John Skomski owns a financial planning practice where he specializes in the area of building sustainable distribution plans for high net worth retirees.
John launched his personal brand Investing Inward in 2022 and he hosts the Think.Live.Repeat. podcast. The brand and show are aimed at humanizing the process of success and helping early stage entrepreneurs level up in their business and mindsets.
Skills for success are only as strong as your weakest thought
โ John Skomski
Knowledge Nuggets and Take-Aways
1. Have the mindset that life is happening FOR you and NOT to you!
2. John helps to move you away from scarcity to an abundance mindset
3. John believes that a great coach or advisor will come from an authentic and empathetic place
4. Compounding is key in everything in life from your relationships, money, family etcโฆ.
5. Human nature loves extremes, but the truth generally lies in your authenticity
6. Work to find clarity in crisis
7. Change reactivity to proactivity
Level Up!
Fergie
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Music Courtesy of: fight by urmymuse (c) copyright 2018 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/urmymuse/58696 Ft: Stefan Kartenberg, Kara Square
Artwork courtesy of Dylan Allen
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Speech Transcript (very little editing so not exact)
Time To Shine Today podcast varsity squad. This is Scott Ferguson, and Iโve had to reschedule with my boy here a few times, basically on my behalf for things. And heโs just been so awesome with his patients. Heโs fantastic individual. Itโs funny, we were just off Mike talking and itโs like Iโm looking in the mirror of myself literally 20 years ago. Itโs my good friend, John Skomski He owns a financial planning practice where he specializes in the area of building sustainable distribution plants for high net worth retirees. He also has a fantastic passion project, which he is really leveling up, and itโs called Investing Inward, which weโre going to really dive into because thereโs a lot of mindset stuff. But, you know, Iโm a mindset conditioning coach and John is somebody that I mentally respect in this field. He has a podcast, which I canโt wait to rock the mic in. I had to reschedule on Felt Think Live Repeat, and itโs aimed at humanizing the process of success and helping early stage entrepreneurs level up their business and mindset. And Iโm so blessed to have this guy on. John, please introduce yourself to Time to Shine today podcast varsity squad. But first, whatโs your favorite color and why? Scott itโs awesome to be here. Iโm going to go with green. And, you know, not because money and green, because I loved green long before I was interested in the fields that I am. I donโt know. Itโs just it does something for me. You know, green is like rebirth, man. Itโs like things can just always grow with the color green. Luckily, Iโm here in South Florida, which I canโt wait to get you down here to rock some stages and speak. But everythingโs green. Can we do it in either January, February or March? Please do it. Letโs do it. Awesome, brother. Seriously, man. Thank you so much for coming on John. And can we get to the roots? I mean, youโre a young man, but youโre also seasoned your light years ahead of most people that are your age. But can we get you to the roots of where this passion really started to develop? Yeah, man. I appreciate that because a lot of times, itโs easy to feel like youโre behind. You know, and and you look and see, oh, you know, this personโs here and this person here. And itโs a game of comparison, but itโs nice to take a moment and kind of realize where I was and where I am today. So Iโve been in the financial services industry close to a decade now, and I have my own financial planning practice. As youโve mentioned, the Passion project that you referenced, investing inward was really just taking the concepts, the core concepts of investing and relating them to personal development. And the more I went down that rabbit hole, the more I realized the similarities are immense. And itโs just like, oh, but then thereโs compounding. Oh, wait, thereโs compounding in how we act and think and habits and direction and thereโs time and thereโs risk. Oh, thereโs that. With how we approach our life and our business. So I was hit with really just kind of up the side of the head. And initially, what was transpiring all this was in 2020. I kind of had a personal crisis where in the period of about a month, I thought I was going to lose my wife. My business and my health and quite possibly my mind. And thankfully, I lost none of those things. But that set me on this journey of realizing I was in my own bear market, if you will. I had not invested in myself in terms of how to think intentionally and react to situations appropriately. And so that began, really, the journey that Iโm still on now, but have made a lot of progress us along the way and then now have gotten to the point where I wanted to share what Iโve learned with others. Thus the podcast, think Live, Repeat speaking things. Thanks. Well, hey, weโre going to get you on there soon. So, yeah, this has been kind of just simmering for a while. What was it when it sounds like weโll call it the quadzilla, thereโs four things job, wife, family. What was the other one? Health. Yeah, weโll call it the Azilla. I like it. So what was it, man, that pushed you through that? Because what Iโm seeing and hearing, and correct me if Iโm wrong, but this seems like. Lot of clarity came out of this crisis. Oh, yeah, right. So what was it, man, that really pulled you through? 