Dillon makes the case that the economy you should care most about isn't the one on the news — it's your own. Whether the market is up or down, your personal trajectory is determined by what you're doing, who you're selling to, how you're spending, and what you're building. He draws the parallel to personal fitness: the national obesity rate doesn't matter if you're putting in the work. Then he shifts into something a little different — the power of language. Drawing from a military memoir and a management consulting book, Dillon talks about how the words you choose, the names you give your teams, and the details you pay attention to signal everything about who you are and how you operate. Small things — a well-chosen phrase, a care package, trash you pick up in the parking lot — add up more than people realize.