Teen Entrepreneur Reveals How Pursuing Dream Transformed His Disability Perspective
"Crippling Hot Sauce was the first time that I had a dream that wasn't influenced or associated with something my parents have taught me. This was something that was completely my own doing. My own mindset. It was formed by my own beliefs."
About this episode
Host Ed Mylett dedicated this special weekend episode to three distinct solo segments covering leadership vision, will to win, daily habits, and a remarkable interview with 19-year-old entrepreneur Drew Davis. Mylett opened by emphasizing that leaders with vision help people with dreams, arguing that every person has dreams but few leaders sell those visions with enough conviction and repetition. He stressed that business and parenting both require repeatedly selling the same dream to new people rather than inventing new messages for old audiences, and that attaching love for others to your vision creates unstoppable momentum. In the second segment, Mylett challenged listeners on whether their will to win is for sale, urging them to negotiate the price of their dreams in advance rather than constantly renegotiating when adversity strikes. He shared the story of visualizing being at his daughter Bella's wedding as his non-negotiable why, arguing that focusing on what dreams are worth rather than what they cost prevents people from quitting. The third segment detailed 20 uncorrelated but transformative daily habits including making to-do lists the night before, sending daily videos to three friends, taking walks, practicing sky before screen, delaying morning caffeine to clear adenosine, prioritizing protein and resistance training, extreme hydration, alkalizing the body, touching your dreams regularly, constant reading, making your bed, maintaining clean spaces, setting deadlines, saying thank you more, learning to say no, planning sleep structure, waking 15 minutes earlier, task switching instead of multitasking, taking stairs, mental rehearsal, planning annual vacations, and prayer. The episode culminated in an extraordinary interview with Drew Davis, founder of Crippling Hot Sauce, who at 16 pitched the business as a high school project only to be told by his teacher it was unrealistic. Diagnosed with cerebral palsy and wheelchair-bound, Davis launched the company at 17 from his garage and has now sold 250,000 bottles while donating extensively to cerebral palsy research. Davis discussed customer acquisition costs, gross margins, learning from the internet without stealing, and how having an independent dream separate from parental expectations transformed his mindset and gave him purpose beyond his disability.
Key takeaways
- Drew Davis sold 250,000 bottles of Crippling Hot Sauce by age 19 after his teacher dismissed the business pitch as unrealistic at age 16.
- Davis launched the company from his garage at 17 despite cerebral palsy diagnosis and wheelchair confinement, donating extensively to research.
- Mylett argued leaders must sell visions big enough that everyone's dreams fit inside, requiring repetition of old messages to new people rather than new messages.
- Attaching love for family to your vision creates greater force than any adversity, but most people detach from love when obstacles arise and focus on price instead.
- Mylett shared 20 daily habits including making to-do lists at night, sending videos to three friends each morning, delaying caffeine 30-45 minutes after waking to clear adenosine.
- Negotiating the price you'll pay for dreams in advance prevents constant renegotiation during adversity, focusing on worth rather than cost.
- Davis credited his business with giving him an independent dream separate from parental influence, transforming his mental state beyond focusing on disability limitations.