A Bit of Optimism - Stop Telling Us Everything Happens for a Reason with Anti-Victim Tom Nash
Episode Date: May 12, 2026We often comfort ourselves with the idea that things happen for a reason, or define our struggles as a test of strength. Tom Nash might ask you to reconsider. Tom is a speaker, former DJ, and globe...-trotting advocate for agency, anti-fragility, and the radical idea that your worst moment might be your greatest asset — as he argued in his TED Talk, "The Perks of Being a Pirate.” He’s also the mind behind Last Meal with Tom Nash where he asks his guests what their last meal would be if the world ended tomorrow, and then actually cooks it for them. In our conversation, Tom shares how, at 19, a rare bacterial infection left him a quadruple amputee with a 2% chance of survival. And he'll tell you it's the best thing that ever happened to him. This isn’t just another conversation about resilience. It’s a deep dive into agency and the difference between a life that happens to you and one you actually choose. In this episode, we explore: ➡️ Why the story you tell yourself about your own life is the most powerful force in it ➡️ The difference between resilience and anti-fragility (and why it matters) ➡️ Tom’s framework for navigating adversity: The Artist, the Author, and the Alchemist ➡️ The counterintuitive reason why we actually need support networks ➡️ Why "everything happens for a reason" can be a trap (and the perspective that works better) ➡️ What your last meal choice reveals about what you're really searching for ➡️ Why the concept of being "self-made" is a dangerous illusion Tom joins me to ask a fundamental question: who is really holding the pen when it comes to your story? This… is A Bit of Optimism. + + + Watch the new season of Tom’s show Last Meal with Tom Nash and head to: https://www.lastmealwithtomnash.com Want more Tom? Check out his website: https://www.tomnash.com + + + Chapters Chapters 00:00:00 Adversity Can Be The Best Thing You Experience 00:03:45 Tom's Story: Contracting Meningococcal Disease 00:07:47 The Gift of Agency: Choosing to Amputate 00:16:18 The Artist, The Author, and The Alchemist: A Framework for Anti-Fragility 00:20:28 The Alchemist: Turning Adversity Into Advantage 00:23:52 Learning to Walk Again: The Momentum Metaphor 00:26:57 The True Purpose of Support Networks 00:34:33 Why 'Everything Happens for a Reason' Robs You of Agency 00:47:37 The Last Meal Question: What Your Choice Reveals About Freedom 00:42:23 Joel Robuchon: Leadership Through Teaching, Not Commanding 00:58:34 The Problem With Inspirational Affirmations 01:00:59 Stop Saying Everything Happens for a Reason + + + Simon is an unshakable optimist. He believes in a bright future and our ability to build it together. Described as “a visionary thinker with a rare intellect,” Simon has devoted his professional life to help advance a vision of the world that does not yet exist; a world in which the vast majority of people wake up every single morning inspired, feel safe wherever they are and end the day fulfilled by the work that they do. Simon is the author of multiple best-selling books including Start With Why, Leaders Eat Last, Together is Better, and The Infinite Game. + + + Website: http://simonsinek.com/ Leaderful: https://simonsinek.com/leaderful Podcast: http://apple.co/simonsinek Instagram: https://instagram.com/simonsinek/ Linkedin: https://linkedin.com/in/simonsinek/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/simonsinek Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/simonsinek Simon’s books: The Infinite Game: https://simonsinek.com/books/the-infinite-game/ Start With Why: https://simonsinek.com/books/start-with-why/ Find Your Why: https://simonsinek.com/books/find-your-why/ Leaders Eat Last: https://simonsinek.com/books/leaders-eat-last/ Together is Better: https://simonsinek.com/books/together-is-better/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Are you going to treat adversity like the conversation stopper or is it a puzzle to be solved?
Right.
Your case is extreme and it's different than this adversity that most people will struggle in a day.
But I like extreme cases because the lessons are easier to discern.
For me, losing four limbs sounds like a bit of a shit sandwich to almost anyone who reads that story.
But when I sit here and tell you, it's the best thing that ever happened to me.
And even you identify it as a gift, all of a sudden it becomes a really good story.
Most of us have experienced some sort of adversity in our lives.
And whether it's from well-intentioned friends or our own attempts to deal with our struggle,
we often try to downplay how bad it is.
Things could be worse, we tell ourselves.
You still have your health.
But what if there was another way?
A better way to deal with stress.
That's why I was excited to have Tom Nash on the show.
At 19, he caught a bacterial infection, which has a 2% chance of survival.
But that's not the story.
because of the infection, he had to have both his legs and both his arms amputated.
And how did he deal with it?
He decided it was the best thing that ever happened to him.
He went on to become one of Australia's most popular DJs and a highly acclaimed speaker.
He's also the host of his own show, Last Meal with Tom Nash, where he serves his guests the meal they would want to have if the world was about to end.
Tom is one of the best guests I've ever had on the show.
smart. He's really funny, charming and insanely inspiring. And he will leave you with the greatest
lesson you can ever learn. When we have agency, we can more than get through anything. We can
come through anything even better. If you like this episode, please remember to subscribe.
