Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Mark Divine on Unlocking Your Leadership Potential, Navy SEAL Style
Episode Date: February 28, 2020Leadership may sound glamorous, but it’s far different from what most people imagine. It’s hard work. It takes brains, grit, and persistence. You have to earn the trust and respect of your team. Y...ou have to do more than just learn new skills to become a good leader, too—you have to work on yourself to overcome the mental hurdles holding you back, including deeply-ingrained negative behaviors and emotions. Luckily, no matter your previous experience, you can become a better leader. And who better to learn from than Mark Divine, who’s releasing a new book on leadership called Staring Down the Wolf: 7 Leadership Commitments That Forge Elite Teams. In case you’re not familiar with Mark, he’s a master in mental toughness and leadership. He’s not just a New York Times bestselling author and creator of several multi-million dollar businesses (including SEALFIT and Unbeatable Mind), he was also a Navy SEAL for 20 years and climbed the rank of commander before retiring. So it goes without saying that Mark isn’t just talking the talk. In this episode, we talk about . . . How leading a team in the civilian world is different from the SEALs The hard lessons he learned from his first major business failure Common leadership problems like internal biases and a lack of emotional awareness Stages of leadership development and the importance of “vertical growth” and mastering yourself And even a bit of book publishing, meditation, and spirituality . . . So, if you want to become a better leader or even just a more well-rounded person more capable of serving a greater cause than yourself, definitely give this episode a listen! 13:25 - Why did you decide to write this book and why now? 20:29 - How was the transition from the navy seals to business? 30:13 - Why is vertical growth so important? 33:05 - What does that higher perspective look like? 50:05 - What does spirituality mean to you? --- Mentioned on The Show: Mark’s New Book Staring Down the Wolf: 7 Leadership Commitments That Forge Elite Teams: staringdownthewolf.com/pre-order-page-3 Mark Divine’s Website: markdivine.com/ Mark Divine’s Podcast: unbeatablemind.com/podcast/ Mark Divine’s Corporate Training: unbeatablemind.com/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: legionathletics.com/shop/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews, and thank you for
being here with me. And this episode is going to be about leadership, which is something that
may sound glamorous, but is actually far different from what most people imagine.
Leadership is hard work. It takes brains. It takes grit. It takes perseverance.
You have to really work to earn the trust and respect of the people on your team. And you have
to do more than just learn new skills to become a good leader. You have to become a better person.
You have to work on yourself. You have to overcome the mental hurdles that are holding you back.
And that often includes, I'd say almost always includes, deeply ingrained negative behaviors
and emotions that make it impossible to really become a competent leader.
make it impossible to really become a competent leader.
Luckily though, no matter what your previous experiences have been like,
you can become a better leader.
And who better to learn from than Mark Devine, today's guest,
who is releasing a new book on March 3rd. I'm not sure when exactly it's going to go up.
It's going to go up in the next few days or so. I'm recording this on the 25th and Mark's book comes out on March 3rd. I'm not sure when exactly it's going to go up. It's going to go up in the next few days or so. I'm recording this on the 25th and Mark's book comes out on March 3rd and it is
called Staring Down the Wolf, Seven Leadership Commitments That Forge Elite Teams. And it's a
book on leadership, of course. Now, why should you listen to Mark? Well, in case you're not
familiar with him, he is a master in mental toughness and leadership.
He is someone we can all learn from because he's not just a New York Times bestselling author and
creator of several multi-million dollar businesses and brands, including Seal Fit,
you've probably heard of that, as well as Unbeatable Mind. Mark was also a Navy SEAL
for 20 years where he honed his leadership abilities, which
helped him climb to the rank of commander before he retired. So it goes without saying that Mark
is not just talking the talk. This man has walked the walk for a long time now. And in this episode,
we talk about how leading a team in the civilian world is quite
different than when he was in the Navy. And that was a tough lesson for him to learn. He thought
he had his shit together because he was a badass SEAL commander and he was used to leading some of
the most elite soldiers in the world. And then he gets out into the business world. He gets into his civilian life after the Navy
and falls on his face. Why? We also talk about some of the hard lessons he learned in this period,
particularly from his first major business failure. We talk about some common leadership
problems out there like internal biases and a lack of emotional awareness, as well as different stages of leadership development
that we go through and the importance of really focusing on what he calls vertical growth and
mastering yourself. And we even talk a little bit about book publishing, meditation, and spirituality.
So if you want to become a better leader or maybe even just a more
well-rounded person who is more capable of serving the causes that you care about, then definitely
give this episode a listen. Now, before we get to the show, if you like what I'm doing here on the
podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help
more people get into the best shape of their lives, please do consider supporting my sports
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And if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what I love, like producing podcasts like this.
producing podcasts like this. Mr. Devine, it's been a while since we've emailed a little bit back and forth, but it's been a while since we've spoken on the podcast. So thanks for
taking the time to come back. Yeah, I appreciate it, Mike. It's been a while and super stoked to
chat with you here. Yeah, I'm excited to hear about your newest book that is coming out. We
were just chatting offline, people wondering, because Mark, you have a few popular books and we've discussed Amazon stuff over a couple of years now. And so it's, I like
staying in touch with other people who are doing something similar because there aren't that many
of us, at least in our space, you find more like people who have self-published books in fiction
and at least gotten anywhere with it. So yeah, you have to have a
platform for the self-publish process to really fly. But if you do and it's working, then it can
be really lucrative. And like we were just talking about earlier, you get to update your stuff. So
your content isn't fixed in time. And when you have a better idea or you're, you know, you evolve,
then you can go back and pull the old stuff down and tweak it, which is kind of nice. You can't do that with a major published work.
Yeah. I mean, that's something I've done quite a bit with my books and you can do it with a
traditional publisher, but it's a whole process. It's not guaranteed. Like you have to sell them
on why they should care. That's right. I did that with the way of the seal. They actually bought
the idea of doing a fifth anniversary edition. I added two new chapters and got to edit a bunch of stuff that
I didn't like out of it. But you're right. It was a big rigmarole process.
Yeah. Yeah. Whereas with self-publishing-
I think the Holy Grail, and this is kind of cool to see you get on this way with Simon
Schuster with your next book, is to have a little bit of both, right? So I've got a couple major
publishers. And this new one that we can talk about in a bit, Staring Down the Wolf, is
put out by Macmillan, St. Martin's imprint. There's just something about the energy of putting
out a book like that and everyone driving toward getting on the New York Times bestseller list and
the professional kind of juice that you get from that, the respect is powerful. And that can drive
a lot of awareness for your self-published books, which will earn all the money because you don't
really earn that much money on these traditional published books.
