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JACK CANFIELD





S3 E1: JACK CANFIELD ON THE POWER OF STORY AND LANGUAGE







Jack Canfield found success through a lifetime of listening, something that
fueled his work as the co-creator of the best-selling “Chicken Soup For the
Soul” book series. His early life was marked by feelings of inferiority and
limiting beliefs, but he learned to take responsibility for his life. He’s
helping others do the same with his latest book, “The 30-Day Sobriety Solution.”






PODCAST TRANSCRIPT

Jack Canfield
If you are enough, you might need to learn something new get a new credential,
but I don’t believe you’re ever given a dream without the ability to achieve it.
Trust in your desires. Have the courage to follow your heart, and you can do
anything you want to do.

David Condos
Welcome to Beyond Theory, a podcast powered by Meadows Behavioral Healthcare.
That brings you in depth conversations from the frontlines of mental health and
addiction recovery. I’m David Condos. “The Chicken Soup for the Soul” book
series has sold over 500 million copies worldwide. You might even have a copy in
your house right now. But you probably don’t know the story of author Jack
Canfield. So how did his early life fuel his desire to help others find personal
and professional success? Let’s get out of the abstract and see how this applies
in the real world. It’s time to go beyond theory.

Jack Canfield
Hi, I’m Jack Canfield. I’m a professional speaker and a transformational trainer
and a best selling author.

David Condos
HI Jack, thank you so much for being with us here at the 2020 US Journal
Training Conference in Arizona. Thanks for being here.

Jack Canfield
My pleasure, David. Thanks for having me.

David Condos
Yeah. So let’s start with your story. Kind of your your origins. Growing up. I
know you moved around a lot. What What was that like for you? What are some some
memories that stick out?

Jack Canfield
Well, I was born in Fort Worth, Texas during World War II. My dad was in the Air
Force. I was born in 1944. So because he was in the Air Force, we moved from
base to base to base, Minneapolis, Nebraska, Florida. And then eventually when
he got out, we settled in Wheeling, West Virginia. And that’s where I grew up in
Wheeling and across the river in Martins Ferry, Ohio, kind of like Minneapolis,
St. Paul. You know, and it was a good was a good childhood. I always like to say
that, that those are great places to be from as long as a kid if you were out of
school. at two in the afternoon on a weekday someone would say “Aren’t you Allan
Canfield’s kid, shouldn’t you be in school?

David Condos
So they knew  you?

Jack Canfield
Yeah, that does not happen in Brooklyn. And, but I wouldn’t want to live there
anymore. You know, it’s like, we kind of outgrew the place I think 90% of the
kids in my high school class, all left Wheeling, you know, to go for more
interesting places to be and do. And I think for me, it was a typical Midwestern
childhood, in a sense of what I did in the outer world. You know, I played
sports, and I, you know, played pickup basketball and you know, hung with kids
on bicycles. We drove around and, and so forth and dated when I was in high
school. But I think on the inner side, you know, I had a very difficult, angry
alcoholic father. So when he would drink, he would get angry and often violent.
So I would remember we had a big console radio that had to be that high, excuse
me, who and the speaker, all the parts were up in here where the dial was, and
bottom was, was empty. When he would drink, I would literally get in there and
pull it back to the wall. So he couldn’t find me because he would like, beat me.

Jack Canfield
So you’d hide?

Jack Canfield
I’d hide. And so my bedtime was six. My mom divorced my father, we moved in with
my grandmother, but it was in a neighborhood where a lot of kids so it was for
me, it was fun. And then my she married my stepfather. And then he was the son
of a Greek immigrant who had a florist and so we moved across the river. And I
worked in the greenhouses, and but I like making money. That was fun. I enjoyed
that part. And we live right at the edge of town. So I got to bike out into the
countryside and sit in the mountains and watch the river flow the high river
flow by. So in many ways, I was developing what you might call a very quiet
inner life at that time. And probably self soothing is the way we talk about it
today. When I was in fifth grade, my rich aunt, which I had, when we were the
poor side of the family, her son named Jack died in an accident. And she kind of
adopted me, I didn’t live there, but she sent me to a private school. My name
was Bill, I wouldn’t be sitting here today. And because of that I got a private
school education. And the downside of that was that I was a poor kid in a rich
school. But I was still in the in that world. Then I went off to Harvard on a
scholarship. And I had friends like Larry Rockefeller, and Max Factor III and
then the IV of these kids, and I still had the same issue. I was the poor gift
from West Virginia, and they were the wealthy kids. So that was kind of the
underlying theme in my life as I grew up, which had to do with worthiness and
self esteem, and am I enough and how much do I have to do to be enough? And will
they ever make as much money as they have? And those are ongoing issues for me,
internally, externally, and I was just a kid going to school playing football
and running track and dating girls and trying to get into college.

