The Best Moments of Modern Wisdom (2025)
By Chris Williamson
Summary
Topics Covered
- Part 1
- Part 2
- Part 3
- Part 4
- Part 5
Full Transcript
What's happening people? Welcome back to the show. It is the end of 2025 and to
the show. It is the end of 2025 and to celebrate, I've put together a collection of my favorite moments from the podcast over the last 12 months.
Some huge episodes that you probably saw, some other episodes that maybe you missed. And I've put them all together
missed. And I've put them all together in an interesting flow and pacing. And I
I really loved all of these. I love all of my I love all 140 of my podcast children. Um, but
these were just some highlights from 2025. Uh, I appreciate you all for being
2025. Uh, I appreciate you all for being here. I appreciate you all for making
here. I appreciate you all for making Modern Wisdom the eighth biggest podcast in the world according to Spotify WP this year, which is insane. And, uh,
thank you for all the support and all the shares and all the everything. Thank
you for staying patient with me when uh, I've tried to bring in new ideas and guests that you've never heard of. I
really really do work hard to try and curate a nice art gallery that even if you don't know who the artist is, you're probably going to enjoy their work. Uh,
so thank you for sticking with me as I go down rabbit holes that you didn't know that you were going to enjoy and commenting and all of the support and and everything, especially this year more than ever. It's meant an awful lot
to me. So, uh, yeah, I I appreciate
to me. So, uh, yeah, I I appreciate every single one of you. Uh before we get into it, you need to do an endofear review. And the review process that I
review. And the review process that I use for myself that I've stolen from all the best productivity guys on the planet uh is at chriswilx.com/re.
Hundred thousands, literally hundreds of thousands of people have recorded it and done their work on it already and um you can get it for free. Copy into your notes app and do your end of your review. So chriswillex.comre.
review. So chriswillex.comre.
Anyway, merry Christmas. Happy new year.
merry Christmas. Happy new year.
Let's get into it. The worst outcome in the world is not having self-esteem.
Why? Yeah, that's a tough one. Uh, well,
I I I I look at the people and I don't want to offend anybody, but I look at the people who don't like themselves and that's the toughest slot because they're always wrestling with themselves and
it's hard enough to face the outside world. Um, and no one's going to like
world. Um, and no one's going to like you more than you like yourself. So, if
you're struggling with yourself, then the outside world becomes an insurmountable challenge. And it's hard
insurmountable challenge. And it's hard to say why people have low self-esteem.
It might be genetic. It might just be circumstantial. A lot of times, I think
circumstantial. A lot of times, I think it's cuz they just weren't unconditionally loved as a child. And
that sort of seeps in at a deep core level. Um, but self-esteem issues can be
level. Um, but self-esteem issues can be the most limiting. Uh, one interesting thought is that, you know, to some extent self-esteem is a reputation you have with yourself. um you're watching
yourself at all times. You know what you're doing and you have your own moral code. Everyone has a different moral
code. Everyone has a different moral code. But if you don't live up to your
code. But if you don't live up to your own moral code, the same code that you hold others to, uh it will damage your self-esteem. So perhaps one way to build
self-esteem. So perhaps one way to build up your self-esteem is to live up to your own code very rigorously. Have one
and then live up to it. Uh another way to raise your self-esteem might be to do things for others. uh if I look back on my life and you know what are the moments that I'm actually proud of there's very far and few between and
it's not that often and it's not the things you would expect it's not the material success it's not having learned this thing or that it's when I made a sacrifice for somebody or something that I loved and uh that's when I'm actually
ironically most proud now that's through an explicit mental exercise but I'll bet you at some level I'm recording that implicitly so that tells me that even if I am not being loved and the way to create love is to give love to to
express love through sacrifice and through duty.
>> And so I think doing things like that can build up your self-esteem really fast.
>> It's interesting when you talk about sacrifice because a lot of the time people say, "I sacrificed so much for my job." It's like, "Yeah, but that was you
job." It's like, "Yeah, but that was you sacrificing something that you wanted less for something that you wanted more as opposed to genuinely taking some sort
of cost." And uh yeah, I wonder whether
of cost." And uh yeah, I wonder whether if self-esteem is you adhering to your internal your your actions and your values aligning um even when it's
difficult or perhaps even more so when it's difficult. I wonder whether there
it's difficult. I wonder whether there is a price that people who are more introspective, high integrity pay
because you think well you've got this uh heavier set of overheads that you need to pay in some way. Well, if being ethical were profitable, everybody would
do it, right? So, uh you at some level it does involve a sacrifice. Uh but that sacrifice can also be thought of as you're thinking for the long term rather
than the short term. Um for example, the virtues are the set of uh virtues is a set of beliefs that if everybody in society followed them as individuals, it would lead to win-win outcomes for
everybody. So, if I am honest and you
everybody. So, if I am honest and you are honest, then we can do business more easily. we can interact more easily
easily. we can interact more easily because we can trust each other. So even
though there might be a few liars in the system, as long as there aren't too many liars and too many cheaters, uh a high trust society where everybody's honest is better off. And I think a lot of the virtues work this way, right? If I don't go around sleeping with your wife and
you don't sleep with mine and you know, if I don't take all the food that's at the table first and so on, then we all get along better and we can play win-win games. Uh in game theory, the most
games. Uh in game theory, the most famous game is prisoners dilemma. But
that's all about everybody cheating. In
the Nash equilibrium, the stable equilibrium there is everybody cheats and you're for the only way you can be you can play a win-win game is if you have long-term iterated moves. But
that's not actually the most common game played in society. The most common game played is one called a stags hunt where if we cooperate, we can bring down a big stag and both have big dinners, but if we don't cooperate, then we have to go
hunt like rabbits and we each have small dinners. So most of uh and and that game
dinners. So most of uh and and that game has two stable equilibriums and one could be where we're both hunting the rabbit and one could be where we're hunting the stag. So the high trust society is a more most more virtuous
society where I can trust you to come hunt the stag with me and show up on time and do the work and divide it up properly. So you want to live in a
properly. So you want to live in a system where everybody has their own set of virtues and follows them and then we all win. But I would argue you don't
all win. But I would argue you don't need to do that for sacrifice. You don't
need to do that for other people. You
can do it just purely for yourself. You
will have higher self-esteem. You will
attract other high virtue people in your life.
>> Would I go on a stag hunt with me?
>> Correct. Yeah, that's right. And if
you're the kind of person, if you're the kind of person who long-term signals ethics and virtues, then you will attract other people who are ethical and virtuous. Whereas, if you are a shark,
virtuous. Whereas, if you are a shark, you will eventually find yourself swimming entirely amongst sharks, and that's an unpleasant existence. But
again, this goes back to the equivalent of the marshmallow test. And by the way, the marshmallow test does not replicate.
>> I saw a replication crisis hard recently.
>> But it is about trading off the short term for the long term. Uh and so I think for a lot of these so-called virtues, there are long-term selfish reasons to be virtuous.
>> Yeah. Uh
did you deal with self-doubt in the past? Is that something that was a
past? Is that something that was a hurdle for you to overcome?
>> Yes and no. I think I I dealt with self-doubt in the sense that, oh, I don't know what I'm doing and I need to figure it out. Um, but I didn't doubt myself in the way of somebody else knows
better than me for me or that, you know, I'm an idiot or I'm not worthwhile or anything that I I guess I had the benefit of I grew up with a lot of love like the people around me love me
unconditionally. And so that just gave
unconditionally. And so that just gave me a lot of confidence. uh not the kind of confidence that would say I have the answer but the kind of confidence that I will figure it out and I know what I
want or only I am a good arbiter of what I want >> yeah that level of self-belief I suppose allows you to determine what is it that matters to me my self-esteem
should I chase this thing or not I can make a fair judgment on that as opposed to being so sued but it's such a good point about even if you think you're not consciously logging the stuff that you're
There is some that's in the back of your mind. Was it the Damon? Is that what the
mind. Was it the Damon? Is that what the ancient Greeks or something used to talk about?
>> Yeah. Yeah. Also in computer science like there's a concept of a damon which is a uh a program that's always running in the background. You can't see it.
>> Okay.
>> Um but yeah, it probably comes from the ancient Greek demon. Uh but yeah, what you know that you don't even know you know is far greater than what you know you know,
>> right? You can't even articulate most of
>> right? You can't even articulate most of the things you know. There are feelings you have that have no words for them.
There are thoughts you have that are felt within the body or subconsciously that you never articulate to yourself.
You don't really you can't articulate the rules of grammar yet you exercise them effortlessly when you speak. So I
would argue that your implicit knowledge and your knowledge that is unknown to yourself is far greater than the knowledge you can articulate and that you can communicate. And
so at some level you're always watching yourself. That's what your consciousness
yourself. That's what your consciousness is, right? It's the thing that's
is, right? It's the thing that's watching everything including your mind, including your body.
>> So, if you want to uh have high self-esteem, then earn your own self-respect.
>> I had this idea, the internal golden rule. So, the golden rule says treat
rule. So, the golden rule says treat others the way that you should be treated. You want to be treated. The
treated. You want to be treated. The
internal golden rule says treat yourself like others should have treated you.
>> And it was a a repost to maybe people that didn't grow up with unconditional love. Yeah. In that way
love. Yeah. In that way >> on the love thing, one of the interesting things about love is you can try to remember the feeling of being loved. So go back to when someone was in
loved. So go back to when someone was in love with you or someone did love you and like really remember that feeling like really sit with it and try to recreate it within yourself and then go
to the feeling of you loving someone and when you were in love. And I'm not even talking about romantic love necessarily.
So be a little careful there. I'm
talking more about like love for >> sometimes get complex if you're talking about past romantic love >> right a sibling or a child or something like that or or a parent and uh think
about when you felt love towards someone or something and now which is better and I would argue that the feeling of being in love is actually more exhilarating than the feeling of being
loved being loved is a little clawing it's a little too sweet you kind of want to push the person away it's a little embarrassing and you know that if that person is too much into it that you feel constrained. On the other hand, the
constrained. On the other hand, the feeling of being in love is very expansive. It's very open. It actually
expansive. It's very open. It actually
makes you a better version of yourself.
It makes you want to be a better person.
And so, you can create love anytime you want. It's just that craving to receive
want. It's just that craving to receive it. That's the problem.
it. That's the problem.
>> I went to this uh daytime house music party in Austin on Saturday. It's called
Mushroom Cowboy. So, it's a >> micro do kind of event.
>> I don't know. I think they're kind of hinting at that, but it's in a coffee Well, it was outside of a coffee shop off Congress.
>> Yeah. So I turn up at half 10. It
started at 10:00 and the queue is 250 yards long for coffee. What? And there
must have been 1500 people there. One guy brought a baguette, was raving with his baguette.
There's dogs, you know, pretty pretty sober looking from the outside. Maybe
some people smoking weed. But uh I think this is maybe the beginning of us seeing the end of like hardcore drink culture.
If you've looked at how few of Gen Z now drink, yes, it's I think maybe 20%. The
interesting thing is like the the theories on why because there's obviously there they have to be theories, right, on on we don't actually know exactly.
>> Yeah. Uh one of them is that people the youth views drinking as like what their parents did, right? So that's
like that's >> naturally uncool.
>> Yeah. like my [ __ ] lame ass dad drinks. Like I don't I'm not interested.
drinks. Like I don't I'm not interested.
And so that's one thing. The other part of it is that this uh group of people uh that are the youth
right now are so much more informed on what the negative aspects of drinking and what it can do to you that they're just like, "Why would I, you know, why
would I Yeah. to to something like that." and that they've found this whole
that." and that they've found this whole other, you know, when you want to take the edge off, there's a lot more options and it's also a lot more accepted today
than it was 20 years ago. Like the idea that you could micro dose or do edibles or smoke or you know what I mean? And
then there's like all the you ketamine and everything is like I have a I have different things that I do when I want to have a recreational good time.
>> Um, and yeah, but it's it's undeniable that it's it's definitely way down.
There's more daily users in the US of weed now than there are of alcohol. Is
that for real? Overtaken or at least that was the the most recent study that I saw. In the US, there are more daily
I saw. In the US, there are more daily or near daily marijuana users than daily or near daily alcohol users. And that
and that that thought was just completely like if you're a a teen right now, you don't understand how preposterous that sounds coming from like if you were growing up in the 80s
and 90s. like you were just like that
and 90s. like you were just like that that those were like the fringe people almost you know what I mean like yes it was popular but it it was not like a
respectable person really wasn't doing that you know it was like the arts it was like hippies and and yeah it was I mean people thought of it as like the absolute worst thing that could happen.
I mean people from like my dad's generation likened marijuana to heroin.
They didn't even see like really a difference. They're just like, "You're a
difference. They're just like, "You're a junkie." It's like, "But what for
junkie." It's like, "But what for smoking a joint?" And like, yeah, that's the way they viewed it. So, the fact that it's that accepted now, >> it's it's mind-blowing to me.
>> I wonder if some of it is that drinking in the house on your own feels pretty [ __ ] bad. But smoking in the house on your own, you're like, I'm just watching I'm playing Call of Duty.
>> Yeah.
>> Leave me alone. But if you if you're six beers deep playing Call of Duty >> Yeah.
>> It's a different story.
>> Yeah. And you're not playing well. I
thought you was like, >> I don't know how well people are playing on weed either, but >> [ __ ] >> Yeah.
>> Yeah, you're probably more likely to yell out pjorative slurs. Um, yeah, I think that um I mean, look, smoke smoking is still not good for you. So,
like you're probably But but we've discovered that, you know, there's other ways to ingest and like consume. And
that's I that's what I think is part of like this youth culture thing about staying away from drinking is they're like whatever I do droplets in this or I you know I I have my gummy or whatever however they want to consume but they're
just they're definitely not drinking man. They're not drinking like they like
man. They're not drinking like they like everybody else before them did.
>> I used to run nightclubs for ages and one of the big downturns we've seen has been in nightlife industry. I think the UK is losing a nightclub a week. There's
not like an unlimited number of nightclubs. Like one is shutting down
nightclubs. Like one is shutting down pretty much every single week. And I
asked a friend who's still in the industry why he thought that was the case. He said, "Smartphones, man. Back
case. He said, "Smartphones, man. Back
in the day, you could be as loose as you wanted. You could sort of have that
wanted. You could sort of have that Larry ly drinking spirit." At least in in Britain, >> they don't want to be recorded.
>> Of course, like if you mess up and like [ __ ] yourself in the middle of a nightclub in 2002, it's a story that you can deny the next day and then after 6 months, most people have probably
forgotten. Yeah.
forgotten. Yeah.
>> I mean, it's imagine like how the pro athletes of the 80s and 90s and early 2000s would just go out and just
just destroy just destroy a woman's hopes and dreams. And then now they're all Yeah. They're
like everyone's >> on edge. Yeah. Everyone's got a phone out. It's just Yeah, it's it's a totally
out. It's just Yeah, it's it's a totally different. By the way, do you ever think
different. By the way, do you ever think about why cuz I still remember that like why was house music and d and dancing in general so much bigger in Europe than
here? People here were never like let's
here? People here were never like let's go dance. I'm not sure. I mean, I guess
go dance. I'm not sure. I mean, I guess why does any scene of any kind appear anywhere? We certainly have in the UK
anywhere? We certainly have in the UK like a good house music culture.
>> Yeah. Uh, a lot of people didn't have much else to do other than go out and party and drink. Yeah. If the weather's bad, then you we're not going to go out to the ranch. We're not going to go and see the sunset. We're not going to go to
the beach cuz all of it's [ __ ] freezing cold all the time. So, you kind of just zero in on the one thing that's reliable, which is >> beer. Yeah. Pubs or clubs.
>> beer. Yeah. Pubs or clubs.
>> Yeah. Yeah. No, I just remember like so many times like being in the States and having like European friends are like, "Why don't you guys you guys don't like to go dance?" I was like, "No, no one's
we're not going dancing, bro." Like,
"No." And and then I would remember like studying abroad and being like, "Oh, yeah. We would that's that was like a
yeah. We would that's that was like a normal thing. Just go to a place that
normal thing. Just go to a place that was just like >> packed and everybody just loud music dancing." It just was one of those
dancing." It just was one of those things where I was like, "It just didn't translate over here."
>> I mean, there were still clubs obviously, but it just wasn't the same type of, oh, I just want to go listen to this and literally dance. Like that's
what people I felt like were doing a lot more in Europe than here.
>> These are the three decisions that I think everyone makes every moment.
First, you're doing it right now. What
are you going to focus on? You going to be focusing on my story I'm telling you.
You could be focusing on the next question you're going to ask. You could
be focusing on how your stomach feels if you've not eaten. There's a million things you could focus on literally. But
we don't experience life. We experience
the part of life we focus on. And so the bottom line is I know my father and I had a different experience because we had different focuses that I was focused on his food. You know what a concept this is cool. He was focused on that he
had not taken care of his family and I know that because you know he said it about 20 times under his breath and my mother echoed it of course. Um the
second decision though the minute you focus on something your brain has to decide what does it mean and meaning is what creates emotion and emotion is where your life is right and so the quality of your life is the quality of
your emotions. If you got a billion
your emotions. If you got a billion dollars and every day you're pissed off and angry your life quality is called pissed off and angry. If you got three beautiful children, a husband or wife you love but you worry all the time,
your life is worry, you know. So his
focus and then his meaning that was the worst part the meaning he gave it was that he was worthless and didn't belong here and that usually leads to the third decision which is what are you going to
do and look if you think if the meaning is something happens you say this person is dissing me you know disrespecting me or is this person challenging me or is
this person coaching me or is this person loving me if you think they're dissing you you're going to have a very different emotional reaction than if you think they're coaching you or loving you. And then of course that's going to
you. And then of course that's going to change what decision you make because if you're angry, you're going to make a different decision that if you're playful or generous or whatever the case may be. So those three decisions control
may be. So those three decisions control our lives. But so your viewers or
our lives. But so your viewers or listeners, I give them an opportunity to take a look at it because there's some patterns that you can make some simple patterns and change your whole life of
focus. So the first one is and I'd ask
focus. So the first one is and I'd ask you two questions for you. One Chris is what do you think most people's answer to this question is? And the other is what's yours? If you're ready, ready to
what's yours? If you're ready, ready to play. All right. For it's real simple.
play. All right. For it's real simple.
We all have a pattern of focusing on what we have and at times on what's missing.
Which one do you think most people spend more time focusing on what they have or what's missing?
>> What's missing?
>> What do you focus more on?
>> What's missing?
>> Yes. It isn't something that comes the focus on what's missing is not something it comes with someone who is a failure.
It comes very much with people who are very successful. And the question then
very successful. And the question then becomes, if you're always focused on missing, how can you sustain happiness?
>> You're in a permanent place of lack.
>> That's correct. So scarcity is there. So
you'll have drive, right, to keep staying on the hamster wheel of achievement, but you're not going to see much fulfillment. Not in a sustainable
much fulfillment. Not in a sustainable way. It's impossible. It has nothing to
way. It's impossible. It has nothing to do with you or me, right? It's just
software. And we got a soul. We're not
software. But you run your software so often you start thinking your mind is you versus my mind is a tool that I'm going to use or if I don't use it it's going to use me. So the majority of
people do that and by the way during co that number exploded because so many things were taken from people they were constantly focused on what's missing and that produces nothing but pain. Second
question and I think I know your answer to this one. Which do you tend to focus on more? Which do you think most people
on more? Which do you think most people focus on more? What they can control or what they can't control? And then which one do you focus more on?
>> Uh I think most people would probably focus on what they can't control.
>> I'm an even balance I would say between the two. I'm working quite hard to try
the two. I'm working quite hard to try >> I was going to say you strive it's part of you know your philosophy right to focus on what you can control right so that's part of this stoicism whole philosophy of stoicism right
>> so but most people you're absolutely right now in my seminars it's different because I got 15 2000 thousand people ask that question and the v vast majority of them say they're focused on what's missing but the vast majority of them say they do focus on what they can
control that's why they came >> why would they spend their money and time they want to take control of their business or their body or their relationship whatever the case may So they have a different belief structure.
If you have both of those out of whack, you got some real challenges. Most
people have at least one out of whack, which creates stress. And then the third one, and there's many more than these, but just quickie for the people at home.
And I'm asking them to do this for themselves if they want to. Where do you tend to focus more? Your past, your present, or your future? We all spend all three, but where do you spend more of your time? Where do you think most people do? Where do you
people do? Where do you >> Let's say that you only had 10 exercises for the rest of time to build the best body that you could. Mhm.
>> What are you going to choose? Talk me
through the >> philos. I've got I've got a roster set
>> philos. I've got I've got a roster set up. So, when it comes to legs, I think
up. So, when it comes to legs, I think that the idea of a crazy heavy squats or leg press all the time as a quad builder, it just wouldn't be it for me cuz I've had periods of time where I
basically did a leg extension exclusively. Usually when I diet, my leg
exclusively. Usually when I diet, my leg extension volume increases because I mean squeezing wise, activation wise, you know, if you slouch electronic pulse
indicators, maybe you could get a real readout of how much they're activating.
