Modern Creator Network
Dean Graziosi · YouTube · 12:57

Stop Wasting Your Life (Not Just Your Time)

A 13-minute Dean Graziosi sit-down built on five questions and one brutal frame: every breakthrough takes seven years of dread and one second of decision.

Posted
2 days ago
Duration
Format
Interview
sincere
Channel
DG
Dean Graziosi
§ 01 · The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

Dean opens cold with the question every personal-development viewer is already mid-scroll for, then hijacks it with a seven-year/one-second smoking analogy — and never lets the camera off the regret thread. The whole video is a sermon dressed as a five-question interview, and every cinematic b-roll cut is a permission slip for the viewer to feel exactly the regret Dean's naming.

§ · Stated Promise

What the video promised.

stated at 00:00What's the biggest mindset shift you've seen separating the people who actually break through from the ones who stay stuck?delivered at 12:57
§ · Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0000:35

01 · Hook: seven years or one second?

Cold open with the breakthrough question. Tony Robbins' smoking analogy reframes the years of dread as the cost, not the decision.

00:3501:30

02 · The soul-robbing job

The fourteen-year job you wake up hating. Two ways it ends — you get fired (a 'blessing from God'), or the relationship/job ends *for* you. Decisions you didn't think you had control of.

01:3002:18

03 · Your maker plays you a video

Thought experiment: at the end of your life, your maker plays you a video of the person you could have been. What's your one wish? 'Wish granted. We're here. Let's start today.'

02:1803:18

04 · Character is who you are when no one's watching

Pivot into integrity as the prerequisite for change. The 'I love my wife' social-media post vs. the DMs on the side.

03:1805:27

05 · Push through vs. pivot — the six-month deadline

Question two. The fine line between quitting too soon and torturing yourself for years. Tactic: give yourself a hard six-month deadline, then go HARDER inside the role than you ever did. Dean's own ladder — cars → real estate → teaching, never quitting until the next thing out-earned the current.

05:2706:59

06 · Measure the uncomfortable

Question three. Measure productivity, not work. The trap of perfecting your curriculum while never making the first outreach call. Score the calls, not the assets.

06:5909:07

07 · AI overwhelm — one constraint at a time

Question four. Why New Year's resolutions die by week two. Kaizen: January = walk every other day, February = add no bread, March = no sugar. One constraint at a time.

09:0710:22

08 · Go all in: identify the goal (fuzzy targets don't get hit)

Question five, part one. Pick ONE goal. 'Two chapters' isn't a goal — *which* two, in what sequence, what should the reader feel after reading them? Reverse-engineer from the end-state.

10:2211:52

09 · Overcome fear by re-deciding the meaning

Part two. Fear comes from the meaning you assign. 'AI ends the world' = paralysis. 'AI cures cancer and gives me more time with my kids' = forward motion. Same input, different decision.

11:5212:57

10 · Embrace change — one straight line

Part three. If you're not climbing, you're sliding. Cut through overwhelm to one path, one focus, one big outcome. Final CTA: find that one straight line.

§ · Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

stage opener
hookstage opener00:02
studio interview begins
promisestudio interview begins00:25
soul-robbing job b-roll
valuesoul-robbing job b-roll00:35
the maker's video / marina b-roll
valuethe maker's video / marina b-roll01:50
sunset / 'wish granted' release
valuesunset / 'wish granted' release02:14
§ · Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

00:22concept

Seven years or one second

Every breakthrough decision actually takes one second — the years are the dread leading up to it, not the decision itself. Reframes long-term suffering as procrastination on a single act of choosing.

Steal forKilling Excuses cold open — 'You think it'll take you years. It'll take you one second.'
01:50concept

The maker's video

At the end of your life, your maker plays you a video of the person you could have been. What's your one wish? Answer is always 'to go back.' Dean's punchline: 'wish granted, we're here, start today.'

Steal forFuture Joe playing Joe Lavery the video Joe Lee could've been — direct Killing Excuses sketch material.
04:14concept

Six-month deadline / go harder while you're leaving

Don't dabble in the exit. Set a hard six-month date, then go harder than you ever did inside the role for those six months while you build the new thing on the side. Commitment, not a dabble.

