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The #1 Habit BILLIONAIRES Run Daily To 100x PRODUCTIVITY For Success! | Robin Sharma

Apr 21, 2024
I think what has happened on the planet right now is that there has been a great seduction and a great brainwashing when we were children, we want to be astronauts, we want to be

billionaires

, we want to be history makers, we want to make all our dreams and then and We are amazed and amazed and we are full of curiosity and we are loving and passionate we are strong we are not afraid to be ourselves but when we leave the perfection of childhood the hypnosis and brainwashing begins our well-meaning parents say oh you want to be an astronaut you want start a business when you grow up you want to paint like john michelle basquiat be reasonable and george bernard shaw said it better than me he said that the reasonable man adapts himself to the world the unreasonable man persists in adapting the world to himself, therefore, everything progress depends on the unreasonable man welcome to impact theory our goal with this program and company is to introduce you to the people and ideas that will help you execute your dreams well today's guest is an international best-selling author whose books have sold More than 15 million copies in 62 countries in 75 languages ​​He has written more than 20 books, several of which have set sales records around the world His book The Untitled Leader was a number one bestseller on Amazon and his mega

success

The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari Wrecked It In The US It Was A Box Office Hit In Too Many Countries To Count It Has Been On The Best Seller List In India For Over Two Years And Is The Fifth Best Selling Book Of All times in Israel, his

success

is not due to sophisticated marketing but rather an obsessive focus on ensuring that what he teaches provides an incredible amount of usable information and, as such, he is widely considered one of the leading leadership experts in the world and its amazing list of clients includes some of the biggest names on the planet, including microsoft fedex, nike ge nasa and ibm.
the 1 habit billionaires run daily to 100x productivity for success robin sharma
He is also one of the most sought-after speakers in the world and has appeared on over 1,000 radio and television shows, and his social media posts reach a staggering number. He speaks to more than 600 million people a year and he was ranked one of the world's top five leadership experts in a massive independent study of more than 22,000 business professionals. So please help me give the best welcome to the founder of Robin Sharma Foundation for Children. -sales author of the 5 a.m. club

robin

sharma

welcome to the show man what a great introduction, thank you very much, easy with what you are looking for and what you have achieved during the time you have been doing this, which is already nice. extraordinary and having seen you in action I can now say that you will be doing this for a long time.
the 1 habit billionaires run daily to 100x productivity for success robin sharma

More Interesting Facts About,

the 1 habit billionaires run daily to 100x productivity for success robin sharma...

It's really extraordinary and one thing I want to talk about is that level of energy and enthusiasm and you talk about that being. something that is common among high achievers, how do we cultivate that? Well, first of all, congratulations on all your success with the show and all the people you're influencing, so one of the lines that comes out of the 5 a.m. club. m. It is one of the The DNA of the legendary is longevity, so if you look at the Picassos, at Jean-Michel Basquiat, you look at the great sporting champions, you look at the great creators of history, they were much better at managing the energy than in time management, so we are in a war against distraction right now and what we really need to do is optimize our energy, how do I do that right?
the 1 habit billionaires run daily to 100x productivity for success robin sharma
I mean, I get to the morning routine that the whole book is based on, but it's really quite powerful because if you start your day with sweaty exercise. In fact, you are going to activate a mastery pharmacy that exists in every human brain. I know you love neuroscience. You're going to release bdnf, which is a brain-derived neurotrophic factor that will actually speed up your processing. It's actually going to repair the brain. cells that have been damaged by stress, you will release the neurotransmitter dopamine, which is the fire neurotransmitter that we all need as entrepreneurs, business builders and servants of humanity, cortisol, the fear hormone, is highest in the morning , so exercise first thing in the morning.
the 1 habit billionaires run daily to 100x productivity for success robin sharma
The morning is going to be reduced, I'm starting to use my 20 20 20 formula, but I mention it because it's a way to maximize your energy, so tell us about the 20 20 20, I mean, you started there with the sweaty exercise, but what's the rest of that formula that's pretty powerful, so the new book is about getting up at 5 a.m. m. and that's because if you look at the great creatives, the great saints, the great humanitarians and the great titans of industry? a lot of them got up at 5am, even now you have tim cook and howard schultz and it goes on and on before the sun comes up, it's the time of least distraction before the sun comes up, where you can build intimacy and flow with what you want to represent in your day before the sun rises the luxury and tranquility of the early hours of the morning you can do that deep inner work that will allow you to go out into the world and play to the best of your ability so that what The formula 20 20 20 is just this, there are three pockets, the first pocket moves from five to five twenty and you start doing sweaty exercise because, as I mentioned, it releases neurotransmitters, reduces cortisol, increases your metabolic rate, which gives you more energy, so now and serotonin too, which gives you joy, so now it is 5 20. fundamentally you feel different, you have energy, your state is strong, you have fire in your stomach and you have accelerated your concentration from 520 to 540 is the second pocket 20. 20 20 formula that reflects that we live in a world where many people are busy, but what is the point of being busy climbing the wrong Mount Everest?
Therefore, clarity is one of the adnas of mastery. You know this if you talk to the titans of the industry and you talk to the people who really get traction around their ambition. These are people who have a monomaniacal focus on the few things that matter. They have an obsession that borders on possessiveness around the few priorities around which they want to build their lives. So from 520 to 540, in the second pocket you journal, you meditate, you visualize, you make what I call in the book a blueprint for a beautiful day or you just sit in solitude and think and reflect and reflect and then the pocket final.
It's 5.40 minus 6 o'clock and this is the hour of victory, the bottom line is growing, but if you look at the biggest

