Wake Up to Wealth

Champion Mentality with Branden Hudson

Episode Notes

In episode 7 of Wake Up to Wealth, Brandon Brittingham is joined by Branden Hudson, owner of SBY MMA and Fitness, recuiter, investor, local 2 time champion fighter, family man and the list goes on . They discuss the importance of mindset in achieving wealth, health and success and how these work in unison. Brandens no excuses and he's bringing that champion mentality to life and this podcast. They also touch on the power of words, overcoming obstacles, habits and being disciplined. This episode is jam packed with takeaways you won't want to miss. Their collaboration in training fighters and the importance of mindset in both the MMA world and real estate. Moreover, Brandon and Branden delve into the transformative power of overcoming adversities and how these experiences can make individuals special, ultimately impacting the world and having others live the life they're made to.

Tune in for an insightful conversation on changing the way you think about wealth and life.

Brandon Brittingham

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mailboxmoneyb/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brandon.brittingham.1/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brittingham/

Branden Hudson

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sbymmaandfitness/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Branden-Hudson-100009946059940/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/branden-hudson-a425326a/

WEBSITE

Brandon Brittingham: https://www.brandonsbrain.org/home


 

Episode Transcription

Intro/Outro00:03 - 00:13

This is Wake Up to Wealth, a podcast dedicated to helping you change the way you think about wealth. And now, here's your host, Brandon Brittingham.


 

Brandon Brittingham00:19 - 00:34

Hey, what's up, everybody? We are back with another episode of Wake Up to Wealth, and I am super, super excited. I got my brother, another Branden, in here with me. We've been on a podcast before, but I've not had the pleasure of having him on my show. What's up, man? How you doing?


 

Branden Hudson00:34 - 00:35

What's up, brother? It's great to be here.


 

Brandon Brittingham00:35 - 00:38

So if somebody doesn't know who you are, who are you?


 

Branden Hudson00:38 - 01:24

What do you do? I am Branden Hudson, not Brandon Brittingham, not to be confused. I own an MMA gym here in Salisbury, SBY MMA and Fitness. I also work with you quite often, the Director of Agent Success, where I work on recruiting your lovely real estate agents and also coaching them and helping them with their mindset. I'm an investor. I've ran a couple of promotions, done a couple of things, but primarily those are my two gigs. And you were a fighter too. Back in the day, you know, I was a two-time champion here locally. You know, fought for a Stellar Fights promotion, which is somebody we partnered up with later on. And yeah, we've done a series of things. Put a documentary on Amazon Prime and done a whole bunch of stuff.


 

Brandon Brittingham01:24 - 02:19

Yeah. So, one of the things that I like to talk about is, you know, wealth is a mindset. You know, it's not just financial. And here we like to say wake up to wealth because I think it's been taught about a lot of things wrong. Right. And I think one of the things that was that's intriguing is how me and you ended up working together was we were having a conversation and you were talking about how you train your fighters. It's like, man, this is this is so uniquely Like similar to sales, right? So, um, you know, like, so now you've been on both sides of it. So now you've trained fighters and now you've trained salespeople, like go into that mindset of where do you try to go with them from a mindset standpoint to make them win?


 

