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The Best Way to Predict the Future is to Create It!
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George Wright III shares a key lesson from a high-end mastermind: lasting success and major business exits come from changing identity, not just setting goals or forcing new behaviors. He explains that most people focus on outcomes and processes but hit an internal ceiling defined by self-image, because identity is a subconscious collection of beliefs and labels that determines what you attempt, tolerate, and repeatedly do. To shift identity, he recommends deciding who you’re becoming, upgrading internal dialogue with aligned thinking, and acting in accordance before you feel ready, stacking small wins to reinforce the new self-concept while adjusting environment and associations that pull you back. He warns against trying to change results without identity work, using affirmations without action, expecting instant transformation, and clinging to limiting labels, and invites listeners to share struggles and wins while directing them to dailymastermind.com for new resources.
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George Wright III shares an idea from Alan Watts about “the great pretending,” where people act as if every decision and outcome is judged on a cosmic scoreboard, creating constant stress and performance anxiety. He argues life is not a test but an experience or game, and that nature operates playfully without strain. The key distinction is between giving up (indifference) and letting go (freedom): you can still pursue goals and build a business without attaching your identity to outcomes. He suggests asking how you’d live today if things didn’t matter in the way you think—speaking more honestly, acting sooner, and overthinking less—because releasing pressure improves clarity, creativity, speed, and results. The takeaway is to treat life like a playground, act from intention rather than fear, and reflect on where you’re taking life too seriously.
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George Wright III explains that most people live in the gap between knowing and doing because they lack discipline, not knowledge, and that results come from consistent actions rather than intentions. He argues motivation is unreliable and defines discipline as following through on commitments regardless of feelings, which builds momentum, progress, and self-confidence. He outlines three drivers of discipline: clear standards (non-negotiables), supportive structure (routines that reduce decision-making and resistance), and identity (seeing yourself as someone who follows through). He recommends getting specific about expectations, removing friction by preparing your environment, starting small and building through repetition, and tracking consistency rather than results. He warns against relying on willpower alone, setting unrealistic expectations, and being vague, and encourages listeners to implement one simple disciplined action this week and share feedback with the show.
The Best Way to Predict the Future is to Create It!
All BlogsVeteran CEO mentor and speaker George Wright III shares decades of experience so you can shorten your learning curve.
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About The Daily Mastermind
25+ years mentoring in Mindset, Money, and Business.