Mark Bell's Power Project - How To LEVEL UP Your Mindset - Super Cut
Episode Date: July 13, 2023In this super cut, the guests speak on ways of improving your mindset and the importance of doing so. MBPP EP. 896 A BROKEN MINDSET WILL LEAVE YOU POOR AND IN PAIN https://www.youtube.com/watch?...v=T7mnps_6V2c&t=4928s MBPP EP. 935 | NICK DAVENPORT HOW TO TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR MIND TO IMPROVE YOUR PERFORMANCE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8FtdQOAD2U MBPP EP. 268 | BEDROS KEUILIAN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpfjI0L-ouU&t=1225s SATURDAY SCHOOL EP 48 THE MINDSET NEEDED TO PURSUE YOUR DREAMS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AEhb-fcEkM&t=215s MBPP EP. 866 | OBI VINCENT COMBINING BODYBUILDING AND CROSSFIT = CROSSLIFT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfIh4nGAWLA MBPP. EP 764 | JUSTIN LOVATO BREATH WORK TOOLS FOR ANXIETY STRESS AND TRAUMA MBPP EP. 796 | JAMES PIERATT BALANCING ULTRA MARATHONS, JIU JITSU, AND HUNTING 0:00-0:48 Intro 0:49-6:47 James Pieratt's Mindset 6:48-14:34 Broken Mindset 14:35-26:19 Fake It 'til You Make It 26:20-33:25 Study Success & Failure 33:36-42:08 Ego 42:09-1:09:01 Mindset to Pursue Your Dreams 1:09:02 Outro New Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! ➢https://drinkag1.com/powerproject Recieve a year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 Travel Packs! ➢ https://withinyoubrand.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off supplements! ➢ https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off all gear and apparel! ➢ https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off Mind Bullet! ➢ https://goodlifeproteins.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save up to 25% off your Build a Box ➢ Better Fed Beef: https://betterfedbeef.com/pages/powerproject ➢ https://hostagetape.com/powerproject Free shipping and free bedside tin! ➢ https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!! ➢ Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: https://youtu.be/qPG9JXjlhpM ➢ https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! ➢ https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! ➢ https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! ➢ https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off ALL LABS at Marek Health! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢ Piedmontese Beef: https://www.CPBeef.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://www.PowerProject.live ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You know how to say fake it till you make it? I believe in that to an extent. So like you said,
he couldn't control everything, but he at least set the parameters in his mind that he could.
The devil's the ego. And so that's that dialogue that you're consistently having like,
hey, I should work out today. And then it's like, start Monday. That's the ego.
You could probably just do the thing that's a little bit more convenient,
but you probably don't realize it yet. And I've referred to this as having a broke mindset.
And I just make the decision to die on that line and hold that line no matter what.
Every month I'm studying one franchise that's successful, one that's failing, and I want to know the whys behind it.
We know that you can slowly but surely get better at something, do it once or twice a week.
We know that.
But it's kind of, it's a more difficult route.
And that's the route of somebody who's super patient and super mature.
Most of the time we're neither one of those.
That's the route of somebody who's super patient and super mature.
Most of the time we're neither one of those.
I've been out on a bunch of runs recently where I just kind of start out.
I usually start out the same way.
I usually just kind of like go and then I'm like, let me see what's available for today.
And then I start to kind of get into it more.
I try not to obsess over like times or anything like that. But sometimes you're just moving and you're like, oh, I'm moving pretty good today.
And you pick up the pace and I'm like, man, I'm fucking kicking ass today.
And then like 20 minutes later, I'm like, I'm not doing so great.
There's waves.
You ride the wave.
And your brain too.
Your brain is all like on fire.
It's like I chugged a mind bullet or something it feels like.
Everything's just fire and fire and fire.
And it's like, this isn't a good idea
anymore you should fucking go home so that's that's its own thing but for sure the longer you
run the more pronounced that gets the ups and the downs yeah but the thing is just like we're talking
like this is gonna pass yeah you find you when you're at the bottom and it sucks and you know
you know you're gonna be back at the top before long it might be an hour it might you know might
be three minutes but you're gonna be back you to be all right. But that admittedly sometimes once you get closer to like your actual limits as far as just what your body can do, the mind really starts to try to save itself.
And I've noticed this is a good idea or why I'm a big proponent of like trying to run in a lot of different areas.
And I think it's important because when you see like that, you're getting close to the finish.
That's when the pain will come in a little bit more,
but you know,
you're like,
oh man,
I'm close.
And,
uh,
whether it's like a letup or,
or,
or whether you're just like excited because you're about to finish,
even if you're thinking like,
I'm going to finish strong.
I think you're better off being like oblivious sometimes,
not for all your training,
but sometimes.
I mean,
I set my biggest PRs in the gym when I'm not paying attention to the weight.
Right.
So I'd say the same thing.
You know, I hit the flow.
Like I'm a jujitsu lifting running.
I love the flow state.
I try to find that and just ride it.
I ride that wave.
But, you know, like I said, there's ups and there's downs.
And sometimes you do have to, you you know do some powerful self-talk or
some imagery or whatever you know in anything not just running or training but um Goggins talks
about like uh the Rocky movies being like the piece of imagery that he uses um I think for
everyone it's different I think once you find yours even if you're not a runner that that's a
it's a powerful tool um with me it was, I've always kind of admired feats of will
as much as strength or endurance or anything else.
And sacrifice, like the story of the 300,
that's always just made my skin stand on end.
Or there's stories of Native American warriors
when the cavalrymen were coming on the village
and they needed to buy time
for the women and children to escape.
They'd drive a stake, a line of them would line up
and drive a stake into the ground in between them
and the village and the cavalrymen.
And each would tie a rope to one end of the stake
and tie the other end to himself
and just swear to die on that ground, you know,
and he'd fight to the last.
And so stuff like that has always been something that moved me.
Yeah, you're like, somebody's done shit way harder than I have.
Yeah, well, that's what I'm saying.
Like, you know, I can run for a day or for, you know,
until things stop working if they did that. And so sometimes it helps whatever your thing is.
And for me, it's just, when I feel that, when I know it's not just riding the wave anymore,
when I know things are starting to shut down and they, you know, parts of my body kind of
stop working. Uh, that's the time when I, you know, I just, I mentally, I draw a line in the
sand and I picture everything that I love and care about and everything that I could be, everything
that I am on one side of the line and everything that wants to take that away or compromise that
on the other. And I just make the decision to die on that line and hold that line no matter what.
And more often than not, once you do that, you get, I mean, if you're truly, truly willing to
make that sacrifice, it's liberating. And after that, after that, you know, you hold, you hold, you hold and
you do whatever it takes. And if you fail, that's fine, but at least die like a man on your feet,
you know? So, but like I said, different for everyone. Yeah, no, but, but again,
like what you just did, there's, it's another aspect of like literally being grateful for the,
what you're doing at that moment in time. And also like, number one, what you just did there's it's another aspect of like literally being grateful for the what you're doing at that moment in time and also like number one what you're doing is fucking it's amazing and
it is badass but you your mind goes to literal people sacrificing themselves and then just being
like this shit ain't so bad fucking be a man and run through it it's that it's your ability to
change your perspective out of what
you're doing. I think that's like the big talent at all. Cause we're always zoned in on us, us,
us, but you constantly take yourself out of it and just be like, ah, that's way better. Or that's
so much, or that's what we need to get better at. Cause we're always focused on what we're doing,
focused on ourselves, focused on our actions, But you have an amazing skill of removing yourself and thinking about different perspectives that makes you grateful.
I mean, I agree and I appreciate that.
I never really thought of that as a skill, but I think you might be right.
