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Some conversations stay with youโ€”not because theyโ€™re polished, but because theyโ€™re honest.

Over the years, Dustin Plantholt has spent time in conversation with Gene Simmons, whose worldview is anything but softened for mass appeal. Simmons speaks directly, often uncomfortably so, and without concern for how his words land. What matters to him is clarity.

Their discussions tend to circle around discipline, environment, and the quiet habits that separate momentum from stagnation. Simmons doesnโ€™t frame success as a mystery or a privilege. He sees it as something observableโ€”embedded in how people think, move, and choose who they surround themselves with.

The reflections below come from one of those conversations. Theyโ€™re not offered as doctrine, but as perspectiveโ€”shared candidly, received thoughtfully, and left for the reader to interpret on their own terms.

From Dustin on Instagram:
”ย Iโ€™ve known Gene Simmonsย @genesimmonsย for years, and if thereโ€™s one thing Iโ€™ve learned, itโ€™s that he doesnโ€™t hand out his wisdom lightly. Geneโ€™s got a fire to him, a sense that life is there to be tackled head-on. Every time we sit down, he has something to say that hits right to the core.

โ€œDonโ€™t hang out with losers,โ€ he says, his voice serious, deliberate. Now, you might not like the word โ€œloserโ€; it might feel harsh or insensitive. But thatโ€™s how Gene speaks. He tells it like it is, not caring if it bruises anyoneโ€™s feelings along the way. โ€œTheyโ€™re going to be vampires,โ€ he warns. Heโ€™s talking about the people whoโ€™ll drain your drive, pulling you down until you become the same volunteer victim they are. Instead, he insists, look to those whoโ€™ve carved out a place in the world, people who know what it takes to rise. โ€œSuccess leaves clues,โ€ he tells me. โ€œItโ€™s there in the way people live, the way they move through life.โ€

Gene didnโ€™t inherit a single dollar. On the contrary, he made every cent himself. And he learned from those more successful than himself, people who were masters in their own fields. Gene practically lived in a library before he could drive a car, reading the encyclopedia cover to cover multiple times, diving into law, languages, history, and anything that would sharpen his mind. So when he talks, I listen.

To him, success is right in front of us, embedded in the smallest details of those whoโ€™ve achieved it. โ€œWatch them,โ€ he says. โ€œLearn from what they do, from how they walk, how they speak.โ€ Gene sees success not as some hidden secret but as a map, laid out in the choices and habits of those whoโ€™ve reached it. โ€œDress for it, too,โ€ he adds, his eyes sharp. Wear your ambition, let it show in everything you do.

In Geneโ€™s world, the clues are all there for the taking. Itโ€™s about stepping up, putting on that armor, and claiming your place among the ones whoโ€™ve found the way forward. Thatโ€™s his message: surround yourself with those who push you higher and let every bit of it sink in.”