『This former introvert now rocks his habits and happiness』のカバーアート

This former introvert now rocks his habits and happiness

This former introvert now rocks his habits and happiness

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

You may never know looking at all that David Henzel, a serial entrepreneur focused on conscious capitalism, has accomplished, but he was once an extraordinarily fearful introvert. Today, he’s let his shy past fall by the wayside, and keeps himself sane through living a life filled with good habits. [00:00:16.470] – TAMAR: Hey everybody, so excited. I have one of my old online, but I don’t know how to describe it, industry entrepreneurial type friend dudes here. David Henzel. I don’t know the best descriptor, but I’m really excited that you’re here. And thank you so much for joining us. [00:00:38.190] – David Henzel: Thank you for having me, Tamar. It’s good to catch up. [00:00:39.300] – TAMAR: Yeah. So, yeah, it really is. We have been doing that a lot lately, so I’m excited. I hope we can keep that cadence going. [00:00:46.680] – David Henzel: I hope that we will meet at conferences again on a regular basis as we did 10 plus years ago. [00:00:51.630] – TAMAR: Yeah. Well 10 plus years ago, because it’s funny, because once I had started having kids, I stopped traveling and then covid kind of kept you from traveling. So now we’re really looking forward to having that face to face. So I’m looking forward to that, too. In some way, we’ll have to figure out way that’ll happen. Hopefully there will be a South by Southwest next year. That’s something that that’s always exciting. Yeah. So where are you in the world? So let’s talk about our distance because we do have some. [00:01:15.390] – David Henzel: Yeah, I’m from Germany. I lived in Los Angeles for 8 years and now I live in Bodrum, Turkey. [00:01:21.900] – TAMAR: What, Turkey? I don’t even know, I didn’t even know you were in Turkey now. [00:01:25.690] – David Henzel: Yeah, after we sold MaxCDN, my wife wanted to go back to Germany so we’re closer to family and our daughter grows up with family. But I couldn’t go back to German weather conditions after eight years of L.A. and so we decided to move to somewhere that’s close to Germany but warm. My initial thought was Spain. But my wife has Turkish parents, so she preferred Turkey. Even though my my Spanish is much better than my Turkish, we decided, “happy wife, happy life,” [so] we decided to go here and we’re very happy here. [00:01:59.580] – TAMAR: Very nice. So what’s the city in Turkey? I never heard of it. [00:02:03.390] – David Henzel: Bodrum B-O-D-R-U-M. Um, it’s it’s a vacation destination where the wealthy Turks have their vacation homes. It’s as far south as far west as you can be in Turkey, close to the Greek Islands. We’re like twenty minutes from Kos. [00:02:17.700] – TAMAR: So how many languages do you know? Because you talked about Spanish and Turkish and English, German, I assume. [00:02:23.910] – David Henzel: I mean, English and German, then some Spanish and some Turkish. [00:02:30.570] – TAMAR: Wow. That’s pretty impressive. And you picked up Turkish? [00:02:36.010] – David Henzel: Yeah, I mean, my Turkish is very basic. I like go to restaurants and stores and say, “hey, how are you doing? blah blah blah,” like small talk stuff. No deep conversations. Initially, I was very ambitious when we moved to got like a a private tutor one hour a day to learn Turkish, but since all business is happening in English and abroad, I just lost interest. [00:02:58.330] – TAMAR: Oh, well, yeah, I’m starting to learn Spanish with the help of Duolingo and I feel it’s actually cool because I feel like maybe my level of Spanish is your level of Turkish, because I could like I could read things on signs. It says like viernes [Friday]. They talk about specific days of the week and when things are open and closed. The one time I had to understand and I didn’t understand, it [said] you have to wear a face mask, and that’s like it’s a weird word, but I’m getting there. Yeah. That’s not something that they teach you in like level one of Duolingo, the face mask part. But yeah, that’s cool. That’s cool. I guess if you if you ever wanted to get a little more fluent, you can either obviously, you can talk to the natives, but I don’t know if you have any reason to at this point, but Duolingo seems to supplement that pretty well, except you do have to execute. You have to actually talk. [00:03:49.650] – David Henzel: Yes, I like the app, I used it for a while as well. That’s cool. [00:03:53.530] – TAMAR: Yeah, yeah. Awesome. Well, I know we met, but I couldn’t give you the right introduction. I’m sorry. I know that some podcasts they have this lengthy introduction. I like to wing this. I want to make it casual. [00:04:07.770] – David Henzel: That’s totally fine. [00:04:07.770] – TAMAR: Yeah. Yeah, but but I can’t really give you the right introduction because you’re like this dude who does all the things. So talk about that because you have, when I talk about career trajectories on the ...
まだレビューはありません