Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - Why It’s Time To Burn The Boats, With Matt Higgins CEO & Co-Founder At RSE Ventures Episode 295
Episode Date: February 14, 2023In This Episode You Will Learn About: How to live life WITHOUT needing the approval of others Why we struggle with commitment and how we can use our anxiety for GOOD The type of self talk... you need to CONQUER your fears The 3 part burn the boat theory to help you stick by your convictions and reach your ULTIMATE success Resources: Website: www.burntheboatsbook.com Read Burn The Boats Email: press@rseventures.com LinkedIn & Facebook: @Matt Higgins Youtube: @BurnTheBoatsBook Twitter: @mhiggins Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/creatingconfidence and get on your way to being your best self. Show Notes: Are you holding back from going after your dreams because of what other people think of you? Well, nobody can see your true potential better than YOU can! We’re joined by Matt Higgins, the CEO and Co-Founder of private investment firm RSE Ventures, and a guest Shark on season 10 and 11 of Shark Tank! He’s here to share his 3 part burning the boat theory so we can leave behind our shame and use our fears to go after our goals even harder! About The Guest: Matt Higgins is the Co-Founder and CEO of private investment firm RSE Ventures and an executive fellow at Harvard Business School. As a guest shark on Shark Tank’s season 10 and 11, Matt is taking things to the next level and will soon star in a new spinoff, Business Hunters! If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: Start Putting Yourself FIRST, With Heather! 7 Steps To Manifesting the Life of Your Dreams With Suzanne Adams Business Development Strategist & Motivational Speaker How to Make Things Happen with Heather & Kelley Tyan, Author & Success Coach! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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When you're lobbying for the approval of others,
or lobbying to bring others along,
I always have to ask yourself, why am I doing that? Am I doing that because their buy-in
is necessary to advance my insight? Am I doing that to assuage me that I might be wrong
because I'm nervous? The reason why we don't fully commit often, it's not because we are
necessarily afraid of what's going to happen. It's because we haven't processed the worst-case scenario
and assimilated that information and realize.
I'll be all right. I'm on
this journey with me. Each
week when you join me, we
are going to chase down our
goals, overcome adversity and
set you up for better tomorrow.
I'm ready for my close to
hi and welcome back. I'm so
excited for you to meet our
guest today. Matt Higgins is
co-founder and CEO
of Private Investment firm RSE Ventures
and an executive fellow at Harvard Business School
where he co-teaches the course Moving Beyond DTC.
A guest shark on ABC, Shark Tank,
seasons 10 and 11, he will soon star
in a new spinoff, Business Hunters,
also executive produced by Mark Burnett.
Matt, thanks so much for being here with us today.
Thank you for having me.
All right, so one of the things I love about your story
met the more that I researched you
and was reading your new book Burn the Boats
was the level of success that you've created in your life
is incredible.
However, most people would be shocked,
and they definitely wouldn't imagine that you grew up the way that you did. And I'm just hoping
you can share a little glimpse into what it was like growing up in your situation with a single mom
and some of the bold moves and decisions you made at a very young age. Yeah, I'm, I know,
glad we're starting there because I always say I want to be known more from where I began
rather than where I end up and and I always have to pull forward my origin story in order
to do that, you know, Shark Tank, all these shiny objects.
It's easy to see me a certain way.
Whereas what I really want to be seen is a 16 year old kid who dropped at a high school.
So I grew up in Queens, New York, shout out to anybody out there from Queens or New York
City.
And I was raised by a single mom, who was amazing.
My earliest memories are watching her deal
with a lot of health issues.
She just had, she ended up being burial beasts
and had all sorts of comorbid issues
that went along with it.
But she also was really desperate
to make something out of her life,
the product of abuse.
She left my dad when I was about nine years old
and she had been a high school dropout and she was always insecure and ashamed about that fact
and high watched her go to Queensborough Community College, get her GD and then enroll in
Queens College. And so my earliest memories were the time before and the time after, you know,
the time after it was filled with a sense of dignity and hope for becoming a college
student. And she would take this little boy with her to classes on Saturday and I'd sit
in the back of the room and watch my mother, my head on the desk thinking, like, why are
we here? Like, what's she doing? And I remember her reporting back to me, like, I got this,
you know, an A in history and Dr. Factor told me that I'm smart, you know, for the first
time. So, you know, one view is education, the power of transcendence. And the other view was desperation, right? Like
little kid, why do we have nothing to eat? Why are we taking a bus for an hour and a half
in order to go to a food pantry? Don't they have food pantries where we live, you know,
shame? And I always say that, you know, gourmet meal in my house was this block of government
cheese from the, which I keep in my desk by the way as a reminder.
So just poverty and selling flowers on street corners.
I was that little kid on Mother's Day who knocked on your window and said, excuse me, sir,
would you like to buy for your wife?
Just every kind of thing.
These things are colliding.
And as time went on, you know, you get more desperate as a kid.
And any kid who's a product of a single parent could relate to this out there is like, you
wish there would be a white knight that would come along.
In my case, I wish there was a hero, man, male figure
who would take care of my mom
because I was tired of taking care of her.
And so as desperation grew,
I was like, I gotta do something radical
to change my circumstances.
