You Have No Idea What You’re Capable of Until You Hear This
If you’ve ever felt stuck, unmotivated, or like it’s too late to reach your potential, you need to hear this conversation.
Today’s episode is a wake-up call.
You can break free of regret, shame, and fear.
You can become the person you know you’re meant to be.
It’s not too late to change.
And this conversation will show you how.
Today, you’re going to meet one of the most inspiring and motivational human beings on the planet, viral powerhouse Wallace Peeples, also known as Wallo.
Wallo spent 25 years in prison and came out with nothing but $1,000, a used iPhone, and a mission to change his life.
Now, he reaches millions every week with a message that reminds you that you are capable of so much more.
Whether you’re rebuilding after a setback, struggling to believe change is possible, or finally ready to stop making excuses and start moving, this conversation will light a fire under you.
And fair warning: this episode is more intense than the average episode. More cursing. But also more truth and even more fuel. Because sometimes that’s what breakthrough sounds like.
For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page.
If you liked the episode, check out this one next: It’s Not Too Late: How to Transform Your Life at Any Moment
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Transcript
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
You are in for one heck of a conversation today. So, let me just start right at the top.
If you've ever wondered why you feel stuck, or if deep down you feel like you're acting like someone you're not, let me tell you something. This is the truth you need to hear today.
I'm talking real talk because we're going to go there today.
If fear, shame, regret, or resentment are holding you back and you feel like you can't break free, if you've got big goals, but you're the one who keeps putting them off, if some part of you believes it is just too late to change, this episode is going to be your wake-up call because today you're going to meet one of the most inspiring human beings I've ever met.
His name is Wallace Peoples, but you may know him as Wallow. Wallow spent 25 years in prison, but this is not a prison story.
This is a freedom story.
See, when Wallow walked out of prison, he had $1,000, a used iPhone, and a promise to make his life count.
Today, he's a media powerhouse with millions of views across every social media platform every single week.
He's a truth teller, a man who's built an empire from a blueprint he wrote when he was behind bars. And he says something I'll never forget, and neither will you.
There's more people incarcerated mentally in the free world than there are in prison. And after you hear what he has to say, you're going to realize he's right.
If you've ever wondered why you feel stuck and how to finally get moving, this conversation is going to shift you. This is real talk about how to eliminate self-doubt.
stop waiting and start becoming the person you know you're meant to be. And by the way, I got to tell you something.
I don't want your kids in the car if you're listening in the car.
I don't want you turning this up in the kitchen because this conversation is going to get passionate.
And I've already warned my team when Wallow starts going, you better keep your hand on the recording dial because holy cow, it's like part sermon, part halftime coach. Your team is down.
The coach is mad. He's yelling at you and he's telling you the truth.
And this is the truth you need to hear because the fact is, you're the one in your own way.
And so I don't want to be hearing from you any language
because this is a conversation for adults. And sometimes adults need to hear words that are a little harsh because that's what it's going to take for you to wake up.
All right, I've warned you.
And here's another warning. Don't even bother listening to this if you don't want to hear the truth.
Don't listen to this if you're not interested in motivation. You still here? Good.
So am I.
Let's go.
Okay, buddy. Got your notebooks? Yep.
Lunchbox? Yep. Homework? Homework.
Double checking? Good call.
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Hey, it's your friend Mel Robbins and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited that you're here.
It is such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you.
And if you're a new listener or you're here because someone shared this with you, I just wanted to personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
You are in for an unbelievable, unbelievable experience today. Because our guest is one of the most powerful, raw, and respected voices in culture right now.
His name is Wallace Peoples.
He's also known as Wallo267. He is the co-host of the massively popular podcast, Million Dollars with a Game.
He's a viral motivational speaker with 7 million followers, the best-selling author of two books, including his brand new one, Yes to You, New. to them.
He's the chief marketing officer of Reform Alliance, the criminal justice reform nonprofit founded by Jay-Z and others.
He's helped raise over $5 million for small businesses, built partnerships with brands like Puma, Foot Walker, and the nfl he's also given a ted talk on forgiveness that left people in tears and he shares stages with everyone from ceos to formerly incarcerated youth and here's the part of his story that is a testament to wallow's unbreakable mindset he did all of that after serving over 20 years in prison No college degree, no corporate ladder, just grit and vision.
So without further ado, please help me welcome the remarkable Wallow to the Mel Robbins podcast. Thank you for having me.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. I'm happy to be here.
Thank you for jumping on a plane. I have been a huge fan of yours for a long time.
I am so excited to be in the room with you.
I'm excited for the person who has made the time to be here with us, to be able to be inspired by and learn from you. And I can't wait to dig into your story, but I wanted to start by asking you this.
If you think about everything that you're about to share from your life story, from your experience, from the impact that you're making with millions of people,
what do you think is going to change about my life if I take everything to heart and I apply it to the way that I live my life moving forward? What's going to change?
You're going to stop caring about things that don't matter and you're going to stop making problems for yourself.
That's the most important thing. Stop making problems for yourself.
Nobody make problems for us. We make problems for ourselves.
If you don't like me, right?
I'm talking to the viewer. If somebody don't like you, that's none of your business, number one.
Number two, what they say about you, that's none of your business. That's their business.
They own them thoughts. They own everything that they say.
They got ownership of that. But what we do is we make problems when we get into their business.
You minding their business now. Oh, I don't like Mel.
Mel is not this. Mel, fake.
She don't really help nobody. Mel, why are you worrying about their business, Mel?
Mind your business that's not yours that belongs to them the thoughts belong to them stop giving power to other people words ideas thoughts feelings why do they like a lot of times mal a lot of people don't dislike you they don't even hate you some people just want to hug you and they don't know how to get your attention so that's what it really be about and some people just like
mel got it going on how can i get close to mel i dm mailed a thousand times mel don't even answer her dm she ain't got time for that she she running i'm just but that's the reality of it yeah i but but i think if you if you got to really be able to cut on that it button the it button the
button the it button we fuck it
like what they think like as long as you living in that world of area you're not going to live listen i look at this like this you guess what if nobody told you you're going to die but guess what caskets don't have no bump beds It's going to be you by yourself.
Why are you worrying about everybody else? Wait, did you just say say caskets? Don't put that bunk bag. Yeah, they ain't got no bunk beds.
Ain't no bunk beds and caskets.
Like, like, what you worrying? You got to go by yourself. When it's time to leave this place, you're going to be when the music is playing, it's there.
This is going to be you.
It's not about nobody else. Like, we got to get out of here.
Mel, do you know one day, do you know one day they're going to be reading your book? They're going to be reading my book.
And they're going to be like, yo, they're going to be looking at old videos of us. We're going to be well off and gone.
That's why, why you here?
And I tell people, the moves I make is secure the future, the futures of the family family members I won't be living to meet.
The moves I make will secure the futures of the family members, I won't be living to meet. That's all I'm here for.
I'm just here to work for some people that I'm never going to meet. You too.
You too. You're just here to strengthen your last name up.
So it's like, listen, we got to go, Mel. Listen, listen.
We're going to the party, Mel. You see that party that be going in the graveyard?
We're going to be there. Well, let me ask you a question.
Why are you motivated by
making a better future for the relatives you haven't even met yet? Because that's our job.
Why is it your job? Because everybody, listen, the reality is everybody's just not going to be male and wilder.
Everybody in our bloodline is not going to be like us.
Some people just going to want to just get up every day and just get a regular job. It's not everybody's job to push, encourage, want more for other people.
That's just not it. So why are we here?
Why not take on the responsibility to say, you know what, it's going to be some people that I'm not going to meet that that's going to have my bloodline that I want to look out for.
Are you motivated by that because your family didn't look out for you no it wasn't about that my family always look out for me even when they couldn't look out for me see back in the day we didn't have nothing but we had everything because we had each other that was the community that i come from yeah my thing is like this mal you got to understand this yeah you got money mal i do now
you can't spend it all Somebody going to take that money when you, when you, when you get up out of here, somebody going to run through some money of yours, they're going to run through it so quick.
They're going to do so many things to that money. So it's like, why not do do things to help people when you're out of here? That's true.
Because you can't take it all with you.
No, I've never seen a hearse pull on a U-Haul. No, no.
I've never seen a bank teller in the graveyard either.
