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In this episode of the Investor Fuel podcast, host Q Edmonds interviews real estate attorney Bishoy Habib, who shares his journey in the legal field, the challenges he faced during the COVID-19 pandemic, and how he pivoted to start his own law firm, Levacy Legal. Bishoy emphasizes the importance of building relationships, serving clients, and the freedom that comes with entrepreneurship. He also discusses his future goals, including creating a unique online community for legal advice.

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Investor Fuel Show Transcript:

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (00:00)
On my honeymoon. We’re in South Africa. We’re literally on safaris with lions and zebras and hippos. And I’m in the, I’m in the damn cart talking to my wife about like, you know, law firm names and law firm ideas and law firm branding and marketing. And like, I’m like, yeah, like, I guess I’m just going to do this.

So on my honeymoon, I decided to start my own law firm and that’s how we named it and we came up with the whole thing during our honeymoon. And then I went, you I launched it and it was the best decision I ever made in my life. The first year was tough, very tough, cause I didn’t plan. Most people plan like a year out to do a law firm. I didn’t, I was like, well, I’m going with it. And I had certain people that kind of gave me some business. I mean, I have good connections. And so the first year was…

tough. didn’t always do we didn’t do well for a lot of the first year. But the second year, it felt more like a business.

Quentin (02:18)
everyone. Welcome to the Investor Fuel podcast. I’m excited to be with you today and you know who I am. I hope you do. I’m your host Q Edmonds. And today I’m joined by somebody who I know you’re going to get, like I always say, a nice wealth of knowledge from. I am joined by somebody who’s making moves. He’s a real estate attorney y’all. And this is how I synthesize. I was talking to him backstage. This is how I synthesize this guy. This guy is one of one.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (02:41)
Thank you.

Quentin (02:45)
He can relate to people and man, he is responsive, deal friendly, and he’s trustworthy. Y’all, I want to introduce to y’all my friend, Mr. Bishoy Habib. How are you doing today, sir?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (02:57)
Good Q, how are you brother? Thank you for the warm intro.

Quentin (02:59)
Man, I’m doing,

no, absolutely. Did I put respect on your name, man? Did the San Jose coming out my mouth,

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (03:04)
You did. You did. nailed it.

Quentin (03:06)
My bad. I love it,

man. I love it, man. Listen, I’m excited to have you here, sir. I know our listeners is going to get a ton of takeaway from you. I’ve been taking notes on things that you said, and I just want them to kind of hear it from your mouth, some of the things that you’re doing. So if you’re on my mind, man, I just want to dive in. So of course, you know, people may not be familiar with you. Just give them a short version of like, what is it that you’re focusing on these days?

and tell them what markets you’re operating in, if you don’t mind.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (03:36)
Absolutely. I’d love to. So my name, like like you said, is Bishoy Habib. I’m the realest real estate attorney you know. So what I say is I’m a deal making real estate attorney and I help my clients structure, negotiate and close their real estate transactions. I’m based in Tampa, Florida. I operate all throughout Florida. I’m licensed in other states as well. We have clients all over the country. We focus in Florida. We could look outside the state depending on what the situation and the deal is.

but definitely anything inside Florida. do. I started, have 13 years of experience as an attorney. and in that time I’ve closed over a thousand transactions totaling $12 billion plus, all kinds of deals, real estate deals, finance deals, business deals. so I, I still work on those kinds of deals as well. Real estate is my focus, but I do business transactions and I also do a lot of lender representation as well. now

I started my firm two years ago. It’s called Levacy Legal. It’s based here in Tampa. Levacy, people always ask me, what does that mean? I wanted to help clients leave a legacy, Levacy. So I combined the words and I get better SEO from it as well. But I like to be unique. So two years ago, I started Levacy Legal. We’re on a great trajectory. ⁓ The growth has been phenomenal. I’m hiring attorneys and staff and paralegals and things like that. So.

It’s been great. What we do at Levacy Legal, obviously the real estate side, we do the business side, we have estate planning. So if you need any trust, wills, powers of attorney, healthcare surrogates, anything like that we can help with. We also have a litigation department as well. So ⁓ unfortunately I’m not a litigator because that’s not my personality. I like to shake hands and make money. But for the people who like to fight and argue all the time, we have those at the firm as well.

arbitration, mediation, litigation, demand letters, any kind of dispute like that we can get involved in. So those are some of the things we do. I love doing land trusts. love doing, know, Florida land trusts are a big thing, operating agreements, know, corporate work, corporate restructurings. So anything that’s transactional and can make money, we can handle. Plus the other things that I mentioned.

