
Dragon's Gold: The Magic of Mindset
Uncover the magic of mindset and the secrets of success on Dragon’s Gold: The Magic of Mindset.
Join host Justin Mills as he takes you on an epic adventure through the stories of high achievers, big dreamers, and champions of personal growth. Each episode dives into the challenges, breakthroughs, and insights that shaped their journeys, revealing the strategies, habits, and mindsets that helped them "win the game" in life and investing.
Whether you’re seeking inspiration, practical advice, or a spark to pursue your dreams, this is the show where wealth becomes the tool, and joy is the ultimate treasure.
Dragon's Gold: The Magic of Mindset
The Mission Over the Commission: Jason McNamara on Mindset, Mentorship, and Breaking Free
Episode Summary:
What does it take to walk away from being #1?
Jason McNamara had everything success told him he should want. Military accolades. Top sales rankings. Financial comfort. But something deeper was calling.
This episode of Dragon’s Gold: The Magic of Mindset is about the moment Jason chose mission over commission—and what it really looks like to rewire your life from survival to service.
From a tough upbringing to working in Guantanamo Bay, from the top of the leaderboard to building The No More 9 to 5 Club, Jason’s story is proof that freedom isn’t found—it’s created.
Key Themes:
- Building a Purpose-Driven Life After Military Service
- Leaving “Safe” Success to Create Something Bigger
- Reframing Sales: Serving, Not Selling
- Breaking Free from Mental and Financial Handcuffs
- The Psychology of Performance and Repetition
- Building a Business That Honors Your Values
What You’ll Learn:
- How Jason turned burnout into a movement
- Why mentorship and mastermind environments were key to his success
- The importance of mental discipline and identity work
- Why many people stay stuck in “comfortable misery”
- How No More 9 to 5 helps others unlock purpose, income, and autonomy
Tools & Weapons:
- The Law of Attraction the Basics of the Teachings of Abraham
- Think and Grow Rich – First mindset shift that changed his direction
- MindTrainer Pro – Jason’s custom tool for brain entrainment
- Repetition & Routine – The backbone of his mental reprogramming
- High-Level Mentorship – Why masterminds fast-tracked his growth
- Identity Work – Unlearning his old self to build what came next
About Gold Dragon Investments:
At Gold Dragon Investments, our mission is to bring joy to others by helping them win the game of investing — helping every client become the hero of their financial journey. We believe that wealth is a tool, but joy is the ultimate outcome.
Through meaningful partnerships, we strive to empower our investors to create freedom, and build lasting legacies of purpose, fulfillment, and wealth.
Join Us on the Adventure:
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome once again to another episode of Dragon's Gold, the magic of mindset. Today we have the pleasure of having the founder and CEO of No More 9 to 5, Mr. Jason McNamara. Jason, welcome to the show. Hey brother, thank you so much for having me Justin. How's your day going? Oh, beautiful, my friend. And even better now that I get to spend some with you. So super excited to share your story. So let's dive in. Let's go to the origin story. Where did it all begin for Jason McNamara? Well, I was born in the Caribbean and I grew up poor in South Florida. So the story goes, I was on the streets, living life, learning life and realizing the life that I didn't want to live when I grew up. So I ended up joining the military. I wanted to make a massive change in who was around me and what I was doing with my life. And I became a prison guard in Guantanamo Bay. And while I was down there, I was also selected by the CIA to assist with interrogations. So. I got my Navy and Marine Corps achievement medals. I went and got my honorable discharge and I came home. And at that point I was going to school full time. I was an honorably discharged veteran. I got a job at the state of Florida helping disabled veterans overcome barriers to employment. I loved that job. It felt really good. We broke records. We made the newspapers, but that job wasn't paying my bills right. ah I had a... bought my first house and I had a little tiny duplex in an HOA and my HOA told me I did not have the power and authority to plant an orange tree in my yard. And I realized that for those years of service and working now for the government that on the salary that I was given to do this amazing work, I didn't have the freedom to even have my own yard that I could determine who mowed it and what got planted. So I love gardening, right? At this point in my life I love growing things. love cooking. have a lot of different passions. And I realized that I needed to make a transition while I was helping getting a lot of veterans jobs, helping them overcome their barriers to employment. I started seeing a whole lot of work that I realized I was fully qualified and capable to do. So I decided to take a risk and I went and took a job in sales and I was good at it. I learned how to be a trusted advisor. I learned how to cross sell multiple opportunities. I learned how