"Headtrash, and the handyman's secret weapon: Duct Tape."

8 replies
Decided to break this out:

"Head Trash" is: limiting beliefs that make us settle for a level of income and circumstances.

But most of us don't even know we have it.

Once you start shining a light on and examining your head trash, you'll begin opening up new opportunities. "Oh, I can't charge that much; I'm just starting out." "I can't eat at that restaurant; it's for rich people." "I can't do that job; I'm just not good at math."

Hey, speaking about math. Let me share a headtrash story with you. In high school I was not an exceptional student. I had a reputation for being smart, but my grades didn't show it. And in math, I was the worst. I spent zero time on studying math, and so I just didn't understand it. Barely got through the courses.

A couple years after graduation I had to take a nighttime math course to get into the operations management program. I was shakin'! Math was always a problem for me; I was never going to be good at it!

Fortunately, the teacher I got for this math course was one of the best and it was truly a life-changing event. His name was Joe, and sadly he died of skin cancer a few years later. But when he was teaching this course, he had a talk with me. I wanted to do well in this course. I wanted to get into the opman program. But I just couldn't see how I was going to to well at math, since it had always been a problem for me.

"Calm down," Joe told me. "Don't panic. There's a method here." Little did I know, there's always a method. "You haven't been good at math because you think you're not good at math. So you don't put any effort in. Do this: learn the method. Practice the method. When the test comes, you'll be ready."

I studied, did my homework, and stayed after class. Tests arrived and I not only passed them, I did OK. I got a B in the course.

(I was a poor 19-year-old waiter then, working night shift--and one memorable evening after class the heel of my shoe fell off! Joe fixed it with the handyman's secret weapon, duct tape, and I had a silver-heeled trip home on the bus. Good times!)

The B was nowhere near as important as the change in mind that Joe had directed me to make. I began to think I could be good at math.

Fast forward three years later: I was taking some courses to finish my business degree. One of them was a high-level statistics course that I had already taken the previous year in the opman program. The degree curriculum just wouldn't let us few opman guys out of taking the course a second time. I had the exact same teacher again, too, a Doctor of Math. Yes. A Doctor of Math. Taught me 3 courses.

At the beginning of this class of budding business admin grads, the Doc says, "So...what do you think you're going to get in this extremely difficult course?" And he asked everybody.

"Well," I responded, "since I got 90% last year with you...I'm gonna get 90% again."

Everyone laughed.

Guess what. I got 90%. For the second time.

Our expectations lead us to good or bad outcomes. Be wary of your expectations. There are company presidents at large businesses that even I am a bit nervous about calling, because I worry they might "be too big for me." And that's my head trash. That's the level that it's at. I continue to work on it; I don't think it will ever end, it's part of being human.

Examine your beliefs. Question them. If a guy like me can go from a near-failure at math to a tutor helping others in six months, imagine what you've been holding yourself back from--for no good reason.

Miss ya, Joe.

For those of you starting out, or having been in the biz for a bit but afraid to raise your prices, watch this:


Remember, your prospect doesn't know everything about you...or even much at all. You know everything about you. And that's why you have the headtrash.
#handyman #headtrash #secret #weapon
  • Profile picture of the author xlfutur1
    Great post, and this is so true. I read a couple of books this summer that blew my mind about what is possible and they relate to this very concept of the mental side of things.

    One of the books is by a guy named Bob Rotella, and he writes books about golf - everything to do with the mental side of the game. Believe me, after reading his books, you can apply the concepts he talks about to ANYTHING. And if you are a golfer, it will certainly help you shave strokes off your game.

    The other one is a fascinating look at "talent" and the myths surrounding how we perceive excellence. Its called Bounce by Matthew Syed.

    After reading this book, you begin to realize that virtually anything you want to become excellent at (even stuff you consider yourself naturally "terrible" at) can be achieved through deliberate practice over a period of time. He lays out numerous examples of people who most would consider to be genius at their chosen endeavor, but in reality were putting in thousands of hours of practice and had the feedback to go along with that practice.

    Its amazing how important the mind is to becoming good at anything. it really all starts there. The rest is just going through the motions.
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    • Profile picture of the author Jason Kanigan
      Originally Posted by xlfutur1 View Post

      Great post, and this is so true. I read a couple of books this summer that blew my mind about what is possible and they relate to this very concept of the mental side of things.

      One of the books is by a guy named Bob Rotella, and he writes books about golf - everything to do with the mental side of the game. Believe me, after reading his books, you can apply the concepts he talks about to ANYTHING. And if you are a golfer, it will certainly help you shave strokes off your game.

      The other one is a fascinating look at "talent" and the myths surrounding how we perceive excellence. Its called Bounce by Matthew Syed.

