Establish Your Relationships
K. Trevor Thompson
Devin Miller
The Inventive Journey Podcast for Entrepreneurs
5/11/2021
Establish Your Relationships
The Inventive Journey
Starting and growing a business is a journey. On The Inventive Journey, your host, Devin Miller walks with startups along their different journeys startups take to success (or failure). You also get to hear from featured guests, such as venture firms and angel investors, that provide insight on the paths to a successful inventive journey.
Get New Episodes
Get 2 brand-new podcast episodes sent to you every week!
ai generated transcription
establish boundaries around your time
and make sure that you schedule your
self-care time first because we can fill
our calendars up with work
not a problem that it's easily done but
when we try to squeeze in
self-care it's harder to find time you
put that on your calendar first
you don't move it don't worry the work
is going to find the open slots it won't
be a problem but schedule your self-care
first and and color code it too use and
i do this what i do with my calendar
i use my favorite color to you know
demonstrate
self-care and things that are beneficial
to me
[Music]
hey everyone this is devin miller here
with another episode of the inventive
journey i'm your host devin miller the
serial entrepreneur that's built several
startups in the seven and eight figure
businesses
as well as the founder and ceo of miller
ip law
where we help startups and small
businesses with their patents and
trademarks
and today we have another great guest on
the episode michael levitt
and michael has a good story to tell and
i'll give a quick intro so
back in around 2009-2010 over the course
of about a year
he went from a heart attack that almost
killed him losing a job in a recession
getting a car repossessed having a house
foreclosed on
um everything in in between all the way
till today where
he's now doing his own thing and being
successful and uh
rebounded from that so and he'll fill in
a lot of the gaps in between but with
that as an intro welcome to the podcast
michael
great to be with you devon so i gave the
the sad
front to your story but maybe if you
want we could start there but if you
want to give a bit more details kind of
how that all played out over the course
of a year
sure and when you're doing that story i
i kind of want to play like sad trouble
music in the background because it it's
like
oh wow you know you had all that stuff
going on and you know i was like well
why are you why are you bringing him on
you know
he is he where is he at no you know what
it's
all those things yeah they all happened
over a period of year
and they were all caused by me being
completely burned out and not taking
care of myself and
really struggling with life in every
aspect of it
and ignoring the signs of burnout
because they were all there
i just ignored them and you know it led
to what i like to call my year of worst
case scenarios
with all of those before you go to the
worst case scenarios and we'll dive
absolutely into that
what were you doing that led to your i
mean what was your job or what were you
doing that led to the burnout
i was a healthcare executive for a
startup healthcare organization so i was
responsible for recruiting physicians
hiring staff educating the community on
why our clinic was better than the other
clinics that were in the area
working with funding officials to get
more funding for a clinic
and navigating all the demands that
healthcare has to it so
it's in a way ironic that you know a
healthcare role
gave me a health scare in a way it's
i guess although it was really good to
be there to get tested to figure out
that's exactly what had happened you
know i had my
when i had my heart attack i was you
know the tests were done at my clinic so
it was
an interesting time for sure so you were
working
at with the startup in the healthcare
industry just maybe summarizing
and making clear on my end working uh it
sounds like a whole bunch of hours
you know and with a lot of startups
that's kind of i don't know expected but
certainly i'm not outside the norm
you're at a startup you're hungry for
business clients money
investors products developing getting
everything up and going
everybody's wearing multiple hats and
then the midst of that as you're doing
all that
then you as you indicated you started to
go down the path of startup and over the
course of a year kind of had that
awakening so
what was that kind of progression was it
the heart attack that was first or which
what was the progression or how did that
play out for you yeah it was the heart
attack was first and then
i was off of work for 17 weeks
recovering and then went back to work
to find out that they didn't want me
anymore so they let me go now
let's rewind here so that time it was
the fall of 2009 so we were still
pretty much in the middle of the great
recession
uh and if we remember there was a lot of
jobs being lost mortgages all that good
stuff
and i was outside of windsor ontario
across the border from detroit
and the auto sector was on its last leg
the government had to bail the gov you
know those businesses out otherwise