This is a bit of optimism. Tom, thanks so much for coming in. I,
learned about you from a team member of ours who sent me your TED talk.
Oh, right.
You're a pirate.
That's getting a bit long in the tooth now.
I can't believe.
It's still out there.
It's still out there.
Just so people know what we're talking about, children stop you.
Yes.
Children stare.
Yeah, children do a lot of things.
Let's go back.
People stare.
Yeah, sure.
People stare.
Yeah, so I've lost both arms and both legs.
They don't really notice the.
leg thing because usually I'm wearing long pants like I am now and I'm pretty good at walking
with prosthetic legs so they don't really detect that but the obvious thing is I have these two hooks
oh my god you've got hooks yeah yeah you wouldn't believe how much that's a genuine response
I get as well like people pretending that they don't notice which is even more awkward but yeah yeah kids
kids are the ones that will sort of like there's no fourth wall there they'll just go straight for you
and ask you whether you're a pirate or not or a robot or something like that and I just have to tell
them that yeah of course I am of course of course I love being in America because I get when
people from America ask me what happened to me I can tell them shark attack and I totally get away
with it because they think everything in Australia is trying to kill you and you know and that that's
true most people die in Australia from shark attack of course that's a known fact that's exactly right yeah
yeah with kids I mean I was playing to the idea of it with them being a pirate or a or a robot or
whatever it is and I think it just makes them feel a bit more comfortable.
And I like it when kids are more comfortable asking questions to people with disabilities.
Sure.
Because, you know, I think it just destigmatifies everything.
Yeah.
You know, if you will.
So you lost your arms and legs when you were 19.
Yes.
Yes.
So, I mean, you lived, I mean, into adulthood, able-bodied.
That's right.
Yeah, I was an able-bodied person until the age of 19.
I was studying at university.
I used to be a guitarist, actually.
as well. So music was a great passion of mine. And it was one day at college, I went in and I felt a
general malaise come over me as I was sitting having coffee with a friend waiting to go to a lecture.
And I thought to myself, I might just go home because I was feeling like I was getting a flu.
And so I took myself home and put myself to bed and I had probably what felt like the worst flu I'd ever had in my life.
If you've had a really bad flu and you can imagine an order of magnitude more than that,
that's kind of what I felt.
So the night was really awful.
And then the next morning, I woke up, texted my step-sister and I said, you have to take me to hospital.
Actually, I think I said, you have to send me to a doctor, not hospital.
Because as a 19-year-old man, you always downplay.
She picked me up, took one look at me and said, I'm taking you straight to hospital.
She took me to a local hospital.
I remember they had to transfer me because they looked at me immediately and they looked at me immediately
and they said, you know, you've got purple rash all over your face and all over your body
and everything's swollen up, something wrong with you.
They knew what it was.
I didn't at the time.
So they transferred me from a local hospital to one of the major hospitals in Sydney.
And I say this is because it was like one of my last memories.
I was in the back of an ambulance.
I don't know if you've ever been in the back of an ambulance.
And they have the paramedic that's with you just to make sure you don't die or whatever it is.
And I remember this guy like it was yesterday.
He was very serious and he was very stern.
And I made it my mission to make him laugh because I knew that I just needed to break this guy.
I don't know what was going on.
And so I was making a couple of jokes and nothing was happening.
And then at one point I remember saying to him, how long until we get to the hospital?
And he said, about 10 minutes.
And I said, 10 minutes is what people say when they have no fucking idea how long it's going to take to get somewhere.
Because nothing takes 10 minutes, does it?
It takes 7.
It takes 8.
It takes 9.
It never takes 10.
Maybe it takes 15 or 20.
And this made him laugh and had a bit of a chuckle
And we laughed together
And then I thought I had
I won this guy over
At that point I completely lose my memory
Well what happened was I got admitted to the hospital
And they put me into a coma
For a couple of weeks
And then when I woke up
I realized that where I've been told
That I contracted meningococcal disease
Which kind of like a bacterial meningitis
Just a fluke? Just a...
Yeah, exactly
It's contracted kind of like people contract COVID
or something like
through sharing drinks or someone coughing on you or something like that.
But it's very rare.
So I just got extremely unlucky or whatever.
I was to be in hospital for another 18 months.
I came really close to death.
I think it had like a 2% survival opportunity.
And I managed to get through that with the help of the doctors and nurses
and some trial drugs and things.
But during that time, I had amputations.
So after I'd come out of the coma,
I had both my legs amputated.
and a couple of weeks after that a doctor came into my room.
I remember this like it was yesterday as well.
There's one of those other sort of poignant moments.
This doctor, his name is Peter Mates.
He was one of several doctors that I had.
And for some reason, this guy had a really acute understanding of my dark sense of humor
in a way that few people have understood since.
And I remember he came into my room once.
And I had my legs amputated.
arms had gangrene on them and stuff like that.
And I was really wanted to keep the arms
because as I mentioned before, I was a guitarist
and it wasn't just the lack of independence,
but like the idea that I couldn't play music.