Quentin (06:27)
Man, I love it. I love it. Y’all heard him. This man is a deal making attorney. He can help you structure your deal. He work with the land, work with landlords. He’ll work from the bar inside. Like, I love this. I think you saying Florida trust, you feel like it’s some of the best. And so just love it, man. I love everything that you doing, man. Listen, you seem like a smooth running machine. And so I would love to ask, what keeps everything running smoothly, man? You don’t litigate, but you got the litigators? Like…

You got the team, like what keeps things running smoothly on your insert?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (06:57)
that’s the challenge. That’s, that’s the challenge every day is, is trying to figure out how to make it a business and not be the business. ⁓ if I can kind of open up a little bit, I work very, very hard and, ⁓ that’s a good thing, but sometimes that’s a bad thing. Cause it’s just like, you know, put it on my back, right? Like put the team on my back and it’s like, well, if you want to scale your business and grow your business, you should not put the team on your back. As a matter of fact, you should step back and not do anything and, and let your team learn and fail.

And so those are the challenges that I face because as an attorney, I can only work so many hours, even if I’m billing, and I’m not billing $1,000 an hour, but even if I was billing like a New York attorney, billing a thousand bucks an hour, I can still only make so much and I still have to work actively. And I think a lot of the…

Listeners to this podcast, if they’re in real estate, they understand the idea of passive income. And, you know, in my world, it’s never gonna be truly passive as an attorney, but it can be more passive if I’m not actively billing, right? There’s a big difference. so even in my world, I’m constantly thinking, how do I make this more seamless? But also how do I give the client a better experience because they’re not waiting on me to respond every time. Now I put people in place and I’m playing chess and…

Who do I need to hire that will alleviate this concern or that concern? And so it’s, it is a challenge. It’s funny you asked me that. I you hit the nail on the head. That’s, that’s the challenge of any business owner truly is figuring those things out. But yeah, man, a lot of hard work and a lot of, of mistakes and learning from mistakes. And I’ll say this about myself. I learned when I started my own business two years ago is I’m, I’m really fearless when it comes, and I didn’t know this about myself until I started my own business, but like, I am fearless when it comes to taking a chance.

you know, this might help. Let’s do it. Let’s try it. Let’s fail. That didn’t work. We wasted $5,000 there. Okay. We learned, right? We’re never going to do that again. And so I think that mentality again, I didn’t even know I had that until I started my own thing. And I was like, man, this is cool because a lot of people sit here and overanalyze and overthink about like, well, should we do this? Should we do that? Why don’t we just try it versus like, you know, hype, hypothetically thinking about it for three months and we’ve just wasted three months because time is money. So

Quentin (08:35)
Mmm.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (09:03)
I think those are some of the important things that I think about on a not a daily basis and hourly basis on how to make this business better.

Quentin (09:09)
Yeah, no man, I hear you for sure. I try to use the line I say, you we try to normalize the hard here when we talk, because everybody got to choose a hard, right? Like, if there’s a hard, you got to choose every day. To go and to work out at the gym is hard. To not go and work out at the gym is a whole nother set of hard that you want to have to deal with. You know, so you got to choose. And I think for me, one of the two…

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (09:33)
The

of discipline or the pain of regret. That’s one of my favorite quotes ever. I love that.

Quentin (09:39)
So excuse me as I write that down real quick. man. Yeah. Yeah.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (09:42)
Everybody has pain, brother. It’s the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. And I’ll tell you one thing, the pain of regret

is the worst kind of pain. You don’t ever want to look back and say, damn, I wish I did X, Y, Z. That’s the worst feeling in the world. I promise you.

Quentin (09:50)
That’s it.

Man,

bro, you hit the nail on the head there. Absolutely. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, now you want to, man, you know, you and I, we talked a little bit before about, you know, Kobe Bryant, Anthony Hardaway, Penny Hardaway. Let me put some respect on them because it’s Anthony Hardaway anyway. So let me put some respect on his name. But yeah, I mean, we watched.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (10:34)
Well, that’s like that’s like my favorite. That’s like my favorite quote because I’m up, you know, so yeah.

