Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:17):
just notes 6.
Hi, welcome to another episodeof life changes, and this is
Mike.
Today we have a special guestin the studio with us, so it's
not just going to be me goingblah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
You know what I'm saying, andwe're recording in a live studio
(00:38):
audience.
Everybody in the audience?
Please clap.
No, we're still in my studio,it's just us.
But today we have our specialguest.
His name is Tim.
He's from Frontline PaintballPodcast, so that's Frontline
Paintball Podcast and he's goingto talk a little bit about his
podcast.
And they go live and they havevideo.
A little more high tech, theyhave videos.
(01:01):
So they go live Friday at 7pmweekly and you can see them live
on the Facebook and YouTube andall you got to do is look up
Frontline Paintball Podcast andwe'll have the links in the
description to all their socialmedia as well.
As they go live on Sunday at8pm as well.
But if you want to just tell usto him a little bit of what
your podcast is all about, yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
So first of all,
thanks for having me on your
podcast.
Life Changers Paintball PodcastBrought a Life Changers for
myself.
Actually, I'll take it back to2019 if you want.
We can go all the way back.
Myself and another friend, wewere always paintballing and we
went live one night for an eventand we had a good hit.
(01:41):
We had lots of conversations onthere talking about the event,
promoting the event, and then weshowed up at another event
afterwards and we talked aboutit and we decided let's run with
a paintball podcast beingsponsored.
As a paintballer, you have toconstantly be putting out
content, at least something oncea week.
So we've decided sometimeswe're not in events recording
(02:06):
doing action videos.
So we figured let's dosomething that we can constantly
keep putting out, putting outinformation, showing people,
different events to go to Actionvideos, interviews.
We wanted to do all that.
Give everybody one thing.
So that's what we went with.
And Frontline is because that'swhere you're going to find us.
We don't hide behind bunkers,we don't do nothing else.
(02:27):
We're on the frontline puttingin work.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
It's awesome.
So you started like is thispodcast only for pros?
Like, if I'm just an ad-vidpaintballer, I just go on
paintballing once a month oronce a couple of times a year.
Is it something a podcast youthink I would be interested in,
or is it just for pros?
Speaker 2 (02:43):
Absolutely.
Anybody can check it out, andthat's one of our things that we
try to focus on.
Most is bringing theinformation to the players that
they want.
So we get a lot of new playersthat'll be coming in and they'll
be in one of the Facebook chatgroups or something like that
and they'll be like where can wefind this, where can we pick
this up?
What type of gear is the best?
So we have episodes where wechannel towards specifically
(03:07):
helping those people out.
Check out this gear.
If you want to start off onentry-level gear, like you said,
being a new player, you onlyplay once a month, so you might
just want to have, you know,basic gear.
You don't need nothing hardcore, like a lot of the stuff I use
is for real steel.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
So let's say, I'm
listening to this podcast right
now and I'm like I'm going tocheck out Frontline Paintballing
podcast and I'm just thinkinglike, well, you know how much
money is this going to cost me?
I'm going to need like 10 grandto get gear to be like kick-ass
quality To play or to do apodcast To play.
I want to play withpaintballing.
I get all excited because I'mwatching you guys.
I'm hearing you guys talk aboutthe events.
(03:42):
I'm like, oh, is it going tocost me a lot of money?
or is it just going to besomething for fun, that I can do
fun and spend a couple ofhundred bucks.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
Well, it can.
If you want to go down thatrabbit hole, yeah, it's going to
cost it can cost you a lot ofmoney.
But no, not really Like.
If you want to start offplaying like I'm a mag fed
player and what a mag fed playeris is we do like everything
real.
So I'm like like real markers.
We don't have a hopper on topof our gun or nothing like that.
Well, actually, not a gunmarker.
We don't have no, um, nothinglike that.
(04:10):
So no entry level.
You can come in, you can buy amarker mag fed marker for two
300 bucks, buy your mags with itand you just basically need a
dump pouch.
Huh, you know.
So when you're done using yourmags, take them out, drop them
in your dump pouch, continuegoing, come off the field,
re-bomb them away.
You go.
A couple hundred bucks can getyou in the game.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
Yeah, paintballing is
a very fun sport.
I used to paintball a lot whenI was back in the day.
It was fun.
I thought we were good.
We used to play every weekendwith my buddies and on the same
track up near our house inQuebec, canada.
And then one time the policewere there like their SWAT team
version of the police were thereand they're like nobody wants
to play with us?
Anybody want to play with us?
(04:49):
I'm like we'll take you, butprepare to lose, because I'm
like 16, 17 at the time.
I'm like prepare to lose, buddy.
Yeah, okay, man, no problem.
And I actually have two episodesor three episodes where we talk
about paintballing on on LifeChangers podcast here.
I'm a nice paintball, butanyways, and yeah, I remember
we're all like okay.
(05:09):
So we split up into two groupsMe, I took about five kids well,
five kids, five guys, we're alllike 16 or 14.
And then my buddy took fiveguys and we were doing the ones
where there's two towers and awhole bunch of like houses in
between and I was like after theflag style, so, with the,
physically, climb their tower,take their flag, physically, run
it back to our base.
And yeah, I remember we're likewe got this, guys, we'll just
(05:32):
take it easy on them.
We're all joking around andthen we're like set up in our
houses at the beginning of thefield and I remember I just like
, hey guys, I'm just going totake a look at what's what, see
where they're scattering, andthen let's go.
I popped my head out and allhere's look back at my friends.
Do you guys hear that?
They're like you were hit inthe head.
I'm like oh crap they hit meright in the ear and you know,
(05:55):
I'm like, yeah, you have maskson and it's protected, and it's
just still loud though.
Oh yeah, so my ears wereringing.
I was like, wow, we got wipedout and last on like two minutes
.
So I was like, okay, let's setup.
I think the cops are like doyou want us to take it easy on
you, boy?
Speaker 2 (06:10):
No no, no, let's do
this.
I told everybody rush them,Everybody just rush, run, rush,
scatter they can't shoot us all,and that's it, that's and see,
that's, that's, um.
So we have big games.
I'm not sure if you're aware.
So in Canada, here and in theUnited States, all across the
world, they have big games,least every weekend in the
(06:32):
summer.
You can go somewhere and you'regoing to find a game that's
going on.
Some big games can vary from 3,400 people up to, in the state
you can get 3, 4000 people at agame.
So you have a commander and he'scommand, and both of you is
back and forth, back and forth,and that's one of my main things
that I've always said as acommander when we have a certain
(06:52):
mission and we need points, wedon't mess around.
We send the whole team in onedirection because chances are,
as teams are splitting up to gettheir missions done, one
commander will send 10 guys left, send 10 guys to the right
flank, and you know a bunch hereand there.
So if I were to send my guysout the same way trying to
capture an objective, we'regoing to get into a bunch of
(07:14):
little firefights.
Some of our guys are gettinghit here, some of our guys are
getting taken out over here.
But when I send in 150 to 200guys and we're charging one
objective.
You ain't getting all of us.
You might hit the first five orsix, but charge them and be
aggressive.
Get the points, don't hesitate.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Do it, do it and like
the fields you play in, like
this is just for fun, like thequestions I'm asking, because I
like paintball.
I haven't been in a long time,now that I'm an old geezer.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
Oh, how you make me
feel a little.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
No, I'm joking, I
mean, I'm young, I'm young, but
like the fields I played in, wehad like just woods, open woods,
there's nothing in between us.
We had ones where you can seethe other team, but they're far
enough he can't shoot them.
That's just tall grass inbetween, that's it.
Bunker, like a hole, a hole.
We're in our hole, tall grass,that's it.
(08:03):
And you know I've been in somehas bunkers.
I've been somewhere.
If you pay a premium you canride a little slack line or
whatever, and it's like you'rein a helicopter and you're just
unloading a machine gun andeverybody below stuff like that
with tanks and buildings andwhatnot.
So is this pretty much similarhere?
Speaker 2 (08:19):
in Ontario.
Oh yeah, very similar.
We had a place here to shutdown this year.
It was our last year.
It opened up in 2010.
So we had it for 13 years.
It was called PRZ.
It was up in Picton, ontario,and it was in an old military
training base and then it wentdown to the St Asylum.
So we've played there for many,many years.
(08:42):
Helicopters you can get I thinkit was like 50 bucks one year
and you could pay cash 50 bucksand you could get a tour up
around the field.
You could shoot down out of theaircraft, out of the helicopter
, and shoot it, but chances thatyou hit in anybody is next to
none, right, especially withpaintballs.
There's zipping left and rightwith the wind and everything
(09:02):
More for fun, yeah.
But we get army tanks.
We've had APCs where we're allin the back of a armor personnel
carrier Wow, getting droppedoff in behind enemy lines.
All kinds of stuff.
Night vision goggles in games,because they have hallways and
it's pitch black.
You can't see nothing.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
So you get some guys
that are like totally kitted out
with like yeah, like I see insome of the YouTube videos these
guys are all decked out.
Even I guess there's likeairsoft, which is a different
sport but similar concept.
Yep, but yeah, they're alldecked out with their gear and
their hardcore.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
Oh, and you know
there's.
It takes you back to being akid.
Like you know, when I was a kid, we'd always be running around
bang, bang, you're dead, andyou'd have a stick that looked
like a gun, or you'd use a pinecone that was a grenade.
Now you know yourself, we havesmoke grenades, we have airsoft
grenades.
There's all types of things outthere now that we can use in
(09:55):
with the game.
That just makes it so muchbetter.
Yeah, get hit with a paintball.
It's splats, you know, givesyou that effect of being hit.
I guess you could say yeahsplats.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Yeah, I like the.
I guess the thrill ofpaintballing and all that and
joining a crew and playing onthe fields and stuff with just
random people is just bondingright, just having fun.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
It is going out and
it's everybody's welcome, I'm
sure like all ages are out there, so you can't really take a
field until you're 10.
Okay, but you will see somepeople that they're taking their
kids for a walk of the fieldbefore the game starts or after
the game or during lunch hours,because the kids like, when
they're coming off they'rehearing dad talk about the game,
(10:33):
right, or here and mom talkabout the game.
They want to go see what'sgoing on.
And now they got gel blastersand everything to start getting
these kids ready for paintball.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Yeah, there's
something called the splat guns
or something.
Yeah, splat masters.
Yeah, splat masters, yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
And the kids are
ready to those, and you can get
like 30,000 gel capsules likesuper cheap for the kids, right,
and you can get like airfieldstoo.
So when you're showing up tothese events you can build these
little I guess you could callit like a field, I guess for the
kids, and you can have blow upbunkers and stuff like that,
(11:06):
yeah, so, yeah, so you know,while dad's on the field, a lot
of the times mom's alwaystraveling with right Cause it's
a family thing Paintball reallyis.
it's a big family thing.
You see a lot of familiesgetting involved in it, now more
and more since COVID's hit too,because when COVID hit, let's
be honest, everybody kind ofstuck together, stuck to the
family.
And now what we're?
(11:27):
Teams of many different players.
Now it's like my son's playing,my nephew's coming up to play,
you know so Nice.
Yeah, it's a family thing.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
So, literally, what
made you decide from being a
paintballer to being like youknow what?
Let's launch this podcast and,like, let's do it.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Well, like I was
saying earlier, um, when I first
started playing, paintball wasa 2015, and I went to a couple
of big games and I realized thatthis is what I want to do, Like
this is my thing.
And to get known, I wanted toget sponsored, get taken care of
.
So you have to have a minimumof so many subscribers on each
year's social media platforms.
(12:04):
You gotta have a good reach.
Well, I was making contentaction videos but I wasn't um,
it wasn't my main thing.
I didn't.
I like to do them for my ownpersonal sake.
I didn't like to do them topromote anybody else.
It was kind of like a look back, like a memory kind of thing.
Like this is how the day went.
A year later, I could look backat that content that I made and
(12:25):
be like yeah, I remember this,so you have to go to get
sponsored.
Like I said, they want to seenumbers, they want to see you're
constantly putting out content,you're constantly promoting.
So I thought, do it a podcastwould be the right way to go.
You do a podcast every week.
I can cover action videos, Ican cover interviews, I can take
care of sponsors.
I could do all of that in one.
(12:46):
So that was that was the maingoal for pushing and meeting new
people, learning why they'rewanting to play paintball, the
reason of that cause we don't dojust mag fed interviews.
We don't just do um load out umepisodes.
We interview people frombeginners Like we've talked to
(13:07):
young kids that are just cominginto the sport, what they want
out of the sport, what theythink of it right To
professional players that arejust in Las Vegas two weekends
ago just can't swear kicking ass.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
They're just kicking
ass out there, right.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
We've got a Canadian
girls team now that are new into
the pro field.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
So that's awesome.
