Habits and Hustle - Episode 177: David Nurse – Life Optimization Coach, Best Selling Author, and Keynote Speaker

Episode Date: July 26, 2022

Pre-order Jen’s New Book: Bigger, Better, Bolder today: https://amzn.to/3hvtqYp David Nurse is a life optimization coach, best-selling author, and keynote speaker. With a focus on the NBA, David p...ushed himself early with that fixed goal in mind. Though, he saw parts of the world playing professionally in other countries his dream seemed just out of hand. So David pivoted. Challenged his dream and refocused to now becoming one of the greatest motivation coaches in the field. Stories, where people have a lifelong dream and persevere through all obstacles bound for success, are fine, but David’s story is so much more and a testament to the different ways success can manifest if you open yourself up to it. In this podcast, he isn’t shy about how he made it where he is. Interested in what it takes to coach some of the greatest athletes and CEOs in the world? Wondering at all what those people’s formulas to success are? This one’s for you. Youtube Link to This Episode David Nurse’s Website – https://www.davidnurse.com/ David Nurse’s Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/davidnursenba/ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Did you learn something from tuning in today? Please pay it forward and write us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts. 📧If you have feedback for the show, please email habitsandhustlepod@gmail.com  📙Get yourself a copy of Jennifer Cohen’s newest book from Habit Nest, Badass Body Goals Journal. ℹ️Habits & Hustle Website 📚Habit Nest Website 📱Follow Jennifer – Instagram – Facebook – Twitter – Jennifer’s Website Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:02:14 That's TRU, NIA, GEN, and we have a special offer for new customers to receive 20% off all orders 100 dollars or more using the code Hustle20 until August 30th, 2022. So definitely run, don't walk and scoop some up now. Hi guys, it's Tony Robbins. You're listening to Habitson Hustle. Fresh it. Today on the podcast we have David Nurse. David has been transforming the way hundreds of NBA stars play on the court for most of his career. In fact, his method was dubbed
Starting point is 00:02:56 as training athletes of the future because of his ability to teach them had a tap into different mindsets and become unstoppable. He has written two best-selling books, runs a successful motivational coaching business, and is a highly sought after speaker. He's hired by companies like Dell, Salesforce, ESPN, and the NBA to help thousands of employees and athletes develop unshakable mindsets. David is a really positive guy. I loved having him on the podcast. We've become friends. This was a really great conversation
Starting point is 00:03:31 and I really hope you enjoy this podcast. Today on the podcast we have David Nurse who is, and if I'm wrong about any of my information, David, please chime in and tell me. But you are a former NBA player, turned coach to the Brooklyn Nets, correct? Almost. I wanted to play in the NBA, play professionally overseas. But we can say I played in the NBA because that makes me sound a lot cooler.
Starting point is 00:04:00 So, yeah, you sound way cooler when you say that. Actually, you sure enough corrected me. But you know why you're on the podcast? Because you were in the top mindset coaches for the NBA. Is that not at least accurate? That is accurate. Yes, you've got that one. Perfect.
Starting point is 00:04:17 And you've written two books. The first book was called Pivot & Go. And then your newest book is called Breakthrough. Yes, there it is. Got that work to. Thank God. And this is why I want to talk to you because I bet you would give my audience and myself some amazing mindset tools to break through to really kind of elevate and up our performances and everything. And I really am happy to have you on the podcast. Well, Jim, thank you very much. I appreciate it. I wish we would have been doing the wood ways,
Starting point is 00:04:51 treadmills, walking and talking. But to the honest, I might have got halfway through and passed out and got winded. So this is maybe better way to start it off. I know. Something tells me that you're pretty athletic, given your background, given that fact, even though you were, potentially, maybe not an NBA player, but you were someone of a professional basketball player. I think that you could probably walk at the one point, it would usually walk at like one one point five anyway.
Starting point is 00:05:17 I think you could probably handle that. You can handle it. See, I believe in on my parents' genes, I believe in a height and vertical leap was about two inches. So that's what I blame my non-NBA playing on. I was going to ask you how tall are you? Six, two, which in the world of basketball is very small. Wow, so that's basically why you became a coach in the NBA versus a player in the NBA?
Starting point is 00:05:45 why you became a coach in the NBA versus a player in the NBA. Totally. So my whole life growing up was based on, I thought I was gonna play in the NBA. And I grew up in this small middle of nowhere cornfields town in Iowa. And I'm very athletic and you know, parents probably should have said, David, try this game golf or tennis.
Starting point is 00:06:00 You don't have to have that much athleticism like that. But I was committed to playing the NBA. So every waking hour was literally me doing something basketball oriented. And I got to play college basketball, division one, and grinding my way to play overseas professionally. Sounds cool to say that. You play in Europe and Australia,
Starting point is 00:06:18 but it was more like the Will Ferrell semi-pro type of basketball. I'm a little joke, a little weak. So I'm up here in the second division in Spain in Spain and, I mean, I'm just pointing all these two days film study and I think I'm still making the NBA, but I'm the furthest thing from it. And I get cut from this team. So think about that.
Starting point is 00:06:36 All your hopes and goals and dreams and you get cut from this joke of a league, basically your face turned upside down and rubbed in the dirt. So I'm back on my parents' recliner chair now in Kansas City where they're living, feeling bad for myself, licking my wounds, and about six months in my mom and I always say these inspirational motivational quotes and usually it was like, whatever, in one ear out the other, not paying attention. Like all parents probably feel. But what is that stuck with me? She was doing dishes. I remember vividly I was sitting there kicking back in the chair. She said, David, when one door closes, four open in an entire beach front patio overlooking
Starting point is 00:07:11 the ocean. I was like, oh, wait, I thought it was one door, one door thing. What's this four doors in beach front? What she was saying is that door closing on my plane in the NBA was actually to open up the door to coaching the NBA. Everything I poured into myself to be able to think I was going to play was actually to teach other players with more athleticism, seven foot height, and had this God-given abilities to play in the NBA. So I made that pivot, hence that first book, making a small perspective shift.
Starting point is 00:07:41 I didn't say, man, what was me? My first 24 years of my life, I need to throw them away. No, it built me for something better. I didn't know that was coming, but it opened the door. So when one door closes in our life, a lot of people will say, man, I'm out of a job. I don't know what to do. No, you just learned all those skills to lead you to something greater.