Totally. Yeah. I've just started the process with Simon & Schuster. And so far, it also,
it looks like it's going to be fun to work with. So, the editor who I'm working with
is what I like is so far, she has good ideas, like developmental editing.
Yeah. They should help improve the book through the process.
Absolutely. Whereas I've worked with some really good editors on my self-published
stuff and have no complaints. And in one case, for example, I've worked with a woman who came
from, she was a senior editor at a number of big publishing houses and she was very good,
very professional. And I enjoyed working with her. And I'm working with another freelance editor on a self-publishing project that I'm finishing
right now. Again, very good, very technically proficient. But my only critique, if I had one,
was just on the developmental side. I like if someone can challenge me and really like from
a conceptual standpoint saying, hey, this idea needs to be reworked
or this needs more details.
Or maybe if we were to rearrange the flow of this argument, it would be more compelling.
Stuff like that is, I'm enjoying that with the woman I'm working with.
Yeah, it's interesting you said that.
I just hadn't really thought of that, but I've had a similar experience.
And I think the difference is the big publishing houses have skin in the game and they take
ownership or co-ownership of the project.
So they're going to push and prod and evolve it through that whole process.
Whereas if you go out and hire someone, they're basically going to edit what you write and
maybe refine some of the verbology, but you're not going to get any book doctoring at all.
Yeah.
And you can get some, but I think you're right.
It's just that point of skin in the game because not only does the company have skin in the game,
but the individual does. I mean, the editors are entrusted with a lot of money and you know,
they have to sell their higher ups on why they should give you a portion of the money allotted
to them. And so they very much personally have skin in the game because if they pay you a bunch
of money for a book that flops, they might just get fired.
You know what I mean?
Right.
Honestly.
So anyways, not exactly what we're here to talk about.
No, it's interesting.
It's a segue.
It's book stuff. somewhere in the process or already have books out there because it's in the meat.
Everybody is being encouraged. If you're a solopreneur or trying to become a content person or a thought leader, you got to have a book and self-publishing is so important or so
easy, I should say. And there are pros and cons to that, right? Because there's a lot of crap out
there too. I mean, like a million books published every year. It's insane.
Yeah. And I would say I get asked a fair amount about this subject.
So I guess you're right.
There are probably a number of people listening who are enjoying this initial tangent.
But my basic advice to people is if they're just starting out and they don't have anything
much in the way of a following or a platform, just self-publish.
And yes, there are a million books a year is the number that I wouldn't be surprised.
There are many, many, many, many books that get self-published every year. But if you can do a good job, so let's just say most of those books are shit. They go nowhere, but it's immediately obvious that they're shit. They have shit covers, shit titles, and shit reviews. It's a dead, it's a nothing. It's not even competition. It's actually, I wouldn't even say it registers as noise. It's like some dust on
the ground and to mix metaphors. But so if you can just get above that, a good cover, a good title
and get off the ground with some good reviews, you're already way ahead of most of the people
who you would think that you have to compete with, who are actually not competition at all.
And then on top of that, if you can write a book that people like, if you can write a book that people talk
about, that's the key, a book that someone's going to text their friend and say, hey, I'm reading
this book. I really like this or share quotes on social media of something like that. Then you can
do it. You can do well as a self-published author. You can prove yourself. So then if you want to level
up, so to speak, with a traditional publisher and really go for the extra cachet and the extra
attention that comes with having like a New York Times bestselling book, for example, you have some
leverage. You're bringing something proven to the table as opposed to kind of begging for a book
deal. Yeah, you know it firsthand. So let's segue, speaking of books, into this newest
book of yours that's coming out. Oh, I thought it was, sorry, I got the date wrong. So it's coming
out in a couple of weeks, actually, 3rd of March. It's coming out March 2nd. So we're in that big
kind of pre-order push and first week of sales push. Our goal is to sell 5,000 copies. Leadership
category books are tough to get on the bestseller list, but we think we have got a good
chance, you know, because I've got a pretty big, decent size following, I should say. And if we
hit the right triggers, levers, you know, we should do that. You and I know that's just a game.
Yeah, it is. Yeah.
It's a long haul and whether the book impacts people positively, that counts.
Totally. Totally. Yeah. No, I understand. So I guess just quickly for people who want to just get right to buying the book, or if they can just keep this in mind in our discussion, they can just go to staringdownthewolf.com and then there's a pre-order, a link to pre-order it there and you have a bunch of bonuses.
bonuses. And one of my friends is Ryan Holiday and we've shared podcasts and stories and he's helped me out with some projects. And I loved his recent book launch for Stillness is the Key,
which is a great book. And one of the things he did was offer like, hey, if you're going to buy
a lot of books, then I'll come and do a talk for your company. I was like, hey, that's a great idea.
So we offered that for anyone who buys a thousand books, like to say they have a large organization,
then I'll come and do a keynote, is great or training even for a day or a
half day and normally that's 35 000 or more with travel and you know when you buy the books it's
like 14 000 so it's a pretty good deal totally stuff like that i mean not many people would
take me up and then i think we've had two yeah it's still like hey that's a lot of books that's
great man that's super exciting actually it is But you can get signed copies and for people who wanted to buy a smaller number for
their team, let's say a hundred, then I do Zoom training. There's all sorts of cool things that
we offer. Those are all my team's ideas. I was like, at first I was like, I'm going to be running
around the country doing keynotes and these Zoom calls, but-
Do you want to hit the list or not, man? That's-
Right. You got to do that stuff, right?
You're willing to pay the price or are you trying to bargain over it? Yeah. So let's talk
about this book. So why this book and why now? Why did you decide to write it? Like most book
projects, it was a little bit labyrinthine, the process. I was working on a manuscript
that I still have on the shelf now and it's called Incommon. And essentially it's like
the sequel to Unbeatable
Mind for young leaders to really radar lock on their future, their purpose, and then use all
the tools that we've been developing at Unbeatable Mind to just dominate. And it's kind of like the
book where if you were to say, hey, if I had that knowledge when I was in my 20s and just launching,
or even 30s, for gosh sakes, I would have been way ahead of the game.
At any rate, so I was about 80% done with that.
My publisher from St. Martin's who published a couple of the books of mine,
Eight Weeks of Seal Fit and Kokoro Yoga, which are like training manual books,
but Eight Weeks of Seal Fit was a New York Times bestseller.
They did a great job and it sold a ton of copies.
He wanted me to do a book on leadership from kind of the Navy SEAL leader perspective.
And I was like, first, I was hesitant because, you know, I've got teammates who do that.
