Saturday, July 4, 2026

Letters from a Young Lion


On May 8, 1965, nearly eighteen months after the gunshots in Dallas had changed America forever, an elderly man ignored the warnings of his physicians and set out on one final important journey.

He was seventy-four years old. Dwight D. Eisenhower had already survived multiple heart attacks. His doctors warned that flying, standing, and the strain of a public ceremony could be dangerous. They urged him to stay home.

He quietly chose otherwise.
He boarded a plane for Boston.

The occasion was the groundbreaking ceremony for the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library. It was meant to preserve the memory of a presidency that had ended far too soon. There would be speeches, dignitaries, cameras, and a nation still learning how to live without one of its youngest presidents.

Eisenhower arrived slowly, every step measured, but his determination never wavered.

Standing beside Jacqueline Kennedy, whose grace concealed unimaginable grief, he spoke not as a Republican predecessor or political rival, but as someone who had come to know John Kennedy beyond the public stage.

He told the audience that one of Kennedy’s greatest strengths was not pretending to have every answer. Instead, he possessed the confidence to ask questions, the wisdom to seek advice, and the humility to listen when others had more experience.

Eisenhower said that was not a sign of weakness.
It was the mark of genuine leadership.

The crowd grew quiet.

Many reporters who expected only ceremonial remarks found themselves unexpectedly moved.

Then Eisenhower shared something almost no one knew.
Every letter John Kennedy had ever written to him had been carefully preserved.

Over the years, Eisenhower had saved each one, keeping them together in a private collection he affectionately called “Letters from a Young Lion.” They were never simply correspondence between two presidents. To him, they represented trust, respect, curiosity, and a friendship that had quietly grown despite political differences.

That day, he presented those letters to become part of the future Kennedy Library.

He wanted future generations to see that public disagreement had never erased personal admiration. History, he believed, deserved the complete story.

Jacqueline Kennedy reached for his hand.
Those standing nearby heard her softly tell Eisenhower that her husband had often looked to him as a source of stability and guidance during difficult moments.

The former general gently squeezed her hand.
With emotion in his voice, he replied that he had always believed John Kennedy had been growing into an extraordinary leader, and that he deeply regretted never seeing the full measure of the man he might have become.

For a few quiet moments, the ceremony faded into the background.
A grieving First Lady and an aging soldier stood together, connected not by politics, but by shared respect, shared loss, and shared love for the country both men had served.

It was a reminder that true leadership reaches beyond elections, parties, and headlines.

The groundbreaking marked the beginning of a library.
But it also preserved something far less visible.
A friendship built on mutual respect.
A collection of letters entrusted to history.
And a powerful lesson that honor does not require agreement, and dignity is often revealed most clearly in the way we remember those who are gone.

Two hands joined.

A lifetime of correspondence passed into history.
And a nation was reminded that respect across differences is not a weakness.

It is one of democracy’s greatest strengths.

Friday, July 3, 2026

Happy Birthday!!

 


How do people actually land clients?

 




It is NOT about:


❌ Posting more content

❌ Running ads

❌ Becoming an influencer

❌ Learning theory and hoping it works


This is about simple steps that look like this:


1️⃣ Pick niches that are already spending money

2️⃣ Find businesses that need help right now

3️⃣ Contact them with the right message

4️⃣ Let them ask for pricing


That’s it.


Thursday, July 2, 2026

Leaders Go First

 


There is a non-negotiable principle in this business:

Leaders go first.


You cannot teach what you haven’t practiced.
You cannot lead where you won’t walk.

That’s why:

  • You get trained and work on deals before teaching others

  • You serve your market while you are recruiting

  • You build credibility before focus on scale

This protects:

  • The business owner

  • Your future team

  • The culture of your agency

What Leadership by Example Looks Like

  • You know the process personally

  • You’ve had real business conversations

  • You’ve handled objections

  • You’ve learned patience

That experience is what makes your leadership valuable.

Raising Strong Kids While Building Stronger Companies

 


Most entrepreneurs talk about business like it's the only thing that matters.

But if you're leading a team at work while hiding from leadership at home, you're not winning.

What you show your family, especially your kids, teaches louder than anything you say.

They learn how to handle pressure by watching how you carry it.

They learn how to solve problems by watching how you face them.

And they learn what matters by seeing what you prioritize when life gets messy.

If you're always shielding your kids from the hard stuff, you're not preparing them.
You're protecting your ego.

Let them see you navigate tension. Let them watch you take responsibility. Let them understand that strength is not the absence of struggle, it's how you respond to it.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Real estate tax goldmine


If you own real estate — rental properties, your office building, or commercial space —pay attention.

You're sitting on a goldmine. (and/or if you made improvements to a property you lease)

It's called cost segregation.

And your CPA almost certainly hasn't mentioned it.

Here's how it works.

When you buy a building, the IRS says you depreciate it over 27.5 years (residential) or 39 years (commercial).

That's a long time to wait for your tax benefit.

Cost segregation accelerates that depreciation by reclassifying components of your building into shorter recovery periods.

Carpeting? 5 years instead of 27.5.
Landscaping? 15 years instead of 39.
Is electrical dedicated to equipment? 7 years instead of 39.

The result?

Massive deductions in year one instead of spread over decades.

A $500,000 rental property could generate $50,000 to $80,000 in accelerated depreciation.

That's $50,000-$80,000 in deductions you'd otherwise wait 20+ years to claim.

We identify whether your properties qualify for cost segregation and estimate your potential savings with our free online calculator in 60-seconds.

Q1 isn’t feeling how you thought it would, right?


Q1 usually comes with optimism.

New goals. Fresh energy. A sense that this is the year things finally click.

But a lot of recruiters I talk to are feeling something different right now.

Undoubtedly, they’re working and they’re busy. And yet… Q1 feels slower, heavier, or less predictable than expected.

That’s not a motivation issue.
It’s a positioning issue.

Most Q1 plans are built around activity:

  • More outreach
  • More follow-ups
  • More effort

But effort without clarity doesn’t compound.

When your market doesn’t clearly understand who you’re for, what you solve, and why you’re different, everything takes longer. That when clients hesitate, referrals slow quietly and wins stretch out.

I’ve seen this for many years now. 

Q1 doesn’t fall apart all at once.
It drifts.

And here’s what else I’ve seen. The fix isn’t doing more. It’s tightening your message so your effort actually converts!!


Larry@BusinessRefund.com