Jack Canfield
Yeah, we were trying to find your place.

Jack Canfield
I was. I was.

David Condos
Yeah. And so as you got older, like you said, you went to Harvard, and then you
taught for a while.

Jack Canfield
So what happened was, I went to there and I got, I became a teacher in an inner
city school, and one of the worst in Chicago. And it was a school that had gangs
in it. And Martin Luther King was killed the year I was there, and it kind of
radicalized me a lot, you know, I end up going to Jesse Jackson’s church and
working with, you know, different things to uplift the kids. And then I became
more interested, how do I motivate these kids because they weren’t motivated,
they didn’t think they could learn a lot really low self esteem as a result of
racism and underfunding for education, and many have never been five blocks away
from their home. And so I started with a band named W. Clement stone, it was a
self made multi multi millionaire, teaching something called a team motivation.
And I started doing that my class. And as a result of that the kids, if kids
were on, if they were like, suspended, they would sneak into school, come to my
class, and sneak out again, because we were having so much fun exploring these
issues of goal setting, and values and communication skills and feelings and all
that.

David Condos
And so what did that look like that achievement? What was it called? Motivation?
Achievement Motivation?

Jack Canfield
Yeah, basically, I still had to teach history, or I was gonna have a job. Yeah.
But I would take 10 or 15 minutes of every class and break them into pairs and
do an exercise with them. Like have them say, I can’t do something back and
forth. And then have him go for a minute saying I can instead. And then what how
do you feel different? Well, I felt powerful, which one was alive? I can’t, you
know. And so they were experiencing this and began to like, set a goal like,
Well, what do you want to be when you grow it? When you grow up? You’re
basically you know, and so, right about that time, I got an offer for a job at a
job corps center. These are places where kids who dropped out of school, mostly
it was a Native American, African American and Hispanic kids from Chicago in
that area. And in my job, there was actually train them in motivation. So I got
to really not be full on doing that.

David Condos
Yeah. And so you, you saw some of how this motivation, this type of approach
could affect people’s lives. And so what made you want to take that broader
because over the next, you know, from the early 70s, to the 90s, you really made
this kind of your life this development and training.

Jack Canfield
I’d learned in the classroom that when I was teaching history, kids were looking
out the window, when I was telling a story about somebody, either Harriet
Tubman, who was a real person, or just my own life, they were glued. So I really
got the power of story. So I told a lot of stories. And coming back on a plane
when they went, ah, I think the universe is trying to tell me put these stories
in a book that became Chicken Soup for the Soul. And the stories are universal,
because they’re about love. They’re about self esteem, they’re about overcoming
obstacles are about death and dying. They’re about, you know, ordinary people
doing extraordinary things, things that are the themes of all the great movies,
movies, like Rocky or On Golden Pond, or you know, those kinds of things. And so
I think over time, what we saw was, when you’re speaking to people’s hearts, and
you’re moving them emotionally with a story that has a beginning, a middle and
the end to make them feel good, or challenges them to think or to change a bias
or something. People want that. That’s why we go to movies, why we read great
novels. 

David Condos
Yeah, we want to be inspired. Exactly. Yeah. And so, more recently, you have
co-authored a book called The Success Principles. And so could you talk us
through kind of how that came about? Are these shirts and bowls that you’ve
seen? Do what would do work in your own life and in other people’s life? What’s
the story?

Jack Canfield
Well, I am a voracious reader, I once just for the hell of it counted up all the
books I’d read, because I don’t rarely sell them or throw them away. And it was
over 3000 books. And I was reading a book a day, I took a big speed reading
course in college. And so I was reading pretty much a book a day. 

David Condos
And you can you can get to him pretty fast. 

