Five Books to Feed Your Mind

"Once you learn to read, you will be forever free." -Frederick Douglass

📚Hey, good evening!

First off, let's welcome all the new people who joined us since last time!

There are 2,083 of us in total now.

Thank you (yes, you!) for trusting me to bring you the absolute best book recommendations I can each and every week!

As always, these are long emails full of great books and tons of cool surprises.

But I never expect that everyone will be interested in every single thing I publish.

So, feel free to jump around and dive into whatever does interest you!

Today we've got...

  • An introduction to today's "5 Books"

  • My personal news, and the best of what I'm reading and sharing right now

  • Two fantastic online creators you need to know about

  • A new book alert to help you organize your modern, digital life

  • The latest book breakdown from the Stairway to Wisdom

  • Why what’s obvious to you might be amazing to others

  • The author of this book helped save more than 16,000,000 lives

  • This might be the rarest and most difficult psychological achievement

  • Choosing your friends is literally a matter of life and death

  • My top 5 book recommendations this week

  • A special gift for reading all the way to the end

In one sentence…

You’re Too Good to Feel This Bad is an amazing self-help book (whose title I hated at first) aimed at proven doers who aren’t afraid of hard work but who want to escape the cultural epidemic of anxiety that often plagues highly productive people.

The Memory Police is the next best Fahrenheit 451, a beautiful novel about the inhabitants of an island who are forced to forget things like photographs, books - even birds - and the “Memory Police” who are assigned to hunt the people down who still remember them.

The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation is one of the best books for beginners who want to form an exercise habit, and for experienced lifters who want to be reminded why they started in the first place.

The Science of Money is a non-fiction book by personal development legend Brian Tracy, about critically important financial concepts that will help you earn more, save more, and live more.

Think Again is one of the most important books to come out in the last decade, and it’s about how to question our own beliefs, how to form our own second opinions, and why we should.

Here in this email are summaries of each book, along with a sample of my best notes, and if you want my complete set of notes on these books, you can find them on my  Patreon .

Pro Learning Tip:

 Getting a membership to Medium is one of the best investments I've ever made in my continuing education. The quality of the writing on Medium is superb, and some of the smartest, most interesting thinkers publish there regularly.

1) This month’s book notes are ALMOST ready on my Patreon, but I just want to thank my newest supporters there, Denisse, Carlos, Fred, and Drea!

And obviously, I could never, EVER forget one of my very earliest Patreon supporters - and now good friend - Jeremy Steingraber! You guys are all rock stars!

By the time the Friday email goes out, I should have this month’s notes ready and sent out. I’m also working on a new YouTube video, which should be ready by then too!

2) I’d love to organize a reading challenge next month to coincide with the soft launch of my online course, Reading Mastery. I’m not sure exactly how I’m going to do it, but I just wanted to let you know it’s something I’m thinking about.

I know I’m being a bit vague haha. But over the next few weeks, I’ll have more information for you! Should be fun!

3) Here’s one of my favorite books about one of my favorite charities. I’m also trying to make better IG reels in general, and I think this one turned out pretty damn well!

I’m glad I was able to do justice to this one because I loved this book when I first read it. It is hands-down one of the best books I read back in 2020 (out of 179 haha).

I'm also listening to  Hustle Harder, Hustle Smarter, by 50 Cent, on Audible. It’s read by him, and I’m getting a ton out of it. He’s a wicked-smart businessman and a super valuable mentor. I also loved the book he co-wrote with Robert Greene, The 50th Law!

Nowadays, I listen to about 3-4 audiobooks a month, and I always listen to them on Audible. No other audiobook service even compares. You can also get a 30-day free trial  right here .

You know I love to support new and old friends of mine who are doing awesome things (or simply amazing people I've stumbled upon around the internet), so here are a few people you should know about:

1) First up is my friend Jaysen Headley (@ezeekat on Instagram), who is one of the funniest people I know.

I first came across one of his IG Reels and instantly shared it with my audience because I thought it was hilarious. I wish I could find it again so I could share it with you here, but you may as well just head to his Instagram and check out some of his other ones. He rarely misses!

He actually recently made the “leap” into being a full-time content creator, and I couldn’t be happier for him! We’ve never even met in person and I’m seriously so proud of him.

Anyway, he reads different kinds of books than I normally do, but readers recognize readers, and we probably both love books the same amount. He just reads different ones, and that’s cool!