gm and chrysler for sure and all
likelihood would not be here today
if it wasn't for the government
assistance and ford was
you know pretty close they had a lot of
their own funding but they still
needed a little bit of assistance here
and there so when you're working in an
area that was so heavily
tied to the auto sector and there's no
jobs
it's really hard to find something so it
did require a relocation for me and i
moved to
from from the windsor area up to toronto
so leaving a community of roughly a
quarter million to an area that has
close to seven million people slight
adjustment in traffic
but so after the heart attack and the
job loss i was able to find a role in
toronto
and then the family car was repossessed
because
when you lose your job and you're on
unemployment and you're getting a little
bit of money from unemployment
it barely covers anything we all know
that but the problem was for me i also
had an additional
thousand dollars a month in medical
bills
and the medications that i had to take
so i was paying a thousand dollars a
month for drugs
and not the good not the good kind that
make you legal drugs that aren't nearly
as fun
yeah exactly the legal ones aren't fun
from what
people tell me but anyway so a thousand
dollars a month for that
on top of food on top of mortgage
payment on top of bills and all of that
and
i'd worked with my creditors and
explained to them the situation and they
you know gave us a pretty lengthy grace
period but that grace period ran out
and then they exercised their right to
take the family vehicle which
you enter an agreement i give you money
you give me a loan to buy a vehicle
if i stop giving you money you get to
take the vehicle so the exercises are
right
never i've never been mad at them at all
um that was just the reality of it
and then after moving up to toronto and
moving the family up
we forgot our bunk bed ladder at the old
house so i was going back to that area
to visit with family
in a week or so and i was going to swing
by the house and grab the ladder
and when i went back to the house to
grab the ladder and anything else we
forgotten i opened up the screen door in
the front of the house
and i saw the largest padlock i've ever
seen in my life
you don't see these locks at home depot
the only the only place that sells these
locks are
organizations that foreclose homes and
that's what happened uh the home was
foreclosed before we were able to put it
on the market so
it did save me some you know fees when
it came to working with the realtor
because the bank decided to sell it for
me but
still to have all of those losses and
those losses are gigantic
each one of them on their own are a big
deal
and they can really impact people from a
mental state for sure
and i had them all in a year and it was
all because
i was burned out and i wasn't taking
care of myself so after
all of those losses i had choices
i could have said you know what i'm
blaming everybody
for doing this to me i could have blamed
my bosses
the fast food restaurants the banks i
could have you know started
pointing fingers and saying how dare you
do this for me but i never
i never played the victim because i was
responsible for all those things
happening it was me i was the only one
that was common in all of those elements
it was me
i could have said hey you know what i
survived all that i'm superman
i'm just going to go about living my
life the way i want to and everything's
great
or the choice that i did make was okay
i'm very fortunate to be alive what do i
need to do to make sure that this
experience never happens again and
that's the path that i took
and it took me some time before when you
make that they make it sound so easy in
the sense of hey i'll just
i i got two you know clear minded i got
two pass before me
i'll choose the path that doesn't lead
me to a despair and anguish type of
thing
was it really that easy or was it a
process a period of time self-reflection
or how did you because you know
certainly in you know you have startups
that go under right and whether it's you
know
you you get burned out and you have a
heart attack and then you get let go or
you just have a startup that you put
your blood sweat and tears in
doesn't work out take out loans get
foreclosed on whatever i mean
other happens other people and you can
start to say hey i'm going to slip into
depression
i'm otherwise going to start as you
mentioned blame everybody
or i'm going to you know start or lose
all hope or you know any number of bad
things
so how did you you know over that period
of time was it did you start out
depressed and have to pull yourself out
of depression
was it a realization hey i've either got
two choices i can go down a bad path or
a good path or
how did you make it you know it sounds
really easy but i'm assuming it's not
that easy so how did you kind of make
that transition or have that realization
yeah it took some time in that 17 weeks
that i had between the heart attack and
losing my job
a lot of the framework was done there
and of course at that point i didn't
know anything about losing the job or
the car or the home type of situation
those weren't
um those weren't in you know in the