Jack Canfield
Yeah, and I don’t recommend that I recommend reading fewer books and actually
studying them and applying them perhaps maybe a little more than I did. But
every book I would take something away. One technique, one insight when new
discipline or something, and I would do it. So that’s why I was successful.
That’s why Chicken Soup for the Soul took off. So maybe about 10 years into that
experience. I’m sitting in bed with my son, who was probably about 10 at the
time, and we both had laptops on a Sunday morning. And he was playing some game
and he asked me a question. He said, “Dad, why do we live in a bigger house than
most of my friend’s parents?” And I said, “Well, because we’ve been very
successful.” He said, “Well, why why isn’t everyone that successful?” So I
started thinking, Well, what, what, why? And I thought, what are the principles
I’ve been living my life by what are the techniques I live by? So I made a list
that when I just typed it in when typing them, I had 114 I thought that’s too
many for a book. And so I narrowed it down to about 70. So that’s, that’s what
it was, you know, everything in there, I figured out my life purpose, I had
created a vision for my life, I had set goals, I chose to believe in myself, how
do you overcome negative limiting beliefs. So I turned my inner critic into an
inner coach, you know, I’d taken a class on that I realized once I’d taken over
600 seminars, you know, one day three day week long things over the course of
the years. And so every everything I was using the work, I think I’m gonna put
in the book work for me work for most of my students, because I’ve been teaching
it, you know, and so that’s how that happened. And it turns out, other people
use it, and they work really well. We’ve got people that will tell you, I’ve
started my business, I started my magazine, I lost 60 pounds, I got pregnant
when the doctor said I could never have a baby, I, you know, traveled the world,
I’ve become the president of my company, you know, on and on and on. I’ve
literally 1000s of letters and emails. My favorite one is from a 15 year old
boy, who said my mother never reads books, she bought your book Calm. It’s a
thick book. It’s like 500 pages, and said, I wonder why “Why would my mom bring
this book home?” So I read it. And I was getting F’s and D’s in school, I was
skipping all my classes, I smoking dope, and doing drugs. And after this book,
I’m not doing any of that anymore. I’m taking my class. I got all A’s and B’s on
my last report card. Wow, this can do that for a 15 year old. That’s way cool.

David Condos
Yeah, yeah. And so what what’s maybe one or two the principles that stick out
that people miss? That’s something you wish you wish someone had told you
earlier in your life?

Jack Canfield
Well, I think I grew up in a family where everyone was a blamer and a
complainer. You know, my dad blamed the fact that we weren’t wealthy on the
government, the corporation’s the you know, whatever. And, and he complained a
lot. So I wasn’t until I met W. Clement Stone, and he said, “You take 100%
responsibility for what…” is an intake interview for my job, first job. At the
foundation. He says, “Do you take 100% responsibility for your life?” I said, “I
think so.” He said, “Do you ever complain about anything?” I said, “Yeah.” “You
ever blame anybody for it?” “Yeah.” “Do you ever make excuses?” “Uh huh. But you
don’t take 100% responsibility?”

David Condos
When you put it like that?

Jack Canfield
Yeah, exactly. So I really had to learn how to do that, you know, I’m not a
victim, I am either creating, promoting or allowing it to continue something bad
in my life, you know. But I think most of what we experienced that causes us
pain and suffering in life, you know, the thoughts we think we’re responsible
for that. We’re responsible for the food we put in our body, for the fact that
we’re not at, you know, educating ourselves on things like meditation, emotional
state management, so forth. I think that was a big one. And that’s why it’s the
first chapter in the book. Because if you don’t have that, as the grounding,
nothing else works. I think the other thing that was important to me along the
way, was realizing that I had a lot of limiting beliefs that I didn’t know I
had, they were subconscious, they were formed easily between the age of three
and eight. Things like “I’m not enough, I’m not worthy of love. I can’t have you
know, our family doesn’t do that. I can’t be president”, you know, whatever it
is, things like that, that are running all of us. And I always use the metaphor
if you got on a plane and you saw the pilot. Come on, he was six years old, how
would you feel? Most people go? Not so good. And yet, we have a six year old
piloting our life quite often. And so…

David Condos
Because that’s where we stopped developing?

Jack Canfield
Exactly. Where we have a limiting belief that we decide, yeah, you know, like,
one of the things that I decided early on, when I was about 10 years old, my dad
punished me for something, and I wouldn’t cry, I wasn’t going to give him the
satisfaction of watching me cry. And what I learned many years later I hadn’t
cried in years, because I shut that part of myself down. Because I had a belief.
I’m not gonna let anyone know that they can have that kind of power over me. And
but that cost me intimacy, my relationships, physical pain, because my jaw was
real tight, because I wouldn’t cry. You know what roughing is? Roughing is a
deep tissue massage, where they really go in and they break down what’s called
the myofascial tissue. So think of a sausage, it’s got a skin on it, and then
there’s meat inside. So if I hold my arm like this for 20 years, it doesn’t bend
really easily because this whole skin is holding in place you go in very deeply
embrace, slowly deepen the massage, you break that down. But when they were
first roughing my jaw, I started starting to quiver. And then I cried. I mean,
for a long time.