Did I mention that he’s hilarious? But hey, don’t take my word for it. You can find him here on Instagram.

2) The second person I want to introduce you to is Brock Johnson, my official/unofficial Instagram coach who is a HUGE part of why I’ve been able to grow to nearly 100,000 followers there in just the last year or so!

His mom, Chalene, is one of the smartest businesspeople I’ve EVER met, and I’ve learned a lot from her as well - they’re actually business partners. Actually, I may end up featuring her here too because if you have a business she can DEFINITELY help you grow it.

Anyway, back to Brock. 

I’ve learned SO MUCH from him about what to do on IG, what not to do, best practices, how to save time but still create epic content, and so much more. Plus, I follow his example of actually having FUN while running a business, instead of taking it so deadly seriously all the time.

The dude runs a 7-figure business but is actually thriving in ALL areas of his life, which is so rare and so wonderful to see. So yea, I think quite highly of him, of course, and you might want to follow him as well!

Do you know someone I should know?

I’m always looking to connect with accomplished, inspirational, and good-hearted people who share the same interests that I do…especially books!

So if you have a favorite author, influencer, creator, etc. that you think I might love to meet (and maybe feature here), let me know! You can just hit reply to this email anytime and tell me about them. Thanks!

Living a modern life requires juggling a ton of information. But we were never taught how to manage this information effectively so that we can find what we need when we need it.

In The PARA Method, Tiago Forte outlines a simple and intuitive four-step system that will help us sort all the information flooding our brains into four major categories—Projects, Areas, Resources, and Archives—allowing us to manage our commitments while achieving our goals and dreams.

-Projects are specific, short-term efforts that you are actively working on with a certain goal in mind, such as completing a website or renovating your bathroom.
-Areas are the larger, ongoing areas of responsibility (health, finances, etc.) that encompass those specific projects.
-Resources include content on a range of topics you’re interested in or that could be useful for your projects and areas.
-Archives include anything from the previous three categories that is now inactive, but you want to save for future reference.

With his easy-to-understand and engaging voice, Forte outlines his best practices and tips on how to successfully implement PARA, along with deep dives on everything from how to adopt habits to stay organized to how to use this system to enhance your focus.

The PARA Method can be implemented in just seconds but has the power to transform the trajectory of your work and life using the power of digital organization.

“There is no end point to this process. There’s no mountaintop. You’ll never ‘arrive.’ Life promises you an adventure and nothing more.”

-Ayodeji Awosika, Real Help

This book isn't going to rescue you. For better or for worse, that's something you'll have to do for yourself.

The truth, however, is that facing the fact that no one is going to come save you is what's actually going to save you. And I can't think of too many people better qualified to deliver this critically important message than Ayodeji Awosika.

Awosika is one of the most popular writers on Medium.com ever, with nearly 100,000 followers, a TEDx speaker, a self-taught 3-time author, and a world-renowned personal development expert who reaches millions of readers per year with his message of radical personal responsibility and radical self-determination.

This is a book that tells you what you need to know, not what you want to hear. This is a book that tells you how the world actually works, not how you think it should work.

Not everyone will resonate with his somewhat harsher, more realistic style, but one thing that no one can ever say about his writing is that he's being inauthentic or dishonest. There may not be Absolute Truth in this world, but this book represents his hard-won truth, which is damn near close enough, as far as I can tell.

Read this book if you want to learn from the valuable experiences of someone who has actually achieved the kinds of results that most of us want in our own lives:

*The freedom to do work that excites you and stretches you creatively.

*The opportunity to make a great living doing what you love and what you're good at.

*The mental toughness necessary to thrive in an unfair world.

*The ability to build life-changing habits and execute them on auto-pilot (even if you’ve tried and failed before).

All of the advice in this book has been battle-tested in the real world. You and I live in the real world too, and if we want to succeed there, we have to learn how to be both optimistic and realistic at the exact same time.

We need to learn how to hold two different, contradictory, opposing viewpoints in our minds at the same time without retreating to the false comfort and safety of either one of them.

There are very few guarantees in life, and you know this already. But one of them is that your existence can become an incredible adventure, once you choose to see it that way. And, crucially, once you decide once and for all to take action to shape your own future.