That's a skill.
Yeah.
It's definitely a skill because you can also listen to Rocky or do something like that and you can get fired up and you can be like I'm gonna like go harder I'm gonna try harder
and that can work sometimes but a lot of times
I'll also kind of stress the
body a bit and sometimes
sometimes you're opening yourself up to an injury
or yeah just get
overheated or whatever the fucking case
may be so it's like and it's a
superpower use it when you should you know if you're going
if you're super strength and you're running around trying to pick
stuff up all the time you're gonna you know but if you're utilizing it for that so it's a superpower use it when you should you know if you're going if you're super strength you're running around trying to pick stuff up all the time you're gonna you know but if you're
utilizing it for that so it's like i i wake up every day i come in here to lift i go to jits i
run i box do whatever i'm doing and i i don't hype myself like this is exactly who i am and where i'm
supposed to be it requires no hype and no nothing i can come and do this with you know i don't take
pre-workout i don't listen to heavy metal in the parking lot i just come and do what i'm meant to
do having said that meant to do.
Having said that, if you do that and you push yourself and you're truly, truly finding the edge of your comfort zone
and going beyond what is safe,
you're going to find some times where you have to call on those extra resources.
But yeah, I'm not waking up every day and like, all right, you know what I mean?
I'm Ragnar Lothbrok and this is the last stand of the, you know what I mean?
Like, no, I'm just a guy.
I'm just a dude, you know, most of the time. I hear people, they're like, yeah, I'm
gonna, I'm going from where I live to like, I'm going to go to Woodland and go to Costco. I'm
like, you just drove past like four or five grocery stores on your way there. Those are more expensive.
Well, it takes you a lot more time. like i'd rather just hit this place up that's
close to me when i need to periodically rather than make this giant haul you know it's again
you got to do what you think is best for you and that's important um however time is time is money
and money is time and i think like food is money you know food is, it's a way to look at food.
Food is money, but food is also time as well.
Lots of time.
The less cautious you are with your food
and the more unhealthy, he's talking about health,
the more unhealthy your food makes you,
the more time it takes you to unwind that whole thing.
The more time you're going to spend on a treadmill, the more time you're going to spend thing, the more time you're going to spend on a treadmill,
the more time you're going to spend running, the more time you're going to spend doing
some, a bunch of exercise just to probably get you balanced out. So you're not continuing to
gain weight. You could be, there's a lot of things that if you start to really examine them, you're
probably wasting a lot of time and wasting a lot of money. You could probably just do the thing that's a little bit more convenient and a
little bit more expensive, but you probably don't realize it yet.
And I've referred to this as having a broke mindset.
Your, your mindset is not, it has too much of a governor on it.
You're kind of stuck in your previous thoughts. And again,
it's understandable to have scarcity. Like,
you know, people have horrible shit happen when they're children. They have, you know,
parents leave, they have divorces, there's deaths, there's all kinds of shit that happens that
is totally understandable for you to have it kind of programmed into you that you're
concerned about your money and you're trying to really have a budget. It all makes tons of sense.
However, I do think that there's a real value to paying for stuff sometimes.
And so you have to kind of wonder like, how, like how into this are you, you know, do you want to
go to this jujitsu school that they just like, you know, they have, they have everybody there
and they have like fitness classes and all these other things going on.
And it's like 20 bucks a month or whatever.
Where do you want to go to this instructor who is really teaching class, who has a bunch of great teachers and instructors under him?
And the place is 150 bucks a month or something.
So sometimes you're going to be paying for much better quality.
And as Andrew's pointing out, a lot of times you want to just do it right the first time.
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Can't let you get away with the Costco disc though.
Like as,
as a man,
Costco,
when you can get like 16 rolls of toilet paper,
12 things, a paper towel where you go to Raley's or Target and-
Fuck those places.
You're getting four.
Costco, you're getting 12 and it's good quality.
Costco, I get what you were going for, but man, Costco.
Yeah, but-
I like Costco.
But then you get to Costco and you're going to get the toilet paper and I'm going to get a rotisserie chicken and some other shit.
And then you walk by and like, well, I guess Valentine's Day is coming. I'll get the toilet paper and I'm going to get a rotisserie chicken and some other shit. And then you walk by and like,
well, I guess Valentine's Day is coming.
I'll get the strawberries too.
And it's like, well, shit.
I think they have cheap flowers for all the guys
and nice cheap flowers.
Yeah, they're like 20 bucks.
They're really good.
This is like way off topic.
I think everything's a trick.
I think everything,
like when people are like,
oh, I make like 100 grand at my job and then I have a company car, I think everything, like when people are like, Oh, you know, I make like a
hundred grand at my job. And then I, you know, have a company car, I got insurance and they put
so much value in all that stuff. It's like, you can own your own car your own way. You don't,
you don't need to be, uh, working for that company necessarily. And you don't necessarily
need them to pay for insurance. You can pay for your own insurance. And I think we put so much value in these things.
We put so much value in, but they're all kind of an illusion.
Costco is the greatest illusion of all time.
Okay, let's go.
Walmart and all these places.
Well, hey, come in.
Costco and Walmart are different.
Hey, guys, come in.
Like everything's inexpensive and we have really large things that you get in these you know the great quantities and you're going to walk out with this amazing uh this amazing like plethora of stuff you know
but as andrew pointed out you're going to buy way too much shit you're going to buy way more stuff
than you need to you're not going to just buy what's on your list must be disciplined they
already know that they're getting you with the four dollar rotisserie chicken they have like
lost leaders in there and stuff like that. The $10 pizza.
That's like huge.
And then you're like, oh my God,
you look at that.
They got a TV for $400.
That's fucking awesome.
You know,
they deliver it right to my house.
We need one of those.
The game's coming up.
Oh,
the game's coming.
We got to get some beer too.
Like we're already here.
The amount of Costco baskets
you see filled up to here,
it's like,
oh dude.
Okay.
They know how to get the hoarders.
That's the thing. And many people are hoarders who wouldn't like to admit it. I like loading up. I. It's like, dude, okay. They, they, they know how to get the hoarders.
That's yeah.
And many people are hoarders who wouldn't,
I like loading up.
I think it's kind of great.
I love getting like a bunch of eggs and shit. Like I kind of,
I kind of dig all that.
Cause it like,
I don't know you,
which especially as like a lifter,
you always think that you're going to be like running out of stuff.
Like I need all this protein.
It's like,
you got like months and months of fucking protein.
Like,
what are you doing most
of stuff's gonna go bad or be in your freezer forever yeah that's the fuck dude no more
vegetables like i already told my wife like we have like too many too many shelves already full
of vegetables that we're never gonna touch they've been there since like pre-pandemic like they're
not going anywhere but nothing ever has made me feel like such a baller than when I walk in and I get the, you know, like the organic eggs, the big boxes of it at Costco and everyone's looking at the damn, that's expensive.
It's like six bucks for like that, you know, the regular white ones.
And they're like standing there stressing, like, oh, how much is that per?
And I just walk in, I grab two because the limit is two.
If it wasn't, I would grab more.
I grab that and just walk out.
Don't even look at the price because I'm like, I need this.
I have to have these eggs,
or else I'm kind of fucked,
because I eat two things.
I eat steak and eggs.
Like, that's all I do.
But, you know, then I look back,
and it's like, oh, they're 20 bucks right now
for, I think it's like 60 of them.
That's still an insane deal,
but when you look at it, it's like,
oh, man, they used to be like $10.
Now they're 20.
Ooh, I can't swing that.
But meanwhile, your cart is full of, you know,
some shit that you're never gonna use.