So, once again, we have instudio.
We have Tim with frontlinepaintball podcasts and he does
live episodes on Friday at 7pmevery week and he can see them
live on this Facebook page andYouTube channel, which we'll
have links.
He's also on Instagram wherethey have a lot of photos and
pictures and short videos.
I believe on Instagram as wellas Sunday they're live at 8pm
(13:45):
and that's the same thing onFacebook and YouTube and we'll
have the links as well, and alsothey play their older stuff.
He can go back and scrollthrough and watch.
So if you're a paintballer andyou never heard of it, check it
out.
It's fun information, it's alot of good stuff and you'll be
able to hear all the differentthings and they do a lot of cool
promotions as well as thegiveaways and stuff like that on
your podcast.
And when you're out in thefield and people come and say,
(14:06):
hey, what's up?
You know Tim from podcast.
So if you're on the field andyou see them, go talk to them
and say hey, absolutely.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
Yeah, come up and say
hi, like don't be shy.
Like that was one thing Inoticed when I first started
into the sport.
I was always shy going up andmeeting people.
But that's one thing that weneed more of because, like, our
sport is, a lot of people thinkit's a big sport but it's
actually really small.
Like you can meet any proplayer you want to meet within a
couple of conversations with acouple of people, like they're
(14:33):
right there.
It's not like you know, tryingto get a hold of Wayne Gretzky
or somebody, or Michael Jordan,you know, and you got to go
through agents and stuff likethat.
So here it's basically justknow the right person, reach out
and you can be talking to thatperson pretty quick.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
That's awesome.
So let's get to the gravity ofthe situation Now that you're on
life changers.
So now we're going to shiftgears and talk about changing
lives and stuff like that.
So have you been familiar orhave you ever heard the terms of
, like law of attraction andstuff like that before?
And what did you think?
(15:07):
Like when you heard about it?
Somebody was talking about it,because the first time I when I
heard about this stuff, I waslike I was about 16 to 18 when I
started hearing this and payingattention and I was like these
people sound nuts.
What's your take on life law ofattraction?
What is your perspective on it?
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Well, first of all,
why would you say?
Speaker 1 (15:24):
it's nuts.
Why?
Because, well, when I wasintroduced to it, there was that
book on that movie that cameout called the Secret and that
was really popular in theChristian world.
Okay, and yeah, I did grow upChristian, if anybody's
wondering.
But yeah, when I came out,people were talking about it.
I watched the video and allthese people are like you know
(15:45):
pretty much.
You know I mentioned it manytimes in my podcast, but people
were like you know, all I did ismake a vision board.
I'm like, oh boy, here we go.
I took pictures of what Iwanted in life, because law of
attraction when I was prettymuch told what it was is like
you just wheel it into existence, you believe it will happen and
it will happen.
And they made it sound likethere's no work, there's no give
(16:07):
or take.
It's just like I'm sitting in aroom going where is my house?
Here's my house.
Oh, look, I got a keys and Ihave a house right and I was
like these people sound likedirty hippies.
I watched too much South Parkin Oak Park, man dirty hippie.
But that's the way I saw it whenI first hearing about it and I
(16:28):
guess maybe it's differentbecause, like my dad you know we
grew in my house was like, mydad is very Christian and he
would be like, you know it's not.
You know, universal guidance ornot, it's God and this and that
right, and you know I'd say itall the time on my podcast.
I don't care what you call it.
You can call it universalguidance, mother Earth, god,
holy Ghost, gut feeling, I don'tcare, it's all you know.
(16:50):
It gets you to the same placewith the law of attraction.
But what is your, I guess,perspective of the law of
attraction and what you wereintroduced to before we decided
to go either crazy or not crazy?
Speaker 2 (17:04):
That's a good
question.
So how do I want to answer thisone?
That's a good one.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
And no filters here,
man.
We just say what's on our mind.
I don't even have a script.
Where's your script?
You got a script.
No, I left it out there in thegreen room, that's right, no, ah
, all I give here is a bottle ofwater.
I don't even have snacks.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
But hey, actually you
know I'm drinking a lot of
water.
I'm actually nervous right now.
Why?
Speaker 1 (17:32):
You do podcasts all
the time.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
Yeah, like I'm doing
someone else's podcast.
It's not too often I've been onanother podcast, like I'm a
little bit nervous, you got togive another podcast.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
I absolutely Um,
because like it's just, you know
, we're just chatting, havingfun, and then we're going to
talk about and see where the youknow, where the I guess the
mood or the trend will take usin our conversation.
So, like I mean, you don'treally have to answer if you
don't want to, if you can'tthink of anything at the moment.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
Well, I'm just trying
to like.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Cause here at life
changers.
We're such big shots I make himnervous.
Look at our studio.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
I just don't know
where to start.
You threw me off to your comeon, run a podcast.
I was like, yeah, let's do this.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
So now you got me um.
So we were literally justhanging out talking and I'm like
, hey, man, do you want to do apodcast?
He's like, sure, I'll be aguest.
I'm like we'll talk about yourstuff and we'll promote you, but
then we're going to talk aboutlife changer stuff and I'm like
we don't have a script ornothing.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
We just wing it.
He's like okay.
So, um, going back to whatyou're saying, love attraction
maybe I'll come back to that onebecause it's a good one.
I just don't know where to gowith it.
So many different ways I canapproach that.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
Yeah, so here's some
basic information that I tell
people about love attraction andstuff like that.
I call it like the uh, you know, the girlfriend effect or the
boyfriend effect or whatever youwant to call it.
Um, you know, but pretty muchwhen we're chasing stuff, you
know, here's a fun thing.
I would talk about it all thetime Cause you know, all my
viewers listen to me and hear metalking and promoting all this
(19:00):
stuff.
But it's good to bring peopleand guests and the last guest I
had, he didn't you know was youknew about love attraction, but
you know it doesn't agree withall my crazy.
Okay, but I don't expect peopleto agree with me and be with
them.
That's the whole point.
Speaker 2 (19:15):
Well, that's the
whole point of this right
Talking yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
And, but anyway, so
you know, with the girlfriend
effect or the job effect orwhatever you want to call it,
cause you always hear peoplelike you know, okay, Mike?
So so I'm really trying to getthis dream job and I'm sitting
there meditating and trying tocreate the reality and all that
stuff and getting my dream job,and I'm chasing my dream job.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
I'm like ha ha.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Chasing.
That's what you're doing wrong.
If I'm chasing you, are yourunning?
Hey, what are you doing, Mike?
Why are you chasing?
You want to talk?
Speaker 2 (19:41):
I'm running.
If you're chasing me, I'm goingthe opposite direction, my man.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
Yeah, the main thing
is, uh, you got to set it and
forget it, in the sense of whenyou're hardcore looking for a
job and you're like I need a job, give me a job, you know you're
putting in the universe lackthereof, like you black, like
that, you don't have a job, youcan't get a job.
It's hard to get a job andthat's what you're putting in
the universe and that's whatyou're going to get in return.
But do you notice, as soon asyou get a job, you're not caring
(20:06):
about it anymore.
You have a job, whatever.
Now you get phone calls fromall these places and you're like
how come they didn't call meearlier when I was so desperate?
You know what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, and you know peopleare like yeah, that's just
coincidence, right?
I'm like meh, it's a coincidence, up to a point when it happens
every single damn time.
And the same thing withgirlfriend or boyfriend.
You know how I'm trying to findtrue love, you know.
(20:27):
And blah, blah, blah, becauseevery the main topics that a lot
of people talk about for loveattraction in their podcast or
in their YouTube channels orwhatever.
It's just like how to manifestlove and how to manifest this.
You know, you can manifestanything you want, but when
you're chasing love, love isgoing to run away from you.
But when you find the specialsperson that you want to be with,
then you're like well, look atall these other people that want
(20:48):
me now.
Yeah, yeah, where was my optiona few months ago?
Yeah, the only difference is isyou're not putting lack, you
know.
So a lot of my conversationsand a lot of my talks and my
podcast and my experiments isgoing to casinos and people are
like oh, it's impossible to winthere.
You'll never win, you alwayslose.
It's against you, it's for thehouse, it's not for you.
That's why you lose.
Yeah, if you're going in withthat mindset already, you're
(21:12):
down, you're down.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Yeah, you can't go in
with that mindset.
You got to go with a positivemindset.
I think, with mine going intoit with the paintball is we had
our goals, we knew what wewanted and at first it was.
It was a rough start because wewere trying to chase what we
wanted.
Like you were saying you can'tchase it right, and we were like
(21:35):
you know what?
This is what we wanted, this iswhat we wanted.
And then, as time went by, itjust slowly started unfolding.
We slowly stopped payingattention or we slowly stopped
chasing it and just let it be,just let it naturally flow.
It's going to be like this.
It's going to come.
It's going to come.
We were more important becauseour podcast is more for giving
(21:58):
back to the paintball community.
So, like when our sponsors takecare of us, 95% of the stuff
our sponsors give us, we giveback.
And that was our main thing.
Like how do we approach asponsor?
How do we get this going?
How can we get this giving backto the people?
And once we just kind of likeyou know what, let's put that
aside, we'll let that come as itnaturally comes.
(22:19):
And the next thing I know we'regetting one sponsor and it was
like, okay, this is cool.
And then it was like he saidthree more coming out of the
woodwork, we like to sponsor you, we like to sponsor you.
So then we just kept focusingon what we were doing.
We just said you know what,let's not focus on the sponsors,
because obviously we're doingsomething right, because they're
coming to us now.
So then we just kept focusingon that and stopped chasing it,
(22:40):
because then they started comingto us and we wanted them.
So it's like we were meetingeach other halfway.
There was no running.
It's like, no, I'm running toyou, I'll meet you halfway.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
Like, let's do this,
you gotta set it on autopilot,
yeah that's a good way of sayingit Because, like you know, if
I'm sitting here going, you knowit's hard making a podcast.
How do I get all these peopleto listen?
How do I get out, how do I dothis, how do I do this?
And then you start figuringthings out, but no one's going
to listen to me because I'm notpopular, I'm not famous, I'm not
this, or I don't have enoughmoney to advertise.
I don't have.
Well then, you'll never besuccessful in a podcast.
(23:11):
And, like, for me, it's just I.
My attitude was the university'stelling me to start the podcast
.
So I started doing the podcastand I'm like I'm just going to
set it and forget it.
All these people that werearound me were like don't put
too much money into it becauseit's just going to flop and this
and that.
I'm like I said that's the samething you told me about in 2019
(23:31):
when I started the homedelivery service for what we do
with the store here.
And people are like oh, youknow, that's another one of your
ideas.
You know, mike, don't put allyour money and time and effort
into it.
But I'm like no, I know exactlyhow it's going to happen.
I'm not going to control it.
I'm just going to let it happen.
But I noticed the moment I takecontrol.
I'd be like, oh, look howamazing I am.
(23:52):
I started a podcast.
I'm getting all these views.
Oh, look at me.
Then things start sucking.
Same thing with the company.
When I'm like, look how amazingI am, look oh, blah, blah, blah
.
And then the universe is likeoh yeah, and now I'm trying to
take control of it, I losecontrol of it.
It's funny how it works.
Speaker 2 (24:11):
Yeah, I've had things
like that happen to me, where
it's been trying to take controlof things and you just can't do
it.
It's like you know what.
You got to step back a littlebit and, just like you said, put
it on autopilot, let it runitself, take care and enjoy it,
because podcasting, to me, isnot a job, it's not an income.
I want to have fun with it.
If it's starting to becomewhere it's like this is like a
(24:34):
job, it gets to be like a like ahassle.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
No, that's fun, I
guess.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Yeah, it's not as fun
.
It's like because I like, likeon a day that consists for me, I
love getting up because I do alot of the stuff for our podcast
, Like I'll do all thethumbnails, I'll do the editing,
I'll do all the posters, stufflike that.
So there's a lot of work thatgoes in behind it.
A lot of people think you justget on the screen, you talk, you
know, you shoot the shit withyour buddies and you have a good
(25:01):
time, you bring a guest on, youlearn a little bit.
No, like you're doing researchon your guest for you know,
sometimes two, three weeks,sometimes even a month, you're
doing research on your guestBecause when they come on your
show, let's be honest, you don'twant to be sitting there
because a podcast is constantlytalking and flowing.
You don't want to be sittingthere, quiet and having crickets
, right yeah, and with paintballyou can only dive so much into
(25:22):
somebody's background about,because a lot of people in
paintball they don't share theirlife story.
