You're listening to Mic Unplug, hosted by the one and only Mic Hunt. This is where purpose meets power and stories spark transformation. Mic takes you beyond the motivation and into meaning, helping you discover your because and becoming Unstoppable. I'm Rudy Rush, and trust me, you're in the right place. Let's get Unplug. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to to another exciting episode of Make Unplug. And today, I have one of my best friends. He went from growing up in government housing with one lung to becoming a globally recognized force in branding and business growth. He is, and I'm going to say this because he won't say it, he He is a LinkedIn powerhouse. He is a keynote speaker, and he is the master of resilience. He is the trailblazing, the relentless, the visionary, my guy, Mr. Jordan Mendoza. Jordan, how are you doing today, brother?
Hey, what's going on, Mic? First off, I would say you are kind with the introduction. You make me sound way more cool than I am. And then one little caveat, my mom was the one that was born with one lung, but I did get to learn from her level of adversity, and we'll get into the book and to the story of how watching her overcome such things helped me later understand, really after her passing, that I had went through a couple of things myself growing up.
Yeah, man, so much. I appreciate you You're talking about your book. For everyone, we're going to go into the book now, but I'm going to make sure we have links to this. You all know me, I'm probably going to buy 20 copies and give them to 20 people, but we'll do that a little bit later. But Jordan, the name of the book, The Life Changing Power of Adversity. Subtitle, How to Overcome Struggles, Unlock your Potential, and Blaze your Own Trail to Success. Bro, let's talk about it. What made you say, I'm going to sit down, I'm going to put pen to paper or keyboard this out? What went into you saying, This book needs to be written?
Well, first off, I was voted least likely to succeed in high school. I think part of that was feel to the fire. I get negatively motivated. Usually, when people say, I'm going to be something that I don't think I might turn out, then it gets to be fired up. This was one of those things where in 2022, I did a co-collaboration project. I did it because because of some of those people that say, Hey, you're not going to be anything when you grow up. You're not going to mount anything. Then you get opportunities further in life. It presented it to me where I could collaborate with 10 other authors. We could each have a chapter, and let's see if I've got it in me. Let's see if there's enough stories. Once I was able to execute on that project, it was called Brand Sharks. They've since done a volume two of that. But just doing that, it gave me the confidence to say, You know what? There's more the tank. There's plenty more stories that I haven't put out to the world. I really feel like I've gone through so many things and come on the other side and can do it with a positive attitude.
When I looked at the world around me, I didn't see many people that were talking about going through that tough situation or circumstance and how they were able to introspectively pull out the lessons from those experiences to put it out and actually help other people. I said, Man, And this is something that... Adversity is a gift as long as we're willing to open it, to unwrap it, and to dive into all that it has to offer. And sometimes it hits us hard, and sometimes it hits us in the right place.
No, I love it, dude. And one, the book is such an easy read. And you sent me a couple of copies, and I sent a copy to my oldest son, Jay, just because I felt like the content that you had was really, really good. And my youngest son came in, you're getting your copy. Don't worry, dad's going to make sure you have yours. But here's what I loved about it, man. The first five chapters, it's almost like you go through the different types of adversity that people could go through and that you actually went through. And I think telling your story allows others to acknowledge, Yeah, I've gone through that, too. And so for those that are listening, for those that are watching, the first five chapters are five different types of adversity. We've got racial adversity, physical adversity, chapter 2, Chapter 3, Financial Adversity, Chapter 4, Communication Adversity, which I freaking love that chapter, by the way. We're going to go deep into that one. And then Family Adversity, Chapter 5. And I know that there's everybody that's listening or watching this, you faced minimum one of these, if not two or three of these different types of adversity in your own life.
