Million Dollar Days

Why Stress is the Key to Success (And How to Master It)

Robby Choucair and George Passas Season 1 Episode 70

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In this episode, Robby and George break down the epic rap battle between Kendrick Lamar and Drake and its unexpected culmination at the Super Bowl Halftime Show. Was it all hype, or did Kendrick truly outplay Drake on the world’s biggest stage? We dive into the drama, the diss tracks, and the mind games that had the entire hip-hop community buzzing.

Switching gears, I recount my personal journey to Adelaide, a city filled with memories and potential. Despite some skepticism about its investment returns, past successes keep me optimistic about future events. The shift in audience engagement is palpable as we dive into the intricacies of brand-building and marketing strategies, particularly when facing the challenge of enticing a "colder" audience. It's a world where first impressions matter more than ever, and emotional connections can be the game-changer.

Tune in for a deep dive into high-performance habits, mental toughness, and why stress only harms those who believe it can. If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed, this episode will change how you see pressure—turning it from a roadblock into your greatest weapon.

Robby:

Do you know what I really like? Please tell me. I like starting the podcast off with the most random things ever.

George:

Hmm, yeah, we've done that quite a few times now, haven't we? And I feel like you've got something brewing.

Robby:

I do, and do you know what I really like? Did you watch the NFL?

George:

halftime show Super Bowl. None of it, None of it. I saw Kendrick. Was it Kendrick Lamar? Yeah, yeah, I saw a little bit of his performance and that's about it. What did you think?

Robby:

of it.

George:

Indifferent. You don't know anything about him. Huh, nothing. I heard there's some beef with him and Drake, or some shit like that.

Robby:

Yeah, so you have zero awareness around?

George:

him. Zero awareness around anything, do you?

Robby:

know anything about that. Nothing, okay, cool.

George:

Enlighten us.

Robby:

Nah, that's Go sort it out. Yeah, it's cool. You know what I like? I like seeing two people at the top of their game go head to head, yeah absolutely.

George:

I fucking love it. Me too. I couldn't agree more. I'm not an underdog guy. I don't like it. Come on the battler, get up there and win and get one for us common folk. No, fuck yeah. The best of the best need to slug it out. They've worked harder than you. You don't deserve to be there. Don't be the common folk.

Robby:

I'm talking about the Titans, that's right, but I'm talking about the biggest guys, yeah. So you're talking about, in that case, you're talking about Kendrick Lamar, who's arguably one of the best rappers yeah, and then Drake, who's arguably one of the best artists ever Right. And they've had this feud, like this beef, and there was. This is sick For anyone who's listening, who follows the beef. I hope you watched it. If you haven't, go, it's free. You can watch the Super Bowl halftime show. And when they had this beef, there was this song that came out. You would have heard it, I guarantee it.

George:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I've heard that song. Yeah, it's called they're Not Like. Us the main his most popular one, kendrick Lamar, yeah.

Robby:

Yeah, it's called Not Like Us and they had massive diss to Drake yeah, I've heard a lot of reviews on it. He calls him a pedophile oh does he?

George:

Yeah, I've heard a lot of reviews saying the halftime show was shit and everyone was waiting just for that one song and that was it.

Robby:

I think there's a lot of Drake superstar. He's in Australia, is he Right now?

George:

Man reach out Anyway.

Robby:

Drake, are you listening? There was this whole thing around. They're going to get sued. So they had a beef. Kendrick won the beef, got the NFL Super Bowl thing, so he's going to be the halftime show solely. And everyone was saying is he going to play this song? Is he going to play this song? Hell, he can't Going to callke a pedophile in at the super bowl. And he was saying everyone was saying drake's gonna sue him if he does. And then he goes and he says I want to play your favorite song, but I'm afraid they're gonna sue. And then the song starts and the crowd erupts and then he cuts off the song and then he goes to a different song and he comes back around and he plays the song and the whole stadium sings the line that calls Drake a pedophile.

Robby:

Phenomenal, in my opinion. I love Drake, love him, but phenomenal. I love seeing two people here go head to head like that. I think it's the greatest thing in the world, dude. Like when Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg were going to have an MMA fight. Oh, yeah, I was pumped. Do you know what I mean? Two titans yeah, it's the greatest thing in the world. Yeah, very cool. I live for those moments. Mayweather McGregor, mm-hmm.

George:

Do you know?

Robby:

what I mean. Two at the top of their game. This is what life's all about. Yeah, these life's all about. Yeah, these moments. I want to have a moment like that.

George:

All right, let's punch on. That'd be sick. All right, Next get an age.

Robby:

Yeah, that'd be the next podcast. Someone told me that we should do podcasts live, like a live show, like have an audience. Sure, when talking to yourself in the mirror.

George:

Yeah, You've been wanting to do that for ages. That'd be cool. A live podcast, make it an event. Imagine yeah, have some drinks, have some cocktails and away we go. That's become a common thing To do a live podcast with people in the room.

Robby:

In the US yeah.

George:

So they'll do that. Do you get live studio audience participation or are you just talking?

Robby:

They'll book out a theater and they'll just go on stage and, instead of like, stand up, yeah, two people will do a podcast, live with the audience and do like get engagement and stuff. Yeah, yeah, that could be interesting.

George:

Yeah, it's a really weird, different way of doing it some people, I think, would be nervous about that, because they get nervous when getting in front of people. But I don't think I would. I reckon I've had enough stage time not to be nervous anymore. Do you still get butterflies? Yeah, I mean, I think like the first three seconds you're about to get on stage, like oh, I haven't done this in a while. What do I say, what do I do? But then, literally, you know, three minutes in, you're just like boom, just rolls off the tongue, like at all. Yeah, I mean, I don't know, I don't think so, but I think that, like first, not, I don't know, it's not not nervous, I'm like let's fucking go, it's excitement. Yeah, maybe that's what it is.

George:

It's probably that anticipation to build up, because you know it's generally like three months before we do those types of trainings um, where we we book out events and whatnot, which we got one coming up in a couple weeks. So if you haven't registered yet for the Construction Success Conference, it's probably air on that week.

Robby:

Sorry, it's probably air on that week. Yeah, that's right, it's still fucking time.

George:

Get your shit together. Get your shit together or sign up, change your life. Yeah, so that'll be cool. I'm looking forward to that event and we're going to Adelaide. Google it. I've actually never been.

Robby:

Haven't you To the city?