2019 was a great year. Everything was working out. It was good to be me. Business was fine. I had just a little money at that point to start buying some toys. This, that, the other thing. Kids were held. Everything was great. Vacations. And then 2020 hit. Started with my wife having an anaphylactic reaction to what we believe was tainted fish and then hospitalized a couple of days later for mixed medication. Because of that going, Iโm going to cut you off. Losing your wife means could have died. Yeah. Could have died. Not like she could have yeah. No, not like you or something. No, thank you for clarifying that. Yeah. Okay. Left me permanently, as in, like, died. So that was highly traumatic. A couple of kids, four and under at that point, Iโm just like, this isnโt going to I donโt know. I donโt know what Iโm going to do. A week later, I was hospitalized for what I thought was a heart attack. Turns out I was under an incredibly understandably amount of stress between that and the market, so I had a major, like, first ever out of nowhere panic attack. That I thought was just a heart attack. Arenโt they awesome? Yeah, theyโre great. So we chatted off Mike about Seinfeld, and I have this moment etched in my mind the day after I was hospitalized. Iโm sitting in the side room trying to watch episodes of Seinfeld. Just trying to calm down, but I canโt. My heart rate keeps going up. Itโs like when youโre sick and you have the chills. Like, Iโm just kind of, like, shaking. And Iโm thinking, this sucks. Life is over. Am I losing my mind? And then, of course, what markets did through COVID and watching my business kind of just like AUM and all that just drop and clients freaking out. So it was a lot in a short amount of time. And it highlighted the cracks in my thinking, the fact that I had not invested in myself. I kind of just skated because life was easy. So it was kind of like a cliche turn, like a wake up call and really start investing in yourself and not just money. Bro Iโm talking health mindset, all of that. What kind of exercises or protocol did you put in place to really take I mean, itโs only three years ago, bro. Youโre pretty Russian. Yeah, well, thank you. So obviously started some therapy. Initially it was more working with a therapist and kind of transitioned to coaching. So a lot of it was aligning myself with people who refer along in the journey in helping me kind of isolate what mindsets it was. So for me, what I eventually learned was it wasnโt like I was absolutely itโs funny, I was asked about this the other day. It wasnโt like I was completely fine. And then one day wasnโt it was that all of the cracks, all of the deficits in my life and my mindsets were manageable. I was able to deal with them. So there OCD various things would come up and I would just deal with them. Itโd be fine. And it got to the point where I just couldnโt. So for me, it was a lot of exposure. Therapy, the things that created the stress, basically, between me and my wife actually almost dying and me feeling like I was dying. I was convinced that weโre all just going to die. So at the drop of a hat, at a cold, and then COVID was there, so I was petrified of that. So Iโm just constantly in a state of my own mortality, waiting to die. Like, not wanting to go anywhere, not wanting to get in the car, not trying to manage a business, but not see anybody. So for me, it was slow little steps, doing things that put me a little bit past my comfort zone and then acknowledging that I was okay and then kind of doing the next step and then not going down. That looking for triggers that I didnโt notice and then cutting them off early on before I spiraled into something that went dark emotionally and then ultimately had physical implications. Yeah, man, because Iโve been there in my early 30s, where I stood up from my desk, I laid down on the floor, I was dying. It was a panic attack. I hear you, man. You know what Iโm saying? Thatโs right around the time. Because life gets real in your t years. Your sounds to me kind of correct me if Iโm wrong, but you took kind of an inch by inch. Itโs a cinch approach versus by the yard. Itโs hard, right? Youโre like, okay, dude, Iโm going to do this, this and that. Clarity started coming out of the crisis. What I love about it, man, is you were taking Proactive. You got your