billionaires

, I have trained many billionaires in the last 20 years, if you look at the largest producers on the planet, these people. They have one thing in common: they are ridiculously curious and no matter how much money they make or how much impact they have, they maintain a white belt mentality. One of the keys to epic performance is a relentless commitment to

daily

growth, so that's the 20 20. 20 formula around which the 5 a.m. Method is built. and the premise is basically this: when you start the day, you handcraft the rest of the day and if you consistently have great days, you will have consistently great weeks, quarters of the year and a lifetime, so your days are life and miniature and you have to calibrate those mornings if you really want to win when you were talking about obsessions, the obsession with the board is possession, which I really like and I think that is what is missing.
In fact, from many people's lives I will say that I don't think people know how to want and I don't think they know how to turn a want into an overwhelming need, so there are people who have this vague feeling that they want something but they don't know. how to actually grow it. How do you help people with that? How do you help them catch fire and really commit to something? Tom, I truly believe that we are made to love the very nature of being human. Being is that we are made to progress, we know that the human brain craves novelty and we are most alive, we have the most energy, we are most intimate with the best of ourselves when we move towards our powerful mission, so I think we all want, I think .
What has happened on the planet right now is that there has been a great seduction and a great brainwashing when we were children, we want to be astronauts, we want to be billionaires, we want to be history makers, we want to make all our dreams come true and then and we are amazed and in wonder and we are full of curiosity and we are loving and passionate we are strong we are not afraid to be ourselves but as we leave the perfection of childhood the hypnosis and brainwashing begins our well -the intended parents say oh you want to be an astronaut you want to start a business when you grow up you want to paint like joe michelle basquiat be reasonable and george berners said it better than me he said that the reasonable man adapts to the world, the irrational man persists in adapting the world to himself, therefore, everything progress depends on irrational man so that is our nature but our parents give us limitations based on their limited psychology and emotional patterns which they learn from their parents then we go to school and they teach us to live in a box think in a box dress like everyone else don't sing too loud don't dream too big don't be too passionate and then our peers do the same to us and then society says oh genius is the realm of genetics, not the common people, which has been ruled out by some very good science, you know, I mean the 10,000 hour rule that we all know from Florida State University professor Anders Erickson, who just confirmed a lot of things, so I think we all want .
I think what's happened is that by letting go of who we really are, we've contracted and now it's about keeping ourselves safe in the world rather than going out and letting our primal genius shine and a lot of people have just done that. They keep that pain of disappointment and their doubts deep inside and are simply addicted to distractions and escapes because they don't want to deal with their potential that they have denied, take us back, so start as a lawyer. a litigator and you write your first book, you self-publish it, you print it at Kinko's, which I thought was pretty interesting.
How do you make that leap like you were obviously starting to cultivate the traits of the irrational man or maybe it was a process of unlearning, but how did you do that? How did you resist all that and make something new? Self-growth. You know, we live in a world that suggests that the door to success opens outward if you build the business. If you get the plane. you get the money if you get the cars if you get the beautiful wife then you will be happy which I believe and there is a model in the 5 am club which I think is a very disruptive model but it is a transformational model and it is called the four empires inner empires and it's not just the mindset, it's the mindset, the heart, the health and the soul, and we can talk about it if you want, but I worked on those four inner empires when I was a very unhappy trial lawyer like I won money.
I was successful, I had two law degrees and yet I woke up every morning and looked in the bathroom mirror and looked at myself and I was a completely empty person and nothing is more expensive than losing joy and peace. of the mind and then what I did was I started working on myself, you know, I worked on my mindset and I read all the books and I went to the courses, but that's just your psychology and I think that's one of the missing links. in our field that everyone talks about mindset, but mindset is just your belief system, it's just your psychologies, it's very important, but that's 25 of the personal mastery equation.
I think the second piece is your heart and I worked on that, purifying your heart, that's your emotionality, not just your psychology, you're never going to have history dominate your domain and create a world class life if you have great psychology but You are carrying the pain and sadness, disappointment and trauma from the past, so I worked on my heart, that's just the second inner empire the third inner empire your set of health does not die if you want to change the world like the dead do not they change the world so biohacking from the health set there is a whole chapter on recovery and the essentiality of sleep so really get your health back on track but there is a fourth inner empire that I worked on that allowed me to go out into the world and pursue my magic and it's a little dangerous for me to share it because I know how many entrepreneurs that you know follow you and how many entrepreneurs, but I'm going to share it because it's my truth, so it's not just about the mindset and it's not just the configuration of the heart, It's not just the health that is in the whole of the soul and the soul said that it has nothing to do with religion, the whole of the soul is about working on your character so that you regain access to your nobility and your bravery and your authenticity and your decency and find a cause that is bigger than your life so that when you go out into the world every morning people can ridicule you because every genius is ridiculed before them.
