Kind: captions Language: en [Music] what are the principles that you've lived by that allowed you to go from dropping out of high school broke selling Flowers by the side of the road to a net worth of 150 million dollars for me it all comes down to this single decision I made to drop out of high school when I was 16 years old I grew up in Queens New York uh very poor on living on government cheese and taking care of my mother who was obese which I don't talk a ton a lot but it was very heavy and the byproduct of dysfunction and abuse which only became clear later on so just born into dysfunction and everything was about concealment everything in my early days was about making sure that nobody knew just how poor I was just how desperate I was so there's all this concealment was what I was born into it takes a long time to sort of shed that shame but and then after years and years of realizing the Cavalry wasn't coming I had an epiphany and it was actually uh born of watching my mother she took her GED as an adult and went from having no education to enrolling in Queens College and she had a really Fierce mind and uh for her education was about dignity but as a kid it was around 13 14 I'm like wait a second I saw an ad in a local PennySaver newspaper and it said uh you know deliver flyers for a congressman uh you know be college students only but you'd make eight bucks an hour the time I was scraping gum at McDonald's making 375 or working in a deli overnight and I was like what is it about this mythical college student thing that makes you make twice as much income I was like I want to be a college student and I had a thought why don't I do what my mother did by accident but do it on purpose why don't I drop out of high school and when I excitedly told my guidance counselor this plan like I gotta figure it out Mr Barkin I'm gonna drop out of high school get my GD in a role in Queens College at 16. and that you were [ __ ] I assume yeah a [ __ ] this is why weren't you though because that like if somebody came to me and said hey Tom I'm thinking about dropping out of high school getting my GED even knowing your story I'd be like that's a bad move right so what's the principle that made that a good move for you is it the burn the boats idea or is it something I think the burn the boats is the weight I I stayed stayed the course the principle is that um convex conventional thinking is built for the average story The regression to the mean right whatever works for most people our education system works for most people when you have maybe two parents or at least one functioning parent right but but the world is set up for the average situation and when you are in in an outlier situation right you need to take matters into your own hands that was number one and the second principle is trust your instincts don't Outsource your judgment Mr Barkin and everybody else thought it was absolutely crazy uh and they were right to think it was crazy but they didn't have the full context of my life because I was concealing everything when I presented to Mr Barkin and the other people at school they saw a kid who was pretty well polished wearing jordish jeans back then and but they didn't have the full context so the the principle that I am the greatest Undisputed expert they'll ever be about myself holds true to this day and we tend to look for confirmation from experts confirmation from books on Barnes and Noble or Ted Talks instead of first Consulting yourself and my instincts told me that that if your mother's dying in the room next door and you are thinking about crashing your car into a tree half the time you know as time went on that this decision makes perfect sense but no one will ever understand because they don't have the context I think instincts are trained most people and if you train them poorly you're in real trouble if I had steered by my instincts I think I would have really LED myself astray a lot of times in my life and so I I am curious why at 16 how do you develop self-awareness were you processing through it the way that you just explained it or like how do you think about that because I've seen more people go wrong on their instincts than I've seen go right and I think we could debate is there a difference between the word Instinct and intuition intuition is probably more of a proxy for pattern recognition I would think at the end of the day but whether we call it instincts or intuition I do think there's a difference between what our instincts are telling us in a non-crisis situation and what our instincts tell us in a crisis situation I think we are are all are all hardwired to survive and when survival is on the line which at that time survival really was on the line not just myself but my mother I think our instincts are our intuition are a strong guide now normally agreed if I is Instinct a word for impulse yeah very different thing if I relied on my impulses which sometimes I do they lead me a strike that's interesting how do you tease those two apart you know you're relying on instincts when you're in a crisis situation but two when there when no other option make any sense like when you have that Clarity I had such Clarity that one my Intuition or instincts told me my mother was going to die eventually she was going to succumb both to her depression but her obesity right my instincts also told me that I was going to spend the rest of my life resenting her if I didn't take matters into my own hands that there was no institution that was going to help us and at the four years I had to spend at high school was too much time to waste right I have to ascribe those to instincts because it wasn't on the internet it wasn't from counseling or experts it was bubbling up but it all bubbled up from the crisis situation of recognizing that it's either do it's a Do or Die moment harder to replicate that Clarity when we're not in a crisis as an entrepreneur as an investor that vets entrepreneurs talk to me about the moment where you realize nobody's coming to save you that's a principle for me that if I were going to say okay there's a small handful of things that led to my success one of them is that I take responsibility for everything it's all my fault if I never point one finger at anybody without pointing all 10 and myself first um what what how what do you look for in people how do you get them to take responsibility why should they take responsibility we're in a moment now where that's very unfashionable it's such a great point oh I'll take you back in time to a conversation I had sitting at the table with uh my mother right um again uh dealing with all these different health issues and our relationship Dynamic was upside down I was parentified as a young child and anyone out there who's a caregiver knows what I'm talking about when you're a caregiver you're both anointed the caregiver in a way you didn't uh you didn't want but you're also led to believe that uh you are a savior right that you were born to do that that was that was my situation that yeah that I was I was groomed as the wrong word because it sounds negative but that I I was anointed as the caregiver and the Savior and that became a lot of my identity but my poor mother at the time was always grappling with depression and her weight and she wouldn't take matters into her own hands she would I never talked about this before uh oh so she would uh she would never get surgery for her knees and I would say if you don't get surgery like you're gonna die you can't you know you can't you can't move and uh I remember this conversation where I would say what's a better way to approach this life because she would say you don't know what it's like to be dying I'm like well I don't know if I don't think you have to be dying I think you can get your your knees replaced and do something and then uh I remember saying to her I had this Epiphany I'm no longer going to view the world as things happen to me I would rather see the world as I happen to things but I also had enough awareness and Defiance and oppositional Behavior to say this is unnatural and it's going to lead to bad things if I don't speak up right it's going to take Decades of therapy instead of just years to unravel this so it was in the context of me trying to reframe her thinking of saying what's better should I see myself as a victim or should I see myself as an agent in my own rescue so there's a point of saying that don't mean to get emotional but uh it's all still very raw is that um that is the actual truth of the universe that we happen to things that we get the last word until our last breath it's like a man's search remaining right that and so when I say to you instincts I agree I normally roll my eyes when people say trust her it stinks without Nuance but like where did that come from that was instinctive and it's only because the situation was so desperate that I instinctively realized the relationship is upside down it's going to leave me with lots of scars but two you're viewing the world as if you have no agency and no power and that does not ring true to me deep down you know in my DNA I think that's one of the most important principles for anybody watching this hoping to understand how to move forward if they disregard that moment they're never going to make it and this is the thing that drives me crazy we were also talking about this before we started rolling so long before I had a show I had a thousand employees that grow up hard as hell in the inner cities and I had this like moment of oh my God I can help you this is crazy like I was meant for this moment I'm like I have cobbled together like you so I took myself from scrounging in my couch cushions to find enough change to put gas in my car to selling a company for a billion dollars like even I like I get the chills now when I think that's not a story that actually happens sometimes I'm like I think I'm making it up so yes yeah yes because I've said it so many times that I'll forget it's not a catchy phrase I actually was like [ __ ] I don't have enough money to go for a job interview I don't have enough money to put gas in my car to go to this job interview what am I gonna do I was like oh [ __ ] like there might be change now admittedly gas prices were a lot lower than they are now so I could actually get enough gas money but when I look back and I go okay wait I've never felt special I've never thought like oh I'm better than other people in fact my story is the exact opposite I always felt like solieri from um Amadeus the movie so real real guy and he was a contemporary of Mozart and he in the movie anyway he laments to God God why did you make me just good enough to realize I'll never be as good as Mozart and I heard that at 16 and was like oh my God that sums up my whole life why did you make me just smart enough to realize I'll never be as smart as my friends or I'll never be as smart as the next business guy whatever and so when I end up overcome doing that and I realized oh it's just skill acquisition I start just going crazy gobbling up skills spending an obscene amount of time pushing myself reading researching all that so anyway I end up getting good I'm in front of these employees and I'm like oh my God like these ideas that I've come together they will work for you but what I didn't realize at the time is 98 obviously that's a rough number just they're never going to point all 10 fingers at themselves they're never going to do the work like they they they don't have what I call the only belief that matters the only belief that matters is if you put time and energy into getting better at something you will actually get better and if that is true to your mom to you to me to everybody it's like oh I can address my knees and I can actually get moving and I could lose weight my life could be different oh I could go to college and end up teaching at Harvard which is crazy if people don't know that part of your story my question is like you have lived the thing that wounds me the deepest which is that the there are people that I love an unimaginable amount and they won't do anything with the ideas and I'm watching them do a slower version of what you watched your mom do how do you deal with that because that really messes with me yeah that's hard I mean this book is my attempt to make the case that it is possible that like you just said I'm not extraordinary I was in extraordinary circumstances and so and was able to open a portal to another world about what happens when you go all in with with complete surrender but I have the same feelings you do the ideas are there why don't you do it you know why why won't you just implement it I think I wrote a book to try to achieve it you should write a book too yeah we'll see so burn the boats giving yourself over to your plan A talk to me about that because it so I often tell people I'm not a burn the boats guy now I've read your book so I actually do completely subscribe to the way that you talk about it but give us the nuanced make the case the nuanced case in a nutshell that you make in the books is pretty competitive okay good all right no I love it the burn the boats is a bit of a trojan horse right so you know some people who get frustrated they pick it up they expect a certain thing and it's totally another as you pointed out it's not the bombastic it's not called burn the boats with you in it or it's not called burn the boats into hell with everyone else this book is written for the 48 of people if you went on a trained platform this is actually true from a study and so do you have a plan a 48 would say yes the other you know 40 are lying most people do right this book is written for The Angst ridden anxiety-laden risk adverse people who I believe need it more than anyone else not