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Kind: captions Language: en hey everybody welcome to another episode of after impact I am here with none other than agent Smith Mr Bilu and we're going deep on our boy W clef Jean hopefully you guys saw the episode man this one was one to remember like everybody here that was in house was flipping out we flipped out from the moment that we heard he was going to be on the show Mad Love to Dr finesse is Dr finesse is here so hopefully Dr Fess somewhere in the house you hear my voice uh that man is incredible he was the one that secured us why CLE it was amazing white literally walked in the door with a crate of Guinness beer and uh like a boss just the coolest guy he there's Dr vaness Dr vanesse you got to come just like peek aead in or something let this audience know what's up man so this is our boy in fact he was last night he was at the wlef concert so if you guys are not following it's too bad that your IG account there he is Dr finesse himself it's too bad that your account actually isn't Dr finesse but it is Mr Christopher McDonald check him out out on Instagram he was there rocking wlef last night I was watching so it was a lot of fun W cleff was so cool he was so cool I've been telling everyone about it like he he came in he was he just immediately started walking up to people shaking hands introducing himself super down to earth just wanted to hang out yeah he was it it really was amazing man there's some people you meet them and you're just like I get why this person's famous uh Michael strayan is another one for me like that guy like you just get it like 5 minutes in his presence you're like all right all right I get it why is like that like he and he was like that when so I went to his concert in New York um after so he invited me that day on the show said hey I'm going to be doing this concert to celebrate the release of um juu which is the leadup to Carnival 3 right exactly um and he did this big blowout concert he ends up having the president of Haiti there I mean it was it was insane and I got a chance to go backstage Maddie thank you so much for making that happen that was awesome uh and our boy Nick at vayer also smashed it um and he was just like that there as well just super cool really nice really thoughtful warm Embraces all around just good dude stay tuned for the episode of red pill theory on that yeah that drops soon right yeah in the next week or so take you guys backstage uh so you can actually live that experience see what it was all about all right should we dive into the episode I think we should I think we should so the one thing that really stood out to me about this was he is a master Storyteller white yeah he is he is such a good Storyteller and I know we've talked about on this show and in Impact Theory how important it is to be a strong Communicator in business but how about life do you think it's important for people to cultivate that skill in life wow man for sure for sure you know that's one of those things that it is um to understand that humans have a desire for narrative that narrative is how they translate their own life narrative is how they make sense of the world like when you really stop and ask like the fundamental question why do we use narrative right so I think most people agree that humans just thrive on narrative that it is a part of our makeup but when you really start to ask the question why why would that be advantageous you start going all the way back to language and language being sort of the first technology that we invented that allowed us to give birth to culture culture is the thing that allows us to spread ideas and ideology very very rapidly like if you want to know why we're doing what we're doing at impact Theory it's because when I look at the no [ __ ] answer of what it's going to take to make cultural change you've got to go back to the fundamental technology that we use to transmit culture and that's language it's narrative it's storytelling um and so when you really contextualize it that way and understand that that is what's driving um the the obsession that we have from a sort of neurobiological level um of narrative it's that ability to tap into emotion it's that ability to um help things make sense like we use that narrative to really um understand right and so if narrative is our fundamental way to understand whether I'm trying to entertain you make you laugh make you think or like the real magic and and W cleff did this to a te in the episode is you draw people in with humor and then you hit them with something that's really raw and really real and you're so open to that and you lower your defenses when you um lead with the comedy and sort of the you know just really down toe nature that he had and so learning those effective things to Prime people to be open in fact I'm reading a book right now it'll probably be the um so we'll have one more book review before this but then the one after will be on this book called persuasion and it's all about the ways you have to Prime people to be receptive to your message and if you're a if you really understand communication and you're a great Storyteller dude you're you're just priming people so yeah that's a long way of saying I think that's a super critical skill to develop awesome and so his story uh is super inspiring obviously I'm loving that wook is like she is locked essentially in a dungeon and it still sounds like she is in this room with us and she's pissed about something so so wcu Story I mean it's it's the quintessential American Dream right uh coming from nothing immigrant uh story comes to the United States and really just builds his entire life off of grit hard work uh you know perseverance all these things so I was really struck by man this is such a great example we talk about mindset on the show so much this is such a great example of a growth mindset how'd that hit you yeah that that was the thing that blew me away in the research and I I really had hoped he'd be able to talk about it which he did I mean just in Spades um researching him though I was thinking so many people today say that the American dream is dead and you know that it we just live in like