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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this powerful episode of Level Up, host Paul Alex interviews Mitchell Osmond, a leadership consultant and top-5% global podcast host who transformed his life from the brink of divorce and $100,000 debt to building a successful coaching practice. (03:00) Mitchell shares his raw journey through addiction, financial struggles, and near-divorce at age 32, triggered by a heated argument with his wife and a profound moment at a funeral seven days later. (05:05) Through radical ownership and strategic mindset work, he paid off massive debt, lost 60 pounds, restored his marriage, and built a six-figure coaching business within 18 months.
Mitchell Osmond is a leadership consultant, executive coach, and host of the Dad Nation podcast, which ranks in the top 5% globally with 33,000 listeners. With fifteen years in senior leadership, he helps high-performing men thrive at home while amplifying their career success through coaching, courses, and his podcast.
Paul Alex is the host of the Level Up podcast and a successful entrepreneur who built his wealth from a blue-collar background as a police officer in Oakland, California. He has helped thousands of people achieve financial freedom and has built multiple successful businesses online.
Mitchell emphasizes that "the cavalry is not coming" - no one else will save you from your circumstances. (10:32) This means abandoning the victim mentality and taking complete responsibility for every aspect of your life, from finances to relationships to health. The moment you stop waiting for external salvation and embrace the difficulty as part of the design, you begin to make real progress. True ownership means understanding that your current life is the result of decisions made 3-5 years ago, and your future depends entirely on the decisions you make today.
Before tackling fitness, finances, or relationships, you must address the underlying limiting beliefs formed before age 12. (13:39) Mitchell discovered his emotional attachment to food stemmed from childhood conditioning where his mother gave him cookies when he had bad days at school. This created a lifelong pattern of using food for emotional regulation. Without addressing these deep-rooted patterns through coaches and inner work, all other efforts become "band-aids over gaping wounds." The 80% of how we see ourselves and the world is shaped before we're 12, making this foundational work essential.
As you elevate and change your standards, you'll make people around you uncomfortable - including family members who love you. (24:17) Mitchell explains that when you start showing up as a "10" instead of a "6," it reminds others of their own lack of progress, creating the "crabs in a bucket" phenomenon. Family often gives poor advice because they want you to play it safe out of love. You must anticipate this social tension and either elevate your tribe or form new relationships while maintaining some old ones. The key is not letting this discomfort pull you back down to previous levels.
Create specific "success statements" that begin with "I'll know I'm being successful when..." covering all life areas - not just finances. (32:34) Mitchell advocates for looking backward to celebrate gains rather than always living in the gap of what you haven't achieved yet. This prevents the anxiety and stress of chasing undefined, external measures of success imposed by social media, neighbors, or family members. Review and elevate these statements annually as you grow, ensuring they align with your authentic values rather than societal expectations.
Stop trying to do everything alone through free YouTube videos and PDFs - the lone wolf mentality kills progress. (40:35) Mitchell emphasizes that "a lone wolf dies alone" while "the strongest wolves build packs." Getting a coach and joining a community of like-minded individuals can collapse decades of learning into months. They provide the experience to help you sidestep mistakes and hold you accountable when you want to give up. Even if you're in the 0.05% who could do it alone, having guidance and community exponentially accelerates your progress.