Episode Transcript
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Alex (00:00):
On this takeover episode of Solving
America’s Problems, Jerremy tells guest
host Robyn Ivy that a six-year-old kidin a Georgia trailer with no running
water somehow bought Apple stock in 1995.
[thoughtful] That same kid justrevealed the exact same energy that
turned three thousand dollars intolife-changing wealth is identical to
(00:21):
the energy most people bring to theirrelationships—and to money itself.
Robyn Ivy presses Jerremy on howcommitment issues, shame around pleasure,
and refusing to feel rich even whenyou are rich keep the money flowing
out faster than it ever flows in.
Jerremy and Dave sit with Robynas she flips the script, forcing
(00:42):
Jerremy to confront why hungerstill exists in a country with
billionaires and GLP-1 obesity drugs…
Hi.
Welcome back to SolvingAmerica's Problems.
I'm your guest host, Robyn Ivy.
Today we're doing something different.
I get to interview one of my favoritepeople of all time, and like a
brother to me, Dave Conley, who'sliving in a support role of Jerremy.
(01:05):
And I couldn't be happierto meet you Jerremy and
Jerremy (01:06):
Likewise.
Robyn Ivy (01:07):
I take over your podcast.
Thanks
Jerremy (01:10):
is.
It's, yeah, it's gonna be so fun.
So fun.
I love interacting with new people.
Robyn Ivy (01:16):
Yeah, this is great.
It's great to do a littlebit of a friendly takeover
of somebody else's space.
Jerremy (01:21):
Yeah, likewise.
Robyn Ivy (01:23):
So for your listeners who
don't know who I am, my name's Robin Ivy.
I'm a life coach.
I live here in Rhode Island, but travelaround the world teaching and presenting.
And I'm a medium and intuitive guideand I host the Robin Ivy podcast where
we talk about navigating change andcreating the life you want while you
navigate the one you actually have.
We dive deep in all sortsof spiritual conversations.
(01:44):
I talk about thought leadershipand really how to change your
life from the inside out.
So this felt like a pretty cool placeto talk about solving problems and
all the things you guys talk about.
Jerremy (01:55):
Yeah, absolutely.
I think blending and co-creating bothworlds will be, uh, very magical.
Robyn Ivy (02:01):
Yeah.
Cool.
Jerremy, when I was in Miami a coupleweeks ago with Dave, he said something
that's like really stuck with me.
He said, of all the things that he'slearned from hanging out with you, that
you sang to him, that your relationshipto money is essentially the same
as your relationship to everything.
And that if you figure out yourrelationship to relationship, then
your to money will completely change.
(02:25):
How true is that?
And tell me about that.
Jerremy (02:28):
Radically true.
Uh, in my opinion, I, I feel likemoney is a relationship, energy.
And one thing that I've noticed forsome people, not everyone, but a lot
of people have commitment problems.
We have commitment issues, so,
Robyn Ivy (02:42):
I can't relate.
Dave (02:44):
me either.
Jerremy (02:45):
Picking something and
sticking to it like, all right, cool.
I guess me and you for a long, long,long time is really, really challenging.
And.
For money that oftentimes can feel thesame as well, where you get some, but you
never feel like it's enough and it doesn'tstay with you very long because as soon as
you get it, you pay all the bills, you payoff your debts, you pay all the things.
(03:07):
And it's like, well, yeah, that'swhat some I'm supposed to do.
But then the money doesn't really staythere, just like a relationship might not.
And you always feel like you're in thiscircle of the perpetual ness of not ever
having enough, or the individuals thatdo actually have plenty of money, not
recognizing and realizing that they haveenough, not feeling like they have enough.
(03:27):
So it's very much one thing to be rich.
It's another thing to feel rich.
It's one thing to have prosperity.
It's another thing to perpetuallycreate prosperity and to scale it
and to grow it and to have more of itjust like in a relationship, right?
Having more love and having loveexpand versus picking someone and
just dealing with all of theirproblems again big shifts there.
Robyn Ivy (03:50):
Tell me how you know this.
Jerremy (03:53):
I've studied both
relationships and money in depth very
closely for a long period of time.
The relationship piece, more from thestudy of energy, masculine and feminine
energy and just understanding to thebest of my ability, what embodies an
individual, what they carry with themfrom a day-to-day basis, what they
actually do, what they say, what theyuse, and what type of energy that is
(04:17):
holding within themselves and what thepurpose of it is and why they're doing it.
And then also the money piece kind ofhappened to me and for me, and then
ultimately through me and the money.
Understanding money, understanding how itmoves was just always fascinating to me.
I love the stock market since avery little kid and seeing how both
(04:38):
of them connected was really as Igot closer and closer to my wife.
We got married five years ago in February.
As that relationship started comingtogether, it made it a lot more clear.
'cause she's very much more in your world.
So she has her doctorate inmetaphysics, so she's very, very,
uh, she's the queen of the Woo, like,as far as you can go into ville.
(05:02):
My wife is the mayor of
Robyn Ivy (05:04):
Yeah.
Jerremy (05:04):
and
Robyn Ivy (05:05):
Uhhuh.
Jerremy (05:06):
learning about her world
and, oh, you two will have a blast.
You two will have a blast.
So she, she loves it.
But, and then seeing her, herunique struggle when we met about
charging money for her services.
Keeping money, how she did it, how shethought about it, and then just having
really in depth conversations from someonewho's way smarter than I am in everything.
(05:31):
Uh, and then having this back and forthdialogue of why was she struggling
with growing her business or makinga lot more money, or keeping a lot
of money or feeling safe aroundmoney or feeling safe around men.
And just having this really coolback and forth and just relaying
it and tying it all to money.
Yeah, it's been an awesome, awesomejourney for the last five or six years.
Robyn Ivy (05:52):
So for my people, Jerremy,
who've never heard of you and are
excited to be meeting you like I am,can you give us a little bit of the
backstory to put yourself in context?
Jerremy (06:01):
Yeah, totally.
I'll do it.
And three minutes.
I grew up in Georgia.
I lived in a very impoverished place.
So about as poor as you can growup in the United States of America.
I grew up in a singlewide trailer tree house.
With no running water, with noair conditioning in Georgia.
So it was always hot,it was always sticky.
Mosquitoes the size of Pterodactyls would
Robyn Ivy (06:23):
Uhhuh.
Jerremy (06:23):
be my constant companion.
And I watched a movie for the veryfirst time that changed my life.
In 1994.
It was me, my father,and my oldest brother.
His name is Jerry Roger.
And we watched the movie Forrest Gumpand 80% of the movie Forrest starts
recounting the story about how heand Lieutenant Dan are investing.
(06:44):
So he says, Lieutenant Dan invested intosome kind of fruit company and said, we
don't have to worry about money no more.
So I said, good, one less thing.
And that just baffled me at thatexact moment, that moment in time.
It was a beautiful paradigm shift.
'cause I had never ever heard someonesay, you do not have to worry about money.
(07:06):
So I asked my dad, whatis a fruit company?
What's he talking about?
I have no idea these words.
And obviously Forrestwas talking about Apple.
They invest into Apple computers.
And my dad started to the best of hisability explaining what Apple is and what
the stock market is and what investing is.
And he told me the a strategythat still works to this day.
It's in fact probably the easiestway to explain the stock market,
(07:30):
buy companies that you use.
Do you understand their products?
You interact with their moneyevery day or every week.