It's so silly the way we do look at things.
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podcast show notes. You know how to say fake it till you make it. I believe in that to an extent.
So like you said, he couldn't control everything, but he at least set the parameters in his mind
that he could. And there was a video I watched on YouTube a few months ago. I forget the name of it, but they use this, like, mindset of, like, this toxic winning, which I wasn't mad at.
See, I'm kind of different from a lot of the mental coaching people in a sense of I'm not going to give you overly positive stuff.
Yes, some of my stuff will give that positive message, but sometimes it won't.
Sometimes you got to say, I'm going to win at all costs.
Within means, like, obviously you don't want to cheat.
Live, you can get into the, you familiar with the dark triad?
You ever heard that term before?
I have.
Okay, so you can maybe get into that, but you don't want to be that person.
A dark triad, that's a person who will cheat, steal, lie.
Is it Machiavellianism?
Machiavellianism.
Narcissism and?
Psychopathy.
Psychopathy.
My man.
That's good stuff.
We talk about psychopaths and narcissists.
I think that word gets overused.
It's like, oh, they think they're good.
They're a narcissist.
No, like I'm a competitor.
Why shouldn't I think I'm good?
And that's why people like sometimes on IG, I get feedback.
Good, of course, but I get something like, well, you can't just make people think the better.
You got to be humble.
I'm like, to an extent, like I definitely know I'm not the best at everything.
So, but let me know what I'm good at.
I'm not going to negate that.
Like, why would I do that?
And we're both,
all three of us are athletes.
So I think that mindset,
more people should adopt.
Like you should have a certain,
they call it,
I think it was like toxic winning.
I don't want to quote it,
but it was like something like that of the point that you will do anything
within means to get it done.
And I'm,
that's how I carry my business out now because there's people in similar
fields that I'm cool with them,
but I'm going to beat you in a healthy way of like I'm going to provide quality
so people say I want Nick's stuff.
What about creating a little bit of like a persona?
Oh, I didn't.
You know, some of the guys can do that, right?
Some of the guys are like I'm this way outside the ring.
I'm this way normally.
I'm normally calm.
I'm docile.
But, you know, Tyson was kind of a little bit of both in and out of the ring.
Right. But he said that he had so many insecurities. He would cry before fights.
He was always terrified. But as soon as he stepped inside the ring, as soon as he got inside those ropes, he's like, I'm the killer.
Then people can say what they want about Mike. But I like that mindset because I use an analogy with my athletes, even the pro ones all the way down to little kids.
I have a nine year old gymnast that I was telling you I was in a hotel working
with, and I used it with her, and I call it superhero athlete. And I'll ask you, who's
your favorite heroes? I see Goku in the back, but...
I pick Goku.
Goku?
It would be between Goku and Black Panther.
Okay, let's go with Black Panther. What about you?
Superman, I don't know.
So those are perfect. The reason I like it better than Goku, because Goku didn't really have too much of an ultra ego,
but Black Panther can work.
And so can Superman.
So I'll go with Superman because his is a little easier to analogize.
So same thing with an athlete, right?
You have this persona in the field, in the ring, the court, whatever it is.
And those traits that come with that, there's a certain athletic identity.
That's what we call it in sports psychology,
that you have to be that high competitiveness.
You have to do what it takes isolate sometimes from your social you know circle
because you have to win or be the best so you have to wear that mask that's superman but who's
superman when he's not uh saving the world he's clark kent and clark kent's personality people
think he's this docile clumsy kind of nerd even though he's like 6'3", 220 pounds. But you put on some glasses.
But the glasses
throw it all out the window, right?
Forget them knowing his real identity. They still
think this man's a loser because
he's a news reporter
with glasses. But anyway. Still walking around like a
60-inch chest. You feel me?
Pics hanging out the front. And he's dressed
well. All the characters that play
Superman are jacked or got got Jack for the role.
Like Chris Reeve wasn't Super Jack, but he was like, I think 6'5".
And then Henry Cavill was like 6'1", 220 solid.
So that guy, but get to my point.
They have to wear different masks or different identities.
And the same thing in sport.
I have to be a killer in the ring.
I have to be the killer on the court, wherever it is.
But I can't carry that because that's one emotionally draining because how long can you
have that kill, kill, kill, go, go, go mindset before it eats away from you? Like see it in the
movies, like when there's a literal killer and eventually it starts getting to them. And we can
even go on a tangent on that, but get to the point is you have to turn that off at some point. And on
the other side, as the Clark Kent, theirent the their main identity real identity that's the athlete who knows when
the i lost but it doesn't mean i'm less of a person because i've seen people who tie even when
i was an athlete back then to even my current clients and they'll tie it into their personality
and say well if i lost here i'm a loser there outside in the real world and that's the problem
so going back to mike tyson I think it's not perfect,
but that's a good way to look at it. You have to
shift those lanes. You have to.
Yeah, and Ali obviously did it. But Ali, even
later on, said he didn't believe half the
stuff he said. He just was just...
He wanted to put it out there
to build himself up that way.
He put that energy out there, and now he
was accountable for knocking the guy out in the third round.
And then there would be a good opening, and he knocked the guy out in the third round.
And I guess that's the other side of when we talk about false confidence.
I guess for the people watching, take this into consideration, too.
They all could back it up.
That's the thing.
They got a skill set.
Conor McGregor comes to mind as well.
Exactly.
So you can't just say it, too, because I've seen young athletes who try to carry those same Conor McGregor or Floyd Mayweather whatever it is personas but let's be real most kids until maybe
junior year high school for the most part skill wise aren't the best maybe raw talent but I know
most people I've played with I'm from South Florida where when we played football every game was like
a state championship even the worst teams were like four or five star recruits were on
those teams so you couldn't take any days off so we knew we had to be realistic you can't be that
guy saying yeah i'm gonna score this many touchdowns or i'm gonna win all the games i'm
going d1 you're like basically right bro you have to be real sometimes you're d3 and it's not wrong
with that because guess what if you're going back to my point identifying where you're at
now i can go forward and say i'm going to be the best at this level and if it gets an opportunity to work up
then work up you never hear anybody say i'm d3 of course i'm guilty i said i'm going to um i was
like i'm going to you i went to camps there i told you i ran a 4 4 40 i was the same size height wise
i was like 190 but i was ideal but my skill set didn't fully get there and guess what i didn't
sign with anyone my senior year for football.
And I ended up luckily getting a partial track scholarship at a small D1AA school.
Bethune-Cookman University is a historically black college in Daytona Beach where it helped me get on this path to the psychology where I changed my major like four times.
I was very indecisive, but I took a class of psychology.
I'm like, I think I like this.
And I was back in 2008.
So there was a guy, Dr. Ian Payton.
I haven't talked to him probably since I graduated, but he doesn't know his class shifted me to psych training.
Now look what I'm doing.
So thank him out there, wherever he's at.
What are the athletes that seem to be stuck in a mindset of, like, loss?
Because you mentioned, you know, for example, Ali.
He said a lot of things, but he was able to back it up even Conor McGregor before he became the champ he was talking like
he was the champ right and you got to imagine like if that's your goal you need to have that
in your mind but you can't talk like that if it's your first fight but some some individuals maybe
they're sparring and they're getting beat right now, or they're just
not where they feel that they want to be, but you still need to have a level of confidence and
belief, right? How can you build that from ground zero? So I guess it goes back to my other point,
because that first time fighter, he has literally no experience, or at least in the official fight,
he might've sparred or practiced, like you said said but he has to know that when i do this there has to be a level of expectation so going to your point he has to
expect something right yeah so i say that should be a high level of competitiveness of being a
winner you you don't want to walk in there and saying man i'm gonna lose because it's my first
time nah but you should have an expectation so going to the point is have a realistic expectation
if you know that you because you you know where you stand let's be real no matter how good or bad You should have an expectation. So going to the point is have a realistic expectation.