You are revered people who may throw stones at you, but you use them to build monuments of mastery. People may not misunderstand you because any disruptor will be misunderstood and even if you are an army of one, a Galilean or a Steve Jobs or like Phil Knight, you continue at all costs, so those fourInner empires that I detail in the book give you a fiery inner core of warrior and leadership that allows you to go out into the world and do incredible things, but it all starts with who. You are because you will never rise higher than what is happening within you.
Okay, we really need to talk about the soul set and the heart set. I think those are going to be the ones that are going to be the least familiar to people, so um in The Soul Set, let's delve into the most perhaps controversial one, but I actually think people are going to resonate with it. With this what you talked about in the book that What really struck me is this notion of being braver or finding ways to be braver and I don't know, it was one of those things where you try to guess. what the person is going to say and it really struck me how we practice being braver what it means to be braver and then how that ends up being useful to us what terrifies you the most go straight there because discomfort is simply growth in wolfskin well, yeah, I mean, the last chapter is, uh, I don't want to give too much away, but it's an experience that I live, you know, it's Nelson Mandela's prison cell, have you been to Robin Island, I haven't done, but?
I am beyond obsessed with Nelson Mandela, so I know the story very well. You know, I encourage you to go, because staying in that cell feeling the sensations will transform you at the level of your soul and heart. So how can we? become braver well I went to Nelson Mandela's prison cell and stayed there and I was shocked he didn't even have a bed and he was there for 18 years then I went to the limestone quarry and saw where Nelson Mandela was . I spent 10 years breaking stones to break his spirit because they threw stones and then I saw the showers where this elder statesman showered while the young guards laughed at him and then in the book I talk about a real event where he On Robben Island they asked him to dig a grave and he went into the grave thinking he was going to die and the prison guards urinated and my point is simply this: when Nelson Mandela was released from prison after 27 years of total imprisonment, he invited the prosecutor who was looking the death penalty to dinner and invited the prison guard who kept him imprisoned for 18 years on robben island to his inauguration as president of south africa and they asked him why he would do that, he said because if not I would still be in prison and my goal is to lead and become a great hero or an everyday hero, the gateway is to accept our suffering and do difficult things.
I think pleasure has been promoted too much in our society like no other great. A strict enough industry, no legendary cellist, no great athlete, you know, the greats all understand that suffering is the price of greatness, so how can we become braver? You do the hard things that you don't feel like doing, but you know you have the reward, yes. the heart set is really interesting and what I liked was the way you talk, you know, we all have this buildup of trauma, often from when we were younger, how do you help people process that? I've worked with some very high-performing people, how has that helped them tap into that and, more importantly, how has it helped them process it?
It's about reframing the event. What does that look like? Journaling is profound. Do you keep a diary? I have journaled to say yes. The diary would be a lie. You're going to love journaling like I do almost every day. I had a show this morning and then I had to set my intentions for you and all your global followers or viewers, so I'm back. to my hotel room I took a cold shower, you know, I've been fasting a lot so we can start fasting because I fasted while writing the 5n collaboration and that helped me enormously and then I took out my journal and sat on my terrace. and I literally started writing about my intentions for impact theory and so how do you get over the pain?
Write a journal if you are going through heartbreak. I mean, we've all experienced heartbreak. What we do is we often repress it because they don't give you the tools to process it you lose a business people repress it someone has a divorce or an illness oh mentality rethink it psychology you are swallowing the pain you are swallowing the sadness you are swallowing the anger we're made to feel good so journaling just posting it, there's actually something in the 5m club called journal deconstruction because it's not just about processing the pain, it's about answering your question about that heart trauma that You journal, you get it out of your system, I guess. what you don't bring passive aggressive to the workplace you don't bring sadness or bad vibes to the workplace you are full of your true self in terms of your heart, which is gratitude, love, appreciation, you know what that means for a business.
You know what that means for human life, so if you are going through a painful moment write it down almost every day. I write thanks, but I love great restaurants, so I take the business card and the next morning I take out my little glue stick and stick the business card in my journal and relive the experience oh, I had dinner with so-and-so, this is What I learned, I deconstruct with greater awareness, we will make better decisions, better