You don't see no bank tellers in the graveyard? I've never seen Chase. Out of every funeral I went to, I never seen Chase in the graveyard.
I never seen PNC.
I've never seen Bank of America, Wells Fargo. None of that shit's there.
So it's like, only thing you see is the dash. The most important part of the graveyard is the dash is on tombstone.
And you're trying to figure out what did they do?
What was a part of that? What do you want on your tombstone? Uh, I just listen, listen,
my tombstone, I don't want to want speakers on there. I want the music to be playing because I'm gonna be dancing because I left it all up here.
I'm not gonna be crying, I'm not gonna be complaining in the graveyard. Every time I go to the graveyard, you'll be hearing people.
A lot of people, you some side you see, they be music playing, they happy, some side it'd be crying because they ain't do what they wanted to do and they left it up here. So true, so true.
You're 46, yeah, I'm 46. So I read that you spent more than half of those 46 years either in juvie or in prison.
Yeah.
Tell me a little bit about that. What happened? So what happened is, grew up, great family.
Rest in peace on my brother Steve, my mom, Jackie, extraordinary woman.
You know, that's where I got a lot of my crazy stuff from. My grandmom, loving, strong woman, the strongest person I know.
My brother Jalal.
I grew up, my pop.
Wallace Roundtree, my steppop, Hip. I had some great people around me growing up.
great family, different size. My grandma, Aura, rest in peace.
Grew up in the streets of Philadelphia, inner cities of America. I wanted to be down.
And because when I grew up and where I grew up at in the ghetto, the only person that got the most attention was the person that was still in the American dream, the drug dealer
or the criminal.
Because he had the fancy cars, he had the jury. He dealt with the most beautifulest woman in the neighborhood.
So it's like the movie.
So as me sitting on the step as a kid, when I see the car pull up, the nice music blasting out, the Mercedes-Benz, the jury, and I'm like, I'm sitting there, Melon. I'm like, hold up.
You mean to tell me? I noticed Ms. Johnson, Miss Brown, and Ms.
Green, the older ladies, they spoke to that guy getting out of the business. They ain't speak to Mr.
Carl walking down the street as a plumber. I said, I got to go out there and steal the American dream.
That's the only people like. America only respects the successful criminals.
They love them.
That's why so many movies made about them. So I'm sitting there.
I'm like, yo, I got to be down. I was smart enough to know right from wrong.
My grandmom, she taught me a lot, but I got into the crime life because I wanted things that I wasn't willing to work for because I'm a kid. June 30th, 1990, I get arrested for armed robbery.
Philadelphia, I get, and I'll never forget when Nanny came in. Shout out to Nanny.
She's 91 now. She's, she's like 91, but she moved around like she 31.
She sent my uncle Tommy to come get me.
The next week, I got locked up again for armed robbery. I kept getting locked up.
So I wound up spending five years in juvenile. June 30th 1990 i was 11 for like
seven days uh um something like that i wound up kept going back they sentenced me that year to a year and i wound up spending five years in juvenile okay in and out so by the time i turned 17 i i got locked up for two armed robberies two firearm violations got sentenced to a total of 19 and a half to 52 years in prison they certified me as an adult they said no you're not a kid no more you you you're good with crime you know how to do crime how mad were your grandmothers and your mom at you?
Because you just kept getting into it. They were mad at me.
Because I can tell, I can just feel their energy right now. They were just like, come on.
They was mad.
And my grandma used to always say, you're going to get it. You're going to realize one day.
Because you know what's crazy?
Your grandma, older, you saying to yourself, she don't know what's going on out here, but she do. Of course she does.
She always tell me, you don't understand, baby, why you the only one that always go to jail?
You always go to jail.
And I remember one of my homeboys,
his mom was saying, y'all can't do wrong, wrong. Y'all need to start doing right, right.
It didn't hit me until later on in life when I was sitting in prison doing time.
What does that mean? What do you mean? You're all doing wrong, wrong. You got to start.
Basically, y'all don't know how to be criminals. Hell, because you keep getting arrested.
Yeah, y'all can't do wrong, wrong. I mean, y'all can't do wrong, right? You might as well do right, right.
Basically, so it was like, y'all can't even do wrong. Y'all don't even know how to do wrong.
You know what I mean? So it was like, y'all really not good criminals. Y'all always get caught.
Most criminals do. So we really not that good.
So it was like, you know, and you don't, you don't think about that. But being you,
being you wasn't cool. See, see, see, see, what's the name had a song out back in the day, but we heard it.
We might have danced to it. But it wasn't that
cool. It was, it was a nice song.
You probably hear it on the TV. You probably hear it on radio.
Huey Newton in the news had a song.
It's hip to be square. But you don't think about that.
You're not thinking about that.
It's being outweighed by all all the other music that you're hearing.
When Revenge of the Nerds come out, you don't even think, you don't even understand about today. You don't know technology going to come.
So everything was based on being cool, dangerous.
Mel, let's be honest, Mel. You was in school.
Y'all didn't want the nerds. Y'all wanted the cool guys.
Of course. Y'all wanted the jocks.
Y'all want the guy to come with his collar.
Y'all wanted the Fons.
You didn't want that. Nobody want that.
Nobody want the good guy. Everybody loved the bad guy.
They love Scarface. They love Al Pacino.
They love, you got to think about that.
America loved the successful criminal. They love the bad guy.
So think about it. When you talk about institutions, when you talk about juvenile facilities, juvenile facilities, prisons is a business.
And I need to ask you out there to everybody that understands about businesses.
What business do you know that don't want their customers to come back?
What businesses do you know that don't want reoccurring customers? So if I change it up, you're never going to be my customer no more. So how do I make money? How do you like it?
So, now the counselors is out.
The
psyches that work at the place is out. Probation officers is out.
Just imagine if we fix this system and everything is fixed. No parole officers, no probation officers.
We don't need a court cloaks.
We don't need senographers in the court. We don't need a lot of judges.
We don't need a district attorney. We don't need a lot of these people.
So, I didn't understand that until later on. So, then when I get sentenced and it's time for me to go to prison, I was scared to death.
I was scared to death. I get sentenced.
I get up to the big house. It's a big wall.
It's called Greatest Fool Prison. They open that gate.
The gate closed behind us. I'm shackled up.
I got shackles running from a belt around my waist, the shackles right here. I'm cuffed and it's going to my feet, to my chains on my feet.
The main thing that I'm thinking about when I go to prison, I'm looking at the TV and used to see all this stuff, but you never think it's going to be you.
Nobody think it's going to be their turn to go into prison when they are part of the life of crime. Everybody thinks they're smarter than the system.
So it was just crazy for me.
They give us our box, we get our stuff.
We had to walk up and we had to go through the general population where the big yard was at to get to the to the to the hole in death row and where they had you locked in because we was juveniles.
As we walked through that hallway,
I seen some of the biggest muscular human beings I ever seen in my life.
I couldn't believe it. They coming out of the yard, their shirts off.
I'm like, I can, please don't put me in the cell with him. I don't know what, I don't know.
I'm like, I'm just like, please. But they wound up taking the cell hole.
And the other younger guy that was with me, I never forget as I covered my head with the pillow in that cell because we shared the cell because we was both minors.
I heard him cry as I was crying at night and wishing I was home and wishing I had another chance.
And it just was, it just was different. But that started my road and my journey being in prison.
And it just, it got real after that. It kept, it continued, continued to get real.
But what happened was, I was in the cell, it was hot, summertime, no air conditioning, none of that.
And I got up to splash my face, but when I got up to splash my face, it was like the devil was dancing in the cell because it was so hot in there, walls were sweating.
And I just looked in the mirror and I said, damn, you ain't here doing all this time for being somebody you not.
The power,
the power of wanting to be down with a bunch of people that really don't care about you can destroy your life.
It can mess your life up, even if it's not about crime. It could be about, I just want to be down with these people in college because they're supposed to be the in-crowder.
I just want to be down with these people because they do business. Or I just want to be down.
It could mess you up because what it do is it removes you from you.
And now you got to be somebody else to be accepted by some other human beings that breathe like you, got 24 hours like you, that drink the same water you drink,
you shitting me.
So once I realized that,
it was crazy. I want to go back to that moment where you're looking in the mirror and
you're reflecting on the fact that you're doing all this time in prison for being someone you're not.
