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Hello and welcome to the achieve your goals podcast, the show that empowers you to wake up to your full potential and achieve your biggest goals and dreams. I am your host, Hal Elrod, and I invite you to join us each week as we share actionable strategies to take your life to the next level, as well as interview world class experts and entrepreneurs who have achieved extraordinary goals themselves. And we ask them to give you a peek behind the curtain and teach you exactly what you need to do to do the same. Ready? Here we go. Most of us donate to charity the easy way. We click a button, enter a card number, and we tell ourselves we did something good. My guest today decided that wasn't enough. Not for him, not for his kids, not for the communities. Nobody's stopping to notice anymore. Matt King. He's the CEO of GoBundance, and he's riding his bike 2,000 miles from Mexico to Canada, 150 miles a day for 13 consecutive days. And he's raising over a million dollars to give directly to strangers that he meets along the way. No nonprofit overhead, no black box. Just a guy on a bike pulling into small towns, finding the single mom with three jobs and no car, and handing her the keys. Today's conversation inspired me in ways I did not expect, and I think it's going to do the same for you. Matt and I talk about what it means to commit before you're ready. Why the body goes quiet when the why is strong enough. And the small thing any of us can do today that costs almost nothing and means everything to somebody else. Let's go. Matt. What's up, brother?
B
How are you, man?
A
Good to see you. I want to set the premise where you told me to not prepare for today's episode because I want to be curious. I want to discover along with my audience what you're doing. And I know what you're doing. You're about to ride 2,000 miles from Mexico to Canada to raise money. But I don't know all the details. Like, I don't even know who you're raising money for. So I'm excited to dive in, but here's where I want to start. We've known each other for a decade almost going on that.
B
Yeah, probably more. Probably more.
A
But here's where I want to start. Is that where most people when they want to raise money for a cause, that maybe they set up a GoFundMe, right? Or, you know, maybe they'll throw a gala if they want to go big. But you chose to ride your bike 2000 miles from Mexico to Canada, and with a goal of not raising a little bit of money, raising over $1 million. Why?
B
You know, I think, Hal, like, that's one of the gifts that I've been given in my life is being surrounded by people like yourself, people like David Osborne, people like Pat Hyben, who, when you want to do something, you challenge the status quo with what you're going to do. I mean, when you wrote a book, you challenge the status quo with how you did it. You're like, I'm just going to write the first two chapters and give them away for free. And then like, oh, my gosh, this has something. Now I'm going to keep writing. I'm going to impact millions of lives, and I'll go into a different country, and I'll go speak in other countries in foreign languages. Like, you just figured it out while flying the plane. And I think so many people spend their entire life waiting for permission, and so they never actually take off. And I'm like, what a miserable way to live life. And so last year, I went and helped support one of the guys who's become a friend of mine here in Austin. His name is Matt Johnson, and he ran across Texas to raise a hundred thousand dollars for veterans to get them back into community through CrossFit to try to combat the isolation that comes post deployment. And Gobundance and the members of Gobundance raised about 55,000 bucks for him. And I ran a morning with him, and I went out there and ran with him, and I was just. As the sun came up, I couldn't help but reflect on how, like, the ability to do something bigger than ourselves in this lifetime. And I think you've done an incredible job of that with the miracle morning. Like, you've touched more lives than you will ever truly know, because there's just not enough hours in the day for you to see all of that impact. And, like, I think that's, like, what a life well lived looks like. But even more important than that, what I've been able to watch you do and David Osborne do and Pat, like all these people do, is they do it to show their kids this is what we stand for. This is what we stand against. They recognize that their kids will learn more from their actions than they will from their words. So your kids watched you go on speeches, watch you go on podcasts, watch you work the long days, stay disciplined in the miracle morning, and therefore, they too, will have those patterns as they continue to grow up. So I was running with Matt. I was just like, dude, this guy's literally spending 19 days to run from Oklahoma to Mexico to raise a cause for something bigger than himself, for people he'll probably never meet. And I was like, man, that'd be so cool. What could I do? And my first thought was, like, I'll ride my bike across Texas. And then how? I was like, well, that dude just ran. You can't ride your bike. After he just ran, like, that's like saying, I'll drive my car, I'll fly a plane. Like, that's such a weak move. And so it just kind of hit me. I was like, what if I rode my bike from Mexico to Canada and I'm not a cyclist? The first question I asked myself was, when was the last time I rode? I was like, oh, two years ago. But the bike looks really good on the wall.
