, more than that, so much fun.
My proof is sitting down right now in real time,
letting my fingers create a bridge from nothing to something of value.
By the way, after sitting here staring at a blank screen for hours,
it's just starting.
Could I be wrong?
Could I screw up?
Could I wildly miss the mark?
Yes.
In fact, it happens more than I'd like to admit.
But here's the beauty, even if I am wrong.
I now have something to work with.
Something has been brought into existence.
And well, that means I'm officially further along than I once was.
And I've heard over and over again that there is no perfect moment, that you have to just go.
And the idea, I mean, it makes sense.
It's impossible not to understand.
But it's one of those things that until you feel it doesn't mean anything.
How can you miss something you've never experienced?
Well, to put it in a way that help me understand,
you aren't going because what do you have to lose?
You're going because everything is to be gained.
The answers that you pick up along the way,
like a little coins you pick up in Super Mario, right?
You have to start collecting pieces of a pocket.
that you can then arrange.
I truly believe that one of the most important ideas
we need to hold on to moving forward
as personal agency, self-belief.
And I say that because I feel like I'm watching it slip.
There are cases where we literally don't know or understand
that it's within our own ability and control
to change our lives.
No person or group or letter in the mail
is going to come along and green light
and green light your idea.
In fact, you might not even really know what your idea means or how it will look.
And that's not only okay.
It's amazing.
It's the marble that you get to chisel away at to create something.
See, life is not the perfect execution of a plan.
Life is the courage to make your way into a world
that no one really understands or knows anything.
or knows anything about.
And I'm not talking physics or biology or quantum mechanics.
I'm talking about the real life that is emergent from those areas of study.
Right?
There is no perfect formula for happiness.
But it will always be true that immobility or standing still is antithetical to progress.
And there is plenty of data that supports the idea.
Progress equals happiness.
We want to move towards something.
So that's what this is about.
Here's to not being scared of what we don't know.
Because somewhere in the realm of what we don't know
exists what we need most.
So yeah, stop waiting for the perfect moment.
And yes, begin.
But not because it's an ultimatum.
Do it because the things that make life fun
and intriguing and exciting
and ultimately worthwhile.
They live on the other side of your front door.
Jack Welch has said control your own destiny or someone else will.
And I'm passing this along today as I believe it's one of the most important things to understand.
Not a once-and-done thing, but a reoccurring question.
Where have I relinquished control?
How can I recapture what matters most?
As the world around us shifts, slips, and slides, so does our grasp on it.
Which is why I find this continuous self-reflection so powerful.
I have a flight this afternoon, which means I have a hard deadline,
and a lot I need to do before I head down to the Miami airport.
I've been traveling a lot recently,
which means I've been finding myself in this situation a lot recently.
And here's what's become abundantly clear to me,
as I work through the logistics.
On travel days, I'm exponentially more productive
than on my typical, quote-unquote, workday.
I wake up with an urgency and sense of control
over my time that apparently is lacking on, say, your typical Tuesday.
And I'm shot out of a canon.
Today, for example, I've worked out,
written and recorded two speeches, counting this one,
recorded short video content sent to my editors,
planned next week's topics,
might even have time to go live and hang out for a few minutes.
And I'm sitting here thinking,
you know, dude, if I had a flight at noon every day,
I'd be worth $500 million by June.
What is the difference between today and every other day?
Simple.
My approach towards it.
How I utilize and control the resources at my disposal.
This is a powerful, powerful thing to realize.
You know, it begs the question, how can this urgency be manufactured?
Because that's what it's about, right?
Setting up the parameters so that they are most conducive to our success.
Another life-changing quote I came across a few years ago was you are your own experiment.
Meaning life is about testing things, trying different methods, exploring different approaches,
and also having the discipline to observe their outcomes.
Why? So that you can use that information to position yourself for success.
That info is as good as gold.
One understanding and two, implementing.
So that we're not pushed back and forth by external factors like leaves in the wind,
but are instead creating our own ideal circumstances.
These, let's just call them, travel days have helped me realize how much power, energy, control I relinquish on a typical day.
and most importantly, how I can change that.
Time for a new experiment.
Let's try approaching every day like there's a hard cut off at noon.
How? I'm not sure yet.
I'll test and explore until something clicks.
But there's definitely some information worth noting.
I've picked up my phone zero times today, which is obviously valuable.
I've second-guessed my messaging and communication a lot less.