And I'd love to have you talk to the person that's having this epiphany as they're listening to you
and they're thinking well i am where i am because i've been being someone i'm not
you i'm talking to you you right there you
you ain't tired yet you out there being somebody that you're not and guess what you just keep losing you don't feel right you know you're not where you want to be because you don't feel right, but you choose to take this path because you wanted to be accepted by a bunch of people that don't even accept they self because if they accepted themselves they wouldn't put pressure on you to be with them why do they need you to be around why do they need you to change who you are think about it but think about this journey you're going on and say to yourself
hold up this might not be for me this might not be my ideas this might not really be what i want to do but the crowd is telling me i should do this the crowd is telling me this is what's cool the crowd is telling me this is what accepted
when you're going to say fuck the crowd and start accepting you,
when you gonna cut the fuck it button on and say fuck what they think, huh? What are you scared for? Huh? What you waiting for? Like, you think time is on your side?
Time is not on your side.
The only thing you got on your side is the decision to let go of everything that's not supportive to you, everything that's forcing you to change who you are in order to be a part of this idea
of what's right and what's wrong. Man, come on, it's bullshit.
Let go. Get free.
Be you.
Love you. Respect yourself enough to choose you.
Say yes to you and no to them.
Oh, yeah, that's the new book coming out too. A new book.
And buy it while you're at it. Yes, buy it.
Yeah.
Well, near the end of the time that you were serving in prison, you started writing something called the Book of Life. What was that? And what were you writing in it?
The Book of Life is something I wrote in every day. And I used to write.
The book of life was really important because I believe people don't write stuff down.
Right.
And that was it. That was a major thing for me.
But in the process of me writing stuff down, what were you writing now? What do you mean your people don't write down? I wish I'd have brung it.
I wrote everything down.
The states I wanted to go to. I wrote down the different peanut butters and jelly I wanted when I got out.
Stores I wanted to go to, movies I wanted to watch, songs I wanted to collect in my MP3 plus. I wrote down everything, places I wanted to go.
If I've seen something in the magazine, I'll write it down, whatever. I will always write all types of stuff down.
You know, one of the things that I love about you is that your story proves
that
all of the excuses you have, I don't have this, I don't have that. I mean, you're in a freaking prison cell, for God's sakes.
You still have years on your sentence. And you had this incredible way
that you thought about being in jail after that moment. Can you explain that breakthrough to us? I used to tell people, I'm not in jail, I'm in Yale.
I'm not in prison, I'm in Princeton.
I'm not in the state penny, I'm in Penn State.
Right? What does that mean? That means that I'm not just sitting around in here. I'm in here to educate myself.
It's not their job to educate me. It's their job to house me.
And at this time, I was so crazy about it.
My mind was clicking so much because in the state prisons of Pennsylvania, you could buy a TV off commissary.
Whereas though, you get some certain TV channels, cable channels, whatever, you pay for it all. My selly's cellmates, they used to always say, why do you always turn the TV?
Because I'm turning the TV all the time. You mean flipping channels? Yeah.
And he used to be like, Something, come on.
I was addicted to commercials.
I was addicted to advertising the marketing. Because I always say, hold up, man.
Big Mac never looked like that when I went at McDonald's. It's be sloppy.
It don't be like that. Something ain't right.
Then I realized, oh, they outsourced that to advertising agencies. I start learning about marketing.
Damn, why is when they got the car commercial, they got a black person doing it, Latino person doing it, Asian person based off the channel? You, oh,
what is marketing? Oh, I ran into a book called Damn Good Advice by George Lois. Oh, I'm reading all these Gorilla Marketing.
I'm start learning about marketing. I start learning about advertisement.
I'm learning about, oh,
they're paying all this money for that. So now I'm starting, I'm thinking more.
I'm thinking, I'm just looking at that. I'm looking at that.
And then one day, as I'm changing the channel, I come across this guy, right?
One of my mentors, right?
When I come across a skinny guy, man,
skinny white guy, right?
And I'm like,
what's going on? I look.
He's here. The next day he's here.
He's just always eating food. His name was Anthony Bourdain, my mentor.
So when I see him, I'm like, hold up.
Anthony Bourdain taught me in the cell that the world is your playground, go play.
He taught me that the world is bigger than your neighborhood. He taught me that while
they're waiting for you, go out there and connect with your people. It's people, places, and things that's waiting for your arrival with a sign on it.
When I seen Anthony Bourdain, parts unknown, no reservations, the layover,
I was like, this guy used to get high. He got his life together.
He was a cook in New York City. He had a New York Times bestseller.
Life, he didn't let hard times beat him up.
And his name, Anthony Bourdain,
I watched every show religiously. I never stopped watching him because Anthony Bourdain,
he gave me a passport while I was sitting in the cell. He used to talk to me through the TV show.
And I was like, damn, because this is what happened.
When you come from where I come from,
if you're not willing to be exposed to other cultures and other ideas, sometimes you will miss out on a mentor like Anthony Bourdain based upon his color of a scanner. We work so hard to find so much,
so many differences in ourselves when it's so easy to find
something that connects us. He connected us because he was a teacher and he was able to say he connected with me because it was like I didn't know that I I was looking for him in our fountain.
In life,
the greatest moments is going to happen when you're not prepared for them, when you're not looking for them. And Aunt came through.
I used to call him Aunt.
Aunt came through and he just used to be like smoking a cigarette, drinking a hot tea, eating the craziest stuff. But it was like, wow, Lil, go out there and live.
It's waiting for you.
It was waiting for me. I didn't give up.
I could overdose. I didn't give up in New York City.
I didn't give up. Ant ain't give up.
I ain't give up.
And what he he did he showed me that i'm going to get out and i'm going to create what anthony bourdain created but i'm going to show people that's where i'm from so as i'm looking at anthony i'm reading books stuff on george lewis i'm reading all this type of stuff and i'm in there in this university mode
and that was the whole thing i'm not in prison i'm in princeton i felt as though like Because I felt as though the information that I could learn here, I could go out there and make as money, make as much money as somebody that's in Ivy League right now.
But the only thing different, I had to pay with my life. I ain't got to, I ain't going to owe them no back money.
I ain't going to owe them no lungs. I ain't going to have to repay that.
I just got to get out here and perform. I got to get out here and do my thing.
See, you only get paid for your performance in this life.
Performance is when you get up every day and you put your energy into something. You only get paid for your performance.
So when you go, if you got a nine to five, you're getting paid for your performance. If you got a business, you're getting paid for what you put into there.
You got to perform.
And the more you perform, the better it get. If you athlete, you go out there and you score more and more points, you're going to get bigger, bigger deal.
deal so it's about you only get paid for your performance in life nobody is coming to save you nobody's waiting for you nobody ain't shit falling out the sky for you based off of oh i know you you my friend oh we went to the same college oh we from the same neighborhood nobody give a fuck about that everybody trying to win so perform and win and if you don't do that you're done while you are driving so much wisdom i cannot write fast enough and i also do not want to interrupt you As you've been talking just now, I have three people in my mind who need to hear this.
I bet as you're listening and as you're watching right now on YouTube, you have people that are coming to mind. So, we're going to take a quick second to breathe.
And while we're going to listen to our sponsors for a few seconds, I want you to take a moment and share this conversation with someone you care about.
And stick around, we've got so much more to cover. And Wallo and I are going to be waiting for you after this short break.
So, stay with me.
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Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
I hope you're feeling as fired up as I am because Wallow, I don't even want to waste time.
I really feel like the person who is with us right now has no idea what they are capable of. until they hear all the information that you're going to be dropping on us today.
So let's just jump right back in. And here's what I wanted to ask you next.
You have also said that there are more people mentally incarcerated in the free world than in prison.
Talk to me about that because I love this university mode and people use all kinds of freaking excuses to not improve themselves, to not educate themselves, to not learn new skills, to not educate, to not seek out other mentors.
And I think you're right that there's more people incarcerated mentally in the free world than in prison. But what does that mean to you? And how do you get yourself into university mode?
Because you know what's happened? Tell me. When people used to come to prison, they fresh off the streets.
I used to interrogate them.
I used to interrogate them about what life is on the streets in the free world because I had it. I never wanted to be the person that was stuck.
