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The Truth About Addiction
Dr. Samantha Harte is a speaker, best selling author, coach and sober mom of two. She is here to tell the truth about her life, which requires telling the truth about her addiction: how it presents, how it manifests, and how it shows up again and again in her recovery. This podcast is one giant deep dive into the truth about ALL TYPES OF addiction (and living sober) to dispel the myths, expose the truths, and create a community experience of worthiness, understanding and compassion.
If you are a mompreneur and are looking for a community of like-minded women who are breaking all cycles of dysfunction and thriving in business, family, body image and spiritual well-being, join the waitlist below!
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The Truth About Addiction
Are You Living a Life Worth Dying For? with Dr. Greg Kimble
Greg Kimble's story defies the ordinary arc of success. From a Capitol Records artist at 15 to a Vegas headliner at 21 making $25,000 weekly, his early trajectory seemed glamorous—until it nearly destroyed him. When his father showed up unannounced to save him from self-destruction, Greg experienced the first of many spiritual nudges that would ultimately redirect his life toward purpose and impact.
"Everyone has something inside that is needed and necessary in this world," Greg shares with electric conviction. This belief fuels his work through The Final Percent, a company named after witnessing a total solar eclipse in Wyoming. The metaphor is powerful—at 99% coverage, daylight remains equivalent to 10,000 full moons, but that final 1% creates total transformation. This philosophy now drives his approach to personal development and the 15 international masterminds he leads.
What makes this conversation particularly compelling is Greg's raw honesty about family trauma and forgiveness. Rather than perpetuating cycles of violence with his abusive brother, he chose a different path—"Conflict is inevitable. Combat is a choice." This distinction offers listeners a framework for handling their own difficult relationships without compromising their values or peace.
Most striking is Greg's challenge about imagination itself. "Both faith and fear are completely made up," he explains, suggesting we have the power to choose which stories we tell ourselves. Why invent worst-case scenarios when we could just as easily imagine positive outcomes? His practical approach to spirituality frames God not as a "genie" but as a partner who provides opportunities that require our action.
Are you living a life worth dying for? As Greg points out, no one knows when their time will end—"life hides the game clock." This sobering reality isn't meant to frighten but to galvanize. Stop waiting for perfect conditions, take massive action on your ideas, and show the world who you truly are. Your journey toward purpose begins with a single, courageous step.
To Book a FREE DISCOVERY CALL with Dr. Harte, click the link below!
https://calendly.com/drharte/free-discovery-call-w-dr-harte
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Welcome back everybody to the truth about addiction. Today's interview is with a friend who I only met this year and a mutual friend between the two of us had come to one of my events in LA Heart Conscious Creators and when I was in person with him, introduced me to this man and said you two have to know each other. His name is Greg Kimball. He came to a recent Heart Conscious Creators event and I got to speak to him. Our work in the world is quite similar and he's a magnificent guy. I'm excited for you to hear this interview and just understand the power of our minds and the way we see the world and the way we think about things. Here's his bio Dr Greg Kimball is a dynamic motivational speaker, personal development coach and entrepreneur.
Speaker 1:From his early music career, starting at 15 and including a Las Vegas residency, to overcoming homelessness in Denver and building a successful music education program, his life is a story of resilience, Inspired by Tim's story at the 10X Growth Conference, he shifted his focus to motivational speaking and founded the Final Percent. His affinity for psychology, influenced by his grandfather, Gregory Adams Kimball, a Duke University professor, has helped shape his methods. Through this, he then developed the Infinity Model. This powerful framework drives his masterminds and educational programs, all aimed at his ultimate goal to bring personal growth to everyone on Earth. Enjoy, like. Leave a review. Leave a comment a comment, ask a question. Send me a message book, a discovery call. I love you guys. Share it with a friend if it helps you, and enjoy the episode but perfection's just a game of make believe.
Speaker 1:Hey, gotta break the pattern, find a new reprieve, gotta break the pattern, find a new reprieve, breaking the and we're gonna welcome a fast new friend who I have so much I feel in common with, even though we barely scratched the surface in getting to know each other Greg Kimball. Come on up here, greg, yeah, yeah, hey Hi. How you doing he? Just your hip flexors are probably really tight.