So this is where I'm from.
This is what goes on.
It's basically this is my styleof paintball and this is what
goes on.
So to actually get to knowsomebody within an hour on the
air.
It's kind of hard, you know.
So I'm the one that I like tothrow the big questions out
there too, the ones that peoplewant to hear, not the ones that
(25:45):
you know.
That are just your basic.
So how long you beenpaintballing?
What got you into paintballingNine out of ten times?
Somebody's saying it was abirthday party or a wedding that
they went to their best man orsomething like that that they
went to.
I want to hear more about it.
Like, let's go back to when youwere a kid.
Like, were you running aroundpretending you were John Rambo?
Like, were you somebody in yourimagination playing outside
(26:07):
with your friends?
Like, what was going on?
What brought you to playpaintball?
Because anyone can.
I can be working with you todayand say you know what?
We're having a staff day andwe're all going to go check out
paintballing.
Okay, that's cool, but whatmade Mike want to get us to go
check out paintballing?
Was it something that was goingon with you when you were
younger that just listen likemaybe you wanted to be military,
(26:29):
never were military.
Or maybe you wanted to bepolice, like those police
officers that you werepaintballing against you were
like you know what, let's go doit and just things and life
changes.
Something happened, so youcouldn't go that route, you
couldn't take that career.
So now you're like man, I'm abig kid, I'm like 43 years old
and I'm doing 15 year old things.
12 year old things you know likethey're on the field just
(26:51):
having fun letting it go, andthat's what paintball is.
You know like some people mightgravitate towards playing
hockey or something else.
For a stress reliever, you goto play paintball.
Everything's left at the at thegate.
You know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
Like you're not
thinking of oh, I got a bill to
do I got this, I got this to do.
Speaker 2 (27:10):
I got to work next
week.
You don't think nothing likethat.
You're just you're a kid againjust having fun on the field
with all the guys or the ladies,whoever's there, and you're
just having fun, man.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
That's awesome and
that's the whole point of I
guess, like when you go out anddo social events, it's just to
hang out and have fun and meetpeople and talk to them and hear
their story, cause you know,it's like like that song, right?
Like everybody has a story totell.
Everybody has a thing,everybody you know, and whatnot,
right?
Yep, and it's funny to hearpeople's stories.
Like I bring a lot of people onhere and I say tell me your
(27:43):
story.
And like a lot of people Ibring on, it's like you know
there's a story, takes them tohaving their own podcast.
Or like one of our other guestsfrom not audio, his name is
Mike.
That's funny.
Speaker 2 (27:54):
Mike and Mike in the
studio.
You call the mic too.
Mike and Mike on the mic.
That's exactly what we say.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
But you know and like
how it changes their lives and
stuff, because you could planfor anything you want in this
world.
But I know this one, especiallywhen we're kids, and I would
say a lot of people plan for allthis.
When I get older, this house isgoing to be I've done the same
thing.
I'm like I'm going to be abusinessman and this is how I'm
going to be.
I'm going to be so rich, I'llhave houses everywhere and we'll
(28:22):
be able to go to the Bahamasand do whatever I want.
Well, no, now I'm sitting inthe podcast studio recording.
Life changer is Mike For thewinner.
So one thing I guess just likein paintballing and in life I
always give advice to peoplewhen they ask me for advice is
you just got to learn to rollwith it, and that's one of the
podcast episodes we have calledjust rolling with it.
(28:42):
Just, you have to be willing topivot and do whatever needs to
be done where you feel yourselfbeing pulled by the universe or,
you know, in your case, likepaintball community, when you're
out in the field, you're notlike okay, this is the plan,
we're going to do this andexecute it, no matter what, even
if we, you know, get taken outof the game and lose points no
no, we're going to pivot and gooh, now we got to do this.
We lost Timmy.
He's out of the game you got toreassess it, right?
Speaker 2 (29:06):
Yeah, yeah, just like
, just like anything, you know,
something happens becausethere's games that we're going
out to and you've got hundredsand hundreds of people and you
have a game plan, but as soon asthat horn goes, throw it out
the window.
Everything you put together isgone, it out the window.
The only thing that you havethat's the same as the players
on your team.
Everything else is totallychanged.
(29:28):
Right, you got these 10 peopleand, like when you're at a
paintball field, you know it'slike you're hurtling, hurdle,
getting cows together, hurtinghurting cows.
Thank you, yes it's a hurdle,but, yeah, it's like hurting
cats are, like it's crazy man,like guys are everywhere.
And then A lot of people likewhen you're there as a commander
(29:51):
, you'll have All your missionsby the hour or every half hour
that come in.
You have new missions coming in, so you might need people with
riot shields.
You might need people withheavy gunners that are running
box mags like 350 rounds, thatthey're just holding them one
drum you know what I mean andthey've got another six, seven
hundred rounds on them.
You have people that arerunning just pistols because
(30:13):
they need to be like to runcertain missions, to do
different things, right, so youget all these people doing
something, but then, at the endof the day, a lot of these
people are recording, so whatyou need them to do goes right
out the window, because they'rethinking I need to make an
action video.
Right, I need to come inthrough this window like this
and, like I said, I said wherewe played, yeah, and like I said
(30:33):
where we played at PRZ, it wasno, the same asylum and they had
a three story.
They had a two story warehouses,gym, nate, you name it.
It was there, right, so it waslike a real urban, a real urban
feeling, and you would have likeExplosives going off constantly
, like they spent like ninethousand dollars on one game
(30:54):
just for the Pyrotechnicians tocome in and do things and it's
pretty wild the things that theydo to it.
But yeah, a lot of your plansgo right.
Speaker 1 (31:02):
With the window man,
you got a role because if you
keep the same plans, like, justlike I tell people with you know
that company we have here andnext door.
It's like you know, for us, ifI was to do what I originally
thought, which was packaging,package out, you know I wouldn't
be in business no more.
Because I realized, you know,people are ordering all this
stuff and they get like 10different packages.
(31:22):
Well, that's expensive to send10 packages back out.
As well, repack them and, youknow, put them together, so
packages in one package out, andnow it's feasible.
Now we're actually, you know,good service and stuff.
But you know, if I stay withthe original plan, out the
window and it's kind of like youknow, life in general, right,
like everybody's like, well, Ihad this plan and this is my
tenure plan.
(31:43):
Blah, blah, blah.
I say you can make all theplans you want, but if you're
not focused on living in the now, you keep on chasing and you're
not like you know what I'mgonna, this is what I want, this
is how I'm gonna attract what Iwant.
Blah, blah, blah.
And I trust that you know theuniversal provide, or God will
provide or whatever you want tocall it will provide right and
(32:03):
just let it flow and then itwill happen.
But you gotta also understandit's not like magic, right where
it's gonna happen, yeah, no,like you're gonna get
opportunities and you gottaseize them and know which ones
are which and stuff like that.
And that's the whole point,that's the whole thing.
Right, sacrifice, not evensacrifice, man.
I never sacrificed anything inmy life to get anything I want.
(32:24):
I find I see it's like it's.
I talk about a lot of mypodcasts, because what's what?
Speaker 2 (32:30):
so like you, like
when you like what I'm saying,
sacrifice, like I'm talking,like I'll explain my big sack.
Yeah, so when you ask me whatmy big sacrifice was, I'll
explain that.
But like what I mean.
Sacrifice, like being away fromfamily, being away, taking time
out of everything that you,you're sacrificing something,
because there could be somethingyou could be doing right now
(32:51):
that you're sacrificing for.
Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (32:53):
I know you're saying,
but I mean sacrifice maybe not
the right word.
No, what would we always bedoing something?
Speaker 2 (33:00):
more productive or
something where we're, like you
said, we're not making money onpodcasting, so we could be doing
something where we're making acouple box or something, right,
but yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
Well, like yeah, when
people so like you know, give
you background.
Some of our podcast is like theway I see the world is, we're
all pre programmed.
Like we talked about thisbefore on one of our
conversations is In movies.
We're programmed to see as richpeople as assholes, and rich
people is crazy murderer, mothertruckers, right, yeah.
(33:31):
And we're just like huh, right,but subconsciously believe me
or not, I don't care butsubconsciously when we're
hearing all this and absorbingit, when we're watching all this
mainstream crap and some ofit's pretty good movies like the
matrix.
The matrix stuff like that.
But you know, when you'rewatching all the stuff and
you're absorbing it all andyou're not paying attention,
(33:52):
that you're getting programmedto subconsciously be like Well,
I never want to be rich becauserich people are assholes and
murderers.
But I'm a nice guy, I'm not aasshole.
I'm a nice person, not amurderer, right?
Speaker 2 (34:02):
I work hard.
Speaker 1 (34:03):
I need to be rich, I
deserve to be rich.
But yeah, that's the mentalitywe have, is well told.
Well, want to be rich, well,deserve to be rich, but it's
really hard to get.
And you don't want to be richbecause look how stupid and mean
these rich people are.
Yeah, they're so bored youdon't want.
You're not bored, you're a niceguy.
You're not going to go aroundstealing money or making.
(34:25):
You know they say you gotta beable to, like, screw over your
family to make a buck, right,yeah, to be successful and rich
in the world.
So you're not that kind ofperson, so don't do it.
And you know Russell, preprogrammed to be, you know,
victims, especially nowadays.
Everybody's a victim.
Speaker 2 (34:40):
Right, everybody's a
victim nowadays.
You gotta watch what you say.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
You can't say certain
things you can't like.
It's totally changing now,especially here in Canada, right
, yeah, but in general, likeEven before covid, like now it's
more prevalent, I guess in 2023, almost 24, but it's more
prevalent now.
But for the whole time,everybody's you know your
program to be like A victim inthe sense.
Like, oh well, for me my familywas well, we're victims because
(35:06):
you know we're poor and nomatter how hard you work for the
rich guy, we're gonna make himricher and we're gonna be poor.
So my dad instilled in me thatwe're victims, right, and that's
where it all goes.
With the pre program and stuffthat I talk about.
A lot of people might be likeyou're not, mike, I don't like
you.
I make my own decisions, do youreally?
You make decisions based on theinformation you have.
Yeah, what you're watching,what you're absorbing, is only
(35:31):
what you're gonna get right.
Like for you.
You know your world ispaintball.
Anything other than that is anafterthought, pretty much.
What wakes you up in themorning gets you going to
paintball.
I get up in the morning andbefore I go into work, I get up
and I have a cup of tea.
Speaker 2 (35:47):
During that cup of
tea I'm editing some clips.
I'm getting my post ready forthe day, making sure
everything's taken care of yep,and then throughout the day,
whenever you get a moment whenyou can, your answering Comments
.
You're replying back to people.
You're talking to fieldorganizers.
You're dealing with sponsors.
You're dealing with Fieldowners asking you hey, can you
(36:10):
promote this on your podcast?
Can you do that?
Speaker 1 (36:11):
get busy, right, and
that's your world it is, and
that's your, your, your, yourprogram that you're running, I
would you know, in a sense,right, just like my program I'm
running is a little bit of aProgram I'm running is a little
bit different, right?
So I got my business owner, gota managing police, I also got
the podcast that I bring peopleon and, as you can tell, I just
wing it, I don't plan for shit.
Speaker 2 (36:31):
Yeah that's what we
do on ours.
We kind of have like a quick Iguess would you say synopsis of
what we're gonna go through forthat yeah just a basic script to
like punch lines that you gottatalk about Like we.
you know I have here like allyour information that we're
promoting and stuff yeah, youjust organically go through into
it and just yeah, that's how wedo it to, just same way, and
(36:52):
just flow with it and go yeah,but in the end, what I'm saying
is like everybody has theirpersonal reality and for you,
that's what's true.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
If I come into your
reality and I'm like paintball
stupid you're stupid forbelieving in paintball that's
not gonna change nothing.
He's gonna look at me and belike your asshole, mike
Paintball, paintball, right.
I'll be like well, I did and Ilost.
That's why I hate paintball,right.
Every, like you said, everybodyhas a Background story of why
they hate what they hate or dowhat they do or whatever, right?
(37:20):
Yeah, or they have thatexperience with that one person.
Well, I met a paintball or onceand he was so mean to me.
So I hate all paintballers,right, yeah, but it's all about
personal reality.
So in my personal reality is,like you know, puppies and
rainbows is you're talking abouta lot of my podcast.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
My motto is a
Kunamata yeah, yeah, I've heard
you say that a few times nowyeah, but stuff like that and
it's not wrong.
Speaker 1 (37:43):
So everybody in their
own personal reality and their
reality, everybody's right inthe world according to their own
reality, in their own self, sothat for nobody's wrong.
