“I didn’t know what I was going to do next. So I started training for a marathon and I was running 10, 11, and 12 miles every other day, waking up at 5 AM with my weight vest and going on 15 mile hikes. I didn’t know what I was doing, but I’d always put on an audiobook or podcast, things like that. Probably all these things helped and inspired me. I guess I never thought about it this way, that’s why I do interviews and speak about it because you don’t reflect like you do when you’re saying it out loud. So yeah, I guess I was looking for some sort of purpose. I said, “Well, I might as well just get really fit and train my body so I could train my mind.”
Putting his mind to the test, thinking bigger and outside the box was something Brandon’s parents, especially his father, found tough to wrap his head around.
“My dad just wanted me to do the safe route,” says Brandon. “He was thinking that I’d done a million different things. I applied to Cal State Fullerton right before I left and I got denied. They denied me and I figured, “Well, I don’t want to go through another six months of community college before reapplying.” So that’s maybe something else I was running from. I just wanted to start my life. I just wanted to do something before it was too late. I guess I probably just wanted to get out of the house too. I didn’t want to run another X amount of miles in six months and do all these different things. Being in that bubble of Newport Beach, Orange County was definitely a little stagnant. I think maybe the longer I stayed there, the less likely I would be to leave.”
Sometimes getting outside the bubble is the answer to a bigger, better existence and Brandon was ready to not only leave the bubble but to extend his life thousands of miles away, all because he heard there might be a better way.
As it turns out the older brother of one of Brandon’s best friends had joined USHEALTH Advisors – and soon enough Brandon’s buddy was on board with USHA as well. Brandon heard about their success and decided to take the leap of faith and make the move from Orange County, California to Nashville, Tennessee. The kid who loved music was leaving the band behind, to go solo and try to conduct his symphony of success in Music City.
“It was just an opportunity to move across the U.S., says Brandon, “to be with one of my best friends and I just saw the opportunity and took it just because the 1099 aspect of everything really spoke to me. You are in control of your destiny, how much you’re getting paid, and what you do daily, not being another statistic in the nine-to-five salary-based corporate world. I like that. I like that the harder you work, the more you’re rewarded, with really no ceiling.”
While there was no ceiling, Brandon, like so many who seem to make it at USHA, didn’t have much of a base to begin with either – which brings us back to how others perceived Brandon’s early success, it wasn’t luck, it came down to three words – Brandon was hungry.