Christopher: What’s up freedom fast track? I’m here with a new friend but someone that I should have connected with before this. His name is Peter Scott. He’s the author of The Fearless Mindset and the creator of the Fearless Life Academy. He helps entrepreneurs conquer fear and to get out there. Dude, I’m so excited to have you here and welcome to the show.
Peter: Chris, thank you, brother. I really am excited to connect with you more on this and share a message that’s going to be valuable to your listeners.
Christopher: We’re going to talk about a lot of things out there listening to this. If you’re in your car, make sure that you get some time to watch this right to the end, but here’s where I think we’re going to go, is I think that if you’re listening to this, it’s for a reason, and that’s that you’re playing small. The only reason that we play small is that there’s some sort of fear that stops us so that’s go right into that. What is it about fear and why do entrepreneurs have so much fear about going to the next level?
Peter: I love it, okay. Number one, there may be a listener who thinks that they don’t have fear and so I want to overcome that fallacy right now because I always say there’s three types of people that are affected by fear, Chris. One is the person who knows they have fear and they’re committed to overcoming it. The second person is a person that knows that they have fear but they’re unwilling to do anything about it and the third is maybe the listener who thinks that they don’t have any fear and has no idea that’s what’s slowing them down. Because you and I know information strategy is not the problem today. We have at our fingertips unlimited access to all the strategies of how to clarify our message, to build a business, to attract clients, all those things. What stops the majority of entrepreneurs are fears and what those fears are, these irrational fears, these fears that are keeping us from living. The fear of failure, the fear of public speaking, the fear of rejection. Those are the things and the crazy thing is this. Fear camouflages and transforms at different levels that you reach in your business and in your life.
So when you’re starting out, maybe you’re afraid of losing your family’s approval, so you’re afraid to actually go out there and leave that six-figure job that you have to launch your business. Then you overcome that and then you may be afraid of losing … Maybe you’ve got a fear of success because you’ve started to taste a little bit of success and now you’re overwhelmed. You’re spread too thin. You’re exhausted. So there’s so many different ways that we could talk about this.
Christopher: There is a lot. There is a lot and so here’s what I see and what I sense. People get started, they make a little bit of money and they’re doing good and they get this first identity and I call this first identity in business the hustler and you kind of have to hustle to get things moving but I see people get stuck. It’s like they’re attached to this way of being and they’re not ready to actually shift and risk it again. I think that the biggest fear is when you’ve actually got some money, you’ve actually got things going and you need to make the next shift. I’m going to talk about a lot of things but let’s get the intro, man. Let’s dive deep. What brought you into a position where you’re now talking so much about The Fearless Mindset and the Fearless Life Academy? Where did you start and what’s your journey, man?
Peter: Yeah so the reason this is my message, Chris, is because my entire life has been consumed by fear. I’ll start and I’ll tell this very quickly. When I was 10 years old I had to sit down in a courtroom with my grandparents, an attorney and my mom and I sit across from my mom, look into her eyes and tell her that I no longer felt safe living with her because of her alcoholism. I’m 10 years old, man. As a 10 year old, I had no idea how that would impact me but what it did is it planted this [inaudible 00:04:04] belief and that belief is telling the truth meant losing love. By me telling my mom the truth, I lost her love and so I became this inauthentic version of myself that everyone loved but it wasn’t really me. Fast forward to graduating college, I’m starting a career in investment banking, making great money but I’m miserable. I hate what I’m doing but I’m afraid to leave it because my family approves of it.
And then another devastating event happened. My father suddenly passed away. He’s 60 years old, I’m 25 and he says to me on his deathbed that … I asked him why he chose to do what he did to his life because what he did is he literally gave up on life and drank himself to death and he said because he was afraid, he was afraid of not living up to his parents’ expectations. So when that happened, I’m 25 years old, I made the commitment to never let myself, a loved one or anyone I come in contact with be controlled by fear. I read books, I attended courses, I hired mentors and that’s what led me on a journey to create this movement that I’m leading now.
Christopher: Wow. Who do you work with the most at the moment?
Peter: All business owners. All business owners that have already crossed that seven-figure mark that are at that stage where the thing that’s limiting them is not lack of strategy, it’s lack of mindset and peak performance. They’re fully consumed in their business, they’re neglecting their health as a result, they’re neglecting their relationships and shifts in mindset is what they’re needing to get to that next level.
