In The Loop With Andy Andrews

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 122:58:32
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

In the Loop with Andy Andrews will expose you to the powerful yet simple principles that, once applied, will change your life forever.

Episodes

  • ITL187: The Truth About Your Potential, and How to Keep Getting Better

    30/05/2015 Duration: 16min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how I’ve learned more about the Seven Decisions since writing The Traveler’s Gift.   I am kind of shocked that, at some point, most of the stuff I talked about in the Seven Decisions seminars were things I learned after writing The Traveler’s Gift. At first I thought of the concept of the principles like a rock, but now I think of it more like an onion. You can know how to use a principle, and change the world with it! But there are other layers that can be peeled away to expose new potential. It’s not enough to know what works; you have to know why it works. When you know why a principle works as it does, you can use it in different areas of your life or business—even when they seem to have no connection to one another.   A hallmark of successful people is that they always want to be better. That’s a healthy attitude to have, toward one’s self and one’s work. When you want to increase your effectiveness, a lot of it has to do with your mentality. Tak

  • ITL186: The Secret to Building Your Self-Confidence (Hint: You CAN Control It)

    23/05/2015 Duration: 23min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how to influence your level of belief.   I think everyone struggles with belief in themselves at one point or another; a strong belief is something you must constantly maintain. Having a great level of belief is so powerful. When you are working with belief, you will become so much more effective in whatever you are working on or struggling with.   You have to remember that every choice you’ll ever make is totally determined by what you think and how long you think about it. You direct your belief the same way you direct your thinking. It’s determined by what you watch, what you read, and the people you spend time with. Thinking logically to a wrong conclusion is something you can catch and overcome. Thinking logically to an incomplete conclusion is trickier: you’re getting results, but they’re not the best results and can keep you on the wrong path indefinitely.   Tune in to the full episode to hear how Andy kept up his level of belief while 51 publ

  • ITL185: When Should I Start My Family, and How Many Kids Should I Have?

    16/05/2015 Duration: 19min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on determining your kid count, and why you shouldn’t let fear be the deciding factor.   Some people grow up and they’re dying to have kids. Polly and I were not like that, and we got married kind of late. Several years went by where one of us would say, “Are we going to have kids?” and the other would say, “Yeah…sometime.” Polly finally said, “If we’re going to have kids, we need to have them now.” Austin was born when I was 40, and only then did we realize just how much we loved kids—and wanted to have more.   I think there are huge benefits to being older parents, but be careful about waiting too long. Especially don’t let finances dictate when you’ll have children. How many times do we hear people say, “We were dirt poor and didn’t really realize it until we looked back”? To become the adult you are, you had to go through some tough times. Isn’t it curious that oftentimes the one thing that made us who we are is the thing we try to keep our kids from

  • ITL184: Have You ‘Burned a Boat’ Lately? You Probably Need To!

    09/05/2015 Duration: 25min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on the boats I’ve had to burn in my life.   When I read about something that happened in history, I try to figure out how it applies to us today. I always loved the story of Cortez “burning the boats” because it’s relevant to almost everybody’s life. To inspire his men to conquer Mexico, Cortez ordered his boats to be burned so they had no choice but to fight and win. Everyone has either done it or will need to do it at some point. Sometimes we run into situations where it becomes necessary, and if we want to grow, we do it.   I never really paid attention to the things in life that I needed to get rid of until that story hit home. For me, there have been relationships or situations that have run their course, or relationships that did not need to continue past the moment of meeting the person. Usually it’s not that the person is bad. It’s just that I am very aware of certain things that I feel I am supposed to do with my life and must carry on according

  • ITL183: Behind the Scenes of the Sporty Citrus Business—with Special Guest, Austin Andrews

    02/05/2015 Duration: 24min

    On this week's episode, we have Austin back in the studio with us to talk about his business, Sporty Citrus. This business has taken off in a way that I don’t think we could have imagined a few years ago. It’s amazing what Austin is able to grow in pots—he grows grapefruit, satsumas, oranges, Meyer lemons, and a lot more. If Austin is running behind or has a really big job, I’ll help with the trimming or will drive him around. Apparently I don’t get paid very often, and I haven’t been able to get myself fired yet, but Austin really handles most of the work by himself. He started with a little trailer on his bicycle.   There was a point where Austin was hired to work on a property with 25 mature citrus trees. The entire property had not been touched in 15 years. We would go there every single week all summer for a couple hours. I knew it was worth the sweat when he would be working on the tree next to me and I realized it provided a wonderful opportunity just to think of new things to talk about with o