situation at that point
but for those 17 weeks which is during
the summer
i did a lot of reflection and i i never
had any depression or anxiety
after uh the cardiac event actually of
everybody involved with family friends
and all
that i was probably the calmest of
everybody
and a lot of people were like curious
about that and
even to this day i i can't necessarily
say
why i was but i it was just the state of
mind that i was in i'm like
okay that happened to me i don't want
that to happen again okay what do i need
to do
so i just relaxed you know for that the
first i would say
four to six weeks i just was
recuperating from it
and getting used to the medications and
going into life at a much slower pace
because you got to remember i was going
full tilt 6 a.m to 11 p.m
seven days a week to not doing
anything that is very very difficult for
somebody that is a type a personality
doer
let's go do this and this to somebody
that needs a nap
at two o'clock in the afternoon and i
was
40. okay saturday afternoons in the fall
yes i'll take a nap because i'll have
the college football game on and i'll
just get comatose
and i wake up in the afternoon and going
you know why is ucla playing it's like
oh it's
it's it's in the afternoon late
afternoon okay
completely missed the first game all
right you know so at least now we can
rewind with our televisions back
then that wasn't still wasn't around as
much so
so basically i just i took that time to
just kind of reflect
and go okay what
do i need to do and it was just
basically keeping track of
my thoughts how i was feeling my energy
interactions
just going in a way just kind of
observing life
maybe just a little bit outside of
myself and that's
it wasn't easy to do that but it's just
like okay why
you know if i had an argument for
example okay why
was i upset about that situation what
were all the ingredients
beliefs patterns and and all of that and
when i started doing that
i started realizing okay a lot of this
was
programming that i had for a long time
and just how i was my demeanor
my personality my beliefs how i
approached things
and and i joke about facebook i
some people love it some people hate it
i i'm hit or miss with it
but the one thing that i do love about
facebook is the memory section
because it'll show you your posts that
you did years ago
and when i see posts that i posted prior
to my cardiac event
i recognized that person but it's not me
i'm not i'm not that person anymore
because i made
changes and is it easy to do it
it's not easy but you have to go at it
from a very
methodical okay how could i look at this
situation in a different way
could i approach this differently
instead of
ordering this food from this restaurant
maybe i can order this instead or
let's you know try a little bit more
activity to start taking better care of
myself
so i wasn't dragging all the time and
eating improperly
and getting a proper amount of sleep and
a variety of other things
that i implement in my life which you
know has made my life
obviously much better than it was before
so so you did that introspection you
look and say okay what are the things
that led me to this
what can i do differently and how can i
move forward now
taking it you know kind of back to
almost a journey of so now you made
those kind of introspections you take
that period of time
how did you then pick yourself up and
how did you decide okay i've still got
to make a living i still have to have an
income so i have a family to support so
i got myself to support
how can i you know what was the path to
now getting new employment different
employment
was it hey i'm gonna go do a startup i'm
gonna do my own thing take my control
you know
take things into my control i'm going to
go work at walmart as a greeter it's a
temporary thing to get some income
or you know i'm going to go work for a
big company or kind of what was that
transition for you now
trying to make that uh make that
decision as to where is it where do you
go from here
yeah one after you know the house was
uh repossessed or actually during that
period of time
i found a role a healthcare role
ironically
in toronto and my parents wanted to have
me committed
they're like are you crazy you're going
back into healthcare it nearly killed
you
what the hell and basically i said you
know what no i'm gonna go at this
differently
i need this was something that i had to
prove to myself like
can i go back into the sector
that i failed miserably at and actually
come out of it
successful and i did and what i did is i
used it as a healing
mechanism to again do the work that i
was doing
but really setting priorities and
boundaries around my work and
establishing when i was going to work
when i wasn't going to work
shutting down email not going onto the
computer after hours not working nights
and weekends
really you know establishing those rules
from the very beginning
and it made the biggest difference for
me and you can do it in a startup you
can do it if you're working for somebody
else
it's easier to do it at the very
beginning and it's just like any habit
once you establish it and you practice
it
then it becomes more routine and you can
do it
