Leading With Nice Interview Series

Optimal Living with Jeremy Herider

January 13, 2022 Jeremy Herider Season 2 Episode 13
Leading With Nice Interview Series
Optimal Living with Jeremy Herider
Show Notes Transcript

Jeremy Herider is a two-sport professional athlete, productivity coach and life coach. He’s also the founder of Optimal Self, a coaching program and podcast. He stopped by the Leading With Nice Interview Series to discuss personal habits that anyone can adopt for success. As Jeremy says, "No success story happens by accident."



[00:00:00.490] - Speaker 1
You may not be good enough. You may not get that promotion. You may not get that job you want. You may not, but don't look and say, oh, woe is me. Say, why not me? And if you're willing to get up, if you're willing to do the work, if you're willing to, to know that you are capable and deserving of it, then you'll do it.

[00:00:31.710] - Speaker 2
Hey, and welcome to the Leading with Nice Interview Series podcast. We want to help you inspire others, build loyalty and get results. My name is Mathieu Yuill. And like, always, because we only do things that we think are awesome. We only invite guests on who we have checked out, and we're like, yeah, this is really cool. So today we have Jeremy Herider on. And when I first came across him, and I'm not sure to be honest where I saw him, it might have been I belong to some podcast matching platforms, but I might have gone down a rabbit hole somewhere or seen him online or whatnot. But the bottom story was it was like, 2am, and if you listen to this, you know, Cindy Craik and Naomi Grossman are both instrumental in helping book and write questions and get ready for the podcast. It's 2am and I've sent now, like, five or six links. I'm, like, check this guy out. How do we get them on? Can you please make this happen? Because I was pumped up. I was like, sure, my wife was annoyed that I was getting psyched for my next day of work.

[00:01:27.300] - Speaker 2
And it's not surprising because I'm going to tell you a bit about his bio. And if you're listening to this, I know, you know, high achievers. And how frustrating is it when those high achievers suck at teaching somebody else to do it? Now? I'm not saying they should all be great at teaching others. That's not what I'm saying. But it does suck when you're like, oh, you're really good at this. How do you do it? Keep me insight. And they're like, I don't know. I just do it like, you just do it. I'm like, not the case with Jeremy. Everything that came out of Jeremy's mail or that I read that was written, I was like, oh, this is how to do it. You're going to hear about optimal self. I'm going to let him explain that I won't do it justice, but it's really important. But just to give a bit of background. Jeremy was a two sport professional athlete. Some of the cool things that I read and make sure I got this right when we were doing our research is you have there's a stat. Oh, man, I'm going to mess it up, and I took it, put it in my notes, but I've lost it.

[00:02:23.900] - Speaker 2
Jeremy, there's a stat with the Diamondbacks. I think that you have the first of something. What was that?

[00:02:29.250] - Speaker 1
Yeah. So cool story is I was one of the first nine players ever signed to an Arizona Diamondbacks contract, didn't even have a major League team yet, but they were awarded the parent franchise. So people know baseball, baseball, they have lower classes, but you're all within the organization. So your rights and contracts are with them. So I was the first contracted player in the history of the organization to get a hit in a professional game.

[00:02:58.880] - Speaker 2
Amazing.

[00:02:59.410] - Speaker 1
It was in the California League. We didn't even have enough players. So we were playing with Detroit, but we were actually Arizona Diamondbacks in opening night. I hit a double and they literally stopped. And the diamond backs don't know this. So if they're hearing this now, they don't even have the real ball. They gave them another ball, and I have a real ball.

[00:03:19.110] - Speaker 2
Nice. Amazing. Yeah.

[00:03:20.770] - Speaker 1
It's a pretty cool story, man again. And it was an honour to be just the fact that they want to be on their team when they didn't even have a team was pretty amazing if you're listening to me thinking, oh, cool.

[00:03:31.780] - Speaker 2
I love hearing athletes talk about their stories. Guess what, guys, that is not the best thing, including Jeremy. We're not actually going to talk about sports and athletics, and I'm not going to dive too deep more into his bio. There's a lot I could tell you, but the juice, the information is so good. So before we even get started, then can you just give us a 30,000 foot view of optional self and what you and your organization are trying to achieve, like, your why what you want to do and why you're doing it?

