What would you do if your son or daughter was given no chance to recover
Speaker:from a devastating brain injury?
Speaker:Greg Reed, bestselling author and founder of Secret Knock, didn't wait for Hope.
Speaker:He actually took massive action, which you'll find in this.
Speaker:Podcast.
Speaker:This is what this guy does.
Speaker:So after Greg, he was actually handpicked by the Napoleon Hill Foundation and he
Speaker:did a whole bunch of cool stuff with that we'll talk about, but he also has used
Speaker:AI to bring his son back from a coma.
Speaker:Greg's story is a total masterclass when it comes to perseverance,
Speaker:purpose and just doing the impossible.
Speaker:His story's awesome.
Speaker:Let's dive into it.
Speaker:And we also have a special guest at the very end as well.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Enjoy.
Speaker:All right, Greg, how you doing?
Speaker:My friend, fellow San Diego.
Speaker:It's great to have you.
Speaker:West Coast.
Speaker:Oh, you know it
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We, we, we, we know the area quite well.
Speaker:Born and raised.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:Why would you move?
Speaker:Oh man.
Speaker:Well you are a such super fascinating guy and you know, we got connected
Speaker:through a mutual buddy, Scott Duffy.
Speaker:Scott Duffy's been uh, featured on this podcast.
Speaker:Now finally, he's also my business partner and I'm sure he
Speaker:is partnered with you on stuff.
Speaker:I don't even know.
Speaker:Um, how'd you meet Scott?
Speaker:I'm just curious 'cause he was probably the episode right before this.
Speaker:So people are kind of familiar with Scott
Speaker:Yeah, it was, I think it was an online chat room, IPE,
Speaker:puppies or something like that.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:It sounds
Speaker:Now we, we go back, uh, 20 years.
Speaker:I mean, we've been friends since, uh, you know, quite, quite a while before I even
Speaker:started working with the Nap Point Hill Foundation and doing all these books.
Speaker:So it's, it's, it's been, it's been a really great journey.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, and, and he's a, he's a fire starter, like you, and just, I think
Speaker:the thing that I've, I've realized about studying you, learning about you,
Speaker:and just the quick interactions is.
Speaker:You know, tons of ideas.
Speaker:You're a fast activator, but you actually get stuff done.
Speaker:You do the thing, you don't kind of hold back.
Speaker:Pontificate.
Speaker:Is that something that's always been, or
Speaker:is that like a learned trait?
Speaker:well, I believe it's the action and the law of attraction.
Speaker:You know, that makes our dreams reality.
Speaker:Think it feel, get off your backside.
Speaker:And take action and go do it.
Speaker:I also gotta be very careful because people come to me to put their crap on
Speaker:me because they know it'll get done.
Speaker:And I realized early on I became a receptacle of other
Speaker:people's unfinished business.
Speaker:And I stopped doing that about, uh, eight years ago, just recently.
Speaker:And it was really interesting.
Speaker:I couldn't understand why everyone kept coming to me, but the realities
Speaker:are I would finish the projects and now I've got a new rule.
Speaker:I only say yes to something that I know and I promise that I will complete.
Speaker:Without question.
Speaker:What made the shift?
Speaker:I'm curious about that.
Speaker:And like you said, now you're making, you're saying yes to
Speaker:things that you could finish.
Speaker:So I'm, I'm curious, how do you define a project that is finishable in your
Speaker:Well, yeah, it's a knowing, not hope, not wish, not believe, but when
Speaker:I know that I can knock that out.
Speaker:I'll say Yes.
Speaker:And so I'm very particular of what I give my attention to because
Speaker:there's so much chatter out there.
Speaker:Uh, and especially in our sphere of influence that's very connected.
Speaker:Everyone has great ideas and concepts and you know, but the realities
Speaker:are, if it pulls me away from mine, then I gotta learn to say no,
Speaker:unless again, it serves a higher.
Speaker:That's good.
Speaker:What, what, what was the, the thing though, like, were you, was there just
Speaker:like a breaking point where you just like, oh my God, I can't do this anymore?
Speaker:You were just tired of old patterns
Speaker:yeah, I also realized, realize that I had spent a lot of my life in my.
Speaker:My professional career is serving so many other people, which
Speaker:is admirable and it's great.
Speaker:So I'm gonna be very clear.
Speaker:On the same note, I realized that I didn't have a chance to focus on my own success.
Speaker:So for example, I worked for 10 years on a project creating a major motion
Speaker:picture for a good buddy of mine and, and he was the founder of Make-A-Wish
Speaker:and I wanted to grant his wish.
Speaker:So between all the different things we did and the trials and tribulations
Speaker:of making a film and promoting, you know, that was 10 years of my life
Speaker:dedicated to someone else's dream.
Speaker:And then I worked with Napoleon Health Foundation, you know, think
Speaker:and Grow Rich, an amazing thing.
Speaker:Again, it was 12 years of my life dedicated towards putting
Speaker:a spotlight on other people.
Speaker:Well, that's 20 years lined up where if I was focusing on my own mission and
Speaker:dream, I realized I could probably have been further down the field with certain.
Speaker:Activities.
Speaker:So I'm very cautious, uh, now of what it is that I send my attention to.
Speaker:And again, I really am grateful for what I did.
Speaker:I just wanna be very clear.
Speaker:I also realize that, you know, I'm gonna be very careful now of
Speaker:what I, uh, you know, dedicate my life and attention towards.
