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James Miller Lifeology Radio

James Miller | LIFEOLOGY® Radio - The Enlightened Passenger Book | Corey Porier

Corey Poirier's latest book, The Enlightened Passenger, shares what top leaders would tell you if you had a moment of their time. ThisIsTheBook.com

Duration:
29m
Broadcast on:
23 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

(upbeat music) - Welcome to Lifeology. I am James Miller, your host and a licensed psychotherapist. I'm looking forward to spending this time with you as we learn some pretty amazing life lessons. Let's get started. I would love to connect with you. Be sure to follow me on all social media platforms under the name James Miller Lifeology, except for Twitter, which is James M Lifeology. I am also very active on Instagram and create many videos with quick tips and tools that you can immediately implement. Be sure to say hello and follow me there. There are thousands of amazing self-help books out there, but what happens when you're struggling at the moment and need help now? Well, my new book, Life Lessons, You Are The Experts On Your Life, a workbook is your new go-to self-help book. I wrote it specifically for when you don't know how to overcome a challenge. Each chapter gives you a framework on how to tackle your situation. I help you focus on what already works for you. Your situation today may be different, but the emotions you're currently feeling, you felt them before, and you did something that helped you. You don't have to reinvent the wheel. This book is specifically written to help you overcome any obstacle you may face. Purchase your book, Life Lessons, You Are The Experts On Your Life, a workbook on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore. Once again, purchase Life Lessons, You Are The Experts On Your Life, a workbook on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore. (upbeat music) - My guest today is Corey Poirier, a five-time TEDx speaker, a Wall Street Journal and USA Today best-selling author, a success magazine emerging entrepreneur, and he is also the founder of Blue Talks. In today's episode, we talk about his new anticipated book of the enlightening passenger. Welcome to Lifeology. - Thanks so much, James. It's brilliant and amazing to be back. - Well, thank you. There was so much I had to say, I edited it all down just so I could tell all that 'cause it was time twisted for me. But you've been on my show multiple times, you're a good friend of mine, and I'm really happy to help you promote this book. In fact, this book here itself was actually started as a podcast. Tell me more about that. - Well, you know, so yes, it did. And I thought that was, there was a reason behind it. It was very intentional. So there's a show called, oh, what is it called now? I think it's called, I'm looking over at my shelf because I think I have-- - I do have time to advocate. - It's called, I think it's called the way back to you. And it's-- - Okay. - Have you ever heard of the anneagram? - Uh-huh, yeah, uh-huh, anneagram, yeah. - Excuse me. The anneagram, this podcast, it's about like the nine, what are they, like nine anneagram numbers, I guess you'd call it. - Yeah, I can remember it's on my head, yes. I can't remember either. - Maybe it's called the road, I think it's called the road back view. And basically it's, what they did was they launched with a podcast. So a short run podcast, excuse me, a short run podcast, I think it was 12 episodes. And that's how they launched their book. And to this day, I mean, they only those, I think those 12 episodes were like, I wanna say 2017. And to this day I'll go, I'll see them, they're still up on the charts. - Really? - And next week's an episode since, which fast needs me. But also, so many people I talked to are like, oh yeah, I know that book. And I realized that the biggest launch plan was to launch a short run podcast and then launch the book. And they both have the same logo and so on. So I decided I was gonna do that. And two things happened that kind of went against the plan. One, I was planning for it to be short run, meaning like, I didn't know how many episodes were, let's say 15. I kind of thought 15 because the idea of that show is every episode under 15 minutes. That was kind of the promise to show me. And so I thought maybe 15 episodes. But here's what happened, because it was so short, it was easier to get some big name thought leaders on the show than I'd ever had a go at before. And then I couldn't stop. Like I was like, why am I getting rid of this show? It's able to get me better, not better. But big names that I can't normally secure because it's such a short request of time. And so like for that show, we got on it right from the jump, Deepak Chopra, who kind of escaped me up until that point. Ken Honda, J.J. Virgin, Janet Atwood. And just a lot of really cool, oh, Tommy Chong, Dave Hester from Storage Wars, the yoop guy. And it's just a lot of cool guests. And so I was like, maybe I don't need to stop this show. So we did it, and I consider it now James, the first round was a season. So season one. - Okay, it makes sense, yeah. - But the plan was it was gonna be short run, but here's where the other fault happened, is I was gonna start selling pre-order copies of the book, and I did actually at the time. Where we ran into the hiccup is, that was conservatively a year and a half before the book was released, and at the time I