[00:04:01.110] - Speaker 1
Well, I love that question. And you know what I love most is you opening with that question because so many times, the first question I always get is like, tell us about your childhood and where did you come from? But that tells me a lot, man, I appreciate you opening with that. So I'm just going to say it to you this way, literally the reason I get out of bed every day. The reason why I spin around and get out of bed. My mission is to help and inspire people to change behavior through belief in action so they can be the best version of themselves. Optimal self is built out of decades of me journaling writing things, learning from people around the world. Yes, through some of it, through sports, some of it through business, some of it just through fate, where you catch people like yourself. And I get to have a conversation and I'm taking notes. Even right now, I have my Journal sitting in front of me ready to take notes and of things that you say and we talk about. And so over years there were things that were built, and I call them principles.

[00:05:05.250] - Speaker 1
But the truth of optimal self is it's not a life in a box. We don't believe we have the answer to any of it. What I do know is every single human walking this Earth has a unique blueprint. And because of the way society is built on our families and all these kind of and they're great things is that sometimes we lose who that person is, and we do things based on what other people are telling us. Right? We grow up believing certain things, and sometimes we get things in our head that we don't even know where they come from. So then we end up living a life that is not truly the best version of us. So what optimal self and what we want to be able to do is just provide an environment to know that it doesn't matter where you come from. It doesn't matter. Your gender doesn't matter. Your race, whatever. What matters is that, hey, let's provide an environment where people can truly become the best version of themselves. I believe wholeheartedly environment matters. You've heard so many people say, and Jim Rohn and all these other people say you're the sum of the five people who you spend the most time with.

[00:06:09.290] - Speaker 1
And there's some truth to that because you are influenced by the people around you. So if we can give you a platform to come and be the best version of you, well, that's what we want to do. We want to provide principles and ideas that you can take and make your own. Not my version. It's not Jeremy's version of the best version of you. It's like, no, man, I'm going to make the best version of me and hear the principles. And here are the things that I use. Come on, man. Let's make the best version of you. Who is that? What do they stand for?

[00:06:39.160] - Speaker 2
That is very cool. And I do want to learn a little bit more about you, but not. I don't care where you were born.

[00:06:44.350] - Speaker 1
To be honest, but.

[00:06:45.560] - Speaker 2
Yeah, I do want to know about your story, and more specifically, though, not where you were born. But I'd be curious when you are giving into other people like you just described. Sometimes it can be exhausting. You're giving a lot of your own energy. So what do you do? Like, what are sort of your habits and routines to help you be at your optimal self while you're pouring into other people? And I'm asking this because there's bosses, there's leaders, there are managers and co workers that do this as part of who they are, and they go home and they're drinking and they don't know how to recharge. So what I'm hoping is that they hear what you do and say, oh, maybe I'll try a few of those techniques.

[00:07:18.940] - Speaker 1
Yeah, it's a great question because it is true. Recovery is the key. I truly believe this. Even in life, you can't overdo it. You can't over train, you can't overlive you only under recover. And recovery is a big deal. And what I will say to you in this case is I water what's important to me most. And that means that the things that matter the most to me are always going to get watered. So if we water what matters most, then how do we replenish our streams so that we have more water to water things with. Right. So principle number one is for us is hydration. And the reason is this you're coming out of a sleep, which is a fast. Your body still runs. Ladies and gentlemen, it's running at full speed, even at times. Right. You get into some slow wave sleep and some deep sleep and all that kind of stuff, some REM and dream and all that. That's where recovery happens. But when I wake up, the first thing is a very short breathing exercise. A couple of box DAREarts that allow me to oxygenate my blood, get my eyes rolling open.

[00:08:33.100] - Speaker 1
And the first thing I have is between 16 and 24oz of water. I use a pinch of Himalayan sea salt, some in the water and some I go right under my tongue and then I use half a lemon. The reason the Himalayan sea salt is there's 84 trace minerals in Himalayan, not regular table salt. Table salt is just straight sodium chloride with a bunch of fillers in it. It's actually worse for you than anything else. Himalayan sea salt has minerals that allows your body. The way that I like to tell people is imagine if you did the dishes the night before. And that sponge that you left out is all dried out. You see how hard it is without putting water on that it doesn't absorb anything. Right? So if you try to use that rigid sponge to clean up, it doesn't work well. The same thing happens to our body. If our body is in a state of dehydration, you could be eating the most perfect diet. You could be having kale and all this stuff that you see all over. But the truth is that if your body is not ready to absorb it, then you're not going to get most of those nutrients.

