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Season 3, Episode 129

Asking Yourself the Right Questions with Crystal & Mark Victor Hansen

A conversation with Crystal & Mark Victor Hansen

55:14

About This Episode

ASKING QUESTIONS....the ultimate game changer. Are you asking yourself, others, or God/Universe for guidance? Learn how to ask all the right questions after listening to today's episode to level up your life. I have two legends on the show--Crystal and Mark Victor Hansen. I know you are going to love all the wisdom they share ESPECIALLY if you are ready to live a life of excellence! I loved listening to the wisdom shared by both of them about writing, success, telling your story, marriage, parenting, and more. Mark and Crystal are leaders in all these areas and you will be re-inspired to live with grit and grace after listening to them.

Mark was turned down 144 times trying to get his book published. He kept going when others told him it would never work -- that it wasn't a good idea. Today with almost 500 million Chicken Soup for the Soul books sold, Mark is glad he held fast to the principles of perseverance, excellence, and self belief, allowing him to create extraordinary achievement in his life. As one of the world's most respected thought leaders, he is known globally as the Ambassador of Possibility.

Crystal Dwyer Hansen speaks internationally, and as an author, coach, and entrepreneur with expertise in the field of human potential, she guides people to be their best selves. Through her years spent as a Transformational Life Coach, and Wellness/Nutrition Expert, she has seen people experience profound and lasting transformation in relationships, career, health & wellness, by tapping into their own inner resources.

We talk about the importance of asking ourselves the right questions, listening to the answers, and showing up for the unique path that is put before us. Get ready for huge inspiration in this episode!

Here's what you will learn:

  • How learning to work for something you love builds self-confidence (2:10)
  • The importance of asking questions in personal progression (8:30)
  • How overcoming roadblocks helps us to ask important questions (16:36)
  • Why asking questions shows trust and admiration (24:34)
  • How vision requires action to manifest (32:43)
  • The importance of boundaries with parenting (41:29)

What did you learn from this episode? Share on Instagram and tag me at @amberlylagomotivation @markvictorhansen and @crystaldwyerhansen so we can see!

Follow Mark and Crystal

Links mentioned in this episode:

Read the "True Grit and Grace" book here and learn how you can turn tragedy into triumph!

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You can also head over to amberlylago.com to join my newsletter and access free downloadable resources that can help you elevate your life, business, and relationships!

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Full Transcript

0:04
Amberly Lago

Thank you for tuning in to the True Grit and Grace podcast. I'm Amberly Lago and I'll be sharing inspirational stories of resilience and empowering ideas to elevate your business and your life, ignite your passion, and fuel your purpose. Hey, and welcome to True Grit and Grace. So grateful that you have tuned in. If you want greater love, if you want happier relationships, if you want to know how to connect with people better, if you want things to work out in your favor, if you want better sales, and if you want to have a greater impact on the world and more abundance, then I am especially glad that you're here. And you're going to want to go out and buy a book after you hear this interview because it's one of the best books I have ever read. Read. I have the co authors right here with me today, Mark and Crystal Hansen. So you probably know Mark Victor Hansell from the Chicken Soup for the Soul series. I mean, he's only sold 500 million copies of the book, but they have co wrote their newest book, Ask the Bridge from youm Dreams to youo Destiny. And if you're watching on YouTube, he's holding the book up right now. Y' all gotta check him out. And his gorgeous wife, Crystal. You know, you guys are making such a difference. You're responsible for encouraging transformative change, making millions of people feel more worthy and capable. And we were just talking before we started, and I'm like, I have so many sticky notes and show notes to ask you and all kinds of stuff. So I am truly honored and so grateful to have you here with me. Thanks for being on the show.

1:51
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Gosh, Amberly, we're so grateful to be here with you.

1:54
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

We followed you as well, and your

1:56
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

work has been incredible. You took one of your biggest adversities and turned it into something that's made such a difference for so many people. So what an honor to be with you as well.

2:06
Amberly Lago

Oh, thank you. Well, I have to say, just when I first started your latest book, I have some of your other books, of course, that I've read. But when I started this new book, it changed things for me immediately. And I mean, thank you for your kind words, but I mean, talk about transformation. It really got me thinking. Okay, first thing when I wake up in the morning now I write down what I've been dreaming about and I start asking questions. And it's really got me intentional about asking better questions. But the podcast is so much about grit and y' all both have it. I mean, both of Your stories are just, they're incredible. And before we get into talking so much about your newest book, I just, there's so many people out there that want to write a book. And Mark, how many times were you turned down for Chicken Soup before you got a publisher to say yes?

3:06
Mark Victor Hansen

Yeah. 144.

3:07
Mark Victor Hansen

People said, hit the road, Jack, because

3:09
Mark Victor Hansen

they didn't like my partner.

3:10
Mark Victor Hansen

No, no, Jack can feel brilliant. I just love that humor.

3:14
Mark Victor Hansen

And I hope all of you, so many people know Jack and I both, so they know that we tease about each other. It's totally a tease. Jack's the most wonderful genius around. I mean, graduated third in class at Harvard, but they also, even though we went to all these publishers starting in New York and then went to the

3:30
Mark Victor Hansen

aba, they all said they couldn't see it.

3:33
Mark Victor Hansen

They said, short stories, don't sell them for short stories. So we, a random house would sell them. And you guys are not smart enough to do that. And now we sold, like you said, a half billion books, 254 different editions, 59 times number ones, just with that chicken series.

3:46
Mark Victor Hansen

So, you know, God bless us for not believing it.

3:49
Mark Victor Hansen

Just one more little footnote. And that just so fun is that the lady at New York Times wouldn't sell us when we're selling 20,000 a week. And so Jack said, I said, she went to Harvard. You call her, she's one of your classmates. He wouldn't do it. He said, I'm afraid. I said, well, I'm not.