George:

no, I haven't been in a very long time. I haven't been for about 14 odd years, but I used to go before that, used to go all the time, had some family in Adelaide so I used to go and visit, used to drive up when I was a kid, when we were kids, and see them. And then when I was old I used to fly, drive, you know, went up a few times with some friends as well. So I always enjoyed it when I liked it there. Well, when I went there, it was yeah, it was cool, Always enjoyed it down there. So I'm looking forward to going back.

George:

Do you think it's changed? Probably hasn't, From what I hear it hasn't. Ah, same shit. Yeah, it's sort of a. How long haven't you been? I reckon probably 14 years thereabouts, so it's been quite a while. Some of that family's even moved down to Melbourne since then. So there'll be probably even less reason to go up. But, yeah, looking forward to going down there for the event and it'll be interesting to see the market Again testing it. We've got to spend money, got to make a considerable effort, a decent investment, to go there and see what it's like. A lot of people are saying don't go to Adelaide. It's not a great return and I'm like well why? Because it hasn't been for you doesn't mean it won't be for me. I've had quite a few clients come out of Adelaide. I've had clients from Adelaide fly to Melbourne and then sign up to 12-month courses with myself. So for me to go there, I don't think it's a big deal. I don't think it's a deal breaker. I reckon it'll do quite well. So I'm looking forward to jumping on that bandwagon.

Robby:

That's going to be fun yeah it will, it will.

George:

It'll be the first interstate trip for the year, the first interstate training, and then, yeah, back to Melbourne. We'll have an event a month later yeah, about a month and a bit later which I'm looking forward to and scheduled out the year pretty much. So it's good to have at least planned that whole year of events and trainings and everything going on which I'm really pumped about.

Robby:

How do you want to share the story of how you did your first event?

George:

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. So in what? What do you want me to share, so that you smile as if there's something specific? Uh, you want me to bring no, no, I'm just I um but what was cool if it's just a general thing?

George:

what was cool is we literally did the training and we invested a fair bit of time, effort and money into this training to be able to learn how to speak on stage. So it wasn't just a matter of getting up there and talking. I think I could could always do that. I've never really been one to shy away if someone said, hey, get up on stage, I'm like yeah, okay, I'll be nervous, but once I'm on there I'm like killing it.

George:

But it was great to get that training and then do it with purpose, with regards to how you speak, how you present, how you communicate with all of the people in the room, and we had done pretty much all the training. It was like combined, I think it was about 17 odd days worth of training, not in one go, but over a three week period, or three a few over a three break period, let's say. And yeah, we ran our ads, we or you ran the ads, I didn't do anything, you ran it and we booked the venue. I had no idea of turnout, nothing. And I remember doing a webinar one night and we got like 10 tickets sold. I'm like this is the greatest thing ever. How good is this? We're going to have like 300 people there.

George:

And anyway, I think, our very first event we had about 70 people paid tickets anywhere between $100 to $200 for a ticket and on that actual day after the day I presented, it was like we were in a glass house. We were literally in a glass room and the air conditioning wasn't working for shit and it was 33 degrees outside. It was probably about 38 degrees inside, so everyone was pretty sweaty and uncomfortable and it was just a hot day. But after going through that training and doing that presentation, it was so cool to get people to go to the back of the room and actually buy your product and your service and to see that the power of everything we had learned implemented. You took the risk.

George:

It's like when you say with marketing you've got to spend money, you have to go backwards before you go forwards. So it was great to see that ROI where we've spent this money and really at that time it was quite low cost because I think I had enough of a brand, of enough people knowing me and what I'm about. That that probably helped the sales and the cost per acquisition to go down. So once they got them in the room, I think it was a little bit easier for them to convince to come on board because they'd built that connection with me prior. The interesting thing that followed thereafter was seeing how your cost per acquisition goes up and your audience is more and more cold and that means your influence needs to be more and more on these people to get them to buy and you have to add more steps and all that sort of stuff. So it's been quite an interesting journey to see all that.

Robby:

So I think there's two sides to that though, because there is the no one knows you in the room, like no one knows you personally. Yep, most now everyone. You say you've seen the content, most people for the end up, but most people in the room now have never met you. Yes, like you most of the, I think. When you first, when we first did the first event, you walked into the room and you're like I probably know 50% of the room yeah, yeah, that's right. Or right now you're walking in and you're like, don't know, might know one person here. I don't know the whole room.

George:

But even asking them, we often ask I think you actually do it more than me you go anyone put your hand up if you've seen any of George's content before today? And that hand going up is less and less and less each event. That's what I've noticed too, because a lot of the time at the very beginning it was like, yeah, everyone would put their hand up. Oh yeah, I've seen George's stuff, and then it's progressively gone down, or they followed after an ad and engaged after an ad.

Robby:

Yeah, I think the audience getting colder and colder, like it has two different effects. One, obviously it's more difficult to get up into the room, but two, I think there is the upside of they don't know, you Do you know what I mean.

Robby:

So, like you've got an opportunity to make a first impression, yeah, whereas someone else might be like nah, it's George, man, it's George, you know what I mean? I know George. Nah, I've known George for ages. I went to high school with George. You know what I mean, whereas they, because people put limitations on you, yeah, do you know what I mean? Yeah, nah, nah, yeah, of course.

George:

But like one yesterday who I've never met before, never ever engaged with, he sent an email saying about he bought a ticket to a previous event and can it get credited to the next one. I'm like, yeah, sure, no worries, which one is it? And he goes yeah, it was this one. I said, cool, I'll register you, you'll get your ticket, no worries. And he cause he called the office and one of the guys answered downstairs and then they transferred the call upstairs and normally my PA will take care of that, but she's been away sick the last couple of weeks. So he came to me and said, yeah, look, I'll have it. And the guy got nervous.

George:

Speaking to me, he's like oh, oh, is this George? Like, yeah, he goes. Oh, it's so weird. Speaking to you, he goes I just watch your videos. And it's like now I'm actually talking to you. This is amazing. Like, okay, relax, mate. And he re-registered from the event. So that just goes to show me and it should show you guys listening and watching the power of brand. I've built an emotional connection with someone and I've never met them before. No matter what business you're in, forget the fact that I'm doing consulting and talking to another business, a B2B. If you're a florist, a builder, like in marketing, whatever it might be Pizza, just pizza, whatever it is, whatever it is, you can get that emotional connection with people just by building brand, and it doesn't always mean you're in front of the camera or whatever it might be. It might be a product that you're showcasing, but I think you're more likely to get influence when you're in front of camera. But that's been a cool journey to see.

Robby:

What are some things that you know, if you could go back and talk to, because I remember when it feels like not that long ago, yeah, you look back, you're like it's been that long yeah.