so going through all the healing and
reinventing myself
and you know looking at life differently
and living life with more boundaries and
protecting myself and focusing on my
self-care more
life was going good i was becoming
really successful in my healthcare roles
doing a lot of great things working with
funding agencies on
strategic planning sessions i was on
boards of directors
you know making big decisions for
organizations and
while i was doing that and life was
going really well and successful
i started paying attention to my
colleagues and i noticed that they were
going down that burnout path
that i did and it scared me and i'm like
what in the world you know you just
start
it's all those things it's like you know
if you're a smoker and then you quit
smoking then you all suddenly start
looking around you see everybody smoking
it's like horus you buying a car
everybody and now you start to notice
everybody has a red car that same type
of a thing
exactly like you know i'm the only one
in this neighborhood that owns this car
and you look around and there's like six
in the parking lot nearly
okay i guess i was exactly
exactly it's like someone's following me
oh they're stalking me kind of thing
but no i think what happened was in that
situation
i started talking to my colleagues and i
didn't share my story so much
with them other than look i've had
bouts of of stress and burnout i know
what it looks like
with all due respect you're showing some
signs
and you should you know take some time
and
ease up and all that and i said i'm just
gonna work through it it'll be fine
later
i knew that it wouldn't be because i
know the work
that they do and i know the demands that
they had and the way that they were
approaching it
wasn't gonna be helpful so i thought
okay i need to do something a little bit
more so i started researching
burnout a bit more because burnout's
been around for a long long time i
actually have a book that was
published in 1980 titled burnout
and so it's been around for a very long
time but
it's just more prevalent and there's
more awareness of it now which is
good and bad it's bad that exists but
it's good that there's awareness and
there's
talk happening about it because once
there's talk then eventually there's
action and then there's
movement and then some people are
addressing it
so doing all this research and finding
all of these things like i should start
sharing these with my colleagues and
and then i realized i just started
looking around and seeing other sectors
outside of healthcare
we're having similar challenges legal
education manufacturing
it was all over the place so i thought
okay
how what should i do about this and then
the entrepreneurial spirit
which i never thought i had although in
my startup roles that i had in my life
i actually did but you know what i i
need to formalize this a little bit more
instead of just having a blog
why don't i launch my own company i'll
keep my
health care roll launch it um so that
way
if it takes time to build it up i can do
it and run
both simultaneously and
of course with caution because you know
it's not good for the burnout guy to
burn out it's not good for pr
so i just thought i need you i was like
the
healthcare professional having a heart
attack right now but no yeah
exactly but exactly exactly you guys
should do this well look what you guys
did to your director i'm not listening
to you doc yeah
yeah i'm sure the patient results for
that community weren't that great after
they heard that but
anyway no actually the the physician
there um that
caught my cardiac event it's a really
good doc so uh
but end of day i thought okay let me
launch a business let's
start writing about this and you started
out as kind of as almost a side hustle
right if
i remember kind of we talked a little
bit before it wasn't just hey i've got
this idea for a consulting business of
how to do burnout you know avoid burnout
but i'm going to keep my job that i'm
doing now and get this started to kind
of decide hassle on the site is that
right
that's correct yeah i started as a side
hustle with the
eventual goal to migrate to it full time
which i did several years ago and
because the work was there
and is there and during the time of this
recording in the middle of this pandemic
it's really there um i'm and we'll jump
into some of the things they do but
after you know writing about it you know
somebody said you know you should
probably do a podcast about this because
podcasts are starting to get popular and
you could
you know give some quick tidbits of
advice so i did
and that the original premise of my show
was i was just gonna yap for about five
minutes here do this
you know triage your calendar you know
prioritize
and here's some things that i do to help
and that's what it started off as and
then
uh the person that told me to do the
podcast said you need to start
interviewing people
and talk to them about burnout or
whatever comes up and
been doing that ever since then you know
we're three and a half years into it so
it's been a blast for doing that but
what ended up happening was the
organization that i launched my initial
thought in the plan and the structure of
