Jan. 30, 2025

Stop Chasing Your Dream Life... Build Your Perfect Day Instead

Stop Chasing Your Dream Life... Build Your Perfect Day Instead
Stop Chasing Your Dream Life... Build Your Perfect Day Instead
10 Minute Mindset
Stop Chasing Your Dream Life... Build Your Perfect Day Instead
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Today I want to talk about why your dream life is a trap. This is going to speak about a mindset that a lot of entrepreneurs have which I think is killing their progress and killing their chances of success. And this idea came up in a meeting last week. I was with my mentorship group and one of the guys in the group shared his dream life vision board. Basically it was a beach house, super cars, private jets. It was the whole aspirational Instagram page package. And I asked him a question because he was so focused on the future. I asked him like, how's your Tuesday looking? And he was confused. And there was silence. He had no idea what I was talking about. What do you mean? How's my Tuesday looking? I just showed you what I want my life to look like. Why would I care about Tuesday? Because the reality is your average day is your actual life. We have it backwards in entrepreneurship. I see this so many times, not just with this guy. It's happened to me in the past as well. We obsess over these massive future milestones and we treat our daily experience like it's something that we just have to endure. Something that we have to push through until we quote unquote make it. But the brutal truth about life and building a business is that your Tuesday afternoon, your random Tuesday afternoon, it matters more than your five year vision. Let me explain. Actually, let me tell you a story that sort of encapsulates and explains this idea perfectly. So there's this old Irish folktale about a man who spent his entire life chasing leprechauns convinced that if he caught one, he'd find the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. And he crossed oceans and he climbed mountains and he explored every forest just one step behind. And years later on his deathbed, he discovered that his own backyard had been built on this ancient gold mine. This is the entrepreneur's paradox. We chase the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, but we ignore the gold beneath our feet. The present moment isn't just a stepping stone into some future paradise. It's the foundation of everything we're ever going to build. Think about the entrepreneurs you admire the most, the ones that actually build incredible things. They're not grinding through miserable days, dreaming about some future paradise. They've actually engineered experiences that energize them, challenge them and light them up. And I'm not saying that the people that you look up to don't work hard every single day, but they don't hate their days. Some of us feel like we have to hate our days on the journey and the road to the big thing. And I really do believe that the greatest lie in entrepreneurship is that you need to suffer now to enjoy life later. I've seen founders actually a good friend. He burned through three years of his life building in a figure business, classic hustle story, working weekends, missing kids events, treating his health like some inconvenience. He finally hit his numbers. He bought the dream house and then he realized something terrifying. He had trained himself to hate every single day of his life and a relationship with the kids was broken, relationship with his wife was broken. His health was deteriorating. Fine, he found a way to build a business, but it didn't have to be that way. And now is just three years. He was lucky. Some people spend 10, 20, 30 years hating every single day on the journey to some future thing. And this vision board fantasy is just called that the vision board fantasy vision board trap. It keeps us stuck because it creates this dangerous bargain where you trade your present life for some promised future. But life doesn't work that way. Business growth doesn't work that way. You cannot sustainably build something great from a place of daily misery. Most of us already have access to 80% of what would make a day and a life great for us. If you think about the things that people care about, deep work, movement, real connections, problems worth solving, these are things that we need. But we're so busy fantasizing about future billions that we forget to design the day right in front of us. So we don't even have to do a lot. We just have to design a day consciously as opposed to just letting our work pull us through. Now if we're brutally honest about how life actually works, your year is not made up of highlight real moments and your life is not made up of highlight real moments. It's built from ordinary Wednesdays, regular mornings and these very normal afternoon. So if you do the math, you'll live about 250 work days this year, maybe 10 to 15 quote unquote dream life days. If you're lucky and to paint a picture, imagine you have two jars in front of you. So jar A contains 250 marbles representing your work days and jar B contains 10 marbles representing your dream day. So imagine if because this is what people do, you focus all your energy on optimizing those 10 marbles while treating the other 250 marbles as disposable. It's like having a bank account of $250,000, but you're only carrying about 10,000 of it. So how does that make any sense? But this is what people do every single day entrepreneurs pour all of their energy into optimizing these rare peak moments and we treat the other 250 days like something that we have to survive. The math doesn't work. It's like focusing all of your attention on New Year's Eve and then you just hate the rest of December. Yeah, New Year's Eve is important, but I also like a lot of days in December too because that's where my life happens because your life happens in 24 hour blocks. It doesn't happen in five year leaps. Think about how business growth actually happens. Real business growth. It's not in breakthrough moments. It's in consistent execution. It's in regular client meetings. It's in the daily decisions you make. All these small improvements that are stacked on top of each other. And I've seen businesses implode because their founders built systems and businesses that they hated running. They hated their life. They designed their days around some imagined future instead of what actually works for them right now. And that perfect business plan they created where they're working non-stop and hating every single day. They're so miserable. Yeah, it looks great on paper. But then you're miserable to execute this business plan on a random Thursday. And the entrepreneurs that really win, they don't wait to start living. They build businesses that fit their natural rhythm. They understand this fundamental truth that you cannot build a thriving business from a place of daily drain. It doesn't mean you're not working hard. It doesn't mean you're lowering your ambitions. It's about sequencing them properly. So instead of fantasizing about your dream life, what if you purposefully start designing a day that energizes you? A day that plays to your strengths even instead of fighting them. Because when nobody tells you about all those big entrepreneurial success stories is they built all of them are built on a foundation of well-designed ordinary days. And most business advice runs counter to this, which is why I think that we adopt this incorrect toxic mindset. Because most business advice focuses on exceptions. What does that mean? So launch days, big presentations, major deals, but your success and satisfaction actually live in the routine and the regular rhythm and the unsexy middle because your average day is your actual life. And when I personally shifted from chasing outcomes to