to leverage my network and ensure my client's success to not only get tips and five-star reviews, but to actually get referrals. And before I knew it, I was retiring early when I was 32 years old. I was the number one residential sales guy in the nation's largest family-owned pest control company because I learned how to overcome objections before I got to the close. I learned how to do an inspection before I made an offer. And I learned how to build trust and confidence and rapport by understanding who was in front of me, what their needs were and addressing those needs and making sure I crossed every T and dotted every I. So a lot of times in 20 minutes, I can get in and out of there, fully explain everything. And people are smiling from cheek to cheek because I took care of them. And I took the time to understand what they needed and made sure they understood everything that I offered. So I didn't retire early just cause I was good at sales. I took all those bonus checks and I invested them. We bought multiple houses. We built multiple passive income streams and we were able to donate our time into philanthropy and to giving back and to helping nonprofit owners and people within our local community make a bigger difference. So just like when I was growing up, I would have never had the mindset to join the military if it wasn't instilled into me by others that I had power to choose where I went in life and what I made my life into. So I decided to make those choices and I guess that's kind of the origin story up to almost where I'm at now. We retired about six months after COVID. So that gives you that last few years of freedom is building the No More 9 to 5 Club, the No More 9 to 5 Foundation, Mind Trainer Pro, and a whole lot of other companies and brands underneath of these brands as well. That's awesome, Jason. So much value and so many things that I want to touch on and what you just said. The first that I'm curious about is when you were inspired to join the military and to make a shift in your life along that, what was the leap of faith to let you know that you were destined to achieve more, to do more than just a nine to five, if you will. Well, I never really saw myself as destined for leaving the No More 9 to 5 club, or leaving the No More 9 to 5, or building the No More 9 to 5 club. I worked regular jobs. When I was growing up before the military, I made sandwiches at Subway, I flipped burgers at Burger King, I threw boxes at Walmart. None of these were high skill, high paying jobs. But I realized as I got good at these various positions and also having my own side hustles and passions, I was capable of knocking out A's. I was capable of becoming dual enrolled in college. I was capable of brushing my teeth twice a day to make sure I still don't have cavities. And all of these things that are taught by our parents, our ancestors, I just started soaking up knowledge like a sponge everywhere I went. Every single successful person, happy person, person I was like, hey, that looks cool. I can learn a thing or two. I actually tried to learn a thing or two. And then when I found things in life that turned me off, like, you know, people complaining, I realized what I didn't like about it and made sure that I didn't become like them either. So as I started making these journeys, I guess the culminating moment probably would have been when I was getting my number one award, right? I was getting a percentage of what I was selling for the company and I was number three. Then I was number two. Then I was number one, six, seven years to retire as the number one guy. did not happen overnight. And when I realized that there was nowhere else to go above and beyond number one, I was like, wow, I was able to share this, this company, this valuable company, this company that taught me how to be a trusted advisor. And I'm, where do I go from here? I said, what if I built something that was extremely valuable? And then I taught other people how to share that value as a trusted advisor. So. The birth of the no more nine to five club, guess there were seeds planted along my whole journey, but I would say that that would be a big defining moment when I was, I was there with my missus getting that check. And later on, I went and talked to the management, to the executive C level management and, uh, said, Hey, I don't want to keep selling stuff. want to, I want to teach everybody else how to do what I did. And they loved that idea. They were eating it up. They were like, absolutely, absolutely. But in order to do that, you have to go through all the other ranks in the company, which it wasn't an insult because even the owner's grandchildren have to go through all the other ranks in the company, right? From service manager to general manager. And that meant huge pay cuts. That meant a lot more work. And I just wasn't willing to go through those pay cuts and work extra hard just to work for their C level. So if they hadn't done that, I probably wouldn't be where I am today. Hmm. That's, that's powerful too. I mean, the reality is, that putting in the work, putting in the time, Really getting those reps in is really where that value starts to build. The foundation