Speaker:I think that's like the plight of the entrepreneur and I don't know.
Speaker:I'm curious of your thoughts that we, we see how to solve problems.
Speaker:We're just natural problem solvers.
Speaker:A lot of us are so fast activators, right?
Speaker:So we can like, oh, I can see how to do this.
Speaker:Let's go, let's say yes and figure it out.
Speaker:Um, do you, do you find a lot of people are in that kind of mode
Speaker:Yeah, and I think you and I are pretty good, and Scott is where we don't have
Speaker:to take on their stuff so we can still say, Hey, real quick, have you thought
Speaker:about doing this, this, and this?
Speaker:One of the cool things about myself, I'm dyslexic.
Speaker:Can't spell read, write for Crap, but I've been published and done all
Speaker:these crazy books and it a hundred fifty seven forty five languages.
Speaker:Look, check this out.
Speaker:Sorry, I down Sold you.
Speaker:Alright.
Speaker:Pretty crazy.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:But, so what happens with dyslexia and with, you know, a DD, is that I can
Speaker:see the end and then reverse engineer.
Speaker:So now I've honed the craft where I can sit someone down and say,
Speaker:well, here's their goal, ba and then give 'em the blueprint.
Speaker:But what's important is I don't have to follow the blueprint.
Speaker:So how do you get it from idea to paper?
Speaker:Like, I know it's a big old process, but like, I gotta close the loop
Speaker:because I'm sure some people, someone's asking like, how the heck
Speaker:does this guy write 156 books, all the languages and not be able to write or
Speaker:Well, first of all, Joe, it's 157
Speaker:sorry.
Speaker:of insulted by that extra one.
Speaker:No, I So it's so funny.
Speaker:So the whole idea is you work your strengths and you align
Speaker:or your higher weaknesses.
Speaker:So I'm full of crap.
Speaker:I'm a good talker.
Speaker:But I can't write.
Speaker:So I have these ghost riders and I'll sit there and say, I wanna write a book.
Speaker:A boy you know, wants a bike.
Speaker:He gets off his back, he Moses neighbor's yards, he makes money, collects it all,
Speaker:and buys a bike and they return it.
Speaker:To me.
Speaker:It was a glorious Sunday afternoon.
Speaker:A young, bright dead lad caught the entrepreneurial dream as he went outside.
Speaker:So I worked my strengths, they work their strengths, and together we've
Speaker:impacted the lives of millions.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:I love it, man.
Speaker:And, and I know you have a, a publishing house as well, right?
Speaker:A whole company that basically does this for other offers.
Speaker:Briefly just tell me on that.
Speaker:I want to go back to some of these other points, but I figured since
Speaker:we're on this vein, tell me about this publishing company you have.
Speaker:'cause now you've like scaled, that seems like your superpowers and others.
Speaker:Exactly all the people that helped me 'cause I suck at certain things and they
Speaker:excel and they, not only that, they won me all these frigging awards and crazy stuff.
Speaker:Well, imagine if you could have direct access to those people.
Speaker:And so I started publishing company.
Speaker:Since I'm not writing books myself anymore, you can now hire all the
Speaker:same people that have helped me and my friends directly to the source
Speaker:and I'm not talking about some one.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:These are world-class, all award-winning top of the food chain people, and you
Speaker:get a jump to the front of the line.
Speaker:I mean, you're, yeah, you're helping 'em with what?
Speaker:The ghost riding all the way, clarifying ideas, but also just actually making
Speaker:'em best seller, seller status,
Speaker:From, from someone sitting there going, I got an idea to them having a bestselling
Speaker:book in their hand, we do it all for them.
Speaker:Nuts the bolts.
Speaker:And what's really nice is we teach 'em the blueprint so then
Speaker:they could do it themselves.
Speaker:So what's really amazing for me is that the next book, you can do it
Speaker:all in, duplicate it, just by follow the exact same successful actions.
Speaker:How do people, how do people find this publishing company?
Speaker:Just
Speaker:Uh, yeah, we're called, anyway, we made it so simple.
Speaker:Joint Venture Publishing.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:Joint venture
Speaker:publishing.
Speaker:I'm all about joint ventures.
Speaker:I know you are too.
Speaker:So that's, and books are like the open door, right?
Speaker:It's like boom, you know?
Speaker:Immediately you start, you're in the conversation and
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, and by the way, there's no money in books, but there's a boatload
Speaker:of money from being in books.
Speaker:Uh, I'm gonna give you an example.
Speaker:There's only three reasons you should ever write one.
Speaker:One is for ego legacy to leave your story behind.
Speaker:Two is for leverage to open up more doors of opportunity to sell more real estate.
Speaker:And three is to become a leader in your chosen field of endeavor.
Speaker:And it's important to know why you start before you start.
Speaker:It's like saying, I wanna be an actor.
Speaker:Well, Broadway TV movies, they're same industry, but three different directions.
Speaker:And it's the same thing in books.
Speaker:So it's important to know where you're gonna go before you begin.
Speaker:I like it.
Speaker:I'm gonna somehow try to tie this back and we'll put all, everything in the
Speaker:show notes too, you know, linked to the joint venture publishing, all that stuff.
Speaker:And anything else we mentioned, um, Hollywood.
Speaker:'cause you, you obviously now have, you've dabbled what you said 10
Speaker:years in, uh, it was Wishman, right?
