Mark Bell's Power Project - EP. 354 - Evan Carmichael
Episode Date: March 27, 2020Evan Carmichael is a successful entrepreneur, entrepreneurial coach, venture capitalist, and YouTuber, and he is currently working to solve the world’s biggest problem: People not believing in thems...elves. He is an author, and is currently touring the United States to speak to and motivate other entrepreneurs. Evan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/ModelingTheMasters Evan on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/evancarmichael/ Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Visit our sponsors: ➢Icon Meals: http://iconmeals.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" for 10% off ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $99 ➢Perfect Keto: http://perfectketo.com/powerproject Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off of $99 plus FREE Shipping! ➢SHOP NOW: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/ Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Power Project, what up? Hope you guys are surviving the quarantine. Today is day...
Actually, I don't know what day it is. But whatever the case, while you guys are chilling
at home, we have an awesome episode for you today with our boy Evan Carmichael.
And since you are at home, you're going to get a ton of entertainment from today's episode.
But what's great is it's going to lead to a bunch more entertainment when you guys follow
up with Evan Carmichael and his YouTube channel. Evan is an entrepreneur. He's a motivational speaker. And like I said, he has an incredible
YouTube channel. He'll take someone like Jay-Z or Bruce Lee or Muhammad Ali, some of the biggest
names in whether it be entertainment or fitness, even someone like Steve Jobs.
And he'll actually like show like early, early footage of them before they were anybody famous
or anybody successful. And it really is extremely motivating. And in today's episode, we asked him
some interesting questions. And I really want you guys to pay attention to what he says specifically about being patient or impatient as he as he explains it.
Like I said, really, really interesting episode.
We think you guys are going to get a ton of value from this conversation.
Links to Evan's YouTube channel and social media will be down in the YouTube description and iTunes show notes.
Please follow up with him.
Let him know what you guys think of today's episode.
description and iTunes show notes. Please follow up with him. Let him know what you guys think of today's episode. And since we are still all stuck in quarantine, like we said in yesterday's episode,
I should say yesterday's intro, Mark Bell decided to try to help everybody out by giving everybody
a deal on slingshots and hip circles. When you combine the two, you're going to get 20% off.
Again, that's at markbellslingshot.com. We're trying to do whatever
we can to help everybody out. On top of that, Mark has actually given everybody 30 days free
of markbell.com. The normal free trial is seven days, but he said, nope, let's go ahead and do a
whole 30 days. And what markbell.com is, basically you get all of Mark Bell's daily workouts. Every
single day, a brand new workout. He has the whole program, thecom is, basically, you get all of Mark Bell's daily workouts. Every single day, a brand new workout.
He has the whole program, the whole scheme, everything, reps and sets, all that good stuff.
Everything for you to view daily.
What's different now is he's actually implementing a lot more with the slingshot, a lot more with the hip circle, and a lot more with body weight.
He's trying to give out as much stuff to you as possible for free right now.
Again, all you have to do is just log in, MarkBell.com, put your email address,
and you have access to the entire website for 30 full days.
I highly recommend you guys take advantage of that.
Personally, I've been using MarkBell.com as my training partner for the past,
pretty much since it became available, my progress is it's, it's going well. I'm really,
really feeling good. And I'm happy that, you know, something like that is, uh, is available.
So please make sure you guys take advantage of that. And, uh, real quick, thank you to Piedmontese
for sponsoring this episode. Um, you know, Mark's doing a hundred days straight of carnivore and
I can tell you the, uh, the easiest way to go about it is with Piedmontese beef.
I just cracked open some of their ground beef and I'm thinking, oh, it's just, you know, it's ground beef.
Well, like it's just going to taste like ground beef.
I have no idea why, what they did to it, but it tastes incredible.
Gave some to my fiance and she's just like, what the heck?
Like it is, it kind of leaves us dumbfounded because we're like it's just ground beef why does it taste so much better um like i said in a previous podcast uh i went to costco
just to simply get ground beef for monster mash and they were completely out well now i'm just
going to get it straight from piedmontese and i don't have to go outside waiting all those crazy
lines uh and deal with just like the whole pandemic i'm just going to stay home and have
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Again, really think you guys are going to dig today's episode.
If you guys like it, please reach out to us on social media.
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Let us know what you guys think, and please enjoy the show.
I know.
No, I didn't go to that guy, but I wonder what guy I gave you.
I wonder where I tried to send you to.
Yeah.
Never ended up going.
My shoulder's feeling great.
That's good.
I go to Michelle Chu.
She's in Davis.
She's at Fithouse Davis.
I go there.
She does a great job.
What kind of body work is it exactly?
Is it just massaging or deep tissue stuff?
Yeah, it's kind of like ART type stuff, I guess you'd you'd say okay she doesn't really move you around that much though you know
usually active release is like they're working on your shoulder and they'll have you like you know
do rotator cuff stuff as they're working through it she doesn't have you move that much she's kind
of like digs in there and out of every chiropractor or any kind of body work I've ever gotten done, she can crack my neck better than anybody.
Oh, you've gone to her too?
Yeah.
And she does it weird.
Like normally you're either sitting up or you're laying on your back.
You're actually laying on your stomach.
And then she just picks your chin up and then just.
I'm like, huh.
So good.
Like I would pay just for that neck crack like every couple days.
She's great. Yeah. Maybe I should check out michelle chu i get it i get addicted to it you know i i stopped going for
a while just because like i don't know my luck runs out with how much free time i have or whatever
and then i stopped going but then i as soon as i get back on track with it i remember how good it
feels i'm like damn i need to go i, little things like just freeze up my hamstrings and stuff like that.
My hamstrings have been kind of tight from like running.
Yeah.
And you just leave there and you're like, I feel a million times better.
Why don't you come here all the time?
So I was actively doing that for a while, but I was also like beating the crap out of myself because I was still competing.
So it was, you know, she would just fix, you know,
stuff that I would break that week basically, you know,
and now it's more like maintenance item.
I don't really have any problems.
She could say, Hey, what's wrong?
And I could just say, ah,
this is like a little tight or this doesn't feel to be like optimal.
And then she can tweak that and that's much easier.
And then usually that doesn't get like, doesn't get again so like with my shoulder it totally felt stuck i was
doing some overhead presses yesterday i benched yesterday it didn't hurt at all during bench
but it just felt like it felt like it was real forward i felt like it was just like um like
interior you know like an interior uh rotation you know forward it felt like it was stuck that way
she worked on the back of it.
She worked on the front of it.
It feels good now.
I'm assuming now that you're like doing a lot of yoga, you're moving a little bit better,
that it's not, I guess when you go there, you do feel better, but it's not like so much
better like it was before, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, definitely.
Well, before there was like a lot of pain, you know, when she would work on stuff.
Now there's a lot less.
I mean, that's, that's a good indicator that you're pretty messed up when someone starts
pushing on you and everything hurts all the time.
That's a good indication that you're, you're probably kind of overdone.
You're kind of over, probably overtrained.
Maybe you're not sleeping well and maybe not hydrated.
Like you really shouldn't be in that state you know here and there to have that here
and there totally makes sense especially when you're trying to go you know you're trying to
go hard you're going to run into that but it shouldn't be too bad it shouldn't be it shouldn't
be but yeah i used to there was like two and a half years ago i had this around maybe three years
ago dr hannah used to go to this art guy like weekly or whatever but i was like i wasn't doing
too much like stretching and stuff on my own.
So when I started that, like I haven't been to one in a really long time.
I'd probably like if I went, if I went there, I'd probably see some improvement, but I'm curious how much I would actually see, you know, curious how much of a difference it would make.
I would say that people like they shouldn't really need it.
You know that your training should be such that it shouldn't be so screwed up that you're
messing yourself up all the time.
However, I do think, here's what I think.
I think that if you paid 30 bucks to lay down on a table for 30 minutes, you would get great
results from that.
You know what I mean?
Like if someone just said, Nsema, go lay over there.
Like go chill.
And you just laid down.
And even if somebody didn't even touch you,
I think you'd get great results even from that alone.
Explain that, please.
Well, just chilling out.
Just relaxing.
Just like, hey, go over there and relax.
And you're like by yourself.
This gives you some time to relax.
Although you're kind of talking to the therapist a little bit back and forth,
but it's super low stress. You are paying for something that you know that can be helpful,
like at least to your knowledge, it could be damaging. Who knows? But to your knowledge,
this is going to help enhance things that you're trying. You're trying to do something for
yourself. It's like a form of self-care, but you went out of your way to pay extra money for somebody else to assist you.
Because real self-care would be like you stretching before you go to bed or something like that.
You're assigning a value to it because you're like, to me, this is worth 60 bucks or 80 bucks or whatever the amount is that you pay.
And that's your value assignment.
Like, yep, I paid that because it's worth it.
And I did my thing for today, I'm good.
And I think it just almost automatically makes you feel better,
even if it didn't do anything.
In my opinion, it's sort of like when you go to the movie theaters
and you have the absolute best nap ever,
because you can't look at your phone because you don't want to be mean.
