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Want to be rich? Stop letting THIS affect you...

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  • Опубликовано: 16 авг 2024
  • Want to SCALE your business? Go here: acquisition.com
    Want to START a business? Go here: skool.com/games
    If you’re new to my channel, my name is Alex Hormozi. I’m the founder and managing partner of Acquisition.com. It’s a family office, which is just a formal way of saying we invest our own money into companies. Our 10 portfolio companies bring in over $200,000,000+ per year. Our ownership stake varies between 20% and 100% of them. Given this is a YT channel, and anyone can claim anything, I’ll give you some stuff you can google to verify below.
    How I got here…
    21: Graduated Vanderbilt in 3 years Magna Cum Laude, and took a fancy consulting job.
    23 yrs old: Left my fancy consulting job to start a business (a gym).
    24 yrs old: Opened 5 gym locations.
    26 yrs old: Closed down 6th gym. Lost everything.
    26 yrs old: Got back to launching gyms (launched 33). Then, lost everything for a 2nd time.
    26 yrs old: In desperation, started licensing model as a hail mary. It worked.
    27 yrs old: "Gym Launch" does $3M profit the next 6 months. Then $17M profit next 12 months.
    28 yrs old: Started Prestige Labs. $20M the first year.
    29 yrs old: Launched ALAN, a software company for agencies to work leads for customers. Scaled to $1.7mmo within 6 months.
    31 yrs old: Sold 75% of UseAlan to a strategic buyer in an all stock deal.
    31 yrs old: Sold 66% of Gym Launch & Prestige Labs at $46.2M valuation in all-cash deal to American Pacific Group. (you can google it)
    31 yrs old: Started our family office Acquisition.com. We invest and scale companies using the $42M in distributions we had taken + the cash from the $46.2M exit.
    32 yrs old: Started making free content showing how we grow companies to make real business education accessible to everyone (and) to attract business owners to invest or scale their businesses.
    34 yrs old: I became co-owner of Skool.com to help the many people who want to start a business online do so.
    Today: Our portfolio now does $200M/yr between 10 companies. The largest doing $100M/yr the smallest doing $5M per year. Our ownership varies between 20% and 100% ownership of the companies. Many of them we invested in early and helped grow (which is how we make our money - not youtube videos).
    To all the gladiators in the arena, we’re all in the middle of writing our own stories. The worse the monsters, the more epic the story.
    You either get an epic outcome or an epic story. Both mean you win.
    Keep crushing. May your desires be greater than your obstacles.
    Never quit,
    Alex
    FULL DISCLOSURE
    I make content to make money - just - on a longer time horizon than most. I want to build trust with business owners so we can find the best ones and help them scale. And if they’re awesome, write them a check and go all the way as partners.

Комментарии • 502

  • @tannerradloff
    @tannerradloff 2 года назад +440

    This conversation and this framework has fundamentally changed how I think about things. Separating beliefs from objective facts is insanely powerful. Most people watching this have no idea how many hours of thought and philosophical work was put in to distill the ideas into this final mentality. Alex providing insane value to everyone per usual, thanks brotha 🏆💯

    • @DH-tv8qy
      @DH-tv8qy 2 года назад +4

      Have a relationship with someone that abuses you. Feelings are real and don’t think it’s so simple.

    • @aydengrosjean2151
      @aydengrosjean2151 2 года назад +2

      Hey i watched you video with Gram stefin I want to start out by saying you did not offend me but you are off your hinges on what you define as Christianity...

    • @chriswaughrealestate
      @chriswaughrealestate 2 года назад +1

      The “objective facts” are themselves defined by belief structures.

    • @DH-tv8qy
      @DH-tv8qy 2 года назад

      Chris Waugh isn’t it ‘meaning and interpretation’?

    • @aydengrosjean2151
      @aydengrosjean2151 2 года назад +4

      No Not necessarily because the main thing you had off was the belief there is no 50 50 line which is not true the bible talked about the 50 50 christan that you have to believe with your whole heart otherwise he says when you die that he will say that he did not even know you [if these needs to be more clear let me know]

  • @thoughtsanddreams2555
    @thoughtsanddreams2555 2 года назад +94

    "A man is measured by the smallest thing that provokes him"

    • @Asiate
      @Asiate Год назад +9

      That's offending!

    • @scottmoseley5122
      @scottmoseley5122 Год назад +4

      My dad always said and I don't know who he was quoting, but oft remembered: A man can be judged by the size of his problems.

    • @suqma
      @suqma 8 месяцев назад

      That is really good

  • @philawsonfur
    @philawsonfur 2 года назад +208

    Lost a parent at 16 in a car accident. Took me 7 years to actually get over it. Almost lost my life at 21. Now at 23, I can safely say I'm done wearing those chips on my shoulder and want to get to fucking work.
    I now live life with lots of humor because that's how the parent that I lost lived theres. Not just that, but life is more enjoyable this way. I know damn well those past years of mine, being that I was in the self pity, jealous hole that I was in, my parent was metaphorically in spirit out there cursing at me saying "man the fuck up and laugh at yourself, you seriously need it. And stop taking the shit life throws at you so seriously" 😂
    Despite the accident I can say 100% my parent, if they were able to and still alive, would still be laughing at their situation and of how funny life can be sometimes. Not saying my experience has any merit for any one else's situation, just offering my humble human perspective. Cheers to all reading this ☀️

    • @timothysullysullivan2571
      @timothysullysullivan2571 2 года назад +11

      one thing with a guaranteed zero ROI: self pity

    • @flint476
      @flint476 2 года назад +3

      Lost my wife to cancer with 2 kids ages 5&3. This resonates. But the best way for me to carry (her) forward is making her proud and still active the dreams we talked so vividly about.
      Thanks for opening your story for us to read.