Speaker:Was
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well now I've been my IMDB, believe it or not.
Speaker:I've got 21 awards and done some pretty good stuff doing these new movie shorts.
Speaker:I've kind of mastered the system and I'll, I'll tell you the secret of this one.
Speaker:'cause.
Speaker:Like we do this event called Secret Knock.
Speaker:And the whole idea is your secrets.
Speaker:Tell us you're just cut to the chase.
Speaker:I don't need 90 minutes, just gimme your thing.
Speaker:And I asked the guy who started, um, a channel, what is that called?
Speaker:Um, Showtime TV Jewels.
Speaker:And I said, what is the secret to Hollywood?
Speaker:I go, I'm getting nowhere.
Speaker:Everyone says, yes, but I'm getting nowhere.
Speaker:And here's his answer.
Speaker:He says, in Hollywood, A yes means no.
Speaker:A no means no a maybe is all you're looking for.
Speaker:And I go, what do you mean?
Speaker:He says, when someone goes, yeah baby, we're gonna make you a star.
Speaker:That's their way of telling you no A no is a no.
Speaker:But when they go, Hey, that's a good idea.
Speaker:Let's sit down with the figurehead at a studio and see if we,
Speaker:that's all you're looking for.
Speaker:So every time I go to Hollywood and they say, yeah baby,
Speaker:we're gonna give you 16 mil.
Speaker:As soon as I heard that, I knew that was a no, but I actually believed it.
Speaker:'cause where I grew up.
Speaker:When someone says yes, it is a yes.
Speaker:But in Hollywood it's the opposite.
Speaker:A yes is a no.
Speaker:A no is a no, and maybe is all you're looking for.
Speaker:How do you get a maybe Greg?
Speaker:Great question.
Speaker:Surround yourself with people that are getting the results
Speaker:that we want for ourselves.
Speaker:For example, when I wanted to do this movie, I didn't go to other
Speaker:friends that have never done movies.
Speaker:What I did is, is who started networks?
Speaker:Who's won an Oscar?
Speaker:Who's won the thing?
Speaker:And the most successful people, or the most available, if you reach out with
Speaker:specificity, and I know I don't say that, right, 'cause I'm dyslexic, but being
Speaker:specific and it works like this, if I wanna get to an Oscar winner, I say.
Speaker:I'm asking for 12.5 minutes of your time.
Speaker:I'll cover all my own constant expense to come see you from the time
Speaker:I open the door till I leave will be 12 and a half minutes exactly.
Speaker:I'll start a stopwatch to ask you one question, X, Y, z, the chance of them
Speaker:coming from their office of the break room for that 12 and a half minutes.
Speaker:Becomes finite.
Speaker:It's so easy for them to do, but unfortunately most people do it wrong.
Speaker:They say, I wanna pick your brain.
Speaker:I wanna take you to lunch.
Speaker:I wanna buy you.
Speaker:No one wants to go hang out with you, but when you make it finite like that,
Speaker:it makes it easy for them to say yes.
Speaker:That's such a good lesson for anybody to, like, if you're doing, looking for
Speaker:joint ventures, I mean, there a lot of entrepreneurs listening to this right now.
Speaker:It's like, how do you open doors to a may, maybe a massive joint venture
Speaker:partner or publisher or whoever that you're looking to get in front of.
Speaker:Well be specific
Speaker:and it was interesting.
Speaker:It's like if I do a speaking engagement and I come off and there's
Speaker:a thousand people, they're lined up.
Speaker:They want autographs, pictures, they wanna sign books and they say the
Speaker:nicest thing, how can I work with you?
Speaker:How can be of contribution?
Speaker:How can it be of service?
Speaker:I don't got 30 minutes for a resume.
Speaker:Compare that to someone.
Speaker:Walks up and said, dude, love your little talk right there.
Speaker:I took some video.
Speaker:I make 'em for people for internet.
Speaker:I created a really cool version.
Speaker:Let me send it to you if you like it.
Speaker:Maybe we'll use me.
Speaker:Eight seconds.
Speaker:I know who you are, what you do.
Speaker:You got my cell phone, and where in contact that's a difference
Speaker:between success and setback.
Speaker:that's good, man.
Speaker:So, so much.
Speaker:You can run with that and, and take, take and apply it.
Speaker:I, I wanna go back now because you, you spent all this time, these years doing
Speaker:film, doing, uh, working with Napoleon Hill, which I want to get into as well.
Speaker:you know what I'm gonna, I'm gonna pause what I'm about to ask and actually
Speaker:ask about Napoleon Hill first so we can lay a little bit more ground.
Speaker:Tell me about how the heck that happened.
Speaker:Because I mean, think and grow rich.
Speaker:That's like every entrepreneur.
Speaker:Maybe investors should ever have that and reread that, you know, yearly, let's say.
Speaker:But yeah.
Speaker:How did that story come to be
Speaker:Yeah, that's the bible of personal development.
Speaker:I mean, that's the, the Holy Grail, right?
Speaker:And the Point Hill, when he was a young guy, he was like 20 something years old.
Speaker:He was a magazine reporter and gave access to the richest dude.
Speaker:His name was Andrew Carnegie, and at the end of the interview,
Speaker:Carnegie says, here's an offer.
