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#531 How I Escaped the Grind, Built a Mastermind, and Doubled My Results
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Action Plan: https://jimharshawjr.com/ACTION
Free Clarity Call: https://jimharshawjr.com/APPLY
I’ve coached nearly 300 men and here’s the most important thing I’ve learned:
The most dangerous place for a driven man is inside his own head. Because he can make “figuring it out alone” sound like discipline.
Male loneliness is not always obvious. Sometimes it wears a suit, makes good money, coaches the kids’ team, and tells everyone, “I’m good.”
Male loneliness doesn’t always look like isolation.
Sometimes it looks like a successful man with a full calendar, a strong résumé, a good family, and a private sense that something is still off.
In this episode of “Success for the Athletic-Minded Man,” I’m talking about the hidden cost of trying to figure everything out alone.
Years ago, I was sitting in a spare bedroom, feeling alone and like a fraud because my business was barely hanging on. I had done hard things before. I knew how to work. But this felt different. I was stuck, and I didn’t know why.
The answer wasn’t another tactic. It wasn’t another book. It wasn’t working harder.
It was people.
Not drinking buddies. Not surface-level networking. Not another group chat.
I’m talking about the kind of peer-level relationships that expose your blind spots, challenge your excuses, raise your standard, and give you a place to say the things you usually keep buried.
You’ll hear how this changed for me, from joining an entrepreneur community, to building a mastermind, to working with a coach, to surrounding myself with people who helped me see what I couldn’t see on my own.
And I’ll share why so many driven men are silently carrying too much alone, even when everyone around them assumes they’re fine.
If success has given you more responsibility but fewer places to be honest, this episode will hit differently.
Listen now and ask yourself: who in your life can tell you the truth?
If you don’t have time to listen to the entire episode or if you hear something that you like but don’t have time to write it down, be sure to grab your free copy of the Action Plan from this episode— as well as get access to action plans from EVERY episode— at http://www.JimHarshawJr.com/Action.
By Jim Harshaw, Jr.4.9
245245 ratings
#531 How I Escaped the Grind, Built a Mastermind, and Doubled My Results
-----
Action Plan: https://jimharshawjr.com/ACTION
Free Clarity Call: https://jimharshawjr.com/APPLY
I’ve coached nearly 300 men and here’s the most important thing I’ve learned:
The most dangerous place for a driven man is inside his own head. Because he can make “figuring it out alone” sound like discipline.
Male loneliness is not always obvious. Sometimes it wears a suit, makes good money, coaches the kids’ team, and tells everyone, “I’m good.”
Male loneliness doesn’t always look like isolation.
Sometimes it looks like a successful man with a full calendar, a strong résumé, a good family, and a private sense that something is still off.
In this episode of “Success for the Athletic-Minded Man,” I’m talking about the hidden cost of trying to figure everything out alone.
Years ago, I was sitting in a spare bedroom, feeling alone and like a fraud because my business was barely hanging on. I had done hard things before. I knew how to work. But this felt different. I was stuck, and I didn’t know why.
The answer wasn’t another tactic. It wasn’t another book. It wasn’t working harder.
It was people.
Not drinking buddies. Not surface-level networking. Not another group chat.
I’m talking about the kind of peer-level relationships that expose your blind spots, challenge your excuses, raise your standard, and give you a place to say the things you usually keep buried.
You’ll hear how this changed for me, from joining an entrepreneur community, to building a mastermind, to working with a coach, to surrounding myself with people who helped me see what I couldn’t see on my own.
And I’ll share why so many driven men are silently carrying too much alone, even when everyone around them assumes they’re fine.
If success has given you more responsibility but fewer places to be honest, this episode will hit differently.
Listen now and ask yourself: who in your life can tell you the truth?
If you don’t have time to listen to the entire episode or if you hear something that you like but don’t have time to write it down, be sure to grab your free copy of the Action Plan from this episode— as well as get access to action plans from EVERY episode— at http://www.JimHarshawJr.com/Action.

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