Moment 109 - How to Overcome & Push Through Your Hardest Times: John Eckbert
When was your hardest time?
My hardest time?
In your five guys' journey.
Yeah.
Well, I went through a very painful divorce and went through something called Leave to
Remove, which I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy.
It's essentially the right to have your children taken out of the country.
So I had two young children who, the court system, approved Leave to Remove, which allowed
my ex to take my kids back to America, which was incredibly painful.
And my whole view of myself, my definition of who I was, changed.
I thought of myself as a great partner, good husband, good father, devoted father.
I was in politics back in America, was involved in my community and a church leader and businessman.
And I thought, you know, all these things are who I am.
And essentially, all of that was, you know, quite a large bonfire of vanities.
And that was a real dark, dark moment for me.
And there were days when five guys was the one thing in my life that was stable and that
I could hold on to.
And it really pulled me through a very difficult, dark time, personally.
How long did that process last?
That's part of the UK challenge.
It took years, a better part of two years were in that process.
And then, you know, trying to rebuild those relationships.
And thankfully, I'm in an amazing place with my kids now and have accepted that we have
had a more adult relationship prematurely.
But now that they're both at university, it feels more normal now.
And those are hard fought, hard won, recast relationships, which, you know, were really
important, are important to me.
It was, I was the thought that they were at risk was caused just enormous anxiety and
living with that kind of anxiety on the personal side, having a place where, you know, things
were more predictable, was in being able to work in that way and provide for them was,
you know, a real, yeah, really helped me through.
Yeah.
When your kids are essentially taken away to another country and you've got this huge
responsibility of running this big business, how does that impact your ability to show
up every day professionally?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it was really complex for me because I had a non-compete back in the US,
the business that I had sold.
So I couldn't just relocate back to America and do my job.
So it felt like a huge cash 22 because I had these court-ordered financial obligations.
And the only way that I could really fulfill them was to keep doing my job here.
So what did financial obligations is in the separation costs and stuff that you have to
patre-pot?
Yeah, exactly.
So it felt like a cash 22.
They were allowed to leave, but I had to provide for them.
So I had to stay.
And so it felt like a kind of a indentured servant for a bit.
But being able to focus on the important job that I had actually was enormously relieving
because I knew that for 10 hours a day, 12 hours a day, whatever it ended up being, that
I could actually do something productive that I knew I was good at that made a difference
for them and that the anxiety of being separated, I could set aside for those hours in a day.
And that was really helpful.
It could have just kind of overwhelmed me, but work was able to.
It was a place where I could escape from that.
Did you see your motivation fluctuate?
Often when we have these pretty substantial life events, there's an initial period where
getting out of bed in the morning is a little bit more difficult.
It's almost like someone is messed with your why, your reason to get out of bed and your
sense of purpose.
So you always have to, I've learned from my own experiences that you have to spend a
little bit of time, you're almost faking it to get the drive back, if that makes sense.
Yeah, of course.
No, well, I told you I got up at 5am when I was a kid and practiced violin for an hour
before school.
And I was never a great musician, but what I did find was that if you did something every
day, you actually could get better at it, maybe even more than competent.
And I think it was something like that that just in me said, get out of bed, do the next
thing, and things will change.
I called a friend of mine who'd been through a similar situation.
And he said, just keep showing up.
Stating my son every day, calling every day, being as present as I possibly could.
And obviously it's imperfect and it's deeply upsetting, I'm sure to them, as well as to
me.
But doing it as much as you possibly can to be available and in touch.
And then you just have to trust.
Trust something that it'll be okay.
Trust something, as I just trust life that it will.
No, I mean, you know, now we're getting very personal, but I believe in a higher power.
I don't pretend to understand it, but I think there's something much more powerful than
I am in the world.
And what I will say is that it helped me to see the world in two camps.
One are things that I can control and some things that I absolutely can't control.
And if you spend, if you allocate your mental health and your time on the things that you
can't control, you can drive yourself to distraction and eventually madness.
So being able to focus on the things that you can control and realizing that that's
your job.
You know, your job as a human is to do the things that you can't control.
And if you, you know, it's just arrogance and ignorance to focus on the things that you
can't control.
And so identifying those two camps and being at peace with that, accepting that you can't
some things you can't control, that's really hard, but it's hugely important.
Yeah, I was at this festival this weekend and there was a, I did one on one meetings
with lots of people that were in the audience for three hours.