If you know that you, because you know where you stand.
Let's be real.
No matter how good or bad athlete and how much they lie to themselves,
deep down, they know where they stand.
So either the coach or the athlete himself, depending on the age,
it's easier to do it.
But if you're younger, it's harder, obviously.
But you have to say, okay, this guy I'm fighting is, let's say, 5-0, and and i'm one and oh my first fight was against a no-name person yeah can you realistically say that i will go
through this effortlessly you're not gonna say i'm gonna lose but you're gonna be like okay i know
how he fights i've seen his competition how they fight and how those fights went because i think
there's this notion of oh i'm my only competition yes and no obviously you got
to beat yourself first but like I said earlier I want to be the best in my field when it comes
to mental coaching and stuff so I'm always looking at similar people whether they're in the same lane
or not like I look at Jordan Peterson stuff all the time I look at Huberman stuff all the time
not to say I'm gonna beat them but I'm like if they're doing this I need to know where I rank
if their videos are getting this kind of engagement what am I not saying to get that engagement so going back to your point if i'm an athlete getting rid of a
fight or whatever sport event where do i engage where's my uh interaction at am i doing the things
they're doing am i getting the outcomes they're getting now for one fight you can realistically
say probably not but you know you can at least keep up with them and then build from there
what i like from what you what you mentioned right there is because like we were actually just we just did a podcast on uh
guys and body image and how like a lot of people are paying attention to social media because
they're comparing themselves to people all the time it's like fucking with how they look at
themselves mentally but when it comes to being a competitor you have to compare and being an
athlete you have to compare yourself to not just your other competition, but maybe on guys on your team. If you're trying to be the best on your team, you have to see,
oh fuck, he has better dribbling skills than me. He has better athleticism than me. How the fuck
can I catch up? You can't be living in your own world where it's me versus me and never comparing
yourself to other people. You have to be okay to do that. You have to be okay to see where you stand
and see how you can improve. Exactly. And the thing going off of that is because when they don't see that, they put them
in a box like a bubble almost. You know how people who don't get to see the world, they only live
around their only circle of friends and they get into a real situation. What happens? They fall
apart. Yeah, they don't grow, they fall apart. So that's the same thing with that. So you have to
be like, okay, like you said, he's a better dribbler. How do I i get to his level because even if your teammate is still a person that you need to either compare yourself
to be better then so you can help the team or at least equal to because at the end of the day those
skills are needed i think sometimes a player on a similar team with somebody might be frustrated
after practice that somebody else got the praise you know hey and seem is rebounding really well today he did abc and then someone else thinks that means that the coach took a shot at them
or the coach said something negative about them but they didn't they said something positive about
him and rather than the next player thinking about how they're going to beat him which isn't that bad
of an idea too because it's good to have competitiveness even within your own team
is how can i contribute you know how what okay he has those skills i got other skills i can pass i can do this i can play
defense i'm gonna do that as hard as possible for the next couple days and see if i can get because
i would love the coach to say that about me but a lot of times i think people are like well how
come the coach didn't say anything about me but But then they don't do anything about it. So that comes into, here the term, like intrinsic and extrinsic motivation.
Because motivation is a term that gets thrown out a lot.
And there's, some people say, oh, it's not about motivation, it's about discipline.
Or I say it's all of the above because motivation, I always say, is the gas that makes the car go.
But discipline keeps you in the car.
Because let's imagine if I got all the gas to go,
I'm from Florida, so here to California.
But if I don't stay in the car,
I get out in Texas or wherever, stop.
Guess what?
I'm not getting to my final destination.
So those people who don't have that wherewithal
to stay with it,
they're not going to be able to accomplish it.
We think about hard work.
Think about someone that's working hard
that has two or three jobs in comparison.
Oh, he's throwing in another mind. To, you know, to really think about somebody that let's say they work 20 hours a week.
We would think that person's not a hard worker versus someone that works 80 hours a week and they have three jobs.
But who potentially is making more money? You don't
really know until you take a look under the hood and see like, what is this time devoted towards?
What are you doing? Maybe you're a material expert at something and maybe you're 20, maybe you're a
doctor and you do, you do 20 hours a week worth of surgery. And obviously there'd be other hours
devoted to some other things, but you kind of get the idea. Like hard work is only like a piece of the pie.
And I think from everybody I've met, it kind of always starts with hard work, but then kind of morphs because you need to have that.
Otherwise you're done.
Have you met anyone that's high level that is not a material expert in something specific?
Because I personally have my own experience with meeting people that are executing on a
high level.
It just seems like they,
like you said,
develop your purpose.
It feels,
I feel like a lot of the people that I know have,
have scaled because they really learned or investigated and,
and knew a lot about one particular thing.
Yeah.
SME said they become subject matter experts and you have to become a subject matter expert.
Like I know all about franchising now.
After almost a decade,
I know more about franchising
than most people would learn from a university course
or going to the International Franchise Association's
certification programs, et cetera,
because I've been in the trenches.
I've dealt with franchisees.
I know what it's like when franchisees revolt against you. I know what it's like when they're
on board with your vision, mission, and values. And so I've become a subject matter expert. I
decided seven years ago that every month I'm going to study two franchises, one that's just
skyrocketing in any space. Could be Subway sandwiches, could be 7-Eleven,
could be Jiffy Lube, way outside of the fitness industry.
Why is one skyrocketing?
Then I want to study one that's crashing and burning.
For example, Quiznos arguably had a better sub, didn't they?
Yeah, they were good.
Better ingredients.
They didn't have yoga material in their bread like Subway did.
Did you guys hear that one? What now?
Yeah.
Yeah, so you've heard of that one, right?
I haven't.
Yoga?
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, yeah, so you know what yoga mats are made of?
That little rubbery thing of a jig?
So the, I don't know if it's the FDA,
the USDA says that you can have whatever,
.09% of that rubbery material in food,
which is also what the McRib is made of.
Because how does it have that
perfect shape? You ever wondered that, right? And so how does that beautiful bread hold its shape?
And so springy and fluffy yoga material. And so there's a, there's a blog called the food babe
and she exposed that. So Quiznos was like, Hey, look, we have actual real bread. There's no,
no fucking yoga mats in our bread. Right. Uh, the, the, the meat is, doesn't have nitrate.
It's not processed meat.
Our cheese is all natural, blah, blah, blah.
So Quiznos, and then when you eat the sandwich,
you're like, this is a better fucking sandwich,
and they toast it.
Oh, my God.
But Quiznos is no longer around,
and if there is one around right now,
I think there's a total of 60 left on the planet.
The Federal Trade Commission,
who sees all franchises, says, hey, Quiznos,
your failure rate has been so high
of locations that you're not allowed to sell anymore.
Every year we get audited by the Federal Trade Commission,
all franchises, and
if you have a high failure
rate, over like 26% or something,
then
you're not allowed to sell any more franchises.
Quiznos is at 42%, Cold Stone Creamery
is at 48%. Cold Stone Creamery is at 48%.
Cold Stone Creamery.
Cold Stone?
Yeah.
Baskin Robbins.
Good ice cream.
Cold Stone.
Amazing ice cream because they'll custom make the fucking thing
and then you want more of that and you want more of that.
Right?
Yeah.
Sorry.
Wow.
Yeah.
Because that, so what Quiznos was doing was taxing their franchisees
an extra 9%.
So you have to buy all your shit from us at a 9% markup.
