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Hormozi Says His Child Will Be Born Into Winning the Lottery and Fears They Cannot Prove Themselves

Jack Neel · "Knock on a F*cking Door!" Why Broke People STAY Broke | Alex Hormozi · June 19, 2026
Hormozi Says His Child Will Be Born Into Winning the Lottery and Fears They Cannot Prove Themselves
Jack Neel
Jack Neel
"Knock on a F*cking Door!" Why Broke People STAY Broke | Alex Hormozi
"For my child, they're going to have been born into winning the lottery. That is actually where the majority of my thinking has gone in relation to parenting, which is how do I give them the opportunity to feel as though they have earned their place when they already are born into just such extreme material situation success."
Hormozi admitted that his primary parenting concern is how his child will develop self-worth when born into extreme wealth, comparing it to winning the lottery without effort. He's considering whether to change their lifestyle to give the child a more realistic view of the world. This vulnerable admission reveals deep anxiety about generational wealth transfer and contradicts the typical wealthy parent narrative of simply providing advantages.

About this episode

On this episode of the Jack Neal Podcast, host Jack Neal sat down with entrepreneur and investor Alex Hormozi for a wide-ranging three-hour conversation covering fatherhood, wealth-building, artificial intelligence, and the psychology of success. Hormozi, who is expecting his first child, opened up about his biggest parenting fear: that his child will be born into such extreme wealth that they'll never have the opportunity to prove themselves, comparing it to winning the lottery without earning it. This vulnerability marked a departure from his usual tactical business advice. Hormozi also revealed that after losing everything early in his career, he made $100,000 in his first month back by arbitraging gym memberships—going to local facilities, selling their services on commission, and letting them handle delivery. The conversation turned technical when discussing AI, where Hormozi warned that current models suffer from dangerous agreement bias, causing entrepreneurs to execute bad ideas faster with false confidence. He disclosed that his book launch added 70,000 new community creators to the School platform in a single weekend, exposing the massive scale of his audience. In one of the episode's most striking moments, Hormozi confessed that at age 20, when facing the possibility of winning over a billion dollars in the lottery, he felt dread rather than excitement—fearing it would rob him of the chance to prove he could build wealth himself. Throughout, Hormozi pushed back against modern self-help mysticism around money, arguing that vague terms like 'energy' and 'manifestation' are used by people who lack actual skills and confuse audiences with rhetoric instead of observable reality.

Key takeaways

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