Most entrepreneurs are wired to grind. The weekend arrives and the work continues, goals pile up, and somewhere in the chase, quality of life gets pushed to "someday." In this episode of The Daily Mastermind, George Wright III pushes back on that pattern with a simple but powerful reframe: stop waiting to live the life you want and start building it now.
George opens with a quote attributed to Wayne Dyer that sets the tone for everything that follows:
The future is promised to no one.
That line is not a warning to slow down. It is a call to design your present. The seven habits George shares are practical, low-overhead, and immediately actionable.
How Surrounding Yourself with the Right People Multiplies Your Results
Gary Vee calls it "hacking people," and George agrees with the concept: technology is a tool, but people are the real multiplier. When you try to do everything yourself, you cap your output. When you build a circle of capable, successful people around you, far more gets done. The first habit is not a productivity hack. It is a leadership decision: who are you surrounding yourself with?
Why Quality Sleep Is a Performance Investment
Many entrepreneurs treat sleep as whatever is left over after the work is done. George argues that is backwards. Sleep should be deliberate, not default. That means building a pre-sleep routine, cutting out screens and bright light, keeping the room cool (science supports the cooler-is-better principle), and investing in a good mattress and pillows. Do not stress about the exact number of hours. Your body adapts. Focus on the quality of the conditions you create, not the clock.
How Creating Memories Raises Your Quality of Life
George makes a distinction most people miss: scheduling activities is not the same as creating memories. A memory has emotion attached to it. When you tie strong emotion to an experience, it embeds in your mind in a way that a calendar event never can. George recommends keeping a physical book of memories, which you can return to when you need motivation, a mood lift, or a reminder of what you are working toward.
Starting a Meditation Practice Without Overcomplicating It
The goal of meditation is not to achieve some mystical state. It is simply to slow down the 50,000 to 100,000 thoughts your brain generates every day and find a center of calm. George does not prescribe a single method. Mindfulness, guided visualization, nature soundscapes, a formal sitting practice: choose what works for you and start. The only wrong move is not starting.
How Time Blocking Breaks the Cycle of Busyness Without Progress
Focus is an acronym for follow one course until successful.
George uses that definition to explain why time blocking works. When you dedicate an uninterrupted block of time, typically around 90 minutes, to a single task, something shifts. The breakthrough ideas rarely come in the first 20 or 30 minutes. They come after sustained attention has built momentum. Toggling between tasks resets that clock every time.
Making Decisions Faster to Eliminate Stress and Anxiety
A large portion of daily stress does not come from the work itself but from the loop of deciding whether to do it. George's prescription is direct:
Just say yes and figure it out.
Once the decision is made, your brain can shift from weighing options to solving problems. Overthinking decisions, over-planning every detail, and second-guessing every move feeds anxiety and can slide into depression. The decision is the hurdle. Clear it and move.
Journaling with Specific Intent to Train Your Brain for Success
Random journaling is better than no journaling, but George argues that journaling with a specific intent is far more powerful. At the end of each day, he writes down three things he is grateful for, any successes from the day, and any memories worth capturing. This trains the brain toward positivity before sleep, so the subconscious works on wins rather than worries overnight. It also creates a record of progress you can draw on when the grind feels endless.
Action Steps
- Identify one person you could bring closer into your circle who would multiply your results.
- Set up your sleep environment this week: cooler temperature, phone off, and a consistent pre-sleep routine.
- Block one 90-minute window each day for your highest-priority task and protect it from interruptions.
- Start a simple journaling habit tonight: three things you are grateful for, one win from today, one memory worth keeping.
- Pick a meditation method (guided app, soundscape, or quiet sitting) and commit to five minutes daily for the next seven days.
It is never too late to start living the life you were meant to live. The habits George Wright III outlines are not reserved for people who have already arrived at their goals. They are the tools you use to build a great life while you are still on the way.

