Hello you savages. Get a free list of my 100 favourite books - chriswillx.com/books/ Here’s the timestamps: 00:00 Control Freak Or High Standards? 14:48 How People Get Older Without Getting Better 22:00 Don’t Be Worried About People Who Imitate Your Work 26:58 The Cost of Being Exceptional 42:39 Differences Between Fame & Respect 50:12 The Key to Authenticity 59:50 The Power of Imperfect Action 1:09:23 Be Careful to Not Over-Optimise 1:18:29 How to React When You’re Insulted 1:31:09 Can People Actually Get Cancelled? 1:38:41 The Price of Strong Character 1:43:32 How to Know When to Quit 1:50:48 Everything Worth Doing is Hard 2:06:46 Don’t Expect People to Root for You 2:16:25 How to Find Your Passion 2:36:19 Admit You Suck, Then Improve 2:43:41 Be in a Good Mood for No Reason 3:00:19 It’s Normal to Not Know What You’re Doing 3:12:59 What’s Next for Alex
@ghlibisk679 ай бұрын
The quote about art for yourself is from Rick Rubin.
@silvzadvice9 ай бұрын
Alex Hormozi: Hard Truths To FIX Your Life - Full Episode (4K)
@cjlrocker12389 ай бұрын
Love you Chris.
@breakoutgaffe40279 ай бұрын
Yo can you ask LMNT to start shipping to EU mate instead of teasing us with inaccessible life hacks 😂 🙏
@GeraldBirkett8 ай бұрын
@ChrisWillx When is NOMATIC coming to Australia is there any future plans for it to be distributed here. Cheers only 5 mins in this video and already resonates with me so much as someone that wants to do it right the first time.
@Suitrags9 ай бұрын
When Chris and Alex chat I feel I can run through drywall in search of the enemy. I’m then faced with the realisation the enemy is within. Thank you 🙏🏻
@meomeo56189 ай бұрын
word
@onthepathtofreedom9 ай бұрын
Bars
@abramhutauruk44129 ай бұрын
preach
@wallace245ful9 ай бұрын
Bro. You are exactly right
@Rae19991009 ай бұрын
Beautiful
@thejordanlee_9 ай бұрын
One of the best podcasts I've ever watched. Some key takeaways: - State the facts and tell the truth on what you do - Pay the price, you can’t have strong character and an easy life - People only root for people who don’t need it - The things your not willing to give up is what the person your competing against will, and thats why they will beat you. - When making decisions, make them based on the down side.. choose your problems instead of looking at the upsides - Theres no return policy on respect. Don''t chase views and be cringe, stay true to you If you don’t change the behaviour, you LEARNED NOTHING. Go make shit happen ;)
@enescohuntejr9 ай бұрын
Thank you. I took notes. I feel a little more comfy dropping mine.
@G-MIP9 ай бұрын
Do you remember the documentary name Chris mentioned that was on Netflix?
@SunnyWinterz9 ай бұрын
@@G-MIPYes I believe it was called Teletubbies
@ssyejo9 ай бұрын
Thankyou man
@joeydomhof64809 ай бұрын
100% man, about the realest talk I have ever seen/heard. I think I got more from this than from dozens of books combined.
@PeterBarber9 ай бұрын
I almost didn't watch this because I thought, "hmmm, I've already seen about 10 hours of these two wonderful lads chatting -- probably not much new on this one." Absolutely my favorite one yet, and probably the most valuable. Keep it up, gentlemen - this is truly excellent dialogue.
@antonyshadowbanned9 ай бұрын
I had the exact same experience!
@BusinessWolf16 ай бұрын
I re-listen to these because there's always new understanding to gain from it
@Nyumc992 ай бұрын
Well said. I slow it to .75 speed .,I can absorb their free knowledge and life experiences better at that speed. I’m male and 60 just. We all have different expectations from our lives. We are all on the same space , time continuum though. If we can work at making a wonderful life inevitable, just as we consider our passing as inevitable, then … ? Over to you x
@ChristianLeFer13 күн бұрын
How profound it is to be alive today so that at 55 I can listen to aeons of wisdom I became awakened to hear at 46, while deep cleaning my house in the excitement of gearing up for the adventure of the next 55 years.
@MilesMcCurtain109 ай бұрын
To those here looking for growth: don’t dismiss the number of pauses they both take before answering
@tamasdavidledeczki51828 ай бұрын
That is the untold hidden lesson
@opeonas58177 ай бұрын
Like they are actually thinking before they talk. It's no regular kind of conversation !
@kahayse7 ай бұрын
I kept looking down at my phone...is it buffering, did I lose the signal, why aren't they talking?
@ericrathjens88475 ай бұрын
Facts!!
@shaikhnaumanshaukat56212 ай бұрын
@@kahaysesame I had my bluetooth earphones on in the washroom and it suddenly paused, I was furious but then got startled😅
@AnandDattaniPodcast9 ай бұрын
I've never paused, rewinded and relistened to an episode so much. This 3 hour episode is quickly turning into 9 hours.
@Blackjacktmde9 ай бұрын
Right!😂
@rumeerhikparowho86698 ай бұрын
Stray Bullet 😂
@pressurebeats35588 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 omg so spectacular 🫢🤣
@gaopalelwemolekoa94148 ай бұрын
Same!!!!!😢😢😢
@lfcfanfromcanada7 ай бұрын
same
@tehbarbour9 ай бұрын
More talks like this needs to happen. NO BS. Just two men shooting the "shit" whilst giving advice and speaking on the life lessons they have learned. I am a fan. Thanks Chris and Alex.