A lot of people, when your family member go to prison, they're stuck in the time that they was incarcerated.
So I didn't want to be stuck there. So in order for me not to be stuck there, everybody that would come to prison, I wouldn't interrogate them.
Sometimes
I would have the CO on the block, the ones that was, you know, all right, I had him keep my cell as a transit cell. So somebody comes and they're not being in that for long, for like a week or two.
Then I get somebody else because I used to love to stay up and just ask people questions about the free world. So this kid told me about Google in the yard.
So we walk in the yard.
He said, yeah, it's this thing called Google, man. I can find anything about anybody.
I said, yeah, that's decent. He said, I can find stuff out about you.
I looked at him. I said,
man, you think I'm stupid? I've been in jail, but I'm not dumb.
I ain't even on the planet Earth no more. How you going to find, I'm in here? Nobody knows nothing about me.
So I typed my name in here, Wallace Peep, and I'm like, all this stuff popped up.
I dropped the phone. I'm like, damn, the feds on me, the CIA, they watching me.
I didn't know what was going on because I never seen nothing like this. I've been in prison all this time.
This 2000, like 2013, 12, something like that. I don't even know.
So I'm like,
once I got there, I set up the social media. And that's where the 267 come from, Wallow 267.
267 was my prison number, DG267. And when I go to set up the Instagram, somebody had Wallow.
So I had to add the the 267, even though that's the Philly zip code, but it also was my number. I mean, it's Philly area cool.
But whatever the case may be, when I went on social media
and I started seeing people in life, I'm like, hold up.
Everybody was locked into the idea of what they think they should be based off of somebody else. And I just seen different cities.
I just seen a bunch of people doing the same thing.
And I'm like, it wasn't like that when I was growing up. Mel, if you're going to school in Boston, you ain't know what they was doing in duke
if you went to boston college you ain't know what they was doing in duke you ain't know what because we didn't have no social media to connect it so now we're living in a world where everybody emulating everybody everybody got the same hairstyle they wearing the same clothes they went nobody like like you got to think about it some of these big people they would have never got this stuff or they would have never had this influencer back in the day because if you ain't get on um oprah mt oprah or mtv nobody knew about you correct so now i'm like hold up don't nobody got no independent thought no more so i'm like oh it's more people out there in prison.
I'm going to, oh, it's easy. It's going to be easy out there.
There's more people incarcerated than it is incarcerated because everybody out there walking around with it, they're walking around with a cell around their brain.
And how would you describe that to somebody who doesn't realize that they're in a cell in their brain? Because they're afraid.
The reason I say they're in a cell, because they're afraid to go out there and do what they want to do.
So they even in a cell based off, you're in a cell based off of worrying about people's opinions, worrying about how people think of you. So now you can't move.
You can't move.
You're in a cell where you just, I'm just going to follow what they're doing. I don't want to have my own thoughts.
I'm a part of this group that I don't even know why I'm a part of this group, but I think it's okay to be a part of this group.
And I might only be a part of this group because where I was raised, who my parents are, the influence they gave me, I don't even know why I'm here.
It's true. You know how many people that just like, hold up.
I'm a part of this. I'm a part of this.
And they will argue with you about why you're so wrong about being a part of something.
And you like, I don't even, you, you can't even tell me why you're a part of what you, what you arguing with somebody else and telling them that they're wrong and they're a part of this over there.
Think about that.
People is just a part of something based because somebody told them to be a part of something or just because their mom was a part of something, their dad was a part of something, or people in their community was a part of something.
They don't even know why. It's true.
And then people get to a point in their life and exactly what you said happens. You start to say, I don't really like my life.
I don't like how I feel.
Why am I doing this? Why am I an accountant? How did did I end up in jail? Like, what is, why did I marry this person? This is the issue. And I realize this is what happened.
We don't value the most important thing in every human being's life.
We use it for the wrong things. We use it for vanity.
We use it for
the most important thing in your life will always tell you the truth. Even if you duck it, will always be real for you.
Will always show you who you truly are is the mirror.
Not your friend, not somebody's show.
The mirror will never lie to you. Because when you look in that mirror, you see who you is when nobody else is around, when nobody else is looking.
When you get up out the bed and your hair not done, you're not got that shave, your breath stinking or whatever it is, and you go and you go to splash water on your face, even before that, you go to use the bathroom and you walk by that mirror and you see yourself.
You got all the answers there. You just keep running away from it.
You're scared to be you. You're scared to be the raw truth, is there in that mirror? That's the raw truth, but you use it for vanity.
And you know what's crazy about the mirror? A lot of times when you go to the mirror, a lot of y'all be getting pimped by people's future perceptions of you. Willie be getting pimped.
Because when you go to the mirror in the morning, you know what you use it for? You use it for dumb stuff.
You go to the mirror, especially if you got the big mirror in your living room or where you're getting dressed at.
You put all this stuff when you're looking at it and you say to yourself, oh, I don't like this. It's not that you don't like this.
You don't think the people at work is going to like it.
You don't think the place that you're going to is going to to like it. The wedding, the party, whatever.
It's not even about you no more.
See, you're using the mirror in the wrong way.
You're supposed to be using the mirror to empower yourself and have real conversations with yourself and really look at who you truly are. But you don't use the mirror for that.
You use the mirror for vanity. You use the mirror to keep punching yourself back.
When you're going to use the mirror to lift yourself up, when you're going to use the mirror to get you, get forward, huh?
When you're going to stop being a scaredy cat,
when you're going to grow up,
guess what? Time is not on your side.
One day you better realize that. Take advantage of the mirror.
How do I do that? Like, I really mean this. I don't mean this like a cliche question
because
being honest with yourself
can be a very difficult thing to do. Yeah.
So many people sit in the wrong relationship for years. They stay in a job that makes them miserable.
They keep making choices that are the easier choice now, but it makes your life harder, whether that's drinking too much or spending money that you don't have or spending time with people that really aren't your people and bring you down.
How do you have that moment of honesty?
Because
it didn't happen immediately for you. There was so much shit that went down in your life and so much pain that you had to experience to get to a point where you're like, I'm just done with this shit.
I got to this unhappy place by being someone I'm not and I need to change. So, how can I use the mirror?
Not for vanity, but to truly cause that kind of moment of truth that you need to have in order to change your life for the better. Mel, look at me.
I'm talking to you personally. Okay.
You know how you say, let them fuck them.
Okay.
You got to be violent with it. And when I say violent in the inside, this violence got to take place, not to anybody else.
Okay. But you got to be ruthless within to say, you know what?
I'm tired of you taking advantage of me. I'm tired of you being in my life.
A lot of people is out here sleeping with the enemy. Their biggest hater is somebody that's laying next to them.
Their biggest hater is one of their friends. Their biggest hater is one of their parents.
Their biggest hater is
one of their siblings. You got to be balanced about it.
Let them fuck them.
Fuck them. Say it, Mel.
Fuck them. Say it loud and bell.
Fuck them. Fuck.
On the count of three, we're going to say it together. One, two, three.
Fuck them.
You got to be like that.
We're not going to be here forever, Mel.
We got to leave.
And until you embrace the reality that you got to leave, you're going to keep catering to somebody else for their benefit.
mail you got it all you got money you got this you got that but somewhere in your life
you got to cut that button on mel even mel got to do that mellie mel come on mellie mel that's what my friends call me in high school you got to do it
again you got to be able to even you yes
actually the more you actually say it the more successful and free you become because you realize you have been a prisoner to other people's opinions you've been a prisoner to making things easier for everybody else.
You've been a prisoner to the easy decisions because you didn't want to make the hard one. And that freedom comes when you are able
to truly choose the harder path. Be honest with yourself first that shit's not working.
And the main thing that's not working is you and the decisions that you're making.
And stop blaming everybody else. Like, that's the other thing.
The bottom line is
you got to really do the big thing. And you got to say,
fuck them.
You got to like, like, because it can't be if you keep, because this is what it is. Yeah.
You keep negotiating with yourself and renegotiation with yourself.
You're supposed to cut them off two years ago. They've been told you that they do not deal with you.
They do not support you. They do not value you.
You know what's even more interesting?
You know what's even more interesting about this wallow? And why this is so important?