thought it was gonna self-publish it. So everything changed because the idea was, I'll start this podcast, and while I'm still doing it, I'll launch the book. Then all the things changed, the book ends up being pushed, and now I'm doing a podcast that has no book. And so what I did was I just ran into the episodes I planned to do in the first place, and stopped there, and considered that season one. So the interesting part about the show is literally now starting Monday, we're releasing season two. And we're gonna release an episode a day, kind of like an episode, we're gonna release an episode a day for probably 30 days, and then we'll, that'll be season two. So it's more of a binge thing. But to answer the question, that was why we started it. It was supposed to be a short-run show that now is a life of its own because of the fact that I didn't think I would get some of these guests on. And we're about to interview Jeff Walker again, so people know Jeff is from launch and Product Launch Formula. The second half of Tommy Chong's gonna air, I did an interview recently with Brian Austin Green from 902 and 0, and you'll be- - Oh, I saw that, and yeah, and that's why she's having it, yeah. - Yeah, so that's gonna be, the full interview's gonna be there, but then I'm doing an interview tomorrow with Brian, Charna, his wife, and Randy Spelling. So kind of like the 902 and 0 episode. So we're doing that for my book launch, but we're gonna air that as part of the show. I just did an interview last week with Richard Paul Evans from the Christmas box, and Mark Victor Hanson and Crystal Hanson. And so these are all season two. Oh, Mike Dooley from Notes from the Universe. And so we had a season two about to come out at the same time as my book is officially being launched. So what's happening now is what was supposed to happen a year and a half ago. Whenever you first brought me on the podcast with the show, I truly thought I'm promoting it for a book that's about to come out, and the book never came out. And now finally, the book is in my hand. - Well, it's crazy how it all works out, but I'm sure at that moment you're like, oh my gosh, what am I gonna do? Because you had one plan, all of a sudden it stops, and it didn't even change into something else. Well, congratulations, that's super exciting. I didn't realize I had you on a while ago for the podcast, but that's what you're turning into, for the book part, or the reason why you had the podcast. That's very smart. It makes a lot of sense as well. With, to meet all those people, I mean, I've been blessed to have some of those people on my show as well, but some of those other people want all the people rather, to glean the information and the advice and the suggestions that they have. How was that for you to just sit under all that wisdom? - Yeah, I mean, you could call it sitting under the learning tree. You could call it getting to sit at the feet of giants. I think, Dr. John B. Demartini, that's how he describes us sitting at the feet of giants. I mean, for me, it's, there's two sides to it. There's, what have I learned from it over the years? Excuse me, and how's it impacting my life? And then there's the side of, in the bigger picture, what, I guess you could say, it feels like when you're getting to do that. So it feels like when you're getting to do that part first, it feels like, I feel guilty. I feel like this is so strange that a person that normally charges $45,000 for a keynote to be able to say to you what they want is on with me for an hour, and I get them one on one, and I get to ask what I want as the audience. It feels like that should be illegal, you know? So that side of it is what it's been like. It's like, how blessed am I to get to learn from the best at what they do in different fields, and really just for the sake of giving up time, not any money, in a lot in most cases. And so that's one side of it. But then the, I guess we'll call it the bigger picture for me personally, is what I've learned. And in fact, this new book, 10 Life Lessons Are Shared in it, and these are the lessons I've learned during these thousands of interviews. So for me, how it's worked its way into my life is it's changed my life at its core, because it's got me to do things that I might not have ever done that have been so beneficial in my life. And at the same time, I've been able to take these things I've learned and test them in my own career and other people's careers. And they've helped me become better, figure out what's works with me for me, what doesn't work for me. But when I say the part about, take those things and internally how they can transform my life, it could be as simple as meditation. You know, I discovered meditation before, I started doing all these interviews. But when I, I struggled with it because I always thought you were supposed to meditate a certain way. You know, you have that vision up on the top of the hill, cross-legged, even feel some people have arguments over whether you should use guided meditation and listen, or whether that's a crutch and you should be just sitting there in silence and they put so many rules on meditation, which is why I feel a lot of people say I can't do it. And so doing the interviews I've done, one thing is it's allowed me to see that a lot of people that are considered meditators or mindfulness leaders do it in a different way. And so like David Gee, who used to work with Deepak Chopra, he calls him meditation