And I came up with this crazy idea
that I was gonna drop out of high school at 16 years old.
Well, yes, it does sound crazy as a mother of 15-year-old.
If he ever came home one day and told me he was dropping out of school,
I would literally fall around.
I would think, you're good man, you took away the most salient points for the interview,
dumb shit.
Right, it sounds really aggressive.
However, looking back now, this is the beginning of your own,
burn the votes, life, and path to such ultimate success.
However, everyone in the world was second-guessing you when you announced this, correct?
Yeah, let me explain my takeaways, because I, Greg, don't want your 15-year-old son to,
you know, take away the wrong lesson. But, yeah, I always say this, when you're
concealing what's really going on in your life, the people who you get feedback from don't have full context because you're hiding it, right? So in my case,
when I was hiding, I was hiding poverty. I was wearing my George S jeans back then dating
myself. But I looked typical, right? Nobody knew I was going home and sleeping on a
dogwarn mattress on the floor. My mother would literally wail through the night and pain.
You know, just I was bathing her like all sorts started at the, when you're a kid, like,
you don't want any of that.
Like, I don't want to pretend that I was just, oh, what a sweet child.
Like, no, I was frustrated.
I wanted a normal life.
So I talked to my folks at school.
And when I came up with this crazy plan, wait, if my mother was able to go to college with
a GD, you know, unintentionally, what if I were to drop out of high school, get a GD
at 16? I could go
from making three seventy five in McDonald's or five dollars of a deli and suddenly make nine dollars
an hour that was the whole genesis if I could go to college and be college student I'd look to the
penny saver newspaper and it says you know college students only I thought well I don't know what
this college student moniker means but I'm gonna go get it and then I remember talking to my
guidance counter saying like you will never shake the stigma
of dropping out.
It's a crazy plan.
It is a crazy plan.
And that was the second burn the boats inside I had.
And in order to stick to your conviction,
you have to give yourself no option but to go all in.
Because even in the beginning, I thought,
you know, there was a lot of pressure.
We'll just see how, see if you can, you know,
pass a couple of more classes, like give it more time.
And then I realized, I, in order to do this, I need to fail everything.
I need to get left back over and over again and fully commit to being a total degenerate.
And that's what I did.
I failed every single class for two years, sat in the same room in the back, except for typing.
I passed typing and I still type 100 words a minute.
So this is to your 15 year old son, again, wrong 10 questions.
And, and, and then I had to execute.
And I remember the last day of school,
I had to return my textbooks and I walked into my science teacher.
I talk about this and I burn the boats and it's true story.
I go to have my boat back.
He doesn't look up because what's this?
I said, it's my, my textbook today is my last day.
And he looks straight and goes,
Higgins, what a waste.
I'll see you at McDonald's.
And it's just, and I remember all the classes laughing and at McDonald's. And I remember all the class is laughing,
and I'm Irish, and I feel like I'm gonna pass out,
and then I start walking out the door,
and then I turn around, and I say to him,
Mr. Rosenthal, if you see me at McDonald's,
it's because I bought it, something to that effect.
And all the clouds snap, you're gonna take that,
or whatever, and then I walk that sound,
the steps of the car does a high school,
and I lit up a cigarette, and I thought he's probably right. Like,
statistically, this is going to dictate a very bad outcome. I picked myself up off those
steps. I went to Springfield Gardens high school on standby. I took my GED. I got a grade
score and rolled in Queens College and went back to my prom as as capital debate team.
And I remember the look on the face of Mrs. Vega,
Mr. Mr. Barker,
I remember all the names, Mr. Rosenthal.
And it went from one of pity, right,
to one of admiration with one move.
So the same people who at a moment thought,
you're out of your mind, were like,
out of boy, you know, and that's the other point.
When you make these radical burn the votes moves,
like don't worry about what people say now,
because they can't see what you see.
They couldn't see that my mother was slipping away and she was going to die.
She couldn't see that I was getting more self-destructive. I was having really intrusive thoughts
about my life. I was just really unhappy. And so they didn't know any of that. And yet,
at the end, they saw all the pieces together. So to anybody out there, and part of the premise
of the book, is to give you the comfort to be alone on the bleeding edge with your own insights because it's lonely, but the payoff is everybody comes along
and says, you know, how to boy.
Okay, well, when you were just describing that story of when you told your high school
teacher that you, the only way you were going to be at McDonald's is when you owned the
franchise, when I was reading the book, I could hear you telling the story, Matt, you're
a great storyteller, and actually when you were telling the story in the book,
you weren't smoking a cigarette outside, you were smoking a mall bro.
That's what just popped into my mind. How funny is that?
So my point is for everyone listening, if you like a good storyteller and really want to be pulled in by something,
Matt Higgins' new book, Burn the Boats, Toss Plan B Overboard,
and Unleash Your Full Pot potential is definitely the book for you.
So Matt, let's get into this book because it is so up my alley, which means it's so up my
listeners alley.
Like I love a great comeback story.
I love an underdog story.
But more important than that, you know, my listeners are going to love that piece of it.
But you did a great job of giving actionable direction in every single chapter, not only through
various stories of multitudes of entrepreneurs and success stories that you've
befriended through your life and your own journey, but also through data and research. And it was
really, really compelling and eye opening for me. As a fellow author and just as someone who always
wants to get better and push myself to the next level. When you start out at the beginning of the book, you use three examples that I really,
oh my gosh, I got so excited reading it.