Is that
nine times out of 10, the fuck them that you have to say is really more about
your own
resistance and bullshit that you're making up in your mind about what you think other people are going to think if you do the thing. Like it's even like before,
it's one thing if somebody treats you poorly, that's pretty obvious when it's happening. But you treat yourself so poorly.
Because let's say you want to start a YouTube channel or you want to go into real estate or you want to go back to nursing school.
Most people hold themselves back, not because of what other people are actually saying, but because of what you're saying to yourself.
Well, I can't go into real estate because my friend will think I copy them.
Let me tell you something. The reality is, don't nobody give a fuck about what you're doing.
Extra. Don't nobody really, like, nobody gives a fuck.
Like, don't know, like, everybody keep thinking that they're so important that every, oh, man, nobody gives a fuck about what you're doing. Like, they don't care as much as you think they care.
Like, a lot of stuff stuff is a mind game. A lot of this shit be mind.
And we be battling in our mind and we be like, hold up. Are they,
I got to go this way because they're going to say this. I got to do this because they're going to say this.
I got to wear this because they're going to say this. I got, man, fuck what they think.
At the end of the day, you got to be willing to have people mad at you. But
that's why you got to say yes to you and no to them. Yes.
The discipline of saying no and the freedom that follows. Get that book.
But listen, at the end of the day, yeah, you got to get my book.
It's coming. Listen, at the end of the day, that's why I created yes to you.
Because it's like
everybody's saying, like, we live in this world where it's though, if you say yes, you're the hero. If you say no, you create a victim.
Like, we live in this manipulative world today. Everybody is using words.
Oh, I'm a victim. This ain't go right.
This ain't go right. Listen.
We all play a part.
If you fuck me over today, mal, and I allow you to fuck me over. I like being fucked over.
That's it.
That's dual accountability, right? I got to be like, we both accountable, right? You said fuck me. You don't fuck.
I think if it happens once, that's once. If it happens a second time.
It always happened a second time because people keep holding on to yesterday.
Tomorrow is going to be better than yesterday when you say yes to you and no to them. But if not, you're going to keep reliving it.
It always happened a second time. Well, that's the test.
That's the universal God, seeing if you're paying attention. It always happened a third time.
People is too comfortable with being comfortable. You got to be uncomfortable and really the win out here.
You got to be, listen, every, every, all the winners that we see, nobody see them up all night doing research. Nobody see them in the gym working out, shooting a thousand shots in the gym.
Nobody see is uncomfortable. Your body hurt, you ache, you tired, you sweating.
Like, that's what life is about. But as long as you keep saying
yes to them, you're saying no to you. All right, let's be honest.
This conversation, can we agree? It's a masterclass, mindset, purpose, real life growth, the truth.
If your brain needs a minute to catch up, I get it. I feel like mine does too.
So we're going to take a beat. And here's what I want you to do.
Text this episode to somebody who needs it.
I have a few people in mind who for sure need a little bit of wallow in their life.
And while we're taking this quick break and we let our sponsors shine for just a few seconds, don't go anywhere because we've got so much more with Wallow coming up right after this. Stay with me.
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Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Emel.
That's right, Wallow.
I love that you called me that and I love that you're here and I love that you're sharing this with everybody. All right, Wallow, I got so much more I want to jump into with you.
Here's where we're going next. I want to ask you a question because I feel like people change because of one of two reasons.
One is pain. That's always the source for me.
And the second is clarity.
But clarity often comes from these deep moments of pain.
When you were about to be released from prison, after being in prison for two decades, you had this video where you
said that you had a thousand dollars saved up from the various jobs you worked in prison, from money that your family sent you, and you were so clear about what you were going to do when you got released.
Can you share that?
Because I want to unpack the power of that intention and the power of being clear, because I feel like One of the things that really gets in people's way is they don't even, they're not even clear about what they want.
And you were so clear
that I could tell in the video itself, I'm like, this guy's going to do this.
So tell that story and then tell me about the power of being clear about who you are and what you're out to do. See,
when I came home from prison,
number one, the first day it was time for me to get out, I was scared.
You were scared? The scariest day of prison was the day that they let me go. And I'm going to tell you why before I get to where I'm going.
Because I never was who I told my family that I was ready to be.
I never was that person before. The person that I said I became, there was no temptation to show that I was that person.
I was that person of the mind,
but I wasn't that potion off of lived experience and action yet.
So
I was scared walking out because I'm like, wow, I got to deal with temptation.
Once I got out there, smelled the air, breathing. Oh, man.
When I did that video, I said in nanny middle room. Shout out to nanny.
When I put that money on the bed,
it seemed like yesterday when I did that video, I wasn't out of prison that many days.
I was so clear
in knowing. If you ever seen that video, you know what I'm talking about.
She might put it in here. If you ever seen that video, you can see it.
I knew.
I spoke with conviction and I'm clear about everything because
you ready to know why I was so clear, Mel? Yes, I am. Who the fuck is going to stop me?
Ain't nobody worrying about me. Ain't nobody worrying about you.
Nobody is gonna get in your fucking way. Don't nobody care.
Who is gonna stop you from materializing your dreams? And guess what? And guess what, Mel? Tell me. Americans be taking playing games or what they got.
I said, I'm gonna destroy them out here.
They're out here playing fucking games. They don't even know where they live at.
I said, I am going to destroy him like I'm an immigrant. Like I just, like I just got here.
I'm going to destroy him.
Nobody is going to stop me.
Do you know how easy it is to set a business up? Do you know how easy it is to get a trademark? Do you know how easy, like, do you know how easy it is to do these things?
Do you know how easy it is to open up a bank account? Do you know how easy it is to get a passport? Do you know how easy it is to get a real ID? Do you know how easy that is?
Nobody blocks you from doing them. So, so you mean to tell me, hold up, I could go on one of these sites
and I could set up my whole business. I could just walk in the bank with two pieces of paper and say, here in my ID, and they could open up an account.
I get a card. I get a mirror.
I could go on social media and promote my products for free.
Like,
I'm sure somebody's going to stop me. I'm sure somebody's going to going to say, no, the fuck, you're not, Wallow.
You can't be, you can't come on from prison and start.
Who is going? Don't nobody care. Can't nobody stop me.
Nobody is going to get in your fucking way. Can you please tell that to the person? Nobody is going to get in your fucking way, but you.
Because what happened is, this is how I be.
You be going to do your thing, right? You be going to do your thing. And this is what happened.
You jump right in front of yourself and say, uh-uh, you ain't going nowhere.
You ain't going to be great. No, you can't do it.
You your biggest fucking hater. You.
You always talk yourself out of ideas. Soon as you say, here it is.
I put the idea down. I'm ready to do it.
No, you're not. Then you sit back down.
Sorry. It's so fucking true.
You sit back down.
You do all this research. You got, listen, we walking around with computers in our pockets.
When I grew up, I didn't know nobody in the neighborhood that had a fucking computer, man.
You only see that when you go downtown and you go into one of them buildings, and the computer was big as this table back then.
You walking around with a computer in your pocket? You mean to tell me you can ask a phone anything? Back in the day,
we had to go to the library to figure out something. And some books that we had, first, we had to find a book of the information we were looking for and hope they told us what we were looking for.
Nobody's going to stop you, but you. Now let me ask you a question.
When is you going to stop being the biggest enemy in your life? You your biggest enemy.
Nobody cares. Nobody's going to stop you.
So what they're going to talk about you. So what they're going to laugh at you.
What does that mean? Haters is your marketing team. Let them work.
Haters is your marketing team. Let them work.
They tell people about you.
You know how many haters will get you followers from laughing at you or sending your stuff around to their friends? Look at this clown. Look at this.
They did that to me. They laughed at me.
So what?
They was laughing at me because I was different. I was laughing at them because they all the same.
But what makes you cool? Look at it. Look at what's going on.
The smart, fearless people is out here destroying shit.
The people that say, I'm going to sit here, I don't care. None.
I'm going to stay on this chair. I'm going to build my app.
They running stuff.
When are you going to start running your life? Because you don't even run your life.
You know what came to mind as you were saying that is that here you are free and you're building wealth and you're doing your thing. Easy.
And you are
just doing your thing.
And the people who are in prison are the ones that are calling you names and hating on you. But the haters are helping you build your wealth.
But listen, you know what? You know what I'm saying?
Like in the prison of their mind.