David Condos
Because it released something.

Jack Canfield
It released. You know, something where I hadn’t cried in years and years and
years and years and years and years. And so the idea is, I think for a lot of
us, we don’t realize why we’re stuck. We think we know what to do, but we’re not
doing it. Or we just can’t seem to motivate our How to get ourselves off the
dime. I think that’s a big issue. And I will just share one more. And that would
be the power of a group, which I call a mastermind group of like five to six
people all working together to support each other to be successful, maybe
meeting every two weeks by phone, Skype or Zoom, where we each get like 10
minutes to talk about a challenge we have. And then we all brainstorm with you
how to solve it. And then you would brainstorm with me. And then we’d all
brainstorm for Caleb assuming this whatever. And at the end of that we all move
forward, you tell me a book I should read or you confront me to something, you
give me a new idea. And that’s been critical for my life. And that’s, it’s
powerful. It’s very powerful. So I think that’s something that for me, I wish
I’d known a lot earlier, I think I’d be even farther along than I am now.

David Condos
And so zooming into behavioral health, mental health, addiction, now we’re here,
we’re here at this conference for trauma and addiction. How would you say some
of these principles can apply to success in recovery? Can apply to creating a
vision for yourself of building any life?

Jack Canfield
Yeah. So I wrote a book. It’s called A 30 Day Sobriety Solution. And really, if
it had a different name, it’d be called the success principles for sobriety. And
this was co authored by a guy named Dave Andrews and I, and Dave, had been
unsuccessful in his attempts to be sober in and out of rehab. Nothing was
working years of a, he kept relapsing. And then one day he was driving home, and
he heard a Tony Robbins tape. And he said, “Wow, why aren’t they teaching
someone what he’s teaching in rehab? Because these are important things. How to
have a goal, what is my goal for sobriety? What is being sober look like to me?
What does not being sober look like, if I were to go 10 years into the future,
and look at my life, if I keep drinking, and my livers shot, the lost my job, my
wife left me, I’m unhealthy, you know, maybe I’m living alone, versus what would
I like it to look like, you know, job abundance, happiness, whatever.” So
beginning to use some of these techniques that we’re using in traditional
success work, of having a vision of having a purpose, a lot of people don’t have
a higher purpose, once you connect with that purpose. And addiction just gets in
the way of that, you know, and so, you you start, for example, we know that
girls in New Jersey that don’t have goals are 99% more likely to get pregnant
than girls who have goals, because they have a purpose that keeps them from
doing you know, just getting the backseat of the car and having sex with
somebody…

David Condos
…because you have that perspective. 