And the franchisees are like, dude, so we can't compete price-wise with Subway.
And now that Subway added a toaster, they're crushing us, right, with their yoga mats.
And Cold Stone Creamery, I forget what their deal was, but they did something where, again, the franchisees revolted.
And we're starting to shut down.
And so you've got to show that on what's known as an FDD,
Franchise Disclosure Document, every year.
How many locations opened, how many closed.
And Federal Trade Commission's like,
hey, neither of you can open up more locations.
Now here's the ironic part.
2017, Subway closed more stores than opened.
That was the first time in Subway history.
So every year or every month,
I'm studying one franchise that's successful, one that's
failing and I want to know the whys behind it.
If I have to call the CEOs or do research on them or listen to podcasts that they've
been on, and because of that I've become a subject matter expert on franchising.
This is the fat foreign kid that came from communist country, English is the second language
for me, learned personal training, worked as a bouncer at a gay bar,
Disneyland, and a personal trainer,
and now I know more about franchising,
so much that people pay me $90,000 to speak at franchising expos.
What?
And all I did was go narrow and deep on one subject.
That one subject, a decade now, might change
because my passion will change, but I'll always be serving.
I know that I'm meant to be a servant because if I'm not serving, I will start self-destructing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A lot of people listening, hopefully they can take that and put it into whatever they want to do.
You know, study two people or two things, study it for a few weeks, a few months, maybe it's two books, whatever it is.
But you can apply that to anything. Maybe you're not interested. Maybe you don't dig franchises.
Maybe you don't care about that, but find something that you can study for a little
while. I think taking on two things is not too overwhelming for anyone.
Not at all. And look, man, if someone's like, I want to be a strong motherfucker,
there's probably a handful of dudes, yourself included, that I'm going to study.
There's not a lot of dudes. You find the best at the top there's not a lot like in that case i want to go looking for the power lifters
who have torn quads and hamstrings and fucking rotator cuffs and all that shit because that's
you're not looking for a failure and a winner in that category right like i am right i want to know
how not to fail so i'm looking for failures in franchising as well to go what not to do yeah
but there really isn't much to becoming the best.
Like not a lot of effort.
And I'll share this with you real quick.
Water boils at 211 degrees.
Cool.
Throw a raw egg in it.
You can make hard boiled eggs and eat it.
One more degree of change.
One more degree of change, it turns into steam.
And you can power a locomotive and that locomotive can bring goods in and out of towns.
Steam versus boiling water.
One more degree of,
I'm going to commit to studying this guy an hour longer than he is,
that hour multiplied by a year per day, per week, per month,
will make me substantially better than you.
That is why I'm better than him.
That's it.
That's one reason.
That's one of the reasons.
Substantially better looking too.
See?
You are very handsome.
Both of you.
If you think about like an average person,
like how many people like are listening right now
that take just a couple moments
to just completely be by themselves
and have silence?
I'm guilty.
I don't really ever do that.
I do go on the cold plunge
and I guess that's the only time that I literally have them myself where I'm completely alone, and I'm alone with my own thoughts.
Even when I'm running, I'm listening to music or something.
But that is a good experience for me.
I am out in nature and stuff.
But I think some people aren't even exploring some of that.
So just imagine, you know, somebody listening, and maybe they don't believe in some of the woo-woo stuff, but hey, could you believe it that taking 10 minutes
and being by yourself and with yourself and with your own thoughts
could really be productive?
And could you figure out a way to do it by being intentional with breathing?
Because maybe just sitting there just sounds like it sucks to you
for whatever reason, but maybe you can do it through some breath work.
Yeah, I think that's probably the best approach for a lot of people because, um, this, I think the
reason why people can't approach this is because most people have the intrusive negative thoughts.
So it's, it's, they're more so escaping most of the day and, and they're not aware that they're
escaping, right? They don't realize that every time they're going for these, these stimulation hits that it's because they're anxious.
And this anxiety is driven from like a really deep,
deep space of like unworthiness in a lot of ways or insecurities and or fear.
So that, that first set of stillness, when they try to just sit still,
it's wild. So it's really great to like use the run, use the cold,
use the breath I feel because, um, it won't
be as intrusive for a lot of these people. Um, and, and they can really like kind of move in
that direction because it's sitting at first, it's still for a lot of these, uh, uh, individuals.
It's just so hard because the thoughts are just wild, like really aggressive, really negative,
um, really, really fearful thoughts. Um, so it's, it's, it's kind of nice to stack it with some type of movement, cold, or breath.
Even just laying down on the ground, you know, you might think like,
oh, this pad is a little bit uncomfortable, or the wrinkle in my shirt feels weird,
or all kinds of things run through your mind because as much as we want to try to shut the mind down
or slow it down, it's always at work.
It's always at work.
Even when we're sleeping, it's at work.
Well, it's interesting.
I have this theory on the ego, too.
So since we're not the mind, I feel like a lot of times when we operate from only the mind and we don't know how to get out of this fear-driven lifestyle,
we then manifest and create the ego.
And the ego is built from a low vibrational place.
And people have relied on this ego to protect themselves,
but unfortunately it stops them from actually doing great things. It's because it's coming from a place of fear.
So I think that's what everybody battles with
when they really start working and talking to themselves.
So I always use the analogy of, or the, remember that cartoon where it has the person and then there's the devil or the angel and then the devil.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I go, well, once you become aware that you have, you're a soul, so the soul is the angel.
The avatar is the avatar, right?
And then the devil is the angel the avatar is the avatar right and then the devil's the ego and so that's
that dialogue that you're consistently having like hey i should work out today and then it's like
start monday that's the ego like it's like when you go to lay down do breath work be like it's
cool they'll do it later and like you get up and you do it later and the brain has always been
like relying on that motherfucker that ego for protection so it only kind of knows
to listen to that guy and so he'll listen to that your avatar is going to keep listening to that guy
all the time until it builds a relationship with this guy and how do you build a relationship with
that guy and that's by getting present that's by becoming love so by becoming still and and the
more you connect to that higher self that that soul, the ego dissolves. It
can't exist in that realm. It dissolves. And I think Joe Dispenza mentions that too. They can
see it on a brain scan that the ego or what the ego is or in a wavelength literally dissolves
while they're meditating. And isn't that what psychedelics can provide too?
Do the same thing that the ego also dissolves on psychedelics as well. there's really something here so everybody that relies on this ego and they even identify
with the ego that's who they're listening to but that thing's built out of fear it's all it's all
makes a lot of sense like it's i think it has to do with the left and right brain you know starting
to communicate come together and communicate yeah and that that was a big moment for for me
understanding that that i that, that I'm,
I'm not the ego. And then what's even cool too, is I think you get to the point where
you no longer acknowledge that there is an ego because it's, it's a manifestation.
You don't even acknowledge it anymore. You don't give it any power. And I'm starting to dabble
with that a little bit as well. Like not even acknowledging that there is this thing that I
created manifested within my mind called the ego. you say you don't acknowledge it what do you mean
exactly um even like like say it's my ego because i think the ego and the brain are the same thing
to be honest right does that make sense right i get it so you don't like you don't separate it
from yourself right yeah exactly i don't create like this whole other thing that's just a whole
other thing you know it's like just like the inception thing you keep like zooming out so
the ego is just another thing and maybe the ego can even create its own ego who knows so it's
like you start just like removing that part and just the brain i liked what you were you were
mentioning earlier right after i don't know if it was before after we did the breath work but
we were talking about how like you know this stuff allows you to be present and it actually allows you to go through
your day. And sometimes like you'll go, you'll walk up to the fridge and then you'll catch
yourself like, wait, wait, I'm not, I'm not hungry. Why am I here? What am I, why did I,
why am I opening the fridge right now? You know what I mean? Like you really start to zoom out.