Who are you to tell me?
But yet in my reality, if I was, you know, close minded and be
like, well, everybody else inthe world that doesn't believe
what I believe is wrong.
They don't believe in lifechanger.
You don't believe in loveattraction fuck you right, yeah
(38:08):
no, you know, I promote on ourpodcast love Every and just
understanding.
Everybody has to understandthat everybody's in their own
reality and everybody makesdecision.
What's the information they'regiven?
And this world, more than ever,is an algorithm we're talking
about Mike are we in the matrix?
We kind of are, in a sense,everything you watch.
(38:30):
So if I watch something, I'msure if I go on, log on to your
YouTube channel and watch your,it's gonna be all about
paintball, right.
And then if you log on to mything love attractions and I am
and all this positive stuff,right, that he log on.
So everything's an algorithm.
So whatever I want to see, thatI start watching, I'm gonna see
.
So if I'm looking up negativestuff all the time, I'm only
(38:51):
gonna see negative, that's right.
No conspiracy theories orwhatever, right, but that's all
the information you're receiving.
Then you make your decision onlife.
That's what you put out andthat's your personal reality and
that's what you put out withthe energy you'll attract the
people that you're gonna attract.
That I believe, what youbelieve in your community or
whatever, right.
And I just want people tounderstand that it's not just
(39:14):
about you know, believe,everybody should believe.
What I believe is funny,because we I had a friend of
mine he would come on me likeI'd be, like you know.
Hey, you know, join cove ed.
You know it's not a lot of workout here, everybody shut down,
but you're still in businesslike you want to come to the
Arctic, you want to get in thetruck for 10 days with me, yeah,
stuff like that.
So, you know, hook him up, givehim a job.
(39:35):
And he came and work with usfor a while and tell, everything
opened up again for him and hegot his job back somewhat back
to normal, somewhat back tonormal, the new normal, but it's
a for him.
He'd be interested, like youknow, tell me about the law of
attraction, oh, you know.
And he's like what would younormally be doing if I wasn't in
(39:55):
here with you and nobody waswith you?
I'd be like, well, right now beplaying, you know, audio books
of Dr Joe to spend or Michael, asinger, you know, and stuff
like that, because I'm curiousand learning all the stuff,
right, right.
So he's like, let's listen toit, right, so we find it.
So far, few months he'd belistening and he's like, oh,
that's a good, yeah, that makessense, that makes sense.
And then one day he's just likeyou know, you're trying to make
(40:16):
me believe what you believe,but I believe different.
I mean wick.
I'm like, where did that comefrom?
But you believe whatever youwant to believe.
Man, I said you're the oneasking me questions and you know
I don't tell people to believewhat, what I believe.
I'm not here to tell you.
Hey, tim, believe what Ibelieve, do what I do.
It's gonna work for you.
Because it won't you have tofind this whole podcast.
Just like your podcast, I'msure, is you giving out all the
(40:38):
information and it's up topeople that are listening to be
like hey, out of all thisinformation, this might work for
me.
This doesn't work for me.
Hey, this you know for you,like this equipment might be
better for me, be the way youexplained it, for left hand or
right hand, so on and so forth.
And then for me, when I'mtalking to people, I'm like
these are what works for me.
I'm not telling people I cannottell you I could.
Here's a fun fact I mentioned toone of my podcasts and we're
(41:01):
just having fun, you can alwayschime in and tell me to shut up.
But one of my podcasts Iremember telling somebody I
brought somebody with me to thecasino, with him and his wife,
and I was like I could teach youexactly how to make money today
At the casino, at the casinoright away.
(41:22):
They're like oh, yeah, right.
I was like here's 20 bucks, andhere's the basic functionality
of casino machines and how theywork, and then do what I say Not
as I do and you will win.
But it's also the frame of mind, right, and they're like oh
(41:43):
yeah, okay, I'm just going tolose your money, right?
So they take the money they putin the machine.
It's only 20 bucks.
I'm not like giving peoplehundreds of dollars.
Here's 20 bucks.
And and I'm like you notice,the guy that was sitting at this
machine before you was maxbetting $25 a spin.
They're like yeah, okay yeah,like, I guess I'm like well, you
(42:04):
know, should have noticed.
But notice, this guy put in alot of money.
He probably put in four or fivehundred bucks.
So you go with 20 bucks, right,mathematics states the machines
have to pay out a certainpercentage, no matter what.
Eventually it's all about runrandom number generators for the
big jackpots and stuff, but itstill has to pay out a little
(42:25):
bit of money.
So you put in that 20 bucks,you do a lower bet of 50 cents a
dollar, right?
And then you're going to getline hits and win technically
some of his money.
And that's just a basic theoryof it, right, mathematics, and
all that stuff.
And then you know they're likeokay, and I was trying to tell
them, but it's also about theenergy, blah, blah, blah.
And I'm like since, you know,since I'm here, I got all this
(42:48):
amazing energy.
I'm going to give you thatyou're going to get some good,
good vibes, good luck from you,right?
Blah, blah, blah.
Anyways, in the end they endedup turning that like and they're
like okay, whatever.
Speaker 2 (42:59):
And.
Speaker 1 (42:59):
I said look, you're
not to keep the 20 bucks and
walk away just like free play ina casino.
You got to play until youdouble it, then you can keep it.
If you lose it all, you lose itall.
But if you double it, you cankeep it and do what you want
after that.
And you know sure enough, theydouble the 20 bucks to 40 bucks,
I was going to say, did they?
double it, of course, but thenthey're like and then just like
(43:20):
other things.
I learned, right, when you'relike oh look, I'm amazing, right
, start getting not greedy, orlike cocky, cocky, poppa, sass
holes like I Even I've done thesame thing where I'm like look
at me, I'm amazing, right.
And then you know they go todifferent machines and then they
get.
You know, that's how addictivestuff, crap starts.
Right, you can't do all thatstuff because that's when you
lose and I've lost money doingthat and then they're like okay,
(43:42):
well, you know, that's cool,that's you know but, what about
you?
Speaker 2 (43:46):
Do they think if they
bet big they win big or
something?
Is that why they're betting biglike right off the hop, like 20
, 25 bucks?
I'd be that penny pincher, 50cents a dollar.
Speaker 1 (43:54):
It's the excitement,
I guess, because when?
Yeah, because the machine isgonna pay you a certain amount
above what you're betting, right?
So if you're betting Unless youwin a big jackpot, if the
machine's gonna give you ajackpot on any bet, then you
might win the 10,000, 20,000 orwhatever right on any bet.
But some machines will be likeyou have to bet minimum three
dollars or five dollars, but inorder to hit that big jackpot
(44:15):
some of them are like that, mostof them aren't.
But if you're betting $25 a hitand then, well, you get a line
hit, it's gonna be a few hundredbucks, right, when you get into
free play and stuff like thatdepends on the machine, right,
and how it works, and stuff likethat.
Speaker 2 (44:30):
I've never been a
gambler.
Speaker 1 (44:31):
You bet big, you win
big.
See, it's not call.
I don't gamble.
What do you call it?
I just call it picking up apaycheck.
Speaker 2 (44:41):
I'm not there with
that mindset, though, right like
listen.
I'm not here to gamble, becausewhen you gamble, you lose,
that's right.
So I'm not here to gamble, I'mhere to get my money.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
It's about personal
perspective.
I can go into casino and if Ihave the good energy, the good
vibes, the perspective of, likeyou know, loving, happy-go-lucky
, living in the moment, mike, Iknow I'm gonna be doing pretty
well that night.
But then if I start gettingpompous, asshole or greed or Hmm
, you know, cocky and stuff likethat, I know for a fact I'll
lose money.
Time to leave, early time toleave.
(45:08):
But you'd be surprised how manypeople when they feel that way,
they're just like in the smackin the buttons hard, and that's
me, know it's.
But I don't do this for a living, don't get me.
I just go whatever I feel andjust have fun, and if I lose, I
lose if I win the odds and win.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
Yeah, it's not yeah,
it's all about my friend.
Do you find you win more thanyou?
Then you lose when you go tocasino, because most people they
lose more it depends on theMind frame.
Speaker 1 (45:34):
But, yeah, like what
the episode of me doing the real
experiment on here is yeah, Iwon more than I lost with my
profit loss perfect, I stillmade money, profit, stuff like
that, but it's, it's what youbelieve.
Okay, here's an example.
She was talking about casinos.
I was playing roulette and Ithink I believed, and those
(45:56):
online roulette, like on an appthrough the OLG sounds like the
OLG one, like the lottery andit's live dealer spinning a ball
on TV, like on a camera, andthen everybody bets and it's
like roulette, but digital butwith a live person.
So there's no Chance ofscamming or whatever right, it's
literally by chance.
(46:17):
And then I'm thinking, I'm likeI want to beat real life.
And then I came up with aconcept on On, you know, betting
on the board and stuff, and II'm not even joking I truly
believed beyond a shadow of adoubt that I just broke the
system and I figured out how tomake money and there's no way in
hell I'm losing.
(46:37):
Okay, and it sounds stupid howI came up with it, but I'm
sitting there watching and I puta $5 chip and I put about $60
worth.
So I put 12 yeah, 12 chips.
Sometimes I add yeah, no, 12.
That's 55.
Then I added 13.
So I'm covering in my favor.
60% of the board is gonna be forme to win and the other 40%
(47:02):
isn't me losing.
But since I take out the doublezeros, there's only one zero.
It's 65% chance for me, right,35% chance to be losing.
And then I was like okay, and Iwasn't paying attention to the
big numbers of like on the board.
I have $60 and then if I spin Ihit One of my numbers and
(47:22):
they're not on one number.
I'm splitting numbers and stuff, right, all this weird fancy
crap.
I don't even know how it works,probably.
Just mathematics, right, yep andcuz.
You hear concepts.
One people like you want to win.
You know roulette.
You put everything five buckson red, yeah, and if it hits you
just leave the five bucks, keepthe profit because it doubles.
And then, if it doesn't hit,you double it.
(47:43):
And then if it doesn't hit, youdouble it.
Don't want to hit, you actuallywon, you know five bucks, so you
will eventually win your moneyback, if you just well, it
depends how much money you'regonna put on there, because they
say mathematics it's rare, butit does happen that it'll not
hit More than seven times in arow.
But you think if you put fivebucks you don't hit, that's ten
(48:05):
bucks, you don't hit.
20 bucks, 20 bucks, no hit,that's 40 bucks you gotta have
enough money and I've seen itwhere sometimes it was ten times
in a row.
Speaker 2 (48:13):
So someone's just
chasing it, trying to get their
dollar back.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
Yeah, and then you
end up putting all the money you
have on you know so, stuff likethat.
But so I'm sitting herethinking so if I don't hit One
of these, I double it.
Right, then when I do hit, Ishould win.
But actually I was winning alittle bit, but not as much as I
thought, because I'm gonnaprofit $30 on a hit Every spin,
(48:37):
even if I lose.
I'm profiting 30 bucks becauseI'll just keep on doubling.
So what I do is I've spread theboard, I Double it, but you
gotta put your original bet backin.
So if my original chip is $5,$60 if I don't hit, I got a hit
double.
But then I got to put myoriginal bet on each other chip.
So I'm adding another $15.
Okay, and if you lose, I'madding.
(48:59):
Now, that's 15, I'm adding, Igot a double it.
Then I'm at five no, at 15,because you got to add what the
original amount per slot.
So within six spins or fivespins, you got over five grand
on the table.
If you're losing, wow, right,but I will do it.
I couldn't do it, but I wasn'tthinking.
(49:20):
You got to understand.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
I don't lose 5k like
that, like I could have, like
you know, like I could havesomething really nice for
paintball for five grand.
Speaker 1 (49:29):
But I wasn't paying
attention to that.
Right, I'm just like doubling,and I'm looking at the original
amount.
Right, I'm like, well, it'sonly like a hundred dollars, but
no, but there's a hundred times13 out there.
Now I'm doubling, I got adouble.
See, so if I have $1300 on onething times 13.
Oh, that's a lot of moneyyou're putting on the table,
right?
So if it's $200, time it's alittle like, and the table
(49:50):
limits only 10 grand, so youcould hit that limit and be
bankrupt.
Speaker 2 (49:54):
But oh, oh, the point
of the story is don't gamble.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
But no, for me, I
truly believed.
You know, like a kid trulybelieves, like you know, the
Santa Claus exists or whatever Iknow, and they truly believe it
1000%, and like they're gonnaget what they want right.
So I truly believed 1000% thatthis was foolproof and I was not
hitting more than three spinsloss.
And I wasn't.
(50:21):
I was hitting, like sometimes Ihit like ten times in a row,
all my numbers.