George:

Exactly, it's been two years.

Robby:

Oh.

George:

No no. Two years since we've been running events.

Robby:

The first event was run over two years ago. Yeah, that's what I mean. So it was like around this time last, like two years ago.

George:

But think about, think about from the point of commitment yeah to now, it's been like yeah, it's been almost two and a half at least, right at least.

Robby:

And it's like what would you say to yourself? Like, from everything now the experience, the journey, the lessons, the, the whole from start to finish, all the experience you've gained in that period Like what would you if you could go to what year? Was it 2022? So it was 2022, 23. Yeah, three, nah, two. End of 2022. Fuck, we're getting old. If you could go back to the end of 2022 and you could go and talk to George, who was walking out of that five day training, and he was pumped and he was like you know, that's where the, that's where the, the name came from, right, yeah, million dollar days came from that event and he were walking out that day, if you could stop him and just say, hey, I just want you to know.

George:

It's going to be sick. It's going to be sick, it's going to be sick. It's been so much fun it's. I mean that very first. I can never describe the moment, even the day when we do make a million bucks in a day because it's going to happen, guys Like you don't get it. We all, everyone, looks at this sign and when we talk about it and it's like I know people dismiss it. You reckon, and it's like I know people dismiss it. You reckon I fucking oath 100% In the sense. They may not say it to us, they might not say you'll never make it. I didn't get any pushback. No, no, no, not pushback from that perspective. But I can tell people you'll never make a million dollars in a day. No, it's impossible. The limiting beliefs, they're limiting beliefs, but for you and for me it's not a matter of if, just when, and we're very patient, we're patiently aggressive. I like that term. I'm working, but I know it's coming and I know I was going with that.

George:

But I think when I first finished that training I was like, yeah, I'm going to make a million dollars sooner than I thought, and the feeling I had after that very first event. So that very first event. I'm going to be completely open here. I made close to $350,000 in a day after that very first training. Now when I say in a day, it wasn't deposited into the bank account, it was committed in the bank account of sale. It was committed over the course of 12 months in sales. Now that figure did drop because some people pulled out, we had to refine the program, a whole range of things happened, so it wasn't actually that much. But the feeling to have gone through that and get that level of sales showed me that it was possible that it can be done. My next three-day training because I feel that over the last two years I realized this quickly, probably after the third event when I didn't get many sales, I probably got two or three or something like that. Now, don't get me wrong, it was still a hundred grand worth of sales.

George:

But I'm like why is this diminishing? Why is it going backwards? I'm getting better. It should be going the other way around. There's been a lot and a lot over the last two years of trial and error, and that's where I think people give up. They go, they see they might get a bit of result and then it becomes harder and then I can't do this anymore. It's not working or the market shit, and they blame other everything and everyone else. But what I realized over?

George:

Going back to your original question, what would you say? I probably wouldn't say a few words. I'd say it going to be sick. But you're also going to need to put in the work, because it hasn't been as easy as everyone might say it. Because, yeah, it looks glamorous that we're on stage, we're selling, we've got a room full of a hundred people. Each time we do it Thereabouts it looks like we're killing it and all that sort of stuff.

George:

But what you don't understand is every cent that I've made in this business I've actually reinvested back into the business I have taken out. Fuck all, take that back. I bought a car, that's it. And even then I lease a car. I didn't go spend $300,000 on a car. I've just used some of that income to go and buy a car. So that's probably the only thing I bought selfishly Now I'm.

George:

There was a period I think it was mid last year we spent $20,000 a month on ad spend. Forget what I paid. You forget what we paid venue hire. Forget what we paid for travel to do Sydney, melbourne, brisbane so we would have spent close to probably $70,000, $80,000 across the course of three months. That's a lot of money For someone that's never really run ads like that before. To turn around and go fuck it, let's go. 20 grand a month, that's a lot of money. That was a lot of ball to do that. Well, I thought it was for me anyway at the time. I'm sure there's other people out there running hundreds of thousand dollars a day. You know what I mean, playing the bigger game. But for me to go from spending $5,000 a month to then go, no, let's go $20,000 a month, let's go all out. It was probably a little bit.

George:

We didn't get the result from that investment. I probably not broke even. I made a little bit more than breaking even from that. Let's call it a tour, but learned a lot. We changed from that whole series or that tour. We changed the way we ran ads. I've changed the way I present. I changed my offer a lot. I've gone and spoken to mentors, to other people. What can I change? What can I do? And I'm really excited now because all those experiences over the last two years we can now put together and cultivate something and go.

George:

I think this is going to be the best value for people, that they will look at it and go. It's a no brainer. I have to sign up Because when value exceeds price, people make decisions and that's what I've really looked at now. We've been studying and watching a lot of Hall-Mosey's stuff. That's his number one thing You've got to provide that value.

George:

A lot of the salespeople they say it all comes down to the value. If I've got my watch here and this is a Rolex right now, there's a Rolex I'm going to sell it to you. Know, this is worth $30,000 and you're negative $100 in your bank account right now. But I tell you, look, I'm going to sell this Rolex to you right now for $3,000. Are you going to go find $3,000? Of course you are, because you know the perceived value of what I've got in my hand and what I'm going to give you.

George:

Now you need to do the same thing with your product. People need to look at that and go holy shit, that product. If I don't pay for it or if I don't find a way to make the money for it, I'm going to be worse off than me giving over that money. So and it's not a manipulation thing at all. I genuinely believe in the product, that if you purchase that, your life and your business will be better as a result of that. And the beauty about that is I've seen it firsthand with the people that have already gone through the course, because it's now had two groups of people saying you know, over the course of 24 months, go through it, complete it, and I've seen the results in their business and what has flown on thereafter. Now, again, I can't guarantee it's going to work for you because I can't guarantee you're going to do the work, but if you follow the process and believe in everything that we're doing and that what we've done, you're going to get extraordinary results and that's what ends up happening. So that's what's been really cool to see.

George:

The complete opposite not opposite, but flow and effect of that again is I think it's forced me to put a GM on in my business Because I couldn't. It got to a point, especially around mid last year, where my construction company was suffering because I was putting a lot of work into one and not as much in the other. And when I say suffering, it made me realize I can't do both efficiently. I was going to run out of time, effort and resources to be able to do both, and one was going to suffer. One or the other would have suffered, because if I had to spend the time on doing my work at PASCON, then, cool, the event might not have been as good. Or if I spend too much time on the event, then does that mean I lose a project here that could have made half a million dollars in gross profit, who knows.

