Shaun White on Always Winning, Even When You Lose | Impact Theory
ULPE3_nPNL0 • 2017-02-14
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Kind: captions Language: en everybody Welcome to impact Theory you're here because like me my friends you believe that human potential is nearly Limitless but you know that having potential is not the same as actually doing something with it so our goal with this show and Company is to introduce you to the people and ideas that are going to help you actually execute on your dreams all right today's guest was born with a heart defect that required two open heart surgeries to correct but he refused to let that slow him down and proving that you can overcome any obstacle through hard ass work he is now the most decorated snowboarder on the planet intensely driven he turned Pro in snowboarding at the rip old age of 13 and turned Pro in skateboarding by 17 he's the youngest Rider to ever win the US Open is the only Rider to ever score a perfect 100 on the super pipe in the X Games he's won two Olympic gold medals and a record-breaking 15 xgame gold medals he's won 10 SV Awards is the only athlete to win gold medals in both the Summer and Winter X Games and he reached number two on business week's list of the 100 most powerful athletes which honestly isn't too surprising giving that he's partnered with some of the biggest brands around and he's designed massively successful apparel lines and other goodies for the likes of Burton Oakley and Target he's also an accomplished musician whose band bad things has played the main stage at laa palooza and toured the world with 30 Seconds to Mars and to Pro he has relevance well beyond Sports he's also established himself as a topshelf entrepreneur he now owns a stake in Mammoth Resorts is the majority shareholder of 20-year-old snowboarding and music festival erir and style he's launched a men's fashion line with Macy's called whites space and wound up on the cover of Forbes 30 under 30 list in 2016 please help me in welcoming the passionate philanthropist who works extensively with Charities including the Make A Wish Foundation the man who has his own snowboards skateboards clothing lines and video game the sh contrepreneur himself the Unstoppable Shawn White thanks for having me absolutely that's a pleasure what an intro all right hey the good news is with you it was about trimming down I was like God I can't even begin to fit all the things that you've done busy guys sometimes which is actually a perfect place start so give us a sense why not uh just focus on one thing so not only do you do multiple sports but you're really really active as an entrepreneur you know it's strange I've always just kind of like had my eyes open to what was around me you know and things would just like come in and out of my life and it was up to me to really um dig deeper on those if it felt right or just kind of you know pass and move on to the next thing um you know like music for example that was something that just kind of came to me I was uh competing at the X Games I won the slope style event and the halfpipe which made me the athlete of the games you know which they called me you and you you win a you win a guitar and you win a car as the prize and I remember thinking like sick let's drive the car not thinking about this guitar and you know randomly you know I'd won this guitar and then my brother was like I'm going to start playing Guitar that'd be cool and and then some kids in my neighborhood and I'm thinking to myself wait a minute I have a guitar and it was a great guitar it was a a Fender Strat Americade and um I called my buddy who actually brought the guitar home from from uh Colorado for me and uh picked it up started playing and fell in love with playing and then the competitor in me was like you know what I want to do this like no one knows and I'm not going to tell anybody I'm going to train just as hard as I would train on a snowboard or something else cuz maybe one day in the future I could actually be in a band and wouldn't it be cool to pick up a guitar and be able to really play like a a true musician and so that was kind of my long-term goal and I I would play and play and play and then the time came where actually made friends in music I joined a band and we put out an album and toured yeah wow talk to me about a using competition but then B like what it looks like to train the way that you train like stretching your fingers on Long flights and picking the seam of your Jee I mean it's incredible story it's a very simple thing in my mind when I look at it it's kind of like you just I mean it sounds lame but it's like you just do what's hard hard until it's not hard anymore I mean I I remember playing guitar and I couldn't up pick you know I could only play like you know punk rock songs because you just down P the chords and whatnot and so um I would sit on the airplane like you said and I would up stroke the seam of my pant and like listen to the music that was playing and kind of like play along with it with the pick in my hand and then it became easy to do it and I slowly got past that hurdle and then a whole another genre of music opened up for me and and that was it um you know even even when it came to snowboarding there were certain things that were very difficult to get past and um I just remember doing it until it became easy you know it's like if you broke your hand and you weren't used to riding with that hand and then you're forced to you know ride or to use chopsticks or to do something once you do it enough it becomes you know a casual thing to do so here's what I find fascinating though and I hope that people will hear in your story so there's a whole genre of medicine to deal with people who let's say they hurt their back yeah um and I remember I one time I had a neck virus which where you get a cold or something and then the virus settles into the muscle