And that's why I wanted to send this to my children, because I want them to understand, Hey, you're going to see social media today and everything's going to look perfect. You're going to go on the Internet and everything's going to look perfect. But there's going to come a moment, probably much sooner than you realize that, holy crap, perfect isn't real. So, Jordan, I'd love for you to just walk through. You can choose any of the five that you want to just start with. Walk us through what that adversity meant for you, whether, again, it's racial, physical, financial, communication, or family.
Yeah, I think the one I want to touch on, not enough people touch on it because it's so close to us, and that's the racial adversity. When you've got a name like mine, Jordan Mendoza, most people's natural inclination, especially if they're from a Spanish-speaking country, they immediately speak Spanish to me. I've personally dealt with that my entire life. Well, in the book, my heritage is actually Filipino. My mom was Irish and Native American, and my father's from the Philippines. Well, if you dive into history a little bit, you'll learn that Spain colonized the Philippines for hundreds of years. In fact, so did Japan, so did the United States. So multiple countries colonized that place. In fact, Texas used to be called Nueva Viscaia, which is a part of the Philippines because they used to bring Filipino migrants in the early 1700s to the state of Texas. So there's so much history that goes on. So from an early age, everywhere, places I would go, people would speak Spanish to me. I remember it used to frustrate me as a kid because I'm like, Man, I speak English. I don't speak this language. Then as I got older and started to work with my dad in the landscaping business, I had to start really learning it.
I took it in high school, barely passed it. I didn't really enjoy the language. But when I started working with my dad and all the employees were Spanish-speaking, you better believe I had to learn this language. I started to actually appreciate it. As I got into the workforce, I started to take it less as like somebody was just profiling me, which is how it feels, though, right? When you're not of a culture, you're not of a language, and all you get is that, especially when you wear a name tag. I had to work in property management as an on-site manager. Well, my name clearly said Mendoza on it, so all the vendors would come and immediately start speaking Spanish with you. And although I could speak it out of principle, I want to just say, Hey, listen, we speak English in here. Once I get to know them, then we can chop it up in Spanish. We can go that route. But the reason why I'm bringing this up is everybody faces some type of profiling, right? Whether it's racial profiling, physical profiling. It's happening all around us. But I think the racial subject is one that really should be highlighted and tackled because it's just 12 years old.
For those of you listening, I want you to remember back to 12. Maybe some of you have children that are 12 and children that are 12 years old. I want you just to put yourself back in what What do you remember about you at that age. We moved two towns away at 12. I had to take two public busses just to get to my middle school. I stopped at a 711 convenience store, and I would play mortal combat, too. I'd do that on my bus route every single day. One day, as you know, Mick, you read the story. I was sitting playing mortal combat 2. The bell ring like someone walked in. A male voice yelled, Hey, Daniel, and I'm Jordan, so I just keep playing the game. Within about a minute, I was literally lifted up. My body was in the air. I was thrown against the Terminator 2 pinball machine, punched several times, thrown on the ground, handcuffed and put into a police car. The reason why this occurred is because, A, they were looking for a Hispanic runaway. Although I'm not Hispanic, Because of what I look like, they racially profiled me.
They leveraged a brute force, police brutality, and it was a false arrest. They thought I assaulted somebody. I was about less than 5 foot tall. Less than 100 pounds probably wouldn't have hurt air. They got the wrong kid. Of course, we went through the whole process of seeing psychologists, the court process. My mom wanted to sue them. She was like, We're about to get rich, right? Because of the level of empathy that I had stored up seeing my mom suffer from her one lung and being sick and almost dying, seeing my grandmother get dementia, I built up this such a level of empathy that my first thing was, they don't need to be in the police They should lose their jobs, and I just want to move on with my life. And I remember- Here's the real truth about AI.