George:

And it got to that stage where I actually almost lost the project that passed on because I was spending so much time over here at Builder Elite. So it made me realize and probably forced me to more. So put someone on and go cool, you're now the GM, you need to run the business, you need to start getting sales, growing all that sort of stuff, and take stuff off my plate so I can concentrate on the broader picture of the company but also focus on the builder elite stuff too. So there's been huge flow and effect with that and a lot of stress, which I was actually going to touch on today. As far as the topic is concerned, I've personally been how do you, how do you before I get into it? How do you deal with stress when you're in a stressful situation Before I get into it.

Robby:

how do you deal with stress when you're in a stressful situation? That's a good question, Like how do I cope?

George:

Yeah, so you're under the pump, got so much on, let's talk. It can be person, personal or professional, because I think they're one and the same in the sense of the feeling that you get the way you handle.

Robby:

that's right yeah, I just remind myself that I, I choose this, like that's a big factor for me. Yeah, I always remind myself like, hey, this is your choice.

Robby:

Yeah, you know, I mean, give me a pleb yeah, exactly have no, give me a pleb, have a 9 to 5 and switch off. Yep, I don't want to do that, okay. Well, fucking man up, you know what I mean. Like that's just the reality. Yeah, it is. Sometimes I'll go for a walk, like sometimes just some, because like, yeah, like a physical break state, yeah, sometimes shit just falls apart. I used to bounce on that, but sometimes, like everything's just falling apart and you feel like everyone you talk to has no idea what you're saying, and then you're like you know what. You know when that happens. I feel like that happens to me a lot and it's like all of a sudden has everyone gotten?

George:

silly.

Robby:

Yeah, I'm trying to know how many of us feelings I feel like that happens to me a lot, and then I just think you know the odds of everyone becoming stupid at the same time are slim. Yeah, it'll be something I'm doing, yeah, and then I'll go and like headphones in and just go for a walk and just like call like cleo, or sometimes too, like I was saying to you those I've had days where like it's 4 30, everything's falling apart and I'm just like tomorrow, yeah, like I'm just like it's fine, yeah, like I'm just fucking, go away Everything, go away, leave me alone and just go do something else, yeah, and then come back to it. That cleared my head.

George:

Yeah, that's cool. I like the initial break state that you said. It's like you know. You chose it. You chose to do this. Yeah, what did you expect? You won a million dollars a day. Did you think it was going to be easy? Did you think that, oh, I'm just going to rock up and work nine to five and it's just magically going to happen? Of course not.

George:

They come with stress. It is hand in hand, a prerequisite of you achieving anything great. Now, if you're going to be Mr Olympia, you need to stress your body in such a way that it grows. You're going to be uncomfortable. You're going to be lifting heavy weights, it's going to be hard and it's going to be. You're going to have a huge amount of discipline. To become Mr Olympia, you need stress, and you mentioned this to me the other day, which has been a great thing.

George:

It's like they say stress is the number one killer. But it's a number one killer if you think it's going to kill you. If you think stress is going to motivate you, if you think stress is there as a tool to help you progress and move forward and be able to achieve great things, then that's exactly what stress is going to do If you sit here and go. This stress is bad. It's going to kill me. I can't do this anymore. I better slow down. I better go get my nine to five. I better quit. That's fine. But that's what's going to happen whenever you come up against stressful situations and I think it's a great reminder that you keep saying I choose to do this, this isn't an easy slog. I've chosen to do this and I know it'll pay off. I just need to keep working, and that's something that I do to get through. Stress is I work, I work, I go okay, well, fucking, let's go. This is stressful, but it'll be less stressful once that task gets done. It'll be less stressful once I get through this and when I get through this, I'll be stronger and better for it as a result of that stress. So I tend to go from stress to stress, just building those mental calluses. From stress to stress. Yeah, as in, there's always something going on.

George:

I'm not saying stress is always a bad thing. It's pressure as well. There's that pressure to perform, that pressure to deliver, that pressure to get things done. It can be from a relationship point of view. You might have stresses. You chose to be married, you chose to have kids, you chose to have a mortgage, you chose to have an argument. How do you change that If you don't want to be in that stress state anymore? What does that mean? Does that mean you need to have an open and honest conversation with your partner about X, y, z, to be less stressed? Does it mean you need to be humble? Does it mean you need to understand the other point of view a little bit better? Does it mean you need to sell your property? Does it mean you need to take a hit and lose some money?

George:

Well, mosey put a post up a few months ago about this as well. Then it was around he goes. When I made $10,000, I lost a thousand to get to the 10,000. He goes. When I made $100,000, he goes. I lost $10,000. He goes. When I made $100,000, he goes. I lost $10,000 to get that. He goes. When I made $100 million, I lost $10 million. He goes. It wasn't a loss. It was a lesson I needed to learn. It was a cost of success. I needed to have that loss in order for me to get to that level. I needed to make those $10 million worth of mistakes to make that $100 million. It's price of entry or cost of entry yeah. The cost of the lesson yeah, and I quite like that as well, because I look at things different when you look at it like that well, this is just a lesson I had to have and pay for it, so I don't ever have it again.

Robby:

Yeah, so what do you do and how do you handle stress?

George:

So working through it. First of all, I don't sort of curl up in a little ball and sit in the corner and I try and take more action than less, if that makes sense. I'd say the last three weeks for myself in my business has been quite stressful from a point of view of delivery Delivery of projects, delivery of administrative things within the organization that needed to happen. I've had one of my my PA has been away for three weeks, so that's added stress on myself, on the business, on all these things that I used to handball to her and I go, yeah, cool, take care of this. I now have to do it because I'm the only one that in the business at the moment that knows how to do some of those things, particularly for Builder Elite.

George:

There's been that stress. But then everything else I've had to do. What does that mean? Cool, work at night. Three fucking weeks, big deal. I've got work at night. I come in here. I've come in here because, again, I don't live far from the office. I walked down to the office at eight o'clock once the kids were all in bed and pumped out a few hours, then went back home and I got ahead the next day. So I was all good with everything I needed to do. Uh, as far as a stress release, you know you don't have any space to work at home. You should? No, I don't now.

George:

I did yeah I did, but I don't now because I converted my the study or the where I had some space to work. I've converted that into my son's bedroom but I could sit at his desk if I wanted to. But, man, I don't need to anymore. I'm so close to the office I can just walk here at any stage that I want and do what I need to do.

George:

But as far as an actual release of stress, I think it was a couple of weeks ago I called you and I went to the restaurant next door to our office and I just sat there by myself and had dinner. All right, I just sat there by myself. I made a few calls, talked a bit of shit to a few people, yourself included, had a really nice fit. I'm like I'm going to eat so much. I ordered heaps of food, I was even going to order dessert.

