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October 25th, 2023 Mature Content

"Everything is always my fault" – Chad Wittfeldt

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  1. "Everything is always my fault" - Chad Wittfeldt Terry McMullen 42:27

Chad is a successful business person who now works to help coach others on how to be successful. What’s super interesting about Chad is that:

1. He has some spiritual and religious values that underpin a lot of his thinking and his goals in life.

2. On the surface, he can seem like a bit of a “Finance bro” who overemphasizes his masculinity and his drive to win at life.

As we do on this show, we spent the discussion trying to reconcile that, understand who Chad really is, and why he approaches life the way he does.

We didn’t shy away from the controversial areas or the potential contradictions, we leaned into them. The result was a really honest and authentic conversation, where I got to truly understand another person’s perspective.

Big thanks to Chad for being game for the discussion and having an honest conversation.

A more complete bio from Chad is below:

Chad Wittfeldt started his entrepreneurial journey at a young age by starting a landscaping company and electronic arbitrage business in his teenage years. He quickly focused on Investing in the equities & currency markets. Chad later became a full-time investor and Real Estate entrepreneur in his twenties. Today, he’s partnered on over $30,000,000 in real estate syndications.

I spent much of my career trying to consult companies on how to better achieve their goals. I was a Finance major, a Harvard Business School graduate, and a business strategist. I've always been curious and I've always loved trying to solve problems. It was a really good fit for a while, but then life happened.

Within the span of a couple of years I had a son, my sister tragically passed away, and my wife became severely ill with Multiple Sclerosis. All of a sudden everything I thought I knew about life didn't seem to make sense anymore. I needed to raise my son and teach him how to be a good person but I realized I didn't even know what it meant to be a good person, let alone know how to teach him to be one. I also realized that I wasn't capable of being the person my wife needed me to be to help care for her. Simply put, I wasn't good enough.

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