[00:09:37.680] - Speaker 1
It's just going to wash through. So I breathe and I hydrate and I move every single morning. Now, listen, I want people to understand movement in you. Moving your body the way that it should move. Getting some kind of blood flow, raising your heart rate just slightly is fine is very beneficial for your brain. Again, that's the control center, right? The brain is literally over 85% water. Think about it. If I could give it some water. And now when I go move all those electrons, all those neurons, all those interconnections are going to fire better. It's going to give me energy. Exercise is truly better for the brain than it even is for the body. The reason why we have so many back problems and all this stuff around the world is because we don't use the body the way it was meant to be used. We're sitting in chairs now. We're on our phones, we're at our computers, and it's all necessary. Let's be clear. But, man, if we could just get up and move a little bit, but I'm not the rigid. Everybody get up at 05:00 a.m. Every day, everybody go to the gym.

[00:10:47.860] - Speaker 1
That's not who I am. I want you to live your life. But what I do is one of our slogans is the power of tomorrow starts with the intention of tonight. So if I get up based on what my day looks like and the more intentional you get about and understand your day, the day coming up, the easier it is to prepare. I want you to understand that you can control those things. You have the ultimate control.

[00:11:15.990] - Speaker 2
One of the reasons I imagine you learn some discipline and the ability to stick to stuff when you were younger. Now, for our Canadian listeners, this won't mean as much American listeners for sure. You were a three letter athlete in high school. Mvp, baseball went to Gonzaga, excelled there. So what I'm curious about is this when we were growing up, coaches weren't nice and friendly and soft. So I'm curious what influenced you to have this attitude of coming alongside you on your journey, helping you be your best version of yourself, whatever that might be. Because unless you were coached much differently than I was as a young man, that's not the approach our coaches took. So what influenced you to both have that background and then where you are today?

[00:12:01.230] - Speaker 1
Wow.

[00:12:01.870] - Speaker 2
I love it.

[00:12:02.270] - Speaker 1
Love it. I so let me be really clear with the listeners so that they do get a better context of my life and where I came from. I wasn't the best kid. You can see all the accolades. You could see the things that I ultimately did in life. But I wasn't that kid. I didn't make the All Star teams. I wasn't the kid who was always picked. I was very small when I was young. Even that, like, ten. 1112. I'm sure those of you guys that have played sports or you're listening to this. You remember that twelve year old kid that was, like, full grown, with full beard. It's not even that. He was better than everybody else. He was just bigger and stronger than you. And at that age age. That's enough.

[00:12:41.910] - Speaker 2
I went to high school with Jamal Mcgloure, who played in the NBA.

[00:12:44.820] - Speaker 1
Yeah.

[00:12:45.070] - Speaker 2
And I remember grade nine. This kid was like, already 65. If you're 6ft, you're the tallest guy in the school. So totally. I get it. You were not that kid. What you're saying?

[00:12:54.600] - Speaker 1
I was not that kid. Let me be very clear. I never made the all sorts. I'll give you a really good story. That kind of context. It is my 13 year old year. This will kind of give you where things started to shape for me. My coach was also my best friend's, dad, this is a guy that was a mentor, like a dad to me. And that year, our team won the Championship. And when your team in the States wins the Championship at that age, the coach of the Championship team gets to run the all star team, and he gets to pick the last two kids. They vote for all the coaches, vote for the rest, and then he gets to pick the last two kids. So I'm thinking, Man, I'm in. This is my year. We won the Championship. He's like a dad to me, man. This is the year that I'm finally going to make the all star team. Right? Well, fast forward to that day. And my name does not get Calce. They call the names out, and it's all done. And here I am. And I'm devastated. You can imagine 13 year old boy dream is to be a baseball player and all these things.

[00:13:56.990] - Speaker 1
And it doesn't happen after they have a little pizza party and we're standing over by where the games are. And he's standing there. And I saw the moments I walked over to him and I tugged on his shirt and he looked at me and he said, yes, son. And I said, Why didn't I make it? Why didn't you pick me? And he looked me dead in the eye. And listen, I want to be very clear to this day. I can tell you what he was wearing. I can tell you what I was wearing. I could tell you the sounds that were happening in there. It's still as vivid as yesterday. And he looked me dead in the eye. And he said, Because you're not good enough, you weren't good enough. Now listen, I know what it sounds like, and it is devastating. Yes, it's soul crushing. Everything hurts. I'm trying to keep it together. Standing there looking at them. We stood there for a second. I Mosed off over where the other kids were. And then I got over to the side and I obviously broke down. I ran to the front and asked the lady to call my mom, can I please use the phone?