@ChristoScriven9 ай бұрын
After over 10 years on self-improvement, the number one thing I’ve come to understand is that I am most disciplined, strong, fulfilled, loving, and present, when everything I do is an expression of a healthy self worth. I have nothing to prove, not even to myself. I realise that I am worthy of my own honour and respect, and that of others. If I’m not treating myself in the best way to honour the highest side of myself, or I’m allowing others to treat me badly, then something is off. I honour the passions and purposes I feel called toward by diligently working toward them. I work on myself everyday and reap the rewards, not because I need to so I can feel good about myself, but because guess what, I’m worth it. I deserve to be happy, healthy and prosperous, so do you.
@dustinstout55279 ай бұрын
This puts into words things I'm not smart enough to explain. 8 years into self improvement and from a man who spent 40+ years in utter disappoint with my life to a man who feels great about himself in the ways you just said. No longer do I have to prove I'm a good man... I know I'm a way better man than I was. I'm a way better husband, father, employee than I ever thought possible and it's so fulfilling to me. To be respected now where I wasn't respectable and to be able to give myself honest affirmation is the best feeling in the world, but I'm not stopping here. These podcasts have humbled me and shown me that there's a 3.0 a 5.0 and a 5.0 man inside me and having seen the benefits of the work I've already done it just makes me more driven to continue. Congratulations my friend on your success.
@ChristoScriven9 ай бұрын
@@dustinstout5527it’s all the more encouraging to hear others not only identify with realisations that I’ve had, but to hear the transformations that have happened in their own lives too. Keep aiming up my friend!
@tshepoboyceemaphane96489 ай бұрын
Both your comments inspire me,am in the middle of nowhere right now but i know ill get there,i come from a very dysfunctional family,i lost my dad at 12 years old and things were never the same since,my mum is still alive but both my parents never went to school so i didn't know things like financial literacy,i grew up with so many limiting beliefs and low self esteem..but last year January i just started motivational videos on KZbin and came across the term "personal development" and this is the best thing that has ever happened to me,i never used to read but now i read 1 book a week,and i watch so many podcasts on personal development..and i can tell am a different man these days and soon it will show by my results..
@User-5amk1m09 ай бұрын
I disagree with one point from all the beautiful recognizations you presented. I believe we all have to prove thing’s to ourselves. Success is never owned. It is rented. And the rent is due everyday. That’s what self-improvement is, proving each day that you are worth it… to yourself. Whatever your proof needs to be.
@IamNotMyTrauma9 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. 😊
@VICTORJIMENEZ-yw1xb9 ай бұрын
You know what I most like about Alex and Chris’ conversations, they both listen to one other and let the other speak their thoughts out
@gaming4life5519 ай бұрын
Of course, it's because they're lovers 😂
@MaitLember9 ай бұрын
Insights on achieving high standards, perseverance, and the impact of volume on success. 00:11 High standards are not control freak behavior, but a desire for excellence. 00:11 Striving for excellence can lead to loneliness, but it's necessary to bring new ideas into reality. 00:35 Great achievements come from relentless pursuit of one's vision despite criticism. 01:36 Excellence is achieved through attention to countless details and continuous improvement. 02:35 Creating for oneself often resonates with others, leading to impactful work. 03:34 Repetition and attention to detail are key to achieving mastery and world-class status. 05:13 Conforming to mediocrity diminishes the competitive advantage and impact of one's work. 07:04 Perfectionism should be focused on areas of highest contribution to avoid hindering progress. 09:29 Increasing volume of work can compensate for ignorance and lead to discovering what works. 12:14 Volume of work negates the need for luck and can lead to success through sheer perseverance. 13:33 💡 Insights on learning, creativity, and business iteration from Alex Hormozi. 13:52 Learning requires changing behavior in new conditions. 13:52 Volume of experience gives perspective for improvement. 14:09 Repeated exposure doesn't guarantee learning; it's about changing behavior. 14:09 Repeating the same mistake without change is not learning. 14:52 Copying others' work lacks the understanding of the underlying reasons. 22:06 Learning involves understanding the 'why' behind actions, not just the 'what'. 22:06 Successful innovation comes from understanding and iterating on the 'why'. 23:25 Testing and iterating are crucial for business improvement. 24:01 Presume winning in the details by understanding the system dynamics. 26:02 💡 Insights on embracing individuality, self-acceptance, and overcoming social conformity to achieve exceptional results. 26:17 Embracing individuality and self-acceptance leads to exceptional results. 26:17 Being unapologetically oneself may lead to external conflict, but internal fulfillment. 27:01 Most people have the potential to be exceptional by embracing their peculiarities. 28:07 Accepting one's peculiarities early in life leads to self-acceptance and fulfillment. 30:01 Prioritizing internal conflict over external conflict leads to personal growth. 34:01 Valuing one's opinion of oneself over others' opinions is essential for embracing individuality. 38:39 💡 Insights on authenticity, fearlessness, and intentionalism in life and business. 40:15 Authenticity and true alignment of thoughts, words, and actions are key. 40:15 Overcoming fear and embarrassment through intentional actions. 40:46 Avoiding compromise for popularity and aligning with true beliefs. 43:00 The concept of intentionalism and essentialism in decision-making. 51:26 Seeking fearlessness and embracing consequences of failure as learning opportunities. 53:19 💡 Insights on prioritizing, sacrifice, and embracing imperfection for personal and professional growth. 54:12 Prioritize what you're willing to sacrifice for success. 54:12 Catastrophizing failure can be overcome by playing out the worst-case scenario. 54:17 Being unashamed of alternative options can alleviate fear of failure. 