Branden Hudson02:20 - 04:40

Well, that's a great question. I think the first thing I want to put out there is that both dynamics, the individuals are extremely fragile. you can say a couple of words that could make or break both a fighter, a personal training client, and a real estate agent. So keeping that in mind. Salesperson in general. Salesperson in general, yes. Keeping that in mind, you have to know your audience. You can't be tone deaf to who you're dealing with, right? So you have stick kids, you have carrot kids. Some people are rewarded by the stick, some people are rewarded by the carrot. So that's a big thing right away. But the accountability and consistency side of it is going to be the first thing. You have to set that tone first, in my opinion. If I'm not the one setting that example and I'm not the one that's willing to be held accountable and be consistent, then it's all just flying on deaf ears at that point. You have people that aren't going to really trust what you're saying and believe in you as their leader and who's pushing to the success that they're looking for. But seeing it on both sides, it's interesting because so many people get distracted really quickly. They come in and a fighter wants to fight and win championships and make all this money. A salesperson wants to come in and make six figures, go on vacation and change the dynamic for their family. And then as they get into it, you know, and they start doing the boring, mundane, everyday things that you have to do to be successful, that's when they get distracted and they start thinking about, you know, everything but what they were there for. And it happens in so many different areas. It's not just with us. It's everything that you see. People tend to lose their attention really quickly. So first of all, keeping them focused on the end goal and why they were there. Keep reminding them as to what it was you signed up for and what we talked about in the beginning and what we said the blueprint was going to be. Revisiting that over and over again, knowing that you're dealing with fragile individuals, the individuals that can really break and fold over the wrong message on the wrong day. And then ultimately, it's having those standards as a coach and as a company, as a culture, to say, OK, we understand you might be fragile. You might be distracted. We understand you might be going through it. But this is our standard. This is what we're doing. And it's non-negotiable. So what are we doing to keep that commitment, that handshake, so to speak?


 

Brandon Brittingham04:40 - 06:18

Yeah. One of the things you think I think you said, which I think is power is words are powerful. And I remember one of the first mentors that I that I ever had that coached me still coaches me to this day. I remember one of the first conversations I had with him is he said that. We as human beings tend to hold on to positive things and positive experiences a lot less than we hold on to a negative experience, right? So one negative experience or something that someone says to you, you can hold on to it versus an amazing positive experience. And, you know, one of the things that he taught me very early was, you know, to be very, very successful at anything, you're able to take that negative adversity and turn it into a positive, right? Because, you know, you think childhood trauma spills into an adult, it spills into mental health, it's, you know, whatever. But if you, it's funny, a lot of people that I've been around, you know, the childhood trauma or some major traumatic event in their life was like the springboard that fueled them to be like super successful. Do you know what I mean? Like it was like, that was like the switch. Like, um, and I'm sure you've seen that in, in the ring of like, you know, a major loss or a major knockout, like for the right person, although that may be devastating, but that also, right, that changes, that changed them to progress to whatever they become.


 

Branden Hudson06:18 - 08:20

Yeah, absolutely. One of our star pupils. He was on a little run. He had not really faced a defeat. He faced some adversity, but he didn't really face that loss in front of your family and friends. He went in a little too cocky, a little too ahead of himself. He was on some good momentum and got TKO'd. You know, he has a black eye, busted up, you know, he's tore up on a Saturday night. He was there training Monday morning, you know, where most guys or a lot of guys, excuse me, they won't even show up for a week or two weeks and that'll give them their excuse to lick their wounds and not show up. So you have both of those types of people, you know what I mean? I think it's in most of us. I think it's really in most of us where if you have the right person in your ear and the right people around you, the support system, you'll be able to bring that out of that person when they face those types of adversities and those types of losses. I'm also a hopeless romantic, so sometimes I look more into people than I should, but I sleep good at night, so I'm going to live with that. But I think that as long as you have the right people saying and doing the right things around that person, it'll motivate them. It'll push them to do more bigger and better things. And that's exactly what it did for this kid. He showed up Monday morning. He had the black eye. He showed everybody the loss and was there. And then completely just went on a complete rampage as far as his training, his eating, his... We're talking about an amateur kickboxer working his way to make his MMA debut. you know, cause we have stages the way we do things, you know, he just was diligent and that day became, became a professional. You know, he decided that that's the day I'm going to take this a little more serious. You know, I might've thought I was doing the right thing, but now here we're knocked down and humbled and, and now he's, you know, he's two time champ, three time champion, excuse me. So yeah, it does make the difference when people can use those negative, negative experiences or, or, you know, those childhood traumas and utilize them as fuel, you know, to, to push forward and become successful. Yeah.