asking here. Ask. You got it. And you asked for the right people to therapy, and I love that. Was your support system there? I mean, I know your wife is kind of going through this stuff, but sheโs being as supportive as possible as well, right? Oh, she was huge. So she was honestly, as I reflected on this, I was kind of unfair. I was a little bit slow to the therapy and coaching, so it wasnโt all like the next day I signed up. Thereโs time in between here for the sake of the episode. But ultimately, she was who I ultimately and really to this day honestly relied on, but to the point of unreasonable and unfair to her in 2020. She was under such incredible stress. Less and emotional pressure for me because I think Iโm losing my mind. I am not able to be a functioning human at various points, which then is itโs incumbent on her to then manage the House, raise the kids, and also support me and then wondering, is he going to be okay? Is he actually going down this very dark rabbit hole? So I credit her with ultimately, I think sheโs the number one person who got me through this and was patient. But it also, in hindsight, wasnโt really fair of me to throw that on her all at once. It was heavy for her, for sure. That burden can get to you, man. And thatโs just fantastic. And blessings for you, man. I was lucky. So investing inward, youโre really working with mindset and knowing that weโve got to it. If we turn in, we actually start to realize what is there, because if we turn out, weโre getting opinions and whatnot. So tell me. This launch with investing inward. Yeah. So it really came with this idea of if I want to change my reactivity how I react to situations, I got to change my proactivity. I have to determine my input is determining my output. And if I donโt like how my output is showing up, then I got to change the input. And so Iโm kind of an analytical person, probably to the point of a lot of times I wrap myself around the axle. I have a very hard time living emotionally. I feel like emotions arenโt trusted. You canโt trust emotions. So I have to get super analytical. Problem with that? As you go so deep, there are some aspects of life that are just emotional, that are just supernatural, that are just kind of like energy and vibes in that. So thereโs no rhyme or reason or me. Exactly. No algorithm. No. Part of it was trial and error. But at the end of the day, I did realize if I want to live differently, I have to think in. And if I just think and let my feelings dictate how I think, I am not going to be happy with the output. Iโm going to be disappointed every time. And so thatโs where investing inward and the mantra thinking intentionally, living differently ultimately came out. It was born out of this struggle of, okay, how do I actually level up not just in business, but in my life? And it ultimately kind of grew into this idea of, okay, well, Iโm certainly not here yet, but some of the best coaches in sports and mindsets and business, they didnโt arrive either. Theyโre like, just a little bit further along. Journey baby. Exactly. So I said, Well, I want to keynote. I want to talk. I want to spread this message to as many people as possible. But I had no proof of concept. I wasnโt on social media. I had no interest in of that. So Iโm like, okay, well, that might be a little bit difficult to do. Be like, hey, I want to keynote your next event. Hereโs my portfolio. Nothing. So I said, well, letโs just start. Podcast and start there and talk to incredible people, which Iโve done yourself and many, many other people. It is mind blowing in the last ten months, who Iโve talked to, people I have no business talking to, Iโm talking to. Itโs crazy, right? And now Iโm sharing not only my story, Iโm learning from these people, bro, real time. And then Iโm delivering content that others can learn from as well and have been giving me feedback, saying they love it. So this has been like, the journey of it. And then hopefully, the next phase will then be starting to transition, actually on stage, but continuing the podcast. Because I love the media. Yeah, you have to. Iโm speaking like, the next six weeks and Iโm having I drop two to three episodes a week and interview people. I started mine December 19 of 19. Right. And it was a selfish to pick peopleโs brains like yourself or other people, and to level up my coaching and speaking game. This whole thing, which you mentioned COVID happened. I donโt know if anyoneโs ever heard. But then it was just like people were needing that information, and it just blew up. So what Iโm hearing a lot here is you started taking responsibility, okay, for everything in your life. So I want to know kind of what your definition of responsibility is. Thatโs a good question. Well, so part of it was realizing that nobody was going to change it it and nobody could change it. And I had people try to pick I mean, my wife, my parents, other acquaintances were like, just do these steps, do these