4:03
Mark Victor Hansen

We're not there and we'll still not

4:05
Mark Victor Hansen

be there unless I call. So I called and she said, well, you're a multi authored book. So I asked her, I said, you're sure? Let me just ask you, are you sure that you don't take multi authored? She said, absolutely. This is the New York Times. Don't you know anything? I said, well, look lady, you got the bible. It's got 66 authors. If we had maps and 720. She said, you're in next week, boy.

4:25
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Wow.

4:25
Amberly Lago

But you know what? That took such courage for you to be like, you know what I'm going to ask, I'm going to have you always been confident or, you know, had the courage to go for it and ask for things?

4:41
Mark Victor Hansen

Luckily, my parents didn't have any real serious money there. My daddy was a Danish baker, owned a little bakery shop, but you don't make money on rolls. So I wanted a bicycle and I had to ask my way forward so I could sell enough greeting cards to get the bicycle. I wanted and started buying my own clothes at 9 years old. So I built up, forgive me for bragging, but supreme self confidence. I think every kid's got to learn to wok for m O N e y so they build their own self reliance, their own self esteem. And we're going into in a time when we crystal and I believe everyone's got to learn to ask to build their mind muscle so they can. Mind and brain are different. Brain is inventory, that's school. Mind is what you think with your image, imagination, your visualization which is a precessor to realization, which is what you know. That's why we want everyone to learn these questions and ask and go over them with a mom, dad, brother, sister, church mate, business mate, whatever the deal is. So they grow and they get self confidence because self confidence is self confidence. It's self given. And most people have self taken away confidence rather than self given. I've never said that before, but didn't that make sense?

5:51
Amberly Lago

Yeah, I love that. And you know what? I think it is important. There's, you know, I didn't grow up with. We hardly had any money. I mean my mom worked two jobs and did the best she could but you know, she had five kids and if we wanted something I had to work for it. And I find myself sometimes it's hard because I, I had to work for, to take dance lessons, I had to work to buy my first car and, and started working when I was 13, babysitting when I was 8. Which is kind of scary that I was in charge of little kids when I was 8 years old. But nowadays, you know, I see, I'm like, I want to give my kids what I didn't have. But there's a fine line where I'm like, I want them to know the value of the dollar and I want, you know, so it's, it's tough. I don't want to raise a kid that is, you know, spoiled or. And I want them to know how to, to value the dollar and build that confidence. So I think it is important for kids to have a job. And I had your book on audible in the car and my daughter was scrolling through TikTok and I said no, you need to turn off the TikTok and you need to listen to this book. And I think this book is, I think it needs to be in the hands of every kid in every school and every library because it really is, well, the beginning, the story with Michaela is beautiful and it really, it shows the power of the human spirit and how purpose propels us forward and that we all have these gifts went within us. And a lot of people think, well, I don't know what my purpose is. I don't have any special gifts. And I don't know, what would you say, like Crystal? What would you say to someone who is maybe sitting here listening, going, well, gosh, that's great that he sold 500 million copies, and that's great. Crystal's beautiful and she's got this successful career and coaches and speaks all over the place. But you didn't start from that. You were on food stamps at one time, and you tell this story of how you have both overcome so much. So what would you say? A good question for a person to ask themselves. So you say, ask yourself, Ask God, or ask others. But what's a question they could ask to start figuring out what their purpose is and what their gifts are? Right?

8:26
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And it's so contextual, because everything, you know, I mean, we all have something different going on. But I will just say, Amberly, that, you know, all of us are going to find ourselves at these places where we've lost something. We've lost a marriage, we've lost our job, our business, maybe our health, had an injury. You know, all of these things. This is part of the university of life. No one escapes it. When you look at someone like us, like you said, you go, oh, they're so successful, or like you. And honestly, it's never that easy. I was, I thought, you know, high school was boring, and I accelerated my curriculum and graduated at age 16 and married my boyfriend five years older. And so five years, two and a half years later, I am in a city by myself, no family, no friends, baby on my hip, and honestly, no idea how I was going to support myself. So I applied for food stamps. And standing in the line that day, it was the question that dropped into my mind that literally saved my life. Because all of a sudden, first question was, how did I get here? As I'm getting ready to turn over for the diapers and the food. And then it was like, honestly, this question fell into my mind from somewhere, God, my higher self. It's like, are you doing the best you can? Are you taking the easy way out? And it was like the second that question fell into my mind, I busted. I knew I wasn't doing the best I could. I didn't even know what that was and that I knew I wasn't doing it. And so when I went home, I still had no answers. But something. The light went on I had questions. And that's the thing. When you've lost everything, we start to feel like we're spiraling out of control, because the rule book that we had before doesn't work any longer, Right? We're playing by those set of rules, and it's like, whoop. Someone cleared the chess table and took away your chess pieces, and now what do you do? And so it's so easy to spiral out of control and keep reaching for that old life that isn't there. And so one tool that you always have is the question. And that is why Mark and I wanted to share this message. It has been so profound in our lives because it was that one question. Are you doing the best you can? Are you taking the easy way out? And knowing that made me go, no, there is something better. So I just started asking questions, like, who would hire me? How can I make money tomorrow? Because I came from this sort of. My dad was an attorney, but we were very much raised in a kind of a pioneering background. Nine kids, and everybody had to pull their weight. And I knew I couldn't go home. That wasn't even an option I considered. It's like, you made your bed, sweetheart. Go figure it out. So I'm like, who would hire me? Suddenly, when I started asking questions, boom. That is what happens. God, the universe. Your own mind starts to expand and connect every opportunity. And I remember hearing all, oh, there's these temporary service agents. I can go. I can go apply. So I call them up, I apply. They start sending me these jobs. I could say yes or no. And I started learning so much about myself. I learned that I loved small business. It was so cool to watch people, you know, just start a business from an idea. I loved that idea. That idea that you could create something from your own imagination, your own plan, and make it work. And. And I learned that I love sales. So at that point, I put myself through real estate school.

11:50
Amberly Lago

And how old were you at this point?