 

Brandon Brittingham08:21 - 08:46

Yeah. So let me ask you another thing, because I just, I, what fascinates me is the mindset of successful people, right? It's just, it's so powerful. Like what, what's it like being in the ring? Like, and what's it like, what's it like being in the ring when you're getting your ass kicked and you know, that you're, you're sitting in the corner and you know, the bell's getting ready to go, go off. You got to get in there for another round. Like just walk us through that. What goes through your mind? What is that like?


 

Branden Hudson08:48 - 12:34

panic, you know, you start to be panic, you start to panic in those situations where nothing's going your way. You're trying everything you can to prevail. You know, you're trying to rely on the training, the skill sets, everything that you thought was going to go according to plan into that fight that night. And then everything goes to shit, right? And on top of that, you're, you know, getting the shit beat out of you. So it's a lot of panic there. And then, you know, You're either going to sit back and you're going to fall back on your preparation and get yourself together and go back to the basics and fundamentals that I preach all the time. You know, or you're going to fall victim to your thoughts and to the panic and you're going to you're going to blow it, you know, and you may not necessarily win. you know, if you go back to the basics and go back to the fundamentals, but you know, there's two types of losses in my book. There's the giving up loss and there's just getting beat loss. You know, I can, I can totally take the getting beat. You know, I can totally take victim of circumstance. I can totally accept, you know, the guy was better than me. I can totally accept that I just didn't perform. I cannot accept that I gave up. I cannot accept that I fell victim to the chatter in the back of our minds. Yeah. And I think, you know, when you're in those situations, you know what I mean? And, you know, again, the preparation and leading up to where you got, you know, how you got there. Dude, that's the game changer. I've been in those situations where, you know, I've wanted, didn't want to come off the stool. I didn't want out and I was winning. And, you know, you just quickly catch, I quickly caught myself. negotiating with a terrorist, so to speak. We say that in the gym all the time. You know, when you're starting to get tired or you're starting to give up, you're negotiating with that coward in your mind, right? Now, this is not just the ring. This is life too. We will negotiate with that coward or that terrorist in our mind to start believing that shit that we think is really not true. You are a conditioned fighter. You have prepared for this. Your cardio, your conditioning, your skillset, all of that is the reason why you're here today. So I think once you stop and catch yourself, with the negotiation, that's when the preparation and that's what the mindset shifts. This is not and you get up off the stool and you go and you fight and you never know when right when you're about to quit. Right. You never know. What that opponent or the adversity you're facing when they're about to quit. Right. You know what I mean? So like I could you know, I had a fight where I was I was in that same situation is my last title fight and I was there. Yeah. Yeah. And we were losing that fight. I was losing two rounds. Third round, turn it around. I went on a complete 60 unanswered shots mounting the guy and giving it to him. I did not want to get off that stool. I didn't want him to get off the stool. Then I caught myself and I stood up and I was like, no. You tapped him, didn't you? I did. It was really quick into the fourth round and I tapped him and finished him. Great guy, hats off to him, nothing against his skill. I mean, I was there, that was a dogfight. That was a dogfight. Yeah. And he was a former Marine. Yeah, he wasn't fucking around. No. But what happened was, that barrage of abuse he took from that third round, going into that fourth round, we ended up right away in the same position, and it was three punches and he gave up his neck. Yeah. You know, because he didn't want to go through that again. Yeah. Now, had I believed my own bullshit and had I start letting those thoughts when it really got tough, you know, you've heard it in a lot of books when you're three feet away from gold or when you're just shy of the finish line. Had I believed that the situation could have turned differently, you know, and we wouldn't have been talking here right now. But, you know. I didn't negotiate with those terrorists. I shut that noise out. I relied on my training, my coaching, my support system, my preparation. And ultimately, he was just three punches away from quitting.


 

Brandon Brittingham12:34 - 12:48

So translate that into sales in the real world. When you see a salesperson off, you know, how do you get them, how do you try to move them around that same obstacle that you went through?