Part of identity.
So he came in and I realized the situation was really different
because he wasn't flanked by the usual registrars and lackeys
that he normally was being quite a high up doctor.
And he sat down next to my hospital bed and he said,
so we're going to talk about the arms.
And I said, okay.
And he said, as I see, you have two arms.
options. And I said, okay, what are they? He said, we can amputate your arms. That's the first
option. And it's pretty rare for people to live with two prosthetic arms, but he said, it does
happen, but you'll have to live with prosthetics. And I said, I don't really like the sound of that.
What's the other option? And he said, we can leave them. And I said, okay, what's the catch?
And he said, oh, you'll die. I see we share the same here.
So after I had a bit of a chocolate that I realized that
Apart from like tapping into the dark sense of humor
Yeah
He was giving me a choice
Yeah
For the first time in this whole process
Yeah
Because up until then everything had been happening to me
Right
And I had no sense of agency
Right
In the whole process
And at that point
I mean obviously I was going to say amputate the arms right
Yeah
And that's the decision I made
Obviously if I'm sitting here in front of you
Having this conversation
What it did was it completely changed my mindset at that point
because now I've made the decision to lose my arms
and it imbued me with that sense of agency.
So you're not a victim of the amputation.
It's interesting you use that word.
I very much regard myself as an anti-victum.
What I do in most of my life is try to, I think,
rail against the concept of victimhood, generally speaking.
There's a subtle but important detail here,
which is the doctor gave you a choice.
Yeah, that's right.
You had the agency, which makes you not the victim because this is something I chose.
I wonder if you woke up one morning and then the arms were gone, if that mentality would be the same or it would have taken more work to get there.
That's a really interesting question that no one's asked me before.
And I'm not surprised that you're someone that picked up on that.
But yeah, absolutely.
Like the idea that you actually make the decision imbues you with a deeper sense of agency much quicker.
Even if it's a fake decision.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, it's like, it's a choice-ish.
Yeah.
But you get to say, got it.
Let's do it.
And I think what that points to mostly is that almost everything in our life is the story
we tell ourselves and everything is a reframe or it can be.
And so you can choose to look at things that have happened historically as something
that you had input in or something that you didn't.
Yeah.
And I think people's ability to make that distinction is what decides whether they have the agency
moving forward and what they can do with what this is so interesting because when I sat down with
you I thought okay this is going to be a conversation about the importance of sense of humor right
I thought this is going to be a conversation about when life gives you lemons yeah you know
make a joke right because I believe life is made of balance right and this is this is everything
for everything we get there's a cost of course everything we lose there's a gain or a lesson
everything right in other words it's always balance and I always I always I always
ask myself, okay, what's the balance?
Right? So when times are hard, I'm like,
all right, what am I getting out of this? And when something
goes good, I'm like, careful, this is coming
at a cost. Yeah, what am I going to get this?
Yeah. Always. And so,
and again, every aspect of life. So, for
example, if you have a corporate job,
you know, your lows are not that low, but your
highs are not that high. You live an entrepreneurial
life. Your highs are insanely high,
but your lows are insanely low. Like, it's
always balanced. And so what I
thought we were going to be talking about was
that the sense of humor
was tapping into the balance
because otherwise
if you have imbalance
that's where you end up
depressed, lost victim
and so to find what the gain
what the balance is like
okay something bad has happened
your identity has changed
your life has changed
new struggles all of that
okay my sense of humor got darker
you know
and it helps you just sort of live in balance
yeah right
I thought that's what we were going to be talking about
we can if you want
what is showing up here I actually think
is more interesting, which is agency.
And how one reclaims agency.
Now, this doctor gave you a gift,
which is he didn't save your life.
He let you save your life.
And I guess the question, I mean, we don't know
if that didn't happen, if you just woke up
and with no arms, you know, what would have happened.
But are there other circumstances as you've had to change,
you're to relearn to walk, you're to relearn to function,
you're to relearn to get dressed.
I mean, everything was brand new for you.
How did agency show up?
When did you feel like a victim?
I don't believe I ever felt like a victim.
I think there was probably a time where...
I mean, there was no depression that came at all.
Oh yeah, there was depression.
I don't believe it came in the form of feeling like I was a victim.
I think you do some get these glimmers of kind of, you know,
why did this happen to me?
It's not necessarily, I think, a victim mindset,
but you're kind of trying to make sense of how you've been selected
for this particular brand of misfortune.
At the same time...
It's like it's the opposite of a lottery.
Yeah, that's right.
You've got a one in ten million chance of being a millionaire or...
Yeah, yeah.
Look at me.
I think it very quickly shifted from why me to, you know, what next, effectively.
But I think there was an intermediary step there of kind of why not, right?
And why not being really important when you think to yourself,
statistically it's going to happen to somebody.
Why not me?
Of course.
And that's an important realization
because it's the first time that you realize
that a lot of these things that happen are just completely random.
And the universe doesn't give a shit about you.
And you need to start developing a skin that can handle that effectively.