A
The.
B
And what I realized, Hal, is like, the lessons that I've learned along the journey of studying people like David, like you, like John Roman, like all these people that I've been able to be around and study up close and from afar is what really determines somebody's success, is their desire or their willingness to take action before they're ready and trust that they will find the way or make the way along the journey. And so I literally one day, on a gobundance call with a bunch of members present, I was like, hey, y', all, next year I'm riding my bike from Mexico to Canada to raise a million dollars for overlooked communities. More information coming. And I hadn't told my wife at that time. I hadn't told my assistant at that time. And they were all like, you're doing what? And I was like, yeah, this is what I'm gonna do. They're like, how are you gonna do it? I'm like, I'm not sure, but I'm gonna do it. And God, the universe, whatever you believe in, when you put that flag in the ground, I swear it, like, it all conspires to work for you. And so when I said this, all of a sudden, the crew chief lands in our lap. Another guy on the aid crew lands in our lap. My cycling coach, who's training for the Olympics, gets introduced to me and, like, just all these weird things happen. And really, the why is twofold. Hell, the first is I recognize that I have a seven year old, a four year old, and a one year old, and they're studying me at all hours of the day, and they are doing what I do, not what I say. And so I say, hey, need to sleep in. But then they watch me get up at 3am and they're like, no, we're going to be up, right? Like, I want to set an example for our kids of what we stand for, what we stand against, and that, like, we find the way or make the way to do whatever we desire. The other thing, though, Hal, is I'm sick and tired of all of these big organizations raising all of this money for these causes, and nobody knows where the money goes. It's like a black box. And I just feel like what made America so incredible was these small communities, these small mom and pop businesses, and people going into the local hardware store and people coming into the local mechanic, and the relationships and the friendships and the camaraderie, the reciprocity that occurred. Now it's just like, order shit on Amazon and wait for it to land at my door. And what happened was I was watching the movie Cars and it dawned on me that in the movie cars, Lightning McQueen gets stranded in this, like, abandoned town. And essentially, this town used to be vibrant, but they built a highway. And so everybody drove past the town. The businesses in that community died. The people in that community started to struggle. And I'm like, we have those communities here. So what if I get on my bike and I ride through those communities, find the people in those communities that need help, and whatever it is, we show up with that. And I was like, well, what do I need to do that? I'm like, well, if we had a million bucks, I could buy a car, I could buy furniture, I could pay off debt, I could pay the mortgages. I. I could give cash, I could buy a coffee, I could give a hug, I could give a handshake. I'm like, yeah, that sounds like a good number. And so I put a flag in the ground. I said, I'm going to do this. I'm going to raise a million bucks. I'm going to document the whole journey. I'm going to bring a bunch of people along on the way.
A
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B
Yeah.
A
How are you going to find, like, logistically? The ride starts May 27th.
B
27th. Yep, May 27th.
A
And you're gonna ride for roughly 13 days.
B
The plan is 13 days. So the plan is 150 miles a day for 13 days, which at my current mile per hour average is about 11 hours a day on the bike pedaling.
A
That's insane. 150 miles a day. And then, yeah, here's the thing. If you were to be like, I'm gonna ride 150 miles today, I. I think me and anyone listening is like, oh, my gosh, that's crazy. And you're going to be so sore. The Next day you probably won't be able to walk. And then you're like, no, no, no, no, no. Then I'm going to do 150 miles the next day and be like, oh man, you're going to be in a wheelchair. I feel like, no, no, no, no, no. Then I'm gonna do it like, wait, how is the human bot? Like, what have you done endurance athlete wise before?