And what more can I add to that discussion?
And the way the SEAL has some of that stuff in it, that's my other book.
And so I just kind of told him, let me think about it and I'll get back to you on it.
And so you know this, but I don't think your listeners do.
But one of the kind of angles I have, or not angles, but kind of main themes for me is that, yes,
I'm a Navy SEAL commander, retired, and I'm an entrepreneur, but I'm really a trainer at heart,
and I'm a trainer who eats his own dog food, meaning I have a very disciplined daily practice
of my physical exercise, somatic movement, breath work, meditation, and visualization,
right? And I talk about these at length in my Unbeel Mind book, but it's worked for me since
I started Zen training when I was 21, four years before I joined the SEALs. And so I have this
daily practice. And so I spend a couple of weeks just kind of meditating on this whole project that
St. Martin's asked me to do and imagining it and asking myself the right questions like this project need to be done,
or is this just another quick money hit for St. Martin's? How can I add value to the conversation
around leadership and how can I help people? I reflected upon my own leadership journey,
and I recognized that this might be surprising to you, but that first of all,
that the team is everything. In the SEAL teams, the individual leader was important, but it wasn't
the main thing. It was all about the team. And that's why we call it the teams. So this book
is actually about developing and leading teams as opposed to like traditional, I'm a leader,
go kick ass and take names, leadership strategies and tactics kind of things.
So it's about teams. And then I recognized that when I was in the SEAL teams, it was actually pretty easy
for me to organize and conduct missions with a team that operated like at an elite level.
And we just dominated. But when I got out into the civilian world and became an entrepreneur,
how it was so much harder, like I never really could put my finger on it,
but I had like failure after failure after failure,
you know, kind of like failing my way towards success.
But it took me a long time to develop the leadership capacity
with my team, my current team,
to get to where now I feel like I have the same energy
and alignment and eliteness as I did in
the SEAL teams leading when I was 25. And I recognize that that's because the SEALs,
the organization of the SEALs, the culture and the structure are kind of like made for you or
done for you already. And all you got to do is come and just be a badass and plug into that.
And everything's already done for you. You don't have to build culture. You don't have to build
the structure of the organization or the team. You just have to work on yourself.
Not true for anybody in the real world, right?
Mike, I mean-
If only, if only.
Your company, you've had to-
Right.
Can you imagine if you could just do what you do and just plug into an elite SEAL team
every day and I'll have all the energy of that structure?
It would be miraculously easy compared to the way it really is.
This came out in my meditation.
That was part of it.
Leading in the civilian world is still all about the team, but the team is really hard to develop
and to align to operate in elite level.
But I had learned some things,
both from my days in the SEALs,
as well as the multiple organizations
that I've built in the entrepreneurial realm,
that there are certain principles
that are really growth principles, that if you apply these principles to yourself
as a practice every day, daily, monthly, weekly, and with your team, then together, you as a leader
and your team, which means that a lot of times you're the teammate and someone else is leading.
So it's kind of this idea we had in the SEAL teams that everyone's ready to lead, ready to
follow and never quit. It doesn't matter what role you're in or what your rank is.
So a team is like that. Everyone's leading, everyone's following, you'll never quit,
but it takes a serious commitment to growing together. And so that's the second major theme
is that your team is your major growth stimulator, so to speak. It's the petri dish for you to grow
to be the highest and best version of yourself as a human being. Tap that unlimited potential or what we call 20X potential. You're not going to
do it just by thinking you're perfect or doing your own little routine and then coming in and
dropping all your shit all over the team every day. So that brings me to the third major theme
that I had this aha moments sitting on that meditation bench was that one of the major obstacles for leaders
to be able to do what I just said, which is show up and grow with and through their team
to dominate whatever their personal battlefield is, is the emotional development or lack of
emotional awareness of every individual leader.
And one of the things that I've learned painfully over the years is that no matter how freaking smart you are or I am, no matter how talented I might be, I'm never going to have the
success that I could have if I don't eradicate my negative conditioning and my biases and what the
psychology profession would call your shadow. And so this book, it literally came out of me where
I was like, oh my God, this is it. The next frontier for leadership development is to develop the team
vertically, meaning to grow their awareness and tap more potential, all that being side of the
team. And the way to do that as a leader is to develop emotionally mature leadership.
And that was my journey is like all these disasters I had were because I had some,
when I say emotion, I'm not talking about all the, I'm talking about negative
conditioning that is reactionary based upon like some childhood trauma or bias that could
be baked into you because you just don't see it.
You know, we all have biases that we just don't understand that they're there, but everyone
else sees them or massive perfection or subtle fear of success or failure.
These things are all like the really soft,
you might even call them just subconscious programming,
but it's all related to emotional patterns
that are developed at a very early age
in the first 20, 21 years of our lives.
And if you don't address those,
like I said, you might be wealthy,
you could even be president of the United States,
but still be an asshole, so to speak.
Just saying, there's a possibility.
Stranger things have happened.
Stranger things have happened.
And so what was that like for you specifically?
You mentioned this shadow.
Like for you, how did you have to change going from when you're in the teams and you're like,
this is easy, we dominate, to then getting out as an entrepreneur and probably
going, whoa, wait a minute, what? Why is this not working?
The first business that I started off active duty was a brewing company, Coronado Brewing Company,
microbrewery restaurant in Coronado, California. I literally came off active duty as a senior
lieutenant or lieutenant commander. And I put know, I put my freaking night vision on
and put the weapon at my shoulder
and just was like a sniper taking down targets every day.
And I'm like, I am going to find a way or make a way
to get this restaurant successful,
open the door, get the brewing operations.
So I was just like game on,
tactically nailing it, right?
Raised a million and a half dollars,
got the doors open, you doors open a year after conceiving
it. And we were like, all systems go, I thought. But my partner was my brother-in-law and I was
newly married about one year into my marriage at that time. And so I didn't really know him that
well, but he seemed successful. He's running another restaurant. He wanted to do a bar together,
but I convinced him that the microbrewery restaurant was right. I mean, there were only like four breweries in
San Diego at the time, and now there's like 400, I think it seems like. We were early in the game.
This is 1996. So anyways, I just made this assumption, back to this bias that I had.
I made this assumption that he would be a team player just like I had in the SEAL teams. And so I didn't really do anything to vet him besides thinking,
well, this guy's smart.
He kind of knows what he's doing.
I guess that's enough.
And so he became my partner, 50-50.
