AI Hustle Talk

The Millionaire Energy: Transforming Your Mindset for Success

MJ Season 2 Episode 3

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Have you ever wondered why some people seem to attract wealth effortlessly while others struggle despite working incredibly hard? The secret might not be what you think.

Wealth isn't something external you chase down—it's something you align with by becoming the kind of person that success naturally gravitates toward. This transformative exploration dives deep into "millionaire energy," revealing how your financial future begins in your mind, not your bank account.

We unpack the fundamental mindset shifts that separate the financially successful from everyone else. You'll discover why wealthy people don't just have different bank accounts—they have completely different thought patterns. They see life as a strategic game against their past self, view problems as million-dollar opportunities, and understand that money is simply a byproduct of creating value for others.

The journey continues through the non-negotiable power of consistent habits and discipline. Learn why your daily routines compound like interest for your financial future, why keeping promises to yourself builds the confidence that attracts success, and how to practice "strategic impatience"—being patient with results but impatient with actions.

Most importantly, we reveal why taking complete ownership of your journey is the most empowering step you can take. No one is coming to save you, but that's actually good news. When you own the problem, you instantly own the solution, shifting from passive victim to active creator of your financial destiny.

Your current financial situation isn't permanent fate—it's simply feedback about your current thinking and actions. Change the input, change the output. The transformation is available right now, requiring only the courage to look inward and take consistent, sometimes uncomfortable action.

What single limiting belief will you challenge today? Your next deliberate choice could be the first step toward the wealth you desire and deserve.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever looked around and wondered why some people just seem to attract wealth and opportunity Like it flows to them effortlessly?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And maybe compare yourself, thinking I'm just as smart, I work hard, maybe even harder, you know, in the traditional sense. So what's the secret? What if it's not about luck or you know, or even the sheer exhausting grind, but maybe something else entirely?

Speaker 2:

That question. It really hits the nail on the head and it's the core idea running through well all the sources we've pulled for this deep dive.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

They point to something often called millionaire energy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's this idea that wealth isn't some external thing you have to chase down, wrestle into submission.

Speaker 1:

Right, not something you get.

Speaker 2:

Exactly. It's something you align with. You sort of become the kind of person that wealth, opportunity, success they just can't ignore you.

Speaker 1:

Okay. So our mission today, then, taking this stack of YouTube transcripts, articles, research bits, all the source material, is to really unpack what that looks like. What are the core mindsets, the maybe surprising habits and the non-negotiable behaviors that cultivate this millionaire energy? How do you start thinking?

Speaker 2:

acting, moving through the world, as if wealth were well, not just possible, but inevitable for you. Yeah, it's about pulling out those crucial insights, helping you start rewriting your own destiny, really right now, from the inside out.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's dive in and, based on the sources, it feels like we absolutely have to start not with like strategies or investments, but with the absolute foundation, the inner game.

Speaker 2:

It's fundamental. The sources are pretty unanimous on this. Wealth is mindset, before it ever shows up in your bank account. Before the numbers change Think of it as the root system. Everything else grows from there. Motivation Hub puts it that way.

Speaker 1:

And this really challenges that common idea, doesn't it that it's all about intelligence, or some lucky break, or just raw talent?

Speaker 2:

It does Sources like Vybo's Millionaire Mindset Shoves videos they really emphasize. It's actually about belief. That's the differentiator the belief that you are capable, that you're worthy, that you are equipped to handle success, to build it. Because you know, as AI Hustle Talk points out, you don't just attract what you want in life, you attract what you are. So if you want wealth to show up, you have to become the energy that wealth is drawn to.

Speaker 1:

There's a really powerful question that keeps coming up in this material why not you? Yeah, so many people just subconsciously disqualify themselves. They look at huge success and think oh, that's for them, not for me.

Speaker 2:

That invisible barrier.

Speaker 1:

Exactly the sources are clear. Yeah, the biggest barrier is often that invisible mental ceiling, your own thinking. You have to break through it by believing you can.

Speaker 2:

And this is where self-awareness becomes so crucial. One source Forbes discussing mindset layers. It highlights recognizing those deeply ingrained, often kind of toxic, identities and belief systems you might be carrying.

