Yes And Land

Yes And Land

di Ride The Wave Media
Stagione 1
Lion King Leadership: Building Relationships That Matter | with Mayor Lorin Palmer
What if the leaders who actually change communities aren't the loudest voices in the room? The Lion King shows us why. Mufasa's strength wasn't dominanceโ€”it was genuine curiosity about every creature in the Pride Lands. And that's exactly what Mayor Lorin Palmer discovered when he stopped networking and started building real relationships. ๐ŸŽฏ 3 Actionable Takeaways Have a Conversation with Someone You Disagree With โ€“ Seek out one difficult conversation per week. Why it works: Understanding different perspectives builds influence far beyond echo chambers. Live Outside Yourself Through Service โ€“ When facing challenges, focus on helping others instead of your own struggles. Why it works: Serving others provides perspective and pulls you out of self-focused spirals. Be Genuine, Not Strategic โ€“ Show up authentically in every interaction, treating their concerns as real. Why it works: People immediately detect fakeness; authenticity builds trust that lasts. Mayor Lorin Palmer of Herriman (one of Utah's fastest-growing cities) joins me to explore leadership through collaboration instead of control. His journey mirrors Mufasa's wisdom: sales career โ†’ divorce and depression โ†’ rebuilding through genuine relationships โ†’ becoming a mayor who listens. Using The Lion King as our lens, we examine why Mufasa's leadership worked through understanding the circle of life and how every role matters. Mayor Palmer treats a constituent's pothole complaint with the same genuine concern as major city development. HIGHLIGHTS Weekly conversations with people you disagree with build real influence Service as the antidote to self-focused struggle Lion King lessons on collaborative leadership vs. dominance Mayor Palmer's journey from depression to leading Utah's fastest-growing city Genuine curiosity beats strategic networking WHAT YOU WILL LEARN How Mufasa's leadership translates to modern relationship-building Why authentic presence matters more than polished performance Practical strategies for building influence through curiosity and service TIME STAMPS 0:00 Welcome | 0:30 Mayor Lorin Palmer intro | 1:10 Lion King lens | 1:43 Price, Utah to Uruguay mission | 2:12 Finding sales passion | 4:08 Navigating divorce | 4:56 Depression journey | 6:18 Step-parenting | 6:43 Leukemia crisis | 18:45 Becoming mayor | 22:10 Mufasa's perspective-taking | 28:45 Validating concerns | 32:20 Weekly difficult conversations | 35:40 Service mindset | 51:15 Favorite book | 52:09 Dinner guest: JFK | 54:45 Three takeaways | 57:26 Closing ABOUT MAYOR LORIN PALMER Lorin Palmer is mayor of Herriman, Utah. His path: Price, Utah โ†’ Uruguay mission โ†’ UVU business โ†’ sales career โ†’ navigating divorce and depression โ†’ discovering authentic connection as his leadership strength. He practices weekly conversations with people he disagrees with, lives outside himself through service, and shows genuine curiosity. His approach mirrors Mufasa's collaborative leadership: every voice matters, and influence comes from curiosity, not control. ABOUT YES AND LAND Yes And Land explores leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach at Altium Advisors. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #LionKing #MufasaLeadership #AuthenticLeadership #RelationshipBuilding ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe on YouTube | Listen on all podcast platforms | Share with someone building genuine influence
Toy Story and Loneliness: Why Connection Keeps Us Alive
Toy Story and the Epidemic of Loneliness: Why Connection Keeps Us Alive What if loneliness is killing youโ€”literally? Toy Story shows us why. When Woody's identity feels threatened by Buzz, he withdraws into competition and insecurity. That's exactly what happens when divorce, career pressure, or life transitions leave us feeling unchosenโ€”and the Surgeon General confirms it's as dangerous as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. In this episode, Ryan Gregerson uses Toy Story to explore the epidemic of loneliness identified by U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy. Just as Woody's scarcity mentality made him competitive when Buzz arrived, divorce and life transitions can trigger isolation and defensive behavior. But Woody's journey from insecurity to secure identity shows us the path forward: courageous initiative builds belonging. ๐ŸŽฏ 3 ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS 1. Initiate One Relationship This Week โ€“ Reach out to someone you've been meaning to connect with. Why it works: Leadership in your career doesn't replace leadership in your relationships; taking initiative interrupts isolation. 