designing a daily experience, everything changed. I stopped seeing my daily schedule as an obstacle to my goal and I started treating it as a foundation of everything I wanted to build. And what I learned is that the best daily design, it starts with energy, not time. Most entrepreneurs, they do this backwards. They try to squeeze more into their calendar without understanding their natural rhythm. Again, doing work is not the issue. It's doing it when there's friction involved, when it's not tied back to how you actually want to live and do the work. I want you to pay attention, for example, to when your mind is a sharpest, when you naturally focus best, when you feel the most creative, these aren't preferences. Their data points on how you should structure your day. I've known many founders who sort of fight their night owl tendencies because, quote unquote, successful people wake up early. And when they finally stop fighting their night owl tendencies, when they redesign their day around their energy flows peak evening hours, for example, their business doubles because they stop wasting energy, forcing an unnatural rhythm. And true success isn't about copying someone else's schedule or the way someone else lives their life. It's about honoring how you actually work. So to get this right, I want you to start with your non-negotiables. These are the things that you can't live without, the things that make you feel human, movement, dim, go for a walk, yoga, whatever it is, deep work, real connection with real people, and then build your business day around protecting these elements instead of sacrificing them. Because the entrepreneurs who sustain success, they aren't just good at business. They're good at designing days. They can actually sustain days that energize them instead of drain. And they design days that are worth repeating because of business that requires you to hate your daily experience. It isn't an asset. It's just a well disguised trap. Now, there's a ROI in daily satisfaction because most entrepreneurs, they think of business growth and personal satisfaction as he's opposing forces. So you have to choose between building something great and having days that you actually enjoy. And I think this is the most expensive myth in business. Think about how this plays out. So you push through these endless draining days that you hate, telling yourself it's temporary, just until you hit the next milestone, just until you can hire one more person to help out, just until things settle down. But businesses don't settle down. Trust me, a good business, it's going to settle up. It's going to keep moving faster and faster and faster and get more stressful. And what happens is you actually train yourself to operate from a place of constant strain. You build systems and habits around that strain and you make decisions around that strain and that stress and your business becomes a reflection of this stressful strained energy. But the counterintuitive truth is that daily satisfaction, building not from a place of strain, is this business multiplier. Because when you're operating from a place of genuine energy and engagement, everything works better. Your decision making improves because you're not running on fumes. Your team performs better because they're not absorbing your stressed energy and your clients get better results because you're fully present with them. And a business that is built on days that you love becomes an asset that compounds versus a business built on days that you hate becomes this liability that extracts. Now let's get tactical about building these days worth repeating. It's not about dramatic overhalls. It's about intentional micro adjustments to your day that compound over time. So start with an energy audit. Not a time audit. I want you to track when you naturally hit your stride each day. When you think most clearly, when you feel most creative, when you need to recharge, these patterns are your building blocks. Most entrepreneurs discovered that they're fighting their natural rhythms without realizing it. They schedule critical work when they're energy dips. They take important calls when they're mentally drained. All these small misalignments, they create this constant friction. So I want you to design your day around energy protection instead of time management. I rebuilt my entire schedule around three peak hours in the morning. No calls, no meetings, no distractions, just pure creation and critical thinking. And it felt almost irresponsible at first. But protecting those hours, it changed everything for me. The key is to start small. You don't want to try and revolutionize your entire day at once. So I want you to pick one window of time that matters most or one type of work that deserves your best energy. And I want you to protect that first. And I want you to let the rest of your schedule adapt around it. And then you're going to watch for the ripple effects because better energy leads to better decisions, better decisions, creates more space and more space allows for better boundaries. It's this positive spiral that starts with this one protected block of time. And I want you to pay attention to what drains you. Those small calls that leave you exhausted, low value tasks that you dread, the meetings that could be emails, these aren't just irritations. They're data points that show you where you can make changes, where you have to make changes. Because your perfect day, it already exists in pieces. That's what I mean. There's no dramatic overhaul here. You're experiencing fragments of your perfect day every single day, moments when everything clicked, hours when you were in complete flow. The art is in stringing these pieces together intentionally. Now, the hardest part about designing your ideal day, it's actually not designing it. It's protecting it as your business grows because success has this funny way of trying to pull you back into these old patterns. Because more opportunities means more demands on your time, more revenue brings more complexity, more visibility, creates more distraction, the very growth that you're working towards. It's going to test every single boundary you set. And this is where a lot of entrepreneurs slip backwards. They build this great daily rhythm. Then they abandon it at the first sign of pressure and they treat their ideal day like a luxury instead of a necessity. But your daily experience, it's not just another business variable and it's definitely not a luxury. It's the foundation of everything else that you're going to build. I want you to think about the compounding effect of your daily experience because every time you compromise your ideal day, every time you work with more friction, less optimally, you're not just affecting those 24 hours. You're setting patterns that are going to shape your next month, quarter, and year. And those entrepreneurs that do sustain long term success, they're not just good at building businesses. They're masters at protecting their energy as their business grows. So this isn't about being rigid. It's about being intentional. Your ideal day, it will evolve as your business does. But that evolution should come from conscious choice, not external pressure. So I want everybody listening to stop waiting for some future moment to start enjoying your life. I want you to stop treating your daily experience like a sacrifice on the altar of success because the truth is devastatingly simple. Your dream life already exists in the day right in front of you. The only question is whether or not you're going to have to courage to build it. And the next time you're tempted to grind through another draining day in service of some future goal, remember, your life isn't waiting in your vision board. It's happening right now in the next 24 hours. So make them count.