    • @daithiocinnsealach1982
      @daithiocinnsealach1982 2 года назад +1

      Lost my dad at 18. Fell into a ditch, banged his head off a rock, fell unconscious and died of hypothermia We didn't find his body for two days. Family life was already spiralling out of control. Can't go into because it still hurts and the facts are genuinely messed up. Part of me is relatively successful as a result of me not wanting to "end up that way" and part of me is totally messed up because I carried stuff into my adult life that I simply did not know how to overcome and nobody knew how to help me, even though they were all utterly convinced they did know how. I've lost almost all trust in people.

    • @heymanhaha
      @heymanhaha Год назад

      @ALEX LEE hey man what's 4 4 48 challenge?

    • @heymanhaha
      @heymanhaha Год назад

      @ALEX LEE wow. That takes mental strength. Kudos to you.

  • @anonmouse7900
    @anonmouse7900 2 года назад +132

    500 years ago when a bear ate your father, instead of crying about it in therapy, you started actively scanning your surroundings for and avoiding bears. This was beneficial to your survival.
    Present day, you got betrayed by a friend and now you have trouble being open with people, causing your relationships to wither.
    This is why we focus on "trauma". It's not for the emotional catharsis, or the limiting label. We recognize things in the past that hurt us because these things shape our behaviour, and unless we analyze it, we will do these things mindlessly in unfit situations.
    I do agree that a lot of times, we need to learn to see past events just for the stimuli that they were, and even be cognizant of the emotional stimuli that it caused, but we don't need to hold on to it as an identity.

    • @Endoempowered
      @Endoempowered 2 года назад +8

      Wow! Love this comment. It makes total sense to me that we would want to protect ourselves from something we felt trauma from. The fun bit it then looking at whether we can shift the identity of that trauma event and distill it into something less painful.

    • @slymusic9108
      @slymusic9108 2 года назад

      And that is a belief

    • @anonmouse7900
      @anonmouse7900 2 года назад +3

      @@slymusic9108 everything is a belief. Some beliefs communicate useful ideas and some are garbage.

    • @dna8269
      @dna8269 2 года назад +2

      Sounds like broscience. You don't have any empirical proof that there was no emotional attachment on a deeper level just a mere 500 years ago (a ridiculously short timeline on the evolution scale for the point you're trying to drive home) when seeing a parent be killed and reacting robot-esque.

    • @MV-wb2cz
      @MV-wb2cz Год назад +6

      I used to think the way alex thinks but ended up hurting so many people I came across because nothing really mattered to me and I ended up living in the moment and that can be dangerous too. I have since turned to analyzing every interaction I have with people in order to become more conscious of how I was treating people or how I react in certain situations. This video does not show the negative aspects of living with this behavior.

  • @dionb112
    @dionb112 Год назад +3

    Yo.. I think the 15 year old girl in your example would still have had trauma even back then Alex.. 😂

  • @MoNaboulsi
    @MoNaboulsi 2 года назад +13

    This is absolutely brilliant. Your perception is all that matters, or doesn't matter. Shift the odds in your favor by deciding what holds 'meaning'

  • @Nortio
    @Nortio 2 года назад +61

    "When people are given resources that they weren't taught how to use or manage, it destroys them. It's too much potential energy"
    Fucking amazing way to put it. Alex is a true role model

    • @PaulEastonNZ
      @PaulEastonNZ Год назад

      The lottery situation 😊

    • @machinemaker2248
      @machinemaker2248 Год назад

      Ayn Rand said the same with different words: if a man's money is smaller than him then it serves him; if it is bigger than him then it destroys him.

  • @78reerob
    @78reerob 2 года назад +33

    Funny I was talking about this the other day. How positive and negative energy affects our body. So, If I quit viewing something as being bad, it won't have the same effect on my body or life.

    • @MV-wb2cz
      @MV-wb2cz Год назад +2

      you just have to remember to be able to separate that with how you treat other people because it can cause major damage to other people

  • @randomname2366
    @randomname2366 2 года назад +101

    Loved the chat and as a Christian who has also studied apologetics and similar supporting topics understand exactly what you meant on all of it. Essentially you moved to emotionless nihilism which it at very least very logically consistent and that is admirable in its own way. That said, I wasn’t sure I understood why your easy argument against Christianity was actually a rebuttal to anything. As you said, it depends on what we mean by the words we use and I think the key one that may have been at issue is what scripture means by faith. Modern Christians think it is just to believe a certain set of propositions to be true and so don’t have any sense of action or duty called upon them. They can believe something is true and then not act as if it is and will rationalize that they are saved.
    Dr. Michael Heiser defines faith best I believe by describing it as “believing loyalty”. It’s about knowing who God is and staying loyal to Him. We see this in David, he always knew God and never worshipped another all the while messing up along the way and doing amazing feats too. So it’s not a 49/50/51% ratio scale of actions and nor is it just about how strongly you believe a set of statements. It is an active belief that brings about loyalty to His commands and not turning away from God.
    I’m sure you had other issues with the faith but as that was all you listed I figured I would say some thoughts on the topic. Wish you the best, love the content.

    • @WestonTisch
      @WestonTisch 2 года назад +4

      Well said, and I had the same perspective in his line of thinking. It is the active belief that proposed a greater future for Alex and in doing so, elevated him to where he is, where we all strive to progress. Faith is at the forefront. And faith has no judgement on the metrics to which we deploy.

    • @azonto1232
      @azonto1232 2 года назад +9

      Unfortunately he doesn't care about the comments so he won't see this😅

    • @biddelyboo1
      @biddelyboo1 2 года назад +10

      @@azonto1232 Let's hope God makes him check this once!