the startup was
i was going to be consulting with
c-suite executives and senior level
management people because that's the
types of roles that i was in
i know those people burn out and i know
they
do their best not to talk about it
publicly
especially if they're fortune 500
executive
and they're burning out if that gets in
the news
that stock is tanking and it's tanking
fast and so the people that i talk with
you know a lot of times and
entrepreneurs all know this
many sites you for businesses i work
with coca-cola and fedex and you know
they list all the logos of all the great
companies to do that
i can't do that because if i put the
name of a company on there
or an individual you know
again they could take their stock and
cost people billions
uh my insurance does not cover that um
so
my my limit is not that high so for me
even if you're to take the smaller
businesses you know and i and i said i
and mentioned in this podcast and others
i run several businesses
and if i were to go if if the people
that worked under me that you know that
were my employees
and i don't like to say under me but you
know work that are the employees that i
employ
if i were to go and say hey i'm burning
out and i'm worn out and there then
they would start to worry about their
job security as well if hey if the boss
the person that's running things
isn't going to be able to keep you know
getting everything done what are we
going to do and then they start so i
think that even
across the stage whether you start up
small business all the way up to the
huge businesses
it's it certainly is a worry for
everybody that's on the
management level c-level type of people
because they have a perception that they
have to exude confidence they have to
let you know whether it's a market or
whether it's the employees whether it's
clients you want to make sure that
you look like you appear to have you're
on top of everything and you've got
everything handled
otherwise some people start to lose that
confidence so
now jumping to it so you did all this
you started you know you
i think you said in 2018 you kind of
went all in full-time you're going to do
all of this
you're going to switch from you know
doing this as a side hustle to now
building a podcast doing speaking doing
consulting
and really helping people address
burnout so you take that 2018 so you've
had it the last
couple years has it how's it going as
far and i'm sure
you know covet has also been a a factor
in it maybe that's helpful maybe it's
not in a sense it probably creates you
know different types of burnout and
other things to factor into it
but as a business you know taking that
as a business has it gone well
gone upwards has it kind of gone those
ups and downs or has it gone for you
uh it started off kind of a slow climb
and then
the pandemic hit and i shifted
things because i was speaking and i had
several events this year
booked already that i was going to be
speaking about burnout because burnout
was
and has been pretty prevalent the
pandemic hit
and it took off
um and and what we see is
monster.com did a recent survey and
those surveyed
indicated that 69 of people surveyed
are identifying as being burned out so
in an organization if those statistics
are accurate
seven out of ten people in your
organization
are burning out we have a pandemic
within a pandemic
that's huge insurance claims for mental
health claims and mental
illness and sick leave are skyrocketing
a colleague of mine works in the
insurance industry and he says yeah the
claims
this year are astronomical so what's
going to happen and
the challenges mental is issues and
stress and burnout
a lot of organizations have been
reluctant to do anything about it
because it's
it's difficult in a way to do it and
they say well you know it's not really
impacting their bottom line
well it's going to because your
insurance premiums are going to go sky
high next year
and you're going to also have a ton of
absenteeism and people leaving your
organization
and we know it takes you know depending
on the role
18 months to two years to get fully back
up to speed if you lose the key
individual
yeah well you start losing five to seven
you know out of ten people in your
organization and you're not a mcdonald's
that's a problem and it's going to
impact your deliverables to your clients
your clients are going to get upset
they're going to leave
believe me it's going to impact the
bottom line so
you need to get ahead of this at
whatever level in and create
opportunities for people to
bring to light the challenges that
they're facing because the working from
home burnout situation is a huge
problem because one you know so many
people working
from home their homes aren't set up like
an office or they weren't
they might be now hopefully but they
weren't before and for many people
they've never worked remotely before and
all of a sudden they're like
what's zoom you know how do i use this
what what's this and
i think everyone knows what it is now
and we're all kicking ourselves
for not buying the stock in march but
that's another story
sure but i think at the end of the day
we have work and home are now the same
place
and so many of us that's a good point