2. Commit to a Consistent Shared Environment โ€“ Join something that meets weekly (church group, pickleball league, support group). Why it works: Connection is built through repeated presence, not isolated encounters. 3. Go One Layer Deeper with Someone โ€“ Ask a better question, offer a more honest answer, express appreciation out loud. Why it works: Small shifts in vulnerability create large changes in belonging. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE - How social disconnection causes health risks equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes daily - Why "just being honest" can become weaponized truth that fractures relationships - How to move from fragile identity (that withdraws) to secure identity (that initiates) - The difference between proximity and genuine connection - Three specific, actionable ways to build belonging this week EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS - Surgeon General's warning on loneliness as a public health crisis - Harvard's 80-year study: relationships at 50 predict health at 80 - Woody's scarcity mentality when Buzz arrives - Buzz's identity collapse and the divorce parallel - Weaponized truth vs compassionate truth - When your ex starts dating: "Buzz entering the room" again - Two common mistakes: isolation and overcorrection ABOUT YES AND LAND Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, a family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach for law firm owners at Altium Advisors, each episode connects familiar narratives to real-world wisdom you can actually use. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #ToyStory #Pixar #Loneliness #Divorce #DivorceRecovery #Relationships #Belonging #MentalHealth #WoodyAndBuzz ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube ๐Ÿ‘‰ Listen to the full episode of Yes And Land on all podcast platforms ๐Ÿ‘‰ Like, comment, and share with someone who's navigating divorce, feeling disconnected, or rebuilding their sense of belonging
Frozen 2 and Breaking Into Male-Dominated Industries | with Ashley Luke
FROZEN 2 AND BREAKING INTO MALE-DOMINATED INDUSTRIES | WITH ASHLEY LUKE What if the safe path everyone expects you to take is actually keeping you from your best life? Frozen 2 shows us why. Anna's willingness to step into the unknownโ€”without magic, without certaintyโ€”was her real strength. And that's exactly what Ashley Luke discovered when she left corporate America, sold everything to move to France, and eventually built a thriving business in a male-dominated industry. ๐ŸŽฏ 3 ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Define Success for Yourself โ€“ Take 10 minutes to write what success actually looks like to you, not what others expect. Why it works: You can't pursue the right path if you're following someone else's definition of success. Do One Scary Thing This Week โ€“ Speak up when you normally wouldn't, send that email, or try something new. Why it works: Small acts of courage build the muscle you need for bigger leaps. Reflect on When You Felt Most Yourself โ€“ Notice what you were doing in those moments. Why it works: Your most authentic moments point you toward your true path. In this episode, Ashley Luke, franchise owner of Pink's Window Cleaning, joins Courtney Pearl to talk about what happens when you stop following the conventional path and start creating your own. Her journey mirrors Anna in Frozen 2: stable jobs โ†’ selling everything to move to France with a one-year-old โ†’ returning to find her unconventional edge โ†’ building success in window cleaning by being authentically herself. Using Frozen 2 as our lens, we explore why Anna's lack of magical powers lets her see clearly and lead with courage. Similarly, Ashley's choice to not follow the traditional career path is what made her successful in an unexpected industry. HIGHLIGHTS The hidden cost of following the "safe" conventional path Why living in France changed Ashley's perspective on success Lessons from Frozen 2 and what Anna teaches about courage without certainty Overcoming doubt and building success in a male-dominated industry How to show up authentically when others expect you to fit a mold WHAT YOU WILL LEARN How to define success on your own terms instead of society's expectations Why taking unconventional paths builds confidence and resilience The power of doing small scary things to prepare for big challenges Why you'll always have doubters no matter whatโ€”so choose the life you want ABOUT ASHLEY LUKE: Ashley Luke is the franchise owner of