Then about six or seven months into it,
suddenly he kind of declares to me one day
that he's going to bring his brother into the deal. And my shadow
side right then didn't protest or I didn't protest because one of my shadow aspects was kind of
codependence and thinking everything's going to work out and thinking, you know, if someone says
there's a good reason, I tended to believe people, right? I believe people's bullshit and I trust
people to a fault, you know?
And that worked fine in the SEAL teams.
But in the civilian world, you know, you got to trust, research, you know, validate, verify.
Trust but verify.
Thank you, KGB.
Exactly.
He brings his brother in.
And next thing you know, I'm diluted down to 33%, which after all the investors we brought in, which I did all the work, by the way, Mike.
33%, which after all the investors we brought in, which I did all the work, by the way, Mike. I mean,
I raised all that money and put my own skin in the game, my own money and liquidated my IRA. And these two guys reneged on their commitment to put cash into the business. And then they
reneged on their commitment to work full-time in the business. And you can see where this is going.
It started to head south a few months after that. So that's kind of an opening salvo where like I went from hero to zero as a leader. One moment it's easy to form a team,
kind of like an NFL draft in the seals. Everyone wanted to work for me because I was a great
leader and I was easy to get along with and I took care of my teammates and I did a lot of things
right and I was able to just really do a good job.
And then I get out of the seals and my first business is this complete disaster.
And it's just because I didn't have the emotional awareness and lacked sometimes the courage
to do the right thing in spite of the consequences, to have those critical conversations, which
are so hard to do that we sweep them under the rugs.
Stuff that is just actually really common in everyday business that can trip you up big time.
That was my first experience of getting tripped up. I mean, it was magnified obviously because
the family involvement and we ended up getting into this freaking lawyer's guns and money
brawl for the ownership of the business. With your brother-in-law.
With my two brothers-in-law, right?
Oh yeah, brothers-in-law.
Who are my wife's brothers.
And then her parents, you know,
the father was a former Marine who really loved me
and supported me and knew that I was doing everything
to protect the shareholders.
And then the mother came down on the side of the brothers
and that split the family up.
And they actually got divorced.
And that thing was a shit show.
So, and I still could have put my seal goggles back on
and fought my way through it. We were winning the legal battles. We were winning the proxy
battles for control of the business, but I was losing on the home front because my wife was just,
they were just torturing her. These two guys were just real jerks and they were torturing her,
trying to get her to divorce me basically. And they had this scorched earth policy, both at the business and at the personal level
that made it really hard. And I was afraid that I'd lose my wife and everything would fall apart,
like the parents had fallen apart. And so Sandy, my wife, just begged me, said,
this isn't worth it. If this is what owning your own business is like, I don't want any part of it.
And so I ended up selling my interest to these two jerks and walked away. You know, the business is still thriving to this day,
but I like to take credit for it because I handed over a $10 million profitable business and all
they had to do is not fuck it up, you know? Yeah, that's an expensive lesson to learn.
And I, you know, I can relate to it. Fortunately, my situation wasn't, the outcome was a bit
different. And it sounds like you didn't,
did you have proper agreements in play at contracts, for example, or was it?
Did not have buy-sell agreement, anything like that. Again, that was codependence. I just didn't
know and didn't think I needed to, right? So that was-
I know so many successful business people who have stories just like that. And I have my own similar story.
It's just, it's kind of ironic though, that, you know, I look at it and go, and I look back and
see some key mistakes that I made very similar, kind of naive and just assuming the best kind of
thing and not really looking at like what's right in front of me and playing that out into the
future and being like, okay, where is this likely to go? And really trying to quote unquote, do the right thing and make it work as opposed to eventually realizing
like, oh no, this just needs to end. Like this is not going to work. And I've seen it a number
of times, but you learn the lesson and then you don't repeat the mistake. That's the key.
Right. Well, and that's part of why I wanted to write this book is like, yeah,
I had to get smacked down another five or six times.
You know, I've had, you know, another huge business stolen from me by Blackwater, which
is a billion dollar company.
You know, I entered into other agreements with people.
I just ended up, I should never have trusted to begin with.
And every one of these decisions that I made to get into one of these deals or that, you
know, to turn left instead of right, I can trace back to some sort of bias or reactionary conditioning
that the way my mind was working then told me it was a good idea or wouldn't take another action
that was a better idea. So yeah, one way to deal with that is just to learn from the school of
hard knocks. And that's the traditional way. Another way is to have someone point this stuff
out and be like, watch out, here's the trap, right? Here's the trap. If you don't stare down, I want to explain what the title is all about in a second, but if you
don't stare down your fear in this area, then you could fall in this trap and you're going to lose
trust, the trust of your teammate. If you don't stare down your wolf in this area, then you're
going to lose respect. And trust and respect are the glue that really hold a good team together
and things start to fall apart quickly. So the book is titled Staring
Down the Wolf, Seven Leadership Commitments That Forge Elite Teams. The commitments are,
and the first three are really foundational, is courage followed by trust and then respect.
And so instead of those things just being things that may happen to you once in a while,
I look at them as practices, like things that we cultivate as a leader and as a teammate,
and actively cultivate courageous, to actively cultivate courageous
behavior, actively cultivate trustworthiness so that you're trusted at work and that trust bond
never breaks down amongst the team, and to practice respectfulness so that you are respected,
you respect others, you respect yourself, and those three are foundational. And then from there,
I already talked about this, but we look at, we're deeply committed to our, what I call vertical growth, which means the being aspect of who we are,
as opposed to just horizontal growth, which is just doing things better. We want to do things
better, but we want to do things better from a higher and higher stage of development or expanded
sense of self and awareness. And that's what vertical growth is. So staring down the wolf has you do that.
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like producing podcasts like this. And why, why do you say it might be obvious to you,
but for people listening, why is that a key? I think that's just a point that's worth discussing
a little bit more about. Cause I totally agree. But what do you mean by that exactly?
All of my training, even in the SEALs, was horizontal development, learning new skills.
And even leadership training up to date, falling down in business is like, oh, that didn't work,
so let me figure this out. And you might grow a little bit, but if you don't have a roadmap for
where that growth is leading, it may not land, right? And so people can get stuck. And so what I've learned through
developmental psychology is that you can unstick yourself if you are aware of the developmental
roadmaps. And so I offer a developmental roadmap in the first, in the introduction, we call it the
plateaus and I've been using it with my clients now for years. And our premise is that if you're
stuck at, let's say,
a second stage protector, and a second stage protector is a huge swath of our society.