And if you continue to like thosecompanies, you keep buying those
companies, the stock will probably go up.
And so that advice I kindof carried with me forever.
So since the age of six, I beggedmy dad to invest in the stock market
and he gave me the very, very commonanswers that most people give when
(07:54):
we talk about the stock market.
I don't have enough money.
I don't have enough time.
I'm not smart enough.
Those are the three main ones, right?
A lot of times it's.
I just, I don't have any knowledge.
Like I can't watch thenews for 45 hours a day.
Like, I don't know what you're doing.
I don't know how to do this.
And my answer is always,well, it's very easy, right?
Wealth is second grade mathrepeated consistently and
Robyn Ivy (08:16):
That's good news.
Jerremy (08:18):
It is.
And so once you, but theword is consistent, right?
It's a repetition.
It's a repetition.
So we're all smart enough because Robin,you got an A in second grade math.
Dave got an A in second grademath when we took in 1912.
I got a, I got an A in second grade math.
Um, we all got A's in second grade math.
Yeah.
So
Dave (08:37):
Ro Robin, we're not gonna,
Jerremy (08:39):
Me and
Dave (08:39):
here.
Robyn Ivy (08:40):
are you gonna do?
Yeah.
Dave (08:41):
a year apart.
Jerremy (08:42):
no me and Dave.
I'd always make fun of Dave.
Robyn Ivy (08:45):
was born in 1912.
Jerremy (08:46):
Yeah.
Boy.
Oh boy.
Dave (08:49):
God.
All right.
I'm going everybody.
Thanks.
Jerremy (08:51):
but Dave's off the podcast.
He's leaving.
Robyn Ivy (08:54):
This is how
you know we're family.
Jerremy (08:56):
Yeah, no, I love Dave.
And so we, we, yeah, Ijust love the stock market.
I asked my, like I begged him and beggedhim and begged him and he eventually
caved and said, BR buddy, if you bring mesome money on match at dollar for dollar.
And so I went, I picked blackberriesand sold them door to door
Robyn Ivy (09:11):
Yeah,
Jerremy (09:12):
a dollar a bag and made
$1,500 in the summer of 1995.
And my dad borrowed, matched it, uh,borrowed $1,500 from my uncle Billy.
We bought $3,000 worth of Apple stock in1995, and ever since then, I have been
immersed and I've read book, every bookI've been to, every class, every webinar.
(09:34):
I've spent seven hours of my life,probably every day since the age of 12,
studying and learning the stock marketand diving into it and trading it every
day and interacting with it every day,and helping people from all over the
world understand it and interact withit, and then grow their wealth from it.
Robyn Ivy (09:50):
I think it's so fascinating.
So like I just said, I'm 51,so five decades on the planet.
It's so interesting to me howone of us is somehow hardwired
to turn towards something.
With great intensity and curiositythat might be a thing that other people
spend their entire life turning away
Or
And when it comes to things like moneyor metaphysics or politics or solving
(10:15):
hard problems that feel beyond our ownagency, we can either really see that as
this great opportunity to learn somethingand to get into that arena with it.
Or it can be totally the opposite.
And I love that.
Now.
I recognize like nobody has the timeto do all of that in every category.
So thanks for being somebodythat does it in that one.
(10:36):
Because if we all just share thoseresources with each other, then like none
of us have to do it at that full throttleunless it's the thing we really wanna do.
Jerremy (10:43):
Yeah, totally.
And to your point I grew up in a cult.
I grew up as a Jehovah's Witness for
Far, the vast majority of my life.
And I would be terrified to talk toyou, 15 years ago to talk to anyone
that's a medium or anyone that works inthe energies of something that's not.
(11:03):
The Bible.
And it was, uh, to, to your point,like we all have things that we
love and that we focus on, thatwe energetically align with.
And the more that we share thatgift through the world, the
more prosperous we will be.
Robyn Ivy (11:16):
Yeah.
And it's interesting 'cause my dadwas a Methodist minister and there was
something about being born behind whatI call like that curtain of Oz and
seeing that discrepancy between being ahuman being who's here to preach about
God and but also not be God himself.
And that immediate question of huh,you don't seem to be living up to the
(11:39):
expectations that you're preaching about.
As no one could, right?
But at
Jerremy (11:43):
Yeah, of course.
Robyn Ivy (11:44):
I was like, I'm seeing
some gap here in this thing.
And it really opened up a lot ofexploration around metaphysical things.
at the deepest part of that, Ireally felt catapulted back into
Christianity at a very deep placebecause it's all the same thing really.
It's all the same thingat the end of the road.
(12:05):
In my
Jerremy (12:06):
Yeah.
It,
Robyn Ivy (12:08):
Love that about that.
Whether it's the energy of moneyor the energy of God or whatever
denominational perspective you holdthe holier you get, the truer we get
with the thing, the pure, the energy,it seems like the better it all goes.
Jerremy (12:23):
Yes, yes, yes.
Yep.
Yeah, well that's, uh, I'll bringit up Robin, just so that you
have more of the context as well.
And for your listeners.
The whole reason that I feelcompelled and moved and guided and
pushed towards running for presidentis because of all of this, right?
(12:43):
Growing up, Joe's witness,that was a big no-no.
In fact, they keep away from all politics.
So one of their biggest Iguess, core tenets of belief is
Be separate from the world asmuch as possible and only interact
with it like when you're working.
So it's very, very, very small.
(13:03):
And I would be asked all thetime at 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, what
are you gonna do with your life?
And I would have to make up something.
Because I already knew theanswer like since I was a kid.
Like, why, just like you, oh, you'regonna go play baseball and become a
professional baseball, or a firefighteror a movie star or actress or whatever.
I've always knew that the wholepurpose of my life, the ultimate
(13:26):
goal is to serve at that capacity,to be a leader in that capacity.
And I was always terrified of that.
So as after I, I was terrified ofthe distinction and the separation.
'cause there couldn't be bothin that particular religion.
So once I left the religion and Irealized what a great gift it was
for me, it kept me safe, it kept meprotected, it kept me from doing really,
(13:50):
really dumb things because that's howI learned, I learned through mistakes.
So I was really mistake free.
For a vast portion of my life, and I don'treally have any skeletons in the closet.
I don't really have anythingto be afraid of or ashamed of.
There's nothing, I didn't do anything.
I just played basketball with a bunchof witnesses my whole life, you know?
So I didn't have any, I didn't have anynegatives, uh uh, and I started doing
(14:14):
a lot of the joda spina meditationwork, and that's where I met my higher
self, or the best version of me, orthe most disciplined version of me.
And every time I interact with thatbeingness, that meanness I've noticed
that's what I'm supposed to do is atleast really make an extremely valiant
effort to live the reason I was created,which is to, again, to serve as the
(14:36):
president of the United States of America.
And I thought, just my funnybelief that every male.
That was born, had that desire.
And I was like, man, I gottacompete against everybody.
Like this is gonna be hard.
And the more I start talking topeople, the more people I realize
that nobody wants that job.
It's like seven dumbdudes generally want that.
(14:59):
So that's why I'm here.
That's why we're here.
That's why Dave and I are being puttingin so much time and energy and effort
into creating something incredible.
Robyn Ivy (15:05):
And it's interesting when you
think about serving at scale, like at
whatever your definition of the highestlevel is, the fundamentals and the
foundational things that it's helpfulto really understand whether you are in
full agreement with them or completelynot understanding, the, understanding
the energetics of money and the painof money and the joy of money and the
(15:26):
relationality of money or being able todo that in terms of religious experience.