daily

choices, better daily results, imagine By keeping a diary like this every day, you will have a nice awareness of when you are at your best, what the greats do, how to live a life, what you want to stand for, what your core values ​​are, when you go out. world and you're just radiating possibilities in a world where people are addicted to distraction and numb, you've mentioned distraction before and I know you talk about it a lot in the book, how are we in this world where their algorithms are literally?
They are being built to make sure they get our attention as often as possible. How do you talk to people about eliminating that? How do you do it in your own life? How do you create that space? How much time do you allocate to that? isolation, yes the brain tattoo in the book is an addiction to distraction, it's the death of your creative output, your people's phones are costing them their fortune, so how do I do it? One of the rituals in the book is the tight bubble of total concentration. Based on Edison's Menlo Park, there's a great documentary about what he did, but essentially he and his band of co-geniuses would leave the world and go up this hill to Menlo Park, where they could enter a state of flow to give credit to whomever. corresponds to Mihai Chic.
I'd be high if the University of Chicago came up with that term flow when we're at our best doing magical things in our performance, but that only happens when we step away from the world so you can play on your phone or you can be monomononic. focused on being a story maker and legend, you can't do both and therefore build periods of time in that tight bubble of total concentration where you leave your phone in another room where you train your team or if you don't have a Team , you just have no distractions and you wonder what's the one thing I could do that would allow me to go out into the world and bring my magic to the world.
The human brain has a phenomenon called transient hypofrontality. The neocortex. as you know, it's the seed of thought, it's our monkey mind, it's all the talk, it's the things they say tom, you can't do it,

robin

, you can't do it, what would they think, and if I fail, what do they laugh at? ? that's all the neocortex, it's the crown jewel of brain development, not our crown jewel of the primitive brain, but there's no genius there and this is what I mean when we step away from distraction and find our playground Menlo or let's go work somewhere quiet and get lost, the neocortex actually shuts down and that's why it's called transient hypofrontality for a short period of time our thinking shuts down.
The whole model is in the book and we actually go from brain waves in beta to alpha to theta and maybe even. delta and we stop thinking we enter flow In other words, the advanced minds of the world the great geniuses Galileo da Vinci Steve Jobs were not in the neocortex they moved away from the world for periods of time that allowed them to access the human capacity that we all have to getting into a state of flow and accessing insights that went out into the world and then executed with a world-class team that totally changed the game.
It's interesting, talk to me about impatience, so this is something I run into. many people I'm not a patient person I don't invest in patients I don't think it's useful it doesn't mean I don't play the long game it doesn't mean I do things that are dishonest just to get ahead or because it would be faster I wouldn't do it, but I definitely cultivate impatience What do you think about patience and what do you mean by being impatient? I am ridiculously impatient with my mighty mission. I'm ridiculously impatient, Tom. serving people and adding value to people I am very patient with my children I am very patient with my team you have to love the people around you I am very patient with the barista at a coffee shop who may be overwhelmed or it is his first In your first day at work I am very patient with the taxi driver who maybe gets lost but you know that is how they make their living so with human beings I have worked very hard and I am a work in progress but I am very patient with human beings who they return to the lead for a second.
What would you say the three are if someone wants to be a truly effective leader? What are three traits you should cultivate in yourself? Know yourself. I'm talking about Jack Welch of General Electric. He said it very well, um, don't get lost on the way to the top Warren Buffett said, um, they will never be better than you, such great leaders again, it's those four inner empires working on yourself, knowing what you want to stand for. . by knowing what you once said about yourself in the last hour of your last day, knowing your core values, your top five core values, knowing those, knowing your weaknesses, knowing your strengths, I mean, a lot of conversations about leadership don't know.
They're not about that, but about starting with your character. and your own identity, that's really important for a leader. I would say the second thing for a leader would be to do great things. You know, you mentioned it in the introduction. He is as fierce as a warrior when it comes to execution. It's great. Leadership is less talk and more, you know? I mean, it doesn't really matter what the talk is, I mean, it's about execution and implementation and application to get things done and we live in a world where you know we get people off their phones.
I'm going to do this and I'm going to do that we tell people I'll send you a book it doesn't get even worse is that we lose respect for ourselves because of the promises we make to ourselves that we break that's where it all starts like this for so you know this is so important your income your impact your relationship with creativity