Number one, you gave an example from the Old Testament, two from the iconic book, The
Art of War, and then three, most recently from the Ukrainian President Zelensky talking
about the ultimate burn the boat's move.
Can we start there?
By the way, you're very generous.
So I just want to say that.
You're a really good generous human being.
I could tell that you get excited and animated
to share somebody else's success.
So that's unusual.
So I just want to say thank you.
Just nice to see you.
Oh, you're sharing the book.
This is amazing.
You read it.
You care.
I put so much of my being into this book.
It's an active blood-letting.
You know, so to hear somebody else appreciate it, thank you.
I, what I wanted to do is contextualize what does this phrase mean, burn the boats? It's too often
associated with Cortez, who is a very bad man. And so I wanted to pick the point, this notion of going
all in and having no plan B goes back to the beginning of recorded history, right? And then Zoom forward
all the way up to Zolansky. And I love talking about him in particular, because I believe there was a turning point
that at the moment we can't visualize
because we're in the middle of it.
And that's when then conventional wisdom,
including the CIA and the United States government,
I concluded there was zero chance that he's gonna win.
And now that he's gonna be assassinated.
So at a pity, they were like,
maybe we should offer the guy a ride.
And there was this moment when he had gotten a call
and I guess they leaked it brilliantly
when the US government said, basically, we'd like to help extricate you from the situation.
And his response, supposedly, was, I don't need a ride, I need ammunition.
And that one simple statement telegraphed both Ukrainians but also the outside world,
I'm prepared to die for this.
So maybe that was self-talk, but it was the first moment
if you look back where the media coverage, and even the government,
the behavior of the US government started to pivot,
that maybe we got some, this person's willing to invest in.
And it was catalytic that brought everybody along, say,
let's invest, let's go on Twitter,
it became the first social media war and whatnot.
So I use those examples to show that this principle
that humans perform better without a safety net
goes back to the beginning of recorded time
and we didn't need universities to teach people.
It was intuitive and it showed up in the battlefield
under the most exigent circumstances
when people were outnumbered, you know, tend to want.
Now a lot of them were nasty folks like CZR and whatnot.
So I wanted to make it clear that it's everybody and we can
But we can learn a lot from the fact that that this has been proven time and again
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It's interesting to me the examples were just so spot on and really connected with me
specifically to President Slensky and it was funny. I was just watching last night with
he was speaking to the house and in Congress and it was interesting to your point from a
leadership perspective,
when someone has truly burned the boats,
gone all in, taken that massive risk,
he didn't have to beg people for help at that point.
People are rushing him wanting to be a part of what,
people want to support him and be a part of what he's created.
And it was so visibly apparent last night,
watching him in motion,
and everyone wanting to touch him,
Pelosi, I think, wanting to touch him Pelosi,
I think tried to kiss him six different times.
I mean, it was wild to see.
So for everyone listening right now,
just from a leadership perspective,
when you truly go all in and take the action steps
to highlight what you're doing,
people want to be on board and be a part of that movement,
correct?
I had the same thought.
I was watching him and I was thinking how,
how, how architected that speech was.
All the difference constituents he was,
he was trying to speak to, the American public.
I know you gave up me tens of billions of dollars.
I'm a good steward of that money,
but by the way, that's an investment in your own future.
Like just, well, everything's gonna be.
Well said.
And then, and then the choice to not wear a suit
to me was fascinating, right?
What do I want to convey?
Do I want to convey that everything's fine and I'm meeting with a head of state?
Or do I want to say I'm taking a break from the war and remind you of it?
Like, brilliant.
Actually, I watched that and had the same reaction to it and felt more convinced that he deliberately
pursued a burn the boat's strategy.
And it makes sense.
He does sometimes people can criticize, I think is amazing.
By the way, and I'm grateful that I'm living through history and got it to watch it.
But you can criticize, he was an actor or silly, like, was he an actor or was he a communicator
who knew how to move people and know how to touch people?
Was he the perfect person for this moment of time?
I think he was.
So my mission with my book was to say, some of you have heard this phrase, Burn the Boats
in a military context.
Let's appropriate it for peacetime.
Because oftentimes we all feel like we're in a war.
Let's take this concept and pull it forward
into every day of life.
Well, okay.
And thank you for doing that because burn the boats
isn't something that I have been applying to my everyday life
or my business.
And now reading your book, I was, you know,
of course, applying it all back to my own self,
my business, my decisions, and the times I didn't do it too.
That was much more apparent to me as I was reading the book.
You broke the book down into three different parts,
get in the water, no turning back, and build more boats.
Get in the water to me.
I mean, just like it really pulls you in,
which I think is great because as soon as you start reading,
you're not going to want to put this book down.
You know, you're going to get through the majority of it within the first day.
Well, again, like I said, not only are there these amazing stories from so many different entrepreneurs,
so many businesses that had to go through these big moments, these big scary moments,
but you also give us as readers these examples. for example, the anxiety study that you shared,
that it's actually good to have certain levels of anxiety and research throughs that it
will drive you to more success.
Can you talk us a little bit about that?