this sort of dark time and it just isn't true and when you look at somebody like w cleff who man read his book purpose like it it's it's crazy so to recap he's born in Haiti his parents leave him behind when he's one so it's him and his little brother they leave them behind they go to America and for almost 9 years I think he lives apart has no idea who his parents are and so his aunt and grandmother who raised him would tell him like Hey this Christmas gift or whatever is from your parents and he would just assume that you know they were making up that he didn't really have um you know parents in America and he kind of suspected that his aunt was secretly his mom and um that they were just trying to be nice to him by you know saying oh no no no like there's this mythical family over in America and things will be better for you one day uh cuz he was living in such a dirt poor Village um so that was really interesting and so for him to start there then come to America grow up in the slums and so go from you know the rural Village to the Hard Knock Life of the projects that he was living in in Brooklyn and still not make excuses like um dude like that stuff is is my drug of choice like meeting people that have achieved at the highest level that really started somewhere um just you know total Ground Zero and be able to build up and and um you know hopefully you'll uh you've got some more questions on there specifically about like how we use music to do that so I won't go into it now but um just wow such a powerful tale definitely uh another thing about W cleff is you can't really put him in a box right super so let's talk about e eclecticism uh is that a word yeah eclecticism yeah dude agent Smith bringing the knowledge like this guy somebody fact check me on that we will fact check for sure but even if it's not I think it should be uh but I have to say like I pride myself on Words and vocab and stuff but I I come to this man I I won't I won't lie like I think he's got the record right Cindy you you with me on that one and it's um the definition is ticism a approach that does not hold rly to a single Paradigm or set of assumptions but instead draws upon multiple theories Styles or ideas to gain complimentary insights into subject or applies different theories in particular nice now did you look that up or did somebody post that you looked it up nice so it's a word it is a word well done man all right so see it was my background so truth I've worked at it # truth yeah uh um can't put him in a box it's part of what makes him makes him unique I think um first off do you consider that a strength like cultivating sort of being eclectic yeah no question so I mean this goes back to ideas in equal ideas out so that to me is the most important math equation in anybody's life um H are there unique thoughts left to be had probably like I actually think there are but people will try to you know say oh there's nothing left and I don't know if you guys know the unibomber that was his beef did you know that no so the unibomber like ends up trying to kill the reason he was targeting University people is he thought like that there's this sweet spot of human intellect where it's really hard but it's possible and if something is too easy or too hard then like it just doesn't give you that sense of being alive but being able to solve a puzzle that like feels like it's just right at your in intellectual reach like that to him was the purpose of being alive like to do that to have those moments where it's something just like it makes you feel like oh my God I figured that out you know what I mean and he felt like the way that um education was going and the way that technology was progressing and the way that um information was spreading there were none of those left so he was literally trying to destroy the higher education system because he felt like it was robbing humans of that moment where you could and he wrote that whole thing and his like it's crazy Manifesto but the the whole point for me is that there's something so incredible about bringing ideas together that whether or not there are new ideas like I it's irrelevant there are I promise you an infinite number of new connections to be made and because one of the core things about making connections has to do with the era that you live in the moment the time the technology where culture is all of that like it will it will forever be fresh and there will forever be new connections to make because somebody born today is going to think fundamentally different than the way that I think because of when I was born and what I grew up around so like that to me is is so interesting but the only way to be making those connections is to take in just like a rich world of information as diverse as possible to get as many differing ideas as you can get um and and that to me is you know God I really avoid politics but the thing that scares me about like when people get really divisive like when they don't even want to hear the other side it's like how does that can't possibly serve you that's like it's l literally like inbreeding it's ideological inbreeding you're you're just trying to reinforce the ideas that you have and even if it weren't dangerous and I think that it is dangerous from just creating division but you will stagnate and you will become irrelevant because other people are going to come along that are going to have a fresh perspective and they're going to knock you off and I've said this before and I'm sure this is an obsession of mine I'll say it again is they say that genius is a young man's game but I don't think it actually has nothing to do with youth it just has to do with staying fresh mentally and it just so happens that when young you don't know enough to have it calcify into Dogma so it's not overly rigid the thoughts that you have and because your thoughts are appliable and you're just beginning to learn and you've got this fresh perspective culturally right because you're you know growing up in a time where the scientists ahead of you didn't grow up so you're just seeing things differently you're making these connections that I was just talking about so if you can find a way to stay fresh like that you