Don't have time to waste on the small...
things. Nope, not when you fly out at noon. This is information I'll take with me. Little nuggets of
wisdom that I've been able to collect. And so I'll finish with an important reminder that this is not
so much about efficiency as it is about awareness and a willingness to adapt. Like becoming a robot
is not the goal here, but the discipline to step outside yourself and look at how you're spending
your time so that you can make it more valuable and meaningful is.
We let the outside world dictate far too much, and we don't even realize.
We just sort of move through it.
We relinquished control because we had no idea it was ours to take.
We are very often unaware of the power that we have over ourselves, our circumstances,
and our lives in totality.
We're unaware of just how much value we walk right by.
The opportunity is not days, weeks, or months away.
It lives with you now.
Every breath, every step, every decision,
you just have to open your eyes and invite it in.
One of the biggest lies we tell ourselves is the success comes from perfect days.
It doesn't.
It comes on that average Tuesday when you're busy and tired and unmotivated,
but still find a way to move forward.
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being here. What you look for in life tends to be what you find. What you believe is usually
what you see, which means your existence hinges on where you build your walls.
And part of the reason stories, music, movies, they move us is because we're allowed,
even if it's for a short period of time to change our parameters on these things,
to let the mind navigate through a world without any limitation.
When you think about it, we never fast forward through a movie so that we can quickly check off the box and complete it.
Right?
We never rushed through to move on to the sequel.
No, we want to experience it.
We want to be overwhelmed by emotion, captivated by excitement lost in the mystery.
And then when it's over, we retract.
We return to reality.
come back up and the rules are reinstated.
And from a 10,000 foot view, you can't help but look at that and wonder if there's more
there.
Why do we have to retreat to this microcosm of our ideal world where we're not rushed?
We can enjoy the moment.
Why does it take a dark room and objects depicted on a small screen for us to feel like
it's acceptable to step outside of this everyday script.
And the question isn't who's enforcing these rules.
The answer is always us, it's internal, but the question is why?
Is it incomprehensible that the same excitement be inserted into your world?
Is it out of the realm of possibility that the rush of adrenaline, the peak experiences,
the laughter, love, twists, and turns be inserted into reality?
It's like we choose to be chased through life by ticking clocks and measured by socially constructed checkpoints.
But we can move beyond that, much beyond in those checkpoints.
They're just as imaginary as the talking raccoon you set aside three hours to watch last night.
So, by the way, you could escape from a manufactured reality.
Right, there's a powerful authoritative line that separates our day to day from the imagination.
And every second is about pushing that back.
Never fast-forwarding through life, but making it unlike anything else.
Never applying the word mandatory to things that don't warrant the term.
We need to think bigger.
Working like a madman to build someone else's dream is not mandatory.
Enjoying two-sevenths of your life is not mandatory.
Being confined to one road when there are infinite past travel is not mandatory.
They're components of a bad movie.
And my point is not to be ungrateful.
It's not to be resentful.
It's to remind you that things are the way they are because you've allowed them to be that way.
Nothing in life is destined, predetermined, or meant to be.
Everything is decided.
Life is chosen.
Paths are taken.
And sometimes a simple reminder that you have the flexibility to redefine.
The rules can make all the difference.
You are entitled to happiness.
Every day is a continuation of the extraordinary, not a break from it.
And you have to see that.
You have to believe that.
You're not alive so that you can every so often escape.
You're here to feel the imaginary, to challenge the make-belief.
Our view of the world without a concentrated effort, it seems to contract.
And this is your reminder to disallow that, to stop living for the 5% or the 10% and flip that ratio on its head.
Now is the time to rewrite your script, recraft your storyline.
And if what you look for is what you get,
then it's time to see what you've never seen before.
Understanding what you want.
Sometimes requires learning in 1,000 different ways,
what you don't.
Uncovering who you are means first experiencing who you are not.
Finding the right person or people in your life calls for initially letting the wrong ones in.
Life seems to demonstrate that there's a price to pay in order to get where we need to be.
Patience, exploration, they're expensive.
They exhaust energy, time, resources, but they are the only way.
as though one needs to dig a hole in their heart
before fully understanding how to best fill it in.
It's stepping back to leap forward.
I've always believed the knows
teaches more than the yeses,
the chaos more than the calm.
We are tasked with taking our hurt
and from it better understanding ourselves,
holding our losses and with them
finding answers we once over.
Overlooked, embracing our fears and alongside them becoming courageous.
That's why maintaining perspective is everything.