Whether you agree with things that aremore dogmatic or more rigid or you open
up to something far more unbounded.
I think it sets you up well, especiallyif you're exploring masculine energy
and feminine energy, because the morewe understand about leadership, the
(15:47):
more we're talking about wholeness.
And we're talking about being ableto access these different parts
of our own humanity, which we seehistorically was not the case,
Jerremy (15:56):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (15:56):
much hiding who they
were in hopes that nobody would
ever find them out, and the levelof pressure of imposter syndrome.
then you play that out at scale inthe Congress and the Senate and like
Jerremy (16:08):
Huh
Robyn Ivy (16:08):
who's ever run, who never
wants to admit they smoked weed
Jerremy (16:11):
Uhhuh.
Robyn Ivy (16:12):
something stupid or learned
by any misstep of any kind do they
really think that we don't know that theyhad to have missed steps somewhere in
Jerremy (16:21):
Yep.
Robyn Ivy (16:22):
learn something?
Or are we meant to think they're justbuffoons having clearly no experience
other than something positive?
The, I think the veil's ready to drop,
Jerremy (16:32):
I love that.
Yeah.
That's beautiful.
Yep.
I agree.
Robyn Ivy (16:35):
Yeah I think there's so much,
there's so much liberation in the things
that at one point maybe feel like they tieus down, and I think that's, I don't know.
I often think like it was only becauseI grew up as a preacher's kid, that
I gave myself the permission to goall the way to the edge of the Woo,
which I ironically gave me permissionto pray a rosary as a Protestant kid.
I don't I will hope, I will probablypray this rosary every day till
(16:59):
I die, and who'd have thought?
But if we're not open to this stuff,whether it's the possibility of becoming
president or the possibility of leadinga family in a different capacity or just
leading ourself through the world ortrying to invest in, in something that we
don't understand it, what we're here for.
Right?
Jerremy (17:16):
Yeah, I agree.
Well, let, let's have, I'dlike to ask this question, Rob.
I think it would just be fun,
Robyn Ivy (17:22):
Sure.
Jerremy (17:22):
As it regards
to the stock market.
Tell me what your beliefs are aroundit, what fears you may or may not have.
Just in, in regards to investing instocks and trading in the markets.
Robyn Ivy (17:35):
I tend to go like
this and pretend there's no
such thing as any of this.
That's been my relationship to allthings financial and all things
relative to financial at all.
Yeah.
Yep.
I
Jerremy (17:49):
That's fair.
Robyn Ivy (17:49):
nothing to do with it.
It terrifies me, but I've learnedit, it terrifies me from a place
of not trusting myself, right?
Like the same fear as an A DHD kidof I'm not gonna figure it out.
I'm gonna have to know more thanI know I'm gonna have to be a
different person to deal with.
It took me a long time of workingthrough a lot of that fear and I think
I still have a long way to go with it.
(18:11):
But I did get smart enough to get afinancial advisor and a bookkeeper and
offload it, but then it left me feelinglike I'm not in relationship with it.
else is in a healthy relationship withit, which is better than no one being in a
Jerremy (18:24):
Sure.
Robyn Ivy (18:24):
it.
Jerremy (18:25):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (18:25):
like, progress.
Someone is in relationship with this,but it also gets to be me one day
not hoping they're doing a great job.
Jerremy (18:34):
Yeah.
Yeah.
I agree.
Well, that's, I, I, I appreciate yousharing that with us, and I think
truthfully, that's probably most people's.
Interaction with it, and it's just scary.
I love your awareness of your like,oh wait, I'm scared of it, because
it's probably gonna be a me thing.
And that really is.
I think beau.
Robyn Ivy (18:54):
percent gonna be a me thing.
Jerremy (18:55):
Yeah.
That's beautiful awareness though.
Robyn Ivy (18:57):
more potently.
It's not only gonna be a me thing,it's gonna be a shame thing.
Jerremy (19:00):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (19:01):
It's not.
It's oh no.
The only thing I'm ever turningmy back on is when it's gonna be a
shame thing that then is gonna alsopotentially be compounded with an
action of consistency thing about athing I don't feel that much self-trust
Jerremy (19:15):
Mm. Love that.
Robyn Ivy (19:17):
Yeah.
Most
Jerremy (19:19):
that.
Robyn Ivy (19:20):
I'm like, let's go
Buffalo towards a storm I'm in.
Jerremy (19:23):
Yeah.
I hope to have more in depth conversationswith you about it because I, I believe
that there's a lot of healing thatgoes into that journey because the
more we understand that world, themore we'll understand about ourselves,
we start removing and working onand healing that shame a little bit.
Because really a lot of times it's, uh,it'll be linked to the shame of pleasure.
'Cause that's what, that's one of thethings that money brings into our lives.
(19:44):
It brings a lot of pleasure.
Uh, it doesn't have to,
Robyn Ivy (19:46):
Oh
Jerremy (19:47):
it can bring a,
Robyn Ivy (19:47):
me that he he has to spend
that you, that he has to send, spend a
certain amount of money just for fun.
Jerremy (19:54):
yeah.
Robyn Ivy (19:55):
Like one of your rules.
Jerremy (19:56):
Yeah.
WW when people say money that
Robyn Ivy (20:00):
that part, by the way.
Jerremy (20:01):
No.
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (20:02):
There's no evidence so
far to suggest that I am not good
at spending it for fun, actually.
Jerremy (20:08):
Yes.
Yes.
And those, those are bothinteresting words, right.
Spending and fun.
Because, yeah, I, I, fun canbe pleasurable, but giving
money away can be pleasurable.
Building churches, buildingschools, building hospitals,
figuring out ways to circulate it.
Spit out ways to not spendit, but just earn more of it.
'cause if you give more,you're gonna get more.
That's the other beautiful law, right?
(20:30):
Scriptural law in all text is like, you'regonna be provided for the more you give
and the more you provide for others.
And that's just also abeautiful recognition.
So I think that it's just a beautifullyinterwoven aspect of our lives.
'cause everyone needs money, right?
It's not as important asoxygen, but it's right up there.
It is really, really close,uh, oxygen and currency.
(20:54):
And when you start playing in both ofthose worlds, you will start opening
yourself up for a lot of opportunity,for healing, for expansion, for growth.
Because yes to make a lot of moneyand to keep a lot of money, we have to
become really, really unique containers.
We have to be a container ofsomeone that can hold all other
things as well in our life.
not only relationships,but also, a assets, right?
(21:18):
Other assets.
Not necessarily onlyphysical assets, right?
Intangible assets, things thatwe really step out into the world
and we're ready to be a big, boldbeacon and say, Hey, look at me.
'cause again, that's what money does, isit amplifies everything that it touches.
Robyn Ivy (21:31):
Totally.
Jerremy (21:32):
Yeah.
Heck yeah.
Robyn Ivy (21:34):
a lot of folks in the financial
world talk about how money loves speed,
Something about money and quickness andI, my coaching practice, when people
are bumping up against self-trust.
That tends to be where theythen wanna slow down the speed.
'cause they're like, I don't feel like Ican move quick at a place of not trust.
(21:56):
And I was like, then that'sgonna be a real setup when
it comes to money for people.
If money loves speed, but nottrusting ourselves creates a this
natural inclination to slow downor stop altogether, then we're also
financially then energetically puttingourselves in a bit of a pickle.