Starting point is 00:07:59 So I made a my mission right then and there to coach in the NBA. But I had no connections. So we can dive into that too if you want to talk about how I got in there, which is a wild story in itself. I do want to hear that. Well, I have a couple comments and then I do want to hear that, but I really love that you said that because like my entire philosophy in life, I even did a whole TED talk on this actually that I think we spoke about was, you know, if you just make attempts
Starting point is 00:08:26 You may not get that goal But then it doesn't matter It's about the process of making those attempts towards that goal because if you don't get it Usually another opportunity will present itself by you just trying and make it doing that action that you otherwise would never even know No, no like in your head You never even thought about being a basketball coach. You thought, I'm working on persevering to be a player, a player, a player. But even though that didn't work, you ended up with something that changed the whole trajectory of your life, but it looks like in a really good way. And the other thing I wanted to say was, if you say,
Starting point is 00:09:01 you don't have any connections, I thought, I was going to actually say this, isn't your uncle the Toronto Raptors head coach? Yeah, totally, but at the time, he was not in the NBA, nor was he close to the NBA. Really? Well, there was no connections from that. Now, he was just starting in the NBA D-L-E. He literally had an upstart team. His story is incredible, which we could go on for. He basically is the epitome of you for the the 10 years to become an overnight success. Of course. Yes. He's 27 years. He was a coach
Starting point is 00:09:31 for 27 years before he even got an opportunity with the Toronto Raptors to be their head coach. Then he wins the NBA championship in his first year. And what do you think everybody says? Oh, he got so lucky. First year head coach. Right. Right. And grinding in countries, you don't even know play basketball. I was in England with him when he was taping players, ankles before the game, pop and pop corn at half time. Like, he put in that time, those 27 years of unseen hours. But the key is, he always saw himself as an NBA head coach. He had a picture of himself holding a trophy,
Starting point is 00:10:03 like cut out and put on the fridge and all that. Because was going to live in that instead of where a lot of us get caught up and like, well, you know what, when I get to this level, that's when I'll really put in the work or when I get to the, no, you treat yourself and you act like you are at that level, no matter where you're at. And eventually you'll get there. But if you don't, if he would have just said, man, you know what? Once I get that opportunity MBA, that's when I'll really start coaching. I didn't ever been there. That's amazing. I actually am glad that you told me that.
Starting point is 00:10:32 I didn't realize that that was such a grind for him. That's amazing. I mean, obviously, the Toronto Raptors, I'm from Canada. So, of course, you know, I have to say that. But then tell us about how you kind of grinded your way with no connections to be in this spot. We're, you know, basically coaching a major team. Yeah, totally. So you'll appreciate this as one of your things is, hey, take shots. And
Starting point is 00:10:58 I'm all about planting seeds. Like what is the worst that can happen? Just take shots, take shots, take shots, calling it planting seeds, what we do with these taking actions, we're planting seeds that we might not know when they're going to grow their fruit, but they will at some point. But if you don't take the shots, you have no opportunities. Right. So what I did was I hand wrote a letter to every NBA GM. And in that letter, I said something I liked about their organization, and if I can serve them in any way, I did not say, hey, hire me. I'll out work everybody. That's what everybody
Starting point is 00:11:30 says. So frankly, a little different than what everybody else does. I didn't get anything back for a month and a half. And I got a phone call from the GM of the Los Angeles Clippers at the time, Gary Sachs. And it was just a normal conversation, real brief at the end of it he said if you ever out in LA look me up or grab coffee basically good luck with the rest of your life. That is an opportunity though, Jen. I spent all my money stole some of my parents book a flight out to LA to act like I had a basketball camp that next week so I didn't look desperate. Now I love that exactly. We have all three when you did this how well for you? 24 right when I was done playing basketball. Okay, so
Starting point is 00:12:15 So I prepare my butt off for this game because I want to know the insides and that and we have this great conversation We hit it off and every NBA connection has stemmed if you look to the root of it from that that with Gary Sacks, Gary becomes one of my closest friends I live with him for six months when I moved out to LA. He was a groom's man in my wedding He is like one of my best friends in the world just because I took that chance So think about that in your own life people listening like you want to take a chance But we're often scared of what the result will be because we don't know what the result will be think Oh, yeah, well, we won't get anything back or we'll get rejected or we'll fail. So what?
Starting point is 00:12:47 You're at the same exact spot if you don't take that chance. Totally true. You're playing with house money. That's the way I see it on all the time. Like, I will reach out to anybody because it doesn't matter. Everybody's a person. Nobody is like, and in these people at the highest level that you've seen that you've been around with these NBA players, what they want is people to actually treat them like people
Starting point is 00:13:08 Not absolutely in taking and taking so anyways I got that relationship with Gary. He introduces me to people throughout the way throughout my journey But I wasn't just waiting around I wasn't like well Gary hook me up with that person who would be hooked me up with them No, I had to take action. It's not just gonna happen So I created these custom basketballs with this line down the middle so you can see the shooting rotation on it, the spin. And I had them made from China with very cheap,
Starting point is 00:13:33 terrible leather, don't ever recommend it. Send out to the Oakland people. I drive 29 hours, put the balls in my car. I spend the next five years driving around the country, living in my car, I was sleeping in a well-marked parking lot and friends' couches who didn't even really know I was their friends, just doing a basketball kit basically for anybody that would take me in.
Starting point is 00:13:54 And I loved it, I mean, it sounds like a grind, but I loved that journey. You're giving me a basketball cap, like give me an example. So you show up in somewhere, hey, what does that mean? So I would make a connection with a high school team or a middle school team. Like, hey, look, I'll teach your players how to shoot.
Starting point is 00:14:08 That was my expertise. I decided if I'm going to make it in the MBA, I can't just say I'm gonna outwork everybody. I don't have connections. Like, I've got to stand out. And it's a whole Hollywood thing too. If you act desperate and try to go for them, they'll never want you.
Starting point is 00:14:23 So I didn't want to act desperate and go for the NBA. I wanted to build myself up as the best shooting coach in the world and they would come to me. So I did camp after camp after camp. I knocked on doors and I sent emails and made phone calls to do these basketball camps and they start growing and I get connections and I love building relationships. So all in the meantime, I'm going out to this MBA summer league, where all the teams come in the summertime,
Starting point is 00:14:47 and I'm getting business cards, and I'm staying connected, and I'm cultivating these relationships. And that's a big point, too, Jan. I, we could talk about that, the art of networking, quote unquote, networking, which is a very dirty term, because I've learned so much doing it the wrong way
Starting point is 00:15:03 that I figured out the connection calculator, how to cultivate and build true genuine relationships, and that is everything for your personal growth. So, anyways, I'm doing all this. No, no, no, that's totally true. And I want to talk about that after you finish your story. I think it's, by the way, it's the crux of all of this, right? Because if you're bad at networking, and you're not able to develop true connection with people, good luck to you. You have to be able to understand that. So it may be like a dirty word to some people because like, oh, it sounds like you're a
Starting point is 00:15:38 Macchi of alien or whatever else, but it's not. It's legit what you have to be doing. Yeah, totally. But I like to look at people looking at networking. You think of the LinkedIn, you think of them and hit somebody up versus the building of a genuine relationship and a connection, which is going to work for a lifetime. Networking can be just quick hits, but you don't build this relationship like with you. I want to build a long-term friendship.
Starting point is 00:16:00 For years from now, we're talking to each other. I'm hitting you with ideas and so on. I don't like just just one-offs and feeling like both sides got use. And that's why a lot of people will do this connecting. So, yeah, I agree. Definitely want to get into that. I want to tell you some stories that I've learned how to not do it to learn the correct way, but fast forward six years, I'm in Melbourne, Australia. I'm doing a basketball camp.
Starting point is 00:16:23 I get an email when I wake up from the Brooklyn net. It says Brooklyn Net Shooting Coach. I knew nobody Melbourne, Australia. I'm doing a basketball camp. I get an email when I wake up from the Brooklyn Nets. It says Brooklyn Nets shooting coach. I knew nobody from the Nets, so I thought it was spam. I opened the email next week on the Brooklyn Nets shooting coach. It was a relationship that Gary had known through a Nike guy, through another guy, and so on. So I finally made it. Vitamin water just dropped a new zero sugar flavor
Starting point is 00:16:44 called with love. Get the taste of raspberry and dark chocolate for the all warm, all fuzzy, all self-care, zero self doubt you. Grab a with love today. Vitamin water zero sugar, nourish every you. Vitamin water is a registered trademark of glass O. That's how you got it. How many years after that initial meeting with Gary, did that happen?