Yeah, I am.
And the book for me, I think when you go on Instagram sometime, there's an inauthentic
layer right now to the universe where everyone has a stumble story,
you know, vulnerability, and then there's the arc
and then the resurrection and the redemption.
That's not my life.
My life is full of resurrection, redemption and regression.
You know, I'm constantly taking two steps.
And part of that is a constant battle
with a degree of PTSD from childhood
and a degree of anxiety.
I am not somebody who walks into the set of shark tank,
it's like, whatever, a barcuba and a lower guinea,
I got this, no, I am somebody who puts in tons of energy
to go ahead and synthesize my doubt.
And what I want to show in the book
from a scientific perspective and then examples
is that there is what is called a level of optimal anxiety.
It's a balance between if a certain degree of anxiety is going to
propel you to excellence and make you prepare and take the steps and too much anxiety is going to
leave you paralyzed and crippled. And that isn't just me saying that there's a York Statson law that
goes back to the 1920s that was demonstrated scientifically. But then there are all these different
environments where it's been proven out and I wanted to share them. So one of the ones I talk about in the book that I love, I worked for a coach where the coach called Eric Mangini,
the head coach of the near Jeds. And at the time he was given the worst nickname anybody could have
because he can't live up to it. Manginius because he was a mad scientist and he was like a 37-year-old guy,
he was always tinkering, tinkering. But one of the things he did at the time, which seemed absolutely crazy, was that he would put the players in the indoor bubble where there
was tremendous, you know, echo and it was really hard to hear anyway. And he would blare
Metallica and like the worst heavy metal Metallica is actually great. The worst heavy metal music
to make it impossible for the players to hear and communicate so that they could have to use
hand signals and read body language to mimic what it would be like to go to the metro dome when
it was really loud. So he was always putting his players in these most uncomfortable anxiety
inducing situations to get the best out of them to prepare. So I use that as an example of
optimal anxiety because it's, it is a utility to it. And then I also talk about the
the unoptimal anxiety, right?
The crippling kind, whereas when I went on the set of Shark Tag,
I was so paralyzed that I was going to be discovered as an imposter,
that that little kid eating government cheese on Queens
was going to manifest on the set, that I didn't want to go forward.
It's like embarrassing to talk about.
You know, I debated, like, should I put that in there?
And I was like, if I don't put it in the book,
people will see how I performed on TV and think I was a natural.
And that's not useful. Believing that I was good at it instinctively is not helpful.
Actually, it hurts somebody who was like, well, I'm not good at TV. I'm like, well,
I wasn't either. And I tell the story about how I was paralyzed the night before. I did not sleep
for two days. And then I got on the set. And that's when I froze. I had to steal
my head. There was a moment when I feel like Mark Cuban looked over me. This did not happen,
but in my head at it. And he's thinking, I'm like, who let this guy here? Who are you?
And then the self-talk pulled me out of it. This sort of third person super ego authority
that can get you through things and sort of coaches you through it.
And so in the book, I try to break that down and say, okay, what is the right way to use
self-talk to get you into that state of optimal anxiety?
And on the flip side, last point, the second time I went on Harvard, I had the opposite
problem.
This was like a layout.
I was totally comfortable.
Nothing bad happened.
I was good at it.
I felt good and I had no anxiety and fear.
And I felt a little bit bored.
So I had to say, what's my motivational system now
that it's not anxiety and I had to switch
to the pursuit of excellence?
So what I hope the book does is take these somewhat
obvious topics that we all talk about
and we all know anxiety, we know failure is good,
we know, we know them in platitudes
but do we know them practically speaking
in real examples? Do we know them with authority? Do we know them with people that we can connect
to and relate to? And that's what I tried to accomplish with the book.
For everyone listening right now, the takeaway here that was really powerful, great reminder
for me is, you know, use myself as an example, when I'm in a nerve-wracking situation, is not
to say, I can do this, I can do this, I'm good enough to do this. It's to say Heather, you got this, Heather, listen right now, right?
You've got to give yourself that space and put yourself in the third person as if you're
coaching somebody else, correct?
Yes.
And do you find it annoying, though, by the way, that I mean, you've done really well, incredibly
successful.
Two-time author, you got this.
I mean, amazing.
Isn't it annoying that you still have to keep doing it?
I mean, maybe you don't.
Maybe you've, you've inquished it. I haven't even I wrote the book. Like't it annoying that you still have to keep doing it? I mean, maybe you don't. Maybe you've, you've inquisited.
I haven't even I wrote a book.
Like, my book is aspirational.
It's not like I have, just because I have some of the answers
to the test doesn't mean I can apply them.
But I still have to do it every day.
It's annoying.
I so see it differently now.
It's so funny you say that.
I understand why you say that,
because I, you know, we wish it would just be easy.
But it, because I was in corporate America in the nine to five, which, you know, we wish it would just be easy. But because I was in corporate
America in the nine to five, which, you know, you hadn't been for so so long, I was there for the
majority of my career. I wasn't waking up scared. I wasn't waking up with anxiety. I was going to the
man. I was, you know, I knew the routine. Everything was visible. I knew what next quarter had to come.
I knew what I need to do annually. Everything was so clear. I didn't wake up with anxiety fear
and have to coach myself up.