    • @godmode2461
      @godmode2461 2 года назад

      The idea of the ratio scale wasn't just to question one's strength of faith but rather to put into perspective that there will be other people who think they have they also have an "active loyal belief". It would be foolish to say that believers never doubt God, it's impossible to be that irrational despite the fact that the belief system is based on trying to find logical reasoning to justify an emotional connection. Thus you reach the proposition that there are 'stronger' active loyal believers than others, which leads to the 49/51 ratio.

    • @WestonTisch
      @WestonTisch 2 года назад +7

      @@godmode2461 I hear you, but to his point, what if we don't reach the proposition that there are "stronger" active loyal believers than others. And to let go of judgement in the realm of "works", predisposition, etc. God knows ones heart and that is the mystery that supersedes and transcends logical reasoning. The journey is from the head to the heart. The logical, rationale mind (wrestling with ones existence and meaning) VS the feeling of being (not doing) - free, alive, and in love. That is the romance that keeps us all going. It's fun to play around with ideas like this, but the core to us as humans all stems from love. Love cannot be deduced to logical rhetoric. There's something to that. Something worth exploring.

  • @flyinmonkea
    @flyinmonkea 2 года назад +5

    As a trauma coach myself, I agree that we create our own traumas based on our belief systems around what happens. However! A young child doesn’t have much choice of their belief system. They grow up in environment that programs them to be susceptible to trauma. And you’re right this can fuck people up for a long time. But the truth is trauma is not healed just by convincing yourself you didn’t have trauma like you’re saying Alex. That’s denial. Trump has healed when we embrace and except our pain and learn to love and let it go. That is a very emotional process and your logical nihilistic view is not helpful for people who are struggling

    • @IronX77
      @IronX77 7 месяцев назад

      Spot on. And to his example, both 15 year old girls were traumatized, it's just no one asked them.
      Bad things happen. If you skip the processing part, it WILL come for you. Mid life. Late life. Life has a way of catching up with you, whatever you want to believe.

  • @nsneed
    @nsneed 2 года назад +25

    Some of these ideas were shortchanged, I think reasonable rebuttals were needed to flush certain examples or concepts out. The examples of trauma in ancient times versus now are similar. Death of a parent prematurely was more common back then, and cultures still mourned for weeks and sometimes months after a person’s passing. Because it isn’t happening now doesn’t mean we can assume it wasn’t traumatic. People often don’t take the step to associate emotion/trauma/turmoil with times they didn’t live in. Instead we often think, “People were tougher back then.” Dating at 15 year old now and back is was still traumatic to the child. We can’t assume it was easier for child brides then. Trauma wasn’t recognized as a condition, but that doesn’t change the way one’s mind deals with emotional shock. I do agree that categorizing conditions and acceptable reactions creates weaknesses though. We have to become less wayward under pressure and tailor our mental responses. As he said, it’s a process.

    • @dna8269
      @dna8269 2 года назад +2

      Exactly. The points brought up are extremely shortsighted and simply wrong scientifically and sociologically

    • @MV-wb2cz
      @MV-wb2cz Год назад

      I agree with you as someone who used to view life similar to Alex. I hurt many people I interacted with without meaning to. Living in the moment at an extreme can have it's negatives.

    • @rf-uj5sc
      @rf-uj5sc Год назад

      The child bride thing is silly. There are still parts of the world that practice it, and the girls are still traumatized.

  • @s.omarfarooque1486
    @s.omarfarooque1486 9 месяцев назад +1

    This segment shifted my thinking in a way that would serve me for life, or at least until I decide to change my beliefs again. Thank you Alex for being bold.

  • @5pointsaday
    @5pointsaday 2 года назад +10

    my god how much you’ve grown your channel while just being your authentic self. Alex, you’re my “Internet dad” and I continue to seek any wisdom you are willing to offer to your audience, keep being you

  • @JackDuffley
    @JackDuffley 2 года назад +58

    The "chips" thesis is so well articulated. Really does a lot to question the idea of "leaving a legacy" in particular.

    • @eldisperez
      @eldisperez 2 года назад +3

      I think legacy is a real thing.
      thats why we still remember the founders of America.
      I think you can live a fulfilling life if you have a bigger vision than yourself.

    • @SteelPlated
      @SteelPlated 2 года назад +1

      @@eldisperez if you expand time out long enough then you probably won’t remember the founders though, we only do because we’re not far removed from it. Few people besides history buffs and historians can name all of the people involved in creating all of the ancient empires that existed in the past. And some remnants of certain empires are for sure lost and nobody will ever know about them today or in the future. And if you really take it to the extreme, scientists believe that around 7 billion years from now the sun will explode and become a nebula and essentially turn everything on Earth (and Mercury, Venus etc) into dust, including any traces of civilization remaining on the planet. What legacy will remain then?
      Of course a lot can happen in 7 billion years, but I think people really overstate the importance of legacy.

    • @eventualrobot
      @eventualrobot 2 года назад +4

      @@SteelPlated But what if legacy isn't about the ego boost of having your name remembered and more about doing something meaningful that allows other meaningful things to be built off of it? Maybe a small percentage of people can name 10 founders of computer science, but we all benefit from their deciding to do something meaningful today.

    • @SteelPlated
      @SteelPlated 2 года назад +2

      @@eventualrobot that’s very true. Even if everything turns to dust at some point, providing something useful and helpful to the world for as long as it’s around is absolutely worth doing.

    • @Stierenkloot
      @Stierenkloot 2 года назад +1

      It’s nice on one hand but on the other it kinda implies life is a zero sum game

  • @hundy6521
    @hundy6521 2 года назад +5

    Definitely interesting, but people were still under intense stress when loved ones died. Attachment and grief is also apart of biology

  • @davidsarmiento5487
    @davidsarmiento5487 2 года назад +8

    The main thing here is that if you have the ability to remove yourself from the problem ( trauma) then you have the ability to solve it and move on. Stay emotionally unattached and you will have a different perspective of every situation. Great vid Alex.