Speaker 1:

Like telling yourself stories right, I'm just bad with money. Or making loads of money means being ruthless. Or even simpler things like oh, I'm bad at technology which might just shut down opportunities.

Speaker 2:

Precisely those limiting stories. They live in that self-awareness layer. But the power comes not from judging them but simply noticing them, that act of just observing without judgment. That's the essential first step to making a change. You can't change what you don't see.

Speaker 1:

And the connection is direct, almost like a law.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

The size of your wealth won't exceed the size of your personal growth. Jim Rohn says that directly.

Speaker 2:

It makes perfect sense, doesn't it? If you're thinking your capacity to handle challenges, your whole perspective stays small. Well, it's hard for massive financial growth to really take root and thrive Right. Your financial transformation absolutely begins with transforming your thinking. You got to tend the soil of your mind if you want the garden of your finances to flourish.

Speaker 1:

So, okay, you start working on that inner foundation. You become aware of those beliefs. You decide to believe in your own capability. What's next? It seems like the next piece is shifting how you actually perceive the world around you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and this is where things get really interesting, because wealthy people often they have a fundamentally different relationship with reality than the average person.

Speaker 1:

How so.

Speaker 2:

Well, they tend to see life itself not just as something that's passively happening to them.

Speaker 1:

Like they're just reacting.

Speaker 2:

Right. Instead, they see it as a game they are actively playing.

Speaker 1:

A game, okay, but not like competing against everyone else.

Speaker 2:

Not necessarily. Vybo highlights that the real competition is with the person you were yesterday. It's about striving to be your best self, seeing every single choice you make as a deliberate move in this bigger strategic game of building your life.

Speaker 1:

That perspective changes everything.

Speaker 2:

It does. It completely changes how you view setbacks. They stop being these soul-crushing failures and they get reframed as stepping stones, crucial feedback in the game. You learn from them, adjust and make your next move.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so life's a game against your past self. How does money fit into this shifted perspective then?

Speaker 2:

They see money as energy not just, you know, paper or numbers on a screen, but as a powerful tool, something to unlock possibilities for themselves and for others. And here's a critical point they understand wealth is primarily a byproduct.

Speaker 1:

A byproduct of what?

Speaker 2:

Of solving problems for other people. Your rewards in life financial and otherwise they're in direct proportion to the value you provide to the marketplace. Jim Rohn, vybo they both stress this heavily.

Speaker 1:

So the core question shifts. It's not how can I make more money?

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

It becomes? How can I create more value?

Speaker 2:

Exactly your current income. It's just a reflection of your current value proposition. If you want to increase your income, you have to increase the value you offer. It takes the focus off just chasing dollars.

Speaker 1:

And puts it on becoming indispensable.

Speaker 2:

Precisely.

Speaker 1:

Which leads perfectly into maybe the most counterintuitive shift how they view problems.

Speaker 2:

This is often where people get tripped up. Most of us see problems as obstacles, right Things to avoid complain about.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 2:

But according to these sources, successful people. They see problems as opportunities just waiting to be monetized.

Speaker 1:

Opportunities. Yeah, even in like a crisis.

Speaker 2:

Jim Rohn is very clear on this. Especially in crises, he says they can even be more excited by problems than solutions.

Speaker 1:

Why.

Speaker 2:

Because bigger problems often present bigger potential rewards. Every frustration, every inefficiency you notice in your own life, your community, the market. It's basically a market opportunity, a chance to create value by solving it.

Speaker 1:

So it's about training your mind to constantly be scanning for those chances, developing that opportunity mindset.

Speaker 2:

Or opportunity sight, as Ron calls it. It's like putting on a special lens to view the world and, crucially, it's not magic. It's a skill you develop by consciously looking for solutions whenever you face challenges.

Speaker 1:

And developing that skill well, it requires stepping outside of what's comfortable. Okay, Embracing discomfort, uncertainty.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely. Greatness isn't found staying safe and comfy. It demands pushing beyond boundaries. Sometimes, standing alone, your comfort zone feels secure, sure, but it can become a cage. It limits your growth. Success demands stepping into the unknown, into the hard things, as VYBO points out. Growth and comfort, they just can't coexist.