Speaker 1:I don't know, he just he just throws so much traffic to get here. Who was in a lot of traffic to get here tonight? Yeah, bouquet, I'm sorry.
Speaker 3:Yeah, lots of traffic.
Speaker 1:I should be able to see you free Lots of traffic in LA Lots of traffic. So, greg, can you please just introduce yourself to the crowd tell us who you are.
Speaker 3:My name's Greg and I um whittle miniature santas for a living. Yeah, blocks of wood. I'll take families and I'll just whittle it down and make it look just like you.
Speaker 1:You worked on that, didn't you?
Speaker 3:No.
Speaker 1:Does that all fly? Okay, you come up with jokes when you're in a lot of traffic, you guys, that's not what he does.
Speaker 3:What can I say? That will be the most intriguing thing. Whittle miniature Santas.
Speaker 1:I like that. I've never heard it. I probably won't ever hear it again.
Speaker 3:Probably not. My other favorite one to tell people if I'm trying to, like you know, like avoid a question is I'll tell people that I named the storms. So like I'm like be a fun job. Like you know, like you know, katrina, I'm not proud of it, but yeah, I named that storm.
Speaker 1:Wait, does that mean you're trying to avoid a question?
Speaker 3:Not with you. No, no, I know you would. You wouldn't let me off the hook. Um, music was my first passion, so, um, I was signed to capital when I was 15 for uh, r&b singing. So, um, I thought that's what I was gonna do for the rest of my life and ended up I had my own show in Vegas for a while, which, just so you know, don't give a 21 year old their own show.
Speaker 1:Yeah, we ran through that in my talk. I would have been dead for sure.
Speaker 3:There's literal, there's decisions that you make when you're 21 and you're making, you know, 25 grand a week and you have no expenses and uh, nothing can go wrong, um, or everything. Uh, my dad, my dad thank god I had had my dad he came to me after I was there for seven months and I had kind of lost myself and he told me, uh, he said, greg, right now you're like the hot new thing, you have your own show. Um, you're gonna end up a lounge act and someone's gonna take your spot and you're gonna lose yourself in this place. And uh, I said what anybody in my position would say to their dad. I said, you know, fuck off, absolutely I like money and I like having everyone look at this. But he said, okay, well, just so you know, I'm gonna rent a room at this hotel and I'm gonna stay here and make sure you don't kill yourself.
Speaker 3:And uh, for about two weeks my dad just was there, didn't say anything. He would just, if I'm eating somewhere, he's crossed the way. Hi, dad, like it's just so weird. Um, and then, uh, I always I talk about how I'm very when god gives me nudges, I'm very obedient. And uh, I just remember this strong push where he said you got to go home, like I gave, like your dad's here for a reason, he's here to protect you.
Speaker 3:And uh, I remember walking, like literally standing up, walking across, and I just looked at my dad, I sat down at the table and I just started crying and I just said I'm ready to home, dad, and uh, that probably saved my life. Um, after that I went to uh school for the recording arts. So I went to the conservatory recording arts and sciences and and I was so mad so I don't have a normal brain on certain things I was so mad at my education at my university that when I left my college I decided that I was going to go build a college to give me the education I wish I would have gotten. So a lot of people don't get mad at their school and say I'm gonna go build it, build a better one maybe he has a resentment towards the university.
Speaker 3:We should get into that well, I, I, I ended up, I ended up building a school and selling it for eight figures. So, um, I, I was in education for a long time and uh, and then, through that a lot of people, I realized I was helping the, the kids with, whether it was production, sound production, audio production, legal, all all the things that go into the production side of things. But instead of teaching them the technical things, I was always trying to help them not make the same decisions I may. So I was essentially life coaching them and I'm like motivating the heck out of them. And uh, and they kept telling me, like you should be a motivational speaker, and I was like, well, that's a stupid job, so who would want that? And so now, and so now it you fast forward.
Speaker 3:Um, I've sold my, my, my colleges and that's literally what I do for a living and I, I love it. Like I literally I tell people this and they think I'm kidding. But when you really get to know me, I have this like childlike excitement about life. I legitimately have to force myself to go to sleep because I'm so excited to wake up the next day because every day is like Christmas morning. So excited to wake up the next day, because every day is like this was morning, because I, I get to live fully in my purpose. And you know, now we have 15 masterminds internationally. Um, we've got over 6 000 people in them and, uh, we, we just travel the world and change lives.