11:52
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Oh, my gosh, I was 20. 20, going on 21. Put myself through real estate school. Somebody said, you ought to go try to do some modeling. I literally stumbled in there, not knowing a thing about it, to the biggest agency in our city. And I asked them, because I thought I need to ask. They might say no, but what if they said yes? So fortunately, as I pretended to know what I was doing, stumbling down the run, you know, and I read some lines, and they signed me, and I got some television commercials. I was cast in some commercials. They went national.

12:26
Mark Victor Hansen

Wow.

12:27
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And a half later, from that time where I was, like, one eviction notice away from homeless. Cause I was getting eviction notices every month, like, crying my head off and, you know, from those food stamps. About a year and a half later, I'm now a licensed realtor working for the biggest home builder. I became Realtor, like, the number one realtor for the company. And I'm getting these. I start getting these residual checks from Screen Actors Guild. Because once you make enough money.

12:57
Amberly Lago

National commercials. Oh, my gosh. Every, like, model or actor dreams of getting a national commercial.

13:04
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Exactly. And I was just this little, you know, gal from Idaho where, you know, lots of spuds. You know, you would never think. But the only reason it happened was because I realized I had to ask. I just had to keep asking because I knew I had nothing, so I had nothing to lose. It is not like I was going to lose anything because I already had nothing to start with. And that is so big. It is so empowering when you realize that the power of the questions inside you. Because what happens is you will ask a question, and suddenly that downward spiral, you start to get an illumination and you start to see the light so that. So those doors, you know, that dead end that was right on you, starts to, like, you see a little crack of light, you get this illumination. You ask more questions. You start to kind of get some solutions or form a plan. And all of a sudden, you start to live this completely different life. You know, it starts to open up. And just like you were saying, Amberly, you had the same experience when you started asking yourself again, asking yourself, asking others, and asking, God, yes.

14:11
Amberly Lago

And, you know, I think it's so much too, about asking the right questions. Because, you know, you can in. In the worst situation or trauma, or at your lowest point, you can ask, you know, I could get caught up in that victim mentality and be like, oh, gosh, what's the worst that's going to happen? Or you can say, what's the best that could happen? And I always, you know, like, after my motorcycle accident, when I lost my career, we had $2.9 million worth of medical expenses. It was just crazy. I was out of work for a year and a half, and I was the main breadwinner, and we had a lien on our house, and I started asking myself, well, what can I do? How can I still be of service? What could I do where I wouldn't have to be on my feet all day, but I could still work? And I think that is part of being resil as well. As and especially in these times where I remember when the pandemic hit, I immediately was like, okay, I can't see these people in person anymore, but what can I do? Well, we can do it through zoom. Everybody started switching, and I remember talking to a friend of mine who was a personal trainer, and she said, well, I'm just going to wait until this is over. And I'm like, no, you can't. You've got to do something now. But there are a lot of people that are afraid to ask questions. I mean, I remember there was a point, and I'm not afraid to ask questions anymore. And in fact, I remember I was asking, he's a friend of mine now, but his name's Trent Shelton. He's an awesome guy. And we had just done the speaking event together, and I had to ask him a business question. And so I messaged him, and my husband was like, you're going to ask Trent Shelton. You're going to ask him that question? And I was like, well, yeah, I need to know what's. If I don't ask, then the answer is always no. So, yeah, Trent actually called me back, and he ended up saving me, like, $25,000 on this business deal I was going to do just because I asked a question. But I remember there was a time when I did have a hard time asking questions. And I'll just share this, really, and. Because I think this is true for a lot of people that have a hard time asking. Something happened maybe in their childhood where they were shut down over and over and over. And I remember it was when I was about probably 11 or 12. I had gone to my dad and I was being sexually abused by my stepfather. And he told me not to tell anybody. And I finally got enough courage to go and tell my dad, and my dad didn't do anything about it. Now my dad and I have a great relationship now. We've really healed all of that, and we do have a great relationship now. But at the time, as a little girl, I thought, I'm not worthy. Why ask? Because I'm not even worthy of being protected or taken care of. And so it just really shut me down. And I didn't ask for help for a long time, but it taught me, okay, if I want something, I got to protect myself. I got to do something for myself. And it helped me build grit. And. And that pain pushed me. I always say, your pain pushes you until your vision pulls you. And I was the same as you, Crystal. I had this dream of being a professional Dancer. I mean, I was doing some commercials. I didn't get national commercial, though. That's why when you said that, I was like, that's amazing. Those residuals. That's money.

17:57
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Money. It is.

17:59
Amberly Lago

But, I mean, it was really hard for me for a long time to ask questions. And then I learned out of desperation, because when I wanted to write my book, I was like, I didn't even have a computer five years ago, Bought a computer, typed up my book. Now here we are on Zoom together. But what would you suggest to people who do have a hard time asking questions? Mark, what would you suggest for someone who's like, I'm afraid to ask, what would they need to do first?

18:29
Mark Victor Hansen

Well, I want to talk to our seven roadblocks, because that's what stops everyone from asking. And yours was the first roadblock we cover, which is a sense of worthiness or unworthiness. Depends on which way you want to look at it. And then, obviously, you got all the other stuff. Like, you got naivete, you got doubt, you got fear. You've got all this stuff, excuseology. And all that stuff swirls in our head all at once or one at a time. And that's why what we're getting is, you know, one day we got, like, 120 letters from different people saying, this changed my life, just like it said, it changed yours. Because you start to look at it and go, wait a second. Right now, unworthiness is big, but if I really work on it, I can make it small. And if I ask all the right questions, I can attack it. I can chisel it away. It's sort of like when we were in Italy, we saw the Michelangelo, and you read the. I bought the David book, of course. And how did he make David? He said, chip me out, everything that's not David. You and I are all. Every one of us got to learn to ask, to chip out all the negativity out of our own body. And all of us have had the yogurt hit the fan. That's what you and I and I and Crystal know. And then the subset of that is anybody who doesn't believe they've got the right or the power to ask. The three of us right now are in congruent agreement and coherence, saying, we give you full 100% permission to ask. And if somebody, you know, I tell people that are selling, I said, just say, mark, Victor Hanson sent you, or Crystal Hanson sent you, or Everly sent you. And then they go, well, no, I'm strong. I can blame Them. Well, I get goosebumps telling you that.