  • @anguiishmusic
    @anguiishmusic 2 года назад +4

    Damn. Going to go watch the full conversation now. Alex Speaks so eloquently it’s super impressive.

  • @PkmnMasterHolly
    @PkmnMasterHolly Год назад +1

    Alex this was an incredible talk thank you!!!

  • @MarketingHarry
    @MarketingHarry 2 года назад +23

    Sometimes changing the narrative will be the best thing that one can do. Afterall, your beliefs define your environment and your future! 👍

  • @alexgriesmer7461
    @alexgriesmer7461 2 года назад +11

    The full podcast is entirely worth the watch, love to see these segments getting uploaded to rewatch often. unrelated note - I have to know, where do you get the flannels?

  • @marioherrerajr5293
    @marioherrerajr5293 2 года назад +4

    As someone who grew up in a different country and came to America later in life, I definitely see how your surroundings can affect the way to react to problems even if you are part of the “same culture”. There a multiple things that trigger my American born Latino people when we who actually grew up in 3rd world countries don’t even care about this meaningless things, we just wanna survive, provide and grow.

    • @richardfain3428
      @richardfain3428 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching
      Hit me up there ☝️☝️
      There are profitable nods and patterns I’d love to show you...

  • @JeffTheEntrepreneur
    @JeffTheEntrepreneur 2 года назад +6

    Do this is always what I believed growing up a born again Christian. This is why I relate to Alex on a different level. None of his content or his wife wastes our time and it’s required to review by companies we consult and my team. Love this.

  • @Paul_Mayville
    @Paul_Mayville 2 года назад +3

    I really like the ethereal casino analogy and have held a similar belief for some time.
    In the business game, we create systems for generating and storing potential energy to do more cool stuff.
    In the end, it is to grow as much as we can, live fully, create choices, and find meaning in sharing these resources and experiences with others.
    If there is a better way to see it, let me know so I can adopt that perspective.💪🔥

  • @DaycanHacks101
    @DaycanHacks101 2 года назад +2

    I am in a lower position that you are now and I completely agree with what you said. The question for me is: is it even worth chasing wealth, then deciding if I still agree with your point of view or am I just making excuses because I been failing too many times in the past few years ?

  • @fitforfreelance
    @fitforfreelance 2 года назад +10

    The level of consideration here is outstanding. You can tell there's a standard of excellence (and a lot of pressure) to be efficient and deliberate

    • @MikeGubisch
      @MikeGubisch 2 года назад

      why does that matter

    • @fitforfreelance
      @fitforfreelance 2 года назад

      @@MikeGubisch it won't matter to everyone. I think it's an inspiring note to success - pay attention and do things with intention

    • @MikeGubisch
      @MikeGubisch 2 года назад +1

      @@fitforfreelance i was making a joke haha

  • @golda3760
    @golda3760 2 года назад +3

    Yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was MEANINGLESS, a chasing after the wind; NOTHING was gained under the sun. Then I turned my thoughts to consider wisdom, and also madness and folly. - Solomon

    • @eze3572
      @eze3572 11 месяцев назад

      Life under the sun is such..

  • @jamaalmillen
    @jamaalmillen Год назад +2

    I came across your channel yesterday and have been binge watching your content… great stuff man! You don’t miss!

  • @serranoblake
    @serranoblake 2 года назад +16

    So refreshing to hear this. I swear I think the same way as Alex and I'm not nearly as good as breaking it down. Thanks bro 💪

    • @JPLAviation
      @JPLAviation 2 года назад

      I felt this hard, similar journey as Alex for me

  • @theluckshow9617
    @theluckshow9617 2 года назад +7

    Alex kept it gangsta with them and they didn’t know how to respond. Priceless. 😂

  • @dakota7763
    @dakota7763 2 года назад +4

    Makes complete sense, you choose to judge things and give them a bias, now you either created an infatuation or a resentment, you've just created a way for yourself to suffer because you only suffer in two ways.. when you perceive youre gaining what you resent or losing what your infatuated. you have to reach neutrality to be able to control your actions and command yourself, true freedom is when you do what you want regardless of your emotions. dont judge, be objective, neutralise the bias neutralise the emotion.

  • @macraeolinger
    @macraeolinger Год назад

    Just stared listening. GREAT stuff. Matches well with Steve Pressfield's 'Do the Work'.

  • @mikemccarthy6719
    @mikemccarthy6719 2 года назад +1

    In regards to his comments about estate planning I find his perspective interesting and odd. I imagine most people do estate planning aren't thinking of 500 generations out into the future and realizing that in the grand scheme of things it won't have an impact on that 500th generation. I would think most people think about their children, the humans that they're responsible for and how the assets they've accrued might help them to pursue a life of moral, intellectual, and spiritual contemplation. Aristotle talks about this that the purpose of society is to work collectively to alleviate our burdens so that we have the chance to pursue the intellectual life.
    It's interesting that he takes the perspective that if his impact would be diluted over 500 generations that his actions are ultimately meaningless. So if hypothetically he was emperor of the world and his actions were impact his family for a thousand generations then his assests would have significance?

  • @kalushaajohnson202
    @kalushaajohnson202 Год назад +1

    Wow! I usually don't comment but this is very very "triggering" belief and profound! You just changed my whole perspective of my belief. What a great way to live life! Many thanks to you Alex for sharing your belief.

  • @derekwhittom1639
    @derekwhittom1639 Год назад +1

    You make excellent quality points. Very stoic. What is a life worth leading? Subject to interpretation. Why does this matter to me? Maybe it doesn’t.
    I try to think orthogonally, and I see so many people doing things because it’s what we’re supposed to do. I do the same, we all do, and often times we don’t even realize we’re playing out our cultural context or our biology without real intention.