I think what you said about balance
made me think about something completely different,
which was that even though you were kind of trying to diagnose
this maybe humor is this kind of,
antidote to the deficit in other areas. I think rather than humor being the antidote for me,
I've found what I call anti-fragility. This is a topic that you would know well was developed by
Nassim Taleb. Usually with respects to complex systems, he's a market analyst or options
trade or whatever it is. But I think it applies just as much in psychology than anything else because
the human mind is a complex system. And so what I've identified,
my own life along the way is like what advantages have come through having a disability for me?
You mentioned my TED talk actually before, which is the perks of being a pirate.
We talked about the idea of being a pirate, but the salience underneath that is the perks of
what are the advantages of having a disability.
I mean, when I look back on my life now and what I've become, I'm a better problem solver.
I'm more, people say resilient person.
I'm more anti-fragile person.
I believe that there are so many advantages that I've had.
having a disability, just completely in my mindset
in the way that I approach life,
that's the balance.
Humor isn't the balance.
The balance is,
how can I flip the script on this
and make it something that's positive?
And that's effectively the lens
through which I view life these days
is how can I develop habits that are anti-fragile,
effectively.
Emotionally as well?
Yeah, absolutely.
Because physically, clearly you have to solve problems.
you have to figure out to work in the world.
That's right, yeah, yeah.
But are you more anti-fragile
and better at solving emotional problems, relationships,
you know, conflict at work?
Yeah, you know.
I think so.
When I talk to a lot of people
and particularly in business about anti-fragility,
it's important to know that, like,
I don't think it's a binary thing
that you're either anti-fragile or you're not.
And I think people get very caught up being like,
am I optimizing my response, you know,
for positive upside optionality all the time?
I don't think you need to be all the time.
Right.
I don't think you need to be all the time.
But once you develop like the habit of doing it and you get better at it,
even if two out of five situations you can flip into a positive,
there will be a net benefit over time.
When something happens to us and we're all susceptible to it like,
oh, why me?
Is there something you say a mantra that helps you change the mindset?
I mean, you kind of alluded to it, which is not what did I lose, but what do I gain?
I mean, is that the thing?
Like, is there a mechanism that helps you get the right mindset?
Yeah, there is.
I actually developed a system that I use day to day.
I have like three characters that I can play in various different situations.
And I call them the artist, the author, and the alchemist.
And they're for very different applications.
And if you think about these things as actual characters,
I like to think of them as people.
So the artist is somebody who paints perspective, right?
I mean, artists always work with perspective.
If you think about it like a photographer
who can zoom in or zoom out of a particular situation,
so that kind of oscillates between like a narrow and a broad framing of something,
I think that being able to change your perspective on any situation at any given time
is a skill that you can develop.
You know, an example of this would be
If you're drowning in the minutia of your life
And work or something like that
It's useful to zoom out and appreciate
That you live in a really good country
Or you have a spouse that's supportive
Or you have a great family or friends network
Or your life is on the right track
Maybe if those things are actually all catching fire
It's better off to oscillate that framing again
And zoom in and appreciate a moment
Like spending time with your dog on the couch
Or having a cup of coffee with your spouse
Or something like that
anyone has the choice to be able to make that decision at any point in their life
you can run through an exercise whereby you know today is another day you didn't get an
email telling you you have bowel cancer right it sounds fucking ridiculous on the offset right but
but today is that day for you and I both and if you put yourself in the mental headspace
where that is a possibility it does actually lighten the problems that you're going through
now you know what I like about it is it works because it's specific
Whereas, you know, usually when something bad happens to somebody's life, you usually get the problem of like, you have your health, which is this kind of generic kind of like, it's the same kind of idea.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, but it's such a generic thought.
It's too hard to say, yeah, sure.
It's too hard to appreciate something so broad in general, right?
Yeah.
Whereas when you say, you know, you don't have bowel canceled.
You know, it's kind of like, yeah, it's a good point.
You know, it's the specificity.
of the, this is why I like your concept of the photographer.
It's the specificity of it.
Yeah.
Not like, hey, life is good.
But rather, just take a step back.
Look what you've got.
That's right.
Are you zooming in or are you zooming out?
And it's the specificity that I really appreciate.
And then another one would be the author.
Yeah.
This was one that I'd do with myself for the last 10 or 15 years.
And I never really had a name for it until I put a name on it.
But I would imagine myself as my own 80-year-old.
autobiographer of my own book, right?
And it would help me make decisions on what I was doing in life, right?
So whenever I had a decision to make and it was really tough and I had to consider all
a bunch of different variables, I would project myself into the future when I was 80 years
old and I would think if this was a story that I was writing and I was the protagonist, what decision
would I want the main character to make?
Like what kind of story would I be proud to write to tell?
Like autobiographies are very much the stories of heroism and making right decisions.
Especially when you write your own book.
When you write your own book, right?
Exactly.
And so you don't want to make the wrong decision.
But you're also giving yourself this benefit of objectivity, right?
Of being outside of yourself.
Yeah.
Of being the third person in a sense.