And then it's cold, and especially if there are seats that you can you know recline it's just
like in the movie theater just out oh my gosh the batman lego movie is the most amazing movie to
sleep to you make me so mad why yeah i hate people that sleep during movies in theaters like i'm like
you paid to be here why are you asleep i hate you so much right now me i think when you have kids it's like kind of
different sometimes a little bit yeah you go to like horrible movies on purpose getting like i'm
just gonna nap like this is gonna be amazing yeah i mean it's kind of like what mark's talking about
like i'm paying to have nobody bother me for the next you know whatever 90 minutes if it's a you
know hour and a half um and yeah it's it's
my time i paid for my one seat i can do what i want with it if it's a good enough movie that
doesn't bore me to sleep then i'll stay watching it and be you know stress-free or whatever or
i'll just pass out and get the best nap i've ever had it seems like you can sleep pretty good like
when we go on trips and stuff you just close your eyes but i don't know if you're actually
sleeping or not can you just fall asleep pretty easy on like you know on pretty good. When we go on trips and stuff, you just close your eyes. But I don't know if you're actually sleeping or not.
Can you just fall asleep pretty easy?
On the plane, I try to stay...
On the longer flights, I would sleep for maybe an hour or an hour and a half.
Then I'd wake up and I'd be able to start reading.
But I usually try to bring a book with me to read.
And it's like, once we get on the plane, I have to at least sleep for 30 minutes.
A book is a killer, man.
A book will put you to sleep right away.
It makes me so mad.
I'm like, fuck, I'm trying to read.
And I read the same page for eight minutes. I'm like, it i'm going to sleep it doesn't happen i was listening to it on the way back from columbus i was listening
to a joe dispensa audiobook i have no clue what any of it was talking about i would snap out of
it and he was talking about meditation yeah and then i'd snap out of it and he's talking about
something totally different i'm just like subconsciously i'm reading this book maybe something will click
one day and i will have no idea why i you know decided to do this instead of that it's probably
because like something in that book stuck with me but yeah i mean it's just i can't get like
restful sleep on a plane it's just like i doze off and then boom i'm back doze off oh okay at
worst they wake you up sometimes like hit you you or whatever, you know, like your arms
in the aisle.
Fucking hell, man.
You saw that happen to me so many times.
They nail you with the cart and stuff like that.
Shit, man.
Or sometimes they ask you a question and you're like, I was fucking sleeping.
And it's hard sometimes to fall asleep, you know?
Yeah, that or if, I don don't know somebody lets you borrow their
their iphone charger and with about two hours left of the flight in sema wake smoky up like
abruptly to not not softly it's emergency it wasn't abruptly smoky was exaggerating i saw it
it was like this it was like it was a nice tap shoulder. It was. I didn't hit him on the shoulder to wake him up.
It was enough to grab him and shake him.
Oh, God.
He wakes up smoking.
He's like, here's your charger.
He's just like, dude, I'm asleep.
Why are you giving it back to me?
It was a lapse in thought.
I literally wasn't thinking.
And after I gave it to him, I'm like, hmm, I could have waited until the end of the fight.
It's just funny because, dude, I totally get it, though.
We're so drained.
But it was just funny that, dude, I totally get it though. Like we're so drained. Like it's just, but it was just funny that it happened, you know?
Yo.
Okay.
Let's talk about this real quick. This was the first weekend or the first time in a long time where I was, uh, we, I don't
know, we were forced to sit for long periods of time.
And this was the first time that I actually started feeling some lower back pain.
Like, because of all that sitting i was like shoot like people sit this
much and i'm not having had lower back pain in a long long time because i'm usually standing when
i'm working i'm not sitting so much and that's like that's yo if you want to you want to give
yourself some self-care stand for more hours during the day i think it's really like the just
the opposite of like what you've been doing i think is going to be the thing that's going to
shock your body the most so if you had a job out of nowhere what you've been doing, I think, is going to be the thing that's going to shock your body the most.
So if you had a job out of nowhere where you're on your feet all day, you know, the same could be said.
Like your back might bother you because you're not used to that, you know.
But, yeah, in our case, man, when we're sitting down for a long time, we're on a plane, we're in a car.
I would imagine most people, too, when you're just not able to move for a long time, you're not able to just extend your hips and just be upright for a little while.
Yeah.
It feels terrible.
Mm-hmm.
You feel like rounded over, and plus we're on our phones, and your head's down,
and it just feels like death.
Yeah.
It was not good.
It was not good at all.
But feeling back to normal, back home, everything's good.
Yeah, they're starting to shut everything down.
NBA is shut down.
I think, you know, we're going to see all the schools be shut down shortly.
Just a matter of time, I think.
I mean, you got like spring break and stuff like that coming up.
One thing I do wonder is, let's just say, because there's no cure in sight.
So they don't have a vaccine,
and they're not going to have one for a while probably.
So what would they do?
Does everyone just graduate to the next grade?
If we go without school for a while,
I'm sure they would probably like,
hey, here's some extra work or whatever for the rest of the year.
But I would imagine that that's probably the natural progression. You were in 10th grade, now you're automatically in 11th grade because we had to
kind of shut it down. We don't really have a reliable way of like testing you and your parents
are going to be like, yeah, he's good to go, you know, and you're just going to, and I don't see
any harm in that. I don't, I don't think it really matters much, but it'd be interesting to kind of
see, yeah, what would they do? They're not going to put kids through summer school. They're not
going to make you, you know, restart 10th grade next year or whatever.
There's just no way. They can't even really, from a logistics standpoint, they can't even
really do that. And to do that to everyone's child, put their education on freeze by a year
would be really weird. So I think they don't have a choice but just to advance it, even if it doesn't
advance. I'd imagine there'd be some sort of like, okay you're in the 10th grade you have to pass this test to get to the 11th grade standardized
test that yeah that that thing there i know we have too much backlash nowadays though for something
like that that sounds kind of logical we have too much backlash nowadays for something like that to
exist because you're gonna be like timmy can't take that test because he you know he has trouble
math and you're gonna rely on math you know yeah why is timmy such a dick his parents too i was gonna say it's not so much timmy it's
his parents he's kind of a dick too though for being honest i give him the benefit of the doubt
but i yeah there's a lot of online courses like harvard um oh oh hello now oh there we go that
was weird that happened simultaneously what. What's up, Evan?
How you doing, man?
Great.
We're here.
It's happening.
Oh, my God.
Look at all these famous people you got behind you.
That's amazing.
This is where I operate.
This is the studio.
Hey, man, I just want to tell you that we really appreciate what you've been doing over the years
because you've created so many great videos.
You created so much great content.
And it's awesome to have that content and that knowledge kind of locked into one channel that you can conveniently go to.
So thank you so much for that.
Cool, man.
I mean, thank you.
Appreciate it.
How did all this kind of start? You know, if you can kind of walk us back to the beginning, like what this curiosity for,
you know, being better and then communicating that out to other people, like where did this start?
Yeah. Are we rolling already? We're rolling, son.
I love it, dude. This is fun. These guys don't mess around. This is going to be a fun one. I
love it. That's right. So listen, I think your purpose comes from your pain. I think whatever
you struggle the most with
is the thing you then want to help other people through.
And so I struggled a lot as an entrepreneur.
My first business, I was making no money,
was embarrassed and I wasn't working.
I was too afraid to ask my friends for help.
And so I really isolated myself and felt worthless.
I'm also a visual learner
and I'd rather see something
than just hear it or read it. And Bill Gates, his story saved my company. And so as I
turned my company around, sold it, became a venture capitalist, all that kind of stuff.
I've now, what have I done? I learned from Bill Gates and now for the past 20 years,
I've just been teaching other people how to model success
and apply it to their own life and business as well.
What was it you learned from Bill Gates specifically that helped?
So I had a software company.
It was biotech software, early stage drug discovery.
And we were not making any money.
I'm making 300 bucks a month.
And I told my partner that I quit.
And I woke up the next day. It's like, I can't quit. It was the worst day of my life. I'm going to regret a month. And I told my partner that I quit. And I woke up the next
day. It's like, I can't quit. It was the worst day of my life. I'm going to regret it if I don't
keep going. And I said, there's got to be somebody who's figured this out. How do you sell software?
Somebody's done this. I can't be this stupid. Somebody's got to figure this out. And I just
thought of Bill Gates. He was the only guy I could think of who was in software who had a big company.
And so I was like, how did Bill Gates get started get started zero to one not how he makes an extra million dollars
now right like he makes a million dollars every second doing nothing probably now but like zero
to one how did he get going and for him it was partnerships so uh microsoft really blew up when
they made their deal with ibm so ibm had all the computers out and Microsoft became the default software on
all the IBMs.
And that's the thing that blew them up.
But Microsoft was already a $7 million company when they made the deal with
IBM.
Now that's not huge,
but it was 7 million more than what I had at the time.
And so like,
how did they get the 7 million?
So I went and researched their story deeper and it was still through more partnerships. So finding other people to partner with. And so
I said, okay, I don't know. I got nothing else to lose. I've already quit. I got to at least try
this Hail Mary pass. I'm going to try doing some partnerships. And I landed my first partnership
deal that paid me 13 and a half thousand bucks, which may not sound like a ton of money, but I'm making $300 a month.
There's no momentum.
I thought I was rich.
And more importantly, it gave me a model I could do again and again and again.
So I landed more partnerships and closed deals with companies around the world.
And that's what kind of helped blow up my company.
And ever since then, whenever I don't know what to do,
I said, somebody's figured this out.
I don't have to be the genius, model success and apply it.
And what I've tried to teach other people how to do as well through my content.