  • ITL182: How Austin Andrews Started a Business Out of His Passion

    25/04/2015 Duration: 24min

    Several weeks ago, we mentioned SportyCitrus.com and the response was overwhelming. We brought Andy’s son, Austin, into the studio today to answer questions about how he started his company and what he is working toward for its future. Here are some excerpts...   How did this business start? Sporty Citrus began after a hurricane blew away our house and all our trees when I was young. We wanted to replant trees that actually did something useful, so we planted a couple citrus trees. I really liked taking care of our trees, and as I learned more, I started taking care of other people’s trees.   How did you come up with the idea to help other people with their trees? Originally, the plan was to just help people in my neighborhood. The neighbors’ trees were not producing fruit and the trees wouldn’t grow.   What is the difference between you and a landscaper? A landscaper sees something wrong with a tree and will treat every problem the same. That’s fine for making it look good, but that is not what you need

  • ITL181: How to Help Your Child Become a Great Conversationalist

    18/04/2015 Duration: 22min

    On this week’s episode, I talk about how parents can train their kids to tell good stories in a conversational setting.   The most important thing when telling a story is to be interesting. Don’t be boring! Make sure that you speak correctly. The way someone talks can get in the way of a listener’s mental process when having a conversation.   Around our house, people get points for being clever or witty. We read witty things, and when somebody discovers something clever, we share it with one another. Figuring out good questions to pose is essential. If you want to raise children who can hold an interesting conversation, they must have good questions at the ready.   You cannot get away with not knowing how to communicate effectively and be a functioning adult in society today. You and I know a ton of people who inadvertently go through their lives expecting the worst to happen. I want our boys walking through life appreciating the humorous and clever things. A common question in our house is, “What was th

  • ITL180: How to Encourage a Child to Read (Even if Your Child Is Older and Hates Reading)

    11/04/2015 Duration: 20min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question asking if the teen years are too late to get kids to start reading.   I am dealing with this every day with adults. I was 23 when Jones found me under the pier and gave me biographies. Nobody ever told me, “Let me tell you why you want to read this.” We’ve all heard that experience is the best teacher, but I think somebody else’s experience is the best teacher. This is why reading biographies is so important.   While living under the pier, I went through periods of fear and periods of boredom. Jones told me that the books weren’t biographies but rather tales of romance, mystery, and adventure. I grew up hating history, but it’s a passion of mine now. I believe that sometimes people do not think things through to their foundation; many have surface-level thoughts about what they do and don’t like.   It’s amazing to me how many people will say, “Well, I don’t like to read.” You mean you’ve never read something that made you laugh out loud, or cry? I’ll a

  • ITL179: How to Get Your Kids to Take Your Advice Seriously

    04/04/2015 Duration: 27min

     On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how to get your kids to take your advice.   Kids tend to listen to somebody else before they listen to their parents. There are tons of adults who have quit learning and thinking years ago. If you want your kids to listen, you better make sure you are a person worth listening to. If we want kids to be open to our advice and seek wise counsel, we must be wise counsel. Wise counsel includes the timing of when you say things and how you say them.   I am a friend to my boys, but I am also their parent. Be friends to have tons of conversations. Talk about what they want to talk about. We want them to have the opportunity to teach us.   I’m not a fly fisherman, but I have a son who is really interested in it. When he shows me something, I ask how he does it or where he learned it, and all of a sudden he is giving me a lesson. A great majority of parents spend most of their time disciplining or warning their children, and kids get tired of it.   One of t

  • ITL178: A 14-year-old entrepreneur? How Andy’s son successfully launched his first business!

    28/03/2015 Duration: 36min

    On this week’s episode, I talk about the business that my son, Austin, started based on lessons he learned in the garden.    I often ask people what they would do with their lives if money were no object, and then what value that activity has for other people. These are the kinds of things that Austin, my oldest son, has heard me talk about at the house over the years. Around 10 years ago a hurricane wiped out all the trees at our house. Austin was just a little boy then, but when we were figuring out what we were going to do, he said, “Plant trees that will do Like orange trees.” He was 13 years old when he came to me with the idea of helping other people grow their own citrus trees.   One of the most important lessons people who want to make money need to learn is that they must adopt the mindset of wanting to solve some kind of problem. Austin told me, “Most landscapers treat citrus trees like any other tree and that’s why they don’t have fruit.” A woman from Dallas, TX, contacted Austin because she wan