19:56
Amberly Lago

It's that I got goosebumps right now. I'm not kidding.

20:00
Mark Victor Hansen

It is that critical because we need people to ask. Because without asking, our culture goes down, our society goes down, our sales go down, our business goes down with asking. The reason we started this book is we've been to 80 countries and what we learned. Great people, good attitudes, smart, well educated. But the difference between somebody's great success and no success or little success. One thing, the ability to ask. I've got a college degree. They should ask me. What kind of crap. Forgive me. Is that too rough on us?

20:29
Amberly Lago

No, we say it all here.

20:31
Mark Victor Hansen

What kind of junk is that? We all got to learn the A, S K to G E, T what we want. It's biblical. Ask and you shall receive. I mean, it's a given. The big guy said it. So if the big guy said, then it's got to be true.

20:45
Amberly Lago

Yes. I love that. And I love also that you share. And I want to get into not all of the seven, because I want people to read your book, but some of the seven roadblocks and how to get through them. But I also like how you say, ask boldly but humbly. What does that mean to you exactly?

21:07
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

I mean, you don't go in and ask somebody something with this sense of entitlement and pushiness and obnoxious. It's not about that. It's just really inviting someone into the opportunity, if they would like to either offer information to you that you're seeking, offer some sort of help or advice, and it's that simple. But never like, well, you know, that attitude you've got to keep, that sense of humility, but at the same time, strength that if that person cannot accommodate your request, that most likely has absolutely nothing to do with you. We can't personalize it. Right? We can't personalize the answer or the rejection. Like, oh, I knew it. I knew, you know, no one wants to help me. Those are those voices, right? Talking about, so if someone can't help you, they probably. It could be it has everything to do with them and probably almost nothing to do with you because they've had a bad day. Or maybe they just don't have the resources to draw on. Maybe they just got news about their mother, whatever, you know. But I think people actually really love to help. And we saw that play out in the studies that we looked at. We looked at all of these different studies that have been done on asking Amberlynn, and it shows that you are 80% more likely to get your request granted if you will just put yourself out there a little bit and ask. And a lot of times we sit around and we think, oh, we'll just hint someone will come to our rescue. They'll figure it out. Or can't they figure it out? But that's not the way it works. People don't want to impose their help on you. Even friends.

22:40
Amberly Lago

Oh, even my husband. I've learned I have to ask him and ask him real specific. And actually, I have to tell him a lot of times, too.

22:51
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

But you know what?

22:56
Amberly Lago

Actually, you saying this reminds me that I think that this actually strengthens your relationship when you can ask your partner for help. I know. For my husband. I remember when we first started dating because I was used. I was a single mom for a long time, and I was used to doing most everything myself. Remember one night he was spent. This is before we were married, and we had separate houses, and he came downstairs and I was downstairs trying to fix the air conditioner and had a hammer and stuff out with my toolbox. And he goes, what are you doing? And I said, I'm fixing the air conditioner. He goes, well, well, what do you need me for? Why don't you ask me to help you? And it really. It like, hit me that he would appreciate that he wanted to be there to. To help me. And I felt that little tug of vulnerability in both of us. And it has actually strengthened our relationship for me to ask him. It feels. Makes him feel good when he's needed.

24:03
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Right.

24:03
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And people don't realize that that is. That is a bonding moment, that it's actually a compliment to someone when you ask them for something. It means I trust your guidance, I trust your help, I trust your expertise. And that's very rewarding to another individual. And that's why most people love to be asked and would love to step up and help if they're just asked.

24:29
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

24:30
Mark Victor Hansen

The great benefit of asking is invisible. And when you read Emerson's essay on compensation, he was my teacher, Buckminster Fuller's great, great grandfather, started divinity school at Harvard. But fascinating is that he said his first line is, every act is its own reward. So I'm bankrupt, I'm upside down, I'm $2 million down. And this guy teaches me how to go out and ask for professional speeches to life insurance. And he said, you'll call on 10 and you'll get one, which is a faith in ratios. Right. Great idea. Well, I call on 10, 6:30 at night, I get with this one guy, everybody has said, no, I don't want any. But this guy is a nice old Italian guy that's bigger than the table we're working on here. He was a man of great physical substance. This is 50 years ago. So I'm not besmirching him. I'm just saying back then it was a good idea. So he and I fell in love with each other. We just. He said, mark, I'm a number one guy in the number one insurance company in the world, Metropolitan. He said, mark, here's what happens. I'm hiring you. And here's the directory to all the other guys. You tell every general agent manager, you tell them Big Tony told you to call if they don't hire you, I'm going to talk to him. Now remember, most people get one rejection, they go, I'm out of here. Because they don't understand that the law sounds esoteric. It sounds too simplistic. And we put it in the book. Every act is its own reward. Well, I knocked on 10 doors. I got paid nothing. But the 10th door, I ended up making. Ultimately, I made millions and millions of dollars with them because I also came up with a book, and I sold it to everybody. But out of my 318 books, I did a book called Stand Up, Speak out and Win. And the next year, I sold 20,000 copies at $10 each. Well, that's $200,000 50 years ago. That's like $2 million. I mean, that's unbelievable to smoke. And that's what we're talking about here. True grit. And I came up with a word, acronym. And I don't know if it's great for you, but GRIT means greatness. Resides individuals in an individual's treasures.

26:24
Amberly Lago

I love that. Oh, my goodness.

26:32
Mark Victor Hansen

Let's do the sub point. If you learn how to ask. By the way, I've never said this before, but when you learn how to ask and there's like 178 major questions you got to have somebody else ask you, and you ask them. That's the only way you're going to wake up and find your fulfillment, your full humanity, your full treasure. And back to what Crystal was saying. I just want to add one thing, her 100% potential. And the reason both of you had this adversity is because and I had the adversity of going bankrupt.