this is how they explained it to me I'm actually tempted to believe this is but nonetheless the effect of it was I was like this for like a week and a half right and every time I try to move I'd get this massive spasm in my neck and the doctor said okay here's what's crazy if you don't force yourself to fight through that and like ultimately get your neck back upright he's like there are people who have lived you know 20 30 years and they never get out of that position because they become so afraid of the pain so it doesn't it's not most people don't break their hand and get good at the left right they just stop and they wait until they heal or they may never get that good again when did you realize like that you could do that when did you fall in love with pushing yourself to do that yeah uh I I would say through Sports you know at a young age I was like you know a lot of angst and I wanted to to do things and uh and that's where snowbo came along and it gave me that outlet and um you know it was fun it was cool in the beginning and then my parents were like oh maybe he you know he's pretty good at it people around the mountain are telling them I was pretty good and so they put me into a competition and it was a race and I won you know I just I was pretty fast and so this is like at 7 yeah like 67 and um and I had skied at 4:00 if you call it skiing I basically like I wasn't allowed polls cuz I would hit people it's like really into the Ninja Turtles and I was just like I had had moves I thought I had moves and uh so yeah I ended up not allowed polls and then I would just like go into the trees and they'd lose me and they'd be all worried about where I was and what would happen and and so they're like oh we'll put him on a snowboard he'll be falling we'll keep track of him it'll be great and so obviously I figured it out pretty quickly um and then they put me in a competition at the local Resort up at at Snow Summit and um you know I I won and that gave me this like wow I can win something and and then it and then it gave me the you know the passion to to work hard at something to keep winning you know once you get that taste of Victory and you're like wow well maybe well I want to keep going on this path I think that was where it it it it stemmed from and then the other huge component which I'm sure if you read any other sports book or anything it was I have an older brother seven years older than me so a lot bigger a lot stronger a lot smarter you know and he was always beating me at everything I did everything Monopoly C like anything the video games the snowboarding like everything he was just always winning and I just couldn't beat him and you know I just kept at it and I finally like you know crossed that barrier where I was actually learning the tricks he was learning at the time but he's seven years older so you know in my age division it was just you know no contest and so that's what kind of stemmed that whole me me turning pro at 13 cuz I was already ready for you know the next level do you think about the birth order of you and your brother and sisters at all in sort of your what ends up becoming your persona in snowboarding and just that you got as good as you did um I don't know I just I think I got to learn from them like so even with my brother and sister it was like oh wow well my you know my brother chose this path like I'm going to do this that's interesting and I think one of the most fascinating things about you is how uniquely you have carved your way through it and if you don't mind it's obviously a very famous story in your lore but just quickly um when all the guys decided they' gone partying and they wanted to just split the winnings from the race but that didn't make sense for you because of you had to pay your own way yeah I was uh I was 15 years old and um I flew to Japan to do this big competition called the Toyota big air and um I remember getting there I'm pretty sure the way it worked out is like the specific invited Riders got a little bit of money to show up and then obviously there's great prize money and you had maybe 3 or four days of practice and um I was 15 so my mom's there and um and I was paying out of my own travel to like get the flights to get the food to get the hotel and all these things I remember sitting there and it's the game day you know we're supposed to hit the jump and everyone's complaining which is like music to my ears cuz I'm having the best day ever and and you know yeah the guys had gone out we're in we're in Japan there's a lot of fun things to do and I was like in my room with my mom like doing my algebra or whatever I'm like all right well you you guys go have fun I'm going to you know do my school workor and so anyways long story short um they all got together and we like we're going to split the prize money for the competition and I'm sitting there thinking wow like doing the the quick math I'm like this doesn't even cover the flights out once you split it up among all the writers and and whatnot and and I said no I 15 I was like no I want to compete and they just sat there and hazed me and there was like this this board of like all the writers faces for who was at the competition and they took turns like drawing dollar signs on my eyes and doing whatnot and I just remember being like I'm not going to succumb to the like pure pressure of this like I came here to compete I'm feeling great and I I I stuck to my you know gut feeling there and I won I won I won $50,000 in a car but yeah it was it was time where I just kind of like stuck to it and that was a big win for me and that was kind of the first realization that I didn't have to follow the pack I didn't have to do what everyone else said because it's what they want or what they should do or what is you're supposed to do I just kind I just kind of felt like you know what this is this is a point where I should make a stand I