don't have to be young right if you reinvent yourself every 10 years so take Michael stran on a Michael Strahan kick if you take Michael Strahan's business partner constant who constant Schwarz amazing amazing human being um every 10 years she's forced herself to reinvent so she was like uh she worked in the NFL I think that was her first career and she was in the NFL for like 10 years and then she was a music manager and U manag Snoop and um oh who's the guy that's that's high like 247 um snoop snoop yeah uh Whiz Khalifa uh and she managed Whiz Khalifa I'm having trouble with my cables today uh she managed w everybody wook has escaped I have no idea how uh she can apparently pick locks and open doors a Pomeranian it's pandemonium God bless it it's Mayhem I love it uh so yeah I uh should we should we beep that should we or or is it part of the fun all right we'll leave it we'll leave it welcome so staying fresh uh is something that wuff talks about in the episode right and he's like even though you know I might take time off making music it doesn't mean I you know I'm not going to be following the hottest new artist Kendrick Lamar um he's working with a lot of new artists Young Thug uh people who are up and coming and um he said that the the way you're going to do that is if you are truly passionate about what you're working on you'll never you'll always be so interested that you're always trying to learn more do more and just be in that space and you will never fall out of sort of what's current and what's relevant so is that a good indicator for people if they're not following whatever they think they so let's say someone they have a passion but they actually aren't as up todate or they aren't following as closely as um they you know they should be is that an indicator that they're really not passionate about it um I don't know that it's an indicator that you're not passionate about it and I think that it's a double-edged sword I think there's two ways so um I think you can drink too deeply of what other people are doing and lose your own voice and at the same time I think that you can not drink deeply enough and not be relevant right and not be getting the fresh information that you need to make the new connections but and and I'm speaking very specifically to an artistic Endeavor um and so I think that it's it it's really a a fine balance and I think what Wu was talking about very specifically was being a cultural sponge and at the moment he was talking about music he talking about hip-hop I think to be relevant especially in hip-hop right hip-hop is the only um form of music that I know of there maybe others but that's the one that I know of where they talk about hip-hop culture right you don't talk about pop music culture um and you hear that notion a lot like do it for the culture you know what I mean so there's a real deep sense of that meaning something either specifically to the African-American Community or just hip-hop at large and so that I think to be a relevant voice voice in that you have to know what's going on and you'd have to be especially as a producer you'd have to be drinking deeply about what's hitting because and he talked about that in the episode as well like and look we hold ourselves to that standard and I was talking to Lisa about this this morning it's weird um you know so I'm walking the show at Magic and I'm walking by all these garments and things it would be really really cool and oh man I was just like oh this is awesome and one of the reasons that we ended up um turning Quest apparel into Quest clothing was when we were Quest apparel we were trying to like high fashion things that we thought were cool like really be cutting edge create a trend instead of asking ourselves what sells mhm and so once we really put the Hat on of what sells it was stuff that was around the brand it was more Fitness related way more casual and so in shifting our mindset purely to like a market driven like give me feedback then it was like okay now we can move units now we're not holding inventory that never ends up going anywhere so if you put that back in the musical context if y clef or anybody else isn't paying attention to what's moving units like what's selling what's hot then then they're really going to be in trouble and so from that perspective um the reason I think he mentioned Kendrick Lamar's mixtape is to say I can identify Talent before it hits right that's important for him as a producer and so to do that I think you just have to understand human psychology and and music um and then two that yes he has to understand like what's connecting with people so that he can give them that and I really hope that we have a chance to go deeper on this and if you don't have it jot this one down but he you know talked about how you um can really go in and mind that stuff to create a hit but only if you know you want a hit right so his whole thing was know what you want like if you if you can't be honest that what you want is a hit record cuz he has done both right like the the original Carnival was in many ways a reaction to um the success of the score he was like we sold you know what are Jesus like 20 million 22 million albums just nuts and he was like now I'm a pop star and I don't want to be a pop star I'm I'm a musician right and I want to really go back to something that was super artistic so the carnival becomes his reaction to that so that was him understanding himself like here's what's important to me musicality right and after the carnival he goes on to do a lot more producing work because he showed people I'm about musicality you know going back to what you're saying about having eclectic interest like being able to synthesize all that into a totally unique and different sound um versus the score which was expressly meant to be a hit so the reason they called it the score he talked about this in the episode but the reason they called it the score was they felt like they were settling the score for the people who didn't buy their first album because they felt like their first album was great musically but it didn't hit commercially and so they were coming back to settle the score with their second album and make something