Jerremy (22:12):
Yeah, I love that.
So true.
Yes, correct.
Speed is really what, what speedmeans, is velocity, and then velocity
generally also means volatility.
And so you've heard thatphrase before, right?
The stock market, that's a tonsof volatility and people are
like, oh, it's too volatile.
Don't put me in it.
Volatility is incredible.
(22:32):
If you know where you're going.
Most people don't knowwhere they're going.
They don't have the clarity, they don'thave the intention to sit down and
go, okay, this is where I wanna go.
You live in Rhode Island, so ifyou're gonna come out here to
Las Vegas and visit me, you'reprobably gonna be in an airplane
that's volatile because it's fast.
But you're gonna choosethat overriding a bicycle.
And it's because one is extremelyefficient and the other one's not.
(22:54):
I think the speed of money is alsocharacterized by the speed of ideas, the
speed of intention, the speed of creation.
I do secretly judge people when Itake them out to a dinner or, or a
lunch on how fast they can order food.
You know, how, how long they taketo just interact with the world,
how long they take to interactwith the decisions to move.
Because having speed of clarity andspeed of intention and speed of thought
(23:18):
does mean that you are, and you have thecapacity to create a lot more income,
money, current to or opportunity.
Robyn Ivy (23:26):
is there any
cost to that you've noticed?
Jerremy (23:28):
Yes, absolutely.
Because most people willnever make the decision.
They think they will and thenthey just go and then they don't.
Because I've heard
Robyn Ivy (23:35):
No, I mean
Jerremy (23:36):
ca
Robyn Ivy (23:36):
fast, is there to
going quickly the opposite.
Is there any cost to being to, yeah.
Is there any cost to going that quick?
Jerremy (23:45):
I'm sure there is.
Yeah, I'm sure there is.
I think probably the cost would be youget too wrapped up in it and you have
the inability to be, most individualsare extremely good at human doings, but
they're not very good at human beings,so that's probably ultimately the cost is
like they don't know how to turn it off.
And they're always flying.
They're always moving.
They're always perpetually justgoing, and they're never here,
(24:06):
and they're never in the now.
Robyn Ivy (24:08):
Okay.
So how do you manage that as somebodywho's really good with the energy
and speed and velocity of money, butalso is good at the being part I.
Jerremy (24:16):
The best answer I have to
that question is I have to schedule it.
And I don't know if that's the right orthe wrong way, but I have to put on, I
have to put on the calendar and I haveto tell my brain and my body and my mind
this, Hey, this is where we're goingthis weekend or this day or these hours.
You're going to sit down and do X, Y,z. I go to seminars very, very often.
(24:38):
We'll ask people, Hey, who here, raiseyour hand if you ever, if you have
ever worked for 12 hours straight?
And everyone's like, yeah, right?
They like badge of on.
They're like, I've done that.
And they get all excited.
And then I ask, who here has everprayed for 12 hours straight?
And all the hands go down and it's justthis, it's just really this idea of, Hey
(25:00):
man, what are you working so hard for?
Why?
Why are you spending allthis time and energy?
Like if you just get closer to.
Whatever ultimate being that youbelieve in, you probably will be able
to close the gap between time and space.
And if you close that gap betweentime and space, it's probably
gonna happen for you faster.
That's one of the thingsI love about Joe Dispenza.
(25:21):
When he says, uh, the unknown, likethe closer you get to the unknown,
the absolute unknown the nothingness.
When you and that nothingness becomeone, everything in your life will
manifest into reality instantly.
For me, that nothingness iseverythingness, which is god or the
universe or love or ultimate perfection.
(25:41):
And I think that's just such anawesome, awesome realization where
the closer you get to that, the fasterthings will happen for you and I
wanna get there as much as possible.
So I think that's a, uh,a fun place to play in.
Robyn Ivy (25:52):
I heard these these two
women, and I forget their names, but
I, if I'm, if I remember correctly,they work for Harvard and they're
organizational, psychologists, andthey were talking about how, that in
organizations that people they say slowit down to speed it up, that that was
like a big business ideology for a while.
(26:12):
Slow it down to speed it up.
And they said, no, that's not true.
Speed it up to speed it up.
But they said the reason that peopledon't speed it up in organizations
is similar to the reason we don'tspeed it up in our own lives.
Because if we don't trust the foundationsof our systems, of our support networks,
of what we have in place, she was usingthe analogy of like a dock pillar where
(26:33):
like, you're not gonna go running outon the pilings if you don't trust that
they're in place, but if you know they'rein place, you could like haul ass down
the piling no problem, but withoutbelieving that they're trustworthy,
you're gonna take it much slower.
And I was like, that's such an interestingthing, especially if we're talking about
the relationality of the money or ourown trust that like we can go fast.
(26:55):
Because we've got the systems in placebecause we trust our financial person
or we trust our knowledge of the stockmarket, or we trust our ability to
reassure ourselves if we make a badmove that day and lose money like that,
Jerremy (27:07):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (27:07):
just abandon ourselves.
I thought that
An interesting parallel.
Jerremy (27:11):
yeah.
I love that.
I do.
Robyn Ivy (27:13):
How do you set yourself up
for the kind of balance of rigidity and
flexibility that you need to thrive?
Jerremy (27:21):
I think that also comes
down to, for me, again, again,
just being extremely clear.
I think the person that's mostclear and the most intentional will
win the fastest or the most often.
Perfect example.
If someone says, Hey, I want moremoney all the time, like that's
their perpetual daily mantra.
I would love to have more money.
I would love to have more moneyIf you get a dollar that is more.
(27:44):
And, but they're notsatisfied with a dollar.
So now they're upset.
And then they get this anger of notbeing grateful or not being in gratitude.
And the way I structure rigidity andalso flexibility is one of my mantras,
I think, is follow my rules like anengineer, and know when to break them.
(28:05):
Like an artist, there's always these ebbsand flows, right where you have to be,
you don't wanna be the most dangerous.
Gardener in a war, you wanna be the mostdangerous warrior in a garden like it.
There needs to be this balance.
I mean, that's what it all always is.
There has to be some level of equilibrium.
(28:26):
Another incredible, for me, justparallel that really shifts in my
life in a huge way, just if not thatlong ago, three or four years ago.
I heard the story differentlyfor the very first time.
The story about the two wolves.
The, there's this Chinese father, or,you know, speaking to his younger son
and his younger son's asking aboutlife and death and good and bad.
(28:47):
And the dad says that every man, everyperson has two wolves inside of them.
The light wolf and the dark wolf.
And the dark wolf is there fordestruction and terror and creating.
Anger and making thingshappen through force.
(29:09):
And then the light wolf is happyand joyful and prosperous, and
they're always battling each other.
These two wolves are always fightingeach other, and the young boy looks
at his dad and says, which wolf wins?
And the dad says, whicheverwolf you feed the most.
Now, I had never heardthe word the most before.
I always heard whatever wolf you feed, butin reality, we all have those two wolves.
(29:31):
We all have to feed them.
And so I do a lot of work withmen because men, the brokenness
of any country is in directproportion to the brokenness of men.
And if men do not have this way tointernally heal, to understand and
to adopt, it's never women who havecreated this, oh, I'm gonna go start a
(29:53):
giant war for more land and more power.
Robyn Ivy (29:58):
We know it's not us.