Speaker:Work for me for free for 20 years, and I'll send you on a mission to meet my
Speaker:friends and write the first ever formula for success when Nap Point Hill said yes.
Speaker:Carnegie pulled out a stopwatch and gave his guests 60 seconds to
Speaker:make up his mind to work for free, and when he agreed to it, there
Speaker:was 31 seconds left on the clock.
Speaker:He made a major life changing decision in 29 seconds, but what's cool is that
Speaker:Carnegie made the same offer to 250 men.
Speaker:Before Napoleon Hill, he was the only person to say yes.
Speaker:Most people don't take action when a golden opportunity comes their way.
Speaker:They have something called the bad case of the once eyes.
Speaker:It means I'll take action once I get the kids out, once I get the big break.
Speaker:And it's the people that take that action like we talked about
Speaker:when we began this conversation.
Speaker:They're the ones that we tell the stories about.
Speaker:Fast forward a hundred years later, the Napoleon Hill Foundation
Speaker:that bears his name and family.
Speaker:Gave me a same letter of introduction like Carnegie gave to Hill, but I did
Speaker:it a hundred years later and it was a Willy Wonka ticket to meet anyone.
Speaker:And from there we wrote the Think and Grower at series where Sharon
Speaker:Lecter and I just kind of blew it up.
Speaker:We wrote three feet from gold and then all of a sudden, Bob Proctor
Speaker:and I wrote Thoughts or Things, stick Stickability, outwitting the Devil.
Speaker:Sharon did.
Speaker:We did thoughts.
Speaker:I mean, it just, all these amazing things came to be because we said yes.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:What, so, I mean, so you went on that Willy Wonka, oh, well,
Speaker:you had the ticket at least.
Speaker:Um, what are some standout lessons from some of the interviews or these, these
Speaker:in, you know, these, uh, interactions you had with people on your journey?
Speaker:Yeah, stickability, you know, first there's a dream, then there's a
Speaker:challenge, and then there's victory.
Speaker:Most people quit in the challenging times, and it's the few and far
Speaker:between people that persevere.
Speaker:They're the ones that we tell the story about, but the greatest
Speaker:one is successful people seek.
Speaker:Counsel and failures listen to opinion.
Speaker:What's the difference?
Speaker:Opinions based on ignorance, lack of knowledge or inexperience like all
Speaker:your family, friends at the barbecue, who's never done what you wanna do.
Speaker:Counsel's based on wisdom, knowledge, mentorship.
Speaker:If I go to a family friend and say, I'm gonna become an international bestselling
Speaker:author, my uncle's gonna try to talk me outta that to protect me and keep me safe.
Speaker:'cause he knows I'm dyslexic and he is never written a bestselling book.
Speaker:If I go to Mark Victor Hansen, who wrote Chicken Soup for the
Speaker:Soul and sold the billion copies, he's gonna say, Greg, sit down.
Speaker:Here's what you need to know and give you a counsel Based on
Speaker:wisdom, knowledge, mentorship.
Speaker:If we would spend our activity only seeking counsel and ignoring
Speaker:people's opinion, that's the exact moment your life would change.
Speaker:That's so true.
Speaker:And, and taking action.
Speaker:So like that, that bit right there, you know, being the, the motivat.
Speaker:I want you to break that down even more because you just told the
Speaker:story about Napoleon Hill, you know, meeting, uh, Carnegie and 29 seconds.
Speaker:He, he made that decision.
Speaker:I'm going all in, I'm doing this.
Speaker:So I guess, what are some.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Frameworks is, but you know, there's mental models that you use when
Speaker:it comes to actually taking action and momentum, making sure you're
Speaker:doing it in the right direction
Speaker:Yeah, well, I surround myself with people that I have respect for and
Speaker:not people I have influence over.
Speaker:Mm. I see.
Speaker:Surround yourself with people you have respect for and not
Speaker:people you have influence.
Speaker:And here's the big one.
Speaker:Never allow another person or yourself to talk you out of what you know to be true.
Speaker:Listen, when I did my first book, I was turned down by 268.
Speaker:Publishers, agents and printers.
Speaker:Uh, the 269th one said, we'll do your book.
Speaker:Just change the title.
Speaker:Beginning, middle, it sucked.
Speaker:It was like, dog boat, beaver car.
Speaker:It made no sense.
Speaker:So I got a ghost writer.
Speaker:They recrafted it, and one quote from that book was shared 37 million times.
Speaker:It's about goal setting, and you probably seen it on coffee mugs and t-shirts.
Speaker:It says, A dream written down with a date becomes a goal.
Speaker:A goal broken into steps, becomes a plan, and a plan backed by
Speaker:action makes your dreams come true.
Speaker:Famous quote shared 37 million times from a book turned down.
Speaker:And what's funny is I happen to be home when we're doing this, but check this out.
Speaker:I pulled this out and this right here are all my rejection.
Speaker:There they are.
Speaker:These are all the people telling me every reason why
Speaker:I'll never be an author.
Speaker:It's so good, man.
Speaker:It's so good.
Speaker:I knew you had those, but I wanted to see 'em.
Speaker:I was hoping they were right next to
Speaker:I, and also we're here.
Speaker:I'm gonna, I'm gonna show you something that I've never been.
Speaker:You'll be the first podcast
Speaker:Ooh.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:All.
Speaker:through Napoleon Hill Foundation, you know, I went through their
Speaker:archives, basically, the stewardship.