that was by definition meant to be big from a sales perspective yeah that's awesome I want to remind everyone we're on Facebook live right now um you can share this feed and you can win an impact Theory t-shirt um and this is after impact if you haven't seen the episode with Y clef John highly encourage you to go check it out on YouTube or on our podcast uh it launched on Tuesday and the link is in the comments nice nice while we're checking in with Facebook live do we have any questions yet we do actually let's hear it this one comes from Michael Foster so he says I love the our boy Michael perspective from what is the best way to cultivate this mentality um so hit me up with the very beginning I was too busy trying to recognize Michael L the no excuses persective no excuses yeah so what's the best way for him to cultivate this mentality or any for them yeah so um question is what's the best way to cultivate and no excuses mentality which is something that white cleff talks about in the episode yeah so this this to me me um is is a great question because it's so fundamental so foundational so here is the very simple truth of how you do this with anything so how do I get more discipline how do I um stop making excuses you start saying I'm the type of person that doesn't make excuses period mic drop that's it like once you start saying that out loud you cannot help you either have to say oh I guess I am a person who makes excuses and now at least you're being honest or you actually stop making excuses and when you say it like especially if there's close friends or uh significant other who will even if just to like put it back in your face like even if they're trying to be mean about it just reminding you that you said it Oh I thought you didn't make excuses you know what I mean like oh man I wasn't going to go running this morning but it's so [ __ ] cold Oh I thought you didn't make excuses then you're going to be like oh yeah I don't make excuses I am going to go run and for the first mile you're going to do it like begrudgingly you're going to be mad about it you're going to be pissed that that person held you to that standard but then it's going to start to be real and you're going to start to think wow I actually went out and ran today like even though it's super cold I did it or and there's Neuroscience behind that too right oh dude all all manner of Neuroscience so what you're dealing with is ultimately it comes down to myelination right so you're going to the at the connection points between the neurons of identity and not making excuses or even just the the the um connections between the impulse to make an excuse and then switching your mindset over to not making excuse becomes a habit Loop right so you're using the excuse as a trigger to remind yourself that your new created identity is that of somebody who doesn't make excuses so the excuse becomes the trigger to not make excuses which is like one of those beautiful things it's another one that I use is um every time I go to criticize somebody I stop myself and think of a compliment and that works on two levels one it's almost always better not always because there are times where you if something is a real deficiency especially in the world of business you have to make that known um but at the same time it's normally better to lead with something that is authentic and real and positive right so to go from uh strength to strength to help people um it's called the muscle on muscle technique so hey there's this thing that you crush you're amazing at this and once we get this where you're as good as you are there then we're really going to be laughing um so that is usually a much more profound way to deliver criticism and it also F forces you to focus on that positive thing so now you're just in a positive frame of mind you're thinking of that person in a positive way um and then from there you can have a bit more sobriety awesome great question uh I got another one here so wlef talks about the importance of knowing music theory in addition to knowing the latest technology in music um in order to always be relevant right so is there an equivalent in business to knowing music theory yeah yeah yeah yeah and the the most obvious one is psychology if you don't understand people and you're trying to sell to people like you're just dead in the water and that's really been and that that holds true for just sales and marketing in general is you really really have to have a deep understanding of human psychology human motivation persuasion um all of that stuff like the brain right so and that's why and and the Brain really became my obsession because I was trying to get control of myself and then I just began to understand like how potent it was um in business as well and that's why I ended up in marketing so I didn't end up in marketing for any other reason than between film and just my desire to understand myself I had spent so much time thinking about psychology thinking about neuro Anatomy thinking about anatomy in general um with how we take things intactly through our senses uh that that just made me already be thinking about okay I'm trying to sell to this person what what do I need to understand understand about them in order to motivate them to make a purchasing decision so you know that and then man when I think about leading people like if you don't understand psychology you're dead in the water um so that's that's the most fundamental one for sure awesome want to kick it back to Facebook live Community any questions from our live audience so this one comes from Ben um so his excuse when he's working in the evening is usually I need to sleep should he stay up later and work harder mean sacrificing that sleep no so shall we shall we go why repeat the question for our podcast audience uh the question is uh the excuse he gives himself when he's up late working is that he needs to sleep so he shouldn't be working um but should he sacrifice sleep in order to work harder and longer yeah and my answer is no so but here's the the next question what's your excuse in the morning and that's where people people fall down right so if Ben if you let me audit the way that you spend your time uh from