because he says, I don't care if you lie down and you meditate and you fall asleep, that's what you need right now. He also says, let me show you in 17 seconds how you can get the benefits of meditation because some people think it has to be hours. And the other thing is people say, I can't slow my mind down and what I've learned is nobody can at first. Like you're not alone. Woody Woodrow, who I interviewed years ago said, he calls it the, he said, you know, for me, he said, when I first started, he said, people said monkey mind, he said mine was like a roided up gorilla. It was stuck in a cage and kept reaching for the banana. It was like in a cage because it couldn't get the banana. And so, and then JJ Virgin, who's known for the low sugar impact or high, is it, yes, low sugar impact guy, I think. But she's known for this, no sugar diet, basically. And JJ, she's obviously known for helping people work out and nutrition and that. She called me when she meditates, it's like she listens to Metallica while she's working out. What's her minute? - Oh, you'll have that time, yeah. - Yeah, and then Anthony Trucks, American Ninja Warrior, he actually said that for him, if he's out doing carpentry and stuff, which is something he normally doesn't do, like doing work around the house, that's meditation. The takeaway from all of those, James, is that meditation doesn't have to be one thing that we all do the same way. Well, those are the kind of things I learned from these conversations. And I think they changed my life at its core. Even lessons I learned, like the fact that most influencers thought leaders luminaries say no, up to 20 to 50 times more than the average person. But yet I grew up as a yes person in a small town who'll do whatever people ask and figure out how to do it all later. What I'm getting at is these are the things, when you ask like, what kind of impact is ahead on me? What's it done for me? These are the things that's done to show me a different way to live my life that I think is more effective and also has allowed me to have more fulfillment. - Yes, I can totally see that. Now, if I remember correctly, and we'll jump into the book in just a second, but if I remember correctly, you and a friend, back in your hometown was sold advertisement, had some type of advertisement stuff where you sold it, and it was a small little thing, and then it grew into something bigger, and your friend decided not to do it. If I remember correctly, I'm trying to piece all that together. If that's correct, remind me, what's the difference between that younger, young young man of yourself and today? What's different and what's the same? - Yeah, I mean, that's, I would say, it's funny, 'cause I could say everything's different and everything's the same. (laughing) But at the core of who I am, I still feel I'm that same person. But as far as in terms of kind of what's different, really, I'm a different person. Like that guy, that person, at the end of the day, I was always distracted. I was a hypochondriac, had filled with generalized anxiety. I've openly shared that. And I was unsure of myself. I wasn't confident. Basically, what you're talking about too, is we had a newspaper, almost like Success Magazine, but it was a publication that was in newsprint. And we launched it without any business launching it. And we started selling advertising because we found out, oh, we can't sell this paper for two or three bucks a paper. And so we started selling the advertising without having ever done that before. And we weren't good, and it wasn't good. And the tire was my business partner's name, still friends with him. He decided after four months it wasn't for him, and I had to buy him out of the business. That's kind of how I got my start. But I bring that up to say, I wasn't confident. I didn't know how to sell. I just got to communicate effectively. Like every aspect of who I was, I would say, is different than the person I am now. Now, I say the same in the sense that, I think my heart's the same. I like to believe that I grew up in a small town and I still have the same values. Like those things are the same. So the who I am probably hasn't changed much, but how I am and how I live and what I do is changed dramatically. And so I have a different level of confidence now. Back then, I was just early on in my playing music and songwriting and stuff. And I had a girlfriend near that time, a little before that, I think, said, "Told me I was terrible." Like, "Ouch, my ears are terrible." And years later, I ended up getting nominated for a CD for Rock Recording of the Year. And that was kind of the validation. But it's true that if you put in the 10,000 hour rule, you can get better than terrible. I'm not going to say basketball, but terrible. - I mean, yeah. - But it's like, so the person that I am today has different level of confidence. Like, it's not that I feel I can do it all, but I feel I can figure it out. I hadn't spoken on a stage now. I've spoken thousands of times. And so I feel like I can communicate my message better than I could have been. The anxiety stuff, I wasn't, obviously I wasn't happy if I was filled with anxiety and hypochondria. Now, I wake up every day. I'm like the kid that loves Christmas running down the stairs when I get out of bed. And so I can honestly say, and this goes back to my original answer, is everything's the same and everything's different. I'm a different person on the outside and how