27:00
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

It.

27:01
Mark Victor Hansen

Long term, it's your best, worst experience. Short term, you go, hey, Big G,

27:04
Mark Victor Hansen

what are you doing?

27:07
Amberly Lago

Yes. It's so true. And thankfully, I knew as a professional dancer, because I moved out to Los Angeles to be a professional dancer, and I knew I got really good at rejection and asking for jobs and then saying no. And I just looked at it as, I'm one step closer to that next ask. I'm going to book that job. And it got me really good in prepping me really well for being an entrepreneur and not being afraid to ask to get on stages. And you know what? Now I have seen you. I hope I get to see you in person one of these days. But I've watched a lot of your talks, and you are such an amazing speaker. The audience is just captivated. You have them engaged, you have them talking back to you. You have them tapping the person next to them and putting their hand over their heart. You're amazing. Well, you're such a good storyteller. I even saw this one talk that you were giving, and they didn't have your slides up right away. Now, most speakers would have been freaking out, like, oh, my gosh, they don't have my slides up. That's the wrong slides. They don't have my. And you're just like, well, I'm going to tell you another story. And you were. You're just the most incredible, incredible storyteller. I mean, you really are. And I'm just amazed by your speaking. But I. Getting to the point of, I have a lot of people ask me, how are you getting booked on all these stages? Because they'll see me doing different, you know, talks at different conferences and stuff. And I say, I ask, and they're like, well, who do you ask? I'm like, I start asking, where'd that speaker find that gig? I'm gonna go find. Oh, I found them on Instagram. And I. And it's what you said, though, Crystal. It's asking boldly and humbly. I don't go to the event organizer and say, hey, I'm the best speaker there ever was. Like, you should, you know, I could be there. Do you want me to be at your event? I'm just, like, praying that they will give me the gig. And. And I even did a post about it today on Instagram. I spoke for free for years before I got asked to do my first TEDx talk. You know, and then I didn't know what the heck I was doing. I'm like, oh, my gosh, what am I going to share? Everybody else is a doctor. I'm the only one that doesn't have a bunch of initials behind my name. And so I started asking around, like, what are the Rules for doing a TED Talk and just asking those questions and then asking myself, self, what is the most important lesson that I've ever learned and how can I share that? And then before I talk or before I came on with y', all, I asked God, please come sit beside me. Be with me, you know? And so I love that y' all say, ask others. Ask yourself. Ask God. And so I just love that. I just want to know, do you walk around the house and think of ideas for a different book and whip out another book really quick? Because you just both seem like you would have ideas sparking nonstop?

30:31
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

We kind of do. And we're really dangerous together, Amberly, because we have this morning time together. It's our morning meditation, prayer time. And that's where we do all of our brainstorming. And it's so much fun because that's where we get creative. But we always start with a lot of questions. And it's really, I think, you know, everything starts with the asking yourself part. And there are three critical phases to that asking yourself part. Like, the first critical phase is, where are we now? Or, where am I now? Okay, where am I in this thing? Is it working? Is it not working? What's missing? You know, because you kind of. You have to, like, take an assessment of what's happening right now before you really know where to go or how to get there, right? So it's kind of like, first phase of asking yourself is, where am I now?

31:16
Amberly Lago

And being really honest with it, too. You got to take the blinders off and ask, okay, how's that working for me? You know, like, how. How's that working for you?

31:25
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Like, you know, am I even happy? Like, okay, I'm doing all this.

31:30
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Is it, like, is this really what I wanted?

31:32
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Or am I missing something? You know, take that inventory, that self inventory, and that quiet time we do our time together, and then we just go alone into kind of prayer meditation. Because you need that time with yourself and God. So it's sort of like the first phase. Where am I now? And then where do I really, really want to be? Because when you're honest about where you are now, then you can go to that phase, break out of that and go, okay, where do I really want to be? And that's when we say, ask from the greatest nth degree of your greatest imagination. No holds barred. Don't ask. Like you were saying. You can ask wrong. Like, oh, am I going to get through this month? I hope one person will book me. Or, you know, whatever. Don't start there. Start with, okay, in my greatest career, what am I doing every day? Who am I talking? Who are my peers? Who are my clients or customers? What products and services am I selling? And see that on the stage of your imagination in its nth degree of perfection. Like, start with exactly what you want, nothing less than that. And the only way you get there is, where do I really want to be asking those questions and then writing them down. Write down the answers that come to you, and that becomes your roadmap. I mean, in that way, you can literally start to engineer your life backwards.

32:51
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Your perfect life.

32:52
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And it works for relationships. You could do that with, like, if you want that amazing relationship. But you go, oh, I just hope I get one date. I mean, is there anyone out there to date? I don't know? No. Who is your ideal mate? Who's your. What does your ideal future look like with this ideal person? How are you relating to each other? Because if we don't do that, if we don't go deep and ask ourselves those questions, we're going to attract the wrong person, we're going to attract the wrong opportunities. We may not be happy or they won't be successful, you know, and so if we take the time in this questioning process, we just can create such a better plan, a better blueprint, and then the final phase. So that's phase two. Where am I now? Where do I want to be? And what specific action do I need to take to get there? Because we're in a physical world where you have to take action. It's the meditation part, the planning. When you start to ask these questions from this beautiful place of your imagination, you will get answers. You'll think of people, you'll think of a plan. Go write it down. Take action. Put it into a plan. Write it into a concrete plan. Or call that person who came to you, because that's your opportunity to move that forward. You know, that's God, the universe, your higher self speaking to you. So then you have to put it into action.

34:14
Amberly Lago

I love that, that first question, it really gets you into awareness and acceptance. And I think that's truly the beginning of any kind of transformation is getting real with yourself and then holding that vision and keeping that vision in mind and really trust in the process. But I love that you have included the action, because so many people, I feel like they're like, well, I'm manifesting, I'm wishing for it. No, you got to work for it, too.