How did that evolve into kind of like exactly what you're doing now with your content,
like from owning that business to now, you said you've been doing this type of thing as taking, you know, grabbing content from famous people and putting it out there. What spurred that? Like, how did you get into doing all of this?
So the early days of my YouTube, so I've been on YouTube for almost 11 years now.
The first video is me telling the story of Walt Disney. And my early videos were telling the
stories of famous people who I couldn't get. I mean, there's no clips, very few clips of Disney.
There's a couple,
but,
um,
I was telling her story and how they had success.
My first like top 10 mashup video was on Kanye West and he's on,
he's on my wall,
you know,
back there in the corner.
Uh,
because my friend for over a decade,
Mark Drager made this blog post about kanye and taylor swift
when the but it's like years after that whole thing happened right he's like can we move on
i mean kanye does kanye things but it bothered me that people didn't want to learn from kanye yeah
like kanye's a genius i agree you can learn a ton him, but it's overshadowed by the antics that he does.
And people are always trying to get him in moments.
And he often rises to the bait and takes it.
And it becomes his viral clip.
It's like, dude won more awards than anybody at his age.
He went from being a Beats producer to a rapper to an entrepreneur.
You guys know John Legend?
Yeah.
Right?
Like legendary singer but his
name isn't john legend his name is john stevens oh and john stevens and kanye are friends which
already seems weird like john legend seems like the nicest human of all time right so humble and
nice and then kanye like how are how are these guys friends? So first off, they're friends.
Second, they're sitting in a bar in Chicago when John Stevens is getting his start.
And John Stevens says to Kanye, I feel like I'm an old soul.
Like, I don't belong in this era.
My voice is more like Sinatra era.
I belong to a different generation.
And Kanye says, dude, you should call yourself the legend.
And John Stevens says, I can't call myself the legend. Like, what if it doesn't work out? I'm just getting started.
And he convinced John Stevens to call himself John Legend, right? So now you may hate Kanye.
You may think he's the biggest XYZ of all time. Awesome. But are you as good a friend to your friends like kanye is to
john legend right so i made the first top 10 video basically just as a as a as a in your face to my
friend mark drager say mark go watch his video and learn from kanye west and it was just this
one-off thing but then people loved it and said hey can you do dame dash hey can you do jay-z hey
can you do oprah hey can you do it was like okay yeah cool why not i i'd love to learn from these people as
well so it turned from me just telling their stories to to then also trying to grab clips
and every one that we make is meant to be a tribute right if i made a top 10 stupidest
moments of kanye that'd be easy and and would probably blow up. People would much rather
listen to negativity and poking fun at people than actually try to get inspired and do something
positive. But it's not, I mean, it'd make me feel gross. It's not what I want to create.
So it's like, this is what I've learned from Kanye. And I hope that you can learn,
if there's 10 things here, maybe one or two things you can apply to your life and get better.
here, maybe one or two things you can apply to your life and get better. And so we try to condense,
you know, hours and hours and hours into 15 minutes of, of knowledge and motivation,
inspiration to help you go off and build a better life.
How do you, uh, build all this up without driving yourself crazy, you know, because personal development is fun. Um, but you can also make yourself a little bit nutty with it. So,
uh, how have you been able to execute on this,
put these videos together and then maybe still have time for other things and
to be like a rational person and not fall too deep into like,
everything's got to be focused in on being a better person 24 seven.
So I think balance is a very personal question.
You got to figure out what your version of balance looks like for you right i look at you guys and like you got your stacked guns and and like
that's not me right there it is right like you value that a lot more than i do because i don't
look like that right i could but it's going to take me a lot of time in the gym to get there
right and so i look i look at you know du Dwayne Johnson, for example, and he needs to work out like four hours a day.
So when he's on set, he wakes up five hours early so that he can work out and two times cardio and two times weights.
And then he showers and goes to his set.
I think that's crazy.
But I don't look like Dwayne Johnson, right?
I mean, you get what you want. So I think you should be crazy. I think you should be crazy all in on your life and what that means
to you. And if I stepped into your life, it should be torture for me, right? Like the time that you
spend in the gym, I'm going to die. Like, this is the worst thing of, I hate my life. If I stepped
into your life, right. And it should be the same for me. Like if you're jumping into my life and you're doing the work I'm doing, it should be
torture for you. But it's not torture for me because I love it, right? I'm doing my thing.
So we judge ourselves on balance and what that looks like against other people's definitions.
It's like, hey, if you're happy, if you love going to the gym and you love sleeping 10 hours a day
and you love making podcasts and you love like whatever your version of balance is awesome go live it you know i think
that's one of the reasons why i like the the top 10 videos that you put out a lot because like you
put out a top 10 on oprah on duane johnson on kobe or whatever right and you'll watch those videos
but the great thing is that you'll like i think there was a time when i was trying to figure out
better ways to be a better communicator.
And I saw your top 10 on Oprah.
And there's a lot of things on interviewing and communication in there.
And I took a few things from that.
I was like, oh, that's really, really dope.
Just like you said that you learned from Bill Gates.
You took some things that he had and you inserted into your life.
And I think that's super powerful because, I mean, there might not be, you know, I might look at the things that
you do and I might not do everything that you do because I'm just like, I can't manage that.
But there might be a few things that can actually change the way I operate and change my life.
Yeah. And I mean, that's the goal, I think, with my channel, but also in-person development,
because your goal isn't to be the next Oprah, it's to be the best you, right? And so this is
my office here and I got on my right, Steve Jobs,
and on my left, I got a picture of me
when I'm eight or nine years old
and my parents above me.
And I like this contrast
because I don't want to be a father like Steve Jobs.
He wasn't that great a father, right?
I want to be a father like my father was,
but I don't want to be a visionary like my father
because he's not a visionary,
but Steve Jobs is right. And so like you, you pull different things. You might hate Steve
Jobs for all these things. I hate yay. Right. But like you could learn from him and throw away the
98% of the stuff that doesn't serve you and just hang on to the two and use that to be better.
Has it ever been unhealthy for you to model yourself after somebody or have you,
you felt like you've been executing that pretty well?
I don't think I would say unhealthy.
I would say it doesn't quite fit.
So when you're modeling somebody, I feel like you're trying on their hat.
And the hat doesn't quite fit.
It serves the purpose of having a hat and protecting you from the sun or whatever, and you'll get some momentum.
But it's not quite you.
And so you've got to make tweaks and adjustments.
Right.
And so that's why I like the exposure to more people.
So, you know, I love Young Les Brown as an example.
Young Les Brown is my hero as a speaker.
He's the best for me.
I can't be young les brown like the way that he speaks and delivers and the stories that he tells isn't me but i could take little pieces of it
but i think the first step is to emulate like if you guys are launching this show uh episode one
great you're gonna look at joe rogan and you're gonna look at tim ferris you're gonna look at
whatever other interviewers oprah larry king and you're going to look at Tim Ferriss. You're going to look at whatever other interviewers, Oprah, Larry King, and you're going to take
their questions. You say, ooh, Oprah asked that question. I love that. We're going to ask that
question. But along the way, you're going to figure out, you know what? That question doesn't
quite work and we want to inject this one in. You find your style, but they get you a massive
head start. They take you 80% of the way and then you just got to tweak that last 20%
to make it your own.
I don't know if I've ever seen anything like this
on your channel before
and maybe you have described it in some fashion,
but what's the best way to consume your products?
What's the best way to like learn
how to like actually utilize your products?
I'm sure you probably have a lot of analysis paralysis
type people that learn a lot
from you and they get this great understanding, but then unfortunately they're still kind of
nervous or scared to really implement some of what you're saying. So have you ever talked about that?
Like how do you take some of the stuff that you present and then put it into action?
So I like how that question transitioned because you said, how do you consume?
But now it moved towards creation.
So, I see it as a spectrum.
Step one is most people are, what are they consuming?
They're consuming entertainment.
They're consuming Netflix and sports and that's great.
But when you can shift the amount of consumption from entertainment to education is step one.
So, I'm going to now spend less time just on entertainment content. the amount of consumption from entertainment to education is step one. Right.
So I'm going to now spend less time just on entertainment content.
Doesn't mean stop watching your favorite sports teams or whatever,
but you're shifting your consumption from entertainment to education.
But a problem a lot of people make is consuming educational content is not
enough.
Right. Like you guys don't look like you do because you watched a video about how to do a bench press. consuming educational content is not enough. Right?
Like you guys don't look like you do because you watched a video about how to
do a bench press,
right?
Like you got to get in and actually do the bench press.
You got to actually do the curls.
You got to actually do the work.
You can't read about doing the curls and feel like that's enough.
But what I love doing is I think it's,
it's the consistency that matters.
I think people will watch something or to listen to your show or watch this
video.
They might get inspired in the moment and do something,
but it's,
it's not consistent enough.
But what I do know is that if you,
if you got,
how many episodes do you guys have of your show?
About 400 or something.
I like three 45,
three 45.
If somebody started right now and consumed one of your show about 400 or something like 345 345 if somebody started right
now and consumed one of your episodes for the next 400 days or 365 there'll be a different person by
the end of 365 you're gonna you can't help it because because these guys are gonna pull you up
you're gonna learn you're gonna push more you may not notice it on a day-to- basis, but you'll notice it looking three months back or six months back or when you're just like
going to the gym. When you lift, you're not feeling anything from day to day, but you look
back on the gains in the past three months like, man, look at how much I've grown, right? It's the
same thing with personal growth. So what I'm trying to do is get as many different voices
in people's heads on a daily basis so that if you're around Steve jobs every day and Oprah every day
and yay every day and whoever every day,
it's always a positive message for me,
right?
