One on One with Mista Yu
Real talk, hard sayings, and authentic conversations from game changers and excuse removers worldwide, giving you tools and strategies to help you grow you!
NEW episodes every Tuesday!
We’re talking to: The Transformational Builder - they’re growth-minded, purpose-driven, and desire continuous improvement. The TCMMY brand helps sharpen their performance in business, ministry, and community, deepen their purpose in their everyday lives, and locate authentic connection and lasting impact.
Want to be a guest on our interview show "One On One with Mista Yu"? Send Mista Yu a message on PodMatch here: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/
theycallmemistayu
Interested in joining the Podmatch community and becoming a guest on some of the best podcasts in the world? Feel free to use my link: https://www.joinpodmatch.com/theycallmemistayu
If this show or any of our episodes resonates with you, please drop a five-star review in Apple Podcasts and let us know what impacted you most. NEW episodes every Tuesday! You can find all of our previous episodes right here: oneononewithmistayu.buzzsprout.com
****Please note: There are multiple dates during the months of July, August, November, and December where there will be a break in recording and interviews.****
One on One with Mista Yu
Finding Clarity & Escaping The Default Loop With David Prosper
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
What if clarity isn’t a grand reveal but the courage to take your next right step? We sit down with leadership coach and author David Prosper—“The Clarity Guy”—to trace how a mother’s final words, immigrant perseverance, and a deepened faith shaped a mission to help people break the default loop and live by design. David’s story moves from Fort Lauderdale projects to global stages, but the thread stays constant: align your identity, actions, and service, then build the discipline to do it long enough to matter.
We dig into the default loop—the set of expectations and scripts we inherit and obey for acceptance—and map a better route through David’s clarity archetypes: Wanderer, Seeker, Architect, and Flow Master. You’ll learn how to spot your current stage, how to transition with intention, and why you only need to see the next 400 feet, not the entire highway. David challenges a core limiting belief—“I come from nothing, so I must be nothing”—and replaces it with stewardship: maximize your resources, your network, and your opportunities to serve more, give more, and love more.
If your calendar is packed with “irresponsible yeses,” you’ll appreciate David’s focus on systems: simple SOPs for decisions, ruthless prioritization, and a not‑to‑do list that guards your best work. He also shares his most practical clarity reset—clean your space to clear your mind—plus a refreshing take on Utah’s community and culture, and an audacious mission to help one billion people live by design through books, summits, retreats, and a decision-making app.
Ready to move from drift to design? Take the free Clarity Archetype Quiz at theclaritybrand.ai, then tune in to hear how faith, service, and systems turn direction into momentum. If this conversation sparked something, follow David on Instagram at theclarityguy_ and share this episode with a friend who needs a nudge toward their next step. Subscribe, rate, and leave a review—tell us which archetype you are and what step you’re taking today.
Hope you enjoyed our broadcast! If you would like to, or know someone who would like to be connected to Mista Yu as a future guest on one of our shows or to have him on your show or you think he's the perfect fit to be your new High Performance Coach, visit our page here: https://theycallmemistayu.wixsite.com/they-call-me-mista-y
We can't wait to hear from you!
Here's my LinkTree: linktr.ee/theycallmemistayu
Here's my Landing Page: https://theycallmemistayu.wixsite.com/they-call-me-mista-y
Welcome & QR Code Guide
SPEAKER_00All right, welcome back to one-on-one with Mr. U. Of course. I am your host, Mr. U. Before we get started with our show today. If you're watching this and listening for the very first time, upper right hand corner of the screen, the QR code. That's how you find all of our shows on one-on-one. Going all the way back, probably about four years or so. Awesome conversations from people all around the entire world with compelling stories, actionable chips and strategies, and some just some real wholesome conversations. So you can find that upper right hand corner of your screen, that QR code. Grab that with your phone and you can check it out. In studio with us today, my guest is the leadership coach, the author of Finding Clarity, Your Guide to Peace, Purpose, and Prosperity. And he's also known as the Clarity Guy, David Prosper is in the studio today. How are you, man? I'm doing well. Thank you so much for having me, brother. Hey man, the pleasure is mine, man. We had a fantastic pre-interview conversation, man. So I'm excited about what you're going to be sharing with our listeners and viewers today. So let's try to get into that a little bit. Let's talk from where you're from, man. Tell me not only where you're from, but also weave into it what happened, or was there a factor in that time frame that got you to where you are today? So a little bit about your childhood, your background, but is there a factor or uh a significant event that got you to where you are today? Go for it, brother. Yeah.