That's like law enforcement, military, bureaucrats, people are protecting deeply religious
people. Again, there's nothing bad about any of that, but the mindset is that the stage of
development is to protect status quo. The past is better than the future. Or my tribe, my religion, my country even is better
than yours, right? And you can see that playing out in a lot of language around politics, especially
on the kind of the Republican conservative side. You see it played out in conversations in the
office, right? Some people are protectors while others are more in survival mode, which is the
first plateau or others, the entrepreneur, the mode, which is the first plateau or others,
you know, the entrepreneur, the business owner is always the third plateau or higher. That's
the achiever. The fourth plateau is the equalizer. That's someone who really wants, you know,
getting more and more world centric, has great capacity and care and concern, but can still have
shadow that holds them back in the sense that they might demonize others or think anyone who's not at
their level is less than them. And so that's, they're not really equal. Everyone's equal except for
them. So that's a shadow side of that. This is the fifth plateau that we want to get to. And the
fifth plateau, Mike, is integrated, whole-minded, world-centric leader. And research shows that
about 5% of humanity is there. so it's not a very big group.
But my premise is that we as leaders need to get there.
And so we need to get whatever's holding us back from living at that fifth plateau out
of the way.
And the biggest thing that's in a way is ourselves, our biases and our shadows, because we can't
take the perspective of the world-centric leader.
And we haven't trained our mind to access whole mind thinking,
which is heart mind, belly mind intuition,
and also opening up the brain so it's accessing whole mind,
and you're making decisions from more of an awakened awareness perspective
as opposed to just mentally barbell shrugging your way through a decision process.
So all of that is very doable.
And what is that perspective at the top?
The best way I can describe it is you have the perspective that everyone is interconnected,
interrelated, all sentient beings have value. Mother Earth is crucial to our survival,
both individually and as a species. And so you're going to make decisions that are like multi-nuanced.
And so conscious capitalism is pointing toward this.
You make a decision that is good for,
is not going to do any harm to the environment,
is going to be either benefit or at least not do any harm
to the global commons and other people.
And you're thinking through the second,
third order consequences of the decision, and you're willing to make a very painful decision that might be unpopular because you
know it's the right thing to do.
And so you step out of your ego and into something else.
Or a decision that's against your self-interest.
That's another key.
And that one I think is probably harder than something that maybe is going to result in, let's say, a fair amount of backlash from other
people. But maybe you don't care about that because you know it's right and you just kind
of shrug off the criticisms. But when it comes down though, really, this is not in my, let's say,
money. This decision is not in my financial best interest, but it's the right decision. And it's
not going to cause a catastrophe in my finance. I mean, stuff like that. I mean, I totally agree
with what you're saying. The fifth plateau also tends to be where people start to think,
you know, that cliche where I'm a spiritual being having a human existence is supposed to be like,
I'm just a human that's here to stake my claim and carve out as much as I can for me and my
family and leave a legacy. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Consume and engulf everything. That's right. And so that model isn't faring too
well and it's created a lot of imbalance in our income inequality is one way that it shows up in
imbalance. It's showed up in imbalance in the earth. Everything I think will come back into
balance. I don't have a negative view of the future of humanity.
I actually have a very positive view, but I think it's just out of balance.
So it'll come back into balance.
And I'd like to kind of guide that conversation with people who are willing to listen.
It's like, well, here's a way that it can come back into balance.
Let's develop ourselves.
And when I say vertically develop, I mean developing your awareness, your consciousness,
your perspectives, the internal stuff
as opposed to like the doing stuff which is horizontal it's like if i which comes from
the internal that's right the external doing stuff working on that to the level of mastery
will have a spillover effect of helping involve the internal but you can still get stuck if you
don't work on the shadow aspect because the emotional piece will just lock you in.
You know, this is born out hot by the fact
that you could have like an enlightened master,
you know, who fails because these, you know,
has a great fall because, you know,
he's sleeping with his students or, you know,
he just is a rager.
Everyone's, you know, just stops working for him.
You know what I mean?
And I've seen great examples of this
where people are one dimensional in the way they develop and including in the spiritual world.
So the fifth plateau leader, male or female, is willing to work on their shit, right? And is
deeply cares about what we would call spiritual. And I'm not talking about religion, but spiritual
matters or things that tend to be kind of put in that category.
And that is like the interconnectedness of all things, you know, believing that all sentient beings have a place.
And we're not going to like, so that means like species degradation is a real problem.
You know, they really care about other beings.
Right. So, you know, that may play out in a way that you want to be more active,
or at least you orient your company to do no harm,
or maybe there's a nonprofit division you start
that helps, you know, with climate research,
or that could play out in a whole bunch of ways
that when you get to that fifth plateau,
you and your team can't sit around and do nothing anymore.
It's just too important to you.
So you take action, you serve,
right? And so this idea can be summed up in like two statements, master yourself and your team
so that you can serve humanity through your business or through your organization.
That's great. And it's a concept I totally agree with. And I'm moving my company Legion, for example, like we are switching over
to eco-friendly recycled plastic. We're going to be working with, and you know, I actually,
I like the idea of offering bags as well that people can like, so if someone wants to buy
a plastic tub and then there can be refill bags, I'm not sure how many people want to take me up
on it, but I'm curious to try it because that's even more environmentally friendly. And I'm partnering up with, I mean, I do a charity
week every month where I give a portion of sales to charities, mostly kids and stuff related to
kids and veterans, which I'm going to keep in, but I also want to have a more long-term partnership
with a charity. And we have a few, we've narrowed it down to a few working to just clean up the environment. And I think plastic in the ocean is a good place to
start. It's obviously a problem and there are some organizations doing good things about it.
And so I totally agree with what you're saying. And I'm putting my money where my mouth is,
because I could just not do those things and take some more money out of my business and buy some,
consume some more trinkets. But I don't do that because it's a point of, I guess the word could just be
responsibility. I feel like I would feel bad if I did that every day, it would weigh on me a little
bit. And I would just know that I'm not doing what I should be doing. And given my outward positions
on stuff related to morality and ethics, it would make me a hypocrite. And if
there's one type of person that people despise the most, it's a hypocrite. And that applies to,
I think, I would despise myself. It would get there. If I were to live too hypocritically,
eventually I would just hate myself. And so, no, I love it. I think that this is a discussion I've
had with friends of mine, other people in business that look, even if you look back on the history of capitalism, turn of the century, robber baron age,
you had a handful of people that controlled inequality was even worse back then than it is
now. Cause you had a lot of people who had literally nothing starving below subsistence
level. You had Carnegie with the equivalent of $300 billion in today's, but you had people
literally dying in his steel mills
because he just didn't really bother to come up with new ways to keep them safe. And so I remember
a statistic at its peak, the percentage of people getting killed or maimed, I think it was over the
course of a year. Like if you worked in his steel mills for a year, the chances of one to three
years, something like that, chances were about 50% that you were going to be maimed or just die yeah and that was at its worst right yeah and he's off in scotland though with
the equivalent of literally hundreds of billions of dollars and he has frick running his operation
it became so outrageous it was an actual joke and rockefeller was better to his people but he was a
huge cocksucker to everyone else in business and And he lied, cheated, and steeled.