[00:15:00.080] - Speaker 1
It's an emergency. I need to call my mom, and she agreed. And she gives it to me. And I'm on the phone with my mom. I said, mom, please come pick me up. Please come pick me up. And she's like, what is going on? It's a sleepover you're with. And she says, she's like, You're not supposed to be coming home. I said, Please, I'm begging you, mom, I'm begging you. She said, Fine. I'm on my way. I handed it back. I didn't even go back in there. I went outside and I sat literally right on the curb till she pulled up. And the moment she pulled up, I jumped in the car, and when I did water, I started crying. I was like, sobbing, right? And she's like, any mom, any parent is like, what is going on? Holy cow. Are you okay? What is happening? And so I told her what happened. And she was like, he said, what she's ready to. She's pulled into the parking spot. Here comes mom, right? And I'm like, mom, please do not go in there. Please. I beg you, please don't do it. I'm embarrassed enough. I don't know that she knew what she was doing in this moment.

[00:16:04.130] - Speaker 1
I don't. But she looked at me. She had that moment, and she looked me in the face. And she said, okay, you don't want me to go in there? And I said, mom, please don't go in there. She said, Fine. What are you going to do about it? What do you want to do? And again, I'm not saying my mom, she knew what she. But I'm going to tell you right now, even in this moment, my whole body gets calm again because she's asking me, not like, it's his fault. What am I going to do? And it gave me that instance to go, yeah, man, what am I going to do? So I asked her. I said, okay, can we go to Big Five? I know you're in Canada. So imagine it's the big giant sporting goods store in Southern California, right? It has everything in it. So she's like, what? Like, can we just go get some ice cream and talk about it? Right? Let's go get some ice cream or let's go do something fun or get a toy. I'm like, Can we just go to Big Five? She's like, Fine. Let's go.

[00:17:03.710] - Speaker 1
So we go there. And just like I told you, I can tell you what he was wearing and I was wearing. I can tell you this sign. All the signs were white, and there was a yellow sign because it was on sale. I said, Can I have that? She looked at me. She's like, what is it? I said, It's a batting team, mom, she's like, I know what she's thinking. She didn't say this out loud, but you could tell it in her face like, she was like, Wait, $19.99. It's on sale. And that's going to make this kid stop crying. Like, Fine, done. Right. Every parent right done deal. And she did. I got home that night that day, and I opened the box, and I built that tea. And I went outside that day and started hitting balls off the tee. And I promised myself didn't tell anybody. I promised myself, I'm going to hit 100 balls off the tee every single day. Every single day. I'm going to hit balls off this damn tee. Rain or shine. I use tennis balls in the rain because they would soak up the rain. Better not wreck my baseballs.

[00:17:58.050] - Speaker 1
And I would go out there and I would hit ball after ball after ball where they would be like, hey, enough is enough. I'm like, no, I got ten more. I got five more or whatever it was. We'd be going places and I'd get up early and she'd be like, you better get in here and get ready. I'd say ten more. You know what I mean? Again? I wasn't the best kid. I didn't make the team. I was told you're not good enough, right to my face, rake eyeball to eyeball. But I knew it wasn't going to be because of lack of effort. I wanted to play, and I didn't care who said I wasn't good enough. There are plenty of people that didn't believe I could do it. I just wasn't one of them. I just said, Screw it. I'm going to go do it right. But I want people to understand. Is this, though? The next year I didn't make All Stars the next year, I barely made the high school team. The next year, I got a little bit better and a little bit better. And yes, by the time I was a senior in high school, five years after the 13 year old to an 18 year old, five years of hitting balls out there when no one was looking, I was the MVP of the team.