Starting point is 00:17:12 I think it was five and a half. So you're out there five and a half years like grinding, doing these basketball camps around the world basically. Yeah, I mean, I loved it because I got to see the world and I was young and I was doing it on my own, but looking back on it's like, wow, I'll tell my wife of some situations I was in, like flying into Uganda or staying on this person's couch who was a large, it was a large knife butcher in Australia when I was doing a camp out there and I only knew their cousin so I didn't know this guy at all. Literally in his kitchen there were these massive,
Starting point is 00:17:52 massive knives. Looking back on it I'm like, oh my God, I'm so lucky I survived. That's amazing. Okay so give me some stories then of how not to network and how what you've learned and what the art and your opinion of how to really make true connections for networking. For sure. So going on with the net story. Okay, so we have this this great turnaround season. We go from 28th in the league to second and 3.4 percentage. And I'm getting all this pub and this media is as hot up and coming young coach. The GM's telling me, hey, we wanna do a three year deal. We wanna lock you down.
Starting point is 00:18:29 So, hey, I thought I was in. Like, this is what my dream was now. I was in for life. I finally made it. So, the nets get a new coach at the end of the season. Now, I went out to Las Vegas summer league and I got so many coaches connections and I was really good at cultivating.
Starting point is 00:18:44 I was really good to stay in touch, checking on them, help them serve them in any way that I could. There was this one guy who had a Starbucks meeting with and he had asked me to help one of his players get to the Philippines to a league down there and I had connections in the Philippines so I could have done it. And I completely forgot. Like, it slipped my mind. I didn't take note of it.
Starting point is 00:19:01 I didn't even stay in contact with this guy totally, totally spaced, did a horrible job at it. And when they announced the hiring for the Brooklyn Net, this guy was the assistant for the Atlanta Hawks at the time. Guess who got that head coach in jail? I mean, that guy. So when you got it, it was like, my stomach dropped. I was like, oh no, I am in big trouble. And I got fired.
Starting point is 00:19:22 I got, yeah. So all of the, that's how I got fired. That's how I got fired. I got yeah, so That's how I got fired the new coach came in and that moment he was like yep, yep bringing on my own staff So but once again, you know what? I'm grateful though that happened that was a door closing for four more opening I'd have still been in Brooklyn being a shooting coach or some other where being assistant coach And I've had opportunities to get back in the NBA but it's not my calling. I got to come out here to LA and train all these top NBA players on court, mindset, write books, speak, met my amazing way cooler than me wife. None of that happens if I'm still in Brooklyn. Absolutely. That's a great story but I mean that was actually more like a
Starting point is 00:20:04 mistake. Like that happens to people, right? Like sometimes you're just busy and things just slip your mind and it just happens that that wasn't a bad bad networking story. That was more just like, oh shit. It's the power of like you actually have to cultivate them. Other people are going to do that for you. You have to be the one that stays in touch. So here's another one. So the MVP last year, Yannis entered the Cumpo. It is amazing player for the Milwaukee Bucks. A couple of years ago, he started becoming this phenomenal player.
Starting point is 00:20:35 Like he was from Greece, he was an unknown player becoming this stud and I see it. I'm like, dude, I can help this guy. Like if I can get with Yannis and be the guy that helps him shoot it, I'll be in lifetime any client I ever want. So I knew as agent. Me and as agent went back for like two years ago, I was training one of his players. I hadn't talked to his agent for two years. My text message to his agent was, hey, hope you're doing great. I would love to help you honest take his game to the next level and be an all-star. Can I work with them?
Starting point is 00:21:06 This guy responds to me. David. Hey, I love you, man But this is the way that you contact me after two years. Sorry Like I was just asking I was trying to take he had this great client and instead of staying in touch with him Or even be like man, how can I help you? Is there anything I can do for you? I went straight for the ask Yeah, we'll move obviously did not get to work with him or even be like, man, how can I help you? Is there anything I can do for you? I went straight for the ask. Yeah. We'll move obviously did not get to work with him. Since we've kind of repaired the relationship, but it's still like little standoffish by his part.
Starting point is 00:21:35 No, I totally, this like, I totally resonates with me. I really do, I really do agree and with everything that you're saying and it's like the strict, because people feel then used when you do it that way. It's about cultivating true, and I talk about this too, about real connections and relationships. So then let's talk about the art of networking. Give me from all those examples that you've learned, how do you walk me through now what you would do, or what other people can learn from this
Starting point is 00:22:11 and what they can do instead? So here's what I do. If I want to reach out to somebody, that let's say they're at a higher echelon and I want to reach out to them and become friends with them. So Instagram is the best way to connect with people. By the way, that's what you did with me.
Starting point is 00:22:25 You reached out to me on Instagram. Oh, I've met a lot of my very good friends off direct messages from Instagram. And you can say that sounds crazy or not, but that is the way most people majority will check their direct messages. It's just how it is. People say they don't, but they actually do.
Starting point is 00:22:41 But in that message, if you go back and look at it, I would not have said, hey, Jen, can I pick your brain? Can I get 15 minutes of your time so that you can teach me everything that you've done? Like I'll get messages like that all the time. Like, hey, can I pick your brain? Hey, how did you get to where you are? But why?
Starting point is 00:22:58 I don't have that time. Time is the most valuable asset. Literally time is money. And I'm not going to give it to some random stranger. But if you reach out to me and you say, David, and I love this book, it's life changing. In chapter seven, I read this and this. I shared it with my wife and kids.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Now we're doing a daily read on it every single day. You have impacted my life so much. I just wanted to let you know how much you mean to me. I'm cheering for you. I am in your corner. That's a little bit different than saying, hey, can I pick your brain? Now this guy on the inside could have been thinking, man, I hope he responds, I'd love to become a friend with him, but I'm going to respond to that.
Starting point is 00:23:34 Like if people pour into me, just like I'll do I'll pour into other people, and I'll encourage him, genuinely encourage them. I'm not sending copy-paste messages. It's going to be legitimate messages on what they're doing, something that they're passionate about, whether it's like we put a lot of work into our books. We put a lot of work into our podcasts, the stuff that we create.
Starting point is 00:23:53 If you compliment somebody in that, they're going to take more, this person really actually cares. Now, you also got to know, hey, they might not get back to you. That's totally okay. It's not the right time. Like there's certain time, I believe in God's timing.
Starting point is 00:24:09 Like if it's meant to happen, God will make it happen. You don't have to worry about it. And you do not a week later, or especially a couple of days later, be like, yo, hey, did you get my message? Like, no, yeah, I got your message and I didn't respond to it because it's not the first most important thing on my plate. Sorry. I doubt it.