the self-possessed so the Nuance of burn the boats and we all I don't have to revisit the ancient you know theory of we perform best when we Have No Escape right but the the boat in my book is meant to be a child's boat floating in a bathtub that you set fire to because the metaphorical boats that many of us have to burn begin with childhood and Legacy issues right I think it is worth telling people where that ancient okay all right let's tell it okay so this is actually fascinating uh Cortez in 1519 a lot of people know the Cortez story very bad man uh bird the boats while taking on the Aztecs and was able to uh win that battle by literally eliminating the boats the Escape Route and eliminating food Provisions I'm more fascinated by as I started researching this book that if you go back to the beginning of recorded history every culture in every Century has a fabled military General and the way they were to overcome insurmountable odds was to literally eliminate their escape boats in a lot of cases Bridges sometimes and destroy their food Provisions there's a story in 207 BC China same exact thing they even have a word for it in Chinese for burn the boats um and Alexander the Great Caesar uh ancient Israelites so I was like why is it that military leaders intuitively understand that we in peace time in modern day don't accept that the idea the way to be successful is to actually eliminate choice so I started looking at the Sciences well maybe this doesn't hold true in peace time maybe this is an outdated concept we're too evolved and we don't need to burn the boats anymore we need to like mend the bridges or something or whatever it is and as a study in 2014 at A Wharton which is fascinating they tried to identify what is the Insidious impact of not having a plan B but actually contemplating a plan B and what they found in this study the methodology so yeah they give permission to the students and said by the way if you just want to think of another way to get a snack or whatever the hell it was right like you can think about it and what they found were two interesting things one the the group that was allowed to just contemplate a plan B was statistically much less likely to be successful but more importantly the second part is what I was most interested they were less interested in plan a anymore they had they had lost intrinsic motion motivation to achieve it so my book is an attempt to make the case with that data and going back in time it is one thousand percent true that the only way to achieve extraordinary things is if you don't have a plan B but now we have to get into definitions because this is where the objections come but Matt I have to pay the bills or I can't afford risk you're a rich white guy you know like you don't understand what it's like plan a and this is why I say I'm the most paranoid risk taker you ever made plan a 1 000 contemplates your mitigation strategy for when it might not work out the difference is you contemplated at the beginning of the journey whenever I do anything hard I'm sure you do the same thing I ask myself what's the worst thing that could happen because I catastrophize going back to my childhood trauma I absolutely I embrace that what's the worst thing that could happen what would I do if the worst thing that could happen back to that crisis mentality that we're all wired with I 100 have within me at this moment the ability to mitigate any big decision I try to make without even a moment's thought if I ask the question get the other job go back to working for bill whatever I got to do right three what's the statistical what's the likelihood that I could forecast at the catastrophizing that I've just thought about is likely to material as usually the answer is infinitesimally small at the end of the day and then four and I'll talk about this in the context of Harvard what wouldn't I do to walk into that classroom as a kid from Queens who had dropped out of high school and teach it like takes my breath away when I think about what I wouldn't do to make this book successful and help people and the answer is I would come within an inch of my life for most of my literally I got covered double pneumonia when I when I did my IPO 30 days with asimeters on both fingers like I would I would almost die to achieve the things I really care about compare that against the low probability that the bad thing's going to happen if plant a doesn't work out it's so small so point of saying this is my book is nuanced it's going to disappoint anybody who wants life to be about you know to hell with everybody else it talks about empathy self-awareness and but the most important point my boat is a metaphor for the internal and external things that prevent us from from fully committing you were talking about that it's a child's boat yeah and why I find the greatest Arbitrage entirely within our control is self-awareness right and when I'm assessing a leader that I believe under indexes on self-awareness when I try to identify why why are they afraid to look within why are they why one are they blaming others or worse why do they believe they don't have the power to make change or worse why do they feel not accountable there's something blocking their willingness to look at themselves and I find more than not this could be confirmation bias that the answer is a legacy issue I I'll tell you one fact Packer and I find a lot with Founders they're living someone else's life to seek the approval that they can never get the father who always wanted them to be an entrepreneur or this like this this elusive approval that they're seeking that they can ever get maybe they have a partner of the Foxhole who is their front of me who's pulling them down to earth when they should be releasing them right they're all these issues so it's either Legacy issues or psychological issues I find are the reasons that hold people back from being self-aware and the hardest ones are those childhoods Legacy stop you from being self-aware because look let's look at mine you were talking to me about my mother and within five minutes I'm like having I'm getting emotional which I regret at this moment if you're carrying something that well let's just call that overall thing shame because that's where shame prevents you for wanting to be seen disclosure if you have shameful Legacy issues or frustration with yourself you don't want to face them and so that makes you not want to be self-aware you want all the answers to be external and not to be internal man so I know uh you've said I've debated getting a tattoo for 40 plus years of my life but if I was going to get a tattoo it would say face everything yeah what do you mean by that that's uh you just mentioned people don't want to face themselves I wrote my book so I'd read my book it's the number again I asked to Rick the hell out of my life like everyone listening I I think I have a lot of insights I don't always Implement them which we don't acknowledge at our level I feel like enough but the number one answer to everything if is face everything and yet it's if I had a tattooed on my chest so I would see it in the Mirror by myself but it is the number one self-talk that I give the answer is to face everything that most of the anxiety that we all carry is anticipation of what would happen if we Face something whereas you can make that anxiety go away if you just faced it that's interesting so I have a idea which I think is actually the same idea that I encapsulate as action cures all and what I'm trying to get people to understand all that anxiety all that worry it will go away if you start taking action now hiding saying that is yeah you have to face it so that you can take action but the idea is to get busy solving the problem and I don't know how much you know about Andrew huberman and the you can reprogram somebody's Thinking by getting them to move their eyes laterally and the reason he hypothesizes and this makes a ton of sense to doing it now is that yeah feel better is that when you move forward your eyes are constantly scanning to the sides to keep you moving on your path so it is the thing that we do when we are moving forward and so you're giving the brain the subtle signal that I'm moving towards this I'm dealing with this and so there's a sense of like lowering of the anxiety which a hundred percent I experience every time I'm like really concerned about something I'm like if I just start building out a plan and going and attacking this I'm going to change my neurochemistry guaranteed 100 and it's the one thing to your point that people don't end up doing like they never turn and face it because it there isn't there's the most friction right before you break through and are like oh no I'm dealing with it and everything's going down because you don't want to look at it you don't want to deal with ah but we're also not taught that principle right like I love the way you just framed it it is right on the precipice is when it's most painful and then you cross a threshold and then you feel the relief and I think there's a sub Point why it brings such peace is because anything that you could do that could zoom you into the present is going to make you happier full stop right so for some people that could be meditating it might be a walk in the park nature play with my kids and then anticipation of of the thing that which we haven't faced takes you out of the present brings you into the future where it's not a happy place to be so I think it's both the piece of just relieving of the anxiety but it's also one less thing that's taking you out of the present that's interesting I don't think about it as being about the present though meditation for me is really profound why do you think so here's when people talk about being in the present when you're meditating here is how I've used that to work for me and is this what you mean the truth is hitting your career goals is not easy you have to be willing to go the extra mile to stand out and do hard things better than anybody else but there are 10 steps I want to take you through that will 100x your efficiency so you can crush your goals and get back more time into your day you'll not only get control of your time you'll learn how to use that momentum to take on your next big goal to help you do this I've created a list of the 10 most impactful things that any High achiever needs to dominate and you can download it for free by clicking the link in today's description alright my friend back to today's episode so when I focus on my breathing it it just occupies my mind and so it doesn't let my mind drift like for me even listening to the sound of rain will help which I do a lot lot will help ground me to just there's a thing happening in my brain so my brain isn't wandering as much it's very interesting yep same point the only the only difference here is that there's a negative which is preventing the ability to hear the rain or listen to the breath which is the preoccupation with that which we haven't faced so it's just to me it becomes an impediment to zooming you into the moment but same exact point you know it's it's I just think it's not just about facing the thing that you haven't faced it's about the obstacle to bringing you back to the moment so what is the value in being present is it so that you can deal with it or is it a neurochemical shift that just stops your mind from spiraling out of control I just think present is the only truth and so when you reconnect intellectually neurochemically with the only truth the only thing we're given and granted there's a lot of peace I mean I I have an app in my phone which is my kids think I'm crazy but after I had cancer actually let me tell you a little bit backstory I had testicular cancer when I was 32 years old and what I found after after going through the fear that I might die I I connected with this idea of zero time that all I would sit in my car because I didn't know where to go and I hadn't gotten the diagna full diagnosis they thought I was a later stage cancer and I was like okay I don't the New York Times real estate section doesn't resonate anymore because I'll be dead before I can buy The Brownstone like all my thoughts don't hold up to the prospect of imminent death and yet we walk around all day with that Prospect and once I um knew that I wouldn't die I had to go through you know surgery and lots of and I still carry a lot of the consequences of of being a Survivor but I wasn't going to die I began to savor the experience to be honest I began to enjoy the fact that something brought me into this moment to such an extent and I've tried to hold on to that my entire life okay so I want to differentiate between being in the moment during meditation which is like literally I'm here with my breath right and being in the moment that I don't have years and so now I'm thinking very differently these feel like two very different they do they do but similar outcome and they're sort of corollary they're cousins maybe that the um the awareness let's talk about face everything we are afraid to face our own mortality we don't know why we're here we don't know where we're going a lot of people are at least and I think our relationship with it is inverted which I didn't realize until I thought I might die that actually contemplating our more mortality a lot relieved me of caring about the future anticipation the things that were taking me away from the moment from the from the from the from the present and I started going deeper into like why is that and then you read the happiest people on Arthur and Bhutan they contemplate their mortality five times a day and so I have an app on my phone called we croak that in throughout the course of the day is reminding me in very lyrical beautiful