Speaker:But check this out.
Speaker:We found these checks.
Speaker:These were written by Napoleon Hill to Napoleon Hill on Napoleon Hill thing,
Speaker:paying himself back for the promotion of a book called Think and Grow Rich.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:How much?
Speaker:How much is on that check?
Speaker:I can't quite read the number on there.
Speaker:Uh, $135 and 9 cents, and it's for the radio and television appearances
Speaker:for him to go back and do it.
Speaker:Isn't that
Speaker:so cool, man.
Speaker:Awesome stuff that reminds me of, uh, what is it, the Success Principles
Speaker:book, and I'm sure he got it from there.
Speaker:It was Jim Carrey wrote a check to himself.
Speaker:I'm sure you know the story, you know, before he hit it big and I
Speaker:think it was a million dollar check or something like that, and he was
Speaker:finally, you know, he, he made it.
Speaker:I, I remember I wrote it be after that, right when I started, I
Speaker:wrote myself a check as well.
Speaker:Actually forget what the number was.
Speaker:I was able to cash it.
Speaker:Maybe I should have gotten bigger, but either way,
Speaker:that's great.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The whole idea is first there's a dream, then there's a challenge,
Speaker:and then there's victory.
Speaker:If we can persevere through the challenging times, that's all it.
Speaker:Difference between you and your family and friends.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:It's not rocket science.
Speaker:Everyone thinks it's some difficult thing.
Speaker:Every billionaire, every rocket scientist I've met aren't rocket
Speaker:scientist and they're just regular people and they saw a vision.
Speaker:It's a guy who invented the sport or the cardboard king of Wisconsin.
Speaker:It's usually not the sexy glamor businesses that you see.
Speaker:It's the people that saw something.
Speaker:They took action where no one else saw it before and they.
Speaker:Actually capitalized on it.
Speaker:True.
Speaker:Kathy found her a Chick-fil-A.
Speaker:He made me my first chick sandwich I ever had, and he said
Speaker:to me, he goes, if you wanna be successful, stop planning so much.
Speaker:Stop overthinking.
Speaker:And I go, what do you mean?
Speaker:He goes, well, you had a lot of plans last year.
Speaker:How did that work out for you?
Speaker:He says, you'll hit a goal, but I guarantee it won't go as you expect.
Speaker:He says, look for and capitalize on unexpected opportunity.
Speaker:And I said, what do you mean?
Speaker:He says, well, if I'm on the sofa and I wanna get to the end
Speaker:of the street, get off your.
Speaker:But and move towards the goal.
Speaker:He goes, but a planner, they plan every step and they strategize.
Speaker:But if a sprinkler comes on, it goes against plan.
Speaker:They run back home.
Speaker:He goes, that's what majority of people do.
Speaker:He goes, I look for opportunity.
Speaker:Did a kid leave a skateboarder or a bicycle out that I can make my journey
Speaker:short, you know, a journey short.
Speaker:If I get Ru real lucky, I'll wave down a neighbor driving by and hitch a ride.
Speaker:He goes, either way, I'll get to my goal.
Speaker:I'm just not so caught up in exactly how it has to happen.
Speaker:That's awesome because Chick-fil-A, you look at it and you're like, man,
Speaker:this is a fine tuned machine right here when you go through the process and
Speaker:you know everything's, you know, right.
Speaker:In order.
Speaker:But it didn't start that way.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It started messy, I'm sure,
Speaker:It did.
Speaker:It started with th a three person.
Speaker:Stools at a place called The Dwarf and he started doing this business
Speaker:and his son when Dan took it over and just really took it and blew it up
Speaker:and, you know, grew it the way it is.
Speaker:Uh, it was a true family affair, but it was really nice again, is that where could
Speaker:we be in our own business, that we stop over planning and analyzing every damn
Speaker:thing and we just took action towards it.
Speaker:that reminds me of, uh, you know, when I was chatting with Scott, I
Speaker:think it was Bob Proctor, if I'm not wrong, he was the one that basically
Speaker:had you or I could be getting wrong.
Speaker:Uh, the name, I gotta look at my notes, but, well, you worked with, uh, uh, early,
Speaker:I know it was what Charlie Terminus Jones.
Speaker:Was, uh, early.
Speaker:That's what Scott was telling me.
Speaker:He, he helped me with a little bit my fact finding.
Speaker:Um, but basically what you worked with Brian Trace, or, you know, in the era,
Speaker:Brian Tracy, Jim Rohn, um, Zig Ziglar, but you were sent on missions, right?
Speaker:Until like to report back what you're, what you're doing and most people just
Speaker:would never actually show progress, right?
Speaker:That, and the way you honor your mentors is to actually follow
Speaker:through and then show them what you did and then ask for more guidance.
Speaker:When I wanted to be a speaker, there's this guy named Les
Speaker:Brown, and I went to him.
Speaker:I said, Les, I go, I wanna be a speaker like you.
Speaker:Give me one nugget, one thing I could do.
Speaker:He did.
Speaker:I found him a month later, I said, Mr. Brown, I met you a month ago.
Speaker:I asked for a nugget, you gave it to me.
Speaker:Here's my results.
Speaker:What should I do next, sir? First of all, he's shocked that someone did it.
Speaker:But more importantly, the chance of him giving me the second
Speaker:nugget goes up a million percent.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And here's what he taught me.