The real world has broken untold masses of people before our time, but it doesn't have to break us. You can break the pattern and break free. You have personal power and agency, and now you also have this book.

"Hit songwriters often admit that their most successful hit song was one they thought was just stupid, even not worth recording. We're clearly bad judges of our own creations. We should just put them out there and let the world decide. Are you holding back something that seems too obvious to share?"

-Derek Sivers, Hell Yeah or No: What’s Worth Doing

This is something that held me back for a long time. It still comes up occasionally: I always assume that everyone already knows what I've just learned.

Over the last 10+ years, I've read more than a thousand books, started two businesses, grown a big online following, etc., etc., and I'm often still surprised when someone expresses shock or amazement after I tell them about something I learned years ago. Has this ever happened to you?

It's far too easy to err in the opposite direction, of course, going around thinking that you know the answer to everything and that nobody will ever have the knowledge base that you have. I think you're going to want to avoid adopting that attitude! But you'd be surprised how common the former situation is!

All of this is to say that there is probably something that you know, or that you've done, or learned, or can do, that is just a regular part of your life, but that would absolutely blow someone else away. Something that's obvious to you, but would be amazing to others. Something that you barely even have to think about, but that to someone else would be revelatory. That they might even gladly pay you for!

Not that you have to turn it into a marketable skill or anything; it's just that maybe you should let the world decide if what you can do is amazing or not.

If I can use myself as an example again, sometimes I'll mention something that I read about in a book years ago, and the person I'm speaking with will just get it, and they'll get this...look. I've seen it many times, and it always comes out of nowhere. It's the look of someone who's just had the dirt cleared from their mental windshield because of something I said, something that was just a throwaway statement to me, but that made a measurable difference in their life.

The best part is that this is probably true for you as well!

Or, at least it could be true if you kept working on your art. Or your skills. Or whatever it is that you do that most people can't.

Sometimes, we're poor judges of what's actually amazing, and what's worth sharing. Get the world's opinion before you decide that there's nothing special about you because maybe it's there and you're just not seeing it.

Note: This is a sample from my other newsletter, Stairway to Wisdom. Along with the book breakdowns, you get a premium weekly newsletter packed with insights and ideas like this one. Get your 14-day free trial here .

This is a YouTube Short about one of THE BEST books I read back in 2020. It’s called Thirst (I’ll spare you the suspense this time haha), and it’s about the charity that former nightclub promoter Scott Harrison started after he was shaken by what he saw on a trip to Africa.

He saw people drinking water that he didn’t even want to TOUCH, but people were drinking it because they had to in order to survive. More about this amazing book in the short video above!

I have another full-length YouTube video coming along very soon, but I hope you love this book as much as I did!

What are the chances that your average 18-year-old — just heading off to university for the first time — is going to be able to make the correct decision about what they want to do for the rest of their natural lives?

And yet, this is exactly what we expect them to do when we ask them to declare their major at university.

Hell, what are the chances that your average forty-year-old is going to know what they want to be when they grow up?

The brilliant psychologist Abraham Maslow thought that personal clarity on this issue was not to be taken for granted. Whatever our age, it’s not a given that we’re sure to find out exactly what we want to do with our one infinitely unlikely, finite existence. [ Read Time: 4 Mins ]

Pick your friends as though you’re going to be a passenger in their car…because you kind of will be!

You’ve worked too hard — you’ve come too far — to throw it all away like this. '

We attach ourselves to the fortunes of our friends, and the right ones can raise us to levels we’d never dreamed possible, while the wrong choice of friends could be quite literally disastrous. [Read Time: 3 Mins ]

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I was originally put off by the title of this one, even though it was blowing up on Instagram and it seemed like every Bookstagrammer I follow was recommending it heartily. My initial thoughts were, “But I don’t feel bad! Why do I need to read this? It sounds…whiny and…weak.” However, after blazing through it myself, I’ve found it’s pretty much the opposite. And now I recommend it heartily!

The ideal reader here is the high-achiever, or wannabe high-achiever, who is already doing relatively well, but who endeavors to go further. The book starts off with some fairly simple – but important – foundational stuff that many successful people seem to struggle with, like breathing properly and getting enough sleep, and then it moves on to mindset, career success, and money, before finishing on a high note with respect to relationships and love.