Immigrant Roots And A Mother’s Legacy
SPEAKER_01Yeah, thank you. That's a great question. Uh, I'm a son of two Haitian immigrants, so born and raised in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to my mother and father, father who came into this country uh for the American dream. And as I got to see them, you know, come from a third world country to work hard and do dishes and uh become the school cafeteria of people, what I got to see was resiliency, work ethic, and um optimism. Like my what I loved about how my mom just went about her day was she she never let her title define who she was. And in the eyes of cultures, like she she was a cafeteria later, so like she was cons she would be considered low on a totem pole, but she always saw herself as somebody bigger than that, and her identity came from God. So I I got to see that and witness it growing up, and she was a pastor, so I'm a pastor's child, and and what was yeah, and what was like a catalyst for me that set me on this path of becoming obsessed about clarity and helping people move from where they're at to where they want to be is seeing my mother on her deathbed and her crying um the last couple of days, saying, I wish I did enough, I wish I did enough. And I was like, Mom, you raised three black kids in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, none of us are in jail. And she laughed, but she continued to cry and said, I had all these dreams and goals, but I wish I did enough. So what I understood was my mother had this inclination, she had this desire, but she just didn't know her next right step that led to her next right step. And and over the last 10 years, and it is actually 10 years this year since I lost my mother. Um for the last 10 years, I've been thank you. I've been obsessed with helping people find clarity to find their next right step, and hopefully I get to save my mother by serving people.
SPEAKER_00Well, that's that's a powerful story. I that's probably one of the few, one of the many things that I remember from our conversation was I wish I did enough. I even wrote it down. I wish I did enough, I wish I did enough. Can you tell me just from your your standpoint, and then we'll kind of pivot a little bit again, person. Sorry about the loss of your mom, all condolences to you on this, brother. Thank you. Can you say that there's a I know I know you you kind of grab the mantle and you kind of take it over which she kind of left off is to a degree with your mindset and what you're trying to uh do, not to make up for what happened, but just to you know kind of further some legacy down the road a little bit. Where in what significant place do you think you changed the most? Not only because your mom is gone, but also because of how she left and what she kind of left behind. How do you think you changed the most? It is one area you can pinpoint. What's that?
Faith Deepens After Loss
SPEAKER_01That's that's a powerful question. I as you're saying that, I'm thinking, I was like, what area did I change the most? Uh I don't know. I mean, and I was I'm I'm thinking, I was like, I need to get a good answer. The the biggest thing for me was spirituality. Like, um, I was baptized when I was like 11 years old because again, my mother was a pastor, so I was kind of forced to do it, so I didn't do it because I wanted to. Um, and then uh right after she passed in July of 20 uh 2016, I got baptized September of 2019, I got rebaptized 2016 or um September. And in that was like my mother was always a praying woman, so she was like always praying. Like Saturday morning, she closed the door and she's praying. And it used to be annoying because I was like, I want to spend time with her, and she was spending time with God. I'm like, yo, what's up with that? Um, but that seeing that being model literally changed how how I start my day and how I fellowship with God, and then to the point where I have clients and people that when I go out and speak, they're like, You have all this wisdom. Oh my goodness, where'd you get it from? I was like, You wouldn't believe me if I told you. It was like, Where? I was like, the Bible. So for me, it's been like Jesus being my mentor and and building a relationship with him has helped the relationships that I have with others become better. And then trusting and surrendering to his process and doing what I need to do and letting him do what he needs to do, like it's it's it's created more peace, and that's where you know finding clarity of the book came from and and just being in walk with him. So that's the biggest thing that is that shift. I love this. I love this, love this.
SPEAKER_00I got a whole bunch of questions. I I prepped you in advance. I asked a lot of deep thinking questions. I think we've already seen a little bit of that, but I want to kind of go a little bit further because you talked about coming from uh from two Haitian immigrants. I want to just get your honest feelings if you don't mind sharing this on air. I know it's live and everybody can hear your answer, but when you hear things in the news or something that has to do with immigrants or laws and borders, instant reaction. How are you feeling in that moment? Have you evolved from whatever that initial thought is? Talk to me about that a little bit.
