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March 31, 2024 34 mins

Embark on a voyage with us as we, your neighborhood Finance BROs, shed light on the simplicity of business often shrouded by society's complexities. We, Anton and Michel, get personal, divulging the twists and turns of our entrepreneurial quests, underpinned by a shared belief that anyone, including you, can step into this realm with the appropriate mindset. Experience the surge of excitement as we pack March's five Saturdays with potency and purpose, bringing you more of our candid conversations, insights, and the energizing force of passion that not only drives business but forges spiritual connections within it.

Feel the pulse of our heartfelt discussions while we navigate Tony Robbins' six human needs, zeroing in on love and connection, and share tales that celebrate the thrill of lifelong learning. Michel’s journey from a youthful start in a finance office to various business endeavors embodies a ceaseless appetite for growth, and we invite you to glean wisdom from our shared anecdotes. It's not merely about transactions and trade; it's about kindling that entrepreneurial spark through every corporate transition, keeping the flame of curiosity and innovation alight.

As we look back on a decade in finance, the inspiration behind this very podcast and our upcoming HHN TV Release becomes ever more palpable. We're not just talking numbers and charts; we're delving into the transformative power of financial education, especially in underserved communities, and the profound impact of consistent action, mental fortitude, and the art of manifestation. Our gratitude extends to you, our community of listeners, Our Wealthians, and we eagerly invite you to engage with us across all our platforms, where we promise to deliver empowering dialogues that aim to enlighten and inspire.

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Learn more about the FBN initiative and get access to all social media platforms at https://linktr.ee/fbnlinks

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
First and foremost, we want to be clear that what we
are sharing with you arestrategies and concepts that can
be implemented by individualswho understand the logistics of
how to approach such platformsas far as the literal, the

(00:27):
mental and spiritual formatneeded to be successful with
your aspirations what's up world?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
you tuned in to fbn and, yes, this is another
episode of Finance Bros Network.
I am the one half of FinanceBros, anton Lefwich, and this is
Michael.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
DePoe the other half.
Yes, sir, and again, as usual,we are coming to you live with
finance for everybody, everydaypeople.
We are honored to be here andbe able to serve diverse
communities, but today we'redoing something a little special
, right, anton?

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Yeah, we're giving them a little extra.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
We always talk about doing more than you have to.
Yeah, and definitely you know.
It so happens to be this is themonth of March and it happens
to have five Saturdays in themonth of March.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
So we're thinking give me a little something extra
, so we're not missing out, oryou're not missing out.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
Exactly, instead of taking the weekend off.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
We say oh yeah, not giving them anything, let's give
them a little something.
Yeah, so we decided to do alittle.
You know road to FBN.
So what does that mean?
That means just kind of talkingabout how we got here, right
right, and what path we took toget here.

(02:15):
And you know what inspired usto be here, absolutely so.
That's a big thing.
You know just the inspirationto make things happen and you
know just just loving what we do.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
Yeah, this is definitely a passion, I mean.
So it's definitely been apleasure to do it with you,
brother absolutely, absolutely.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
You know, and uh, just just a little bit about me
and and uh, what made me wantingto do something like this with
the FBN and talking aboutwealthy ends.
You know, I started young inbusiness, started young.
I even mentioned when I startedworking.

(03:00):
I started working when I wasaround 12, 12 years old or
something like that.
13 years old, worked in a taxoffice, in a finance office.
Yeah, imagine that.
Yeah, I know Of all places, soI worked in a tax finance office
and then, you know, I was likeman, I like doing this, I like
working, working and.

(03:27):
But you know my road to workingfor companies, working for
different businesses, workingfor, uh, just working in general
, I always felt there'ssomething missing, right,
there's something that, um, thatI could be doing more, I could
be learning more, and I neverhad that, never had that
entrepreneurial, uh, mentoring,so to speak.