So yes, Nate Dallas covers quite a bit of ground in a fairly short book, and it certainly wasn’t written to be the “definitive” book on any of these topics. But it’s rooted in Dallas’s invaluable personal experiences getting to the top of the Career mountain and realizing that he’d neglected important parts of himself along the way. There’s an element of ceaseless self-questioning in this book that would be a wonderful skill for all of us to develop more fully.

A recurring theme here is the large impact over time of small choices that we are in control of. Simple, obvious stuff like breathing from the diaphragm and prioritizing sleep is well within our loci of control, and once we do regain control of these elemental life processes, a whole lot of other things are going to start falling into place as well.

Also important – and I’m so glad he references them repeatedly – is the raising of our standards. We don’t rise to the level of our goals but rather fall to the level of our standards, and in my own life, raising them has been a huge part of my success.

You get what you tolerate in life, and if you tolerate getting 4 hours of sleep and working 70 hours a week for a salary that’s barely enough to live on, that’s exactly what you’re going to keep on getting. Ed Mylett calls this your inner thermostat, and if the temperature of your thermostat is set to some “comfortable” level, you’re never going to achieve what you’re truly capable of achieving. You have to turn up the heat.

My whole life changed when I started raising my standards – in all areas of my life – and this is one thing that this book is uniquely suited to help you do. It’s also extremely quotable, and he’ll hit you with ideas that stay stuck in your head, like when he points out that “brands are for livestock, to show who owns them.” Do you own your car, or your handbag, or whatever, or do they own you? 

As I said, this book isn’t the “only” one you need in order to level up. You should totally read and apply 100 more great books in each area and watch your life upgrade before your very eyes. But it’s a wonderful resource, written in a friend-to-friend style that’s both encouraging and helpful, and frankly, you’re too human not to read this book.

“Small decisions do influence dramatic transformations.”

***

“The problem is that we genuinely have no idea of what lies outside of the mediocrity. We don’t even question the possibilities because we are ignorant of them. Our measuring scale is inadequate. We compare our lives to those of sick people, not to the people that are thriving.

I was one of the healthiest and happiest people I knew, but only because I measured myself within the median range of sick, unhappy, stressed, depressed, angry, broke, bored, unfulfilled folks. I am now functioning as an anomaly, several standard deviations away from the mean.”

***

“I am not such a dreamer as to think that this material is for every person who picks it up. It’s not. This is a manual for proven doers. It’s for those people who sincerely hunger for growth and don’t require extra external motivation every day to do demanding work.

Most people have goals, but the majority don’t attain those goals. What most people do get is their standards. The three-word, simple takeaway from this book may be: raise your standards.”

***

“When we begin to think in new ways, we quickly become someone else.”

Another random bookstore find, this is a sparse, dystopian novel that will stay with me for quite a while. The “book hangover” from this one lasted a long time!

Actually, the more you think about the book, and consider the structure – the hidden meanings, the references – the more you come to appreciate the craft and the care that went into writing it.

Not surprisingly, it was a finalist for the International Booker Prize, it and the author have received a crazy number of other literary awards, and it has been favorably compared to 1984, Fahrenheit 451, and others.

The basic plot is that, on an unnamed island, the unnamed narrator tells of the “disappearances” from the island of things like photographs, novels, and even birds, and she explains how it’s the job of the Memory Police to find people who still remember - and eliminate them.

Or at least “disappear” them as well since it’s never really clear what happens to them once the Memory Police take them away.

That’s what’s so eerie and cool about this book: hardly any of the main characters are named (there’s “R”, her editor, “the old man,” her closest friend, etc.) – nothing is fixed in time or place, and that gives this novel a disorienting, uncomfortable feel that meshes perfectly with its exploration of memory, loss, and significance.

The ending, too is just…phenomenal. I’m so glad I picked up this book in a bookstore I forget the name of, on an island I rarely go to, during a time in my life I’ll never forget.

“The room had changed completely. The traces of my father’s presence, which I had done my best to preserve, had vanished, replaced by an emptiness that would not be filled. I stood in the middle of that emptiness, feeling myself on the verge of being drawn into its terrible depth.”

***

“A heart has no shape, no limits. That’s why you can put almost any kind of thing in it, why it can hold so much. It’s much like your memory, in that sense.”

***

“The moon and the stars were nowhere to be seen, as though they had been scattered by the brilliance of the flames, and only the corpses of burned books lit the sky.”