Steal forAny 'should I quit my job' content — flip the framing from 'when to quit' to 'how to leave on a deadline'.
04:50concept

Dean's ladder (cars → real estate → teaching)

Never quit a thing until the next thing out-earns it. Cars stayed until real estate beat it; real estate stayed as side income until teaching beat it. A staircase, not a leap.

Steal forStack-builder content — 'don't quit the day job until the side hustle has already beaten it.'
05:40concept

Measure productivity, not work

Curriculum done = comfortable = work. First outreach call = uncomfortable = productivity. Score the uncomfortable thing. Most builders measure the wrong axis.

Steal forSolo-builder retrospective videos — show what got measured vs. what should have been.
08:01concept

Kaizen / one constraint at a time

New Year's resolutions stack five changes at once and die by week two. Instead, one month = one constraint. January walks every other day. February adds no bread. March no sugar. April weights three times a week.

Steal for'How I actually changed X' content — month-by-month stacking beats all-at-once promises.
09:40concept

Fuzzy targets don't get hit

'Write two chapters' is not a goal. WHICH two? In what sequence? What should the reader feel after reading them? Get the end-state surgical before you reverse-engineer the steps.

Steal forAny goal-setting / planning video — exact line is clip-bait.
10:58concept

Fear is just deciding the meaning

Fear comes from the meaning you assign. Same input — AI — can mean 'ends the world' or 'cures cancer and gives me more time with my kids.' You don't conquer fear, you re-decide what the thing means.

Steal forAI-content angle — flip the doom narrative with one reframing line.
09:07list

Purpose → Fear → Change (the three-step go-all-in)

  1. Identify the goal with surgical clarity
  2. Overcome fear by re-deciding the meaning
  3. Embrace change as inevitable

Dean's closing triad — the only way to actually go all in. Each step gates the next.

Steal forThree-act framework for any 'how to commit' style longform or carousel.
§ · Quotables

Lines you could clip.

00:22
Did it really take seven years, or did it take one second?
Standalone reframe. No setup needed. Works as a tweet, a Reel cold open, or a newsletter pull-quote.TikTok hook
01:59
Your maker played you a video of the person you could have been.
Cinematic, visual, instantly painful. Begs for an edit with imagined-self b-roll.IG reel cold open
02:18
Wish granted. We're here. Let's start today.
Punchline release after the regret setup. Works as the second half of a two-clip cut.TikTok hook
02:50
Character is who we are when no one's watching.
Already a quotable in the wild — Dean lands it cleanly here.newsletter pull-quote
04:20
It's not a dabble. It's a commitment.
Six-word punchline. Cuts perfectly under a 'how to leave your job' Reel.IG reel cold open
07:24
Like anything in life — chunk it down. One clear path. One step at a time. One constraint at a time.
Self-contained instruction. Pairs with kaizen month-stack b-roll.TikTok hook
09:56
Fuzzy targets don't get hit.
Five-word maxim. Quote-card ready.newsletter pull-quote
10:58
Fear comes from just deciding the meaning.
Pivot line — the whole AI/fear section pivots on this one sentence.TikTok hook
12:10
If I'm not climbing, I'm sliding.
Six words. Visual metaphor baked in.IG reel cold open
§ · Pacing

How they spent the runtime.

Hook length22s
Info densityhigh
Filler8%
§ · Resources Mentioned

Things they pointed at.

00:10channelTony Robbins
05:50toolChatGPT / Claude (referenced as 'Gigi or Chad or Claude')
§ · CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

12:42next-video
You gotta cut through the overwhelm and be able to see one straight line, one focus... you gotta have that one path with a one big outcome.

Soft thesis-CTA rather than a hard pitch — no link, no product mention, just a re-statement of the framework as a call-to-self. For a Mastermind Circle channel this is on-brand: the implicit pitch is 'now join the mastermind to do the work.'

§ · The Script

Word for word.