Exactly. Cause you have these routines that you'll just naturally be going through if you've built in
a routine and it's just like, you're kind of like a robot.
You go to the fridge, you see that there, you take it to the couch, you eat it while watching something.
But when you become present, you start doing some of these breathwork practices, cold plunging, et cetera.
You're like, wait, why am I scrolling?
I've been scrolling for the past five minutes.
This is useless.
And that buffer is huge.
That's when we can get a chance to kind of like, whoa, step outside of it. And most people right now, they don't have the capability that that buffer is huge that's when we can get a chance to kind of like whoa step outside of it right and most people right now they don't have the capability of that
buffer they don't know how to get that like that just that little bit of space in between
their person and their actual self and and if you really do remove the identity of of this self
it makes it really easy to look at it from a really wonderful, objective way. And you
see it as literally retraining it. Like it's like, almost like a monkey mind. It's like, or a child,
if you will. And so then you can really just start like approaching it and do it through love,
never shame or guilt, right? Like, so when he messes up and like does something that doesn't
serve him, I can be like, well, that's okay. Let's pick ourselves up and like does something that doesn't serve him i can be like well that's okay let's
pick ourselves up and maybe let's handle it a little bit differently you know but if we identify
with that self and it messes up then we're like i'm a piece of shit i'm these things right it's
like it's we turn on ourselves it's kind of wild so if you can separate and then like be really
kind to the the avatar when it goes through a moment of like messing up,
you can make some profound changes very, very quickly
with many of your behaviors
through just being loving towards it
as opposed to like shaming it.
Got it.
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Maybe as a kid,
you weren't encouraged to try different things.
Maybe as a kid,
you were discouraged a lot of times.
Maybe you went to go do something
and you made a fool of yourself.
You went to go play baseball.
You swung at one ball
and like you hurt yourself,
like hurt your back or something.
Or the ball hit you and you cried
and everybody made fun of you.
Like you're a big baby. You're 12 years old. What are you crying about? It's like,
well, baseball fricking hurts. And maybe you had a bad experience. What I want to encourage you is to start to try to really find different things because you don't know how they can
change your life. You can go from having a broke mindset and not understanding things that
are outside your box that you were born into. And I'm not even saying that the box is necessarily
broken, but it doesn't allow you the growth mindset that's necessary to be able to have a
mindset that can continue to grow over time. And that's kind of what I mean by monetizing your mind. Like let's make this mind
grow. And over time, it's going to become more and more valuable. And will it ever turn into money?
It probably can, but we'll have to, we'll have to think about that after we already acquired
the skill sets. Yeah. And I just, you know, as a, as a kid, if you're not encouraged,
you're almost ostracized. If you do try other things, um, my, all my uncles, you know, as a kid, if you're not encouraged, you're almost ostracized if you do try other things.
All my uncles, you know, everyone played football.
And when I wanted to play soccer, it was like, that's a girl's sport.
You know, you're not tackling anybody.
Like, don't be a little wuss.
And it's like, but I don't want to do that thing.
Like, I love watching the Niners play and stuff.
But, like, I'm actually kind of good at soccer. But then, you you know everyone makes fun of me for it so then I I don't do it and whether or not
that that carry that I carry that with me but a lot of people who aren't encouraged to you know
have the monetization mindset they do carry it into their adulthood and stuff so how can like
what what do you think is like kind of step one, if somebody,
you know, they're working their eight to five, cause they're supposed to, you know, maybe they
don't want to. So like, how do you start to like kind of break away from that mindset?
Yeah, I think it's, uh, you know, I've heard Jordan Peterson say something like this. He
said something to the effect of that, um, pursuing happiness is pursuing happiness is a luxury. But pursuing, pursuing
what you are, I'm losing the word. But basically he meant like by pursuing the thing that you love,
that's like a moral obligation. It's a moral obligation to pursue the thing that you love, that's like a moral obligation.
It's a moral obligation to pursue the thing that you love
because you're going to find a lot of life's answers in there.
So what does that mean?
Does that mean you just quit your nine to five
and like, I'm going to follow my dream, bro?
I don't think so.
I think what it does mean is that
you simultaneously,
you have your job that you have, you have, uh,
an obligation, you have a responsibility, but it's going to be your moral obligation over a period of
time to pursue what really fills up your cup, what really fills up your heart. Is it helping other
people? Is it, um, do you really love, do you really love running,
but you literally don't have like a lot of time for it? You know, do you, because some things
that we, some things that we like and we love, it's kind of hard to get good at them unless we
have a specific amount of time for them. I know, we know that you can slowly but surely get better
at something. We do it once or twice a week we know that but it's kind
of it's a more difficult route and that's the route of somebody who's super patient and super
mature most of the time we're neither one of those so we choose to go to jujitsu like four
times a week or we choose to run every day you know like i'm just i i run every day not because
it's optimal i run every day because it's like what's in my head.
And it feels good for my brain to go do that.
But yeah, somebody that does have the nine to five and they don't have the luxury to go around and chase what makes them happy, you're going to want to still think about like what is the thing that you want to do?
want to still think about like, what is it? What is the thing that you want to do? I think if you're to back way up, you're to back way up and you're to think, what's this going to look like in like
10 years? Again, think of your, um, your way into lifting, you know, I'll just use my own
powerlifting career as an example. If I would have took six months off from powerlifting and just reset and
reloaded and rethought and just didn't power,
just thought I just didn't powerlift and wanted to pursue train,
wanted to pursue raw lifting a little bit more.
I would have hit every goal that I had.
And then some,
like,
I just know that I would have,
I've done things like that before,
but I did it when I was younger
at this time around I was like
I ain't waiting around
man I'm going to give this another
go
meanwhile in the previous training cycle
in the previous
training cycle I blew out my pec
and so when I came back to powerlifting
and I benched 578
that was after I tore a pec for like the second or third time or whatever it was.
In training for the 578 bench, I slightly tore my tricep and I still was able to go to the contest and be able to hit that 578 bench.
And when I went for 600, I gave a pretty decent push on it.
bench. Um, and when I went for 600, I gave a pretty decent push on it, but once the weight,
once the weight of that kind of hit me, um, it was too much and I tore my pack again.
But again, if I would've just, if I would've just pulled back a little bit, if I would've just taken my time and said, how do you really want this to end? How do you really want this powerlifting
career of yours to end? You want to end it with an exclamation point or do you want to end
it with like, nah, it's pretty cool. You did 578, but it's not 600. You know, there there's, you,
you have control over these things and anybody that's in any sport, anyone that's in any,
it's even worse than that. A lot of times, a lot of times. So at least for me, at least I,
that sounds so stupid to say some of this, but at least I was already Mark Bell.
At least I was already like, I was already secure.
I was already making money.
I already had the slingshot.
I was already doing all these things.
I was already somebody in power.
I already did the things that I wanted to do.
There's some people that they just cannot, they cannot stop bench pressing.
They cannot stop doing curls. They cannot stop doing curls.
They cannot stop doing tricep pushdowns and their elbows are killing them.
Their body's killing them.
Their body's telling them the last thing that we need is for you to do these exercises this week, you know, and they can't take a week or two off.
Someone's shoulders bothering them.
And there they are, you know, doing bench and doing dips and doing pushups. I just got to work through the pain.
And that's not the answer. The answer is to like, Hey, what would happen if I just took a big step
back from this and just kind of reloaded with a little bit more information with a little bit
more knowledge. So again, kind of back to, you know, somebody having like a nine to five or somebody being in college and kind of just feeling like in a funk and they're not doing what they want to do.