 

Branden Hudson12:48 - 14:32

Well, everybody thinks they're so special and everybody thinks they have a different story, right? We all think that because it's our story, it's just so much different than anybody else's. And I say this a lot, you know, if you get a little quirky about it, dude, we're just a grain of sand on a beach in comparison to the universe and to the world and all that. You're not special. You know what I mean? Now the choices and the decisions and the adversities you overcome can make you special and can help you change with the butterfly effect and the ripple effect of the world, right? And you don't know who's got the potential to change the world. You know what I mean? Like a lot of our greatest leaders ever, we didn't know they were going to be that. They just did what they were supposed to do and they shut the noise down and the distractions and they went on. So I think sometimes you have to put people, you have to bring people back down to earth. Like, dude, your problems are just an isolated problem. What makes you so special to think that you get to just level up with that adversity? You know, what makes you so special that you think that you don't get to go through, you don't have to go through all the challenges and the things that we've had to go through that have gotten to these next levels. And you know, that's just like anybody else. You've taught me this. You know, when you get to that next level, you're at the bottom again. You're at the bottom of that next level. So you've got to climb. Every time you get in a bigger room. A hundred percent. You know what I mean? So if you get a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, now you're at the bottom of the blue belts. You know what I mean? So, you know, I think when you're talking to salespeople or talking to business people and, you know, they're in those moments of, you know, my bills are due, I'm running out of money, you know, I'm trying to cover payroll, you know, I don't know about this. Everything's falling to shit, you know. You have to talk them off the ledge like dude, you're just caught up in the soldiers that that situation should happen hundreds of times You know, you should go through different situations thousands of times.


 

Brandon Brittingham14:32 - 15:22

Well, you know, you know, it's what you said. Um, what you said earlier is You know you prepare and you train and you get ready for a fight and then the shit goes sideways, right? It's like it's like as a business owner as an entrepreneur If everything went the way that you would, you know, you wanted it to go, everybody that started out as an entrepreneur would be successful. You know, what defines a lot of times an entrepreneur for being successful versus one that's not is the one that stays successful is the one that can get punched in their face repeatedly. and just figure out a way around it because shit's going to go sideways. You know what I mean? It's like it just is. I mean, that's just part of what it is. And relating it to the fight, you know, the fight game, it's you want to get it, you know, you feel like you don't want to get off the stool, but you get your ass up and you finish the fight. You know what I mean?


 

Branden Hudson15:22 - 16:57

Yeah, I mean, so many business owners just give up and they stop. And they're like, you know, I think, I don't know who told me this, but you know, it takes about 10 years before you're at expert level in anything. No doubt. Mastery level, yeah. Mastery's at 20, in my opinion. There's a big difference between a real estate agent that's been doing it for, or a salesperson doing something for 10 years, opposed to somebody that's been doing it for 20. I think you're a prime example of that. The martial arts world, you know what I mean? There's a big difference between a 10-year black belt versus a 20-year black belt. But so many people and so many business owners and entrepreneurs, they hit those adversities and a few things happen. They're so stuck on the way things should be done. They don't want to pivot and they don't want to go out and put themselves in uncomfortable rooms where they're no longer the big fish in a little pond. and they don't want to reinvest in themselves and spend the money on masterminds and on education or seminars and stuff like that. So what happens is they stay stuck in this is how it should be because it's been done for the past 10 years or 15 years or two years or however many years. And that's a self-sabotage of itself. Or they don't stick it out long enough to understand the business. You know what I mean? I've seen so many people that have gotten into these businesses, and just in the gym world, the martial arts world, they stick it out for about two years, four years, five years. Dude, I've been doing this for 13 years. I still consider myself a veteran.