  • ITL177: Balancing Life: How to Stretch Time and Add More to Your Plate

    21/03/2015 Duration: 31min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question about balancing the items in your life and how to know when you’ve taken on too much.   Before we get into this week’s episode I wanted to say a few things about my new children’s’ book Henry Hodges Needs a Friend. I’m excited about this book because it’s my first rhyming book. The artist Colleen Madden did such a fantastic job the illustrations. I’m also excited because I finally got dedicate a book to a lady who has been so important to our family.   I don’t think there is anyone who has accomplished anything great that didn’t feel like they’ve taken on a little too much. I don’t know anybody who has accomplished anything great that sleeps 7-9 hours a night consistently. Sometimes we need to catch up, but we can go for periods of time “running and gunning.”   When you find yourself dropping the ball on things you’re committed to, then you may be taking on too much. I think you can balance more things in your life more than you think you can, but you

  • ITL176: Owning the Spotlight: How to Handle a Leadership Role Where People Look Up to You

    14/03/2015 Duration: 26min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how to handle the pressure of people watching and looking up to you.   People watching you and looking up to you are two different things. When it comes to people looking up to me, I don’t think about that at all. While I know it’s probably true, everybody has people who are looking up to them. I think the people that become hyperaware that people are looking up to them somehow become people we don’t want to look up to.   I talk to a lot of leaders about the fact that people are watching. This can affect your income if you do not remain aware that people are watching. I knew that I was getting a handle on that in my own life when people would comment on my personality. I always want to be happy, fun, and approachable. If I don’t watch myself, I can get very direct and intense. People tend to take a glimpse as the whole deal.   What do I do to keep my batteries charged? I read. I make sure that I have time around people that I am totally relaxed with

  • ITL175: This New Book Addresses the Growing Problem within Youth Sports—with Special Guest, Jerry Jenkins

    07/03/2015 Duration: 21min

    On this week’s episode, we sit down again with Jerry Jenkins to talk about and the surprising backstory behind New York­ Times Bestseller, The Matheny Manifesto.   Baseball is my favorite sport probably because I wanted to be a baseball player. One of my earliest breaks in writing was when my boss came into my office and said, “Would you want to help write a biography with Hank Aaron? I don’t really know that much about football...” People hear that I’ve written for Nolan Ryan, Walter Payton, Joe Gibbs, and Mike Singletary, but Mike Matheny is as classy a guy as I’ve ever worked with.   Mike was asked by some parents to coach a little league team. He wrote a letter to the parents, telling them that if he was going to coach the team, they needed to back off during games. In it, he wrote that “the biggest problem with youth sports today is the parents.” The letter ended up going viral and posted in locker rooms around the country. People referred to it as The Matheny Manifesto.   In the book, Mike tells thi

  • ITL174: Take a Peek Inside the Writing Process of 21-Time Bestselling Author Jerry Jenkins

    28/02/2015 Duration: 27min

    On this week’s episode, we’re honored to have special guest Jerry Jenkins with us to share his proven writing process.   Give us a snapshot of your journey that got you into writing. I played on a state championship little league team. I was hurt my freshman year in high school playing football and decided to be a sports writer so I could stay close to the games. We’re a bad example to great writers because we can’t identify the different parts of a sentence but composition was something that came so natural.   Did you go to college to write? My first year of college was at Moody Bible Institute. I wanted to go to journalism school, but by the time I was 19 I was a sports editor of a local paper and never did finish college. I felt a call as a teenage to full time ministry. I thought I would have to give up my writing to full-time ministry. Someone counseled me and said, “God sometimes equips us before he calls us. Don’t assume you have to give up writing. It may be the vehicle that you use to fulfill your

  • ITL172: The Amazing Benefits of Reading (and How to Get Your Kids to Actually Do It)

    21/02/2015 Duration: 17min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how to get your kids to read.   It’s extremely important that you get your child to read. I understand when people say they don’t like to read. I’m more of an outdoor kind of guy so I have to make myself read.   When we look at the massive benefits of reading, then it doesn’t really matter whether you like to read or not. The statistics about reading show that people who read make more money, have a lower divorce rate, have fewer problems with their children, and get many more benefits. I want my kids to read because I know what reading does. Do we always want to read? Not necessarily, but we do want to make a better living for our families. We do want to be more valuable in our careers. If there’s something you want to learn how to do, you can learn exactly how the best people in the world have done it by reading their books.   If you think a certain book is critical for your child to read and it can’t wait…pay them. Have them give you an oral or w