>> But for me, like if I had to pick a quad movement, I would just kill it on the leg extensions cuz you can really pump them up, go a little heavier. Like
there, if I had to pick one, it'd be they that would be it.
>> Okay. Then hamstrings would be I'd be a little torn, but I'd probably pick I'm very torn. Either seated or laying curl.
>> Mhm.
>> But either way, a hamstring curl. Uh
>> pick one. I'm I'm afraid Sam, you can't >> I guess I'd have to pick the uh I'd have to pick laying. I would have picked >> a little bit more stretch. I would well I just like not even because of that because you would actually in a seated
position >> if you pull forward >> would your you know hips not be more rounded over where your hamstrings tie in. So now they're actually more
in. So now they're actually more stretched >> like you feel your hamstring stretch when you bend your torso to touch your toes, not when you're laying down.
>> So like the idea when people talk about there's more stretch on the lane curl like I don't I don't even see it. Well,
that depends if you're sat like this because often there's handles, people press themselves up.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, that would be >> you've pushed this off as opposed to pulling yourself in. So, I guess it depends how you position yourself.
>> So, I I guess but right now I'm on a kick of laying curl.
>> All right. So, quad extension, lying hamstring curl.
>> Mhm. And then for back, I'd probably just have to do regular pull downs. But
you could also cheat them into a row by leaning back extra far.
>> All right. Okay. Yeah, that's that's that's acceptable cuz you've just got the one machine.
>> It's the same handle. It's the same setup.
>> Okay. All right.
>> For me anyway. I need more lats because I want them to be wider. Like the
thickness of my back is actually fine.
Like I want them to extend out. Like
that's what really gives that sort of look illusion.
>> What do you think about when it comes to lat pull down, hand position, cues? What
are you thinking?
>> Because then you you can change it up pretty drastically. Like if I do a
pretty drastically. Like if I do a lighter set, which is normally toward the end, uh I can put my hands extra far out and it's a bit more like rather than
pulling my shoulders up and down, which kind of gets like a lot of my lower lats, like kind of erector like middle thickness rather, you know, having wider
hands and rotating around my shoulders that gets me a little more upper lats.
But or you could also make it super heavy and do a closer grip and you get a little forearm and bicep just from the nature of a like that's more of a compound movement of a row.
>> But then you can really load it too.
>> Okay. So quad extension, lying hamstring curl, lat pull down with a little bit of [ __ ] on the handle.
>> What's for?
>> Yeah. For for chest, I think I would have to pick Oh, I'm a little torn. But honestly, if I had to only pick one.
>> No, you can. You've got 10 in total. So
you can >> but you got a lot of muscle groups. So
you got to at least cover your bases.
>> Okay.
>> So I would say there was a time when I would say incin barbell >> if I was on an incined barbell kick.
>> But it it's a little trick in your shoulders because of it's very like directly mounted. Like the only time I ever get
mounted. Like the only time I ever get my shoulders is usually incined barbell.
When I like it, I like it. But I
wouldn't do it all the time. So that's
where I would say dumbbell.
But even then, dumbbells very limited because you can go really heavy and the individual loading and the fact that they can move out the entire way. You
still squeeze at the top. You can rest a bench with a bar at the top >> cuz it's all just going through your bone structure.
>> Not so much with dumbbells. So, it's
>> always adjusting.
>> Yeah, you're all you're never going to relax on the top of a dumbbell.
>> But what I think I'd have to pick now would actually be a uh a seated cable press. So, if you've ever seen seat here
press. So, if you've ever seen seat here >> Mhm.
Cable here, cable here. You pull it in.
You kind of like this.
>> Okay.
>> Because neutral throughout that.
>> Pretty neutral. Yeah.
>> Yeah. So, you're not you're not allowed >> not incline, not decline, like kind of hands up a little bit >> because that's a much more versatile set cuz I can do it really heavy like a
conventional press, but I I could also go lighter and be much more squeeze emphasized >> cuz those are like the two bases I basically cover for every mo, every body part. If I do a heavy one, I'm going to
part. If I do a heavy one, I'm going to counter it with a lighter squeezing one.
>> And to do only one, I think you'd be limiting your stimulus.
>> So that uh that puts us away.
>> That's that's that's four now. So
there's definitely on incline dumbbell press, which I think for every guy is always going to be up there for chest. It feels good on your shoulders.
chest. It feels good on your shoulders.
It's always one of the first movements that you do when you get into the gym.
You feel like it's building the bit of the chest that you want, which is up here. Um, but if you do a really light
here. Um, but if you do a really light set, you just don't feel it the same as you do if you're on cable. So, I
understand that tension, especially cuz you're being pulled >> that way, not that way. Right. It's
>> So, you always have that >> kind of, you know, widening force even at the top.
>> Yeah, that's a good point. All right.
So, there's four. So, extension, curl, pull down, >> cable, press.
>> Yeah. Is that on a on a little incline 30°?
>> Just just flattish. basically flat flat loaded.
>> All right, >> because then you could also put your hands up a little and get more upper chest, put it down a little, get more.
>> You're being very cheeky here. Okay,
number five.
>> So, a five and six for arms would be uh well, for triceps first, >> I' I'd probably have to pick just a easy bar curl push down.
>> So, not the V bar like 90 degrees is too much.
>> Straight is also a little too much on your wrists.
>> So, a little camber, more like a 120.
That's about right because I can also do that light and squeezing or you can really like get into it and have some heft.
>> What are you thinking about with cues for that? Are you more upright? Have you
for that? Are you more upright? Have you
got a little bit of bend in the hips?
>> Yeah, decently upright. But if you're if you stand too upright, >> well then now you're like turning it into an ab exercise cuz you're loading your arms downward and you have to keep
yourself tense to stay there. So, I I I'll hunch over it. Or if I'm doing a hard one, I'll put my head to the side of the cable and kind of like wrench it a little like that. Not for all of them, but for some of them.
>> Mhm. Okay.
>> And then dumbbells is just dumbbell curls. Like it's it's hard to beat.
curls. Like it's it's hard to beat.
>> Seated, standing, supernated >> with it count as different movements.
>> Yes. Got to pick one.
>> I guess I'd have to just pick standing.
>> Standing supernated.
So more of a regular a classic twist of neutral at your, you know, your hips into super.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
>> Because just the >> with some movements being able to change the load completely changes the style of the movement cuz I could do the 30s and really hold it and squeeze it. Or I
could try to do like the 70s and have it be a much heavier kind of brunt sort of thing.
>> So that's uh All right, we're getting close to six now. So you got four left.
>> Yeah. So six now.
I can chill on shoulders because I don't I haven't done a real shoulder workout for like years at this point because they're just they're already big >> like they don't relative my arms need to grow. So I I I would want to add a a
grow. So I I I would want to add a a forearm curl cable.
>> Okay.
>> So hold on the 1D handle, you know, cable up here. I'm loading it down this way. Like this is the force.
way. Like this is the force.
>> Okay.
>> And I'm just doing this.
>> Okay.
>> And it's not a huge movement. Yep.
>> But it's like enough where you actually kind of thicken this up. And I used to do a ton of that and then my forearms got big enough and then I never did it again. At least
again. At least >> now you're back on it because the arms have gone up.
>> Now I added a little more. But it's uh Yeah. And honestly for just I think it
Yeah. And honestly for just I think it was a joke that Hugh Jackman or someone or Stallone worked their forearms like crazy cuz when you're acting you're not
always shirtless but you're usually sleeveless >> and having big forearms makes you look extra cool. Mhm.
extra cool. Mhm.
>> So, uh I guess after that I probably have to add a calf raise just because >> standing seated.
>> H seated seated is a little bit better.
>> Okay. Even though you're going to be hitting I always get these the wrong way around so whatever for me I feel it and my calves will grow from it. So I've got my own anecdotal evidence of it worked.
>> Okay. Got two left.
>> So the next one has to be the cardio bike which not many people would add.
>> Mhm.
>> Cuz they were thinking I don't even need to do cardio >> cuz it's not on their mind.
>> But that's uh Yeah. So seated and then the pedals are like where my feet are over here. It's kind of a reclined a
over here. It's kind of a reclined a little bit further back.
>> It's a reclined position and it's the easiest one. Little back rest.
easiest one. Little back rest.
>> My torso does not move.
>> So I can pedal as much as I want and I'm just sitting playing with my phone for 30 minutes.
>> Like you can do it and also make it easy.
>> Have you got a preferred machine for that? Like to precore make a
that? Like to precore make a particularly good >> just and some of them they have little handles. Sometimes the handles are too
handles. Sometimes the handles are too close to where your knees are and you'll bump your knee on them. That's that
that's my only gripe. But I'm not I'm not picky. The one I have at my house is
not picky. The one I have at my house is like >> I mean it's the equivalent of one that you would get for free if you picked it up from like the side of the road, >> but it it still works. And actually,
that one's harder on a um well, it reads harder because sometimes the math that they do to calculate calories burned,
it's not completely cuz if someone like me pedal for 30 minutes at X difficulty, at X speed, an Olympic cyclist or like a marathon cyclist could do it at the same
speed and the same difficulty and he would actually burn less calories cuz he's more efficient >> and I'm less efficient. So, it's not necessarily I always aim for the same number. It's like I know the feeling of
number. It's like I know the feeling of like this is hard, but it's not too hard. Like, this is the right energy
hard. Like, this is the right energy expenditure level.
>> I did that on a I've been getting into incline treadmill walking to get to zone two. Zone two for me is really hard to
two. Zone two for me is really hard to hit. It's like way faster than a normal
hit. It's like way faster than a normal walk on the road and it's way slower than a jog.
>> And >> yeah, my incline preferred is like 3.5 5%.
>> 3 point for me 3.2 two at 15.
>> Yeah.
>> Is is nice, but I don't know what the metrics are of the whatever the machine is that was in the UK and it was 3.25 and I was like this doesn't feel right.
Okay, I'll just keep going up four. Like
four still doesn't feel right. Five.
What the [ __ ] is this number? It got to 5.3.
I'm like >> the speed is off. Is that miles per hour or >> I don't know because it wouldn't be kilometers over here cuz it would still be miles per hour. whatever it was, the exact same. You go, I can go to a new
exact same. You go, I can go to a new machine. And after you've done,
machine. And after you've done, >> you don't even need that many sessions.
What >> 20 30 sessions before you go, I kind of understand how I'm supposed to feel and where my heart rate's supposed to be at like just by a sense of breathing.
>> Exactly.
>> Okay. So, you got one left. What's left?
>> Yeah. One left.
>> What haven't we done? We haven't You haven't touched abs. You haven't touched glutes directly. You haven't touched
glutes directly. You haven't touched shoulders directly.
What else is missing? I think that's it.
lower back. I guess if that's >> in a bodybuilding sphere, you you'd want your lower back developed enough >> where it's got like a little texture, but if it gets too big, it'll take away from your waist because the whole point
is this illusion of wider shoulders and a smaller waist. So, now that they're already developed, I probably wouldn't like I don't hit my abs because they get worked, you know, kind of secondarily
for like even doing dumbbell curls. I'm
keep myself stable. Like once they're there and you're actually still working out, they're not going anywhere because you're and then every time you look at yourself in the mirror, you got to flex them.
>> Like they get worked enough to be maintained. So that's uh like that's why
maintained. So that's uh like that's why there's not a lot of ab workouts cuz I did a lot before and now they're just not going to go anywhere.
>> Like same with shoulders. So
>> I'd have to I'm a little reluctant, but I can't think of anything else I'd want to do. I' I'd pick the adductor machine.
to do. I' I'd pick the adductor machine.
So that's where you're squeezing your legs together.
>> Okay. Why?
>> Makes your legs a little thicker in the middle because that's it's this whole kind of like system of uh like kind of it tie in it ties in kind of below your
knee more hamstring, but it's this sort of just piece right in the center where if your adductors were completely undeveloped and you just stood up straight with your knee straight, you'd have a really big gap between your legs.
>> And you think you wouldn't be able to fully get that with the extension? Uh
well the extensions are quad >> because that's a quad like a knee flexion >> and this is uh like leg well you know I don't even know what you call it
>> that >> they uh yeah the joke is the well it's I don't know there's like two versions of a joke cuz they'll call that one the ball crusher
>> cuz that's what you squeeze your legs together but the older like the joke that people would say before was that was either the good girl or the bad girl machine.
>> Uh, one's forcing it apart, one's forcing it together. Yeah. Okay.
>> Because I I don't really I don't want to perpetuate that name, but that was that's kind of a reference to to those.
>> Okay. Very good. The single greatest skill you can develop is the ability to stay in a good mood in the absence of things to be in a good mood about.
>> I think that tweet has been my theme for 2025. Um, it's been it's it's funny
2025. Um, it's been it's it's funny because that was the most shared tweet I've ever had. Um, and it was so it was like it's it was almost um
not the opposite of iron. It was
fitting, right? It was completely fitting for the year. And it's been because like this year I've had a just I would say a series of unfortunate events um that has occurred and it's really
tested my tools, right? tools in the tool belt um for reframing reality so that I can make my experience less you know miserable. And so
know miserable. And so I thought about that it's like if I were if I were to boil everything down um of all the skills that you can learn if everything that we do eventually becomes
irrelevant then the single greatest skill that you can develop is being in a great mood in the absence of things to be in a great mood about. And so one of the other frames on this is most people
don't question someone who's in a bad mood. Like I'm just in a bad mood. So
mood. Like I'm just in a bad mood. So
it's like well if you can be in a bad mood for no reason it's like you might as well be in a good mood for no reason cuz that one at least serves you. And so
I've been trying to exercise like cuz there's on one degree there's like let's count things to be grateful for. On the
other side it's like why do I have to have things to be grateful for in order to be in a good mood? Like why is trying to find things
mood? Like why is trying to find things a requirement of being in that mood?
Like can I not find things and still choose to be in a good mood? Because
I've certainly not had things to be in a bad mood about and been in a bad mood.
>> And so I've been trying to flex that which is like sure we can find things to be grateful for and when those things pop up. Yes. And of course it's a you
pop up. Yes. And of course it's a you know it's a practice you get better at it. But like what if I can just be in a
it. But like what if I can just be in a good mood? And so I've just tried to try
good mood? And so I've just tried to try to break that that relationship between the two because then it makes it contingent on something that I can find.
>> How successful have you been at that?
mediocre.
>> Well, look, I think it's a it's a a lovely idea. Yeah. In isolation,
lovely idea. Yeah. In isolation,
>> sure.
>> Uh in theory, but I'm not convinced about how effective it is in practice for the reason that humans have a negativity bias. You know, it's our
negativity bias. You know, it's our psychological entropy%.
>> And your ability to detect things that are a risk to you significantly better than your ability to detect things that are just pleasant. Like this morning I texted you and I was like, "Hey man,
like I really love the feeling I have of anticipation on a morning before we do a podcast. That's a normal, boring,
podcast. That's a normal, boring, mundane source of pleasure to me."
>> Yeah.
>> If I'm not really really training myself to notice that, >> yeah, >> I just it just [ __ ] falls away with the fact that, huh, I asked for almond milk and I bet this would have been
better with like whole milk.
That's the thing that r that ruins the day. And the thing is, you do notice it
day. And the thing is, you do notice it though, right? you do notice that.
though, right? you do notice that.
>> Um, so I've had um, one of my themes this year has been focusing on moments and on both the positive and the negative. And so like when we think back
negative. And so like when we think back on if I think back on the last year, right, I don't remember probably 95% of the year like I, you know, I did the same things. And so it's like it just
same things. And so it's like it just didn't get recorded. Like nothing
notable happened. Um, and so really like when we think about a year, we really just recall a handful of moments and that's it. And those moments in time are
that's it. And those moments in time are usually very short. And so I've been trying to think about um the bad, you know, seasons as well, maybe it wasn't a
bad season. Maybe I had five bad days or
bad season. Maybe I had five bad days or really five bad moments that I then thought about for the entire season and
turned what would have otherwise been 5 minutes times five into an entirely bad year. And so it's like, okay, well, if
year. And so it's like, okay, well, if we can do that in the negative, can we do in the positive, which is, you know, obviously the thing to to exercise. But
to the point that you said earlier about our our ability to detect threat and risk at such a such better accuracy than our ability to detect good things, it's
so interesting because if you use that side of your brain, um, not to derail us, but like I think that has been one of the things that's helped me a
tremendous amount in business because when I think about a business and I want to grow it, for example, I would think, okay, what are all the things that can destroy this business? And this is Charlie Munger. this isn't me. Um, but
Charlie Munger. this isn't me. Um, but
basically he says invert always invert.
And Einstein said that too. And it's
because like you get to use this this way stronger horsepower engine of like how do I grow my business? That's a you could obviously think that way, but the alternative would be like how would I absolutely destroy this business in the
fewest possible moves. And then when you list out those moves, you're like cool, now let's do the opposite of that. And
that has been um honestly a lot of the some of the sources of my greatest kind of creative moments have come from these apparently obvious things that would kill us. Well, what if we did the even
kill us. Well, what if we did the even more obvious thing and did the the opposite of what would destroy us. Um
and it's worked. It's worked um better than I deserve. So, this is a problem.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh you can be re rewarded professionally for focusing on things that you do not want to focus on personally. And Ryan
Long taught me this. He was talking about how he comedian, Canadian comedian, really funny guy. Spends all
of this time, you know, dialing in these bits and obsessing over how it could be better. And then he says to himself,
better. And then he says to himself, "Yeah, but I don't want you to do that in your relationships." No. Can you let that go when it comes to the way that you show up for your partner or your
friends or your body image or whatever?
You don't get to compartmentalize stuff like that. And it is a very
like that. And it is a very unfortunate irony of the world that the skill set you often need to become successful in business
>> is the one you need to get rid of to be happy in your life.
Yes. So I was I was thinking about what you were saying earlier with regards to risk and our ability to detect it. So
the other part of that that's been really interesting is we also not only do we detect more threats, we also overemphasize how catastrophic they
could be. And the converse of that is we
could be. And the converse of that is we rarely identify the upside. And when we do, we typically underestimate the upside. And I think this is something
upside. And I think this is something that a lot of people don't talk about as much. Um obviously I always have a
much. Um obviously I always have a business, you know, hat on literally. Uh
and but I think about this because I think this is where like you said it at the very beginning that people complain because they cannot accurately view reality. And so if we tie that to this
reality. And so if we tie that to this concept, then it means that people will disproportionately blame the universe and then perceive significantly greater
risk for them asking Google out, starting a business, taking a loan, uh you know, asking a stranger to buy something, >> making a podcast, and for fear of what other people on the internet will say or
people who know them, right? Right? So
we we catastrophize this side, but the flip side is and you hear this a lot when people, you know, do make it and what not. They're like, I never dreamed
what not. They're like, I never dreamed it would be this big. Now, some people are obsessive and like absolutely have thought through everything. I fall more on that side. Uh but uh on on the other hand though, a lot of people do get there and they're like, I never thought
it was going to be this big. And it's
because we typically just underemphasize the upside, which is where from the business perspective, it's like that's where the alpha is. That's where the outperformance exists. where most people
outperformance exists. where most people think, hey, this bet uh it could go to zero. And you're like, h I don't think
zero. And you're like, h I don't think it's going to go to zero. But even if it did go to zero, I have a 10x here. And
so if I have a 50% shot at a 10x and the other 50 is zero, I should take that shot every single time >> knowing that I'm going to be wrong half the time. It still makes sense to take.
the time. It still makes sense to take.
>> And so I think um people are not good at making those riskadjusted return bets um obviously financially, but even in the very micro aspect of our lives. And so
the we talked earlier about uh you know the cosmic irrelevance and the frame of the veteran but there's a third frame that I think about a lot which is I call it play it out. And so it's like let's no let's let's sit in there because again fear exists in the vague not in
the specific >> and in the resistance.
>> Yes. And so like when we have these um these spec specificities of like okay I'm going to start a p I can't start a podcast like okay it's this big vague thing but no like let's play it out like
let's see what actually would happen.
So, I'm going to upload something and then people don't listen to it.
Okay. Well, they didn't listen to it.
Okay. Well, then that's not a problem.
Okay. Let's say people Let's see tons of people listen to it, which I don't know how that magically happens, but let's say tons of people listen to it and they all hate it. Okay. Immediately you have this anxiety that No, no, but but let's
play it out. Like, what's happens next?
It's like, okay, is it going to change what I eat? Is it going to change where I sleep? Okay, let's say let's say I all
I sleep? Okay, let's say let's say I all of a sudden I lose all the money that I have. It's like, okay, well, I probably
have. It's like, okay, well, I probably have a bunch of people that if I really needed to sleep on their couch or in a spare bedroom, I could do that. Okay, so
I'm not really going to be homeless. And
if I really didn't have enough money for food, I can go to a homeless shelter and get food, right? So, it's like, wait, so my worst case scenario is like I have shelter and I have food and I'm still
breathing air. So, that's the downside.
breathing air. So, that's the downside.
And so, there's this catastrophizing that we cuz we our brains are meant to are meant to keep us alive. We literally
think if we fail, we die.
Like everyone will will ostracize us from the group and we will be alone and die.