Christopher: It’s massive, man, and I love when people take their story and are so clearly able to use it to benefit others. Have you, I’m sure you have, come across The Five Regrets of the Dying?
Peter: I have, yes, absolutely.
Christopher: I was just struck by that and I quickly just pulled it up here and so listeners … There was a book, it was by an Australian nurse and … The Five Regrets of the Dying and I love this because I think this is going to be such a great episode. The first one is I wish I had courage to live true to myself, not the life others expected me. Next is I wish I hadn’t worked so hard. The next regret is I wish I had the courage to express my feelings and next is I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends and the fifth is that I wish I had let myself be happier. And it seems to me that all of those come back to fear, Peter, and I think-
Peter: They all do. They all do. That’s the biggest thing is … We as committed entrepreneurs and the person listening to this, we are so passionate about what we do. It’s our purpose in life, it’s our mission, right? And it’s funny because we had every intention to do this, not only to impact humanity but to fund our own freedom. I think that’s the purpose of business. Purpose of a business is to fund your freedom. My own personal purpose is separate from my business’ purpose. My personal purpose is to help people transform their relationship with fear but the purpose of my business is to fund that freedom, that’s my highest value. Now on my journey, I absolutely was in that stage at a hustler and I’m just getting out of that now. Working so hard, trying to push, trying to force, challenged of letting go of control. That’s a big fear that I’m facing now is learning to let go of control and delegating, trust a team around me and that’s the only thing … What I know is that, what got me here is not what’s going to get me there and same thing for the listener.
Christopher: Yes and so it’s always the same case as well, Peter, and you’ll get that one, then you’ll delegate and then the next fear will come [inaudible 00:07:21] what do I do with all this money? And that’s an interesting fear and I remember the journey. The first time was, “well, how the hell do I get out of this job and what if I don’t make the money? Oh wow, I’ve made this money, okay, how do I actually go bigger? Holy crap, I have to now trust other people. Okay, so now I have to figure out how to trust other people. Wow, now I’m trusting other people but now I’m making the money, now [inaudible 00:07:40], now I’m in the books, now I’m in the movies, I’ve got all this money. Well, what the heck do I do with it? And what if I lose it?” And it’s funny because fear does drive us as well so there are some benefits of it. But if someone’s out there listening, how do they go about actually reducing and removing the fear because some of it’s good, right?
Peter: Yes. Absolutely. There’s good fear and there’s bad fear. A mentor of mine, Jesse Elder, once said, “rational fears keep you alive, irrational fears keep you from living,” so I’m not telling you to have no fear. When I have a fearless brand, that’s my brand, I’m not suggesting being without fear. I don’t think that’s possible. I’m suggesting having the courage to do the thing that scares you that’s irrational. Number one, it’s really uncovering what is that specific irrational fear? Is it fear of rejection? Is it fear of failure? Is it fear of charging what you’re worth? A lot of aspiring or, let’s say, early stage entrepreneurs don’t have that certainty and that confidence yet to raise their rates to what they’re really worth and so there’s fears there.
One is define what that is. The second is one quick strategy that comes from my book, The Fearless Mindset, is to have a sentence stem and go through this mental exercise where you literally write down, “if I was no longer afraid of that irrational fear, if I was no longer afraid of failing, I would … .” You would what? What would you do? Who would you be? If you were no longer afraid of failing, if you were no longer afraid of public speaking or of rejection or whatever that is and then at the end of the day, very simple, is you got to do the thing that scares you. There’s no way around it, there’s no … There’s been thousands of people that have talked on the subject of fear and at the end of the day is there’s only so much pumping up you can do. You’ve got to do that thing and then know that on the other side is where that confidence and that courage is. A lot of people think they need to be courageous or be confident first. No, confidence is a result from doing the thing that scares you. It’s not a requirement.
Christopher: I love it, brother. I love the three steps. Really define what it is, if I was no longer, how would I be, how would I act and then do it. Let me add this piece for the listener as well. Something that’s really helped me is this is what’s the worst that could happen? Do you know what I love? This might sound stupid and you’re the fearless mind coach here so you can tell me whether this is good or bad advice. For me, I love looking at it from a worst case perspective and this might sound stupid-
Peter: [crosstalk 00:10:05] I love it, keep going.
Christopher: Really?
Peter: Yes, yes. Keep going.
Christopher: Okay. So in dating, if I see, when I was single, see a beautiful girl I’m like, “what’s the worst thing that could happen? Okay, she’s gonna say no and I’m gonna end up back here.” In business, what’s the worst that could happen? I’ll start a business, I’ll fail, I’ll have to get the same job. I always ask myself what’s the worst thing that will happen and if I’m okay with that then I’ll go for it.