It's never deflating or negative or making fun of people.
It's always something inspirational that I personally learned from.
You can't help but grow.
You can't help but start to want a better life,
to start to take action towards it
if you've got all these successful people
in your ear every day.
What about patience?
You're saying that you want people
to try on different hats and...
Wait, who's this guy?
This is great.
Sorry, dude.
Coming in from the side.
I've been the one that's been in communications
with you and your team.
So what's up, dude?
Thanks for hanging out with us today.
Sorry for the abrupt change in cameras and stuff. No it uh so anyway yeah like uh so how much patience do you like have people
or do you want people to have because if you're saying you know trying a couple different hats
and you try one on it doesn't really fit how much of that is like oh well shit i i want to be like
mark bell but his his hat really doesn't really fit me because I can't wake up at four. I can't work
out every day. I can't work on my own business. It's almost like I'd be making excuses at that
point why I don't want to work hard. But really, it's just maybe I'm just not quite there yet,
right? I think people need to flip patience and impatience. I think we're patient about the wrong
things and impatient about the wrong things. So most people are very patient with themselves,
but impatient with the results.
I want to get big.
I want to work out.
I want to look buff like that.
I want to have a successful podcast.
I want to write.
You want the results,
but then you let yourself off the hook all the time.
Like,
I'll start tomorrow.
You know,
I start on Monday.
Right.
So you're patient with,
I want you to flip it. I want you to have insane impatience with yourself like today matters like today i'm going to lift
as much as i can like today i'm going to reach out to as many guests as possible today i'm going
to make my myself proud of the effort but then having patience with the results so i think i
think both are important i just think most people have it flipped that's huge let me ask this because um i've like i've been paying attention to your channel for a
while and recently i started seeing some of the young like pulling up uh video footage and quotes
and stuff from the younger version of all these individuals um what's like i guess what spurred
you to want to get into that realm because when you think so when some people think about it
they're like they see the end product and they're like i want to learn from
the end product so what what's with the you know focus on the younger version of a lot of these
notable individuals yeah so um i mean appreciate that so i started a new channel called starting
from the bottom and we're trying to find the earliest interview clip of all the people that you know and love and like.
So we, you know, Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos,
and we just did Jay-Z and Grant Cardone and all these guys.
And I'm trying to find the earliest, youngest version of them and sharing it
because I think it's inspirational.
I get inspired when I see Jeff Bezos do his first interview
and how awkward he is and how nervous he is
and like how much it sucked.
It gives me hope.
It's like,
man,
if he went from that to being like the richest human on earth,
there's hope.
This is amazing.
Right.
Um,
the Jay Z one that we just put up recently,
he was talking about just creating Rockefeller betting on himself.
Stop letting the,
you know,
the,
the record labels dictate the money and
who gets paid but he had no distribution yet like he hadn't figured out how he was going to do it
but you get to see him in dream mode and then actually like doing it his mindset when he was
pitching it and nobody believed in him right now jay jay-z doesn't do that many interviews and and he's so
cool calm collected and like looking back on the glory days is great but like you get to see him
in the prime when nobody believed in him and he was taking that bet on himself i don't know i love
that so you could see i love being able to see how people got started you can see it 100 in his like
body language even that he's kind of tense.
He's in a fight.
He's got to explain himself the entire time.
And he's like, I'm going to prove myself to the world.
F all these people.
I'm going to take all this on.
You can see that in the way that he talks, even though he was polite and he was kind.
He didn't seem like he had a problem, but it did seem like he had a massive chip on his shoulder and he had something to prove.
And that's awesome.
And I think that that's great because if you ask somebody to reflect on their success, they're going to give you a much different story because they just it's impossible to really give you the truth.
Yeah.
It's why I still have all my videos up on my channel.
So you can go back.
I got 6000 videos on my main channel. I can see like April 2009.
My first video uploaded. I'm sitting down. videos on my main channel. I can see like April 2009, my first video uploaded.
I'm sitting down.
I'm in a suit.
I'm sweating.
I'm nervous.
I had way more hair, you know, all this stuff.
And it's embarrassing to go.
Like if I go back and watch like, oh my gosh, it's so bad.
And you can see me trying to memorize the lines.
But I keep it up there to show the journey, right? Like to see where I got started because it's,
it's often easy for people to look at you guys and say, man,
look at these, they're crushing it.
They know what they're doing, but you're also 400 episodes in,
like go back in episode one.
You didn't know what you were doing.
So I like showing the early stages because I think it gives people
inspiration and hope to say like, if that's where they started and here's where they're at, I can do it, too.
You look like you're in good shape.
You know, I've been following you for a long time and it looks like you're in better shape now than you've ever been.
Can you contribute that to the Doritos that are in the background over there?
Oh, you're going to love this.
So I have a strategy called Dan the Doritos.
So, well, we'll see.
We'll see what you guys think of this. So I think when people are on a diet,
the common advice is get
rid of the junk food from your house.
Clear out your house, clear out your fridge, clear out your
cabinet of all the junk food, right?
I think that's you telling yourself
that you suck.
You're telling yourself, I'm not
capable of being around junk food.
I suck. And so what ends up happening is you go to an office party you go on vacation you go on a cruise or whatever what are
you doing you're stuffing your face because you taught yourself that unless you're in your perfect
environment yeah nothing happens and so uh i love doritos my mouth is watering just like look at
these i'm getting excited just seeing the bag through the camera.
This is the giant
size Doritos.
That bag's bigger than your whole body.
It's like the Costco half-human
size bag of Doritos.
But that's
my weakness. My mouth is watering so much
right now because I just want to eat that bag.
But I want to tell myself
that I'm stronger than the
doritos got it because damn the doritos i like that and the doritos so these things stay in my
office all the time uh and and like if somebody's eating cookies or doritos or whatever i'll i'll
take their bag of doritos and this the sweet chili spicy, like the purple bag one. That's my real jam. I'll take it,
take their bag, bring it up to my nose. Oh my gosh. Just like, be careful. That causes
an insulin response. Just enjoy. Can it really? I didn't know. Yeah, it absolutely can.
Does it really? Wow. I didn't know that. So, but I'll still do it.
And then I'll put the bag down and walk away.
And then in my head, it's like, I am the greatest human on this planet.
You mastered it.
You're not worried about it anymore.
Damn the Doritos, man.
I think you have to teach yourself that you do difficult things.
Are you worried about the day that people find out that you did all this for selfish reasons just to advance yourself?
No.
I'm just messing with you.
Okay.
Well, in my advancement is everybody else's advancement.
100%.
100%.
So I think the greatest thing you can do is build your own confidence.
I think we need more self-talk about I'm awesome.
I think the problem is people feel like they suck.
And that's a problem.
And so you change the inner dialogue by doing difficult things,
by saying damn the Doritos.
And so I apply this to everything.
People say don't hit the snooze, so take the phone and put it out into the kitchen.
My contemporaries, Mel Robbins and other are saying like put the phone in the kitchen
my weird duck brain says that's you telling yourself that you suck like if i even thought
about that i need to have the phone right next to me and i just get up just because
you have the self-control to do it that way.
You build the self-control.
Right.
Like it would bother me so much that the Doritos bag is stronger than me.
It would bother me so much that I'd have to go off and do it.
And you start in micro steps, right?
Like you don't just go off and do the most difficult thing, maybe if you're capable.
But you start in these micro steps, and it starts to build.
Just like when you go to the gym, you're not lifting 400 pounds right away.
You're starting with a five-pound dumbbell.
You doing anything in particular with exercise?
Guys, I really want to get back into it.
I broke my neck in two spots on my tour last year and had a concussion.
This guy broke his neck for you people.
You know, come on.
And I stayed on tour.
I was on tour in Colorado.
Everybody says go home.
Like, I'm not going home.
I'm going to do my tour with a concussion and a broken neck.
And I sat there at the front for four hours
with pillows and ice packs on me doing Q&A and doing my workshops.
But that's the greatest
part of the whole tour right like how often do you actually get pushed to your max yeah
very rarely right so even if i failed and sucked like even knowing that this was my the greatest
day on my tour was when my wife pulled me off in kansas city because it was it was three days after
my concussion. Uh,
and I still went and did it.
I refunded everybody the money for the workshop and said,
Hey,
I'm going to be here anyway,
guys,
like let's come hang out and ask you questions.
And she pulled me after an hour and a half.
Cause I was like blanking out and going to pass out.
That's the greatest moment of my life.
Like that's the physical max.
I had nothing left in the tank and I got pulled
off a stage. I'm so pumped for that. What's the best, what's the best two or three things that
you've learned, you know, in studying all these giants over the years? It's the belief that you're
capable of great things. The belief that you are the best in the world at something like you are
Michael Jordan at something. What is that thing and it's
probably not what your parents did or what you went to school for or what's happening right now
with the people around you but the belief like a lot of the people who i profiled and have won
had no business winning like you guys have no business making a podcast and making this show
happening like the use from 10 years ago five
years ago see you're not doing this right you have no business being here and yet you're here
right and so it's just the belief that it's possible that separates so many people with
so much talent that never go anywhere because they don't believe in themselves i think it's
the world's biggest problem and that's what i'm trying to solve every day with everything I make. I love it, man. Where can people find out more
about you and where can they get ahold of some of your books and stuff like that?