George:

I just sat there by myself and I ate and it was so relaxing and peaceful just to unwind, not talk to really anyone opposite me or anything like that, just eat my food, enjoy a nice meal and unwind. And then I went home after the dinner because my wife and kids went to. They had gone to an early dinner elsewhere. I got home and I was so much more refreshed and clear of mind as a result of that, so that was something that really helped me. But other stress releases I mean going to the gym helps as well. I like exercising, so having a decent workout and getting rid of some of that energy often helps me.

Robby:

Is there anything you do in the moment, in the actual moment? Yeah, like right now what do you do?

George:

Nothing specific that'll be like okay, take 10 deep breaths or anything like that. I just have that mindset that it's going to pass, like there's no need to be upset over this. It's going to pass, like you will get through it. I've gone through all the bad shit that's happened to me in my life to date. Every single thing. It's like a muscle.

Robby:

It is, it's a muscle. Things that would once stress you out, don't.

George:

Perfect example. Yesterday I was speaking to Simon. He had and Simon for you that don't know, he's my construction manager. Shout out to Simon. Shout out to Simon Won't listen to this. You're definitely fired. Fired After this. If you listen to him, don't come into it. If you listen to this, have your day off. Yes, Simon, if you listen to this episode, yeah, Text me and say listen to that episode. It it has to be the next day.

Robby:

And you have to tell him what the title of the episode is.

George:

No, I won't tell him. No, I'm not going to tell him anything. He needs to listen to this. I'm saying he has to tell me. Oh, he has to tell me, that's right. Yeah, that's right, and it is a time stamp as well At this moment in the yesterday.

George:

He just had a shit day, yeah, and he's like everything he goes I've had the worst day, everything's going to be the worst. And it's like he's pre-framed himself to have the worst day Because he had a difficult thing happen in the morning, he had a difficult thing happen at lunch, he had a difficult thing happen in the afternoon and then he had a difficult thing happen in the evening. Okay, so it's like this has been the worst day ever. I just want to go home to sleep and sleep it off and move on. I said, dude, relax, okay, you'll get through it, but if you keep thinking everything's going to be the worst, it will be the worst. Like he had to go to one of our jobs. He got called out because there was a water leak and he had to go there at 6.30 at night and check out the site and see where the fucking water leak was. And it turned out not to be our issue, but he still had to go there and do it. And the next morning yes, this morning I get to the site and he goes God, look at this, this is just cap off the day and someone reversed into his car, which is actually my car, but reverse into car is a little scuff mark.

George:

Yeah, well, fuck, what do you do? If you keep looking at all the negative things in your life and all the problems in your life, what do you think is going to follow? More problems? It's that whole aspect and mindset around manifestation. You know you want to manifest something. It's not manifesting, isn't sitting there and going. You know, oh, great things are going to happen. Where am I? Million worth a million dollars, you know, and it magically happens. It's about your perception on everything that happens outside of that moment, because now you go.

George:

Okay, today I'm going to have an amazing day and mind. All I want you to do is just focus on the things that are amazing throughout the day and that's all I need you to do and you will see things that are great. Do you do this? Yeah, I have done that and it definitely works. It definitely works. When I say it's not a spiritual, magical thing. I don't believe it being a magical thing that's happening, but I do believe in the unconscious mind finding things throughout the day that you go. You know what? That's actually pretty cool.

Robby:

Yeah, I think that it's been proven as well. When you like, if you have a daily practice of gratitude, you unconsciously have to look for because you're like, if you have a daily practice of gratitude, you unconsciously have to look for cause you're like, if I can ask myself later, and then you're like I better start noticing some of the stuff that I can write down later tonight. Yeah, cause you don't like having nothing to write down. Yeah, so you start to notice some of the uh, the better things. You know.

Robby:

I heard, um, I watched an interview the other day of Tony, the other day, a couple of weeks ago Tony Robbins and Jordan Peterson Fuck, I love Jordan Peterson, by the way, mad dog, he's such a cool dude and Tony Robbins said we don't experience life. We experience what we focus on in life. You know what I mean? He's very true. Yeah, he's like you can go through life. You can both go through and have the exact same experience, and one person focuses on this and the other person focuses on that. Like the same, like a set of actions happens and you focus on this, I focus on that. We have a completely different experience. You know what I mean. You can walk the same path, have a completely different experience than someone, because it's all about what you look for, yeah, and if Simone is looking at the wrong things, that's what he's going to focus on.

George:

That's right. So having that mindset in a stressful situation I think is so powerful. Not, I think it is so powerful. If you can train your mind not to focus on the shit things that are happening at the time and just realize it'll pass, realize that you'll get through it. You'll end up finding the good in those stressful situations. How good was that?

George:

I had to get a report in by a certain date for a client and normally that report takes me three hours to do. And he texts me no, he sends me a message on Friday at 3.30. Okay, an email. He's like if we don't get this report by today and he moved the goalpost, I was going to get it to him on the 5th and he goes no, if you don't get it to me today by 5 pm. He goes, you're going to miss the pay run and we won't be able to pay you. I'm like fuck, I've got that. Normally takes me three hours. In one and a half hours I just fucking boom, let's go. Didn't fuck around, got it done and submitted it. Why do you? And it was approved, it was done, it was dusted.

Robby:

Why do you think you're able to do that? I think you mentioned it before, yeah.

George:

I don't know if I mentioned it here, but we definitely spoke about it. Why do I think it happened? Well, things take you as long as they take you. If you give yourself three hours, you'll probably take three hours to do it.

George:

If I give myself an hour and a half it'll probably take me an hour and a half to do it. So you've been doing an hour and a half in three hours. Yeah, that's probably what I was doing. That's probably what I was doing Because, I mean, think about, when I'm doing this report, I get the phone call oh, I better check email, I better do this. So the report itself probably doesn't take three hours, but it's all the distractions that come in between that of me working and what I've now done as well.

George:

I've actually, as a result of that, I time block the first of each month to do all these reports and things that I need to do for the business the whole day. So nothing else other than focusing on finance and reports. That's it On the first of each month, because that's when I go and get my money in and I've actually called it. Who's got my money? That's what my meeting is on the first of every month, because who's got my money? Who's got it? Because someone has your money. It's in their bank account for the goods and services that you've provided. You need to get it into yours. So who's got it?