Peter: Totally. Best question to ask is, “what if I fail?” And when you do that, just like you said, envision the worst possible scenario. Close your eyes and feel what you would feel if you felt, see what you would see, hear what you would hear, hear your family doubting, hear all those things and then realize it’s actually not that bad if that was to happen. It really isn’t. You’re still … Now here’s a better question to ask. “What if I fail and recover? What if I fail and recover from that failure?” When you start viewing at the path to recovery, if the worst case scenario happens and then you understand that there’s a way to recover from that, then you look at that failure as a unavoidable step on the path to success. That’s what failure is. My commitment personally is to fail as often and as quickly as possible and I’m not trying to mess up but I know that if I fail, that’s the marketplace giving me feedback in my business, what needs to be different in order to me to be successful?
Christopher: Beautiful, man. One of my sayings as well which adds to this, which is so good, is business is a series of microtests. That’s all I think an entrepreneurship venture is is you’re just microtesting because you’re never going to know. I love to say to people, “look, yeah, you can pay me to give you an educated guess but an educated guess is still a what?”
Peter: Yep. Totally.
Christopher: Have you done any study on this that the amount of times we actually get people to envision themselves failing then envision themselves recovering, is there anything that … Because it seems to me that’s creating a neurological link there of where they’re going to go … It’s [inaudible 00:12:11] pre-paving.
Peter: Absolutely it is. I don’t think I’ve done a study on it in terms of what the numbers is but I know that when we bring clarity to someone’s biggest fears of realizing that if that was to happen which, number one, it’s very unlikely that most of those fears come true, but if they do when they see that on the other side they’re okay and in fact when they recover from that they’re going to be better off then they’re more committed to take that action. When I work with clients of mine, a lot of them think they need to have a crystal clear vision before they take that next step in a relationship or in their business and I use the metaphor of walking through a pitch-black cave with nothing but a flashlight. You can’t see your destination. All you can see is a few feet in front of you but with every step that you take, more and more of that path gets illuminated and so you have to choose faith in those moments over fear. Faith is trust that it’s going to work out. Without having the crystal clear picture of what that path is going to be, you’ve got the end in mind and you trust yourself taking each step and if you take the wrong step, that’s okay. You can course correct.
Christopher: I love it, man. Let’s breath some life into this with some few different places where people might be. So somebody right now is listening to this, they’re in a job and they know they want to start a business. So let’s do it for them. Let’s paint their worst case and how they recover.
Peter: I love it, okay. Worst case, biggest fear of someone who’s leaving their corporate job to launch a business is that at the end of the day they’re going to fail at their venture. They’re going to lose the security of their paycheck and they’re going to have to go back and get a job again. That’s really the biggest fear. There’s all these different fears but that’s what it comes down to and then if you go deeper than that, what’s really underneath the fear of failure is actually the fear of not being enough. Because so much of our identity is wrapped up in what we do. Society tells us what success is. It’s the suits that we wear, the houses that we own, the fast sports cars that we drive. That’s not necessarily true. I’m not discounting amazing experiences like that but I’m just saying that your worth is not wrapped up in that.
So a worst case scenario of that is, at least you took a leap and risked it because what would be worse? What costs more to you, taking that risk and failing or looking back on your deathbed, realizing that you slaved away at a job that you were not passionate about but it gave you a paycheck to pay your bills and having that regret of not being able to fund freedom in your life? Literally living this one life … Whatever your beliefs are spiritually or religiously, this is all I know in this physical form right now, so why not make this the best quality of life I possibly can? I’m not going to take a job where I spend most of my waking hours hating what I’m doing just to pay the bills. That costs more-
Christopher: I love it.
Peter: That’s more painful than failing if you actually take the leap.
Christopher: When you make the fear of regret bigger than the fear of failing then you’re going to take action every single time. Let me ask you this, Peter. Can you remember a time that you set a big goal? [inaudible 00:15:35] Can you just think of a time in your life you set a really big goal?
Peter: Yeah absolutely.
Christopher: Now let me ask you this. Did you hit the goal or not? Most times people don’t, right? So I’m just going to pre-frame this a little bit. Let me ask you this next question. Even though you didn’t hit the exact goal that you want, what other good things turned up because you’d been on that path? Was it pretty substantial?