Views On Immigration And Solutions
SPEAKER_01That's a good one. Uh, it's funny because I was just talking to my father a couple weeks ago. He just got out of prison, and he his accent is just as strong uh as if he first came into America. And he was like, David, David, petit moment, which means my son. Um, I'm so glad I have my my my immigration card. I'm I'm glad I'm a citizen. I was like, Yeah, because Trump would have kicked you out, Dad. He would have kicked you out. Oh well, we can't I've learned like in my culture, like you either laugh or cry about it. Like I so we'd rather laugh. But when I hear about it in the news, um when I think about again, my family, and my family were immigrants. Um, but what what I've noticed, what they did, my mother, she went about like she she did the immigration process, she got her green card, and then um she did her schooling and all this stuff, and submitting all of the documents that she had to do in order to become a citizen and foregoing uh Haiti as uh her her court country of origin. So I saw them as a child vicariously go through the immigration process of of and then being met with a lot of the challenges, but staying steadfast instead of what I loved about my parents and and I honor them, instead of about instead of complaining about what's not going well, they figured a way to make it actually become beneficial. Because there's there's a point, like we can scream, we can shout, we can do a lot of protesting, like that grabs attention, but what are the solutions outside of that? You have to still go back home. So um, I I got to see them actually do the solutions, and and that's what has shaped my perspective.
SPEAKER_00I love it. I want to get into some more of the work that you're doing, but I do have another question I want to ask you about. I know that people might find it sacrilegious, but I'm I'm if you ever watch any of our shows, you know I keep I keep it as real as it's humanly possible. I don't believe that we can uh live out uh somebody else's dream. I'm saying that maybe it's uh it's a clunky way of saying it, maybe I shouldn't say it that way, I should rephrase it, but I really feel like somebody's dream from 1859, you can't live that dream out in 2026 because circumstances are different, different era, different people, different mindset, different fears and concerns. I can't live out the dream from my great-great-grandfather. I can't I can't live that out. They was giving my things that I didn't even know anything about. I wasn't even an embryo when he was thinking about this kind of stuff. For you personally, David, what is the American dream for you? And I can I can I can probably guess what it is for your parents, what it was for your parents. Yeah, what's the American dream for you? When you got American dream, what's that look like?
Redefining The American Dream
SPEAKER_01Ah, that's that's good. I'm gonna be honest, that's one of the best questions I've ever been asked. Uh that's not the son of a son of an immigrant. The American dream for me has evolved, and it is now how I would define it is maximizing the resources that you have. And even though you you can come from poverty, like I grew up in the projects of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, um, which is still considered rich from a third world country, like my parents grew up. So that's poor America, but poor America is still rich in other countries.
SPEAKER_00Oh, yes.
SPEAKER_01So for me, is maximizing resources, maximizing opportunities, is maximizing connections, is maximizing network, and then using all of those things to leverage ourselves in a way that we can serve more, give more, and love more. And that's the American dream for me.
SPEAKER_00I love it, I love it. What was the impetus for the book, man? Why did Final Clarity come about? Please tell me you weren't just like, you know what, he's author. I would have been author too. Tell me that's not what happened. Tell me there was a uh a reason and a purpose behind why you wrote that book.
Why The Book “Finding Clarity” Exists
SPEAKER_01Please, it's uh I was I was walking because I used to live in Colorado Springs, and I was I was walking up the mountain, and I was like, God, like what's my thing? Like Tony Robin has his thing, Les Brown, John Maxwell, all these amazing individuals that I get to look up to and learn from. I'm like, what is David Prosper's thing? But more importantly, what do you want your children to hear? And he he said at the mountaintop for me was um clarity. And I was like, okay, God, like, what does that mean? And I'm searching the scriptures, and I'm like, okay, but what do you want me to do with it? He was like, I need you to help my people find clarity. And and I was like, okay, what's my next step? And he was like, write a book. And I was like, Who am I? I had a uh a Moses moment. I was like, who am I to tell these people I'm not knowing? And so um it was like, okay, so since you have a podcast, Clarity with David Prosper, use convert your podcast into a book, and so that was my next right step. Continue what I'm doing, being faithful, what I'm doing in front of me, and when I'm done in that season to transcribe that into a book. And as I wrote the book, um, I was talking to a gentleman yesterday, uh, and he was like, What should I what should I be thinking about as an author? I was like, first step, everyone teach their own, but the first step integrate God into your writing. Then whatever you write is gonna speak to the souls and the hearts of the people. So he became my co-author. And um, yeah, so it that's where it all originated from. And then I was like, okay, God, if if this is free, if you really want me to do this, you're gonna have you're gonna help me see this through. And since I've released the book, there's been countless people who've benefited from it and talked about it. Feels like you're talking to me. And I was like, Oh, that's God talking to you. I'm just the vessel, the vehicle, and the pen. He's actually the the ink. So um he's talking to you, so have a good conversation with him.