You know that axiom is kind of like it's always easy to give advice to a friend but never
take your own advice?
This is just you putting on that hat and giving yourself advice.
It's sitting on the outside.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
The artist is great for, you know, if you're sort of drowning in the minutia.
The author is great if you have a decision to make, but you want to respond in the best way.
And then I guess the last one would be the alchemist, which is what I live my life by.
And the alchemist is somebody who turns horrible situations into gold.
Right.
So how do you find what is the hidden benefit from some horrible challenge that's happened to you?
Are you going to treat adversity like the conversation stopper?
Or is it a puzzle to be solved?
Right.
What are the great things that you can get out of what's happened to you?
So for me, losing four limbs sounds like a bit of a shit sandwich to almost anyone who reads that story.
But when I sit here and tell you it's the best thing that ever happened to me and even you identify it as a gift, all of a sudden it becomes a really good story.
And that's what the alchemist does.
Here's where my head goes.
Okay.
Your case is extreme and it's different than this adversity that most people will struggle in a day.
but that's why I was excited to talk to you.
I like extreme cases because the lessons are easier to discern because it's extreme.
And then you take those lessons from the extreme and you apply them to less extreme circumstances
where the lessons are harder to find, right?
And so when you talk about the alchemist and when you say,
this is the best thing that happened to me, when somebody gets dumped, fired,
a small business is not, is barreling down.
it seems too simplistic to simply say,
change your mindset, this is the best thing that ever happened to you.
Like when there's so much emotion, I mean, I have to believe this is something you developed,
not something you had out of the gate, right?
It wasn't the week after amputation.
You're like, this is the best thing that happened to me.
That is not how it worked.
No.
So I guess that's where I'm getting at.
What is the process that we have to go through of mourning loss, you know,
going through the fear, going through the anxiety,
because you've got to go through it,
there's no avoiding that.
Otherwise, it's just suppression
and you're kidding yourself,
allowing yourself the grace to cry and be depressed
and be like, this is normal.
You know, I just lost something.
I'm going to be depressed.
Absolutely.
Like, how long was the gap
when you went through,
fuck my life to, you know what?
No, this is the best thing that ever happened to me.
And what was the process to get?
I'll tell you my gap,
but I don't want that to sound prescriptive to people
because I don't think it's going to be the same
for everyone in every situation.
But I just want people to appreciate
that it's not just some faux spiritual affirmation
that you're going through some shit
and you just turn your life around and change your mindset.
You know, this is the best thing that ever happened to you
and then all of a sudden you have this amazing outlook on life.
That's not how this works.
I went into hospital about middle of the year.
I was terrible.
depressed in the beginning and I noticed that that had a high correlation to physical pain.
And I know that emotional pain can kind of induce physical pain and all that sort of stuff, but pain.
Pain, pain. Sure. Yeah. But my emotional pain and therefore depression, I think, was very closely
correlated with physical pain because I noticed it getting better as the pain started to subside.
Notwithstanding, I experienced the kind of pain that I didn't know existed and for prolonged periods of
time, things that you would think, oh, that's an 11, might be 110 or something like that,
crazy amounts of pain. And so that was largely unavoidable, but I think it sort of skews
the results in my head. There were these markers along the way. Having that agency, that sense of
of losing my arms was one marker. Another marker was, you know, walking for myself unassisted,
which would have been about eight or nine months after I first went into hospital. Actually,
The story about the first time I walked unassisted was a bit interesting because I had these
two prosthetic legs put on me.
In the beginning, I had a person holding me under one arm and a person holding me under
another.
And then there were a person on each leg, moving my leg forward.
So I started with like five people when I first started to learn to walk again with prosthetics.
And as I would get better and better, I would lose people.
So I lost the people on each leg because I could move the leg by myself.
and then I just sort of needed balance
so I lost one person to my left
and I just had this person to my right
holding me for balance.
The longest period was when I just had him.
It was just a wardsman
and he would hold me under my arm
and every day we would go for a little bits of walks
around the grounds of the hospital.
I remember I couldn't work out what it was
that I couldn't walk on my own
and I thought to myself, I'm like it's balance.
I don't have the balance, right?
And I had this fear of him letting me go
because I didn't, he was giving me the balance.
And it was just this one day that I'm walking along with him.
And I remember we're walking and I'm starting to pick up a little bit of speed,
more speed than I had previously.
And I said to him, okay, let me go.
I don't think he was supposed to let me go.
Like it was probably had, he might have got in trouble for that by the hospital administrators
if he'd done it.
But he could see in my eye that I was ready and he let me go.
And as soon as he let me go, I just started picking up more and more.
more speed.
And what I got was momentum.
And the momentum was actually what gave me the balance that I needed.
So it was happening is he was holding...
It's like a bicycle.
It's like a bicycle, right?
So he's holding my arm, and I'm thinking he's giving me balance, but he was actually
holding me back.
And I didn't realize that, right?
And so I realized at that point that the momentum, which was, that was what was giving
me balance, and that's what propelling me for.
And it was only fear that was stopping me from having him let go.