54:30 Facing fears can reveal they are not as daunting as imagined. 55:20 A personal story illustrates the test of courage in the face of adversity. 56:00 Choosing what to prioritize and what to sacrifice is essential for personal excellence. 56:29 Balancing priorities may require periods of imbalance for focused achievement. 1:02:23 Periodizing goals allows for dedicated focus without long-term commitment. 1:05:29 💡 Insightful life lessons on decision-making, optimization, relationships, and personal authenticity. 1:06:56 Making decisions involves considering both upsides and downsides. 1:06:56 Regret minimization is achieved by considering the negatives of unchosen paths. 1:07:21 Over-optimization can lead to stress and may hinder true living. 1:09:02 Being true to oneself is essential in attracting the right people. 1:17:02 Comfort in one's own skin, clear direction, and having fun are key traits of an attractive individual. 1:17:25 Insults only hurt if one believes in them; otherwise, they are irrelevant. 1:18:35 Murder is just picking when someone dies, so holding grudges is unnecessary. 1:19:21 🔑 Insights on handling insults, cancellation, and authenticity in the face of adversity. 1:20:10 Disregard for insults and focusing on personal growth is key to overcoming negativity. 1:20:10 Understanding the nature of insults and the decision to believe or disregard them. 1:20:25 Seeking authenticity to avoid having multiple personas and hidden truths. 1:21:47 Authenticity means having no secrets and being true to oneself. 1:24:22 The value of being genuine and transparent to attract genuine connections. 1:24:38 Recognizing the impact of false accusations on reputation and status. 1:26:43 Addressing attacks on character by being 10 times louder with positive actions. 1:27:10 Being louder with the truth is a powerful counter to false accusations. 1:28:09 Learning from experiences of being targeted and using them as opportunities for growth. 1:29:17 Coping with cancellation and misinformation by continuing to create content. 1:31:48 Cancellation only happens if you choose to stop communicating publicly. 1:32:02 🎯 Insights on decision-making, perseverance, and reframing challenges to achieve success and personal growth. 1:34:01 Challenges compound if one becomes a recluse and disassociates from others. 1:34:01 Embarrassing moments only become bigger problems if one agrees to the terms set by others. 1:34:29 Facing public humiliation with humor and self-acceptance can diminish its impact. 1:35:09 Reframing problems as evidence of progress on the chosen path can change one's perspective. 1:39:20 Reflecting on past challenges reveals their insignificance compared to present ones. 1:39:54 Reframing quitting as pivoting allows for continuous adaptation and growth. 1:43:41 💪 The journey to success is filled with challenges, but perseverance and passion are key to overcoming them and achieving greatness. 1:46:48 Success requires continuing to work without immediate results 1:46:48 The world belongs to those who persist in their efforts 1:46:54 The ability to persist without external validation leads to greater opportunities 1:47:00 Doing significant things takes time and persistence 1:47:09 The willingness to persist without positive feedback leads to easier opportunities 1:47:33 Doing the 'boring work' leads to significant success 1:48:56 Protecting passion and motivation is crucial for long-term success 1:51:21 The beginning of any endeavor is the hardest, but it gets easier with time and experience 1:57:12 Earning stripes and understanding every aspect of a task leads to a sense of nobility and competence 2:00:16 📚 Insights on success, perseverance, and self-improvement from Alex Hormozi's podcast. 2:01:25 Success is linked to the ability to see what others don't. 2:01:25 Experts have more feedback loops for success. 2:01:36 Focus on becoming the type of person who can endure hardships. 2:01:43 Futurecast the story you will tell about your struggles. 2:02:36 Be the hero of your own story and make decisions based on epic outcomes.
@MaitLember9 ай бұрын
Be the hero of your own story and make decisions based on epic outcomes. 2:04:13 The medium and the message are linked, affecting how people perceive the information. 2:07:17 People often follow established blueprints for safety, even if they have failed before. 2:09:08 Hard work and suffering can be justified by the eventual outcome. 2:12:37 The ends justifying the means is a slippery slope. 2:13:15 Influencer gifting can be elaborate, but simple, magical touches can be more impactful. 2:14:17 Success is ultimately linked to the quality of the product. 2:15:04 💡 Insightful lessons on achieving success through sacrifice, relentless focus, and ruthless prioritization. 2:15:12 Success requires sacrificing non-essential activities and focusing on high-impact tasks. 2:15:12 The 'too good to fail' mindset emphasizes the importance of excelling in one key area. 2:15:17 Focusing on excelling in a specific area can overshadow mediocrity in other aspects of life. 2:15:31 Identifying the one big thing that can make everything else irrelevant is crucial for success. 2:15:43 Creating passion involves starting with something you're not good at and gradually improving. 2:16:26 Monetizing a passion can lead to sacrificing the pure enjoyment of the activity. 2:19:04 Turning pro in a passion may require sacrificing personal time and leisure activities. 2:19:12 Prioritizing high-impact tasks based on their financial return is crucial for success. 2:23:24 Sacrificing non-essential activities creates space for focusing on what truly matters. 2:25:17 Subjective well-being is not determined by external circumstances but by internal mindset. 2:27:38 Victor Hugo's extreme dedication to his craft exemplifies the level of sacrifice required for success. 2:28:11 💡 Brutally honest insights on happiness, worthiness, and imposter syndrome, and the importance of accepting one's flaws and pursuing meaningful goals. 2:28:39 Happiness is not the ultimate goal in life, but rather doing epic and genuinely useful things. 2:28:39 Long-term joy comes from sacrificing for meaningful activities, rather than pursuing momentary happiness. 2:29:01 Obsession with happiness can lead to sadness and depression, prompting a shift towards focusing on doing meaningful things. 2:29:27 Accepting one's current state of happiness and relinquishing the desire to be 'happier' can lead to greater enjoyment of activities. 