When we find that we've been slighted by life,
we have to recognize that, yeah, maybe we didn't get the answer we wanted in the short term,
but still picked up something beautiful, something necessary.
We still learned what didn't work and saw where not to go.
Because every step taken in one direction is a simultaneous decision to not go another.
To embrace one option is to neglect its inverse.
Every loss is a data point.
Every time we fall, our worldview is shaped.
And that's not just helpful.
It's imperative.
It's a brushstroke just as valuable as the ones derived from our successes,
all culminating into one all-encompassing, mass.
And I look back at the mistakes I made.
The time spent learning where I shouldn't be, the days with people who didn't lift me up, and
I'm incredibly thankful for them, they brought me clarity.
Like marble being slowly chiseled away, piece by piece, they have left an understanding,
a self-identity that takes shape one day at a time.
So as we make our way through life, let's not fail to see the
the value in these short-term misfortunes, for in many ways we are fortunate to have them.
Perhaps the value lags.
Maybe you don't see why the mistakes saved your life while you were making them, but they are
contributing to the building up of a greater you.
They are mitigating the noise and lighting up the path.
So hold your head up high, and not just for the sake of doing so, but because you had the
courage to step out into a world that you knew would at times bring you to your knees.
Hold your head up high because every time you stood back up, you made a statement.
You declared that you wouldn't let discomfort and obstacles deter you, but rather shape you.
You were willing to learn where not to go in exchange for the privilege of taking your road.
through the haze across the war torn ground beyond the hills and toward a distant horizon
your horizon what are you willing to endure because to become something more is not to react to
the world but to create a new one yours as my dad explained to me when I was in grade school it's
taking initiative right seeing what isn't there what's needed
than making it happen.
And while the setting certainly change,
the situation is no longer about helping around the house
so I could go to the concert with my friends.
Right now, as we get older, our world seems to get bigger along with us.
The stakes are higher.
Now it's everything I see when I open the blinds
and I look out that window.
It's all there.
And we can have as little or as much of that as we want.
But what we receive will always be directly proportional to what we're willing to endure.
To how long we push forward before results arrive.
How long we can carry on with the sole company of our beliefs.
It's about Bezos packaging and delivering his own books from a garage.
Knowing it's not about today, it's about tomorrow if he can just hang on, if he can just endure.
where it's Tony Robbins with $20 in his bank account,
knowing that has no reflection on him or what he's capable of
if he can just hang on, just keep pushing.
It's not that they had the ability to bring their dreams to life.
A lot of people do.
They had more.
They had patience.
They had the discipline, right?
To remain calm and collected.
That's nerve-wracking.
That can be unsettling.
They had the ability to be focused.
To remove all the noise around them.
The doubt that stops people before that desired payout is achieved.
And one of my favorite ways to look at this concept of growth is a little anecdote about lily pads in a pond.
And basically, it's posed as a question, right?
So the lily pads in this pond double in size every day.
And by day 30, the pond is completely covered.
covered in Lillipads.
So then what day is it half covered?
That's the question.
A lot of people, you know, instinctually they say,
oh, okay, day 30, half of 30 is 15, so on day 15 it was half covered,
but that's wrong.
They're doubling every day, which means the pond wasn't half covered until day 29,
and only a quarter covered on day 28.
And the reason that's important is because that means on day 1 through 23,
Those lily pads were growing, they were working, they were moving, yet they occupied less than a quarter of that pond.
All that work for a result that was barely visible.
And then at the very end, the payout becomes exponential, and that's what success is.
That's what it means to pursue anything of significance, its days, months, years of unrecognized work, of marching forward,
ground when no one knows or cares or believes except you. That visualization is your sweet spot,
but like we all know easier said than done, right? This is an incredibly challenging thing
because we get impatient and our pride starts to hurt. We become tempted to jump to something
different or easier. We don't hang on long enough to hit day 28 or 29 or 30 when things
really start to evolve.
It's like James Clear's metaphor and atomic habits, right?
Where you have an ice cube sitting in a room and it's freezing and you start slowly shifting
the temperature up.
You don't see anything going on with the ice cube.
Not until you hit that 32 degree mark.
But there are things happening when it goes from 26 to 27 degrees and 27 to 28 and 28 to
to 29.
Those little molecules are moving and bouncing around.
But then boom, suddenly it hits that mark and it changes rapidly right in front of you.
That's why this single shift in perspective changes everything.
It's not about right now.
You're doing this for the exponential growth to come.