Cut to now, every day I'm freaking out.
I'm so scared that I've got a meeting with QVC
and I've got to get this deal closed
and this product has to get on there.
It's on me.
How am I going to talk them into it?
How am I going to get them to feel the passion?
Oh my gosh, Heather, you've done this before.
You can do this again.
I've got, I get so excited that I'm talking myself
into these fear moments because I know there's something
potentially so great on the other side.
So I don't know, I'm like celebrating every day now
because I had so many days where I wasn't
to do myself.
That is the right attitude.
I think me, I'm like, why can't I habituate my response
to this so we can preempt having to have the self talk?
And I think that answer is, it stems from the fact that if you are like you and myself
and you're always putting yourself in these new situations that are uncomfortable, that
is the thing that triggers, right?
It's the fight or flight response.
It's like, oh, I got to overcome it.
And in the pursuit of excellence, I'm going to put a lot of stress on myself.
So I think it's a prerequisite.
So I've come to see that pain as a feedback loop,
but I still wish it wasn't.
I still wish they would be an efficiency to it.
Like, Matt, come on.
I mean, you teach it hard for business school.
Like you've been doing it for four years,
never taught it day in your life.
But yet, nope, every day, even talking to you,
I'm like, you know, you're amazing.
I write up about you.
And like, I'm like, we're going to crush this interview.
I'm going to put energy into it.
So I guess it's by putting yourself in these unfamiliar circumstances.
Well, the good news is everybody listening. You are not alone because we are all in that same boat
feeling that same way. Okay, when you brought up the coach of the jets and I think I have this
right, you'll let me know if I don't. I thought of the story of him kissing the wife's feet and getting caught on video.
Could we, I love that story.
It was so interesting to me to hear how hard he was on himself
and how you saw that as such an opportunity
and how it helped Tim power and change
a moment of scary moment for him.
Yeah, that was on the coach of the Jets Retry
and the most amazing, lovely person.
And it's hard to actually tell this supposed
scandal to anyone now because I don't understand, I don't really get it. Well, part of it was like
a scandal. But at the time, there was some suggestive videos that I had gotten out to do with Rex
idolizing his wife's feet. Yeah, I mean, you can't make this up. And then there was this constant,
you know, barrage of covers on like the post and every New York paper,
everybody trying to, you know, what's going on.
It's like so absurd to recount, but at the time,
it was actually really stressful
on aggravating embarrassing for racks.
And we had a really close relationship,
and I remember talking to him.
And I am that person because of my background
as press secretary to the mayor, running crises 9-11, I've been through everything
that people tend to call, you know,
when the crap hits the fan.
And so I remember going to his office, he was pretty upset.
And I said, Rex, you got it all wrong,
something that's a fact, like, you're gonna go on Oprah.
Like, we're gonna do a like a 10 book deal
about how to still maintain love for your wife
after 25 years.
Like, it's an interesting story, and he like laugh.
And to this day when he sees me there is Oprah.
The moral of that story is a couple of things.
One, when you shed your shame,
even though this is absurd that it was shameful,
but when you shed your shame,
it gives permission for everyone around you
to do the same.
To all the catastrophization that you had about what would happen
when you did it never materializes,
and then you regret that you spend so much energy anticipating what might happen.
Because it never ever ever happens. And third, when you're there for somebody who's going to
the act of shedding shame and you could stamp beside them, they will never ever forget that.
And so Rex to this day, now he owns it. Now he tells a joke like even like a decade later,
it'll still come up on TV.
He'll make a funny joke when somebody's foot will come up.
And he realized by him doing that by him owning it, it made the players realize that, you know, he was human.
So throughout this book, now when I read my own book, I'm like, I really, I shared that.
But throughout the book, there's attempts for me to model what shedding shame looks like and show by virtue of the fact that I'm still standing still writing the book still you know achieving new things that it didn't matter.
I talk about my GED when I can then instead talk about my honorary PhD. I talk about Cardoza high
school and government cheese when I could talk about Harvard Business School in Boston right like
I don't want to airbrush the end. I want to show the beginning so that you could see this journey
of shedding shame and that's exactly what happened to Rex Ryan.
You should know what that means already.
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You do a great job of that when you share your cancer story and getting divorced for me as a reader relating
that back to empathy and understanding and how it helps you with leading people and connecting
with people you work with.
And I couldn't agree more from my own experience getting divorced.
Having a baby getting divorced made me the best and strongest leader I'd ever been in
my career because I finally could understand and empathize with people. Yeah, I talk about that in the context of
before I got divorced, if I'm perfectly honest, I discussed this in a book because I don't want
to come across as a hero, that I, because I supposedly powered through everything in my childhood,
now I'm a hotshot 26 year old press secretary of the mayor, I have all these supposed accolades,
I'm healed by the way, mom's in the rearview mirror, you know what I mean?
I'm fine. And when somebody would go through something, I'd be like,
what are you talking about? In fact, when I had cancer,
testicular cancer, my first reaction was that of being discovered,
which is so crazy. I was so worried that people were going to judge me as
now walking dead, that they were going to take everything that I had earned
for me in a very like tribalistic way. Like, and my whole objective was to cover it up.