>> And so just actually playing it out, not one step, but like two more steps after that, you're like, "Okay, so my actual downside risk is nothing, but my upside
is everything I've wanted." And even if I even if I'm at 50% off on that, it's still worth the shot. It's very healthy
to have um an inner critic, but it's also it's the there's the golden rule and then there's the there's the platinum rule, right? There's the treat others as you want to be treated.
>> Mhm.
>> And then there's the treat yourself as you treat others.
>> Most people are very kind. Like you're
nicer to me than you are to yourself.
Mhm. Mhm.
>> Like I if you said the [ __ ] you say to yourself to me, we wouldn't be friends.
>> Um and I think that thing of like the the inner critic has to be it's um as long as it's process driven. I think
it's it's very very healthy.
>> It's like imposter syndrome. Yeah. Okay.
Feel like an imposter for a while. As
long as it gives you as long as you can get that to a granular level where it gives you something to work on. Like the
inner critic can't just be it can't just be like that's bad.
>> It's got to be oh that that didn't work so we need to change it or that one's that one's not going to work so we're going to write something new. It it's
got to be something that's like uh you're working towards something you're aiming up >> and I think criticism is very important.
I mean Walt Disney used to do this thing where he had like the he had three rooms. You know this thing of like one for creativity uh one for sort of um management like
how would you do the idea and then it was only in the third room that you were allowed to be critical.
>> It's kind of fun idea of like going to sort of comp >> compartmentalize. Well I do think that
>> compartmentalize. Well I do think that thing of like never refuse the muse if you're working in anything creative.
Just write it down. something comes to you, you just one, right? Inspiration is
perishable. Act on it immediately.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. There's a Tim Ferris says, "The world rewards the specific ask and punishes the vague wish." And I think that sort of inner critic voice can
expand out into I don't feel good about the thing I did. Okay. Well, that's
probably the first place everybody gets.
I'm not not really too sure about why, but there's some sense of discontent about something that just happened or something that I'm about to do. Probably very normal. You don't know
do. Probably very normal. You don't know where it's coming from and you don't know what it's about and you don't know what to do to fix it. Okay. So, how
about we get away from the vague critic and we move toward the specific coach with regards to this. Okay. So, what
precisely is it that you're concerned about? Well, I don't feel fully prepared
about? Well, I don't feel fully prepared for the presentation I've got to give tomorrow. Okay. Is that fair? Do you
tomorrow. Okay. Is that fair? Do you
know that it's true? Do you think that you haven't prepared enough? Well,
actually, I have prepared quite a lot to be honest. I think this is probably just
be honest. I think this is probably just my fear trying to be sneaky and sort of turn itself into a way that I'm going to believe it. All right. Well, what are
believe it. All right. Well, what are you going to do about it? Well, I'll
just check my notes a few more times.
And actually, huh, it seems like I do know this pretty well. the the yeah the inner critic it's not often wrong just you can say it in a nice way you
know it's it's it sometimes it's right sometimes you [ __ ] up sometimes it's not it's not it wasn't good enough >> and that's okay it's like it's the um it's the idea of like going um it's not
repetition it's iteration >> it's like lots of different you know doing the same thing again and again doesn't make you better but like tweaking it and knowing what to tweak is
that you have to listen to an inner critic. I think the the um uh is it
critic. I think the the um uh is it Hoszi? Uh it's Hozi is so good for
Hoszi? Uh it's Hozi is so good for quotes, but it's I think it was um uh self-confidence without evidence is delusion.
>> Mhm.
>> Some version of that.
>> Confidence. Confidence without
competence is delusion.
>> Yeah. It's it's so true. And you do meet people along the way that have that incredible confidence or they they sort of exude that and then they they don't have the confidence to back it up
>> and you go well no you need to you need to be able. So finding that I think it's very I think without that inner critic I think we would all be kind of delusional wandering around going yeah you know >> yeah George says uh does someone with
half your talent but five times yourself believe making 10 times the money?
Yes. And that's that's true for for every British person. There's an
American.
>> Exactly. Well, I mean, look, I I think for the perennial overthinkers refraraming this
very wellrodden landscape of inner criticism.
A lot of the way that you can look at that is I'm fragile. You know, my my self-belief exists on a knife edge. It
feels like I'm tightroppe walking confidence. Perhaps I think a better way
confidence. Perhaps I think a better way to look at it is you're not fragile.
You're just finely tuned.
And in the same way as a Ferrari can go really, really fast, especially around a track. But if you don't treat it very
track. But if you don't treat it very well, it's probably going to break down quite a lot actually. And if you treat it really well, it's still going to have a couple of hiccups and days where it
doesn't fully operate rightly.
>> But yeah, you're not fragile. You're
finally tuned. Is a nice reframe. It's
so easy to be kind to other people and sometimes so difficult to be kind to yourself. It's like you wouldn't let
yourself. It's like you wouldn't let someone else speak to a friend like that. You just wouldn't stand for it.
that. You just wouldn't stand for it.
>> Mhm.
>> And yet your inner critic. You're just
like, "Yeah, yeah. Say terrible things to me.
>> Just accept it as it comes." Yeah. I uh
that idea on you had uh position and disposition.
>> This has happened a couple of times. I
misremember things that guests uh tell me and then I write about the thing that I misremembered and what you realize is that you've actually built on something that they didn't mean. And I think I told you about this before, but I'm
going to I'm going to tell you about it again. So, uh this is after our first
again. So, uh this is after our first episode 18 months ago, something like that. My chat with Jimmy Carr a few
that. My chat with Jimmy Carr a few weeks ago inspired an idea. I've been
reflecting on how your trajectory is way more important than your position. If
you're number two in the world, but last year you were number one, that is way worse than sitting at number 150, but being on a huge upward slope from 300 12 months ago. There's a few reasons for
months ago. There's a few reasons for this. Recency bias. If your value is
this. Recency bias. If your value is increasing right now, that means you have to be popular at the moment. By
looking at recent trajectory, you are selecting for only the few people who are trendy right now, which is really all that we can remember. We can also romanticize where someone will be in future. If they're currently hot stuff,
future. If they're currently hot stuff, how high might they climb? Who knows?
maybe to the top, maybe even beyond the top. Humans struggle to realize that
top. Humans struggle to realize that everything is temporary, including growth and decline. Instead, it's easier to label people as heroes and losers based on what we know of them right now, so we don't have to predict a messy
future. There's an old saying saying
future. There's an old saying saying that there's three types of people on the ladder. One at the bottom, one at
the ladder. One at the bottom, one at the middle, and one at the top. Which
one is the best to be? The one that's still climbing.
>> Yeah. No, I think I think it's fantastic. It's very well put. Um, yeah,
fantastic. It's very well put. Um, yeah,
I think that especially in show business, trajectory really seems to be such an important metric and it's like you could be half the size of some other
comic, but they've been around 20 years and they always sell out the arena so who cares.
>> It's like it's >> novelty, dopamine, this is new recency buyers.
>> Yeah. I think there's a there's a thing this year where um Oasis are playing >> uh and it's a big deal. People are very excited about it and I think Coldplay
are doing I think it's 10 or 11 nights at Wembley Stadium.
>> Everyone's like Chris Martin bored of you been around for ages.
>> Yeah. Well, of course you are. Yeah.
You're a big band.
>> But it's like but it's not like uh an event culturally in the same way that Oasis coming together is. There's a
narrative to that and a trajectory of kind of where they are that's and Coldplay have just been steadily listen and if Taylor Swift does 15 nights next year it'll be a yeah of
course of course >> accepted.
>> Yeah. So that thing of like other people getting excited about it and I think I don't know what it feels like to be uh you know in Coldplay at the moment and maybe people aren't making as much fuss.
I hope they're celebrating. I hope
they're I hope they're taking time to go. This is fantastic.
go. This is fantastic.
>> Has no longer having the Olympia impacted your drive and passion in other areas of your life? You know, you've got
the dad husband thing, business, desire to work on yourself in a sort of from a personal standpoint.
How have you found drive and motivation separate and also wrapped up in what you were doing previously?
>> Mhm.
I wouldn't say it directly decreased because there's no Olympia, but I think almost as like a byproduct of what the Olympia was for me of like a schedule of
a year of like the first half of the year is X. You have some time off, you can recover, give yourself a break, and then you start to ramp up. You travel,
focus on business, and then near the end, you go inward. You figure out what's driving you, what's pulling you back right now, self-reflect, spend time away from [ __ ] focus on yourself, be selfish, work, intense schedule, and
like it was this like organized routine.
And then all of a sudden, it was all gone. And that on top of the singular
gone. And that on top of the singular goal of being like, where do I put my energy now? I think definitely left me
energy now? I think definitely left me in a place of feeling a little bit lost, of not figuring out like where do I still have the passion for anything?
Where do I find that energy to put into something? What do I put it into? Does
something? What do I put it into? Does
it even exist? Will it exist again? And
then it kind of led to me then I had an injury. I stopped working out for a
injury. I stopped working out for a while and I just started to wake up in the morning exhausted and not knowing what to do. going in and helping with this business, going on this trip for travel, a meeting here with a
distribution center, blah, all these little things for all these other things that weren't really like driving me. I
didn't have like an important big role in them. I was just like kind of
in them. I was just like kind of coasting through. And I started to wake
coasting through. And I started to wake up and feel pretty lost in general of like where do I where am I progressing to essentially? And that was when I was
to essentially? And that was when I was kind of like what I'm honestly I'm still working through it. I don't have this answer, but a thing I'm working for is just like empathizing with myself that I
don't need to be constantly progressing towards something. That I don't need to
towards something. That I don't need to be getting better and have this big goal and doing X and I can just sit and rest for a while and like truly just like do
nothing and be good enough as that is and let something come and figure it as it goes. And that's that was tough for
it goes. And that's that was tough for me is tough for me and speaking in proper >> verbiage of figuring that out. And the
funniest little thing of what has made me feel better recently was working out again on a schedule and eating five meals a day and weighing out my food and having that little bit of structure of
like and not having to as well. It's
like all this stuff's going on my life.
I don't know. I'm kind of lost. What can
I do? Well, I can go work out again >> and I don't have to. So now I'm choosing to. Well, why you still work out so
to. Well, why you still work out so hard? Why are you training so hard? It's
hard? Why are you training so hard? It's
like well I just cuz I love it. I feel
good.
>> Why I used to do it 12 years ago.
>> Exactly. And now it's all of a sudden I'm getting more and more excited to go back in the gym or even in prep last year I started oh I have to go work out and then all of a sudden I start to feel better dayto-day and it's these little
changes and I realize this is truly how I fell in love with the gym and why I'm such a big advocate of weightlifting.
Like I honestly kind of hope I don't inspire people to get into bodybuilding cuz it's tough. It's [ __ ] up. It's not
good for your health. But I do want to inspire people to go lift weights, get in the gym and want to get jacked because it's such like oh I'm lost. I
don't know what to do. Just go work out.
Apply some discipline. Work hard. find
something you love that's like difficult that shows you progress builds confidence and just go do it and then from there then you can clear your mind a little bit have self-confidence start looking around a little bit more clear start looking inward and figuring out
what is next for you and finding that next goal and working towards it so for me that's why like I just [ __ ] love the gym so much and I'm so grateful that I'm back to a point of like loving the gym >> this is the cash value or this was the
price that you pay in retirement I think you know cuz what you're talking about it's going to be difficult and things will be hard and you won't have the um the drive or the goal that you used to
in the past. All of those things that kind of fluffy concepts, but they come into land. They actually sort of meet
into land. They actually sort of meet reality with I woke up on the morning and didn't know
what to do. I felt tired a lot. I didn't
want to train. I was short and snappy with my business partners. I I found myself getting distracted with lots of little tasks because it made me feel
important and like people needed me. I
packed my calendar out and did because >> a lot of the time in advance of something happening, we probably have a good idea about what it's going to be like in the macro, but what we don't
know is how it's actually going to appear, manifest in life. And it's
navigating those things. So, for
instance, I've been sick for the last 18 months or so, and that's been hard. And
I knew based on what the trajectory was going to be, what was going to be tough, that I was going to have a lot of self-doubt,
that I was going to lose confidence and self-esteem, that um I would feel like I was moving backward, all of these things. Uh but the way that that
things. Uh but the way that that actually appears like the individual building block thoughts that you have like that mean random little voice or that one night where you ruminate about that one thing or you're more sensitive
to criticism and that one comment from that person or you can't really focus on your meditation as much like none of those are I am going to lose confidence they're the individual incidents that
contribute to my confidence has gone down even if you knew it was going to happen in advance and even if in retrospect you can say oh wow both of these things converged each of the little steps that occurred to make that happen kind of come out of nowhere a
little bit because you don't know the effect of each little thing. Does that
make sense? Yeah. So, it's the pack calendar, the lots of travel, the I'm tired, I don't really want to go train, I don't really I'm not weighing my food, I'm maybe eating weird diets compared with what I used
to. And this lack of structure feels
to. And this lack of structure feels alien and uncomfortable to me. But it
also feels like relapse or or uh rest or uh change or variation. But that's also uncomfortable
variation. But that's also uncomfortable because it's unfamiliar. And yeah, each of these little building blocks is contributing to that like
I don't feel like me. I don't feel like me and and not in the way that I wanted to either.
>> Mhm. Yeah. And it it creeps in like that and you have absolutely no idea that it's coming until one day you're like I don't feel good.
>> Mhm.
>> So it's definitely interesting and I feel like you need to you need to I needed to treat myself like a science experiment of like taking and removing pieces and see what's important. It's
like okay bodybuilding was creating a bit of pressure and stress in my life. Is it
everything related to that >> or was it the whole, you know? So, like
as I pulled out like, well, I'm not competing anymore. I don't need to eat
competing anymore. I don't need to eat on a schedule. I don't need to train at the same time. I don't need to leave my phone outside the gym and be locked in and focus as much. I I don't need to wake up with my alarm. I can kind of sleep. I can do all these little things
sleep. I can do all these little things that I can let go of cuz now I don't have to because the goal is different.
But then I start to not feel good. And
it was like, okay, it wasn't those things that weren't making me feel bad.
that those were actually making me feel good. It was the outcome like I said
good. It was the outcome like I said before. So now taking those things out
before. So now taking those things out from bodybuilding, putting them back in my life and realizing, oh wait, the structure and the discipline makes me feel better. It filled me with more
feel better. It filled me with more confidence and ability to go do other things rather than taking away >> regardless of whether it's in service of becoming Mr. Olympia.
>> Yeah. And I mean I know those things, but like you said, it was all of a sudden it was like, "Oh, well, I'll just cut one meal out cuz like I'm busy now.
Oh, well, my shoulder's injured, so I'm going to do my rehab, but like I don't really want to, you know? I'm going to >> I'm not competing this year. Like, who
even cares?
>> Yeah, I'm busy. I'm going to reply to emails in between sets. I'm going to sleep in cuz I went to bed late last night. Like, all these little things.
night. Like, all these little things.
Next thing you know, you're like, I feel like [ __ ] I don't want to do anything.
And you're way harder to pull yourself out of that than if you'd caught it earlier.
>> So, that's life though, you know?
There's no direct ascent to the top.
It's ups and downs and >> building a new self as you go. As a dad, you got one job. Love her. If you want to raise successful kids, especially
boys, you have one job. Love his mom.
>> That's so sick.
>> It's crazy, but it's great in its way.
It's beautiful in its way.
>> And what what look here's the funny thing. I mean, people often ask like,
thing. I mean, people often ask like, you know, what do I do? What should I teach my kids? It doesn't matter what you tell them. You could talk to them in a foreign language.
>> Show them.
>> All that matters what you do. So the
number one predictor for example of kids growing up and practicing a religion is whether their father practices the religion. There's like a 40 percentage
religion. There's like a 40 percentage point difference in the father and the mother practicing on the predictive abil on the predictive capacity on how on how the kids are going to grow up and behave.
>> And there's it's almost certainly the case. It's because I mean when I was a
case. It's because I mean when I was a little kid I thought my dad was you know I thought he could lift the corner of the house.
>> My dad was a math professor. He could
not.
Now I realize he was a nerd. At the time I thought he was cool.
>> Nerd.
>> Yeah.
>> Now that I'm a nerd, I recognize that.
But and my dad was very proud guy. I
mean, he never would have bent the knee to any other men, but he was on his knees on Sunday.
>> And that had a big impact on a little dude. There's something bigger than my
dude. There's something bigger than my dad. And I saw it and it like it's in
dad. And I saw it and it like it's in there, right? That's really important in
there, right? That's really important in every part of life. If you want to teach virtue, practice virtue. be the person you want your kids to actually turn into and they will become that. Generally
speaking, they'll become that person.
>> Yeah. I I was thinking about um you know, we're this generation, both millennials and Gen Z are the progeny of parents who didn't have the tools to sort of relate or navigate in the same
way as an infinite number of evidence-based relationship coaches and then the podcast world and the self-help and all the rest of it. Uh I think I
wonder how they should go about thinking well I didn't necessarily have the best example in front of me because there was
challenges here and we did have uh changing dynamics and and motivations around the acceptance of divorce and maybe I did grow up in a non-intact home
and such. Uh but that sets expectations
and such. Uh but that sets expectations for a good relationship is supposed to be now. And there's this interesting
be now. And there's this interesting uh not a burden I suppose but a responsibility opportunity to be a circuit breaker right and to think you
know Gogins talks about this so you know he explains about how um his dad hit him a lot as a kid and he had a a brother
and sometimes Gogggins sort of took the beatings in place of his brother >> but he also found out that his granddad would make his father stand in front of an open stove move and if he moved, he
would hit him with a belt, >> right, >> as a kid, right?
>> So, you have this lineage, this like ancestral, literal ancestral trauma, but physically being passed down, plus also probably epigenetically being [ __ ] passed down as well.
>> Uh, and I asked David, I didn't even know that this was the case. It was
really kind of beautiful of him to say on the on the podcast, I said, uh, if you had a child, how would you hope to raise them? So, I do have a child. I've
raise them? So, I do have a child. I've
got a 22-year-old daughter. He'd never
mentioned it previously and he brought it up on on the episode and he said he basically sees himself as kind of like a dam sort of a breakwater this circuit
breaker thing in between the series of mistreatments of people like no more.
>> And I kind of think I I often think about that example when it comes to stuff like um your parents didn't necessarily have the tools you do. Yeah,
>> you didn't have an example, but you have the opportunity.
>> And you have the metacognitive ability to manage your emotions, so they don't manage you. This is the most important
manage you. This is the most important thing to keep in mind. I mean, we're talking about the psychology being biology, but we also have will. We also
have a prefrontal cortex for a reason.
That's the most important part of the neurobiology of all is the seuite of your brain where you're actually making decisions notwithstanding your your proclivities. I mean, you got these
proclivities. I mean, you got these urges. We all have these urges. You
urges. We all have these urges. You
know, you you look at a woman who's not your wife and you go, "Oh man, she's really really attractive and all that."
And then your prefrontal cortex, which is the is the behavioral activation system, the behavioral inhibition system that's in the prefrontal cortex, bis and bass, behavioral inhibition and behavioral activation, right? And
behavioral inhibition is more important because you know you I want to hit my son and my my prefrontal cortex says, "Uh-uh, no, because my father hit me and
I'm not my trauma." That's a perfect example of metacognition. That's a
perfect example of being of being a the the master of yourself. And we actually can do that. But you got to have knowledge. You have to be strong, but
knowledge. You have to be strong, but you also actually have to have knowledge. And that's why all this stuff
knowledge. And that's why all this stuff matters. That's how I teach happiness
matters. That's how I teach happiness >> is happiness is really a process of understanding the science, practicing habits that go along with the science and then teaching it to other people so
you ingrain it in yourself. And that's
anything that you want to do. Anything
you want to get better at. If you want to become a better golfer, learn about golf and golf and teach golf. You know,
doctors when they're becoming surgeons, they always say, "Watch one, do one, teach one." That's how you become a
teach one." That's how you become a surgeon. Anything in life actually
surgeon. Anything in life actually follows that basic pattern, but you must have the knowledge such that the habits that you practice are not the habits that are just kind of >> lurking in your limbic system and being
epigenetically expressed from the misbehavior of people six generations ago or some crazy thing like that. We
should not be prisoners of that.
>> Yeah. There's this gorgeous idea from uh Robert Wright's Why Buddhism is True.
>> That's a nice book.
>> [ __ ] dude. Blending evolutionary
psychology. I know.
>> With Buddhism. Uh cuz the the book that got me into uh EP was um The Moral Animal from 1991 or 1992 or something.
And it's still some of the stuff little uh replication crisis, but most of it's [ __ ] on. I love it.
>> The replication crisis is a big problem in my field.
Yeah, a lot of people made their career to be true. And grandma would have said, "Ah, I mean, I can find you a a study that shows that that conjugal infidelity will bring happiness."
>> I mean, I'm sure I could, right?
>> Motivated reasoning by a researcher that darling, darling, honestly, I only did it not only did I not love her, but I did this for us.