You're believing.
You're laying the groundwork.
Until what I call the overnight success period.
When the world finally recognizes and goes, who is this?
Wow, that was quick.
They have no idea about, you know, day one through,
27. They don't know about the effort and the mental gymnastics. They don't know how many times you
had to talk yourself out of quitting or out of rationalizing a day off. They just don't know the road
you took to get there and that's fine. In fact, that's the beauty of it all. You not only saw
it first, but you brought something beautiful to life. By enduring turmoil, by navigating discomfort
and chaos, you would become the maker of a new universe.
Your universe.
Because you stood there because when others would have ran, turned back, you endured.
Of all life's lessons, it's my relationship with what it means to suffer that's transformed my reality.
Something that's learned, not unlike one's ability to read or write, an understanding that unlocks the door to fulfillment.
Nietzsche says, to live is to suffer. To survive is to find meaning in the suffering.
Dostoevsky says pain and suffering are always inevitable for a large intelligence and deep heart.
The really great men must, I think, have great sadness on earth.
Helen Keller says, although the world is full of suffering, it's also full of the overcoming of it.
Our problem is not that we suffer.
Our problem is that we don't know how to perceive it when it inevitably arrives.
We're taught that it's synonymous with a giant street sign saying wrong way.
We're taught that the perfect life is free of its grasp.
It's why when suffering does arise,
we're so inclined to run from it.
I reference my experience as a D1 Rower often,
not because I stood out or even really because of my love for the sport.
I reference it because it is the point in my life when I learned to suffer,
when I learned what I could put my body through, my mind through,
and see that like all things, discomfort simply ends,
and life is different on the other side.
That's why I talk about waking up to go to the gym in the morning when it's still dark in the middle of winter, the practices that made me throw up, having three exams, two papers, but thinking about a 2K test.
Because part of me couldn't believe I was doing it, because up until that point in my life, I would have simply said no.
That's why I reference the three of us walk-ons that were their senior year out of the 60-plus that showed up freshman year.
We built a relationship with suffering.
You understand what opens up to you when you agree to, for a moment in time, walk through those flames of hell.
It's not a trick or a complex formula.
It's just taking yourself to places most haven't learned to go.
Not because they can't, but because they haven't learned.
When you know you can push yourself, far beyond what you thought possibly.
Not only survive, but come back, renewed, re-energized, a different understanding of the world.
It's hard to see anything as too much or outside the realm of possibility.
In my personal life, I can make difficult decisions.
In my professional life, I can sit down and write when I don't want to, when I feel like I can.
I can take on projects and scare me.
That take me so far outside my comfort zone, my ceilings have no choice but to become floors.
you elevate yourself with ECHES.
Gustav Lanzone says,
there is no art without commitment and suffering.
That is not a demon to be avoided.
It's truly the beginning of everything.
Jocko, he says,
discipline equals freedom.
Well, what is discipline?
If not one's ability to accept and harness suffering
to teach yourself not to step back,
but forward into it,
into the chaos, into the disarray.
That's where our lives are assembled,
It's where we are made.
And so my message is where you would once say no, dare to say yes.
Even if it's a footstep, a moment, one toe in the water,
teach yourself that the very discomfort you've been running away from,
that most run away from will be the reason your life transforms.
Change isn't a miracle.
It's a decision.
Part of my morning routine every day is to listen to the commencement speech,
Admiral McRaven gave at the University of Texas, where he's talking about 10 lessons that he learned
during his time as a Navy SEAL going through Bud's training.
And he positions them in a way that will really help anybody through life if they implement these
concepts.
It's an incredible speech.
And my favorite lesson of the 10 is around what he calls the sugar cookie.
And I want to delve into it a little deeper because it's, it's,
It's such a perfect metaphor. It's so relatable. And so for a quick overview, basically, during
Buds, all the attendees were called to line up for uniform inspection. And the instructors would,
you know, walk by and check out their uniforms. They had to be perfect, right? As McRaven says,
uniform press, belt buckle shiny, no smudges on the shoes. But the point of the exercise
that a lot of people really didn't understand
is that the uniforms were never going to be good enough.
The inspectors or instructors would always find something wrong.
And the punishment was to go run down into the water
with your clothes on, get soaking wet,
then roll around in the sand,
and it sticks to you all day.
That's why they call it the sugar cookie.
And what he says is,
you were never going to succeed.