[00:18:57.390] - Speaker 1
I led the team in hitting. I was the only kid to make the All League team. Now the real good stuff, right? I was an allvalley play All Stars. First time I really made an All Star team. And it was the All Valley team that's all the schools. And I was the only kid on that team to get a scholarship. And I say that because if I would have expected a result after just one day of hitting off the tee, like most people, what we do today is like, oh, that didn't work. That didn't work. No, the consistency to that action over and over. It was incrementally. Better, incrementally. Better. Then I got a little bit stronger. Then I got a little bit taller than my height and weight started to catch up with my technique. And I still have that T today. I've never thrown it out. I've kept it. It is beat, but it's a symbol for me. And I know what that sounds like. And I know it sounds harsh to a 13 year old boy, but the thing is, he told me the truth that day. In that moment, he wasn't saying I would never be good enough.

[00:19:58.340] - Speaker 1
What he was saying is that year, in that moment, I wasn't good enough. And you know what? He's right. And I was the one upset and hurt because I believed he should pick me because he liked me because he was like a dad to me, not because I earned it. I didn't say that. And I wasn't even telling myself that. I wasn't telling myself, oh, I've earned it. I've put in the work. I've done everything I can. This is it. No, I was saying, oh, he likes me. We won the Championship. I'm on the best team. So pick me. But that's not how life works at a young age. Understanding that was very important because I knew, and I wasn't saying it crushed me. I didn't want to go to any of their games. I'm not talking that it just happened overnight. It didn't. But I'll tell you this, it fueled me. Not in a negative way, like a spike. Like, I'll show you. I didn't have that. I never did. I was just like, man, I just want to keep playing. I just want to keep going, and I'm going to do whatever it takes to get there.

[00:20:57.420] - Speaker 1
And when I say that people are like, oh, whatever it takes. Sure, Jeremy, not everybody has that, like, yeah, you do, because you can get your ass up and go do it. You can. I was not special. I didn't do anything special. I was not gifted with size and strength and all these speed, and I didn't throw the ball 95 miles an hour. I didn't hit the ball. 500ft. I didn't ever. But when you put in the time, energy and effort, your skill gets a little better, and then it gets a little better, and it gets a little better. We can take that in any aspect of our lives. And I want everyone to know right now, you may not be good enough. You may not get that promotion. You may not get that job you want. You may not, but don't look and say, oh, Whoa. Is me. Say, why not me? And if you're willing to get up, if you're willing to do the work, if you're willing to know that you are capable and deserving of it, then you'll do it. And that's where we lose sight, because we believe we should get things without really, truly earning it.

[00:22:03.990] - Speaker 1
And I want people to know because they're like, Well, you're so confident today. And I say, because I work on that. It might come off as a confidence, but I'm still just a human man. I still get scared. I still don't know if things are going to work. I don't, but I do know this that I'm willing to sacrifice.

[00:22:24.430] - Speaker 2
Good to have great at leading with nice. We often talk with our clients about clarity. So for you, it might have been when you got to your final, your senior year of high school. If you didn't get a scholarship, maybe you would have been like, you know what? I gave it a good five year run. And, like, I'm not going to do this anymore. So we talk about that with clients, the clarity. So when you do that work and you try something out and you don't get what you're after, at least you have clarity on it. Now, we do a lot of proposals here at Leading with Nice. And for every ten we put out there, we might get a call back for one, right. And that's not even the guaranteed job. But I've never submitted a proposal and been like, oh, you know, we could have done better. And I was like, no, man, that's our best. So if it's not good enough for them, then we're not their people. And that clarity lets me sleep at night.

[00:23:11.540] 
Yeah.

[00:23:12.410] - Speaker 2
So I want to ask you one further question before we wrap up today. And it's just around habit forming. So right now, people are getting in Kanata, they're getting ready to go back to the office, go back to work after the COVID pandemic. And what I'm hearing a lot is people are looking for just small wins because they felt they've had a year of losses. Are some habits easier to form than others? Or are there things like, is there low hanging fruit? My personal opinion is that maybe it's probably not the same for everybody, but how could maybe I know, first of all, the question is one can you identify low hanging habitual fruit? And if so, how would you encourage somebody to do that to kind of get that momentum going.