should really be me and own it and and I did and I won it was pretty wild so that was amazing the the reason I really wanted you to share that story is no un certain terms when I was 15 I would have crumbled I'd have been like I would have so wanted them to like me that even if I had said no what first about the time they start drawing the dollar signs on my eyes like what what gave you was it having one in the past was it fights with your brother like what gave you the ability to go I idolize these guys they're now really um being mean yeah and so how did you stay the course at that point um I don't know I I remember remember I remember being harsh and they were lighthearted joking in a way but I know that deep down they were like pretty pissed that was the only one like no we're going to ride so I I just remember thinking like this could be my chance to win and I'm not going to let these guys take that from me and um and I just stuck to it and I remember just putting my headphones on or doing anything to distract myself cuz nothing's going to slow down the clock on when we need to do the competition but um it was definitely like a a defining moment for me to stand up for myself and and what I wanted to accomplish what's the nature of competition for you like what does competition mean it's it's a multiple of things I mean it's [Music] um it's a chance to I guess go out and show you know the hard work that's been put in and to kind of display it for everyone your chance to show off in a way and and uh in another way it's it's a chance to access some deep part of yourself that is going to do something you never thought you could do or would want to do you know and I I have trouble now that I'm you know I'm I'm gotten a little bit older I've just turned 30 um and uh and you know unfortunately you think more I feel like you know I'm like it's pretty icy today it's a little windy I feel like tomorrow and now I got the weather report I'm like it's going to be better tomorrow we should definitely come back tomorrow you know and like procrastinate ating but like you know it's it's your chance to do something great and and um I strive for those moments and I and I wish I could recreate them in the normal life setting because um it changes from a I want to do this new trick to I have to do this new trick and it's the best because it takes that seed of Doubt out of your mind and and once that that doubt is gone like you know if I asked you to jump over the table or something and and you know you were like going to practice it and then we're like all we're going to film this one I better make it you know I mean like and you're expected to jump over the table and and there's so that's it's going to happen so what are you going to do to best prepare yourself and that's kind of that motivation of like getting to the contest and throwing the big tricks and seeing your competition and that motivation and and I've always loved that where interesting enough the dynamic in my family was my brother extremely talented guy amazing on his snork could do any trick he could think of but you put a camera on him or you put him in a contest scenario he couldn't do it he just like the pressure and the kind of awkwardness of like all right go sort of thing and I remember I was slightly the opposite where I would do all right in practice and then they're like all right it's Contest time and I would do better and so I know that like I have that in me so you cultivate um I think over time it just became so you know you you you get used to like if you um um hate speaking in public and you got to talk and make speeches all the time you're going to get comfortable at it you know just like us talking now like I used to look back at my interviews and I was terrified and I was like well why like why was that such a bad interview well cuz you're you're not thinking about your answer you're talking and then trying to steer it where you want to go and I learned from that and then try it again the next time and um you know in an interview you realize you're in the driver's seat of where you want to go with the answers you could kind of ask anything but I could kind of tell what I want to say in a way you know but that's the funny thing but you learn these things over time so if you can imagine obviously I've been competing since I was six years old and um you know you develop these these rhythms and the way you go about it and so I know that when I get to the contest like this is going to happen and and you can Bank on those moments but that's that's really what competition is for me it's a way to really tap something in me that I don't normally get you know I uh I I was at um the X Games and I did in my run I did I broke a old record and I went 24 feet out of the 22ft half pipe so I was up there and it was funny cuz I wasn't going that big all day but it was the contest time and I was jacked up and I dropped in and I hit that marker and I recently broke that record at the US Open of snowboarding Veil last season I went 26 ft it just kind of comes out of you and you and you do better so that's that's what comp comptition is for me for sure all right so if your brother Jesse came to you and said all right so I really do feel like I'm gifted talented but I I don't do as well with the pressure teach me uhuh what would be like a couple things that you would know right away I've got to get him to understand this do this pre-visualize like whatever yeah visualize definitely that's kind of the thing for me it's always been like what's my what's it going to look like and what's it going to feel like and what am I going to be wearing and what every little detail um and and and visualize yourself winning you know like what are you going to do after you know you just project it and it and it happens and I've always kind of like set goals for myself that's a huge one set the goal of like what do you really