The perfect uniform was.
impossible. The instructors wouldn't allow it. But the interesting thing is that some people simply
couldn't handle that idea. They didn't understand that no matter how well you prepare or perform,
sometimes you're going to end up a sugar cookie. That is life. It's such a powerful concept.
It's a life lesson that must be understood before someone can effectively make their way in the
world, the idea that life simply isn't fair. And those who refuse to accept that are pulled into
this void of projecting out and looking to assign blame as opposed to continuing a march forward
and reshaping the odds, right? A tough lesson to learn. It's tough to work and work and work
and not get that immediate validation you hope for. It's tough that life drops obstacles before us
that we weren't prepared for and don't feel equipped to take on.
It's tough when people around you get rewarded or promoted
or acknowledged for doing the same or less than you.
And if you let it, it will eat you up.
It will taint your view of the world.
It can close the door to your own self-improvement
and open it up for comparing, contrasting, projecting,
blaming toxicity.
You know, it really hit home for me when McRavens says,
look, some people just couldn't understand that no matter what they did, they were going to be a sugar cookie.
They couldn't rise above the apparent unfairness.
They didn't realize that they were being prepared for the reality of life.
Not the gentle, predictable, fair world we often feel is owed to us.
So the ones who made it out of the class, well, they took their hits, they dealt with their discomfort.
They learned to expect more out of themselves.
Right?
There simply was no room for the victim.
there.
Those who wouldn't help themselves, they got weeded out, left behind.
It really is the perfect metaphor for life.
And as far as I'm concerned, the only way to ensure defeat
is to divert responsibility to the outside world.
The only way to remain powerless is to feel bad for yourself,
to feel angry that life isn't what it is in the movies.
Again, hard to hear.
In a perfect world, hard work's always rewarded.
The correct actions always have positive consequences,
but that's not always reflective of reality.
As the saying goes, it's not your fault where you start
or when things you can't control present themselves
and make your life challenging,
you didn't choose that hand, not your fault.
But guess what?
Where you go from here is your responsibility.
It is your responsibility to move beyond the cosmic injustice
you can do nothing about
and create a better situation, a better outcome, a better world.
How many times in life do we find,
ourselves looking in the mirror.
I was saying, hey, I did everything I was supposed to do.
Why am I being punished?
Why is this happening to me?
Why did I take that L?
On paper, every box was checked.
I've asked the question.
We've all asked the question.
And every time we do, we're placed at a crossroads of sorts.
Do we go one way, let it derail us, distort our worldview?
Do we let it alter how we perceive ourselves?
Or do we go the other way?
Do we acknowledge that life is a marriage of highs and lows?
And to make something of it, we shouldn't feel slighted by the challenges but accept them.
Let them make us better.
I've learned this again and again.
I learned this after I spent four months on a project in 2014 that essentially bombed.
And it was the first time in my life that I felt that.
It's like how?
I put everything into this.
How could I get nothing back?
Well, it turns out I got the world back.
I just didn't see it at the time.
I learned one of the most powerful lessons to learn.
The universe is indifferent to your agenda.
All it does is present an obstacle course in front of you
and allows you to navigate as you see fit.
Will you focus on the negative?
Will you have resentment towards life's injustices?
Because a lot of people do.
A lot of people can't get past it,
so they hide from the struggle that would all,
become their strength.
And see, I'd much rather work to be the type of person who finds the positive,
who carries on, who doesn't take hardship personal because it's not a personal thing.
In fact, let's remove the emotion from it altogether.
Let's focus on getting through.
As a good friend of mine says, if you're on a hiking trail and you get bitten by a snake,
are you going to chase the snake into the woods so you can kill it and get your vengeance?
Are you going to go to the hospital and get the medical help you need?
Are you going to focus on what's necessary for your betterment to move on, to grow?
Every time you accept responsibility for a situation,
every time you point at yourself as the one who can make something good happen,
you move forward.
You stack the odds in your favor.
You position yourself for something bigger and better,
and it doesn't mean it will happen overnight,
or even that you are entitled to an outcome.
But those who remain empowered through life's trials and tribulations,
they usually find a way.
Not because they deserved it,
but because they simply did not stop.
They did not waste time blaming the universe
and instead created something of value.
They got over being that metaphorical sugar cookie
and started thinking about the big picture.
They accepted the defeats and they learned.
They made a pact with the face looking back at them in the mirror
that sometimes we don't get the ideal hand,
but it will always be up to you how to play it.
There is always a win, always a positive,
and to remember that is to create a world of your making.