2:30:51 Divergent views on happiness: hedonic pleasure vs. meaning, influenced by one's disposition. 2:31:55 Permission to be unhappy, to suck, and to pursue exceptional goals, rather than conforming to societal expectations. 2:36:16 Imposter syndrome is a result of pretending to be something one is not, rather than embracing the journey of growth and learning. 2:38:52 State the facts and tell the truth, rather than fabricating success or worthiness, to gain genuine authority and respect. 2:41:55 💡 Insights on embracing truth, overcoming cynicism, and prioritizing peace of mind. 2:42:54 Embracing truth and stating the facts can lead to peace of mind and freedom. 2:42:54 Community is essential and cannot be automated, making it a hedge against automation. 2:43:10 Choosing a good mood over a bad mood can empower individuals to control their perception of work. 2:43:47 Cynicism is a short-term mindset that shields against betrayal and disappointment. 2:44:35 Cynical people may be seen as smarter, but cynicism is a substitute for intelligence. 2:47:06 Optimism is essential for achieving big goals, as cynicism only leads to short-term rightness. 2:50:01 Choosing peace of mind over viral trends or pleasing others is a higher standard, not a weakness. 2:53:39 Telling the truth in social settings can lead to freedom and self-acceptance. 2:56:28 💡 Insights on embracing truth, rejecting medication, and understanding trauma for personal growth. 2:57:57 Advocating for being comfortable with the truth and shedding social niceties 2:57:57 Embracing discomfort and uncertainty as catalysts for growth 2:57:57 Challenging the societal norm of always feeling happy and understood 3:01:13 Rejecting the idea of medication and overprescription of mental medication 3:01:39 Rejecting the if-then statement for happiness and the reliance on external conditions 3:02:00 Encouraging acceptance of reality and confronting problems rather than seeking a non-existent solution 3:04:54 Challenging the desire for character growth while seeking an easy life 3:06:43 Criticism of those who give advice without embodying the results themselves 3:07:45 Trauma as a punishing event leading to permanent behavior change 3:10:05 Defining trauma as accelerated learning and the need to create new conditions to change behavior 3:10:25 Addressing the mysticism and nonsensical beliefs in the 'woo woo' world 3:12:16 🎓 Entrepreneur Alex Hormozi discusses his investment in a platform to improve education and shares his views on the broken education system. 3:13:12 Alex Hormozi co-owns a platform focused on education and skill-building. 3:13:12 He believes the education system is broken and aims to make a positive impact. 3:13:30 Hormozi is investing in a platform to help others contribute to fixing the education system. 3:14:13 He emphasizes the importance of trading useful skills with one another.
@Jitin_mishraa3 ай бұрын
@@MaitLemberthanks man
@HeartlandFamilyDesigns7 ай бұрын
One of my personal quotes is 'I'd rather be hated for who I am than loved for who I'm not'
@Nicegirlsilver4 ай бұрын
False
@HeartlandFamilyDesigns4 ай бұрын
@@Nicegirlsilverwhy is that false?
@islamlardjane7110Ай бұрын
@@HeartlandFamilyDesigns i think I've heard that from an anime before ? i guess its Oregeru
@AmyRoss239 ай бұрын
The dynamic you two have is honestly amazing. You bounce off each other so well. Every podcast you do with Alex always leaves me with so much to think about. Thanks Chris 🙏🏻
@peacelily649 ай бұрын
1:17 yes my father told me as a child do things right the first time and you don’t have come back an fix or finish .. he was talking about washing the dishes to me as a 9 year old but that something I have remembered to do and have used that lesson in my life ✌🏻
@jaydenp4975Ай бұрын
That isn’t popular anymore. People from other generations had that belief.
@alexlavi36999 ай бұрын
Epic one! It took me a moment to realize what you do that is different from other podcasters, what makes you exceptional Chris here it is: - You ask excellent, yet succinct questions Chris - You HOLD the space for your guests to freely and completely express themselves - When you have something to add, it is very insightful, to the point and valid for the conversation (you don't make it about you). Thank you for being who and how you are and for allowing us to be part of it! 💗
@samunitt62168 күн бұрын
It's the pausing between speaking on both sides , gives you a couple seconds to think
@JayFriedrichs9 ай бұрын
I don’t think I can put into words how incredible this podcast episode is. At a time where I feel lost- I resonated with so much of this.
@noodlenate8 ай бұрын
❤. Same
@tooeztv7609 ай бұрын
Chris thank you for letting Alex be Alex by allowing him to reflect oh his past thoughts. A masterful exhibit of picking his mind so we can possess the gems of wisdom he possesses.
@jaijai11327 ай бұрын
Gandhi said “Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony". I love this definition because it suggests that happiness is not necessarily this euphoric feeling we chase nor is it a continuous construct. No person is always happy.
@Zencba2 ай бұрын
Its like happiness is when you're flowing in life, no ifs, buts, whys, whens. Just do and move forward.
@AdamRose-jb3qcАй бұрын
I've heard it said before that we shouldn't chase happiness, because happiness can easily be fleeting. Instead, we should be chasing contentment, not only because it's more achievable but it will last longer too
@GodWorksOut16 күн бұрын
If you are able to be content in 99% of situations, then what is happiness?
@AdamRose-jb3qc15 күн бұрын
@@GodWorksOut Happiness, to me at least, would be those moments when the contentment is overridden by true joy. Having a good laugh with close friends, sharing in something you love with someone else, etc. But like I said in my initial reply, those moments are fleeting, so it's best not to chase them and instead pursue contentment.
@thedaretodreampodcast9 ай бұрын
So many powerful takeaways. As somebody in those early stages of going for my dreams, it's often hard to discern if what I'm doing is right. But all you really gotta do is continue. Outlast the doubt, the fear, the uncertainty, and cherish the journey, as much as possible, every step of the way. "So many people waste all their time trying to solve a problem that is life, rather than living it.” - Hormozi This hit, so hard.
@noodlenate8 ай бұрын
No one has lived your life before. Keep your eyes and ears open, and refine your intuition! You're it.
@danialnadeem30138 ай бұрын
Likewise! Good luck to you!