ways you know Descartes Socrates that Matt you are in fact gonna die and what it does it zooms me back in to the moment so slightly different but similar that I think that the happiest place that you can spend your time is here now with you it's really interesting I'm gonna make a hypothesis okay tell me if you think this is true so I try for a long time the thing that was most beneficial to me was to think about living forever and that got me really motivated there's a book called Einstein's dreams and every it's a bunch of short stories and all the short stories are about time and one of them is a world where you live forever and in that story everybody bifurcates into one of two kinds of people people that do nothing because there's always time to do it later and people that do everything because now the statement that haunts my dreams is no longer true which is that you can be anything you want but not everything and so I very much fall into that second Camp of if I could live forever I would do everything I'm like oh my God these skills are going to stack and stack and stack and stack and stack it's living forever is as close as you could get to a superpower just because you could get good at so many things and so for a long time that was my meditation no you might live forever go as fast as you can acquire as many skills as you can you could do it all and it was really motivating and then somewhere in my mid-40s that started to feel like it wasn't the right way to think about it and so then I started to think about okay as of today you're not going to live forever but it it's interesting I get why you're calling it putting me in the moment but here's what I did this is my hypothesis the reason that dying is so cathartic for so many people the especially if you come out the other side and you don't actually die that thinking you're about to die is so cathartic Jim Carrey has a whole story about being in Hawaii when the the missiles are coming in nuclear missile strike on its way this is not a drill that whole thing and he was like well I guess this is it and he said he's been able to carry that idea with him forward the reason I think that that is so effective for people is you no longer have to give a [ __ ] about what other people think now every um theory is autobiographical so that clearly is the thing for me but the idea of like because I think we're all the shout and the echo I don't think there is a way like the shout is the things you do and The Echoes what people tell you about the thing that you did I don't think there's a way to to get away from that I doubt even monks are completely abstracted from that I'm sure they care about what other monks think whether they want to say they do or not it'll be off-brand though yeah yeah very true but nonetheless probably true uh what do you think about that oh it's a lot to unpack I I think for me why it brings relief and peace is exactly what you said about you stop caring what other people think which is similar to also stop worrying about outcomes and to the extent to which they judge I wondered if that's what we meant about Legacy yeah yeah like I think I think back to death for half a second like when you when you one number one it's technically true we're facing the prospect of imminent death right we don't know when so it's actually true right no conjecture about that uh could be when I walk out this door right and the second thing is I know that if I were to to take go back into that moment with a reasonable degree of certainty I'll probably regret all the things I cared about that just did not matter and so reminding myself tries to make me not not tries to make me um ameliorate that future regret right or to mitigate that future regret in the very end the moment so it's you know very convoluted but that's why I think it brings me at least uh peace have you been able to hang on to that because that was yeah no unfortunately because here's why when I went through cancer and I had these wonderful epiphanies that's completely impractical to implement but but theoretically true I was like wait a second though I like you I'm motivated by the pursuit of excellence and if I eliminate if I'm no longer vested in the system because it turns out I may die in 15 minutes what's going to motivate me to do what you were I'm going to accumulate skills I'm going to learn everything like if theoretically it could be over very soon you know I was very nihilistic view right like how will I be great and then but then I did realize there is another motivational system which is the attempt to figure out what is my what anomalies what are my purpose here on Earth but what is the total capacity I was granted let me touch the ceiling of my capacity of my potential and that motivates me just as much as this vesting in the system right I gotta get a better job Prestige money I can achieve the same degree of success by wanting to touch the ceiling of my potential or my capacity at that moment so I don't understand so if time is now super finite yes and let's say you're like oh no what do I care what's the matter well it's my it's my answer to my mind saying well if mortalityism is a is our death is imminent or could be then what makes me vested in showing up today or caring or giving a great presentation but I think for me at least I'm just as you want to perform like an athlete on the field I want to see how well I think that brings me close to God like oh what I mean if we're all made in his or her image whatever that may be on a particularly religious but spiritual that knowing what what I'm capable of feels like I'm I I'm closer to the origin or wherever whoever put me on this earth right so it's that to me is just as motivating let me see what I get let me see if I can write this book let me see if I can touch people if I can move people let me see what happens and what do you think now that you have kids is it a different game for you yeah yeah I assume you did not have kids at that point I just had had a kid yeah it was three months old oh yeah that is that didn't require that that that made a quick reframing instantly that's all I desperately wanted to do was be there for the handoff whatever the handoff is did you like end up writing letters or anything too I I I I didn't because fortunately it was a relatively short period of time when I thought like I could die to like statistically I'm a big statistics person I was like yeah this cohort probably a waste of ink I also didn't want to put me in the group that writes a letter to their kid because then I thought maybe then I'll be in that death core plan B yeah but but uh but when a live Plan B document yeah it did do one thing which I would encourage everyone to do it did clarify me saying what do I want my Epitaph to read and work backwards and now what did you want it to read yeah that was the that was the video I want to know oh herein lies a great dad who did the best he could I really and again you don't get a lot of words on Epitaph so it's kind of effective I wish I could have sub subtitles and he also changed the world and but like it really I think and I think everyone feels that way but for me it was partly to break the pattern I wanted to break the pattern like like I felt like if I could just it wasn't just a good me it was it was a pleading with God or the universe like let me get this right please so that I don't you know carry on because all the patterns that we're subjected to were either repeating them or were or we're doing the opposite of them creating their own new bad patterns so it was sort of a bargaining with the universe like please like let me get this right but when it's all said and done and that was only because I had I obviously had kids if you don't have kids you're not you don't understand how powerful that is yeah I can only imagine but even even though I don't have kids I get like that sense of what that would be like to want to leave something for them to want to do well for somebody else in fact that is the thing I understand so well that I get how that would be dialed too that's your amazing relationship I love reading exactly what you talk about with your relationship with your wife and then and you're not a lot of people talk about the importance of partnership and as a force multiplier and this book doesn't exist without my wife my show doesn't exist without my wife which you make very clear in the book by the way which is definitely one of the things that I want to talk to you okay but the the idea of wanting to do well for somebody else I'm wired for that whether I should be or not is a different story but again going back to the idea of every theory is autobiographical I always tell people you whatever you're going to pursue if you want to get through it you're going to have to find a way to connect it to serving other people like if you don't I think it's as close to Universal as you're going to get but saying that I'm doing this thing for me can be very motivating but saying that I'm doing the same for somebody else like is for me anyway is just unbelievably powerful it's interesting I'd never thought about why do I feel so like I get it so much when parents are like yo for my kid I would do anything that's why do you think were you always that way were you that way in your 20s I've been that way since I was a little kid one of my earliest memories is throwing a Easter egg hunt so my sister who's four years older than me could win that was five or six and I was like I know how much this will mean to her and so I'm gonna not I'm gonna pretend I don't see that egg and make sure that she finds it so yeah I have been I'm wired for that I think we're 50 hardwired and 50 malleable I was gonna say I actually don't think that everyone is wired that way definitely not I think there's a certain percentage that are sociopaths there's a cousin named narcissist you know what I mean like and that's been a hard thing is to retain my empathy uh which I think is my gift been hard no not hard wrong word it's not hard I'm defense I'm protective of it it's to operate in a world where you allow your empathy to flow freely but also protect yourself and be committed to self-defense but at the same time I like I never hold grudges for example because I don't want to let somebody be able to take away my empathy but I am capable of making sure I beat you to a draw and then I'll let the empathy flow again really interesting so we're gonna have to give people a little bit more of your backstory so you are an extraordinarily accomplished investor and entrepreneur been on Shark Tank as a shark um invested in a lot of amazing things including vaynermedia for people that know garyvee you were his first client essentially owned a piece of the company um so some really big wins that is normally associated with somebody who's a little Sinister they're not afraid to step on people um how have you been able to be successful be a shark he's literally called Shark uh to be a shark and maintain that sense of not only Integrity but empathy yeah great question uh the answer is I'd probably be more successful if I had less of it maybe that's the honest answer right like I am not a sociopath and I do care um I I think you if you if you marry empathy with the intellect and pattern recognition I think you can go pretty damn far in life and the the uh empathy unlocks a ton of value I always say when I look back at this crazy story of me uh post cancer I don't think I told you the story when I had cancer um and I was 32 years old my number one concern was not not dying not right away at least was not having one testicle it was not even whether I would be infertile it was it was whether I would be picked apart by the villains who are waiting for me to be finally shot my weakness I get it I mean I was nuts looking back so nuts that after I was diagnosed you you go real fast they want that tumor out of your body because they think it's spread to your to your lymph nodes and whatnot I had it within 24 hours surgery it's like well can I can I say goodbye diagnosis diagnosis to removing my right testicle that's not a long time to say goodbye to like a pretty important one it's not a particularly attractive body part but I was still like can I sit with this decision for half a minute and then 48 hours later within 48 hours I was like how do I show everybody that I'm not defeated and there was a dinner for all the coaches at the Jazz Eric Mancini was at the time you and I have a very different reaction to this story yeah very eager for you to tell people okay all right so I'm curious to hear your reaction so I I um I I show up at this dinner and everyone's having wine and I sit at the table I have an ice bag in between my groin right like clear that I have just been operating on and I'm like showing them how tough I am and I have a little toast to everybody let me tell you what my new motto is that I'm soon to put on dog tags and it says half the balls twice the man the 32 year old version of me thinks that that's cool and tough but before I say my interpretation of that story I want to hear your interpretation of my story well so I know your punch line okay uh but act like you don't and feel free to judge I don't mind no no no no judgment it's ah it may say something more about me than it says about you so uh I'll give people your idea because I think it's better that they hear that first so you realize hey this is cringy and when I show up moments after surgery it sends a message to everybody else I don't give a [ __ ] what you're going through you better show up and you better do your thing and I get that and I try to be very protective that my team feels like hey if you need time take that time we're here to protect you we use that language