starts to build. And, if you're elevated to the top before you're ready for it, then like a house of cards, it crumbles. One of the things you touched on earlier that I thought was really powerful is when you were doing the pest control and you went in, you were sharing these with people what the process would be, how you would do it. You answered their questions. You probably anticipated their needs. You made the comment, cross the T's, dot the I's, facilitated the information and you answered it in the details they needed. And you did it in a way that made them feel excited or happy with the prospect of what you were offering them. And I think whether it's pest control, whether it's real estate, whether you're a dentist or a doctor, whatever the case is, flipping sandwiches or flipping burgers and making sandwiches. Like whatever you're doing, if you do it with power and purpose, if you do it with care and kindness and you do it importantly with clear communication, you can get your message across. But one of the things I think that's also powerful that you mentioned is in regards to listening to them and understanding what their needs are, right? And then meeting those needs and I think that in any entrepreneur's business, understanding what your client, what your customer needs, meeting that need and exceeding their expectations is really how you blew your success. the adventures that we go on, it's never alone, Oftentimes there are people that inspire us and help us along the way or that go along the journey with us. We call this the fellowship. Is there anyone that you would cite in your journey that helped you in your fellowship? Oh yeah. A whole lot of people, you know, first of all, I grew up Southern Baptist, so I was taught to have a relationship with God at a younger age and that's evolved over time. And I understand everybody's got a different opinion of God and I'm okay with that, right? So, you know, for me, people, there's so many good people in my life, so many mentors. I remember my math teacher in 10th grade. For some reason, he was an inspiration to me, the way he talked with confidence, teaching people mathematics and just so smooth. And then I remember as a disabled veteran outreach program specialist, Senior Chief Ron Zimmerman. He's the one that actually hired me as a work study and then saw the value and offered me a full-time position with the state of Florida's Department of Economic Opportunity. And he also continued to mentor me while I worked with him, as opposed to for him. And he taught me so much. treated me like a brother, even though he was a retired senior chief. He used to drive these minesweeper boats over in Vietnam and he had Agent Orange rain down on him and all of that stuff. you know, he looked out for me. He looked out for me and he taught me a lot and he taught me to help myself. You know, he taught me to, uh, to stop trying to pretend like I'm invincible. He was like, I know you're tough, Jason. CIA wouldn't have picked you if you weren't tough, but you don't have to be invincible. You can rest, you can ask for help, and that's a valuable lesson. I will say Jason, what you said in regards to working with someone and not for someone, when you have a task or a goal, the outcome is what's relevant. And when people can work together and not worry just about who gets the credit. but worry about what is the outcome and the intention. We can do so much more together. Yeah, that's so important. You know, the mission over the commission. I it's so important to work as a team towards the end goal, right? That same position I was in, Senior Chief Ron was on that original team, which was all amazing. He retired and some of my other people went other places. One actively deployed back to the Middle East. The other one went up North to work on nuclear reactors, both huge influences in my life. Shout out to Rich and Jordan. the team that replaced it didn't have that let's work together to break these records and really care about the mission. And unfortunately, that was another part of the motivation that made me go seek more money. So I was like, no way I'm about to work with them and that it was more about the politics. was about, Hey, we know you came from a winning team and we know you know how to work hard, but make sure you don't take too much credit. Make sure you don't speak up too much. Your job is to make us look good. Now. I was like, I was never okay with that type of vibration. So when I run my team, when I run my community, when I run my club, when I run my companies, I let everybody know, I don't care if they're washing dishes, I don't care if they're answering phones. They have a say, they're just as important as me. We're all human. know, every single one of us brings value to the table and whether or not they believe in it yet that they're as valuable as me, I do. And it's up to them to decide if they're going to put in the work to learn the things to get them the answers they need. 2025 there's little excuse to live in fear if anybody looks out the window I highly doubt you're gonna find a saber tooth tiger where I need to pounce on you if you go outside which means you're safe you don't have to live