***

“’Do you really have to go?’ he asked, gathering to his chest the air he held in his hands. ‘Good-bye…’ The last traces of my voice were frail and hoarse. ‘Good-bye.’

For a very long time, he sat staring at the void in his palms. When at last he had convinced himself that there was nothing left, he let his arms drop wearily. Then he climbed the ladder one rung at a time, lifted the trapdoor, and went out into the world.

Sunlight came streaming in for one moment but vanished again as the door creaked shut. The faint sound of the rug being rolled out on the floor came to me from above. Closed in the hidden room, I continued to disappear.”

I haven't been this impressed with a fitness book in a long time, and as someone who knows a thing or two about a thing or two when it comes to fitness, it is my pleasure to introduce you to this one. I really think that reading it could be the start (or continuation) of something great for you.

This is a thinking man's (and woman's) fitness book, and somehow...somehow...Mike Matthews finds a way to bring Epictetus, Solzhenitsyn, Teddy Roosevelt, Socrates, and more into a book about health and fitness and still make it accessible, easy to get into, valuable, and fun.

And fitness should be fun. It should make your life better, and not be seen as a chore, a fearful obligation, or something that's beyond your reach.

Mike and I also share the conviction that training isn't just about training. People think, "Oh, yea that's just the gym." But the gym is...Life!

And once you learn that you control what happens to your muscles inside the gym, you find out that there's a lot more that you can control outside the gym too.

“What we’ve done or failed to do doesn’t forever determine who we are or will be. In fact, I believe that we have no idea what we can really do. We may never find out, either – there may always be another level – but striving to reach the top is the most rewarding adventure life has to offer.”

***

“If we can do just one brutally simple thing well, then no amount of psychological and emotional trauma can put us down.

If we can truly embrace this one little thing, then we can even learn to tune out the treacherous voices in our heads and inoculate ourselves against their poison.

This little thing is action. By staying in motion, the roots of doubt and despair can’t take hold and ensnare us. By doing things, we can’t be stopped by thinking things.”

***

“As it happens, there are over one hundred published studies on this phenomenon, and the conclusion is crystal clear: if you explicitly state what you’re going to do, when you’re going to do it, and where you’re going to do it, you’re much more likely to actually do it.”

***

“If you have what it takes to conquer your psychology and your physiology, then you might just have what it takes to reach out into the world and conquer a whole lot more. In short, the better you get at the fitness game, the better prepared you’ll be for every other game you might want to play.”

You can get virtually anything you want in life, just as long as you help enough other people get what they want.

That's one of the earliest lessons I learned from one of the first self-improvement books I've ever read, and Brian Tracy has been a staple of my wide reading ever since. The truth of his principles has been proven time and time again, and in my own life, much of my success can be directly attributed to what I've learned from him.

In this book, The Science of Money, Brian breaks down some of the myths and misconceptions concerning how money works and how to bring more of it into your life, as well as provides enlightening explanations of the ideas that will help you create wealth. Perhaps "science" is too strong a word - there's certainly a softer, more human element to wealth creation, too - but these ideas are solid.

Importantly, the ideas in this book are foundational. They will help you to start your journey to riches on the right foot.

There's a ton of misinformation, bad advice, and downright lies that are propagated today when it comes to making money, but you'll find none of them here. And even if you're a little further along on your journey, you'll find that this book is an excellent refresher and one that you may want to keep close by.

There are a ton of great ideas contained here in this book, such as the vital importance of investing in yourself, a discussion about identifying infinite opportunities, and advice about how to increase your earning capacity, but I will just say this: if you bring these ideas to your life through your daily actions and activities, your financial life will change for the better. It will improve.

The world is getting richer all the time; the principles of wealth creation are known; you are more capable than you know, and Brian Tracy's hard-won wisdom is available to all who seek it in this book.

“Your most valuable financial asset is your earning ability. What is your earning ability? It’s your ability to get results that people will pay you for, and the most important word for success, in life and in business, is results.

***

“If you invest in yourself, you own 100% of the investment forever. You get 100% of the return.”

***

“So if you want to double your income, find somebody who is earning twice as much as you in your own field. Then trace it back to what they did to get there. You find that everybody who’s earning twice as much as you today was at one time earning half as much. So they must have done specific things. If you ask them, they’ll tell you.