steps. ABC, one, two, three, youโre golden. Sometimes I try them if I was open minded to it. Other times I was closed mind. Iโd just be like, Forget it. But at the end of the day, I realized taking responsibility, taking ownership was, first of all, owning the problem, owning the situation, and realizing that I had to create the solution. Now it might be and it ended up being other peopleโs solutions. That I kind of worked into something that worked with me. I wasnโt, like, sitting there like some guru, like, coming up with original content all already out there. Yeah. I just had to assimilate it in a way that worked with how I thought. Right. And what Iโve seen is the times that if Iโm lazy about it, if Iโm just like, all right, hereโs what so and so. Say Iโll just do that. Oh, it doesnโt work. Will it work for them? Well, because theyโre not you and youโre not them. Right. And so I had to learn to take other peopleโs insights and then assimilate them to how I think and feel and act. And that was, like that personal responsibility moment. Like, I put myself here. I own it now I need to own the solution. I donโt have to be original. I just have to make application. Love it. And then also being aware of when try to give advice and help to people, knowing that I shouldnโt be like, one, two, three, just do what I did, and itโll be fine, because no, itโs like, one, 2.33.4. Itโs like everyoneโs got their unique path. Itโs just the same direction, just different pathways. Thatโs great. You say that because Iโm a coach, not a consultant. You know what Iโm saying? Thatโs like I believe that everybody knows what they want, but they donโt know how to talk themselves into it. And thatโs why I help them. And that every problem or challenge they have that resides in them. The answer is there, too. The first step is responsibility. And this is my first coach, when I was 26 years old, said, listen, pergie the responsibility is nothing more than the ability to respond. Itโs rooted right in the word. Thatโs good. After everything that you freaking said, bro, thatโs exactly what we do. You werenโt reacting to it. Youโre responding to it. And thatโs beautiful, man. But letโs move a little bit into coaching. Are you coaching people now, or whatโs your story? Right at this moment? Yeah. So at this moment, not outside of my practice. So I do kind of view myself as a wealth coach in the sense of the clients I work with through my financial practice. Iโm certainly, like Vanguard, has done studies to show that the big. Part of the value that an advisor or planner brings to the table is not financial. Itโs behavioral. In fact, as a certified financial planner, the certified secret sauce yeah, the certified financial planner board actually changed the exam to include a model of behavioral finance because the two are inseparable now. I did have an early stint of coaching right out of college. I kind of pursued my bachelor his degree in a nontraditional way through well, it was nontraditional at that time, online learning. And I had a coach who helped build out the degree and ultimately kind of walked alongside me and kind of morphed as a life coach a little bit. I was hired by that company and did that for a few years right out of college, coaching students through earning their online degrees. Then I pivoted into financial planning, where I am now. So at the moment, not in a traditional sense, but I do see that as an offshoot. People need it because youโve walked a journey. Itโs funny that 80% of my coaching clients that become speaking as well. Are gotten to me by financial advisors. I make it a point here in South Florida. I mean, Iโm blessed to live in Palm Beach. Okay? Everybody kind of Tony Robbins, tom Brady. Whatever. Theyโre all down here. But the financial advisors here, they work with their money, but not their mindset. So I sit down with financial advisors and they say, Listen, man, I got a free hour power. Iโd love to talk to anybody thatโs thatโs struggling, that maybe theyโll invest more money with you. And theyโre like, Shit, dude, I got, like, three people for you. So thatโs where I really started building it, was through financial advisors. And youโre such in a prime condition. So have you seen the movie Back to the Future? Yes. Letโs get in that DeLorean with Marty McFly. Man, I know youโre a young man, but letโs go back to the 18 year old John Scofsky. What kind of downshug gets would you drop on him? Not so much to change anything because youโre learning from crisis and clarity and everything is really awesome. But what might you drop on him to maybe help? Them shorten the learning curve maybe a little bit and blast through maybe a little quicker. Itโs such a good question. So what I would probably say and I like that you said not change anything either, because you got to walk your journey. You got to go through it. What I would say is less of life happening to you and life happening for you, because at that early age, it was