Jerremy (29:59):
No.
Yeah.
It's, it is not women.
Like it's that internal.
Robyn Ivy (30:04):
sure that
wouldn't be how we do that.
Jerremy (30:07):
We would figure out another way.
Robyn Ivy (30:09):
Yeah.
We're pretty sure we couldfigure out another path to
And resolution.
Jerremy (30:15):
But really that's a
gorgeous recognition that I think
so many people just skip over.
It's listen, it's not, it'sthe dudes like they're the ones
that are ruining everything.
If there's something that needsto be ruined, leave it up to a
really angry, egotistical guy andhe'll figure out a way to do that.
That's the big challenge.
And
Robyn Ivy (30:33):
of two, like now grown
men, I also think, boy, without
the men, like men get a bad rap.
And I'm always like, I always jokethat I'd be the first one Vijo,
voted off Vagina island because Ireally stand for men and all that.
Jerremy (30:47):
yeah, of course.
Robyn Ivy (30:48):
that presence, without that,
it would, we would just all be different.
So
Jerremy (30:52):
That's the balance, right?
That
Robyn Ivy (30:54):
important parts of this.
Jerremy (30:56):
agreed.
Agreed.
And that's the balance.
The balance is the recognitionthat we have to be in both places.
We have to know how to do both things.
We have to know how tolive in the both worlds.
Men need to learn how to healdeeply and to pull their ego
out and to pull it into light.
And also be a protector.
A protector of women, a protectorof children, a protector of
(31:16):
themselves, a protector of theirkingdom, the castle, and they have
to be totally okay to become more.
Grace to become more kind.
And I think having the balance andhaving the blend between all of those
things we're talking about, which isreally the energetics of spirituality,
of beingness, of who individuals are.
And you start blending all ofthat and putting it into money,
(31:37):
into investing, into politics.
That is my four corners of like, Ican talk about this stuff all day and
it jazzes me up and it lights me up.
'cause I know that thereare solutions in this box.
Robyn Ivy (31:49):
Yeah, I think that
I've noticed with women, a pa the
pattern of there's a pattern of notfeeling safe and not feeling worthy.
And those two things then ripple outinto, that becomes almost like a filter
through which everything it's not safeto put themselves out there in the world.
It's not safe to start the business.
It's not safe to ask forthat amount of money.
then on the guy side, I see a lot of, notenoughness, like it's, I'm not enough yet,
(32:11):
so I can't, I don't feel good enough aboutmyself, so I can't start the thing, do
the thing, be humble or be compassionateor open, It's such a shame to me because
if we could see ourselves from thatposition, reassure that in each other,
then just keep going out and doing thething, our contributions and our, what we
could create here altogether, the problemswe can overcome are it's mind blowing.
Jerremy (32:34):
Yeah.
What problem would you like to overcome?
If you had to pick one that you couldjust solve tomorrow, what would it be?
Robyn Ivy (32:40):
Hunger.
Hunger to me, hunger.
Because if you're hungry, Idon't care what plans you have,
I don't care what, I don't care.
Everything else, ifyou're hungry, it's over.
Not doing anything if you're
So I don't, yeah, I just, I can'tfathom for me how it's 20, 25 and five
decades later people are still hungry.
To me, this was a problem that shouldhave been solved by the time I was like
(33:02):
12 years old or long before I got here.
So the fact that people are stillhungry, the fact that we could have this
many billionaires and hungry people.
Something is glitchy in the matrix still
Jerremy (33:13):
Y yes.
And not only billionaires.
So we have this manyobese people in the us
Robyn Ivy (33:18):
correct?
Jerremy (33:19):
So someone's
eating a lot of food.
Robyn Ivy (33:20):
have GLP if we have
GLP ones and hungry people.
It's astounding.
Jerremy (33:26):
Yes.
Agreed.
Like there, like to, to that aspect.
Like what, how are wegetting at this incorrect?
Robyn Ivy (33:36):
And I also I looked around
my house a couple months ago and I
thought, wow, this is interestingthat you can be overwhelmed.
I could be overwhelmed by the amount ofstuff I have to the point that I'm like,
I gotta get rid of some of this stuff.
It's this is a lot.
And then simultaneously haveany sense of lack in my life.
Like how interesting.
Jerremy (33:52):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (33:52):
things can sit there together.
Jerremy (33:54):
Yep.
Robyn Ivy (33:54):
Yeah.
Jerremy (33:55):
I love that.
Robyn Ivy (33:55):
But hunger, to
me, it's always hunger.
Jerremy (33:57):
Okay.
Robyn Ivy (33:58):
else, don't know.
If you're hungry and you're cold,don't have somewhere to stay.
But you can always you canfind somewhere to stay.
If you can't eat, if you have nothing toeat, you're, what are you figuring out?
How about you?
Jerremy (34:10):
Love that.
I think my main, I believe my main focusis going to be to radically change the
educational system in the US because
Robyn Ivy (34:20):
system?
Jerremy (34:22):
Come on Robin, let's go.
Be careful.
You're gonna enter my bestfriend status real quick.
Robyn Ivy (34:28):
That's
Yeah.
Get
Jerremy (34:29):
I agree.
It's
Robyn Ivy (34:30):
friends.
I can come rummage through your cabinets.
If I need a
Way,
Jerremy (34:33):
cool.
Robyn Ivy (34:34):
in the acquaintance level,
Jerremy (34:35):
Yeah.
I want snacks.
I'm with you.
I'm with you.
Robyn Ivy (34:38):
Get one on the Uber Eats,
and we're both grabbing the same, yeah.
Jerremy (34:41):
It.
Love it.
Yeah.
I think the, our educationalsystem is killing us.
And it's making us scaredto put kids in school.
It's making our kids less smart.
It is making our generation andour populace fatter and larger
and bigger and more complacentand more docile and less creative.
(35:03):
And it's helping us memorizethings that we never use.
And I believe that if we sit downand we help our children and we
help our teachers, and we help ourstaff become extremely creative
thinkers, I believe that a lot ofour problems do slowly dissipate.
Just as an example, you mentioned hunger.
(35:24):
Obviously that is a componentof many, many, many things.
But if you have enough smart peoplein schools, in high schools, middle
schools, colleges, universities sitdown and go, alright, let's creatively
think of these solutions and let'sreally, really figure out how.
This one company, this one product,this one creation can solve that issue.
(35:47):
And we are rewarded as a communityglobally, but also also here in the US for
just extremely creative thinking often.
I think that's something that reallydoes make a huge, massive impact.
And we're not, we're notdoing that in school, right?
Our schools are,
Robyn Ivy (36:05):
think it's very difficult
to get rid of everything that
fosters creativity in a system,and then expect the people to
Side with their most creative thinking.
Jerremy (36:13):
Yeah,
Robyn Ivy (36:13):
I am like if we don't
support creativity anywhere, and if we
don't cr if we don't support feedbackand unique perspective and socra
conversations, opportunity for peopleto have various opinions and debate.
Gosh, gosh.
Debate, did I say debate in
Jerremy (36:30):
Oh, my good.
Oh.
Robyn Ivy (36:32):
my no Lord.
Yeah.
What a dangerous concept.
Jerremy (36:36):
Agreed.
Robyn Ivy (36:37):
How are we gonna
do anything creatively?
Jerremy (36:39):
Yes.
Yeah, I'm with you.
And so I, I can see it extremelyclearly is we do make huge changes
there where we actually have thatwell, 'cause AI is coming, it's coming.