So that was another mind.
milestone along the way, right? And so when I say that, you know, it wasn't like waking up to
the next day and being like, oh, I'm fine now and everything's positive. No, it's iterative.
And you have little moments like this over the course of like a year or so. And you know what?
That hasn't stopped happening. I still have moments like that that just make life better and
better. Just don't have the ones that make life worse. That's my only recommendation. This is
such a good insight, which is
We go to friends in times of struggle and hardship for help, of course.
And it is much easier for us to get through struggle and hardship when somebody is by our side.
Metaphorically, holding us up.
Yeah.
Giving us balance.
Making us feel like, you know what, I can walk.
Thank you for being by my side.
But there is a point where the friend's love and the friend's intention of holding us up is actually holding us back.
And there's a point at which we have to say to ourselves,
I love you, but I have to leave you now.
This support is holding me back.
Yeah, it's a dependency.
You know what I learned about support networks during my period in hospital is,
and I had a great support network,
like not just people who are paid like doctors and nurses,
but family and friends and things like that.
And everybody kind of thinks that the support network is good
because of what people do for you.
I actually found out that, for me at least,
and I think this is for everyone,
support networks are useful because you've found,
feel like you owe these people something once they commit to you, right? It creates a debt of
honor effectively. So you want to get better yourself because they've invested in you and they
believe in you. I think that's happening for everyone who has support, whether they see it or not.
You don't want to let them down. Yeah. They sacrifice for you. That's right. They gave to you and you
want to make sure that their sacrifice was worth it. That's it. I think that's the best aspect of
support networks. I mean, this is what it means to be human, right? Which is, and I, and this is
all these discussions about AI and all of these things,
the problem with technologists is they always leave the people out.
And they forget that people are still people and we're going to be people all the time.
And the technology is great and it supports us.
They always forget the people part.
And so much of people and humanity and humanness,
we don't fully understand or we only understand in sort of silos,
various social disciplines, psychology and sociology and psychiatry and all the rest.
But there's so much we do.
don't understand and get. And it's this idea of pride and not wanting to let people down. And that the
value of a friend is not just that they were there. You know, it's like when a kid graduates high
school or university and they're walking across the stage to receive their diploma and there's
this sense of pride. But the parents and the friends and the family sitting in the audience also
have this incredible sense of pride. It's this shared feeling that we have with each other. It's
called relationship. It's called love. It's called trust. It's reciprocity. It's reciprocity. And
Like we forget that emotions aren't just in us.
When we are close with someone, we share in those emotions.
We share in their pain.
We share in their pride.
And in this case, there's, I don't know even what, I don't even know if there's a word for it.
You know, there isn't a word like not wanting to let them down.
You know, some sort of version of gratitude.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think of it the best I could come.
We don't have a word for it.
Isn't that kind of amazing?
Dead of honor, I guess.
But even, again, we have these phrases, but we don't have a word for that shared
experience. I bet the Russians do.
They've got words. The Germans.
The Germans have weird words for everything.
That's right. Yeah, yeah. That's good.
Yeah.
Does it bother you when people stare at you?
No.
Because I hear from other people who are disabled in some way that causes great discomfort
to feel like an object.
It's funny, isn't it?
So many people spend a vast amount of energy and resources and money to be objectified
on Instagram and
and some of us just have it
and then we don't want it.
It's a gift.
No, I don't give a shit, it's fun.
I think people are just generally curious.
I mean, I do my best to try and make people
feel comfortable off the bat.
And that could be just making a joke about my hooks
or making them feel comfortable in another way.
My aim is to, once I get to know somebody,
is to make them forget that I have hooks.
I love this idea of how.
you, and I guess we have to thank that doctor, because I mean, we don't know what the future
would have been, but this idea of taking agency and making choices, like, I'm going to choose this,
that the mindset starts with choice.
I really like that.
It always does, yeah.
You're helping put a lot of things into place for me where there's certain things that
what I now know is agency, which I wouldn't have defined as that prior to this conversation.
There's agency.
I'm not left with this life
I chose this life
this is not the metric
I have to accept
this is the metric I chose
I really like this framing a lot
I think there's a lot to be
I think there's a lot there
in your artist author and alchemist
and then the alchemy is always
just to your
I mean literally in the definition
the magical part
well actually it's interesting you say that
because and I've been following your work
for quite a while now
Thank you.
You know, I remember when I first heard about, you know, what is your why or whatever.
And I think I stumbled on mine by accident.
I don't know when.
A while ago.
Because, you know, you think you have it and then you're kind of wrong or whatever.
And there was a guy who came, who approached me and said, he said, I was, you know, really great to meet you.
We'd been chatting for a while.
He said something along the lines of, you know, I never would have been able to go through what you did and remain so positive on the other side of it.
And I remember feeling so deeply upset by that.
Just I never wanted that to be what people took away from me.
And so it wasn't as much that he revealed something.
He revealed what I didn't want.
What I wanted was for people to understand that there never really know what.
what they're capable of until they're truly tested.
Like that's what I want to communicate.
That's what I want people to get from me.