HOOKopening / re-engagementCTAthe pitchmetaphoranalogystory
00:00HOOKWhat's the biggest mindset shift you've seen separating the people who actually break through from the ones who stay stuck?
00:10HOOKYou know, Tony's really good at saying when people say, how long does it take to quit smoking? People say, oh, it took me seven years to quit smoking.
00:22Did it really take seven years, or did it take one second? It took seven years of thinking about quitting smoking, and one second to go, enough. It's over. I'm done.
00:35There's a situation. There's a circumstance out of your control. You're in a job for fourteen years. You know it's robbing your soul. And for the last four, every morning you wake up and think to yourself, I'm done with this job. I hate it, but you still go.
00:53Two things could happen. One, you go to this job you hate and they fire you. You have no choice. Decisions have to be made. True? I have to make a decision. I have to do something different. I just got fired, and sometimes we get that blessing. Right, Amy? Where you go, that's a sign from God, the universe. I'm going to try my own thing. Sometimes
01:15HOOKdecisions, if you look at the biggest ones you make, you really didn't have control of it. Yep. You're in a relationship that you're not sure is good, then you come home one day and the other person says it's over. You gotta deal with it. This path will lead me to a life is not meant for me. I think the biggest regret in life, think the worst thing that could happen to any of us is to get to the end of our life and realize we missed it.
01:38HOOKSometimes that that brain comes in and I'm like, at the end of my life, looking back, what would I say to myself? If you got to the end of your life and you realized you didn't make that decision, you didn't shift your mindset, you didn't say enough, you didn't decide to say no, or you didn't decide to say yes Mhmm. And you missed it. And your maker played you a video of the person you could have been.
02:03HOOKWhat would be your number one wish? What would be your wish? If you got to end of your life and realized you played small, and your maker said to you, alright, you got one wish, what would it be? To go back and To go back. And you know what I always say? Wish granted.
02:18Wish granted. We're here. Mhmm. Let's start today. If you were there, you'd say, please let me go back. Boom. We're here. We're back. Let's go. As a kid, I remember, I think I heard that in church. It's like, what are you doing when no one's watching? And it's so true. I mean, that follows you throughout your whole life.
02:38It's it's the the the is Yes. Right? If you think about it, you and I have talked about this. When people say their values or their character, let's use the word character. Character is really just who we are when no one's watching. Right? If you're on social media and you're like, I love my wife. You're amazing. Mhmm. But then I'm looking at DMs on the side in my Instagram of other pretty girls, then I'm full of crap. Mhmm. Right? Because nobody's watching.
03:04Right? If I say, I love my partner Tony Robbins, and behind his back, I'm making side deals, then I'm really the side deal guy, or I'm really the guy that would be unfaithful. Like, we we really are. Our character is who we are when no one watching. Question two. How do you know the difference between pushing through resistance and knowing it's time to pivot and start something new? There is this fine balance
03:27of quitting too soon. Sometimes we don't realize that we don't recognize the joy of the lessons we learn from it from going deeper, even in something we don't like. How you do one thing is how you do everything.
03:43But what if you said, instead of I I shouldn't be here, I'm supposed to be doing this. What if your brain said, oh, this is just part of the journey. I have to do this in order to get there.
03:59If you think to yourself, I'm not here forever, but while I'm here, I'm gonna make everybody around me sick because I'm gonna love what I do. I'm gonna kick ass what I do. And when I'm at the peak of this, I'm gonna bail and go do my own thing.
04:14If you're torturing yourself year after year of hating it, then just give yourself a deadline. Right? I'm in this career that I don't like, or I'm in this relationship I don't like, and just say, hey, I'm going all in for six months. I'm gonna make it look like I like, they're not not gonna recognize me at my job because I'm gonna come in early, I'm gonna light it up, but I'm only here for six months. And in that six months, I'm gonna skip these five things, and I'm gonna spend the time launching my coaching program, or getting started with this new business,
04:41clients, or getting my social media to go. And in six months from today, it's over. It's done. It's not a dabble. It's a commitment. Listen, I didn't quit. I started with cars. I didn't quit doing cars until my real estate business made me more than the car business did. Then I quit, got out of the painting. Then I started educating people on how to invest in property like I do. I didn't quit.
05:03I never quit investing, but I didn't I didn't quit it being my full time, and I didn't go all in on teaching people until the teaching business made more than the real estate business.
05:17Okay. Number three. Is there a simple way someone can honestly evaluate whether what they're doing is actually moving them forward or they're just or just keeping them busy? You have to measure. You have to keep score. Where was I three months ago? Where was I three weeks ago? And am I moving forward? Am I am I making progress? Doesn't mean not perfection, progress.
05:41You have to measure what actually moves the needle. Don't measure work. Measure productivity and moving towards the goal that you want.
05:51You might be great at creating your coaching curriculum. You might be great and go, I built the most beautiful thing and the most beautiful logo, and I have my 12 session coaching program. I went back and forth with Gigi or Chad or Claude. I dialed it in. It's freaking amazing. I am making progress. True. But when that's done, where's the part that you're holding back on? Letting people you know just start telling everybody that you are a coach now and you wanna do it. Starting to put on your social media.