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Telling that to my mom, and ultimately, she went with my call, which I'm still eternally grateful that she did that. There are some parents that could have said, Whatever kid, you're 12. We're going after the money. I'm sure we would have got a boatload of money. Would it have added value to our world? Sure, probably. But at 12 years old, just to know in my heart of hearts that that wasn't the right call. The right call was to say, Hey, listen, they shouldn't have a job. They both got fired from the Portland police. They lost their jobs, and I went on, and they went on. To me, that was the right call because what I had learned at that point in my life is that people make mistakes. I'd seen this, whether it was my stepdad going in and out of jail, making mistakes and coming back, and my mom giving him a second chance or a third or a It's worth a chance. I'd seen that good people do bad things, right? Listen, I don't know what happened that day. I don't know if the guy just walked in after he got off the phone and his wife just divorced.
I have no clue. I don't have the context, but I knew for me the right thing was to just let this thing go. Let's see what lessons I could maybe extract from this as I move on with my world. A lot of people say, Well, did this impact you from a traumatic standpoint? Even psychologists, they're like, Hey, what do you feel like when you hear a siren? They go through the list of things, and I was like, There's no difference. For me, I think that's just the grace of God. He was with me, protecting me, guiding me in these moments because it could have went a really bad direction. As we've all seen in social media in 2025, people decide to make a run for it or do something with their hands or maneuver in some way, and then it ends up in a a whole different light.
Yeah, absolutely. And I have to think, Jordan, right? Because you've made a business around it, but I also know that it's who you are based on your character, right? You help and have helped thousands of people Find their voice, find their message, build their identities, whether that's socially, digitally, or whatever. Did a part of these adversities help you understand how to get that through to other people?
Yeah, that's a great question. And I think you hit it on the head. It's understanding that everyone has a story. Most people haven't mustard up the courage yet to share it. And so it's finding out, how can I get it out of them? Hey, what's your story? Everybody wants to be known, but people don't feel like they're heard. The reason is, is sometimes we're not asking the right questions. Hey, what's one traumatic experience that you went through and you've made it to the other side? What a great question, right? Because if somebody has the willingness to become vulnerable with you, then they can do that on camera or on a podcast or on a stage or in front of people. In fact, it's actually the biggest unlock for me was mustering up the courage when I lost my mom at 31 years old to be able to go stand on a stage and tell her story in front of about 60 people back in '19 when nobody knew who I was and get positive feedback about that. Because that was really when I I was like, You know what? My mom did go through a lot, and she is one of the biggest inspirations, but I can't not let my story be heard as well.
I cannot share the things that I've been able to overcome on my journey because I would be doing the world a disservice if I didn't share what I've been able to overcome so that they can see it's possible for them, too.
Yeah. I want to go there, Jordan. 2019, nobody knew Jordan Mendoza. You got the courage to tell your story, but there's also a business aspect to that. Okay, you did it. You proved that you could tell your story and that your story resonates with others. I know that there are people that are watching or listening right now that are like, right now, I am 2019 Jordan Mendoza. I want to tell my story, and I want to use my story as a platform to help others. And by helping others, maybe I can make a business out of this as well. Talk to us about that journey for from Jordan telling my story to Jordan, I'm a freaking successful business person. I'm a rock star what I do. Let's go through that a little.
Yeah, I love it. So it first looked like a lot of borrowed confidence. As you read in the book, I mentioned Brian Schulman, who was like the godfather of LinkedIn for video. I mean, this guy did the longest live streams. And he, when I was on a trip to Boston, I remember I FaceTimed him, and he took an hour to just just listen to me. After I was done sharing my story with him, he said, Jordan, one day you're going to have a brand bigger than mine. He fed into me. He instilled something in me and gave me confidence when I didn't have it in myself that he just said, Go start talking about what you've been through. Go start talking about different experiences, coaching that you've helped people with. He's like, You're going to find your people. If you just start showing up, if you just start posting short videos, tips, tricks, quotes, whatever comes to your mind, if you're out there to add value to people, then you'll see that this is going to pay off. Man, some of the best advice that I've ever received because it happened. My brand did grow bigger than his.