Speaker 3:It's it's like I have to pinch myself all the time. I can't believe this is my job. One of the things I love that in my top level mastermind, once a year I have everyone come to my house, so we'll have about a hundred people in my basement. And when I finally get on stage cause I've like built a whole thing in my basement and everyone's like excited to be there and I'll I'll hit the stage and I get to say this line every time I look at them, I'm like, guys, I'm working from home today and that's just such a cool thing to be able to say Like I'm working from home and I've got a hundred of my best friends sitting in the audience and it's just such a surreal moment. I pinch myself constantly to try to understand how in the world God blessed me so much and the only thing I could do is remain obedient.
Speaker 1:So, sort of unsurprisingly, god has come up All night and we're talking about forgiveness, and we're talking about resentment, and we're talking about willingness to change, willingness to surrender, right. So this is sort of a two-part question. The first part is have you always been connected to God? And then the second part is tell me about a time where you were confronted with a resentment so strong that you were either going to lean in and become willing to forgive the offender, or you were going to stand in your self-righteous anger.
Speaker 3:I've got a lot of nice stories.
Speaker 1:And in that scenario, where was god?
Speaker 3:okay, what was the first question?
Speaker 1:god, so is that a relationship you've always had?
Speaker 3:uh, okay, so I wish my mom was here. My mom is like literally, like there's like people who have your back, and then there's whatever my mom is for me Because, like, she is like the mama bear of all mama bears, and so she has two stories about this. So I have a company called the Final Percent. That's what my company is founded on, and I'll give you a quick synopsis of that. It stems from August 17,. Sorry, uh, 2000. Sorry, uh, august 8th 2017.
Speaker 3:And uh, in casper, wyoming, there's the full totality and what I realized and you know I'll go really fast through this, because my mom's version is way cooler um, when you're watching the totality happen, the moon is coming in front of the sun and the final percent is the temperature dropping by 15 degrees. It looks like the sun set 360 degrees around you. It's darkness, the animals go completely silent and you're in the midst of magic and if you're present enough, you'll start understanding. You're truly in the midst of magic. But the thing is is you have to move. It's about a two mile radius. That's moving across the United States, or, in this case, the United States. I went to Denver and I said hey, did you experience the final percent and a lot of people were saying oh yeah, it was amazing.
Speaker 3:And I said oh, you went to Casper to see it. He said no, we had 99% coverage and that was good enough. And I realized that at 99%, with 1% of the sun showing, it's still the equivalent of 10,000 full moons. So the final percent is the difference between night and day. And I rewind to my mom's version because she says the final percent showed up a lot sooner for you than you realize, greg and I okay, do tell. And she said I had a miscarriage, um, about 10 months before you were born, and they had to go in and surgically remove the kid because it's very late and there was so much scar tissue of so much damage done that my mom was not able to have kids. And they said that and she goes no, I have to have kids. And she's like Jesus would not do this to me. And they're like well, you're not going to have kids. She's like no, I have to. Like what are the? Is there any answer? Like, no, like the stuff's not even connected, it's you're not going to have kids. And she's's like still, like a five for like. She's like try to do the, the, the dumb and dumber thing. So you're telling me there's a chance kind of thing, she's looking for anything. And the doctor finally goes there's like a one percent chance, oh so good. And so she said she looks at me now and she goes it's so fitting that you have this company. Because she says, greg, you are the final percent.
Speaker 3:And there was one time we were at a Presbyterian church just because it's the most beautiful church in Laramie, wyoming, and there was a time where we're hanging out because I just wanted to go into this church and the sun comes down and hits me and I kind of go like this and I go. Mom, did you feel that she's like? No, but I saw it and it's like through the stained glass, like out of a movie. And so my mom always talked to me about my relationship with Jesus, my relationship with God, and so I've always had conversations with him and I used to think, you know, in talking with whether or not God is there, you know, and how is God there?
Speaker 3:I used to think that he was punishing me. I was one of those people who was like the bad, the bad shit in my life, for sure, god's like if this asshole doesn't get it together, I'm just going to keep kicking you. And so I went and talked to my pastor about it. I was just like do you kid? When is God going to stop punishing me, bro? This, this, this is getting kind of annoying.