want to do like what's what is it in the end for me I would always set up like a fun goal and then like a serious goal so one year um one of the goals was like how many cars can I win cuz like the snowboard contest would give out cars if you won the series so you know obviously like yeah winning the series is amazing you know that's a feat of its own but I broke it down to like I just got to win the cars I mean it's it it made it into this stupid sort of game where it it dumbed it down slightly you know um does that help alleviate the pressure a little bit yeah I mean you obviously you have serious goals of like I want to win the Olympics and then I want to see how many cars I can win you know and it made it this fun thing of like you know taking taking a little bit of the edge off because it's such a daunting task when you look at it from like wow I'm going to try to win the Olympics like it it's such a big thing and then you really kind of break it down into these small things it's more edible that way and um did you come to stuff like that naturally or was it like you knew I need to manage my mind which is what I hear as you talk through this stuff yeah I don't know if I if I knew what I was doing I mean now that I'm a bit older I kind of see the the you know I can break it down for what was happening but it just felt like there was so much pressure like man like you got to do this you got to do that and it just felt like there was so much weight on it and I would always kind of turn it to my favor so any any which way you spin it I'm winning in a in a way like if you look at a competition like this last X Games I went to like I didn't win but I really feel like I won because I know exactly what I need to work on now I know exactly what happened and I did wrong and I got to go back you know and that's why it's still winning to me where if I did win you know I think about it like wow well I'm exactly on the path I'm supposed to be going the training and the ideas I've had before working and this is where you go so it's not like you know even those slight step backs are actually you know to Leap Forward in a way you know cuz how are you going to know where you lay in the whole you know field of things and what's going on is to take a step back and then go okay you reassess refocus and um you even I was talking to some some people in the green room and they you're talking about Russia calling I watched that and I was like man okay like that wasn't right like it didn't normally play out that way I'm going to change that for this next time or I'm going to do this and that so if you're always kind of looking to better the situation you know and I've been to contests before where I really wanted to win and I put everything on the line for that event and I didn't win and I went like man you put too much pressure on it you know you did this you did that I you know there's such thing is over practicing too you know a lot of guys show up at the competitions and they you know there's 2 hours to ride they ride from they're the first one there at the gate they ride two hours and then you know they landed their run you know um you 15 perfect runs and then they get to the contest and they fall I'm like yeah cuz you've been you just nailed it 15 time you know it's like rolling dice you're going to hit seven like you're going to crap out and and you know like save it for the for the real contest like you know you got it you got to you know be your own friend in that that scenario I really hope dear listeners that you paid attention to that because here's what's powerful in that and here's why I think that you're going to have unprecedented success for an athlete in your after career as an entrepreneur because all the mental tricks that you're using in sport are exactly what you're going to have to do in business so in business you're going to get your ass handed to I'm sure you already have and that's only going to keep Contin it's the natural part of it right but you learn ex exactly what well that didn't work 100% And so when you're saying that you know I went to the X Games I didn't win but I feel like I did win because I know how to frame that in my mind and I know how to look at that as okay now I'm going to assess and if you had said and I was actually really afraid you were going to say if I had won it wouldn't have been as good but you didn't you said if I had won then I would know okay cool you're on the right path like you're going to make a win out of it either way right so there's a great book called sometimes you win sometimes you learn and if that's your mentality right then you can never really lose because you're playing a much longer game than everybody else it's like I always people think of life as practice so I came into competition very late so my sister was really good at basketball MH she's really good at every sport un like you who got better than your brother I did not get better than my sister okay um so I tried to do all the things that she was good at I was terrible at them because I had a fixed mindset I didn't believe that I could go practice and get better like that never it never occurred to me practice time was just facing my inadequacies over and over and over so I wasn't able to compute that hey if I do this then I'll actually progress and get better and then I can really so as an adult though I found that and and business became that for me that hey if I treated this like practice that I'm really just trying to get good and that over a long enough timeline this will add up to something yeah then while other people are freaking out about a lost deal about blowing a meeting about not getting hired or fired or whatever the case may be they're not looking at it on a long enough timeline cuz I'm thinking ah I totally screwed that meeting up but what did I learn I learned this now I have that skill set I can go on and get better and