He did anything it took to win to the detriment probably of the system on the whole.
But imagine if those people just weren't such fuckheads.
I know, right?
Honestly.
Imagine if they – I mean, they did.
We can honestly thank them for a lot of our modern society.
I mean, they did industrialize
the entire country. So yeah, they could stand on that, but they didn't have to do it with so much
destruction. It could have been done so much more constructively. And ironically, if they would have
done that, it would have changed the course of history probably because Marx's ideas probably
wouldn't have caught on as much as they, it would have been, capitalism would have become almost a realized utopia. And it's done amazing things. And I'm 100% behind capitalism,
raised more people out of poverty than at any point in history.
And it continues to do so.
Absolutely.
If capitalism had co-evolved with compassion, we would not have these problems, right?
And if you had people naturally like, yeah, I guess Carnegie, I guess I don't need another $10 billion. I'm going to invest in
my plants. So people are a bit safer. I'm not going to ask my people to work. I think, I think
for them to get one day off a week was like this big win. You know what I mean? Like I'm going to
care. I'm going to a little bit more about these people and not just completely abuse them and treat them as wage slaves.
It's just ironic when you look back on it in the context of what you're saying.
Right. You know, not a lot has changed, I should say. A lot has changed.
and development of the leader or develop, you know, personal development, you know,
we had kind of the first wave started with Napoleon Hill and Think and Grow Rich, right?
Which I'm sure most people listening have read that. And if you haven't, you should,
because it's where it all started. And so that kind of like everything that we've had up until the last few years was kind of riding on that, you know, Tony Robbins stuff and Jim Rohns.
And so, and it was really helpful. There
wasn't much in that path that was going to unlock someone from a paradigmatic stuck point at the
second or third plateau or first plateau of survival mode, right? If someone's in a survival
mode situation, they don't really have time to even to read Think and Grow Rich, you know, or
they just don't have the energy, right, to really evolve. And so
that's a big problem. There's a lot of people in business who are even entrepreneurs who are in
survival mode. And so development just kind of stops. And my point here is that there hasn't
been any real discussion and training around emotional and spiritual development or integration
in the business world. Like you've had some of that come from yoga and the Tibetan
Buddhist traditions and some other kind of maybe esoteric traditions. I got my start in Zen
training. And Zen training in those traditions, even though they do address emotional development,
emotional awareness, there's not many skillful teachers who teach it. So that's left to the
Western psychology. And the entire paradigm around development in Western psychology is
if you're broken, if things fall apart, then you go see a therapist and they put you back
together or the psychologist will give you some Adderall or something like that.
And so it's not considered to be a developmental path.
It's considered to be a path of temporary fixing you if something goes off the rail.
And as you know, Mike, very, very few men even consider it to be legitimate.
My dad used to just laugh at the idea.
When I married a therapist, you know, he just used to razz her all the time.
It was kind of sad because, boy, could he have used some of that therapy, a lot of it, right?
So my point here in this rant is we didn't have any model for emotional,
spiritual, intuitive development in leadership until now. And this book is an example of how
this model plays out. And on Beetle Mind Company, we're doing this vertical development covering
what we call the five mountains of physical, mental, emotional, intuitional, and Kokoro or
heart-mind. And these seven commitments, you know,
that forge elite teams.
These are all things that are developed at a team level through not just by
sitting around and doing role plays,
but by through really deep vulnerable exposure to your teammates,
strengths and weaknesses,
and getting very uncomfortable
in situations that are you know that you're not used to and then having to basically drop all the
masks and to begin to look at what are the fears that are holding you back what are the reactionary
shadow that's causing your team to respond or react to you a certain way so that you can just start to unstuck yourself and evolve to that fifth
plateau kind of perspective and then just thrive with your team. And I'm assuming that's what the
title is alluding to, staring down the wolf and the wolf is the stuff you don't want to look at.
Yeah. Funny story there. Originally, the title of the book was the subtitle,
Seven Commitments that Forge Elite Teams, it's fairly vanilla, but it would have
worked. It's not sexy enough. It's not sexy. And we were actually, this reminds me of, I said,
spoken. So Jordan Pearson, before he really blew up, how did I get this? I was in his Patreon.
It was at a certain level. If you did that, you got a Skype chat with him, right? And so this was
after his book had come out and he doesn't offer this anymore, but the time he did. And I had
spoken to him. We ended up just talking about book stuff actually, because he was just kind
of curious. He's like, Oh, someone who writes books. That's interesting. So with his title,
this makes me think of it because I was like, Jordan, if you're going to do another book,
dude, it needs to be clean your room. Like, and then what you have now is you have something like
that for the subtitle, but that's it, man. That's your meme. That's your whole
identity. It's like McRaven's make your bed. So I think it's a good call that you're like,
I need to add a little bit of edge. It's something that grabs your attention.
Well, just like I was inside the bottle and not be able to read the label, it was my editor came
and said, you know what? Because I had sent him the copies of my other
books so he could get a sense for kind of what I'd done in the past. So make sure there wasn't
any overlap. And my Unbeatable Mind book, my self-published book has a really cool picture
on the cover of me staring at a wolf. And it's clear that in there, I make it clear fairly soon
in the book that one of my themes is that in order to eradicate negative conditioning,
you've got to starve it. You mean you got to stop focusing on it. It's not the panacea,
right? But it is the starting point. So we have a process, a mental process to basically zap or
eliminate negative self-talk, negative emotional patterns, and then refocus on positive. So you
negative emotional patterns you know and then refocus on positive so you starve the fear wolf which is the negative wolf and the Native American story says that
the negative wolf the fear wolf lives in your head so it's your mind's negativity
bias and we are now known to have five times as many negative thoughts on a
daily basis as we do positive so that's the fear wolf and then the courage wolf
lives in your heart and so courage actually means heart. Cour is a French word that means heart. So the courage wolf
makes sense that the courage wolf is in your heart. And that means that if you're making a
heartfelt decision, that's courageous. It takes courage because like we said earlier, fifth plateau
leader, if you're making a decision from the heart, sometimes it's not what your mind wants you to do.
And there could be a really good reason that your clever mind says to go a different way,
but your heart says to go this way and you know that's the right way.
