Maximum Lawyer

Watch the YouTube version of this episode HERE

In this episode of Maximum Lawyer Live, Tyson Mutrux breaks down Dan Koe’s viral article, “How to Fix Your Entire Life in One Day,” and applies it directly to law firm owners. Tyson walks through why New Year’s resolutions fail, how identity drives every result in your life and practice, and why your current goals might be more about safety than growth.


You’ll hear Tyson unpack Dan’s ideas on identity, fear, intelligence, and cybernetics, then connect them to real-world examples like starting your own firm, growing beyond a “nice job,” and even coaching his daughter through a mindset shift in volleyball. He also guides you through Dan’s one-day protocol, morning, daytime, and evening questions, that can help you get brutally honest about where you’re stuck and what you actually want your life and firm to look like.


If you’ve been feeling that nagging dissonance, knowing you’re meant for more but staying stuck in the same patterns, this episode is your permission slip to design a new identity and start playing life like a video game.


In this episode, you'll learn:
  • Why most resolutions and firm goals fail so quickly
  • The real reason you “aren’t where you want to be”
  • How your identity silently sabotages or supports your success
  • The 8-step “anatomy of identity” Tyson breaks down with his jiu-jitsu example
  • How inherited beliefs (parents, culture, religion, profession) keep you small
  • The stages of mind and why most people hover in the middle forever
  • Naval’s definition of intelligence and what it means for law firm owners
  • Dan’s one-day reset: morning, midday, and evening prompts to reboot your life
  • How to turn your life and law firm into an engaging “video game” you actually want to play


Highlights
  • 00:00 – Intro: Why “fix your life in one day” matters for lawyers
  • 01:30 – Why resolutions and traditional goal-setting keep failing
  • 04:00 – Identity vs. behavior: becoming the person who naturally hits the goal
  • 06:30 – Self-talk and performance: Tyson’s daughter’s volleyball story
  • 08:30 – Tyson’s jiu-jitsu example and the danger of defending the wrong identity
  • 11:00 – Hidden goals: safety, predictability, and staying in the “nice” job or firm
  • 13:30 – Morning “anti-vision” questions: getting brutally honest about your current life
  • 16:00 – Daytime & evening prompts: interrupting autopilot and naming the real enemy
  • 18:30 – Turning your life and firm into a video game + closing invites (Association, MaxLawCon, Becca’s List)

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Resources:

Creators and Guests

Host
Tyson Mutrux
Tyson is the founder of Mutrux Firm Injury Lawyers and the co-founder of Maximum Lawyer.

What is Maximum Lawyer?

Maximum Lawyer is the podcast for law firm owners who want to scale with intention and build a business that works for their life.

Hosted by Tyson Mutrux, each weekly episode features candid conversations with law firm owners, business experts, and industry leaders sharing real strategies and lessons learned in the trenches.

If you're ready to grow your firm with less stress and more support, this is your next must listen. Subscribe today.