Peter: Yes, I’ll share a story if that’s what you’re looking for on this.
Christopher: Do it.
Peter: Last year I published my book, The Fearless Mindset. It was a huge goal of mine to become a published author, not just publish a book but have a really well-written book that’s successful, that’s sold to thousands of people. That was my goal. What I wanted underneath that, which I didn’t realize, was the approval of my family in doing something significant. And what happened was, I didn’t reach my goal and it was heartbreaking. Why? Because what happened was, while writing that book, a family member of mine who I loved dearly said that if I was to publish it, because I get very raw and vulnerable about my family story in there, if I was to publish it then I was ruining the family name and she would disown me. This seriously happened.
Christopher: Wow.
Peter: This was actually at a family reunion. We’re sitting at the dinner table. I’m declaring to my family how proud I am of launching my business, this was a couple of years ago, of publishing a book and literally everyone’s like, “you’re not doing the right thing. Who are you to be doing this? You don’t have the certifications [inaudible 00:17:11],” all these things, right?
Christopher: Wow.
Peter: My heart sank in that moment so I had a choice to make. Do I throw away the book that I was so committed to doing to make my family feel comfortable or do I risk losing my family’s approval to actually have an impact on humanity? And I chose the latter and now my family is so proud of me, now they’re so amazed that I went through with that but I had that moment and every single listener here is going to have that shift where it’s like, you can choose to sacrifice in a way where you’re making your family, your friends, your co-workers, your employees, whatever it is, comfortable or you can pursue and follow through on this vision no matter what and actually experience the result of that. I think that answers your question of setting a goal, missing it and then actually achieving more than what that goal initially was.
Christopher: Every single time I ask that question, Peter, here’s what happens. 90% of the time we don’t hit what we set out to hit but that doesn’t fricking matter. The point of action? Other things turn up. Here’s what the universe says. Universe goes, “you know what, I’ve got something better for you. You said you were going after that thing. Yeah, that’s great, move,” and as soon as you move the universe goes, “I’m gonna reward your movement by so much.” And I see this happen, dude, and I’ve helped multiple people make millions and millions and millions of bucks and every time at the beginning of the year we set this big goal and I always have this smile and [inaudible 00:18:42] I go, “it doesn’t matter if we hit that or not.” We set the big goal, we do everything to hit it. Other stuff shows up and this is this crazy externality that we never can plan for and that we never know but if we never took that leap, that fear holds us, then we never get it, man. And it’s just like [inaudible 00:19:00].
Peter: I love it.
Christopher: It happens every single time so let’s shift to the next person. Let’s shift to the next person. This is the first person fearful to start their business so the next person has started their business, they’re full-time but they’re really fearful of really going out there in a big way.
Peter: Okay.
Christopher: What’s the worst case that’s going to happen to them?
Peter: So the worst [crosstalk 00:19:23] So the worst case … So if the fear is actually afraid of going out there in a big way then there’s some underlying fear of judgment there or of rejection, of getting feedback from people not agreeing with you and especially with people that are speakers, authors, coaches, they really face this because they’re very vulnerable. They’re out there, they’re sharing their message, they’re doing these things directly with people across online, on social media, things like that. So what the worst thing that could happen is that you’re going to get haters. In fact, actually the thing that’s guaranteed that’s going to happen is you will get haters because if you’re sharing a message and you’re not getting haters then you’re simply being too vanilla and no one’s even noticing that you exist. So if you’re doing something that’s going to upset or make a few people uncomfortable or people are going to disagree with then good for you because that means you’re going to have a tribe of raving fans that absolutely will follow you to the end of the earth and that way you can actually have a bigger impact.
Christopher: Badass, man. Haters are just jealous supporters, man. They just help get your message out there even more.
Peter: I have never heard that. I love that. I love that.
Christopher: We’re going to take a quick break listeners and when we come back after the break we’re going to talk about the person who’s actually got themself out there and they’re looking to build a team and then the person that’s made the money and I’m going to talk about fear at every single level, Peter, because I love this, man, and we’ve covered so much ground so have a quick break, take a glass of water, get out your pen and paper because when we come back, we’re just going to go down into more gold nuggets. See you in a couple of minutes.
Welcome back to the show guys. I’m still here with Peter. We’ve been sitting here chatting off-air for a moment and he’s got an amazing gift he’s going to give you in a little while but before we go there let’s just continue on this vein because it feels to me like a vein of gold. It really does so let’s talk about the next person, Peter. This person, they have started their business, they have got their voice out there and now they’re running out of time and they need to hire a team. What is the worst case for these people and what is their fear?