here it's sacred you're we just had somebody their mom fell broke their hip in the hospital they had to fly back to their home country deal with it I was like we got you like do not worry about a thing we are on it we will take care of you it could be any one of our moms the next time and I want you to protect me but I love that hardcore [ __ ] so much like I love that you showed up now if you expected other people to do that I would be grossed out but the fact that you want to do it for yourself the fact that you were like I'm not gonna let this beat me all of that resonates with me still and I'm not I can't you know claim Youth and that's what I like but I I I so I think let's meet in the middle because I don't disagree with you let's talk about Behavior that's changed in Behavior that's not changed so for those listening my 30 year old version of me thought that that was like you know so tough right but the with a little bit more perspective and this only occurred to me when I went to my own divorce right I realized Not only was I expecting me to show up with one testicle on an ice pack the next day I was not understanding why everyone wouldn't want to show up right like surrender to the mission the the when I went through my own trauma that was much more significant than than cancer um I realized I have been ignoring or overlooking or you know basically deciding that it's not that big a deal everyone's trauma and expecting generally the same that I that the behavior that I was modeling and that's not reasonable it's not fair and it's not good leadership however what I haven't changed is I still put myself through tremendous arrest to achieve great things when I teach uh when I taught at Harvard uh business school you know three weeks ago I was going through something really tough on the home front right and I had a choice to make do I succumb to that do I not teach this class that I've worked on for almost a year and do I but I have to show up for the family situation do I not do that and then I was like oh there's a third choice I will stay up for four days straight good like literally I'm gonna try to an hour here hour there I will put myself to the brink and that's my choice and I so I don't deny myself the right to make that choice when I'm trying to do really hard extraordinary things but I make sure that I I that I do the best I can not to model that behavior not to so the way you just said about one of your employees I was going through uh loss of a family member right like and you went out of your way to say it's okay like I try to do that to the best of my ability and I wouldn't have done that at 32. that's the difference it's very interesting so the only difference I would say too is the last point I think anybody objectively watching me go ahead and show up at that dinner two days later would understand stand that that behavior is born out of dysfunction that has unregulated Behavior it's such an outlier I don't think that there's anything proud about you know I don't know what to do with that I'm sorry I don't mean to challenge your whole idea I love it because I I work non-stop on this book like it's not that I'm not crazy about my work effort it's just some things just don't really make sense no I love it and I I love encountering people that don't think the way that I think so I will keep exploring the edges of this so um I think it's very important to make other people feel like the choice that they need to make is a hundred percent like make it so my wife taught me this uh in that she just her body cannot handle the amount of stress that my body can and so for her she'll start getting sick if she tried to match me hour for hour she'd get sick and my wife's sister or what did I started crying she's like I can't get up at four yeah I'd be like come on babe like let's go let's do math I should be like please yeah I can't do it and so at that moment a dick if you're like come on come on everyone you know right not fun not cool no respect for that whatsoever but at the same time I want to see if he's here he is here so that guy right there uh came to me one day and he said I want to be the CEO of impact Theory one day and I was like don't say that if you don't mean it and he's like no for real I was like okay so uh let me tell you uh I'll treat you the way I treat myself and I'm not gonna hold anybody else without Sandra because they did not come to me and say that they want to be the CEO okay uh and I love it I love talking to him more than anybody else because I can just be like yo [ __ ] what are you doing like you need to get going and he he has a phrase that he took from Goggins who were talking about before this and Goggins has carry the boats right now I've said many I love Goggins I'm inspired by goggles I don't want to be Goggins but I want to have that gear and so being able to talk to him and push him in that way and see him like yeah yeah I do love it but I am very aware that the it was Alex hermosi I don't know where he got it so I always credit him okay but he said there are three qualities that make somebody successful an undying belief that you can do something great agreed a terrifying fear that you're not worthy agreed and the ability to delay gratification I totally agree I was like oh my God it's so funny because I always say like when I was going through something really bad on the personal front and I was overweight whatever I trained for a marathon in my basement and I would only train on a treadmill in the dark and I would stare at a red light on the on the wall for months that's how I turn because you didn't want people to see no because I was trying to to get a different muscle which is the ability to persevere through something with repetitive motion but I'm always manifesting through power through something you can't power through a marathon you'll burn out so it was like practicing you know that level of deferred gratification and and then that that patience muscle that maybe doesn't come totally naturally but I like all three of those I agree yeah I mean I hate the second one but when I think about the reality is that still true for you the second one a hundred percent it does and you're the first person I've heard talk about it in the book where you said I I don't know about you guys but I make progress and I regress yeah and so I talk about this in itu a lot uh which is hey everybody I've never been able to get rid of the negative voice so I've learned not to death loop on it so I can't stop the first thought it's gonna arise whether I wanted to or not but I can stop myself from indulging in that like you're never gonna do what you want and all that just I talk about that in the um in the book too I I bet you can relate to this I think a lot of the packaging on Instagram this is the first of all there's a there's a we're over waiting now anybody who's gone through like Crisis and re-emerge Like a Phoenix and but it actually reinforces a myth because if you are telegraphing to the world I have figured it out and I went through a bad thing like you did now I figured it out but you don't share the regression most people can't relate to that so they're appreciative of the answers to the test you care about people being able to relate to it I do I just care what's true no I I I care I don't want to be robbed of my origin story I don't want to manifest in the world as a guy on shark what if it was all of that your whole origin story all but people can relate and they can only relate to natural talent and they're like I don't I don't even understand this guy like I haven't been born it was like it's like a death sentence it's like it feels you know why it's useless that would mean if they can't relate yes that would mean my whole thing I think is objectively useless if people can't find a point of intersection and join me okay help me break through them so here I I said I don't think it's useful to me it's just I just think it's useless in terms of a higher order to things right like I can't do anything more with my story than other than self enrichment it's interesting so you have a base assumption that if people can't relate to you they're never going to take your advice um that's a great question I do think Authority matters I think like these nice brands that I've collected Shark Tank right I'm at HBS like they they matter because they give me presumed Authority but to me that's the usefulness of those things you know writ large right but I I do think that people are looking for reasons to say yeah but yeah I can't and so I won't ever really break true breakthrough if they can't find a place to intersect and I don't have it doesn't have to be factual intersection it has to be emotional and spiritual like you maybe you can't relate to the idea that a guy drops out of high school at 16 self-possessed enough to know to do that ends up in these terrible situations but you can relate to somebody who had to overcome imposter syndrome or you know what I mean you know life brings them to those things anyone can relate to and what I'm most proud with the book at the moment is the extent to which every socioeconomic demographic has reached out to me that's hard to do where you when you're at where I'm at so I think I got that right but yeah I would I would I just keep thinking in terms of utility of my life be on myself and if if people can't connect and intersect then it just doesn't have as much utility and I don't want to manufacture it but the stuff I put in a book is you could say it's not manufactured it's it's painful and uh and people are now joining me on the journey it's interesting I may just be blind to the fact that I respond more to being able to relate to people than I think the reason I like your book isn't because I can relate to it though I can the reason that I respond to your book is my [ __ ] meter pegs so fast with people that the reason so I used to only interview people like you uh which I'll call in the empowering Camp it's it tactics principles to live by it's going to make your life better which I can vouch for 100 your book you everything like it's all that and people should dive in if that's what they care about but I stopped interviewing just that because so many people are full of [ __ ] and so the reason that I like your book I think isn't because I found it relatable it's because the advice is actually real and if people take your advice whether they can relate to you or not it will make their life better this is interesting I'm discovering something about myself I'm going to keep going for a second so I have an allergic reaction to the moment that we're living in right now where people are like like yeah like it's okay blame the world like this has happened to me and I that makes me so angry because it won't [ __ ] help you that's like a lot of help even if it were true so I was um giving a talk at Google of all places and an African-American in front row so Tom do you think things are going to be harder for me because I'm black and I was like yes almost certainly but now what and so you can be angry you can blame people or I think there's only two options you can go try to change the system Martin Luther King or you can get so [ __ ] good that no one can stop you Kobe Bryant and it's like those are your choices and I have an allergic reaction to people that aren't interested in doing one of those two things totally agree my reaction is both allergic and a little bit empathetic and the reason why having been in politics before my early like Republicans and Democrats are like cousins you know like one one genetic strand difference between the two I think I have a cynical view of it all but I think actually the those people who have chosen to adopt the victim narrative um through every spectrum of type of individual background they're being sold something that won't help them and I feel like you're actually being manipulated with that narrative I I has it's it's it's an attempt to to change the sub subject to make you look away and to make you not try to be honest with you like generally but at the same time I do think I tried hard in my book it's back to connecting with different individuals on a first pass of somebody reading it a woman had read it and she's from an immigrant family and she said I love your book and I and I and I I love so much about it the only thing I kept finding when I was reading I was like but I don't quite see me in it and I was like really why and then she's like because at the end of the day you were a white male in this society and of course I first react like but wait I was dropped in high school I was poor I went through all the stuff and then as I sat with it I thought you know what if I was from a different demographic a minority group right the act of of dropping out getting a GED might to have to a racist seem confirmatory and the act of me you know growing up with a degree of privilege is Aboriginal right and that somebody would look harder at my story to find the why and then I became obsessed with I need to to to show who's ever reading this book from whatever demographic that I see you and I acknowledge you you know without whether or not this victim doesn't come into it right it's just that I see you and I hear you and I tell the story in the book which I love at the end of one of my classes at Harvard I was talking to uh to uh um two black women and they were talking about one of the speakers I had who used a lot of profanity in the class and they said it was amazing conversation and she goes her name was Tracy she goes you know I could never say that in this class I was like why and she goes because if I did everybody would instantly judge me and conclude that I'm I'm only here for whatever reason but more importantly