Quentin (10:55)
both of those guys with their careers go through different hard times, right? And I think it’s only fair if you don’t mind, because we got people listening. All of us, we hit our obstacles, right? We go through different things. There’s moments when things get real. There’s a moment when things go sideways. There’s a moment when we have to pivot fast. So I’m just wondering, have you ever had one of those times in your career and your business when you had to pivot fast, a real moment that you had to come up against?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (11:22)
So in 2020 during COVID, peak COVID, mean insane COVID, I’m here in Tampa. Tampa was the number one beneficiary maybe in the world, but definitely in the country of COVID. And what I mean by that is we had an influx of people migrating to the state of Florida and Tampa was the number one. mean, Tampa maybe in South Florida were the number one beneficiaries of that.

The real estate market here in Tampa was insane, insane. My law firm was doing not my law firm that I own, but the law firm that I worked for at the time was doing 700 closings a month. And my office was responsible for about a hundred of those a month. we were doing numbers. I was doing 10 closings a day and I’m not exaggerating during peak COVID. I’m insane. Okay. So now we fast forward. Everybody’s recruiting me. ⁓

recruiters are coming, law firms are coming because everybody can’t find enough good real estate attorneys. So I finally end up taking another position and it was supposed to be an awesome opportunity, right? Because I could choose. I had three recruiters hit me up every week. Hey, we got this. Hey, we got that. Come here. They’re offering this. And I was, I knew that I had to wait for the right opportunity and I did. And so this opportunity presented itself and it was this firm that had 30 plus locations all over the Southeast, no Florida locations. And they wanted me to

operate and manage and control the 10 offices in Florida. I was going to basically be in charge of all of them. So I was like, this is awesome. I’m the Florida guy. That’s what I want. Well, I worked for them and then a year later they hired me. It was this big thing. And a year later, they unceremoniously decided that they didn’t need me anymore because the market turned rates skyrocketed and they had a lot of builder work and the builders stopped building. And so that was 2020.

Quentin (12:57)
Mmm.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (13:02)
⁓ that was 2023, beginning of 2023 that they let me go. and that was the moment that you asked me about because I was, I was getting, I was getting married a month like that, like within a month, my wedding was right. ⁓ we, we didn’t, you know, we hadn’t really paid for the wedding in full yet. So that was happening. I had a wife who, ⁓

Quentin (13:16)
Yeah.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (13:23)
she was not she was in school. She’s she’s still she’s finishing school now. But like she was in school for two plus years. So I had to make all the money for us, right, which was fine. I agreed to that. But it was a little different. I’m okay being the breadwinner. But so that happened. Then you know, you know, the stock market plummeted. And then you know, the I had money in crypto and the crypto plummeted. And then all my other investments were tied to certain assets that just

Quentin (13:34)
Yeah?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (13:48)
You know, and my net worth essentially evaporated overnight and I lost my sole source of my biggest source of income, I should say. That was the lowest point of my life. And truly it was. It just felt like the world was caving in and I had, you know, very little options. And so obviously just like my firm had let me go when I started applying for those other, I started calling those recruiters back like, Hey,

Quentin (13:55)
Yeah, yeah.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (14:12)
Hey, you know, remember me? And guess what happened? They kind of didn’t remember me like, yeah, nah, that was a year ago, buddy. mean, nobody’s hiring anymore. Everyone’s firing now, right? Everyone’s letting go. And so it was extremely difficult. So now those same opportunities, they either weren’t there or they were being offered for like a third or a half of what they were, compensation was. And so I, there’s a long way of saying it was a very big fork in the road for me.

Quentin (14:13)
Remem- Y’all reme-

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (14:41)
And so was literally the month leading up to my wedding as if I didn’t have enough on my plate, I’m trying to figure out how I’m going to make money from now on and how I’m going to work. so, you know, fast forward, we’re

on my honeymoon. We’re in South Africa. We’re literally on safaris with lions and zebras and hippos. And I’m in the, I’m in the damn cart talking to my wife about like, you know, law firm names and law firm ideas and law firm branding and marketing. And like, I’m like, yeah, like, I guess I’m just going to do this.

So on my honeymoon, I decided to start my own law firm and that’s how we named it and we came up with the whole thing during our honeymoon. And then I went, you I launched it and it was the best decision I ever made in my life. The first year was tough, very tough, cause I didn’t plan. Most people plan like a year out to do a law firm. I didn’t, I was like, well, I’m going with it. And I had certain people that kind of gave me some business. I mean, I have good connections. And so the first year was…

tough. didn’t always do we didn’t do well for a lot of the first year. But the second year, it felt more like a business.