34:44
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Yeah.

34:45
Mark Victor Hansen

So let me. So when she talked about relationship, I went Through a very painful, expensive divorce long, long, long ago, I wrote down 267 things I needed in my ideal woman. The characteristics, the values. We had to have exactly the same value. She had to want to travel with me. We had to be around together 24 hours. If she had kids and I had kids, they had to get along with each other. Just a ton of stuff. She wanted to take care of herself. She was deep into Nutraceuticals. Deep into, like, we were exercising at 6 o' clock this morning, you know, together. Just all kind of stuff that you have to do if you're going to stay in good shape and, you know, I'm going to live be127 with options for renewal, so. Because that's all in writing.

35:22
Amberly Lago

I love it. And you will, I know. Actually, I have that written down. I heard you say that in another interview. And I'm like, yeah, I. No doubt.

35:31
Mark Victor Hansen

Yeah.

35:31
Mark Victor Hansen

So I saw her radiance in this great seminar and I asked, is she married? And said, no, he just got divorced. I thought, oh, thank you. Anyhow, long story short, she was everything I wanted. And we synchronized in time and space, and then it's been blissful ever since. Because I believe, and I don't know what you believe, Amberly, you're going to say, but. But I believe there's some perfect soulmate. Two hearts get together and create one soul. But we're even better than soulmates. We're the higher level twin flames. That's where you take two candles and it jumps four to eight fold. Depends on the candle.

36:01
Amberly Lago

I swear. I see that. I mean, I love looking at your pictures together on Instagram. Y' all are the cutest together ever. Like, seriously, you glow together. And I'm not kidding, you see it in all of your. Even your pictures. You are the cutest couple ever. Like, couple goals, for sure. So, I mean, I just love it. And so, yeah, I found, you know, that I needed to really. Sometimes I get a soundtrack in my head and I'm asking a question over and over, and I'm like, why am I asking myself this question? I'm creating chaos or worry, or, you know, why am I doing that? Have. Have either one of you ever had this question that is maybe not so positive, but a question that you've had, that you've had to shift? Because I know for me, too, I was always kind of the fixer of my family. Like, I was a middle child. My parents were divorced, and I was the communicator between the two of my parents. And I started, you know, got out of that. And I would fix relationships with girlfriends. I would be the fixer. I married a guy who I was going to fix, and then that didn't work out. I'm like, I don't want to fix anybody anymore. I want a man. And you know what? I got really intentional. And I thought, I really don't know right now if I want a man, but if I have another man in my life, I'm like, I want him to be able to take care of himself. Like, I've started thinking and asking myself, well, what is it that I really want in a man? And my goodness, God gave him to me. He's still with me. He keeps threatening to trade me in because my warranty's up, but we're still together. But are there questions that you have ever thought, well, gosh, why do I keep asking myself that? And then how do you shift that? Has that ever happened to you?

38:04
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Definitely, because we're all human, and there are certain things that trigger all of us. I think one of my weak spots. I was a fixer like you for so many years. I thought I could fix addictions in my family and other. You know, I got to fix that, because I know how I have to fix that. How am I going to do, you know? And so I had to learn to stop doing that. I had to learn to release everyone to their own journey and be there for them. You know, offer some help if they ask, right? So be there, but they have to ask you. And the other thing is, I think we all have trigger points. Like, for me, it was my kids. When my kids were going through stuff, you know, going through those teen years, it's like, oh, no.

38:45
Amberly Lago

Oh, yeah. I got one at home doing that right now.

38:48
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Oh, and you're just, like, losing your mind sometimes. You're like, what's gonna happen? Is this gonna end well? You know, because you just. You feel so responsible. Your heart and soul are so connected to your children. So it's a great big trigger for moms especially. But I found that I. If I would just sit by myself quietly. This was long before I wrote the book. And I would just say, crystal, you know, what do you want for your children? You know, instead of just ruminating on this terrible, oh, no, what if it would have. And I would picture them in their best. As their best, in the nth degree of their best, what I could see as a beautiful vision for them, that they would be happy, successful, free, whatever. And I would just write it like a story, you know, after I'd ask myself, what does that really look like? Instead of sticking, going down this spiral like I'm doing of like wondering if all of this is going to end up terrible, you know, this disaster. I would ask myself, what does it look like if it ends perfectly or if it go. If it moves forward perfectly and we heal this or we get past this. And then I would write that story down, the perfect story. And it is amazing. I would take that into my meditation, take that perfect story with me after I asked those questions. What does that look like? What does the perfect end, the perfect process look like? And I would just read it out loud and say, thank you, God. Thank you. I am so thankful that this is happening. And I swear to you, Amberly, things would start to change so much more so than if I was like engaging, you know, like. And why don't you know how that goes when your kids are like, they're at that stage where they're pushing back. And so it's pretty magical, you know, that inner work that we can do when we know how to ask, when to ask, you know, ourselves, others and

40:36
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

God, it's just powerful.

40:38
Amberly Lago

It is. And I mean, thank you for sharing that because I mean, with my oldest daughter, I was really young when I had her and I hadn't done a lot of self development work or much. And bless her heart, it was not always easy going through those stages. We have a great relationship now, but we definitely had some rough times. But when I could not, like you said, not like engage and like and let it escalate and, and I can just hold space for her. So do you wait for them to ask you? Is that what you.

41:14
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Right.

41:14
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

I think it's like the healthy boundaries, if they're doing something that's not okay, that's not respectful or too entitled. No, you're not entitled to just demand something from me. So the boundaries are important and just communicating those boundaries and then let them ask. But always it needs to be from a very respectful, non entitled place.

41:38
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

So if it came from, yeah, give

41:40
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

me the keys, I have to go. And it's like, you know, no, that's.

