Alex Hormozi
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That's just my two cents.
And that comes for everything, whether it's to have a meeting or give a presentation or write an email or do a book.
Like if you feel nervous before you release it, then you probably didn't work on it enough.
And I think the reality is that most people to get not anxious about whatever they're doing, you have to do it so many times that by the last time you're doing it, you're bored of it.
Like you don't even want to see the thing again when you're sick of it.
is the point where you'll have no adrenal response to the stimulus because you've seen it so many times.
You could do it in your sleep because you hate it at this point.
And if we think of confidence as the percentage likelihood of what we think is going to happen will happen as a predictive metric,
then in order to be more confident, we want to have more proof that what we think will happen will happen.
And so the easiest way to do that is to do it a lot of times.
And so it would be reasonable to say that you're confident that it will go the way you want because it has gone the way you've wanted.
The leading indicator of a successful person is the ability to act without anything happening.
And when you continue down that path, it happens slower than you expect and then faster than you can imagine.
And I think that's the part that everyone misses is they expect the faster than they can imagine and they imagine really big.
And so then their expectations are really big, really fast, but they take the intensity and they don't apply it to a timeline that's appropriate.
The path of personal development is...
befriending uncertainty.
You always have to be the person who roots for you before everyone else does.
And it's usually a single clap in the auditorium for a very long period of time.
It is a slow clap that's just you rooting for you.