Starting point is 00:24:25 Wait, you got to wait at least at least two and a half weeks before you send a reminder or something, but also in every message you send to connect, you say, hey, no pressure do not feel like any pressure at all that you have to connect totally cool. Take the pressure off them. And when you take the pressure off somebody, they have a general inclination that they actually want to help. So that's a few of the tools, but you also then, it's so important too,
Starting point is 00:24:52 like when you connect people together, like, if I connect you to somebody, I am not gonna connect you to somebody who just started a podcast, somebody who is, you might hate to say this, but as someone that's at a different level, because it just doesn't make sense for you. Not in a conceited way, but you've put a ton into what you've built, you put a ton into what you do.
Starting point is 00:25:12 So people have to put in those reps to be able to get up there. So you have to connect people on the certain levels. And I'm going to ask you first every single time, hey, do you want me to connect you to X, so and so? I'm never going to just say, hey, meet Jen, like now I put something on your plate. Now you feel obligated that you have to get back to them. Even if it's a great connection, it's still a misstep on my my part. So always ask permission first. Yeah, that's a good point. But you know, you know, it's funny because I agree with a lot. Everything again, you and I are very, we think very similarly for sure,
Starting point is 00:25:48 because I think that when people, when you feel like it's cookie cutter, or like it's like one of those like mass type of emails, no one wants to respond. Like you can tell the difference if someone is being genuine and it's kind of curated for you versus just mass, right? And then I always will respond if it I feel like there's like they put effort in, right? There's a different effort. But the question, right? The question then is, and then what? So then you connect, let's say, let's say if you get the connection and then what? How do you maintain?
Starting point is 00:26:27 A lot of times it's not so much just the, you know, you got it. Now you have it. Once you have it, how do you maintain the relationship? Great question. Now, it'd be what is my gift to you? So what do you, what can I provide to you that will help you? So maybe it's relationships. Maybe I'll say, Hey, Jen, I got these friends and my lead John Gordon Max look of your like, I
Starting point is 00:26:50 would love to put them in touch with you. I'm sure you guys are doing a great podcast. Now, this is something you might want. You're like, Oh, I don't have those connections. Okay. Now, I become the connector people that get when you connect people together, they never forget, or they shouldn't the person that connected them. So you might not have that as your ammo. It could be something like when I was connecting with people, like, hey, especially when I was reaching out in one product and sponsors, they might MBA player, they'll have them use it.
Starting point is 00:27:15 If they like it, you know, I'll have them reach out to you, just in great ways for me to be able to do it. Yes. So that would be of that I could use. But you have to figure out what your give is. Maybe you're a genius behind the camera and you can cut up this killer speaking clip. That's your gift. People want that.
Starting point is 00:27:31 Maybe you have really, really smart with email marketing. Like people need that. So if anybody out there knows email marketing. I need that. I need that. I need that. So if you have the gift, you hit me like, dude, I know how to do this. Like I can build huge email newsletters list.
Starting point is 00:27:46 I'm gonna get in touch with you and I'm probably gonna become your friend because you are giving me this thing. So. Absolutely. I totally understand and I totally agree with you. Like it can't be like cutting, like just because that's my like super power
Starting point is 00:28:01 is like being a connector. Does it mean that's your superpower? Use up to figure out what yours is. But a lot of people don't even know they have a superpower or they don't have the confidence to even send an email or a DM like you said, right? So then let's take one step back, okay? Because I think you talk about this a lot
Starting point is 00:28:20 I think in pivot and go about confidence. I mean, I think right off the bat, obviously, you have confidence. You're confident enough and you already have that mindset of like, what's the worst that can happen? You know, I don't care if I'm rejected, I don't care if I fail. I'll just, you have that ability to get up and try again, you know, pivot and go, let's say. How do you tell people in both, in, for your, in your book in general,
Starting point is 00:28:47 was the best way to build confidence, to actually not feel and fear, fear. That's a great point. And there's so many ways to do it. And you just gotta pick which works for you. So I'll go through some different ways. But first of all, the foundation all starts with understanding that your confidence does not,
Starting point is 00:29:04 does not lie in your results, does not lie in your results, does not lie in your resume, or it is completely on who you are, your true self-awareness. So if I strip everything away from what you do, if you take your business title, you take all that and throw it away, who are you? Are you a loving, caring person?
Starting point is 00:29:19 Do you pour into your spouse, your kids, are you the best Sunday morning pancake maker? Like, who are you outside of your business title? So that is very, very important. Before we start with why the Simon Sennick famous thing, you have to start with who and know your foundation. Once you do, you can build on there. So there's ways to build confidence.
Starting point is 00:29:37 I have a seven steps to unshakable confidence that I'll do with in my coaching groups and with MBA players. And I'll just go through the list. Confidence through comparison. People will think that's a bad thing. It's actually a great thing. So you pick somebody who you can see yourself being like, and then you just study them, follow their footsteps. Somebody's already been to the point
Starting point is 00:29:56 that you want to get to. What did they do to get there? They didn't just wake up born there. They had to go through it all, figure out what that is. Try to reach out to them, try to connect with them. Even if you can't build your table of people you can have this virtual dinner with all the time. Like say, I wanna be like Tony Robbins,
Starting point is 00:30:14 I wanna be like Mr. Rogers, I wanna be like Anthony Bourdain. Let's say I put those guys around my table. I wanna be a mixture of those guys. I'm gonna learn from each one of them. What did they do? Because it's not a, it's not a, oh well, that's for the lucky few like, why me me no, it's a why not me?
Starting point is 00:30:29 Somebody's got to do it. It can be you and so compare yourself to somebody like that Confidence through strength focus figure out what your god-given ability is what your strength is like NBA players If you're good at everything you're not playing in the NBA But if you're great at one thing like a player that I grew up with Kyle Corber was one of the best three-point shooters in NBA history. Because he decided, you know what, I'm going to stop focusing on all my weaknesses, and I'm just going to practice, practice, practice threes. So that's how we had made over $100 million in the NBA. So think about what your strength focus is. I love that. First of all, I love that because people, I believe that too, and the people who kind of
Starting point is 00:31:06 like go at it with me, because they're like, you still have to, you know, I believe that you don't have to be a, it's better to be a master of one than a jack of all trades. Jack of all trades, you get, you get water down, right? Because you, and then you never shine. But to be able to be able to pick that one strength and go all in on that, that's how you really kind of take it to, that's how you become a star, so to speak, and get known for one thing, and niche. Yeah, totally.
Starting point is 00:31:34 Like, I'm good at speaking, and I'm good at writing. I am not going to be Mr. The E-Mails. I'm not going to be Mr. Cut Up Film. I'm not going to be handyman, like I know I'm not good at that, but I'm not good at shooting. Much of good shooting. Yeah, that I'm not gonna be Mr. Cut Up Film, I'm not gonna be handyman, like I know I'm not good at that, but I'm not good at shooting. Yeah, that I'm good at. So if we're playing that, but I mean, that's not what I'm not going out
Starting point is 00:31:52 and shooting thousands of shots anymore because that's not my goal. So it was my one thing that I practiced when that was my goal, but you gotta think of yourself over the formula one racer. Like that racer is not gonna stop, do the pits with the tires, put the fuel in. Like you find people around you that are part of your crew to make yourself just solely focused on what you do so well.