  • ITL172: How Social Media Can Make or Break Your Child’s Job Opportunities

    14/02/2015 Duration: 26min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how teens’ social media accounts affect their life and their employability.   You’ve heard me talk about how we’re misinformed about change. There are two things that have to be there with every single change. What’s in it for me? Proof beyond a reasonable doubt. It is critical that you understand how change occurs.   The guidelines for social media are going to be different for different people. Knowing that, what we do want is the best for everybody. The one thing that separates 100% great results from scattered results is explaining why we do things this way. One of the first things you want to do with your kids is make sure they know what you want their life to be like when they’re an adult. Build stories and examples.   I talk to a lot of people who are in the position of hiring and firing. When a company puts out word that they are hiring, they sometimes get 10’s or even 100’s of applications. Somebody will knock it down to the top people by j

  • ITL171: How to Beat Anxiety: The Simple Realizations That Erase Our Stress

    07/02/2015 Duration: 20min

    On this week’s episode, I talk about the myths that keep us living in fear, and how to stop anxiety from ruling our lives.   The key to unlocking our confidence is examining our fear. If you could put people on a scale and see the level of fear in their lives, I am convinced smart people would be on the higher end of the scale. Smarter people have bigger imaginations, and possibly more opportunities for fear. If you know what fear is, you can determine the effect it has on your life. Fear is nothing but the misuse of the creative imagination that has been put in you.   In The Noticer, there is a section that is based on a real study of what’s really happening during our episodes of stress and anxiety. 40% of what you worry about will never happen. 30% has already happened and is in the past. 12% has to do with totally needless imaginings. 10% involves petty little things about what other people think. 8% was left for legitimate concerns, and most of them we actually have control over—but we’re using a

  • ITL170: How to Teach Your Kids to Be “Interesting” (and How to Be Interesting Yourself)

    31/01/2015 Duration: 18min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a listener question on how to teach a child to tell a good story in a conversational setting.   The ability to tell a great story is extremely valuable in all phases of life. When we train ourselves to tell a good story, we become more engaging to our peers, to authority figures, and to people we are in authority over. Being well liked by people can lead to a great number of additional opportunities. So we not only need to train our children to tell great stories, we need to train ourselves to tell great stories.   First, we need to train our kids to talk to all kinds of people. To train your child to tell a good story or anecdote, it’s very important that they watch adults tell good stories and anecdotes in conversational settings. Most kids grow up on the outside of those conversations. They don’t get to listen because the parents do not give them the opportunity to listen. Let them see adults in conversations. They tend not to act appropriately if they haven’t seen matur

  • ITL169: How to Deal With “No One Wants to Be My Friend”

    23/01/2015 Duration: 26min

    On this week’s episode, I answer a question on how to help a child when they’re having a tough time making friends.    How can you help when they say, “No one wants to be my friend?” It’s a focusing process. Our thinking is at the foundation of everything. It determines our choices, and everything about us.    When people are disgruntled or depressed, they’re thinking more about themselves. They aren’t thinking about whom they can serve and help. If you’re child is sad or scared about making friends or going over to a friend’s house, focus their mind on the fun activities or opportunities they have. I wouldn’t talk to your child about why no one wants to be his or her friend. Instead, direct their thinking to how they can be the greatest friend in the class.    Questions for Listeners Do you have a question? Call in and your question might be featured on the show! Phone: 1-800-726-ANDY E-Mail: InTheLoop@AndyAndrews.com com/AndyAndrews com/AndyAndrews

  • ITL168: Insider Consulting Tips to Help You Give Impactful Advice

    17/01/2015 Duration: 20min

    On this week’s episode, I address a listener question on the questions I ask when first going into a consulting situation.   There are a couple things I’m looking for when deciding if I’ll take on a client. They have to be somebody that I like and connect with. They must have a great level of belief in their company or team.   You have to ask the questions that will lead you to their level of belief. I rarely ask, “What are your goals?” because people will lie or tell you what they think you want to hear. Ask, “What you we trying to do here?” Listen carefully to see what their level of belief is and what they ultimately want to accomplish. This can apply to all relationships: family, neighbors, teams, colleagues etc…   You’re going to have to come up with your own questions according to what you’re after and the people you are dealing with. If you’re going to be a guide, you have to see the future. You first need to find out where they want to be, so you can help lead them to it. Ask, “If you had a magic

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