@maxcuenca4579 ай бұрын
Preface I never comment on youtube videos. Alex Hormozi has become such a key peice of information very grateful for everything he does. But it is insane how much more wise he seems between three of the podcasts he has done with Chris. It blows my mind how much he grows in such short amount of times. I think I attack life at 100% everyday but I don't know how to change at the rate he is. It is insane.. Thanks for the pod I rewatch them constantly.
@G-MIP9 ай бұрын
Do you remember the documentary name Chris mentioned that was on Netflix?
@Soteb19 ай бұрын
This is thee most meditative episode, Chris. Thank you for embracing the still moments. There is nothing quiet about the silence you allow in this conversation!
@MoGamingMoProblems26 күн бұрын
What, you thought this was gonna be easy? No, easy would be giving up and settling. You wanna quit? Be my guest. But I know that’s not what you really want. I know who you want to be and I know who you are, and I know that you got this. So, keep moving forward!
@george46light9 ай бұрын
Alex is right about happiness. For years I tried to be happy. Made me miserable. Now I try to do what's right for me to do. I feel happy a lot of the time.
@jarvryan9 ай бұрын
38 Mins in, already one of the best conversations I've ever listened to on high standards and authenticity.
@radrazor13559 ай бұрын
Listening to them speak, I feel less alone in my life striving for what I want. My other mentors and coaches hit chords on the topics Alex and Chris dissect in these 3 episodes (the other two are part). I truly feel like I've gained them as part of my community that really do encourage me while also calling me out for not reaching for what I say I want. I'm grateful for their wisdom and their support through the webs. Thank you both, see you guys soon.
@Walkerxy6 ай бұрын
29 year old with cancer here, trust me. I understand the constant truth or death. I’ve almost died 4 times and was fully aware of it on 2 of those occasions feeling myself slip out of life. And knowing it happens to everyone eventually is not an ease to the fear because there’s so much I still want to do. The honest truth is we all know we are going to die but most of us don’t believe it. Like, it’s easier to be able to live without believing in your certain death. The hard part of dealing with shit like terminal cancer is you don’t just know you’re gunna die you have to believe it and believe it’s gunna happen soon. Which means accepting a loss of everything you wanted to do without ever having done any of it. Death is hard to accept man.
@sketchyschemes5 ай бұрын
wishing you a healthy life bro ♥
@samjmackenzie9 ай бұрын
"volume negates luck." thank you, Chris and Alex. another great episode
@EntrepreneurLaunchpad6 ай бұрын
Love that
@JonTo_6 ай бұрын
Good point if you are still trying out things. Then you have to just try what works and you will learn by that what is good. But i feel like they missed out on saying that when you know what you have to do, good quality will outperform volume with not so good quality. And in the first place looking on quality will outperform looking on pricing.
@Nicegirlsilver4 ай бұрын
@@JonTo_ Nothing you wrote applies
@JonTo_4 ай бұрын
@@Nicegirlsilver yes it does, people always think they should look on pricing and costs. Looking to improve quality in process will always automatically reduce cost. Maybe you are stuck in tayloristic thinking
@najibasma5 ай бұрын
That feeling when someone literally defines why you feel the way you feel, whilst others try to convince you not feel, or think, or do, because they aren’t willing to do even 1% more. But it’s all you know how to do.. This podcast is straight fire right from the beginning 👏🏻
@jacksonmcferron21289 ай бұрын
The idea that your own opinion and happiness with yourself is all that matters in your life hit hard for me. Thanks guys 🙏 .
@joaomadeira17709 ай бұрын
Yesterday my mother called me crazy, and not balanced to be at the computer working every day and I has so proud of my self to hear that. Thank you Alex and Chris
@Ross_Will9 ай бұрын
This episode is magical. I hope every young man sees this.
@fabulousnewt7703 ай бұрын
Or young woman.. women are being told a load of bull these days.
@theminddoula9 ай бұрын
I would pay a monthly subscription to hear these guys talk about Business and Life more often! Side note: a song I'm finding really motivational right now (sounds random but go listen and you'll see why) is Shakira's "Try Everything" I sing it with my kiddos, I'm raising them to be fearless in pursuit of their personal greatness :)
@Zencba2 ай бұрын
Thats song is uplifting 😅
@jhakkssh9 ай бұрын
I love how alex simplifies everything. I feel so enlightened and so fucking dumb at the same time.
@IamNotMyTrauma9 ай бұрын
😂😂😂You are so not alone!
@WESimmonsII9 ай бұрын
@#1: There's a branch of Air Force aircraft maintenance called 'Egress', they maintain the ejection seats and other critical parts of the aircraft (like the complex explosive chain that blows off the canopy during the ejection sequence) etc. I always loved their motto, "Works the first time, everytime!"
@michaela27063 ай бұрын
"Volume negates luck". Love this. A coach in a sport I'm studying says "Volume cures variance" ie the small variances off a perfectly accurate shot are cured by taking so many more shots that You score more points overall.
@whatsthemonsterbelowАй бұрын
This is the key to success👍
@alimhdi64346 ай бұрын
I have watched this conversation every day for more than a month and I am still watching it.
@Nicegirlsilver4 ай бұрын
Why
@BillAugersdca9 ай бұрын
Chris and Alex are a dynamic duo. This is some of the very best dialogue I've ever heard, and I'd wager ever recorded. No one can dispute Alex's business acumen, however his knowledge and understanding of real trauma appears to be non-existent. That there are clear physiological and neurochemical markers in infants and children who've been traumatized is also beyond dispute. If a young one has experienced deep and prolonged trauma, but never learns to face and process it, it will almost certainly act as a powerful constraint on the options and choices available to him or her later in life. Whole swarths of reality will fall outside the range of such a person's perceptual landscape. It's for this reason that undigested trauma is the cause of so much human conflict and suffering, and for Alex to imply that a person can simply make a decision to act against their internal reality is naively simplistic . Another problem is that the word itself has been hijacked and corrupted in modern parlance, but we'll save that for another time.