Pink's Window Cleaning. After following the conventional pathโ€”college, dental assisting, corporate jobsโ€”she and her husband sold everything to move to France with their one-year-old daughter. That experience opened her eyes to different ways of living. Upon returning to Utah, she completed her bachelor's degree while raising two daughters, then stepped into entrepreneurship in a male-dominated industry, proving that unconventional paths lead to extraordinary success. ABOUT YES AND LAND: Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, a family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach for law firm owners at Altium Advisors, each episode connects familiar narratives to real-world wisdom you can actually use. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #Frozen2 #UnconventionalPath ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube ๐Ÿ‘‰ Listen to the full episode on all podcast platforms ๐Ÿ‘‰ Share with someone who needs permission to take the unconventional path
Mulan and the Grit to Never Quit | Jacob Davis on Purpose-Driven Success
Mulan didn't quit when the army sent her home. She came back anyway โ€” and saved all of China. What if that kind of grit is less about toughness, and more about knowing why you won't stop? In this episode, Jacob Davis โ€” tech entrepreneur, startup veteran, and CEO of WellTrio โ€” joins Ryan Gregerson to talk about what success through not quitting actually looks like. His journey mirrors Mulan's: never quite fitting the expected mold, facing real adversity, and discovering that the refusal to quit โ€” aimed in the right direction โ€” is what separates people who find their purpose from those who don't. ๐ŸŽฏ 3 ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Reframe the Obstacle โ€” Ask "how do I get around it?" not "how do I bash through it?" The obstacle usually isn't the real problem. Point Your Compass at Magnetic North โ€” Define what you actually want, then check whether your actions are aligned. Stress is what happens when your values and actions stop aligning. Talk About Your Problem โ€” No one of us is as smart as all of us. In Mulan, the avalanche only happens because Shang listens. Your answer might come from someone you'd never expect. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN When to push through versus when you're just on the wrong bus Why being different isn't a limitation โ€” it's a superpower How Mulan's story is a blueprint for anyone who has never quite fit the expected mold ABOUT JACOB DAVIS Jacob is CEO of WellTrio, a healthcare cost solution that has helped businesses cut costs by up to 68%. He was previously part of the team behind ERC Specialists, which scaled from idea to $1.6B in revenue in two years. Connect with Jacob: ๐Ÿ“ฑ TikTok: ๐Ÿ“ธ Instagram: ๐ŸŒ Website: ๐Ÿ’ผ LinkedIn: ABOUT YES AND LAND Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson โ€” family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach at Altium Advisors. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #Mulan #NeverQuit #Grit #Entrepreneurship #PurposeDriven #HealthcareInnovation #WellTrio #Resilience #90sDisney #DisneyAnalysis ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube ๐Ÿ‘‰ Listen on all podcast platforms ๐Ÿ‘‰ Like, comment, and share with someone who has never quite fit the mold โ€” but kept going anyway
The Ride of a Lifetime: Bob Igerโ€™s Leadership Lessons
What happens when a company known for magic starts losing its creative spark? In this episode of Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson, we explore Bob Igerโ€™s leadership journey through one of the most turbulent chapters in Disneyโ€™s modern history. Drawing from The Ride of a Lifetime, Ryan reflects on the breakdown of trust, the dangers of centralized control, and how psychological safety shapes innovation. This conversation dives into succession planning, corporate culture, executive decision-making, and the power of future-focused leadership. Rather than tearing down what came before, Iger chose to frame his leadership around possibility and renewal. That decision reshaped Disneyโ€™s trajectory and offers powerful lessons for leaders, entrepreneurs, and anyone navigating transition. If youโ€™re facing change in your organization or personal life, this episode will challenge you to say yes to what is and and to what could be. Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson for more leadership insights. Listen, follow, and share the show on your favorite podcast platform. *Note: In this episode, we referenced Disney's acquisition of Pixar at $4.5 billion โ€” the correct figure is $7.4 billion. We regret the error!