how long you probably lay in bed in the morning to how long your shower is to uh the waffly way that you get ready I mean I don't know this guy about I just like thinking about like my own self and all the things that I've had to deal with you know laying in bed for too long um like the amount of time that it takes you just to get ready all of a sudden you're like 45 minutes like what like what you could have done with that time like force yourself to get ready in 7 minutes right I look at my wife like she's an alien because of how long sometimes it takes her to get ready um just because I can't bear that lapse of time like I literally can't I would make a horrific woman because a would wear no makeup uh just for Speed or I would sleep with it can you sleep like no you're not oh well then no makeup then because like my hair would be in a bun or in a hat like something like you've got to crush that stuff down so anyway we all have the same number of hours it's about efficiency of that I think sleep is a huge thing if you've got a deadline or something something look of course like it's all got to be what are your goals mandate but one of my goals is to actually enjoy my life and I find being tired all the time a unique form of misery like that is there's a ring of hell where all they do is make you not get sleep right like and think about the um military and what they do in the Marines or sorry uh Navy Seals sleep deprivation oh it's the first thing you do like if you want to really mess with somebody deprive them of sleep and you're not going to be as effective at whatever you're doing if you're chronically fatigued so that to me is just like let's rule that out um so I get as much sleep as I need I don't set an alarm you have to like stop setting alarm and there will probably be weeks or maybe even a month or more where you sleep so much you think Tom's crazy I can't keep doing this but that's your body trying to catch back up and then once you get through that phase you'll find your natural Rhythm which I'm going to guess is somewhere between 6 maybe 9 hours maybe but even if it's 9 hours like your brain will be functioning optimally and at that point like you're just going to make better use of the time that you have so but you're going to have to cut out TV you're going to have to cut out like watching cat videos on the internet you're going to I mean yeah I know it's tough those dude cat videos are rad and that's the thing like there's a million things I want to do right but just you have to begin to prioritize disciplined so the Cav video's got to go prioritize sleep there it is um all right another question I have for you Tom um so w cleff is a is a sponge right so he has all these diverse musical tastes coming from sounds he heard in nature as a kid living in Haiti to the rap battles in Brooklyn to the Christian rock band Petra yeah buddy um who who's the only man he could listen to as a child that his dad allowed him to who was a preacher um none of it is thrown away he still talks about all of those and how how they um came together to form something greater so everything informs who he is as an artist and he's very self-aware about that how how did how did that strike you in the episode that that's amazing and honestly when when he said in the episode like uh go what did he say like um something had a note I forget the first one but he was like this has a note the bird or whatever and then the wind has a note and I thought what and that's when I realized like this man's brain like works differently than mine and that goes back to the notion of early wins like everybody has that thing like there's something you're going to get early wins on it doesn't mean you have to pursue it but when you find a passion for something you have an early win for it's pretty neat and so w Cliff clearly had early wins from a musicality perspective and we didn't get to talk much about the story about his drum in the episode but like he would sneak out in the middle of the night to go play this drum that his church had like like a little when I was envisioning either like a small like Congo Conga drum or like a tambourine with none of the you know the jingly bits um and so I was just like wow man I was not like that like I was in band I had a trombone and I did everything I could to avoid playing that damn thing like I just didn't have that same sense and his Insight that the oscillator is a tone and that music is just vibrations it's like wow man it's it's really really cool when somebody like happens on to something like that and they really like go hard for that cake yeah let's talk about the oscillator please so that was a big moment in the in the episode when he talks about um you you can just read the manual the most important tool you have is your brain right you don't need a $25,000 piece of equipment and he so essentially if you've seen the episode he reverse Engineers this very expensive piece of equipment in order that makes one specific tone um that he really wanted in the album and he did it by going into the music store and reading the manual and then figuring out that he could kind of hack it through some other tools he had already at his disposable as his disposal I mean that that just that like I know you were shocked in the episode oh man I love that so much like that that's one of those stories that like don't you want to be like that yeah like that's one of those I just look at anything that you're tempted to say this is like too hard or I don't have what I need or whatever and then you hear someone like that and look here's here's the thing about not making excuses all of your excuses the the worst part the most Sinister part about excuses is they're real like they're valid and once I had that Insight that that the excuses that I make that other people make they're valid and you have every right to be making them they just don't move you towards your goals like that was when I started saying to myself I'm going to do and believe that which moves me towards my goals period and at the end of the day the way that so you were asking like is there a fundamental thing in business like learning music theory and the answer is psychology at the