SPEAKER_00Fair enough, fair enough. All right, so as a clarity guy, from what I'm understanding, you help people break the default loop. What is the default loop? Help us understand that.
The Default Loop Explained
SPEAKER_01Oh, yeah, this one is good right here. So the default loop is the projection and perceptions that people have of us. So typically, we put things in boxes and we do the same thing or we follow the same script because we follow the same script. So go to college, get a good job, um, retire, and then spend time with grandkids in the white picket fence. And oftentimes, that default loops gets us into patterns and systems where we don't feel fulfilled, but we don't want to go against the current and go against the group think philosophy. So we continue to do the same things, getting the same results, feeling deprived. But you know what? At least I'm not on the outside. So the default, the default loop is us doing things, being things, uh showing up the places where it's not in alignment, but it's out of convenience and from a need of acceptance. And when people break from the default loop to the clarity cycle and they live in clarity, they're designing a life based off how they're intrinsically designed, and we can only understand that by understanding our creator.
SPEAKER_00I love it, I love it. So when we talk about living by design for you personally, what does that mean? And our follow-up to that would be where does discipline play a part in that?
Living By Design And Discipline
SPEAKER_01Oh, okay, all right. So living by design is understanding my strengths and weaknesses and maximizing my strengths and weaknesses, and then taking it a step further, like understanding what's my purpose. My purpose is we all have a purpose. So I believe every human's purpose is to serve. And my the goal of living by design is how do I serve best? So for me, I'm a speaker, I'm an author, um, and I'm a coach. That is how I serve best. Other people, they're administrative, they're a teacher, they're a principal, whatever it may be, that's their level of service. And then my goal is to find opportunities that I can use how I serve best to serve people. So living by design. And then the follow-up discipline, great question. Um, discipline allows us to do the thing long enough in order to develop our our ability to serve the people.
SPEAKER_00I like that. I like that. Do it long enough. Yeah, I think that's that's that's a that's a big key. That's a nugget right there. To do it long enough that you see it develop, that you develop. I like that. I like that. All right, so you teach what you call clarity archetypes. You got a quiz. I'm dropping that on the screen right now for the listeners and viewers to watch it. The clarity brand.ai. What is this archetype and what is this quiz about?
Clarity Archetypes & Quiz
SPEAKER_01So, yeah, it it helps you understand where you're at in the cycle because clarity is not this finite thing and it's not this judgment like some other assessments that are out there. So the archetype um it breaks it down. The first one is a wanderer. So you're typically finding your way, you're kind of confused, but you feel that that uneasiness, um, but you know that there's something out there, but you still don't know how to articulate it. Then you move into the seeker, and the seeker is the individual who's going to the networking events, listening to the podcast from Mr. U and reading different books, and then they're consuming all of this good content because they're looking for the good content. Then they meet a guide and they go into the architect. That's when they start designing their ecosystem, designing their lives, designing their businesses, designing their podcasts like Mr. U, right? You changed your name because so many people will mess up how they pronounce your name, and you're just like, you know what? Real quick. So it's like, just call me Mr. U. It's keep it safe. You design that, and then the last step is the flow master, and the flow master is anchored and convicted in who they are, and they're living their values, they're attracting what their vibrations they're they're anchored and grounded, and saying, you know what? I know who I am, and then now I I'm I'm here to serve because that I believe is the greatest sense of fulfillment. How can I make things better? How can I grow things? Uh, so that's what the the quiz walks you through. Um, once you take it, you tell you figure out where you're at. And the goal is what is your next step? So if you're a wanderer, what is your next step to be a seeker? If you're a seeker, what's your next step to be an architect? If you're an architect, what's your next step to be a flow master? And then we go through these cycles and ebbs and flows, um, whether in a day or in a week, but it's just understanding where you're at.