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Starting point is 00:35:30 Personal highlight reel, which I call the highlight reel 2.0. So at some point in your life, you had a moment when you were just killing it, whether it's a basketball player, their best game, a speaker on stage, making a business deal, stay home mom, just the best dinner you ever made, whatever it is, you've had that moment. So you can recreate that moment in your mind. Most people think, well, that was a stroke of luck. No, you actually did it. So there's proof that you can do it again.
Starting point is 00:35:56 So literally, either if you have the clips, you can watch or you visualize yourself, see yourself going through that moment. And more bonus points, if you can actually feel it, if you can actually feel it. If you can put some sense in some smells to that time, that moment smell is the three times more powerful than any other sense that we have. So like if you walked in and you had this brief case and it smelled like leather or this
Starting point is 00:36:17 coffee you were drinking when you were doing it, like tie those to it, the feeling, everything and watch this daily. Do this when you wake up. Visualize your personal highlight reel. Because if you do it once, okay, that's great. If you brush your teeth once, they're not gonna be white for the lifetime. Do this.
Starting point is 00:36:33 These mental skills, these mental habits are meant to be things that you do consistently. It's just like a basketball player. If they work on their shot day after day, they build muscle memory. But that's tangible muscle memory we can see. That's what people think like, oh, well, I'm in working out so I can see my body changing.
Starting point is 00:36:49 That's tangible muscle memory. But the more important part is the mental muscle memory where you don't actually see, but it works the same way day after day. There's other things that I'll use like the Q word, like that movie Inception where the top is spinning and they see it, boom, it kicks them back into a level of the dream. You pick a word whatever it is. Mine's unshakable. If I'm on stage and I've done this I've been in talks with like
Starting point is 00:37:11 these big CEOs in this intense room and I see this guy doodling literally drawing like stick figure pictures. Oh I'm just starting off my talk. So I'm like oh my gosh am I losing the room and I'll I'll say unshakable, unshakable, unshakable. And it'll keep me back to be like, I'm okay. Like, it's fine. And you can use so, pick your keyword, what that'll be. But the biggest one of all, honestly, is like understanding what you stand for
Starting point is 00:37:37 and knowing that you have a faith in belief in something bigger than that moment alone. And for me, it's my faith in God. And so I know if I walk onto a stage and I trip and I fall and I forget every single word, I don't care. One, it's going to make a better story for another talk later on. But two, I've got God and I've got my smoking high wife. I don't need anything else.
Starting point is 00:38:01 I love that. That's great. That's great. Those are great tips, actually. You said one that you said in the first one you said was comparing. So who do you compare yourself to for the confidence builder that you would like to be like? Yeah. In the basketball room, I compare myself to the best shooting coach, Chip England. So I studied him. I tried to write him, I wrote him letters I try to call him I drove out to Las Vegas to actually get the chance to meet him Just the chance to meet him and he saw all that I was putting in and he gave me some advice Give me some great advice. So I put a ton of work into meeting him comparing myself to him now It is it is a mixture. It's Tony Robbins. It's a John Maxwell It's a Mr. Rogers who I obviously can't meet. It's the Anthony B, like those type of people, I'm like, okay, I'm going to study everything
Starting point is 00:38:48 that these guys do. Because I know they had to be at this point sometime in their life, like if they got there, why can't I? So I'll just, I'm a nut for studying all high performers to see what their story was, what their daily habits are, and stealing from them. Because I believe like we are an original, but we are never an original. We are like a smoothie.
Starting point is 00:39:09 We have these different ingredients. Like I take an ingredient from something I love about you or something from friend John Gordon. And I'll throw them on this blender as people I learn from blended up. And then I put my own little spices, granola, cacao nibs on top, my own little flavor. So we're a maker
Starting point is 00:39:25 of everybody. An uncommon original is what I call it. No, I love that. So, okay, so you've said a lot of good things here. So I was going to, we didn't really talk so much about your book yet, but we did it. We did it. We didn't really, but these are all great. All this information, what I love about it, it's very practical and tangible. And that's what this podcast is about. And this is the kind of guest, you're the kind of guest that I like to have, because it's that, these are like little nuggets
Starting point is 00:39:54 that are really simple for people to really integrate into their lives and tweak, right? It's not so, this is not daunting information. But I wanted to ask you about something that you said about habits. What are your daily habits? Who did you, so you took out, you basically, it's in a smoothie of all these people you mentioned. And so give me a day in the life of what kind of habits do you do to kind of keep you on point that you've kind of tried and figured out works the best. Totally, so right now, and I'll keep sharpening them,
Starting point is 00:40:27 like they're not always gonna stay the same. I think one important thing for people to understand is habits are meant to help you. They're not meant to inhibit you and probably of you is being like, if I didn't hit this or if I didn't get my workout in, like my whole day is thrown off. No, like then you fall death to the sort of habits.
Starting point is 00:40:45 Like these are just meant to help you. So minor, when I wake up, what's not, any details David, I don't like this. But I like waking up early, but it just depends my wife's more of a night owl. So if I'm staying up later with her, she needs to talk about something and we're watching the show. Like I'll stay up a little bit later.
Starting point is 00:41:02 I deal world, I'm going a bit of like nine and I'm up at five, but usually it's more like 10, 30 and I'm up at 6, 30. Okay. So I wake up and I walk by a mirror. So when I brush my teeth in the morning, I do this thing called the foggy mirror, where when we wake up, we always have self-doubt.
Starting point is 00:41:18 We have 50,000 self-talk thoughts, daily 80% of them on average. I know we all know this are negative. So I stand there in the mirror and I do this action where I'm wiping away, acting like the mirror is foggy, wiping it away. I do this every day and this just reminds myself, I don't have to live in negativity or self-doubt. I can wipe it away, I can live in the self-confidence
Starting point is 00:41:37 of who I am. So that action brings a lot of power for me in just that reminder, okay, God's made me to be something great, not average great. Then I hop in a three minute ice cold shower. This is for two purposes, you know the health benefits of it for the cold thermogenesis, but also is just to wake me up and it's a way to be like, okay, I can go through this sucky stage that I hate getting into that ice cold shower. If I can get through this, I can get through anything else in the day. It's kind
Starting point is 00:42:02 of like a mental dictatorship type of tool. I'll go upstairs. I put on my praise and worship music. I just want a nice and calm. My phone is on airplane mode, unless I'm on the road, then I'll have it on. So in case my wife needs something, but if not, I've got it on airplane mode. I don't want the text messages, the emails, the WhatsApp, the line, the we chat all from all over the world coming in. That can wait.
Starting point is 00:42:23 I'll have my praise and worship music on. I'll make my beautiful chemics made coffee. I love the process in the cell. What kind of coffee? Well, the chemics machine. So it's a poro. It's like you're pouring it into the chemics. It's type of type of way that you make coffee.
Starting point is 00:42:37 Yeah, I know it sounds good. I'm a huge coffee person. That's why the chemics. Is that like a brand or is that like a type? It's like a there's porover. There's I mean, there's a cure thing, it's a, it's a chemics, if you just look it up and you see it, you just, how do you spell it? I'm going to look it up. C-H-E-M-E-X, chemics.