It was like, okay, I can kind of see this. It was more consistent. I had the phones were ringing every day. And then, like I said, we’re in a much more, you know, better situation now 8590 % of my business is from referrals. Even when we ran a ton of ads, 85 to 90 % of my business came from referrals. And that tells me a bunch of different things. But the biggest thing it tells me is

Quentin (16:34)
friends.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (16:37)
always, always, always do right by the client. If I have to work late, if I have to work weekends, I always get to the client what they need and they always refer me. And I don’t know if I have, I don’t want to say I have a hundred percent retention rate because I don’t know if anyone does, but I don’t really know if anybody has, um, left me that I know of because they weren’t happy. So, uh, if you go look at my Google reviews, we got 85, they’re all five star between my personal page and my law firms page.

No bad reviews, no four star reviews, nothing like that. I’m so proud of those things. But I turned what would have broken a lot of people and it just became a source of power for me and strength that I always lean back on that moment and say, I just did that. I did that when my back was against the wall. There’s nothing that really could affect me anymore. And it gave me a sense of confidence.

I would encourage people to if you’re not working for yourself, consider working for yourself because it is the best thing you can ever do in your life and you will never regret it. You may have hard, you will have hard time, not you may, you will have hard times. It’s not always easy, but choose your, choose your pain, right? Like we said.

Quentin (17:46)
Yeah,

choose your heart, yeah?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (17:48)
choose your heart. You know, want to work for someone, you want to be a grown man asking for, or grown woman asking if I can get time off to go to Disney with my kid or, and somebody else has to approve your decisions to take a trip or spend time with your wife or husband or, you know, spend a day with your kid. That’s not a life that I ever wanted to be a part of. And so now I make my own decisions. call my own shots. It’s not for everybody, but I think most people would enjoy.

the fruits of their labor if they were willing to put in the work and blood, and tears. And I will say one last thing on that. If we have real estate listeners on this show right now, real estate investors by their very nature are entrepreneurial. That’s what brings us to real estate because we do want that passive income. We do want that ability to create our own path forward and real estate money doesn’t buy you happiness. buys you freedom.

and freedom buys you happiness. And I will always stand by that. Whatever your happy place is, money doesn’t get you there, but freedom always will. Freedom to choose, freedom to take time off, freedom to spend that money how you want, you know? And that’s to me the biggest thing. So, but the working for myself has granted me that flexibility, which has given me happiness. I’m not always happy because no one is, because there’s always issues going on, but I’m way happier than I ever…

was working for someone else.

Quentin (19:07)
Man, thank you so much for that. I love hearing how levacy, did I say it right? Levacy legal, am I on it? birth out of pain that you turn pain into triumph. You you turn tragedy into triumph, man. And that’s a beautiful, wonderful thing. And I thank you, man, for your gift of vulnerability.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (19:15)
You said it perfect, man. You’re nailing these things.

Quentin (19:32)
You know, I thank you for your honesty. This is the kind of stuff people don’t always feel comfortable sharing these days, right? But on your journey, this is what keeps you dialed in for the long term is that when something happened, I can pivot and I can push forward. I can push through out the pain. And so I appreciate you sharing, man. I really, really do. And I know our listeners, that’s it’s really going to help them because we don’t know where we are when they journey. But like you said.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (19:52)
Yeah, yeah.

Quentin (19:58)
You keep going long enough, you will, you’re gonna encounter an obstacle, right? And what builds strength is resistance. And so resistance is only gonna make you stronger. So I love it, man. I appreciate you sharing, brother. So let me ask you this, man. What are you most focused on solving or scaling next? Like what’s your next real goal?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (20:10)
Yeah. Yeah.

Within the law firm, would say, I would say the title aspect, we do closing and we do title. And I’ve, that’s something I have a ton of experience with. But when I first started the law firm, I didn’t want to do it because I wasn’t ready. You have to be really on top of it. And I said, let me focus on the legal, build the brand, and then the title will kind of flow more naturally. And that’s pretty much what’s happened. that within the law firm, I don’t know if that, I don’t know if you asked it for any specific reason, but within the law firm, I would say

you know, bringing up the, um, the title, real estate closings and title aspect of it. Uh, if you’re asking big picture, man, it’s always, there’s always moves to be made. Um, I’m in the process of creating a very unique community, uh, online community that nobody, I haven’t seen anybody do it for a real estate attorney. And, um, I’ve seen one other business attorney do it and it’s a really

not a good community because I joined it and I checked it out. So I’m just going to do something that no one’s done. It’s 2025. People deserve access to legal advice at a reasonable cost. And so I’m literally building that out as we speak. It’s been months in the process. So if you want more information on that, give me a follow on Instagram at attorney Bishoy, attorney B-I-S-H-O-Y and

when it comes time in a few months, I’ll launch that soft launch then hard launch. So that’s a project I’m very excited about because I think we could get a lot of momentum and I could give people access to high quality real estate and business legal advice for a fraction of the cost of, mean, what it would cost 20 minutes of my time one-on-one, but in a group setting, it would be much more efficient. so,

We’re working through that right now. People are going to be so shocked to see the value that we’re giving, you know, for the, for the price that it will cost. will be very nominal. So that’s what I’m excited to work on. you know, kind of in the background, a little teaser. haven’t really publicly announced that before. You’re hearing it for the first time.