My audience did even surpass my mentors that I thought was doing incredible things. It's so cool to whenever we get feedback like that, it's up to us to do something with it. For me, if I get positive feedback, that's something that really ignites me and it lights that passion even more. I want to go set out to do it because I don't want to let that person down. If they saw something in me, then they saw it for some reason. Even if it's cloudy for me at this point, I need to go prove it to myself that I can at least go to attempt it. I remember one of my first videos, Mick, was, Can anyone help out with social media on getting their associates engaged online or something? It was something stupid like that. Now I help people globally with social media and getting visibility online. I was literally asking the question that, you fast forward six years later, this is what I do to help people. It's just all about that first video that got five views, and all of them were me because I kept rewatching the thing over and over again.
But you start to sound less like you think you sound, because we all hate how we sound. I know probably you can attest to that. When you first start on video, you feel like this bumbling, baffling person. Then all of a sudden, it just comes second nature and natural where you're like, Wow, I just did three hours of video, and I didn't even realize I was doing it. But I tell my clients, it's all about the reps. You got to put in the reps every day. You got to show up for yourself. One of the biggest things that really unlocked it for me, and I implore anyone to take this challenge, I think I talk about it in the book, is I did this 30-day video challenge where every single day I had to post a video for 30 days. I did it probably harder than most people because I'm just a freestyle type of guy. Every single day I would come up with the topic when I was about to post a video. I got so much. It was silly stuff. I did impressions of character. I just went through this whole gamut of my whole...
Anything I had in the tank, just threw it all out there. Some of it was sticky, some of it wasn't. But that was just so helpful to know that no one cares. No one cares really what I'm putting out. It's just a matter of, is it adding value to them in that moment? Is it entertaining in that moment? As long as I'm getting that accomplished, I can build something around that.
Amen to that, brother. Amen to that. And so I'm going to come back to the book because for those that don't know, I'm telling Jordan's story Jordan's way, and I'm using the book to do that. So Chapter 10, The Podcast and the Jump, which obviously stuck with me, and that's one of my favorite chapters. And I've actually been using that to coach a couple of podcasters, Jordan. So kudos to that. Love it. But talk to us about the podcast in the jump. And if you're anyone who is quasi-thinking about starting a podcast, this next segment that we're about to talk about is literally for you. So Jordan, go ahead, brother.
Yeah. So for those of you that don't know, the Blaze Your Own Trail podcast, which is our podcast, About to hit our sixth anniversary, January first. So it's super grateful to start that before I started the business. I started this show on January first. First guest was my mentor, Brian Schulman. Had to kick that off, bring him on the show. I remember This was right before COVID. I said, I want to start off and try to get some heavy hitters in the space, people I really looked up to. Getting Heather Monahan on the show early, I saw what she was able to do to break out of corporate, start her own thing. I really aspire to do all the things that she does. I'm proud to say that now, after almost six years, I'm doing all the things that she does. I aspire to set out to do, which is pretty awesome to reflect on that. But getting folks like David Meltzer on the show, a guy that figured out how to lose 100 million and build it all the way back and everything in between, and Marcus Ogdon, who I know we both know as well.
Man, I feel like COVID was a gift, and I extracted every bit of that gift, which was access, because I had access to people that most people wouldn't typically have access to. If you knew any way to communicate with humans, then you knew how to get their attention. I built this strategy up, Mick, where I would see Meltzer go on live. I would jump on the live, make a comment, and then I would go to his post comment, I would go to his story comment, and then I'd be like, Hey, I'd love to get you on the show. As soon as I saw him react, I would jump back in with the voice note. I was Leveraging a strike while the iron's hot approach and accessing people that I would have never got their attention had it been the year prior. That really helped me get people that other people knew. Because, again, I didn't know what I was doing. I just knew that if I wanted to get my show to be up in the ranks and to get people to listen, I could tap into other people's audiences and leverage their audiences if they would be willing to share that.