Speaker 1:

So inevitably when you step into that unknown fear shows up. Yeah, how did the sources say to handle that?

Speaker 2:

There's a really powerful idea from Matthew McConaughey here Reframe that feeling. Fear feels a lot like excitement physiologically.

Speaker 1:

Oh interesting.

Speaker 2:

Try seeing it that way. He also talks about the importance of acknowledging your fears Declare them, admit them, give them credit. It's not about pretending they don't exist.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

But seeing them clearly so you can find the courage to overcome them. Fear actually increases your need to overcome it.

Speaker 1:

Another key perspective shift mentioned is championing logic over emotion. That can feel incredibly difficult when things are stressful or uncertain.

Speaker 2:

It is difficult, but it's about prioritizing rational thinking, objective analysis, over fleeting feelings. It doesn't mean ignoring your emotions you acknowledge them, but you consciously choose reasoned thought to lead your decisions.

Speaker 1:

How do you practice that?

Speaker 2:

Mindfulness helps Catching yourself when emotion is trying to drive the bus and deliberately stepping back. Motivation Hub talks about successful people staying emotionally calm in a storm. They self-soothe and they focus only on solutions.

Speaker 1:

Shifting from problem mode to solution mode.

Speaker 2:

Right? A great practical question to ask yourself when you're facing a challenge is what would need to be true for this to work? It bypasses the paralysis of the problem and immediately points your mind towards finding a path forward.

Speaker 1:

And finally, this ties into something about clarity over certainty.

Speaker 2:

Yes, wealthy people move forward with clarity about their direction, the value they want to create, but they don't wait for certainty. Jim Rohn calls certainty an illusion.

Speaker 1:

An illusion.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, one that keeps most people stuck, waiting for perfect conditions that never actually arrive. They embrace calculated uncertainty. It's the price you pay for extraordinary returns. They trust their ability to figure things out as they go.

Speaker 1:

OK, so you're building the inner foundation, shifting how you see the world, but none of this means anything without action. And that brings us to the power of practice habits, routines, discipline.

Speaker 2:

This is absolutely where the rubber meets the road your daily habits. They're like compound interest for your financial future. Jim Rohn emphasizes this. You're either growing or shrinking every single day, advancing or retreating, based on what you do consistently.

Speaker 1:

It's that powerful idea, isn't it? We fall to the level of our habits, not rise to our hopes.

Speaker 2:

Exactly. And habits are permanent anchors, while inspiration, well, that's temporary fuel.

Speaker 1:

So you can't just rely on feeling motivated.

Speaker 2:

No way. You need to build productive routines that happen almost automatically. Craig Ballantyne stresses becoming proactive, not reactive. Have that clear vision. Set those one-year, five-year, ten-year goals.

Speaker 1:

And then reverse engineer the daily steps needed to actually get there, and simple things like daily to-do lists Still important.

Speaker 2:

Still essential, according to sources like mediums. Look at millionaire habits Absolutely Good habits, good routines. They're about making the path to success as smooth and automatic as possible.

Speaker 1:

And part of that routine is your environment.

Speaker 2:

Definitely Surround yourself with people who actively support you, lift you up, not those who pull you down or just breed negativity. And be mindful of your inputs, too. Choose podcasts, audiobooks that enrich you rather than just passively consuming negativity.

Speaker 1:

Craig Ballantyne talks about stacking daily wins. What's that about?

Speaker 2:

It's about building those long-term success streaks. Every day you stick to a positive habit like exercise or working on your key project. You build resistance to breaking that streak. It creates this powerful virtuous cycle where discipline actually becomes easier over time.

Speaker 1:

Planning and preparation are also highlighted as key habits. Not just doing, but planning the doing.

Speaker 2:

Right, don't just wing it. Use planning techniques like a brain dump, making a priority list, mapping out the process for key tasks, and there's that specific subconscious mind hack mentioned.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, the sticky note thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, write down your single most important project before you go to sleep, on a sticky note. The idea is your brain works on it overnight. Some sources claim it can triple your productivity the next day by helping you wake up with solutions, or at least clarity.

Speaker 1:

That's a really concrete, actionable habit. Organization seems tied into this too.