the reason I was asking you to Define competition for me competition is being tested I want to be tested now I didn't when I was younger cuz I just assumed I would fail but once you believe you're in control of whether or not you win then competition becomes intoxicating cuz it's it's a moment where now it isn't just practicing snowboarding down the mountain over and over like there's something real that this is working towards there going to be a moment of immense pressure yeah and I get to see am I better than everybody yeah of course no it's true though and that in that in that moment of like well I put in the work and it's the actual like that's what you're going for and yeah you said in business you can fail here and there and it's the same idea of like trying something over and over and just finally cracking the code on it and then once you get that win you get that experience and know that you can succeed it's it's that that like I said in competition that seed of Doubt goes away and you show up to win every time it just that's the only option you know and and and once that's the only option it's even more obtainable say that again it's it's even more obtainable what do you mean by that cuz that's so true yeah you just it's just in the air you put it out there it's just like you just feel it and you're like wow well I know it's you know um back to the table thank God this a lot of metaphors um you know but if if if I asked you to do a feat and you you actually accomplished it you have that knowledge now going back to do it again well oh I've already you know jumped over this or I've already done this thing in business and and it's old news and you go in with with even more confidence than you had that it took to win the first time so you know um you know you have that in you and and projecting that positive thing always just leads to better outcomes either way you know and and and even with pressure as well when when people say like how do you deal with the pressure and I'm just so thankful for the pressure you know like they're like everybody thinks you're going to win the Olympics and I go well if everybody thinks I'm going to win that's great like that's that's a lot of people believing in me thinking that I can do it hey maybe I just might be able to do it you know if if you instead of letting it weigh me down like oh my God all these people are expecting this from me and and I'm expecting this from myself and it's just too I can't like no it's such a a it's a blessing it's a great thing to to have people counting on you and needing that and it's all kind of leading up to that sort of like you know you can win you've felt it before you you know what's obtainable everybody else believes in you it's like your team rather than letting it weigh you down so if you can kind of put that subtle spin on things and and use it to your advantage is always a better scenario you know and and I've let the pressure get to me before and it just well that didn't work you know like I was terrified this to happen and you know and you learn from that and you go on um but yeah there's always lessons to be learned even learning tricks it's the basic thing it's like a math problem you're throwing Solutions at it and you finally it the numbers work and it clicks and it works out you know same with snowboarding and jumps and learning a new trick you learn the very important lesson and simple lesson of what not to do and you know you hey I tried this you know you watch the video oh I didn't I took off wrong I'm going to try it again and again and again and again and you get to a point where you get the confidence you get the muscle memory you get the ability to then do that trick and uh and now it's yours and then you can do it at a competition when it really matters the you know the practice like you said um you know it's something you kind of get over time so when you were doing the um buildup for the Sochi Olympics and you were trying to learn the new trick and obviously in the documentary was so cool which by the way like I don't know how you felt about making that available to the public like you were so raw and so vulnerable admitting that I've never had a roadblock like this I've never been afraid to try something like this as somebody watching the documentary that was so powerful for me to know that a somebody who you look up to and admire and think they just done something inhuman that it's more interesting to me that you had to overcome that than if you just H you know if it was just easy for you like that's not inspiring here's the winning run exactly to to see the fight so how do you how did you in that specific example how did you deal with the fear because when you had crashed D that look like it was going to break you in half yeah um yeah I took a bad spill I mean I I basically if that were a competition I would have land landed it because I had to I dropped in and I went to do that trick and I I was doing a I don't know if you've seen there's a video of me attempting the first triple uh flip in the halfpipe and you can watch the video and I slowly I do the one rotation everything's great I do the second rotation and then halfway through the third I decide that I don't want to do a third flip and I open up and that's kind of like it slows your rotation down it it changes things and that mindset got in there and I decided like oh I'm I'm nervous about this I opened up and I and I caught the lip of the halfpipe now the Wall's 22 feet tall so I then bounced off of the lip and flew to the bottom of the halfpipe my helmet came off it's actually pretty spectacular crash like the goggles come off of my helmet and then the lenses come out of the goggles like you know is bad and so you know there's all my stuff everywhere and and I don't know if you've ever been concussed for uh but it's it's a very surreal thing like I wasn't in any pain I was just sitting