even to the point of you know
and i think a lot of people think that
they work well from home or they always
dreamed of working from home
and you know they don't you don't
realize so i work from home i don't work
at home anymore i have my office i
haven't played but for
beginning and for quite a bit of my
career i worked several years from home
and i worked for remotely
and you know it was everything and i'm
an introvert so i
tended to be fine i didn't i didn't need
the social interaction
but what i did even for me doing it all
those years it took me a while to figure
out how do you balance so
if your wife comes in and wants to have
a question for the kids to get home from
school
and you're on a call how do you balance
that or how do you not you know get
distracted well i've got these couple
things i just need to get done at home
and so i'll make up the time for work
later on and then it creates those
issues of missing deadlines
and it it creates a lot new a lot of
stress that if you haven't done that or
you're not used to it
makes it you know a much different
dynamic than you're not used to
so i completely get that and i think
there's a lot of
issues with or you know a lot of things
are addressed there we don't have as
much time to address at all here
but my question would be i'll give you
two opera or two things and then i'll
always
hit my last two questions first is you
mentioned you have a podcast and
addresses a lot of this
people want to find out more want to
listen to your podcast
get to get more information what's the
podcast that you that you do
it's called the breakfast leadership
show and it's on all the major platforms
and some that i've never heard of and so
yeah i listened to your show
on this i'm like on what like so yeah
it's it gets replicated everywhere so
uh itunes spotify i heart radio all of
them so
breakfast leadership show okay well
that's so that would be the first thing
so people want to find out more about
um how to avoid burnout how to deal with
it and other people's experiences i
think that sounds like it's a good
resource to go to
with the one other thing so people want
what would be the one
and i know that it's always hard because
there's a lot of things what would be
the one tip or piece of advice you'd
give people
to avoid burnout or at least to address
it or to you know
guard against that limit your screen
time on your smartphone
um it's you don't understand how many
times you're interrupted in a day
just in normal things for your
smartphone great devices
but my goodness we pick these things up
so often and
they eat up a bunch of our time and take
us away from the deep work that we
really need to do and even during this
pandemic
we're we're consuming a lot of content
and unfortunately a lot of it is
negative
and that can impact your mental state
which impacts your physical state
which lowers your immunity and you don't
want to have a low immunity right now
no i think that that's a good advice i
mean it's always one that
we hear it a lot it's a simple one and
yet how often do we either
oh you know and i thought it was
interesting this is inside you know you
see a lot of the studies and that of
people think you know how often do they
people think they're on their smart
device or on a screen
versus how often are they actually and
people like oh i'm on my phone maybe an
hour a day
and then you do the you know the
trackers and everything else and people
are on for two and a half three hours or
plus
and you know then it's you know it's a
has a much bigger impact that oftentimes
people disregard it is and you know for
mine i use mine often as a computer so
it
it piles up on on the time and you look
at you go
like yikes so you know i try to do
different things and
and build in breaks and not use it as
much but yeah i keep the time of the
track and i go wow
that's that's not good okay yeah because
when people say i don't have any time
it's like according to your smartphone
you you're spending about five hours a
day so you think you could
carve out maybe 30 minutes away from um
tick tock and and
and maybe do something else although
tick-tock if you're dancing and you're
moving
you're getting action and activity
that's true that's you know
well as long as it doesn't get banned
we'll be good yeah
who knows what will happen there that's
a whole longer conversation so yeah
all right so as we start to wrap up the
the podcast i always ask two questions
at the end of the podcast we'll jump to
those now so first question maybe it's
already
all you know within all the things that
we've covered but what was the worst
business decision you have ever made
worst business decision was not starting
this organization
sooner center it is funny
because i think we're you may be 100 if
not we're getting close to the number of
episodes 100 i don't have the exact
number but we'll call this 100
it may be what a couple off but of the
100 ish episodes i've done
i would say the number one thing is that
people say their biggest mistake is is
just that they should have got started
earlier
i love this it's a it's been a
life-changing all of the above
and so i think that it's just
interesting how many