06:24You gotta measure the uncomfortable because sometimes our brain just goes, well, I built the curriculum. I built the site. I did the thing. I did that thing. I know my ideal client. I wanna do the thing. It's like, yeah. But did you put did you reach out anybody, make any calls, try to set an appointment to get your first hold
06:40on a second. Right? You have to measure those things. You gotta know if you're winning or losing, and you gotta measure especially the areas that you've been hesitant on. We're all uncomfortable when something is new.
06:55It's okay to be uncomfortable. Just do the stuff that you've been putting off. Okay. Number four. What are you watching people make way too complicated that if they just simplified it, it would completely change their results? Our brains love to make things complicated. Looking at all of it is what freaks you out. Like, I if I use if I use AI as an example, oh my god. If you go online for five minutes, click on one
07:23AI training, and then your algorithm knows that you clicked on one. Oh my goodness. You will get served a gazillion of them, and everyone makes you feel like you're stupid, fall behind,
07:36never gonna catch up. I'm too old for this stuff. How does this work? I didn't grow up with technology. Right? It's like, you all you gotta do is get a Mac mini and use Clawbot, and then it does the thing, and then you see all these breakdowns, and you plug it into your workflow. It works like six people. You're not doing it, you're dumb. If you are, you're cool. And you're like Yeah. Ah. And you start thinking of all these things you gotta do with AI, and it becomes so overwhelming.
07:59Like anything in life, chunk it down one clear path, one step at a time, and then just overcome one constraint
08:08at a time.
08:12One constraint at a time, one problem, one thing you have to overcome at a time. So if if you know I wanna get to, you know, it's kaizen, one step at a time. You know the end result, but you can't look at all of it at the same time. You know, it's why New Year's resolutions don't work. I'm gonna stop drinking soda. I'm gonna stop eating sugar. I'm gonna eat three good meals a day. I'm gonna increase my protein. I'm gonna work out five days a week. You look at all of it. By week two, you're like, I can't do all this shit. Give me a piece of bread and soda, please. But what if you just said, January.
08:41January. I'm gonna walk every other day. That's it.
08:48February, I'm gonna walk every other day, and I'm cutting out bread. March, no bread, no sugar, walk every day.
08:57CTAApril, waits three days a week. So one piece at a time, one constraint at a time.
09:07CTAOkay. What are the two or three things you would tell them to go all in right now? We must truly identify the goal. If you said, hey, I want ninety days, I think most of our brains say, what do I need to do for the next ninety days?
09:24CTAIf I look what to do, because there's so much going on in our lives. So the thing I would do is pick one thing k. And then identify that goal down to the specifics. So before you write the how, you're gonna write two chapters, but more clarity. What what two chapters are you gonna write? What is the outcome of those two chapters? How are people gonna feel after they read these two chapters?
09:49CTAI wanna be so proud of these chapters that they're the two best chapters I've ever written in my entire life. Mhmm. I'm just you know, and you hear me say that fuzzy targets don't get hit. Wanna I write two chapters. So what does that mean? Is it the first two, the last two, the middle two? Where are they gonna be in sequence? Then once you have this big goal that you stare at, the end in mind, then reverse engineer what you have to accomplish to make that happen.
10:12CTASo I realized we did this unconsciously is you gotta give somebody a reason why they need to learn it in the first place deeper than just knowing it or just deeper than just being better at at business. Yes. Number two, once you have and embrace a purpose,
10:28you need to overcome fear. Is there a fear of going live and somebody judging you? Is there a fear of screwing up? Oh my god. When I get my first client in the first coaching session, they think I'm stupid. They think I'm crazy. Fear. When it comes to AI.
10:45Oh my god. What if AI gets all the codes and starts World War three? But when you have a deep enough purpose, we can transform that fear because you know where fear comes from? Just deciding what the meaning is.
10:59If AI is the thing that could take your job and end the world, do you really wanna learn it? But what if you said, humans, as humans, we've invented a lot, and I'm going to have faith it's going go in the right direction.
11:13You know they predict AI, especially when it comes to quantum AI, will cure cancer in the next three years because it's like having a gazillion, a million doctors working twenty four hours a day, seven days a week to solve it. We are gonna have so many medical breakthroughs. We are gonna cure my kid's allergies. All those things are coming. So I would just rather focus on
11:35AI can make me more human because it can do the stuff I don't wanna do so I can spend more time with her and the kids. It's gonna help cure cancer, and I think we're smart enough as humans that we'll put boundaries on it. I don't know if that's gonna come, but if I think about that, then I lose the fear and I wanna move forward. True? I'm just gonna think AI is gonna shift my life, and it's gonna make everybody else better. Then the fear is gone. Then we get to the third part.
11:59When you have a deep enough purpose, and you're not scared, and then you realize if I don't change, you know, that that saying if I'm not climbing, I'm sliding. Yep. If I don't change, there's no way I can be significant. There's no way I can impact other people's lives. There's no way I can turn this inner passion into something bigger. Change is scary,
12:18but I'm gonna model proven practices. I'm gonna take one step at a time.
12:25CTASo if you think about that, my purpose is big enough. I shift the fear, and now I'm embracing change, turning resistance into momentum. You gotta cut through the overwhelm and be able to see one straight line, one focus. If you're helping people find romance again, find intimacy, find themselves,
12:44CTAget over an illness, Whatever it is, you gotta have that one path with a one big outcome.
§ · For Joe