Books, Amazon, easiest spot. Just look up Evan Carmichael. The new one's called Built to Serve.
Otherwise, I'm Evan Carmichael on every social media platform. I'm probably hanging out where
you're hanging out. Awesome, man. Thank you so much. That was incredible. And again, we really appreciate
it. If people haven't seen your channel before, they really need to go and check it out. They've
been kind of living under a rock, in my opinion. But whenever I'm looking to advance myself and
look stuff up, I end up using your channel all the time. You know,
I would search for stuff. I used to Google search stuff and that wouldn't work so great.
Then I'd shift over to YouTube and then you became more popular on YouTube. And that was super helpful because like, oh, Evan's got a top five on this guy. He's got a top 10 on that guy.
Oh, let me check this out. And it's just been a huge wealth of knowledge. So I really appreciate
what you've been doing. Cool, guys. I love love the energy listen episode 1000 let's do it again yeah all right good yeah all right man
have a great rest of your day and uh have fun with those doritos much love guys thank you thank you
cheers whose stomach was that at the very end might have been mine that was me that was you
yeah maybe it's maybe it's ours growling at each other. Nope.
No.
Okay, not now.
You know, Howard Stern, Howard Stern, every once in a while, like when his show would get too serious, he's like, let me get back to the basics.
And he would just fart into the microphone.
He would just let him go.
So we're going to have to save some of those for the show, too.
But yeah, no, it was awesome having Evan on here.
He's amazing.
And it shouldn't have been any surprise but
he was uh insanely intelligent i mean as we started talking i was like whoa like this guy
has thought he's not just putting together these videos you know he's thinking about a lot of this
stuff and uh it's very clear that a lot of the stuff's sinking in yeah for somebody who claims
that he doesn't like to speak to people like the way he just did.
Dude, his like.
He was great.
What's it called?
Enthusiasm?
That too, but like his cadence.
I'm just like, holy shit, dude, like just keep going.
You know, like I just want to like keep going.
This is amazing audio and it just like hits perfect every time.
People who aren't into public speaking or even into like rapping and stuff won't understand like what i'm talking about but it's like i'm working on it too and when it's like game recognized game like i can
see that like oh shit that's why people pay attention to them like or one of the reasons
why people pay attention to them i'll just blown away it's like holy shit this is great well if you
think about doing over 6 000 videos and he speaks at some point all of them like he's had a lot of experience behind
the camera a lot of just a lot of reps let's just put it that way an insane amount of reps it's
amazing i loved the impatience versus patience point that he answered in terms of your question
that was huge that was a great way to look at it i've never heard anybody say it that way
yeah and mark has said stuff like similar just a different verbiage, but that was so plain, simple, easy
to follow for anybody.
Yeah.
You know, like don't wait till Monday, right?
Let's just go right now.
Be patient with your results.
Yes.
Be impatient with yourself.
Be impatient in terms of taking action.
So start that shit now.
But as the ball's rolling, just give that shit time.
I like what he said about how hard it would be to step into somebody else's life.
And I think that's really important because, you know, let's, let's just say, um, uh, let's just
say someone's like an electrician, right. And they have a job where they got to like check wires and
shit like that. Right. And let's just say that you stepped into that world and you did that.
Like if you just did it for one day, it probably wouldn't be that big of a deal.
But if you did it for like six weeks, you know, my cousin, he used to wake up at like
three in the morning, be on the road by four, drive into New York City every single day.
And then he was, he managed like JFK, which is just absolutely enormous.
And I mean, could you imagine like, so again,
like, like doing that and then learning someone says, Hey, this wire, you know,
has this many volts and we got to check these lights. And it's like, that wouldn't be that
bad. You would learn it as you go, you would take consume some of the information, but imagine how
hard that would be to be doing that every day to try to figure out like where your lunch is going
to come from, when you're going to eat, uh, when you're going to get home because trying to commute back home is hard
because you're fighting traffic and you can just see how difficult it is.
That might be a job that sounds fairly simple,
but now it all of a sudden becomes very hard because that's not your life.
That's not your interest.
You would be exhausted.
Like I would just like, yeah, i would be miserable trying to do that or even how about a job that even might be sound even easier like what about being like a
postal worker you just deliver the mail it's like hey you look at the thing and then it's like oh
that's the address okay i get out of my truck and i deliver the mail it sounds sounds simple but
imagine doing that for like a week none of us would last i mean
people's mail would be all fucked up yeah you know like we we would be we would be hurting so i
thought that that was amazing it's gonna be crazy to step into anybody's life i think the big thing
when i when i think about that is um the the ability to adapt that we all have that ability
to get better and adapt at something because smoky yesterday, he was asking me how many times I trained Jiu-Jitsu a week.
And I was like, oh, like six to eight.
He's like, oh, shit.
But then I was like, well, when I first started, I remember I was only training twice a week.
And that in itself was difficult at the time.
So now people are asking me, how do you do that so much?
Because I was slowly able to build myself up to training that much.
So if you step into trying to do what somebody is doing right now, they talk about it and you try to do that exact thing, it's going
to be hell, you know, just actually, yeah, it's exactly like he said, like him trying to work out
as much of us, it's going to, it's going to be hell. But if he were to start working out slowly
and slowly build up to the training frequency that we might have, it would be something he'd
be able to do. I fully believe he'd be able to train as much as we do if he built up to it.
Think about, you know, when we talk about fasting, like we love fasting,
we like talking about it, but we also urge people like if you haven't really tried it much,
it's not a bad idea to try it for a day, try like a 16 hour fast rate just to see if you can do it as like a challenge. But for you to think that you're going to do 20 hour fast consistently out
of nowhere, it's probably not a great idea, especially if you're not used to dieting, if you're not used to the
foods.
You're going to find yourself three weeks down the road probably weighing 20 pounds
more than you ever did before because you were in such restriction.
You know, and I love what he talked about with the foods being around.
Yeah, that doesn't, that kind of stuff doesn't bug me.
It doesn't bother me when I see other people like eating stuff.
I mean, occasionally, you know, occasionally you're hungry and you catch a smell of a certain But this kind of stuff doesn't bug me. It doesn't bother me when I see other people eating stuff.
I mean, occasionally you're hungry and you catch a smell of a certain food.
You're like, ah, that would be kind of nice to dive into that.
But it's interesting people's different takes on things.
I can have whatever food I want in my house.
It doesn't bother me.
My kids have stuff that's a little bit different.
My wife has stuff that's a little bit different. My wife has stuff that's a little bit different and it doesn't really, I see cereal and stuff like that in there, but I'm so over it that it doesn't matter. Now, if we had stuff that really
interests me, that might be a little bit more dangerous. Like if we had like peanut butter
cups in the house or something like there's certain things that I'm, I might fold on if I am broken down, you know, from a couple of days of like, you know, long hours in the gym, a lot of hard workouts, kind of a culmination of things.
And then there's like one of two things could happen.
You have, you know, quote unquote, a bad day and or you have an amazing day.
And you're like, today was amazing.
I'm going to have fucking peanut butter cup.
Or you're like, you know what? Today really kind was amazing. I'm going to have fucking peanut butter cup. Or you're like, you know what?
Today really kind of sucked.
I'm going to have a glass of wine and those peanut butter cups are pretty good.
Right.
It's like either way, you know, and he's trying not to let those emotions carry you.
But I love what he said about, you know, don't really worry too much about the environment that you're in.
It shouldn't have to be perfect for you to do the best job that you can.
You know, I was actually curious about this when you, when you were mentioning all of that.
Do you remember a few years ago, like when you were having all these other foods in the house,
would you have had that same control, even if it wasn't peanut butter cups? Like if it was
different types of food, would you still be able to just hold yourself back from it?
I was usually pretty good with it. Oh, okay. Yeah. I was usually pretty good with it. Cause
you know, you just have to keep in in mind like my story is so different.
I started lifting so young and I understood the protein side of things from a real early age.
So everything was always like protein first.
I was always like, where am I going to get my protein?
Even sometimes when I would have like a cheat day.
Like I used to have like a cheat weekend, which is funny to think about now because I would get so fat off of that nowadays. But I'd have like a cheat day. Like I used to have like a cheat weekend, which is funny to think about now because I would get so fat off of that
nowadays,
but I'd have like a cheat weekend.
And even when I would do that,
he was always protein first.
Like I would even have,
I might like go somewhere and get pizza.
But even before I drove there,
I would have like a protein shake,
you know?
And I don't know,
maybe that helped because maybe it helped me eat less or something,
but I was always very protein minded.
So even when the kids had snacks, I'm not really – somewhere along the lines, I learned that snacking is just – it's just not intelligent.
Like, it's just not – it's not very smart, you know, and I'm not – you're not going to really see me with, like, a handful of, like, goldfish or something, you know, little snack foods that you might see kids with.
I mean, that would just be – like, I can't even think of the last time.
I mean, I would say like about maybe like five years ago,
I was with Jesse Burdick and we were,
my wife and I went on a vacation somewhere.
We were in some beach city.
I can't remember where it was, like Santa Cruz or something like that.