  • @Gameboob
    @Gameboob 2 года назад +5

    I intuitively rejected his idea but when you reflect on it there seems to be valid points on both sides.
    I think it fundamentally comes down to this: *Humans understand the world through their culture.* Cultural values can differ widely and substantially, so the same experience in one culture could be traumatic and in another culture could be normal. But that doesn't mean that the event wasn't traumatic for the person who says it was. And that's *because* humans understand the world through their culture.
    The same thing that makes Alex's point true also makes it false.
    We know that nothing is traumatic (or stressful) in and of itself, but that doesn't mean one can't get traumatized.
    That's why those who experience trauma do need to process it. They need to process it to understand that Alex is right. They don't *need* to be traumatized because they experienced that event.

  • @thomasrial4444
    @thomasrial4444 Год назад +4

    That podcast helped me form a lot of my opinions of how I look at the world and was definitely impactful for me and honestly I’ve been living better sense.
    So thank you for putting your thoughts out there for others to help form their own.

  • @CaseyBurnsInvesting
    @CaseyBurnsInvesting 2 года назад +13

    Nice segment my man. Definitely agree, your beliefs should serve you and nothing is permanent.

  • @perrywinkle5000
    @perrywinkle5000 2 года назад +2

    I disagree with Alex on this one. Trauma 500 years ago and trauma now was still trauma. Our brains 500 years ago processed that trauma 500 the same way it does now, it's just that 500 years ago the results of that trauma (in the form of things like destructive behavior) may have had you labeled as possessed or a demon, a witch or something else. Or you died before the consequences of the trauma could be felt or the society just accepted your behavior as "normal" doesn't mean it wasn't trauma. I mean it took humans until Vietnam to start to really comprehend PTSD. 1000 years ago it still existed, they just didn't understand it. It's not trauma because we think of it as trauma, it's trauma because it actually has a negative effect on your entire life and the biological, mental and emotional processes of your brain and it's of no fault of your own. You can't just will it away, you need to get actual help.

    • @dna8269
      @dna8269 2 года назад

      Agreed, and 500 years is a comically short amount of time. People were definitely mourning the loss of a parent in 1522.

  • @itsjosephhenry
    @itsjosephhenry 2 года назад +2

    Alex hormozi, owner of the thinnest office in America

  • @ZMartinW
    @ZMartinW 2 года назад +1

    Alex, just found your channel. I've been an avid follower and practitioner of stoicism for over a year, and see many parallels to the ideas you've discussed. It's all about separating the internal from the external. Aligning with oneself is all that really matters.

  • @Safe_TX
    @Safe_TX 2 года назад +6

    I started listening because of this interview! Really helps hearing your points and appreciate the experiences you share. You’re reaching people, so please don’t stop sharing.

    • @Laercio3M
      @Laercio3M 2 года назад

      Where is the full interview?

  • @JacquiMwangi
    @JacquiMwangi 2 года назад +2

    the chips going back to the table when we die really struck me. awesome Alex

  • @scottmoseley5122
    @scottmoseley5122 Год назад

    I am new to Alex and love his insights. I feel he is genuine and brilliant beyond words. As a long time Christian and recently back in the faith I'd love to hear Alex discuss his views with other Christian apologists. Not in a debate format where each is trying to prove something but in thoughtful conversation. From his discussion I don't get his false binary argument against Xtianity. Once one accepts Christ that work is done and the Holy Spirit takes control as far as you yield. There is no binary of believing with a greater amount of power or not. Remember in Christian Theology its God who chooses you not the other way around and your belief is magnified by His power not your own. Man cannot save himself. Prayers your way Alex and Leila on your ROAD. And Thank you.

  • @matheson7156
    @matheson7156 2 года назад +20

    The economic hardship, recession, unemployment and the loss of job caused by covid pandemic is enough to push people into financial ventures. Summer is here again with lots of activities to be enjoyed. Well, I'm taking a trip into investing because I lost so much during this pandemic. Multi creation of wealth is the best strategy to ensure financial sustainability..

    • @theresawagar4524
      @theresawagar4524 2 года назад

      *It requires money to make money this is the best secert I have ever heard we don’t make money we make multiple money.*

    • @maxgoodchild6111
      @maxgoodchild6111 2 года назад

      I’ve been trading crypto with Mr Dawkins Morrissey for over a year now and I've made about a whooping profit of $86,000 in crypto its not much but I'm ok with the progress since i now make a whole lot from the comfort of my bed.

    • @maryellis1165
      @maryellis1165 2 года назад

      @Michelle Noah Please 🙏 tell me how i can contact Mr Dawkins Morrissey I've lost alot of money trying to trade on my own😭

    • @maryellis1165
      @maryellis1165 2 года назад

      @Michelle Noah Thank you for this. I just looked him up on google and impressed with the information I came across. Will definitely reach out to him. Thanks again 😊😊

    • @paulwalter9516
      @paulwalter9516 2 года назад

      Take it from one who has it and buy a house in Missouri and dream Wrangler with forex trade profits. I started with Mr Dawkins Morrissey of financial education and he has been my handler and guider for the past years

  • @UldisBiz
    @UldisBiz Год назад

    Here's a question that puzzles me all the time... I love my wife so much which also means I deeply care a lot about what she thinks of me... obviously, it's not always just positive... which leads to drama, me feeling hurt, me probably overreacting etc... I've had periods where I choose not to care. No drama, more peace at home. Problem solved? But then we end up pretty much not having relationships... at least not intimate, caring, loving relationships, just a co-existence... it's like a direction towards a divorce. If you care, you live in pain. If you don't - you pretty much don't even live together. Any advice would be appreciated.