Biggest Misconception About Clarity
SPEAKER_00I love it, I love it. David has a free clarity archetype quiz right here on the screen. For those that are listening and not watching, it's the clarity brand.ai. The clarity brand spelled the same way the clarity brand.ai. Find out if you're a flow master or architect, well, if you're just a wanderer. I'm gonna find out which one you are. So check those, check that quiz out. I believe it is free. All right, so what do you what would you say is the biggest misconception about clarity? I hear clarity a lot. As a matter of fact, I've been advised to utilize that in some things that I'm doing uh professionally, but what's the biggest misconception that you would say about clarity?
SPEAKER_01So, yes, you're you're 100% right. Clarity is a very overused word, and I'm the clarity guy, so I'm gonna like keep it straight. Um, it's a very used word. I ain't trying to be brand, but I'm just I'm just asking the question over here. It's all good. Um the the biggest misconception is that you have to figure it all out. So when people think, oh, I have clarity, they assume they associate clarity with I know the outcome, but clarity isn't that, it's knowing your next right step. So I live in Utah, you live uh South Carolina, South Carolina. Um, so for me to drive from Utah to South Carolina, I I'm not gonna be busy with what the Carolina roads are, South Carolina, like I don't care about that right now. I need to figure out the roads in Utah, then when I get to Colorado, then when I get to uh Tennessee, like it's my next right step. So if I put in my GPS this at your address, I only know 400 to 600 feet at nighttime what's ahead of me, but I know the direction that I'm going. So the biggest misconception is the outcome. Clarity is knowing the direction, and then that way when I need to take detours, I know ultimately where I'm going. I don't know how the outcome is gonna be.
Limiting Beliefs And Worthiness
SPEAKER_00I love that. I'm I'm a I do a lot of other things other than podcasting. I do a lot of things in the tr in the realm of uh counseling, deliverance, and things like that. So I I recognize that a lot of things that we deal with, our parents and grandparents have dealt with. I just kind of keep that really simple. I go over everybody's head for yourself. What do you think is one or what do you know is one limiting belief you had that you had to get rid of or you have to get rid of now to be the person that you want to be?
SPEAKER_01Biggest limiting belief is I come from nothing, so I have to be nothing. And um I remember growing up and hearing the stories, the people in my church would actually say, Oh god, um I was like, Don't don't forget the don't forget the people when you make it, you know, the white man. He was just like, and and they would say, you know, you gotta, you gotta stay, you gotta stay humble, you gotta stay grounded, don't get too high and mighty. You you you remember your roots. This is where you came from. So don't act like you're new to anybody. Don't act like you have dreams and goals. No, this is not what we do here. We, we, we play here because we this is where we fit in. Um so the biggest thing is, so I've been in circles where there's people who have a lot of commas in their bank accounts, um, like three commas, and I'm around them. And there's been times where that limiting belief was just like, don't become nothing because I come from nothing. Um I was like, I shouldn't be in this room. Um, but I combat that every time where I'm like, all right, God, like I got you, so I am something. And if you've opened this door, then I'm gonna walk through it. And if this is not for me, you'll close it and you'll see me, you'll you'll redirect me. So that's big the benefit the biggest one.
SPEAKER_00Well done. If you can highlight right now one area that is, I would say is where you're at least you're at least aligned with your values in this area. What is it that you would change? Is the area of your life that you do right now that's the least aligned with the values that you want to uphold? What would that be? And how would you change it?
SPEAKER_01This is something I coach, but uh this is something I need to work on myself. Uh saying giving an in res uh irresponsible yes. So I find myself giving a lot of yeses because we can talk about this show, right?
SPEAKER_00That's that's not that's not your no no no no no no no somebody has an opinion.
Public Life, Google, And Privacy
SPEAKER_01I'm like, yeah, sure, yeah, sure. Um it's like uh my mother always always told me as a kid, she was she would always say, Um, make yourself useful, make yourself useful. So when I say yes, it's like it it has a good in intention. Like I want to serve, I want to make things better. But when I say yes, I'm not always considering like the time allotment that I have and what other prior engagements, I'm just saying yes, and then I'm trying to figure it out on the back end. So that's the least aligned because that makes me um I don't show up to things that I need to on time, or I have to backtrack and say I can't make it, and now that it it breaks down dependability. Um, so yeah, that's the biggest thing I need to work on that I'm still working on.