Tyson Mutrux (00:04)
Welcome back to Maximum Lawyer Live. I’m Tyson Mutrux, and today I’m going to walk through an article I find really fascinating by a gentleman named Dan Koe. The article is called “How to Fix Your Entire Life in One Day.” It’s been around since January and has exploded online with massive views, thousands of comments, and a ton of reposts and likes.
Tyson Mutrux (00:35)
For those of you watching live inside the Association or catching the recording on YouTube, you can see the article on the screen. I’m going to read segments of it, not the whole thing, and then we’re going to talk about what it means for you as a law firm owner.
Tyson Mutrux (00:50)
Dan starts with this: if you’re anything like him, you think New Year’s resolutions are stupid. I’m in the same boat—no offense to anyone. Most people go about changing their lives in the wrong way. They create resolutions because everyone else does. They build superficial meaning out of status games, but those resolutions don’t meet the requirements for true change, which goes much deeper than convincing yourself you’ll be more disciplined or productive this year.
Tyson Mutrux (01:22)
People say, “I’m going to do this, I’m going to hit this goal,” and then they do nothing to actually design their life around it. They throw a goal out there, change nothing structurally, and then fail. The percentages of people who fall off in the first couple of weeks are insanely high.
Tyson Mutrux (01:43)
Dan says this letter isn’t something you read once and forget about. It’s something you bookmark, take notes on, and set aside time to think through. I agree. There are some very specific questions later in the article that you’re going to want to write down, so if you’re listening or watching, grab a pen and paper or something to type on.
Tyson Mutrux (02:07)
The first big idea: “You aren’t where you want to be because you aren’t the person who would be there.” When people set big goals, they usually focus on one of two requirements for success. First, changing your actions to make progress toward the goal—he calls that less important, second‑order change. Second, changing who you are so that your behavior naturally follows—that’s the most important, first‑order change.
Tyson Mutrux (02:36)
Most people set a surface‑level goal, hype themselves up for a few weeks, and then drift right back to their old ways. They’re trying to build a great life on a rotting foundation.
Tyson Mutrux (02:48)
He gives a simple example. Think of somebody successful: a bodybuilder with a great physique, a founder or CEO worth hundreds of millions, or that charismatic person who can walk up to a group and talk without anxiety. We think they must grind to eat healthy or to show up and lead, but the truth is they can’t see themselves living any other way.
Tyson Mutrux (03:10)
The bodybuilder has to grind to eat unhealthily. The CEO has to force themselves to stay in bed and ignore their alarm—and they hate every second of that. To them, the “disciplined life” is just normal. To some people, Dan’s lifestyle looks extreme and disciplined. To him, it’s natural.
Tyson Mutrux (03:30)
I think he’s simplifying a bit, but it’s still really important. This is why a lot of the mindset work Jason Selk talks about matters so much. You’re training yourself to think and act a certain way, and that’s how you grow into the CEO you want to be.
Tyson Mutrux (03:47)
I was just having a similar conversation with my daughter yesterday. She plays volleyball and wants to get better at setting. She kept saying, “I suck at setting.” She knows I hate that language and was almost doing it to tease me. I stopped her and said, “Let’s change the wording.” We started with, “I’m working on getting better at setting,” and eventually moved to, “I’m amazing at setting. That was an amazing set.”
Tyson Mutrux (04:13)
She was talking the talk, almost convincing herself—and it worked. You should have seen the difference between when she was saying “I suck at setting” and when she was saying “I’m amazing at setting.” It was night and day. The way you talk to yourself and think about yourself has a significant impact on performance.
Tyson Mutrux (04:33)
Dan’s point is you say you want to change, you say you want to become financially free and healthy, but your actions show otherwise—and that gap goes deeper than you think. You actually have to take action on these things. Just thinking about it is not enough.
Tyson Mutrux (04:51)
Part two of the article is titled: “You aren’t where you want to be because you don’t want to be there.” At first, that sounds like a contradiction. You say you want to be somewhere, but he argues you actually don’t, at least not at a deep enough level.
Tyson Mutrux (05:08)
He quotes Alfred Adler: “Trust only movement. Life happens at the level of events, not of words. Trust movement.” If you want to change who you are, you must understand how the mind works so that you can start to reprogram it. The first step is seeing that all behavior is goal‑oriented—teleological.
Tyson Mutrux (05:29)
When you think about it, this is obvious, but when you dig into it, most people don’t want to hear it. From my years in the Guild and the Association, I can tell you a lot of people resist this idea. You may even resist it as you listen, but it’s reality.
Tyson Mutrux (05:45)