Jesse came up and we spent some time together and, you know,
I was still in the middle of power lifting or whatever. And had some of these like pretzels those thin those thin uh
pretzel things that are perfect for like dipping and he and i went through like a whole a whole
thing of those and like two tubs of kerrygold butter i knew it was gonna turn into this because
we just kept dipping we just kept dipping it into butter and uh it was like the best tasting thing
ever but literally that's the last time I can remember eating something like that.
Yeah.
Was it like the Gardetto, like, chip, like, pretzel things?
Like, they're like real dark brown?
I don't know what they're called, but they're really thin.
They're like a chip.
Super crunchy, right?
Yeah, it's like a chip, but it's a pretzel.
Those are good.
What are those called?
They come in a bunch of different flavors.
They have, like, an everything one, and they have, yeah and they have yeah we were like dude like we just ate two things wait are they
kind they're not round right these things no oh those are delicious those are really good buy some
of those there is this pretzel how about the mustard ones those are good golden mustards are
so good yeah there's this pretzel snack that's like round and there's a bunch of different
flavors and they have seasonings and stuff i used to i used to fucking love those maybe now i'm are so good yeah there's this snack that's like round and there's a bunch of different flavors
and they have seasonings and stuff i used to i used to fucking love those maybe now i'm starting
to think that snacking is a much smarter idea than i originally thought did you ever have a bagel dog
i don't think so so good a bagel weenie can you type that in yeah it's incredible what's gonna
come up oh i know right i do have to commend you on your self-control at Hyde Park when we were all partaking in the pretzel bread, right, Andrew?
Oh, yeah.
That pretzel bread.
I know, and I got a soft spot for pretzels.
I love pretzels.
That thing right there.
Oh, hey now.
It looks kind of lewd.
I don't know if I'm allowed to do that.
I'm married.
So basically, it's a hot dog, but it's wrapped in a bagel bun.
It is insane.
It's called a pig in a blanket, right?
I think so, yeah.
But it's just, I don't know.
It's a larger version.
I think so.
It's so good.
It's an uncircumcised hot dog.
Yeah.
It's got a turtleneck.
There's a hot dog place in Davis. An eatercised hot dog? Yeah. There's a... It's got a turtleneck. There's a hot dog place in Davis.
It's an anteater of a hot dog.
Yeah.
An anteater snout.
There's a hot dog place in Davis called the Hot Dogger, and it's been there for a long time.
And when Charlie was working here, we went there and we got like a hot dog or whatever
and like i ordered like one or two but he ordered like four of them i don't know if you've ever seen
this guy eat oh yeah but man he just devours food like he's like in a contest or something
he gets it like spicy he gets chili on there he's got all this cheese and i was like dude i'm like you are gonna shit
yourself like something horrible you can't no one gets a free pass to eat that kind of food like
you're gonna feel so sick and he's always talking about his uh acid reflux you know and i'm like
dude like this is gonna this is gonna kill your stomach you know he wolfs it down he's like oh my
god he's like i'm totally he's like, and it's not even like the summertime.
He's like sweating.
He's trying to like suck down soda and stuff,
and it's like only making it worse.
He was just a mess.
He ended up throwing up.
He ended up puking.
And then blaming it on probably my acid reflux.
But when we first moved to this location,
which is very close to Ikea, jokingly one day,
I'm like,
ah,
dude,
we should go to Ikea for lunch one day.
And then one day he's like,
so you're ready to go.
I'm like,
like,
all right,
let's do this.
And same thing.
We just,
I mean,
I Ikea hot dogs are like a quarter.
I don't know what they cost,
right there.
We got,
we got way too many of them.
Oh wow.
We got those pizza,
everything there.
And yeah,
just,
uh, we, both of us the next day, we're like And yeah, just, uh,
we,
both of us the next day were like,
dude,
like I don't feel good at all.
We just got so sick from it, but it was fun.
Cause it was like,
you know,
like 10 pounds worth of food for like two bucks.
Yeah.
You know,
go ahead,
go for it.
I really,
uh,
I really liked that.
Damn the Doritos thing.
That's tough,
but yeah,
I like it.
I think, okay, maybe it's tough, but yeah, I like it. I think,
okay,
maybe it's not something that everyone should implement right now.
Maybe not the best idea to take your,
for me,
it would probably be getting like a,
a box of double stuffed Oreos.
Cause I really like Oreos.
Right.
Um,
and just putting it by me,
that would be it.
But I don't know if I have,
I don't know if I've trusted myself.
I think I could hold off,
but I like the idea of like just seeing it there and being like, fuck you.
I'm not going to eat you.
Peace out.
It's like training.
It shows you that people don't know what's uncomfortable for them.
We talk about, oh, you've got to be a little uncomfortable.
And I don't always agree with that principle 100% and working your weak points and stuff.
I'm not a huge fan of too much of. Cause I think that leaning on your strengths, I mean, that's, I see a lot of
very successful people just kind of leaning into their strengths. And of course, you know, if you
have issues with communication or you have some of these, these are things you pick up over the
years and you get better at those things and you practice some of it. But I think that in general,
we just don't even know what's uncomfortable for us. So for me to say,
hey, man, you know, you got to be uncomfortable to be comfortable or what am I referencing? Like,
am I referencing doing an extra set in the gym or an extra rep? It's like, well,
that's what you do all the time. So that shouldn't be that hard. Now, if I was referencing it to be the opposite of something that I do, like go get a library card and spend time researching and reading stuff in the library, well, then that would be an example of trying to be really uncomfortable.
But in this situation, I think people are thinking that they're like hardcore or disciplined with their diet.
like hardcore or disciplined with their diet but this requires a whole other discipline because now you're like kind of intentionally trying to mess with yourself i wonder what like the science
would say on something like that like in terms of psychology um let's say that you took it a step
further and just always had like m&ms out you, if you normally don't eat that way, I guess it probably wouldn't bother you.
You had a cookie jar.
You got some M&Ms out all the time.
You know, like if we had them here in the office,
we know that they would just be eaten all the time.
We've done that with fruit.
We'll buy fruit and it just gets eaten.
Meanwhile, people aren't like stopping on their way to work to grab fruit.
But if it happens to be here, they go for it.
They've even seen like with water, you know, they're just trying to get people to drink more water.
If they have, they could have free water, but if it's like off in the corner, people aren't going to tend to drink it that often.
But if they want people to hydrate a little bit better, they'll just put it out, you know, they'll put it out in front of them.
You know, you kind of see, I guess, out of sight, out of mind, you know, the grocery
store uses a lot of these tricks.
The outside of the grocery store is supposed to be kind of a safe place.
But when you go to check out, that's where like the candy and some of those things are
and they're like, they're staring you down, you know, right as you're about to leave.
So I find it all very, I find it all very interesting, you know, walking by that case
at a Starbucks and walking by, you know, walking by the case, you know, when you're at Phil's
Coffee in these places and, you know, you see these donuts and bagels and you see all
this stuff.
Maybe, maybe this is a faster way to condition yourself to not worry about that stuff.
I don't know.
It's interesting.
I think it would end up having that effect.
I think like if,
especially if it's next to you and you're,
you're every single day,
you're looking at it and making decision not to,
and continuously looking at it and making the decision not to.
I feel like for some people who have that problem,
if that's actually a problem for you,
I think it would actually help them out a lot in the long run.
I don't see it.
Like for someone like you, I don't think it'd make that much of a difference because you already
said like you have that stuff in your house you don't really reach for it i wonder if you literally
like made it an obstacle like say say you put something really really good like let's say that
you had like a pie or something or or a cake and you have it in the fridge and behind your cake
you have got to move your cake out of the way you got to move cookies out of the way and you have it in the fridge, and behind your cake, you've got to move your
cake out of the way, you've got to move cookies out of the way, and you have to reach in the
back and grab the steak and cook it.
I wonder if that would make you a savage faster, because it's like you went out of your way.
I don't know.
It's all very fascinating to me.
Maybe it would.
Yeah.
Maybe you'd turn into a black belt in dieting.
I think I'm actually actually gonna give that a shot
honestly i'm gonna go to the store and buy a box of oreos i'm gonna keep it we need like a what a
psychologist is that what we're in something like that it's a psychologist psychiatrist psychiatrist
yeah somebody somebody something something of the side we need somebody in here i love the john
legend story too that was really cool with kanye yeah yeah Yeah. And then again, like Kanye doing Kanye stuff.
Yeah.
The, the, um, the looking at the young, the young individuals, I don't know if we were
talking about this on air or not, but it is really cool for like someone my age or whatever,
someone in their twenties, like you'll see what a lot of these people are talking about
now, what a lot of them are doing now, but then you get to also see how they were when
they were your age, the way they were when they were your age the way they were looking at certain situations the way they were
looking at their goals and their dreams at your age and it's it can be somewhat very motivational
because you wouldn't you wouldn't expect that sometimes you guys know who the best example of
this is somebody that's been talking about themselves and talking about being amazing
from day one that they have a lot of footage of one of the most popular people we have in modern society today would they have started filming
around 2006 no it's not it's not really well oh yeah maybe yeah maybe you no no
that was my first thought that's what i was like st06 no no no no who are we talking about
talking about conor mcgregor wait really yeah conor mcgregor has been talking you know about
being ufc champion about being the greatest anyone's ever seen he's been talking about that
from like day one and he's one of those few guys that i guess my point here is he's one of the few guys where you've seen the old stuff of him almost right away like like i've seen that
stuff a lot and with like jay-z and some of the people that evan has picked out to showcase you
haven't seen a lot of that stuff so i think it's great that he's he's kind of popping a lot of this
stuff up but yeah from uh i would say that when I kind of think of this scenario of listening to people when they're young and listening to these interviews, I heard so much from Conor McGregor.