end of the day the only thing humans respond to is extraordinary performance that's it so why' the iPod Crush because it was amazing it was better than anything else their marketing campaign was better than anything else and when I say better because from a bits and standpoint it wasn't but it made me feel something that the other products didn't and that's what we judge it by that is better better meaning I got more value exchange out of my dollars than I would have gotten from anything else not necessarily that empirically speaking it is better from a features and benefit standpoint that I have received more value from my purchase than I would have with something else and so that comes down to psychology that comes down to really understanding that and so once you get that once you get that's the only thing humans respond to is extraordinary performance then how do your excuses help because it's only going to be somebody like wlef who says okay I may not have access to that but I can't give you my album and say hey look I couldn't afford the $25,000 piece of equipment you know whatever like right now if you're trying to me make music right now you're going up against DJ khed right let me walk you into his recording studio it's better than yours and like from a dollars and cense standpoint and the artists that he has access to they're better than yours right like all of that but you still have to win like you have to win you have to beat him at that you have to be better you have to find an angle that he doesn't have you have to out hustle him and then like if you don't know the story about Jay-Z he used to literally stalk LL Cool J do you know why no I don't cuz he wanted to rap battle him and he knew if I can LL Cool J was the biggest guy had the best contract in rap music and he said I'm better than him and if I can like track him down he would literally they would pull up to him exiting out of the back of a club they'd hit him in the parking lot just trying to show like a few insiders in the world of hip-hop that this guy could be as good if not better than LL Cool J and so that like you've got to want that you've got to want that like you've got to be Jay-Z like I want to Corner him in a parking garage and take my chance getting my ass handed to me because I believe that I can actually outperform right not outm market outperform and that's when it gets interesting so that's what blew me away you know when Y cleff is is talking about taking this oscillator running it through a midi and now he can make the oscillator make any sound he wants because he understands vibration he understands music theory like he can just put it all together and now because of his mind because of his training because he's focused on Jazz because he's looking at music in a totally different way that he's able to outperform the people that have access to that equipment the people that already had the ear of the music industry like he was just able to outperform and because of his music you know everybody starts calling from Destiny's Child to Michael Jackson I mean just they start coming out of the woodwork he starts working with Quincy Jones but all because he outperformed not because he gave like some list of like all the excuses and people thought oh man I really feel bad for this kid doesn't work like that no excuses no excuses the bottom line all right I want to remind everyone we are on Facebook live we are doing after impact this is a show where Tom and I sit down and go deep into the episode of impact theory for this week which was y clef John you can check it in the comments if you haven't seen it yet highly recommend it it's awesome we're doing some giveaways you can share this live feed for a chance to win an impact Theory t-shirt and then I also want to do something else I want to ask people and this is a bit a bit of a sid step here but we have another content series called impact books Tom reviews uh books that are meaningful to him that have changed his life in some way so I want to ask the audience what do you think Tom should review next drop a link into the comments this can either be from his reading list the top 25 books or it can be from something that you've read and think that uh Tom should check out as well we want to we want to hear what you guys think nice do that and uh you can win a book from the reading list but yeah cool any questions from Facebook live Cindy so this question comes from J why CL mentioned the pulse of the youth how would you integrate embracing your Youth and parir it um pair it with knowledge and wisdom in business hit him with that yeah can you repeat the question I didn't quite get it can you repeat the question repeat the question you got it okay so he in the episode he talks about um needing to really have your finger on the pulse of the youth and that youth is really what drives um music I think he was talking even a little more broadly but how do you pair that with wisdom and experience M and in business and the answer is that goes back to what agent Smith was saying earlier about taking in just a diverse uh Ray of ideas and staying fresh and being a cultural sponge and like I look at what Millennials are doing and I watch videos from Millennials and I read articles about Millennials and um watch things like Vice which is like all Millennial all the time and uh really getting a sense of what their worldview is is it's it's fascinating I don't even think of it necessarily from a business perspective I that one in particular um I think about it from the like where is the the perspective migrating to like so if you grew up when I grew up which was primarily in the you know late' 80s early 90s then like I know what that perspective is right and so I can talk to people that have that perspective hey Facebook the world just got a little weird for you um but Millennials grew up hearing different things with different kinds of parents who've been raised in different ways and so what does their perspective look like and I think anybody's capable of understanding that perspective it may not be your own but you're able to understand it so now I'm able to take the all the experience that I have my own perspective look at