You take a step forward because you want to reach a certain location. You scratch your nose because you want the itch to go away. Those goals are clear. But most of the time, your goals are unconscious. You might sit on the couch in the middle of the day because you’re trying to burn time before your next responsibility.
Tyson Mutrux (06:04)
On a deeper level, you also pursue goals that can harm you, but you justify those actions in ways that sound socially acceptable and don’t make you look like a loser. If you can’t stop procrastinating your work, you might say you lack discipline. In reality, your goal might be to protect yourself from the judgment that comes from finishing and sharing your work.
Tyson Mutrux (06:26)
I’m guilty of this sometimes—not necessarily with sharing my work, but with other things I avoid. The point is, there’s usually a goal underneath the behavior that we don’t want to admit.
Tyson Mutrux (06:38)
If you say you want to quit your dead‑end job but stay in it without any real reason, you might start to think you lack courage or that you’re not a risk‑taker. The truth is you’re pursuing the goal of safety, predictability, and having an excuse not to look like a failure in front of people who think holding that job equals success.
Tyson Mutrux (07:00)
The lesson is that real change requires changing your goals. So if you’re working in a job right now and you’ve thought about starting your own firm but you’re afraid of what people might think, or you love your “nice office” and fear people thinking you failed if you leave it—those are goals. These are exactly the things you need to examine.
Tyson Mutrux (07:23)
He digs even deeper in part three: “You aren’t where you want to be because you’re afraid to be there.” He quotes Maxwell Maltz: if you’ve accepted an idea—whether from yourself, your teachers, parents, friends, or advertising—and you’re firmly convinced it’s true, it has the same power over you as a hypnotist’s words over a subject.
Tyson Mutrux (07:46)
Then he outlines what he calls the anatomy of identity.
You want to achieve a goal.
You perceive reality through the lens of that goal.
You notice “important” information and ideas that help you achieve that goal—this is learning.
You act toward the goal and receive feedback that you’re progressing.
You repeat that behavior until it becomes automatic and unconscious.
That behavior becomes part of who you think you are: “I am the type of person who…”
You defend your identity to maintain psychological consistency.
Your identity shapes new goals, and the cycle restarts.
Tyson Mutrux (08:25)
If that identity is disadvantageous to a good life, things can go bad quickly. Let me use jiu‑jitsu as an example. My goal is to become a black belt. Reality: that’s going to take 10 years, maybe 12, because I can’t train four times a week. My feeds are full of jiu‑jitsu content. I read books, I roll, I get stripes. That’s feedback.
Tyson Mutrux (08:49)
Over time, it becomes automatic. I start saying, “I’m really good at jiu‑jitsu.” Then I defend that identity. But recently I went to a tournament and lost three matches. It sucked. I could blame the draw or a hundred other things, but if I cling too tightly to “I’m amazing at this” and refuse to look at where I need to improve, I won’t get better.
Tyson Mutrux (09:12)
You have to break the cycle between step six and step seven: between “this is who I am” and “I’m going to defend that no matter what.” That’s where growth dies. This lines up with what Jason teaches—he doesn’t tell you to blindly believe positive statements without also looking at where you need to improve.
Tyson Mutrux (09:31)
Dan explains that this whole process starts when you’re a child. You have the goal of survival, and you’re dependent on your parents to teach you how to survive. You conform. Most teaching is done through reward and punishment, so unless you adopt their beliefs and values, you’re punished.
Tyson Mutrux (09:49)
You don’t truly think for yourself until you see through this. Your parents went through the same conditioning with their parents. Many of the beliefs they passed on came from an industrial‑age idea of success. That’s where it can get dangerous—unless someone breaks the pattern, it just keeps going.
Tyson Mutrux (10:08)
He says if you were raised in a religious household and never learned to think for yourself, you’ll fight and attack anyone who threatens your psychological safety inside that bubble. The same thing happens when you unconsciously see yourself as “a lawyer,” “a gamer,” or any other identity that stops you from taking the actions you need for a better life.
Tyson Mutrux (10:27)
Then he shifts to another big idea: “The life you want lies within a specific level of mind.” The mind evolves through predictable stages over time, and if you’re not careful, it can crystallize in a way that makes it hard to live a meaningful life.
Tyson Mutrux (10:43)
He references things like Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, stages of ego development, spiral dynamics, integral theory—all of which build on each other. He creates a Human Model 3.0 with a set of levels: impulsive, self‑protective, conformist, self‑aware, conscientious, individualist, strategist, construct‑aware, and unitive.
Tyson Mutrux (11:04)
He says most people reading the article hover between levels four and eight, which is a big range. Those closer to eight are reading to learn or to pass time in a non‑destructive way.
Tyson Mutrux (11:15)
Here are the levels in short:
Impulsive – no separation between impulse and action; black‑and‑white thinking.
Self‑protective – the world is dangerous; you look out for yourself.
Conformist – you are your group and its rules; those rules feel like reality.
Self‑aware – you notice you have an inner life that doesn’t match the exterior.
Conscientious – you build your own system of principles and hold yourself accountable.
Individualist – you see your principles were shaped by context and hold them more loosely.
Strategist – you work with systems, aware of your involvement in them.
Construct‑aware – you see all frameworks, including identity, as useful fictions.
Unitive – the separation between self and life dissolves.
Tyson Mutrux (11:58)
The good thing is it doesn’t really matter which stage you’re in, because moving through any of them follows a pattern. That leads into the next section: “Intelligence is the ability to get what you want out of life.”
Tyson Mutrux (12:12)
He quotes Naval Ravikant: “The only real test of intelligence is you get what you want out of life.” Dan says there’s a formula for success: agency, opportunity, and intelligence. If you have high agency but low opportunity, your effort won’t bear much fruit. He focuses on what intelligence really is in this context.
Tyson Mutrux (12:32)
To do that, he looks at cybernetics, from the Greek word for “to steer.” It’s also known as the art of getting what you want. If intelligence is getting what you want out of life, understanding cybernetics helps you do that faster.
Tyson Mutrux (12:46)
Cybernetics describes intelligent systems this way:
Have a goal.
Act toward that goal.
Sense where you are.
Compare it to the goal.
Act again based on feedback.
Tyson Mutrux (13:00)
He uses the example of a boat heading toward a lighthouse. If the boat drifts left, you steer right. If it drifts right, you steer left. Same with a plane and a destination. You’re constantly adjusting back toward the target.
Tyson Mutrux (13:14)
You can judge intelligence by a system’s ability to iterate and persist through trial and error. A ship correcting its course, a thermostat sensing heat and switching on, the pancreas releasing insulin when blood sugar spikes—they’re all cybernetic systems.
Tyson Mutrux (13:29)
He says low‑intelligence systems get stuck on problems instead of solving them. A writer who fails to build a readership and quits instead of trying new things is one example.
Tyson Mutrux (13:40)
Your goals determine how you see the world and what you consider success or failure. You can try to “enjoy the journey,” but if you pursue the wrong goal, you won’t enjoy it. Your mind is the operating system for reality, and that system is composed of goals.
Tyson Mutrux (13:56)
So to become more intelligent, he says you must:
Reject the known path and dive into the unknown.
Set new, higher goals that expand your mind.
Embrace chaos and allow for growth.
Study the generalized principles of nature.
Become a deep generalist.
Tyson Mutrux (14:16)
That’s what leads to what we see as an “intelligent person.”
Tyson Mutrux (14:22)
Then he gets to the part everyone clicked for: “How to launch into a completely new life in one day.” He says the best periods of his life always came after he was absolutely fed up with his lack of progress.
Tyson Mutrux (14:35)
He’s observed three phases people go through when they successfully flip their identity.
Dissonance: they feel like they don’t belong in their current life and get fed up.
Uncertainty: they don’t know what comes next, so they experiment, feel lost, or feel worse.
Discovery: they discover what they want to pursue and make six years of progress in six months.
Tyson Mutrux (14:57)
The goal of his protocol is to help you reach dissonance, navigate uncertainty, and discover what you truly want to achieve—so clearly that distractions lose their pull.
Tyson Mutrux (15:09)
Part one is morning: psychological excavation, vision, and anti‑vision. Think of it like creating a new shell and slowly growing into it. Set aside 15 to 30 minutes. Don’t use AI for this. He wants you to break past your current mental limiters.
Tyson Mutrux (15:24)
Here are the morning questions he gives.
What is the dull, persistent dissatisfaction you’ve learned to live with—not deep suffering, but what you tolerate? “If you don’t hate it, you’ll tolerate it.”
What do you complain about repeatedly but never actually change? Write the three complaints you’ve voiced most in the last year.
For each complaint, what would someone who watched your behavior—not your words—conclude you actually want?
What truth about your current life would be unbearable to admit to someone you deeply respect?
Tyson Mutrux (15:59)
Those questions make you aware of the pain in your current life. Then he has you turn them into what he calls anti‑vision: a brutal awareness of the life you’re on track to live if nothing changes, so you can use that negative energy to aim in a positive direction.
Tyson Mutrux (16:13)
More questions:
If absolutely nothing changes for the next five years, describe an average Tuesday: where you wake up, how your body feels, your first thought, who’s around you, what you do between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m., and how you feel at 10 p.m.
Now do the same, but for 10 years out. What have you missed? What opportunities closed? Who gave up on you? What do people say about you when you’re not in the room?