a lot of like, well, this is what happens, so it is what it is. Itโs kind of like, this is what it is. So you just kind of like, whatever shows up, thatโs what you take. And if it was good, great. And if it wasnโt, oh, that sucks. There was very little proactivity, both in thought, but even just in action, youโre just kind of like, okay, Iโm out of high school now. I got to get a degree. Okay, now I get a job. Now you get married. It was just kind of like I didnโt really start thinking. I feel like intentionally or originally. Probably two or three years ago. And I feel like if I had kind of taken a little bit more ownership early on and looked for ways for life to happen for me, rather than just being on the receiving end of everything or looking for the abundance versus scarcity, it has taken me so long to start to have an abundance mindset. I was like, scarcity. Think part of it is just the way we were raised, and that has hung on for years. Still does to a certain extent. Always will, bro. Yeah. My father, I love him. Best friend in the world. My day one. Right. He worked on the line at General Motors. Right. And thatโs what he is. And thatโs fine. I love him. But it was like at the time, donโt laugh. Like the Jordan Jeans or whatever. Wasnโt able to get them, unfortunately, which put a chip on my shoulder, and I became a vulture. Iโd pray on other peopleโs misfortunes. And then God, who I believe in, said, no, dude, Iโm going to stop you in your tracks and not crash the market. Effed up, right? So how about your dash, man? Hopefully, itโs way, way down the line, but how do you want your dash? Remember that little line in between your incarnation date and your expiration date, your life date and your death date? How does Scomsky want his dash? Remember jeez, these are some deep questions, man. Time to shine today, baby. Yeah. Authenticity and empathy. I want to be known as someone who is real. I hate fake. I try not to be fake. Probably in some cases, I end up being too real, saying too much. But it is what it is. And empathy. Iโd rather err on the side of giving somebody the benefit of the doubt sure. And relating to them, trying to put myself in their shoes and feel what theyโre feeling than just turning a cold older. If people look back and say, he was authentic and he was empathetic, as you get older, it all becomes into the delivery, like right now. Now because these gray things and when I come in and I speak, I get a lot of, like Iโm in the silverback time of my life. Yeah. You know what Iโm saying? How you deliver things at your age versus how I can deliver them, but stand authentic and empathetic, like you said, itโs key. Youโre killing it, dude. Iโm so proud of you, man. This is actually awesome. So, Johnny, what do you think people misunderstand the most about you? It what do they misunderstand about me? Well, I think so, going with that empathy vein here. So I try to see both sides of an issue, whether itโs an argument, whether itโs a political thing, whether itโs a religious thing, whether itโs just business related. I really try to maintain a certain level of open mindedness thinking, okay? Like, human nature loves extremes. We will always go one way or the other. Itโs just the way weโre wired. But the truth usually lies or the answer is somewhere in the middle or. Maybe itโs just different things to a different manifestation to different people. And so I think at times people look at that and just think thereโs a wishywashy. Like, oh, John doesnโt commit to anything. John to an idea like, what do you believe in? And stand and I had a super conservative Christian upbringing and so I think that kind of open mindedness. Me too. Yeah, Baptist and of fundamental baptist, baby all the way is a little bit hard for them to understand. And maybe part of it was like a response to my upbringing, like, realizing that not everything is absolutely black and white and itโs either right or wrong. And obviously theyโre right all the time. And so I think there is that perception of, like, oh, John, heโs just kind of wishy washy or whatever. And maybe in some cases it is, but in a lot of cases Iโm, like, struggling in my mind thinking, how is this person feeling? What would I do? Is there a different way of looking at this is it situational? And Iโm not talking about like, fundamentals and all that sort. Thing, but just kind of day to day life. So that might be one thing. I love it, man. Basically, you said human nature loves the extremes, right? But thereโs a harmony. I donโt believe in balance. I believe in harmony. A lot of people will say balance, but balance is zero, bro. You know what Iโm saying? And we hit that when we die. But in harmony, even, like, coaching clients, I like, in it to a jazz band or another metaphor that they might understand, like a football player or something like that, where you have different things like God, your spiritual, personal growth, family, community, work, money. And each one of