their perspective hold those two ideas in my head look for the areas of friction look for the areas of overlap and then for me I'm looking for things that I can use that uh move me towards my goals so if there's a millennial Viewpoint or something and and look I get generalities they're never universally true but they're helpful at a macro level if there's something that I can pull out extract that I think that they see that I don't um then it helps me move towards my goals and I'm going to adopt it and it's it's all ideas like it's just ideas right so even perspective is built on beliefs and ideas and you can adopt whatever you need and certainly just to be able to understand it and that's why I mean this is I think going to become a real thing for me is talking about the division that's going on in the world um it because that freaks me out and it's people doubling down on their position rather than opening up to another position and just trying to see things from a different perspective and it doesn't like seeing something from someone else's perspective does not mean agreeing with them it means understanding their perspective right so so um I just think that that's critically critically important to self-empowerment like I'm not doing it from like a we should all hold hands in sing Kumbaya I'm just saying it's empowering and um yeah doing things that are empowering is always the right answer in my mind awesome um I want to talk about the the moment in the episode when when white cleff says um you have to know the entire game you have to have a 360 degree view of everything um so where so my question is where should people start and how do they measure progress along the way and I'd love to walk through a little bit a little game here and throw throw a uh a hobby at you or or an interest and and see where would you start to get good at it wow this is cool so just you guys know this is not pre-planned this isn't like hey hey you know Tom real fast just so you know I'm going to be hitting you up with this I have no idea so I don't know where we're going with this but sounds very interesting cool I'm ready so why don't we do it through the hobby I think that'll be let's say you want to get good at surfing okay word um so start so the the first thing is um I'm I live in a digital age where I know that right now on YouTube there are thousands of videos about um surfing so I'm going to go watch anything that I can find I'll drop in terms like uh learn how to surf how to surf surfing 101 like and then I'll just Chase those down um I'll watch videos from some of the best people in the world and then I'll try to find the best teach teachers in the world which are usually vastly different like Kelly Slater is probably one of the best Surfers but can he teach I have no idea um so might not necessarily go to him and then as rapidly as possible I'm going to get in the water and there so I might you know like if I decide that I'm going to start surfing on a Tuesday night I'll watch my videos on Tuesday night but by Wednesday morning I'm trying to be in the water uh because there's just no substitute for that experience and I'm not doing it to look cool feel cool I'm doing it to experience it and find out quite frankly if I want to do it and if you remember when we interviewed Marie for Leo um on inside Quest she talked about that right like there's just no substitute for getting your ass ass in the dance class and finding out do I actually like dance class like do I want to be doing this um and you know people can put things off for for a super long time so uh step one I'm going to digest some information rapidly so I have context and then step two as quickly as possible I'm going to do the thing and then I'll be able to better understand the information that I'm getting um so something that I did was magic okay and so learning magic um which by the way I'm atrocious at I've never seen any magic tricks yeah see and that I really only have I have one vanish that's pretty dope that I could do um you like refuse no I don't refuse to do the vanish I do the vanish for you um but that would like I would never try to do like my um Mr Clean three coins across I would not I would not do that because I would embarrass myself but um I've taking classes at the Magic Castle and like the whole n so it it started exactly the same way I started by watching videos started by trying to do it do do do do do then you watch more videos and that you begin oh okay yeah I totally get now what he's trying to do because I've tried to oh and I fumble it there or whatever um so and then rinse and repeat right and I would talk to as many other people as I can that do it and I would try to find other people that are into it um because you reinforce that in each other right so you and I would be spending our mornings like I'd try to get you amped up like come on we got to go uh like however many what's what's a reasonable number of mornings to go to go surfing yeah uh every morning okay cuz I was going to say whatever your number is like I would do more so like I would push you like as long as there are waves you go perfect so and that that to me like going all in immerse yourself awesome so if you are if you go in and you immerse yourself and you decide you love this thing and you want to become the best at it right you want to know the entire game oh now you're getting interesting how do you measure progress along the way okay so we're in surfing now so um I would put small goals for my myself for like immediate term and then I would have long-term goals so if I'm really trying to be the best in the world at this um best in my age group or best we'll say best in your age group okay that's a little bit easier and I think we can make it a little more grounded which is admittedly a limiting belief in myself but the amount of time and energy I'd have to dedicate to getting better than everybody else like I'd have to start with like longevity [ __ ] and anyway um so just keep it nice and grounded uh if I'm trying to be the best in my age group so first of all I'm going to identify who's the best in my age group now okay and I'm going to see what I'm up against like what are the what are the