Impact with Eddie Wilson
Impact with Eddie Wilson

48 - You’re Mistaking Noise for Direction | How Stillness Creates Clarity

2/10/202623:383,994 words
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In Episode 48, Eddie Wilson opens up about one of his greatest leadership weaknesses: the lack of stillness, and why many entrepreneurs confuse stillness with laziness. Eddie explains how stillness is...

Transcript

EN

Welcome to the Impact podcast.

Create opportunities where others have failed, and push you to build empires where once there was empty space. Let's embark on this journey together and make a difference in this world.

Welcome to the Impact podcast with Eddie Wilson. Excited to be with you again today as always,

and this is my favorite day of the week when I get to hop into the studio and share some knowledge and some experience with you. Today I'm going to be a little bit vulnerable and just

sharing with you one of my greatest weaknesses. I think that as a leader we have to spend so much

time really focusing on our strengths and making sure that that is leading us guiding us, pushing others around us forward. But we shouldn't neglect those weaknesses that we all have. You know, a good leader will oftentimes be aware of their weaknesses and we'll compensate for them. And so, you know, this is a weakness that I think a lot of entrepreneurs have. I don't think it's unique to me. But the weakness is the lack of stillness.

And this podcast, you know, today as I talk about this, these are principles that I learn and I practice, but yet I still don't accomplish every single day of my life. It is a pursuit. It's something that I'm on the path of changing, correcting, creating. But, you know, it's a difficult thing for an entrepreneur who is driven. The noise that drives you, oftentimes the chatter

that's inside of your head, the noise of the competition, that noise is oftentimes a driving force.

But I'll tell you that you've heard me talk often about the ego and how everything everything that I want is on the other side of ego. And, you know, you take a young entrepreneur and an

ego actually gets them to step out on their own. So, ego isn't always bad. But, you know, for

me, once you get to a certain level, ego begins to detract. And so, everything I want is on the other side of my ego. When ego is in check, when ego is refrained. But I'll tell you the only way for me to get to the other side of my ego is through this, which is stillness. Because stillness is that concentrated effort to exist and sit with thoughts, realities, and unknowns. And it's one of the most difficult things to do as an entrepreneur. I was doing some coaching with my good friend Larry

Yatch, who led Seal Team 3 and he's been such a good mentor to me in my life. And maybe one day I'll have him on the podcast to love to have Larry on here. But, basically, we talked through a lot of the, you know, the traumas that you have in your life, and you've heard me talk about that. I'm previous podcast. But, when we were talking through that, that he, you know, essentially said that

the key to me, living in alignment. And one of those, like, aha moments for me was that that stillness

was the key for me. That stillness was that active place where alignment happens. And so, easy to get pushed out of alignment when you're just chasing the noise of the world around you. And so, I want to just kind of help you today, because so many entrepreneurs lack that stillness. And in lacking stillness, they lack these fundamental pieces that make them successful in life, relationships, and business. Hyachievers often equate stillness with laziness. And that's where

I get stuck. I grew up in a home and an environment and a family where work ethic was everything. It was, it was preached. It was pushed. And, you know, work ethic was, it was, you know, who you were. And if you weren't a hard worker, then you weren't anything. You know? And so, that was the environment I grew up in. And so, oftentimes, I would equate stillness or that lack of activity as laziness. But when I began to build kind of my, the empire way of thinking and how I existed and, you know,

a lot of the philosophies that I've built an empire, what I realized is that in building the empire, stillness is where clarity forms. Stillness is where you have those moments that no one else can interrupt and clarity begins to show itself. And if you don't pause, you build your ego. If you don't pause oftentimes, that's where the ego and the subconscious just, automatically, automatically jumps in and so much of our lives just trying to bring the subconscious

into the conscious that we can make good choices. And that's where it's done is stillness. But if you don't pause, you know how that stillness you build your ego. You build fear. You build assumptions. And you don't get revelation. Revelation is when you're sitting there and you begin to put all of those thoughts together. But in activity and movement moments,

you essentially can never have that clarity in that revelation. So I don't believe that your next

big breakthrough in your life is going to come from speed. I think it'll actually come from stillness.