[00:23:55.240] - Speaker 1
Man, you said it perfectly. Yes. The answer is yes. And let me put it to you this way. There's a great old Samurai. He wrote the book of Five Rings called Miyamoto Musashi. And in there he says, if you know the way broadly, you will see it in everything. And let me translate that to how we translate that. Is that excellence in anything increases your potential in everything. So when you talk about low hanging fruit, when you talk about something that's easy to do, the answer is 100% yes. To be honest with you, that's the only way to do it, because wholesale changes don't happen very often unless it's life or death a lot of times. And it's so drastic where people can make those changes that it doesn't happen or it's not sustainable. Right. And what we need to do is we need to prove to ourselves because, you see, I opened this and I told you my mission is to help and inspire people to change behavior through belief in action so they can be the best version of themselves. Well, belief is a two sided coin because in their belief is if you sit down with people and you say, okay, like you just said, give it a go.

[00:25:13.910] - Speaker 1
Here's the plan. Here's what we got. Here's what we believe. And here's what we believe you need to do to get there, right? You say, do you believe that you can do that? That plan is going to work. Yes, that's awesome. I can lose weight, whatever it is. Right. But see, belief is a two sided coin where most people forget is they see that and they see the plan and they go, yeah, that plan is awesome. And yes, it will work. Here's what they forget. I got to turn that coin over because belief also has the side of, okay, great. You believe in the plan. But do you believe you are worthy of that end result? Do you believe that you are capable of exercising that plan? You see, the plan can be the best plan in the world. But if you don't believe you're worthy, capable and deserving of it. Yuill, never do it. That's where we lose focus. That's where we jump on that diet plan or that workout plan at the first of the year. The New Year's resolution. Woo. Let's go. Right. Got this thing and it dies. It doesn't die because the plan isn't good, doesn't die because, you know, eating that way or training that way or even with business, that that plan will work.

[00:26:37.700] - Speaker 1
It doesn't die because of that. It dies because we don't believe we are worthy of it. So what we need to be able to focus on is, yeah, those habits which we want to change behavior through belief in action behavior. You can transpose that word with habits. Change habits. People. Please understand this. You do not break habits. You make new ones. Those old ones are still there. Ask a smoker. Ask an alcoholic. Ask anybody who's done something that they've done religiously for a long, long time. That is almost to again, an addiction state or that habit. Ask them. They're like, no, it's still in there in an instant. Something can trigger it. Something can go. So we don't break habits. We have to form new ones. But understand, we have to start small because excellence in anything increases your potential in everything. Because when we talk about, we don't talk about wholesale changes because it doesn't work. I know that the truth is and the numbers are skewed today because of all this other stuff. But listen, if we were sitting in an arena right now and you were doing your leading with nice and we had a packed arena in Toronto with 10,000 people there, right.

[00:27:59.180] - Speaker 1
Get this. If we gave them one thing to do, everyone in this arena, one thing to do. There's an 87% chance that they'll come back and do it. So 13% of them are still not going to do it, right? Yes. Imagine that. And you're like, hey, this is going to make you a bajillion dollars. Still 13% aren't going to do it.

[00:28:16.330] - Speaker 2
They're not.

[00:28:16.850] - Speaker 1
They're going to walk out of there. The motivation is going to be gone. The thought process is going to go. They're going to be gone. Check this out. If we give them two things to do. Go, hey, these are just the two things. When you walk out of here, it drops to like, 37%. But if I give you three, it's in the single digits, the chances of you getting anything done. So again, excellence in anything increases your potential and everything. What if we just do one thing we call it streaks something that means something to you. Well, you can do this with any habit you want, but it has to mean something. And say, okay, I'm going to do it. And I'm going to string it together. And I'm going to put an X and I'm going to put an X and I'm going to put an X. And then I start stringing these days together to where now it becomes. Because again, don't listen. Don't read the Internet and think that it takes 21 days to form a habit. I've read 66 days. I read a new thing that said, it's 100 and something days.

[00:29:07.820] - Speaker 1
I'm like, you know what it matters. It matters the person and it matters the habit. Yeah. Those are the two things that you guys are taking, not taking into consideration that you're trying to put a time frame on it. It depends on what it is, and it depends on the human. That's something we cannot track. But I promise you this, whatever that little habit is, I would tell you this. The four that I believe are the most hydration. Get up and have that water before you have anything else so that you hydrate your mind. You hydrate your muscles so that they work your body correctly. You have some forum breathing. You'll hear words like meditation and things like that. Just spend a few minutes understanding diaphragmatic, breathing. Really getting that breath in. Do some form of movement. If it's a walk, if it's Pilates, if it's yoga, if it's to the gym for whatever, that's fine, too. And you need to set some intentions, write something down. Know what your day is? I said it to you earlier in this conversation, but the power of tomorrow starts with the intention of tonight. Get out your calendar.

