Last week I opened enrollment for 5 Days to Financial Clarity—the live workshop designed to help owners unlock hidden profit and cash inside their business.
Over 50 business owners have already gone through my earlier cohorts.
Here’s what they found:
That’s the point.
This workshop pays for itself—or you don’t pay.
If you missed the details last week, here’s the quick rundown:
It’s practical. Hands-on.
And by Friday, you’ll finally know what’s working, what’s not, and where to focus next.
All sessions are recorded so you can come back to them anytime.
The workbooks will be reusable so you can build on top of them.
And you'll get direct access for questions and to get feedback.
The workshop is $1,195, but if you purchase before EOD tomorrow, you can save 40%.
If you’ve ever wondered, “Where is all the money going?,” this week is your chance to find out.
Spots are filling fast, and the discount disappears at 11:59 PM EST on 11/28.


In Morgan Housel’s latest book, The Art of Spending Money, he writes:
“It’s astounding to witness someone gain what they thought they always wanted only to realize that happiness is more complicated than they first assumed.”
Founders know this feeling better than anyone.
You hit the revenue target. You hire the person you’ve been needing. You win the customer you’ve been chasing. You finally get breathing room in the bank account.
And then, almost immediately, you feel behind again.
It’s not that the wins weren’t real.
It’s that your brain didn’t let you feel them because you’re onto the next thing.
Because entrepreneurs have a bias toward minimizing wins, which leads directly into scarcity, hesitation, and worse financial decisions.
And Thanksgiving gives us one of the rare built-in chances to reset that.
I got back into running this year. I love that you can measure progress against yourself. You see the splits improve. The recovery gets easier. The same route feels less brutal.
But running also humbles you.
You can be having your best day… feeling great, in rhythm, and still get passed by the old lady in a turkey costume.
All that positive energy can come crashing down with you thinking “I’m not good enough.”
It’s the difference between measuring ourselves externally (“Who passed me?”) instead of internally (“Am I getting better?”).
And when you do that long enough, you start believing a lie: That you’re behind, even when you’re not.
Sometimes this energy can force you to push and get results. But other times… it results bad decisions.
Not hiring when you need to. Not investing in what’s already working. Not allocating cash strategically. Not making decisions you’re absolutely ready for. Not acting, just waiting.
Those bad decisions come from scarcity, hesitation, and are lack of willingness to acknowledge the wins.
It comes in convincing yourself that even the wins are losses.
You double revenue and tell yourself it “should’ve been more.” You stabilize cash flow and instantly worry it won’t last. You land better-fit customers and obsess over the ones who churned. You fix one bottleneck and only see the next. You exceed your goals and quietly raise them. You reduce your workload and feel guilty instead of proud. You survive something that would’ve crushed you three years ago, and instead of celebrating, call it normal.
Every one of these minimizes a win.
And minimized wins always create scarcity-driven decisions.
And this is where gratitude comes in. If we can pause and reframe things back into thankfulness and gratitude, we can click the “reset switch.”
Gratitude forces you to see:
And by seeing this clearly, you switch from a scarcity mindset to one based in reality.
And when you lead from strength, you make better decisions.
And when you make better decisions, you get better financial results.
Not because gratitude produces money, but because gratitude produces the version of you who makes money possible.
So, on this Thanksgiving Day, where we’re hopefully pausing to spend time with family and reflecting on what we have to be thankful for, think about your business:
No matter how difficult it has been, there is always something to be thankful for.
And ultimately, the good things in business spill over to your personal life.
Ask: how have these things I have to be thankful for impacted my personal life?
This is not reflective for the sake of reflection. It’s reflective for the sake of recalibrating the truth: You already have more than you think.
You already are further than you think.
You’re standing on more progress than you’re giving yourself credit for.
And the sooner you can see that clearly, the sooner you’ll start making decisions that move the business forward again.
Happy Thanksgiving.
Take the reset. You’ve earned it.