Because think about how incarcerated you are if you spend any of your time and energy tearing people down online. Yeah.
When you could take that time and energy and actually put it into educating yourself or building something that you want and getting out of your own way.
You talk a lot about energy, how important it is to protect it.
Let's talk about energy. Energy is very important, right?
Right? You got different levels of energy.
You got positive energy, you got negative energy. Then you just got floating energy.
Energy that you don't know what the fuck's going on. You don't know what you want to do.
Energy.
I think there's a lot of people with that. Like, yeah, yeah, but because a lot of times, like the reality is, it's sad.
And the sad truth is,
some people just don't got the energy to change.
Change is uncomfortable
because you got to cut that switch on and you got to be willing to be talked about. I did a post.
And I said on the post, I said, strangers make you rich. Strangers make you rich.
Stop worrying about the people that you know. Stop worrying about the people you went to school with.
Stop worrying about the people that you went to college with. Strangers make you rich.
Strangers made Bon Jovi, bitch. It made Guns and Roses rig, Michael Jackson rich, Michael Jordan.
Just think if only people that was Michael Jordan fans was the 15, 20 people, 30 people, 100 people we know. That's not enough.
Stop worrying about, oh, they don't support me. They're not with me.
Oh, man.
Shut up. Strangers make you rich.
When you go to Mel Show,
it's people you never knew. They didn't go to college with you, Mel.
They don't know you. They wasn't your childhood friends, Mel.
No.
No, no, no. No, no.
Everybody that Mel's talking about, let them, them people that,
they don't matter.
The people that support it and understand the mindset shift, they matter.
We spend too much time.
worrying about the people that's not supporting or the people that's not there that we forget to say, I want to give a shout out right now on
Melie Mel's show to everybody that ever supported Wildo267.
I'm talking about everybody that reposted me, that liked it, even the people that talked bad about me. Like at the end of the day,
if you're talking about wealth, you're talking about getting, you got to have that right energy and you got to have the energy. You got to have the energy to put yourself in position.
before you get a position. I was a millionaire before I was a millionaire.
Let me tell you something. What does that mean? You were a millionaire before you were a millionaire.
I was a millionaire before I was a millionaire and I was preparing for my bank account. I was preparing for everything to come because let me tell you something, Bel.
I'm living in Philadelphia.
I'm living in nanny
middle room, right?
So I'm living in the middle room. I used to get on the subway.
I had my backpack on or sometime I walked from Broad and Allegheny all the way to downtown Center City, Philadelphia, whatever.
It depends.
I got my earphones on. I'm listening to Samfa.
I'm jamming. I'm singing to myself.
myself i'm laughing people thought i was crazy because i just dance all through the streets sometimes i throw bruce springsteen on streets of philadelphia come on he's singing i'm walking through the streets i feel like i'm in the movie but i'm feel like bruce i'm like bruce i'm literally like yeah the boss is singing to me he's singing he's my he listen you know how when you every time i come out the house sometimes like a couple times a week i had it in the streets of philadelphia playing by the boss And I'm like, yeah, he's doing my D music.
It's like I come out, you know, like superheroes. Yes.
It's like streets. Everyone needs to walk on.
I'm like, yeah. So I go downtown, right? And I'm telling you, you got to be bold.
I was cocky with my imagination.
And I'm going to tell you about how me going to prison from 17 to 37, it fortified my imagination. So I came back out with imagination like I was 17.
But let me tell you about my imagination.
I used to go downtown Philadelphia the four seasons, one of the best hotels in the city, right?
I'd go down there, right?
I'd go to the bar, right? Just get me a hot tea and a to-go cup with lemon and honey. Because I'm like, it's on the top floor.
I can overlook the city. I'm the man right now.
You got to know you the man. And you got to, listen, you got to know that you him.
You got to know that you her before you become there, before you arrive. So I go there, get my hot tea.
Right after there, I leave. I go see one of these luxury condos downtown.
I'll go look at it because once I realize it, hold up. I could go check out an apartment, luxury condo.
I could go drive, test drive a car, and I ain't got to have no money in my account like that. Oh, it's on.
So I'm just preparing myself for the lifestyle and I'm going to live.
Like I'm preparing myself. So I go in there and I never forget, I put my backpack down.
I go in the condo lady. Yeah,
I'll be sitting back.
So what do you think I should put here? Should I put my painting on the wall? Should I put my art here? Should I put the couch there? They like, yeah, see, what I would do is, and I'm just like, yeah.
And I'm taking my time. I'm not in no rush.
Cause I'm filling it in. I'm like, I would like to see the, let me see the rooftop.
Go on the rooftop, smell the air, overlook the city.
It's nice. Do y'all y'all got a jacuzzi in there? Pooh? Okay, let me check that out.
Oh, yeah.
Lead air. I go to the dealership, BMW, Benz, whatever.
I'll be like, test drive. Yeah, you want to? Yeah, let me test drive that.
I'm talking about, I want to test drive the most expensive car.
Get in that joint, drive around the train, seatbelt on.
Hook the Bluetooth up because I need to play my music. Throw my theme music on, coming through, window down, hand hanging out.
I'm like, yeah, it's nice. I get used to this.
He's like, what you thinking about it? I said, I'm thinking, man, let me go a couple more blocks.
they in there they on their phone they don't even care i'm i'm just prepping i'm getting ready right i'm getting ready for the life that's waiting that's coming
you got to be ready for the life you got to live inside the life that you want before you get the life and you got to live inside it right here see see what happened with me that was different than being people out here when i went to prison 17 to 37 My imagination was fortified.
I didn't have to deal with the real life issues that tear you down and beat down your imagination. Having getting married, divorce, heartbreak, getting lost, losing the job.
So when I came out, I believe I could fly. Well, I also want to unpack one other thing that you were doing, which I think is really important because it's available to anybody.
You were doing it in a prison for 20 years,
which is when you were fortifying your imagination, and it began with the story of Anthony Bourdain. Yes.
You allowed yourself to imagine a world where
you were traveling to all those places. You weren't just a person watching Anthony Bourdain doing it.
You, in your imagination, taught yourself how to live that before you did.
And in imagining it, visualizing yourself there, I believe you were training your mind
to believe. that it was possible for you because your mind doesn't know the difference between what's actually real versus the things that you allow yourself to imagine.
And what's so beautiful about the way you just described, I went up to the Four Seasons. I ordered my tea like Anthony Bourdain.
I enjoyed it. I smelled it.
You're now pulling in your five senses, which then make your brain imprint on all of this experience. And now your brain is like, yes, this is where I belong.
I do belong at the Four Seasons having a cup of tea. I do belong in an apartment that feels like this.
And that is an example.
And the the story is amazing, like the detail of the arm hanging out, the window down and the themes are, I'm no kidding, you weren't, but that is actually how you do it.
You invoke your senses and you don't just watch what people are doing. You step into the scene and you've become a master at that
because you did do what you said you were going to do in that video. You did turn.
the thousand dollars in cash into millions. I turned it up.
Yes.
So what happened after doing all that and preparing for it? Like, how else did you prepare yourself? See, see, see, I used to always, like, when I walked the streets of Philadelphia, right?
Because I was doing these videos, right? When I first got out, I used to do these marketing videos because I felt as though I was a marketer, right? I felt as though I was an ad agency by myself.
So I would go to people's business. I'd be like, damn, I go to Mel's, I go to Mel's steak shop.
I'd be like, Mel, how you doing? She'd be like, hey, what's going on? I'd be like, my name is Wallow.
I want to do a commercial for you. You're like, what? What type of commercial you want to do? Well, Mel, you got a steak shop.
You know what I mean?
I want to just let people know about your steak shop. She'd be like, what do you mean? I'd be like, Mel, do you understand that
there's so many people living their everyday life that people 15 blocks away might not even know you're here?
What I need you to do is I need you to make a real nice steak, Mel. When you make this steak, I want it to be dripping, the onions, the potato, I want it to look like a real, I want it to look great.
And I want you to stand right by me. And just only thing I'm going to give you, I mean, we're going to do this minute video, but I'm going to give you to say something at the end, but I got you.
And this is how it would go.
What's up, everybody? I'm Wildo2's Except. I'm right here at Mel Steaks.
Let me tell you something. If you want to get a steak, I'm talking about Mel's is the place to eat the steak.