Then I lost twice.
I just doubled add.
So you're doing like doubleplus the original bet, double
plus the original all the wayThrough.
And I only did it, managed toget to three spins and then it
would hit.
And then who?
Look, I Won, right, and thetheory is I win $30 every spin.
So you know how lost the threein a row on the fourth spin.
(50:44):
Well, I'm gonna get all mymoney back, plus $30 profit on
each spin.
So then I got like, wow, thisis, I'm amazing.
So instead of five bucks, I putten bucks.
Oh, no, so now I got 120 on theboard.
No, no, and I'm going throughlike this.
And I started I'm not even likejoking I started with $3,300
because I like playing slotmachines and you know, I started
(51:04):
with a hundred originally and Igot up to 3,300 by winning
different games and stuff likethat, and then I was like
playing blackjack or poker andthen I was like I think I
thought you know, I created thesystem, I'm gonna, I'm just
gonna do a thousand a day.
And I was like so excited, likeI I'm not even joking man I
believe, like these kids believeSanis, or I believe that I was
(51:26):
not gonna win, no matter what.
And here's the funny part In myheart I was like you know, I'm
gonna tell my wife, I'm soexcited, I'm gonna tell my wife,
right, yeah, and you know.
And then I kind of felt like,oh, I shouldn't tell her
whatever.
Speaker 2 (51:38):
You're winning.
Speaker 1 (51:39):
I took it from 3,300
to 8 grand in two hours.
Wow, okay.
And I was like, oh my god, Ifigured it out right.
Speaker 2 (51:49):
And then you know I
was like so are they watching
you now in the casino, like Iknow, like Eight grand, like
that's not one of us exactly sofor casino.
So when do they start watchingyou?
When you start making thismoney and you're like I'm God,
I'm making, but that's the bank.
Speaker 1 (52:01):
Let's go.
Well, that's the thing I don'tknow.
Like I'm playing on online, I'mplaying in my house in the base
.
Speaker 2 (52:07):
Oh yeah, right right,
right.
Speaker 1 (52:08):
When I play at a real
casino, you got to be fast.
I'm putting all these chips onand everybody's pulling.
All right, that just pisses meoff.
At least this way, when I justclick rebate Double right,
simple, not running aroundchasing people, I'm trying to
make sure I get mine.
He's only got a certain amountof seconds.
Speaker 2 (52:23):
I need a drink.
Speaker 1 (52:24):
Lady with the cart
right, yeah, but I had
experiences when I was playingand Winning, like in blackjack
and stuff, and then you see likesome managers are coming over
to look like because if you'rewinning a lot of money, but I'm
only winning eight, you know Ionly won 4700 in two hours but
(52:45):
there's people that are betting.
You can see when they win thatthey're like boom,
congratulations, so-and-so, justwon like six grand and that's
just one spin.
Yeah, I don't know how muchthey lost, right, but it's funny
Because I truly believed beyonda shout of it out.
But then I went against myfeelings and against the
universal law.
I guess I told my wife, hey,honey, and I showed her all the
(53:06):
math and everything.
And she's like yeah, but do themath and see if you lose six,
seven times in a row, mm-hmm,how much money you're gonna put
up and you could lose it all ina second.
And then you won't buy theeighth spin or something.
I'm not gonna be able to recoupmy losses, yeah, so you gotta
know when to fold them.
Yeah, right, and I was like, oh, and then it hit me like a ton
(53:34):
of fucking bricks, man poof, itisn't foolproof, you could lose.
And now I have that feeling inmy heart, in my body, that I
could lose.
And I could, oh my gosh, no.
Speaker 2 (53:47):
That's what I would
have every time going in there,
I'm gonna lose.
Speaker 1 (53:49):
So then I try.
You know, I ended up playingsome slot machines and stuff and
I got it above eight grand.
So I had an extra thousandabove eight grand.
So I thought about like to thesame nine grand.
I was like, oh, I'm gonna tryfor fun.
Oh my, and now I'm losing.
Mm-hmm, I'm losing.
Every spin, I'm losing.
I've got it.
Oh, I won one.
Oh, I'm doubling, oh, I'mtripling.
Now I got no, the thousand leftme like a fart in the wind man
(54:10):
Just.
Speaker 2 (54:12):
So, like where you
were, you betting, like
afterwards, where you like youknow, I got a double, I got a
double down.
Now I just lost a thousandballs.
I got a bet 2k.
Speaker 1 (54:20):
Now I got to get that
back well, in theory you're
supposed to continue, but I wasjust like huh.
I just want to prove to myselfthe law of attraction works
because it does.
When I truly believed in everyman on my bone and I was hitting
like I've never seen it thatyou know, I'm on a roll, yeah,
yeah.
And I didn't believe I couldlose.
I truly didn't believe I couldlose.
(54:40):
So I did it, because the law ofattraction states what you're
like, that energy you're puttingout there is guaranteed to win.
Right, in theory it's notguaranteed, but I really
believed so I wasn't.
I was like I'm only gonna hitfor maximum, where I have to
double down and add the originalbet, so on, so forth.
And then I'm, and I was doingamazing and I was confident that
(55:00):
I could make a grand every damnday in less than an hour
playing this way, and I Provedit to myself in two hours I made
all this money and I was likeGenius.
But then, the moment my realitybroke and like no, this is you
know, now this is real.
And look them out.
Speaker 2 (55:20):
I'm like Now I'm
scared and now I'm losing it's
like they say if you play withfire long enough, you're bound
to get burned right.
Exactly so you're bound to loseif you're constantly gambling.
Gambling.
Now, what would happen if youwere this little test you're
doing with yourself?
What would happen if you werelike Okay, I hit my G note, I
made my grand for today.
Before you started losing, youknew when to fold them.
(55:43):
You got up.
We're not.
That one came back the next day.
Yeah, have you ever done that?
Come back a few days like cashout when come?
Speaker 1 (55:50):
back.
Yeah, it keeps going.
It's not that I see it.
If it keeps going, I just feellike the energy is drained out,
it's done, there's no morewinning, and I leave and then I
come back and I win.
Speaker 2 (55:59):
So you go.
Have you ever passed off yourenergy to somebody else?
Speaker 1 (56:02):
Oh man, yes, and
other podcasts, you'll see me
talking.
But yeah, when I meet people ina casino and I start talking
and I'm like, I'm just like, hey, how's it going?
Are you doing good?
Are you winning?
You're losing.
And there's like, oh, I'm notdoing good, I'm losing.
When you have that negativeenergy, you're gonna dump every
penny you own into that machine,thinking you're gonna win.
But then I'm like, oh no, nowyou're gonna win because I'm
here, I'm happy, go lucky.
(56:22):
I'm Mike from life-changers Didit right.
People are like this guy's weird.
But then they start winningbecause I shifted the energy,
yeah, shifted the belief system,because I, you know, I'm not
here to tell you this is what,how it's done, do it and you're
gonna be successful, like me,right?
No, I'm telling people thatthis works for me.
If you truly believe thatWhatever you're doing is gonna
(56:45):
work for you, 1000% of the timewill work for you.
But the moment you don't andyou believe otherwise and this
is how it started for me I usedto rock climb all the time.
I would climb to 300 footcliffs, no problem, don't blink,
I don't care, I would freeclimb up, not worried about
nothing.
But I remember the one day Istarted going because I don't
know where it came from, ifsomebody put it in my head and
(57:05):
all that.
But I wonder how it's lookingaround going.
What if this rope breaks?
What if this rock falls outwhile I'm climbing?
What if this, I, all theselittle I could?
Speaker 2 (57:13):
die, I could die, I
could die.
Speaker 1 (57:14):
Yeah, I haven't been
really rock climbing since,
Because now I'm like, oh no.
Speaker 2 (57:19):
I put that my reality
.
Yeah, you manifest that inthere and that can happen
sometime.
Speaker 1 (57:23):
right, exactly so you
know I say I never what was
that word we used earlier?
Like gave up something,sacrifice, sacrifice.
I'm like I never reallysacrificed anything, because I
just everything I have, I kindof just like created and like
put in my reality.
Like you know, I don't focus onnegative energy.
(57:46):
I'm not the type of person tobe the victim or be everybody
hates me, you know, or whatever,and then things the whole world
hates me.
Now I'm an asshole to everybodyin the world, you know, because
I'm pre Determining thateverybody needs gonna be an
asshole.
So I'm an asshole to themsubconsciously, right?
Yeah, but no, I feel likewhatever I want, I'm gonna get.
That's a good mindset, becauseI put in the universe and the
(58:09):
next thing I put into that isWhatever I want I'm gonna get,
as long as it's something that Ineed and that's okay what I put
out there.
Speaker 2 (58:21):
I'm with you there as
long as it's something that you
need, right cuz like you knowyeah, I, you hit me on my
podcast sometimes.
Speaker 1 (58:27):
I'm like you know,
it's such a piss-off that I'm
not like Multi-millionairemaking millions of dollars a
week or whatever, because Iwould just give it away, you
know.
But see my me talking like that, as all my listeners are
probably shouting right now.
You're putting lack there ofMike.
Exactly, I'm putting thatenergy out there you have to
truly believe that if you wantto accomplish something or
(58:50):
create something in your realitybecause I'm telling you, this
is the only world when you canput a thought, and it's proven
with science and it's proven allover and over and over.
Even people that's listeningright now Going this guy sounds
crazy, he's stupid, right?
Even those people can testifyTo the fact that we can think of
something and then create it inthis reality, absolutely, and
(59:12):
this is the only thing we coulddo that, like you could think of
, you know, a type of waterbottle you want.
You can go ahead and create inthis reality.
I'm not saying you're creatingit from nothing, but you're
gonna find a way to create yourreality.
Yep, and All those people thatare negative, energy negative oh
poor me, I'm always sick.
Oh poor me, I'm always dying ofsomething, blah, blah, blah.
Well, if you focus on that andlet that become your reality,
(59:33):
that's what you're gonna get andthat's what I live is
Happy-go-lucky Mike with hispodcast life-changers, and I'm a
successful businessman in myeyes.
Speaker 2 (59:44):
Well, you seem to be
pretty successful.
From what I've seen, that youhave going on seems to be what
you've been putting out, whatyou've been taking in and
putting out.
Has you been Reaping thebenefits of it?
It's not saying like you'regetting filthy rich or nothing
like that, but you know you gota roof over your head.
You have other projects thatyou have in life that you want
to continue going on and doingand Obviously you couldn't do
(01:00:04):
that if you weren't beingsuccessful in this business.
Right, this would help Pay forsome of your future projects
that you want going on right.
Speaker 1 (01:00:13):
But it's not only
that it's the fact that I'm not
putting the lack of thereof ofneeding money.
I can care less about moneybecause I'm at the point where I
know, no matter what I can makemoney, if I want it, I'll make
the money and get it.
It's like what you know I usedto grew up and you always hear
we'll live paycheck to paycheck.
I know and some people arebehind, right, they take loans
(01:00:36):
and they're behind a paycheckright to pay off things.
And it's a struggle and Iremember thinking like no, I
don't want to be like this, Idon't want to live paycheck to
pay.
I was 18 years old, working ajob making $25 an hour.
That's over 22 years ago, buddy, that's, I was making 25 an
hour.
That's when a bag of chips waslike a buck 15, whoa right.
(01:00:58):
A bottle of water was like 25cents, yeah right.
Pops were like a buck.
Everything was cheaper backthen.
You know, oh yeah, gallon ofmilk or four liters for Canada
of milk was like, you know, $3,$2, 50 cents, whatever.
Everything was cheap.
Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
Gas was like 40, 50
cents a liter.
I was gonna say I rememberbeing like 67 cents a liter.
Right, that's the cheapest.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
I can remember it
yeah and that's you know where I
grew up.
But I still never had moneybecause I was told you have to
live paycheck to paycheck.
We have to struggle becausethat's what poor people do.
And then I was like, no, Idon't want to and I just, you
know, like that book I read thatyou hear me talking about in
the podcast a lot.
I don't know if you heard thatpart where I talk about you got
to break the habit of beingyourself.
Speaker 2 (01:01:40):
That's by dr Jordan
Spencer and that's one of the
hardest things, because that wasgonna be one of the questions I
wanted to ask.
You was like what kind ofadvice would you give somebody
that comes from a negativemindset?
How?
How would you get them to startthinking Positivity every day
like you do?
How would you?
You woke up with somebody.
You or, oh no, I have people.
Speaker 1 (01:01:58):
I know that I like
okay.
Speaker 2 (01:01:59):
So how have you
noticed yourself Seeing any
changes in them from beingaround you like no energy that
you put off.