in a fight or flight mentality and that's how they keep people trapped in this rat race now well now I care what Sheila up the road thing so let me go buy a new car and get in further debt so I can be proud of myself when I drive by her house. No, stop keeping up the Joneses. Live your best life. Take care of yourself. Save, earn, invest money. Have a plan. I have evolved myself multiple times since I started growing up. I have had this future version of myself that I would envision. And instead of making up excuses on why it's so hard to become that person, I make up excuses on why it's so hard to not. I decide to start changing my actions and I evolve into the future version I want to see in myself. And I expect that everybody around me wants similar results, right? They want a better future and they're willing to take action now to have it. It's why people get up and brush their teeth twice a day. Obviously they don't want to go to work and somebody complained that they have bad breath, but they also don't want to go to the dentist and get all their teeth yanked out. So there's multiple reasons you're thinking about your future self. Love that. along the way, we go through trials and tribulations. You talked about the evolution that you've achieved and what you've done multiple times through your career. What are some of the trials and tribulations that you've had to overcome? I've had to overcome a lot of trials and tribulations. know, growing up lower income to a single mom who worked full time left me lonely a lot. So that was kind of my first trial was what do I do with my time? And then as I started getting older, I started going outside and playing probably when I was around 11 years old. And the neighborhood I was in, everybody wasn't nice. were older kids that sometimes were doing bad things and I had to learn to fight at a young age. I actually boxed, played football, but I've been through a lot growing up. mean, I can think of tons of trauma I've had even before getting to the military. But, you know, so many instances of making mistakes, I'll say some of the most traumatic things that have affected me are my own mistakes. As I understand, sometimes other people do bad things. Sometimes other people take care of themselves or they disappoint you. But when you lose your expectations of other people and you stop putting the trials and tribulations on what other people bring to the table and you put it on what you can actually control, you become a lot more powerful. So, biggest trials and tribulations I've had with myself is my inner critic, my inner self-doubt. A version of me that was weaker, that would look to make myself feel better, the yin and the yang. Instead of the higher version of me, I would work hard enough to feed the lower version of me. Maybe I would drink too much. And I'll tell you, that was probably... one of the most damaging things of my life. know, alcohol will actually hinder who you are. It'll change who you are. It'll make you less caring. And I say this to say, because I've learned, I've made a few mistakes, even while drinking and specifically while drinking, because most of the time I'm sober, I don't make mistakes. So that's one of the reasons that I haven't touched alcohol or I barely touched it, I should say, in a long, long time. And so it's not your go-to, right? So trials and tribulations need to happen internally. And, you know, I beat myself up sometimes when I would make a mistake, when I would lose a friend or disappoint somebody or realize that I had a shortcoming or a gap to excellence. I didn't ace every single class all the way to my MBA. I've gotten B's and C's and I think I even had an F or two because I made bad choices that semester. So the thing is you live and you learn. I mean, I literally lost the scholarship. I went and joined the military and had my school paid for anyways. I was a kid, lots of mistakes. So trials and tribulations would also go into that shadow work. Um, after the military, think I really had to go into a ball in my own head and process everything that happened. And I remember it seemed like a month of time that I barely slept. I would lay down with my eyes closed, my brain racing, my heart pounding. And I would think, at least if I close my eyes, I won't have bags under my eyes. Right. Let me sit here and just relax my body. because my brain was continuously going. And then as I continued to master the art of talking to myself, coaching myself, being my own best friend, cognitive processing basically, and realizing that the future version of myself isn't gonna go through this, I was able to kind of fix my own control of my own thoughts. I was able to fix my control of my anxieties, which is constantly living in the future or my depression, which is constantly living in the past. And I could become grounded and centered right now in the now. So until I learned that, mean, anxiety, depression will lead you to make a lot of mistakes. It'll lead you to not be your best self. Not always. Obviously I had enough accolades growing up and throughout to completely mask all of those mistakes, right? If you look at my resume on LinkedIn, you'll see a track history year after year after year of continuous improvements, but I've stumbled. I've made mistakes just like everybody. And the biggest thing is that I have the mindset to not stay stuck, to admit when I made a mistake, to admit my flaw and take it as a learning curve. Cause I can commit back to myself. If I do something stupid today, I can be totally different tomorrow. I can be new and improved. I can show up learning my lesson and I cannot repeat that mistake. As long as you don't make a too bad of a one that causes you to get in handcuffs, you're going to be okay. Promise you people will forgive you. They'll love you. You're a human. You're allowed to make mistakes. It's when you repeat them, that's the choice. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. You know, one of the things when you may comment uh in regards to drinking, there was a comment I heard years ago that rings true. I didn't always make dumb choices when I was drunk, but every time I made stupid choices, I was drunk. Right. It's amazing. The the impact that some of the choices that we make uh and when we're not in control of our faculties. And when we talk about control, you mentioned when you learn to control your own mind and to be able to Talk the self-talk right the self-talk is so important because we can be our biggest advocate or our worst critic and it can be completely debilitating to really rip yourself down and and To not give yourself some grace, Now there's a difference between giving yourself grace and learning from it and growing from it instead of making excuses, right? Finding reasons why everyone else affected you instead of looking in and saying, what could I have done differently that I can do better next time, Is there a moment Jason that, and we call this the darkest hour, a moment where you were going to throw in the towel or quit, you just, you thought this is too much. It's not worth it. And I'm done. And more importantly, or as importantly, how did you overcome that? What is the mindset shift that you had to have to push you through to the other side? Justin, you know, I'm glad you asked that. You know, everybody hears about, I think it's 22, right? Regarding veteran suicide. And while I was in Guantanamo Bay, one of my friends, passed away, he didn't take his own life. And I went to his funeral with the command to represent us. And I stopped a few actual suicide attempts while in Guantanamo Bay from guards and detainees. I can't really talk about all that. But I've always been a huge advocate against self harm, right? I want people to take care of themselves, pour into their cups. And while I was trying to deal with that state I was in with the depression, anxiety, you know, no shots at the VA, but I, when I reached out to help and I would met with somebody for maybe 15 or 20 or 30 minutes, and then they start writing scripts of pills that are supposed to make it all better. That was the lowest point in my life. I started taking these pills that were prescribed to me and my quality of my thoughts got worse. For the first time in my life, I contemplated suicide and as soon as that thought came to my mind, I was so traumatized and disgusted that I just stopped their medicine cold turkey and I told them, thank you. I don't know what this stuff's supposed to do, but I guarantee you it's not supposed to make me think about ending my life. So hashtag F-Y-D, I'm good on the organic stuff. A little bit of greenery, a little bit of water, a little bit of sunshine, a little bit of meditation, a little bit of happy vibes goes a lot further. But that was one of the lowest points, right? And I know they didn't do it on purpose. Everybody has reactions, everybody reacts differently. But it's really, really important for people to learn. how to take control of their health, their mental health, their physical health without relying on prescriptions. Cause I realize those are band-aids on bleeding wounds and they don't always make it better. Sometimes they mask other problems or they create other problems. So if you get to the root cause of what's causing you to live in the anxiety or the depression, that's going to be way better off than just numbing it down as if you were drunk. Yes. You know, there's a, when I hear you say this, it makes me think about the fact that there, is no magic pill. There is no one size fits all piece or remedy that's going to help you through your problems, right? The thing that's going to help you. And sometimes you do need support outside, whether it's friends, family, but at the end of it all, no one's going to do it for you, but you, you have to make that choice. You have to come to that realization and you have to, be willing to accept your faults and flaws where they are, but understand that it's your choice to move forward, to grow from that. And how can you grow from that? Having a plan, you commented earlier about the idea about having plans. Sometimes the easiest way to get yourself out of that is put pen to paper, write out those thoughts, review them, create a plan, recognize what your goal or intention is, whatever that is, whether it's to quit drinking or become a multimillionaire or to be able to save the world, which I'm going to give a