(03:48):
Right, and even back then,unfortunately, I'm like I ain't
gonna let people know my agelike that but, that that word
entrepreneur wasn't even inpeople vocabulary.
Yeah, yeah it was.
It was a word, obviously it's athing now right, right.
And when you heard wordentrepreneur, you always thought

(04:08):
about big things, peoplebuilding big things, and so on
and so forth.
But now everybody's adaptingthe the entrepreneur and anybody
could really become anentrepreneur.
And and in my mindset and whatI've done a lot of things that
I've done I always had somethingin my heart to say that I'm
going to become an entrepreneurone day and this is what I want

(04:30):
to do.
So let me grasp at everythingbusiness, learn everything.
Business.
I mean from construction to,you know, doing the blueprinting
and drafting and retail, and Itry anything that involved a

(04:52):
business I wanted to getinvolved in and I wanted to
learn.
And that was sort of my journeyin just learning different
aspects and how business workBecause, to be honest, the
fundamental of business is verybasic.
Right, right, it's very basic.
I'll break it down for you howfundamentally basic it is.

(05:15):
You have a product, you sell itfor a price and somebody buys
it.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
For real, or you have a service For real.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
Or you have a service A service, somebody wants it
and you give them the service.
It's not complicated, prettysimple.
To me Sounds complicated, butpeople complicate it.
People, we complicate it.
We complicate stuff Becausebefore there were currency that
was traded for the service orthe product.

(05:48):
It was a border system.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
Yeah, yeah, if you do this for me, I'll do this for
you, you do this for me, andthat was back then.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
That was the business .
So where was theentrepreneurial spirit then?
You know, yeah, yeah, butobviously we're in a complex
society, we're in a complexsociety, we're in a complex
world and there's opportunitiesday and night for people to
leverage and people are willingto pay for, whether it be

(06:16):
entertainment, whether it be aservice, whether it be a product
that you have or that you canget your hands on in order to
barter for currency, right,right, and then boom, that's,
that's where and that's wherethat came from.
And but I always felt I wasdisconnected from the real, the

(06:42):
real meat and potatoes.
On how this goes down and howit happens, because you know my
parents are foreigners, thatthey came from another country
and they come to this country,the United States, for an
opportunity and yes, I was bornin the States.
I was born in the States.
I was born in the United States, in Brooklyn, new York, you

(07:05):
know, and you know I was raisedhalf understanding what the
environment that I'm in, what Ineed to do, and half what my
parents thought I should bedoing, you know, and how I
should be living, because theywere just getting acclimated to
the environment.
Okay, okay, but all that beingsaid, just, uh, just having this

(07:30):
entrepreneurial spirit toalways having ideas to do things
, and I, you know, I foundmyself loving to teach.
You know, once I gainedknowledge, I always wanted to
share it.
And, um, and I guess that's oneof the reasons why I do this, I
do the podcast, because I wantto share the knowledge.

(07:51):
I want people to understand thefundamentals of finance and come
to realize they never reallytaught us that in school.
So, right, you know, it's likeman, we didn't get this at
school.
What's going on, you know?
And then I found a way tofigure it out and, for the most
part, always learning every day.

(08:11):
I don't have 100% of theanswers, but that's how we met,
talking about finance, talkingabout savings, talking about how
we can leverage with the toolsout there, and we said, man, we
should do this, we should dothis podcast, and that's how FBN
for me, that was my road to FBN.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
What's up?

Speaker 1 (08:35):
man.
So you know it's been a longjourney.
It's still a journey, we'restill on that road Always, but
you know, it's just.
My journey was the ambition,the drive to learn and to be
better and to express it to showpeople, Because I do like

(09:08):
teaching and I do want people tolearn this to really benefit
their lives and and to besomewhat privileged and free.

Speaker 3 (09:12):
I love that man.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
That's a good that's so, so yeah, I like it and, and
that's that's what I am, and forme it's more of a literal
mental, but I, I think, when wemet up, I felt the spiritual and
I think that's what you'regoing to give me.
What you got for me, Anton.
What was your road to FD?

