In this episode of The Freestyle, Iβm sharing something a little different:
How writing music has shaped the way I think about business, creativity, and life.
Over the years Iβve written hundreds of rap lyrics, and inside those lines are lessons, observations, and patterns Iβve learned along the way. π
I call them Life-Lines β ideas hidden inside the lyrics that apply far beyond the music.
Letβs Rock.
Some people journal.
Some people write essays.
Some people talk things out.
For meβ¦
I rap. Freestyle Rap off the top of the dome.
Some I record on voice notes, some I write down.
Over the years Iβve written hundreds of lines.
Some turn into songs.
Some stay in voice memos.
Some sit in notebooks.
But every once in a while a line lands that feels bigger than the track.
A line that explains something about business, creativity, or life.
I call those Life-Lines.
Where The Music Started
Music wasnβt always part of my life.
Then one day my brotherβs friend handed me a tape cassette.
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony.
I put the headphones on β metal headband, gray foam speakers β and hit play.
The first track started with an alarm clock.
Then a yawn.
Then the beat dropped.
βFirst of the Month.β
I was hooked immediately.
From that point on music became a constant.
Surfing during the day.
Music in the headphones.
Later it became something else too β a way of thinking.
Because writing lyrics forces clarity.
If a line doesnβt hit, you feel it immediately.
Business works the same way.
Weak ideas fall apart.
Strong ideas stick.
Music and Business Come From the Same Place
Writing music feels surprisingly similar to building companies.
You start with nothing.
A rhythm.
A thought.
An idea.
Then you start building.
Layer by layer.
Line by line.
Decision by decision.
Eventually something real exists that didnβt exist before.
Music taught me something important:
Creation is a muscle.
If you use it, it gets stronger.
If you wait for inspiration, nothing happens.
The same rule applies to entrepreneurship.
Life-Line #1
Build Demand β Or Sit Still
One of the lines that stuck with me came from a late-night writing session.
βWith time and a plan you can build the demand,
or take no action and sit on your hands.β
Everyone has the same 24 hours.
But those hours can go in two directions.
You can:
β’ build
β’ test
β’ experiment
β’ move something forward
Or you can wait.
Years later the difference becomes massive.
Small daily action compounds.
Life-Line #2
Environment Shapes You
Another line that always stuck with me:
βHang around with three bums chilling on the porch,
do it long enough guaranteed to be the fourth.β
Itβs blunt, but itβs real.
Your environment shapes your expectations.
The people you spend time with influence:
β’ what feels normal
β’ what feels possible
β’ what feels worth pursuing
Ambition spreads.
So does complacency.
Choose your circle carefully.
Life-Line #3
Diversify Your Opportunities
Another bar that eventually became a real business principle:
βMany lines and streams converge to one path,
diversify opportunities and it shows within the math.β
Our businesses didnβt grow in a straight line.
They expanded outward.
Printing.
Signage.
Advertising.
Digital screens.
Real estate.
Each stream strengthens the others.
Diversification isnβt just financial strategy.
Itβs risk management and resilience.
Life-Line #4
Ownership Changes the Game
One line captured a shift in thinking:
βI went from rent to own, now I own the rent.β
Thereβs a moment in entrepreneurship when your mindset changes.
You stop thinking only about income.
You start thinking about assets.
Assets produce value repeatedly.
Ownership creates leverage.
Leverage creates freedom.
Life-Line #5
Growth Happens Gradually
Another line that reflects how progress actually works:
βSteady increase, you could say we on the rise.β
Success rarely happens overnight.
Itβs incremental.
A little progress today.
A little more tomorrow.
Stack enough of those days together and suddenly people call it success.
But the real story is consistency.
Music Is Thinking in Rhythm
For me music isnβt about performing.
Itβs about processing ideas.
Sometimes a concept becomes clearer when it rhymes.
Lyrics compress ideas into a single sentence.
One strong line can hold an entire philosophy.
Thatβs what I love about writing.
You discover thoughts you didnβt know you had.
The Real Lesson
When I go back through old notebooks and voice memos, I see something interesting.
The lines reflect different phases of life.
What I was learning.
What I was trying to figure out.
Music becomes a timeline of thought.
Sometimes a line you wrote years ago ends up explaining something you're experiencing today.
Thatβs why I call them Life-Lines.
Because sometimes a single line becomes a reminder.
Keep building.
Keep creating.
Keep moving forward.
Closing Freestyle
Quarter century I finally came to my senses,
finally got my hands on that tinted Benz kid.
I see the world clear through my tinted lenses,
with the dream and the drive the possibilities endless.
π§ If youβre curious, you can hear some of my music here:
Forward this to someone building something.

My Music Crew: CTZNS. Travis Kaneshiro, Phillip Hawkins, Jean-Paul Gedeon.
Chinatown Honolulu circa 2013 before a show.

Making CTZNS merch in my garage at home. Always keep manufacturing capabilities on hand.

Aloha. Got the crowns for the kings of this rap sh!t.