 

Brandon Brittingham16:57 - 17:42

Well, it's like someone that, you know this, because you're not just the martial arts on the personal training side, You know, and I, you know, I see it from going to the gym, you know, brain and I go to the same gym. He actually introduced me to my personal trainer. And, you know, you will see somebody come in there. You know, they got their gym clothes, they got their bag, they got their water. I mean, they're fired up. They're in there three days. Then they disappear. And then it's, you know, I don't have time for the gym or it was too it was too tough or. You know, I've heard this shit a few times. They're like, well, I went to the gym. I didn't see any results. It's like, well, how long did you go? Well, 30 days. Yeah. It's like, well, shit. I mean, come on. Or what about what are you going to get progress in anything in 30 days?


 

Branden Hudson17:42 - 18:58

What about the guys and gals that go to the gym for two hours? And they'll tell you, I worked out for two hours. No, you did not. None of us are working out for two hours, first of all. You went to the gym, stopped at the snack bar, got talked a little bit, then you went to the bathroom. You're on your phone. Every time somebody walks around, you're having a conversation. You probably worked out for a solid 30 minutes of those two hours. And if you're like us, I need my two hours. I got way more shit to do than just sit around at the gym. if you condense all the time that you were bullshitting around to the time you're working out, and then you multiply that with how many times you went into the gym per week, maybe you'll get those results in 30 days. Something, not the ones you're looking at online, but maybe you'll get what you're looking for. But so many people, they go in here and they fool themselves. You told me this a long time ago, there's a lot of agents out here that are busy, but they're not productive. You know what I mean? Sales people in general. Yeah, sales people in general. Yeah, there's a lot of people out here that just because they're, moving and doing things and whatever it is they want to define as busy, that doesn't mean you're productive. So I'd much rather be productive and efficient with my time than just busy all the time and not make any money. And I think so many people watching this and hearing this will agree. Yeah, 100%.


 

Brandon Brittingham18:59 - 19:37

Yeah. And I mean, one of the things of, you know, I think wealth is health. And, you know, I can't in any episode I mentioned this, but, you know, a lot of shit in your life can be solved by getting up, going to the fucking gym, eating clean, drinking water, you know, stay away from alcohol, you know, in mass consumptions. Me, you guys know. Well, you know, a lot of people know me. No, I don't drink at all. But I mean, God, I mean, just going to the gym, eating clean, drinking water can just change your perspective and your life around everything. I mean, you want to care for fucking, you know, being depressed, not feeling good, not having energy, just go to the fucking gym.


 

Branden Hudson19:38 - 19:53

Well, I love that brother, because especially the people that may not know this about you, you know, when I started with or, you know, when we linked up about three years ago, you know what I mean? You know, you weren't in the best shape. Yeah. And that was because of your autoimmune. And that was because you were told you couldn't work out.


 

Brandon Brittingham19:53 - 20:42

So I I've said this before, but if you're listening to this, And you're like, well, I don't want to work out, you know, whatever, whatever excuse it is. I've been told more than one time that a single workout could kill me. Going to the gym one time, working out, I could die. Do you know what I mean? But at the same time, I was like, if I, if I can't physically work out the rest of my life, I'm going to die. Like my health is going to deteriorate. My mental health is going to deteriorate. I can't be a hundred percent myself. So, um, you know, this is not a conversation for today, but I took my health and wellness and did my own research and figured out how to get around it and, you know, took the risk. And thankfully it worked out. Um, I go to the gym 5-6 times a week now.


 

Branden Hudson20:42 - 20:44

Sleep better, think better, feel better.


 

Brandon Brittingham20:56 - 21:04

your mind controls your body. If your body feels great, your mind's going to feel better and vice versa. I mean, it's just, it goes hand in hand, all of it.