I'm talking about this is a different type of steak. This steak right here, I had your tongue break dance.
I'm talking about your tongue will be doing moves you didn't even know your tongue could do.
This is the best steak in the city. I'm telling you, it got the peppers, it got the onions.
You might don't like peppers and onions, so it won't be on there.
Well, you want American cheese, you want whiz cheese, what type of cheese you want? I'm telling you, these steaks is a different type of steaks. You're going to tell somebody about these steaks.
You're going to run home about these steaks. You might even go run in the marathon after you eat this steak.
This is the type of steak. Hey, Mel, tell them what type of steaks you got.
Tell them what you got going on. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Yes. So then I leave.
Next week, you'll call me and be like,
Wallo, thank you so much. You can eat here at any time because I'm coming to do it free.
See, I had to get my proof of concept. So I do a bunch of places free to get my proof of concept.
And then what you do is somebody will call you, hit you on social media, and they'd be like, yo, you might know, I got a friend. He got a laundry mate, Wallo.
He wants to pay you. Right?
So I'm like, oh, man.
So, because the first time, the first time that i i really got paid for a commercial is when my cousin gil called me gil called me like yo man somebody want to pay you 300 i said man i do them joints for free he said you did enough for free man what you talking about gil like you did enough for free they got 300 i'm like damn oh yeah you're right
so i went and got it and then it started i started charging it but whatever but it was like i knew that people need to advertise and i knew that everybody don't see everything So I became that dude and I just filled my page up with examples.
Like people don't understand whatever you're doing, go get examples. that i'm talking about some of the most some of the most valuable stuff you could do is free when i did my first ted talk
um it was this girl named nicole pervy that i knew from philadelphia she called me and at this time i'm charging for what's name so they called me by the ted talk ted x in in atlanta i'm like ted x i don't even know who ted is i'm like who the is ted what i don't know nobody named theodore ted i don't know him i know theodore roosevelt but i don't know no ted x or ted talk i don't know none of that so i'm like all right bet i said all right i said what y'all want i said how much they charge I mean, how much they paying me?
I got, you know, what's their budget? I mean, I started asking them because I'm getting more professional now. Of course, I got my one sheet.
I got my
everything, right? Pay me $50,000 a year, pay for my flight. All I'm getting all this stuff, right?
So, what happened is she was like, No, Wallow, they ain't paying you nothing. But what he can do is he gets you a hotel.
So I'm like, I'm like, Nicole, you sure I should do it?
She's like, Wallo, I'm telling you, this is big. A lot of people, I don't know nothing about TED, right? I'm like, she like, so I go down there
and this was for free.
And And the TED talk that I did, I got two TED Talks. I got three.
I made it out of three. I got TEDx's.
I got, I forgive my brother's killer. That was my first TED Talk.
And I spoke about me forgiving my brother's killer.
And then the second one was Fuck It Button. And I forget it through.
But when I went down there and I did that, that was one of the most powerful things that I did. I forgive my brother's killer.
Because to this day, it wasn't about the money I made.
The impact was more powerful than the money I made from people booking me and all that, because I had people in airports, restaurants, they get up and say, man, I really needed to see that video.
Talk to me about forgiveness. How did you forgive the person who killed your brother? Because
it was an unbelievable pain that somebody shot my brother.
He ran down the street. My grandma, Nanny, opened the door.
He fell in nanny's arms. She was like, what happened? He died in Nanny's arms in the childhood house we grew up in in the doorway.
it was so painful when it happened because I'm in the cell and I'm watching it on the news.
Like, I'm watching
somebody was shot
because I'm outside of Philly at the prison. I'm like,
that looked like nanny house. And I'm like, damn.
A couple of days later, my mom brings his kids up, right? My niece and my nephew.
And
when I seen them and I seen the energy that they had as kids kids and just like so excited to see me and just so like,
I'm like, damn, so much going through my mind. I'm like, and when I say forgive, I mean
be willing to live for somebody
in the right way and utilize this as motivation to get up, to make sure that these babies is all right, to make sure my mommy, because he was the oldest out of all, I was, it was him to me, I was second.
So I'm like, I got a big responsibility now.
So I think the greatest thing that i was to be able to do based off of my environment because i come from an environment where revenge is god
uh get back is god but i said to myself you're not gonna be my god my god is a different god and my god forgive one thing that i realized is that
everybody wants forgiveness but who is willing willing to forgive yeah and it wasn't about no ego or none of that because i got to always think of a logic as i got older and i'm like what is the logical what I'm going to do?
Go out there, try to do something to somebody, and somebody do something to me, or and they lose me, or they lose them, and I'm back. Like, so it was the
whole thing was just to sit back. And I had time,
I still had years ago in prison, where I was like,
I got to figure out a way to turn the cycle of violence around in my community and show by example of what forgiveness looks like and what living for somebody look like.
Because if
the cycle of crime, the cycle of murder
is too normalized where I come from, but it's normalized based off of ego. Where I come from, a lot of people die based off of ego, based off of words, based off of emotions.
And
I said, I didn't want that to be me, and I wanted to be an example.
Not for, it wasn't a natural thought of wanting to be an example for other people, but I was just like, I got to be an example to my family, and I got to be an example to these kids.
And they got a man that they could count on.
Because my brother wasn't able to fulfill that because his life was taken, so it was like that there had me more like,
okay, and I had to share that. And what's so funny, he said, You only got like 18 minutes.
I'm like, All right, cool, because nobody else is going to share that.
I didn't want to, once I seen what a TEDx is, and I said, Oh man, I got this. How do you forgive, though? You like, how did you actually get to the point where
you
no longer carry that anger with with you, like that you're freed from it. Like, what does forgiveness even mean to you? Forgiveness to me personally,
if
my condolence to anybody out there that lost somebody, right? Anybody out there, if you lost somebody through violence,
my condolence to you. And I can only,
I know the feeling. So I know what you go through.
For me personally,
forgiveness helped me breathe because
I wanted to celebrate my brother.
I celebrate my brother by living for him, being happy, and like knowing who he was and having the memory of him and not holding on to this dark part of this pain of this anger of the person that did something to my brother.
When I got that, my back was straight. I didn't have to,
I was able to breathe. It was like, damn, I got,
it was like, I'm not carrying that around with me. It wasn't that be it.
It takes a lot of energy to carry anger around for somebody to whereas though the anger can supersede the love and the memories that you have for your loved ones because it's so much to carry.
You carrying, and it could be unbearable.
So now you're, you're, in a way, and I, and I'm not saying that anybody have to choose this route, but in a way, you're neglecting the memories, preserving the memories and
just the life of your family member that was lost. So it was like,
it's just like, it's real, it's just like, it just, it just is a lot. But I was willing to get to that part of my life.
And that was one of the most therapeutic things I ever did.
Did you ever tell the person that killed your brother that you forgive him? No, he out there, you know. It never was like the,
it wasn't about him.
It was about my family and me.
You dude I'm saying, yeah, I do. It ain't, it, it, it wasn't even about that.
But uh, if I seen him, I'd say that it wouldn't, it wouldn't even be nothing. Do you want to sell him? Look,
I don't.
I don't know you.
We never met.
But
Stephen Keith Peoples,
that's my brother.
And I don't know that. I don't.
I'm not here to judge you. I don't know the circumstances.
I don't know what took place. I don't know what transpired at night on Lippencott Street.
I don't really know.
And I'm not even here to judge you. I'm not here to try to.
I don't know what happened. I don't know why it happened.
I wish it didn't happen. But I know a decision was made by you.
And
you took away somebody.
Like, you took away somebody that was a good
dude as we know.
You took away a brother, a father, a son, a grandson, a cousin, a friend, a neighbor.
You took away somebody
that
I find myself
talking to or planning to talk to in my days before I remember that he ain't here no more.
Right?
Uh,
uh,
mainmate, Tyrene, Mookson, they can't talk to their dad,
my mom can't talk to us,
Nanny can't talk to his son, her grandson. So it's like,
I wish it didn't happen, but it happened. But let me tell you something, I don't know what you could learn or how, but I hope you learned from this experience, and I hope you never do it again.
Um,
I'm not God, I can't judge you, and um,
I just wish it didn't happen, but it happened. But know that
I don't feel no type of way to like want to do none of harm to you or want something done to you.