Quentin (22:11)
Absolutely.

Hey man, I asked the question, like,

you know, like you said, I’m penny, try to just dish it man. And you know, it was a layup man. It was right there. You had to talk about it man. You had to talk about it. And listen man, honestly man, I’m excited for you. I’m excited about this creating this unique community. I’m excited about you forward thinking. I’m excited about you trying to serve people, right? Cause I believe in that. I believe that

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (22:22)
It’s a layup. It’s a layup. It’s a layup. ⁓

Quentin (22:42)
We got to the service people, right? And I love how you talk about, look, I’m gonna give you high quality legal advice for a serviceable amount, right? For something that you really, really can afford. And so I absolutely love it, man. And you know this, man, you’ve made moves, you’ve been in the rooms, you said your department was doing a hundred deals. I think you said like, you was going to send a date, you know? So you know that the next move, can either compound things or create kick.

total chaos, depending on how you play it. And so I love it, man. I love it that you’re like, you’re not gonna let it stop you. It can create chaos, but out of this chaotic picture, we’re gonna create something very, very beautiful. So I absolutely love it, And so, of course, you know, like I said, we got people that listening, they’re at different stages of their level, different stages of their journey. And I think it would benefit from hearing this from you.

When it comes to building relationships and growing your network, what’s the biggest difference for you?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (23:41)
biggest difference.

Quentin (23:42)
Yeah, well, what’s made the biggest difference, right? When it comes to like relationship building. Yeah, sorry about that. Yeah.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (23:46)
Oh, what’s made the biggest difference?

You know, one of the things that I am learning to do better with my I have a business coach. And one of the things he showed me is a weakness of mine. I openly talk about my strengths and weaknesses now. I embrace both is really a lack of follow up. And so that’s an area that I think that has helped me kind of build those relationships. I have good relationships with people, but I’m the kind of person that

Just inherently, like I don’t call just to say, hey, I’m always talking business. I think, you know, I can be a very intense person, which is good, right? That’s the discipline, that’s the hard work, that’s the grit. Like that helps me so much. But every once in a while, you gotta kind of soften up and just call to say, hey, so my…

Mentor he get my business coach. He calls those gas calls, you know, and gas call stands for give a blank call, right? And so, you know, so we’re working on doing gas calls now, but something like that simple where you’re just once a quarter once every six months, even once a year, just touch up, reach out to somebody in your network and hey, how’s everything going? How’s that project you were working on last year? What are you working on now? How’s the wife? How are the kids? You know, what’s going on?

Those kinds of things feel a lot more organic than just calling when you need something. And again, there’s nothing wrong with doing that, but I think building that personal connection and knowing what’s going on in their life personally, professionally, not just when you need something. I think that’s an area that I’m improving on. tell you transparently I’m improving on because I just don’t typically have the time in the day to just call people and say, Hey, but if you

Yeah. And then it’s another thing I’m learning is blocking off your calendar. And this is, I’m become, I’ve become a freak with my calendar. It’s like, if it’s not on there, it’s not happening. If it’s not on there, I don’t have time for it because that’s how I stay on track. so. You know, blocking off two hours a week, every week, you know, for me, I’m trying to do Tuesday from like four to 6 PM every week. And you don’t want to do Monday morning. You don’t want to do Friday afternoon. No one’s going to answer your calls at that time. Right. but you want to pick a reasonable time.