The cool thing is Conor McGregor never changed.
He's always been the same.
If you can find some of his footage, he says, like, I'm going to be the best.
Like, everyone else will have to adjust to that. I coming through and this is what i'm doing like i believe in myself this is my goal
and he was just like on fire from day one and he still talks that way you also see that kind of
thing from ali too oh yeah like you'll see a lot of king of it yeah and i think mcgregor was amazing
at that shit yeah mcgregor was like all like it
wasn't quite like uh like he didn't quite catch a break or anything like as far as like getting on
like a big like organization like ufc so he was almost like well shit i guess this isn't for me
and then just got the phone ring and then he was like well this is for me and i'm gonna be champ
so it's like holy shit like how quickly you can go from like i don't know to nope for sure like this is happening which is fucking huge it is yeah the
other thing we commented on that you know he started this starting from the bottom series and
we were just kind of saying it's really hard for someone to give you the truth about
what was it like when you first started it might even be really hard for you to think back to when you started jujitsu,
which is not even that long ago.
Yeah.
Like right now, like, hey, was it that hard when you started jujitsu?
You might be like, meh, it wasn't that bad.
But when you were, you know, you're in it week two,
I got a camera in your face like, dude, how's it going?
You're like, I'm kind of dead.
You know, like my neck is sore and they tweak my arm and, you
know, you might have a little bit of, uh, some negative reaction to some of the stuff
that's been happening.
You know, actually I like the odd thing about that is I think since it's more of a recent
thing, it was four years.
I do remember how much it sucked at the beginning.
I mean, I got quite a bit of video to too, of me getting my ass beat. But I was talking to someone about this, and I'm just like, yeah, it really was really, really tough.
Also mentally in the beginning, because it's like every day that I was going there, I was getting my ass beat, like, multiple times.
What about, like, the small things?
Like, I've heard people say, like, just your feet and the tops of your feet and your toes and your knees and, like, just even being on the mat.
Like, I'm sure, like, I would guess that you probably don't even think about that at all at this point.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, there was a point that both my Achilles tendons were sore for some reason because of the different types of movements that we were doing.
Like, my, there would be a lot of matte burn on like my toes which i don't
get anymore but like yeah those are those little small things that happen here and there in the
beginning that you're not used to barely even concentrate because you're like i don't know
how anybody else in class is doing this because this hurts my freaking toe yeah so bad right now
yeah i'm not gonna tell anybody but i'm dying over here yeah even the grip at the beginning
oh the back of your like knuckles right oh yeah like yeah i do
have these weird yeah they're all back of knuckle calluses which i never really realized yeah but
like yeah no like holding grips was difficult at a certain point but that's another thing that you
adapt to it gets easy you forget about it good sign for everybody out there when you see someone
with like no skin on the back of their knuckles just probably just probably be like yeah man you
can bump into me as hard as you want. I don't have any problem with it.
It's really funny, though.
The first time I noticed this was a few months ago.
My girlfriend, she was looking at my hands, and she was like, what the fuck is wrong with your hands?
I was like, what do you mean?
She's like, look at your knuckles.
I was like, wait, let me see yours.
And she didn't have them.
I was like, whoa, okay, this is actually kind of weird.
So, yeah, but, like, you know, jiu-jitsu is really interesting i was talking to
a dude about this the other day and um i think that it'd be really cool if you know we as adults
because i think when you start something as a kid you're naive to the how long it takes to get good
at something and you're just forced to do it whether you start playing a sport right you just
you just go to practice all the time because your mom tells you to go or because you're like oh this is fun
right and you're getting better naturally right but when you're an adult you start something new
um it's like you're so aware of how slow you're progressing so i think it's like just a good idea
to find something you think you'd enjoy but will take a long time to progress at because that's
going to be a good way to train that like whether it's jujitsu or like i'm trying to learn how to play the guitar and that's fucking
hard right it's just like i think that's a really good thing to do as an adult because it'll it'll
train that part of you i think jujitsu like wrestling like martial arts boxing i think any
of it is really really crazy and weird in in perspective towards, like, I don't really know this person, and I'm going to be, like, wrestling.
Like, I'm going to be, like, engaged with them.
Like, when I was boxing, I boxed for long enough to where I got comfortable with someone, like, leaning on me and stuff.
But that took, like, two years.
And I wasn't even that good. Like I can't,
you know,
it must take a really long time in some of these sports to get adjusted to
like,
all right,
this guy's like leaning on me.
He's pushing on me.
But just imagine like if you're a person that is really super shy,
you don't really love a lot of one-on-one interaction.
Even with Evan right there,
I noticed he looked down to the side quite a bit
like i can tell like he he has said before he doesn't really like public speaking i could see
it i could see it when he was doing that even though he was awesome at it but i would imagine
that jujitsu when you grapple with people like that you probably out grapple yourself at some
point and become more comfortable with stuff that otherwise was pretty weird to you.
Oh yeah.
That was one thing that I was like really concerned about when I first
started.
Like,
am I,
is that dude's ass and that dude's head?
Like his balls are in his face.
I was like,
am I going to,
yeah,
it's like the guy just,
he,
his sweat just went right from his mouth to mine,
like his nose or his arm or whatever, right?
It just drips right in your mouth.
It's like, all right, well, I guess here we go.
So you guys have the same concerns that I do.
Or had, I should say.
Yes.
Yeah, definitely did.
Have you tried any of the RPR stuff before jiu-jitsu?
Yeah, I've been doing it every single time before I go.
Noticing a big difference?
My shoulder's been continuously getting better.
It was getting better slowly since it happened.
But ever since I started doing that and continuing my prehab and warmup stuff
that I've been doing,
it's been getting much,
much,
much better.
Like it's,
it's ridiculous how good my shoulder feels right now.
I do it for all my workouts right now and I'm really liking it.
I actually did it the other day.
I took the bar and I think I just did the bar twice in a row, but you guys have seen me warm up before. I actually did it the other day. I took the bar and I think I just did the
bar twice in a row, but you guys have seen me warm up before. I just, I just move and I move
in a pain-free zone and I might squat down like four or five inches at first. Cause I'm just
moving and I just don't want any negative feedback at all. So I did that for set number one. I did
the RPR stuff. And on the next set, like I wasn't moving good in comparison to somebody
that moves really well, but I was moving much better for myself. And I'm like, that just,
was it the first set that, you know, kind of lubed me up for that next one? Because I did do a set.
Could it be that my heart rate was increased a little bit? Could it be that my body temperature
was up a little bit? I don't know, you know know really what it was, but it's my belief that it was the RPR.
It made a huge difference.
The pain in my knee was gone.
I was able to squat fluidly.
And I don't even really know what I'm doing with it yet.
I'm not even following along with what they got.
I'm just doing it out of kind of memory and just jamming on what I can.
It takes me two minutes, and just why the hell not?
That's what I've been doing too.
But I did it the other night before i went to bed and my fiance was pissed because i i don't have a hard time falling asleep but like by time the light like went from switch to like
actually being dark i was already out like i passed out instantly it was crazy thanks for
telling me that dude because like i remember jl
told you know jl said you don't do before bed but i've been forgetting to do before bed so
thank you for reminding me about that because i'm gonna start doing that it's the easiest place to
do it too just sitting on the edge of the bed just like and yeah good to go i can't wait for
for people to first off hear that episode jail i don't know if it's coming up next or the next
two episodes by the time people hear hear this they will have already had access to that so yeah
but um yeah it's gonna be fucking great man and then when they see the video of him doing those
tests like oh i have a piece that you could use for ig too because i filmed a bunch of weird shit
yeah yeah man i loved that episode.
Yeah, it was great.
You know, back to Evan for a second here. I love the other thing he was saying about, like, consumption and creation and, like, you know, consuming his content.
And then going from, this is just, man, this is just great advice, period.
Like, going from entertainment to education.
How much entertainment do you consume?
You know, how much stuff is purely entertainment?
And I'm not saying that you should get rid of that stuff, but maybe you're like four to one,
you know, you're, you got four hours of entertainment and you got one hour of education.
And maybe you can flip that a little bit because maybe that could help you advance as a personal
trainer, as a coach, as an entrepreneur.
I mean, whatever it is, if you just flip that ratio,
if you go four to one the other way, which might be hard, it might take time,
but if you went four to one education to entertainment,
you're going to be more successful a lot faster.
And just as he's saying, this stuff will flood your brain.
You can't help but end up being a different person after you continually listen to these messages. I thought that was really cool.
It was.
And then I think the next phase that, like, obviously, education, what was it?
Not just education and entertainment, but yeah, education and entertainment, but also the flipping that education into action.
flipping that education into action um i think like i think one thing a lot of a lot of uh people in their early 20s including myself had a tough time with was like okay cool there's all
this education but when exactly do i start when exactly do i start putting this into action
turning this into something that i want it to be um i noticed like i hear a lot of like
i know a lot of people that are struggling right now because they're like, I want to do something, but I can't figure out exactly how to do it.