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Man I mean brother and it was so genuinely
progressive in ourcommunications since the time we
met to the time that weactually sat down and made a
decision, to the time that weactually sat down and made a

(09:49):
decision like we're gonna we'reactually going to actively
pursue right this, this movement, this mission, and and make it,
you know, make it somethingthat is that is real right,
because we, we, we had so manyconversations and we talked
about it and so many good thingswould come out of those
conversations, so many powerfulthings were said, to the point
that we started to document themyeah, oh no.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
I like the fact that anton said mike, hold on, I'm
gonna press record what, what,yeah, yeah, you know how to hit
like I was like wait a minute.
This is, this is not a legalconversation, brother.
No, no, I'm pressing record,because there's some stuff
you're saying I don't want tomiss.
I want to make sure I go backand review and press pause and

(10:32):
replay Exactly.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
And other times it's like I get real quiet.
You're like you all right?
Yeah, I'm taking notes, I'mwriting stuff down.

Speaker 1 (10:42):
If you didn't press record, he's writing it down.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
That's correct, and the fact that you've always been
that one who's passionate aboutteaching and I've always been
the type to be a sponge absorbknowledge.
Right, because I I do and, likeyourself, I do enjoy.
I do enjoy learning things andthen sharing them with other

(11:04):
people.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
I feel you bro.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
I mean, if I, if I, if it has to hit my heart, it
has to inspire me in a way thatmoves me to the spiritual.
You know what I mean.
Like we always talk about theliteral, the mental and the
spiritual and I have to tellpeople, like when I'm doing, you
know when I'm doing a TED talks, or I'm doing you know, you
know doing uh, ted talks, or I'mdoing, you know, you know

(11:29):
things where I'm motivating ourteam, or or our team, or the
team that I've built infinancial services.
I tell people, I give them adisclaimer, I say listen, just
so you know, before we getstarted, I got a lot of energy,
all right, and and it can, itcan peak at any time, right, you
know what I mean.
So just, I just want to tellyou so you don't get scared

(11:50):
right you know what I mean, but,but I mean my in my energy.
If I had a gift, if I had to saythat god gave me a gift or a
superpower, right, it wouldprobably be my energy or my
genuine love to connect withpeople.
Oh, that's wonderful.
Tony Robbins says something.
He said there were six humanneeds, six basic human needs

(12:11):
security, variety, recognition,love and contribution, which is
actually it's one of the two,yeah yeah, growth Sorry, sorry
Love and connection is one ofthe same.
Growth and contribution.
Okay, those are the six basichuman needs that people yearn to

(12:32):
have in some form or fashion.
All right, and maybe, maybe,maybe some, and we all have an
essence to want all of them atsome point, but usually one or
two are most prevalent to aperson and usually, when you go
down those six things, you hearyours.
You're like death, that's it,that's and mine is definitely
love and connection.
Oh, all day I get it from mymom.

(12:54):
I always say the whole world'slove can fit inside my mom's
love and that's what she gave me.
Oh man, that's beautiful.
You know what I mean.
That's always how she's been.
She's a very intelligent humanbeing.
You know what I mean and she'salways gave me that my whole
life.
You know what I mean.
So you know, coming through,going through being in business,

(13:14):
being a kid and growing up, Iwas always the type of person to
be really excited about things.
I was very easily excitable.
I say this in the episodesbefore, my mom would always tell
me son, stop thinking.
You got to be entertained allthe time.
Son, there's not going to be aeuphoric epic moment every

(13:35):
second of every day.
You know what I mean.
You gotta learn.
You gotta learn how to sit downsomewhere.
You gotta learn how to chill,yeah, chill, yeah, yeah.
So but but I was always, youknow, especially if it was
something new that reallytouched my heart you know I
would just get, I would just, Iwould be amplified by it.
You know, however, I did, didnotice through going, you know,