Speaker:I'm gonna give it to you real quick.
Speaker:He says, when you're on stage, the first thing you could tell is a
Speaker:senior person from not is by the way they hold their microphone.
Speaker:And I said, what do you mean?
Speaker:He goes, most new people, they hold it like a rap star and they put
Speaker:it like this and they talk to you.
Speaker:He goes, first of all, you're blocking yourself from the audience.
Speaker:He goes, not me.
Speaker:What I do is I hold it at the very end.
Speaker:I extend it so people can still hear me, but I connect with
Speaker:my people doing it this way.
Speaker:So simple little thing.
Speaker:But as soon as I started doing it.
Speaker:I said, what's my next?
Speaker:And he gave me the next and the next and the next.
Speaker:And here we are today.
Speaker:In fact, it's so funny when, uh, I got a chance to speak at the, uh,
Speaker:you know, Pentagon, I got a chance to speak at the United Nations
Speaker:as general assembly floor for the Novus Summit, all this crazy stuff.
Speaker:And every time I go on stage, this big thing, as I keep
Speaker:thinking, hold it at the end,
Speaker:You're like, come on man.
Speaker:It's so simple.
Speaker:Just
Speaker:hold it at the end.
Speaker:I mean, that's good.
Speaker:And hold it close enough to your face.
Speaker:Don't be like one of those guys that are way out there either,
Speaker:but yeah, I love that man.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Before.
Speaker:Yeah, because I wanna get into AI and, and kind of some of the things
Speaker:that, that you've done there.
Speaker:But, you know, going back to what you said really early, and I, I forget exactly
Speaker:what you said, but it was basically you spent, you know, more than a, a couple
Speaker:decades working with other people.
Speaker:You had Napoleon Hill, um, you did the film stuff for a decade and obviously
Speaker:a whole bunch of other things.
Speaker:Do you feel like you would be where you're at now or like.
Speaker:Did you, obviously it helped you get to where you're at, but I'm just curious,
Speaker:you know, because you mentioned something about working on yourself, you know,
Speaker:instead of working with all these other people, I guess I just wanted
Speaker:And there's, there's no crystal ball, you know?
Speaker:So half of me says, imagine if I spent this much, how organized I
Speaker:am, 20 years building my business.
Speaker:Uh, compared to someone else's business, logic would tell you you'd be more ahead.
Speaker:On the same note, I wouldn't have switched it for anything.
Speaker:I mean, they, they honored to have done those things that were the
Speaker:greatest blessings of my life, and so I would never, uh, exchange 'em.
Speaker:So, for example, so I, there's zero regret, there's only
Speaker:appreciation, love, gratitude, and you know, those amazing feelings.
Speaker:That's how I feel associated with it.
Speaker:Yet on the same note, to answer your question, yeah, I think I would've been
Speaker:further along in certain other aspects.
Speaker:and that's pretty much what I was kind of hoping you would say, because there's
Speaker:so many entrepreneurs, including myself, who've partnered up with people or
Speaker:seen an opportunity with a company or whoever, expert, you know, and you're
Speaker:just like, I can give a lot of value here.
Speaker:I'm gonna learn a lot in the same time, but also it's gonna open up
Speaker:doors that I maybe didn't have before.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Do more than you get paid for and then eventually get paid for more than you do.
Speaker:And it's not, again, technical stuff.
Speaker:You don't always, we keep talking about how keep it that simple.
Speaker:One of my favorite guys is this billionaire dude named Brian.
Speaker:He made it in dirt.
Speaker:I go, how'd you make a billion dollars in dirt?
Speaker:He goes, that's easy.
Speaker:He goes, all I do is find a town that's growing 25% a year.
Speaker:Go on Google Maps, you can see it.
Speaker:I go, what?
Speaker:He goes, yeah.
Speaker:He goes, I look for Broadway Main Street.
Speaker:I draw a line out eight miles.
Speaker:I buy the dirt.
Speaker:I go, okay.
Speaker:He goes, I rent the dirt to farmers.
Speaker:They paid the lease so it's free land and I get vegetables for years and as the
Speaker:town grows at 25%, which is historically has done, eventually ends up on my plot.
Speaker:And since I'm on Broadway Main Street, I resell it to big
Speaker:box stores, 800 times what?
Speaker:I paid billion dollars
Speaker:That's freaking genius.
Speaker:And it's, it could still be done.
Speaker:Just, just start looking at the map.
Speaker:I'm doing one right now and it's so wild how this is.
Speaker:So simple.
Speaker:Everyone, every is that thing.
Speaker:It's funny 'cause Scott introduced me to this guy, um, the Steiner Sports.
Speaker:I dunno if you've ever seen the sports memorabilia stuff with the
Speaker:signed jersey, stuff like that.
Speaker:I, same thing.
Speaker:I go, how'd you make all your money?
Speaker:He goes, dirt.
Speaker:I go, what?
Speaker:And everyone's saying, the dirt.
Speaker:And he goes, yeah.
Speaker:He goes, if I had a pair of shoes from Derek Jeter, I could sell
Speaker:'em for two grand, but if he autographed them, there were four.
Speaker:He goes, but there was dirt on the shoes.
Speaker:20 grand.
Speaker:Ah, that gives me hope.
Speaker:I have, I have all of that for Tony Gwen.
Speaker:I have his gloves and they're dirty, they're taped and they're
Speaker:signed.