  • @ThinkAMillDrae
    @ThinkAMillDrae 2 года назад +10

    It's just amazing to see Alex just come out of nowhere and literally take over the investing space on youtube. People who have been influencers for years cannot stand with this guy.

    • @richardfain3428
      @richardfain3428 2 года назад

      Thanks for watching
      Hit me up there ☝️☝️.
      There are profitable nods and patterns I’d love to show you

  • @Maxime_K-G
    @Maxime_K-G 8 месяцев назад

    7:12 From here it gets really good. I too can get a lot of drive out of existentialism when framed like that. When you talk about the piece of land, and how futile our legacies really are, that's really eye-opening!

  • @RichardDuryea
    @RichardDuryea 2 года назад +1

    Good advice. But it’s also good to know what your limits are.

  • @HopeAbigailDayan
    @HopeAbigailDayan Год назад

    Trauma comes from not expecting something bad to happen, and not having a framework to understand it when it happens. That is why some people experience one situation as trauma, and other people do not.

  • @ahocka
    @ahocka Год назад

    Trauma is when you experience flashbacks. When you freeze or yell and scream over something that appears small. Your brain ruminates, and your body shakes, and you re-experience the situation all over again. Trauma is lifelong torture. Yoga, meditation, EMDR, mindfulness, healthy living, and good friends help, but it never goes away. It is part of your life forever, no matter what you do.

  • @yesyoucanquilt
    @yesyoucanquilt Год назад +3

    I’m honored to live in a time that Alex and Leila live!

  • @Carlos-Saldana
    @Carlos-Saldana 2 года назад +3

    This is exactly how I think and you Alex, are the first person I’ve heard talk about the world the way I view it. I grew up catholic and then went non-denominational Christian and then had my years of thinking of what you talked about and now I view the world completely different. It’s so awesome and liberating that I’m not the only one that thinks this way!

  • @jonathonjoyner7326
    @jonathonjoyner7326 2 года назад +4

    Best upswell of watching his videos is “I have nothing to sell you” makes me want to watch his videos more. Love it.

  • @j.o6885
    @j.o6885 2 года назад +3

    Like I always say...be very careful for the things you choose to care about..there is real power in that choice

  • @Emilio0587
    @Emilio0587 2 года назад +3

    Hahaha that’s awesome and a very good perspective. Money doesn’t matter because you eventually die and it goes back to the game. Then you can really figure what makes you happy in life.

  • @opaidios
    @opaidios 2 года назад +1

    Fucking powerful. Biologically this is similar to Epi genetics & the perception of stimuli being more impactful than the stimuli itself.

  • @brotherjosie8432
    @brotherjosie8432 2 года назад +1

    I disagree with certain aspects of what Alex says, but his openness is what makes him such a compelling thinker and speaker. He admits that even some of his statements are beliefs statements. Amazing self awareness and you can tell he thinks deeply before ever uttering a word

  • @MB1z
    @MB1z 2 года назад +1

    What he has created for himself is a meaningless unhappy life. Choosing to seek your own pleasure over others is what destroys families and society. Having these emotions and empathy and love for others is what makes us human and the reason we were made by God. Taking that away, you become an uncaring animal with no joy no happiness just so you don't feel the hurt and pain of life. Which is all still there covered up inside.

  • @foreverkazi7748
    @foreverkazi7748 2 года назад +1

    Alex the insane focus and hunger in these thumbnails are killing me 😂 great job

  • @dennis-theguyfromitaly9787
    @dennis-theguyfromitaly9787 2 года назад +2

    The Casino of life is a great analogy, I love it. Every time, when you bring it out, I remember how life isn’t all about getting money.

  • @tonygagliardotto3232
    @tonygagliardotto3232 2 года назад +1

    Beard looking crispy as fuck

  • @Timi1111
    @Timi1111 2 года назад +1

    Basic question to ask myself is why does it matter and what does it matter? It's really freeing.

  • @investornabil8825
    @investornabil8825 2 года назад +2

    Totally true. “Everything is opinion.” -Marcus Aurelius
    That’s why it’s important to reinterpret your experiences and give them positive meaning.

  • @unclezizo
    @unclezizo 2 года назад +2

    Alex, you are so wise and mature for your age. Thank you for sharing!

  • @RickWilliamTV
    @RickWilliamTV Год назад +1

    Is a rational argument, however that’s not how trauma works nor is it how trauma is stored in the mind or body. Alex you give great business advice, not healing advice.

  • @wealthedge
    @wealthedge 10 месяцев назад

    Daaaaamn, Alex quoting Orson Scott Card, nice. Ender’s Game FTW

  • @user-wk1wc6jr3x
    @user-wk1wc6jr3x 8 месяцев назад

    For a guy that no longer believes in Christianity, he gave a good summary of the book of Ecclesiastes.

  • @marcellaarieta7009
    @marcellaarieta7009 2 года назад

    Awareness and freewill. Alex comes from the mountain top all is possible!

  • @leelaffan3925
    @leelaffan3925 2 года назад +3

    I found you a few days ago and I'm glad I did. Not through Graham, but you have helped myself and a lot of people. Thank you

    • @richardfain3428
      @richardfain3428 2 года назад

      Thanks for watching
      Hit me up there ☝️☝️
      There are profitable nods and patterns I’d love to show you..