And I remember how day after surgery, I guess I have surgery, you know, removed my testicle
after finding out, you know, 24 hours earlier than I have to.
I'm like, what?
I miss it.
It takes a while to process the loss of that part of your anatomy.
Like, really?
Like, what is this entail?
But you have to move quick.
And then I went home and then immediately
once the pain meds were off, I was like,
I'm gonna lose my job.
So I'm just gonna take my spot.
I got, I'm gonna be back eating government cheese.
I'm gonna be back in landlord
10th court on Queens Boulevard.
And then I went the next night there was a dinner
with the coaches and I showed up at the dinner
with an ice pack in between my legs.
I wouldn't really talk about it.
And then I made a joke, a little toast.
I'm like, hey, everybody, I was like,
I'll only roll out my new moniker.
And I said, from now on, I want to be known
as half the balls, twice the man.
Now, I thought that was really tough.
They probably were like, what is it matter with this kid?
I did get dog tags made with that.
But my point is, if I could show up to the office having just had
a secular cancer and had this surgery, then you better suppress
your divorce.
All these other things that I thought were secondary that you
should have gotten over.
So the reason why I bring this up, it's kind of a little
convoluted, contradictory.
I bring that up in the book to say, number one, that is not
something to be admired. When executives, you know, act like they could shoulder everything,
because now you're telegraphing to your team, we cannot accommodate whatever it is you're going through.
And then, too, the hypocrisy that I wasn't able to extend embassy to other people, especially around,
you know, divorce until I went through it. When I went through it, it crushed me and brought
me to my knees,
the fear of loss of children and all these other things. But also, I had been known as the kid
who was always doing better, faster. I was do yehouser, TV show from the 80s, about a 14-year-old
doctor. I was that kid, that was my nickname. Suddenly, my identity had become enmeshed with
this notion of doing things faster, and now I was away from me. And I talk about how fragile we are when we allow our identity to be associated with our
track record of success as to who we are. And so I wanted to be honest in the book about these
things we don't talk about, like as an executive, just how corrosive it is when you try to adopt
the hero status and what you're really modeling. And after I went through divorce and had a bit of an, you know,
what I believe in an apparition one night,
I'm spiritual, but not particularly, you know,
one religion over another.
But I really felt like I heard the voice of God,
say to me in the middle of the night,
Matthew, you are okay.
It was the first time I began to realize that we are born whole,
and we're not dependent both on my track record,
or both on being validated by another human being
and began to reconstruct my identity and self-worth
based upon its own merit.
And the fact that I have everything I need.
But the overall point of that chapter
is be careful what you're modeling to your team
when you think you're being a stoic and heroic.
You might be actually forcing everyone
to push their pain down.
It's so true.
And now in hindsight, looking back on the leaders,
I have worked with them and who I showed up as,
the closer I became to my people
were those moments that you actually were vulnerable.
You become so much more people are pulled towards you
when they see, when you share your pain,
when you share your shame, like you said,
because they finally know they're not alone
and it's acceptable and that you're gonna help you there
to encourage
them. So thank you for sharing
that. I love this idea of acting
on lightning not waiting for
thunder. Can you break that down
for us? So it's a nice way to
package up how to identify
opportunities of metaphor. Right?
So there's a great, great essay
of anyone out there hasn't read
it by Emerson. It's a piece of
writing I return to constantly.
It's called self reliance and the big, the big theme of the essay is that we all have these spontaneous insights that are rendered to us
by, you know, Providence and Divine. But because we lack respect for ourselves and our insights
from time to time, we reject them. And then we wait till they come back to us and we are forced to
take our own ideas from another.
All of us have seen this.
Maybe it's you're watching an infomercial or two in the morning like, damn, I had that
idea or you're watching Shirt Tag.
And you're like, I had that idea, but I didn't have the courage to pursue it or the respect
of myself to value it, right?
So I talked, okay, how do we identify a proprietary insight that's worth pursuing?
And you have to, I believe, cultivate your mind first by developing that self-respect and then understanding what opportunity is.
So opportunity, it appears like a flash of lightning, not everybody saw it unless you were looking for it, but you distinctly saw that flash.
What do you do next? You either begin to pursue it because you value that insight and value you and you start taking steps in that direction, or you raise the bar to action, and you wait for validation
from others, thunder. But by the time you hear thunder, which is a five-second delay, right,
then it's obvious to everybody else. So I'm trying to make the point that true opportunity
arise before the tipping point of evidence, and you have to get comfortable. If you really
want to have breakout success, figure out how do I act on the lightning and not need the
thunder. So it's my way of I 100% believe
this as a life philosophy. It's the exact reason why I am where I am, but it's very lonely when you
have to act on lightning. There's nobody to talk to. And the mere fact that if opportunity and
lightning was obvious to everyone, there wouldn't be any arbitrage, right? Everybody would be acting on
it. Everybody would see it. It reminded me when I was reading that part so much of faith of just having this faith,
but unseen, this belief and or another way to look at it would be through this idea of
manifestation and belief before seeing, feeling before seeing. Is that how you see it?
Yeah, I think it is. It is really faith. And I tried to pat kitchen language that isn't necessarily
about religion or spiritual in case people reject that, it's just fact, right?
Like when you hear those words, you realize, oh, that is right.