Speaker 2:

For sure, taking just 10 minutes each day to map out your main projects for the day or the week ahead and, you know, extending that garden analogy from your mindset Tending the garden and you know, extending that garden analogy from your mindset, Tending the garden, you have to tend your mind regularly. Vybo suggests actively weeding out those pessimistic or self-defeating thoughts, deliberately replacing them with empowering beliefs. Nourish it with positive inputs books, meaningful conversations and practice gratitude.

Speaker 1:

And discipline. It's not just about getting things done, is it? It's deeply connected to self-trust.

Speaker 2:

This is huge and often overlooked. Vybo's millionaire mindset shifts really emphasizes keeping every promise you make to yourself, no matter how small.

Speaker 1:

Why is that so important?

Speaker 2:

Because when you break promises to yourself, I'll wake up early, I'll make that call you. Train your mind to doubt your own word. But when you consistently keep them, you build deep self-trust, confidence. Doing the hard thing even when you don't feel like it builds willpower. It strengthens your character.

Speaker 1:

It's about showing up, doing all that you can every single day, giving everything you have with the resources you currently possess.

Speaker 2:

But critically and the sources bring this up too you have to include rest and well-being in that routine. It's not optional.

Speaker 1:

Right Burnout doesn't help anyone.

Speaker 2:

Exactly, Sleep is crucial for productivity, for sustained motivation, Exercise, eating well these are foundational habits mentioned across multiple sources like medium and better up.

Speaker 1:

And speaking of consistency, there's a point about not getting fixated solely on the outcome, but mastering the process.

Speaker 2:

This is profound. When you prioritize the process, the daily work, the habits, the execution, the results tend to become a natural byproduct.

Speaker 1:

So focus on the doing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, VYBO highlights that joy is often found in the process itself, in the doing of what you feel you're meant to do, regardless of the final outcome. Like Matthew McConaughey says, focus on the doing the craft.

Speaker 1:

OK, and finally in this section, a concept called strategic impatience. That sounds like a contradiction.

Speaker 2:

It does, but it's powerful. Jim Rohn explains it like this Be patient with the results, those, those take time to compound, but be impatient with the actions. Don't wait. Don't wait until you feel perfectly ready to start Act to become ready. Waiting for perfect conditions that's often the habit that keeps people stuck, prevents wealth accumulation. Treat every single day as a building block. Act with urgency on the process.

Speaker 1:

So you've got the inner foundation. You're seeing the world through a different lens. You're building consistent habits and discipline. Now it's about putting all that into continuous motion, learning, action, persistence.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and Motivation Hub just cuts right to the chase here, the biggest, simplest difference between you and many successful people they just start.

Speaker 1:

Just start.

Speaker 2:

The best time to start is literally right now. Don't overthink it. Just swing enough. Get started swinging. The bias has to always be towards action over inaction.

Speaker 1:

Because inaction isn't neutral.

Speaker 2:

No, it's an active choice. It's a form of self-sabotage. Really, it's actively delaying your success. Vybo stresses that the only way forward is through action, even if it's imperfect action, even if it's uncomfortable.

Speaker 1:

You learn by doing, and once you start, you need that relentless persistence, never giving up.

Speaker 2:

That's the only way to truly fail. By quitting, you have to want whatever you're building so much Want it more than the air you breathe, as one source dramatically puts it. Wow you have to push through when things get tough, holding on to that vision. Success demands sacrifice. You have to be willing to let go of comfort, distractions, wasted time.

Speaker 1:

Learning is highlighted across the board too. Lifelong learning. Millionaires are apparently gracious readers.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely. They are constant students of success. They study market trends, human psychology, technology, anything that helps them understand the world better and create more value. Jim Rohn says they're obsessed with learning, not just formal education, but practical, applicable knowledge.

Speaker 1:

And it's not just passive consumption right. You can't just read books and expect things to change.

Speaker 2:

Crucially no, you must convert that information into action. Jim Rohn has a great analogy Knowledge without application is like food without digestion.

Speaker 1:

Doesn't do you any good.

Speaker 2:

Just sits there. Listen to mentors, read books. They help adjust your compass, point you in the right direction. And Tai Lopez suggests seeking discomfort in learning. Surround yourself with people who challenge you, who make you a bit uncomfortable, because that's often where the most significant learning happens pushing your boundaries.