(14:00):
progressing in my life, that youknow I was also very easily
bored.
You know what I mean.
I get excited about something,but then I was easily bored with
it Right right, right, you knowwhatever that thing was.
So I knew that the things that Ifound in my life that stuck to
me were things that I wasprobably I was, I was probably
supposed to hold on to, for itdidn't have to make sense right

(14:22):
then, but maybe down the road itwould make sense.
So I just I just, you know Iwould have these experiences
through life.
I go through things, dodifferent businesses, and I
didn't have, I didn't have thebug early like you did.
You know what I mean.
I went through, you know, I wasdoing the corporate thing and I
had a job and I did really goodmaking money for other people
for a long time and and most ofit was in sales and always

(14:44):
connecting with people, thoughright, delivering a message or
was a product or service,whatever it was.
But I did notice when Igraduated college that I, all of
a sudden, I just thought oneday to grab, go into the uh,
into the copy office and printout all these flyers.
I was about to graduate fromcollege, uh, one of my network
administration degree, right andI noticed going through all my

(15:07):
classes, I was working for astudio at the time and everybody
just kept asking me to fixtheir computer.
And I don't know why it cameeasy, but it came easy.
And all of a sudden I just gotall these flyers and started
putting them on, on, on, on the,on the windows of cars, to all
the colleges.
I would go and I would go to theparking lot and I put flyers on

(15:28):
a hundred, 200, 300 cars untilthe fly, until the parking lot
attendant kicked me out.
Oh, wow, right.
So I got my.
That was my first take and,sure enough, weeks later not
even weeks later, this wasactually a couple months later
Some of it trickled in, but acouple months later it was just
boom, boom, boom, one after theother.
Yeah, it was crazy, because inthe studio I had nine laptops

(15:51):
laid out on the floor one day,oh wow, and everybody was coming
to pick one up because I hadfixed it.
And it just hit me that I waslike man, I'm actually doing
something for myself.
I kind of really don't want towork for anybody anymore.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
That was your little taste, that was your first taste
.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
Yeah, and sure enough , I did go back to Corbett
America for a little bit.
But then I was in a transitionin my life and a good friend of
mine, literally out of nowhere,just said, you know what?
You should go sell insurance.
And I was so open to anopportunity right to do
something for myself.
I was just like, okay 10 dayslater I had my first license

(16:29):
that's what's up yeah, so I wentand did that and and so so, and
this led me to the champ legacyof anton talk about champ.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
Yeah, this is where it happened, because that's,
that's the spiritual, that'swhat that's the spiritual.
Yeah, that's what you bring.
I'm always talking about theliteral and then you know, I I
reinforce it with the mental,but you bring, you definitely
bring the spiritual to uh, youknow, to finance bros network.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Tell them about the spiritual so, funny enough, the,
the, the company that I end upgetting with to to do the
insurance.
It was a multi-level marketingcompany.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
It was an MLM Right.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
And I mean long story short about that phase, that
season in my life.
You know most MLMs, a lot ofpeople don't really make a lot
of money, and I was one of thosepeople.
I didn't make a lot of money,but what kept me there was the
leadership development.
They always had all these rah,rah, rah meetings and stuff like
that.
Okay, and I I'm not.
I've never really been moved bythe rah, rah, rah ever till to

(17:28):
this day, but there were thesemoments where something would
touch me and then I was able toconvey that message with energy,
passion and conviction.
I I always say EPC, and Inoticed that people were
starting to kind of gravitatetowards me and it didn't really
matter what the message was.
If it hit me, I couldcommunicate it Right.