That's not my job. I'm not the decision maker.
God is. I don't make no decisions.
But I just want to let you know: if you're looking at this, if you didn't see, but I'm pretty sure you've seen it because I talk about it so much. I forgive you, man.
And I don't forgive you
just
to say it. I forgive you in a way where as though that was the greatest thing that I did personally for me and for my family.
Because you took Steve away from me, from us,
but you motivated the mother, the fuck out of me to be something that I never even knew that I can be.
So there's a gift and a curse in this whole situation, but I would rather have Steve here right now with me and be doing whatever I'm doing.
But I just want to say that I forgive you and I hope wherever you're at in life,
you ain't do this again and you learn from it.
What's so
beautiful
about
your brother sounds like an amazing guy.
Man, he was fucking crazy, man. Steve,
the best people are.
Steve didn't give a fuck, and that's where I got it from. He was this little short guy, but he had the biggest heart.
And he was just like, this dude was funny. He was crazy.
He was just like, there's things he would say in the house, the things he would say to people,
like he really didn't give a fuck. And I'm talking about in the way where it's though, he just lived.
Well, here's what I got from what
I just experienced with you.
That when you forgive, you actually create the space for your brother to live on in you.
And so his life gets bigger.
And when you hold on to something horrible like that, and you allow the hate and the darkness to take hold, you not only shrink the life of the person that you lost, but you also shrink your own life.
And you could feel it.
You could feel both the pain that you feel and the love that you have, but you could also feel the freedom. So thank you.
Thank you.
if the person who's been with us
takes one thing from your remarkable life and all of the wisdom and truth that you've shared today
and they take one action
what do you think the most important thing for them to do is
push that let me see that book yes to you
And no to them. You see where you at? This you.
It's you up here. You see where they're at?
The discipline of saying no and the freedom that follows yes to you we live in this world where as though everybody is looking for somebody to come and save them everybody's looking for a reason to be upset with somebody when they don't get their way it's not perfect but
for so long
you continuously choose others and you say yes to others, but you say no to you. When are you going to start saying yes to you and no to them? It's not about them no more.
It's about you. You got to start choosing you and letting them go in order to grow, in order to glow, in order to go.
That's what this is about. It's not about when you, when you think about life, it's not even about like
trying to appease nobody no more. How old is we, man? Like, what the, like, we living in a world where it's though, even a person of 18 to 19, they know but like we got too much information.
Like, you know better. You got, listen, yes to you, no to them.
That's, that's it the people that be in your life you you ever notice how your mom say no but you can deal with it the people that really love you can deal with the people that really love you can deal with it your mom and dad been telling you no like and you can deal the people that really love you the people that really deal with you the people that really value you they cool with it they ain't got no problem with it they don't have no problem with it the people that really
love you is going to stay And the people that don't, it's going to go. You don't want them in your life anyway.
You already know why they was there. So what do we do? What are we talking about?
Like, what is we really talking about? You got to think about that. What is we talking about? And another thing:
them,
them,
them. Capital F.
What are we talking about?
You know, that's all she said.
Let me tell you something. Everybody out there, come here, you, everybody home that's watching this,
Mel, Melie, Mel universe, everybody out there, I'm gonna tell you all a secret. Belle really said, fuck them,
fuck them. That's what Mel said, and you also said, fuck me, because I'm the one in my own way.
Fuck me, yeah, Mel.
Fuck you, Mel. You're in your own way, Mel.
That's right. You gotta say that a little louder.
Fuck me, Mel. Could you say it louder? Fuck me, Mel.
Fuck me, Mel. Mel, Mel, I'm in my own fucking way.
Mel is in her own fucking way. Wild 267.
God damn it. I'm always in my fucking way.
Listen, Mel, y'all looking at Mel. She got all this shit going on.
She walk on stage.
Crowds, he's like,
whole time
she backstage overthinking it's my hair shut up mel stay not worrying about your hair is you telling me your glasses is perfect she back there oh my god is this right mel let it go let the go them what we talk what we doing mel you worry about the wrong mel you creating problems for yourself mel
and that's what it that's the whole thing like you got to say yes to you no to them man them man stop worrying listen stop worrying about them and worrying about you start loving you Start.
Matter of fact, before you love you, you got to start liking you.
Then you got to start loving you. Then you got to know, listen,
I ain't got it all figured out, but I'm going to figure it out one day. And that's enough.
And if we keep following and listening to you, we're going to figure it out for you. Listen, Mitch, listen.
267. Listen, definitely listen, but I'm going to say something to people.
Yeah. And this is from my chest.
I don't know where you are right now.
But if you're living in America, I just want to say something very important to you. Very important.
Don't let nobody turn you into somebody that you're not. Don't let no ignorance.
Don't let no hatred.
Don't let nobody's idea that you're less than, that you're not worthy, that you're not special start interfering with your thought process and start having you doubting who you are. You're special.
Everybody on this planet was made different. Everybody is a different person.
It's cool to have different outlooks on life. And let me tell you something.
It's cool that we ain't got to agree. But one thing,
we need each other in order for this world to work and for it to be a better place.
No matter your color, no matter your sexual identity, no matter where you come from, that's not, what's important is when humans connect, great shit happen all the time.
We're stronger together. We always got to continue to be an example for the world.
The way we be example, is be great, come together, and do great things.
A lot of times, some people might not see that, but we got to think above, we got to move above, we got to live above the stuff that divide us.
You know, Wallow 267, when they say don't ever meet the people that you admire, don't meet your heroes, they weren't talking about you.
Because you are extraordinary.
I have been so excited to meet you. I am so proud of you, and I'm so grateful that you're in the world doing what you're doing.
So, keep doing it, please. Thank you.
I appreciate you for having me, Mel.
Let me ask you. So, what are your parting words? My parting words is,
I thought I'd say a lot of parting words, but the parting words is
new book coming out, Mel Rob, right? We're going to shorten her name. We know the new book, her name will be Melie Mel, Wallo267.
Fuck him.
The new book coming out, the tour is coming all around the world. It's going to be crazy.
The middle finger is going to be the t-shirt and the hat. You got to choose you over choosing.
It's going to be crazy, Mel. You just got to live.
Listen, we taking mel back to her college days when she was mellie mel we're gonna show you the other side of the game
that's the bell we go we the other side of the game she we wilding out we not come on man that's what we doing be on the lookout man oh my god i love you man i love you too mel like mel we only got one shot we living once let's live man let's live like we come on man you didn't listen Do your thing, man.
Have fun. Go to a party, man.
Go dance at some people party you don't know. Go crash a wedding.
Do something. Fuck it.
Like, damn, man, we're not going to be here forever. Fuck is we doing, man? Shit.
Wasting time. That's what we're doing, but not no more.
Not me. Shit.
We out of here. Oh, my God.
We're out of here.
I cannot wait to see what you do with this conversation and the truth.
The truth that you are the one that's in your own way.
The truth that you are going to die. Like, what are we doing?
Why are you worried about what Susie in accounting says? Sorry, Susie. Like, why are you worried about what your friends from high school? Stop.
Let yourself live.
Let yourself be the person that you know that you are. There is nothing holding you back except for you.
And if Wallow can do this from a prison cell, you can do this from wherever you are right now.
And know that Wallow and I are going to be here every step of the way to encourage you. to keep moving forward, to keep saying yes to yourself.
And I want to say thank you.
Thank you for spending time listening to this. Thank you for sharing this with everybody that you know.
It is such an important conversation.
It's such an important amount of truth for you to accept in your life and to apply to your life.
But in case no one else tells you this today, I wanted to be sure to tell you as your friend that I love you and I believe in you. And I believe in your ability to create a better life.
And if you don't believe that now after listening to Wallow, I'm going to tell you what, go back and listen again.
Alrighty, I'll be waiting for you in the very next episode. I will welcome you in the moment you hit play.
I'll see you there.
Like somebody that you deep down know you're not. Or if you feel.
Oh, wait, hold on. If you've got big goals that keep, if you've got big goals, there's more people mentally.
There's more people. And he's here.
And here's the part that is a testament to, okay. And here's the part of his story that is a testament to Wallow's unbreakable mindset.
I learned a lot from you today.
You better hold on to that fuck him domel.
Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language. You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
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