I know that all of my great breakthroughs, all of my great moments, was a mom...

not a moment of speed. It wasn't about sprinting. It wasn't about pushing. It wasn't about dominating.

There are moments where you have to sprint, where you have to push, where you have to dominate.

But it's that stillness that gives you the clarity and the direction in which to do that.

And so I believe your next big breakthrough will come from stillness. So I want to kind of

juxtapose two points today. I'm going to take Ryan Holidays book, which is a stoic philosophy called stillness is the key. And then I'm going to take the Bible and I'm going to oppose those two together because in the Bible many of you have heard the verse where we're supposed to be still and know that I am God. It's like this place of, I want you to hear the intellectual side. I want you to hear the spiritual and faith side. And I think that there's some meat and some truth

in the middle there. So let me give you just a quick summary of Ryan's book. So Ryan's book stillness is the key. I actually went on, I took my youngest son, Maddox, to the beach for a couple of days. Just the two of us just to go hang out. And I took a couple of books with me just for those

still moments where I could just think and absorb and one of those books was stillness of the key.

It was a fantastic book. It was a great read. And I knew that I was going to struggle with it because that's the one thing that I already know that I struggle with. And so I thought I'm going to read it and I'm going to do my best to get through it and add principles to my life even though I know it's

going to be painful. And it was great. And his book talks about stillness. And he basically

says stillness equals peace, clarity, or control of yourself, or control of the self. And he gave a ton of examples, some great examples. Marcus Aurelius, if you've ever read, he's got all these like musings. He's got his meditations. He's got that in those are just the journalings of Marcus Aurelius. And so Marcus would practice stillness through journaling. He talked about Winston Churchill and he talked about how Winston Churchill during the war and during the height of the war,

height of the war was painting. And he would go off and he would paint. And so some of the his paintings are still in various London art houses. And then he talked about Lincoln, how Lincoln as Lincoln would get fear and anxiety, especially during the war, he would walk. And that walking he was told by a doctor that the movement of your inner ear releases fear. So he began to walk. So that his equilibrium would essentially, would remove some of those actions of fear.

And just a really great book. And then he said stillness is the discipline that allows leaders to stay grounded in chaos. And just a great reminder. And then he basically talks about the three domains of stillness. He said that we have to have stillness, not just in the physical, we have to have stillness in our mind, our soul, and our body. And I thought these were very, very, very great points. He said in our mind, stillness gives us clarity, focus, and that inner peace.

Usually that's what's talked about when we're talking about stillness. We're talking about that,

that mind stillness, right? Like when we have that clarity or that inner sense of peace. But then he talked about the stillness of our soul and how that brings us purpose or helps identify our principles or it gives us identity who we are. And then thirdly our body, he talked about our rest, our health, and the disciplines of our life. And how those can help so much and how stillness can bring that. And so it's like, I love the concepts that he

broke down because stillness wasn't just this concept of sitting there and meditation and inquiateness when you're dealing with the thoughts of the mind, it was the mind, it was the soul, our identity, our soul's purpose. And it was the body. And making sure that there was a alignment in all three. And so as you sit in stillness, the concept would be bringing into the conscious, not just the stillness of my body, right? Not just rest, not just the inner clarity,

or the peace of mind, but also bringing in those thoughts of purpose and identity and who we are. And so as I kind of reframe that, as I look at that book and that concept, I would say that my take away from that is that without stillness, you oftentimes mistake noise for direction. You've heard the phrase that the squeaky wheel gets degrees. And so oftentimes especially in business, typically what's yelling at you the most, it might be a disgruntled customer, it might be the

fact that you're losing money, it might be frustrated employees, typically as a business owner or CEO or leader, you run towards that noise and you're trying to solve that noise. But oftentimes

in that noise is not really where the problem is solved. It's usually the result of whatever the

Problem is.

are unhappy and maybe you are losing money, there is no profit and your employees are frustrated.