Speaker 3:I'm trying to be good, I'm still a human being and this is probably the most important thing that any pastor has ever said to me. He said, greg, I want you to tell me, I want you to think about the greatest love that you've ever known. I said that's probably my mom's love. My mom loves me unconditionally. I had given her so many reasons not to love me. I had given her so many reasons not to love me and she still does, for whatever reason. She forgives me, for whatever reason, she guides me, for whatever reason, and he goes okay, I need you to understand that the maximum that your mom loves you and the maximum that you understand your mom's love is the least amount that God can love you. He goes it's not coming from a place of punishment, it's coming from a place of love and he's trying to guide you and he's trying to show you. He's trying to give you opportunity.
Speaker 3:And that's when I just decided I'm going to be obedient and so if I get the nudge, I'm going to show up and from a resentment standpoint, it's probably my brother. I don't talk to my brother. I love my brother but I don't like my brother. I don't want a relationship with my brother, and the reason is he's 15 years older than I am and he abused me all my life. He abused his son, who I actually essentially adopted, so much so that like and they went through a lot of things like so my nephew, when he was 11, he was in the aurora theater shooting he's. He's seen a, a three-year-old with her head blown off. My brother was in that and his other son was in that.
Speaker 3:And when my brother got so mad because the family wouldn't help him and this, that and the other, he just had all these perceived things. He called my mom up one night and I'm sitting in the room and he's screaming at my mom saying I just wish you would die in a fiery crash, and so I can't unknow that he said that. So in my head I'm you know, you, you're 15 years older than me, but we have taken decidedly different tactics on the way we've treated our bodies and different things. So in my head I'm like I need to go beat this dude's ass, but in my heart I realized I need to forgive him and I need to choose the fact that my job right now is to be an example for the family of what forgiveness looks like, of what love looks like, of what righteousness looks like, instead of the warning of the perpetuated cycle of violence, and let's just go kick someone's ass. You don't have to kick someone's ass, you can walk away. And so you know, to soften the language a little bit, I always say you know, if you're in the midst of about to fight, the best thing that you can do is use your Lamberfeeties and run away. Or I'm from Wyoming, so maybe it's more Chevrolegs. If you're bougie, maybe it's Escalegs, whatever you want to do.
Speaker 3:But moral of the story is, conflict is inevitable. Combat is a choice and we are so quick to combat and we don't have to be. Conflict is fine. You should have conflict, like you should iron sharpens iron. You should move forward, but we don't need to get into this aggressive posture all the time, and so many people do that and, like I often talk about you know, psychologically I've devised a plan where, at any given time, any relationship that you're about to get into, whether it's business, friendship or romantic.
Speaker 3:There's essentially 18 paths that you could take. So I want you to imagine those 18 paths that you have available to you, and then you have chips and you can place bets on what's going to happen with this relationship. Now, if you get energy reciprocated, then place more bets on that area that's getting reciprocated. Okay, this isn't working, I'm going to put it over here. But when it's time to take your chips off the table, you got to take your chips off the table. Working, I'm going to put it over here. But when it's time to take your chips off the table, you got to take your chips off the table. And then, if you use that methodology, you go okay, cool, there's no reason for me to put energy behind this in a friendship or in a romantic relationship or in a business, because I'm the only person doing the work. Everything has to be co-creation and going back to God.
Speaker 3:Everything is, at least in Christianity, is predicated upon the idea of free will. He wants us to choose him, to seek him, and I love the story of the gardener. There's this guy who has this beautiful garden, and a lot of people have heard this story, but I think it's very, very important for people to hear Because they think that. You know, I think people need to stop thinking of Jesus as a genie. He's not a genie. You don't pray in the oh my God, it happened.
Speaker 3:Your free will comes with action and it's time for you to do the work. One of the things that happens is there's this story about this guy who has this beautiful garden, you know, like the archway and the hedges and the flowers and everything. The pastor walking by, this guy building this garden all the time, all the time doing all this stuff, and finally the pastor gets so mad because he goes. Oh my God, you're so prideful. I knocks on the door and he goes. All of this stuff, just so. You know you wouldn't have it if it wasn't for the Lord. He goes. I agree with you. This is true. He goes. All of this is just blah, blah, blah and he just like goes off on this guy and he goes. I agree with you. However, you should have seen what this looked like when God had it all by himself. We needed to work together.