B
I've ran a couple marathons. I've done the 29 029, where you hike the elevation of Mount Everest within 36 hours. Earlier this year, I ran 100 mile race that I refused to train for. So the most I ran leading up to it was three miles. I ended up dropping out at mile 40 because I tweaked my Achilles, have ruptured my other Achilles twice. And then I started to get paranoid that I would jeopardize the ride. And we'd already raised like 250 grand, so I kind of panicked. Fair. But what I've really learned, Hal, is like, when the why is strong enough, the body becomes silent. And what I mean by that is like, if you're running for a cause bigger than yourself, when the pain kicks in, you persevere. Because it's not about you, it's about whatever that cause was. And when we did our first training camp three weeks ago, we ended day one, we rode 103 miles, and we ended day one at the Burke center for Youth, which is right here out by us in Driftwood. And the Burke center of Youth houses young boys ages 11 to 17 who have all been victims of sexual abuse, neglect and extreme trauma. Like, these are people who have been dealt a hand that nobody should ever be dealt at that age and nobody should ever be dealt that period. But like at 11, at 14, and as we were getting ready to leave, a 14 year old boy came up to me and he said, can I tell you my story? Now, we were warned before we went there. Like, we don't know how these kids are going to respond. They haven't had positive male figures for the most part in their life. Like, just be careful. And I was like, yeah, sure. Like, I'd love to hear it. He's like, my mom's in prison, I never met my father and my sister's been adopted and I won't be able to see her or talk to her again until we're both 18, assuming I can connect with her, because that's how the system works. And he's like, I'm here to try to fix my anger Issues. I've been kicked out of a foster home. I've been kicked out of other homes. I can't get my anger under control. And he's like. I'm like, okay, well, what's the goal? He's like, I want to get back in the foster home where my good friend is like, I really miss them. And I was like, dude, that's incredible. Come to find out he has no family helping him on this journey again. He's 14, and he looks me in the eyes and says, will you come back? And in that moment, how. I was like, what do I say here? Like, how am I supposed to respond? So I just asked him a question. I was like, look, man, do you want me to come back? He's like, yes, please. I really enjoyed this. The next day, Hal, when we did 105 miles, the hills were irrelevant. The headwind was irrelevant. The pain in my legs was irrelevant because I'm like, I chose this hard intentionally to impact people who didn't choose the hard that they're having to deal with and shouldn't have to deal with. And I want to show up to provide them the aid. And so from a physical perspective, it's going to be hard. It's going to be taxing. It's definitely going to drain me. But I just keep going back to, like, what's the why? And this why is so strong. It's like, I don't care what hand I'm dealt on this journey. I'm going to find the way to get it done. Because it's for people who deserve to be seen, loved, and heard in this world, who have been dealt a hand that I don't think anybody should have to be dealt.
A
What inspired you to think this way? Because I think that you're right. Now, I can just speak for me personally, like, the way you're talking is I'm like, yes, yes, yes. And there's a part of me that's like, man, I haven't thought this way in a while, or I don't think this way often enough, or I'm not doing, like, I'm not doing what Matt is. I might help people with the miracle morning, but there's a big part of me for a long time that's like, I don't do as much, like, charity work as I used to or. And so I'm wondering, like, what inspired this in you? Now, you mentioned the run, like, right? You saw Matt Johnson run across Texas. Was there anything before that? Like, what was your past in terms of helping Those less fortunate or seeing those less fortunate.
B
I just feel like, Hal, I always talk about leaving the world a better place than I found it and leading gobundance. I often talk to our members of, like, how do we create impact for the people we come in contact with? Like, let's talk about that ripple effect. If Hal Elrod changes as a human, that's going to impact his wife, that's going to impact his kids, they're going to impact others, they're going to impact community. Like, there's a ripple effect that happens. And one day I just felt like a false prophet. I was standing on stage in front of 300 guys talking about making the world a better place, and I looked in the mirror. I was like, why? What the hell are you doing? Like, you're just sitting here preaching about it. Why don't you get out there and do it? And so I was like, if I'm going to ask others to show up for communities and to show up for strangers, then I'm going to be the first one to demonstrate it. I'm going to be the first one at the front lines. And I just really recognize that there's been times in my life how where I felt down, I felt counted out. I know you have, like, battling cancer doing these things. Amazing people showed up for us in those dark, gloomy moments. Now, we might not have been 14 with sexual abuse or whatever, and I'm grateful that I didn't have to deal with that, but people showed up for me and I was really fortunate to have people show up for me. These folks that we're going to meet along this journey may have had somebody show up, but they also may not have yet. And so why don't I do it? And it goes back to what I learned from David. He said whenever he was facing a big challenge, he would get overwhelmed. And then a mentor of his gave him this quote. Jim Rohn said, why not me? Somebody's going to do it. Why not me? And so I was like, well, wait, somebody is going to have an impact on these humans. Why not me? And how do I create momentum and how do I create gravity around this? I'm like, well, I do something really hard. I document the whole journey. We create content. We're going to create a wheel of doom where people can make certain donations to make me do crazy stuff on the bike, ride a bull in Stephenville, Texas, hot sauce. Like, make it engaging so that people want to come along for the good and the benefit rather than just doing it in isolation and in silence.
