↓ About Me ↓
My name is Samuel Průša and am 21 y.o.
I decided not to go to college — not because it’s bad, but because I knew I’d learn faster by doing.
I wanted to grow in sales, marketing, and building my own company, and real-world experience felt like the best classroom,
So over the past 2 years, I’ve worked in both corporate and startup environments. Project manager, sales rep, account manager — learning what actually works.
Along the way, I’ve been constantly studying and improving myself 📚People who influenced me the most include Iman Gadzhi, David Goggins, Alex Hormozi, Ryan Holiday and many others.
My long-term goal is to build and lead a company that helps businesses grow through sales and marketing — both in my home country 🇨🇿, and internationally. 🌍
I started this account on X to share the journey, connect with interesting people, and learn from others along the way.
If you’d like to chat, connect, or potentially collaborate, feel free to message me 🙂
Spent years chasing better strategies.
The guy who just showed up every day, did the boring work, and never looked for a smarter way he won.
Consistency isn't a trait.
It's a decision you make when the excitement wears off.
Someone organized a networking event on a plane and I almost skipped it.
Turns out removing people from their offices, their phones, and their comfort zones at 30,000 feet does something to a conversation. No distractions. No easy exits.
Just real talk.
Venue changes everything.
Took a client to the best steakhouse in town to make an impression.
He opened the menu, looked up and said "I'm vegan."
Always ask about diet before you try to close a deal over food.
@Markmanson Hope is just planning with no steps attached.
The miracle mindset is comfortable because it outsources responsibility to the universe while feeling like optimism.
@IAmSteveHarvey Wanting something isn't the same as deciding to have it.
Dream big keeps it comfortable. A decision with a date attached is where the seed actually grows.
@Codie_Sanchez In cultures where bargaining is daily life, the opening number is never an anchor, it's an invitation.
Western professionals treat negotiation like conflict. Those cultures treat it like conversation.
@DaveRamsey The real mechanism isn't time, it's distance.
Sleep forces a perspective shift because your brain literally reprocesses emotional memory during REM.
That's why the deal that felt urgent at 11pm looks different at 7am.
@CoachDanGo Your eating window matters more than which meal you skip.
Ending food intake at 5pm and letting 14 hours pass before breakfast does more for insulin sensitivity than any morning routine ever will.
Front-load, don't just cut.
@LayahHeilpern The market is confusing "new Fed chair" with "policy pivot" those aren't the same thing.
With oil at $105, cutting would be a credibility suicide no incoming chair would risk on day one.
The pump is the trap.
@thedankoe The scroll doesn't feel like a choice because it's designed not to.
Variable reward loops, the same mechanism behind slot machines, make your brain treat Instagram like a Vegas floor.
@ChrisWillx Most people think distraction is laziness.
It's not. It's a defense mechanism against the weight of actually being somewhere.
Full presence means full exposure to whatever that moment contains, good or bad.
That's why it's rare.
@RyanHoliday Your brain manufactures readiness as a delay tactic it's called the intention-action gap, and it's been killing potential since before productivity culture had a name for it.
The other stuff never clears. The now never arrives on its own.
@Markmanson Most people know exactly what the next step is that's precisely why it's terrifying.
Vagueness is comfortable. Knowing and not moving is the thing that actually eats you alive.
@AlexHormozi Silence is the most underrated negotiation tactic alive and it works because most people are more uncomfortable with the pause than you are.
Motivation is a visitor. Discipline is the one who lives here.
You can't schedule motivation it shows up when it wants and leaves before the work is done.
Build the routine anyway.
Do it on the days it doesn't show up.
Eventually the discipline becomes its own motivation. That's when everything changes.
@paulg When the project becomes the point not the exit, not the valuation, not the validation it stops needing external fuel to keep running.
That's the only sustainable energy source in a long game.