>> I know. Exactly. And besides, studies show. Oh, and anyway, so but and and and
show. Oh, and anyway, so but and and and but the whole problem if if a if a and this is like you're you're talking about evolutionary psychology all the time and biology all the time and this is my stock and trade is behavioral scientist.
For everybody watching, if your grandma would hear this result and say that's wrong, she's probably right.
>> Why do you think so many girls are drawn to therapy culture?
>> Oh, I think it's a lot of things. Um, I
do think this is kind of a cliche thing to say now, but I do think therapy culture has replaced religion.
Um, and that's not a new thing to say.
People have been saying that for a long time. So, Christopher Lash was writing
time. So, Christopher Lash was writing about that in the ' 70s. Uh, Frank
Farudi writes about it really well now.
But in recent years since social media, I would say therapy culture has just escalated um to the point where I think young women don't see it as a worldview.
They just see that as kind of life. So
they interpret everything through this therapeutic lens. So their lives, their
therapeutic lens. So their lives, their relationships, their emotions. Um and I think it has elevated to the level of religion. Um, so you think of you think
religion. Um, so you think of you think of all the kind of characteristics of religion, we just mimic them with therapy culture. So instead of praying,
therapy culture. So instead of praying, we just repeat our like positive affirmations. Um, instead of like
affirmations. Um, instead of like seeking salvation, you'll go on like a healing journey. Um, instead of like,
healing journey. Um, instead of like, you know, resisting temptation from the devil, you'll reframe your intrusive thoughts. Um, and so I think for young
thoughts. Um, and so I think for young women in particular who are becoming less religious, this kind of therapeutic worldview has completely replaced that void.
>> What does a therapeutic worldview consist of? What what what does that
consist of? What what what does that mean?
>> Um, like seeing problems in your life, kind of pathizing problems and experiences as something medical rather
than I'm just experiencing this emotion or kind of age-old anxiety. Now it's
become a medical issue. Um, so things like talking in the language of attachment styles uh and and trauma and losing the language of just ordinary
hurt and disappointment and things like that.
>> And for some reason this is giving some kind of solace or comforts, order being brought out of chaos. I
think it gives the comfort religion gives and the consolation of like you see young women on Tik Tok saying things like um like they won't pray to God but they'll give a request to the universe
and like have faith in that.
>> Yeah.
>> And so I think it gives all the comfort of religion but it takes away the inconvenient parts. So the
inconvenient parts. So the >> any actual demands on you or kind of restrictions on your freedom or anything like that >> being held to standards of behavior etc.
So it has what women are craving in modern life, I think, which is belonging and security in something and faith in something, but it's it's a much easier version of religion.
>> Slippery religion.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> How many of these girls are in therapy, do you think?
>> A lot. Um there there was a study recently showing 32% of all 12 to 17 year olds in America have either had therapy, been on medication or had some
kind of treatment in 2023 um >> in a over a single year one/3 >> which is insane. And
I was talking to someone about that statistic and they were like oh that's great that's amazing. And I was thinking that's a bleak statistic. Um, so yeah, I think there's there's the girls that are
in therapy, which is a lot, but then there's also the girls who are just like living in therapy culture. So, it's just they scroll through Instagram and it's all about attachment styles, trauma.
They go on TikTok and it's like a trauma informed therapist telling them like red flags they should watch out for and stuff. It's just like
stuff. It's just like >> there's the actual therapy, which I'm sure there is.
There's useful therapists, but there's also just this culture which is just the world that they're swimming in.
>> Yeah. So, you're never able to switch it off. I think um
off. I think um >> Alando Baton was sat in that same seat as you.
>> Mhm.
>> Big proponent of psychotherapy. I think
trained as a psychotherapist himself too, owns a school of life, which isn't just a YouTube channel, but a psychotherapy uh facility here in London.
>> Yeah. And even he like the biggest proponent of it I think would very much say that there is a time for therapizing.
>> Yes.
>> And then there is a time to not in the same way as going to the gym. There is a time to train and then there is a time to recover. And I wonder whether
to recover. And I wonder whether >> one of the criticisms that's common that I put to him was uh lots of people online more old school people more sort
of typical stiffer bullet type people >> Yeah. would say uh you're not fixing
>> Yeah. would say uh you're not fixing your past's problems, you're dwelling on them. And by dwelling on them, you are
them. And by dwelling on them, you are ruminating too much. There is some evidence. I mean, good bit of evidence
evidence. I mean, good bit of evidence rumination is not particularly fantastic for you. And finding this line between,
for you. And finding this line between, yeah, mate, we don't want to deny that bad things happened and never alchemize them or transcend and include them into our life.
>> Yeah.
>> And then on the other side, we don't want to wallow in them. Uh but I suppose if you have the online environment that you exist within permanently using this language, you're permanently having these structures and these thinking
patterns reinforced >> and then it's how you begin to talk to yourself about what happens offline.
>> Yes.
>> And then you also have, you know, facilitation or medication or conversations with your friends. Further
embracing all of that, it's you're just entrenched in this all the time.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Well, I used to think and I think a lot of people think therapy culture is particularly bad for men because it it kind of has a female approach to problems and it's about, you
know, ruminating and often it's like if you don't have a female response, there's something wrong with you. Uh
it's kind of a red flag if you don't go to therapy. But I actually changed my
to therapy. But I actually changed my mind on that and actually think therapy culture is worse for women because women ruminate more.
>> They co-inate playing into the weakness that they already have or the disposition.
>> Yeah. If you think of an anxious young 14-year-old girl, the worst thing you can tell her is to go further into her own head to get relief and to think more about her problems and to kind of search
her life for symptoms. You know, that if you told me that at 14, it's the worst thing I could have heard. Um, so I actually think maybe some men do need to do that a little bit more, but the
average young girl uh needs to kind of cut out. I wonder whether
cut out. I wonder whether therapy language and therapy culture for girls is what gym language, gym culture, >> Yeah.
>> Psalms, testosterone, steroids at 17, uh, is for guys.
>> Yeah. I think it's a form of control.
So, it's like it's our version of control. You know, if we feel
control. You know, if we feel uncomfortable or feel an uneasy emotion, we're just like, I'm going to categorize that and diagnose it. you know, that's
my attachment disorder or that's uh my depression. Um, and I think men do that
depression. Um, and I think men do that kind they have their own kind of self-optimization trends and the gym stuff where that can become like a form of control um to deal with kind of
uneasy emotions and I think yeah this is the woman's version of that. It's like
we can't sit with it or just accept like a painful situation. So I often think about so if you look at these kind of attachment style forums or girls talking
about their attachment styles very often they'll describe just a bad relationship and then they'll say oh it's my attachment disorder. They'll be like,
attachment disorder. They'll be like, "He cheated on me and I can't get over it because of my anxious attachment."
And it's like, it's so sad because they're actually losing the language to talk about the actual problem >> that they're facing cuz they're trying to get control >> cuz it's a lot easier to be like, "Oh,
you know, I'm anxious or he's avoidant, then we have a terrible relationship and I've just wasted >> four years with someone." It you get the control through the therapy culture. Um,
so that's where I see it becoming a danger to girls and young women.
>> What's the difference between a nice guy and a good man?
>> Yeah. Um,
you know, right about that and there, but a nice guy has is about a nice guy gets along. Yeah, do that. Yeah, I'll do
gets along. Yeah, do that. Yeah, I'll do that. They don't necessarily have
that. They don't necessarily have discernment or judgment. Not sure what they stand for or stand against. It's
like, yes, yes, yes, sure. Yeah. Hey, a
good man has ideals that they stand for and they'll stand against and when they're tested, a good man is not a nice guy. Um, that's
in the chapter of manning up.
You know, that's I was that time when I was doing the romcoms, that's all I could do. I was feeling like my work was
could do. I was feeling like my work was just me as a nice guy. And in life, I was not just a nice guy. Like I said, Camila's pregnant. I got a child coming.
Camila's pregnant. I got a child coming.
I was I was feral with masculinity and and my work maybe I was feeling a bit neutered
>> and I was like, well, I'm I'm I'm I'm a good guy and a good man in life, but I'm just a nice guy at work. Can I be a roles that can be a a good man?
>> And that was dramas because in dramas you can stand for or stand against something. Your ceiling for pleasure and
something. Your ceiling for pleasure and your basement for pain are up to you.
How do you feel about it? And no
director can go that's too much or that's not enough.
You got too angry there. Oh, you meant that too much. Those that that doesn't come in a drama. Those come in a romcom, right? Cuz the emotions and how you feel
right? Cuz the emotions and how you feel are compressed to be in a buoyant level in a threshold that's up bouncing from cloud to cloud only. Dramas are as much pain, as much evil as you want to go, as
deep dark you want to go. Get there.
Let's see how far you go.
how high you want to fly, how close to that sun you get before you before you get burned, go and see how far you go.
That's what you get in drama. Much more
like real life. Um, and so, you know, good guys, being a good good being a good man's a lot harder
for good reason. Not going to be most popular, not going to be always most affable.
Um, it also doesn't mean you got to be a dick or an [ __ ] Just means sometimes you got to go, I believe in this, is this for me, this is for me, and that is
not for me. And because that is not for me, if you do trespass >> into my space upon me and my family, there will be I will do my best to cause
consequences.
And I'm going to let you know that. I
want I hope that's apparent because I'm not going to intrude on you, but if you trespass that I mean I'm I'm going to stand up for it and that we
can talk our way out of that. Great.
No, it doesn't always work that way.
You know, a good man's not looking for trouble, you know. Um, but if it comes and if he
you know. Um, but if it comes and if he or something he cares about unless we're susceptible to being trusted on but trespassed on by trouble, a good man
does what he can to do to stop that. So
Aaron Bugsy um tells this story. He famously had his house robbery attempt occurred on his very nice house in Manchester.
Manchester's got some spicy individuals in it from the gang culture and there is a CCTV video of him. Now by this point,
this is I think 21 or 22. So he's been in the first movie. He has had multiple huge albums, world tour rapping, done
all the things. Most played fire in the booth, freestyle in history, all of this stuff, right? Uh so you might think even
stuff, right? Uh so you might think even though he came from below the streets sort of he came from the sewers uh as a kid he has a public image to keep up. Maybe
he's got soft the sort of velvet prison silk pajamas problem.
>> And he told me this story and uh his girlfriend rings. She's in the house.
girlfriend rings. She's in the house.
These men are trying to break in.
There's a barricade. So he's driving back with his sister in the car. He's
driving back and there's a guy by the side of the road and he can see he's got a brick in his hand. So, uh, Aaron stops the car, opens the door, and immediately says, "Mate, is that you? Blue shirt.
That's such a nice blue shirt." And as he's moving toward him, he puts his hands in the air like this. He's moving
towards him. He's moving towards he's moved to Hits this guy. Brick drops,
finishes him off, gets back in the car, and this bit's captured on CCTV, and somebody overlaid it with the call to the police. So, there's a 999 call going
the police. So, there's a 999 call going on.
>> Yay. from I think his mom who's in the house. These men are trying to break in
house. These men are trying to break in and you see him pull up in this Mercedes. This guy been in movies and
Mercedes. This guy been in movies and all the rest of it and it's a van of dudes. It's a van of men
dudes. It's a van of men >> trying to break in.
>> Yes. Yeah. You're trying to rob his house and see he's rich. He's got
something that we want.
>> He's already dealt with one of them.
Think he might have dealt with another one of them as well. And he pulls in in this fancy Mercedes. You see this guy who has got kind of world at his feet
opens the door to his Mercedes, pulls his shirt off and just sprints at this van.
>> And he it was [ __ ] electric. He told
me this story is so electric.
>> And that's on CCTV.
>> That's great. There's best video he ever made right there, huh?
>> So hardcore. It's so hardcore.
>> Um but yeah, that's you know, good man, not a nice guy.
From the inside, it's very hard to know who you are. And one of the interesting things is how people go a bit mad when they've spent too long alone. If you
spend a long time alone, you sort of >> you don't know certain thoughts go a little too far.
And one of the great things about company, you know, why do we need other people? Just to be able to kind of hold
people? Just to be able to kind of hold us slightly in check in small ways and large, they they kind of go, "No, that thought is getting a little too extreme." Whatever. They they they
extreme." Whatever. They they they define us. Um but also the other thing
define us. Um but also the other thing that people help us to do other people is give us a compact sense of who we are that eludes us. So I see you and I go
there's Chris. Now when you're alone you
there's Chris. Now when you're alone you don't think you're Chris. You just think I'm consciousness in the universe. I'm
just you know I'm just a giant net that's capturing thoughts and impressions. You don't know that you
impressions. You don't know that you have a name, a beginning, a middle or an end etc. And when we're in company, people go, "Oh, you're that guy who does this or you know, you've so other
people's caricaturured vision of us is actually quite helpful to us because you think, oh, you know, I'm I'm that relatively simple soul that >> unifies us, gives us a sense of story."
>> Yeah. And also because, you know, if I look at you, you look unified. You got
two eyes, a nose, a mouth. You know,
you're relatively compact, etc. But inside you, >> you don't feel any of that. It's it's a it's a vast shapeless landscape.
Is this uh is self-esteem related to imposter syndrome? I I think imposter
imposter syndrome? I I think imposter syndrome was already something that I was seeing a lot of and now I'm seeing more about increasingly this sense that
the world expects something of me that maybe I've even actually done previously, but I'm scared about whether or not I'm going to be able to deliver it.
Look, I think it's I know imposter syndrome causes people problems, but um I'm reassured if somebody suffers from imposter syndrome. It's a sign of
imposter syndrome. It's a sign of honesty. It's a sign of self-awareness.
honesty. It's a sign of self-awareness.
Of course, it has its extreme versions which you know causes people a lot of pain. But if someone is aware that they
pain. But if someone is aware that they might be a charlatan or might be pulling off a confidence trick, that's honesty.
That's great. That's a that's a starting point. You know, it's just like somebody
point. You know, it's just like somebody who knows they might be evil is a good person. You know, evil people don't
person. You know, evil people don't worry they might be evil. So, it's, you know, you're likely to be authentic and genuine if sometimes you think, "Am I a fake?" That's a good sign. It's a good
fake?" That's a good sign. It's a good starting point in the same way as identifying that you're a bad driver is a good starting point for not driving fast.
>> But it doesn't necessarily make you better on the roads. So, where do we go to? Where is becoming a better driver?
to? Where is becoming a better driver?
Okay. My imposter syndrome. Thank you,
Alan. You've told me that I'm not so up my own ass that I can't see my own flaws. Hooray.
flaws. Hooray.
What about starting to work through that? What about starting to get a
that? What about starting to get a better sense of our own capacities and capabilities?
Look, a lot of it is bouncing against the world and testing yourself against reality. It's very hard to know your
reality. It's very hard to know your talents until you've had a go at something. And I think we all have this
something. And I think we all have this sense sometimes that some things come more easily to us than to others. You
know, I don't know how great tennis players start, but they must have a sense, oo, I was able to hit that ball and that that worked quite well. Or a
great writer is able to think, I was able to pull off quite a nice little sentence there. And that's the beginning
sentence there. And that's the beginning of a kind of growing confidence. And you
you know, you need a you need that kind of start. And you know, I think a good
of start. And you know, I think a good life doesn't require you to do everything. it it requires you to do the
everything. it it requires you to do the things that you feel you're capable of and that you're especially good at. Um
it's no humiliation for me that I can't play tennis for example if somebody goes you know you're terrible because there's I don't sense a talent but I do sense talent in that tiny area of assembling
words that's the area that you know but maths I can't do um you know architecture I can't really do etc so many things I can't do so it's about
finding those little sweet spots and one of the great puzzles in life is how do people find their vocation how do will find their core identity, their talents.
And I sometimes think of it as it's like you're passing a metal detector over the ground and very occasionally something will let off a little beep, a beep of intensity, of interest, of heightened
thoughtfulness, and you think there's a fragment here below the ground of my true self. Now, my true self was
true self. Now, my true self was shattered or it it came in disassembled form. It's buried. It's scattered over a
form. It's buried. It's scattered over a vast area. And the task of life is to
vast area. And the task of life is to recreate it from hints. And I think that you know one of the great challenges I mean I think one of the big big challenges and it happens to every young person is what should I do with my life?
It's it's one of it's one of these central questions of philosophy in a way because unless you're a very rare person you will have to assemble a vision of your future. It's not going to come
your future. It's not going to come readymade and there won't be a voice from the sky going you know you are an accountant or you are a downhill skier.
It's going to be something you have to assemble and you'll assemble it in bits.
You'll you'll have to recreate the the the original statue of you that was shattered a long time ago and that lies across a vast area. So like an archaeologist of the self, you have to
build that up and and you have to build it up out of those little beeps of interest.
>> And I think a good thing there is envy.
People speak very very low and embarrassed way about envy. You know,
you're not supposed to feel envious. I
think very often when you feel a beep of envy, it's because there's a fragment of your true ambition and your true self in the life of another person. And rather
than go, oh, I must run away from it, go, no, this is a clue. What is there that you are envious of? And often envy is a very inaccurate emotion. We envy
the whole of someone when actually it tends to be a part of them that we want.
And so we go, I'm envious of that singer, actor, business person, etc. You want to go, hang on, hang on. It's it
won't be the whole thing. Drill into it.
What what really is core here? And you
might realize it's actually not their fame, their money. It's that they work with their hands or it's that they, you know, um live in a log cabin somewhere far away from other people or whatever it is. So the best thing to do with envy
it is. So the best thing to do with envy is to see it as a guide for your own ambition, not a sign of your innate jealousy and inadequacy. M. It's a clue.
>> I always think about envy as the only one of the seven deadly sins that doesn't feel good.
>> Remind me of the other seven deadly sins. Gluttony.
sins. Gluttony.
>> Gluttony. Sloth. Sloth doesn't feel good.
>> You don't think sloth feels good? Have
you not spent a good Sunday afternoon watching some horrible TV show?
>> Think of the self disgust that sloth often brings, right? You know, you're lying on the sofa and you know that your you know, you're scrolling Instagram and you know that your better self is being eroded
>> and so there's guilty sloth, right?
>> Good sloth and guilty sloth.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Interesting.
>> I remember when I came out with the first book, I was being interviewed, I don't know, some today show or something like that and the guy goes, "So, you lost everything in your 20s and now
you're teaching people financial peace.
How did you bounce back?" And I I remember it just hit me like that was stupid. And I said, "Dude, when you fall
stupid. And I said, "Dude, when you fall that far, you don't really bounce. It's
more of a splat."
And he just looked at me just like that wasn't the answer that fit the narative you're talking about.
Yeah. And so the the thing I would say though is if if someone's watching you and I right now talk about this and they go, "Yeah, I'm in the soup."
>> Um people do react two different ways to being in the soup. We all have the uh the fear and then the momentary courage or the momentary hope followed by uh you
know another another injury followed by another betrayal followed by a momentary we all have that then the choice you have to make the individual has to make while we're in that and I made that
choice semicconciously was you can choose all right I'm going to quit I'm going to adopt the victim language
and I'm just going to sit down cuz I quit.
And those are the people that never recover from their divorce. They never
recover from their business loss. Uh or
you can say, "I don't know what I'm doing. I'm so lost. I don't know what to
doing. I'm so lost. I don't know what to do. But I do know I'm going to take the
do. But I do know I'm going to take the next step. The next step I'm going to
next step. The next step I'm going to take the ne I'm going to do the next right thing that's in front of me. And
the next right thing that's in front of me and it might even not be the right thing, but I'm going to do the next thing. And and sitting is not an option.
thing. And and sitting is not an option.
I'm going to keep walking. So, keep
walking if you're in this. And the old country song, you know, if you're going through hell, keep going.
>> And um and so, but I I meet people that uh and they call on the show. It's like
a lady called the other day and she's talking about her divorce like it happened 20 minutes ago. And I'm like, "How long ago were you divorced? 40
years." I'm like, "Honey, you're still living emotionally back in that thing."
the language she was using was fresh >> and and she's still sitting there mad at him and he's gone and gotten two other wives since then. I mean, you know,
right? And move on. And so, um, but that
right? And move on. And so, um, but that it's real easy to quit in that. And it's
not a quitter thing. It's, um, it's just this natural reaction. I'm going I'm going to get up one more time, even though I don't feel like it, and walk out into the sun, get a little vitamin D, get a little prayer, meet with my
buddy, and let him make fun of me, and then I'm going to get after it again.
And I'm just one more time. One more
time. Right. Yeah. I I remember toward the end of my 20ies, and I was really trying to sort of work out some of the predictors for when I felt better and when I felt worse, when I was when I was
in the soup, as you would say. And uh I remember I wrote it, action is the antidote to anxiety that you really don't fear the future when you're moving yourself toward it. Um and it's a
vicious spiral because the very thing that's hardest to do when you are struggling is precisely the thing that would make you feel better, right? You
your motivation is at its lowest. You
don't want to get out of bed. You don't
want to go to work. You don't want to think of a new idea. You don't want to apply effort to something or pick up the bar or not eat the comfort food or whatever it is. stick to your routine.