(17:50):
You know what I mean and I was.
It was a spirit, it was, it wasall spiritual, it was just, it
was in my heart.
So I was genuinely able to doit and I meant what I was saying
.
The only thing was I wasn'tmaking no dang money.
That was the only problem.
You know what I mean.
I was moving people to dowhatever they were doing, but I
wasn't making any money myself.
So after a while it began toeat at me because I felt like I

(18:16):
was preaching a message thatdidn't really ever result in
anything for myself.
So in my heart I'm saying thatthis is never going to do
anything for them either, right,but anyways.
So, getting to that, Iconsistently well, I gradually,
then consistently were just upin front of people.
Up in front of people, whetherit was a small group of five or

(18:43):
a crowd of a couple hundred orwhatever it was, I would just, I
was just not scared, bro, and Iremember man as a kid not as a
kid, not even as a kid.
No, this is when I found myself.
I found myself in thatenvironment.
It was a very inspiringenvironment.
It was a motivationalenvironment, environment.
It was a motivationalenvironment.
It was an encouragingenvironment and I thrived in
that environment, right?
So I, I noticed that watching,watching will clark.

(19:06):
When I was a kid, I was a giantsfan hit the baseball.
I never looked at him and waslike, yeah, I could do that.
That would sound cool.
I wanted to do that, I tried todo that.
I never seen bo jackson run andrun a football and be like,
yeah, I could, I could do that.
But I noticed when I started,when I started really doing
self-development, watching theEric Thomas's and the Tony
Robinson's and all those people,that that really move others.

(19:27):
When I would see them on socialmedia I would always say to
myself I can do that Like, Ireally feel, like I can, I
connect with that, I relate tothat.
So it just became a progressivething.
And then all of a sudden I justcame up with this concept like
champion, because I would justbe in the office all day.

(19:49):
I would be like I'd calleverybody champion, what's up
champ, what's up champion,what's up champion?
How you doing champion?
Yeah, and I don't even know howI started saying it, to be
honest with you.
But I walk and I'd be like hey,what's up champion, hey, champ,
yo, champ, what up champ?
Ok, and then, and then when Iwould walk in the office, it was
this thing where I wouldn'tjust open the door, right, I

(20:22):
would fling the door open and Iwould charge through the front
door.
Wow, wow.
And then after a a while I wasso I would be like champ is here
, champ is here, champ is here.
And then, after a while, when Ifling them doors open, somebody
else's voice said it firstchamp is here, champ is here.
I wasn't even saying it, nomore, and I claim.
I claim that identity withmyself because I really believed
that just somewhere along theway I gained this belief system

(20:49):
that whatever I wanted to do, Icould do it, and eventually I
had to accept the fact that Ijust wasn't going to do it there
, right right, right, rightright, there was just so much
bandwidth.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Right right, you know , there's only so much yeah, but
I knew that.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
I knew that anything was possible I got you and I
knew that I could.
I could carry that message and Icould give that message to the
world.
So when I sat down and Istarted brainstorming about this
champion thing, it brought anacronym to my heart, and the
acronym for champion is courage,honor, ambition, mentality or

(21:25):
mental toughness, persistence,integrity, ownership and
nobility, nice.
So those are the components ofa champion, and you see the
mural on my wall when you walkin the office.
You already know what it isright, right.
And then, when I came with thechamp legacy, I thought of
legacy and I thought of champ,and champ to me, since I'm a

(21:47):
connector, since love andconnection is my, is my language
, I, I, I abbreviated champ tosay connecting humanity and
manifesting prosperity.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
That's that's beautiful and I remember the
first time you told me that Iwas like.
Oh, wow that, that's cool.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
And you helped me expand on it even further, past
what I had even came up with.
We had those conversations tillone, two o'clock in the morning
however late we was on thephone just expanding on the, the
whole identity of chant andchampion and champ legacy and
what it means and what it coulddo for and what it what it would
mean to the world you know Imean right literally those are,

(22:25):
and it is that right there yeahyou know what I mean help it.
I mean, rather, it's justhelping somebody, uh uh, uncover
a gift that they might have, orhelping people realize their
potential after the fact thatthey do recognize what their
gift is.
That's what champ legacy is,brother, and and part of coming

(22:45):
together with you and theconversations we had and being
able to actually pull, pull,pull life out of that and bring
it to a even even greater height.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
Right.