@bxmully9 ай бұрын
This comment is so poignant and insightful. Healing my traumas, or rather addressing them and having done a lot of healing for them, was one of the most liberating and positively life changing things I've ever done. I still have a long way to go. There's a saying in psychology apparently that goes like "you're responsible for all things that you're not responsible for". That is to say you are responsible for healing the traumas that you experienced, that weren't your fault that they happened to you. Healing generational trauma is one of the most worthwhile things a human can do. I say that a lot.
@Kurtrussell_9 ай бұрын
The ending is the best, where Alex talks about his ‘controversial views’ on life. More of this, Chris 👌🏼
@cipcooksfast34389 ай бұрын
A true, profound, exceptional, dinamic dialogue between two self educated people like these, I have not seen before, and is the top of what podcast became at this moment from my point of view. 🙏👌
@thelifewithnate9 ай бұрын
Alex Hormozi is a very interesting case study of sacrificing everything to make it in terms of entrepreneurship. I am definitely by no means the same personality type and our values are completely different, I just want enough autonomy over my life that I can do what I want when I want without having to report to a typical 9-5 job. Some of those lessons in this video ring hard and true. One of them that I can relate is the eternal grind in the shadows before making a success story and building up enough value to an audience to actually sell something. It is going to be a long road, boys. Hope you can tag along with me.
@jamess.24919 ай бұрын
That really is the hard truth about entrepreneurship - the only way to make it is being willing to sacrifice everything for it. And even then it's no guarantee of success. You have to be willing to give everything for an extremely low chance of success, and most people aren't. Statistically it makes no sense. The true sign of a great entrepreneur is one who knows just how unlikely the outcome is, yet strives for it anyways.
@noodlenate8 ай бұрын
As a fellow Nate, rock on!
@rigelb90252 ай бұрын
'Sacrifice everything'. What does that mean exactly?
@aluumina9 ай бұрын
Main takeaways and learnings: 00:17 I think most people feel lonely 12:31 perfectionism allows people to sit back and not produce work, at a rate required to work out what actually works 13:37 volume negates luck 52:00 What would you do if you weren't afraid? (And know you couldn't fail) I have never regretted failures, i have always regretted not doing what i wanted to. 53:40 Normalize consequences and failures as win or learn. 55:30 "Fear is a mile wide and an inch deep" 1:44:08 These are continuums to be managed and not problems to be solved. 1:44:40 should you quit (pivot) or keep going (push)? - I will not stop going unless new information has come to light 2:04:04 "I will tell this story one day" "Have a larger narrative for where you're going so the large dragons you'll have to slay along the way feed into it". Basically when you need to do hard shit: do it for the story. Do it for the plot. 3:04:47 so many people waste all their time trying to solve the problem that is life, instead of living it
@yedson54723 ай бұрын
I had a friend who loved to show up and challenge everyone just to spark passionate debates and come out feeling like he "won." One day, we all decided to respond to everything he said, whether true or false, with a simple "You're right." That day, he was visibly frustrated -- it was hilarious to see that all he really wanted was to be the guy who’s always "right." Despite that, he's still a good friend.
@commentcraftsman3 ай бұрын
That's funny AF.
@RilMom2 ай бұрын
It's so crazy that I know someone who's exactly like this. My resolution and that of others has always been to respond saying "You're right".
@enescohuntejr9 ай бұрын
I’ve chosen to be alone, So I don’t feel lonely. And Alex said the exact reason Why. . . I’d like to CONTROL my environment or at least what could happen it. I’m only 2 mins in. So I’m going to finish listening and comment again.
@olcha2546Ай бұрын
It's so reasuring to hear someone so successful describing your situation as being on the right path
@AnupreetBhuyar2 ай бұрын
This is WORLD CLASS.
@gavinbinding9 ай бұрын
Alex's point about accepting you're not going to be liked by people around you to be liked by yourself hit hard. That's something I think anyone with a conscience will struggle with.
@mejdlocraftci9 ай бұрын
I dont very much relate to Alex's crazy hustle lifestyle, it honestly does not motivate me much. But what I do gain from these conversations, and what is priceless for me, is how you guys reinforce the unshakable belief in oneself, even when everyone tells you you are wrong. Thats basically the story of my life and its nice to hear from time to time that you are not crazy. Its just so hard to be able to withstand the constant bombardment of doubt from everyone and still be able to say "no, I am right" with confidence On a different note, soo I guess the guy Chris talked about being cancelled and who was worried he was a coward was... Rogan?
@user-lp7rp7cb4g6 ай бұрын
May be that's Lex Friedman?..
@garethwhitehead49385 ай бұрын
In all my years of consuming content online, I have never seen someone quite as succinct, intellectual & brilliant as Chris Williamson. I would pay great deals of money to sit down and have a 1 hour conversation with this man. I would be beyond absorbed in his wisdom. Keep going Chris, your content is a glitter of beauty in a sea of unoriginal, bubblegum media.
@eyluismi1689 ай бұрын
Just started watching this episode, but I have to say, I have seen movies with less image quality that this. Thanks for caring about that, and thanks in advance for this 3 hours masterclass.
@kristyboxx8 ай бұрын
If you can be in a bad mood for no reason, you might as well be in a good mood for no reason. If it’s not going to change your life it shouldn’t change your mood. If the cost is peace of mind, don’t buy it. 2:43:43 that statement helped me today. Thank you guys for uplifting and direct conversation.
@nikhilnagargoje85928 ай бұрын
23:20 even if anyone copies the formula, they will have no idea what to do if something goes wrong, and thats where u win
@joeduarte19868 ай бұрын
I have listened to this podcast 10 times and every time I find something new and useful to use in my daily life
@CocoaSnack8 ай бұрын
Damn I know, every time you realize something new, there’s something else that stands out in this video.