SPEAKER_00That's a great answer. That's a great answer. I gotta follow up to that answer in the next question. But at the particular okay, I'm not uh I'm not clearly an expert on Google and how Google works and how the uh uh algorithm works. I I don't know. I know that people have blogs and they have podcasts and they have books and they have web pages and they have social media, all with a design to put out a certain image to tell the people who are looking or who may Google them what they want them to see. But we know that sometimes Google shows things that you don't want to be at the top of the list of things that people find out about you. If somebody Googled you today, David B. Prosper, what do you think they would see or learn about you? And do you and do you like the idea of that?
Coaching Priority: Build Systems
SPEAKER_01I welcome it, I welcome it because at the end of the day, um one thing I don't have is an imposter syndrome because I am who I say I am, and my life is is public uh to a point, like I have private things. Um, but if somebody googled me, the things that they will see is a lot of podcasting, a lot of speaking, books, articles. But what they would not notice, but they'll eventually get to is that um I was married and uh my my marriage was very public. The the individual I got married, my former wife, uh she she's a she's she's a celebrity in a way.
SPEAKER_00Um and she's been uh I even I missed that, but I don't I don't know what's the oh but yeah so she's she's a celebrity and and unfortunately the her claim to fame um was she experienced uh domestic violence abuse in her first marriage.
SPEAKER_01I was the second marriage, and the the biggest misconception I tell people like if you really google my name, um it when you read it, it's David B. Prosperous second husband, not the first husband, the first husband was the one who did the the event, a second husband, which is me, um did not do that. So people will find out that I was married. And I remember telling my girlfriend Googled me and she she ended up seeing it, and I was like, Yeah, my marriage is and I lived in the public eye for a very long time, so um that's why I keep certain things private because it's not it's not what it's not what it's all cracked up to be.
SPEAKER_00You betcha. I love this, I love this I got so many more questions, but I know we don't have that much time. But if I if I if I was your new coach, if I was your new high performance coach, what's the very first priority that we have to address? Right out of the gate, you may have 10 mountains that you want to climb. Number one mountain, we gotta deal with it up front is the most important one. What are we dealing with? Systems, systems, break it down for me a little bit more.
Misconceptions About Utah
SPEAKER_01So creating systems that allow, and I'm the the person that's getting coached, absolutely okay. I'm coaching. So if so, if if I'm getting coached, the biggest thing is the systems, and um because I have a lot of things where I have a whiteboard here and I have my notebook over here, and then and so it's just there's a lot of scatteredness, and then um bringing everything through a SOP standard operating procedure of how I make decisions, what do I tackle, what's prioritized, um, and then what's on my not to do. So it's just like creating systems of prioritization, creating systems of um implementation of the the goals and the strategies and the items I need to execute. Um, so yeah, big biggest thing is systems.
SPEAKER_00Got it, got it. I got two more questions. I'm gonna have you share about how people can find you and maybe perhaps share with some wisdom with our uh viewers and listeners. But this question I I have to ask. I asked you when we first met, but I gotta ask. I got two friends that live in Utah, and I have to ask this question because it's it's it's low-hanging food, it's sitting right there. What's one of the biggest misconceptions about Utah? Because you know, that's not that's not that's not a prime place to move for a lot of people. Yeah, you decide to move there from Florida, from sunny Florida, you move to Utah. If you want to talk about that, you can. But my primary question is what's the biggest misconception about Utah that people do not know about?
The One Billion People Mission
SPEAKER_01Yeah, that's that's a good one. Um, Utah is very different, it's like an entire new country. Um like an entire new country. But one of the biggest misconceptions about Utah, um, and and and and I share this with my white brothers and sisters. Like, I joke around and say, like, Utah is like where all white people are born, um, and they just spread out into the rest of the world. Uh, but here's the the thing that I love most uh is the level of hospitality that is here. I heard that too. The hospital and then the the culture of family and community, it is so ingrained in the culture. It's like like people prioritize community, people prioritize family, and like you're not gonna fit into every tribe just like anywhere else, but when you do find your tribe, like I've been grateful to find my tribe, like it is like it's it's of it's of family. There's you get invited to so many things, um, and uh curiosity is piqued right now. Yeah, you get invited to a lot of things. Um and and and the last thing is uh people in Utah are more cultured than people give them credit because you got to think about with the church being here, the LDS church, um, they send the a lot of missionaries to different parts of the world. So a lot of these missionaries come back having been to Africa, haven't been to New Zealand, Detroit, um, China. So they're actually very cultured when it comes to understanding differences of people, in my opinion, than anywhere else I've ever been.