I'm ruining it for everyone that comes comes after me every black woman who walks into this classroom now because it will be judged by my behavior and I was like that's unbelievable and I chose to put that in the story because I thought that is undeniable proof that I had an advantage even getting government she's being a poor kid I'd undeniable Advantage because I don't represent anybody but Matt Higgins and if you come from a minority group you carry the weight and the burden of everybody who comes you know after you so but now what no seriously you're so the reason why people take you is not because you sold a billion dollar company it's not it's not anything it's because you drip empathy and Humanity like it's like I don't know if it's a God complex or what but like honestly no but it it is not in a positive way because I feel like somebody put you on this Earth but like it exudes you it's why I got emotional talking about my mother like you create this safe space and you only deliver in the facts the now what I think is the book is the burn the boats but if people can't see themselves or can't join me I'm saying this to you to say everybody can join you because of your empathy that that radiates through all your content like you really give a [ __ ] that is very true the so I react very strongly there's two my wife will she'll she will vouch for this there are two reactions when someone hurts themselves oh my God are you okay and hey be careful what the [ __ ] are you doing I am very much that hey be careful what the [ __ ] are you doing so when I see someone I love hurt themselves I'm just like yo there is a solution stop smashing yourself in the hand with a hammer and I I I it upsets me so much to watch people struggle like I hate that so much I want to see everyone win and I have wasted so much of my life trying to help people help you and I say wasted because some people just aren't going to do it but what I what I really want people to hear uh it doesn't if if you meet minimum requirements intellectually which unfortunately exists but if you're listening to this show and you've made it this far I guarantee you meet minimum requirements intellectually but once you meet that the world is stacked against some people way more than others Yeah a hundred percent I'm just begging you take Kobe Bryant's advice booze don't block dunks no matter how much people may have hated Kobe no matter how the best Scouts in the world were paid millions of dollars to go around the world and find people that could stop him from scoring baskets they trained athletes five of them to be on a court at a time with their sole mission of stopping him from scoring points and just and fans in the crowds booing like crazy going nuts despite all of that that man scored 81 points in a single game there are games that only score 80 some points and so that that is so inspiring to me that oh wait there are a set of skills that I could acquire that would let me get so good at something people can't stop me from winning they can't stop me no matter how much they want to they actually can't and that to me is so inspiring like that's all I want people to get and dude it's hard and it really sucks that it's going to be harder for some people than others a hundred percent and trust me when I look at Elon Musk I am angry that I'm not that smart and so he's just always and forever he it feels like he's always going to be able to out execute me just because he can process data faster than I can it's really he's a superhero living among us you you can hate him that's right no I'm with you but he is we're living with Thomas Edison yeah I hate the way he uses his fight for him fair all right like every day I hate it more but you know I don't take it hard it was built though no wait it's back to you for half a second well you were saying a second ago when you respond to like uh the you know putting your hand in fire or whatever and you know what's up smashing yourself yeah stop what the [ __ ] are you doing even as you said it though it didn't seem judgmental it still it seemed like an anxiety response yes so I don't I still think it's coming from the same place no yeah it's more just like ah like yes but it manifests as I dude look I'm just so desperate for people to win I want people to win this is the thing where I could spin myself off emotionally you have no idea so first of all uh in in that way I've earned my stripes so at Quest it was basically all minorities and I don't give a [ __ ] like I don't care I didn't care that they had criminal records that they were drug dealers former or current uh I just wanted people to understand there was a set of ideas you can totally change your life forever but you have to put its use what is up my friend Tom bilyu here and I have a big question to ask you how would you rate your level of personal discipline on a scale of one to ten if your answer is anything less than a ten I've got something cool for you and let me tell you right now discipline by its very nature means compelling yourself to do difficult things that are stressful boring which is what kills most people or possibly scary or even painful now here is the thing achieving huge goals and stretching to reach your potential requires you to do those challenging stressful things and to stick with them even when it gets boring and it will get boring building your levels of personal discipline is not easy but let me tell you it pays off in fact I will tell you you're never going to achieve anything meaningful unless you develop discipline right I've just released a class from Impact Theory university called how to build Ironclad discipline that teaches you the process of building yourself up in this area so that you can push yourself to do the hard things that greatness is going to require of you right click the link on the screen register for this class class right now and let's get to work I will see you inside this Workshop from Impact Theory University and tell them my friends be legendary peace out I think people don't fundamentally believe it's possible as the end of the I think they just I think they just don't believe it's possible and I think it's not going to happen with a bunch of empty Instagram you know platitudes about like just do it I think it takes more Nuance than that and we're not a world built on Nuance they just don't believe it's possible they think the deck is stacked I think we're sold a lot a bill of goods to believe that you know it can't happen or in conspiracy theories and whatnot they we've just we've lost our way from the celebration of the individual you know you just gave me the chills say that again we've lost our way from the celebration of the individual like like we we do like it's like lost in society for some reason and we experienced the world first individually and we need to experience it together but obviously the individuals at the center of the journey and yet we want to we want to dilute the individual experience and we want to remove the individual from causation we want to like it's like this vast conspiracy to take the individual out of the equation and you look at somebody like Emerson's incredible writing favorite piece of writing I ever if I had one riding on an island it will be self-reliance that one essay I would read over and over and over again oh really oh I'm so excited to share this video please oh great yeah self-reliance I just really all these incredible one of the one of the most Central um premises of it is one don't Outsource your judgment it starts with a phrase in Latin which is as do not seek outside thyself and it talks about the indignity of having an incredible idea like an epiphany but you refuse to accept it because it was your own and then later on you're forced to accept it from another and the indignity of being force-fed your own insights from others yeah it's an incredible piece but the individual has lost its place in society and it's almost become like a republican thought or an Ann randian thought whereas to me it's just facts um but when you say things in a bombastic like just do it it's very hard for people to implement it's too simplistic yeah I agree with the two simplistic thing yeah okay so getting out of the Simplicity and into the Nuance I wrote down a bunch of the things that I took away from your book emotionally drained now though I don't know if I can do it yeah yeah yeah we're just warming up uh one of the things that I like is so you're telling people to burn the boats don't have the plan B because I mean there's just a psychological principle at play that if you have it you're not going to fight as hard then on top of that you tell people to aim high so this is one of the things that allowed me to be successful was I had the audacity going back to those three things I had the audacity to believe that I could that there was nothing that I couldn't accomplish now actually as I get older I think that there are I I have really tasted my limitations now ironically even though I have I've developed enough scar tissue that I'm like ooh they're they're probably there is a ceiling to my abilities but I don't know that I'll ever reach it and so it's this fascinating like oh I can see now that there are limits there are things I won't be able to accomplish but since things like the Aiming High for anybody let's say is a ratio distance from where you are now so my aim high may not be Elon musk's aim Heim he's literally talking about terraforming a planet I admittedly don't have that belief in myself and so I'm not even pursuing that but I am trying to build the next Disney which for me is like whoa like this is dizzying and the irony is when we started I said to my wife and co-founder I'm not good enough yet to build the next Disney and so there's somewhat of a leap of faith in a shared belief that you and I have that you have to aim high like go for something crazy go for something that actually exceeds your current grasp burn the boats in your way and now figure it out there is this gravitational pull towards um incrementalism right that we believe that life and experience unfolds like sedimentary rock but you only perceive sedimentary rock in retrospect when you look back millions of years and it looks nice and organized so what I mean by that is like you first need to have the lemonade stand and then you get to have a bigger Lemonade Stand then you get to have a business and I think people look at their progression of their experience and success completely the wrong way that the first thing we always have to consider is a step change a step change meaning something that's completely detached from the experience that came before it by and large and you envision opening the 100 million dollar lemonade stand before you open or eliminate business before you open a lemonade stand and the reason why is once you and you've experienced this once you have a company when you have a thousand employees and you think back to when you had you know 20 this is the problems are generally the same because most problems are people problems and once you begin managing people you have people problems right and and so I find that if you bypass the step of saying well what if I went for a step change what if I went all at it that reach goal you'll never be able to ask that question again you can only ask it at the beginning and most people ex believe that they have to have this approach towards incrementalism and they deny themselves the benefit of reaching really far so I'm always trying to put myself in positions that are tremendous reach I'm always questioning why not I never taught anywhere before Harvard Business School it would have been more logical to go Queen's College I certainly could have maybe Fordham law right but I was like why can't I try to teach it the best I think I have it in me now back to my instincts trusting your intuition there was nobody who could have confirmed for Matt that he was capable of walking into that classroom right that to tell me there's no data so I feel really passionate that anybody out there is listening if you have a dream do not submit to incrementalism before you've tested the idea of of a step change but how do you pull that off like so I know what it takes to run business there are times where I'm teaching people business and I'm like Jesus like to get across the complexity of these ideas it is so hard it's so complex like even the throwaway comment I want to burst out laughing because I know what's hiding in oh you have people problems it's like like that is that that's tomes this right of how to deal with said people problems and all the variations that they come in so how the hell have you figured this kind of like going back to this idea of principles yeah how do you start like okay I'm gonna sort of bucket these like yeah is it Vision First like you have to be able to see it before you can execute it is it convincing other people is it understanding are you a Visionary or an operator like how do you begin yeah I think the first thing is um one just as a general principle never let anybody put you in a box and make sure you're not putting in your own box so you have to sort of you know unchain yourself from what conventional wisdom is that says this is what I am this is what because you'll end up limiting yourself yes because like for me I I never taught before for so if I'm listening to the peanut gallery they'd be like well where do you get off you're not you don't teach and I always have to deal with that response to my audacity all the time like what are you now you got a book what are you are you some lifestyle Guru that's the question I'm like no [ __ ] I have something to say but whatever you go write a book it only takes three years