 

Branden Hudson21:04 - 22:00

And people look at me a lot and all the time and they think that I'm a gym rat. Yeah. No, let me explain something to whoever's listening. Right. You don't like going to the gym. I hate it. I got into MMA. I don't need, I don't, I don't enjoy working out. I hate it. I got into MMA because that was the only part of the gym and only sport that would keep my attention for the long span. I had to own a fucking gym to make me go there every day, yes. So whatever excuse you wanna make, there's always a way around it and there's always an option to be able to make it happen. And you're 100% right, when you take your health and your wellness serious, I mean, and I'm not bashing anybody who does it, I'm not saying just because you don't have six-pack abs and huge muscles that, no, no, no, just moving your body and staying consistent with the mental and the discipline side, and the commitment side. If you can't take yourself serious, how are you going to take your business serious? How are you going to take your spouse serious? How are you going to take the other things that everybody wants to hear serious?


 

Brandon Brittingham22:00 - 22:22

Well, and here's the other thing about going to the gym that I think people don't get. Well, a couple of things, right? I know a lot of people that did very well, were super successful, made a shit ton of money, and then later in their life, They were spending all of it to get their health back because they abused their body and their mind through this climb, right? To me, that's not wealthy.


 

Branden Hudson22:22 - 22:27

They call that trading your health for your wealth and then later on in your life trading your wealth for your health.


 

Brandon Brittingham22:27 - 24:27

Right. And so, you know, I've seen that. But here's the other thing that the gym will do that you don't get because I believe how you do one thing is how you do everything. So. I don't particularly like going to the gym. I don't particularly like working out. I like the byproduct of it. But being disciplined of, I'll go to the gym five or six days a week, typically the same time every week, it forces me to eat clean. It forces me to eat better. It forces me to go to bed early. It forces me to get up early. And it forces me to be on a schedule of going to the gym. So what that does is it forces you to do something hard. And look, if you're listening to this, going to the gym five or six days a week for an hour with the busy schedules that all of us have, right, not just me, whatever you do, it's fucking difficult. Do you know what I mean? And one of the most difficult things for any human being to do is be consistent around any one activity. What it will do in subconsciously in your brain is it will teach you how to do something hard and be consistent at it, which then will make other shit that you need to do that are hard that you need to be consistent at easier. And then guess what? You'll feel better because you're getting the hormone release. You're, you're moving your body around your, and then, you know, the other thing too is all of us have an ego. Right, you know, it's not it's it's a pretty cool feeling when like for me, especially because where i've dealt with my health Shit is like when I go places and like people are like dude, you look really healthy Like holy shit, man. You look good. Like what are you doing? Like, what the fuck are you eating? like um, you know, that's that's a that's a great compliment for people to say, versus like people used to say, do you look like you work too much? Do you know what I mean? Now they're like, fuck, I can tell you're going to the gym. You look good. You look healthy. And then, um, that, that affects, you know, the other thing too, is what it does gives you confidence.


 

Branden Hudson24:27 - 26:07

Oh, yeah. I mean, anybody that you know, I'm not a big cocky ego guy when it comes to like, look at me. But if anybody thinks that vanity doesn't play a place in our lives, you know what I mean? We wouldn't be making the money we make. We wouldn't be driving the cars. We wouldn't do all that. So, you know, and gyms wouldn't have mirrors, you know what I mean? So, you know, there's a level of vanity and, you know, when they got a saying in the fight game, when you look good, you fight good. You know what I mean? So if you associate that with business, you know what I mean? There's a reason why some of the most top performers and top people that are successful have their health in shape. You know, they take that as a priority. And it just, I think it's just another layer of, a self-pride thing where, you know what I mean? I want to look good. I want to be clean. And I think that Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is a prime example of that. I couldn't do the old weights, that wasn't my thing. You get into a combat sport where you're doing something like Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, it'll take you and humble you quickly. And it'll keep you in a gracious mindset where you're grateful for so much. On top of, the thing about Jiu-Jitsu and other things, and whatever your thing is, is your thing, but the thing about Jiu-Jitsu that I've noticed is it helps you with problem solving skills too, outside of the gym. Because you're really looking at a human Rubik's cube versus another human Rubik's cube, trying to figure it all out with different combinations. You translate that into your business world. Not only are you getting the endorphin release, not only are you getting the mono-e-mono ego release, not only are you getting exercise and so forth, you're also figuring out the puzzle, physically being humbled and winning at the same time. I mean, that sounds like business 101. You know what I mean? 100%.