That's when stillness is crucial because if you're just trying to solve one of those versus

solving the root of those, you're going to be on this full's air end of just this cyclical, I

go to solve this and I go to solve this and I go to solve this and you're never actually

getting ahead. So without stillness, you make noise for direction. Stillness builds internal structure just like systems build external scale. Okay, so that was Ryan's books. Now let's talk about the Bible, right? What is the Bible say about stillness? And so we know in Psalm 46, 10 it says, "Be still and know that I'm God." Stillness in the Bible is actually referencing surrender, trust, or an intimacy with source with God, right? And that stillness isn't about something that is

internal. Oftentimes it's the internal that's related to the source or the created our creator

who is the source of all knowledge and all truth. So with Ryan in his book, it very much was an

inner focus. It was very much tied to who I am and what my purpose is. But I love that in Psalms, it says, "To be still and then the conjunction to that is as and know that I am God." And it's not just the stillness, it's not just the ability to pull one's thoughts, emotions, activity, and noise away. It's about a full surrender and it's about trust and it's about intimacy, or a deeper relationship, a connection with the creator God, right? And so it's oftentimes then

in scripture where you see Jesus who is the the preeminent example in scripture, right? You see Jesus would often withdraw himself before the major decisions. Before the crucifixion, he's in the garden of Getsemony. Why is he in Getsemony? He's there. He's praying is alone, right? You see, Jesus being still as an example. When you go back to the Old Testament, I used to love these stories as a young boy, but the story of Elijah, right? And Elijah hears the whispers of God. And he hears

the whispers, not in the storm and not in the noise, but he hears him when he's alone and he's still in his silent. When Moses stood still beside the Red Sea before he part of the waters for the children of Israel to pass through, he stood by the Red Sea. He paused. He halted. He waited. So what you see is even in scripture, there was this moment of just this pause, this reflection, this stilling of your spirit, your mind, your body, and your emotions and soul. But the step of the

where the Bible is taking us is and in that you tap into the knowing. What is the knowing? Well, oftentimes as a human, we have this experience where knowing is typically assimilated with knowledge and knowledge is assimilated with whatever truths we have experienced or received or collected. Wisdom would then be taking all those collected truths and putting them into action, right? So knowledge into wisdom would be knowledge would be almost like, I know it, wisdom would be, I know it and I

acted on it. However, have you ever innately just knew something without ever experiencing it? Have you ever

felt in your soul that something was right, but you didn't have the experience or knowledge of it?

And this is what the Bible is talking about. This is what scripture is talking about. It's like, being still allows you to tap into the source of all knowledge, the knowing, which is God.

And oftentimes in running and sprinting, you never tap into that source. You miss all that is

already there. This is a wild concept because as much as I loved Ryan's book and I think Ryan gave me light into how to practice stillness, without the scripture, I'm missing the source of all knowledge. So in that stillness, in that practice of mind-body soul, I can then in my mind-body and soul tap into source. Stillness isn't quitting. It's confidence that God moves when you don't have to. When I'm still and I'm in the knowing, what happens is I can sit and believe that there are

things working in my favor and on my behalf. That's a really important point. Stillness then leads

To better decision-making, slow reaction, slow reaction, less regret and more...

eternal priorities. So with those two, I think that there's a physical and there's a spiritual,

right? And wherever you are in your faith journey, I don't know. And I know I bring a lot of faith elements and scripture elements as well as business and practical elements into this podcast.

But I don't think that we could ever miss out on how those two play together. And that's what my

belief is about stillness. Is yes what Ryan was talking about. His book is so practical to essentially be at war like Winston Churchill and get away and paint. Is that sense of stillness? But in that moment, what are you tapping into? Are you tapping into nothingness? Right? Like is there just an absence of all things or in stillness does it allow you to tap into the source of all things? And that's a practice that I'm on every day. So practical ways to build stillness into your leadership and into your life.

Let me just kind of like take you down the path of just some practical things. Number one,

there always should be some strategic silence before big decisions. Before you go walk into something

or do something big or act on something big, there should be moments of silence and reflection.