      After reading this book, you begin to realize that virtually anything you want to become excellent at (even stuff you consider yourself naturally "terrible" at) can be achieved through deliberate practice over a period of time. He lays out numerous examples of people who most would consider to be genius at their chosen endeavor, but in reality were putting in thousands of hours of practice and had the feedback to go along with that practice.

      Its amazing how important the mind is to becoming good at anything. it really all starts there. The rest is just going through the motions.
      Thanks for your contribution here. Yes, book learning can definitely be eye- (mind-)opening. What I wanted to share was a real world transformative event: not something I read in a book but a live occurrence that has had long-reaching effects on who I am as a person. Believing I could and then actually becoming good at math made me believe that I could and then actually become good at many other things I would have otherwise shook my head at and walked away from.

      Success and failure begin in the mind. I haven't shared this before, but I actually demand certain revenue amounts from myself. I don't just "put an offer out there and see what happens." Things are planned for and there are solid expectations. When I'm sloppy and don't do that, I get sloppy results. And let's talk about price again. When I put something out there for a higher price than what's normal for me or someone else, yes there is a bit of a "gulp" factor. But I do my best to ignore it, and concentrate on the fact that there is someone out there--many people--who are looking for this exact thing and are ready, willing and able to pay what I want for it.

      That's what to keep your mind on. Attracting that outcome. Not on "This probably won't work because so many people are broke" and "I doubt anyone will be interested in what I have to offer."

      Maybe this thread will do better in the Mind Warriors section, but Offline are my peeps and I want you to see this stuff first.

      Too many people leave their income to chance. Instead, pick your target and then work backwards to how you are going to get that result--what you are going to have to do to get there. Man it is going to look like a lot of work. Yup. That's the price of getting the flywheel to start turning. Are you in, or are you out? Is it time for you to go back to working a J-O-B? Or are you committed to this thing?

      It begins in your mind, and if your headtrash gets in the way, you'll never get off the ground. So be careful of what you believe about yourself and the world. Most of it is nonsense handed down unwittingly to us and we simply accept it as truth. I'm sure you see the danger in this now.
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  • Profile picture of the author Ron Lafuddy
    Jason,

    Stellar work!

    You and the Claudatious One are hitting them out of park.

    Thank you for your mega contributions here.

    Ron
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  • Profile picture of the author Ron Lafuddy
    Your learning math example reminded me of my catholic
    grade school days, way back when. That scene in the
    Blues Brothers movie, where the Penguin sends Belushi
    flying down the stairs - desk and all, is exactly the
    way I remember it.

    Got my ears pulled, hair yanked, slapped upside the head
    swatted with a ruler on my hands and backside, when I didn't
    know the answer to a math problem. Remember ducking down behind
    the girl who sat in front of me, so I wouldn't get called on.

    My 7 year old body couldn't take the abuse!

    Ah, the good old days. They were terrible!!
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  • Profile picture of the author Jason Kanigan
    I recently was asked to write a guest blog for Contactzilla on head trash:

    How head trash can nuke you before you start via @Contactzilla

    And I want you to apply this to the Christmas season.

    YOU believe people shut down, businesses stop, for the holidays. Nobody buys.

    FALSE.

    But as long as you believe it, it's true (for you). And the results you get? You stopped prospecting. So yeah, nobody buys from you--it's true!

    Companies out there are overstuffed with money right now: everybody just gave it to them for Christmas! Those who are working are sitting there, and with no competition for you since everyone else gave up, too, you can talk to them easily!

    You also don't need to limit yourself to this part of the world. I closed my second client in Singapore this morning. Guess what, I was the highest bidder. The lowest bid was 4-2/3% of mine--and the average was about 1/5th. Do people always buy based on the lowest price? No they do not! Do people always stop buying at Christmas? No they do not! I was the very best match for what they needed, and I proved it.

    Is the whole world concerned about the thoughts going around in your head ("People don't buy at Christmastime")?!

    You give up when you've given up. You do it to yourself.
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  • Profile picture of the author ElijahsChronicles
    Jason,

    Thank you for this inspiring talk on headthrash. It reminds me of how I started out in public speaking back in high school. I was the shy-always avoiding-the-public-type. I had a female teacher that really liked me and pushed me into debates in school.

    Despite that I fought tooth and nail not to participate,she always looked out for me and gave me tips on how to speak better.

    I had this headtrash that I'd be tongue tied when I stand in front of people. She cleared that by telling me that, every audience always seek and pray that the speaker coming in front of them perform well. She made me believe that my audience wants me to succeed.

    I believe that. And that cleared my headtrash. At first,I fumbled through some words. But as I pressed on,it became easier.

    Now I thoroughly enjoy public speaking.

    Thank you Jason for sharing. By the way,this is my first post. Been a lurker for awhile. Thank you once again.
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