@IFBBProYeo9 ай бұрын
Incredible episode!! THANK YOU for not including commercials! The flow here is INSANE!! I just discovered Alex last week on this very podcast and have been binging his content ever since. So glad for a fresh episode!
@theknowledge702410 күн бұрын
Hearing to men speaking logic is so impressive, if only the world could see it through the eyes of knowledgeable people who have sanity as their power! Good on you guys refreshing! Let's make this wave take over everyday society. Great content!
@endgamefond9 ай бұрын
Alex speaking truths of life. I am so ready to be hurt by his truths. What a talent he has.
@JakeWoken6 ай бұрын
I truly really hope he doesn't stop doing these... Because these conversations are what any entrepreneur needs to learn from.
@Halidar9 ай бұрын
I love this interview, especially the last point resonated with my own internal feel. I actually shouted: “Thank you!” while walking through the city listening to your podcast
@ChapsShrugged2 ай бұрын
2:18:15 -"Everything is terrible all the time, forever." When I was younger, I'd have said "this is very negative". But younger me didn't do much to support that statement. So at this point in my life, this quote is extremely resourceful to help me take the necessary actions to overcome my (current, nearly unbearable) adversities. Thank you. Oh, there it is: 2:29:50 - If I were a Transformer, I would be "Chronic Optimist", my toxic trait is "positivity". I tried being pragmatic, owning my circumstances realistically for the last 18 months or so. This has backfired and reflected exponentially on my health, wellbeing and succes. I still think chronic optimism does better for me by gaslightng myself into positivity. But this... Alex's stoic inputs are very resourceful right now
@Do_nz9 ай бұрын
Wow. This episode was filled to the brim with wisdom. Great topics and the delivery was deeply profound and engaging 👏
@rigelb90252 ай бұрын
Bro wisdom.
@Andradi3038 ай бұрын
Thanks to Alex, I feel normal when I look at my work ethic and how I operate in life. Sharing what he shares, liberates me and it’s a great feeling to know it’s okay to work hard and expect more from yourself. See you in a few years Alex!
@Lukas-ye4wz9 ай бұрын
Alex's strength isn't "building businesses". It is communication. Which is the most important skill to build businesses :)
@AmieBehave9 ай бұрын
My life changed so much when I just said what I meant. You'll be surprised how many people actually react positively. They feel secure in your company, trust your words and don't bother trying to persuade you or guilt trip you to change your mind on decisions!
@dansteryoo9 ай бұрын
Man you guys are gold together.
@charliewilliams86275 ай бұрын
I've listened to this podcast minimum of 4 times now. Absolutely love it, can't wait for the next one! Thank you Chris and Alex for putting this on
@MarkMaina-mw6xh9 ай бұрын
It just gives me the feeling that am gonna have some stuff to think about for the next month that will be worthy .
@konradtopolski9 ай бұрын
If someone started listening to You guys on session 1 and started DOING THE THINGS. Listened to round two STILL DOING THE THINGS with new kick in the ass. Now is listening to this nodding their head like "yes Sir. 100% agreed", having their own proof.
@Itsmeyourfriend849 ай бұрын
THE QUALITY, IS JUST... IN A WHOLE NEW LEVEL! Ty! We can "feel" your perfectionism paying off!
@ellesab48739 ай бұрын
I believe he frames it as having very high standards rather than being a perfectionist. What do you think?
@Nicegirlsilver4 ай бұрын
@@ellesab4873 I THINK CLEAR AND SIMPLE SO TO ENLIGHTEN. THE PERDECTION IS QUALITY TREATED A WHOLE VERY WAY OFF WAY FROM WHAT I HEARD. WAAY OFF
@joseatilioa9 ай бұрын
I think I'll watch this episode 100 times
@davidfarrallАй бұрын
All these lessons work brilliantly for enthusiasts like Alex and Chris and they set a never ending gold standard. Like the reference to Dr Robert Glover too, another Boss who has totally found himself in the dating and mating crisis.
@mistaree57319 ай бұрын
This was so fire lol so many gems packed in here. I have lots of respect and admiration for these guys.
@sunnc9 ай бұрын
50:19 authenticity 1:18:30 insults don’t matter 1:34:16 if you do something embarrassing 1:36:48 there can only be 1 person in the angry boat 1:44:16 do you push through or pivot to something else 1:45:28 language matters a lot 2:26:38 miserable on the journey
@michaelmendes65479 ай бұрын
You two are genuinely some of the best influences I've ever experienced, and I hope one day share the stage with my own podcast and personal entrepreneurial endeavors. Much love and appreciation.
@Oni_wrangler9 ай бұрын
I am incredibly impressed at how articulate and purposeful both of you are with your words. The amount of time Alex spends considering each question he’s asked and formulating his answer is incredible and inspiring. Thanks for such an amazing interview. I’m glad I found my to your content.
@arthuralves9049 ай бұрын
It's always amazing to listen to both of you chatting. Thank you for everything
@Kmarie179 ай бұрын
“Reminder that if you want to be exceptional you’re going to be different than everyone else, that’s what makes you exceptional. You can’t fit in and also be exceptional. Both have discomfort. When you fit in, you have internal conflict because you’re not being 100% you. When you’re exceptional you have external conflict because everyone sees you as different. Pick one. When’s your friends start to say, “you’ve changed” remember its because they don’t know how to say, you’ve grown.” I hate to write down every single word…. A complex feeling articulated to perfection
@thisopinionwillexpire9 ай бұрын
Most of us hate a control freak at work, but we expect a control freak to be behind everything we buy. And our standards reflect that. If customer service isn’t perfect, we can’t wait to lay into the manager, demand our money back, or write a terrible review. So the point is, when your co-worker has “too high standards”, just thank them. They’re why you’ve loved every product you’ve ever loved.