Starting point is 00:42:54 Okay, keep, I didn't mean to interrupt you. Okay. I'm going to done the same. If you say something about coffee that I don't know, I'm going to interrupt you. I love coffee. I'm going to done the same. If you say something about coffee that I don't know, I'm going to interrupt. I love coffee. I'm a nut for it. That's what you're like. I'm going to do this coffee detox. I'm going to do Dica because my body needs it. No. Then your brain's going to hurt for a week and you'll be unproductive. I don't want that. Exactly. I'm with you 100%. I can't do it. It's too much of it. I also don't want to
Starting point is 00:43:24 deprive myself of the one of the things I love the most. Totally. I wake up excited for that. So no, they're not happy. 100% okay, so you make your kid. What do you put in your coffee? Do you put like half and half? Do you put milk? Do you put sugar? Stevia. Stevia is one of God's greatest gifts ever. I do that too. I pray that it doesn't come back long-term and say that it's unhealthy because I use an unhealthy amount of stevia and everything that I drink. So I'll spend five minutes just quiet. It's really hard for me to just sit quietly. I'm not a meditator and power like kudos to if you are. But for people who say they meditate for an hour in the morning
Starting point is 00:44:02 hour and night, what are you doing with your day? How do you have so much time, number one? And how do you have so much attention? Like my mind's, like my puppy or something. I'm thinking about a bird flying out the window. So I try to stay five minutes and just like talk to me during that time. And they don't have a devotional reading
Starting point is 00:44:18 and a short reading out of the Bible that I do. And I'll journal, I write down any joy that I had from the day before. So it can be the smallest little joy. Like me and my wife had this great ice cream the other night. I write that down. So telling those little joys that I have. And I'll do something called the big three. It's one of the most game changing things for me. I'll text message or video message three people who maybe I haven't talked to for a while just encouraging them. Just saying you know what I'm thinking of you in my morning time, I hope you're doing well,
Starting point is 00:44:46 cheering you on, let me know if there's anything I can ever do for you, I'm in your corner, something like that. And the responses I've got from it have been literally life changes at some point. I mean, you don't know how much I needed this at this time. I was so down, thank you so much. Like we don't know what people are going through. We just don't, everybody puts on a face, puts on a front.
Starting point is 00:45:02 So if you can be that person that encourages others, like it could literally change their life. And you got to understand, like most people are not going to do that to you. Very, very rare for you to do that for me, but I'll always do that three people a day. And then I'll usually go into a workout, unless I have an early call from the East Coast, which if you live on the East Coast, like, what are you doing? Like, come to the work out. So I'll get a workout in and then I'm in my zone from there. What kind of workout do you do? I just lift. I mean, if there's, I'll play tennis if someone wants to play tennis,
Starting point is 00:45:34 but I'm pretty much, so just, just lift weights and not, I'm not killing it with the CrossFit or definitely not running a marathon. Anybody that says that too, you know what, I don't know if I trust people who don't like coffee and who want to run marathons. I don't know if I can trust, just say that. No, no, I'm with you. I should, I never, like people always ask me
Starting point is 00:45:56 like, oh, have you run a marathon? I assume that I have because I'm in a fitness space and I'm like, I would refuse. I do refuse to do that because the strain and the, and what you're doing to your, the pounding that you're doing to your body, like you just break, like you're just like asking for an injury later on.
Starting point is 00:46:15 Like I just don't wanna, I like to be active so much that I don't wanna have that chance of ruining it later on. You know what I mean? Or getting hurt. I never understood it. I never understood why people love marathons. It just doesn't make any sense to me.
Starting point is 00:46:29 How about those ultra-marathons? That's another one altogether. Oh. Crazy. Yeah, you can, yeah, everybody else, you can go have those. Crazy. Okay, so you said coffee and then you work out,
Starting point is 00:46:41 when do you eat? Are you an intermittent fasting person? Because you did drink coffee. Okay, so you eat breakfast, when do you eat? Are you an intermittent fasting person? Because you did drink coffee. Okay, so you eat breakfast? God bless you. I've only something small before I work out, Natalie, breakfast, big fan of food. Like I'm not gonna, I mean, if, I guess there's sometimes,
Starting point is 00:46:55 I used to do intermittent fasting all the time. And like long term it killed my hormones and it like testosterone was low. And like I thought I had to just always be in a deficit. And like, he's just dumb. I didn't know. And finally, I've learned and I've got around great people. Like, dude, like stop doing that.
Starting point is 00:47:11 You're literally killing your body. What are you doing? You know, it's funny that you say that because that's kind of how I, it's not for me. But I will tell you, I feel like when I ask these questions about what are people's habits? The number one habit I always hear now is they do intermittent fasting
Starting point is 00:47:28 and that it's like great for your, you know, for growth hormone and for, for like building growth hormone and for, uh, pathogen for this, for that, and I just don't, it just does not make sense.
Starting point is 00:47:41 It does not work for me. I feel like it's such a deprived way of living. Because I love breakfast, I love coffee, I love this stuff. I think a lot of people will just say and they'll get so on and on the kick, like people that just promote carnival, like that's the way to live. No, it's just, it's literally just become their thing.
Starting point is 00:47:58 So they feel like they have to promote that. Or, oh, I'm the fasting guy. So I'm gonna do five day fast. I'm sure, I'm guessing there's some benefits, but there's also probably long term negative things that people don't talk about. I know for me, I haven't missed a minute fast for seven years straight, because I thought that was a thing.
Starting point is 00:48:16 I checked my test to Astron when I got married. Let's just say it was like an 85 year old man. So I'm just saying, be careful, you don't know. Like you should always check your blood levels and know where they're at and know what works for you. Don't just listen to the guy who's been doing carnivore for two years and it acts like he's the expert and on every podcast and literally doesn't know what he's talking about. Just be careful who you listen to. No, I know. No, you know, you know your resources, but I've had a million of these doctors on. I mean, so many of these fasting people who
Starting point is 00:48:45 like, who said there's so much research, proven research on the benefits of fasting, like what they're getting for, like in terms of their mental, like, focus and being alert to the, the, how they really actually are burning fat instead of burning whatever. I mean, it goes on and on and on and I agree with you. I think everybody is different. I also think that in life, if you haven't noticed how for, you know, 20, 30 years ago, it was all about low fat. So we all would be having snack wells. And those low fat, like just have a bowl of pasta. And it wasn't about having protein. It was all no fat, low fat, fat free. And then that was a whole fad for many, many, many years.
Starting point is 00:49:27 And every doctor and every expert would say, that's the way to do it. And then there was a cycle and it changed. And then and now, and then it was about the Atkins die. And then there's always something that like comes up like in it, like another fad or another like cycle where that becomes the way to live life. And then you only hear about about the after effects or maybe the negative effects years and years later, right? So I just think that but people are looking a lot of times for like a quick fix for weight loss or they're thinking that this would be the panacea for their longevity, you know, and sometimes it's
Starting point is 00:50:04 just about like people don't like it because it's And sometimes it's just about like, people don't like it because it's not sexy, but just about moderation and just maybe just not eating a shit ton all the time and being careful of what you're eating, right? But people don't wanna hear that. It's too plain-jane. You know what doesn't, you know what doesn't sell? It is, this is the number one thing.