Just think about you can do what you want to do for a shorter period of time during the day and during the week than what it is you have to do for now.
week than what it is you have to do for now. Then over time, you should be able to flip those things around to where now 70% of the time is you playing and doing and messing around with the things that
you love. And 30% of the time is kind of the other stuff. Cause there's always like some stuff
that we don't have an opportunity to do. But even as a kid, you think about it, you go to school,
what percentage of the day is that?
You know, you go to school, seems like forever.
You leave at like eight o'clock in the morning.
You come back at two or three every day.
And that's five days a week, every week,
except for some weeks and some time in the summer.
And so that is really flip-flopped, right?
Like that's you doing maybe some kids that really enjoy school.
So there's that.
But it's a lot of kids probably doing things that they don't really want to do.
They don't really love to do.
And then on the other side of it, maybe they play volleyball.
They do some stuff with their friends.
But that volleyball practice is an hour. The time they got to hang out after school with their friends is 30 minutes.
They hang out with their friend on the weekend, every Sunday. It's like for three hours or
something. It's like so minor compared to the amount of time they spend in school. So hopefully as you get older, you can flip some of that around. I think
that like a 90% of you doing what you want to do or you doing what you don't want to do. I think
both of those are bad. I don't think that's enough. I don't think that's enough balance.
Some people, you know, might say, well, I just want to rock it to the top and so I'm gonna go 90 percent and do all that I'm gonna wake up at four and
those things are fine but you got to kind of back yourself up from that even and think
the number one killer of humans is stress more so than cigarettes and more so than heart attacks
and cancer because it's all kind of lumped in there. And once you're stressed,
it makes your body,
makes it a lot harder for your body to fight things off.
If you're super stressed,
most likely it's going to be harder to sleep.
And so if you,
even someone like a Joe Rogan who talks about like longevity,
it may be harder for somebody like that
or someone who's driven like a Jeff Bezos or an Elon Musk might
be harder for these guys to live longer. I'll use Jeff Bezos as an example because I realize Elon
don't think really trains. But you would imagine that Jeff Bezos must have had some pretty stressful
times in his life. Rogan seems like he's ahead and seems like he's not super stressed, but
you know, there are hundreds of millions of dollars.
There are hundreds of millions of dollars
that have been generated by his show.
And even the success that I've had,
it would be foolish for me to not recognize
like that's an extra stressor,
having employees and then trying to,
yeah, have people work with you, have people work
under you and things like that. And that communication, like those are all,
those are all stressors. And then who you are, even in your community, who you are in your family,
those are all things that can, it's kind of cool. Like if you're hovering around like the middle or the high end of the middle, those are all
cool spots to be because someone could easily just a family member could be like, Oh, I'm
going to get there too.
You know, but when you're really killing it, you know, it's, it's like, it's a different
thing and it's, there can be, it doesn't have to be, but there can be more stress with things
like that. So things can become kind of unbalanced. But anyway, that 90-10 is like, that's not something you want to mess with. You want to have it, you want to have your time commitment to the things that you don't want to do.
And you should be able to flip it as you get older, but you're going to have to develop a skill set and you're going to have to develop a monetizable brain, a monetizable mindset to have something that's valuable so you can flip that around.
Yeah. When you were paraphrasing what Jordan Peterson was saying in regards to like, it's your obligation, you know, to kind of pursue this or whatever. I can't remember who else it was. It might have been Steven Pressfield.
But basically, it's kind of like your duty.
Like you're put here on this earth for it.
And, you know, talk about zooming out 10 years from now.
Like when you were powerlifting, were you doing it for anybody else?
Like period.
No.
And I think that's what drew people to it.
Yeah.
So, well, that's amazing.
People like this guy doesn't care.
Like he wears this weird hat and it's sideways or backwards or whatever the weird nonsense I was doing and rapping and just like, just, yeah, just having fun.
It's for me.
Yeah, it was all for you.
When I was working on my photography, it was because I didn't want to go back to my regular job.
Like, I wanted to just break away from that.
But even for myself in doing that and now being a part of the podcast,
like we do have people that work for us now or they work with us, but you know what I mean? Like
the podcast has helped families now, you know? And like, so if I wasn't here, maybe that wouldn't
happen as successfully, you know, kind of tooting my own horn here, but like for yourself with,
you know, powerlifting, I don't really need
to say too much, but like you've helped a lot of people and it's all because you were kind of
focused in on your thing. This is your, your thing, your passion. I'm going to go all in on
this for myself. And then 10 years later, it's like, oh, wait a second. I'm impacting the entire
world now. So it was more than just your obligation to pursue your passion. It was
why you were put on this planet. You know, you were meant to do bigger things than just your
typical, you know, whatever, eight to five person. Although that person's also put here for something,
but maybe that person thinks it's too late. How do you break that weird feeling of somebody?
break that weird feeling of somebody you can throw in any age and everybody will think oh i missed the wave from you know 20s to 30s 40s 50s everyone probably feels like it's too late how can you help
somebody get over that weird thought i think the only people that will feel like they're missing
out are people that you know maybe get a look behind the curtain or they're like, Oh, that's what everybody's talking about. Holy shit. It just like, Whoa. Um,
it would be like, uh, it would be like entering like a new, a new world or something you know um or um there is something really
amazing about figuring something out i don't know if people know what i'm talking about but like
i don't know if you've ever been driving and you've heard a quote or heard something on a podcast or
and it just hits you so hard like you're almost like i i should pull the car over right now for
a minute this is oh this insanity. Because whatever it was
that they said connected the dots in your brain over to the other side that was like disconnected
for some reason. And I hope people know what I'm talking about, but I have parts of Davis,
California. I live in Dixon, but I have parts of Davis that are like, they're cut off for me.
I can't link them together. I'm like, wait, how do I get from this street over here to this street?
How do I get to this school or how do I get to this area over here?
And they're not connected.
They're connected by other roads because I know those roads.
Those are familiar.
I'm like, I need to backtrack and go over those other roads.
But sometimes you get a message or you see something and it just connects that stuff together once and for all
for you. So sometimes there's like a quote or something that you hear where it brings all that
together. And you feel that like I get in goosebumps even just thinking about it because
it's been so transformative to me so many different times, so many different ways.
And it's sort of foolish in some ways because you've heard people say similar things,
but for whatever reason,
they didn't like land on you the right way at that time. And I think timing is everything. So with the person that, you know, with the person that kind of wants out and they want to
start making adjustments, they're not even going to really realize that they want out. They've been
inside this coffee mug, you know, for 20 years and they're like, this is great, man. This
is awesome. Like every morning they dump a bunch of coffee in here and it's awesome. And just swim
around the coffee and they just think that that's cool, but they don't really realize like you don't
have to just be a coffee mug. You could be a shaker cup or you could be a bigger cup or a smaller cup
or a bottle, a ninja blender or yeah, or or a bottle a ninja blender or yeah or a ninja
ninja blender you could be um you don't have to be uh what kenny calls poverty water like the
crystal geyser uh water you get from the gas station that's super we've talked about water
sucks well it's super crinkly like i have a fuji right now that i'm or or Fiji rather, that I'm, uh, that I put up to the microphone and it only does that.
But the crystal geysers,
like,
it's,
it's just like a bag.
Yeah.
You're like,
what is this thing?
When you go to open that thing,
like you,
you basically have to like grip it.
But if you grip it too much,
it fucking,
it shoots water everywhere.
It's,
it's terrible.
You could be a glass bottle of Pellegrino for God's sake.
Could you imagine?