It's an opportunity because not everybody's acting on it.
Well, there would be no Delta anymore, right?
Everybody would have all exactly the same information.
And so, and then training yourself to realize, like, it doesn't matter if others validate
it.
Why would they, same going back to my Burn the Boats moment?
Why how does it tie into high school
in the steps of Cardoza?
Well, they didn't have perfect information that I had.
Number one, I had the strangest model of my behavior,
which was my mom.
Here I have this brilliant person who inadvertently
has, is a, got a GD, which he didn't intend at H38.
But by seeing that and modeling it,
it opened up a portal to another world where I was saying,
wait, I can deliberately get a GD, right?
The loophole that I was taking advantage of is fundamentally a rejection of everything
they've bought into, right?
This idea that I need four years of high school to perform at college where I was like, well,
I don't really think that's probably true.
Like, I think that I could learn it on my own and fill the gaps.
And then they would have to accept the idea that subsistence and survival is more important in this principle of finishing the four years.
Well, that's survival and taking care of my mother was more important in the idea that I would
have a stigma of being a high school dropout. Like, they would have to subscribe to all that and
then why would I put all that energy when the decision I was about to make was hard already, right?
So I talk about this in a book and in life generally, when you're lobbying for the approval of others or lobbying to bring
others along, you always have to ask yourself, why am I doing that? Am I doing that because
their buy-in is necessary to advance my insight? Am I doing that to a swage-me that I might
be wrong because I'm nervous, right? And the end of the day, most of the times you don't
need their approval, you're doing it
because you're insecure.
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Okay, there's one other example that you shared in the book
that I thought was so eye-opening.
It was research around being
blindfolded and taking a basketball shot and people encouraging or not encouraging.
Can you break that down? I had never heard it before and it was so interesting.
Yeah, there's a show out there called Brain Games. It didn't last very long, but I love this show,
and it's always looking at these different topics and trying to understand the psychology of motivation
and whatnot. So one of the episodes they had, they were trying to understand what's the empirical impact
of people cheering for you or rooting against you.
And so in one of the experiments, they had a woman come along who was terrible at basketball
and she went ahead and she tried to do a couple of, you know, 10 free throws.
I think she got zero of them.
She was awful, right?
Like, did just air balls everywhere.
And then they put on a blindfold and there was a crowd around and she knew it. 10 free throws, I think she got zero of them. She was awful, right? Like did just airballs everywhere.
And then they put on a blindfold
and there was a crowd around and she knew it.
And the crowd was instructed to cheer multiple times
when even though she got an airball.
And she was so like enamored with her own performance.
I can't believe I did that.
And then they went ahead and they took the blindfolds off.
She shot 10 more times, she shot four baskets.
This is a person who couldn't shoot a basket for life dependent on it, and she was able
to get a 40% head rate.
I just thought that was so incredible and an empirical way, and then they did the reverse.
They had somebody who was a grape-free throw, a rubon, whatever like that, and then the
crowd did, they booed, even though they were hitting them when they were blindfolded,
and their performance degraded.
And then they actually did an elite athlete, And the elite athletes performance didn't change,
which I thought was incredible,
because they had trained their mind
to be able to handle both situations.
And so it's a way of simply saying
that the internal and external inputs
do affect your performance.
Like, I'm not immune.
The work I put in is not in spite of me being immune.
Actually, it is in spite of me being subjective to all these forces. I have to work on it, right?
It's not because I am intellectually curious. If somebody gives me feedback or is trying to tear me down, it's not like I dismiss it out
I want to make sure that there's something to extract that I could get better
But then I need to immunize it from making me suddenly a very bad free-thrower, right?
So it is a balance and I talk in the book about how to strike that balance, how to take feedback, how to process
information, how to process failure, but not let it cripple you.
It's so good.
You definitely break down haters in a way that I hadn't seen it as more useful in how
you can turn it into a useful exercise for you, which I had not done before.
So thank you for doing that.
And one other thing I wanted to highlight, a key takeaway for me personally, I love you shared that when you do have a plan B, research shows that you are actually not
as motivated to pursue with that primary goal. I'm not sure I don't remember what school
maybe it was important, maybe it was a business school. And you gave the example that they had
two different test groups. One said they said here's your plan
go after this one goal. And the other one they said here's your plan go after this one goal.
But you also have a plan B in case you need it available. And how demotivated and quickly they
wrapped things up and gave up on that second team. However, that first team delivered on their
initial goal. Yeah, I love that study because I think people could understand if you have a real
plan B when you're pursuing something hard, like it's a really fully developed backup plan, how that could
actually erode some of your ability.
Like that's an intuitive thing we can all understand.
What this study showed was that even contemplating it, because all they said to the students,
you can think about your plan B, you can think about the possibility that you don't get it.
There was no efforts to go in that direction.
It was purely theoretical, and that materially impacted their motivation
and their likelihood of being successful.
Their performance materially degraded.
So the point of that is the mere presence of even a backup plan affects your performance.
Now, when I talk about this, a lot of people, and I'm sure the reviews will say it,
will reflexively recoil and say, this is irresponsible.
Like, you're basically saying that you should just go all in, and what about people have
to pay the rent, people have children, you know, what if it fails?