I live and everything else that way. I like to believe I'm the same person I was back then. You know, a small town, a person who really cares about people who still really wants to say yes, even if he knows when he has to say no. I'm still that person. I'm still that person that writes a song and will say openly it's terrible when it is. And I think I got that from people being honest with me because the truth is she did me a favor when she told me I was terrible because it made me work to get better. Although her and I weren't meant to be long-term because I also don't think you're terrible and then imply that you can't get better and walk away from it that you care about. But at the same time, it was a motivator. So yeah, different person, still a little bit the same. - I really like that. I understand what you're saying as well. I mean, it makes sense that who you are is based off of the values and the core values that you had as a young man. And all right, so I have one more question and then we'll definitely transition. So, you know, we're talking about sitting at the feet of giants. You have a lot of people that you've worked with and you've really helped a lot of their careers. Do you, I know you wouldn't call yourself a giant, but do you realize the impact that you've had on other people's lives? - This is an interesting one for me, especially small town guy who, you know, when I grew up, there was a saying not where I'm at, but hours away that my friend he grew up with said that no man, and I would add, or woman these days, but no man shall rise above the masks. And the idea there was basically their way of saying don't get too big for your britches, like in other words, but there's an inner negative for that too, right, James? Because it's saying nobody should try to achieve higher than they are. Like if you try to achieve higher, we're gonna tear you down. There's that side of it, but there's also the side when you're raised like that of thinking like, don't ever bring about your achievements or your accomplishments. So I still have that when I said there's still parts of me that are the same. I still have that person inside of me that sometimes I'm happy I do, sometimes I wish I didn't, where I struggle sometimes with going, you know what? I'm doing good things, I'm doing big things. Like it's hard for me to just sit with that, but at the same time, you know, when I get messages from people and these days, partly because of the new books out and partly because of the work that we do with our Bluetox brand, but it's usually common to have one or two comments a day, like just want to let you know this and whatever this is like, you know, because of what you did, I just landed my TED talk and now I'm living a dream that my parents that I could never do, you know, that type of thing. Or with the book, it could be like stuff that really is humbling like, okay, I'll give you a great example and it's just a super short example, but I sent an email a few days ago and said, do you believe in synchronicity was the header? And then it talked with synchronicity. And one of the replies, and she said I could screenshot it using so I can say her name or name is Lisa Demi, she's another speaker. Her reply was when I said, do you believe in synchronicity? She said, now that I've read your book, I do. - Oh, interesting. - So the point is, is that from an impact point of view, not saying people should believe in synchronicity or not, but that's a big deal to say that somebody's saying, I now believe in meaningful coincidences and not just coincidences. Like, that took me years, like literally years and somebody's saying I've read your book and now I'm in. And what I'm saying is, to me, that's an impact. Like if you can, somebody can tell you, you changed my way of thinking about something as so monumental that people have arguments over whether or not things are really happening for you or whether it's just a coincidence happening to you. And that's a big deal. And so it's not lost on me, but I will say, after I shake it off, like you get that comment, you're like, oh my gosh, it's so humbling. It takes me about five minutes and then I'm right back to what I'm doing. Like I don't sit in it enough. I don't think I don't sit in the juices apart enough. And so I recognize that I'm having an impact, but I probably don't sit with it enough to realize that that's significant because of the fact that that's the visible impact and we never really ever fully know the invisible impact. A weird comparison or story is years ago, I went to Jimi Hendrix's grave site in Seattle. And while we were there, there was this guy pulled up in a red car with gloves on, jumped out, cleaned around Hendrix's grave site, jumped back in the car and drove up. And I said to my wife at the time, well, first of all, he doesn't work for the graveyard 'cause otherwise he's doing a horrible job. You only cleave one place. But obviously he probably lives in Seattle and he was impacted by Hendrix. But I said, do you think Hendrix thought when he played music for three real years, two and a half, three real years, that 43 years after his death? By the way, that now would be seven or eight years ago. But at the time, 43 years after his death, he'd still be having somebody go clean his grave site that lives nearby. That's the invisible impact that we never know. You know, like also in the same day with the Bruce Lee and Brandon Lee's grave site. How many