But I, I, like, it seems like you need that phase of that education, whether it's formal education or whether it's you educating yourself before you take that action on that thing.
You can't necessarily start taking action if you haven't educated yourself on it.
I think that it's, that's think that it's a rough place because
you're not sure exactly when you should start, but then you mentioned that paralysis by analysis
thing. You're now doing all this analyzing, but now you're not even taking that action.
You got to figure out when is that time that I can start taking a move on this thing that I've
been wanting to do. You start to really learn a lot about training and you walk into the gym and
you end up being more confused than ever. You start learning a lot about like, here's why bodybuilding works.
Here's why powerlifting works.
Here's this method for powerlifting and here's this other method for powerlifting.
Here's this method for bodybuilding.
Here's this other method.
You walk in the gym and you're like, I could start out with a bench press or I could start
out on a machine.
Jay Cutler used to start out with leg extensions before he squatted,
but Ed Cohn used to always just start off with squats.
And then Steph Cohen says that you'd be better off.
I mean, if you start going down that path and you're going to be really stuck
and it's going to be hard to have a good training system.
And what you should know is that the people before you
although they thought about it a lot and they educated themselves a lot they really just went
in there and they just did it and they worked at it and they they just learned from their errors
and that's all you could ever do so you go in you're like ed cone used to just squat he didn't
really spend too much time doing because they didn't talk about prehab and rehab and all this stuff back in the day.
You go to squat, you tweak your knee.
You're like, all right, I should look into that.
Like, why did I tweak my knee?
It was only 225.
I squat 315.
You find Steph Cohen.
You find these other great athletes that take a lot of precaution before they lift.
You implement that.
Oh, wow, my knee doesn't hurt as
much anymore. Right. It's just, it's all, you know, kind of critical thinking, finding errors.
We've talked before on the podcast about problem solving. That's really all that it's ever going
to be. But if you're not doing, then you don't have a problem in the first place. So you need
to do stuff. You kind of need to mess up a little bit, and then you can go back and make corrections.
I've even heard people say, hey, look, man, don't worry about shit.
Some people say, don't even show up at Westside or don't even show up at Super Training.
Just fucking go to a gym, a gym, any gym.
Do three sets of 10 of everything and just keep moving around.
And then come back to us after you've been doing that for a year.
And that just means to try stuff and to learn about your body and learn how you feel you should look at everyone as guinea pigs you're yourself
or your own human guinea pig where you're going to try things out and experiment and see what works
people are pigs and that's cool but then like just like you said with the jay cutler ed cone etc
they did these things and they did them and it worked for them and you can take that and you
can be like okay well i can try this on this person i can use this for myself or whatever
but everyone's pretty much experimenting on themselves and then people like steph cohen and
like uh all these other individuals or whatever they just have a bigger sample size because they
use it on their clients and then you can utilize that too and take it also good point so like just
just yeah you know that it take it for what it is i I like the Steve Jobs thing. He's like, here I got Steve Jobs, and on this other side I got my dad, you know?
I want to be a dad like my dad was, but I don't want to be a visionary like my dad.
You know, I want to be a free thinker like Steve Jobs, and I don't want to be the dad that Steve Jobs was.
It doesn't appear that he was very good at it.
Who knows what's true or whatever, but I really like that. It's like
I admire Bo Jackson. I admire these people, but I don't really know much about someone like Bo
Jackson. I don't know much about Michael Jordan. All I know is that anytime he played, I wanted to
watch because I was inspired by how he played. I think everybody, whether they were even a
basketball fan or not, was inspired by the way that he was like, yep, I'll take the game on my shoulders and I got it.
And if you just give me the ball, I'm going to figure this out.
It could be three or four people on me.
I'm not passing it to anybody.
I'm going to hold on to it and I'm going to shoot it and we're going to win and we're going to get out of here.
I think everybody admired the way he kind of shouldered that responsibility and you can apply that and take that into anything else in life. But then
maybe you just don't have any idea of his actions off the court. Maybe they were flawless. Maybe
they were great. I don't know, but we don't know. And I think it's better. I think that's where it's
better. You're better off having a family member that's a hero or family member that you can kind
of look to and be like, you know what? I really dig that guy. I love the way that that guy,
you know, that guy is just, he's consistent. He's just always there for his family. You know, it could be your uncle, it could be a relative, it could be your own dad,
it could be whoever. I feel that way. You know, like I loved Bo Jackson, I loved Mike Tyson,
I loved Michael Jordan, but my dad is kind of really more my idol. My dad is like the person
I've looked up to, even though he's only 5' five two i've looked up to my whole life for the responsibilities that he's taken on and he's
continued to take them take them on with a lot of consistency much the way these athletes have
taken on their own responsibilities but it was only with athletics and i don't know you know
tyson you know i don't i don't really know you know, Tyson, you know, I don't, I don't really know, you know, their people's behavior,
uh,
you know,
outside the court or outside the ring with Tyson,
you know,
became very public and things like that,
you know?
Yeah.
I really agree with that though,
because like a lot of athletes,
there's a lot of things that they may have done that was,
that was in the news or negative that you may have heard of,
but,
and you,
you,
you see a lot of posts,
people saying,
fuck this guy or fuck whatever, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, of. And you see a lot of posts of people saying, fuck this guy, or fuck whatever,
you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, right?
And I can understand it,
especially if something that they did was pretty horrible.
But there's probably still a lot of stuff
you could learn from that person.
Absolutely.
Positive and negative.
Like, probably not a good idea to do X, Y, or Z
that they did, right?
It's probably not a good idea to fall into that trap.
But there are these awesome things and these awesome ways that they looked at
this in terms of their sport or, you know,
awesome actions that they took that you can definitely draw from.
So you can't necessarily hash somebody out because of the mistakes that they've
made as a human being, because that's not the whole culmination of who they are.
Yeah.
I like that.
What you got, Andrew?
Take us on out of here?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, we didn't even.
So, well, thank you to Pete Montes for sponsoring this episode.
Check the links down in the YouTube description and iTunes show notes.
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That's on Instagram.
My personal Instagram is at IamAndrewZ.
If you got any questions for me personally, at MBPowerProject on TikTok and Twitter or on Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, all over the place.
Thank you to everybody that's been rating and reviewing the podcast on iTunes.
I had one pulled up.
Here it is.
Right now, a quick shout out to MH Design.
MH says, informative, inspiring, and funny.
Quote, don't bother trying to listen to this while working out unless you want everyone in the gym to stare at you and wonder why you break out laughing every few minutes.
Oh, yeah, and they know their stuff.
Listen to this podcast only if you want to be inspired and informed.
M.H., thank you so much for that review.
Probably took you 30 seconds to do it, but it is a huge thank you to us.
Thanks, M.H.
Yeah, so thank you.
It took you 30 seconds to do it, but it is a huge thank you to us.
Thanks, MH.
Yeah, so thank you.
If you're listening right now, if you want to hear your name in your review read on air,
please head over to iTunes right now and leave a rating and a review,
and you could hear your name on air, just like MH Design.
Transima, where you be?
At TransimaYinYang on Instagram and YouTube,
at TransimaYinYang on TikTok and Twitter.
Mark, that's my ASMR voice. Oh oh okay i was like what happened hey now did you just run out of gas so like you just last thing i want to mention uh
about evan here is that um you know that zero to one was a really cool thing that he said
talking about like bill gates you know he talked about microsoft and you know they
did a lot of stuff with ibm and that was something that really launched them.
But even when they did that, they were already at 7 million.
So he wanted to dig deeper and find out like, no, where were they like in the beginning?
Like what happened in the beginning?
I love that he has that desire to kind of dig that deep.
And he did so with like Walt Disney and people that it's kind of hard to find information on.
So if you're not following along with what Evan Carmichael has,
I think you're really missing out on a lot of great research,
a lot of great information.
Every pop culture icon you can think of and every popular person and every top
entrepreneur, you got everyone from like Jay-Z all the way to Gary V, right? It's like a wide
range of people that he has on there. And I just think there's just so much, he has so much to
offer and there's so much to learn. So why not check out his stuff? Strength is never a weakness.
Weakness is never strength. I'm at Mark Smiley Bell. Catch you all later.
What's up podcast? Like I said, man, I really hope you guys took in that bit about patience. Be impatient to start and be patient with the results. I seriously wish I had heard that. I don't know how many years ago. I'd probably be much better off. But anyways, we're better off now because you guys have been rating and reviewing the podcast on iTunes, and it seriously helped us out so freaking much. We cannot thank you enough. We'll do our
absolute best right now. We want to give a shout out to Daniel S Raina. I think that yeah, Raina.
Sorry about that, dude. Uh, Daniel says hilarious and inspirational quote. Absolutely love this
podcast. Not only is it very funny and entertaining, it is very inspirational as well. I've
already made some changes in my own life and diet just as a result of this podcast.
Cheers, guys.
Cheers to you, bro.
Seriously, appreciate that.
I mean, like I've said before, like the short time that that took you to write that review,
it gives us so much value.
So it's kind of like we're trading value.
Like you found some value in the podcast.
We found a tremendous value in your review.
If you're listening right now,
if you'd like to hear your name read on air, please head over to iTunes right now,
drop us a rating and a review, and you could hear your name on air just like our homie,
Daniel S. Reyna. We'll catch you guys on the next one. Peace.