That was my whole play. I was building this audience. I had the $20,000 on LinkedIn that I could leverage. But if I could really add value to my guests and they were willing to share it, then I would tap into their audiences. That's really how the show began to take off. Something surprising happened, though, Mick, as I was interviewing all these incredible people that I really looked up to, they actually, I found out, looked up to me. They were consulting me for advice on things like LinkedIn and social media. They were all asking me why I hadn't left yet. After a year of having this amazing podcast, they all instilled courage in me and also my circle locally, business groups I was a part of even before I had a business. They all were like, Man, you need to start your own thing. The podcast was essentially my college. I didn't go to college, but I felt like I earned in 2020 four different PhDs because I was learning from some of the world's greatest people. In my eyes, some of the brightest people, some of the best storytellers, the best authors, the best athletes.
What I found is that they were no different than me. That, I think, was the biggest gift that that gave me is that I could do this, too. The borrowed confidence turned into actual confidence, which turned into taking a chance in betting on myself. I remember I had just interviewed Mark Victor Hansen. The guy sold a half billion copies of Chicken soup for the Soul, interviewed him and his wife, Crystal, for their book, Ask. Their book, Ask. I remember he said on this book, he said, he's like, Jordan, you're a star. You leaving corporate was the best thing that you could have ever done. We're just excited to see what happens next. Because I interviewed them right at the very start. I had just given my notice and just left, and they were like, Hey, who else can we introduce you to? That's all it is sometimes, folks, is you're just one connection away from creating massive impact in your world.
Amen to that, bro. And I'm a testament to that. My mentors, Damon John or Robert Irvine or Dave Melser, who literally... What I realized with all of my mentors and people that I look up to, if you communicate and ask the right questions, they love that. If you're going to be a fan boy, a fan girl, they see that all day, every day. You're no different than anyone else. But you ask the right questions, and then conversation starts. And that's where I think those relationships can truly blossom. So I have this piece of advice that I give to everyone, whether it's podcasting, public speaking, building your brand, whatever it is. Instead of taking selfies with these celebrities or the people that you think you look up to, ask them questions. Because, again, they take a thousand pictures a day. They don't remember them. But I can promise you what Dame and John will tell me, make the reason I remember you is because you asked me a really good question. Robert Irvine, who now is my best friend in the world, the The reason our relationship started was because I asked them a really good question, and I didn't go to them as a fanboy.
I really wanted to pick their brain and get a free master class if I could on a question that I had. So tell everybody about just the importance of Being able to ask good questions.
Yeah, I love it. Asking questions is so important. And the other thing is don't be afraid to offer value, offer some type of advice. Hey, I noticed I identify things. I'm a nerd like this. If I go to a LinkedIn profile, someone's TikTok, their Instagram, their podcast, I look at their show notes. If I see something, I'll actually say, Hey, I just wanted to give you this feedback that if you did this shift or you did this change, this would actually add a tremendous value to you. So offering is also great. Asking, if you don't ask, you don't get. Clothes and outs do not get fed at all. If you grow up poor, you'd know that from the early days, it's like, If I don't go out and hustle, I'm not getting the things that I actually want to get. I learned that from the jump. But it's so important in business because the worst that could happen is silence. The second worst thing that could happen is no. The best thing that could happen is yes. Mick, you're a testament to knowing what that yes could turn into down the road. All of a sudden, you have this circle of people that will go to bat for you with the drop of a dime.
They're there for you. You really build these contextual relationships. Asking powerful, Open-ended questions, I would say, is the best thing to do because open-ended elicits a response. If you ask a yes or no question, that frustrates people usually more often than not. Ask something open-ended, but then don't be afraid to offer up some assistance. If you have value to add that they're not seeing, because we all have blind spots, we all have areas that we're not experts at, believe me, you don't want me to cook or clean or do a lot of these things, measure anything. I'm very self-aware of what I'm good at and what I'm not good But if you have an area of expertise and they're missing it and you add that to the table, man, people will remember that, especially if you're not asking for anything in return.