And so anyways, they said, hey, let's call the book Staring Down the Wall.
And I was like, that is really cool idea.
But it did cause me to step back and be like, okay, if that's the case, then I can't just
profile these seven commitments and how great I am at doing this myself.
I actually have to now talk about staring down the wolf.
Like how did I stare down my wolf of fear and what were the obstacles that I had to
clear up in order for me personally to display efficacy with that commitment of say courage,
trust, respect, growth, you know, excellence, resiliency, and alignment, which are the seven
commitments. So the book is kind of this yin yang. I have these stories of these great special ops
leaders like McRaven and McChrystal and Olson, who just really cool stories that most people
don't know much about, demonstrating these qualities
of courage, trust, commitment, blah, blah, blah, blah. But then I look at a story from me in the
civilian world, like the Coronado Brewing Company one, and how I basically fell on my sword because
I failed on that commitment. I wasn't courageous, or I breached trust, or I lost respect, or someone
lost respect to me, that kind of thing. So it became my most vulnerable
book. And I reveal things in here that take me out of the realm of, hey, I'm the perfect
badass Navy SEAL commander turned entrepreneur turned author. And I do everything right. And
you can learn from me to like, oh, by the way, I'm actually just as fucked up as you are.
Maybe the only difference is I'm willing to admit it and, and work like hell to overcome it.
And work to overcome it. Totally. Yeah. And I can appreciate that. You know, I understand
it can be, I guess just uncomfortable. It can be uncomfortable to, I mean, I speaking for myself,
I mean, I guess I don't really think about, but if I were to sit down and really be in really
go, okay, let's lay it all out there. What are the things that are just going to,
just going to make me look bad? But
there's value in that. There is value. People learn from that and they trust you more, I think.
I mean, there might be some people who are turned off. Sure. But if you're doing a good job,
at least as far as marketing goes, you turn some people on and you turn some people off.
If you are just in the middle and people go in or whatever, then those ideas don't catch on.
If you are just in the middle and people go in or whatever, then those ideas don't catch on.
I believe that people are way smarter than we give them credit for and that people crave authenticity these days.
They can see through your bullshit.
And so if you lead with the bullshit, then you might win some people over, but you're going to turn a lot of people off.
And that's almost like a meta trend that we see happening.
I think so, yeah. We see it certainly in politics. Quick question. So,
what is spirituality to you? I'm just curious. You say the word, but what does that mean to you?
Like, what are your ideas? You know, first, growing up, I didn't really know what it meant.
And I was brought up, you know, a Christian family, Episcopalian to be specific. And so,
I learned all that kind of stuff around Jesus. And I think Jesus is an incredible human or whatever. And I learned a lot and he's done, that religion has brought a lot of
goodness and as well as pain to the world, just like they all have. And so I kind of got turned
off around religion in my late teens and early twenties. But then when I found Zen training,
even though it comes from Buddhism, it wasn't taught. I wasn't taught in a religious
context. It was basically something we did to master our martial arts training, my martial
arts training. So Zen and the martial arts, non-sectarian, right? Or non-religious sectarian.
So when I began my Zen training, I also began a deep study of what you would call spirituality from the Zen, which then led me to yoga.
Amazing gift to humanity is yoga,
which is the science of the mind.
It's ported over to the United States
as stretchy, bendy, sweaty stuff,
but it's not, right?
If you read Patanjali's Yoga Sutras,
you get the sense for the profundity
of what the yogis were teaching.
And Buddhism all came out of yoga.
And so then my journey led me more recently
in the last few years to Tibetan Buddhism,
in particular the Zajin traditions,
the essence traditions.
And what they all teach,
or what my insights have been,
is that we truly are,
we have this deep spiritual essence to us
that is timeless and vast
and beyond our ego's sense of personality, meaning that
Mark, as other people might identify me, Mark Navy Seal, author, entrepreneur, this spiritual
essence of mine is beyond that.
And that through a practice of introspection or what Socrates called self-examination or self-awareness,
which is what all these internal practices are about, you can kind of reveal that aspects
of yourself to yourself. And then that becomes your primary focal point or seat of operation,
your base of mental operation. And everything up until that point, your base of operations is essentially your thinking mind. You think that you are what you're thinking. You think that you are your
stories. You think that you are your emotions. You think that you are this body and the things
that have happened and the decisions you made in your life. And the stuff you've consumed,
the stuff you've acquired. Right. And everything you've consumed, right? And you think that's the only thing. To me, spirituality is, or being a
spiritual person is doing, you know, having a practice and it, you know, every individual human
is going to have a different practice or type of practice. For some, it's just being in nature.
For others, it might be like surfing that has led them here or at least open the door for them.
And for me, it was Zen through my martial arts, which led me to a deep practice of meditation
since 1985 that I continue to this day.
And it changed everything.
It changed literally, as we now know about meditation, it changed the structure of my
brain.
It opened up my heart, which now we know is part of your brain system.
It opened up my brain. It opened up my heart, which now we know is part of your brain system. It opened up my intuition. It allowed me to be way more eventually courageous and spontaneous
and happy and even humorous and creative and develop the concentrative powers to literally
write two books at once and to build multimillion dollar businesses. All that came, in my opinion,
partly, yeah, I had a good brain,
you know, and I have a decent IQ, but nothing extraordinary. You know what I mean? Most of that
was all a result of the meditation. And it also led me to a deep feeling that there's way more
going on in this life than the identity of Mark Devine in this physical body. And that there was
a deep purpose for me to be on this planet and that a sense of urgency to align with that purpose. And so that's where all these books and
this work has come from. It's like, once I figured out that purpose or was revealed to me, then I had
a really intense sense of urgency to continue to improve myself, to master myself, so that I could
serve others along in alignment, I should say, with that purpose.
So that's a long-winded way of answering your question, but spirituality is sort of like that.
It has nothing to do with religion at all.
Yeah, I was just curious.
Have you looked into the research? I believe it's a team.
It's a few people based out of UVA in reincarnation.
Yeah, I've read a lot of that stuff.
I don't know if I've seen that.
It started with Ian Stevenson, and then I believe Jim Tucker heads up the team now.
They've pretty much proven reincarnation.
I mean, it's very hard to poke any holes in their research.
Oh, I mean, they have thousands.
They have over 3000 cases documented all around the world.
And Stevenson's work in particular,
I mean, he was published in the most prestigious journals.
It was real science.
It wasn't quackery as of, I don't know, eight months ago when I was reading about it and
watching videos and stuff.
So it was over 3000 documented cases, mostly with children, but I believe it was half of
them were solved.