41:46
Amberly Lago

I'm just laughing because my husband snapped on my daughter the other day because of the way, just how she was responding to me. And he was like, what? Don't talk to your mother that way. She's a teenager right now. But yeah, I would think too just learning to ask the right questions and getting intentional with that really is a great way to communicate as well with your Company with people who work with you. If you've got a big company and you have a lot of leaders to get clear on how that they can lead what's going on in your company to make your everything better. So the relationships, your sales, everything is just asking the right questions. It's like, this book is so freaking magical in every way because it changes so many different aspects from relationships to how you run a business, to, like, for me, right away, how I woke up. Now, I've always had a morning ritual, but I really got more intentional about waking up and going, okay, what did I dream about? What did what. What does this mean? I wanted to ask you that. The beginning of the book, if y' all don't mind going over a couple of more roadblocks. I wanted to know, how did you come up with the story with Michaela? That is such a beautiful story. Y' all have to read it. It's just a beautiful story. How did. Did you dream that up? Or how did you come up with that?

43:19
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Yeah, it's really crazy, Everly.

43:21
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

So we.

43:22
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

We had decided, Mark and I said, let's start that story with a fable. We love school fables, you know, stories. Because it can get you into the story so easily, because we all relate to stories. The story is just a great way to, you know, because you get into the emotions of the story, and you can learn lessons so quickly. It becomes like a metaphor for our own lives. You know, when you tell us, we thought about doing some ant, like an animal fable, and then we thought, you know what? I said, let's just do a girl. And so I started writing it, thinking we pass it back and forth a

43:50
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

little bit, because that's what we do.

43:51
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

We each take different parts of the

43:53
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

book, and we work on it, and

43:54
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

we bring it together. So I started writing, and I just couldn't stop. And this story just unfolded like I was channeling it, and I ended up using. My entire life, I've been really blessed to have these dreams that guide me for real. Like, very real, vivid, deep, spiritual dreams where I am in a different place.

44:15
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And it's like, truly, when I say

44:17
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

this saved my life.

44:18
Amberly Lago

Wow.

44:19
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And I was really, like, lost and confused. And so I took my dreams and changed them, you know, fit them to the story of Michaela. And I just wrote, you know, the story just unfolded. It was so crazy, because Ms. Kayla starts off, I say, it's every man, every woman's story. Because she starts off, she's lost everything, everything that mattered. Mother, father, and she's been like basically an indentured servant at a stone quarry. So her job every day is about lifting heavy stones from one place to another.

44:54
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

And that's how life feels to a lot of people. And so I think we can all relate to Mikayla's story. But then at that point where she's lost everything, she falls into this exhausted sleep and the being comes to her and he takes her on this journey and he shows her these special things. And I'm not going to give everything away, but he basically says the key is to ask and never stop asking. That's one of the things he says to her, the most important thing. And so from that moment on, she just starts questioning herself and wondering. Because wonder. Wonder is part of asking, inquiring, wondering,

45:29
Amberly Lago

looking around you and keeping that curiosity for life.

45:34
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Yes, yes.

45:35
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

So we talk about that curiosity in the book. I mean, we talk about how we all came into this world as these beautiful, uncorrupted children who wanted to know everything, right. Who, what, when, where, why, how, you know, and then it's like, stop, you know, stop asking. Depending on how we were parented. Right? Yeah. From you and what happened at school. No, put your hand up. Don't talk unless you're called on. Don't ask any questions.

45:58
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

45:59
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Over time, you know, and your opinion's not valued at your job and it just, you start to get shut down and you're. You get that asking ability gets crushed out of you. And so we need to bring that beautiful curiosity back to life and, you know, bring it to the world because that is what is going to lead you to your next step. And just like in Mikayla's case, her life changed 180 degrees.

46:24
Amberly Lago

It was beautiful.

46:25
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Yeah. And everybody, that is everyone's story, if you are listening now, that is your story. So really pay attention. I think it is an important message to everyone.

46:36
Amberly Lago

Yeah. And I think that everybody who reads the book, it's going to hit them in a different way.

46:41
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Absolutely.

46:42
Mark Victor Hansen

So we had the top agent in Hollywood who's now become our agent, and she's too humble to say it. So I'm just going to ask you if I can tell what's happening now. Are you interested?

46:51
Amberly Lago

Oh, what is going on? Are you kidding me?

46:54
Mark Victor Hansen

Your show is so good. Because I get goosebumps, which in chicken soup land means corroboration of truth. Goosebumps, God bumps, chili bumps, all that stuff. I got them right now. Top agent says, holy cow, this is the next Harry Potter. And can you do it? So we talked to one of our great friends, who's Jim Stovall, who, because of me, he's blind. But he wrote this thing, and I said this would be a movie. It ended up making $100 million in movie. The ultimate gift. So I said, chrissy, we got to call Jim. And we were just with him again in Tulsa a couple days ago, because we're talking there twice now. So Jim said, oh, my God, As a blind guy, I listened to it. I got to tell you what's true here. You got to let Mikayla talk through you and finish the script. And we have our agent on, and the agent says, yeah, we want to do this and this and this and this. And all of a sudden, I mean, like, this thing is mushrooming to everything that anybody could possibly want. Because that's what happens is that once you start asking the question. And we asked ourselves where we could go with Mikayla, and I said, look, what you said earlier on, I wanted to compliment on. We won't do any business or book that's not transformational, unique. And nobody's ever done a parable at the beginning of a book, a nonfiction book, as far as we know. And then number three, it's gotta be inevitable that it sources and serves people and takes them to their godly good nature. And so what happens is that she is. Go ahead, tell them what's happened. How much is poured out of it?

48:14
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Well, it's interesting because it was so fun when I got to sit down with Mikayla again, you know, and all of a sudden, all these characters are pouring out. And I pulled all of the roadblocks, actually, I pulled those into the story of Mikayla.

48:27
Amberly Lago

Wow, I got goosebumps again. I'm just saying.

48:30
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Oh, that's so awesome. That makes me happy. It's gonna be a movie.