At the end of your life, you lived the safe version and never broke the pattern. What was the cost? What did you never let yourself feel, try, or become?
Who in your life is already living that future you just described—someone 5, 10, 20 years ahead on that same trajectory? How do you feel when you imagine becoming them?
Tyson Mutrux (16:58)
Then he shifts from anti‑vision to vision.
What identity would you have to give up to actually change? “I am the type of person who…” What would it cost you socially to no longer be that person?
What is the most embarrassing reason you haven’t changed—the one that makes you sound weak, scared, or lazy rather than reasonable?
If your current behavior is a form of self‑protection, what are you actually protecting, and what is that protection costing you?
Tyson Mutrux (17:27)
If you answer those truthfully and you’re in the right chapter of your life, you’ll feel a deep sense of dis‑ease and maybe even disgust with how you’re currently living. It’s a powerful exercise.
Tyson Mutrux (17:39)
Then he says: forget practicality for a moment.
If you could snap your fingers and be living a different life in three years—not what’s realistic, but what you actually want—what does that look like? Describe an average Tuesday in that life with the same level of detail.
What would you have to believe about yourself for that life to feel natural rather than forced? Complete the identity statement: “I am the type of person who…”
What is one thing you would do this week if you were already that person?
Tyson Mutrux (18:12)
Answer all of those first thing in the morning.
Tyson Mutrux (18:16)
Part two is throughout the day: interrupting autopilot and breaking unconscious patterns. Journaling is cute, he says, but real change won’t happen if you don’t break the patterns that keep you the same. He wants you to finish everything from part one and then sprinkle contemplation questions throughout your day.
Tyson Mutrux (18:34)
He suggests scheduling questions at random, non‑conflicting times—during commuting, walking, or lying around. For example:
11:00 a.m. – What am I avoiding right now by doing what I’m doing?
1:30 p.m. – If someone filmed the last two hours, what would they conclude I want from my life?
3:15 p.m. – Am I moving toward the life I hate or the life I want?
5:00 p.m. – What’s the most important thing I’m pretending isn’t important?
7:30 p.m. – What did I do today out of identity protection rather than genuine desire? (Hint: most things you do.)
9:00 p.m. – When did I feel most alive today? When did I feel most dead?
Tyson Mutrux (19:18)
He adds a couple more fuel questions.
What would change if I stopped needing people to see me as [the identity you wrote earlier]?
Where in my life am I trading aliveness for safety?
What’s the smallest version of the person I want to become that I could be tomorrow?
Tyson Mutrux (19:37)
Part three is evening: synthesizing insight and entering a season of progress. These are the questions you answer at the end of the day:
After today, what feels most true about why you’ve been stuck?
What is the actual enemy? Name the internal pattern or belief running the show—not circumstances or other people.
Write a single sentence that captures what you refuse to let your life become. This is your anti‑vision compressed. It should make you feel something when you read it.
Write a single sentence that captures what you’re building toward, knowing it will evolve. This is your vision MVP.
Tyson Mutrux (20:13)
Finally, he has you create goals with three time lenses.
One‑year lens: What would have to be true in one year for you to know you’ve broken the old pattern? One concrete thing.
One‑month lens: What would have to be true in one month for that one‑year result to still be possible?
Daily lens: What two to three actions can you time‑block tomorrow that the person you’re becoming would simply do?
Tyson Mutrux (20:40)
That’s a lot, but it’s worth sitting with.
Tyson Mutrux (20:44)
He ends with the idea of turning your life into a video game. He quotes Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi about flow: the optimal inner state is when attention is invested in realistic goals that match your skills. Games are the poster child for obsession, enjoyment, and flow—they have all the components that lead to focus and clarity.
Tyson Mutrux (21:04)
If we reverse‑engineer those components, we can live in a state of deeper enjoyment, fewer distractions, and more success. He suggests organizing your insights into six components:
Anti‑vision – what’s at stake.
Vision – how you win.
One‑year goal – your mission.
One‑month project – the boss fight.
Daily levers – your quests.
Constraints – the rules of the game.
Tyson Mutrux (21:29)
All of these act like concentric circles, a force field guarding your mind from distractions and shiny objects. The more you play the game, the stronger that force becomes. Eventually, it becomes who you are, and you wouldn’t have it any other way.
Tyson Mutrux (21:43)
So thank you to Dan Koe for this article—it’s fantastic. I hope you got something out of walking through it. If you actually sit down with these questions, it can be a really powerful one‑day reset.
Tyson Mutrux (21:55)
Let me know what you think in the comments. And as always, be sure to check out BeccasList.co, join us inside the Maximum Lawyer Association at maximumlawyer.com, and grab your tickets to MaxLawCon at maxlawcon.com.
Tyson Mutrux (22:12)
Thanks, everybody. Have a wonderful day.