people have so many different journeys
and yet that's probably the number one
answer is the thing that they wish
they'd done earlier
okay second question is if you were to
take
someone that's now just getting the
startups just getting into small
businesses
just starting out or wanting it started
out what would be the one piece of
advice you'd give them
establish boundaries surround your time
and make sure that you schedule your
self-care time first because we can fill
our calendars up with work
not a problem that it's easily done but
when we try to squeeze in
self-care it's harder to find time you
put that on your calendar first you
don't move it
don't worry the work is going to find
the open slots it won't be a problem but
schedule your self-care first
and and color code it too use and i do
this what i do with my calendar
um i use my favorite color to re
you know demonstrate self-care and
things that are beneficial to me
then that way i can look back at
yesterday or last week or last month and
if i don't see enough of my favorite
color
i know there's a problem and i need to
make an adjustment with my time in my
schedule
so you it's your favorite color and it
doesn't have to be an electronic you can
use paper one too just use
a highlighter um and and highlight uh
the self-care
uh with your favorite color then that
way you can look back and go okay
yeah i'm getting enough and you can tell
it's just
you ask yourself you do a check in with
yourself how am i feeling
and you know both physically mentally
you know
does my outlook on life look good do i
feel dejected and i feel kind of down
am i anxious about something do those
check-ins
and keeping track of your calendar is is
one good way to make sure that you keep
in check uh with what's going on in your
life no and i completely agree and i
always there's always more fires to put
out more things to do than you ever have
time to
and i'd put that in there that's just
kind of the same perspective i have with
family time too is you know having those
boundaries
because you know in self-care and i'd
put family is both very important things
and you
they're always ones that are easy to
push off right oh i can work start
running or working out tomorrow i can
start taking a
break or medication
oh we're back sorry dropped off there
for just a second
yeah i looked i i looked down at the
thing and i was like do i
okay sometimes it's me but i look down
it's like no
all all white bars on this and i'm like
i'm like
all right for the listening audience we
had a temporary break so i'm going to
back up and if you if i repeat myself
you'll just get an extra thing but what
i was saying is you know for me i look
at it just to your point taking time for
yourself
you almost have both family and
self-care kind of
fall in the categories uh it's easy to
push off in the sense that
you always have fires to put out at work
you always have things to get done
especially if you're a startup small
business or a c level
is you're always going to have more
things to do than time to do it and so
family always say oh you know all i can
get that tomorrow i can go to that game
or that practice
or i can spend time reading the book to
the kid same thing i can always start
running tomorrow i can eat healthier you
know
next week and i'll just get through this
week type of a thing and yet if you're
not intentional if you don't do it
you're never going to have that you
never if you're
you're always going to have things that
will fill up your time and if you don't
be intentional about it you're always
going to have to fill it up
and never have that self-care and you're
never going to have that family time
so well as we wrap up as we finish up
the podcast
people want to reach out to you they
want to learn more about you learn about
your
find your podcast read your book
schedule you for an event
uh they want to work for you they want
to pick your brain any or all of the
above
what's the best way to connect with you
best ways go to breakfastleadership.com
at
you know the bottom there's a thing
where they can enter some information
and i can
um you know reach out to them social
media under be
fast leadership so the letter b and then
fast leadership
on all the major social media platforms
so
interact with me there as well i'm happy
to help or guide you
on you know whatever you're facing when
it comes to this burnout
awesome well i appreciate you coming on
it's been fun to hear about your journey
about how you've overcome burnout and
how you're now helping other people with
it
now for any of you that uh have your own
journey to tell love to have you on the
podcast
and feel free to go to
inventivejourneyguest.com
and apply to be on the podcast and come
on and tell your journey
if you're a listener make sure to click
subscribe so you can get a notification
of this and all the new
or all the new episodes as they come out
and lastly
if you ever need help with patents or
trademarks feel free to reach out to us
at miller ip law
always here to help thanks again michael
for coming on it's been a pleasure
and wish the next leg of your journey
even better than the last
thank you
you
English (auto-generated)