A
Before I forget, what is the website?
B
Yeah, just backtheride.com People can learn all about the story. They can sign up to ride with us. We want people to ride with us throughout the way. They can ride a mile, they can ride a minute, they can ride a hundred miles. They don't have to ride at all. They can donate, they can follow along on the content, they can nominate a story on the route, which is one of the things I'm really excited about. If you know somebody in need on this path, nominate them. I mean, literally last week, how I got a call. Hey, I see you're stopping in Stephenville, Texas on this date. I have a story for you. I'm like, tell me more. A family was sitting in their house, drunk driver lost control of their vehicle, drove through the house, killed the mother, killed the seven year old daughter, left the husband and a son in a low income area. Do you think you could show up for them? I'm like, do I think? I'm like, I will be there. What do they need? And like that's going to be the exciting part for me is getting these stories nominated and then providing the impact with the human that nominated. I'm like, hey, I know this person. Cool.
A
Meet me there.
B
Let's do it together. Let's do this together. And so everybody can find all of that atback the ride.com.
A
does it show the path so people. Oh, it does. Okay.
B
Yeah. Scroll all the way to the bottom. It shows the path, it shows the days where we're going to stop. It shows the exact route. Now that route may change just very slightly given construction or whatever else pops up along the way, but that is the main route and where we're going to stop every day if you struggle
A
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B
Yeah.
A
And if you go to the website backtheride.com, you can click follow along and it drops you right down to the route, the bottom. Wow. Eight. Okay, so. All right, so next question. I was going to ask this earlier. Logistics, like my brain is trying to figure out you're riding a bike for 11 to 12 hours a day. Other than people nominating folks, how are you going to find out who in each town along the way needs help so that you can and what they need and deploy the funds? Like, how are those logistics? Is that all being planned out ahead of time?
B
Yeah. So yes and no. And I'll start with this. When I set out to raise a million dollars, give it all away along the route, I never spent the time with a calculator. Our friends were over one night and my friend looked at me and he's like, do you know you have to give away $75,000 a day if you raised the million bucks? I was like, no, but that's a lot of money. Like, that's a good point. Didn't think about that. And I hope how we're blessed and fortunate enough that we have to give away 150,000 a day or 200. Like that would be an incredible problem. But really we're thinking about giving in three ways. The first way is people nominate a story. So somebody has nominated some individuals already. And these are pre planned, pre programmed. We're already working on some of the logistics to do the giving in certain locations. The second way is like with other organizations. So One of our GoBundance members is on the board of Big Brothers Big Sisters. We're working with a local Big Brothers Big Sisters organization to find the family in that market that we can provide benefit in tandem together with the hope. I should say expectation, but I'll never say that, but with the hope that Big Brothers Big Sisters matches us dollar for dollar for whatever we're doing or whatever organization matches us to make a bigger impact and a bigger movement. But I don't want to give it directly to them because again, I'm a little paranoid about that stuff. The last way Hal and the thing I'm most excited about, we have about 21 GoBundance members that have signed up to ride with me at various points in the route, most of which don't want to ride a whole day. So they'll ride for an hour, two hours, 30 minutes, whatever that looks like. And then they as a cohort will be deployed to where we're going to end the day. They'll go to the small town, they'll go to the coffee shops, they'll go to the diners, they'll go to the mechanics, they'll go to the laundromats, they'll go to those places and they'll find the story. They'll report back to us saying like, hey, found a single mom, three jobs, no car, she's taking the bus. Can we get her a car? Yep. Here's who we need to call. They can get us a car. Great. By the time we get there on the bike, we'll have the car, we'll have the story, and then we will go find the human and be like, here's the keys to your car. And we will be able to like really see them and honor them. So we're using like the GoFundance members that come along on the way and anybody else that joins us as like secret agents that get deployed into these communities to go find the people. And then when we get to the communities, I want to do a lot of that too. So I plan to like walk into the Walmart 9 o' clock at night and just randomly ask people, what's up, what's up? And see a lady with three kids and a newborn baby at 9 o' clock go like, what are you doing in Walmart? Like, this is the only time I can come and be like, what do you need? Okay, cool, here's $10,000. Here's all the furniture you need. We're gonna pay off your rent, like, whatever that looks like. I just want to meet people and hear their stories.
