The Daily Habits Behind Endless Income - Garrett Gunderson
6/3/20261 hr
Garrett Gunderson grew up in a coal mining town, made his first bad investment at 18, and spent the next two decades figuring out why almost everything people believe about money is wrong. Now he's written the books, built the business, and works with the entrepreneurs and high earners who are tired of being told to just wait it out.
Charles and Garrett get into the real problems with how most people handle money, from the three myths that keep even hard workers broke, to why the wealthy spend their time managing risk instead of chasing it, to the tax moves that the average business owner never hears about until it's too late. Garrett breaks down why cash flow beats the long game, how relationships and ideas build more wealth than capital, and why the financial industry is designed to work for itself first.
They also go deeper on what it actually looks like to build a life you don't have to escape from, why waiting until retirement to enjoy your money is a losing trade, and how the right environment, the right people, and a few unconventional reads can change the way you think about all of it.
This is not a lecture on saving more. It is a straight conversation about why the rules most people follow are keeping them stuck.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
- Why hard work with the wrong philosophy still leads to broke, and what needs to change before the work pays off
- How the three biggest money myths were built to benefit institutions, not the people following them
- Why the wealthy focus on mitigating risk while everyone else is told to take more of it
- How cash flow and enterprise value beat the long-haul savings model for anyone who wants financial independence before old age
- Why the average business owner overpays taxes by $11,000 per quarter million in revenue, and what to do about it
KEY POINTS:
03:53 The first bad investment: Garrett walks through the decision that cost him money at 18 and turned him into someone who questions everything, while Charles connects it to the moment most people stop trusting their own instincts with money.
05:40 The three myths: Garrett breaks down why it takes money to make money, high risk equals high return, and playing the long haul are the three ideas that do the most damage, while Charles pushes him on where he first saw these fail in real life.
26:44 Risk is not what it looks like: Garrett explains what the wealthiest people actually do with risk and why taking action gets mistaken for recklessness, while Charles ties it to the entrepreneurs he has watched blow up and the ones who did not.
39:25 The tax moves most people skip: Garrett walks through the checklist he uses with business owners to find the $11,000 per quarter million in taxes they are overpaying, while Charles digs into which ones apply the moment someone starts making real money.
53:22 The books and the habits: Garrett names the reads that shaped how he thinks about money, relationships, and health, while Charles shares the unconventional places he picked up his own best lessons.
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsCharles· Host0:00
Welcome to The Proven Podcast, where we don't care what you think, only what you can prove. If you ever wanna sit around a bunch of entrepreneurs and listen to their proven tactics on what they do and how they do it and what their routines look like, this is the episode for you. Garrett and I sit down, so much so that we're gonna have to do another episode just to talk about the finance stuff. This episode is about our routines, about the things that we've seen that create success, and really what it's like when we all sit down and talk to each other. The show starts now. All right, everybody, welcome back to the show. I'm really excited to have my guest on. Thanks, man. Thanks for coming on. I appreciate you.
Garrett Gunderson· Guest0:32
Yeah. It's been a fun chatting until, uh, we g- got to the show, like right away. You and I- Mm-hmm ... you know, just hit it off, so look forward to this.
Charles· Host0:41
So for the four or five people on the planet who aren't lucky enough to know who you are, uh, let's get everybody caught up. Who are you? What do you do? How'd you get here?
Garrett Gunderson· Guest0:50
Well, I grew up in a small coal mining town, so I didn't come from money, but I teach money, you know? So when I was a, a teenager, I won $5,000 being the Young Entrepreneur of the Year, uh, for the state of Utah. And I wanted to invest that money, but my mom was like, "You're gonna mess that up. I'm not signing off," you know? So she wouldn't be a custodian, so as soon as I turned 18, I made a really dumb investment in this variable universal life insurance policy that they said was gonna earn 18% a year for forty years, which was nonsense. But that led me to getting an internship by the time I was 19, and, uh, that internship was basically teaching me how to peddle products, but it also was the, you know, foray into, like, finance. And in the year 2000