live a life worth writing a book about it yeah that's the real challenge right so so this isn't a screed against um expertise expertise does matter it's a warning that you should be your own litmus test at least start there of whether you have what it takes so my process is whatever audacious thing I'm looking to do including like Shark Tank right start there how do you get on Shark Tank everyone asked me I was like there is no you know go on the internet and put your name in like it was a Year's worth of meanings but I had to start like because there is no litmus test by saying what does it fundamentally to be mean to be on Shark Tank well one you have to have a history of being an investor all right well I did that two you have to be presumed to have some platform some reach of that and perform well under a camera so that they want to put you in front of one think I have that four have a good compelling origin story right well I think I have that right so now it's the how the how is a lot easier actually everything has a how I just have to look for the how when it came to Shark Tank is a guy named Reed Bergman he had helped uh A-Rod get on the show like he's my agent you know there was a how it was the first part of of deciding what's the litmus test and relying on my own judgment to say that I belong on that show because if if you don't do that then you're just delusional I'm not one of these people that's like plan a or all in like I go through a process to determine whether the goal is delusional I just don't rely on on external validation because external validation will always tell you it's not your time right you're not good enough I really hope people heard what you just said yeah you don't have a delusional plan a and burn the boats and then you're like well I'm now all [ __ ] no not at all I'm very risk adverse so my plan a allows pivoting and iteration but like every audacious goal you know like I have a hierarchy of goals with the book right my number one goal which was the hardest one is like let me connect with people in a way that's unusual let me not write a boring Business book that's redundant after the third chapter let me write a story Well story takes a [ __ ] load of work I was like well I was a journalist when I was a kid I was a little reporter I was nominated for a Pulitzer when I was 19. you know hell anybody could be you and I can nominate each other but Carl Bernstein nominated me Jesus she's on the board of directors of my company so I always have to caveat that very clearly anybody can be nominated but I won a lot of awards for investigative journalism oh I I have the skills to tell a story and I have a vision I'm going to do it different than I have something to say point is there's nobody for me to go on the internet does Matt Higgins deserve to write a book and could it be a book that gains traction and I think that's where people go wrong they they there's a gravitational pull of incrementalism because incrementalism is the only thing for which we have data to validate our choices incrementalism like oh I know that the person who opened lemonade business would probably have evidence of having a lemonade stand you know so there's a conversation in my book about Jesse Darris and um we ultimately created a Communications firm together and we went for this epic walk and he's a risk adverse human and and his mind kept telling him let me be the partner at this firm first before I'm capable of running my own business and I was like why what is it about getting the imprimatur of being a partner you know on a door that actually makes you more qualified to run your own firm because Society told you that that was the logical sequence of events and then in the end we created The Firm obviously or else it wouldn't be in the book and he sold it for tens of millions of dollars but those are the most transformative trajectory changing conversations I have with people when I challenge their bias towards incrementalism and we break down and people always know when it's right like they always know oh for me to run my own private Equity Firm all I have to have is access to dealflow a great Network to raise money the tenacity to keep going and like and off we go there's a student my book Harvard student was about to take a job with a soul-crushing private Equity Firm and he was in my office trying to help make decide which crappy firm to take and as he was talking I was like can I ask you a question I was like why aren't you just creating your own firm and he goes well who's going to give me money I was like nobody until the one person who gives you the money and when they [ __ ] do you're gonna have your own firm true story leaves my office after giving that speech I'm like I don't know he's he came from the military so it used to corporate higher you know military hierarchies I'm like I don't know if he has the willingness to break out of that gravitational pull three months later or whatever he calls me up so let me get your address and I'm like wise I want to send you the swag from The Firm I created when I walked out your office I raised 10 million dollars an hour and now I'm raising 50 million that was a long way of answering your question I guess the question is not it's it's really about containing within yourself the ability to decide whether you have the expertise necessary not whether somebody else grants you the expertise necessary so you've done a lot of crazy things I think I'd heard you throw away that you were a journalist but that one didn't sink in yeah so the fact that you've done that people don't even know about your time in the government what you did with 911 the memorial what you've done in the NFL I mean it's like your story is crazy you should be 75 to have the biography pretty pretty nuts um how do you learn like how do you go and okay I'm gonna do this crazy thing that is new it's a step function ahead but at some point you actually have to get good at that thing how have you gotten good at that that's such a great point I I I I I'm sure like you do I have that voice in my head that does say like where do you get off you know a bit right and then I have this tremendous desire to do well and to do right to honor the whoever granted me entrance to the to the setting you know or a seat at the table there's always somebody who decided yeah I agree I agree with your litmus test you do have what it takes I'm going to open the door to you now I'm going to vouch for you I might even put myself In Harm's Way by letting you in this room I feel such tremendous obligation to confirm even at my age convinced people to do that are you really good at that because like your firm RSE uh you guys say we're about connecting the dots yeah and the testimonials I don't know if you prompted people but they were all like oh they know how to connect us that that is my crypto night how how do you find wait what do you mean in a good way or a bad way I'm terrible I don't networking is my question networking I hate that I'm the most introverted human this is the first meeting I've had in a year I don't even leave the house I just hang on my wife you and I are no I'm really so introverted yeah people people don't believe it because I have Charisma and you have Charisma right Charisma is just an accident like I so introverted I'm lost in my head um so when I say connect the dots it's more people you know how these investment firms put such a [ __ ] narrative to make things tidy like we are only doing in this you know a series B whatever like I don't have the need to do that because it's myself and Steve Ross we're Partners right but he connects for those who don't know it's Steve Ross Steve Ross Yes Steve Ross right so you know largest developer in the United States tremendous entrepreneur but he gives himself permission to play in such attenuated places and spaces and doesn't care what anybody thinks but when you look back how did he get here and I'll give you an example uh for those who don't know my firm does you know consumer broadly we're in food on partners with Dave Chang and Mama fuku I've done a lot in sports huge international soccer business but there was a time when Steve and I decided we would buy formula one and I had based upon my experience in sports knowed that the asset was completely under optimized spent two years attempting to buy the entire sport it does not work out right for a variety of reasons uh and but the consolation prize but we understood enough about the sport and what was wrong with deal structures on these races that we ended up incubating a race in Miami so now we have what I believe is one of the coolest races in the world that takes place every May in Miami race yeah we brought a Formula One race to the United States and I never would have done that so if you are looking for a tidy narrative an F1 race and a sea of other things next to Momofuku might not make sense but there's a reason so when I use connected dots it's actually leveraging that which came before to put the pieces together it's not so much networking that's really interesting so but my body I'm not my body me as an individual as the self is operating under the same general principle and that I I don't know how much uh you're into real estate but there's a phrase in real estate zoning or philosophy called highest and best use it's a way to ensure that you don't have a piece of property sitting in the middle of a metropolitan area that's zoned to only be a two-story Church you know in the year 2023 right so you want to make sure a property is always put to its highest of best use I treat myself like a piece of property that's constantly being rezoned every week sounds a bit crazy but I ask myself every week sometimes every day what is the highest and best use of Matt Higgins today and the reason why that question is so important I am an amalgam of all these accumulated experiences that now give me permission for a step change into a new environment and so I like that so much uh thank you that's really powerful yeah I'm obsessed with that thought and that is really the formula that I'm operating upon so when I finish Shark Tank which was a great experience I'm we're sitting my wife on the second time on the set and and I kind of went all in and I was like babe let's just sit here for a minute because I don't think I'm ever going to be back on the set she's like no you're a recurring shark they named you I was like don't think I'm coming back I don't know why but but it's just it's no longer the highest and best use no no will be just because I feel like they'd move on and they were more charismatic you know whatever I just thought that the journey would end here right and and my point is once I did that though I said what would actually be better than now that I've done Shark Tank what's the highest and best use of Matt Higgins now that I've done it oh creating your own Shark Tank and fast forward I partnered with Mark Burnett to create our own show called business Hunters right and then after I did that show I was like huh well now that I know how to do a show wouldn't it be better to like own the show outright and so I created a Production Studio with Gary vaynerchuk and Eric wattenberg so I'm just showing you how that mentality now people listening are going to say this is exhausting so I don't you know like I'm sorry I apologize it doesn't have to be like that I'm just trying to show how you can make big hopscotches if you want in your life interesting I really maybe they will but I would be if people are exhausted by I'm learning so let me start with that and so because this is the thing that um this really changed my life so I met entrepreneurs that they were just farther ahead than me and while they didn't have the words that you're talking about about aim high and all that stuff it was like I watched them do it and I was like oh I'm playing way too small interesting oh I can be way more aggressive than I'm being interesting like even now to your point about people problems the when when I have people problems in the company it's almost always because people underestimate what they can pull off and so they're not moving with urgency they're not being aggressive enough they're not like reaching far enough making demands of people Etc et cetera so hearing how you move hearing your story hearing what you've done in soccer hearing how you spent your time in the NFL what you liked what you didn't like it's really interesting because I'll add something I think you're going to agree with this okay so you're you're looking for what's the opportunity what's underserved like you said F1 is an underutilized asset that also ties into what you were talking about with Emerson where it's like you have to have a a an epiphany and then trust it and look you're gonna get slapped in the face sometimes because you're going to be wrong or mistimed or whatever right but if you're learning from that every time and you act with a boldness and you look for how do I connect the dots I mean this really is like so the the step function change God the step function change I'll explain I'm nesting ideas but the the step function change of really reaching beyond what you're currently capable of is the path from getting out of your sort of rut nine to five like I'm only ever gonna achieve this much and doing something really extraordinary okay now that that idea is finished just yesterday one of my students from Impact Theory University Applied for one of our jobs got on the call and he's not the right fit and I told him so because he doesn't have enough experience in that thing for me to feel like okay like you need to go get knowledge that would be useful in this job but as he was telling me his story about what he had applied that willingness