Speaker:I track, I tracked them down.
Speaker:I swear he gave 'em to me.
Speaker:that's gold right there.
Speaker:That is
Speaker:gold.
Speaker:have yet to frame it and put it on the wall right next to me.
Speaker:I really should do that.
Speaker:being a San Diego native, I mean, that is like, that's a holy grail for a San Agans.
Speaker:I figured you would appreciate that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I was hoping that you liked the pods.
Speaker:3000 hits.
Speaker:He was a legend.
Speaker:Good human being.
Speaker:His son's amazing.
Speaker:Just great family.
Speaker:Just, yeah, all we have is positive stuff
Speaker:that's right.
Speaker:Tony Gwen, one of the cool things about him is that he
Speaker:understood the power of singles.
Speaker:And a lot as entrepreneurs, we miss this.
Speaker:Everyone's swinging for these crazy shots, these home runs, but Tony Gwen says, no.
Speaker:He goes, I put my shoulders same way.
Speaker:No matter what.
Speaker:He goes, I can strike out, I can hit a home run by ax.
Speaker:He goes, but I'm going to get on base.
Speaker:And he goes, and he focused on this.
Speaker:And as entrepreneurs, unfortunately most of 'em are just swinging
Speaker:for the fences and wondering they're why they're striking out.
Speaker:And I think it's pretty cool as an entrepreneur to sell tickets or your
Speaker:bread and butter hit your singles while once in a while you're swinging away.
Speaker:But we can't make that our primary focus.
Speaker:and that's that momentum, right?
Speaker:That constant action.
Speaker:You're always moving forward or at least trying something new.
Speaker:You're getting that single,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:O okay.
Speaker:And I know we're getting ready to wrap up.
Speaker:I may tell you one last story about Truit, Kathy.
Speaker:I got so many stories about other people, but this is a, such a good one.
Speaker:I was in his office, uh, is Atlanta, Georgia, and it's hard to explain the.
Speaker:Prestige of this building.
Speaker:IJI just imagine.
Speaker:It's just incredible.
Speaker:And he has this office on the top floor and panoramic glass, stunning.
Speaker:And there's a picture Thumbtack to the thing.
Speaker:It was like a poster like Hello Kitty.
Speaker:And it was a mountain climber.
Speaker:It was like, what?
Speaker:I go, you have billions of dollars and stuff, and it's a Thumbtack.
Speaker:This doesn't go together.
Speaker:And he says, this is how I've lived my life and ran my business,
Speaker:and this is why we're successful.
Speaker:Ooh,
Speaker:And I said, all right, I wanna hear it.
Speaker:And he goes, you see that mountain climber?
Speaker:I go, yeah.
Speaker:And he goes, that's what I did as an entrepreneur, where most people miss it.
Speaker:And I go, explain.
Speaker:He goes, most people as an entrepreneur, they see the top of
Speaker:the mountain, the quest, and he goes, all they wanna do is summit.
Speaker:So they get their momentum up.
Speaker:We all got the same thing.
Speaker:We're filled with hype and excitement, and we run off that thing.
Speaker:But as soon as we get to a certain thing, we skip.
Speaker:We fall and we go all the way to the bottom.
Speaker:These are the people that fail, go bankrupt and quit their business.
Speaker:He goes, not me.
Speaker:He goes, I'm that mountain climber.
Speaker:And he pointed to a guy and he was, dang it off the side.
Speaker:And I says, why is that?
Speaker:And he says, you know what he does is he goes up about 10, 20 feet and
Speaker:he takes a little carabiner and he ties himself off to the mountain.
Speaker:Then he climbs up another 20 feet.
Speaker:He says, eventually when they have their mistake, he goes, all entrepreneurs do.
Speaker:I only go down 10 feet and he goes, that way I can regain my
Speaker:stability and then continue my quest.
Speaker:And he goes, that is the way I've run my business.
Speaker:And that's why we're here today.
Speaker:Dang.
Speaker:That's a damn good analogy.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:So I've never heard that one.
Speaker:That's great, man.
Speaker:Ah, okay.
Speaker:I wanna wrap this up on, I think something that I'm, I'm thinking
Speaker:it's pretty damn close to your heart, is using technology and ai, but
Speaker:how it applies to your family and.
Speaker:If you're open to, I don't know how much you know, you want to share here, you
Speaker:know, with, um, basically the use of some really cool technology and your son,
Speaker:So a year ago my son was in a catastrophic motorcycle accident.
Speaker:Basically, he was going the speed limit in the bike lane, wearing his gear.
Speaker:The whole bed of car pulled in front of him.
Speaker:A true, pure accident, but he ended up, uh, having the most severe
Speaker:brain injury that a human can have.
Speaker:There's nothing higher.
Speaker:Um, and what happened is that.
Speaker:They said he'd more than likely never speak again.
Speaker:Uh, and he'd be in a vegetative state, and we didn't want that as
Speaker:our prognosis, but it was really bad.
Speaker:I mean, I'm not gonna AFib you.
Speaker:There was 20, 30 rips in his brain, in his brainstem.
Speaker:It was impossible mathematically, like a bumblebee for him to talk
Speaker:or walk or anything of this nature.
Speaker:But we said, we're gonna throw the kitchen sink at 'em.
Speaker:So what we did is we did every modality from all the connections set.