Speaker 1:

And what about failure? It's pretty much unavoidable if you're taking action and pushing boundaries.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, unavoidable and essential. The sources emphasize hyper-resilience. Successful people don't stop when they fail. Motivation Hub says you have to learn from mistakes. Look nakedly at the results, even when you fall short. See it clearly. See it clearly Failure is feedback. As Jim Rohn famously put it, every failure carries within it the seed of equivalent or greater success. You learn to fail forward. Use setbacks as a setup for a comeback.

Speaker 1:

And this whole process taking action, learning, pushing through failure that's how you build something else vital.

Speaker 2:

Confidence.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. Confidence isn't something you're born with or something you wait to receive. It's earned through action. Action first. Action comes first. Confidence follows. Vybo is clear on this the more you practice a skill, the more you master it, the more confidence you naturally develop in your ability to execute. You don't doubt yourself when you know you're good at something because that's a great way to put it.

Speaker 2:

The competence you build through consistent action is the true foundation for real self-assurance. It's a virtuous cycle Action leads to competence, competence builds confidence.

Speaker 1:

And confidence fuels more action, bolder moves. Okay, so, beyond the internal shifts and personal habits, cultivating this millionaire energy definitely involves external dynamics to how you connect and contribute to the world energy definitely involves external dynamics to how you connect and contribute to the world At its core.

Speaker 2:

this comes right back to value. Strive to become indispensable. Provide massive value. Solve significant problems for others. Be so good at what you do solving the problems you solve that people simply can't ignore you.

Speaker 1:

And who you surround yourself with. That matters immensely. Relationships are key.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely critical. Surround yourself with intelligent, supportive people, people who actively lift you up, not those who drain your energy or just dwell on negativity Sources like Medium and Motivation Hub. Talk about intentionally building relationships with other successful, wealthy, ambitious people in your community.

Speaker 1:

There's an interesting suggestion about strategic socializing, like attending specific types of events.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, things like black tie events or industry gatherings. It's not just for show. It's framed as a deliberate strategy to connect how so Well. At these kinds of events, successful business people typically ask two key questions what is your name and what do you do? It's a direct pathway to finding people you can potentially collaborate with, learn from or provide value to.

Speaker 1:

Which brings up another powerful tool often underutilized the power of asking.

Speaker 2:

Motivation Hub calls it maybe the most powerful thing, accessible to absolutely everyone. The upside of asking for help, advice, opportunities. The sale it's unlimited.

Speaker 1:

And the downside.

Speaker 2:

Usually just a moment of discomfort or hearing no. But if you don't ask, the answer is always no.

Speaker 1:

And helping others who are on a similar path is also noted as a common habit.

Speaker 2:

Yes, specifically helping friends and business associates who are already actively pursuing success, people who are optimistic, goal-oriented. Lift those who are already trying to climb. It's not about carrying someone who isn't trying, but amplifying the efforts of those who are putting in the work.

Speaker 1:

There's also a strong emphasis on charity and giving back.

Speaker 2:

It's seen not just as an obligation, but as an integrated part of success, building a rich life. Motivation Hub even suggests starting a business with charity built into its model.

Speaker 1:

Why.

Speaker 2:

Because it helps build a positive culture and it naturally connects you with other generous people in your community. The sources suggest nothing feels better than changing a life or blessing someone less fortunate.

Speaker 1:

Building on passion is another external dynamic mentioned connecting what you do to what you genuinely care about.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all great brands, great movements, great businesses. To what you genuinely care about. Yeah, all great brands, great movements, great businesses. They're built on passion. Find what truly energizes you and remember it's often not just about selling products or services. It's about selling hopes and dreams, solving problems that really matter to people.

Speaker 1:

And purpose. Is it something you just wait to find, or is it more active?

Speaker 2:

The sources lean towards purpose not being born but decided. It emerges from what you've worked hard to get good at your skills, your confidence and finding ways that allow you to serve both yourself and others effectively.

Speaker 1:

And legacy.

Speaker 2:

Legacy in this context isn't just about the money you leave behind. It's about the impact you create, the lives you touch, the mindsets you shift.