[00:30:17.890] - Speaker 1
Look at what's on your schedule for tomorrow. What's the most important thing that's got to get done, right? And it could be family. Hey, your daughter has a dentist appointment. Well, hey, guess what? I got to plan my day around that. So I make sure that happens. But if you can start to set the intention of the day, if you can start to get things ready, know what you're going to wear tomorrow. Know where the toothpaste is. You know what I mean? Those are little tiny things that we have. True decision fatigue in our lives today. Our lives can be busy, especially you parents. Man, it's crazy. There's just little things about intention that we can do. And again, you're right. It's the low hanging fruit. That's why everything at optimal self, everything we do is exactly that I love when people go, well, Jeremy, my knee from my old lacrosse days, and it really adds up and I say, okay, great. Do you use the restroom? Yes. Do you get on and off the toilet?

[00:31:17.690] 
Yeah.

[00:31:18.240] - Speaker 1
Every person goes, yeah, of course. Okay, good. Guess what. Get your phone out. Put a timer on there. You're going to give me 1 minute. You're going to shut the lid on the toilet and you're just going to get on and off the toilet for the next minute, up and down. Best you can. It's no excuses. When you talk about little things. We have ladies, the lady now that she's at day 61 of Pilates and she was doing nothing before. You know what I mean?

[00:31:47.820] - Speaker 2
Amazing.

[00:31:48.170] - Speaker 1
It's the little things, man. The little things will lead to the next thing.

[00:31:51.640] - Speaker 2
Yeah, I only make New Year's resolutions that I know I can do. And my favorite one is actually when I was, like, 40. But three years ago, up until that point, I had probably a 40 year streak of never making my bed. There was an award for it. I had it. And I said this year I'm going to make my bed every day. And you know what I'm doing today? Every day making my bed. And it's funny how often my wife and I will say, we'll come down to bed. We're like, you know what? It's just so nice to come back to like, a nice looking Nade bed. So start with one thing, try things. And if you're not good enough, you are not being told you can't be good enough. Those are the takeaways from this podcast. Before we go, where can we find out more about you? Where can they go to learn more about you? Read, hear, see more, learn higher, et cetera.

[00:32:42.170] - Speaker 1
Well, I mean, we're everywhere but Optimal Self today is our website. We do have a free identity creator course there that I'd love to get out to the people of Canada, Toronto. So I'm Super stoked to see if we can get anybody from that area code and then YouTube every day, five days a week, we have fresh new content that comes out on YouTube channel. That's just Optimal self. So we'd love for people to jump over there and subscribe. We're trying to grow that channel and try to just get as much great information content. And we'd love to hear from you. So comment and let us know if there's anything that we can do. We're always open to helping cool beans.

[00:33:25.190] - Speaker 2
Listen, there's a few people that I got to say because you and I had a great conversation that didn't just happen a lot of people. So I mentioned them earlier. Cindy Craig does all our bookings. She made sure we connected. She found a great time for you. She helped get the bio ready for me. Naomi Grossman helps with the question, preparation, and you get ready for this. She's so kind. She always says to me before a podcast, I know you don't need it, but good luck. So thank you. Naomi. Jamie Hunter, he's your content manager. If you heard about this podcast, saw it online, you got him to thank for it. Sam Forrest did all the great graphics. Jeff Anhorn edits the video puts it out there. Kerry Cotton is my account manager. There's only been one episode ever. We've done it in about 30 or 40. Now where I haven't gotten like notifications of her doing work today. I saw my notifications. Kerry, thank you for keeping the business running while I'm here. Yammering on. And Austin Pomeroy is our audio editor who makes all this sound great, makes the volumes come in and out.

[00:34:20.830] - Speaker 2
Is that even right, Austin? Did I just say enough the volumes. Austin does the volumes. You put that on your LinkedIn. Anyhow. Jeremy, thank you so much. You're the last. Thank you so much for being here today. I really appreciate your time right back.

[00:34:33.910] - Speaker 1
And I want to say a big thank you to your whole staff, too. They've been fantastic to work with and getting us together. Ma'am Super Grateful thank you, guys.

[00:34:41.750] - Speaker 2
I Yuill talk to you again. Cheers.