Quentin (25:32)
Yeah.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (25:53)
Uh, and so anyways, for me, Tuesday, four to six, right? I want to start calling people. And so that’s been, that’s been helpful. That’s been a tip that’s more recent, but it’s been helpful. And I guess at a more, uh, that’s like a very detailed, honest answer from me. If you want kind of generic answer, I would just say, you know, always be willing to serve people, always be willing to help people when they call, pick up their call. If they need a favor, give them a favor because it will come back to you, you know,

Quentin (26:08)
you

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (26:19)
As long as people are not taking advantage of you, and I don’t like when people take advantage of, actually get very upset when people do that and I remember it. But most people are not trying to take advantage of you. Most people are, are, you know, willing and understand like, Hey, you know, I’ll, I’ll take care of you one way the other, you know, anything you need, I got you or I’ll pay you for your services. And, you know, but, as long as you, you always got to be willing to give first before you get, maybe that’s an easier way of saying that.

Quentin (26:44)
Absolutely. No, man, I sincerely thank you for your authentic answer, I, too, when I hear you, I think about my different journeys when it comes to connecting with people. Now, I call myself a connector, right? I call myself, I always say, I say my passion, I say my purpose is that I want to unite and my passion is through storytelling, right? That’s why I love doing podcasts. I love getting to learn about people’s stories, because I think that’s a really good connecting point. But man,

early on, man, it was tough for me to make those connections. And you said something about your schedule. If it on your schedule, it ain’t happening. That’s what I learned from me. Like I had to start off actually scheduling relationships, scheduling these calls to actually connect with people. And I learned that you, what you care about, actually schedule. The fact that you’ve scheduled it means that you care about it. And so it felt awkward at first, I’m scheduling these connections, but then

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (27:23)
Yeah.

Yes.

Yes.

Quentin (27:37)
once I authentically made the connection, it was much easier. Cause I hate small talk, man. I hate, let’s just get straight to the, I can’t stand small talk. Let’s get straight to the point. And if we ain’t talking about nothing, I’m getting off the phone, Deices. Like I just, I don’t have time for the small talk, but I’ve learned, you want it man. But now my friends have a saying now, my friends say, I get scary when I get silent. And so,

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (27:42)
Me too. Me too.

If we talking money, I wanna talk.

Quentin (28:04)
I’m learning that I can’t, I can’t, gotta continue to make the connections. Like, I gotta, like now that we got it, you know, it’s a healthy thing. So I’ll just say all that to say, I feel you man. And we can’t fake relationships. Relationships are kind of everything for us, man. And it has to be authentic though. I ain’t pushing a relationship. It gotta be authentic. It gotta line up with the authentic me. So I feel you on that, man. Hopefully that all made sense. Yeah, man.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (28:19)
Yep.

Yep. Yep.

Quentin (28:29)
But listen, listen,

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (28:29)
Yep.

Quentin (28:29)
man, you gave us some information before. I want to circle back around it. So before we wrap, if someone wanted to reach out to you, connect with you, collaborate with you, find out more about what you’re doing, what’s the best way for them to reach out to you?

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (28:38)
I care.

Yeah, hit me on social media. My LinkedIn is my name there, Bishoy Habib. I’m all over the algorithms because I post every day, twice a day. So it’ll pop up. Plus how many Bishoy Habibs are there? Not, not man. I think there’s one in Egypt in me. So I’ll pop up. You’ll find me easily on LinkedIn. But also give me a follow on Instagram, at attorneybishoy, attorney, B-I-S-H-O-Y, same name on YouTube, at attorneybishoy. I’m posting some fire content lately.

Quentin (28:56)
You go.

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (29:09)
I have a five part mini series coming out today, like one and a half, two minute clips of this new law that is being, that’s about to pass. That’s going to change affordable housing forever. So this week is a five part series. I recorded it yesterday. Every day I’m to talk about one specific part of the bill and how it’s going to make a big impact on the affordable housing crisis here in America. Sometimes I talk about more goofy things like John Cena’s 75 page.

contract with his girlfriend and how he could kick her out at any time. So I’m all over the place, man. I could talk serious. could talk about cool things going on, but give me a follow on there and hit me on there and I’m happy to chat. And the website’s levasselegal.com if you wanna check that out as well.

Quentin (29:52)
There he is, Bishoy man. I thank you so much for your time, your story, your perspective, man. I love what you’re doing in this space, man. Keep doing what you’re doing,

Bishoy M. Habib, Esq. (29:58)
Thank you.

I appreciate you, Q. Thanks for having me on, man. It’s been fun. My cheeks hurt. I’ve been laughing so hard.

Quentin (30:06)
That’s what I’m talking about. I love it,

man. And so for those who are tuning in, please make sure you are subscribed. I like to say that very slowly. Make sure you are subscribed because listen, you do not want to miss out on conversations just like I had with my man here, Mr. Bishoy Habib today. So thank you all again for tuning in. We’ll see you on the next time.

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