And if we don't sit down as a nationand go, alright, AI overlords,
'cause those, those are the peoplethat Dave battles with every day.
He battles with the AI overlords.
(37:01):
If we don't, if we don't start gettingready and prepared as a, as a nation
and also a civilization for whatis coming down the pike in 15 to 30
years, people aren't gonna have they'renot gonna be aware to how to have
jobs, to how to, to how to create.
They're gonna be extremely complacent.
And Wally, the kids show the moviethat is wildly accurate and hopefully
(37:28):
never going to happen, but probablyis a 200 year dystopian from now.
That's gonna start happening if we don'tget extremely creative on making changes.
Now
Robyn Ivy (37:38):
and Idiocracy is sad
that we just watched that a couple
weeks ago together in Miami, andI said, because I, he's have you
Jerremy (37:43):
it's a documentary.
Robyn Ivy (37:44):
no, I, what we said.
I was like, in what universe isthis actually more like how it is?
And then it is.
It just is.
It is so much more like howit is, which is terrifying.
Jerremy (37:56):
Terrifying.
Terrifying.
Crocs is a publicly traded companynow, and that's what they're all the
people wearing Crocs in the wholemovie, and they were doing it as a joke.
Robyn Ivy (38:07):
on Friday night and I turned
to my friend and I was like, I don't
know I don't know what drug this is.
They're on, I don't, I cannot identifywhatever substance has run through
this place that we didn't take.
Everybody was at a frequency I had.
I'm like, I don't know.
I know most of them, and I don'tknow what this is, but people
were in some kind of weird of halfKensington, like they were just kinda
(38:30):
There.
I'm like, this is not normal, butthis is very much like that movie.
Jerremy (38:34):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (38:36):
Yeah.
Jerremy (38:36):
what was your,
Robyn Ivy (38:37):
feel like it's a rally
cry for people who are excited
and still wanna make a difference.
Like, how about now
Jerremy (38:42):
yes, agreed.
Dave, what was your,
Robyn Ivy (38:45):
the team now.
Jerremy (38:46):
the big one that
stood out to you in Idiocracy?
Dave,
was it the pro wrestling president?
Dave (38:52):
The every piece of that thing
is really, this was 20 years ago
and here we are living this thing.
So it's there.
It's bonkers,
Jerremy (39:01):
Yeah.
Dave (39:02):
think that this
is actually happening.
Jerremy (39:04):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (39:04):
the fact that it was
20 years ago is one thing, but the
fact that it was intended to be themost absurd thing on that would ever
potentially, ever and ever happen
Dave (39:13):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (39:13):
it, and it's now
more not this so alarming.
Jerremy (39:17):
Dave, chances we could get
the creator writers on the show.
Just have a conversation with him.
Robyn Ivy (39:22):
Dax Shepherd,
Dave (39:23):
And
Robyn Ivy (39:24):
probably.
Dave (39:25):
Mac no, it's
Jerremy (39:26):
It is possible.
I think it's possible
Dave (39:28):
It's a mike
Robyn Ivy (39:28):
Oh, Mike Judge.
Got it.
Jerremy (39:29):
Do
Dave (39:30):
I'll reach out.
Robyn Ivy (39:31):
Get on that, Dave.
Jerremy (39:32):
Get on it, Dave.
Dave (39:33):
more people say
yes than not, so Yeah.
Jerremy (39:35):
Yeah,
Robyn Ivy (39:36):
know.
Jerremy (39:37):
that's right.
Robyn Ivy (39:38):
Jerremy, what do, when
you look at the landscape of your
life in this financial container,what do people, are people get wrong?
Like, where's the paradigm shift in that?
If people are, where are they soclose, but getting it all wrong.
Jerremy (39:54):
That is a very
beautiful question.
Most individuals, in my opinion, have thisextremely u extremely bad belief about
the co, the combination of time and money.
And so here's what I mean by that.
(40:14):
They feel like there is somuch time they can do it later.
And that is true.
So that that's a truth.
And since there is so much time andyou can do it later, if you start doing
it now, the later becomes amazing andsays you can start whatever you want.
(40:37):
You can start at 67, you canstart at 72, you can start at 84.
The earlier you start though,the better and easier it becomes.
That is the truth.
Most people that I connect with,work with discuss, they go, uh, you
know, one day, one day, one day.
And every time I go through my calendar, Inever see, one day I see a Monday, right?
(40:59):
Monday's on the calendar, somedays not on the calendar, but
some Sunday's on the calendar.
It's like we gotta start doingthis as soon as humanly possible.
'cause you said it, money loves speed.
Quick, fast example.
Tons of people will say.
This is a pretty, pretty open statement.
I'm not blowing your minds here.
Apple's done innovating.
They've created the exact same thing foryears, and that company's gonna slowly die
(41:22):
well for the last two and a half years.
So if you go back to just July, 2023,I'm just gonna pick a really random
time that's, relatively relevant.
July of 2023 on Apple, and until today'sprice over the last two and a half
years, apple's up 47% just in value.
47%. They make $90 million net an hour.
(41:45):
It's a lot of money.
It's a lot of money.
Google is up 85% since April of this year.
Robyn Ivy (41:54):
Wow.
Jerremy (41:54):
there, there are
some companies that we,
Robyn Ivy (41:57):
unbelievable because of
the messaging that AI's taking over
and nobody's using Google, right?
Jerremy (42:02):
I know precisely, yeah.
That, that messaging is just wrong.
Robyn Ivy (42:05):
how it appears.
Yeah.
How.
Jerremy (42:06):
It's almost never how it appears.
Yeah.
So it's just a really wild andbeautiful belief and awareness process
that when we start looking at andnavigating the process, like we need
to start investing into assets nowbecause you do have enough money.
If you have a dollar, you have enoughmoney to start investing into assets.
And if you start now, as in today,buying $1 worth of something and
(42:29):
you can obviously exponentiallyit to however much you need to
or want to, or have ability to.
But we, we just hired an incrediblewoman to work with myself and my wife
and my family to help us out with ourtime and to give us more leverage.
And she, uh, her name is Nelly.
She's really, really sweet.
And I'm getting her, she just really juststarted working with us like days ago,
(42:50):
and I've already given her a Robinhoodaccount and I'm already teaching her
how to invest into stocks because I knowher background and her background is
an amazing background, but it's one of,I need to work really, really hard for
money and I need to spend six hours aweek and order to provide for my family.
And although that is a truth, right?
We can and we should.
And there, that's an a possibility.
What if instead of working 60 hours,we hired her for 40 hours and is paying
(43:14):
her the exact same amount she wasmaking when she was making 60 hours.
And then I'm also gonna teach her howto make more money by investing and
taking some of the capital that wepay her and taking a portion of that.
Obviously we all have bills in life.
You take a portion of that and you put itinto the Googles, the NVIDIAs, the apples,
the Teslas of the world, and guess what?
The value of your value, your networth is going to increase because
(43:35):
those companies are gonna increasebecause you're betting on America.
And I think that's really what peopledon't understand is when you're
buying assets you're betting on thelargest, most powerful, most profitable
country that in the existence.
And if you think that'sgonna go away that's fine.
You're entitled to that belief.
I'm just telling you thatyou're mathematically wrong.
It's not gonna go away.
It's gonna get bigger.
Robyn Ivy (43:55):
it.