Speaker 3:So I really believe that God puts opportunities in front of you, and whether you take action or not is what's going to happen in your life. So your answered prayer is based on the action that you take with the opportunity he puts in front of you. The problem is is you get the opportunity and then you try to talk yourself out of greatness and you go like, for instance, imagine like if I'm trying to start my speaking career and you know, I recently spoke to like an arena of people, like it's crazy to think about, like I've been in arenas now, like I'm getting ready to go to another arena, like you know, five thousand, ten thousand people, like this is really cool. But there's people out there where God will put the opportunity in front of them. They're like I'm not ready, you're not supposed to be ready. And one of my favorite things to help people understand the idea of faith if a bird comes down and lands on a branch, does it trust the branch or does it trust its wings? It trusts its wings, but everyone's looking for the sternest branch. No, you need to fly, you need to trust your wings, you need to take action and most people like I'm a creature of action. I take a tremendous amount of action.
Speaker 3:Great entrepreneurs are people who have a very, very, very short idea to action. Like this whole thing of like I got to think about it. No, you don't. You know what needs to happen. What the fuck are you waiting for? It's time to do stuff?
Speaker 3:We don't know if we see tomorrow, like life hides the game clock. So if we have a clock up here like we're playing football, there's some people in this room where the clock they think it's halftime and they're in the two minute warning. They're playing like it's the first quarter and they're in the last 10 seconds of their game. Life hides the game clock. This is not a practice life and we have to go there and we got to play full out and who you are when no one's watching. That's your actual standard. And what I realized is I had that inverted for a long time. When I was around people, I would actually lower my standard because I didn't want to scare people, but when I was by myself, I was like a maniac. And then I realized I think it's time to introduce the maniac to everybody else and if you don't like it or if I'm too intense for you, fuck you yeah, I'll stop standing around you after that and like, yeah, like.
Speaker 3:And here's the other thing, because a lot of people will be like oh my god, you're so intense, greg. No, I'm intentional, I'm very intentional with what I do. Can't confirm, can't confirm. Yes, brie knows me very well.
Speaker 3:So many people think that, like, why would you be unintentional? And that's why, like, I wear my heart on my sleeve, I tell people how I feel, I take the action, I do the work, and that's the only way to live life. But so many people are just like let me just go sit somewhere and think about my life for a while. For the most part, you know what you need to do. Why aren't you doing it? And the thing is, is faith is meant to be tested? If you only take the actions when you know what is going to happen, when you have all these safety nets, you're not actually operating in faith. You're operating as an employee, like I would say, better than I don't know. 80% of the ideas that I have have failed and and, but I'll take action on hundreds of ideas. And then over here there's someone who's like still trying to get their like one idea ready for them to kind of launch. Just launch it, because the thing is, you can't account for all the variables. Have fun, live life.
Speaker 3:And one of my favorite sayings is are you living a life worth dying for? Because that's what you're going to do, that's the outcome of this thing. No one has ever gotten out of this world alive. So if you are going to die for this life that you have right now, are you living a life worth dying for? It's time to play full out, and there's no, there's no, there's no reason to play small, Like. Play as big as you possibly can and then bigger than that, because everyone is greater than they could possibly imagine. But they have to operate in a faith that comes from the depth of their soul so that they can actually make something, and not even make something, but show the world who they are. Everyone has something inside that is needed and necessary in this world.
Speaker 1:Just give it up for Greg, because I have some things to say, but I'm going to say it to them. I love you because I have two more people to interview, but give me a hug because you guys, you're listening to somebody. Yeah, what I love about this event okay, is that you're going to get some people up here who are face down in a pit of despair, or when I ask them about something, it reactivates all the old wounds. And then you're going to get somebody like Greg, who's so far along in his spiritual development that it feels like willingness to forgive, like I'm like in communion with God. I am fucking charging towards my destiny, not that resentment doesn't pop up.