shout out to my, my oldest daughter. That is her mission. She wants to save the world and she's in college right now and I can't be prouder of her than that. and so what, no matter what you do in your life, you have to take the reins, right? You have to believe in yourself and you have to be able to push yourself through. In regards to pushing yourself through, when you do, oftentimes there's achievements, accolades. We call this the dragon's gold. And I've found for myself that tends to be mindset oriented often, but is there anything that you would share as dragon's gold, something that you've gained through the experiences you've had? Yeah, tons and tons. And you remember I've been on stage, I've gotten number one awards, walls of plaques, trophies, medals, and all types of things. And through it all, the biggest thing you have to do is believe in yourself. Right? I know we didn't get into the books yet, but the law of attraction, think and grow rich, the quality of your thoughts determine the quality of your life. If you show up with confidence that you're capable, you're probably going to show up capable. If you show up with confidence that you're in doubt, you're probably going to falter because you're going to show up in doubt. So really the ball's in your court. And remember to smile. It's a good look on you. I love that and I think it's very true. I've never seen a smile that wasn't beautiful. Let's talk about books. Let's talk about the tools, the resources that we call these tools and weapons, the things that have helped you along the way and in your journey, whether it's courses or books or things of that nature, what would you share? So I actually read the Thinking Row Rich book after I retired, ironically, but I understood all of it to be true. And I think I absorbed a lot of this just from other people, from mentors, from watching TV, listening to radio shows, all over the place. I love to watch movies on Netflix way back in the day. I love good conversations, I'll say this. ah Having a group of interesting friends that can challenge you psychologically. that you can have philosophical conversations with that you can not just focus on the same thing over and over again, but actually expand horizons and thought processes. That's valuable. If you don't know what it's called, it's actually called a mastermind. And if your group, if your circle, if they get together, they talk about the same thing every time you're having a mastermind on that subject, learn how to expand your circles. And that's what I've done growing up by myself, younger, right? Only child. I had to go out. because I was bored and lonely. So I started fitting into different social circles. I started understanding how to talk to different people. And I had to learn a little bit or a whole lot about communication and undoubtedly neuro-linguistic program and stuff like that before I even understood what those words meant just by growing up in the environment where I grew up. So a lot of times, a lot of people that grow up in a multicultural environment such as I did, ah You have a lot of gifts. You have the ability to think critically and get a lot of different viewpoints and perspectives. That's opening your thought process and expanding your horizons. And I'll say this as well. The game of life is better played as a game of chess as opposed to a game of checkers. So if you don't know how to play chess, if you don't know how to think strategically, see the whole board, evaluate all positions and opportunities, you're probably missing a lot. Chess is a lot simpler. Checkers is a lot simpler. Try chess if you haven't. If you can master that, you start to notice a lot more in the world around you. So good. Also, I'm a bit biased, but and you may see from behind me, but I've got a few board games I own over a thousand and I absolutely love that that analogy, right? Being strategic and being thoughtful, looking at all the different moves and understanding which one's the right one for you to make now, right? And you don't have the ability always to to make all of those moves at once. You have to pick the best for that. And is it going to be the right move? Well, maybe it is and maybe it's not. But making that choice, taking that step forward, and then reevaluating the next moves from your new perspective and your new position, right? Sometimes plans change. You have to be open to that. But having the plan to begin with, right? Having that strategy is so integral to the process. Jason, we have what's called the Hall of Heroes, right? If there was a massive statue of Jason McNamara and it had a plaque that could say anything you want, what message would you want it to share? something about my dedication to service and building legacy after legacy while helping others fulfill their legacy and changing the vibration of the world for the better. amazing. In service, we can do so much, right? It's amazing how serving others really can help us to grow, right? Not just monetarily, but, but emotionally, spiritually, and how much when we raise that vibration, right, like ripples in the pond, impact that it can make in not just to you and not just to the people that you've inspired. but