productivity

in the world it all comes down to your relationship with yourself so that would be the second thing about leadership is like execution and don't break promises and the third thing What would I say um you know, be crazy, great leaders are crazy and I say they're crazy for most, the great ones are all misfits and they're all weird, I mean The very nature of being a disruptor and a leader means that you don't You are a follower and if you are not a follower then you are not buying the kool-aid that society is selling you.
If you are not a follower, you are not like this all the time looking for likes if if you are not a follower you dress how you want to dress if people criticize you if they criticize all the greats the critics are nothing more than dreamers who got scared and never got up out of their chairs and back into the game, so you have to be willing to stay until 5 a.m. weird, who does that? Why not sleep? Leaders have to be willing to not be followers. Everyone said what motivates you so much to keep doing this after you've done it.
You had the kind of success that you've had, you gotta keep coming back to this and keep pushing and touring and just go after it because we live on a small planet in a galaxy with billions of other planets, so on our small planet Actually, it's one of my core philosophies, we are brothers and sisters on a small planet, that person, that homeless person, was someone's dream at one time, the person in the restaurant or the hotel, it is very easy if we are numb and not awake. I am not anyone's father or mother and when I look at most people on the planet I don't judge, I only see people who are in scarcity versus generosity.
I see so many people saying, "You know, when I was a kid, I had all this creativity I don't know where it happened you see it every day you know you have all these people I want to build a business oh i i oh I guess it's psychology of can't versus possibility mentality I see people in pain, I see people playing the victim, I mean, wouldn't you agree that the majority of people on the planet, in some strange way or another, whether with their creativity, their prosperity or their personal lives, are trapped in victimhood and I know it, I know it mentalities I know rituals and routines I have systems and I don't knowjust try to go out and live your dream and be happy happy happy i mean the book shares most of my methodology the twin cycles of elite performance the 90 90 rule the second air workout the two massage protocol the 2020 like these They have worked for my clients for years, so I have the information to serve you.
You have the information to serve you. How can we see stagnant people when they have so much glory, nobility and decency within them? Can we allow that to happen? We have a responsibility. We all have a responsibility. You said everyone should have core values. What are some of your most cherished core values? He could be a tenth of the human being that my two children are. It would be an incredible family. You know, I've worked very hard, but I've also worked very hard on my family. Trying to be a great son, a great brother, all those things because we all know to come to the last day of your life and say I made a lot of money, I got a lot of money.
I like it and I sold many books. and it impacted a lot of people and your own family never got to know you that's anguish third value I'm an asset the French word lover of beauty you know that's why you know that's why I love the angels like we come here and it's like there are flowers, you know, It's any time of the year, there are flowers everywhere, you know, so I love beauty, art, food, people and sunsets, and that's why I love Rome so much now that the fourth value would be vitality, You know? I truly believe that one of the keys to being legendary is longevity.
I mean, I want to live to be 177. I want you to know that. I mean, I'm biohacking, I'm resting, and I'm doing the two-massage protocol and everything. possible so I can improve my craft and serve as many people as possible when I'm interested, you know, I mean, one of the things I would say is you never want to let an older person get close to the inside of your body because and we can get into epigenetics and the fact that we have a chronological age and a biological age, but vitality is important and I think the ultimate core value is lifestyle.
You know, we can serve the world and that is very important, I know it for both of us, but I want his life to ultimately be a very short journey and that's why I want to be surrounded only by people. I mean, I'm focused. I only want people in my orbit who bring me joy or fuel my joy. I just want to dedicate myself to my business activities. and the career and the life that bring me joy and I only go to places where I feel joy, it all makes a lot of sense, so you've mentioned the biohacking part a couple of times, so getting into the topic of health, let's talk about that .
You are doing? Are you fasting? You have obviously the exercise you have sounds like the massage to massage protocol. Tell us what you do to take care of yourself and make sure you reach that number 177 that I like. it's very far away and it's very specific, so yeah, fasting, I wrote a lot in the book. He was in a fasting state and to me it was the way he looks. Are you doing intermittent fasting? Yes, but I want to get to 36 hours and then I want to go further because many of the great creatives and mystics, so for me my last meal may be at nine o'clock, but I won't eat until four, let's say the next day, when I was writing a Mucho, if the book was written in Rome, I would get up and have two cups of coffee because coffee is a healthy drink, an incredible antioxidant, a wonderful cognitive enhancer and, plus, I'm in Italy, you know, I drink coffee , um, and then you just know that I'm. in a hotel that allowed me to have a tight bubble of total concentration, so there were no distractions and then I got into that flow state and just worked on the manuscript on an empty stomach and saved a lot on grocery bills and food, imagine.
I know how much time, how much time we spent even eating, yeah, and actually I would and then it would be like three or four o'clock, I'd be in flow, I didn't even know where the time went and then I'd ask, you know, call the hotel reception. Can you clean my room? I would go outside, grind again and eat something, so basically it would be at least 18 hours without food and then I would have the eating window where you know, eat healthy. I'm on a Mediterranean ketogenic diet and this is how I do my fasting and nutrition.
I only know this from my energy level and mental focus when I'm in ketosis. Rest. There, like I said, there's a whole chapter in the book about the essence of sleep and the key piece is this. Many business creators, many creative artists, many great athletes think it's about working harder to achieve more. Well, that has been debunked by science, we all know that we are at our best creatively productive and in terms of our performance when we experience an intense burst of elite performance and then take the time to recover. I had a person at one of my events recently.
I worked with Usain Bolt and he said that Usain Bolt told him that I sleep 50 percent of the time to allow the training to take effect, so I run these cycles of intense creativity and