  • @WestGeorgiaTiger
    @WestGeorgiaTiger 2 года назад +3

    Alex, great conversation. I just wanted to throw one idea out there regarding your background (Christianity/Apologetics)... I totally get where you are coming from in terms of good vs bad or belief vs unbelief as false binaries. I have wrestled with these notions as well. But, it seems to me that Jesus himself dealt with this same false binary. He was accused by the religious leaders of hanging out with the unclean and blasphemy etc... which I see is ultimately being an accusation of "not believing enough" or in that same vein at minimum. And Jesus constantly defied those accusers... as if to say, that isn't the correct way (way of being). His disciples weren't the types who were measuring the "amount" of their beliefs or other's beliefs, and those are the people Jesus befriended. So, doesn't the question come back to ... who was Jesus? Is he the Truth, the Life, the Way? Or not? And if he is, then isn't the false binary you mention merely a prominent failure of humanity rather than a reflection that Jesus/God isn't who He is?

  • @jaredholland3563
    @jaredholland3563 2 года назад +2

    I just love that line, I have nothing to sell you... Kinda makes me want to buy something from him, probably why his so successful hmmm... His just authentic

  • @FinancialFreedomMadeSimple
    @FinancialFreedomMadeSimple 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge Alex.

  • @sagenosnibor9173
    @sagenosnibor9173 Год назад

    I don’t agree with everything he says but I do respect that he can clearly articulate they why behind his stances.
    It doesn’t sound emotion based or regurgitated from some other wealthy guru. It comes off thought provoking, genuine, and from personal experience and a non biased perspective.
    Keep being cool 👍🏾

  • @ziprun2005
    @ziprun2005 2 года назад +1

    Alex, by chance if you read these, your podcast w/Graham was an amazing look into your mental framework. Incredible stuff to chew on.

  • @potatodog7910
    @potatodog7910 Год назад +2

    I’ve been having some similar thoughts but this was so well articulated, epic 😎

  • @albongo3949
    @albongo3949 2 года назад +1

    So true though you do always give it back to the middle. The land the car the house the moment might be yours or not but the earth keeps spinning

  • @solitario8993
    @solitario8993 Год назад +1

    HOW DID YOU COME ACROSS THAT QUOTE BY Orson Scott Card ?? im interested to know what type of open-minded books you can reccomend.

  • @stephymeissenheimer-foster8169
    @stephymeissenheimer-foster8169 2 года назад

    The point is…do you know nothing matters while at the same time everything matters….it’s a question of how they matter and why…

  • @BobbyLuce
    @BobbyLuce 2 года назад +1

    Alex Hormozi first off I have mad respect for what you have accomplished and what you are continuously doing with your valuable content.
    You have spoken about your growth with the mentoring of Russell Brunson and I'm curious if you have considered mentoring with Jay Abraham?

  • @ChadandHollyOckstadt
    @ChadandHollyOckstadt 2 года назад +3

    So the only part I'm not sure on is the part about trauma not effecting us if we don't choose to make it mean that.
    Our subconscious is a meaning making machine and sometimes we as kids make meaning out of things and that causes beliefs we are not aware of..
    Their are people who have had "terrible " things happen to them when they are kids and they have no memories for several years.
    This subconsciously runs the show with out us knowing.
    I agree it's our responsibility to become aware of these things and until you realize this is even a thing you can't do the work..

  • @deadeyejac
    @deadeyejac 2 года назад

    I need elaboration/clarification. @7:43 you say I don't think about what makes me happy vs. unhappy. Then at @7:53 you say those are things that you enjoy.

  • @yusufshafie8951
    @yusufshafie8951 2 года назад +2

    This is good. We give meanings to what mean to us.

  • @traceyhilder3426
    @traceyhilder3426 2 года назад +2

    I really enjoyed this video Alex as a born again Christian & going through life you have a humble great beliefs that matter in life to you very thankful

  • @user-ey6gy9vn9m
    @user-ey6gy9vn9m 3 месяца назад

    I disagree.
    Because I cannot explain in words what I went through. Not to you. Not to my therapist. And the worst part is, it's something that society doesn't even deem to be trauma. People around me tell me it happens to everybody, it's normal, etc.
    Then why did it tear me to pieces?
    It's like glitching. I glitch. I can't fuction the way normal people do because that "event" (although I can barely remember it. All I feel is ENORMOUS sense of dread. But this much is certain. SOMETHING did happen.) broke my identity so totally, I can't go back anymore.
    I mourn, not somebody else, but who I was.
    During the fifteen days it lasted, my parents told me they literally thought I was going to die. I had lost 10 kgs, I was lying in my bed, completely broken, afraid to move, and afraid to think. They told me the same thing you are saying now. That trauma is something which we construct and label.
    The problem is, I could never label this feeling. I can't describe it to anyone. During my 2 months stay at healthcare insititute, the only way I could communicate it was through abstraction, poetry and what not.
    The only way is to IGNORE it. But that's a 24/7 job.
    Those fifteen days still echo in my mind.
    And I know they are not ending. Ever.
    The very writing of this comment makes me feel that dread that means a bad week is ahead. But I've got to say this, because SOMEONE may be suffering from what I did, and blaming themselves.
    I can't blame you for being insensitive. After all, before my problem, I would have agreed with you and told you what a smart guy you are.
    I can only hope it never happens to you, or anyone you love.
    Or even anyone you hate.
    Sorry Alex,
    I think you're 99% right. Perhaps you never felt this feeling.
    But I disagree.

  • @ivaldisako
    @ivaldisako 2 года назад +2

    Man! I know I already Watched the Podcast but I still love watching these again haha

  • @licitahoy_rd
    @licitahoy_rd 2 года назад +1

    You need to add these videos to spotify ASAP, great content

  • @renegadestate6924
    @renegadestate6924 2 года назад +1

    My friend! I sent Leila an email that I didn’t edit and address to her, rookie move from a rookie, but I would love to talk with both of you about my plan to save SF combat vets. Love yall

  • @tdoc9530
    @tdoc9530 2 года назад +5

    Did you come to this through your own self reflection and study? I agree with what you are saying. Just curious how you came to this because maybe there is a way I can program myself to get in that space to change normal thinking.