Don't just gather the data before you act, gather yourself. Oftentimes, the discernment, the knowing happens only in stillness. It's good to block 12 to 24 hours of time before big major moves in your life. One practice that I have as we have the aspire tour is I always right before I go on stage, I walk up and I just pause and I pause in stillness and in that I'm trying to tap into the knowing. Yes, it is about a reflection of what I'm going to speak about or

but it really what it is. It's a gathering of truth. It's a gathering of all things and I do that and it helps me become a better communicator and it helps me deliver more what I want versus just running out there and we need that those moments of pause and silence before we walk into those big moments. Number two, there should be daily moments of nothingness, daily moments of nothingness. Five minutes without your phone, no journal, no agenda, just listen, just breathe,

let things settle. Just listen, breathe and let things settle. I will oftentimes struggle to sleep and I know that many of you is entrepreneurs, you struggle to sleep and we try everything. We try, I try breathing exercises, I try melatonin, I try it's everything, I try walking, I try to change up my habits before bed and when you have a restless mind, when you have a million things going on, you're analytical and you're dissecting down every situation and every scenario,

it's difficult to silence the mind. And so every day we must practice those moments of nothingness, no phone, no journal, no agenda, no noise. Because in that it allows us to begin to expand into those spaces, just listen, breathe and just settle. Number three, I call this a Sabbath way of thinking, okay, so if you're not familiar with Jewish rituals, if you go back to Old Testament times,

there is always a period of time where the Jews were not allowed to act to work or to do anything.

And it was that 24 hour time period and we've got to get into a rhythm of stillness. It can't just be on a whim as needed, we've got to get into a rhythm. It's not just a break. It should be a weekly time of rest. It should be a period of time where we set aside our world for a moment and we don't act on all the things that are noisy around us. And this is important because, and I don't think

that you necessarily have to do a typical way and you have to set aside 24 hours of doing nothing.

But I do think there should be periods of time. You know, there should be time where you're away from the distractions, where you're away from the noises, you're away from a TV, you're away from work, and you allow yourself to honor yourself with weekly rest. And that is not a suggestion. It's a structure, right? Like, it's when I teach empire, teach you meeting cadences. I teach you how to have meetings, when to have meetings, the rhythm of your meeting. I teach you all these things.

And when you get into that rhythm, you find success. And there should be a rhythm of stillness.

You don't lose momentum by resting.

do you do you lack the clarity on why you're not successful? And if so, you should be pointing

towards moments of stillness. And then kind of the last thing I want to share as this is that I think that when you are still. So then most people say, okay, so I have this moment of stillness. What should I say to myself? Because there are times where you should sit, you should collect, you should gather, you should be quiet. But then you get to a place where it needs to be an internal conversation. And the internal conversation should be asking questions like this.

What am I doing in fear and not in faith? What in my life is a voidence versus pursuit?

What am I acting on that doesn't serve me because it's a fear-based activity?

Next, the second question I would ask myself in stillness is, what am I assuming

without asking God, tapping into that source? When I talked about be still and know, it's about being still and tapping in. It's accessing the entire all-knowing God source. When you sit there, it's stillness. Don't forget that there is a chance to tap into all things. And so when you tap in, you should be saying things like this, what am I assuming in my life? What am I taking for granted without ever asking God? What am I doing? What am I asking? And then the last thing I would ask

myself and stillness is, what is good in my life? But not aligned. And I think it lately you know what I'm saying. There are things in your life that are good. They're good things. They're not bad things, right? Like spending time with certain people, oftentimes we can go overboard as entrepreneurs in any area. We have moments of excess. You know, it's like you're really into working out now you're working out two days a week or two times a day, right? It's like really into coffee.

And now all I do is spend my entire life chasing coffee, right? It's like as entrepreneurs we have this

obsessive component to our lives. And so you have to ask yourself, what is good, but not aligned?

Alignment comes when when that mind, body and soul are all acting in in concession with each other, in alignment with each other. And there are so many things in our life that are good, but they are distraction. They're good, but they're not aligned. Stillness does not slow you down. It recenters you and it gives you direction. You've heard the phrase that it's that slow is smooth and smooth as fast. And that's what happens when you find that stillness.

It doesn't slow you down. It actually gives you speed and speed over time because clarity and

activity pointed in the right direction always ends up winning. Taking that straight line versus

the circuitous route, taking that direct line is what will allow you to get your goals and your aspirations in your dreams faster. Today I wonder if you like me will take on this challenge to find the stillness in our life so that we can have all things we want. You want to get to the other

side of your ego? It's going to take stillness. Stillness is the key. Thanks so much for being a part

of the podcast for listening today. I'd love to connect with you further and you can connect with me on social media at any Wilson official on any of the social media channels.

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