those individually is like an instrument, right? So where your spiritual might be the guitar, the money might be the drums. The freaking living environment might be piano. But if any one of them is out of tune, you donโt have so much harmony. Iโm not saying you have to be Beethoven or Eddie Van Halen, anything like that, right? But if anythingโs out. So we really work with myself about getting them tuned in or, like, a football player might talk about linebackers and downline and whatnot. So I love I love that youโre really kind of rolling that way as well. And so, John, what what is your definition of a life well lived? A strong marriage. My wife and I are best friends, and we got married young, got married in her early 20s. Whatโs her name, by the way? Because natalie. Natalie. Natalie is awesome. So we got potential given age and health, hopefully maybe 60, 70 plus years of a life well lived. I want my kids to not just love me, but like me and ultimately want to hang out. And Iโve seen far too many times where kids kind of grow and they go their own ways and thereโs just not that bond. So I really hope that I honestly donโt think youโre going to have an issue there, John. Life is early. Donโt want to kid myself into thinking Iโve won at this early stage. Just being known for someone whoโs delivered value and helped people kind of just get over something. Ultimately, if I have a platform, and Iโm not going to lie, I hope itโs a platform that somebody knows my name somewhere that I donโt die in die in obscurity, but that they can say, hey, no, I heard something John said and it just the next step. Honestly, most of my epiphanies have been mini and theyโve come as a result of a conversation like this or a conversation off mic or a podcast that I consumed. And it was like a puzzle piece. Itโs just been steps. One puzzle piece next and then like five puzzle pieces later. Youโre like, wow, this is a direction. You mentioned it early in this podcast. US, man. Itโs called compounding. If I can be someoneโs next puzzle piece, thatโs beautiful for me. Yeah, thatโs awesome. And squad weโre. Going to take my good friend John through our Leveling up lightning round just as soon as we get back from thanking our sponsors and affiliates. Time to shine. Today, podcast versus squad. We are back. And John, you and I are going to meet up. Weโre going to rock stages. Weโre going to have some fun. Iโm going to be picking your brain for coaching clients that might be on the up like you are. And youโve already reached out to me a couple of times. Iโm happy to share what I have and weโll meet up and weโll probably talk 1520 minutes about a lot of these questions. But today, love it. You got 5 seconds with no explanations. No explanation. And they can all be answered. That might be my friend. You ready to rock? Letโs rock and roll. Letโs do it. Johnny, what is the best Leveling Up advice youโve ever received? Mindset of it. Intentionally? Yes. Share one of your personal habits that contributes to your success. US. Morning. Gratitude. Awesome. So if you see me kind of walking, maybe weโre at an event or maybe weโre just out somewhere. And Fergie, he looks like heโs in his doldrums. What? Book might you hand me? Going to go over the 5 seconds here. Iโm going to say Simon sinnick. Start with y. Thatโs nice. Good call. There your most commonly used emoji. When you text, laugh out loud. Yeah. Laughing face. Laughing face. Nicknames. Growing up, Julius and Johnny. Love it. It give me a hidden talent or a superpower that you have that no one knows about. Iโve played piano since I was a kid. Cool. Nice, man. Itโs not something I really build, but yeah. Chess, checkers are monopoly. Monopoly, right. Whatโs the headline for your life? Can authentic and empathetic? I donโt know. I donโt know. Yeah, I love it. So go to ice cream flavor mint chocolate chip. Love it thereโs. Sandwich called the Julius. Johnny, build that sandwich for me. Okay, so itโs got blue cheese, itโs got a buffalo chicken tenders. Itโs on sourdough baby. Itโs got pepper, Jack cheese, itโs got lettuce, tomato, maybe some pickles. Itโs fat, itโs juicy with some French fries. Boom gold heart attack on a plate. And I would be right there just chowing down with it. Love it, love it. So it favorite charity and organization. Like to give your time or money to so thatโs a good one. ATI anti human trafficking intelligence agency, so Iโm passionate about anti human trafficking. Are you familiar with Deanna Kemple? Iโm not. She has a label free podcast. She actually was human trafficking. Iโm going to put you in touch. Iโm actually going to her wedding tomorrow. Crazy beautiful. Yeah, thatโs awesome. Last question. We can elaborate on this, but what is the best decade of music? Sixty s. Seventy s. Eighty s or 90s? Or at your age? 2000. Bro, Iโll go. 80s. Really? Oh, I love 80s. Give me some journey. Really? Oh, yeah. Give me some europe. What was I just I was going through toto recently