    • @tdoc9530
      @tdoc9530 2 года назад +1

      Disregard.....got too excited and messaged too early

  • @cking509
    @cking509 2 года назад +1

    I don't think you gave a good example. Just because something was once considered 'normal' culturally doesn't mean that it wasn't traumatic to the person involved at the time. The lense through which you perceive something affects meaning/beliefs around it, sure. But many things considered 'normal' throughout history were just as abhorrent at the time as they are now. Something being 'normal' doesn't mean that people didn't suffer.

  • @cryptkeeper5346
    @cryptkeeper5346 2 года назад +5

    I Lost my dad brother and mom and struggled my whole life. You may be crossing the bridge of some shit u have no idea about. Just because your successful does not mean your the know all or feel all.

    • @ignaciodominguez5577
      @ignaciodominguez5577 2 года назад +7

      "Just because your successful does not mean your the know all or feel all." Literally during the last minute he disclaims that for people like you

    • @Happy-zw9nv
      @Happy-zw9nv 2 года назад +2

      @@ignaciodominguez5577 Look at his title and his description. (Both major reasons a person clicks on a video and learns what its about.) The last minute of his video doesn't make up for what he is trying to teach on for the entire video before that. Trauma isn't a mindset.

    • @cryptkeeper5346
      @cryptkeeper5346 2 года назад +1

      @@ignaciodominguez5577 I didn’t make it that far sorry after the bullshit I heard I couldn’t take anymore. I met a person like that at a job one time. Said life is what u make it and insisted that no matter where u were or what had happened to you .
      He Was a non believer of Christ which is fine that’s your choice. Also didn’t care about death Of a close one didn’t matter to him.
      In my eyes that’s as selfish as anyone can ever become. Nothing mattered but “his “ happiness and he wouldn’t let anything at all take that away from him. Does that make you mentally strong or just a piece of shit…..

  • @successsystem2468
    @successsystem2468 2 года назад +1

    After the 500th generation chips cashed comments, Hormozi has confirmed himself as the best business guru out there. Mind blown. 👏

  • @stevef6523
    @stevef6523 Год назад

    Alex, I like to think that I'm a smart guy. I'm not even a shadow compared to you. You blow my mind. You keep rewriting how I THINK! Not just give me food for thought, but physically changing how I think. I'm in shock, again. Thank you for sharing, always share. Please

  • @princelyadiele-nzewa668
    @princelyadiele-nzewa668 2 года назад

    You have logistically broken down the law of duality and how everything is a measurement of 2 polls and never just one. Namaste & Fulfillment 🙏

    • @richardfain3428
      @richardfain3428 2 года назад

      Thanks for watching
      Hit me up there ☝️☝️
      There are profitable nods and patterns I’d love to show you...

  • @Cmyztry
    @Cmyztry 2 года назад +1

    Eckhart Tolle's book 'A New Earth' Awakening Your Life's Purpose is a very good ready on this topic. You own nothing. It was here long b4 you and stays long after.
    Another fun fact is energy is never created or destroyed.
    You could've been part of a tree, or a dinosaur before.
    We're all made up of the stars!

  • @B3ASTM0DE92
    @B3ASTM0DE92 2 года назад +1

    I’m inspired by listening to Alex. I was successful badly as I want to breath.

  • @Noumenon4Idolatry
    @Noumenon4Idolatry Год назад +1

    There is usually a part, of ourselves, that perceives things happen to us at effect. These things are usually found recorded in the subconscious mind or ego.
    So like let’s say your teacher used to pick on you as a kid so you felt stupid and angry or hated the teacher or school and you had some thought like education is for losers or I’m a stupid ahole…that you might carry with you in your subconscious mind for a lifetime. Mostly because you forgot about it and you don’t know it’s there. Later in life you might notice you are having a problem focusing or learning things and have no idea it’s because of some idea tought feeling emotion experience you had in the past. If you can consciously change your mind about the past then it won’t effect you. If you have no idea it’s there your mind can still effect yovpresent even if it happened in the past.
    The ideas and thoughts you had about life and yourself or others and this world can and will efffct your future from the past. The mind is very powerful. Trauma can be powerful but it’s usually your perception of what happened to you and how you view yourself that matters. That’s sometimes what makes therapy powerful. Change your mind change your life.

  • @natedavidoff668
    @natedavidoff668 2 года назад +2

    Invalidating trauma, I don’t agree with your view of this but it sounds like you are passionate about that belief. We are animals fundamentally and the body responds to stress and represses what it can’t handle. People get ptsd after war. It is clinically observable and can’t be dismissed away by logic. Kids that are molested have that effect them their whole life. It is real trauma not a cultural definition.

    • @rise7056
      @rise7056 Год назад

      am I really going to take this guy seriously bro do you even look at the mirror

    • @natedavidoff668
      @natedavidoff668 Год назад

      @@rise7056 come at me bro

  • @hoseaderricklal
    @hoseaderricklal 2 года назад +2

    8:10 I literally just developed this mindset and I'm grateful I looked at this here

    • @richardfain3428
      @richardfain3428 2 года назад

      Thanks for watching
      Hit me up there ☝️☝️
      There are profitable nods and patterns I’d love to show you...

  • @ThomasGoldstepFinance
    @ThomasGoldstepFinance 2 года назад +1

    Recently found your channel and love your systemic approach! Thanks for sharing your wisdom - I'm going to binge watch all of your videos today! All the best

  • @sprinklelovetulloss5562
    @sprinklelovetulloss5562 2 года назад +2

    Oh my goodness. I have always felt like a black sheep in the family for thinking this way. Not totally everything you think but close. Thanks for sharing