If you don’t know them personally, read their books and their articles and their interviews, and they will tell you, because people who earn a lot of money are very generous in telling other people how they did it. If you do what other successful people have done over and over again, you get the same result, based on the law of cause and effect.”

***

“You’ll always be paid in direct proportion to what you do, how well you do it, and the ease or difficulty of replacing you.”

One thing I’ve learned from reading more than 1,000 books is that life and the world are really, really complicated.

Reality resists easy answers, sound bites and bullet points, and that’s why books like Think Again are so important. It’s an argument for appreciating complexity, nuance, and the fact that getting to the right answer isn’t something that just “happens.” And it’s certainly not usually the first answer that we settle on.

What’s more, being wrong feels exactly the same in the mind as being right!

There’s rarely one single answer to any complicated question or nuanced situation that we’re likely to encounter in life. For instance, is milk good or bad? I rest my case.

But seriously, even for touchier issues – especially so for these – getting to the right answer is going to require collaborative work over a sustained period of time, which is going to necessitate constantly questioning our assumptions and received opinions, not to mention working with others to share knowledge, gain access to wider perspectives, and challenge our own ideas.

This is really hard to do. Which is probably why it’s so rare. It’s so much easier to think once, act once, where what Grant argues for instead is a disciplined process of rethinking, entailing many revisions of what we once thought to be true.

Interestingly, what Grant found is that the people who are best at predicting the future (we’re all bad at it, but he means the people who are the least worst, one might say) are the ones who rethought their original opinion the greatest number of times; the ones who went through the most rethinking cycles and who always entertained the idea that their original prediction could be wrong.

Think Again is such a refreshing book in so many ways, and probably one of the most important books to come out in 2021, or, really any year.

He starts with a discussion of why rethinking is so hard, moves on to tactics for having productive discussions and debates with people we can learn from, and then the last section of the book is about cultures (work or otherwise) where the best and worst rethinking takes place, and what we can learn from them.

Underlying all of it is the suggestion that we live the questions, sit with them, until we someday live and question and revise our way into the answers.

“The problem is that we live in a rapidly changing world, where we need to spend as much time rethinking as we do thinking.”

***

“We need to develop the habit of forming our own second opinions.”

***

“There’s no benefit to me for being wrong for longer. It’s much better if I change my beliefs sooner, and it’s a good feeling to have that sense of a discovery, that surprise – I would think people would enjoy that.”

***

“Changing your mind doesn’t make you a flip-flopper or a hypocrite. It means you were open to learning.”

Today’s Five Books on Amazon:

You made it to the end! Congratulations!

You're now among the rarest of the rare.

I mean, that was a lot of books!

But I hope you found something here that looked interesting!

Personally, I’m obsessed with sharing the magic of books and reading, and so I love it when one or more of my book recommendations “hits.”

Also, if you know someone who might love this newsletter, you can just send them this link!

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I also want to thank you for reading this newsletter all the way through to the end and to thank you for real, I’m going to give you a 1-month free trial to the Stairway to Wisdom.

That’s twice the free trial period that most people get, because people who finish what they start - and have the patience to do a lot of reading - are usually the ones who love the Stairway to Wisdom the most.

Enjoy!

And remember, you can just hit "reply" to this email to ask me a question or offer a book recommendation of your own. I may take a while to respond, but I read every one!

All the best,

Matt Karamazov

P.S. Whenever you're ready, here are three more ways I can help you apply the wisdom found in the greatest books ever written to your life:

  1. I’m going to be leaving some casual spots open for personal coaching, alongside what I do for my monthly clients, and the first choice always goes to the people on my email list.

    Simply reply to this email or click here if this is something you're interested in working with me on, and I'll let you know more about it, answer all your questions, etc.

    Areas I can help you with include reading more books and remembering more of what you read, growing your business, getting into better shape, and building mental toughness and resilience.

    You’ll work 1-1 with me, and together we’ll be lining up big breakthroughs for you every single month.

  2. I've released 50 complete, in-depth book breakdowns on the Stairway to Wisdom that respects both your time AND your intelligence and will help you become the person you've always known you were capable of being. Read them for free here.

  3. Join my free Substack publication, The Competitive Advantage, where I teach high-level, high-impact self-discipline tactics and strategies to help you progress toward your goals.

    You'll also join a supportive community of other winners all moving forward together in the direction of where we want to be in life. Join here.

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