And I found myself being asked over and over again how to deal with exactly that, which
is when chaos arrives in our lives, what to do on that day.
And people had me recording these voice notes for them for that day.
So when that day comes, they just wanted to be able to play it.
And what you said there is exactly what I said, which is there are a small list of things
you can control.
And on that tough day, make a promise to me that you'll spend 100% of your mental energy
focusing only on those things.
Because you can't, because obviously yesterday, focusing too much on that tends to lead to
depression is I think the loose hour, the philosopher says, focusing too much on tomorrow.
And the things that are yet to be in your control will also cause a lot of anxiety.
So really focusing on today, I think is just phenomenal advice in terms of A, it's the
thing that's most conducive with a successful outcome.
But B, it's also the thing that's most conducive with having a healthy mental state in total
chaos.
No, I think that's absolutely right.
I mean, I think the other thing is that realizing that our, I believe our purpose in
life is human connection.
I think that's why we're here.
I think we're made to connect.
And sometimes it's, we're colliding, more than connecting, but figuring out how to connect
with other human beings.
And I will say, that was the making of me as being able to, when someone comes into my
office and says, I've lost my partner, they passed away way before their time.
So being able to connect with that person in that moment of loss is hugely valuable as
a company, but hugely meaningful to me as a human being.
And I wouldn't have been able to do that if I hadn't been through the loss that I had
experienced.
So it's one of those things where you end up being grateful for the most upsetting things
that happen in your life, because I think they're the making of you in many ways.
Because of what you said at the start, this conversation about that importance of feeling
like you belonged.
And that's so, it's so evident that that is much of the reason you've also been successful
is you're, you mean, even from this short conversation we've had, you strike me as a very empathetic
person who's able to connect with others.
That moment must have been presumably even more difficult because your sense of belonging
in that moment was, was taken from you to some degree.
You're a family unit, right?
No, for sure.
That was a defining moment.
But now, the thing about five guys is that we have these 8,600 people who get up every
morning and have this shared vision mission to make great burgers and fries for hungry
customers.
And I get to be a part of that.
And I get to be a part of this larger community that has this, and that winning in business
feels fantastic.
I mean, it's a real high.
It's a drug and it's an addiction.
And being a part of a community that's accomplishing this thing, we were the 8th fastest growing
business in 2016, I think in the UK, and the fastest growing food and beverage business.
And even with that, we never met a budget that I had made.
So we were fastest, but still behind by my mind.
Being a part of this community that shares our values and that are all working towards
this is enormously satisfying.
And yeah, feel something that has always been empty.
Some days as CEOs, we maybe were tired or we're in a bad mood or something's off.
We can sometimes not show up as our best selves.
And sometimes when that happens with me, I regret it.
So I'll go home and think, I just wish I'd handled that situation differently.
Does that happen to you a lot?
Well, you think, fuck, I wish I'd been in a better mood or I'd slept more today or something?
Yeah, Julie tells me.
Who's Julie?
Julie, my head of ops, she comes in and says, yeah, you really fucked up that meeting.
That was it.
But actually having somebody who, to me, one of the worst things that can happen are these
emperor has no clothes where the most important, powerful person in business has blind spots
that everybody knows about and somehow you work around.
And that's just hugely dangerous as a business.
And having people who can come into your office and go, John, that comment was just way out
of line or really unhelpful.
You now have people thinking like this, is that what you wanted?
So people who can confront power with truth, and to me that that kind of culture is hugely
important to a company because you can go so wrong with the emperor has no clothes and
people thinking, God, we know this, we just can't tell them to that person.
How would you cultivate that?
Because I imagine a lot of CEOs and a lot of team members that work for a CEO think,
oh, there's no work at good with my CEO and tell him that was wrong or he shouldn't have
said that.
What?
Or she shouldn't have said that.
I think publicly owning your shit is really helpful in that way.
So showing up at the next meeting and go, hey, you know what?
I said this to the last meeting, and that was just really wrong.
It was off.
And I was off my game or I didn't think it through.
And it should be the opposite of that.
And showing that you can respond to that kind of challenge, I think is important as a leader.
And then you give everybody else permission to do the same thing.
I mean, you can change your mind.
You're allowed to change your mind.
You're allowed to be wrong as a fallible human being too.
And confessing that, it's powerful.
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