48:33
Mark Victor Hansen

Everybody. Everyone's going to want to go to the movie, but they got to read the book first because you want to own the concept. So when you go to the movie, you really go. The silver screen will wake up your imagination because we want to wake up people to their fullest, most magnificent, most outstanding potential.

48:48
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Yep.

48:48
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

We're so excited about it. Like, the potential is amazing. And we're talking to some really cool people. So God willing.

48:55
Amberly Lago

I am so happy for you. And you know what? The world needs this more than ever right now. We need it. We're going to need it for our kids through what we've been through. Just with everything that's going on in the world, we need this because you show the power of the human spirit, how it pays to be kind, that kindness matters, the gifts of gratitude. Like it's all wrapped into this, this beautiful book. And it shows that we all have purpose and we were born with purpose and we were born with gifts and we were born with so much worth. And so this is going to change so many lives when it's a movie as well. So I'm so excited for you. That's so amazing. Tell everybody where they can find the book. But before we get that way, you all have to go check out their website websites. Okay. Because I mean, first of all, I'm blown away by both of you, but I was bragging on you, Mark, about your website. I was like, oh my gosh, he's got everything. He's got a course you can buy, he's got stuff you can download. I was like, this is what I want. I gotta level up after. I'm serious. I was like. So I was bragging on you saying this is amazing. And all I've been doing is talking about how like when you were going through this three step process, Crystal. And you say, where do I want to be? This is actually where I want to be. Getting to sit with y' all is seriously a dream come true. So I, I mean, thank you so much for blessing me and all the listeners to be here. I'm just like getting emotional thinking about it. I'm just so grateful for y'.

50:45
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

All.

50:46
Amberly Lago

But where can people find you your websites and the book?

50:50
Mark Victor Hansen

So they can go to any bookstore almost now and get it, assuming the bookstores are open.

50:54
Mark Victor Hansen

And then you can go to Amazon

50:55
Mark Victor Hansen

of course and all the other places and get a copy of ask the bridge from your dreams, your destiny. Because we say just what you just said. Everyone is God coded at birth with a destiny. Here's the problem. You got to discover it. You got to do your homework. This is the only homework book that I know of that will get you from here to there. That's number one. Number two, is it our websites, crystalvisionlife.com

51:16
Mark Victor Hansen

or any mark Victor Hansen has lots

51:18
Mark Victor Hansen

of iterations inclusive of.

51:20
Mark Victor Hansen

We now want to help everyone write

51:21
Mark Victor Hansen

their book in a multiplicity of ways called mark victorhansenlibrary.com where if you want to self write your book, I do a little book called speed write your life story speed write your first book.

51:32
Mark Victor Hansen

Then we got a book called you have a book in you. And then at a bigger level, like

51:36
Mark Victor Hansen

you said, we've got all these courses that will take you through.

51:38
Mark Victor Hansen

And then. And if you really have a little

51:40
Mark Victor Hansen

bit of finance and want us to write it. We'll Ghost it because 98% of people are so scared they won't write their own book.

51:45
Mark Victor Hansen

But we can pull it out of

51:46
Mark Victor Hansen

them and make it more than magnificent.

51:49
Amberly Lago

That's amazing.

51:50
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Oh, we forgot to mention, we created a course. It's a free course for everyone. Free masterclass for about asking. So if you go to askthebookclub.com, we'll send you an invitation. We're about to release this. We're so excited. We've been working a really long time on it. It's really exciting, Amberly, because we want to keep people going in the asking journey. You know, we all need help and support and sort of that. That tribe that can help move us forward and do it together. I mean, we need to do this together.

52:22
Amberly Lago

Okay, what is that again? What was that one?

52:24
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Go to ask the book club dot com. Ask the book club dot com.

52:29
Amberly Lago

Okay. And you guys, if you're out for a run listening to this or, you know, you're in your car listening, don't worry. Go to the show notes, and all of these links will be in the show notes so you can make sure you connect with Crystal and Mark. But I'm telling you, go. I don't say this a lot on my show, like, promote a bunch of stuff, but I am saying this book is unbelievable. Go out there and get the book, because it will transform. I mean, I love growing and learning and asking, how can I be better? And this book definitely answers that. Like, it really gets you intentional about what's going on in your life, how you can be better, how you can transform and have the life you've always wanted and that you deserve. And so you guys are amazing. And if you're listening and one part really hit home for you, why don't you take a screenshot and tag us on Instagram so we can see that? And when you tag me at Amberly Lago Motivation, I will share it in mine. And y' all can tag Crystal Hansen or Mark Victor Hansen. But Crystal, your T, your Instagram handle is not just your name.

53:42
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

It's Crystal Dwyer Hansen. If you look at Crystal Dwyer Hansen, I go by all three names because my name was Dwyer before I married him. And I had so many impressions. They're like, you can't drop the Dwyer.

53:54
Amberly Lago

Yeah, yeah.

53:56
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Okay.

53:56
Amberly Lago

I knew I couldn't remember that middle part, really. I think it just comes up if you put your name. But I want people to know that. So y' all. I just adore you. Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom. Thank you for writing this book to change lives and I hope to see you soon. We need in person.

54:18
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

Yes, we need to get together in person. Amberly, you are a gift. Thank you.

54:22
Amberly Lago

Thank you.

54:24
Mark Victor Hansen

We are talking in Scottsdale, Dallas and

54:26
Mark Victor Hansen

Atlanta and LA in upcoming days so

54:29
Mark Victor Hansen

if they go to our website they'll see all the stuff we're doing and there's a lot of stuff pouring in international like Vietnam and all that but the local stuff they ought to go see. I mean if you're just a little ways travel by love to meet you and get a picture.

54:42
Amberly Lago

Okay well I'll be in Dallas ready to see. I moved from LA to Dallas a couple of months ago so I'm going to check out your location in Dallas so I can come hug your neck.

54:54
Crystal Dwyer Hansen

I love it. Okay, thanks.

54:57
Amberly Lago

Thank you.

Pain to purpose to joy.

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