Totally agree, bro. Totally agree. Before I get you out of here, I want to go to the ending of the book or towards the end, and we talk about the blaze method. Like, break down the blaze method for the viewers and listeners. I know, obviously, it's the brand with the podcast, but I feel like the blaze method It is the framework that everybody... I don't care what you do for a living. It is the framework that you need to incorporate into your life, into your business, into your daily. Jordan, if you will bless us with the blaze.
Yeah, we'll do a little reading time We're going to do a little reading time with Jordan here and get this method. It's on Chapter 84. My literal goal with the book is I wanted to build it for people like me. Honestly, if I'm not a reader, I I have become a reader by force, but I'm naturally not a long reader. I wanted to build this book for people that have ADHD like me, very short attention spans that could actually get through it because that's one of my biggest complaints for a lot of things around the household is that I just forget stuff or I don't get things done. This is a book that is ADHD friendly.
Yeah, 100 pages. You've got spaces for people to put their notes in, so you don't even have to write on the words or highlight anything. Jordan gives you 7-10 lines that you can take notes right there. So I freaking love it. That's it. Back to you.
Let's go through it. The blaze method. The B is believe in yourself. When You believe in you, others will believe in you, too. That's one of the things I'm always coaching my clients on is like, Hey, do you believe in this? Do you believe in what you just said to me? Because if we don't believe it, people will see through that seven out of seven. You can usually tell just a couple of telltale signs when people don't believe, they won't make eye contact, they won't look you in the eyes. They're looking to the side or down. But if they believe they're actually looking in the eyes, you can actually hear the tonality in their voice change. Their voice inflection is changing when people believe. Those are just a couple little signs of how do you believe in yourself and why do you need to believe in yourself so that others will believe in you as well. The L, let's just go right down, is let go of the past. Reflect on the past. I tell this to people all the time, but don't dwell. We have to go back to get context, to pull lessons, to extract things.
But dwelling there serves us no good. Take it from me. I've been a past dweller in the past. It doesn't serve you any good. But go back, extract some lessons, and let's get back to action. And the A is action. And then I put a little quote in here. Action creates momentum. Momentum creates consistency. Consistency creates habits, and habits turn into those results that we're looking for. The Z is be zestful. Being zestful is to have great enthusiasm and energy. It's to align ourselves with God, is actually to have zest. It's almost something that's tangible you can see on people. Then E is to elevate. The best way to elevate is to invest in yourself. For me, it's my faith is number one. My coaches, mentors, education, health, family, investing in those areas, for me, I've been able to elevate at such a higher level. And it sounds like, Mick, you have to. Using the blaze method, to me, when I look at everything that you've built, whether you knew it or not, you've actually leveraged this to realize some of the things that you have.
No, absolutely, brother. Absolutely. Jordan, I know how busy you are. Totally honored you took some time. We're going to get to my quick five in a second, brought to us by RegenerateRx, the best wellness company in America. But I want everybody right now, if you're listening, I'm going to get 20 copies of the book. If you message me the word blaze, message me blaze. I don't care if it's LinkedIn, if it's Instagram, if you email me, it's the first 20 people. So number 21, I'm sorry. Number 30, I'm sorry. But the first 20, you're going to get this book. Message me blaze, and you've got the life-changing power of adversity coming your way. Is that cool, Jordan? Can we do that?
Oh, I love that. Yeah, I appreciate that. Awesome. Listen, if it doesn't add value to you, ping me, okay? That's my goal with the book, is I just want to make sure that everyone that gets it in their hand, it least adds value to them in some capacity. Yes, sir.
All right. You ready for this rapid fire quick five?
Let's do it. Let's go.
All right. Before you go on stage, you need to get hyped up. What's your hype up song?
Man, right now, it has been Blimp by Schema Boy. Okay.
I like it. I like it. Your favorite place to recharge: Mountains, A beach or a big city?