Do you find that they're slowlychanging?
Or are they just like Mike?
You're crazy, this ain'tworking.
Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
Yeah, well, see, I
don't talk about my craziness to
everybody that knows me inperson.
Okay, only certain people.
There's been people that havebeen with me Buddy, mine, named
John.
He's been with me and saw mewhen I did my experiment.
He was with me watching me winall this money.
Like you know, I make it soundlike Millions.
(01:02:36):
No, no, for me I went in with ahundred and I'm walking out
with like 800, 1500, 2500.
And then Sometimes I went inand I went in and lot like lost
everything.
Right, I'm like okay.
Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
I'm leaving right,
because it was an experiment.
Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
I want to test the
law of attraction and see if it
was BS or not.
If it was real and I learned alot, like you know, we've
mentioned a little bit earlierhow soon to get cockier or
Selfish or greedy or whateverarrogant.
Or if I'm playing the machine,I leave machine and that person
wins on that machine, I'm like,oh, that motherfucker's winning
my money.
I'm gonna give it back to theold bag.
(01:03:10):
Come here, then you're gonnalose everything you have.
That's my experience.
But when I'm like if I'mplaying and let's say you're
playing next to me in a machineand I'm like, hey, how's it
going, guy?
What's up?
Are you winning?
You're like, oh, you know I'mdoing okay or I'm not doing too
Well.
I'm down a little bit.
I'm like, don't worry, I'm goodenergy.
We're all gonna get bonusestogether.
Let me start feeding off thatenergy.
(01:03:32):
You might think I'm crazy, butusually you'll start hitting you
like what?
I got a bone and he got liketwo, three bonuses in a row and
you're like this never happenedbefore.
And I'm like what come to lefty.
That's what I was literallydoing.
And I'll just like happy forthem and people would win more
money beside me because now intheir Reality they're like, holy
crap, this guy, somethingdifferent about him.
(01:03:53):
He's, he's, I'm getting bonuses, I'm yeah, I never won like
this before.
And then they're like there'ssomething with this.
And then I'm, you know, winning.
And then some of the peoplethat work there, they know me,
and they're all like, oh hey,mike, how's it going?
How much are you gonna take outtoday?
Speaker 2 (01:04:08):
How much do I need
for a paycheck today?
That's what you call, it right?
Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
Check, I'm not here
to gamble.
I don't gamble.
I don't see it as gambling.
I go in there to have fun andplay around and see what the
universe wants to hook me upwith, and sometimes it's nothing
, because I'm an asshole.
Speaker 2 (01:04:23):
But you, you're still
coming out of it with something
, though.
Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
It's the learning.
You know, the experience.
Yeah, people, you can learnabout business yourself and
Spend all the money learningabout it.
But you could just listen to me, I spent all this for losing
all this money in a business andat the casino.
But yeah, other people besideme were winning and yet to this
day my buddy would still be like, well, he's just, you know,
lucky Mike, lucky, lucky.
(01:04:47):
I could never do this, I couldknow, and he would play beside
me sometimes.
I'll try to convince him andhere's okay, here's a fun
example.
You always hear this all thetime and then I'll show you.
I'll tell you the story inreality.
Like, I know we're over an hour, but who gives a shit Already?
Yeah, yeah, we're out, been onfor an hour and five minutes now
.
Oh, just about, but anyways,we'll wrap it up soon.
(01:05:10):
People, this is getting fun.
Speaker 2 (01:05:12):
I'm excited that
somebody else to talk to we'll
have to run another episode whenI'm not so nervous, that's
right but what's it called?
Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Yeah, so you always
hear stories of people like
winning and they're like oh, Ijust I don't care if I win or
lose.
I just bought a $10 ticket andthey hit 50 grand or whatever,
right?
So I'm playing a table with mybuddy, this guy named John, and
we're playing ultimate Texas,hold them at the casino.
And he's like you know, I onlyonly have like 50 bucks.
I'm willing to lose.
(01:05:42):
I'm like, hey, man, don't saythat, because you're gonna lose
it all real quick, real quick.
I was like you know.
He's like okay, mike, I'm nothere to gamble, but you know,
you don't really believe it inyour heart, right?
So, the old you, the oldprogram of you, but you know, mr
Negative, I'm here to losebecause that's what everybody
tells you, right, you're gonnalose a casino no matter what.
So he lost this hundred buckspretty quick, I bet.
(01:06:03):
And then I looked at him andsaid hey, you want to see
something funny.
He's like what's that?
Well, I was already up.
I said okay, I'm gonna give youhundred dollars on my chips.
You're gonna play for me.
I said you, you don't, I don'tcare if you lose it or win it or
whatever.
He's like I don't give a crap,it's not my money, it's your
money You're, it's your funeral,right, right.
I was like, yeah, but here'sgonna be the funny part You're
not gonna lose, you're gonna endup winning because you're not
(01:06:25):
gonna give a shit, because it'snot your money, you don't care.
So now you're putting theuniverse of I have what, I have,
abundance, I have everything Iwant, I don't care about this.
And then you're gonna startwinning because you're not gonna
care about, you're not chasingthe win Before you're chasing
the win.
Speaker 2 (01:06:41):
So here's my question
on that, then Yep, so you're
not caring about what happens,as long as you're winning right,
like it's not that you're notcaring, it's that you're not
chasing before with his money hewas chasing the win.
So here's my situation.
My ultimate sacrifice that Idid, right yeah, is when I was
(01:07:01):
younger, growing up I Was, I wason the on the poor side growing
up, right so, having brandnamed Nike shoes, a fitted hat,
a Columbia jacket, that meanteverything, right so yeah,
especially back then.
Yeah, especially back then.
So With that going on, when Ijoined paintball, I Learned,
(01:07:28):
okay, like, okay, you can go tothis level.
You can go to this level.
You can start getting sponsors.
You can become a pro.
You have to go through allthese ropes, right.
So I said to myself I'm gonnabe a pro, I'm gonna do this,
there's no stopping me.
Yeah, I'm doing it.
Yeah, and I remember saying tomy son when I first bought a
GoPro, I was like I'm gonna gopro.
(01:07:48):
He's like dad is the GoPro.
I said you watch, I'm going prowith this.
So when I started doing thepodcast, my ultimate sacrifice I
lost a family that I had for 20years married wife, two
beautiful kids.
I had it all.
I had it all going good, right.
And then I kept putting all mytime and my energy Into becoming
(01:08:11):
a pro.
Yeah, you know, like I had tocome home, I would.
I would get my wife would pickme up From an event.
Three hour car ride home.
I would be on instead oftalking to her about how was
your weekend.
Well, I was gone.
What's new?
What's going on?
I'm constantly talking topeople on the internet.
Thanks for showing up today,tim, da da da, I hope to see you
at the next one.
And it was constant.
(01:08:31):
I would get home soon as Iwould get through the door.
The clothes are going in thelaundry, I'm cleaning my guns,
I'm cleaning my cameras, I'muploading all my footage.
I'm editing this.
Now.
It's like 11, 30, 12 o'clock atnight.
Next day would come and be likehey, driving the kids to school
, you want to go for a ride?
I'll be.
Like I give me 10 minutes here.
I'm just finishing this video.
That I didn't do last night.
(01:08:51):
Next thing I know it's likewe're heading out the door.
You coming, yeah, I'm comingright now.
I walk out.
They're gone already.
Then it got to the next thing.
It got to like going out fordishes I mean groceries.
Then it got going out fordinner and then it's kept going
to the next thing, the nextthing, and I just kept Isolating
myself away from all that.
And next thing I know, yeah, Iwent pro, but I didn't have a
(01:09:13):
wife to share that with.
I have my son, I have mydaughter, but I don't have a
wife to share that with somebody.
You know what I mean.
Like we got separated and stillbeen separated.
So that was my ultimatesacrifice.
But that's why I was curious onwhat would you lose by doing
these sacrifices.
Not so much sacrifice by youmanifesting I'm gonna go to a
casino or not just you, anybodyelse.
(01:09:34):
What is the sacrifice?
That's what I call it.
The sacrifice like is the wifesitting at home wondering why
are you always at a casino orwhy are you always at the
racetrack.
To me, I believe there has tobe something that's being taken
away to get the good, like yourclothes in the door open at the
door, kind of thing.
Speaker 1 (01:09:51):
I'm smiling and
excited because he hit the nail
on the head.
You said I believe you have tolose something.
I don't believe I have to loseshit for anything.
There we go.
There's that mindset again.
It's the program.
I tell this to people like IDon't know if you feel the
energy shift in here.
Speaker 2 (01:10:09):
I do, I do feel it.
Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
It's, it's.
It's sad, right that we aretold our whole fucking lives
that and some goods to come topoor people like us.
Because I grew up like you dirtpoor velcro shoes Going to the
thrift stores.
People are like making fun ofme.
Where do you shop sellers?
Or Walmart?
Yeah yeah and public school,because I want to go to English
(01:10:33):
public school learning English,because I grew up in Quebec and
it happened to be an enrichedEnglish neighborhood, right, all
the English people have betterjobs, right.
I guess back to and I was like,oh, I can't afford Niki, right.
But I was also told if I wantto have that kind of stuff, I
have to give up after lose, Ihave to make a sacrifice, right?
So, and I was like, why, evenmy dad, we're making the
(01:10:58):
sacrifice.
I gotta work all these jobs andeverybody see me anymore.
My parents were the same waylike we, that's, they were
programmed.
How poor they were, where mymom's like, oh, I'm gonna go get
a career and a job, so I can,you know, you know, make the
sacrifice, right, we're allmaking the sacrifice, but you
don't have to make sacrificesfor shit.
I Think, you know, I'm not aconspiracy guy in the sense like
(01:11:18):
it's the government programmingus to tell us we have to
sacrifice, to lose everything,so we're not gonna be happy to
get what we want and so we don'twant what we want.
No, it's not that at all, it'sjust I don't want.
Maybe, I don't know, I don'tgive a shit, yeah, yeah.
But you said to now on the headyou were told, and you said it,
that you have to sacrifice toget what you want.
Yeah so I'm not.
(01:11:38):
You know, when I go to thecasino.
I'm not going to the casino allthe time.
I go, maybe once a month, onceevery couple months, just for
fun.
Shit's and giggles at thispoint because the experiment's
over, right, my wife's like, hey, you know, I need you to go to
this part of the city, blah,blah, blah.
I don't like.
Oh, that's an hour away.
Hey, I'm near casino, so theykind of stop the casino,
whatever, like we're all incahoots, yeah, and you would be
(01:12:01):
interested in the one episodethat I've not recorded that I
want to record is it's chasinglove and and happiness and my
journey on finding, and you know, what I call like the perfect
Couple.
Like yeah, I'm not saying I'm aperfect couple, but like we were
(01:12:21):
struggles, but where we're inso perfect for each other, so
much in tuned Right with eachother, and stuff like those
episodes will be like, oh, butyeah, it sucks.
And it pisses me off when Ihear stories of you know how you
subconsciously not on purposeFigured out yet lose something
to become pro.
I need a little blues in yourwife which sucks.
(01:12:43):
Yeah, right, yeah, I don't knowif she was the love of your
life or not, maybe in the endgood.
Speaker 2 (01:12:48):
That time he was yeah
, at that time it was, you know
like I was 20 years old when Imet her.
Well, I've known her my wholelife.
Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:12:55):
Right.
But I was 20 years old when wegot together and everything we
did paintballing too it was donetogether.
Yeah, the kids like everything,like road trips, everything.
So sometimes, like when I takeroad trips, they don't even feel
the same, no more.
And I've been separated forthree years.
But being with somebody for 20years and and having doing these
activities together for so manyyears, now when I go up like
(01:13:18):
I'll be traveling for three,four days you know most talented
stuff like that is it?
It's not that I I miss her,it's just I missed like the
family, outing the familytogether.
You know what I mean.
I miss that.
Like I'm past all that now.
Like life's gone on.
You know I've moved on, I'vestayed positive about it.
I can't dwell on it.
I gotta don't.
I gotta stay positive.
I gotta move forward.
(01:13:38):
I have a couple kids, I got araise.
You know I have work to do,yeah.
So I've always tried to staypositive that way.
Speaker 1 (01:13:44):
But it sucks because
like you hit the nail, like I
write that again.
Speaker 2 (01:13:48):
Yeah like I was just
about to say, like I did the
sack, I had the sacrifice right,but so there's a point, but I
didn't look at it like I'msacrificing something I didn't,
and I still don't look at itlike, okay, I'm gonna put this
all on the line to get this.