Steal the 5-question dialogue format.

Dean Graziosi playbook

Five numbered questions, one regret thread, b-roll for every emotional beat — this is a 13-minute longform template that ships cheaply and clips into ten shorts.

  • Five questions, one thread. Pick one regret (missing it, wasting time, settling) and let every answer return to it. The thread is what stitches a Q&A into a thesis.
  • B-roll every emotional beat, not every line. Dean uses ~6 b-roll inserts in 13 minutes — each one lands on the line that needs a permission slip for the viewer to feel it.
  • Open cold with the answer's question. Skip the welcome, skip the intro, hit the title-question in the first 7 seconds.
  • Plant maxims that survive the cut. 'Fuzzy targets don't get hit.' 'It's not a dabble, it's a commitment.' 'If I'm not climbing, I'm sliding.' Engineer 6-word lines that work standalone on a quote card.
  • Reframe a familiar enemy (AI overwhelm, hating your job) with a single line — Dean's 'fear is just deciding the meaning' is the whole AI section's pivot. One line does the work of an essay.
  • Cheap to shoot, clippable on the back end. Two chairs, one wall, ~90 min of studio + a stock b-roll bin = ten shorts and a longform in the same week.
  • Soft thesis-CTA, not a hard pitch. Restate the framework as the close. The 'join the mastermind' is implicit — the audience does the conversion themselves.
§ · For You

What this could mean for you.

If you're stuck right now

The decision you've been agonizing over for years actually takes one second. The years are the dread leading up to it, not the decision itself.

  • Stop waiting to feel ready. Pick the one thing you've been turning over in your head for years and say 'enough' out loud, today.
  • If you're going to leave a job, relationship, or habit, set a hard six-month deadline. Then go HARDER inside it than you ever did, while building the next thing on the side.
  • Measure the uncomfortable thing, not the comfortable one. First outreach call, hard conversation, first post — score those. Not the prep work you've been hiding behind.
  • Stack one change per month, not five at once. January: walk every other day. February: add 'no bread.' New Year's resolutions die because they're greedy.
  • When something scares you, ask what meaning you've assigned to it. Same input, different decision: 'AI ends the world' vs. 'AI gives me more time with my family.' You don't conquer fear — you re-decide what the thing means.
  • Get the goal surgical before you plan the steps. 'Write two chapters' is fuzzy. 'These two chapters, in this order, that make the reader feel X' is a target you can actually hit.
§ · Frame Gallery

Visual moments.