to step function he'd gotten into surgery and so he's on the uh there's a name for it I'm forgetting that but basically they sterilize everything and they're the ones when you say scalpel they had to do the scalpel that whole thing okay this kid took himself from Watts which if anybody is familiar with South Central LA watts is rough rough and so we used to hire a lot of people out of Watts so I I know what I've seen Watts up close that's one of the few places I've been scared in broad daylight it is it's it's a whole thing and so he took himself from that to getting all the way there by saying okay I'm gonna believe that I can learn I'm gonna push myself he was taking a bus four hours a day to go to school just really incredible when people get out of that rut start looking at okay what is uh the highest and best use of my current skill set how do I get out of my um God what'd you call it you're challenging the conventional wisdom so something else gravitational yeah no no one of the very first things you said like you really have to break outside of that like oh this is the standard path and most people just do that and that's it yeah so you end up like for him the standard path would have been basically day labor and you know that's that and so for him to push outside of that get on a surgical team it was really amazing to hear him talk about hey I'm deploying these ideas and I'm using it to like make these leaps so anyway this is all a reaction to you saying that people are getting exhausted but that to me there there's a nugget there that's hard to encapsulate which is you need to be getting yourself in new rooms with new people that force you to learn new things you need to be freakishly looking for what's the opportunity here how do I connect dots that other people aren't connecting and then just keep leapfrogging for me I'm giving people practical advice well how do I identify that breach right what is the thing you know the the opportunity or the Arbitrage like where is it I feel convinced that everybody has um within their life a proprietary Insight that could be the seed of if not a new business not everybody has to be an entrepreneur but at least a promotion or or a step change of their life and sort of to unpack that when you think about the best businesses over the last you know 20 years that stick with us the brands like Airbnb for example they're not they're not inventions like Shark Tank leads you to believe they the Shark Tank leads to you to believe that you have to have an invention to you know to have your own autonomy and run your business nothing could be further for the truth usually it's a refinement or an improvement of a process right and so when you look at Brian chesky and his co-founders of Airbnb you know he slipped on a futon at one point was like maybe other people would want to rent futons which is a Preposterous idea in 09 like everybody's gonna steal [ __ ] and you know they're not going to pay like this I don't know how he had that Insight but for some reason him and his three friends recognize that the sharing economy was going to explode and extend to houses and now he has a 100 billion dollar business because of a proprietary Insight everybody listening to this right now um sees something that is a proprietary Insight that in order to bring it to fruition now you have to eschew incrementalism and have the courage to make a step change so when I was on my show business hunters and the whole purpose was to take somebody who wanted to start their own business and give them um and and help them determine which business to buy like House Hunters right this is a show that did not air uh we're still trying to find a home but I was sitting there talking to these two sisters from the Bronx and I was asking what do you do now he's like well I have five airbnbs I'm like where are they I think they were in you know Georgia I'm like oh why there he's like well we have a lot of visiting nurses there and I and I know the visiting nurses can stay for Extended Stays 30 days and they pay better because they're subsidized I'm like huh well how'd you figure that out well I used to work in a hotel what'd you do at the hotel I was just at the at the at the front desk but I would always hear visiting nurses come in and wonder why they were staying so long we and they and we charge them more because you know that's that was the setup with the visiting nurses and I thought if I could create an Airbnb as a network of them for visiting nurses I could have an annuity business I'm like that was my I was like mind-blowing that's a proprietary Insight So for anybody listening who are like wait I've had one of those you know that's what gets me excited about the book and I can I deconstruct what it looks like to have both a proprietary insight and what a step change would look like she could easily have said well before I can run my own Airbnb I need to be the manager of a hotel first so I'm going to wait three or four years this is what most people do and I just for whatever reason I don't know if it was my mom or God but I was like I was not wired to accept those boundaries I challenged them until one of them beats me into submission which happens regularly oh for sure for sure right so this is so interesting so you're here's a trick that I do so I want to help people cross a bridge so people are going to hear this and they're going to get in the room now and they're going to be looking for that proprietary insight and they're not going to know how to manufacture it I think there's a way so here's what I do this is how I interview this is how I read books this is how I um come up with vision for where to take the company I'll look at something and so I did this with your book so I read your book and I start myself with the question what's interesting here and then what I try to do is break down what I think your thesis is without going back to reread just without looking at my own notes what what's interesting what is this thesis what's the The Narrative thread that you've woven and what it forces you to do is understand it and so if somebody finds themselves in the room in F1 soccer you're in over your head you have no idea what's happening the the thing that changed my life is when I get in that room I'm not afraid to look stupid because if I ask until I understand I can have a proprietary Insight because now I actually understand it but if I if I'm just like oh yeah and I want to look cool and I'm yeah no I get that for sure yep yep and then you don't understand it you can't synthesize it at the end and so you you have to push yourself and you're it's going to make you feel like an idiot at least it does me so I always end up feeling really stupid for a second so I'm like wow I don't actually understand this what is this how do I connect that and I have to ask what about this yeah and but once I get it and I think of myself like Ai and I'm like I need to feed the tombot I need to to force the data into my brain and go okay once I understand it then my subconscious will start working on like how it's usable what it can be deployed against it will interact like almost like you know chemicals interacting with each other in ways that I couldn't have predicted so again a nested idea in the Nobel Prize typically they're one at the intersection of two things biology and chemistry whatever and so it's like when you have two worlds colliding you'll get far more unique insights so I had this happen very profoundly for me in comic books so uh this was six years ago we're launching impact Theory I know that comic books are a traditional feeder into film and TV so I'm like all right let's do Comics low dollar amount potentially big win so we create a comic we get it printed we get it distributed and I'm I've had 40 000 plus points of distribution in a quest so I know what real distribution looks like real volume like 2.5 million bars a day or whatever it's just insane all over how 100 countries whatever it was amazing yeah nuts right and so I'm used to knowing what shelf I'm on who's category Captain like all like ah like what how am I selling in Poughkeepsie with this SKU right and you're getting it almost real time and I go into Comics there's one distributor and they give you no information and so I was like time out this is so crazy I'm like either we buy the distributor or we get out of this completely and so we ended up getting out of it because it was self-evident to me because I understood distribution I could have a new chemical reaction of what I knew from even though it was from nutrition manufacturing it was helping me in comics because I understood it and it's like if you force yourself to understand and send the size now as you go into a new space you can make unique connections get these proprietary insights anyway I wanted to give people away and if anybody's listening to what you just said because this is where the Mind goes they'll be like yeah but when I when I ask questions I feel stupid because I kind of exposes where I came from my background my deficiencies the way I immunize myself this is because I do exactly what you did I don't give a [ __ ] on I'll ask questions I'm Not Afraid um I I transport my this whole room that I'm in to a different to my playing field where I know they'd be out of their depth and I imagine well and this could be as simple as you know you play twitch all day and you're a great gamer whatever it is that you're a little patch of dirt that you own transport that room to your territory and imagine them out of their depth because everyone's out of their depth and you are always in your element somewhere to immunize yourself from the insecurity but love the way you put the pieces together for those listening who want to say okay but make it even more actionable I tell the story in the book I love this story because this is refutable evidence of what a proprietary Insight what somebody could do with a step change Michelle Cordero Grant was a uh maybe like a director at Victoria's Secret in the marketing department and she kept being alienated by her own marketing thinking it feels like we're talking to women only as you know objects to please men and all the branding around our branding and maybe and maybe I'm being too harsh maybe wasn't as harsh sorry Michelle if that's not exactly what you said but whatever and so but I believe there's another um demo and cohort that would like to wear this clothes for their own edification to feel good body positive sexy whatever it is but I'm just an executive at Victoria's Secret right so what does she do she's like I think this is a proprietary Insight didn't use those words creates a you know a community it's a crowdsource it creates a waiting list it like blows up right so now she knows there's a market for this but the problem is she's an executive right she has to make this she can either now go work for someone else's company or she could Lobby Victoria's Secret to create a new line or she could cross the threshold and say I think I have what it takes to be a founder and CEO and I'm going to do it she quits based on the strength of the community so my point is to everybody out there don't be afraid to share your idea with others I you know people always worried out somebody's going to steal it when somebody says they're worried about somebody's gonna steal it uh it's the end of the meeting for me it's like you're here there's a great line in The Social Network movie if you had invented Facebook you would have invented Facebook like don't be afraid she shares her idea she quits she creates a company called Lively which is all premised on this idea and she sells it for 100 million dollars within five years whoa so now she's a woman of color she was never founded before she had no money there you cannot remove yourself from the from the truth of that story so anyone out there listening that wants a case study reach out to Michelle and say how'd you do it but I believe everybody that Insight was so simple right like why why are we talking to this other group everybody has an Insight like that within their grasp not that everybody needs to be a Founder Michelle could have leveraged that for a promotion too so I don't want to just talk about like fetishizing the entrepreneur I hate that crap but you know anyway I just love that story The Elegance of it it is a great story yeah having the gump Shin to act on that and to start your own company it's very impressive right and she didn't take on a co-founder so I use her for two reasons because because and you talk about partnership all the time with your wife like uh one of the top questions that people have at Harvard at the uh at the end of these 17 classes they always want to know how the founder chose their co-founder and how to decide whether you need a co-founder she actually didn't have a co-founder and in the book I go through her process for deciding she didn't need one and how she thought she could pull it I don't remember that yeah walk people through that it's actually so I have always had a co-founder and probably always will going back to I love winning as a team the idea I'd like to see other people succeed which makes me like being on a team blah blah blah yeah but she had a really logical way of thinking about how she could get around it because it wasn't like oh I can do everything myself no it was it was basically she she honestly asked herself what are the deficiencies uh in my skill sets or my expertise or desire and can I backfill those or augment those by hiring people versus equitizing a co-founder and as she went through each one of them supply chain all the other issues she felt like I could hire that person now oftentimes people get that equation wrong and they