there like wow this is that moment that I dreamt about like it's like a Deja Vu sort of feeling of like I've been here before i' like I this is I swear and I just remember going wow this is that moment like this sucks like you know like okay and I I remember going to the hospital getting all checked out and I had slightly separated my my shoulder and um my pelvis was all been out of shape and uh I had a bit of a concussion from it um but yeah I mean going going back to to doing that again yeah I had to I had to look at the video and think about what I did and what I could have done differently and um something happened though that kind of saved me right in the middle of it is that and I don't know if it was a good thing or a bad thing because it kind of steered me from my path but another competitor of mine created a new trick um he deemed it the YOLO flip uh uh you only live once flip I guess and so uh he created this new trick and I'm like oh well I have to do this trick and it really inspired me I learned his trick first try um like three days later wow I was that motivated to do it because I saw a competitor and he was you know and I knew it could be done cuz he did it and well why can't I do you know and it really kind of paved the way for it rather than doing something that had never been done before and so you know to create that excitement that pressure and and you know to look at it like this year I've decided to do every single competition that I can enter just because I know that getting to that pressure scenario when I was younger I didn't think as much I would just throw my tricks and that was it but nowadays I need that extra motivation that coaxing into it and to get rid of that seed of doubt I show up at contest now so it's kind of like knowing yourself as well knowing your strength and your weaknesses and and kind of sticking to that like what are you really good at and what are you not and and and being real and honest with yourself about it there's a difference between like working hard at something that that you're not good at and forcing it and you and that's kind of the inner question you have to ask but um I've always found that to be kind of a truth for me you know what drives you now you've accomplished so much it's absurd I mean writing your intro was it was it was a matter of how do you trim things out right cuz just your list of accomplishments is ridiculous so it's dangerous dude like what you do is dangerous so how do you push yourself to like keep pushing stay relevant to to Really progress the sport when it's like I'm Sean white like you know what I mean like how do you what it says on my car yeah you saw me pull in huh um how do I stay motivated you know um man it's a it's a mixture of things it's like you know there's always new goals there's always new things to do obviously you know when it comes to snowboarding going to an Olympics um and not doing well obviously at Sochi not getting the gold and and all that like man extremely motivating extremely eye openening to I'd never gone to an Olympics and not won it was the first time for me I was like wow how do I feel about this what happens after and and it was amazing for me to to realize that people were still like oh you're the champ you're the guy you know and and I I don't know for some reason I just like in my mind I just assume that if you don't win they immediately strip all the other metals and you're just some guy you're like the superpowers are gone and you're just like the dude and the glasses at work like I was like oh no you know and I I I just remember feeling like this overwhelming like wow I'm still alive I'm still here like the worst thing I could have imagined happen and I was still here I was still considered you know the great in the sport and um it did a lot for me personally I was like wow I can actually like I can lose and and I hadn't lost I mean this this like reign of like me winning it's it been a a long long thing and obviously that was just like one night one contest but the world was watching so it was pretty rough to lose but you realize that yeah it's just that one moment and you got to get back up and that's the true Spirit of the sport is to come back and it's like Rocky you didn't even win the first movie you know it's like the thrill of the fight to get there and and you become you know part of the US team the Olympics and all that it's such an amazing and memorable thing and then to actually could and compete um but the balance back from that was amazing and I and I remember sitting there thinking instead of like curling up and like all right maybe I should you know yeah they're saying I'm getting old or maybe I should quit or maybe I you know and I didn't want to quit I was just like put in my head so many times by the media that I was like they're comparing me to like a 14-year-old I'm like of course I'm going to look a lot older this kid's 14 you know um but you start hearing it so much you you kind of believe it and um and I remember sitting there thinking wow like well I don't feel that way and I'm not done and I don't want to be done and and obviously there's other things in my life that were capturing my attention at that time but um I didn't know the thrill was still there and I had new found motivation from not winning and um and I remember thinking you know from our our wins and lessons sort of scenario I was like wow what's to learn from this and and how do I how do I better myself and I sat there thinking I actually probably said it out loud to some friends I'm like I'm gonna do more than I've ever done after an Olympics this time around because normally what happens is you get this kind of flood of like hey you know this company wants to endorse you you're the Olympic gold medalist and blah blah blah and you totally deserve to do that you won and it's it's kind of like the quick money that comes your way and before the