Speaker:I made it on this quest, and this is where you don't know what is
Speaker:set for you, because I'm gonna backtrack in this in full circle.
Speaker:I believe if I did not go on the quest with Napoleon Hill Foundation, I would
Speaker:not have met the amazing people that open up the doors of opportunity for my son.
Speaker:They have the great success that he has today and all of his
Speaker:achievements and him coming back.
Speaker:And what we did is one thing that was spectacular while he was in his coma,
Speaker:while he was in his vegetative state, we used the AI tools where he's an actor.
Speaker:I took all of his audition tapes, we made a twin clone of him, and then I
Speaker:trained the clone to speak to him in his own voice and walk him back to us.
Speaker:While he was in his coma, he would say, Hey Colt, this is you.
Speaker:You're going through a circumstance.
Speaker:You are in a bike accident, you're in a hospital right now and here's
Speaker:what's going on, and your body parts are firing great, but your brain
Speaker:right now is, has had some challenges.
Speaker:Here's what we want you to do.
Speaker:We want you to focus on reconnecting, and what we did
Speaker:is train it each and every day.
Speaker:I would come in with these new different talks and the doctors
Speaker:would come in the room and go.
Speaker:Like Colonel Clink, I see nothing, and they walk out and we kept
Speaker:doing and feed him this stuff.
Speaker:It's been a year later and he is now a hundred percent recovered.
Speaker:He's the first human.
Speaker:Alive of his age group to ever recover from this.
Speaker:And we believe it's all these amazing modalities.
Speaker:And part of it is Delphi and the great people in the organization who did it
Speaker:now, would I have ever met them if I didn't do this question to Point Hill or
Speaker:they wanted me to do this for my fans?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:So at the end of the day, I do believe in the Simba Circle of Life
Speaker:moment where it all came to be.
Speaker:Dude, what an awesome story.
Speaker:And it's so great.
Speaker:A hundred percent recovered like in a year.
Speaker:That's wild.
Speaker:'cause
Speaker:It,
Speaker:it, it, it is.
Speaker:Well, hey Cole, I keep hearing something down there.
Speaker:It's either ghosts or something like that, so I use that out
Speaker:there now doing whatever.
Speaker:it'd
Speaker:be cool to see it, but it's all
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Well, I just wanna make sure he is not out there going through my wallet.
Speaker:You know how these
Speaker:kids are.
Speaker:So
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:he, he is.
Speaker:So, he's now a typical 13-year-old kid having fun, jamming music.
Speaker:And it was so funny how he used Words against You.
Speaker:So the other day he was doing something, he was playing this
Speaker:rap music sold out, and I came in like, you old man, turn this down.
Speaker:And he goes, dad, there was a time not too long ago, you would've given anything
Speaker:for me to be able to listen to this music.
Speaker:Ah, he's gonna hold that again.
Speaker:Smart kid, man.
Speaker:That's good.
Speaker:right.
Speaker:Well, I wanna say thank you for having me on.
Speaker:Any time you wanna do it again in the future.
Speaker:Thanks for also coming out to our event, uh, next week.
Speaker:We're fired up to have you with us.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Appreciate it.
Speaker:And you know what, before you bolt out Greg, how can people follow along, learn
Speaker:about some of these events and cool stuff?
Speaker:Yeah, just go on Instagram, Greg s Reed, it's the easiest way.
Speaker:'cause that's how we're all connected in a short attention span now.
Speaker:Uh, and more importantly, if you reach out to me and send a dm, it all goes
Speaker:to me, no filter, no assistance, and I promise to respond to everybody.
Speaker:You the man.
Speaker:Greg, I appreciate you.
Speaker:Hey Cole, come up here real quick.
Speaker:I knew I heard him down there
Speaker:I'm not a ghost.
Speaker:So, so listen to this one.
Speaker:So this is him again.
Speaker:Remember a year ago he was pretty messed up.
Speaker:Hey Cole.
Speaker:Ah, isn't that pretty
Speaker:It's all is awesome man.
Speaker:saying.
Speaker:How has the recovery been?
Speaker:It's been great, man.
Speaker:It's,
Speaker:You still talking to yourself too with the ai?
Speaker:nah, yeah, I mean, listen to it.
Speaker:Yeah, that it's so funny.
Speaker:I gotta plug him back in there.
Speaker:So when you come to to Prosperity Camp, make sure you bring
Speaker:a copy so he can can, yeah.
Speaker:Remember he was in a, he was in a coma, dude.
Speaker:He doesn't know what the heck he
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Good for you, man.
Speaker:You're strong as heck, so it's cool to see.
Speaker:You Got a cool dad,
Speaker:Thank you, man.
Speaker:Okay, we're gonna end with this one.
Speaker:He you, before the accident, he used to do this mantra.
Speaker:Every night before he goes to bed, he'd say, positive messages.
Speaker:We believe what you put into your consciousness.
Speaker:Subconscious mind determines who you are.
Speaker:What's your mantra?
Speaker:A mantra is.
Speaker:My name is Cole.
Speaker:I'm powerful.
Speaker:I'm brave.
Speaker:I'm wise, I'm worthy.
Speaker:I'm successful.
Speaker:I help people.
Speaker:My name is Cole.
Speaker:Get outta here.
Speaker:You're bugging me.
Speaker:All right, so that's it.
Speaker:I'll see you in a bit.
Speaker:Thanks guys.
Speaker:Have a good one.