think I find this a lot with like robots people who are kind of like robotic and they want the world to be driven by Excel or our AI that they they have a disdain from marketing being an EQ and like I'll just hire some tick tocker you know with almost like disdain that never works out so but the conclusion in my Harvard class whenever we ask successful co-founders how'd you choose they always contradict what the students believe they said um complimentary skill sets is way subordinate to Value overlap I chose my partner Bob or Sally whatever because we looked at the world the same way and why that mattered as companies fail when things go wrong and we can't survive and when you have value overlap we're able to survive so I I thought that Focus conventional wisdom is augmenting where you're weak and they said actually overlap where you're strong which is your value system and then subordinate as maybe but if not you know winners will winners will figure it out yeah I'm a big believer that choosing a business partner is like choosing a spouse I think you want somebody who overlaps on your values like 80 85 of your values better be the same otherwise you're going to have Collision there are two collisions that can really cause uh a breakup and that is a values Collision or a collision of Base assumptions that you never recognize and I see that one a lot like if you're having a problem in your marriage I guarantee it's either a values Collision or a base assumption Collision basis on I think people will get values but base assumption is that I invisibly think the world Works in XYZ way and the other person invisibly thinks the world Works in a different way values is odd the world ought to be this way base assumption is it is this way and so often people don't realize you have codified the world that way it's not necessarily objectively true or at least not in some binary way and so I found this was from working with my former business partners I would sit there and be thinking they're a [ __ ] idiot and they're talking to me like they think I'm an idiot and so I'm like I know they're not and I'm not so what is happening when two smart people think that the other person is a [ __ ] and I was like oh wow for because I I'm a writer by trade and so I always go back to if I were writing this person as a character what would they need to believe for them to be acting this way and so I was like he would have to believe that this is true and I remember one day I stopped him and I was like do you think this is true he's like yeah obviously and I was like oh my God and so then I was like okay this we're going to call this base assumption from now on so your base assumption is this my base assumption is this now we can actually talk about it one of us is probably right and one of us is wrong but at least now we're talking about the real thing and yeah I think that's really important so anyway you have to have overlapping values with your founder spouse whatever but I do think that you want to have that you will be best suited if you guys don't think the same way so you value the same things you don't think the same way it was a great quote and if you've heard this before but that if in business you and your partner think the same way one of you is irrelevant and I've that really resonates I I so I would agree with your caveat to Value overlap I think at the end of the day when when there's not a clear reason for why both of you exist that is a recipe can be a recipe for a disaster so whether it's saying you know think exactly the same way or it's you know a a um a bias towards one particular area of the business is actually helpful I find where people where Partnerships go wrong because I'm often stepping into like a failed partnership or trying to work it out I mean that fact pattern recurs over and over again because that's where opportunities happen right there's a lot of value destruction when Partnerships go wrong and I found when I look at the Genesis like how'd this partnership form and oftentimes it's because there was a uh there was a interloper into an industry that had a vision for doing things differently but they either believed that they were deficient in some area or they needed subject expert subject matter expertise wow they go ahead and they choose a partner the problem is because they had the courage to to invade the industry that only last like four months before they're like this is all stupid you guys are all stupid and then now they're stuck with the co-founder who is born of that industry and not born of disruption and then eventually they're disdain or you know conflict sets in that makes a lot of sense and there really is a temptation to do that to get somebody that really knows the space it's logic that's why I thought Michelle could have created in the book I'm like well she didn't have that because she was from the industry she knew what she wanted to disrupt but I see that fact pattern over and over again I don't think it applies to personal personal uh life I think that augmenting you know or or completing applies more to personal but I see that in business all the time with failed Partnerships that's so interesting all right I have to ask were you the one that brought Kim Kardashian to Harvard I was well I shouldn't say I I have two co-professors they're professors I'm a fake Professor I'm an executive fellow but they uh one of them had a relationship with Jens who's her partner and then we did multiple calls to you know what are we going to talk about is it comfortable and then sure enough it happened that's my class though so I I am very impressed with what she's done and I remember I heard about her saying like basically God if I'm misquoting I hope not but basically hey ladies like don't let anything hold you back just work harder or get up at work or whatever the quote was and when I heard it and didn't know people backlash I was like yes that's so dope and yeah I was like hell don't say that again no I have to because I really believe it yeah so uh did you get backlash for bringing Kim Kardashian and then what do you think of what she's accomplished um the answer is not enough backlash I was not enough I was hoping for more because it's entertaining because I don't care and I was a little annoyed that it like didn't come land uh you know it took like a few days before I was on CNBC and I was asked about it and the reason why is she has built a multi-billion Dollar business I'm an investor actually but that's really yeah yeah I have an investor in skims but you know congratulations thank you but that's but that's beside the point she has built an amazing business and I love the lack of intellectual curiosity to say well why was she invited to Harvard and the reason why my course is called a moving beyond Direction consumer and this year's every year is a sub theme that I like to introduce that would surprise the students or like at that demographic might be slightly beyond their reach so this year's sub context was uh Tick Tock is is the new Google right like and that's where search begins that was one and two and two that CAC uh on the DTC model is as out of whack and rhymed I didn't mean to but the hack is out of whack and that acquisition costs are really expensive and a lot of TTC models are broken and they raised at these inflated valuations and they're not sustainable because now investors are demanding profitability blah blah so that was like the whole thing so we brought in um Scarlett Johansson uh I'm an investor in her business and advisor we brought in Bobby Bobby Brown to demonstrate straight that somebody in their 60s could dominate Tick Tock and we brought in Kim Kardashian the Common Thread between those three is they're all using their community and celebrity to generate subsidized CAC with outrageous numbers and their businesses are Printing and so it was entertaining to watch everyone judge Kim and it's very superficial way now I don't keep up with the Kardashians literally so I had no idea honestly and when I saw her in that class she was there for uh um almost two hours it's not like the students hold back you know what I mean watching her volley with everyone in that class and watching her hold her own with all the with all the founders was pretty remarkable I was incredibly impressed but I love those situations when you have total conviction and like you don't really care and that I was waiting for more of the backlash and uh it didn't it wasn't quite intense enough yeah I I so going back to things I'm allergic to I don't understand people that look at somebody that's successful and look for reasons to dismiss them and why well that's a terrible example because because XYZ right it's like man well not only that if every celebrity could slap their name on the brand they'd all be Moguls right they'd all be billionaires it's not it's not easy what she did she didn't just she's like so stayed relevant for a long time right and was just found an amazing uh sliver of the market built a direct to Consumer business that is valued in the Pro I don't know what it would be valued now probably five billion dollars it looked like right and yet there was this desire to dismiss and now In fairness you you reap what you sell right I mean she I even said to her off camera uh this actually probably be on the Hulu show I was like I don't follow you so maybe that everyone knows this about you but I would not have perceived you as somebody that could go in at Harvard Business School and hold you around with the best consumer Founders in the country she actually said I want to show more of this of me but when I had my Sean e they never wanted to show it they said it was boring and people don't want to see me in this light so it's admittedly it's it's not entertaining in that way that's true so I get e like they've what they've done I think it's amazing and again it's you and I don't keep up with the Kardashians Maybe than me I have a feeling as time goes by she will become more than even a Paris Hilton figure right you know Paris Hilton had her own reduction story right a thousand times right but my point is we will see Kim Kardashian in the light of the Mogul that she is and they'll be an integration if she keeps us going God you just you can deny somebody only so long so she's winning people like me over who I'm not immersed in her world and so after all I know she's saying just absolutely atrocious things on social media but I'm watching her move as a business person I'm like damn but if he was sitting at the table right now you know how we're having this intellectual conversation about Partnerships and bad Equity structure and product she would be keeping up with us I was like is this on purpose you know and they also didn't work very hard to get the story out in a business context that she was coming there so maybe I thought maybe it is like a grand point and there's an intriguing question there like is that brand damaging for her no I think if maybe it was all just like we're living in a Truman show called Kim Kardashian I don't know maybe it was all calculated I don't know so it's pretty amazing so interesting dude the book is amazing where can people find you thank you I'm uh I'm on Instagram I'm on LinkedIn I spend a lot of time I can't stay on Twitter I'm there but it's the latest Matt Higgins land of hate can we talk one more before we go please about um your spouse yeah I I love your relationship with her thank you and um I talk about my wife all the time as my basically my co-founder and that um I no matter what environment I am the uh the the uh that my conditions are always I need to do it with Sarah because we're better together and so when I teach at Harvard people don't know the Sarah's in the back of the room and she said my wife does the logistics for the course because they're third you're playing into a thesis I have so my wife is all about logistics is utterly amazing obviously my co-founder uh yeah we'll need a lot more time to talk about how that ends up happening but that's amazing yeah so you went through a divorce it was utterly soul-crushing by your own admission how did you rebuild and how did you find somebody the second time that actually really fit you I think I went online to be honest like I think get more data was the first starting point but I think we are we don't believe that we're either entitled to something or that something exists and the change in my mindset was maybe that that person does exist that's right for me and maybe and maybe I deserve it people can be cliche like I just want to thank my partner like like no no no I'm like I dedicated the book to her for a reason and she unlocks all this potential because there's value alignment but also there's no ego and so the secret my secret sauce is that we are doing it all together in these different environments which can seem a little bit unconventional but back to you guys I admire the way you talk about each other and I feel like by modeling it this is the point of my story you take care of one of the two issues that I just brought up that maybe it maybe it doesn't exist or maybe it does exist if somebody models that kind of dynamic then people believe that it's out there and so when I see you two on Internet it's like oh you're telling millions of people that it exists all right everybody if you haven't already be sure to subscribe and until next time my friends be legendary take care peace building businesses really is a skill that anyone can learn check out this interview with Alex hermosi if you want to learn how to go from being broke to making your business Skyrocket they should focus on one thing in general rather than lots of different things that you're not sure about because if you're starting out