>> Uh so, but then when you start to roll that boulder a little bit, it accumulates an awful lot of momentum, which is exactly how you see people get unbelievable outcomes. How like this seems super
outcomes. How like this seems super human. How does this how does this
human. How does this how does this person get so much done in a day? How
are they so successful? How are they so balanced? All the rest of it. It's like,
balanced? All the rest of it. It's like,
well, they are on the positive side of the same momentum that is currently kicking your ass.
>> Exactly. Yeah. Uh we developed a little theorem around here to talk to our team about this uh called the momentum theorem. Focused intensity over time
theorem. Focused intensity over time multiplied by God equals unstoppable momentum. And one of the things we talk
momentum. And one of the things we talk about in the little book I did on it was just this idea that when you have negative momentum, you are better than you look.
>> When you have positive momentum, you are not as good as you look.
>> That's great. That's you know and so uh so don't believe the lie either way. And
so you know you if you got positive momentum you are harvesting crops that were planted yesterday not this morning that they were planted a year ago put them in the ground and
today I'm getting this fruit and everybody thinks I'm a genius but it was actually a year ago I was a genius >> and or you got you got crops going in the ground there's nothing coming out of the ground yet and you're planting
you're planting you're planting nobody can see you nobody knows you're there you uh but you're a lot better than you look cuz wait till the rain and the sun comes. There's going to be a crop in the
comes. There's going to be a crop in the spring and suddenly you're going to be that genius. So, you know that that's
that genius. So, you know that that's how that stuff works. I I remember talking about going through this stuff.
Uh this idea of walking, continuing to walk that you brought up. I love that.
We were snowk skiing the other day in Telluride and I'm a mediocre snow skier for a 65-year-old dude, right? Uh but I like to go down the hill and go fast. I
enjoy it. So, you know, go and so I'm skiing with my uh kids. They're like 40 and 30 years old and they they haul butt. I mean, they go and so the old
butt. I mean, they go and so the old man's trying to keep up and he's huffing and puffing. So, we jumped off a lift.
and puffing. So, we jumped off a lift.
We were running cruiser blues, you know, good and double blues, that kind of stuff. We hit a black every now and
stuff. We hit a black every now and then, but they were cruisers. They were
grooming groomedies. So, we jumped off it and there's this one run on tellide that when you get to the top of it on black, it's a it's a uh it's a groom to
black and it's unbelievably steep.
You can see downtown Telleluride and it looks like you're going to fall into Main Street when you fall. I mean, it's right there. It looks like a toy box and
right there. It looks like a toy box and there's nothing between you and Main Street. It's just air. It's that steep.
Street. It's just air. It's that steep.
It's an unbelievable. And I pulled up on top of that thing and I looked at one of the kids, you know, these 30-year-olds.
I'm like, uh, they went, "That's steep."
And I went, "Yeah." And if I stand here about three more heartbeats, I'm going to walk back because I'm getting really scared. So, I got to go or the fear is
scared. So, I got to go or the fear is going to take me over.
>> And I thought, you know what? That's
what I've done half my life. You got to go or the fear is going to take me over.
>> I because if I stood there, I my heart rate was going.
>> This was just the other day. I was
scared, you know? I mean, it's like I was scared, but I thought, you know what? If I can I can do this stupid
what? If I can I can do this stupid thing. I can ski it. I know I can ski
thing. I can ski it. I know I can ski it, but I if I stand here and think about it, it's going to the the fear is going to kill me. There's a
I I want to give it a better term than cultivated stupidity. uh conscious
cultivated stupidity. uh conscious ignorance maybe you could say or tactical ignorance around things that yeah a lot of the time there is um there is a period where you're supposed to plan where you're supposed to reflect
and ruminate and and and sort of think about stuff but that can be a trap as well and I think that a lot of people who like to listen to shows like yours and like mine uh they'll be thinking about their thoughts they'll be thinking
about themselves they'll be strategizing um but there is just a there is absolutely a time for straight action without having to ruminate too much.
>> Yeah, you can get paralysis of the analysis.
>> So, this was a longitudinal study that was done in a relatively sort of academic setting.
>> Yes, he did a large scale longitudinal study and um he's fantastic.
>> Those three traits were predictive.
Conscientiousness, which is being a combination of thoughtful and kind.
uh >> you know I'm not I don't want to get too into definitions in case I misstate something but um the way I understand conscientiousness and there are
different personality models right and each personality model and not a not every personality there's really no one personality model that has ever gotten it completely right they've all been
dispelled in certain regards but the way that I see conscientiousness as a whole across different personality models is uh it's got a couple of things combined.
So, it's not just nice. Nice to me can also mean low self-esteem, a pushover, um trying to be liked. Conscientiousness
may not even look super smiley friendly.
It's more of an action. So, to me, it is somebody who's smart enough to actually notice and anticipate somebody's needs.
My husband is incredibly observant, and it's something that continues to also bring up admiration. So, it's got that uh observational quality, intelligence,
and then also motivation. You can't be lazy. Um and they go and get things
lazy. Um and they go and get things done.
>> They're industrious. Exactly.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Okay, that makes sense. I
was more thinking I was trying to sort of interpret it, I guess, into the language of romance. But yes, if you're talking straight up what is conscientiousness, I think good definition. Uh they are flexible
definition. Uh they are flexible psychologically. If there is some sort
psychologically. If there is some sort of perturbment, they end up getting back to baseline in not an insane amount of time. If something occurs, they're able
time. If something occurs, they're able to adapt to it, which >> is maybe distinct, but kind of sounds a little bit like a subset of agency, which I would put not too far away from conscientiousness as well.
>> Agency, >> right? Okay. So, you want highly agentic
>> right? Okay. So, you want highly agentic partner.
>> You were so smart.
>> A thank you. Um,
>> I'm going to have to up my game now.
>> We're on a different level. Um, and
then, uh, your final one, you want a degree of openness to new experience.
Presumably, that's somebody that just doesn't want to sit on their ass all the time. It helps to keep things exciting,
time. It helps to keep things exciting, but that is something that you can overshoot for. Uh, and you end up with
overshoot for. Uh, and you end up with someone who is going to be very open socioexually. They're going to be
socioexually. They're going to be looking for >> high adventurousness predicts cheating.
>> Yeah, correct. Um, so, okay, those that's interesting is three traits. I
guess a question would be uh let's say that you are uh on an early date with someone or you're early into a relationship. What are some of the ways
relationship. What are some of the ways that you can adjudicate how much or how little of those traits your partner has?
>> You know, this is the great question. Um
I learned about these I'm I'm going to speak from my own experience. Okay,
so I've experienced this because I knew about these traits before I met Tai and I absolutely intended to try this out.
Uh when I learned about them, I was actually uh dating somebody I we were not happy and that person I would say lacked these traits. Both of us probably
lacked these traits to be completely fair. But we were in a conference
fair. But we were in a conference together watching Tai Tiro speak about this. And I remember sitting there um at
this. And I remember sitting there um at this conference not having a particularly good time with the person I was with and thinking I can do this. I can follow
instructions. And the reason I also
instructions. And the reason I also thought that was because Tairo was emphasizing how difficult this is that our evolutionary brains really want. So
if we're talking about a straight female, we want that strong jawline. We
want uh somebody who's all brawn. We
want money. We want height. We want
protection for our young. Um I and and he actually did this experiment where he had everybody raise their hands if they
were a straight male single. And so you had about a hundred men in this room raise their hands. And he was mimicking the average dating experience. So you go
online, you're straight woman, you want a straight man, single. And then he says, "So how many of you are between the ages of 35 and 45?" So let's say now
you've got about 50 hands up. And then
he said, "How many of you are Catholic?"
And you've got maybe 20 hands up. How
many of you make over 200,000 a year?
You've got, I don't know, five hands up.
How many of you are 6 feet tall? One
hand. So you can see that this completely diminishes our pool. So
really what he was doing was in fact the book he wrote is called The Science of Happily Ever After and he talks about three wishes. Statistically speaking,
three wishes. Statistically speaking, you'll get married. If that's something you want, you're going to get married.
Most people in society do. But you
really get to choose three things guaranteed and then your pool goes down.
And if you want hotness, height, and money, you might have a person who's a complete selfish [ __ ] And that's where you think like, are there those problems ones that you're going to be
able to deal with just because the person's hot in 20 years?
>> Or are you going to be so sick of their [ __ ] that you don't care how hot they are?
>> So, that's really what it comes down to.
So, your question was, how do we adjudicate this? How do we find somebody
adjudicate this? How do we find somebody with these qualities? What I can tell you is that um I knew it was going to be hard, but I also know that I love
science. And so if this was as sound as
science. And so if this was as sound as he said it was, I could do it. And I
knew that the biggest thing, the biggest thing in my way was just to get rid of that evolutionary urge for hotness. The
night I met Tai, so I broke up with the person I was with that day. I moved back to California. I immediately got on
to California. I immediately got on Tinder. was 2015, so Tinder was kind of
Tinder. was 2015, so Tinder was kind of it. Um, and I also didn't know what I
it. Um, and I also didn't know what I was doing. I was new to apps and got on
was doing. I was new to apps and got on Tinder.
I will tell you what, with that mindset that I didn't care about hotness, money, or height, I realized there were so many lovely eligible bachelors. And so, I was
just swiping away. Swipe, swipe, swipe.
Ty was one of the first people to respond. He was online and so was this
respond. He was online and so was this male model. And uh the male model was
male model. And uh the male model was that baseline instinct of me. I was just like, "And you, even though you're putting up a lot of like ab pictures,
I just can't help it." So, I actually had two contenders. I lived this. And
Ty, I didn't know what he actually looked like. He was wearing a giraffe
looked like. He was wearing a giraffe costume on his main picture, which I thought was funny. And there was some pictures of him working, but he had like hard hat stuff. So, I really I had no
idea he was hot and Australian and 6'2.
I mean, I did win in this case, but um I've been texting, I'm messaging him, I'm messaging this other guy. Ty is so wonderful and he's just asking me these
really intelligent questions. Um sort of like this conversation, right? So,
you're one of those rare ones who has all of those qualities. Ladies, watch
out. Um but he I could just tell he was wonderful and we're talking. you can
tell if you know what these three things are. I could just tell. I just needed to
are. I could just tell. I just needed to be aware of them. It was there. And he
kind of became more of a friend. And in
the meantime, this model is sending me like emojis of wet splashes and asking if I want a massage. Now, granted, I was on Tinder. I need to be fair, but and I
on Tinder. I need to be fair, but and I kept talking to the model. I just
couldn't help myself. But after about 24 hours, I was done with the model guy.
Tai was just becoming this friend and then something kind of scary happened with my work two weeks later and I realized I wanted to tell my friend about it and that's how it evolved.
>> If I was to just chuck a little bet on for something that's very very reliably going to happen over the next 3 years before the end of this administration, the mother of all blowups between Elon and Trump.
>> So, how do you see that happening? I've
heard a lot of people Charlemagne talks about this all the time. Trump thinks
that that uh sorry, Charlemagne thinks Trump is going to put him in prison.
Okay, that's a take that I hadn't heard before.
>> But yeah, but uh what do you now you know Charlemagne is is very Democrat, like obviously he's going to have some bias that goes into this, but uh but what do what is your take and how do you see that relationship going? I just
think that when you've got two people with so much power and ego and I do from what I can tell uh Elon's ego and that
uh sort of self focused self-belief like it's me it's me and like I'm going to be the center of all of this uh seems to be
ramping up. That is probably a pretty
ramping up. That is probably a pretty dangerous cocktail based on like some stories and stuff that I've heard about behind the scenes from from Trump about
some levels of vulnerability and then sort of like flimsy uh senses of um he doesn't like to be shown up, doesn't like to be sort of upstaged and uh
>> and I don't know if I don't know if Elon has the emotional intelligence of JD Vance >> to be able to tiptoe around and yes sir, no sir, three bags, false, sir. JD and
why I say do not treat that man lightly.
I think he has like he came from like poverty. I think his mom was like a drug
poverty. I think his mom was like a drug addict like and then he ends up going to Yale and then he becomes the VP of a guy that he campaigned against and said was horrible and like a tyrant.
Do you know the level of emotional intelligence it takes to go from like a broke middle America broken family to an
Ivy League institution to then VP for the guy who does not he doesn't always keep it like you can say things about Trump but if if it's advantageous for whatever his plan is he will forgive you
you know he's kind of like Vince man in that regard like whatever works for the thing but like that takes high EQ even in that moment with Zillinsky he's managing Trump
like he's he he did have a moment for himself but everything he said was and you show respect to Trump and Donald Trump's office and what >> so he knows the game he's playing >> oh that what I'm saying is don't treat
him lightly. What the our coastal elites
him lightly. What the our coastal elites we always do is when someone has a kind of southern accent we think they're idiots and we and we don't we don't even
really pay attention to them. And that
man is someone I see a problem with JD before I see Elon. But
>> what do you think is going to happen with Elon long term with Trump?
>> Nothing.
>> You think that he's going to dance through the minefield?
>> I I don't think I think he's acutely aware of his limitations in America. He
cannot physically be president. If he
could be president, I think there is a concern because eventually he'll go when they have an impass, he'll just go, "Well, I'll just run against you." He
cannot. The the laws dictate he cannot.
>> So, inevitably, you're going to have to bow down at some point.
>> This is the highest you're as high as you can go.
>> That's only that's only based on the fact that you can put your the outcomes that you want for your project behind your ego.
>> Yes. And I'm
not sure which one is going to be the bigger priority.
>> The the only other thing he could do is leverage the Democrats which have already made him radioactive.
Like no Democrat can side with Elon. So
Elon is as far as he can go in America.
He can't go any further. Like this is outside of being president. Like there's
that great line in Game of Thrones where like Cersei is talking to Littlefinger and Littlefinger is like you know you know Littlefinger the character and Littlefinger goes uh you know what I've learned over the years is that uh you
know knowledge is power and there's all these guards around her and and them and and she goes um guards slit his throat and they all walk up and put a knife to his throat and then she goes guards
stand down guards take two steps back guards take six steps back and then she goes power is power and it's just so
fire and it's like Trump has power.
Power is power. That is the closest Elon can get to power and I don't think there's another president that will allow Elon to have that access to power.
>> So Elon either has to hope there's another person that he could ride with >> and establish relationship and and maybe that's JD, but he have to wait till the next administration anyway. So what he
can't do is sour all the Republicans on him. Like I I I cannot see the situation
him. Like I I I cannot see the situation where they get into trouble because there's nowhere else for him to go.
>> He'd either have to jump parties >> which is very difficult after chastising the left all this like he's kind of made his bed and he's high. He has access to all these things and I think it does
benefit him the most if America is successful because all his businesses are tied up in America. He could jump ship to another country, but that's not the thing I worry about because I think he's smart enough to understand the
position he's in. Eventually, you hit the This is what happens with all rich people is they that that actually want to move weight around. You hit the impass of government and you have people
who are way less successful than you, way poorer than you telling whe you whether you can or can't build a factory or do whatever you want to do. And in
that moment, they go, "Fuck, I just worked my ass off. I got [ __ ] yachts and everything and now I got to go kiss this guy's dick. Like you saw them all lined up behind Trump during the
inauguration. Zuckerberg Bas. Everybody
inauguration. Zuckerberg Bas. Everybody
went to kiss the ring and he set him up letting everybody else know they're kissing the ring. And I think Elon goes, I got the best seat. It don't get better
than this. And this guy trusts me and
than this. And this guy trusts me and believes in me. I can't [ __ ] this up.
And he's dealt with governors, mayors, and all this other [ __ ] that he doesn't respect at all. So he's like, "It's not going to get better than this." I if if I I don't think he can ruin it.
>> Is if they change the rule to let non-citizens become president, now we have an issue.
>> But Trump would never change that rule because it's that's his security blanket right there.
>> It's It's actually kind of like brilliantly done by Trump. It's ride
with me against the left. Now he Elon can't go to the left. So he has to be loyal to you. It's he's it's like he's Zillinsky. Well, everybody that's
Zillinsky. Well, everybody that's everybody that's associated with Trump is so unspeakable and toxic that they're never going to be allowed back.
>> So now you got the loyalty built right there.
>> Yeah.
>> Circling back to Chris's opening question, is it possible that everyone's having less sex because of the labubu may
>> but seriously like maybe crossed my mind sometime we need more polarity. Yeah.
Well, look, I this is to me this just seems like the progeny of me too in many ways that the message
that a lot of men, the vast majority of well- behaved, uh, sexually disciplined, not pushy men took was, I shouldn't be
pushy. It's like, well, yeah, you
pushy. It's like, well, yeah, you already weren't that pushy, and maybe you actually weren't pushy enough. So
the issue with the message don't be too pushy is that the men who really need to hear it will ignore it and the men who are already predisposed to believe it will take it to heart. So what you end
up with is this weird selection effect where the bad actors still act badly and the ones who actually probably needed a little bit of a helping hand to go forward like oh holy [ __ ] >> And maybe the labuba man is just the the
final >> final form of of that.
>> He's taking it too seriously. the risk
of the risk of just pouring um petrol on this conversation and then flinging a matching. Um it it strikes, you know,
matching. Um it it strikes, you know, the it strikes me that, you know, if if if your thesis is right and in fact um somewhere buried in in all of this is
actually a low level of sort of low-level revulsion at Lubu man. Um and
a yearning for a more direct and unmediated form of um masculine sexual aggression. Um it has been suggested by
aggression. Um it has been suggested by people on the internet whose names I now forget that that this is some this is in fact a factor in the extremely um
politically sensitive subject of migration into the country across the English Channel. Um, as in there are
English Channel. Um, as in there are that there are progressive women >> who I know >> kind of kind of enjoy the appearance of
young men who haven't been liubified yet.
>> Wow.
>> Or this is no this is this is not >> because Lubu hasn't reached Syria.
>> Labubu has not reached Syria. The these
guys are not noodle armed. These guys in fact have demonstrated considerable gumption in making it from wherever it is that they've originated to England. I
mean, it's an it's a genuinely impressive level of gumption involved.
>> Yeah.
>> Um and I don't know, maybe >> that's spicy.
>> Yeah. You really
>> So, so I Okay, two things. One is
>> So, so having having just I'm just I'm going to hand you the petrol.
>> So, I do actually agree with you. I was
speaking to a journalist friend recently.
>> No, you're not agreeing with me. You're
agreeing with people on the internet whose names I don't know. Um I was speaking to a friend, a journalist friend recently who had been in uh Calala and speaking to these guys who
come over the channel and he said like what is really amazing is you'll talk to these guys about their life stories and it will be like oh yeah so I came from Sudan and I walked across half of Africa
and then I got to Libya and then I got enslaved and so I was taken to another country where I was a slave and then I was gang raped and then I somehow escaped from that and then I swam across the tunnel or whatever. like they tell this story >> and it's the most appalling thing you've
ever heard and they're physically it's evident that they've been through this and these are like 20-year-old guys or something and then that you ask them why did you do it and they're like >> just like Manchester United
they'll offer some like really weird inadequate answer. It's not even like I
inadequate answer. It's not even like I want answers to the welfare state because you could have got that in other European countries. It's it's it's quite
European countries. It's it's it's quite like strange and I do kind of get your point that there's an element of like >> crazy machoess about it which If you're prepared to go through all of that for Manchester United, imagine what you do
for your family and your partner.
>> I suppose so. The only the only thing I would say though is that the impression that I get from a lot of women who are very very invested in refugees welcome kind of stuff is that they really infantilize these men at the same time and there's a degree to which they're
kind of scooping up the vulnerable. You
know, >> you think this is a bit like the American pitbull ladies phenomenon.
>> Yeah. Yeah. He's just he's just misunderstood. This is
misunderstood. This is >> I'll just add some >> in there. It's okay. Um this is this is this is another one of these these
discourses actually probably related in obliquely to Lubu man. Um there was one of these memes that slot is around in which um pro a certain subtype of of
usually single American progressive women are accused of adopting actually obviously murderously sociopathically dangerous rescue pitbulls >> as a kind of proxy for the sort of man
they would never dream of admitting to fancying in real life.
>> Right. Okay. So, so in a sense, you know, officially they're only allowed to date Lubu man. And that's in fact the only people who are within within their social circles immediately. And so they adopt a pitbull to just kind of compensate.
>> So I see >> his lack of >> I see your Lubu man.
>> Yeah.
>> And I raise you the newly nomenclatured himo, which has actually come back around.
>> The new dream guy is beefy, placid, and politically ambiguous. Amid pitch
politically ambiguous. Amid pitch debates about masculinity, the HMBBO stands stoically above it all. As an
alternative to the thinking man, the Renaissance man or the family man, today's HMBBO offers just man, a blurry image, a blunt political instrument, or just a caricature, the human equivalent
of a smiley face. The Hmbo is in many senses unreal, a wish fulfillment fantasy. His true self is concealed
fantasy. His true self is concealed behind a set of do-ike eyes. The content
of his inferiority forever un unconfirmed.
>> So, is this like Ken in Greta's? He says
he says towards the end, "If I'd realized patriarchy wasn't wasn't just about horses, I wouldn't have bothered."
Hunk with a heart of gold. Punk with a heart of gold. I think um who was the dude that did Magic Mike? Who was the guy, the actor that played Magic Mike?