Starting point is 00:50:23 If you wanna be successful, if you wanna have a great body, if you wanna be healthy, but it will not sell. This is the number one thing. If you want to be successful, if you want to have a great body, if you want to be healthy, but it will not sell. It's called consistency. It's literally being consistent. It's boring, but it works. I tried keto, an anal bunch of fat, and I got fat. It doesn't work. It's long-term consistency. I got fat. It doesn't work. It's long-term consistency. You know, it's not, you know? Also though, it's because unless you follow something
Starting point is 00:50:49 to its exact T, which is almost impossible with these diets, you, then it kicks you right out, right? So like, for example, if you wanna do this, you know, keto and you put like, or whatever it is at the time, intermittent fasting, but you're drinking coffee and you put an ounce of cream in, oh my God. It's gonna, you know what I mean? Then you're out of your jump to self right out of the,
Starting point is 00:51:12 the top of the, the top of the G thing in your mind as well. I wrote my first book with called No Jim Required and it was before it became a popular thing to not go to the gym and just use your own body weight. And in my book, no one wanted to read it because there was no sexy magic pill. It was basically be consistent, move every day, push ups, let's do a push up, let's do a squat, let's do a lunge.
Starting point is 00:51:39 And it was this other book that was out of the same time that was promising the moon and the stars, and that book, of course, did much better than mine. And it's just like people, because people don't, I think we understand that, maybe logically,
Starting point is 00:51:55 but our brains don't wanna accept it. It's not like, you know what I mean? We wanna go for that quick fix. We really need it to feel like we're trying. Yeah, totally. It's like, it's the four hour work week that Tim Ferriss created. I promise you, Tim Ferriss does not work for four hours. First of all, that's so true and so funny. I love that because it's about titling, right? Like, it's about finding a title that's provocative
Starting point is 00:52:25 that people are gonna be like, oh yeah, I want that. I want to work for four hours. That guy probably, I think that guy does actually work like 18 hours a day, like crazy. So sure, yeah, totally cool. It's all clickbait. All clickbait, because at the end of the day, you can escape.
Starting point is 00:52:41 If you want to be successful, it does take a lot of hard work. So that's what I have to say. Okay, wait, I've got a couple of questions for you. Other than what we of course just been speaking about for almost how long it's been, it's almost an hour. Let's talk. I've done here just a bit. Well, listen, I have one question for you and then we can get out of here. How about that? Beautiful. Ask away. Okay. Okay. Let's talk about this idea of greatness that are
Starting point is 00:53:09 talked about for break. Let's talk about breakthrough for one second. So, we talk about, tell us how do we get a breakthrough. Let's just talk about that and then we can come back and do another podcast some other time. It's beautiful. That's a great segue. So, breakthroughs are, I mean, there are these little happy accidents that happen in our lives. There's these strokes of luck. And you're like, yeah, I had a breakthrough. I'd love to have that again.
Starting point is 00:53:31 I just don't know how to recreating. It's just how it is. It's a very abstract term. You can't grasp it. But through years of working with these NBA players and NBA coaches and work with CEOs and these high performing actors out here, like I've just studied like how do these people become so successful? What are they doing and putting this all together into a formula and the formula for making
Starting point is 00:53:54 these little happy accidents into regularly occurring breakthroughs is confidence plus cooperation plus service plus purpose. That puts you into the breakthrough mode. Now, each one of these is slightly different than you think. So we talked about confidence earlier and understanding it's not about results. It's about your self-awareness, figuring out who you are at the core first.
Starting point is 00:54:17 The cooperation is figuring out the team around you. Now, you don't want to just put around people that are just going to tell you how great you are. You don't want to have the, I'll just the Yes Men and you don't want to be the American idol singer that your family says is the greatest ever and you actually suck. Like yeah, have your support team. Everybody talks about I got to get my support team. That's cool, but also have your challenge team.
Starting point is 00:54:37 The best leaders and the best people you want to be around will challenge and support you with a fine balance and find people people that aren't like you. I call it the misfits. I mean, Jesus comes down and who's he picked to be around? Kings, does he pick to be around? No, he gets a fisherman, a tax collector. He pits these misfits together to change the world. The 98 Chicago Bulls, best NBA team ever.
Starting point is 00:54:59 Jordan Best Score, Pippin Best Sidekick, Steve Kerr, Best Shooter, Dennis Rodden, and Best Crazy Man, where you don't know what color Harry's gonna show up with with, or if he's going to get kicked out of the game. Missfits surrounding yourself with different people, it's like your strength, their strength, their strength, it's a compliments wish list to make an ultimate culture. So you know yourself, you know your team, this is the who, plus the where, where, where is your team, cooperation, who, who are you? Confidence.
Starting point is 00:55:26 Now it's the what, what are you actually doing? And if you're doing it for yourself, you're like, hey, I wanna make a lot of money, and I'm gonna be really happy because I have a big bank account or check me out, I got a million followers. Oh, I'm happy, never happens. No one on their deathbed said,
Starting point is 00:55:40 I made a ton of money and I'm really happy because I used it all for myself. Nobody in the history of ever is content with that. Neither are you going to be. It's about service, true, genuine service. Sure. Go down, continue to help out the food bank. That's great service, but true service is about giving your time and energy when it's
Starting point is 00:55:58 not convenient for you. When it doesn't match up with your Google color coordinated schedule, when somebody needs you and you're on a mission, you've got the Zoom call, you've got this call, you've got this call. But hey, they need you to pour into them. Are you going to stop and give them your time? People need it. We don't, like we said, we don't know what people are going through.
Starting point is 00:56:15 You could change somebody's life just through a spark of a word of somebody at the gas station or behind the counter at the grocery store. But if you're too much in a hurry and only concerned with yourself, you'll never be able to find out. I've had massive breakthroughs and living in the service mode. And I got to meet, that's how I met Mark Cuban and became friends with Mark Cuban because I gave him shooting lessons.
Starting point is 00:56:33 I didn't even know he was Mark Cuban. But that's not always going to be the case obviously. And I'm admittedly not very good at this because like when I have a schedule, it's, oh my God, hit this, I gotta hit this, I gotta hit this. So I'm not saying I have it all figured out. Trust me, I do not, but I'm working at it. Right. You just said now, you're like, I got to go. I have to be somewhere else. So I got to be, but part of the service is to
Starting point is 00:56:56 be, you know, answering the rest of my questions. Isn't that service? What time is your next thing? I'm just teasing you. What time is your next thing? Seven minutes to get out. But it's totally cool because I'm just teasing you what time is your next thing seven minutes to get up But it's only because I'm zoned in the moment. No, no, no, it's good. Just go no listen I think I actually think that I'm gonna allow you to go because you gave us some great insights some great Improving you're gonna leave you're gonna leave everybody hanging with I go listen. I was I was being served I was giving you some service by saying listen I was gonna be like,
Starting point is 00:57:26 enough of what my needs are, you have to go, you have a call, but no, please, go ahead. I'm here with you and I'm here in the moment and I'm here with your audience. Thank you. So the fourth point is purpose. This is the why. And now you can understand, it's not necessary
Starting point is 00:57:42 about what you are doing. It's not, hey, I have to be a famous singer, and then I'll be happy, that's my purpose. It's about who you are doing it for. So even if you're doing a job that you don't necessarily like, are you going to that job and your kids are seeing you just grungin' through, walkin' and being in a bad mood every single day because it's now what you love,
Starting point is 00:58:00 or are you puttin' on a smile and going there with a lot of energy and being the person who's given high fives and then you see your kids see you're like, well, that's what that's what that's like. That's what mom's like. It doesn't matter what you are doing, but it's who you are doing it for. But if you are really living in your true element, where you're on purpose plus passion, when you put the passion in there, that equals mission. And I love it when people are obsessed, when they're obsessed with what they do, whether it's a local coffee bean, barista who's telling you how this bean was roasted at 37 degrees
Starting point is 00:58:34 Fahrenheit in the mountains of Nicaragua. I love that. I don't care if you're making a lot of money. If you're something you're passionate about, if you're the guy out in Scotland who is the dude that everybody goes to for the best cashmere sweater, he's sitting out there in the mountains, he's just doing all this wool kinda knitting stuff,
Starting point is 00:58:52 but he is the man because he's obsessed with it. I love that, that's so attractive. Yeah, I agree with you 100%. I mean, like, why, if God gives us a gift, why would you say, you know what? I don't think so. I'm worried about what Jimmy Down the Street says. He doesn't think I'm good at it,
Starting point is 00:59:08 so I'm not gonna do it. That's a slap in God's face. I think the greatest gratitude that we can give back is to fully pursue what our passion is. And if you're doing that passion for other people, then you are on mission to bring other people's joy. That's the breakthrough formula. That is, okay, well, I wanna ask, have you always been this religious?