Speaker 1:

Okay, finally navigating this whole journey successfully seems to require a fundamental shift in perspective about your own role, Taking ownership.

Speaker 2:

This is maybe the most empowering idea, but also the most challenging. It's your life Bottom line. No one is coming to save you.

Speaker 1:

You have to step up.

Speaker 2:

If you don't step up and take control, no one else will Stop blaming circumstances, the economy, your background, other people for where you are right now.

Speaker 1:

And take full ownership, even for things that might not seem entirely your fault.

Speaker 2:

That's where the power lies. Vybo really stresses this when you own the problem, you instantly own the solution. It shifts you from being a passive victim.

Speaker 1:

To an active agent.

Speaker 2:

Exactly An active agent in your own life.

Speaker 1:

And where should you direct your resources first? Your time, your money.

Speaker 2:

Towards yourself. The sources consistently emphasize this the best ROI you will ever get is the investment you make in yourself.

Speaker 1:

In your learning skills. Well-being.

Speaker 2:

Your mindset, all of it.

Speaker 1:

There's also encouragement to explore, experiment, try things out. Don't get stuck trying to prematurely optimize before you even know what works for you exactly.

Speaker 2:

Try different approaches. Figure out what activities, what projects, what connections give you more energy than they take.

Speaker 1:

Follow that energy and actively cultivate an abundance perspective. Now fight that scarcity default yes, money isn't inherently scarce.

Speaker 2:

Opportunities aren't rare. As Jim Rohn says, the world is an endless stream of opportunities disguised as problems. See life, not as a zero sum game.

Speaker 1:

Where someone has to lose, for me to win.

Speaker 2:

Right, but about creating value? The pie can grow infinitely. If you actively look for abundance, you'll start finding it everywhere.

Speaker 1:

Be pulled by your vision of the future, not pushed by the circumstances of your past.

Speaker 2:

Focus relentlessly on where you're going, the opportunities ahead, the growth you're pursuing, the value you're creating. Jim Rohn offers a really powerful thought here. Your dreams aren't just random wishes. What are they? They're assignments calling you forward, hinting at the person you're meant to become and the impact you're meant to have.

Speaker 1:

And ultimately, this all boils down to one unavoidable truth, doesn't it? Your financial future is your responsibility.

Speaker 2:

Completely your current financial situation. It isn't some permanent fate. It's just giving you perfect, objective feedback about your current thinking and actions.

Speaker 1:

So if you want different feedback, you have to change the input.

Speaker 2:

Your financial future isn't determined by your past.

Speaker 1:

It's determined by your perspective and your action starting right now. You haven't been failing All those challenges, setbacks, moments of discomfort. According to these sources, you've just been in training preparing you.

Speaker 2:

Preparing you for the transformation that's available the moment you decide to fully step into it.

Speaker 1:

So, wrapping up this deep dive, the central idea is just undeniably powerful, isn't it?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Cultivating millionaire energy isn't some mystical thing or external chase. It's about a fundamental internal shift, about consciously becoming the kind of person who naturally attracts wealth, opportunity, success just as a consequence of how they think, act and show up in the world.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we've walked through the foundational mindset shifts, changing your perspective on reality, the non-negotiable power of consistent habits and discipline the fuel of continuous learning and action the critical external dynamics creating value, building relationships and that empowering perspective of owning your entire journey.

Speaker 1:

And the resounding message from all these sources. It points to one undeniable truth this transformation, it's available to you Right now. It doesn't require a lottery ticket or some special connection you don't have, or waiting for the perfect circumstance.

Speaker 2:

It just requires a willingness a willingness to look inward, do the work on your beliefs and habits and take consistent, sometimes uncomfortable action. Your financial future isn't about luck or fate. It is your direct responsibility.

Speaker 1:

So here's the challenge directly to you listening what single limiting belief or habit will you identify and consciously challenge today, right after this?

Speaker 2:

And what specific, maybe uncomfortable, action will you take towards building that millionaire energy, starting like in the next hour?

Speaker 1:

Remember that key idea.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

You don't just think your way into new ways of acting.

Speaker 2:

You act your way into new ways of thinking. It all starts with that one deliberate choice right now.