Jack Canfield
Yeah, how know this won’t help me get there because once I have a kid, it’s not
likely I’m going to be able to be an executive at RCA or Chrysler, or whatever.
So the idea of having a purpose, taking 100% responsibility, as we talked about,
having a team of people whether it’s a or others around me, working with setting
a goal, like in the 30 Day Sobriety Solution, the goal at the end of the 30 days
is to be sober. Now, we got we have a very controversial title, which is how to
cut back or quit drinking in the privacy of your own home, how to cut back does
not make all the A people happy, because they think, you know, you either have
to cut out or there’s no way to do. Unfortunately, what we found is if we can
tell people at the end of 30 days, you can read aside, at least then they’ll
play because a lot of people can’t imagine their life without alcohol. So they
won’t even engage a or rehab or whatever. So we’re finding we were getting an
85% success rate with this process, a 30 day sobriety process. So it takes
people through each day as a principle where they have to do the homework and
apply it to their life. So using EFT tapping when you have a craving using EFT
tapping to overcome a limiting belief, most people don’t know how to do that.
How do you meditate. So meditation is a piece of it so you can have inner calm,
learning how to handle emotions that come up, because most people don’t know
what to do with them when they flare up. The only way they can soothe themselves
is through alcohol or drugs. So teaching people tools, other than what a drug or
porn or you know, whatever it is they’re addicted to, is a relief for them. It’s
a stress reliever, but also we now know that the same things that are stress
relievers are actually creating more stress in the body. You know, like in terms
of if you are drinking, you get a serotonin rush and you get a dopamine rush,
but you’re also robbing the body of its ability to make its own serotonin,
dopamine. And so it’s a downward spiral takes more of the same drug or more,
they’re going to get to the same level. You know, I can have one drink wine and
I’m happy someone else has to have four before they start to feel it because he
developed this immunity to it. So so all these principles are important. Diet is
a big issue. You know, there are certain things if you eat correctly, you don’t
have the same cravings like sugar, and white flour and things like that.
Anything that’s a, alcohol is a sugar basically. So if you can get out of that
addiction, even the sugar, I go to most a meetings everyone’s eating donuts and
cookies and other they just changed the mix – replacing one thing with the other
with the other. Yeah. And the other big thing that’s inherent as important is
the importance of like, “What do I do when I used to come home? And I’d pop up
in the six pack, right? Pour the wine or I pour myself an old fashioned or
whatever.” Now what do I do, because there’s a there’s a linkage, there’s an
anchoring that goes on between that walking in the door, or driving past the bar
I used to go into what do I replace that with. And so finding things that
actually are healthy behaviors that provide you with the same relief from a
stress which could be meditation, yoga, running, playing basketball, at the Y
swimming, dancing, playing the guitar, you know, writing music, whatever it may
be. So all these principles that are applied to becoming wealthy or being
successful in sports, whatever, can be applied to becoming sober, changing your
beliefs, visualizing, using affirmations, taking action, having keeping scores
that are big thing, we know that if you keep score, there’s some part of you
that wants to keep the score going. And you want to kick off another day,
another day, another day, there’s a whole system built in there is same thing,
if you’re going to exercise or do yoga or meditate, we want to keep score. We
even address the whole thing. I’m an alcoholic, you know, “My name is Joe, and
I’m an alcoholic.” I think it’s important in the beginning, because you have to
confront your denial that you don’t have a problem. But if you keep affirming
for the next 30 years, I’m an alcoholic, we know that the words “I am” the
subconscious takes as a command. So how do we get to a place where I’m not
fighting the urge to where I don’t even have the urge anymore. And there are a
lot of subtle things, language is just one of them. replacing the old behaviors
with new behaviors, having something you’re looking forward to, like, I wouldn’t
go out and get drunk the night before I’m giving a talk because I know it’s
gonna ruin my career if I do that. And so you get to a point where you just
you’re not, the thing I want to do is much more fun than this other thing you
know, right? I’d rather go get a massage than get drunk, I’d rather go and spend
time dancing with my wife at the local country western bar, then, you know,
dancing because we don’t drink there. But the point being that there’s so many
things that have to be addressed that are not addressed in most programs. What
we’re finding is the rehab centers and the addiction counselors and who are
using this program, along with what they already do, are getting tremendous
results.

David Condos
Yeah. And so you’re here at the conference. Yes. You’re speaking to a lot of
people who are doing this work on the frontlines of mental health trauma
treatment? What’s your message for them? What do you hope they take away back to
their lives, their practices that work?

Jack Canfield
I really, I really want them to take away two things: One personally and one 
professionally. So I want them to know there is a system that’s been well
researched of if you do these things in the right way in the right order, like
if you know, that combination to a lock, and you have the numbers in the right
order, the lock opens, I don’t care if you’re young, old, smart, low IQ,
whatever, it’s going to open. Miss one number then nope. So a lot of people are
doing a lot of things in their own personal life, but they don’t have the
clients they want their rehab centers aren’t getting the results they want.
They’re not making the money they want, they’re not happy in their
relationships, are working towards… whatever it is. But there’s a solution to
that, you know, it’s because there’s something you’re not doing or something
you’re doing wrong. And so that you have to have all the numbers, but they have
to be in the right order. So that’s, that’s critical.

David Condos
And so I want to have kind of like following a plan, a system.

Jack Canfield
Yeah, there’s really a system if you will. And if you follow that do the right
thing in the right way in the right order at the right time, then you can have
more success, personally, professionally. And then also, how can you use these
same principles with your clients? You know, I want people to teach these
principles to their clients, whether it’s in a one on one session or a group
session or a rehab center, whatever it might be, or even prevention, so that
people have more tools available, so that they understand psychologically and
intellectually what needs to be done. And then they have the support, the
understanding and the the commitment to actually do it. Because that’s, I mean,
my my whole belief system is suffering is optional, and that nobody needs to be
in pain if we use what we know. We know enough.