potentially to the people that will be inspired by something or someone that takes an action that was impacted by you. You never know quite how far the rabbit hole goes and how deep it is. So much that you do and choices that you make can have legacy, can have impact in countless ways. Really, really love that idea, Jason. So what's next? What's the next quest? Well, I definitely have some next steps. you know, going from what you just said to here, you know, if you can imagine Maslow's hierarchy of needs, right, you have a bunch of people that have everything they need, food, shelter, security, a good social circle, even time. They don't have to trade their time for any more money because they already have built the vessels and vehicles to generate income for them, whether that's businesses or investments. There's multiple ways to build a passive income stream. So you get a whole bunch of these, you know, retired folks, right? But they retired early, right? I just want you to picture this. And then you have a whole bunch of folks that aren't retired, right? They're working nine to fives, they're living paycheck to paycheck, they're all hungry, all a little bit tired. And you put these two different groups of people in rooms. What are you gonna have? On this hand, with a bunch of retired people, you're probably gonna have some kind of philanthropist convention. They're probably gonna sit there and talk about doing something good for the world. They're probably going to talk about charities and donations and having fun and it's going to be a happy room. The bunch of people with no stress in this other room where they're all tired and hungry. might get a little uncomfortable, right? Let's say we turn out the AC. It's not okay, right? They didn't pay the bill. That's what I see this world having too many people that are just tired and hungry and broken. I want to help them come into this other room. I want to help them. evolve into the best version of themselves, the version who's already secure, who's already wealthy, who saved, earned and invested financially in themselves, who took their time and had enough discipline to set some of it aside and carve off some of that Netflix time to put into self-development time so they can show up to the world more valuable, so they can get paid a little bit more instead of being a cog in a wheel at a machine getting nine, 12, 15 bucks an hour. I'm not knocking anybody, trust me. was getting like five or six bucks an hour when I started. I want to help people get to this room because that room is going to change the vibration of the community around them positively. And this other room is going to nine out of 10 times change it negatively. So the more people we can get into this first room that I talked about, the people that have time freedom, the people, people that have extra money, they can tip, they can buy things. They know how to accumulate, how to share, how to trade value. Once we teach all these people how to join this room, we don't have a good neighborhood and a bad neighborhood anymore. We have a community, equitable community where all can prosper. And long-term plans, I want the No More Night at Five Club to have millions of people in it. We have a completely free membership and the more high vibe people that we can attract into the club, the more amazing leaders and corporations and whoever see the value of the community and they come in to add more free value. So we can continue this. mission of philanthropy of shining our light of sharing the secrets of success to the people who if we're given the keys to the kingdom, they're going to do the right thing with it. So I want to continue to find those people who once they get over to this circle of winners over here, they're going to focus on making sure that the rest of the people get over. They're going to make sure that the community, the society, everything is good. And I want to launch a five eight, which is actually a ministry where I'm tying in my own belief in God into the no more nine to five. and how he has empowered me to be bold, to take action, to know the words, to have the confidence. So between the No More 9 to 5 Club, ah the No More 9 to 5 Ministries, which has not yet developed, we also currently have a 501C3. We have a nonprofit foundation called the No More 9 to 5 Foundation. Through the foundation, we give all veterans free upgraded membership in the club to the basic membership. We also give all veterans our free uh PTSD brain entrainment technology that we're calling calm and clarity. Also what they need is a pair of headphones. We're giving it to them completely free. They just put them on and they're going to have brain entrainment technology talking to their right brain, their left brain and their center brain at the same time to develop deeper neural trenches and pathways to positively affect mooded behavior and create better habits. Um, on top of that, we offer paid internships and unpaid internships to people who are trying to learn entrepreneurship as well as courses. And we have over 24 hours of live virtual events every single month in the No More 9 to 5 club that the cost to entry is only a name, email address, and