I talk a lot in the book about going, burning the boats doesn't mean burning the boats with
you on it.
You know, it means actually, what does it take to you to fully commit under the circumstances
and a framework for you to go ahead and do that?
One of the core elements of it is to process risk factors.
The reason why we don't fully commit often is because it's not because we are necessarily afraid of what's going to happen.
It's because we haven't processed the worst case scenario and assimilated that information and realized,
alright, I'll be alright, right? Like I'll get another job or whatever whatever the rationalization is.
And so I think most people bypass the act of processing the risk because they don't actually
want to be confronted with the decision.
So, so part of the Burn the Boats philosophy is yes, Middegrate risk.
Yes, we think through the worst case scenario.
Yes, make provision so that you could feed yourself and your family.
Because once you've done that, you'll perform better.
You won't have the same anxiety.
So burn the boats is not a blueprint for irresponsible risk.
It's a blueprint for synthesizing risks
so that you can go all in without worrying about the downside
because you've already processed it.
Oh, I love that.
And so true.
I have so lived that and I couldn't agree more.
Who did you write this book for? Oh, I love that and so true. I have so lived that and I couldn't agree more. Who did you write this book for?
Oh, I love that question.
And I really do because I feel like I,
I feel like when you see the title,
somebody will think, oh, it's jingoistic.
You know, it's not for me, it's belligerent.
It's, you know, some, some white male businessman,
you know, telling me about what to do.
I wrote this for hopefully first and foremost,
the unseen for somebody out there who says
The die as cast who thinks from because of the circumstances I was born into because of some of the bad decisions
I made that put me into circumstances. I regret you know, it's too late, right? I wanted to
strip myself there to give anyone any entry point to my journey and the journey of 50 other people to say,
all right, well, he dropped out of high school and got there or he had cancer or he got to
avoid it. Again, it's not an autobiography because I'm not as interested in my own story as I am
interested in me as a vessel to transmit this idea. I wrote this book for anybody out there who
frankly thinks it's too late or it's not for them. And you'll notice, I don't know if you notice,
but I begin with a female entrepreneur,
I end with a female entrepreneur.
My life has been guided by strong women,
the first was my mother, who've been inspirational.
So I hope when someone reads this book,
say this is a more thorough compendium of success
than I've seen in a long time.
And there's somebody in there that I could grab onto.
One of my favorite parts of the book
was at the end of my harbor
class. I was talking to two students, black women, and they were making a really interesting
nuance point. We had an entrepreneur in the class, and he was talking of belligerently gesticulating
and using a curse word every two seconds to kind of breaking the decorum of the August Harbor
Business School. And I thought it was theatrical and entertaining. It's just style. And one of the
students says to me, you know, I could never talk like that in this class. And I thought it was theatrical and entertaining. It's just style. And one of the students says to me,
I could never talk like that in this class.
And I was like, well, why?
She said a couple of reasons.
One, I'm a woman.
Two, I'm black woman.
And I would be judged.
And I'm not only concerned about me being judged.
I would then therefore be ruining
for every woman who comes after me in the same way.
Tell me more about that. And she says, I carry the entire weight of my race and gender on me
when I come into this room. And it made me realize, wow, despite what I've ever been through,
right? You know, all the poverty or that, I'm still born as a white man with the advantages
that come into it, right? And I never had to represent anyone but Matt Higgins.
Like, there is no stakes, you know what I'm saying?
And here's somebody who not only has to break through, has to burn the boats,
but also has to make sure and doing so she represents, you know, her community.
I put that story in there for a reason to say, I hear you and I see you.
And that is true.
And it is a way to distinguish yourself from me.
Nonetheless, you wish to break through,
you wish to burn the boats.
You don't wanna hedge and hesitate.
You want great things for yourself.
So let's see you and let's hear you and let's acknowledge you
and then let's do something about it.
So that to me is one of my favorite parts of the book
because it is easy to say, to remove yourself
and say, well, that's not for me.
You were able to pull that off
for whatever structural advantage.
Like, of course I have structural advantages, but at the same time, we still both want the same things.
So that's who the book is for.
Well, I will tell you being an avid reader, I love the book. Book is, was so eye opening
for me, so helpful. If you are going through any period in your life where you're questioning
things, you think it's too late for you or you want to make a leap and you're not sure
how or what next step to take, get burned the boats. Matt Higgins, where can we get burn the boats? Where can people find you?
How can people catch up with you? Burntheboatsbook.com is my website on Amazon.
I spend a lot of time on LinkedIn. I love LinkedIn. I feel like it's like a warm
bath. Yes. The month, Twitter and everything else, but if I'm honest, I'm on
everywhere else reluctantly. And LinkedIn is amazing. So find me out LinkedIn.
Alright, burn the boats guys.
It's by Matt Higgins, Matt.
Thank you so much for writing the book
and thank you for being here.
No, thank you for having me.
This was amazing.
All right, guys, until next week,
keep creating your confidence.
You know I will be.
I'll write a word over here.
I decided to change that time here.
I'm a head of my fill out.
I couldn't be more inside of the world
when you're getting here.
Start learning and growing.
It can inevitably start to go happen.
No one succeeds alone.
You don't stop and look around once in a while.
You can miss it.
I'm on this journey with me.
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