Speaker 2 (22:59):
Well, it was just, it was just.
I mean, it was, it was, it wasdivine, it was a divine
appointment yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Divine intervention Divine intervention yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
So, and then you know , moving into into what, what
that I've been in all this timenow, for a decade.
You know finance.
You know finance.
You know insurance andfinancial services.
Right, you know it, just it.
Just it just felt.
Right, man, you know what Imean, and you being the teacher
that you are, and me being thepassion that I am, you know you,

(23:28):
I mean me being the the, the oraspiration and you, you know,
you, knowing how to breakeverything down to the simplest
form, yeah simple to itssimplest form.
It just became it.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
Just, it just became finance bros, you know real talk
and listen, and that that wasour past and right now we're
giving it to you.
We, we have a podcast.
We announced our our soon-to-benetwork, well TV network.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
Yeah, hhn TV, hhn.

Speaker 1 (23:59):
TV network premiere.
That's coming soon, but westill got more to come Like.
We want to grow every aspect ofour literal, mental and
spiritual, and we spoke aboutthis.
We spoke about, you know, eachthing having its own, its own
growth.
The literal part how we canhelp society Um, we literally go

(24:22):
out there and touch people,literally to help them with
their finance.
Mental, what can we provide,what service we can provide to
help them stay focused mentally,cause that's what I think are
underprivileged income peopleout here.
They're not getting that,they're not getting somebody

(24:44):
who's going to hold them by thehand, because that should have
happened when they were fiveyears old, when they started
public school and startedtalking to them about finance,
which is still not happening tothis day.
Still not happening to this day.
No, still not happening, right.
And then the spiritual part isjust being able to have champ
legacy, um, just just be evolved, even to a school we spoke

(25:08):
about that and that could behappening in the future where we
we have people come into aschool, that and it could be a
nonprofit that we have peopledonate to help people train and
let them see and understanding,giving them understanding the

(25:30):
kind of spiritual guidance thatthey would need to grow within
themselves, to help grow theirfinance Absolutely, man Realize
potential.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
You know what I mean when you, when you, when we, we
put the concepts of the, of thefinance bros and put them into
some, like you obviously, like Isaid, break it down to the
simple where people can actuallyfollow a format and then we go
and champ legacy it with theencouragement to help people
take those steps consistently.
Right, I mean I, I, I mean Ijust love the combination, man.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
And getting together every week and bringing new
information to people and justbeing excited about it.
Actually going through my weeklooking forward to Saturday yeah
, you know.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Yeah, we get to put it all together.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, most of the time it's on
Saturday, yeah yeah, sometimesduring the week it just depends
on what we got, what's going on,but most of the time is
saturdays that we try to.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
We try to put our podcast together and make sure
you know we're getting thatmessage out there, so yeah so
it's.
It's definitely been a road youknow, uh to uh, something to
look at and something to lookforward to you know absolutely,
brother, because that road isnever ending.
Oh, it's a journey, man, it'snot.

(26:42):
It's not a destination thingit's a journey type thing.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
You know I mean always, forever, evolving,
forever, you know, able tocontinue to expand our, our, our
, our bandwidth, as you putearlier, and do more things, do
bigger things, do it with morepeople.
I mean it's to expand ourcapacity constantly.
So, and you know we've beenworking on the finance bros

(27:05):
lately.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
Right right.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
And people.
I don't think people know thatthe bros mean something.
It's an acronym for something.
We ain't going to give it tothem yet, but it's coming.
But it's coming Right.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
Yeah, we're constantly making accurate and
it's just a simple way to toremember stuff, so absolutely so
that's why we give it to youlike that, but but as usual,
we're gonna give them thebreakdown for this episode, just
keeping it consistent, right,keeping it consistent so let's
look at the literal.
the literal says stay, uh, stay,stay, putting your time and

(27:46):
effort in something you want andeventually it's going to happen
.
And that's what we did.
You know that was we stayed onthe road, we stayed putting time
and effort into it, and we'remaking it happen Consistently,
so consistently.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Doing everything we talking about Right, taking our
own advice.
There you go.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
And the mental.
No matter what, no matter howhard it gets, don't stop.
You can't stop.
I love it, man, becausementally it will get hard.
It'd be like too muchoverwhelming, a lot of barriers.
Don't stop.