Peter: Biggest fear is a fear of letting go of control. This in fact is actually something that I’m working through right now. I’m actually experiencing this right now because when you’re starting out you’re taught whatever needs to be done, you’re going to roll up your sleeves, you’re going to hustle and you’re going to get it done. Why? Because you don’t have the resources at that stage to delegate. When you’re at this stage, Chris, that you just said, you’ve got the money. One of my favorite quotes comes from a man named Dan Sullivan from Strategic Coach and he goes, “if you have the money to solve a problem, you don’t have a problem.” So true. How many people are like, “I-I-I don’t have the, the, the, the freedom I have to spend on … ?” Well if you’re doing everything yourself then you don’t have a problem because you can actually delegate and pay for somebody to do that so the fear is letting go of control. The way to overcome that is to have faith in really getting clear on the process of attracting the highest level of talent that you possibly can be and then give them the freedom to actually do the work and take responsibility. I’ve seen so many entrepreneurs start building their team out and micromanaging their team to not actually do … And they’re actually working more as a result of this. It’s getting clear on-
Christopher: So what’s the worst case?
Peter: So worst, okay so-
Christopher: [inaudible 00:23:53]
Peter: Yeah. So worst case is that you hire someone, they don’t do a good job after a month or three months and you have to let them go. There’s an opportunity cost of a couple of months and whatever you paid them. But the best thing about that is you have to go through that. Just like failure, you have to go through that to find the right person. That’s the worst case scenario which any one of us at this stage can recover from.
Christopher: Just [inaudible 00:24:22] right back where you want to … Here’s something listeners that I always say at this point is you either spend your time or you spend your money but nothing is ever free. You either spend your time or your money but nothing is ever free. So that’s the worst case that could happen unless they let go of control but do you know what? It could actually be worse than that. Here’s what could be even worse. They could rip you off. That’s even worse. That’s the complete worst so how do you recover? They can come into your business, you can teach them some stuff then they can rip you off, this has happened to me, and then they’re out there doing what you would do or something. They’re taking your inner workings of your business. So then how do we recover?
Peter: Number one, I know that no one’s going to do something as good as I can do and in the way that I do it, right? I know that so if I was training somebody and he was going to take my information and go and share that and package it himself, it’s not going to be done in the same way as myself so honestly, Chris, that could happen and it doesn’t seem like the end of the world to me at all. Because I’m so confident and certain in my own abilities that I know that no one … Copy me all you want because what you’ll be viewed as is a copycat of me, right? So I’m okay with that. That’s why [inaudible 00:25:42] on that.
Christopher: Right on, man. Right on. So then the last move, I think, the last fear is … Okay, so I’ve got it all and now I might lose it. The fear of now I’ve got the team, I’ve got the business, I’ve got the money, look at my bank account, look at the difference I’m making. What if I lose it? That’s the biggest fear.
Peter: At that stage, I always say the fastest way to lose anything is to live in the fear of its loss and when you are feeling the fear of losing money or you’re feeling the fear of losing love … Think of how many relationships have ended because somebody is becoming clingy or needy or attached because of their fear of losing that love and they’re actually driving that love away. What I would suggest doing in that moment is, number one, get really connected to the journey that you’ve taken to get to where you are because there’s so much to be grateful for … so much to be grateful for in what you’ve created and then, two, trust that if you do lose it all … Let’s talk about worst case scenario. If you did lose that but you already achieved all that, you have not only the ability but now the knowledge of however many years it took to do that. You can recreate that even better in less time. That’s the way that I honestly look at that.
Christopher: True that. True that. Dude this has been awesome.
Peter: I’m loving it, this is good.
Christopher: I’ve got a couple [inaudible 00:27:11] questions.
Peter: Okay.
Christopher: I think that every single listener would have found something that they can really take from everything we’ve gone through and that’s what’s important to me. I’ve got two questions I ask every single time and here’s the first one. If you would go back to when it started for you, your entrepreneurial journey, and you got to spend just five minutes with your old self, what advice … What would you tell that old version of you?
Peter: Stay true to your path. I would say stay true to your path because I look back where I started and it was so easy for me to compare myself to others that were in the game of entrepreneurship five, ten, twenty years longer than I have and noticing that gap and that gap would create stress, it would create frustration, it would create all these different things. If I really just appreciated the journey of every single step, I know that I would’ve not only achieved as much if not more than what I’ve achieved but I would’ve enjoyed every single moment. This is something I recommend myself now at this stage as well as when I started.