George:

This client's got a call. Let's send him a claim. This person's got a call. Let's send him a claim. This person's got a call. Let's give him a phone call. This person's got it. Let's send them their sponsorship deal. Let's do all that, get everything out and get the money in Every single the first of every single month. That's what I'm doing for the whole day. Nothing else not processing invoices, not doing meetings, not fucking talking to the team. No one talked to me on the's a really good.

Robby:

I think Grant Carter says that who's got my money, who's got my money, that's it he does. He backs against them all and he's like who's got my money, who's got my money.

George:

Yeah, that's a thick, that's such a cool concept.

Robby:

It is such a good concept. The money that I need to make and, gc, we're coming to see you next month Coming to see you.

George:

Next month we're going to 10X Growth Conference in Las Vegas. I see Alex Hormozy in Las Vegas Going to do a whole bunch of stuff. Going to the UFC in Las Vegas? Yeah, you're going to, I'm not. You are. That'll be pretty cool.

Robby:

That's going to be sick.

George:

Yeah, doing lots. Yeah, it's going to be a really good trip from the perspective of I love it because it's a. People say, oh, las Vegas, you just go in there for the strippers and the fucking partying and boozing and all that shit. Well, all of us, obviously. But I love it because it's actually we're going there, I enjoy. I enjoy getting things like learning things I never knew, yeah, and I really hope I sit particularly I don't think we'll get it so much at the 10X Growth Conference, because I think that's going to be more entertainment than education, even though it's a business conference and you might pick up a few little things.

George:

It'd be great to see us as people that speak on stage, to see how they perform what they do well, taking notes from that perspective, how you engage with your audience, because I think Grant's very good on stage as well. He's very charismatic and he can control a crowd, that's for sure. So it'd be good to see that. But then, particularly from the Alex Formosi course, because that's going to be two days of sort of nine to six content and they're going to be presenting there as well, we'll probably get an opportunity to have a chat with them too, you reckon? I think so. Yeah, maybe not like a one-on-one chat let's go to the back of the room or anything like that but you'll probably get an opportunity. You will get an opportunity to ask a question if you've got one there, for sure, and he'll spend the time. He'll spend the time to answer that question and make sure you get the answer.

George:

And the strippers have really good reviews, very good.

Robby:

Google reviews. Yeah, there you go. From what I've heard, friend of a friend. Well, it must be really good SEO. They've got going on. It must be They've done something right.

George:

Or maybe it's just a great product, or when they leave, can you leave us a Google review before you leave?

Robby:

I hate the marketing guys making it work. If someone ever goes, they'll tell me and I'll tell you.

George:

Yeah, that's right. Not us, we wouldn't know. I'm looking forward to that aspect of it. It's a fair investment Spend a fair bit of money to go there and go to these trainings and these courses. But it also fills your cup up from the perspective of looking at goals or looking at your year. It's always good to have that one defining moment in a year where you can say I did that and I'll remember that year for the rest of my life because of that one thing. And this could be one of those moments or one of those trips. But you look back and you go. You know what 2025 was so like when we went to Vegas and we went to Hormozy GC, did all those other extracurricular activities how good was that. What a great trip that was. And we're going with other friends who are business owners and will also be benefiting from going there too. Friends is a stretch. Have you messaged him this morning? No, good morning. No, I might message him good afternoon.

Robby:

You know messaging good morning is good.

George:

Yeah, you should do it to just a random person you haven't spoken to in a while. They might freak.

Robby:

They will freak I hope they do and then they'll be stressed.

George:

And then they'll have to listen to this podcast and they'll have to subscribe. I mean, that's a great stress relief, isn't it?

Robby:

Subscribing? Yeah, subscribe. You know what it's called when a this is so random. You know what it's called when a word begins. Every word in a sentence begins with the same letter. No, it's called alliteration.

George:

Did I know that?

Robby:

Alliteration know that, so iteration subscribe. I got nothing.

George:

Yeah, it's sexy stress-free, stress-free, stressless subscribers, subscribers. Yeah, there you go. I did not know that and it's a good chance.

Robby:

I will never use that ever again I uh, I reckon you will maybe on stage alliteration, maybe on stage.

George:

Maybe we can turn it into a training of some sort and sell it for $2,000.

Robby:

Yeah, and then you'll be very glad you listened to this iPod broadcast. I'm just going to start using wrong words for everything.

George:

Make you sound smarter.

Robby:

I doubt it, but sure, exquisite, we'll go with that.

George:

So if you want to learn great things like that in your life, the way to do it is to subscribe, so you don't ever miss out on any moment of anything. Anything else you'd like to add yeah, this podcast is stressful.

Robby:

Why it's not easy Taking my phone, blowing up dude, that's what I mean.

George:

I've had to turn mine on silent. Do not disturb, might check it probably got a few missed calls. You know what I was actually stressed just before this call. Yeah, I've been. I was too, absolutely because I've got so much to do. But you know there's having a lot to do with stress here no, I don't get flustered by that anymore. I used to. I don't anymore. I can take on a lot. That's what I've realized and again. But I had to go through that stress to realize how much I can actually take on.

Robby:

Yeah, but so so again, does that turn around and say to you, okay, like, and we've had this conversation before, so this used to stress you out? And then you went through this and now you've like built up this barrier and then then you'd open your own business and then that stresses you out and then you build this barrier and then you're like nothing stresses me out and it's like, are you not doing enough, because something stresses everyone out. Yeah, yeah, we'll cut it out, yeah. And then it's like cool, like do you need to? Do you have the bandwidth to push more than you are? Not in the sense of work more or do more hours, but it's's like tolerate. It's toleration, dude. Like how much can you? You know what I mean.

Robby:

Think about the stresses that a an Elon Musk has. You know what I mean? Or like someone running a Trump yeah, trump's making some moves. Man, I don't know if I'm, he might be losing me, nah, but got rid of, got rid of paper straws yeah, it's fucking fantastic is that not just a thing to be remembered by?

Robby:

though that's so funny anyway. Um, do you know how much stress he can handle?

George:

yeah, like, that would be a whole another level. It must be at a level where he just doesn't give a fuck. Do you know what I mean? Ah, fuck it Whatever. Get rid of straws, get rid of paper straws.

Robby:

The worst thing ever, but yeah.

George:

What a world we live in. What a world we live in With some of the stuff that he's actually signed off. You know that you have to actually Sign the fucking Executive order. Isn't that weird? That's fucking weird. Like the other day he sat there in parliament and what a great moment in the sense of what he did. But he or Parliament, wherever he was sitting Oval Office, I don't fucking know Somewhere he was sitting in a chair and he had all these women behind him and he was signing an order to say men can no longer compete in women's sport. Yeah, like what a fucking world we live in. The fact that you have to sign an order to tell people that.