A
Oh, man, this is so cool. Matt, you were right that the less prepared I was, the more I didn't know that. I'm just like speechless right now. Okay, so I'd imagine this has to be a yes, but do you have a professional filmmaker that is going to be a long document in the whole thing?
B
Yeah, we have a full content team. So we're gonna have short form content on Instagram and stuff that drops every single day. And then I was like, let's totally change the game. I'm like, I want a badass vlog that drops every day at noon of the day prior. So we, like, literally have a full content team that's gonna be able to tell the full story of day one, that will drop on day two of day two, that'll drop on day three. And so people can really engage with what's going on, be inspired by what's going on, and really follow along. And not just on the biking, not just on the giving, on the whole, like, how do you problem solve? What's the power of your network? What's the power of proximity? How do you deal with weather? How do you alter the course? Like, just tell the whole story of what we're up to and we'll be able to do that every single day.
A
Love that, dude. I'm so inspired, man. I'm going to be just digging into this so much. Backtheride.com, everybody. So I want to ask a question about you. There's a concept in personal development about identity, right? That we do hard for things, not for the physical outcomes, but because of who we become in the process. And I think about when I ran, I ran an ultra marathon because I hated running, right? It wasn't like, okay, I did a 5k, then I did a half marathon, then I did a marathon. Now I'm in a challenge. It was like, similar to you. Like, I'm like, I haven't run since high school PE Class when they made you run a mandatory mile every year. And. And I hated it. And my identity is I am not a runner. So similar to you, I did it to raise money for Front Row foundation, right? For a charity that my friend John Van. Our friend John Van had founded. And similar to you, this is funny. I'm seeing all these similarities as you're telling the story. Matt Johnson ran across Texas. So you're like, I can't ride a bike across Texas. Well, originally I was going to do a marathon, but I'm like, dude, my two friends John Bergoff and John Roman, both ran double ultramarathons. I'm like, if I run a marathon that's weak, it's like the. The competitor in us, the ego, you know, like the whatever. I'm like, I gotta run an ultra. That's what they did. And similar to you having zero idea of what I was saying. And there's a big lesson for everybody that you commit. And then the how. H O W. The how reveals itself. You announced on a call I'm going to ride a bike from Mexico to Canada. And they're like, well, how? I don't know. I just am committing to it and I'm going to figure it out. And that's what I did. All like, I committed online. Hey, guys, I'm going to run an. I actually called John Broman first. Like, buddy, I'm giving you my word. I'm running an ultra marathon. He's like, dude, have you ever run? And I'm like, nope, I'm gonna figure it out. And then you do, right? Like, you back, you commit to the outcome, and then you figure it out. So anyway, here's the question. I just want to share some of what I like. I was so related to you on points. But the question is going back to this personal development philosophy of who you become by committing to this. Like, who is the version of Matt King that is going to be crossing the finish line with his bike in Canada? Like, have you visualized that? Have you thought about that?