people do I think Bruce Lee is impacted in the world? Millions and millions. But again, whenever he started and even while he was doing it, he probably had no fathom of that ripple. And the fact that, again, 50 years later, we'd still be talking about it. - Yeah. - Yeah. - Well, that's invisible and visible. - Yeah, well, that's a wonderful segue into your book, "The Alight and Passenger." Tell us more about that because everything you've said is really leading up to that as well. - Yeah, so the book in terms of what the book's about, first and foremost, is it's a fictional parable. You know, it's, again, this is the hard part for me to soak in and even acknowledge. But it's been compared by quite a few people to the Celestine prophecy, the alchemist, and then to Aug. Mendino's many books. In fact, I did this live interview that I mentioned with Richard Paul Evans and Mark McCrehenson last Friday. And Richard, as I mentioned, were at the foreword. And he talked about how he had a chance to meet Aug. Mendino years ago in a mall when he was a young kid. I think he was like 20, and he always regretted that he never went over. He said, "Ogg was at a table with nobody in front of him," which would be rare. I don't know how well he was in Aug's career, but in the tailor end of his career, you'd be hard pressed to get in a place with less than 600 people lined up. And he said he was sitting there and this author who was in awe of and he didn't go over and talk to him. But my point is he brought that up because he said the book is very ogg-like. And he actually said about the book, he said, "Bory, if you don't write this book, I'm gonna write it, so you better hurry." And that's 46 times New York Times was selling author. But to me, the bigger compliment is he's a huge fan of Aug and he said, "This is ogg-like." And then we had Mark Victor Hanson on the show and Mark Newog personally. And he said, "Yeah, personal, I just read your book "and it's so ogg-like." So what I'm saying is, first of all, to set this stage, it's that type of book. And what that type of book is is the fictional parable. You could argue whether it's a spiritual fictional parable or there's components of that. I'll leave that for the reader to decide. But the story is of two passengers on a plane, old passenger named Treb, young passenger named Robert. Robert books the flight in first class, pays for the seat next to him, doesn't want anybody to sit next to him, falls asleep, wakes up Treb sitting next to him, the older, wiser man. Treb is very charismatic, almost like, I don't wanna talk to this guy, but look, he's so cute. Like he's just, he's very charismatic. So Robert, the idea is he's going, he found out that Treb was bumped because the flight was full. So he's like, "I'm gonna go to sleep "and ignore this old guy." Somehow, within the first couple of minutes, like Treb's like, "Well, tell me about yourself." And he's just engaging. And he ends up, somehow Robert gets wind of the fact that Treb's made money. And that's the one thing Robert's interested in, 'cause Robert, it's described as he makes a lot of money, but he spends it just as quick. So he's like, "How can I make more of it?" He thinks like, and that's how a lot of us think when we're younger, I just need to make more. Not how can I spend less, I need to make more. So he's like, "What can I learn from this old geezer "who's made money?" That's kind of his thinking. And well, for me, what happens is called a flight that changes everything because what happens is, instead of Robert learning about how to become rich financially, he learns how to become rich as a person from Treb. So it's the 10 life lessons that Treb shares during the flight, and they're loosely based on what I've learned during those interviews we talked about. And it's loosely based on my life in the sense that the two characters I realized after I wrote it, each are like a half of me. So like Robert, he's a young, arrogant, like, not, he's arrogant, I was, he's like that, "No, it all." I was like that, I didn't know what self-help was, their personal development. And then Treb is the guy that's further along the journey, and I like to think I'm heading for him where, and here's where it's even truly like tagged for my life is Treb, it talks about when he performs standard comedy when he was younger. Treb talks about when he played music at the Cameron Club, where the Beatles play. Treb talks about, I don't know if you can see it here, is John Lennon tattoo he got in Liverpool. - Oh cool, yeah. - So that, it's kind of upside down, but I got that tattoo in Liverpool while Treb talks about that experience. So like, I pull stuff from my life and then fictionalize it. Because you've been in some of them, you'll appreciate this probably, but you know, if I interviewed Les Brown in his living room in Atlanta, and he said, "Sinkernicity is God's way staying anonymous." I brought that into the book as if Treb was sharing the photo class that he called, Les said it in the green room pool. So that's the book in a nutshell, two passengers on a plane around, a flight that changes everything based on an older, wiser passenger teaching life lessons to a younger, Norton, more naive passenger. - So all the advice and all the help, if you will, is all things you've learned from the people you've interviewed, so it's all sprinkled in there as well. So you'll, like you said, Les Brown, that comment, all that sprinkled in throughout