And so at that point, that was when I realized,
at least vocationally,
that everything that I did,
I wanted to make it so that people didn't look at me thinking,
oh, I never could be that positive after having something like that.
I want them to think the exact opposite.
That, like, nestled deep inside me,
there is the power to overcome crazy bad,
shit and it just hasn't been tested yet. I want to agree with you. Okay, cool. I want you to not because
it would be way more interesting for the conversation. I want to. I want to. Yeah. But I don't think I do.
Okay, cool. Tell me why. My great aunt survived the Holocaust. And, you know, this is Viktor Frankl's stuff.
You know, Victor Frankl, who also went through Auschwitz. Yeah. And he came out of it. He couldn't
understand why all these people who are suffering the same horrors that some people had the will to live and some people didn't, right? And that was how he wrote Man's Search for Meaning at the end of it. That it was that there are certain people who can accept and recognize that we cannot change the circumstances around us all that we have control over agency is our attitude, is our response. Yeah. And my great aunt who came through it, I remember talking to her about it. And, you know, we talk about post-traumatic stress. And, you know, we talk about post-traumatic stress. And, you know,
but we rarely talk about post-traumatic growth.
And I read this recently, and I can't remember,
I'm going to muck it up so people are going to get angry at me,
but that post-traumatic stress is only a recent thing
that we started talking about.
And we used to talk about post-traumatic growth more.
Yeah, right.
How you grow from trauma, not just struggle from it.
And both are true.
She went through the concentration camp with her husband,
and she said,
you came through it stronger or broken.
I came out stronger
He came out broken
This is why we made a great team
We are there for each other
Yeah
You know I need him and he needs me
Yeah
It's true you don't know what you've got
Until you're tested
But I'm not sure everybody's got it
Oh that's what you disagree with
Yeah
Oh yeah
I mean I don't know whether everyone's got it
I don't think everybody has
Yeah I
Well there's no way for me to know that
It's not that I think everyone has
But I think everybody
I think
everyone has the ability to surprise themselves.
It doesn't necessarily mean that everyone could have gone through what I did.
I don't think they could have.
Maybe not.
But I still think everybody underestimates what they're capable of, generally speaking.
That I agree with.
And we see that in national tragedy.
But I think our ability to, and this is the next line of question I have you,
which is I think our ability to withstand the extreme stresses of life go up
when we have a support network.
Of course.
You didn't do this alone.
Of course not.
And that's really important here.
It's not like, you know, Tom with this inner strength of an ancient Greek god.
No.
No, I quite often talk about one of the things I detest the most is that the self-made myth.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Like the idea that you were the author and the contributor, the only contributor to your own success.
I mean, like what you are talking with right now in conversation is a person that probably had 11%
to do with who I am right now.
I'm a product of doctors and nurses
and families and friends and support networks
and getting sick in a country that had medical support
and they pay for my prosthetics
and just I'm literally a melange of all of these things.
The only reason I think that's important to identify
is because if you want that to be replicable in your own life,
you need to have an honest conversation
about how you're not the center of it effectively.
because some of the best people know how to rely on their support networks
and use them as resources.
And when we go through adversity together,
we're more likely to come through it healthfully as individuals.
And it's definitely in America we've over-indexed on rugged individualism,
but you see it all over the internets as well,
especially on social media,
where everybody has to be the hero of their own life.
Even when they're expressing gratitude,
it's always like them by themselves, you know, welling up in a car.
Yeah, you know.
I hate that shit.
But look, that is fragile.
That's not anti-fragile.
Think about it, right?
If you are the self-made person,
if everything that you did relies only on you,
that's one choke point.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
That's not anti-fragile.
But if you're somebody who's resourceful,
you mentioned before about somebody who loses their job
or whatever it is, right?
This is obviously a huge challenge in someone's life.
But I don't know.
Let's say, for example, you worked, where are we?
California.
Let's say you work in tech, right?
You earn a couple hundred thousand dollars a year.
You've been working for like four or five years or something like that.
But, you know, you work for Invidia,
but you've got plenty of friends that, you know,
work for Microsoft or Apple or, you know, all these things.
You're going to all the conferences.
You're building this support network, all of this sort of stuff.
And then one day you lose your job.
Now imagine that person.
And then imagine like a recent Columbia grad or some whatever, right,
that doesn't know anybody that's also going for the same jobs.
Who's going to get it?
the person who has the strong support network.
And you know what?
They're probably going to get a better job than they had before
because they hadn't even thought to reassess their career paths.
So number one, the network is anti-fragile.
Number two, getting fired might not be the worst thing that ever happened to you.
This is also touching on if you're at the top,
just don't relieve your own hype.
Because that's when you start believing people have to rely on you.
That's when you start breaking the networks
because you become an asshole.
Yes.
You know?
And I think to have the humility that this could end at any time.
It is amazing to me how many people I bump into and opportunities that are showing up.
I'll give you a perfect example.
I went to a conference just last weekend and I bumped into a guy who I last saw him 16 years ago.
Right.