B
I've thought about what it could look like, and for a while, I was really obsessing on what it would feel like. And then I realized that no different than this interview, sometimes when we go in with, like, these predetermined plans or these preconceived notions, all we actually do is we set a ceiling on our life of what's capable. Because we're like, oh, yeah, I knew it would feel like this. Or, oh, yeah, I knew it would look like this. And in reality, if we didn't define it, maybe it could have been more or different or better or, like, whatever else could show up, right? And so I've spent a lot of time letting go of those thoughts. Now I'm like, it doesn't matter, because I know the hero's journey, the journey of man. Like, anything, it's about the journey, and it's about who you become on that journey. And I'm like, I'm just going to obsess with every single mile, and then whatever comes, I'm not going to have judgment, resentment. I'm just going to have pure curiosity to, like, wow, how special is that? How great is that? And I think you've done a good job of that as well. Like, you didn't write a book to create a movement that would go global. You wrote a book to change your life, and it in turn changed millions and millions and millions of lives. And I think if you would have said, like, hey, I want to write this book to be a New York Times bestseller, it maybe would have been a New York Times bestseller and then fizzled out. But instead you're like, I want to write a book to change my life. You changed your life, and now you've changed way more than you probably ever dreamed was possible. And that's really how I'm thinking about it.
A
All right, let me ask you a question. How many apps are you using for your personal development? Maybe a meditation app like Calmer Headspace, an affirmation app like I Am, or think Up a book summary app like Blinkist, a journaling app like 5 Minute Journal, a visualization app like Envision, an exercise app like 7 Minute Workout, and maybe even a habit tracking app to keep it all together. That is a lot to manage and a lot to pay for. What if you could replace all of them with just one app? Yes. It is called the Miracle Morning app, and it is essentially seven apps in one. Hundreds of guided meditations and breathwork tracks, a full library of affirmations, plus tools to create your own visualization prompts for 10 key areas of your life. Guided workouts from 2 to 10 minutes long, book and audiobook summaries of top personal and professional development books, and a journaling tool with guided prompts. The wheel of life or a blank page to write freely. It simplifies your morning, saves you money, and helps you start every day with clarity, purpose, and energy. And it's one of the only apps in this space with a 4.9 out of 5 star rating. Try it free for 7 days. Just search Miracle Morning in your app store or go to miracle morningapp.com to get started. All right, back to the show. I love it. Yeah. I think about how, like, I go to events when I go to, like, a personal growth or a business event. And I've heard people say, like, what's your outcome? I'm like, I have zero. Like, how can I? I don't know. Like, my outcome is to be open and curious along the way and then be surprised by whatever the outcome is that emerges. And so I think you're taking that same mindset. So I want to close this out with whoever's listening to this right now or watching this on YouTube and they're thinking, man, Matt is inspiring. I want to help those in need. I'm not going to ride a bike from Mexico to Canada. I don't know that I could raise a million dollars. Right? Like, I want to give somebody, like, action. And even for me, where does somebody start when they had that realization you had, which you were on stage. You're Like I'm talking about giving back, but I'm not even doing it. So yeah, where's the baby step? Way before you think about, right. And maybe after the baby step and they, they help somebody in need, maybe it's their neighbor, maybe it's somebody in their family, maybe it's a local charity. Right, but where's a baby step that would move in this direction?
B
Now I think really the three core basic needs of a human being are to be seen, loved and heard. And so when you think about actually making an impact or actually doing good, I would start there. And a lot of our life is spent sleepwalking and getting out of Starbucks as fast as we can because we gotta race to the next thing and then the next thing and the next thing. Like today could you leave the house 10 minutes earlier and could you just pick up a random conversation with a sweet old man or woman sitting in Starbucks alone and reading a book and just say like, hey, do you mind if I sit down? How are you? Yeah, tell me your story. Like sometimes that's all it takes. It could be as simple as saying in the Starbucks coffee line, and this is not a promotion for Starbucks, but you could be in the Starbucks drive thru line and you could just be like, hey, here's $40, pay for the coffee behind me and whatever is left over you guys keep as a tip, does that person then pay it forward? It doesn't matter, you can leave there feeling good. And I really saw the power of this. We take our kids on Christmas Eve with $2,000 $100 bills, we go to Walmart in a lower income area and I let my kids just hand out the money to whoever they see that they feel like needs it. And the first year we did this, my in laws were with us and my mother in law was like very scared. Like she's like, I don't want to be by you guys, I'm like that's fine, you don't have to be. But like we'll be okay. And we walked out of that Walmart, Hal and I asked my daughter, I said, how does your heart feel? And she said my heart feels so happy. And I was like okay. So if a 4 year old can tell me that giving to strangers who one cried, one gave her a hug, one had just had a newborn and cried like $100 and she can say my heart feels full and happy, like how powerful is that? And so I just think it's small acts and it's just literally like asking the old woman leaving the Grocery store, can I help you with those groceries? And even if she says no, she's going to smile and say like, thank you so much for seeing me. Like, I appreciate you. And I just really, like, really encourage people to just slow down a little bit. I know life's busy. I know life's chaotic. I get it. It's amazing. But just slow down a little bit and just see somebody like, hey, good morning. Like, that's all it takes.