Remember the Titans and the Character Ethic | Shea Owens on Stephen Covey
Remember the Titans and the Character Ethic | Shea Owens on Stephen Covey's 7 Habits What if the behaviors everyone tells you to fix aren't actually the problem? Remember the Titans shows us why. Coach Boone didn't win with a new playbook โ€” he changed who his players were becoming. And that's exactly what divorce attorney and current part-time judge Shea Owens has witnessed across football fields, rural courtrooms, and a decade of navigating some of Utah's most complex legal terrain. ๐ŸŽฏ 3 Actionable Takeaways Change Your Paradigm First โ€“ Before trying to fix any conflict, try viewing it from a completely new angle. Why it works: Behavior change without a shifted perspective rarely sticks. Identify What's at Your Center โ€“ Ask why you're really making the decisions you're making. Is it fear, money, or genuine values? Why it works: You can't align your actions with your values until you know what's actually driving you. Write Your Personal Mission Statement โ€“ Define who you want to become, not just what you want to achieve. Why it works: It gives you a ladder โ€” and makes sure it's leaning against the right building. Using Remember the Titans as our lens, Shea and Ryan explore Stephen Covey's first three habits โ€” Be Proactive, Begin with the End in Mind, and Put First Things First โ€” and why Covey called these the "private victories." Featuring the iconic "attitude reflects leadership, captain" scene, the story of Coach Yost's character-driven decision to stay as assistant, the real-world story of the Cliven Bundy standoff, and what keeping commitments to yourself actually requires. WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE Why behavior change without character change almost always fails How Covey's first three habits mirror the story of T.C. Williams' integration season What "beginning with the end in mind" looks like in divorce, football, and a nonlinear career ABOUT SHEA OWENS: Shea Owens is a family law attorney at RCG Law Group and a current part-time judge in Kane County, Utah. Before joining RCG, he spent nearly a decade on federal public lands law in Southern Utah, including navigating legal tensions during the Cliven Bundy standoff era. A former collegiate football player and lifelong Remember the Titans devotee, Shea brings a character-first lens to law, leadership, and life. ABOUT YES AND LAND: Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, a family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach for law firm owners at Altium Advisors, each episode connects familiar narratives to real-world wisdom you can actually use. New episodes every Thursday. #YesAndLand #DisneyAdults #DisneyPodcast #RememberTheTitans #7Habits #StephenCovey #CharacterEthic #LeadershipPodcast #AttitudeReflectsLeadership #BeProactive ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube ๐Ÿ‘‰ Listen to the full episode of Yes And Land on all podcast platforms ๐Ÿ‘‰ Like, comment, and share with someone who's tired of chasing better habits without addressing who they actually are
Ratatouille and the Fear That Keeps You From Calling Yourself Creative | with Kirsten Hirst
What if the thing standing between you and your creative life isn't talent, but the story you've told yourself about who gets to be an artist? Ratatouille knows. Remy wasn't blocked by ability. He was blocked by a world that said a rat had no business in the kitchen. And that's exactly what Kirsten Hirst discovered when she stopped trying to recreate someone else's picture and finally started making her own. Kirsten Hirst is the Director of Revenue Operations at RCG Law Group, a practicing collage artist, and the daughter of an architect and a writer. She has spent years sitting at the intersection of analytical thinking and creative identity, and in this conversation she unpacks why insecurity, not lack of talent, is the real block that keeps most people from ever owning the creative side of who they already are. Using Pixar's Ratatouille as a powerful metaphor, Ryan and Kirsten dive into the belief that "not everyone can become a great artist, but a great artist can come from anywhere." Together they unpack how creativity shows up in unexpected places like business strategy, architecture, marketing, and personal growth. 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. Buy a mixed media journal for $8 to $10, grab some old books from the thrift store, and make one collage a day for a month. What you learn about your creative blocks will be more valuable than any class. 2. List your childhood favorites โ€” food, movie, TV show, favorite outing โ€” then start doing those things again. Stop outsourcing joy to some future version of your life and let yourself be a kid. 3. Try on the identity of an artist before it feels like it fits. It's not something you aren't. It's something you've been afraid to admit you already are. Yes And Land explores the leadership lessons, relationship dynamics, and hard choices hidden in the stories we love. Hosted by Ryan Gregerson, a family law attorney at RCG Law Group, Disney enthusiast, and business coach for law firm owners at Altium Advisors, each episode connects familiar narratives to real-world wisdom you can actually use. New episodes every Thursday.