Speaker 1 (01:14:03):
No, it's just the way
, but you happen it's the energy
that you put out because, likeyou said, you mentioned to me,
your wife was even playing withyou.
Yeah, you guys are goingtogether with the whole family.
You're both were playing.
So you know logic should state,yeah, that's since you know you
play together, he'll staytogether.
Yeah, right, because you'reboth doing it.
But here's the kickerSubconsciously, you kept on in
(01:14:23):
the back of your mind I want tobe pro, I want to be pro.
And then what are we programmedaccording?
To you know, the world today is, if you want to be successful,
you have to give up things, andeven in mainstreet movies, we
see all the time, yeah, yeah,these people that are living on
the streets and all the Happento give up all this stuff to get
to now.
Look at me.
I'm Eminem, I'm famous.
(01:14:44):
You know, yeah, you know, oneopportunity, whatever that's
right, but it's yeah, you'reright and he sacrificed even his
story.
When he hear the story of Eminemoh, I sacrificed all this stuff
.
Same thing.
He's not married anymore.
He sacrificed all that stuffand he made it because he
sacrificed.
But I don't believe that myreality, that you have to
(01:15:05):
subconsciously.
I'm not saying you do it onpurpose.
Nobody does anything like thison purpose.
They're like you know, it'sjust a Pre-programming.
I say it all the time.
So what I tell people that arenegative or that are like what
do I have to give up to get?
You don't have to give upNothing.
You're not making a deal withthe devil, yeah yeah, you know,
that's where the concept comesfrom, right, and I guess, like
Christianity is like, you know,when you sell these famous
(01:15:27):
people and they're like, oh,they made a deal with the devil
to get there.
Yeah, maybe they made a dealwith somebody who's gonna take
all their money or whatever, butthat's their problem, that's on
them, that's on them.
But when you're living theuniversal law of Living what you
believe, okay, that's the keything.
So you believe you have to giveup something to get something.
I don't.
(01:15:48):
I, that's bullshit.
I used to believe I have to workhard to make money and the
harder I worked, the less I made, it seemed like.
And then I look up atmanagement like these guys do
nothing, compared to how hardI'm working and I'm only making
six dollars and 50 cents an hour, yeah, and this guy's making
60,000 a year, right.
(01:16:08):
And we look at that, oh, right.
And we agreed oh, this assholedoing nothing.
So if I work less, I make moremoney.
That's cool when I get tomanagement.
And then that's how you get badmanagers and bad owners.
Yeah, yeah, yeah and that's whyyou get people that start
companies thinking Without youknow.
Let's say, you own a companyand a paintballing place and I'm
like, hey, tim, without me yougot nothing, I'm quitting, do my
(01:16:30):
own thing, right.
And then it just goes belly up.
I come back.
Right, it's all about frame ofmind is that we're told To get
what you want and to do this,but no, it's all about what you
believe.
You gotta live your beliefsystem and your reality system.
So when I read the bookbreaking the habit of being
yourself by dr Joda Spenza, Idon't read that.
(01:16:51):
A lot of my podcast says Ilisten to it on audible.
Yeah, and hey, you can listento us on audible.
Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
I've changed your mic
.
Speaker 2 (01:16:58):
Oh, you get your
podcast, yeah, or anywhere.
Speaker 1 (01:17:01):
But, yeah, when I
read that I was like holy crap.
And you gotta understand, drJoda Spenza was like me he's out
to prove that this shit was allstupid.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And he ends up proving it rightbecause it's what you believe,
what you're gonna getsubconsciously and consciously,
and we're all programmed tobelieve.
(01:17:21):
We have to struggle, we have tolose, we have to do this in
order to be successful.
It's gonna be a hard climbright that, no matter how hard I
work as it to be a business,it's gonna be so hard for me to
be successful.
I have to keep on.
And if I believe that, and I'mstruggling with that today.
So when you mentioned to me howdo I deal with negative people,
Mmm-hmm.
That's a daily battle.
Even for me because, like inone of my episodes, I talked
(01:17:42):
about the ego, or the voice inyour head.
Yep, and he's a little negative.
Speaker 2 (01:17:45):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:47):
Okay, but it's it's a
constant battle where sometimes
I think about like I'm watchinga movie.
It's hilarious.
I'm watching a movie aboutpeople struggling and how poor
they are and they used to besuccessful but they lost
everything.
And I start getting scared andnervous and I'm like what the
fuck about money, about melosing all my businesses and me?
Oh my god, I'm like this isbullshit.
If I keep this and harness thisfeeling, I'm gonna lose
(01:18:08):
everything.
And because that's the reality,I'm deciding to program myself
with.
But I literally read in thatbook said fuck this, I'm gonna
build my own belief system andthat's what I'm gonna live by
and that's what's gonna work forme.
And Sometimes your body istrying to fight you to go back
to your old self right now.
Oh yeah, it's easier to do thisand be lazy.
(01:18:29):
It's easier to do whateverright or think this way, but
it's a constant battle.
But I'm that's the whole pointof the podcast is to keep me on
track.
Yeah, is I Putting theprogramming that I want on my
belief system?
That I believe?
You know I'm an amazingbusiness person.
I know what I'm doing.
I trust the flow of the universeI live in the now.
(01:18:50):
I don't give a crap aboutyesterday.
I don't give a crap about anhour ago.
Right, I'll give a crap aboutone minute ago.
Yeah, I live in the now.
I don't live in the past.
And in this world, everybody'syou see them the way they talk
is always about the past, do youknow?
Right?
And everybody dreams about thefuture, but never comes and
never lives in today and neverlives today, the moment.
(01:19:10):
You can live today, you willachieve Anything you want that
you put in the universe today,especially for the future.
But don't live for the future,that's right.
My dad lives for the future andit sucks for him because he's
not living in the now.
Speaker 2 (01:19:24):
He's missing him now
and he's gonna regret missing
all the now, was your dad alwayschasing the dollar?
Speaker 1 (01:19:29):
Um, yeah, he works
hard to chase the dollar and now
that, like he sees mesuccessful, I'm trying to tell
him how I changed the way.
I thought none of these waslike no, you just finally
figured out how to do businesshas worked that way dad and he
lives for the future.
He doesn't care about the now.
And my mom's negative.
She's a good person butnegative mind frame right.
Oh, we grew up with that stuffand that's probably where, like
(01:19:51):
my negative energy, my headcomes into play sometimes, where
everybody's against me.
Doom and gloom, you know, Iused to watch these TV shows
called a thousand ways to die.
I'm like, oh shit, you coulddie at any second.
What's the point of leaving thehouse?
Right, you can't listen allthis doom and gloom, all this
bullshit, all this crap if youdon't want it in your life.
That's.
That's the funny thing.
You know, we mentioned a coupletimes COVID.
(01:20:11):
If you were focused onlistening about COVID and how,
all this stuff, and trying tofind out their conspiracies for
or against, or whatever.
It's just nuts it's gonna makeyou create just for me.
I ignored it.
I was like whatever, who cares?
Speaker 2 (01:20:25):
And you had a good
way of ignoring it.
Though You're in Florida, yougot to see people like out on
the beaches like.
You got to see everythingdifferent from how the media was
portrayed here for us, right?
Yes, in Canada was different, Iguess but I think took it the
worst, like I hear a lot ofpeople talking and I've watched
a few plot podcast, one of theones, joe Rogan and they were
(01:20:47):
talking about how Us Canadianswere so afraid compared to, like
, the people in the States A lotof people in the States they're
on lockdown or what not, butover here we were being isolated
in our own houses, in our ownrooms, away from people in our
own house.
Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
Yeah, no, it was
weird in Canada.
I was glad I was in Floridawhen I started.
Yeah, everybody just kind oflike quarantine because nobody
knew what was going on for likethree to four weeks and after
that it was like that's normal.
Yeah and that was it.
But I'm not here to talk aboutthat stuff.
But, yeah, it is like whateveryou bring into your reality.
So, if that's all you'relooking at, is all this negative
publicity, all this oh no, no,no, like in Canada was pushing
(01:21:23):
on their media, was all thisnegative crap.
And you'd hear on the radiolike these are how many people
have COVID, these are how manydeaths today.
Yeah, and that's just pushingfor you to believe whatever they
want you to believe real or not, who cares?
Right?
And all this negative energymakes you know the information
you're given.
You make a decision.
You're either gonna be scaredas fuck or just be like a fuck
(01:21:44):
up.
I'm gonna matter, motherfucker.
I live my life and that's mymotto.
But, yeah, that's the only thingthat you get out of today's
podcast.
Man is you got to reorganizeand Choose what you want to
build for your belief system.
Yeah, I'm not what you weresubconsciously told through
movies, media growing up,whatever, I'm not saying.
Like you know, this is a bigplan to program everybody to be
(01:22:05):
robots.
But I just found the when Iread that book and I changed the
way I Lived my reality and Ichoose to live in my reality
with these belief systems.
Everything I want happens justlike this.
So you know what's the name ofthat book Breaking the habit of
being yourself by dr Joe tospend.
Okay, and it's not audible andit's like pretty cheap, like 12
bucks, 10 bucks, stuff like that.
(01:22:26):
He can probably board from thelibrary for free.
But yeah, like it's sad when Ihear that story, how you
sacrificed, and I kind of feltthat energy, how you're like.
Well, what did you sacrifice toget successful in business?
What did you?
I sacrifice nothing.
I.
Speaker 2 (01:22:42):
I love.
I love how you say that likethere's been no sacrifice.
Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
No, it's just been
compromises, but there's no
sacrifices.
Okay, meaning I decided to quitall my good jobs to start my
own business.
Speaker 2 (01:22:57):
So what makes that a
compromise opposed to a
sacrifice?
Speaker 1 (01:23:01):
So for me it was more
of a compromise that like or is
that just how you put it?
in my head that's just how youput it in your head.
I was making decent moneytraveling about.
I was never home.
I didn't see my daughter go fortrick treating for the first
time.
I wasn't there for her firstbirthday, I wasn't there for
this and that.
So I made the decision whereI'm like fucking I want to be
home, I'm gonna start my ownbusiness and I trust to flow the
universe and boom, boom, boom,boom, boom.
(01:23:22):
And I started researching moreabout the flow of the universe
and all this stuff.
And now I See my kids moreoften than not and I'm at home
more often than not.
That's a blessing it is like youknow, I don't need to come to
the office every day unless I'mtraining somebody, but you know,
or if I'm doing a podcast orwhatever right?
Yep, and I'm at the point where, in my belief system, if I put
(01:23:42):
I know for a fact, if I put 10hours a week of Hardcore pushing
certain things on my business,that I'll be more successful
than I ever dreamed.
Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
It's so I'm gonna
piss you off here.
Do you think?
Is you don't?
You don't have sacrifices?
No, you have compromises.
So do you think Now you'regonna say I have no sacrifice?
Do you think you did yoursacrifice when you were younger,
getting that mindset of being aHard worker at 18 years old?
(01:24:11):
Listen, I'm gonna sacrificefrom hanging out with all my not
, you weren't thinking sacrifice.
Did you just look at it like,listen, man, I'm gonna.
I don't want to be paycheck topaycheck.
So you know what I'm gonna workhard.
I'm not gonna go out party onFridays and Saturdays with the
friends as a teenager would or ayoung 20 year old would do.
(01:24:32):
Do you think that was what?
Was that a compromise or wasthat a?
No, I mean again, I'm trying togo, because it's that negative
mindset that I have that I'mthinking there's a sacrifice
Somewhere down the line, like,did you sacrifice some of your,
your youth, to have the mindsetthat you?
Speaker 1 (01:24:48):
have now?
No, has nothing to do with it,because the mindset I have now I
was introduced to it when I wasyounger but I thought it was
all crazy, stupid people.
Yeah, I only looked into it inthe last five to six years or so
or more now.
Okay, so it's only since I'm anadult.
But if I look back when I wasyounger, I chose to work because
I did not want to have no money.
(01:25:09):
I was tired of being poor.
But if you some of my podcast,my brother, without knowing,
bestowed upon me law ofattraction attitude without me
knowing.
He goes hey man, you knowYou're, you're Mike, anything
you want you know you get.
Like that's just the way itgoes.
We get what we want because wewant whatever we want, right,
(01:25:30):
and that's just part of so.
You know, I never thought I hada hard child.
I hear people complain aboutschool, talking about how hard
their life is.
I'm like, wow, it's prettyweird.
I have a pretty happy, luckylife, right.
But I was already in themindset at a young age because
my brother would say that to youNow we get what we want, stuff
like that.
That's all there's to it.
And I believed him because Iwas a kid right, yep.