Speaker 1:No of course not, but I know how to clear it. There's a, there's a channel that allows me to release it. That is available, always right. So it's so important to have people like you up here to show the difference in what happens when you're willing to do the work. My event is to show you guys the work right. The work of. Why I couldn't hear God was because shame was on top of it. I couldn't hear a fucking thing. All I heard was you're a piece of shit. I would never have been able to receive what you're saying. Right now I hear you. Of course, I am the action taker.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah, you are.
Speaker 1:I am living to die. I am doing everything because I don't know when it's over. Yes, but I didn't know how to do that, because I was stuck under the weight of guilt, regret, shame, resentment, fear, uncertainty. There was no pathway to my intuition and to God right? So there's the Greg version, on a refined spiritual path, right In deep communion with God. And then there's the person sitting in here. Because there's someone sitting in here, I know one of them who's suffering, who has no idea how to get to the place you're at. There's a part of them that hears you, though.
Speaker 1:Yeah, they know it's their destiny, but they have no idea how to get there and we've got to do the fucking work if we want that life.
Speaker 3:I think one of the things when I realized that if you take the word imagination, there's one side of it is faith, and if imagination is a coin, one side of it's faith and the other side of it is fear. Both of them are completely fucking made up. You're making the story up Now. Humans are pre-wired to run away from pain and fear, so they want to make everything scary so that it can create action, so they can run. And one of the things I use like if I told you, like if I told you, hey, I need you to make a hundred thousand dollars this month, you'd be like you're a fucking nut job. But if I said I'm going to take Lainey, I'm going to put her in in a bird cage over a pit of lava, she's gonna drop in unless you do it legally. Now you know you're gonna do it. Why do I need to put your fucking kid in a bird cage and drop it in lava? Why can't you just be like you know what? I just want to. Let's just make that money. Like, let's just make that decision without the peril. It's because we're pre-wired to run away from pain, so we want to make everything scary. We can't just decide holy shit, this is good. We, we want to go wait a minute. No, no, no, no. Samantha is too good to be true. Let's wait, let's, let's wait until she's. She's trying to fuck us all over, because that's just that there's. That's. The only way she exists is if she's has some sort of ulterior motive or she actually just gives a shit and we can allow her to pull us into our future and we can be surrounded by good people. But we're constantly trying to vilify people like her because, imagine, we can either have faith, like oh my God, she's incredible and she cares, or we can go. I'm scared of her. She's not supposed to exist. Well, I've seen this movie, this, no like, if you're gonna make something up, what if you start making up the good stuff? And then you can get into the red car scenario.
Speaker 3:I asked people, how many red cars did you see on the way to this event? Well, I have no idea. But if I said, hey, the next samantha event that you go to, for every red car, you see, she's going to give you a hundred bucks. Notice how it's not for me. She's going to give me a hundred bucks. But now I just said, great, but. But now, all of a sudden, on the way here, you're like, oh my god, there's red cars everywhere because we have the reticular activating system, and so if you can make rewire your brain to see the good in people, the good in humanity, the good in humans, the good in events, guess what? You're gonna attract all the good stuff. But if you're like, oh my god, I'm pre-wired to see all the bad stuff, you'll literally make this shit up and then you're gonna block your blessy. What if you stop blocking your blessings? So anyway, that was my 33 cents I had to add. I love it, cheers.
Speaker 1:Make it. Love you, raider, love you Love you Waking up.
Speaker 2:I hear the desperation call. I turn my back and hit my head against the wall To meet a crucifix. To take me to my knees, whipping my mistakes, to jump over the grief. Breaking the circuit, making it worth it. Oh, sick and tired of the voice inside my head Never good enough, it's leaving me for dead. But perfection's just a game of make-believe. Hey, gotta break the pattern. Find a new reprieve. Breaking the circuit, making it worth it all.
Speaker 2:I am ready to make a change. I am bigger than my pain. There's no deep inside. I gotta live this life. I can be brave and afraid at the same time. Practice self-compassion, start to calm my mind, taking tiny steps to loving all of me. Just the process, cause it's gonna set me free. Breaking the circuit, making it worth it. I am ready to make a change. I am bigger than my pain. There's no deep inside. I got the, the life. Gotta gotta gotta break it or fake it till we make it. Gotta gotta gotta break it or fake it till we make it. Gotta gotta gotta break it. Come on One, two, three. I am ready to make a change. I am bigger than my pain. There's no deep inside, thank you. There's no, deep inside, I got this life.