phone number. So all that's through the nonprofit foundation as well. And MindTrainor Pro is actually under our umbrella and we're getting ready for a relaunch. And Justin, you're going to love this. When you see the bells and whistles of like come May 1st, how this is going to look. And uh I know this is going to be airing a little bit after that. y'all Google MindTrainorPro.com. It's MindTrainor-Pro. And you'll see that I partnered with a neuroscientist and this man spent the first 40 years of his life in turmoil doing his own shadow work. And he tried every method under the sun to fix himself and he didn't find the help he needed. So he actually studied and developed his own technology so he could learn how to rewire his own brain. Since then, thousands of people have used his work, thousands of testimonials, and he used to sell these systems for thousands of dollars. But when he got with me, said, Hey, listen, let's give the, the PGSC stuff away for free for veterans. And let's figure out a way to change the world. So we actually took all of that genius and we develop various systems from quantum to wellness, to business, to sales, to whatever. have systems for athletes and pickle ballers. Like we have a system for you so you could reach peak performance. And instead of thousands of dollars, we brought the price down to $14 and 97 cents per month. So we can be on par with Netflix. Planet Fitness and make the ability for somebody to rewire their own brain and get control of their own thoughts a lot more affordable and easy way easier than having to go to any kind of psychiatrist and take pills that may or may not work. This empowers you to be your best self. And it's really important that people learn how to tap into their own genius. Y'all can follow me. You can follow Justin. We'll give you our best advice every single time. You have that because you have us as trusted advisors. But you need to learn how to be your own trusted advisor. need to learn how to be your own best friend, your own coach, your own guru before you can lead everybody else around you. So learn how to take care of yourself. And we're here to help you tap into your best potential to do so as well. Absolutely. So amazing, Jason. Brother, I have one more question that I've got to ask and this is my favorite one to ask. If you could be any mythical creature, what would you be and why? you know what? I think I would be a Pegasus. You want to know why? Who wouldn't want to be a horse that can fly? at least for a day. Like, let me just go around from city to city and land in the streets a little bit and hop on the sidewalk and let people pet me. I want to see their faces. The freedom that allows, right? I think that, and I'm sure that you would get some gawks, especially ah in today's day and age, it would be up on TikTok and Instagram and a heartbeat, right? I'd be way more viral than I am now talking about financial freedom. uh Right? Yeah, for sure. Jason, thank you so much for taking the time today with myself and with the listeners. And I also want to say thank you for your service. Thank you for helping so many people and thank you for giving your time and life to service in our country. Thank you, Justin. my honor. thanks everybody for watching. y'all wanna reach out to us, join the community, come show up on Zoom, take the free courses. And I'm sure Justin, you'll share the links with them. So thank you everybody. So Jason, if any of our listeners want to reach out to you, how can they connect with you? Sure. Going to the No More 9-5 Club or the No More 9-5 Foundation is probably the best way. I get a little bit busy for one-on-ones to share my calendar, but people can register through our events tab. And like I said, there's over 24 hours of live virtual events. Also, we do have a calendar where we can meet with people. It's not always me. I have an amazing team that helps run the No More 9-5 Club of trusted advisors and virtual assistants, because we do a lot more than just offer community. You we offer people tools to help them save, and invest. The three core pillars in the basic membership is wealth, wellbeing and wisdom. We have tools to help people automate and expand their circle and run businesses and delegate and scale. So our network is our net worth. I know a lot of amazing people. So if you have a goal, if you have something that you need to learn. I may not be the guy, but if you come to me and I know the guy or the gal, I will send you to them. I will point you in the right direction every single time on time. Cause I don't have time to serve everybody, but if you do get on my calendar, I guarantee you I'll serve you to the best of my abilities and I'll make sure that you're well taken care of. Cause that's what it's about. And I want you to pay that forward. and pay that forward. Absolutely. Absolutely. That's so such a key part of that. think especially whenever we achieve success and whatever that is for us and then helping others to do their best to achieve their success. Right. My friends, thank you for joining us today on our quest to inspire, educate and empower you to turn your dreams into reality. One mindset shift at a time. We'll see you next time.