Speaker 2 (28:31):
It's easy to quit when things get hard all day.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
It's easy all day.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
I don't feel like doing it anymore.
I mean, I know I'm supposed, Iknow I'm doing this for my kids
Quit when things get hard, hardall day, it's easy All day.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
I don't feel like doing it anymore Tired.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
You know what I mean.
I know I'm doing this for mykids, but I can't do this right
now because I got to go takecare of my kids.
Letting your why become your?
Why not?
There you go.

Speaker 3 (28:46):
Again, hard pill to swallow, but it's the truth.
We did speak about that.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
We spoke about the spiritual, yeah, the champ
legacy.
There you go, give it to them.
So this is good.
Manifestation should be a partof what you are inspiring for on
a daily basis to make yourdreams come true.

(29:12):
There you go, man.
I love that man.
And look, manif manifestingthings like putting things out
there in in verbal, like whether, whether it's whether you want
to call your, you're saying youraffirmations in a mirror.
Some people like to say themout loud.
I see them sometimes when I goon my walks outside.
You know, I mean the reaffirmingthose things and put them out

(29:33):
there in the world likemanifesting things that can
happen in so many different waysright rather you, rather you
obsess over it all day, bythinking about it and then
finally putting something topaper because if it's a thought
it could become an action.
And the things that come out,the things that the things that
we let into our, our, our eyes,our ears, you think things and

(29:55):
put in the food we put in ourmouth right eventually becomes
part of us and comes out of ourheart.
You know what I mean.
So I mean it's, it's all a partof that being state for us.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
Yeah, right, so watch what you take in and watch what
you put out hey, and, and we,even, we even decided to make a
t-shirt for this one and I'll goahead and let you guys know,
because we gotta keep itconsistent for our audience out
there and the t-shirt would saythis one gonna hit a little bit
the t-shirt would say you can'tgrow and be comfortable at the

(30:26):
same time so that's what we hadto do for on this road.
We had to get uncomfortable.
Had to get uncomfortable,brother, we had to get
uncomfortable.
Had to get uncomfortable,brother, we had to get
uncomfortable.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
And it's okay and that's why we're growing.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
Exactly that's why we're growing.
So the t-shirt says you can'tgrow and be uncomfortable at the
same time, and we're definitelymaking sure that we're
following that philosophy, rightthere, absolutely, brother.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Hey, man, we're doing this with nobody else, brother,
yeah me too, man and mike.
Look man you are.
You are definitely consistent,brother.
Oh, if the world don't know,I'm saying I'm letting them know
right now.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
You can depend on that.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
That's the truth and I appreciate the accountability
too, because every every, everyday, every time we say we're
gonna do it, you show up and wedo it and we make it happen.
And when it's done you surefeel a whole lot better, no
matter how uncomfortable it is.
This been a long day right here, yeah, by itself, by itself,
but I feel, I feel great that wegot it done.
We got it all done amen untilnext time.

(31:30):
All right, all right.
So, oh, we gotta uh let themknow about, uh, the.
Oh, yeah, let's just tell themhow we do.
So I'm like thinking about the,about the HHF, but anyway, you
guys can check us out on allyour social media podcast
platforms, obviously Applepodcast, iheartradio, spotify,

(31:50):
google podcast.
You might be up down, left,right, wherever, whatever
Depends on which social mediaplatform you might be up down,
left right, wherever, whateverdepends on which social media
platform you might be watchingthis on.
And also, remember, don'tforget to come check us out at
our home now on HHN TV.
And as usual, mike, Iappreciate you, you know it, and

(32:11):
we'll see you at the bank.
Peace y'all, take care world.

Speaker 3 (32:15):
Thank you, thank you.
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