Encanto's Real Gift: Why Mirabel Had No Powers | Building Your Brand With Authenticity
What if the pressure to look perfect online is the exact thing holding you back? Encanto shows us why. Mirabel's "lack" of a gift was actually her superpower. And that's exactly what Jana Oman discovered when she stopped copying other real estate agents and started being herself on TikTok. ๐ŸŽฏ 3 Actionable Takeaways 1. List What Comes Naturally โ€“ Focus on what feels easy, not what you โ€œshould.โ€ Why it works: Authentic strengths attract the right people; performed ones attract everyone else. 2. Post Stories, Not Reels โ€“ Share your day, food, or adventures. Why it works: Low-stakes practice helps you get comfortable on camera. 3. Watch Yourself Back โ€“ Notice how you move, talk, or flip your hair. Why it works: You canโ€™t improve what you donโ€™t see, and people already like you. In this episode, Jana Oman, a real estate agent who built her business on TikTok, joins me to talk about what happens when you stop trying to fit in and start showing up as yourself. Her journey mirrors Mirabel in Encanto: tech career โ†’ pressured to cold call and door knock โ†’ realizing her โ€œlackโ€ of traditional skills was her edge โ†’ TikTok success by being authentically herself. Using Encanto as our lens, we explore why Mirabelโ€™s lack of a visible gift lets her truly see and hold her family together. Similarly, Janaโ€™s choice to not fit the โ€œsuccessful realtorโ€ mold is what made the right clients find her. CHAPTERS: 0:00 - Introduction: Pressure to Look Polished Online 0:40 - Jana's Background: From Coding at Age 8 to Real Estate 4:35 - The Shift to Real Estate: "This Looks Easy" 9:10 - ๐ŸŽฌ ENCANTO CONNECTION: Feeling Like You Don't Belong 11:04 - What Gave Jana Courage to Keep Going 15:06 - The Uncomfortable Truth: Watching Yourself Back 19:51 - The Shift: "I Don't Care What Anyone Thinks" 21:13 - ๐Ÿ’ฅ THE TIKTOK BREAKTHROUGH 22:48 - Why TikTok Rewards Authenticity 24:38 - ๐ŸŽฌ ENCANTO: Mirabel's Journey 28:48 - Mirabel's Real Gift: Love & Holding Family Together 30:02 - Louisa's Pressure: "Surface Pressure" 32:01 - Abuela's Role: When Gifts Become More Important Than People 33:14 - Finding What Comes Easy to You 44:37 - ๐ŸŽฏ 3 ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS (Full Breakdown) 45:44 - List What Comes Easy, Start Posting Stories, Watch Yourself ABOUT JANA OMAN: Jana Oman is a real estate agent in Salt Lake and Davis Counties, Utah, who grew her business through authentic social mediaโ€”especially TikTok. A tech whiz since age 8 and former systems administrator, she brings a smart, tech-savvy approach to marketing. Skipping cold calls and door knocking, Jana connects with clients through her personality, Harry Potter references, and genuine style. Fluent in English and Spanish, she helps first-time buyers and others discover whatโ€™s possible. Connect with Jana: ๐Ÿ“ฑ TikTok: [link (https://www.tiktok.com/@jana.oman)] ๐Ÿ“ธ Instagram: [link (www.instagram.com/janaoman_)] and Facebook: [link (www.facebook.com/janaomanarche)] ๐Ÿก Website: [link (https://janasellsutah.com/)] LinkedIn: [link (https://www.linkedin.com/in/janaoman/)] ๐Ÿ’ฌ Continue the conversation: - What are you overthinking about posting online? - What comes naturally to you that you've been ignoring? - Have you watched yourself back on video? (It's uncomfortable but necessary!)
Brave's Real Lesson: Finding Harmony After Addiction | From Rock Bottom to Women's Recovery Center
What if the path to harmony requires breaking first? Brave isn't just about a rebellious princess, it's about what happens when perfectionism, expectations, and fractured relationships force you to explore a new path. 3 ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS: The Gratitude List - Write down 20 specific things you're grateful for TODAY. Not general things. Be specific. Why it works: If you weren't grateful for it, would you want God to take it away? That question makes the list get real long, real fast. Lead with Humility - Be open to being wrong. Listen to understand, not to respond. Lead with Curiosity - In your next conversation, ask 3 more questions before sharing your perspective. Try one this week and comment which you're starting with! In this episode, Ryan Brown, founder of Ideal Practice and Reprieve Women's Recovery Center, shares his journey from high-functioning alcoholic to creating a sanctuary for women in addiction recovery. Using Brave as our lens, we explore what it means to break free from perfectionism, face your authentic self, and rebuild relationships that seemed too fractured to heal. Ryan's story includes: - Breaking his back in 2007 and the Oxycontin prescription that started everything - Years of hiding alcohol addiction while running a successful business - A heart attack in Central Park at age 38 (leather-bound in an ambulance) - The DUI that forced him to confront reality - Entering rehab in 2021 after a moment of complete emptiness - How God directed him to buy a house in the mountains - The miraculous pivot to creating an all-women's recovery center Whether you're navigating addiction, rebuilding after hitting rock bottom, exploring a major life change, or trying to repair a fractured relationship, this conversation offers hard-won wisdom about