world turns around it's off to the next thing and um I wasn't getting those floods of uh offers I was getting offers still but it wasn't like the quick you know Gold Rush sort of scenario and um I was like well what do I want to do what do I truly want to do and since since that Olympics I mean in business man I've I'm I no longer ride for a mountain I'm a part owner in a a mountain resort big bear Snow Summit and Mammoth Mountain and uh I yeah I still compete but I now own my own competition series Music Festival series I've changed um my boy clothing line to a men's clothing line because it fits my um you know Vibe of who I am today not who I was before do you know Michael Strahan NFL Hall of Famer Good Morning America yeah of course he um he talked about that that like if you want to have longevity in a career at some point you have to get really serious about your training and a lot of NFL guys have talked about you don't bulk up as you go longer in the NFL you actually start getting leaner meaner tighter wow um Jerry Rice who had one of the most uh unbelievably high performance long-lasting careers worked out like a demon his whole thing Terell Owens who we've had on the show um same thing right work ethic like really treating your body like a tool like that's the weapon with which you're going to win the war so it'll be really fascinating I'll put a chip that if you keep up with that like that'll magnify your and you love Agy I do yeah interesting to see um his I read his book open which was amazing um but yeah it was funny to see in his career because I was always comparing obviously you read the book I'm like comparing my life to his and you know the one thing is is that he never really enjoyed tennis because like everything was tennis for him and and once he found that his life wasn't tennis it was his wife and his foundation his family like and then he would go out on the court he was more dangerous because he had that slight bit of like well I don't care like I'm you know like that feeling I got after losing like wow I'm still here I'm still alive I still my dog still likes me like my you know my house isn't taken away like you know what I mean and and so he became you know even greater tennis player than he was I felt like at least maybe my recollection of the book but I was comparing that to my life and I always felt like snowb has been a part of it's not me it's not my life like it's it's what I do for fun and it's what I do competitively but it's not who I am and so I've always felt that way I mean certainly answers the question of why you've done so many diverse things in your career from music which I mean you take it seriously man like you're not a dabbler like you're a full-blown rock guitar player I mean it's crazy so when I I cuz I didn't know a lot about the music side of you when I was researching so when you were like and uh yeah I went on tour with 30 seconds tomorrows I was like the like that's for real yeah it was heavy and I've always loved that about music that there wasn't really a competition it was more you just create and and you know you keep doing that and you keep trying to better your craft and um and then within that there was a team element CU I remember standing there and I was like man I got to uh I got it was our first show and uh I got on stage and I was like okay I got to do this I was like talking to myself and everyone laughed looked at me they're like no we got to do this you know cuz like you can play that all you play the guitar all you want butless I'm on time and you know everybody else does their thing and it really kind of was an amazing thing that we were all there together and that's something I never really had in snowboarding because it was always like I'm going to practice today and this and that and and whatnot but um but yeah a really amazing time with with the music you know it gave me a lot of appreciation for that lifestyle and and the amount of work that goes into it I mean even Jared gosh to see the levels of like we were playing dive bars to like a festival to seeing a guy like sellout in Arena was just incredible and the amount of effort that goes into it and night after night doing the same show and bettering it and like I mean the guy's learning you know bits and pieces of every language from whatever you know part of the the world he's playing and it was just incredible to see uh very inspiring so yeah it's interesting so having been to his house the way that he has everything laid out so that he can maximize his time he's got like three companies operating out of his house which tells you something about the size of his house which is an old military base it's old which is crazy he's on another level he oh very much so it's incredible I thought I worked a lot I was like man this guy you do work a lot though I do how do you think about time management that's been a real tough one for me cuz um you know I guess going to Traditional School setting um you know you learn to manage your time from this class and oh I want to go to the mall tonight so I'm going to you know I never really had that I was always just like in a van with my parents like going to the next competition and doing whatnot and so as I got older that was something that took a lot of time and I'm still pretty terrible at it I have I have a uh a really great assistant you know it's it's that's when you realize um you know to any great person you see there are people around helping because you can't do it all it's just too much and and you got to know your strengths and your weaknesses and I'm like I'm terrible at scheduling and I can't accomplish all this all these things I want to do without somebody coming into help and so that's where you got to rely on people around you in that sense it's interesting cuz for somebody who has so many things going on usually the first thing to go are details but you're actually super