>> Oh, >> Channing Tatum. Channing Tatum is often put forward as like him. I actually
Channing Tat follows me on Instagram, so I I actually quite like him. But
>> hunk with a heart of gold, the human equivalent of a smiley face. What we've
got here is basically I think you're trying to cross the streams between Labubu man uh in terms of disposition and front cover of a dark romance novel
in terms of presentation.
>> I mean it's a tricky tight road for women because on the one hand you want and this is an eternal conundrum. You
want a man who is going to protect you and protect your children and pro provide for you in times of of extreme threat, right? But you also don't want
threat, right? But you also don't want someone who's going to beat you up and beat up your children. And so that's that's tricky.
>> The line that you've got to perennially >> Yeah. And so the the Hmbo is is I I I
>> Yeah. And so the the Hmbo is is I I I love a Hmbo, right? And I the impression from my female friends is that Hmbo is very high status. I remember a friend talking to me about how attractive a Hmbo was and she said she really really
didn't want I guess a labubu man who was like excessively intellectual. She said
if I came home and he was like I just read something in the New York Review of Books. I would kill myself.
Books. I would kill myself.
It's not what she want. Right. Um, a
himmo does kind of tread that tie road like he's physically capable clearly of doing what's needed if you're at risk, but he's so sweethearted that he would never turn on you.
>> Well, again, I mean, skipping sideways through this this sort of untidy territory. There was a there was a
territory. There was a there was a piece, I think it was in the New York Times, which is often a sort of barometer for what uh what American middle-class women in the 30s think
about stuff in general. There was it I think it was the New York Times, but it was it was somewhere in that zone, that discursive zone. Anyway, um on on how on
discursive zone. Anyway, um on on how on a on a on an in fascinating new trend of women marrying down and what they were actually talking about No, but but what they were talking about wasn't actually
women marrying down. It was women marrying below their educational level.
Yeah. Actually, they were financially they were marrying up because these were these were women with maybe a degree and a masters or a degree and a PhD or something but no money and a mansion of debt. It's like complex hypergamy
debt. It's like complex hypergamy >> who were marrying um construction, you know, construction entrepreneurs or, you know, a successful plumber with a with a with several employees who was turning
over, you know, chunks of change. And
so, you know, in straightforward financial terms, you know, it's it's at least a match if not marrying up. But in
intellectual and in terms of a of a particular type of cast as distinct from straightforward economic levels, you know, she she was exp, you know, some of these women were experiencing it as kind
of marrying down. And I think there's something there, you know, I think that speaks to your hmbo in the sense that very sensibly these these extremely overeducated women have married some guy who's going to appreciate their brains
and also be able to pay the mortgage, you know, without trying to compete. It
seems like the the the Hmbo is economically uh prepared and maybe educationally underdeveloped, whereas the Labubu man is maybe economically underdeveloped and overeducated.
>> I mean, would you rather have a guy who can talk would you rather have a guy who can talk contemporary literature but can't afford to buy you dinner or some guy who can who can who can fix the plumbing when it goes wrong and just doesn't care what you think about books.
>> I have a funny story about this. It
occurs to me that my parents technically have that dynamic cuz my mom has a PhD and my dad has an undergraduate degree and then became a lawyer. Um, but anyone who knows PhDs don't translate into big
money, right? So, my dad's always learn
money, right? So, my dad's always learn more. But there was this funny story
more. But there was this funny story about a time when he was at work, this is the age for the internet, and someone referred to King Leah in talking about office politics. He was like, "Oh,
office politics. He was like, "Oh, someone is someone's behaving like King Le in relation to someone." like he didn't understand what they were saying and he called my mom like very quietly and said what happens in kingly
>> and it was a funny example of this >> well there's something there how much do women find that endearing how much do women find needing to intellectually coddle their partner
beyond up to a certain point >> how much do they find that is oh noble savage >> I personally find that endearing >> if he's also if he's also sort of generally red-blooded in his bearing
behavior and is also capable of fixing stuff around the house that goes wrong.
I don't really see the problem is very girly.
>> What about What about if it's the opposite though? What about if it's
opposite though? What about if it's somebody who can tell you what has been happening in the New York Review of Books, but uh needs to call his dad if there's something broken in the toilet at your house?
>> I mean I mean competence competence is very hot or should you know, >> right? But this is competence within a
>> right? But this is competence within a particular domain because you could say the noble savage is incompetent when it comes to his intellectual development. I
mean, I suppose, you know, zooming zooming back a bit, you could probably make the case that we're where we're we're currently in an age of flux where the sort of never- ending growth really does feel like it's come to an end. You
know, politics is quite uncertain. You
know, we've got war in Europe for the first time in a very long time. Um, and
all kinds of things don't feel as certain and safe and stable as they used to. And it could be that in fact some of
to. And it could be that in fact some of these uh very instinctive mating patterns are going are shifting are going to shift or are perhaps even already shifting in the light of how
people assess their own prospects in that very much more uncertain world.
>> People want to become more high agency presumably. We've said it's important.
presumably. We've said it's important.
We've identified what it is, how it works, some ways that people can fall into traps to stop them from being it.
Some beliefs that those people have. Are
there give me something? Give me a pair of breasts. Give me something tangible
of breasts. Give me something tangible >> up sake. Um I'd say so there's a there's a few, right? So the first one that I I mentioned a few times, but I really want to actually get into it, which is the um
does it defy the laws of physics question because okay um the going back to the brain is a question answering device. So if you say why or what's
device. So if you say why or what's great about my life, it'll start finding answers. If you say, "What's awful about
answers. If you say, "What's awful about my life?" It will start finding answers.
my life?" It will start finding answers.
And let's say we go to a venue together and the guy on the front door says, "Sorry, not tonight, mate."
And then you go, "Okay, accept that social reality." And it's, "Well, does
social reality." And it's, "Well, does it fundamentally defy the laws of physics?" Does it go against Newton's
physics?" Does it go against Newton's laws of motion? Chris getting into um Tiger Tiger tonight? No. Um does it defy Einstein's relativity? No. And that
Einstein's relativity? No. And that
point sounds trit, but then when you actually begin to understand that, well, you go, well, as long as it doesn't defy the laws of physics, anything is um theoretically possible with human knowledge. And again, it sounds trit
knowledge. And again, it sounds trit saying that, but you just look at the last few hundred years since the Enlightenment. And you have this period
Enlightenment. And you have this period before it where nothing happened in humanity. We would just your great great
humanity. We would just your great great great great great granddad's life looked the same as as yours. Um, and meanwhile we have this change and the ability for
humans to understand how things work and implement it into reality and happen to life and shape their environment that we just now completely take for granted like me
getting annoyed at the flat diet coke on the Emirates flight >> um is a big thing. The second thing which is probably a little less esoteric that I I really really like as a a
metaphor is when you're in the complete low agency and everything is super general and it's like I don't even know I don't even know where to begin. I
don't even know where to start. One
thing I I love doing a little experiment I got was going okay let's say I have a problem right now um of I had a friend at the minute who who uh
he's an extreme but a friend we both know actually he's an extreme workaholic to a point that I've never I've never seen before >> and he was talking about how it's a problem he just doesn't know where to
start and I said to him I go okay where are you at right now out of 10 and it suddenly takes this kind of general infinite universe all the way down to okay well we're well a bit of a binary
choice here and you can never say seven right >> so he goes he goes um I'm at a three and I go okay and I go why why are you at a um a three by the way like why aren't
you at a two and he goes to be honest with you cuz I've actually like not worked tonight I've come here to see you go okay so we're getting some specificity here >> and I go okay well what would take it up to a four and he goes well
>> if I left the office before 8:00 p.m.
I'd give that a four. I go, "Okay, great." Got a little step there. I go,
great." Got a little step there. I go,
"Well, we take it to a five. We'll take
it to a 6 7 8 9 10." I go, "Okay, first off, let's just do the four immediately." And then as soon as you
immediately." And then as soon as you have that, you have momentum. One of the things I love, and I'll probably put it in the piece of like a template that people can use is just what I call the
video game Apple Note. So, you have, let's say, for example, to-do list in Apple Note, build a website. The problem
with that is that's starting the video game on level 56. M
>> so one I had this fascinating realization that um two sorry one person that I knew was the laziest person I've ever met couldn't like open his mail couldn't get out of
bed and like make himself some food but was one of the best video game players at that specific game in the world I would spend 16 hours a day on this video game and I go well >> do they have an agency problem
>> or is their reality just a poorly designed video game so the video game Apple note is just level one let's say whatever it is whether from opening mail to going to Kittyhawk
and taking the planes into the sky, there's always a level one. And that's
what video games are incredible at that they adapt to where you're at and then just slowly move you up. Again,
completely the opposite of school. So
level one is always just dump down thoughts on topic. And what I love about that is no matter how complex the thing is, from curing cancer to flying planes to opening the mail, you can always dump
down thoughts and then you check it off.
And level two is create the next five levels based off level one.
>> And what's beautiful is when you check level one, hey, level one's small enough to start but isn't overwhelming. So you
you have that video game bit of dopamine. Then when you check it off,
dopamine. Then when you check it off, you're like, "Fuck, let's go. I'm on
level two." And then each step is enough. So key thing with video game
enough. So key thing with video game design is it's enough of a step to feel a challenge but without overwhelm. And
if you if it's too big of a step, like level 56, build website, that's too big of a step. You just are constantly in frustration, so you just quit the video game. It's a terribly designed video
game. It's a terribly designed video game. But breaking things down into
game. But breaking things down into micro steps is such a uh a key thing in video game design and ultimately increasing agency.
>> Yeah. I mean, this is the productivity 101. You write your
productivity 101. You write your epigraph.
You work in sevenyear seasons. You work
in threeyear blocks. You work in one-year sprints broken down into 90-day chunks broken down into daily actions and you know minuteby minute you've got
your life planned out. Uh and it's kind of trite because it's so obvious but the flest the smallest first step imaginable is how the Wright brothers managed to get their plane to go. It's how you
launched your marketing agency in a different country. It's how this podcast
different country. It's how this podcast started.
>> Yes. And yeah, you need to be able to if you can figure out ways that you can constantly make that first step because 50% of the battle um is that first step.
So if you have that um great tool another tool um more related to so we spoke earlier about the four four tenants of high agency you have clear thinking you have bias to action you have resourcefulness and disagreeability
on the disagreeability point which I think is a huge huge part of it >> the question I like to ask people is who's your favorite podcaster creator
>> me thinker so let's say all the people listening to it right now who have the Spotify wrapped with you top of the list What do you disagree with Chris on?
>> Because there'll be a percentage nothing, right? It's all good, baby. But
nothing, right? It's all good, baby. But
there'll be a percentage of the audience, unfortunately, probably less so with your audience, but there'll be a percentage of the audience that says, "Chris says sky is red, >> therefore sky is red." And that's actually a great disagreeability test
because the amount of times I've put gurus on a pedestal and then they'll start they'll say a lot of wise [ __ ] and then I'll just start drifting >> out over their skis.
>> Yeah. Yeah. and then you start drifting and I'll just go with them. But that
ability to say who do you admire the most and what do you disagree with them on is a great disagree test.
>> That's really lovely.
>> Another one is >> who do you dis like who do you what's the maybe the strongest held opinion that you have whether that's politically business-wise
theoretically and who's the best person on the other side that you've heard?
>> Yeah.
>> Can you answer those two questions?
Have you ever read Richard Feman's love letter to his wife?
>> Uh, no. I read the pleasure of finding things out.
>> Okay.
>> But I love Fineman. Love, love. I mean,
you can see a lot of influence.
>> I might I might not be able to say this without crying, which is going to be very embarrassing, but I'm going to try.
October 17th, 1946.
To Arlene, I adore you, sweetheart. I
know how much you like to hear it, but I don't only write it because you like it.
I write it because it makes me warm all over inside to write you. It is such a terribly long time since Alash wrote to you, almost two years. But I know you'll excuse me because you understand how I
am stubborn and realistic and I thought there was no sense to writing. But now I know, my darling wife, that it is right to do what I have delayed in doing and that I have done so much in the past. I
want to tell you I love you. I want to love you. I will always love you.
love you. I will always love you.
I find it hard to understand in my mind what it means to love you after you are dead.
But I still want to comfort and take care of you. And I want you to love me and care for me. I want to have problems to discuss with you. I want to do little projects with you. I never thought until
now that we can do that. What should we do? We started to learn to make clothes
do? We started to learn to make clothes together or learn Chinese or get a movie projector. Can't I do something now?
projector. Can't I do something now?
No.
I am alone without you. And you were the idea woman and general instigator of all our wild adventures. When you were sick, you worried because you could not give me something that you wanted to and
thought I needed. You needn't have worried just as I told you then. There
was no real need because I loved you in so many ways, so much. And now it is clearly even more true. You can give me nothing. Yet I love you so that you
nothing. Yet I love you so that you stand in my way of loving anyone else.
But I want you to stand there. You dead
are so much better than anyone else alive.
I know you will assure me that I am foolish and that you want me to have full happiness and don't want to be in my way. I'll bet you are surprised that
my way. I'll bet you are surprised that I don't even have a girlfriend except you, sweetheart, after two years. But
you can't help it, darling. Nor can I. I
don't understand it. For I have met many girls and very nice ones, and I don't want to remain alone. But in two or
three meetings, they all seem ashes.
You only are left to me. You are real.
My darling wife, I do adore you. I love
my wife. My wife is dead.
Tough.
to play the reverse out. It's like,
would I want Leila to write that letter?
And I don't think I would unless she was happy writing that letter.
But if the removal of me as a contingency of reinforcement for her um meant that she
couldn't find that in somebody else, um would sadden me. And so I've already so like with Lelay life I've told her I tell her a lot. Um I was like I'm going to die before you statistically there's
I'm for sure going to die before you.
>> She's a little younger.
>> She's younger and I'm bigger like and she exercised like she's for sure going to live longer. And I was like >> I want you to spend as little time as humanly possible from the time that I
die to finding somebody else. Um you do me no service by making yourself miserable. And you do not discredit or
miserable. And you do not discredit or dishonor me by finding somebody else to spend your life with. So
yeah, just I I only think about that from reverse. There's a
from reverse. There's a the joy of melancholy.
>> Yeah.
>> Is an interesting kind of emotion that's kind complex.
>> Mhm.
>> You know, this strange >> think wallowing >> satisfaction in wistfulness.
>> Um and yeah, wallowing. swallowing maybe
a little a little more loaded.
>> Um, but melancholy, you know, there can be odd joy and sadness and and a kind of beauty that you get to experience after
something is gone that you can't experience during it. That I've not had anybody in my life die. Only child with a mother and a father that is still alive. Like I've got there's no one.
alive. Like I've got there's no one.
>> Must be nice.
>> Yeah. [ __ ] Um, but there's not been many things that I've lost. And this is me [ __ ] Monday
I've lost. And this is me [ __ ] Monday morning quarterbacking. Uh, I don't
morning quarterbacking. Uh, I don't know. But maybe
know. But maybe what's a mood setter?
>> Modern women see Ila and think, >> "I'll wait to establish myself in my career before I date or get married or have kids." But they forget we got
have kids." But they forget we got married when she was 23 and we built this together. Love is one of the rare
this together. Love is one of the rare times you don't do life in order, but rather all at once.
If you find someone that makes your world go round and makes the world make sense to you, where you both look at the same thing and say, "Oh, you saw that, too?" Like, I feel like I was the only
too?" Like, I feel like I was the only one. I think that for high achieving
one. I think that for high achieving individuals, finding someone who sees the world the same way is incredibly rare. And when you find that person,
rare. And when you find that person, you should stop what you're doing and then you should get them to stay with you. And it's been, you know, one of the
you. And it's been, you know, one of the best decisions of my entire life, marrying Ila. And
marrying Ila. And there's there's this especially unfortunately for women right now there's this huge
you know put it off delay there's no rush but it doesn't actually take into um consideration two things. One is that biology hasn't advanced with culture and
society. You can't have kids past you
society. You can't have kids past you know 35. I mean, you can, but you're a
know 35. I mean, you can, but you're a geriatric, you know, it's a ger geriatric pregnancy past 35.
>> Ruthless tum.
>> Yeah. I'm just being real, right? Yeah.
>> Um, and so I mean, I I this is like super prevalent and I know this is a much more common theme on the show and I don't touch it very much, but >> it it just I just say it more like cuz it I think it sucks. Um,
>> it's not fair.
>> It's not Yeah, it's objectively it's not fair. Guys can wait the you know, their
fair. Guys can wait the you know, their whole lives. They can do everything. Um,
whole lives. They can do everything. Um,
and you have to, if you go to college, graduate college at 21 or 22, and if you want to have four kids, assuming that you have perfect pregnancies and you
have exactly one year, you know, 18 months between each one, okay, that's six years by the time you're done. And
so if we if we rule out ger that geratric pregnancy is our last, then it means that we have to basically have or we you have to have your first kid at 29. Well, okay, maybe it'll take, let's
29. Well, okay, maybe it'll take, let's just tack one year on of marriage to have the kid and be married. Okay, 28
you're married. All right, do you want to marry somebody within six months of meeting them? Let's give it two years to
meeting them? Let's give it two years to give our logical, you know, brain in.
Okay, so 26, 26, you graduate at 22, you have 48 months.
And I think that again, this is if you have, if you don't want kids, then all of this is null. If you do, then you have a very small window um to piece that together. Now, of course, there's
that together. Now, of course, there's surrogates and maybe in the future, you know, like I I'll say in general, betting on I'll smoke I'll smoke cigarettes now because by the time I'm
old, they'll have a cure for it. Um I
don't know. I just I don't make those bets. And so,
bets. And so, >> it's easier to work with reality the way it is, not the way you hope it's going to end up landing.
>> Yeah. to to knowingly incur basically a guaranteed price for the potential of maybe a non-existent solution is probably not the best decision-making process. And to be clear, I say this,
process. And to be clear, I say this, Ila and I, you know, we don't have kids.
She's not 35. Um, but I think that we have these unrealistic expectations that someone is going to make our lives, that they're going to complete us in
some way. when I think that for me the
some way. when I think that for me the the the best thing that a partner can do is help you be the best version of yourself.
>> I love what you said about really appreciating small victories so forth to go back to the nobility.
Um and I kind of relate to that in a early Buddhist frame of these are the truths for noble beings not noble by birth but noble by effort. Uh there's a nobility in letting yourself feel deeply
or be revealed deeply like to go back to that maybe conversation at dinner that went bad to say, you know, at the end of the day, I was there in good faith.
Maybe I was unskillful. I said this or that. There's lessons to learn for the
that. There's lessons to learn for the future. I was there in good faith. I was
future. I was there in good faith. I was
there with with my whole heart uh deep down. And I was brave enough to be
down. And I was brave enough to be earnest and sincere enough to kind of lay it out. Like, yeah, take pride in that, healthy pride, you know,
appreciate yourself for that. The the
heroism, the nobility in that and the uncommonness >> of that. To me, that's that's where real bravery is. That's really cool. Yeah, I
bravery is. That's really cool. Yeah, I
love that. Uh I get the sense as well that this is one of the reasons why allowing yourself to be puppeted by your own fear to not show
up. There's an equivalent in the world
up. There's an equivalent in the world of content creation which is audience capture. So uh continuing to throw red
capture. So uh continuing to throw red meat that is uh predictably going to be liked by the audience but doesn't necessarily resonate with you as a person.
>> Uh it's actually you know the word grifter. Have you familiar with that?
grifter. Have you familiar with that?
Okay. Um, so I asked, it's a word that gets thrown around on the internet a lot for all manner of different individuals and I genuinely was interested. I said,
"Hey, for the people that use the word grifter, what is the best working definition of what that word means for you?" Because it's a it's just kind of a
you?" Because it's a it's just kind of a slight. It's just a slur. It's like
slight. It's just a slur. It's like
calling >> Yeah. It's just a very odd nebulous term
>> Yeah. It's just a very odd nebulous term that that people tend to use for someone that you think might not be fully authentic. Like, I mean, come on. like
authentic. Like, I mean, come on. like
let's get a bit more specific and and somebody said um and I actually really appreciated this and this is currently my working definition uh somebody promoting a product or staking a claim
that they wouldn't use or don't believe themselves. So it's here is what I'm
themselves. So it's here is what I'm doing out front.
>> This is what I believe in private behind. And I was like, "Huh, that's
behind. And I was like, "Huh, that's okay. I can work with that. That's like
okay. I can work with that. That's like
a functional definition, I think, for what people think they mean when they say that word." And my point is with the audience capture thing, it's you not
being you. It's you uh trying to be
being you. It's you uh trying to be manipulative in a way. Uh it's this sort of meta you. It's playing persona, not person. It's projecting, etc.
person. It's projecting, etc. and um that conversation at the restaurant that was ungainainely or didn't go the way that you wanted. Um
the difference between you showing up with vulnerable sincerity or just straight up sincerity like this is me and this is the position that I hold and I said it all right. Could I have said
it w with a little bit more deafness?