So for people listening, I wonder what that means.
So, I mean, there was a kid, let's say in India, who says that in their last life, they lived in Chicago and this was their name
and this was their wife and they had two kids and this is how they died. The researchers go
and find that person and check out the details. And yes, it checks out. And so please tell me how
literally a five-year-old kid in the hinterlands of India, like, please
explain, right?
Now, somebody could say, well, there are many potential explanations for that.
And I would say, yeah, that's true.
There are.
But if they don't at least incorporate some of what you're talking about, I just go, yeah,
you know, if you try to stick strictly to genetics, you go, well, somehow, some way
there's the DNA is communicating cross-continent, it pollinated over, you know, if you try to stick strictly to genetics, you go, well, somehow, some way there's the DNA is communicating cross continent. It pollinated over, you know what I mean? It starts
to get a bit where you're like, uh, yeah, maybe we should apply a little bit of a comms razor here.
And maybe there is something more going on just to the point that you're saying, whether you buy it
as, I mean, it's circumstantial evidence, obviously, and it doesn't, oh, it's not open and shut case, but it's strong circumstantial evidence that should at least give people pause. And there
are hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of very compelling stories like that. Again, it's a team
of people. Jim Tucker, I believe is the name. He's written books. He started with Ian Stevenson.
They have thousands of case studies been published in name, a prestigious journal. They've been
published. I found that stuff fascinating.
I think it's fascinating too.
And I love that they've done that.
Like it really to validate such a, I would like to see more research.
Maybe I'll look into funding some of it myself.
I'm funding research on like how to gain more muscle and lose fat.
Maybe, Hey, it's my money.
Do with it what you want.
But you know what?
I'm a avid reader of yoga texts and, yoga texts and at least two deep meditation retreats a year with really, really talented teachers who've been doing this for 40 or 50 years.
And it's just well known in the meditation community lexicon that one of the skills that can develop through an advanced meditative states
is to be able to see your past lives.
And so many yogis talk about this in their writings,
being able to, even Paramahansa Yogananda,
one of the people that got me started in yoga,
this is after he passed away,
but I live right down the street
from Yogananda Self-Realization Fellowship.
And he was one of the first yogis to come to America
and really introduce the spiritual yoga,
the idea that yoga is the philosophy of the mind,
mental development.
Anyways, he talks about his past lives in an autobiography.
And there's a biography written by one of his top students
that talked about Yogananda talking
or telling him about who he was in past lives.
And William the Conqueror was one of them.
It was fascinating.
And it turns out that William the Conqueror was a great poet, and Yogananda was a great
poet.
And actually, William the Conqueror was not like this bad conqueror dude.
That was kind of a historical reinterpretation.
He was actually quite a benevolent leader.
It's fascinating.
And then one of my favorite prayers or writings, things that are written that have a spiritual quality to them, a high spiritual quality to it, is the St. Francis prayer. And everyone attributes the St. Francis prayer to St. Francis, but Yogananda says that actually he wrote that when he was William the Conqueror and St. Francis picked up on it. It's so fascinating. You know what I mean? I'm just going off on a tangent here, but like this stuff is not, like I don't question it at all anymore either. I didn't
question it well before the research came out kind of in the Western world, but I think it's
very helpful for people because they can get a sense that maybe there is more that going on than
just this what's right in front of me right here today now maybe i should be thinking
about decisions that have that impact the earth and impact other beings and have more you know
maybe operate from more of a spiritual centric emotionally mature centric way here's an idea
let's say reincarnation is a thing so what if what you're doing now is just what you come back to
so if you just shit a little bit more in the world and then you just have you come back to. So if you just shit a little bit more in the world, and then you just have to come back and live your own shit.
Yeah, which is essentially the law of karma, right? The law of cause and effect. You have
an opportunity in this lifetime to burn off past karma, negative karma, and to not create
future negative karma. So why wouldn't you take that opportunity? If you knew you were going to
come back. It just makes for a better life too,
even if that's not the case.
And I understand I probably have a fair amount
of Christians listening.
I don't mean this to be,
I don't mean any of this discussion to be offensive.
So if that's the case and we get to go on
to that type of afterlife,
well then still when you're here, of course,
you can have, I guess living that way would be,
I think very much in accordance with the Bible anyway,
but you're also personally just going to have a better life.
Well, I think so. In early Christianity with the Bible anyway, but you're also personally just going to have a better life. Well, I think so.
And early Christianity before Nicene commissioned everything believed in reincarnation and karma,
and these things were not uncommon, right?
They just kind of got suppressed because they weren't really beneficial for the church.
Yeah, I believe you can find those ideas in some of the apocryphal gospels.
Like I believe, what is it?
I think it's St. Thomas.
You should find some of those ideas there. But hey, well, I think we can wrap this up. Again, I really appreciate you taking
the time. And for people who want to pick up this new book, it is Staring Down the Wolf.
Is it best just for anybody who's willing to go the extra mile, is it best for them to buy from
a bookstore if you're really trying to push for the NYT or does it not matter? I don't actually know where that stands now.
You can't buy it from a bookstore until March 2nd.
But you can pre-order.
You can pre-order online bookstore.
Right, like bn.com or whatever.
Right, or Amazon.
Or you can pre-order through our website.
But the website is going to point you back to Amazon and then say, come back with a receipt if you want one of these special offers.
So that's how that would work.
Okay, good.
Well, that's the best place to go. And so it's staringdownthewolf.com.
And let's see, it's the 25th today. I'll rush to get this up as soon as possible.
So appreciate that. Great conversation.
Yeah, yeah, it was fun. Anything else you want to let people know about where they can find the
rest of your work? Anything new and exciting you have coming up?
Yeah. So thanks for asking. My personal website is markdivine.com. And there you can find the rest of your work, anything new and exciting you have coming up? Yeah. So thanks for asking. My personal website is markdivine.com and there you can find all the
social channels and also my podcast, which is nearing 20 million downloads is Mark Devine's
Unbeatable Mind podcast. And that's available at iTunes and all the normal podcasting places.
And then if anyone listening was really intrigued with the training that we're addressing,
the vertical development team building, then unbeatablemind.com is the website for the corporate training. And we have
a really cool certification program. We've got close to 500 coaches in various stages of getting
certified. And our goal is to have 10,000 certified coaches in the next 10 years out teaching and
developing people in this way that we talked about today. That's awesome. I love it.
Well, thanks again for taking the time, Mark.
It was a great discussion.
I look forward to the next one.
Yeah.
Thanks so much, Mike.
It's been an honor.
Appreciate it.
All right.
Well, that's it for today's episode.
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