humility, harmony, and hope. ABOUT RYAN BROWN: Ryan Brown is the founder of Ideal Practice, a credentialing and contracting company serving medical providers across all 50 states. In 2023, after his own journey through addiction and recovery, he co-founded Reprieve Women's Recovery Center in Mountain Green, Utahโ€”a residential treatment facility specifically designed for women seeking healing and long-term growth. Over 150 women have graduated from Reprieve's program in its first two years. Connect with Ryan: ๐Ÿ”— LinkedIn: [link] ๐Ÿ—„Ideal Practice: [link] ๐ŸกReprieve Women's Recovery Center: [link] RESOURCES MENTIONED: ๐Ÿ“š "Rising Strong" by Brenรฉ Brown ๐ŸŽฌ Brave (2012) ๐Ÿ’ฌ Continue the conversation: Have you made your gratitude list of 20? Share one thing from it below. What's a conversation where you could lead with curiosity this week? Have you experienced a "wisp moment" where something bigger guided you? ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube for thoughtful conversations about growth, resilience, and what comes next. ๐ŸŽง Listen to the full episode of Yes And Land on all podcast platforms and share it with someone who believes connection still matters. #Brave #AddictionRecovery #DisneyAnalysis #WomensRecovery #FindingHarmony #Sobriety #MentalHealthRecovery #LeadershipLessons #YesAndLand #DisneyForAdults #RecoveryStory #Gratitude
The Intern's Real Lesson: How to Mentor Without a Title | From Pharmacist to Patent Attorney to Divorce Law
You don't need authority to be a mentor. You just need experience and the willingness to share it. The Intern shows exactly howโ€”and so does the attorney who went from pharmacy to patents to divorce law. 3 ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS: Put Down Distractions and Observe - Stop scrolling. Look around. Someone near you needs guidance but won't ask. Why it works: Mentorship opportunities are everywhere, but you'll miss them if you're distracted. Look for Struggle (Not Just Failure) - Find someone working on something hard. Approach gently: "I've done this before. Want to know what worked for me?" Why it works: People are more open to "here's my experience" than "here's what you should do." Lead with "Here's My Experience..." - Never: "You're doing it wrong." Always: "When I faced this, here's what I did and what happened." Why it works: Sharing experience gives people agency. Telling them what to do takes it away. Try one this week and comment which you're starting with! In this episode, Kenton Walker, attorney who took the road less traveled (pharmacist โ†’ patent litigator at AmLaw 100 firm โ†’ family law attorney) joins me to explore what real mentorship looks like when you don't have a title, program, or formal authority. Using The Intern as our framework, we discuss how Ben Whittaker (Robert De Niro) becomes invaluable not through his tech knowledge (he has none) but through his experience, presence, and willingness to guide without taking over. Kenton's known at RCG Law Group as "the paralegal whisperer" and his approach mirrors Ben's: mistakes are expected, trust is earned through consistency, and the best mentors are guides, not commanders. We discuss: - Why Kenton left a successful patent litigation career to start over in family law - How mentorship works when you're not anyone's manager or supervisor - The power of "here's my experience" vs. "here's what you should do" - Why letting people make mistakes (and fixing them together) builds trust - How The Intern's Ben Whittaker mentors through principles, not technology - Why explaining the "why" behind what you do is mentorship anyone can practice Whether you're early in your career wondering how to add value, mid-career feeling like you should be mentoring but don't know how, or experienced but lacking a formal leadership title, this conversation shows you exactly how to start. ABOUT KENTON WALKER: Kenton Walker is an attorney at RCG Law Group with one of the most unconventional paths to family law you'll hear. After working as a pharmacist at Johns Hopkins Hospital System and in the pharmaceutical industry, he went to law school and spent 22 years litigating patents for pharmaceutical companiesโ€”both in-house and at an AmLaw 100 firm. When he was ready for a new chapter, he chose family law and discovered his passion for mentoring others without needing a formal leadership role. Known affectionately as "the paralegal whisperer," Kenton's approach to mentorship centers on sharing experience, building trust through mistakes, and guiding without commanding. ๐Ÿ’ฌ Continue the conversation: Who in your life could use a "here's my experience" conversation this week? What's one mentorship opportunity you're missing because you're distracted? Have you ever been mentored by someone without a title? How did they do it? ๐Ÿ‘‰ Subscribe to Yes And Land with Ryan Gregerson on YouTube for thoughtful conversations about growth, resilience, and what comes next. ๐ŸŽง Listen to the full episode of Yes And Land on all podcast platforms and share it with someone who believes connection still matters. #TheIntern #RobertDeNiro #Mentorship #LeadershipWithoutTitle #FamilyLaw #CareerChange #MentorshipMatters #YesAndLand #ExperienceOverExpertise #ParalegalWhisperer
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