So putting your money somewhere else islike a way to make sure you're right,
which is a terrible idea if winningthat it means you don't have a country.
Jerremy (44:03):
Oh my goodness.
The quote of the date.
Yeah, that's it.
What do you like if you're like, no, Idon't wanna do that, so I'm just gonna
put all my money into like this bunkerand guns because the zombies are coming.
Robyn Ivy (44:15):
Okay.
Jerremy (44:15):
So that means you're gonna
be fighting zombies in 20 years.
Like, that sucks.
Like, that's not a great world.
Let's, let's prevent that from happening.
Let's prevent the zombies from attacking.
Robyn Ivy (44:23):
direct it towards
everybody's wellbeing.
Jerremy (44:26):
Yeah.
There you go.
Robyn Ivy (44:27):
Yeah.
all right, so three things thatcame up when you were saying that
is I could feel my own oh, Lordhow am I gonna learn everything?
I would have to learn about this,because this feels like, I don't
know what it's taken to learnabout parenting 24 years deep.
My friend is a lot, and I'm like,
Jerremy (44:44):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (44:44):
Is it, do I have to that my
inner Sisyphus is like, I'm gonna have
to grab another boulder and hit the road.
So how can you pacify that fear in me in a
Jerremy (44:55):
yeah.
Robyn Ivy (44:55):
I am?
Jerremy (44:56):
The same way my dad did.
Where it is as easy as you wantit to be that's what investing is.
You don't have to learneverything to know something.
You kinda like anything in life.
I asked you, how can I connect withmy dad who's no longer with us?
There's probably a easier way, aquicker way that you could guide me
(45:17):
into, and then there's a probablya more in depth way where if I
needed to go all the way into it.
So that's, that's with Juujitsu.
All right.
I'm a practitioner, juujitsu.
I love doing it.
It's an incredible martial art.
Uh, I'm nowhere close to good.
Yeah.
I'm nowhere close to good.
I'm terrible.
I'm a 16 year white belt, but I love it.
It's awesome.
It's really fun.
(45:38):
And just like there's levels,there's learning, chess, picket,
pick anything in life, pickleball,tennis, football, basketball, soccer.
You can become an incredibly,incredibly proficient at it
and become a professional, likean immaculate professional.
Or you can become someone who's aware and.
Robyn Ivy (45:55):
But the difference is
that with money, if you get it wrong,
people have a whole lot of ugh,about getting that wrong in a way.
You don't care if you get the armbar wrong in Jiujitsu, I think.
Jerremy (46:07):
Yeah they, they can, and
I think 'cause wrong is back to the
whole time thing, it's gonna they'llbe right if there's enough time.
Generally I would say 97%
Robyn Ivy (46:16):
Ah,
Jerremy (46:17):
the time they will be correct
over a long enough time horizon.
And so when you're putting too shortof a time horizon, when I first
started trading and doing the stuffin the stock market and day trading,
my family literally lit the same week.
We're like, alright.
So are you a billionaire yet?
Like a bi a, a billionaire?
No, I have started learningfinance a week ago.
(46:40):
And yeah.
Yeah, it's just, it's justthis fascinating asset and it's
just fascinating realization.
I do think that really ultimatelyfor all of us having the ability
for it to make things simple, tomake it easy, for me to you, Robin
would be Yes, baby girl, something.
Go for it.
Yeah, of course.
To make it easy would be invest intocompanies that you know, that you
use, that you understand, and itcould be any, any amount of money
(47:04):
that, that's really the quick answer.
And if you do it repeatedly, it will grow.
So every time you spend a Netflixaccount, put the same amount of
money into the Netflix stock.
Anytime you buy an Apple iPhone.
Robyn Ivy (47:17):
a great idea.
Jerremy (47:18):
Yeah.
Buy some Apple stock.
Anytime you pull up Google to search,Google, put some money into Google stock.
Every time you get into it, everytime you make a car payment, like
most people make a car payment towhoever a finance company, Ford,
gm, Tesla, somebody, Honda Toyota.
Put a little bit of money into that stock.
If you use the realization that wecan all be owners rather than just
(47:39):
consumers, your money will grow.
So that's a very, very powerful statement,but that's a statement of 100% accuracy.
You're betting on America, America'sgonna win by the companies that you
use, interact with on a daily basis,and your money will grow over time.
Robyn Ivy (47:55):
I love that idea, and I
really appreciate you framing that in
a way that's very pedestrian relatable.
Jerremy (48:01):
Yeah, sure.
Robyn Ivy (48:01):
makes sense.
It makes sense why we would do that.
I can hear the kind of flags ofsocial responsibility of where
do I wanna be investing in that?
And at the same time, I thinkif you're using them, then you
might wanna be checking in withyourself about that anyway.
If you don't want to beinvesting in Apple, then why
do you have an Apple iPhone?
Jerremy (48:18):
Come on, champion.
Robyn Ivy (48:19):
want to be
In
Jerremy (48:20):
oh.
Robyn Ivy (48:21):
then maybe you don't
want to put gas in your car.
Like I, you're accountable to your money.
You're accountable to your decisions.
This is life folks.
Jerremy (48:29):
Yes.
And yes.
Drink Starbucks or someone else.
It's up to you.
You're all making decisions.
We're all making choices.
And exactly what you said, we makethe social determination and what's
responsible and what is valuable for us.
As an example, I do not personallyinvest into oil companies.
(48:52):
Why?
I just think it's dirty.
That's all.
That's it.
I just, it is physically not clean.
So if there's someone comes into myhouse and spills a bunch of oil on
the floor, I'm gonna notice it, right?
That's all.
I just don't think it'ssuper, super clean.
So I also do invest inrenewable energy systems, right?
So I have large investments intosolar, into solar companies,
(49:14):
into solar technology, because.
To me in my, I have noclue how Solar Works.
Couldn't explain it.
No idea.
I don't know how mycell phone works really.
Like I just click a buttonand it things happen.
I, how are we not all using the sun?
I haven't learned that yet.
I No clue.
Can't figure it out.
It's just this free energysource that just hangs out there.
(49:35):
No one has to pay for.
We just boop, put on Bang energy.
It is kind of mind blowingto me that we don't do that.
And it's not because oil is gonna runout and there's a finite supply and
there's only a little bit, and thatI don't even come from it from that
perspective, I come from the perspectiveof there's people that have to work really
hard and tirelessly to do all of thosethings that need to be done for oil.
Where you have this ginormous thing.
Robyn Ivy (49:57):
ways.
Jerremy (49:59):
Yeah.
Hello.
And you could just createsolar energy for everyone.
Go, you, we, Robin, we can go tothe corner of, of Utah or Nevada.
And take out the whole corner of thestate and, 500,000 acres in solar field
and all of America's powered by solar.
That's all it would take.
That's a
Robyn Ivy (50:17):
you see the level of innovation
that they have, but it's, again, it goes
right back to the willingness to thinkcreatively, to problem solve with a way
that keeps everybody, it's not a communistidea to consider everybody's wellbeing
when your amount of land is finite, butit's, it's easy to prepare it that way
here, but it's a matter of understandingThe resources are limited and
Jerremy (50:38):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (50:38):
need is different.
Like great.
Use 'em as parking lot cover.
Why not
Jerremy (50:43):
Yes.
Robyn Ivy (50:44):
wants their
car to be cool anyway.
Jerremy (50:47):
Agreed.
Yep.
Precisely.
