 simplest way to change your life is to change your geography. I look back on my life and I was like, I stayed too long in that city. Move. So when I say move, I don't always mean run from your problems because that's another error. I see some people, it just depends on your hormonal and genetic personality type, right? So some people are too stubborn, they stay in one city for too long to get stuff, get around a wrong social circle, not push, you know, that their environment doesn't push them forward. But some people always running from place to place, that's also another mistake. So I mean, I think that the happy median here is you got to look, you got to have some wisdom and go, am I stuck because of my geography, which is probably about 50% of the time, or am I stuck because of my mental something wrong in my mind, where I'm thinking the grass is greener on the other side. It's easy. It's like a fine line to walk, boy, between those two. I meet people every single day, that should move. That should move. And then I meet other people that should do what my first mentor, Joel Saladin said, which is bloom where you're planted. Like, you're fine. You're in the right place. You're not thriving for another reason. You're going to be like a doctor with your life. You have to successfully diagnose what's actually wrong. So, you know, it's easy. It's like Aristotle said, to be angry is easy, but to be angry at the right person at the right time for the right reason, this is difficult. So like to want to move is easy, but to write, to want to move at the right time to the right place for the right reason is more difficult. So, you know, we live in a world of like short form social media, where you get all these quick pieces of advice. But like Albert Einstein said, advice should be simple, but not simpler than it must be. Meaning some things require nuance, you know, some things aren't always an easy answer. So, if you feel stuck, examine, you got to sit down and really think about it. Don't don't just be scrolling through social media all day, frying your brain, sit in a chair with no social media, go out on a jog, go on a walk, hit the gym with no headset on, no music on, no distractions and actually think, let me diagnose, I must be the doctor. You must be the physician to your own problems sometimes. Sometimes you bring an outside physician. Sometimes you think about it yourself and you go like, okay, what's actually wrong here? What's actually wrong? Is it my location? Is it actually dragging me down? What will actually be right about the new place that I'm going to? If I move, like right now I'm in Dubai. It's like, do you move? Okay, I was talking to some people that live here in Dubai. What's the pros and cons of Dubai? Well, you got a lot of ambitious people here. What's the downside? I'm overly materialistic, too simplistic of an environment, maybe not as much culture as you would get from a bigger city like London or Berlin or Los Angeles. But walk that fine line between always running from your problems and between being stuck. For sure, changing your geography is one of the quickest hacks to change in your life. So in general, if you're on a fine line, try to move. And good news is you always have to move now. It's pretty easy to go get an Airbnb for a month. Try, test, experiment. I got a private client program where people doing $10 to $100 million pay me to kind of coach them. And for some of them, I'm like, look, man, spend the next 12 months, live in three different places, give it time, experiment before you do a permanent move. And it's amazing how well that works for, you know, you got to be a math scientist in your own life with your geography. People always ask me, where's the best place to live? Well, Scandinavia. I live there. There are some great things about Scandinavia. Oh, there's some great things about Brazil. I was just there. Oh, I love Sydney, Australia, you know, but you have to have this fine balance between running from your problems to whether you think the grass is greener and actually realizing that you're stuck in the wrong place. Like I said, if you can't figure out which one you are, lean towards changing your geography. In general, I see more people stuck from their geography than not. So like if you're on the borderline, it was pretty hard to tell the difference, move and try for a month. I'm not a big fan of just like trying to change your test your geography by going someplace for like a week or three days. It's not enough. Go for like a month. Then you'll really test your geography. See if it really is a catalyst to flip the switch when you get stuck, you know? So try it. I'm in Dubai. I've tried, man, I've tried 40, 50 countries. You know, there's pros and cons of everyone. I'll report a video where I go deep into the geography of the different, you know, what I think are the pros and cons and you, what you basically want to do is match your inherent weaknesses with the strength of someplace. So for example, let me give you an example. Let's say you inherently lean a little bit toward depression. You look at your genetics, your mom, your dad, your grandparents, somebody had that and you're a little bit melancholy type person. Well, I would lean towards changing your geography to a bright place with a lot of sun and a lot of warmth, you know, like San Diego, Dubai. That's a good example of offsetting your weak strengths and weaknesses with a location, locational change. If you're somebody that, you know, doesn't suffer from that, like you're an upbeat extroverted type person, whether it doesn't really affect you. I mean, whether it affects everybody, but you know what I'm saying. It's not a big, then you can live in, you know, Norway, Sweden. So Iceland's a cool place. I was just there, volcanoes everywhere. So that's why I said, you've got to be a chess master. A lot of people are like, Ty, what's the checkers advice you have? Simple advice. I'm like, once you become a little more man's life is chess, not checkers, my friend. Deep thinking, deep thinking. By the way, a little survey in the comments. What is the best city in the world? If you only had to pick one, the best city that would help the most people to live in is Dubai. No, let's see. It's a little survey.