

Your World Within Podcast by Eddie Pinero
Eddie Pinero
Using his unique blend of inspiration and storytelling, Eddie Pinero motivates his listeners to live their best lives and find the opportunity intertwined in every moment. This is not a self-improvement podcast, this is a self-empowerment podcast, reminding the world that we are always one decision away from a totally different life.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jun 1, 2020 • 7min
Not Enough
In this episode I discuss Warren Buffett's belief that the greatest threat to a business is complacency, and offer some suggestions on how to weaponize your strengths to continue growing, evolving and learning.

May 31, 2020 • 8min
Don't Be Afraid to Walk Away
"I am learning to love the sound of my feet walking away from things not meant for me" In this episode I talk about the process of leaving behind all that doesn't serve you and re-building life in your own terms.

May 30, 2020 • 6min
The Simple Secret to Taking Action
Contrary to what we may tell ourselves, doing nothing is a choice. Indecision is, in fact, a decision. That leads to the obvious question: "Well, what do we do about it then?" In this episode I discuss a mental shift that will change how you view decision making and motivate you to begin moving towards your ideal self.

May 29, 2020 • 6min
Playing the Hand You Were Dealt
"Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but sometimes playing a poor hand well." In this episode I discuss the important of understanding that life is broken down into two categories: Things we can't control, and things we can. When we accept the things we can't control and take responsibility for the things we can, we put ourselves in position to overcome obstacles and live life to the fullest.

May 28, 2020 • 8min
Why People Stay the Same
In this episode I discuss a concept from Daniel Kahneman's book "thinking fast and slow," where he states that people are far more interested in protecting themselves from losses than they are in pursuing opportunity. Without realizing it, we spend our entire lives in protection mode. This manifests itself in the form of optimistic denial, as Tim Ferris puts it. Since we are so concerned with preserving and maintaining the status quo we invent reasons to avoid the discomfort of change...we live to stay the same. But what if we didn't? What if we could teach ourselves to become aware of this phenomenon and cut through the excuses and procrastination we're so accustomed to? In this episode, I dive into exactly that question.

May 27, 2020 • 6min
Detail is the Enemy
"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication" In this episode, I make the argument that unwarranted detail and granularity are the greatest enemies to growth. We don't begin the journey because we don't have all the answers. We don't begin the youtube channel because we don't have all the right equipment. We stay in bad relationships because we can't fathom the logistics of what could come next. These are all examples of details becoming larger than the objective. The truth is, is you want something, simplify and move toward that thing. The detail will ultimately work itself out. This process is all part of mastery. Details are accumulated and mastered over a lifetime, not before you take your first step.

May 26, 2020 • 6min
Almost
How many best selling books were "almost" written? How many award winning movies were "almost" made? How many life changing relationships were "almost" started? We will never know. But what we do know is that a single decision often separates our greatest accomplishments from their inverse: regret In this episode I discuss the power of being on the right side of "almost," looking back years from now and laughing with family and friends about how you almost didn't go, you almost gave up, or you almost walked away...but thankfully you continued forward, and life was never the same because of it.

May 25, 2020 • 5min
Remember How Far You've Come
"The only time you should ever look back is to see how far you've come." In this episode I discuss the value and necessity of looking back for the sake of acknowledging your progress and personal growth. We spend so much time focused on tomorrow that we forget to look back and appreciate what we've already overcome. We forget to look at our hard work in totality. We fail to see the courageous decisions that created our current reality. The road ahead will present its adversity. But don't forget, you've overcome more than you give yourself credit for. Your track record has proof of resilience. Once you see that, you'll know you are well equipped for whatever may come next.

May 24, 2020 • 10min
An Ode to Excellence
In this episode I talk about a promise I made to myself 6 years ago, with my back against the wall, no money coming in and the future very much uncertain. It was a time that, contrary to what it seemed in the moment, would end up changing the trajectory of my life and the way I looked at the world. Years later, with all that in the rear view, it seems apparent that both my personal and professional growth were not remarkable or spectacular, but rather, quite ordinary. My reality today is a consequence of one thing: putting all my chips on the table and promising not to stop. When times are most difficult and uncertain, we should remember that simple premise. The world does not require of you to have it all figured out or ask that a masterpiece be created overnight. Sometimes success is simply hanging on when others would let go. It's trusting yourself to see a finish line that others cannot.

May 23, 2020 • 7min
To Be Great Is to Be Different
"Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect." - Mark Twain If success is a product of seizing life's opportunity, that might prompt one to wonder: Well, where exactly is this opportunity to be found? In today's episode I make the case that opportunity exists in life's fringes, outside the bell curve. It is in the places most people won't go and the actions most people won't take. For Kobe it was early morning practice while people slept in, that over time accumulated to become a lifetime of advantage. For Buffett it's moving in when most people are running out. You name an accomplished individual, and I'll point to their willingness to move away from the herd and seek out hidden opportunity. There is a golden rule that states, if you want what the 5% have, you need to be willing to do what only the 5% are willing to do. That starts with seeing "different" not as an obstacle, but as the path.