Yeah, probably. And you know I could have delivered it but I I tried like I gave it a crack and that was actually what I meant. I said what I meant and that you know I can take some lessons
from it. The difference between that
from it. The difference between that >> and the lessons that you can take from that situation >> and a situation where you didn't say what you meant
>> and you were still rejected >> is the kind of the last bastion of well I tried and you know like I guess you
know you can kind of laugh it off.
There's there is a there is an ability to do humor in that. But where is the humor that you find that I compromised myself to try and be somebody else
and that was rejected? There's there's a an additional level of difficulty in getting past it. And I think it's just a nice justification for yeah showing up sincerely, showing up earnestly. um uh
you know sort of playful seriousness I think is huh why >> I have this additional level of protection for all of the fear that you are going to have
>> by being seen and by this being me and by a rejection of that not being a rejection of a projection but a rejection of a person and that person happens to be myself
>> what you do gain in that is well I at least I was myself at least this weird character I tried to play, this role that I tried to perform wasn't
rejected because to be honest, like that's kind of more pitiful than the other way around.
>> That's so true.
Um I'm thinking the ways in which playfulness uh is a great aid to aspiration without attachment.
And uh if we're incredibly not just earnest, but if we're self-righteous or uh pompous about our
pursuit of even a wholesome goal, that's not so good. But to be playful about it, I think about uh I made a play using the word for a woman uh in my late
20s. Uh I was part of this whole
20s. Uh I was part of this whole personal growth context kind of half a cult. I won't name it now. And uh so
cult. I won't name it now. And uh so everybody was really deep in each other's business, kind of all knowing each other. And there was a woman in a
each other. And there was a woman in a relationship with like the head dude. So
I was like a layer or two down from Alpha and she was with Alpha Boy. And I
fully played went for it. I It was public. It was known. I wrote these nice
public. It was known. I wrote these nice little notes. I told him what I was
little notes. I told him what I was doing. Um and uh I went full out and I
doing. Um and uh I went full out and I didn't know if I would get it. I didn't.
She was relatively kind and it was okay.
But at the end of the day, I felt good about myself that I little Ricky kind of the dork had still stuck my neck out and, you know, made a play for a
particular woman. And I feel great. You
particular woman. And I feel great. You
know, I went for it, right? If I hadn't gone for it, I'd be thinking, you wussy, you should have gone for it. Why not
take the risk? And but what enabled it is there was a playfulness about it. It
was like an improbable goal and I could be playful about it which helped me be less attached to the outcome.
>> My friend Charlie uh did a wonderful video breakdown of Jordan Peterson's most recent debate against 20 atheists.
It was on the Jubilee YouTube channel.
So it's it's a a series called Surrounded. Uh and it's it's doing huge
Surrounded. Uh and it's it's doing huge numbers. It's really cool. kind of like
numbers. It's really cool. kind of like uh speed dating for debate, I guess, is kind of the way that I would call it.
>> What a format.
>> Yeah. We used to call them a fishbowl.
You're in the fishbowl and you've got 10 or 20 people around you. Okay.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um and each person comes in individually and you do a bit and then they move on and so on and so forth. And um he does this comparison
forth. And um he does this comparison between Jordan when he did that Kathy Newman interview in 2019. So, what
you're saying is that really famous one in front of the purple background and and this most recent one and Charlie is very interested in charisma and he's talking about likability being he's big
into playfulness and he's >> very deep into selfwork and and mindfulness too. So I think that sort of
mindfulness too. So I think that sort of percolates through and he has this he just compares them side by side and I'd never even thought of this uh because the way that people change especially over a long period of time it's been six
years nearly seven years since that first debate came out and then there's this new one >> and if someone changes slowly slowly slowly slowly you kind of you don't really notice right it's like when did you get fat it's like I don't know one
day one day at a time >> um and he just makes a a really lovely distinction between Jordan in that first one uh where Kathy's sort of pointing her finger at him and saying, "So, what you're saying is this thing." And he
goes, "No, I'm not saying that at all."
I I think that's silly. I think that's really I think that's I I do I think that's really silly. And you just have this it's keeping him regulated. It
feels more casual. It's much easier to get on side. It's much more likable approach. Um now he's standing his
approach. Um now he's standing his ground, but he's standing his ground in a sort of, you know, really fluid sort of Bruce Lee kind of way.
you've sort of touched on them a few times, but just do a rundown for me of the most common places that people are getting exposed to the highest levels of microplastics.
>> Yeah. So, the the most I would say common places, one is drinking out of bottled water, like bottled plastic bottles, right? Like a lot of people
bottles, right? Like a lot of people drink out of plastic bottles. Um, that
would be a big source. Tap water that's unfiltered. So, tap water again also has
unfiltered. So, tap water again also has microplastics.
Unfortunately, our oceans are contaminated. So, microlastics are also
contaminated. So, microlastics are also found in a lot of fish and particularly they accumulate in the digestive tract of fish. So, if you're eating
of fish. So, if you're eating shellfish or clams or oysters or anything where you're eating the whole digestive tract or sardine whole whole sardine, then you're going to be getting
microplastics.
Heat is a big big one. Okay, that I would say that is one of the main, you know, culprits when you're combining that with plastic. So, a lot of your to- go coffees that you're drinking from >> Starbucks,
>> Starbucks, anything >> like that is going that is a huge one because you're you're you know, there's been studies looking at BPA leeching into liquid when it's when heat like
boiling water is applied, it increes increases the leeching by 55 times, which is huge. It also increases microlastic, you know, breakdown, right?
Because you're breaking down the plastic.
>> Not only getting more, you're making the plastic smaller, which allows it to be permeating through the gut more effectively.
>> Exactly. Exactly. I can't tell you how many like to- go coffees I've had in my life. And you know, another big source
life. And you know, another big source now, this is like new coming out. I
mean, this there's been a couple of studies that have come out on this is tea bags. because you're adding hot
tea bags. because you're adding hot water to tea and the tea bags themselves are made of either um polyropylene, they're made of nylon or they're made of
interestingly cellulose which you would think wouldn't have microplastics but I think they must be mixed there must be a mixture of stuff in there and there's this new study came out you know really
just a couple of months ago showing that you can get anywhere between millions to billions of microplastic particles per milliliter
I mean per milliliter.
>> How many how much is that compared with the normal sort of that's a that's a large >> a lot. Okay.
>> It's a lot. What I'm getting at is you know I you know there's not that I I think what's happening is the the the heat is breaking the plastic down. These
tea bags are made of plastic. And so um you know consuming these tea bags again when you're getting to go tea it's like I I now I'm like all I can think about is like I'm consuming a plastic tea.
>> Yeah.
>> But you have to remember there's a lot of studies at least with green tea showing that green tea has huge benefits for cognition. It it delays dementia.
for cognition. It it delays dementia.
>> Might even offset the microplastics you've had to consume.
>> Yeah. Yeah. So I mean clearly people are drinking tea out of probably tea bags.
So it's not like Yeah. At least with green tea, it seems like there's some there's some benefits, right? But um so so those are some of the major sources.
Um and then there's also it's in our salt. Um and then air, right? So like
salt. Um and then air, right? So like
that that's another one if you're living in a polluted place. If you're again, you know, >> internally venting your dryer, >> dryer ventilation in your house, that's a another major source. And then another
one would be also to consider would be black plastic. So I know you're like,
black plastic. So I know you're like, "What? This is this is kind of some new
"What? This is this is kind of some new data coming out. Black plastic is often made from recycled electronics.
And >> you mean bits of plastic that are black.
>> I mean black utensils like your black spatula or black plastic, you know, forks and knives or your your black plastic lid on a coffee to go coffee cup.
>> Black sushi. The bottom of a sushi container. Bottom of like a rotisserie
container. Bottom of like a rotisserie chicken. If you've ever bought a
chicken. If you've ever bought a rotisserie chicken from the grocery store, that black, right? Black plastic.
It's often made from recycled electronics. And recycled electronics
electronics. And recycled electronics often have chemicals in them that are added to prevent fires from starting like they don't electronics starting fire. So, they add these brominated
fire. So, they add these brominated flame retardants which are carcinogenic.
They are not supposed to be in food.
They're not they're not you're not you don't suck on your electronic. They're
not supposed to go in your mouth, right?
So these um black these black plastics have very high levels of carcinogens that are normally not even found in regular plastics that were you know in in things that we're consuming. And
there was a study out of the University of Plymouth that found black utensils, black toys for babies, you know, they're putting in their mouth, they contain between 30 to 40 times the safe limit of
these brominated flame retardants and other carcinogens and endocrine disruptors in them than than safe. Mhm.
than safe. Mhm.
>> So, um that's another sort of and think about it if you're buying like a rotisserie chicken or like you get a to- go fur or whatever soup and it's in like a black container, you got the heat
that's the added factor on top of that, right? So, that's another major source.
right? So, that's another major source.
>> What about dermal stuff?
>> Yes. Um so, again, we mentioned the phalates, right? Um which are in
phalates, right? Um which are in personal hygiene products. And that's
something I do want to mention because you might think, "Oh, I'm looking at the ingredient list and there's no phalate on there, but there's two different chemicals that are very, very sneaky cuz
they mean there's phalates." And they're in a lot of personal hygiene products.
One is fragrance. If the word fragrance is in the ingredients list, that means they're stales. And perfume,
they're stales. And perfume, not perfume, but perfume. That is
another chemical that means they're stalates. So you really want to look for
stalates. So you really want to look for phalatefree personal hygiene products. Again, very
important especially for um people that are considering conceiving because those are the chemicals that are associated with the sexual, you know, disrupting sexual development in boys. And then the
other one is receipts. And this is a really big one because maybe not for you and I, right? Receipts are they're
thermal paper. And so essentially
thermal paper. And so essentially they're coated with BPA because there's a thermal reaction that happens when heat is applied to the BPA. It
prints it prints text on the receipt without actual ink.
>> Mhm.
>> So that's how it works. And if you ever see like a white coating on the receipt like that that's BPA. So the BPA in like plastics at least is kind of contained in a plastic matrix like this is just
>> it's purposefully liberated. Yes.
>> Exactly. It's it's like free-for-all on the receipt. And um so there's studies
the receipt. And um so there's studies looking at people that handle a lot of receipts. The other like when I was in
receipts. The other like when I was in the airport >> stuff and stuff like that.
>> Yeah. I was in the airport on coming coming here and you know I the the guy that was like handling the receipt. He's
like do you want the receipt? I'm like
no. And I saw him take it out and put it in the trash and like I thought about there's this huge line of people.
>> You're doing that 500 times a day.
>> Exactly. And I looked at the guy and I was like I was like, "Hey dude, you know, I just want to tell you that these receipts are lined with endocrine disruptors that disrupt hormones." And
he goes, "You mean >> wish somebody had recorded this?" Oh my god. This lady who's going through the
god. This lady who's going through the airport. I met this lady earlier on
airport. I met this lady earlier on today and she started ranting and raving about the receipts said it's sort of covered in this magic dust that's killing me or something like that.
>> I couldn't I couldn't help. I felt like it like I couldn't not say something, right? Okay. And he looks at me, he
right? Okay. And he looks at me, he goes, "You mean like testosterone?" I
was like, "Yes, testosterone. It's been
show it's been correlated with a decrease in testosterone." I was like, "You need to wear nitro gloves." So,
bottom line is BPA um it's lined on the receipts. Uh nitro gloves can stop
receipts. Uh nitro gloves can stop people from absorbing it. So, people
that are like, you know, basically any kind of cashier, anyone that's handling a receipt multiple times a day, >> highly recommend they wear nitro gloves.
Latex doesn't do that. Also, if you wear cream or um hand sanitizer, it it's been shown to increase the dermal absorption of BPA by a hundfold.
>> [ __ ] off.
>> Some people are like, I don't want to get my hands on the >> I don't want to get co or whatever, right? How many
right? How many >> 100x >> 100x absorption? Think about how how many times these reg I've seen I've seen them do it, you know, and then they touch the receipt. So I think I think
this is like something that is not really talked about and here I am worried about my like one-time exposure.
So you know for people out there it's like yeah you can opt for career of working in Target or something like that. So the first time that I ever
that. So the first time that I ever learned about receipts uh you won't know who this is but Owen Shroyer who is Alex Jones's sort of second in command. I
went for dinner with him when I first moved to Austin like forever ago. It was
him and a bunch of other people. There
was a couple of girls at the table with us as well just downtown in Austin. the
receipt came out. I was like, "Oh, this I'm sort of new here. I'll I'll get the meal. It' be like nice. It' be a nice
meal. It' be like nice. It' be a nice thing for me to do." So, I did it. And
as I'm going to get the receipt out, one of the girls that sat around the table like hits my hand away. I'm like,
"What?" She's like, "What are you doing?" As if I was about to walk out
doing?" As if I was about to walk out into open traffic. I'm like, "I was going to going to take the receipt and I was going to put the tip on." She's
like, "Are you crazy? You going to touch that?" I'm like, so it kind of does show
that?" I'm like, so it kind of does show that the fringe insight from three years ago, some of that stuff ends up being a bullseye and sort of percolates around.
Now, I'm not saying that all of it is, but some of the stuff ends up being legit, >> right? It is. It's definitely legit and
>> right? It is. It's definitely legit and it is a concern particularly for people that are handling them daily, multiple times a day. And I don't know that I've really I've seen a couple people wearing
gloves at cash registers. Like
>> they've got um special ones that are like finger things. Have you seen those?
I've seen those >> individual. So maybe just the sort of
>> individual. So maybe just the sort of your first two fingers and your thumb or something rather than having to wear sweaty gloves all day.
>> And I imagine that's I mean significant.
Well, it gets through latex as well.
>> It gets through latex.
>> There is no way of getting it perfect.
There is no complete, no finish line, no done. There is simply what's the next
done. There is simply what's the next experiment? There is only play. Yeah.
experiment? There is only play. Yeah.
Yeah. So the Yeah. I So the way I think about that one is uh So when is an oak tree perfect?
When it's an acorn, when it's like a sapling, when it's like 100 years old, when it's 200 years old, like when is it perfect? But yet somehow or another, we
perfect? But yet somehow or another, we have to be perfect. But it's not. It's
just iteration. It's just it's just evolution. Evolution doesn't end. The
evolution. Evolution doesn't end. The
only thing that ends is an idea in our head and our egos. Egos can't exist if you actually really understand that there is no end. The ego has to evaporate.
>> Say more on that.
>> Right? So often times the people who are searching for enlightenment, they think once they get the enlightenment, then it'll be done. Right? That's just the ego talking. That's just that's just oh
ego talking. That's just that's just oh there is going to be this end point where then I'm going to be happy.
like that that that is an ego thought process so that you they can so you can whip yourself and beat yourself up to get to that place and it is just a way to convince yourself that what you want can't be found right now.
>> So if I said to you right now without going into the past without going into the future you can't find any evidence from the past or any evidence in the future >> find a problem with you.
>> Yeah, that's funny.
>> Yeah, there's none. you can't find it.
So, so you need an end because the other the only other choice is to be in this moment, which is where the ego doesn't get to exist.
I wrote this quote from Van Go this week in my newsletter that said, "If I'm worth anything later, I'm worth something now. For wheat is wheat, even
something now. For wheat is wheat, even if people think it is grass in the beginning."
beginning." Oh, I like that. That's so that's so [ __ ] good. the same thing you're talking about, right?
>> It is >> the AON.
>> Okay, I'm gonna I'm gonna >> wheat is wheat, even if people think it is.
>> Let me geek out. Let me geek out for just a second. So, today I got a text from somebody who a Zen uh teacher that I know and he was worried about AI
and uh and so found out that I'm working.
>> You're the guy to ask.
>> Yeah, apparently am. Yeah.
>> Are they coming for my Zen teaching?
>> Say again.
>> Are they coming for my Zen teaching?
Tell me, Joe.
>> Yep. And uh and my response was um just like everything this river is going to find the lowest ground. So where it's going to end up is already determined.
And it's the same thought process that you just said there. Like even the action that I take and that all the people will take towards influencing AI
like all of that is set in a in from that same kind of point of view. So our
job is the same. It's like show up with love. do what you're called to do, you
love. do what you're called to do, you know, draw the boundaries, say the truth that you can see. And but the whole idea of like I have to manage my entire world
to get to the place is just >> it's just a huge amount of stress. It's
all self-t talk.
>> Yeah. Not real. again to sort of fly the flag for the insecure overachievers out there. The uh the the desire for
there. The uh the the desire for control, you know, if I can prepare sufficiently well, if I can know every different permutation of every different outcome, then I
>> reduce down the play within the system.
So it's so precise so that what I think is going to happen and what is going to happen end up being so tightly correlated that there's no variance at
all. Ah. Ah. Okay, there we go. There's
all. Ah. Ah. Okay, there we go. There's
a bit of certainty. Isn't that nice?
>> Isn't that death?
>> Yeah. I want I want I want this wholly under control and absolutely predictable existence.
>> Yeah. I mean, yeah. Exact I think about this in a slightly different way, but the there is no life without tension.
A cell doesn't exist without tension.
Your lungs don't exist without tension.
>> Solid >> cell. No cell. Maybe that salad doesn't
>> cell. No cell. Maybe that salad doesn't exist. So that's
exist. So that's Dude, I had this vision. I had this vision in my mind. I was like, why is he has he got like bits of [ __ ] lettuce leaf hanging across a string? I had that
like a tightroppe walk, but it's just individual leaves of lettuce hanging over a salad bowl. Holy [ __ ] Wow. Yeah.
Okay, getting back to it. A cell doesn't exist without tension.
>> Tension. Yeah. It's just so life doesn't exist without tension. So the idea that you're going to be at peace when there's no tension, the idea that you're going to be at peace when you've narrowed everything down so that you don't have
to actually feel that tension is death.
>> Mhm.
>> So you don't find peace by having no tension. You find peace by enjoying the
tension. You find peace by enjoying the tension, welcoming the tension, looking forward to the tension.
>> Is safety got anything to do with it here? Is there a degree of unsafety?
here? Is there a degree of unsafety?
There is no safety. Safety is an illusion.
What the [ __ ] is safe?
Like we're sitting in like we're in Austin, Texas in a cool thing. Like
yeah, it's pretty safe, but hurricane, earthquake, fire there. Like safety is just something that we like to pretend exists.
>> Mhm.
>> Yeah.
And and also like a form of death.
If it feels scary to say it's important, if it feels scary to say not saying it will hurt your connection. If it feels sorry scary to say not saying it prioritizes their imagined reaction over
your truth.
>> Yeah.
What? Why? Why?
>> Why?
>> Um so I'm not scared to say things that aren't important to me and vulnerable to me.
So I I could qualify that and say that quote I could qualify that quote and say with an open heart to say it with an open heart. But and I think that would probably be more
accurate. But if I'm if I'm scared to
accurate. But if I'm if I'm scared to say it, it means that there's something important and it's something vulnerable.
>> If I am if I say the important thing to you and I'm vulnerable with you, our connection deepens.
>> Always the case.
>> Mhm. If I am not willing to say that, it means I'm scared of a reaction that you're going to have for me, which means I'm prioritizing you more than I'm prioritizing my own needs.
>> Yes. Yes.
>> I'm actually prioritizing my fear over our connection as well >> and over yourself >> and Yeah. and over myself. That's right.
>> So, it's >> And so, this is how I run my business.
It's how we run our marriage. It's how
every It's like And this prevents resentment. It like it's amazing. If if
resentment. It like it's amazing. If if
I find something that doesn't feel right, I will speak to it. I might not speak to it right now. It might take a day >> because I'm not going to be heartless and like and not pay attention to the person or have compassion or empathy for
where they're at, but I'm going to say the thing that's scary to say or the thing that's bothering me.
>> And and and my expectation with the 18 or so people in our organization is that they do the same thing. Like that's a we tell them that's that's the job. You got
to say the hard thing. We actually start our meetings with what's the scary thing you're not saying because that's what keeps relationships clean. That's what keeps the problems at
clean. That's what keeps the problems at bay. That's like stepping into it
bay. That's like stepping into it instead of trying to avoid it.
>> It's I was trying to think about the difference between uh selfish and selfless. And this is a third one that's
selfless. And this is a third one that's not that's not either of them. You So
you're not being selfish because you're actually hurting yourself in it.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> You're not being selfless because you're killing the connection and like what the [ __ ] is this >> and you're not trusting them.
>> Yeah. It's like what is this? It's not,
you know, it's one of those interesting situations where it's neither selfish nor selfless. Yeah. Yeah. That's that's
nor selfless. Yeah. Yeah. That's that's
really cool.
>> Yeah. There's no
>> uh >> it's just destruct Well, it's actually it's kind of it's destructive to the self and it's destructive to the other as well. I guess that's one way to put
as well. I guess that's one way to put it. Yeah. Right. It's like it's bad on
it. Yeah. Right. It's like it's bad on all fronts.
>> Yeah. I remember having this moment where so I we did this in our company and I was just like we we do this. We're
gonna if something's upsetting anybody, we talk about it. That's how we're doing. And one day I came into
doing. And one day I came into >> and I was the the woman who I at the time worked with most closely. Um and
she her name's Sarah. She's Anybody
who's worked in our done anything in our organization know Sarah. She's amazing.