@thelifewithnate9 ай бұрын
Same goes for feedback from your audience as well. If you have enough high standards for a product or KZbin channel and you keep on iterating, success will be on the horizon.
@thisopinionwillexpire9 ай бұрын
100% agree with you, Nate
@drtracythomas9 ай бұрын
Guys this was one of the best videos I’ve ever watched. The messages I needed at the perfect time. Authenticity is the path and that’s why it’s easy to believe what Alex is saying because he’s telling us the truth that we need to hear and I know when I’m listen to truth, because the truth makes me stronger, even if I have to face myself and go into what is harder in order to do it. Thank you for doing what you do both of you.
@Ryan.G.Spalding9 ай бұрын
There are so many great lines. This it’s nuts. They are going to be able to cut this into so much content.
@SamsonFX8 ай бұрын
The fact that I have the opportunity to sit down and listen to these two men have this conversation is benign
@aidenfrick68389 ай бұрын
Thank you for always posting such eye-opening conversations Chris!
@davidnrwd8 ай бұрын
First 14 minutes: Master class in how to focus on your own deal. Thanks for all the inspiration
@upper90529 ай бұрын
What a powerful episode! Great stuff from start to finish
@Crispybeats.6 ай бұрын
I listen to this episode every single day. By now I know it basically off by heart. It’s the best MW episode for real no-bullshit advice. Lessons that are genuinely applicable to day-day life for people if any class, living any lifestyle. Thank you Chris, thank you Alex, ya’ll created a masterpiece.
@charlesratcliffe68399 ай бұрын
Always love listening to Alex. You don’t have to question if he’s really “in the arena”.
@NotYourAverageRealtor9 ай бұрын
Life Changing Podcast for anyone who applies even 2-3 of these principles. Apply all 21 and you’ve cracked the game of life.
@HaiperEXE9 ай бұрын
Can't wait to binge watch this episode !
@NEWGREATNESS9 ай бұрын
LOLOLOL. Literally 9 episodes of anime 😂😂😂
@favoring-quiet-goatskin9 ай бұрын
My brother in Christ you cannot binge watch a single episode any more than you can binge drink a lone beer.
@YousifRozba9 ай бұрын
My brother in Christ you cannot binge watch a single episode any more than you can binge drink a lone beer.
@PineappleAdrift9 ай бұрын
My brother in Christ you cannot binge watch a single episode any more than you can binge drink a lone beer.
@SketchyAsFunk9 ай бұрын
@@favoring-quiet-goatskin a lone beer empties, this episode can replay infinite times.
@jefedeuce62852 ай бұрын
7 months down the line and the first 5 minutes are speaking directly to my face. Interesting!!!
@BeautyandtheBeesTasmania9 ай бұрын
There are many people with too high standards who are infact mediocre.
@BigSexyWizard9 ай бұрын
It’s better to hold a high standard than a low one. I’d rather have men that where mediocre who strives for the best then the best who strived to be mediocre.
@willemaucamp61896 ай бұрын
I'd say this might be one of the most valuable discussions I have ever heard.
@strengthcoachphil9 ай бұрын
The last 3 hours and 15 minutes of this conversation is really good
@pratyushsharma37397 ай бұрын
I was listening to the podcast and the first time I felt, “daaamn! That’s so true!” I hit the like button. But then that feeling came multiple times. And I searched for the like button again not realising i had already like the video. wish I could like it multiple times. Man, such good quality content.
@themythsthatmakeus9 ай бұрын
I love Hormozi, bought his books (even got his hat lol), but I gotta share that his comments on trauma are wrong. Specifically the 3:11:31 mark. There is a lot of woo out here, and a lot of it is bullshit, but the work of Dr. Peter Levine isn't. There is a type of trauma called 'acute,' that in most cases, requires what is called a 'discharge.' In lazy speech, that is a 'feeling' that needs to be 'released.' If you have that kind of trauma (normally from war, acute violent experiences, and sometimes surgery), and you try to think your way out of it, you're going to suffer much more than if you took 20 minutes to learn something like somatic experiencing. If you want to understand trauma at the highest scientific standard we currently have, check out Peter Levine, PhD's work. Thank yall for the epic podcast. I watched the whole thing.
@cupuhjoe0124 күн бұрын
If you try something and fail, but learn along the way... You didn't fail at all
@easyundefined8 ай бұрын
This video is so good! Like bro if I don’t change after this I must be a dumbass 😂😂 that’s so crazy
@OGTennyson6 ай бұрын
Same G😂
@Dracon-International9 ай бұрын
Im very OK with 75% percentile of work quality and detail. And I appreciate Chris and Alex smashing into top 5%.
@Thisisausername5569 ай бұрын
Hyped! I can’t wait for more Churchill quotes! XD Both of you are huge motivations for me to do more and be better. Glad you’re putting all of this great info and these great ideas out for free. Fantastic! 👍
@SketchyAsFunk9 ай бұрын
Im new here but man the info in their conversation is incredible. Not to mention they arent scared to have differing views, discuss them and conclude in an educational, civil and respectful manner.
@danielhuebsch29059 ай бұрын
Life changing episode. Thank you so much
@joshuatrott1939 ай бұрын
Apparently that is worth $2. 😂
@WH20129 ай бұрын
Why are you donating to someone who doesn't even interact with his viewers?
@zikaperic21339 ай бұрын
@@joshuatrott193it’s an internet tip, how much one should give?
@da3ki9 ай бұрын
the even more fun thing is people are giving away money to the rich @@WH2012
@colettithekid7 ай бұрын
Hormozi. . A shining example of if you have big dreams and rich parents, there’s nothing you can’t achieve.
@YaroslavRadchenko-me2wl9 ай бұрын
This podcast feels like a movie
@AidaMemisevicTV9 ай бұрын
OMG!! High standards, not control freak! That's me...been dealing with that my whole life. Thank you so much for this post.❤