And I think that those are just,anyway, like that's things for me to
understand and be aware of is it hasnothing to do with certain beliefs.
It has everything to do with,I want things to be easy,
fast, efficient, simple.
And the faster we get there as a societyand the more we think about it and the
more we debate and have open discussionswhere I can just simply disagree with
(51:09):
you, like me and Dave don't agree oneverything, although we agree on a
lot of things we can have a beautiful,very easy commonality where it's like,
oh, cool, man, I think you're wrong.
And you think I'm wrong.
And high five, dude, it's love you.
You're awesome.
But that's like playing poker orplaying chess or playing a sport.
There will be a loser.
It's okay.
(51:30):
It's not, doesn't meanthat you're a bad person.
It means that you played a gameover a period of time and someone
lost because of the result wasyou lost and someone else won.
That is all right.
It's okay for that to happen.
Robyn Ivy (51:42):
Yeah.
I really value multiple perspectives.
I spent 30 years as a commercialphotographer, and the entire career is
essentially wrapped around the idea thatthere is no one way to look at anything.
And in fact, if you're only lookingat it one way, you're really
missing 99% of other possibilitiesof how to see something.
it's true about ourselves.
It's true about what we thinkis possible with our money.
(52:03):
If you are also in your fifties,like I learned when I inherited
some money a handful of years ago,it's like you can start at any time.
Like you, your own thinkingabout money or your ability to
invest is the only limitation.
Because if you tell yourself that,you're gonna have to pick up the
Boulder and start going, that'salso just a thought you're having.
It's not necessarily how it has to be.
That's just one thought you choseto have about what it would be like
(52:26):
to start getting healthy with money.
But that
To change as I'm gonna not have icecream at 10 o'clock in the morning.
It's
Jerremy (52:33):
Or at night.
Robyn Ivy (52:34):
Yeah.
Or whenever.
Yeah.
Or you
Jerremy (52:36):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (52:37):
however.
Jerremy (52:38):
Exactly.
Robyn Ivy (52:39):
knowing that we're
really like a few thoughts away
from it not being a problem.
I,
Jerremy (52:43):
Yeah.
Precisely.
I, I'm gonna openly share thiswith all of your listeners too.
The week of like, Christmas week,I'm, I'm, I just eat cookies
and sugar and just get fat andjust do nothing for a long time.
I like it.
I enjoy it.
But again, to the point of, I thinkit should be absolutely okay where we
all can just sit down and just relaxand have a good time and do our thing.
(53:04):
But that's balance.
That's the, you can schedule it.
That's the creation ahead of time.
That's the thought process ahead of time.
That's what all these conversations arealmost always gonna keep coming back to
is clarity of time, clarity of purpose,clarity of intentionality, knowing how
to sit down, think and grow rich, right?
The book is not called WorkHarder to Make More Money.
It's called Think and Grow Rich.
(53:25):
And so we have to be ableto use our thoughts and our
thoughts can become things.
And if thoughts become things,then our words create our world.
And that's why I think it'scalled Universe, right?
You are the verses that we speak out loud.
So if you start speaking toyourself, I do love money.
Money is incredible.
What an amazing tool that moneyis for myself and for my family.
I want to interact with it and grow it andexpand it because it's so awesome and it's
(53:49):
incredible everything that it does for me.
You start speaking like that andusing those words often daily,
guess what's gonna happen?
You're gonna start having abetter relationship with money
and your wealth is going to grow.
Robyn Ivy (54:00):
And noticing, I mean, no matter
what your circumstances are right now,
noticing the abundance of blessings.
And I don't mean that in some kindof like hashtag blessed silliness.
Truly looking around on a cold dayand recognizing like, you are lucky
enough to have a warm place to be.
You do have someone to call.
There is something to eat in the fridge.
There is, we're so resourced in waysthat we just don't say thank you enough.
(54:25):
If any of this were togo, we'd care about it.
So in the moment that we haveit, it's really a practice.
I think it's a devotional practiceto just say, I'm gonna be as
consistent with my acknowledgementof this as I am of the lack of it.
You spent all this time beingaware of what's not here.
What about the practice ofthank you for what is here.
You for what is here.
Jerremy (54:45):
Yes.
You appreciate appreciatesas Oprah Winfrey said.
So you don't pray or ask or hopefrom a place of want of I have less.
It's not from a place of lack.
It's from a place of love.
Thank you for what I have.
I would love more.
It's a powerful statement.
I love what I have.
It's incredible.
I want more.
(55:05):
And it doesn't have to be for you.
You can have more.
I want more from my cell phone.
Robyn Ivy (55:10):
resourced
We feel the easier it is to give it away.
Jerremy (55:13):
Let's go.
Robyn Ivy (55:14):
on what we don't have,
we're not gonna be giving that much.
Jerremy (55:17):
Yes.
Yes.
And that's, I love those conversationsbecause I do get a little slack sometimes
when I get on stage and I say, you'reselfish if you do not make enough money.
Because who are you really,truly, ultimately providing for?
If you make $40,000 a yearand hey, no hate on it.
I've, I was there for along time in my life, right?
(55:37):
The first 20 years of my life, 19 yearsof my life, guess who I was helping?
No one.
I mean, maybe I would tip awaitress 15%, 10%, but probably not.
I would find ways to kind of skirtaround tips, and I would do things
that I, I didn't have that muchmoney, so I couldn't circulate it.
I didn't ever go to
Charity galas.
(55:59):
I never donated money everto anyone for any reason.
I didn't have any, so it's okay to go.
I love what I have.
I love my $48,000 a year.
This is amazing.
Thank you.
God.
Give me more.
I know there's some available,I know there's more available.
Let me figure out how.
Gimme the insight, gimme the wisdom,gimme the knowledge, the path,
the opportunities, the blessings.
Give me more because Iknow more is available.
Robyn Ivy (56:21):
I love it.
Jerremy (56:22):
Yeah.
Robyn Ivy (56:23):
because
otherwise what are we doing?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cool.
Jerremy, where can people findout more about you and learn more
about you and connect with you?
Jerremy (56:33):
I have an
awesome social media team.
If anybody connects withme, they could reach out.
Jerremy Newsome on all platforms.
My name is built with two Rs,so my dad's name was Jerry
and stands for Jerry and me.
Jerremy and for my podcast solvingAmerica's Problems Anywhere that you
listen to podcasts and on all the socials,I would love for people to reach out and
(56:58):
connect with me on, on that podcast so wecan continue grow, growing the platform,
helping people see, know, and understandhow we can all be a part of the solution.
How education is going to be the rootfix for almost everything that we are
struggling over, and that we worry over.
Because the more we educate, the morewe are aware, the more we are aware,
the more we can have a an extreme clearpath on where to go to how to fix it.
(57:22):
And we love having guests on the show.
It was an absolute honor and privilegeto meet you, and I am quite confident
that we'll see each other when I popup to Rhode Island in a month from now.
Robyn Ivy (57:32):
Yeah, I am looking forward
to it and I really appreciate the chance
to guest, host on here and hang outwith you guys and share the message.
I think it's a really beautifulopportunity to speak into wholeness
because it's not it's no differentif it's money or if it's your faith,
or it's your relationship or yourmarriage or the way you parent, or
the way you wanna serve our community.
If we're not all in this together, thenwe're really not gonna make this happen.
Jerremy (57:58):
That's right.
Robyn Ivy (58:00):
Thank you for this.