things that they're doing that make them great and then okay so that's my Grand Vision I'm going to create I would I would actually do a vision board or a faux vision board maybe it's the background on my screen saver on my phone as a constant reminder maybe I actually pin something up on my mirror or something so I'm seeing it all the time do you do that now oh yeah yeah for sure for sure um having having reminders is just super super critical of visual reminders yeah yeah definitely um so that's super important and so having that something that's going to cue me of what I'm trying to accomplish and then also um I pick like something that I'm chasing like I I won't tell you who but there are on my phone right now as I track the metrics that are important to us here there are people outside this company that have similar metrics that I can view and I obsessively check us against them and I don't just check like raw numbers I check growth rate yeah so okay they're still growing but at what rate are they grow growing and just so you know the people that we tracking we're growing faster so we're coming for you guys uh so yeah I I do that kind of thing all the time and I let it I let it hurt me emotionally like when I see um the numbers or you know to bring it back to surfing if I saw someone who was better than me I let that hurt and I don't dwell there but that's like I need the chip on my shoulder cuz I know it's going to drive me when I'm really really feeling fatigued and down and I'm looking at the rest of my life and it's beautiful and amazing like why keep going so there's got to be something that like you're angry about right so I love that you guys have heard me talk about it I think rage and Beauty you've got to use them both so I'd make sure that I have my chip on chip on my shoulder about somebody something um and then uh so I've got my Big Goal then I'm going to break it down into small goal so I'm going to guess number one for me is dealing with the cold so I'm going to have to get over dealing with the cold so I'm going to be like Vim hofing it I'm going to be spending time in the ocean I'm going to what like literally if I if I found that that was distracting I would fill my bath with ice uh and water like however many days a week that I needed to and I would make sure that I got good with the cold then I'm going to guess paddling so I probably don't have the arm strength in that way to do it for hours and hours so I'm going to build that Foundation um and then I'm going to focus on getting up on the board um and then God what else would be useful in surfing so once I could do that once I had the strength to do it all the time I could deal with the cold I was able to get up on my board um then it's going to be um make sure I don't develop habits which I guess I would have started before getting a coach somebody that can really help me shortcircuit that so I do as much as I can with online coaching um but you know I'm obviously in a fortunate position where I could hire a coach um if I couldn't hire a coach no excuses I would find a way to add value I would take that person's trash out whatever uh because you're going to Short Circuit a lot if you can get somebody great um to tell you and if I really had a reason to be committed to becoming the greatest of all time I'd probably be living outside of um lared Hamilton's house like taking out his trash or something like literally and if you think I'm kidding then you don't understand the way that my mind works but I would be doing something like that uh to make sure that I had access to absolutely worldclass coaching um you know I yeah it would disrupt my whole life which is what it would take right humans only respond to extraordinary um performance so I could keep going but I think you get the would you would you have a timeline would you map all this out yeah I would I would have goals but one thing I know about timelines you almost never hit them but um I think the one thing and and you guys can um a test to this or not but uh I think the one thing that winds people up about me is I set such [ __ ] aggressive timelines um but that that's important to me so like you know I mean you guys know my lazy goal is our ecosystems 100,000 by the end of the year but my real goal is 500,000 so a lazy goal that first one yeah so that's uh aggressive timelines so if you fail at least you fail big way that you you still you still get at least to a certain point those are great words but that isn't why I do it and that's what people will tell you and like that's a good way to get will you let me say lesser Mortals sure okay that's a good way to get lesser Mortals like motivated but that isn't why I do it the reason that I do it is if you want to 10x your performance not 10% Improvement but truly 10x you have to think in a fundamentally different way and everyone everyone thinks linear in the beginning and you have to think exponentially so that's why like as I was really sitting here thinking about it I have to move to and live with lared Hamilton that's just like I don't see any other way around it um he's a standing for or lared Hamilton or some other great you know what I mean but like you're totally dedicating yourself to that and that's like you would have to and that's why it's a big switch right you got to be careful what you throw yourself at but don't have faet so if I wanted to be the greatest in the world in my age group that's what it would take and so that's what I would do thank you for uh playing along dude that was fun man all right uh Facebook live do we have any questions Brian his name was Robert pson I don't know why that just triggered that neuron in my brain so if you find yourself having one of those days where everything is a struggle and dark what is your one thread to hold on to that pulls you that I can do anything I set my mind to so sorry I keep answering them without repeating the question for audience question is it's like Jeopardy so the the question is uh if you uh find yourself having one of those days where everything is a struggle how do you hang on to a thread to pull you through the dark time yeah and so that
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