the conversation. So that's wonderful, that's really interesting because you see so many different perspectives and so much knowledge and wisdom that goes into the conversation. That's brilliant, brilliant and done. - Oh, thank you. And I will say, very prestigious, I'll say, brilliant writer actually told me, I should take those aspects out. He felt that, yeah, he felt like, I shouldn't reference like modern day leaders, it should just be my story and stuff. And I, my whole brand, as you know, in a lot of ways, James has been built around, the interviews I've done, what lessons I've learned, how I share them. To me, it felt more on brand to leave it in. And so I looked at it, but I will say somebody thought I should remove it all together, but I did. - Yeah, yeah, and that's, I think that's a hard to see because we have well-intentioned people, brilliant people, really good at the craft and give us information. And if it doesn't resonate, that's hard. I mean, that's, you know, for you to say to know or yes, I mean, be that type of person and have to, that's an opportunity for you to practice. Do I say yes, I agree with you or no, I don't. And so I'm sure, you know, in that moment, you had to really decide what's on brand for you, what makes sense for you as well. - Absolutely, yeah. And that's totally what I had to look at is because this book, here's the funny part, it, that was on brand, but the book itself, and this kind of sounds weird, the book itself isn't on brand. So what I did, the approach in the book I took, I feel is on brand, but when I say the book is not on brand, it's a fictional parable. And James honestly, really hard to have a quote-unquote back-end business that have a fictional parable. And most of the rest of what I've done has always been congruent. Like in other words, I put in a book on how to get paid to speak because I help people get paid to speak. Well, putting in a book on ultimately how to get people that have become more enlightened by being open to learning is not really where I spend most of my speaking time. So that part was unique, but I also feel you have to listen to what people call them, Godwinks. Doesn't matter, higher power nudges, for everyone to call it. I felt like this story came to me for a reason and I felt like it was channeled through me. And I felt like it would be irresponsible to not listen. - Yes. Well, I am super excited to read it as well. First of our time is up. Cory, if my viewers and listeners want to find out more information about you to work with you to learn more about Blue Talks because I send a lot of people to you as well through this show. But if they want to learn more about that and about your book and your lighting passenger, where would they find all this information online? - So I usually don't like to give two places 'cause I always say, what do they say? A confused mind doesn't act or goes nothing. So I'd like to not go like, here's 12 links 'cause I see people do that a lot. So what I'll say is, main one and if you go to this one, you'll get the book and you'll also be in my community. So you'll get access to all the other stuff we're doing anyway and hear about it. But the main one is if you want to get a copy of the book, that's at pretty easy website to remember. This is thebook.com. So this is thebook.com. The great part about getting it there, James is that you get five instant bonuses and some other bonuses as well because basically you go there and it tells you the steps one to free. You just pick your preferred retailer, grab the book, bring back the order number, plug it in and we can give you the instant bonus. You can still go buy it as a retail problem as we won't know you bought it and we can't send any bonuses. What we get to is that's the bonus of that. The second part, which is easier, is if you want to chat with me, learn more about Bluetox, all that kind of stuff, I'll give you an easy email. So first one's a website, this one's an email. You can send me a direct email at Corrie, which is c-o-r-e-y at blue, which is b-l-u-no-e. Talks with an s on the end.com. So Corrie at Bluetox.com, shoot me an email. Let me know you heard me on the show here with James and whether you want the link to the book through there or you want to chat about Bluetox or you just want to say, hey, any of those options work. So I'm just an email away. - Awesome. Well, my viewers and listeners also know that if I can't find this information in any other place, I'm going to go to the channel. This is James Miller. I found it at com. I have all the information that Corrie just spoke about. So Corrie, once again, thank you so much. I really appreciate all your expertise and time. - Thank you so much, James. It's been an absolute pleasure. Thank you, everyone. - I also want to thank you, my listener, for tuning in today. Please subscribe to this radio show through whichever portal you join me today. Also, please go to my website where you may sign up for the free weekly recap. Watch my YouTube episodes, read the articles I've written specifically for you and purchase my previous guests' self-help products. If you'd like to work with me, be a guest on or advertise on this show. Visit jamesmillerlifeology.com. Be sure to follow me on all social media platforms under the name James Miller Lifeology, except for Twitter, which is James M Lifeology. Once again, thank you so much for your support and I'll talk to you soon. (upbeat music) (gentle music)