We built Last Life Ever for the people we kept meeting who knew they wanted more and did not know where to start. We were those people once.
Most of the people we have met over the last decade did not need a coach. They did not need a course. They did not need a six-figure mastermind, a thirty-day journaling protocol, or another listicle telling them what they already know.
They needed a hand on the shoulder pointing somewhere specific. They needed to see two people who had been where they are, doing the things they want to do, treating it as ordinary. They needed an actual trip on the calendar.
So we made one. Then another. Then another after that.
The reason no one in his orbit gets to have a bad day.
Jeff was diagnosed with leukemia at twenty seven. He spent the next year doing what people in that situation do, and then he spent the year after that deciding the rest of his life would not be a slow drift back to the version of him that existed before the diagnosis.
At thirty, he hiked Machu Picchu. He has not stopped moving since. He has run hundred-mile ultras, climbed Mt Sinai in the dark, walked into Egyptian temples at sunrise, and built a real estate portfolio of more than three hundred and fifty apartment units in a market most people gave up on.
He is currently writing a book that no one asked for and everyone is going to read. He believes there is no such thing as a bad day, and he is the most aggressively cheerful person you will ever meet on the subject, which, depending on the day, is either inspiring or completely insufferable. Usually inspiring.
Runs the system that makes the math work.
Jillian spent twenty years as a securities attorney. She helped entrepreneurs raise more than four billion dollars and built a reputation as the lawyer founders called when they wanted the deal done right, not just done.
In 2024 she sold her law firm. She moved her family to Rincón, Puerto Rico, because the math finally worked and because she had run out of reasons to keep waking up in California. The move was the answer to a question she had been avoiding for years.
She now runs Capital on Command, hosts The Extraordinary Life Podcast with Jeff, and writes the system that lets people fund a travel-first life without quitting their work or pretending they have figured out something they have not. The point is not to have it all figured out. The point is to move anyway.
Most people we meet are not stuck because they are lazy. They are stuck because no one ever pointed at a door and said, walk through this one.
Last Life Ever is the door. It looks like a trip because the trip is the easiest version of a door for an adult human to walk through. You buy a plane ticket. You show up. The rest follows.
You already know there is more. We are just the people who said it out loud.
Look at the open trips, or start with a fifteen-minute conversation. Either one works.