productivity

and I learned to really rest. I take naps. I've done it since I was 18 years old. And recovery is very important in terms of visualization meditation or whatever. Okay, I could go on with you, but we have to get you out of here, so before I ask my last question, tell these guys where they can. I'll find you online, sure, well, anyone interested in the 5 a.m. book club. m., it's in Amazon bookstores, it's on audible.
Anyone who can't find it either is in the 5 a.m. club. m., and I think it's important to say that there are a lot of books that I don't have a support system and I really wanted to serve people and really help, so at the end of the book there are 66 days because that's the amount of time according to the University College of London to install a new

habit

. There are 66 days. free online digital course where I coach people through videos to establish the 5 am club

habit

. It's also very important to me because every uh, book royalties, a percentage goes to help me fight leprosy.
Wow, yeah, a lot of people don't. I don't know about leprosy and I'm fiercely committed to helping reduce it as well and then I'm on instagram robin

sharma

.com youtube robinsharma.com yeah, very perfect, okay, last question, what's the impact you want to have? the world i want to remind people who they really are and when they see nelson mandela or oprah winfrey they say they did it, but legendary is simply a testament to ordinary people who thought differently, felt differently and did different things and there he became who he was. They were and if they can do it, I can do it if I try my best.
I want to spread that message even more. I love those guys. If you want to go all out, let me tell you to immerse yourself in this man's world like I said. He has written over 20 books, the way he can weave information into narrative is absolutely extraordinary; He's been at this for a long time touching high performers, figuring out how to make them even better and he's able to distill that information, package it and make it usable for everyone else, I think he's truly one of the most incredible minds in the space. . You won't regret diving in and seeing how much information you can glean and use in your own life.
It will change you if you let it. Okay if you haven't already make sure to subscribe and until next time my friends are going to be legendary take care Robin thank you so much man this is what we want in our lives this is who we are and that's not a judgment, is correct in terms. of our level of personal development and then my epiphany was that if I spend time every day on personal development, I will gradually become a level three and then a level four and then a level seven, eventually if I become a person of level 10.

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