Definitely the beach, somewhere in the Gulf Coast of Florida. Okay.
I like it. I like it. If you could have any meal that you wanted today, no repercussions, what's on the plate?
Man, it's on the plate. Man, it's on the plate. Cucino egg rolls, so Lumpia and chicken adobo. Lumpia? Yeah, Lumpia and chicken adobo is my go-to.
I love Lumpia, bro. I love Lumpia. The biggest lesson that you've learned from failure.
That it is a gift. That's the biggest lesson I've learned from it, is that it's a gift. I encourage everyone to try to fail multiple times a day, and it makes life a lot more fun.
The last question, and this is funny because you know where I'm getting at. How many times do people think they're messaging you on Instagram, but they're really messaging AI bot Jordan Mendoza? A lot.
Or they're messaging the Jordan Mendoza from Comedy Central as well.
I probably spent a good hour talking to Jordan's bot, and then I got mad and had to text him. I was like, Bro, I thought I was talking to you the whole time. I love it, man. I love it. Jordan, thank you so much for taking the time. Everybody, the Life Changing Power Diversity, make sure you get it. I'll have links to all of that. Jordan, where can people find and follow you.
Yeah, the best place, you can just check out the podcast. Go to byotpod. Com. That'll get you to all our social links. The book info is on there as well. I just want to say, Mick, I appreciate you hosting me on your amazing show. You're doing You do an incredible job. You clearly do your research, ask great questions. And I want to say, keep blazing your own trail, my friend.
I'm going to because of you, man. I'm going to because of you. Thanks for just being a great friend and mentor. I appreciate you more than you know, bro.
Thanks so much.
You got it. And to all the viewers and listeners, remember, your because is your superpower. Go unleash it. That's another powerful conversation on Mic Unplug. If this episode moved you, and I'm sure it did, follow the show wherever you listen. Share it with someone who needs that spark, and leave a review so more people can find there because. I'm Rudy Rush, and until next time, stay driven, stay focused, and stay Unplug.
Jordan Mendoza is a globally recognized expert in branding and business growth, celebrated for his resilience and trailblazing approach to overcoming adversity. Born to a diverse heritage, Jordan grew up learning lessons in perseverance from his mother, who was born with only one lung. Despite being voted "least likely to succeed" in high school, Jordan defied the odds and built a powerful personal brand, becoming a sought-after keynote speaker and LinkedIn powerhouse. He is the author of "The Life-Changing Power of Adversity," a book focused on turning struggles into opportunities and helping others blaze their own trail to success. Today, Jordan is also the host of the Blaze Your Own Trail podcast and is committed to empowering others to find their voice, share their story, and unlock their greatest potential.
Key Takeaways:
Adversity is a Gift: Jordan emphasizes that adversity, when faced head-on and unpacked, offers valuable life lessons and growth opportunities. He encourages listeners to view challenges as gifts to be unwrapped, not just obstacles to be endured.
Your Story Has Power: Sharing your personal story, especially your struggles and how you overcame them, is essential—not just for personal healing, but for helping others realize they’re not alone and inspiring them to overcome their own challenges.
Start Before You’re Ready: Whether launching a podcast, building a brand, or publishing a book, Jordan urges people to take action even if they feel unqualified or nervous. Progress and confidence come from putting in the reps and learning along the way.
Sound Bytes:
"Adversity is a gift as long as we're willing to open it, to unwrap it, and to dive into all that it has to offer."
"Everyone has a story. Most people haven't mustered up the courage yet to share it."
"If you just start showing up, posting short videos, sharing tips and stories, you'll find your people."
Connect & Discover Jordan:
Website: jordanjmendoza.com
LinkedIn: @jordanjmendoza
Instagram: @therealjordanjmendoza
TikTok: @jordanjmendoza
Podcast: Blaze Your Own Trail
Book: The Life-Changing Power of Adversity
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