focused on the details I know for the white space you hand painted 150 motorcycle jackets why was that important enough for you to to put the it was like 5 days locked in Warehouse yeah um I think well what's funny is and And when everybody looks at the thing well he's you know if you you broke up my time you would think that I'm like well he's 50% this and then 10% that and what whatnot no I'm 100% everything so it's like it's gets my full attention and the jackets for example like we came up with this great idea to you know I I was sitting around with some friends and I was like man we should like do really cool custom painted leather jackets and we'll do kind of like a you know if you you're the right person on the right day and you you show up to a Macy's um you'll be one of 150 that will get the chance to buy these like leather jackets that that we that I hand painted um the details that I missed is that I don't paint I don't paint that that's worth considering I was like you know and I was like this is a great idea and then it dawned on me that like I didn't really have a concept of you know what I wanted the visuals on the jacket to look like and what not and so I started calling some artist friends of mine I'm like okay it'll be a mixture of this and that and then the perfectionist in me was like you know we started painting some jackets and I stumbled upon a design that I really liked and um and then I was like this is it we this is the aesthetic I want to do and then I we I went back and like with a couple uh friends that helped just kind of help fan and dry the jackets and hang them up around the studio that we had um I painted all those jackets myself um we spent about yeah five days and nights in the in the warehouse there in Downtown LA and so every single thing that has brought me to this place has been like a long play I just kind of like I mentioned in the beginning I was just like my eyes were open enough to see the opportunities at hand your eyes were open enough to see the opportunities which is incredible that notion of I'm going to put the word in your mouth flow that you're almost moving through these business opportunities with the grace that you show you know when you're skating or snowboarding which is pretty incredible but you also the balls to pull the trigger and that's where a lot of people fall down they maybe see the opportunity but they don't actually have the vision of what they want to do with it or the guts to do it to actually buy into it or if they buy into it they don't spend the 5 days locked in you know the warehouse painting on the jacket though and that really to me through yeah that's where that's where so many entrepreneurs fall apart is the end of the day only action matters right all right I've got one more question for you but first tell these guys where they can find you and definitely tell them about Aon style cuz we're like right around the corner Aaron style it is happening this February 18th and 19th at the coliseum in Downtown LA uh really amazing bands are coming we got Flume major laser Vince staple YG TV on the radio um and then we're building a 16 story snowboard jump where the world's best are going to come and compete um all happening this February you go to Aon style.com and get your tickets and uh I'll see you there nice it's the next one all right cool so my last question what is the impact that you want to have on the world impact you know like I touched on in the beginning is that like yeah snowboarding is a part of my life but it's definitely not my life and all that I am and so I feel like my thing that I would leave is that I hope to be looked at as someone that that really didn't you know see the boundaries of what you should and shouldn't do that I just kind of you know uh I did I did The Road Less Traveled you know I did I did the things that people said couldn't be done it's kind of the goal for me it's a pretty damn good thing to leave behind so that's it so Sean thank you so much for coming on incredible thanks for having me so guys I hope that you took away from this man what I took away from him which is it really doesn't matter what anybody tells you you can be what you're up against where you start with double open heart surgery it's all about what you're trying to become and how hard you're willing to work to get there it is absolutely incredible the way that this man has totally bucked pure pressure he does not around with that he has stayed true to who he is what he wants to accomplish and in doing that he really has defined a totally new path from athlete to entrepreneur that I think is really inspiring and seeing the way that he dives into the details seeing the way that he pushes himself to grow and get better that he looks at competition as a way to actually feel the pressure and to deal with his mind that is the thing I found so fascinating about him is he understands what he's doing with his mind and that's reason that I think he's going to become an incredible entrepreneur and he's going to have an even more impactful um career as an entrepreneur so be sure to go check him out he's going to blow you away it's absolutely incredible guys this a weekly show so if you haven't already be sure to subscribe and until next time my friends be legendary take care you Sean man thank you so much that was awesome awesome really fun hey everybody thanks so much for joining us for another episode of impact theory if this content is adding value to your life our one ask is that you go to iTunes and Stitcher and rate and review not only does that help us build this community which at the end of the day is all we care about but it also helps us get even more amazing guests on here to share their knowledge with all of us thank you guys so much for being a part of this community and until next time be legendary my friends [Music]
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