Christopher: I love it, dude. The second part to the question is this. Say today, you had to start from scratch. No relationships, no connections, no following, no email list, no money. Only thing that you have is your mindset. You’re in a completely new environment, no one knows you, you just have your experiences and you have your thinking. How do you start your business?
Peter: Good question. The first thing that came to mind was to find a group of people that represent a younger version of myself, not just in age but in life experience. So if I find a group of people that are in a stage in business or in their life where I once was. Let’s say, where I was three years ago. Find them and then commit 100% to serving them because I know what problems they’re facing, I know what fears that they have, I know all these things that are … Because I was them not too long ago and since I’ve got that knowledge, I don’t need the financial resources and the relationships to start growing. I can go serve immediately.
Now side by side that process, I go find the influencers of the world who I need to start connecting with and serve them in a valuable way because by creating value for them, over time they’re going to want to introduce me to influencers or to groups that they lead if that makes sense and that’s how I’d reverse engineer that process and the biggest thing … Honestly, Chris, what I really want the listener to take away is get it really clear on the results that you’re wanting and find somebody who has those results and has helped others create those results. I would not be where I am without the mentors that I’ve had, without the masterminds that I’ve been a part of. It’s the hundreds of thousands of dollars and the time that I invested that has shortened the learning curve because could you do it on your own? Absolutely. But why take 10 years when you can do something in one year, right?
Christopher: It’s the biggest thing, like a smart man learns from his own mistakes, wise person learns from the mistakes of others and getting that and getting clear on that is huge and you would think … And this really segues into your gift. You’ve got an amazing gift and you were telling me about it before. It’s a five day face your fear challenge where they get an online training and you’re gifting this away to everyone listening today. You want to fill us in a little bit on the five day face your fear challenge?
Peter: Sure, yeah. Since my passion is helping entrepreneurs conquer fear and I know that’s the one thing that’s limiting them, I created a free virtual five day face your fear challenge. What your listener gets is, they get a daily video from me. It’s absolutely free and that video is short. It’s less than five minutes. But it challenges them to conquer one specific fear in their life whether it’s rejection, judgment, charging what you’re worth and I just really am passionate about what your message is, Chris, and your audience and I wanted to gift that away so if the listener wants to get that they can go to challengeyourfear.com and get it absolutely free.
Christopher: That’s awesome and that’ll be in the show notes, listeners, and in the email that you received about the show as well so you’ll be able to just click on that link and head on over and so let’s not just face your fears, let’s forget about them and move forward and I think that’s what’s going to happen in that five day … Brother, we’ve covered so much. We went into, step by step, the different fears, fear of judgment, fear of letting go, fear of getting started, fear of … I’ve got notes. If you’re listening to this and you can hear a page rattling, that’s because I’ve been sitting here taking notes listening to this. I really love the three steps that you dropped down. Define what the fear is, talk about how if it was no longer, how would I be and then do the thing that scares you and we had some good chats on that, man, and I was just excited to have you on. We do need to say goodbye but before then I would love you to just connect with what is the last message or the last thing that you would love to leave with our audience and our listeners today?
Peter: The last thing I would say is … The biggest take away I want you to have is that being fearless is not being without fear. That’s not possible. It’s not something that’s healthy. Being fearless is having the courage, the confidence, the commitment and really the faith of doing the thing that scares you. As long as you know you’ve got a fear there, then commit to ruthlessly do that thing over and over and over again and your life will just level up beyond your wildest dreams. That’s what I would like to leave with.
Christopher: I appreciate that, brother. Listeners, you might want to listen to this again and I love that it’s being fearless, less fear. I would love everyone listening to transmute the fear of action, the fear of success and the fear of failure into the fear of regret because when the fear of regret is there then you’re going to take action and right now, as you listen to this, it’s the youngest you’re ever going to be. Peter, my guest today, thank you so much for being on the show, man. You’ve no idea how much I appreciate it.
Peter: Thank you, brother.
Christopher: It’s awesome so thank you so much. Listeners, live with total freedom. Free your mind, free your time, free your life so you can do more of what matters most. Like, subscribe and share this episode. Remember to leave us a comment and go and check Peter out. You’ll see all the show notes at christophermduncan/podcast and have an amazing day. We’ll see you on the next episode. Smash it.