And I walked in. I was like frustrated.
I was like and she goes, "Oh, I'm so excited that you're frustrated."
I was like, "What?" She goes, "Every time you're frustrated, it means that you're seeing something that we're not seeing and we're going to make a big improvement." So, what is it?
improvement." So, what is it?
>> Totally like changed the whole like my the way I hold my own frustration. It
changed that. And then it also changed like how I like looked at the whole business because I was, "Oh, wow. This
is really important."
>> It's like alchemy.
>> Yeah.
>> Doing that.
>> Exactly.
Why do you think it is that people are drawn to relationships that are very tough that from the outside look turbulent, difficult, challenging? Uh
the classic I can fix him meme. Uh what
have you come to believe about that?
>> Yeah. Uh can I go in reverse there? So
you're not going to fix anybody to tell folks out there. Uh it's a common belief. People almost seem to have it as
belief. People almost seem to have it as sport or hobby, right? like I'm going to fix go fix people. Uh it almost just never such low odds that that ever ends up ends up working out. But
>> why?
>> Uh because people are people are stable, you know. Uh there's these really
you know. Uh there's these really beautiful studies of personality where they track people for 40 or 50 years from the time they're in their teen teenage years to the time that they're
retired. And if you were neurotic when
retired. And if you were neurotic when you were highly neurotic when you were a teenager, you're like the grumpy person at the retirement home. You know, it's just like a stable kind of thing. You
know, also if you were the sweetheart, really nice, always helping people out kind of person in high school, you're doing the same thing.
>> Do you reckon that's the same for socioexuality? If you were the girl that
socioexuality? If you were the girl that was sleeping around a load in high school, you're still the girl that's sleeping around a load in the retirement home. Well, you know, that is a concern
home. Well, you know, that is a concern actually with older adults right now.
So, there's this um STD STD concerns.
One of the places is most acute in public health is among older adults.
>> Yeah. Phenomenal. Which is amazing. So
yeah, people don't change because traits are, you know, traits are stable and folks might see these articles every now and then that that you can change your personality and that is true to an
extent but the number of people who will change their personality like like the rough way to put that is about 20 to 25% of people like for example who are
neurotic will turn themselves into not neurotic people anymore. The remaining
75 to 80% will show stability over time.
And the reason I like to put things that way is if you're in a position of choosing a partner, you know, this is a bet really, right? And you're saying, "Okay, so I have this person who's high
in neuroticism.
>> Do I think that's going to change? 80
75% chance. Yeah. Going to be exactly the same way for the rest of my life.
>> 25% chance they change. That's not a bet I would probably want to make, you know.
Yeah.
>> It's interesting when you think about sort of what people are doing when they first find a partner. They kind of I get the sense and you may tell me that uh my belief in personal growth and
malleability is misguided and must be subdued. But um you're trying to find
subdued. But um you're trying to find somebody that is as close to the bullseye of what it is that you're looking for uh whilst making the decision rationally before you get into passionate love using evidence. based
insights from somebody as educated as yourself trying to find somebody that's close to the bullseye but also has I would guess as strong of a capacity to grow to work on themselves to be able to
update their beliefs uh the way that they operate as possible. Um, and it seems like those two variables, um, how close are you? Where's the starting
point and, uh, how capable are they of of running and maneuvering toward something that is, uh, more healthy?
>> Yeah. Yeah. I know. Exactly. So, you're
kind of identifying this trait that sits outside of personality a little bit, right? Which is this this interest and
right? Which is this this interest and this this persistence to grow as as a person. And I think you're
person. And I think you're gosh that's if people want to put something in their top three that would be another great trait to to put in their top three like >> capacity for growth.
>> Yes. Capacity for growth and >> and that dogged commitment to it because it's one thing you and I probably both know people who >> have some bright idea every other month about oh I'm totally going to change
myself in this way. Yeah.
>> Usually has the word radical in front of it. You know
it. You know >> Yeah.
>> I engage in radical self-disclosure or something.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Radical
honesty, radical painting.
>> Yeah. And I'm always like, uh, I, you know, what I'm more interested in is, I mean, that's cool and that's part of it.
It is a necessary first step, but but then how many people now have the dog of determination to actually make that happen because it's so hard, right, over
the course of really years to >> you know turn that huge ship around and make it so that you have this better range in your personality.
>> You've got to be dead ass committed if you are going to actually do anything. I
mean, yeah, you're right. I think the way to look at it is these forces uh personality whe whether it's infant upbringing uh genetic
predisposition time place confluence nature nurture whether it you know whatever it is whether it's personality whether it's attachment style whether it's values
whether it's ideological belief whether it's all of that stuff um it is no matter which of those you're playing with it is a marathon to try and get
that to be nudged. And uh you know that's where you know the 20% sits right for the most part. Uh these are probably I imagine there's not many people that
fluke themselves into lowering the neuroticism. It's probably you know the
neuroticism. It's probably you know the people that listen to podcasts like this one you know the the the uh insecure overachieving personal growth maximizers
uh who are are really sort of trying to better themselves within the world.
They're thinking very carefully. They're
very reflective. Um,
>> you know, they they they're really trying to work on themselves. But that's
>> a terrifying minority of most people.
>> That's that's that's so true. You know,
so maybe for some of your listeners who, you know, maybe are really into fitness, for example, if you think about I'm always annoyed like January 2nd in the gym when you can't get on anything,
right? This overrun with
right? This overrun with >> all the cuisines taken.
>> That's right. That's right. and all
these New Year's resolution people. Um,
I mean this the same exact mindset and outcomes could apply to something like personality like okay someone could have this really bright idea like they want to get fit or they want to change their
neuroticism but who's going to be there even in March you know who's going to be there much less in December and you know as your listeners know who are really
committed to fitness it's not even a year right it's a course of numerous years and being really disciplined and constantly evolving and learning about new things in nutrition and technique
and other things that actually lead to a meaningful change in their body composition and their and their fitness and their health. Same thing with your mental health and your psychological health. It's that degree of commitment
health. It's that degree of commitment and obsessiveness.
>> Uh right, to to make some sort of long-lasting change.
>> I want to talk about something that's really important to me. So, you're big into inequality as am I. I I grew up as working class as possible. The only
thing that was famous about the town that I grew up in in the UK is it had the highest teen pregnancy rating in the UK and then it lost that. So, it didn't even have that anymore. Um,
fatherlessness. Boys who grow up apart from their biological father are about two times more likely to land in prison or jail by age 30. Fatherlessness is a better predictor of incarceration than
race or growing up poor. Young men are more likely to end up in prison or jail in the US than they are to graduate from college if they are raised in any
non-intact family setup. Regardless of
family income, children in intact families are about half as likely to be diagnosed with depression.
What do you make of that?
I I make it to be a serious crisis and I make it uh I believe in family.
Uh and I believe we have got to create the conditions for young people to be good dads and good moms
uh and to raise healthy children. M
thinking about some of the groups that you brought up today, one of the ones that's um obvious in its absence is men. Uh
why have the left tended to not talk about men's issues, do you think?
>> That's a good question. And I think I mean we start with I I I think the underlying issue is that for a very long time women were
secondass citizens in this country and people were saying it doesn't make sense that you have women who cannot become police officers, soldiers, carpenters,
governors, presidents of the United States. And that's wrong. If we believe
States. And that's wrong. If we believe in equality, we want to give everybody an equal opportunity. So I think there was that focus on that. I think the issue you're raising is getting more
discussion and it needs far more is that what we have seen right now and it I I was on a plane coming from Washington back to Vermont sitting next to a woman and uh she was visiting her daughter at
the University of Vermont and we were chatting and she mentioned to me that something like over 60% of the college of the kids in her daughter's class were women.
>> Correct.
>> Okay. Two women for every one man completing a 40 college degree basically.
>> All right. Not a good situation.
>> That's more that's a bigger gap than when Title N came in 50 years ago in the other direction.
>> This is a serious issue and I think it is not incompatible to say that we believe in women's rights, the right of women to control their own body, that we don't want women to be secondass
citizen. but say at the same thing, of
citizen. but say at the same thing, of course, we want our young men to be able to have all of the opportunities that they deserve as well. And there has not been the kind of focus on that that I
think uh needs to be.
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Do you know Richard Reeves? He does the American Institute for Boys and Men policy.
>> I have heard of it. I don't
>> Yeah, he wrote of boys and men. So, this
is just a passage from an article he wrote a little while ago. So, let me get you to react to this. Suicide rates
among men under 30 have risen by 40% since 2010 and are four times higher than among young women. Male suicides
account for as many deaths as breast cancer. Men are less likely than women
cancer. Men are less likely than women to go to college or to buy a home.
They're more likely to be lonely and more vulnerable to addiction. Young
white men from lower income homes are worse off than their fathers on almost every economic and social indicator.
There is a bigger gender gap on campuses today than in 1972 when the government passed Title 9 to prevent sex-based discrimination in education. But today
the disparities in college enrollment and performance are the other way round.
There is no strong evidence that young men are turning against gender equality.
But they have turned away from the left because the left has turned away from them. The problems of young men are not
them. The problems of young men are not the confections of reactionaries. This
is a story of elite neglect, not voter chauvinism. The Democrats have failed to
chauvinism. The Democrats have failed to address these issues. Under the Biden administration, the Centers for Disease Center control and prevention has refused to acknowledge the gender disparity and suicide rates. The White
House Gender Policy Council has not tackled a single issue primarily facing boys and men. There have been initiatives to promote me women in STEM and construction, but nothing about encouraging men into teaching on men's
health. There is women's health research
health. There is women's health research initiatives, but no office on men's health. The Democrats and progressive
health. The Democrats and progressive institutions have a massive blind spot when it comes to male issues, and this was exposed in the election. At worst,
men are seen as not having problems, but as being the problem.
That was Richard. He's his policy wonky DC fluffy.
>> I agree with much, not all what he's saying. I think look, here is the issue.
saying. I think look, here is the issue.
The world in the fight for women's equality, the world has changed. All
right. 50, 60 years ago, men were the breadwinners in most households, right?
>> Mhm.
>> Men were the bosses.
>> Men made the most money. Men were the governors. Men were the presidents. Men
governors. Men were the presidents. Men
were the senators. It was a man's world.
That's change and the fact that we have fought and achieved more equality for women is a positive thing.
>> I agree.
>> All right. But but you're suddenly seeing and I think half of what he says is is very true.
>> Uh you're suddenly seeing men feel does anyone give a damn about me? You know
what's going on in my life? Good. We
want women's equality. What about me?
Have we paid enough attention to that?
Attention to that? I think uh we have not and I think we need to do a better job. I don't believe that everything
job. I don't believe that everything that Reeves is saying is accurate.
>> I understand. I was watching that uh uh now infamous uh interview that you and AOC did on CNN last week. I think
>> it was infamous. What? Fox television
picked up on it.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Well, it's just gone everywhere. It's gone everywhere. Right.
everywhere. It's gone everywhere. Right.
It was It's >> What was infamous about it?
>> Uh the well, this is what we're talking about. And then you kind of uh blew
about. And then you kind of uh blew through when it was asked, is this going to be a challenge? That wasn't what I was interested in primarily. What I
thought was real interesting was she said uh the reason that Republicans have appealed to young men is a dangerous way. They are able to radicalize and
way. They are able to radicalize and target and exploit a generation of young boys in particular away from healthy masculinity and into an insecure masculinity that requires the domination of others who are poorer, browner,
darker, or a different gender than them.
>> Do you think Democrats have done a good job of giving men a positive vision about themselves? He's saying that this
about themselves? He's saying that this is an insecure masculinity as opposed to a healthy one.
>> You know, I'm not a great expert on this. Uh I think this is a real issue.
this. Uh I think this is a real issue.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh and I think we've got to pay a lot more attention to it.
>> 90% of anxiety is anticipatory, not about events, but about control over them.
>> And this link between uncertainty and anxiety being uh intrinsically related.
>> Yeah.
>> Is so true. There's this wonderful idea called compensatory control.
>> What is it called?
>> Compensatory control. Compensatory
control.
>> Compensatory control.
>> I'm I'm gonna speak in a language that you may not be familiar with. British.
Um >> my husband went to high school in Britain.
>> Okay, good. Did he retain?
>> No, I just don't understand the big words. Compensatory control.
words. Compensatory control.
>> Yeah. To compensate.
>> Oh, compensate. Okay.
>> Compensatory control.
>> Okay. Gotcha.
um when people were told to imagine an uncertain medical diagnosis, >> okay, >> they were more likely to see patterns in meaningless static on a TV
>> really. So basically if you have a sense
>> really. So basically if you have a sense of threat coming from the outside if you feel like control and uncertainty are very common in your life you are more
likely to construct narratives and uh personify and create archetype and myth and believe in conspiracy uh and attach meaning where it's not there. This is
from Matthew Sad. It was in the times forever ago. It was actually around co
forever ago. It was actually around co uh and he basically made this point that um this is before lab hypothesis stuff was you know supported or disproven or anything. It was just a notion at the
anything. It was just a notion at the time. And uh what he basically said was
time. And uh what he basically said was it is far easier to believe that the release of some global pandemic is the plan of a malign scientist than it is the transmutation of a silly little
micro >> because at least if it's a scientist, we understand there's motivation and and there's desire and it feels like it's within our realm.
>> Yes. And I think for many people the what feels like control in life is actually just a reminder of how little control we have. Right? Because we have
the illusion of control. I can tell you what the weather is going to be in Tampa, Florida tomorrow within a a pretty tight timeline.
>> Um if a a nuclear bomb went off in Russia tomorrow, Starbucks would open in Austin, Texas. Right. Okay. So, I have
Austin, Texas. Right. Okay. So, I have acute predictability, but I have long-term chaos.
>> Yes.
>> And trying to match these two, trying to work out, well, we've always not had control over the things that we haven't had control over, but never before have we had such an illusion that we might be
able to have control over them. We've
got this illusion of mastery. Wow. The
modern world, I can message anybody on the planet immediately. I can consume the entire world's news 24 hours a day directly streamed into my face.
So maybe I should have more control than I do. And it's blurred the lines. I
I do. And it's blurred the lines. I
think it's made distinguishing what we should let go of and what we should try and have uh agency over.
>> Those lines have become more blurred than ever before. And I think that >> uncertainty about the future combined with the sense that I might be able to get some sort of a change enacted if I
push. I think that those two worlds
push. I think that those two worlds blending together has made it very difficult for people and I think that's where the anxiety might be coming from.
>> Well, one of the things that's interesting about anxiety, having been somebody that has not has struggled with it for most of my life and not
understood it and not understood what to do in those moments and probably made every single mistake personally to make it worse.
Um and also being a mom who had kids who had anxiety and making every single mistake
you could make. So, I am personally responsible.
>> You've got skin in the game.
>> Oh, not only skin in the game, dude. I
have bruises and broken bones when it comes to this game because I have [ __ ] it up cuz I didn't know. I didn't know.
And if you're somebody that has really struggled with anxiety and you then have somebody around you that's anxious, it then makes you anxious and I can see now
in hindsight all of the things that I did wrong. This is why I pay gladly for
did wrong. This is why I pay gladly for my children to go to therapy, adult children, because I'm like, I [ __ ] you up in so many ways and I didn't.
>> Allow me to compensate.
>> Yeah. Well, I let me support you in identifying the things that don't work and let me support you in working with somebody who can help you change the
settings in your mind and who can help you understand when life triggers you cuz it's going to. bit to that point on anxiety that I want to talk about. I
actually believe now that anxiety if you can simplify what is happening in the moment, it will
help you apply what every expert tells you you have to do because the world is so overwhelming right now. Whether
you're talking about the world at large and AI coming or the headlines that are distressing or you're talking about the issues going on in your life, whether you are struggling to pay your bills or
you're scared about the rising cost of living or maybe you have somebody in your life that's struggling and you don't know how to help them. Um, and any one of these things can cause you in
this present moment to start to feel anxious about what's going to happen.
And so in that moment, God, I wish I knew this. I wish I knew this decades
knew this. I wish I knew this decades ago. I wish that decades ago somebody
ago. I wish that decades ago somebody could have explained to me that anytime you feel that alarm going off, cuz
that's what anxiety is. It's just an alarm system in your body that is designed to wake your ass up in this moment. either because there's something
moment. either because there's something that you care about that you need to do.
So, it's coming online as an alarm to wake up your body and your brain to help you perform. That's one type of anxiety
you perform. That's one type of anxiety like performance anxiety that a lot of people get. Or you have the kind of more
people get. Or you have the kind of more nagging chronic anxiety, which is what I had, which is this nagging sense
that something is about to happen, and you then have this moment where you separate
from your own ability to handle it. Like
I love Dr. Russell Kennedy's work.
>> I love Russell.
>> Yes.
>> Yes. And the fact that he says that all anxiety is separation anxiety. I'm like,
"What? What the hell are you talking about? It's not separate. I'm a, you
about? It's not separate. I'm a, you know, grown ass woman. It's not
separation anxiety. My son, you know, is not have separation anxiety." He's like, "It's not separation from another person. It's separation from self."
person. It's separation from self."
Because, you know, if you've got a situation, let's just take for example, you know, something that that I'm seeing, and you're probably seeing this too from a global fan base, people
around the world feeling incredibly anxious about AI, incredibly anxious about whether or not they're going to lose their job, incredibly anxious about the changes that it's going to have in
the world. First of all, that's a normal
the world. First of all, that's a normal thing to feel because it is completely out of your control if you get fired or not. It's completely out of your control
not. It's completely out of your control if your job's redundant or not. It's
completely out of your control how this is all going to play out. And so in the moment where you feel this alarm going off, what happened in that moment is you started go, "What if this happens? What
if that? Oh my god."
You separated from the one thing you can't control, which is your response to it. And so instead of going up here and
it. And so instead of going up here and going, "What if this? What if that? What
if the other thing?" which only makes the alarm that you're feeling worse because when you go up here, you now double down on doubting your ability to
handle it. And so in that moment, if you
handle it. And so in that moment, if you could take a breath and drop back into your body and into the mode and go, "Wait a minute. Okay, so I don't know what's
minute. Okay, so I don't know what's going to happen with AI. I don't know, you know, what's going to happen with the state of the world, but here's what I do know. I know that through my
attitude, my actions, I can handle it. I know that even though I don't know what's going to happen or what if this or what if that, I can also
say, what if it works out, what if something bad happens and I surprise myself and I'm able to just
figure it out as much as it may suck.
When you start to drop back in and double down on the truth, and the truth is you can through your attitude and
through the actions that you take, you can handle even terrible things that happen. It doesn't mean you deserve it.
happen. It doesn't mean you deserve it.
It doesn't mean that it's not going to be terrible. But doubling down on your
be terrible. But doubling down on your capacity is what will quiet the alarm and it is what will retrain you to know that in
those moments because those moments are coming and they're there for all of us. In those
moments when life really overwhelms you.
There's nothing you can do about life, but there's so much you can do to support yourself through it. And you
know what I can now see if you look at somebody like David Ross Marin, professor at Harvard Medical School and he's also the one that has all the I think they're called the anxiety
centers. They're all over the US.
centers. They're all over the US.
He said the single thing that people do wrong with anxiety is the moment you have that separation, oh god, what if this and I can't handle it. [ __ ] [ __ ] [ __ ] [ __ ] [ __ ] And then you like send
yourself into a state of complete panic.
You freeze.
And now you avoid the thing you're scared of. So most
people right now, if you're worried about your job, I guarantee you, you know what they're doing? You're probably
doing what Mel Robbins used to do.
You're bitching to your friends. You're
worrying about it. You're frozen about it. You're pissed off about it. But you
it. You're pissed off about it. But you
know what you're not doing? You're not
doing the one thing that you can do, which is [ __ ] update your resume, learn new skills. If you're scared about it, lean into it. Ask yourself, do I even like what I do? Maybe now is a time
to tighten the belt and and cut back on all the spending I don't need so that I can create a longer runway and figure out what changes I want to make. Cuz
you're not stuck in the job. You're not
stuck where you are. At any moment, you can [ __ ] change. But if you do what I used to do, which is separate from your power to change
and separate from your ability to change your attitude or to learn from somebody like you or to get the support that you need, then you're going to trigger a
bigger alarm and you're going to become the single biggest reason why you stay stuck. And it's in these moments,
in these moments where life overwhelms you. That's the mistake I
overwhelms you. That's the mistake I made for years. And then the mistake I made as a parent. Oh, Jesus. My kid
would be overwhelmed. And you know, as a mom, you're like, "Okay, no problem. You
can do a sleep under, not a sleepover.
Oh, no problem. You can sleep on my four on the floor of our bedroom for 6 months since you're scared to be in your room."
>> You know what I'm signaling as a parent?
I'm signaling I don't think you can handle it. Yeah.
handle it. Yeah.
>> And so you should be scared because I'm showing you that I don't think you can handle it. Congratulations. You made it
handle it. Congratulations. You made it to the end of an episode. Your brain has not been completely destroyed by the internet just yet. Here's another one
that you should watch.
Come on.
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