(01:25:52):
And yeah, I started working ata young age and I didn't go to a
lot of youth activities or hangout, but I still hang out with
all my friends and I just hadmoney and I paid for everything.
Speaker 2 (01:26:01):
So would that have
like and this will be the last I
ask you that have been asacrifice.
Speaker 1 (01:26:06):
No, and my eyes today
was not a sacrifice.
Even when I did it then To mewas like a compromise, in a
sense.
I could go out and play, bedumb, or I rather work and I
still play on my days off.
I'm spending all my money byhooking up all my buddies, right
?
I'm like let's go paintball,I'm paying for everybody, let's
go to the restaurant, andthey're all like I don't have
money because I don't work, oh,I'll pay, I got you, yeah, stuff
(01:26:27):
like that.
And I always had good jobs.
They were still in school.
They started going to you knowan adult, like when they turn
1617 in Quebec, we graduate highschool and they start going
college or university andstarted trying to get their
careers.
And I would still pay foreverything because I was working
to making money and I wasmoving up the you know the
corporate ladder, as they say.
Right, my jobs were, in the end, I was working for care of
(01:26:48):
foods at 17 years old, makinggood money, and then I was like
you know, I've done with thisand I want to do the military
security thing I talked aboutfor a bit in some of my episodes
, and then I was making $25 anhour at 18 years old.
Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
And then back then.
Speaker 1 (01:27:03):
And then I was like
I'm gonna start my own company,
you know, and I just didwhatever I wanted to do and not
think of a con, because therewas no consequence, there was no
sacrifice.
It was like I don't want to dothis, I'm gonna go do it, it's
gonna work out for me becauseI'm motherfucking Mike.
Speaker 2 (01:27:16):
Consequence, I guess,
would be having nothing,
nothing, so you get fuck allright.
Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
And I still live that
mindset where you know, like
the older generation I guess,would live that mindset where if
we're not working we'respending money, so might as well
just work and have fun at work.
That's still how I got throughwork and just to the point where
I was like I just felt a pullthat I need to start my own
company.
So I did and and well, you know,that's how my all my episodes
(01:27:41):
go or talks about me's, was mycompany's.
On all the younger episodes,anyway, yeah, we'll talk about
how I manifested my owncompanies and how I truly, when
I started learning about the lawof attraction, manifested what
you know, you see next door,yeah, and how that just came out
of nowhere and I couldn't do itif I wanted to, and how
Everything just works outperfectly when I'm fully in tune
(01:28:02):
.
So for me, in my reality, IChoose not to believe in
sacrificing, because why?
Speaker 2 (01:28:09):
You already did the
ultimate sacrifice for us.
I guess, right yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:28:17):
Right.
So why do you have to sacrificeanything?
That's right, but no, just itis what you believe.
If you believe you have to giveup something to get something,
you're gonna have to.
If you believe you're not gonnabe able to be successful
because you're supposed to bepoor, you're gonna be poor.
And people listening to me thatnever heard this, like I did
for the first time, they mightbe like You're fucking nuts,
mike.
But if you actually do theexperiment, do what works for
(01:28:39):
you and find what works for you,I'm bringing the energy flows
that work for you and themindsets that work for you.
And if I could help you withthat.
And if you have people, havequestions, you can always write
us.
You can click my email in thelink in the description or write
me at lifechangers mic atgmailcom and I'll be more than
happy to bring it on the episode.
And but yeah, it's all aboutwhat you truly.
Your personal reality is how Iput it and that's the only thing
(01:29:01):
that makes sense to me.
So, in your personal reality atthis moment is shifting based
on this conversation we have,and it's either gonna be your
mind's gonna be like, yeah, butyou know, you know, tim, you
know your mind's going, don'tworry.
Mike's been doing this foryears and that's it.
He's yeah, but he had strugglesand stuff.
I'll just stay with your oldmindset.
(01:29:22):
It's easier.
But if you choose to go through, fight through that like I did,
a nice do every fucking day.
It's not as easy as I make itsound on, you know podcast and
stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
Well, you gotta.
You gotta get used to being um,you gotta get used to being
comfortable while beinguncomfortable.
You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
Yeah, yeah but it's,
it's yeah.
And it's, it's.
It's like I'm not even doinghalf of what I know I need to do
to in order to achieve evenmore success in my eyes, where I
feel like in my reality I gotto be better at meditating and
stuff and Dr Joe to spend, somentions a lot about meditating
and stuff, and here's just asynopsis for you, since grabbing
this conversation, I believeyou'll help with the rest of
(01:30:01):
this.
Digesting of new information isthink of your computer if you
never turn it off to reset it,how it starts lagging and
fucking up.
Yeah, right, so you let me turnit off.
It reboots.
Ha, works better, right, yeah,okay.
So we Think when we go to sleepthat's what happens to our
bodies, but it doesn't.
(01:30:21):
We're actually more active whenwe're sleeping Scientifically
with our bodies in mind, than weare when we're awake.
So the only time you can rebootyour computer here and your
internal computer, your body, isthrough meditation and being
nothing and nowhere and notputting you know through
meditation, as Dr Dispenser putsit.
(01:30:42):
And when you achieve that, youreboot and then you can.
Yeah, you're wired for success.
You're wired for success.
You know and the anything youbelieve you create.
Everything you don't believeyou don't create and that's the
story it is if you believe it'ssupposed to be.
You know, sick on flu seasonevery year, you're gonna be sick
(01:31:05):
.
If you believe you're not goingto because you decided to get
the flu shot, or you decidedlike, if I don't get it,
whatever works for you works foryou.
But it's all about your belief.
So it's up to you to decidewhat you want to believe and how
you want to live your life.
Do you want to live it beingtold what to do by whatever you
see on TV?
And you know, yeah, all thesethings, a robot, all these
negative yeah, I know it justseems to be negative on
(01:31:27):
mainstream.
I could.
That's why you see me watchingthe old stuff of Tool time you
know yeah yeah, whatever it'scalled.
Speaker 2 (01:31:34):
Yeah, and see, that's
how it's all.
At that, programming like youwere saying, right, they program
you, program you to think likethis, think like this, think
like this, and then you'redependent on them.
Speaker 1 (01:31:43):
Yeah, I don't know.
Oh well, I'm not putting thatout.
I'm not saying it's likeprogramming from the government
or the media or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:31:50):
It's just I feel like
how you were saying like, how
Younger, like when you'rewatching movies or you're
watching the news and stuff likethat, how they're constantly
Pushing a certain agenda.
Yeah.
I guess yeah and then then westart thinking like, like, for
example, covid me, I don'tbelieve COVID was anything, I
think COVID was just a scam inthe whole nine yards, like,
(01:32:11):
personally I do.
I think it's just another thingthat they're calling for the
flu.
Now, you know, we had this, wehad that, we had smallpox, we
had this, we had that, that somany different things.
Now we don't hear none of thatstuff.
Now it's the next thing, thenit's the next thing, like what
was it years ago?
Sars, then it was a swine flu,and then we have this, you know,
so see it's not that, like youknow, it's bullshit or anything
(01:32:33):
like that it's.
Speaker 1 (01:32:33):
if it's brought into
our reality and we believe this
is something like it's gonnamake A sick, we're all gonna get
sick from that's what I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:32:38):
right, and it comes
to that programming, right?
You watching all the news, youwatching, like you were saying
the one day, how they weremaking movies and they were
throwing things out in there,yeah, like little words we won't
get into that they werethrowing like little words out
there that now is Verymainstream.
Everyone's using these.
Yeah, I mean pandemic and stufflike that.
(01:33:01):
Right, like they were preprogramming us back in 2018,
2017, for all of this, and nowthat's how we think.
Like, soon as someone gets sick, now what's the first thing we
think of?
It's a new variant of cove.
Oh, so yeah you know.
So like we're all alwaysthinking yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:33:16):
Well, now there's
more germaphobes than anything
in this world.
Oh yeah, but no, if you it's.
You know the power ofsuggestion works.
I mentioned that some of mypodcast.
But like, for instance, if yousee somebody coughing and
sneezing and you're like I'm notgonna get sick because that
fucker, well, scientificallybecause I was a health and
safety inspector for care foods,right, I know a lot about that
(01:33:38):
stuff is so scientifically ifyou're coughing and sneezing and
you're not really contagious,you're contagious a week before,
yeah, yeah.
So if you believe I need totell you something, I'm gonna
get sick now because I just saw,you know, mike was coughing to
sneeze and all over the mic andI'm talking in it, right, and
then I'm gonna be sick.
Well then, yeah, if you programyourself your body, be like
okay.
Speaker 2 (01:33:57):
I'm contract is now
what that's called.
Speaker 1 (01:33:59):
I guess yeah, they're
like that where someone's
always thinking they're sick,they're sick.
Speaker 2 (01:34:03):
They hear this
person's got a cold.
Now they have it.
Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
Yeah, but like what
I'm saying to people is, if you
don't want to focus onNegativity, then don't focus on
it.
If you say that the world isdoom and gloom, well, stop
allowing the algorithm of youryou know, youtube or Google,
because you're watching all thatstuff is gonna program you to
see doom and gloom.
For me it's puppies andrainbows.
(01:34:26):
Man, it's a cool amount thatthere is no worries.
I don't care like.
I live my life and some peoplelike that's that's stupid,
that's whatever, but you knowwhat it works for me.
Who gives a shit?
Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
I'm happy, all right,
and you're healthy, right.
Speaker 1 (01:34:39):
Yeah, I'm not
stressed, I'm not getting.
You know, gallstone, whateveryou get from getting stressed,
yeah.
I'm just happy, go lucky.
Speaker 2 (01:34:46):
No ulcers, no,
nothing yeah coulda metata.
Speaker 1 (01:34:48):
That's, that's all
I'm gonna leave here.
So I'm gonna close with saying,like you know, we talked a lot
about different things and allthat, but in the end, it's all
about what you truly put in yourbelief system and in your
reality, because I can come toyou and tell you exactly how to
make a million bucks and showyou how I did it you know
step-for-step, word-for-word andeverything and you're just
gonna be like, yeah, whateverthat worked, yeah, no, it's not
(01:35:09):
gonna work for me.
So, then it's not gonna work foryou.
But you have to find what worksfor you in the sense of you
know what ticks you, what makesyou excited.
You know you get out of theframe of mind if I have to
sacrifice to be successful, Ihave to give up something to
make money.
Because you don't.
But if you believe it, then youdo.
It's as easy as that.
Yeah, so it's up to you how youwant to do it.
(01:35:31):
I recommend this.
People listen this podcast forthe first time and there's like
there's a lot of crap.
This guy they're talking about.
Well, check out breaking thehabit of being yourself by Dr
Joe Spenza, becausesubconsciously you know it's not
that people are programming uson purpose, like our parents or
whatever, it's just right well,they were Todd.
They were Todd that you workhard and whatever.
That was their generation.
(01:35:51):
See, the new generation is likeI don't know what they're gonna
like, just go on tiktok andmake money.
Ask a I do it.
Ask a I to do all the work andmake money.
But you know what I mean.
So it's it's all about believe.
If you believe you're not gonnabe successful and if you
believe you're not gonna bemaking money, because, no matter
how hard I was making $25 anhour and I still had the belief
system that I was supposed to bepoor.
I never had money, but yet Iwas making $25 an hour back then
(01:36:15):
, which in today's money wouldprobably be closer to 60 70 an
hour.
Speaker 2 (01:36:19):
That's why you
shouldn't have been spending all
that money on your friends.
If you were banking it, then,right, that's probably why you
were spending that money,because you're making this
paycheck and you werepre-programmed to think you
gotta be broke.
You gotta be broke, you'regonna be poor.
So here you are you're makingthis bank at 25 bucks an hour,
getting home a $500 paycheck,but you want to go hang out with
the friends and all this notwell, there goes 350 tonight or
(01:36:42):
over the weekend, and then youwonder why you're broke, right?
Speaker 1 (01:36:44):
so easy as that.
So in the end it's all aboutyou and you gotta understand
like some of the next topicswe'll be talking about is
co-creating, how everybody is aco-creator of this universe and
of our world.
We all create our reality andwe're all living in this
together, or will that PC?
Who's real?
Are you real?
You know it's gonna have funwith it and whatever you believe
(01:37:08):
is real to you is real to you.
That's all there is to it.
So once again, thanks forcoming, tim.
We appreciate you Thanks forhaving me on don't forget to
check out on, especially in thelinks in the bio for frontline
pot, frontline podcast,frontline paintball podcast.
And this is Tim.
Thank you very much andremember everybody you are loved
, you are important, you aresuccessful.
You just gotta believe it inyourself and you could do it.
(01:37:31):
Thanks for listening.