You understand what I'm saying? He could be opaque. Yeah. What else grano for god's sake could you imagine you understand
what i'm saying he could be opaque yeah what else could we be i guess well i was gonna this is a
family show i looked up at our uh oh yeah at our display yeah i've seen a pump of sorts but yeah
you don't want to be one of those yeah yeah that's true you going to get used and abused.
Yeah, so I think it's hard to even think outside the box when you're like, I have a job, and that job allows me, provides me on the weekend to go fishing.
I get to go skiing with my kids in the summertime when they have off from school or in the summertime skiing.
I get to go on water ski.
I get to ski with my kids when I have off in the wintertime and things like that.
So your job does provide you some things where you're like,
oh, that's cool.
But I think some of that, not all the time,
I think some of that sometimes is a little bit of a trap,
just like the company car. car you know i you know
i make 80 but i really make like 110 because they gave me a company car it's like no you actually
make 80 but i have really really good benefits that i only have to pay like half of what everyone
else pays like it's it's tight right right and and hey look making eighty thousand dollars a year is
a blessing making anything over like sixty thousand dollars,000 a year I think is a huge blessing,
and it could be a step in a great direction for you.
But I just think that sometimes we get kind of trapped by the dollar amount even.
Like even if you were making $120,000 or $150,000, that sounds cool.
But what are you leaving on the table?
You know, let's, let's zoom again,
let's zoom back out again. You know, here lies Andrew Z. Like he was awesome. He was, he was
such a great dad. He was such a great, this great that. But, you know, we also know like,
not that anyone's going to say this, you know, when you're dead, but we also know how much he was into cars and how much he was into
he he started really talking a lot about jujitsu but he you know he just he never went
he had those cars he was gonna work i never worked on him he's talking about podcasts he never
he never did that one either you know but he well he was really nice he was a really sweet guy
you know but it would have been cool to see. I wonder what he would have, you know.
So if you can zoom out and think like, man, it's just like they're not even really risks, I don't think.
They're not that bad.
They're not that bad.
Every once in a while, they're every once in a while, they're tough.
But I think anyone that can see outside the coffee mug that they're trapped in,
um, you need to take a little risk. You need to, you need to try to make that leap,
make that jump because what you're going to, I was explaining this to somebody the other day.
They're like, I have an opportunity. I have this crazy opportunity. Like I could give
X percentage of my company to this superstar person and like,
boom, off to the races, this would go. Right. And, um, I was like, well, okay, there's two
ways of looking at that. One is like, that is crazy because you haven't been in business that
long. Like that is, that is amazing. Like that is, you should really pat yourself on the back
because that is, I have not even ever heard of that before.
Like that's wild.
So there's that.
The second thing is like that could work out
and that could be amazing.
The third thing is, and still on the positive side is,
if that guy takes X percentage of this company,
If that guy takes X percentage of this company, then I should be – I should understand that I have the ability to build other companies and other brands since I just built this one and I'm talking to this guy that's such a hot commodity.
I'm talking to this person that big of a risk because you're still so valuable.
And I shared this before with Ryan Spencer.
Ryan Spencer has been a friend of mine for a long time.
We have to have him back on the show, by the way.
We've got to get him on the podcast.
long time. We have to have him back on the show, by the way. We've got to get him on the
podcast. He's an absolute
animal, absolute beast in there.
You know, political muscle in there, deadlifting
five plates
for reps and shit like that. Weighs like
170.
He does it by himself in the morning. He does it by himself
at like 5 a.m. He's just
an absolute animal.
He's got two kids, somebody I really admire.
But it was years and years ago
and he was really sweating it about this job and he had this other kind of job opportunity
and it wasn't really like a, it wasn't like a move real forward. It was more like a lateral move
and he and I discussed it. I'm like, Ryan, you, do you understand? Like all the people that I know, I know a lot of
people and most of them are really stupid, unfortunately. But I said, you're one of the
smartest guys that I know. And you're, you're, you work super hard. So this move that you're
thinking about making, let's say you make the move and let's say the move doesn't work. You're
three weeks in and you're like, Oh my God, this is not working. let's say the move doesn't work you're three weeks in you're like oh
my god this is not working it's not like you can't get another job like you already have all the
capacity is already there you already have all these skill sets no one can take any of that away
from you so even if you switch jobs and let's hypothetically say everyone hated you no one
would hate him because he's super sweet he's a very nice guy in a lot of different ways
but let's say that was the case and let's say that his skill set wasn't matching up to that
job, which that wouldn't be the case either because he's super smart. If any of those things
were the case, he could just bounce on over to another job. Now that does seem scary, but I'm
like, even if you were to lose a little bit of money, you currently don't dig what you're doing.
Like you're not, you don't love it right now. You don't love what you're doing and you used to love
it. So even if it's less pay, which I don't think it even was, but even if it is less pay, what if
you're waking up in the morning, like 30 minutes earlier, cause you're more pumped to go to work.
You got a little extra pep in your step.
Sometimes too, like depending on the type of job that you have, if you are, if you're kind of, if you're kind of like more than enough qualified, like overqualified for a
particular job position, who's to say that you can't develop like a side hustle somewhere?
You know, so let's say that you do go and work somewhere and it's for a little less money. Um, but you are really
experienced. You should be able to write your own check a little bit, not in terms of the money,
but you should be able to say, Hey, look, I've been doing this for 15 years. You know, here's,
here's what I can bring to the table. Um you cool with me taking every Friday off or taking half days on Friday and you can spend extra time with your family or whatever it is that it amounts to be?
But in this job that you can work a lot easier and more efficiently and have wrapped up earlier in every single day, you might be able to develop that online business
that you always wanted to do. You might be able to pursue something else. And I told my wife the
same thing when she, my wife years ago wanted to quit the job that she was at and she was pretty
upset and stuff. I said, go in tomorrow and quit. She's like, I, she's like, I can't do that. You
know? I'm like, why not? I I mean you had the job for two years we can
if we had to we can collect unemployment or whatever the case was at the time and I was like
you know that you can make a similar amount like you can fill in that job within a month you know
she's like I don't know if we have a month. I was like, we got, we're good. We're good. We have, you'll probably get a job faster than that. But anyway, she switched jobs and ended up in a job where she didn't have to be in the office as much. And then it kind of just parlayed into us being able to make Power Magazine. with my own career where I've moved into somebody else's gym when I already had my own gym.
That provided me the comfort of making the gym free. That provided me the comfort of not having
to be on the hook to actually coach people as much and to train people as much and to think
more freely. I went on more walks. I thought about powerlifting more rather than just like
actually doing powerlifting.
And I created the slingshot. Like a lot of those things, they wouldn't have happened without having more freedom.
Because I still needed to, I was still in the process of developing the skill sets.
But you can't think of something like the slingshot without a skill set
within a given field. It's just not going to happen. You either have to be a coach in that,
or you have to be a participant. Like someone from the outside isn't going to really be able
to think of a cool idea for that particular sport unless they have some experience and the experience could be through somebody else
like John Donaher he's uh well he's a practitioner as well and a really high level one but
he's the most famous jiu-jitsu coach out there right now he could think of something in jiu-jitsu
because he lives in it all the time now like his friend that maybe doesn't practice jiu-jitsu
it's going to be harder but he might hear him talk about it all the time. Now, like his friend that maybe doesn't practice jujitsu,
it's gonna be harder,
but he might hear him talk about it all the time.
He might say, hey, you ever think about making this?
And the other, he might go, whoa.
And that's where you can actually have that.
But you have to have the experiences
within those given fields to be able to think that way.
Otherwise, it's hard to think outside the box.