Robby:

Well, does he have to? Or is he making an iconic, memorable moment so that when because, like you, got to turn around and say he could not be thinking all this through, he's made more decisions in the last six weeks than I've made in my life, do you know what I mean? He cannot be thinking all this through? And then it's like are you doing this for the greater good, or are you doing this so that people say this guy came in, and you know what I mean? Yeah, he came. This guy came in, and you know what I mean? Yeah, he came in and really fucked shit up and came in and really started to make some like what's your overall objective here?

George:

well, I think time will tell.

Robby:

Are these changes actually going to have significance in in the world moving, making more moves than I've ever seen anyone make ever. Then what's?

George:

what's the downturn like? He's like okay, makes it like okay, signs and order, fucks up. Sorry, just erase that, do it again. But if it comes off, fucking genius. Yeah, someone completely off track, but relevant. I was speaking to someone One of my friends is in the football world and connected to everything and everyone and he was telling me once about Alistair Clarkson and he was saying how Brett Radden used to be assistant coach at Hawthorne and he was saying one day how Clarko goes and grabs the board and he moved whatever he moved.

George:

James Cicely, who was full forward, or Jack Gunston, who was full forward, every single day kicking bags at 10, puts him in the back line and he's like Radden goes and he goes. What are you doing? He goes. Jack's kicking a bag. Why are you putting him in the back line? He goes. Look, just put him there for a quarter If it pays off and he stops whoever kicking a bag because he's defending him. He goes. You look like a fucking genius. He goes. If not, you take him off, put him back in the forward line and he'll be all right. He, you take him off. Put him back in the forward line and he'll be all right. He goes.

George:

But you've got to be willing to take the risk, you've got to be willing to make the move, and I think that's what Trump's doing. He's just making the moves and seeing what comes to fruition. Some moves will be big, some moves, like all these tariffs he's putting on everyone Will that help? Who knows? Maybe it will, maybe it won't, but he's a lot more influential than anyone else in the world, you know, stopping wars and doing a whole range of shit at the moment. And, yeah, I think that level of craziness at least when he says something, people look at it and go fuck, he might actually do that. He doesn't care what people are thinking. He doesn't is. Is he thinking of the consequences? I'm sure he's smarter than just let's sign this and not think about it. I'm sure he's got people behind him going. We'll do some research, look, have a look at it Before we sign anything off. What's the consequence? So yeah, I do think there's a level there.

Robby:

Yeah, but there's also a level of don't know if I've ever seen anyone move faster.

George:

I think speed's important For straws, For anything Like speed. Like you say, it's better to be first to market instead of best to market.

George:

Yeah, it's better to be first than to be better.

George:

Yeah, like, let's move. Like, get shit done? Yeah, I like you know that ceiling analogy. Yeah for sure, could you. Does it mean you need to handle more and do more? Absolutely, I think it does get to that point. You keep hitting the ceiling and go, well, how do you break through the ceiling? How do you more? Like, yeah, and we do, though, because, like, I keep asking, like you said, I said you've asked for this stress.

George:

So you want the yacht, you want to take the chopper to the yacht. Are you still doing helicopter lessons? Because I see a pilot? Yeah, um, but you want to take it. Is it's killer, but you're taking the chopper. That is now, oh, really, I think because I'm listening to this podcast maybe 100. Why would they get one otherwise? But we're going to fly the chopper to the yacht or get that super yacht or do whatever. Get your private jet. Those things require you to break through the ceiling each and every time. And then, when you get that jet, well, okay, you only have a $20 million jet. What's wrong with you? People have $300 million jets If, again, that's what you want. But is that?

Robby:

what you want.

George:

Do I want, like a jet, or are you just saying to get to that level, both the jets? No, not specifically. What I want is what I want is it's choice. That's what I want. You don't have choice now I do. I want more To do what I want when I want, how I want it's. You know, it's the thing. It's money is the tool, the tool to get the freedom to get the things that you want when you want. So I want to get it to that level and I know that once I do get to that level you know we spoke about this a little bit like how much money is enough money per year? Like, what could you not spend in a year? If you had a million dollars a month? Can you spend a million dollars a month? Probably couldn't. What are you?

Robby:

going to spend it on, oh, not consistently, consistently, that's what I mean.

George:

You could go out, you might go, you might go now it's 10 million dollar home all right in one month but I'm saying to actually have a lifestyle.

George:

Yeah, correct, what does that look like? That's exactly, it's jets and it's everything. It's whatever you want it to be. So, yeah, I'd like to think if I do get to that level, does it ever go? Sorry, when you get to that level, is it ever okay? Well, what does 100 million look like? What does 300 million look like? Or does it mean I go the complete opposite route? Okay, well, what just fills my cup now that I want to do things and gives me those opportunities? I've gone through all these stresses. Maybe it's a time where you know what. I'm just going to travel for a year and not do anything. Maybe that's what that looks like. So I've gone through all the stress to have that. Do you reckon you've bought? It depends what I'm doing and who I'm doing it with.

Robby:

Do you reckon you've traveled for a whole year?

George:

I don't know man, I don't know. I think there's a lot to do in every other country. Yeah, I know.

Robby:

But there's also like more buildings, great, more beaches. Do you know what I mean? There's that element too, like at the start you're like, hey, man, this is a change of scenery, this is great Blah, blah. When that's all you know, it starts to become Do you know what I? It starts to become genuine. Yeah, absolutely. It's kind of like when you make great money and then you can say like, yeah, more money, it doesn't feel the same thing.

George:

So you had this conversation with someone the other day. It's like do you think Elon Musk is motivated by money? Do you think you can motivate Elon Musk with money?

Robby:

I don't think you can. Yeah, I don't think you can.

George:

Yeah, I don't think you can I don't think you can Go to Elon and say I'll give you a million dollars or a billion To pack up that fucking camera, that tripod, and he'll go, I'll give you 10 million not to talk to me ever again.

Robby:

Yeah, to stop breathing, yeah.

George:

To just show you how. So yeah, it will get to a point where I think a lot of people aren't motivated by the dollars, because they're just always there, Always there. So stress Good, bad ugly, it's what you determine.

Robby:

Yeah, I don't think it's a bad thing. No, I don't yeah. I don't think it's a bad thing. No, I don't yeah.