Starting point is 00:59:27 It feels like you have like faith, it's a very big part of your life too, a very big part, like a happy daily habit. How did you grow up? What was your... So I haven't been. No, I definitely haven't. Oh, you haven't, okay.
Starting point is 00:59:39 Like, yeah, and I mean, you could say really, like religious, but it's more of a, mine is a relationship with Jesus. That's where I find my joy, that's where I find, just to say religious, but it's more of it. Mine is a relationship with Jesus. That's where I find my joy. That's where I find just the knowing knowledge that I don't have to do this life alone, like it's all planned out for me. And I was never like that.
Starting point is 00:59:53 I was extremely selfish and for me in college. And I was a worse the party at every like that was who I was. And I started going to this thing called fuel. It's funny because a friend of mine on the team that just invited me to is called fuel. Is this just a Christian or just a little hangout and stuff? Like nothing, like religion can be because I grow Catholic. That's religion and that drove me the other way.
Starting point is 01:00:15 People probably have a lot of the same experiences. Yes or no, maybe I don't know. But anyway, so I go to this thing called fuel and I'm seeing these people, they're singing, they're high five in there They're smiling. I'm like What drug are they on I literally said that I was like I want to get whatever they have are they drinking something They got something I got to get that so I keep going back because inside I'm waking up every like I'm the like if you want to say the
Starting point is 01:00:39 epitome of Big man on campus on the basketball player the stony college whatever But I'd wake up empty. Like I didn't have that, I had a deeper desire for something. So I keep going back to this thing called fuel and like, this is weird, people are giving me hugs and they're asking what they can do for me. I don't like this, but then there was something
Starting point is 01:00:58 that kept drawing me back, drawing me back. I was like, this is what joy is. This is what true joy is. These people are living for Jesus. And that's where this is what joy is. This is what true joy is. These people are living for Jesus. And that's where they find their true joy. I was like, this is, this is a no brainer. So for me, it's, it happened when I was 23, 22, 23. Wow. And so it's been with you, you've been able to sustain and do this and be this way. That was like a big, that sounds to me like that was a major transitional or pivotal point for you in a way.
Starting point is 01:01:27 Totally huge, that's everything. And in saying like I've been able to maintain and sustain, like it's a lifestyle, like to me, like there's no, this is not in me in any way saying like, hey, this is what you got to do, like, it isn't, but like that's what I believe. And like it's It isn't, but that's what I believe. And it works for you. But that was your pivot and go. It really was. I mean, you pivoted to, you leaned in and pivoted in this way, and it's really kind of grounded.
Starting point is 01:01:54 It seems to me that it's really grounded you and really help you kind of flourish because you've believed in something that was so much in your belief bigger than you. Totally. And there's so much historical backing of it. Like when people say, oh, Jesus was just a good dude, a good leader. No, there's thousands and thousands of articles and books and all this kind of stuff written on Jesus. There's seven written on Caesar. But yet everybody's knows, like, oh, yes, Caesar was this guy. For sure, seven compared to thousands. I just, I would challenge anybody to go read the book
Starting point is 01:02:27 or watch the case for Christ, where this guy who didn't believe at all tries to prove it all wrong and literally everything lines up. Like, it's crazy. You can write it off. You can say, hey, well, I like the universe. The universe is, what the hell does that mean?
Starting point is 01:02:41 Like, when people, I mean, it might be your belief and I'm not coming down to anybody about that, but if you say, I'm believing in the universe, where is the backing of that? Where is it? So I would challenge you to do this type of research. They're not saying you have to, you could come back and be like,
Starting point is 01:02:56 no, this is the dumbest thing ever. Cool, but at least try. Yeah, well, no, I was just, like I said, I was only really mostly asking because you've kind of called back to it and mentioned it so many different times that I felt like that was kind of where you got a lot of grounding from it. So I'm glad that now that you told me,
Starting point is 01:03:13 I'm sorry that you're late on your call. So we can always do, we can finish some other time, but I or not even finish some other time. We've done, you gave us a lot of amazing information. And where do people find you or get your book or just you know kind of sum it all up for me and you can then do your business later like in about 30 seconds. Dan, I just want to thank you for having me on number one and just for like your podcast is awesome. You bring so much hope to people and you give so much people inspiration and like just the belief in
Starting point is 01:03:46 themselves because me and you we're not like we don't come from anything special but we're able to create it through just the way we live and our habits so being able to follow you from afar and see what you do is like it's like awesome to call you a friend and I would love to have you back on my podcast when the book comes out but for myself david davidnurs.com, I do group coaching on there. Social Media's David Nurse NDA podcast is now called the art of, the art of, that has since changed. And anywhere books are found. Ghost call.
Starting point is 01:04:18 Is it called the art of what? Just the art of? The art of. And then you bring on all these amazing people. Like we had Boris Kojo, the art of acting acting or an NBA player was the art of three-point shooting where these people are obsessed in their passion kind of like we talked about Mmm. I like it Because I was on your podcast. It was called pivot and go you changed it like in the last couple months ago We're the final episode of pivot and Go before we pivoted to whatever name.
Starting point is 01:04:45 I love that. Amazing. Okay, great. And so that's all great. Your book is breakthrough. The other one's called Pivot and Go. I really enjoy both of those books. I really enjoy talking to you. We're going to do this again super soon. On the wood ways. On the wood ways. Yes, on the tremeals for sure. And that's it. Thank you so much. Well, that's it guys. Go check them out. He's great. And thank you, David.
Starting point is 01:05:10 I appreciate it. Thanks, Jen. Thank you so much. This episode is brought to you by the Yap Media Podcast Network. I'm Holla Taha, CEO of the award-winning digital media empire, YAP Media, and host of YAP Young & Profiting Podcast, a number one entrepreneurship and self-improvement podcast where you can listen, learn, and profit. On Young & Profiting Podcast, I interview the brightest minds in the world and I turn their wisdom into actionable advice that you can use in your daily life.
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