originals that sang africa. I know. I like the 2000s rock too. Like shine down and others like that. But ninety s I kind of just itโs eighty s I kind of skipped to is. So transformational meaning. Like the rap got introduced with DC boys, run DMC, sugar hill gang, stuff like that. You had the long hair, donโt care. Glam rock. You had the invasions from like duran duran, you two that kind of came here and then the thing is, man, itโs like you listen to music today, they use the hook 80s songs. Like, if they do anything by pit bull, youโll hear 80s, like the frame of the song. Iโve got one for you. Justin bieber is anyone? Yeah. Totoโs going home. Yes. Those two together, you think Justin the the beebs ripped them off, right? I mean, Iโm not saying that on the air, but listen to it. Boom. Yeah. Whatโs old is new, right? In 70s music, I love because I graduated 90s, so 80s was my jam, right? 70s obviously goes back to memories with my parents, but 70s, they told stories in their song. Yes, yes. Very folksy, very story driven. And I enjoy that. No, weโre like brothers from different mothers. Iโm old enough to be your kind of feeling. Like, that crazy. So, Johnny, how can we find your brother? Yeah. At John Scomsky on Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn and the thinkliver repeat podcast streaming on platforms everywhere. And also you have the Jskomsky.com, right? And websites Jscomsky.com of it. You have to check out his podcast. Itโs fantastic. And especially when Iโm on Iโm kidding. But no, any episode on there, heโs literally interviewed some big ballers that you will know. So hop over there after youโre done here and leave a review for his episode. But hop over there and check out. Think live, repeat. And John, do me one last solid and leave me with one last knowledge nugget we can take with us internalize and take action on. So you need your skills, your skill set. The skills for success are only as strong as your weakest thought. If you really want to level up, youโve got to level up the mindsets. That will enable you to fully utilize your skills. Otherwise youโre going to be constantly just spinning your wheels only halfway there. The mindset is what unlocks the skill set. Go after it. Yeah, squad. This is light years beyond his age, man. I really hear them break down through his crisis area. It is inch by inches of cinch. One thing I want to tell John also that I got from him is that he might be working with people he went to high school with that are. Just bawling out making more money, but itโs more or have better life monetarily or how the world sees it. But the trajectory that Johnโs on, itโs not even going to be about the money. Itโs about the service he provides. He reminded us that the compounding and how we act and think really actually matters. And again, he got clarity in crisis. But during that time, he got his asking gear and asked for the right question, the right people through therapy, coaching, and that unreasonable, unfair love story that Natalie has with them and how she really was. That puzzle piece. John wants to be for others. Yes. To put that up, he wants you to cut off the triggers from any anxiety that you have, or if you know, something comes up and you know that this is whatโs happened, try to work to cut off that triggers like John was talking about, I want you to change, reactivity to proactivity. And he wants you to take responsibility. And again, responsibility is the ability to respond. He reminds us to live different. And think intentionally. Remember that less of life is happening to you and itโs happening for you. Huge. With me also is what heโs talked about abundance over scarcity your creator, god, whoever you believe in wants you to have good things. A lot of people are like, OOH, money thatโs bad. But it comes from God. It comes from your creator. Get closer to that creator, really live in that abundance. He will be remembered as some of itโs authentic and empathetic. I mean, this kid Iโm sorry, John, but youโre a kid, okay? Youโre planning trees that youโre never going to sit in the shade of. Youโre going to be that puzzle piece that is going to carry on. This blew me away. Where he said, human nature loves extremes, but the truth usually lies in your authenticity, and that is never wrong. Life well lived at John is that strong family connection with his beautiful bride Natalie. He delivered value on the daily lastly, which another knowledge. Blew me away is the skills for success are only as strong as your weakest link. So where youโre weak, get your asking gear and get help with that. And thatโs what my friend John does. You know, he levels up his health, he levels up his wealth. Heโs humble, yet heโs hungry. Heโs earned his varsity letter here at time to shine today, brother. Absolutely love your guts. Thank you so much for coming on. Oh, man, itโs been awesome. Thanks for having me. Chat soon, Johnny.
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