 

Brandon Brittingham26:09 - 27:00

So, um, before we go, I ask everybody this question for some money that's out there listening, right? So this is what I believe. I believe we've been taught about a lot of shit the wrong way. Like, you know, we've been put into the matrix. Um, you're supposed to go to college and look, there's nothing wrong with any of this shit, but you're supposed to go to college, you're supposed to get a nine to five, you're supposed to save your money. You know, don't invest your money. You know, just there's kind of these the stereotypes in life that that are put on most people and anything that I've ever done that I've been wildly successful at. I broke a stereotype. Right. And so that's why we call the show Wake Up to Wealth. So for you, for everybody who's out there listening, what does waking up to wealth mean to you? And it doesn't have to be money. It's just what is your version of that?


 

Branden Hudson27:01 - 27:55

just burning the boats and being all in and everything I do, you know, it's, you know, I was not always like that, you know what I mean? And I mean, I guess there was a hint of it there, but until I really had my back against the wall and it was time to make a change, you know, just finding out that, you know, staying committed to whatever it is that I'm doing and just going all in no matter what and whatever, whatever outcome is yielded from that, you know what I mean? That was meant for whatever's come to next. So if I failed at something, I needed all of those lessons and all of those things leading up to what I was about to do next, you know what I mean? And those doors and opportunities that opened up throughout that failure or throughout that triumph led me to what I needed to be prepared for coming up. But just going all in, man, I see so many people, they're committed for six months or committed for a year, maybe two years tops. And they just tap out, man.


 

Brandon Brittingham27:55 - 28:02

But you're being generous. Two years, that's generous. Most human beings can't commit to shit for more than six months.


 

Branden Hudson28:02 - 28:39

I'm trying to get the gym people credit. I'm trying to get them love, but it's way less. It's not even a year. It's roughly about a year where people tap out and they start chasing those shiny objects. you know, put five years in, put 10 years in. I mean, do you remember when you were 20 or what, 35? Right? Do you remember when you were 30? How about 25? All right. So these are just five-year increments that we can remember very vividly that shit went by fast. And in the grand scheme of things, five years was not that big of a deal. So why not commit to something for five years? I think after about five years, you're gonna know if this is for you or this isn't for you.


 

Brandon Brittingham28:39 - 28:44

Yeah, it's we overestimate what we can do in five but we underestimate what we can do in 10.


 

Branden Hudson28:44 - 28:46

One of my favorite sayings.


 

Brandon Brittingham28:46 - 29:00

And if you know people do not understand that 10 years of commitment in any area of your life Unless you're a complete fucking dipshit, you're going to be fucking super successful and figure shit out.


 

Branden Hudson29:00 - 29:17

Yeah, no doubt. We got a saying in the gym. It's not about who's the best. It's about who's left, you know, and that's just what it is, man. So, yeah, burn them fucking boats, man. Go on and, you know, stop making excuses as to why. You're not able to live the life that you want that that's that's me every day waking up to wealth and saying this is what I'm doing today. This is where we're at.


 

Brandon Brittingham29:17 - 29:29

Awesome, man. Well, brother, I appreciate you coming on the show. You dropped all kinds of Jim, all kinds of gems. And I know our listeners are going to like this one. So thank you for for getting on here with us today.


 


 

Branden Hudson29:29 - 29:34

Well, thank you for having me. And do you know, I'm a big fan. I love that. Love everything you do, brother. So I appreciate everything you're doing.


 

Intro/Outro29:40 - 29:59

Thanks so much for tuning into this episode of wake up to wealth. We sure do appreciate it. If you haven't done so already, make sure you're subscribed to the show, wherever you consume podcast. This way we'll get updates as new episodes become available. And if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review on Apple podcast and tell your friends about the show. It is how new people find us until next time.