SPEAKER_00Wow, okay, that that's a lot of that is shocking. I did say I have one more question, but I forgot a very important question. Talk about real briefly about the one billion person mission that you have.
One Simple Step To Find Clarity
SPEAKER_01Oh, so yes, so we're going to help one billion people live by design, and how we get to do that is through the books that we put out and the readers that we get to connect with uh through their speaking events. Um, uh next year, my ambitious and audacious goal is to have a clarity summit where we're gonna have different speakers on the stage and talking about different methods um to finding their clarity of their next next right step. And then later this year, my ambitious goal is to have clarity retreats. So it's like having our retreats, having our summits, and then having our our literature um and then eventually our the app that's coming out of helping people make better decisions. Thank you. Uh so it's it's how can we help people make better decisions so they know the next right step and they eliminate the noise and they can focus on what's ahead of them. So that's our mission. And when we can do that successfully, people become more fulfilled, they become happier, they become more peaceful, their relationships get better, our schools get better, and overall the world gets better when we live by design because we're no longer competing, we're collaborating.
SPEAKER_00I love it, man. So this is my final question for real. And I'm gonna have you take the last 120 seconds of the show to kind of just share with whatever's on your heart and let folks know where they can find your work and where they can find you if they have any questions. All right. Last question somebody listening right now kind of feels kind of lost right now, they kind of feel like they're dealing with uh not really being connected. Can you give them one simple step to help them find clarity?
SPEAKER_01Hmm, this is gonna be profound. You're gonna be like, oh my goodness, this is a clarity guy giving me this simple direction. Your mom and your dad has probably told you this numerous times. Clean your room, clean your house. I promise you, if you do those two things, you you clean your physical space, it's gonna give you the emotional space to deal with what you have to deal with. And oftentimes when we're overwhelmed, we feel disconnected, is because we're overwhelmed by the things around us. So there might be some things you need to throw away. So physically do those things and watch how that opens up space mentally, emotionally, and even spiritually to hold space for the next thing.
Closing Encouragements & Where To Find David
SPEAKER_00All right, 120 seconds, brother. You got it, man. All right, as you will, you can let post somebody to find you, or you can share something, however, you want to do it, brother. Floor's yours.
SPEAKER_01Appreciate it, appreciate it. So um, I'm on all social media platforms. The the place that I live is Instagram, the clarity guy underscore. So the clarity guy underscore, or you type in my name, David Prosper, you'll see me as well. Um, but the thing I want to leave you with because um like there's gonna be a lot of information that you're you're gonna uh consume and hear, and everyone has an idea about doing something. My challenge and my encouragement is every day make progress, every day find clarity. And I promise you, as you take those next steps, it's gonna lead you to your next step and just keep on going because time with consistency and discipline leads to elevation. And if you want to elevate your life, put the time in, be consistent with it, and just take your next right step.
SPEAKER_00All right, so your podcast is up on the screen, Clarity with David Prosper. The link is up there for those that you guys who are watching. You can see if you're listening, you can't see it, obviously. But you can go to Apple Podcast, Spotify. His podcast is definitely there, and you already have the uh clarity archetype quiz that's gonna be in the uh in the show notes if you want to grab it from there. But this is a uh the author of Finding Clarity, a leadership coach and a clarity architect, the clarity guy. David Post is in the house. If you guys are watching and listening for the first time, of course, upper right hand corner of your screen is a QR code where you can get all of our old shows. But please, thank you for supporting us. Our YouTube channel is YouTube.com at they call me Mr. You. All of our shows are there. This episode will be there as well, and of course, on all the listening platforms today. Thanks again for watching and for listening. Have a fantastic day. I'm Mr. U. That's David B. Prosper. We're out of here. Have a good one.
Podcasts we love
Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.
Power of Man Podcast
Rory Paquette
The TCMMY Inspiration Station
Mista Yu
UH-OH Conversations with Cohesive Leaders
Cohesion Culture
TCMMY Men's Roundtable Series
Mista Yu