A
Yeah, I love that, man. It's showing up with love, showing up with kindness, showing up with presence to be aware enough of like looking around and going, who could I fill up today? Who could I be sweet to? Yeah.
B
Yeah.
A
And it's really the theme of what you're doing is it's that it's this hands on, like, it's easy to write a check. It's easy to run your credit card on a nonprofit's website and hope that a decent percentage is actually going to help somebody versus just go to pay all the expenses to run the business, the nonprofit. But I love that you like what you're doing and it feels way better. Like if you would have had your daughter, right. Run your credit card number online for $100 for a charity and be like, hey, how'd that feel? She's like, it was fine, Right?
B
Yeah.
A
How did it feel to like, look a human in the eye, give them something of value that made an impact in their life, and then receive the love or appreciation or gratitude that they gave to you? Right. Like, I love this hands on giving and I love the examples you gave, which is at Starbucks or not Starbucks. Any coffee chain will do, Right. Matt's a big stockholder in Starbucks. I'm kidding.
B
Unless Starbucks sponsors you. Al, we don't even keep buying them this.
A
This episode is brought to you by Starbucks. Overpriced coffee. Non organic.
B
That doesn't taste very good.
A
Yeah. And so. Right. But just being a human, that's helping other humans. And I think that the biggest challenge in that is getting out of our comfort zone where we've become so socially isolated in a way where it's like we don't talk to strangers. Right. Ever since we were little kids versus like, they're not strangers. They're members of the human family that we're all members of. Yeah. And might you be able to lend a hand, lend a smile, lend a kind word, or lend $40 to pay for somebody's coffee. So, Matt, dude, you are being the change that I think we need in this world. I am so inspired by you more than I imagined coming into this conversation. And thank you for shining your light, dude. Thank you for making a difference. Thank you for being courageous. Thank you for how you are showing up for your family and for all of us.
B
Thank you so much. Hal. It means the world to me to hear that from someone like you who I've looked up to and learned so much from. It's been a true joy being with you today.
A
Awesome brother. All right, Everybody, go to backtheride.com and find ways to follow the journey to donate money to the cause that you know is going to go to a good place. You can tell Matt's not going to be paying admin fees with that money. It's going to all 100% go to help somebody in need. Boots on the ground. Love you Goal achievers. Thanks for listening. Members of the Miracle Mind community and I will talk to y' all next week.
B
Thanks for listening. To learn more about the Achieve your goals podcast and to get access today's show notes, transcript and exclusive content from hal Elrod, visit Halelrod.com podcast thanks again for joining us. Be sure to tune in next week for another episode of the Achieve your goals podcast.
Episode 634: Giving Away $1M to Strangers on a 2,000 Mile Bike Ride with Matt King
Date: April 22, 2026
Guest: Matt King, CEO of GoBundance
In this inspiring episode, Hal Elrod interviews Matt King as he prepares to ride his bike 2,000 miles from Mexico to Canada, aiming to give away $1 million directly to overlooked individuals and families along the route. Unlike traditional charity efforts, Matt’s mission is a hands-on journey of connection, documenting every step while bypassing organizational intermediaries to provide real, immediate help. The conversation delves deep into themes of committing before you're ready, the transformative power of service, and actionable steps anyone can take to make a difference.
On Leading by Action:
On Physical and Emotional Motivation:
On Simple Giving:
On Service and Fulfillment:
On Hands-On Giving vs. Anonymous Donations:
Call to Action:
The episode is heartfelt, action-oriented, and brimming with practical inspiration. Both Hal and Matt speak candidly, mixing motivation, humility, and real-life stories with humor and warmth.