George:

Look for it. You get addicted to stress. Yeah, you know, the other day you mentioned it a little bit earlier, but I used to. I remember on I think it was this year. You know, during just the time that I've been under the pump, I went to Coles and I saw the checkout chick there. I wonder what you're worried about. You're under the pump now today.

George:

There's a lot of customers coming through giving you a hard time. Are you worried about you didn't give that excellent customer service? Or you just look at the clock waving to checkout so you can go home and play PlayStation or go out with friends or go to the movies. You know what I mean. So everyone's problems are real. They are their problems, I know, but I'm just saying in the sense.

George:

But they probably it's an assumption they're probably just chilling, going through the motions, probably don't have too many stresses. Let's just say, from a professional point of view, don't know anything personally, but in that role as a checkout chick or bloke or whatever you're doing, you're just processing. There's no real stress or pressure on you. The boss isn't going to yell at you because the profits are down for the quarter, Mr Coles. He ain't coming down, Mr Coles, and it was like there was a moment I looked at that. I was like, must be nice, maybe I should do that. I should just become a checkout chick for a little bit. I wonder what it's like, but I can't comprehend it. I could not comprehend going to that level again it's a different life, yeah oh, but think about when you was first started like work.

George:

I remember I had a job working at a company called Holeproof. They made underwear.

Robby:

Were they holeproof?

George:

I like to think so. I like to think so, but it was in their factory and you'd get all the boxes you worked at Holeproof. Yeah, See, you're learning something every day. I would have been 18 to 20 years old somewhere there and it was just. My cousin got me the job. It was shift work. It was shift work, it was night work, so I'd actually work during the day. I was always a hard worker. I would work during the day building fences this was during uni, building fences which was a hard slog, man and then go home for an hour or so, two hours, and then go to Holbrook at seven to 12 or something like that Three, four hours, whatever.

George:

We decided to work on the day. I was literally just unpacking. You get boxes, cut them open, empty all the socks or the underwear into the right section, go back, get more boxes. They'd just bring trucks and you just had to keep unloading the boxes. That's all. It was Paid well because it was out of hours work. That was just go to work, zone out. You don't need to do anything except unload boxes. There was no stress behind it. There was nothing behind it. It was just the job that had to be done. You could probably slack off if you wanted to, in the sense of walk slower than everyone else.

Robby:

Go see an atoll of Feminine yeah, you could do that sort of stuff, and that's probably the last time I can ever remember and just not go see a little of them. Yeah, you could do that sort of stuff.

George:

Yeah, exactly so, and that's probably the last time I can ever remember and just not just having a cruisy chill out. Well, my whole uni was that. Really, I'm going to be honest, wasn't until I actually started working that I felt proper stress.

Robby:

I I can't remember the last time I felt that way like completely switching off.

George:

I remember a specific moment. I was on the beach in Mykonos in 2006. I remember no worry in the world. I remember specifically thinking of sitting on a chair. I think we'd gone from the club to the beach. It was morning. I didn't sleep that whole night and I was just sitting there on the beach and I'm going to sleep here right now and I've got nothing to worry about. That's sick.

Robby:

Nothing in the world Go to bed and say no alarm. You love that because you get to sleep in. Yeah, you can just go have a good sleep. Do a whole episode on sleep. Sleep is so good.

George:

But there's a lot of study on sleep and how and it's important in your life and how it has a direct correlation to your health, wellbeing and longevity.

Robby:

It's the ultimate drug Fix everything. Yeah, that's the ultimate drug Fix everything. Yeah, that's the weirdest thing ever. Yeah, there's a lot of people out there. What part do you enjoy? The part where you're drifting off, when no one's like just come, you don't know?

Robby:

but you can't enjoy the rest. Yeah, um, yeah, stress I. I used to go into holiday mode a lot. What do you mean Holiday mode? You know, when you've gone on annual leave? Yeah, yeah, you're like, you're so switched off and people are talking to you like I'm just going to get to four o'clock, oh, whilst you're at work. Yeah, three hours isn't it?

George:

I used to like the actual summer break, you know, where you took two, three weeks off work. That was when I was working for someone. That was always enjoyable. No stresses Like work, literally turned off. Yeah, you didn't answer emails, you didn't answer phone calls. You were just living your best life. You don't get that through the holiday. A little bit, not as much. Yeah, I don't get that at all. Yeah, yeah, I don't get that at all. Yeah, like what do you mean?

Robby:

You don't get the holiday mode at all now, yeah, that's what I mean, as in people run ads through the.

George:

Oh, but you know I've always got shit to do. There's content going out, yeah, I've always got shit to do. Yeah, at every moment, at any time, like think it's very hard to switch off completely. You know, the first this holiday we were moving office for two weeks. Well, I was moving office for two weeks. You know, I had to knock down walls, had to connect power, electricity sorry, telstra order the works, get all the server, get the server up and running, make sure Wi-Fi's on computers are working like Great. First day back, everyone was in operation, which is good. That had to work. It was stressful but I got it done. Everything happened. Then that last week of the holidays or the break, I went to Noosa and was able to actually relax and had a good time with the family and some friends. I do like that period of the year because it does tend to die down and we're a lot calmer and cooler. But, as I said, it never switches off.

George:

Never switches off, never skips a beat, just like we never skip an episode 70.

Robby:

This is 70. How good it's 70. 70. So we'll, it's 70.

George:

70. So we'll get to 100 this year.

Robby:

Yeah, very cool. I have to have a party Cake. Yeah, what else we should do? A whole episode about what we're going to eat in the US, okay, okay.

George:

Good the week before we leave. Okay, the week before we leave, we're going to tell you everything, excellent. Well, I hope you guys learned something and at least came to a realization that your stress is your choice. You've chosen to have that stress in your life, but also how you look at it, whether it's something that's going to bring you down or whether it's something that's going to drive you.

Robby:

Stress only harmed those that thought it could harm them.

George:

Yep, 100%. So, knowing that, what are you going to do with it? Leave us a comment somewhere on our socials in the podcast. Can you leave comments on, like Apple Podcasts? Can you actually put a comment somewhere on the episode? Nah, write a letter.

Robby:

Leave us a review. Leave us a review. Yeah, leave us a review. That's what we should do.

George:

Let's ask for a review. I'm going to ask for one, and if you give us a review, you'll sleep well at night.

Robby:

Yeah.

George:

Good karma will come your way. You're going to manifest amazing things. Yeah, that'll happen in your life, so I'm gonna listen to that. Excellent, all right. Well, thank you very much for tuning in, guys. Pleasure as always. Cannot wait to be in here again next monday bringing you some massive knowledge bombs and I hope you have a million dollar day. Thanks, guys.

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