David Condos
Yeah. And so for someone listening who wants to dive in even deeper on this,
what would be one or two books or resources other than your own work that you’d
point them to?

Jack Canfield
Well, I will reinforce, you should get the copy of the Success Principles. And
if you’re dealing with an addiction, whether it’s food, whatever alcohol 30 Day
Sobriety Solution is something you really should do. As far as other people’s
work, I think I’m really a big fan of Byron Katie, who wrote Loving What Is she
teaches this thing called the work, which is she saying, it’s not? It’s not what
happens in the world that upsets you, it’s your thinking that it shouldn’t be
happening. You know, my mother should have paid more attention to me, my father
shouldn’t have done that.

David Condos
So it’s kind of like we’re in control of our response.

Jack Canfield
We’re in control of our response. And, and, and it’s the thinking that makes us
miserable. You know, we could go, oh, President Trump shouldn’t have done that,
then you get to feel bad for all day, or you can just go present, you know, the
question she asked you to consider are, “is it true? Can I really know that he
shouldn’t have done it?” And then, “Who am I when I think that thought?” Well,
I’m miserable, I’m pissed off. I’m all that. Who am I without that thought?
Well, I’m relaxed, I’m peaceful. I’m just going to live my life. And then the
question then is called the turnaround. You know, I shouldn’t have done that.
You know, like, my mother should have listened to me more. Now. The turnaround
is, I should listen to me more. I should listen to my mother more. And you start
to look at is that true? And you begin to realize that almost everything I’ve
said about is a projection of some part of my life. So he can go to the work.com
and download her worksheets are free. She’s really into service, and her book
Loving What Is teaches you how to do that she has YouTube videos, I constantly
recommend her and her work. Thing is challenging because I’ve read 3000 books is
that there’s very few like a book that’s an overarching book, like the Success
Principles is like some of the secret is you know, but law of attraction. I
divide life into seven areas, you’ve got financial, good job and career, you
have relationships, you have fun and recreation, you have health and fitness,
you have personal, which includes things you want to own and things you want to
do. And then you have service to the community. And I believe there’s books to
teach you how to be effective and all those different areas. So you can read
books by Dave Ramsey and Tony Robbins and Ray Dalio on finances. You can read
books by JJ virgin on how to be healthy, you know. So there’s not one book that
I’d say you’ve read that book, a book I have been recommending lately is a book
by Hal Elrod called The Miracle Morning. And he teaches a model called “saver” –
[stands for] silence, affirmations, visualization. E is exercise, R is reading.
And then at the end, S again, S for scribing, meaning, journal writing. And if
you do all those things every day before eight o’clock in the morning, your day
goes much better. You’re doing most of what you need to do your focus on your
goals. You have an affirmation for it, you’re visualizing the success. you’re
exercising your body, you’re meditating, you’re journal writing, so your
mindfulness and awareness is higher. So developing, those kinds of disciplines
are valuable. That’s what I attempted to take the best of the best and put it in
the Success Principles, which anyone can go to amazon.com get a copy.

David Condos
Yeah. All right. Well, thank you, jack for your time. To wrap up with this, what
would be a favorite piece of advice that you’d want to leave listeners with
something that’s meant a lot to you something that me, you see meaning a lot
when you pass it on?

Jack Canfield
Well, I like to say you are enough that any goal or vision you or dream you have
you have the capacity to fulfill it. You might need to learn something new, get
a new credential, partner up with somebody, whatever. But I don’t believe you’re
ever given a dream without the ability to achieve it. And so I want to just say
to everyone listening, trust in your desires, have the courage to follow your
heart and believe that you are enough already, and that you can do anything you
want to do. And when I really took that advice to heart, my life changed
dramatically. 

David Condos
All right. Jack, thank you so much for your time. I appreciate it.

Jack Canfield
Thank you, David. My pleasure.

David Condos
Jack Canfield is a personal development trainer and best selling author of the
Chicken Soup for the Soul series based in Santa Barbara, California. You can
learn more about his books and find some free resources at jackcanfield.com.
Beyond Theory is produced and hosted by me David Condos. You can discover more
from this podcast, including videos of each conversation at
beyondtheorypodcast.com. Finally, thank you for listening and I hope you’ll join
again next time for another episode of beyond theory.

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