What if your twenties weren’t about drifting through parties but about building a foundation that outlives you?
Most men waste these years. They chase distractions, buy things they don’t need, and call it a lifestyle. Meanwhile, the clock is ticking. Our guest this week, Glensky Inagas—better known as The Glitch—chose a different path. At just 23, he has built an automation company, manages luxury real estate, published a book, and still calls his mission simple: to serve.
His story is part mindset, part faith, and part raw entrepreneurial hustle. And it might be the reset code you need.
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From Venezuela to Miami: The Hard Reset
Glensky’s life began like many young men’s—soccer, fun, friends.
But Venezuela was collapsing. His mother made a choice that changed everything: they left for Miami. He remembers sleeping on couches, starting from nothing, and slowly building piece by piece. “That’s why I see everything as a game,” he told me. “There are levels. From anywhere you are, you can get to any level you want if you put in the dedication daily.”
That shift—from victim to player—was his first glitch in the system.
Be a creator, not a consumer
Mindset and Faith as Cheat Codes
Glensky calls himself The Glitch for a reason.
To him, life is built on numbers, codes, and patterns—and you can learn how to play it differently. His book The Glitch in the Game of Life lays out that foundation. The first level was mindset: becoming conscious of thoughts, habits, and influence. The second was faith: “For me, God is the reflection of the best version of ourselves. God is within us,” he said. Not religion. Not empty manifestation. But faith in action.
Belief that your higher self already exists and it’s your duty to step into it.
🧠 Remarkable & Relevant 💡
(Did you know…?)
Successful startup founders tend to be much older than you think
Research from Harvard Business Review found that among the fastest-growing startups, the average age of their founders at founding was around 45 years old—meaning Glensky, at 23, is well ahead of the curve. (learn more)
Venezuelan migration has reached staggering numbers
Nearly 7.9 million Venezuelans have left their country since 2014—making it the largest migration crisis in Latin American history and one of the largest globally. (learn more)
Self-publishing continues to surge
Recent industry data shows that self-publishing output increased by 264% over the last five years, and in 2023 alone, there were 500,000 new self-published works released in the U.S., dwarfing the 10,000 titles released by traditional publishers. (learn more)
Building Business Like a Creator, Not a Consumer
“Be a creator, not a consumer.” That’s Glensky’s mantra. At 23, he runs three parallel paths:
AI Automation – A system that scans Instagram, reacts, comments, and DM’s potential leads for brokers, coaches, and entrepreneurs. The same outreach he once did manually for hours, now done automatically.
Luxury Real Estate Management – From Miami mansions to short-term rentals, his team manages properties and fills them with clients. “It’s a concierge service. People come for the lifestyle.”
The Book & Podcast – Originally not a business, but a mission. Teaching entrepreneurs mindset, influence, and habits.
What stands out isn’t just his hustle but his perspective. Miami, he says, is a game of appearances. Flashy cars, luxury rentals, and status symbols that often aren’t even owned.
Yet, instead of condemning it, he plays it smart—leveraging the environment for opportunity while staying grounded in service and gratitude.
Watch the full podcast:
Mentors, Family, and the Right Circle
When asked about his greatest influences, he didn’t list celebrity entrepreneurs.
His answers were his parents, his pastor, and Patrick Bet-David. The key word? Alignment. He warns against picking any mentor who just sells a course online. “Get a mentor who aligns with your vision,” he said. “If you’re focused on health, find a trainer. If you’re focused on business, find someone who has built it. But make sure they’re ahead of you in the exact level of the game you’re playing.” In an era where most young men drown in noise, Glensky filters ruthlessly.
He protects his inputs because he knows they shape his outputs.
Fail Fast, Serve Boldly, Live Gratefully
Perhaps the most impressive part of Glensky’s story is not the businesses, but his urgency.
He knows his twenties are for failure. He embraces risk. He puts himself in uncomfortable rooms with older men who’ve already lost and built again. And he serves. Every mission he takes on—whether in AI, real estate, or writing—circles back to one answer: “My mission is to serve. Serve God. Serve others.”
That’s the glitch in the game of life: stop consuming, stop drifting, and start creating something that outlives you.
That’s a wrap!
Talk soon,
Roman
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