Now, we remembered who each other, you know, we remembered each other.
We've had, I would say, exchanged maybe two texts over the course of 16 years.
Wow.
Right? Maybe I don't even think text, emails. I don't even think we had each other's phone numbers. Right. Yeah. I saw him 16 years later. We were happy to see each other and we decided we're going to do something together. Oh, great. Now, you know, if you don't treat somebody nicely 16 years ago. Yeah. That has repercussions. Of course. And it is amazing to me. And I would never have imagined this as I was coming up through my career. It goes back to your photographer. Everything seems so myopic and everything seems so close. And the number of relationships that show up again.
And by the way, the other way around, which is people come to me, is like, have you ever worked with X? I'm like, actually, I have worked with them. You know, he treated me like a complete chump when I was starting out my career. I'm thinking of somebody very specifically.
That sounds like it. Who, as I was, as my career was just getting going, this guy treated me like an asshole. For no reason. I don't mind if people don't want to work with me. I don't mind if people don't like me. But you don't have to go out of your way to demean me. Just say no. Right? Right.
And he went out of his way to insult me.
And he was a very successful, powerful guy in his industry, right?
And I was just getting started.
And he was an asshole.
Flash forward, my career is going pretty good.
And all of a sudden, his office calls, not him, because they want to work with me.
And I said, not only is the answer, no, never call me again.
Right?
I don't care what the money is.
Don't ever call me again, right?
Flash forward, I found out that his company worked.
worked with me through an agent.
So I didn't, in other words, it was hidden.
Really?
So I didn't know.
Oh.
And so I called the-
non-consensual business arrangement.
So I called the agency and said,
whenever you get a request from that company.
Yeah.
I don't care how much money,
the answer will always be no.
There's no word for it,
but whatever the opposite of loyalty is.
There's a lot of situations we're finding
that there are no words for it?
Right, right.
Is it just we have limited vocabulary?
Well, I mean, the Germans probably have words for it.
Get this podcast translated into German, please. Thank you.
Because all of, well, it'll be much shorter.
Because we'll have all the words for the things that we have to have a whole podcast about.
Oh yeah, they're just talking about X.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, there should be an inverse to loyalty, shouldn't there?
And again, I have no problem with people telling me no.
I held no grudges.
I'm not even a grudge holder as a person.
Like when I have fights with people, like I can let things go pretty quickly.
I'm not a grudge holder.
It was just, I was astonished how somebody's starting out,
that somebody would go out of their way to,
push down and suppress.
Yeah.
For no reason, right, to insult.
And now expect that just because money's on the table that I'm going to like be like,
woohoo, can't work to work, you know?
Yeah.
I think that this is the reason you treat people nicely all the time.
Now, that doesn't mean we, I'm an asshole sometimes.
I'm angry.
I'm tired.
I'm short-tempered.
Like, we're all imperfect.
But to really make the effort to be nice to people.
Yeah.
Because you just don't know.
How did we get on this topic?
Yeah, I don't remember.
But there was one thing that I wanted to bring up with you,
which is kind of like, not entirely parenthetical,
but kind of adjacent.
You have this quote that I really love,
and now I can't really work out how it said,
but I'm sure you'll be able to correct me.
It's something like it's about leadership
is not about being in charge of people,
but taking care of the people.
Leadership is not about being in charge.
Leadership is about taking care of those in your charge.
That's it, right?
I always love that.
that and it made me think of this story that I wanted to tell you about a chef called,
we're talking about food before we started rolling and in particular in Paris.
Do you know a guy called Gilles Robichon?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the first time I ever went to his restaurant, this would have been like 20 years ago,
I met him because he was sort of walking around the restaurant.
He was a really sweet old guy.
He came around and he just talked to all of the customers and everything.
I remember saying to him.
He was like, oh, how's your night going?
And I said, can you give me a recommendation on what to eat?
And he said, what do you like?
And I said, I like to be surprised.
And he said, steak and mashed potato.
And I was like, okay, that's not very surprising.
But it was a very surprising steak and mashed potato.
I've never had anything like it in my life.
So he was right.
But what I noticed is that he was pottering around the kitchen while the, you know,
they've got 20 chefs or whatever.
I never eat there, but sure.
Right, yeah.
And he's sort of pottering around and like looking.
And the next time I went back there, I sat up at the bar because that's kind of the experience.
And I had one of the chefs in front of me.
I was talking to him.
And I said, oh, is Reboshan in tonight?
And he's like, no, no.
And he got really excited.
He's like, but he was in a week ago.
And he's like, you know, we really love him here.
He's like a grandfather to us.
And I was like, that's a weird thing for a sous chef to say, whatever it is.
But I was, and I was chatting to him a little bit about it.
And I was like, you know, what is it you love about?
Rebichon.
And he said, oh, you know, he's just like having a grandfather.
around. He doesn't get in your way or anything, but he'll come up and, you know, if you're doing
something wrong, like he doesn't yell at you. He'll take the knife off you and he'll, like,
teach you a bit of a technique. He'll show you how he does it. And then he'll hand the knife back to you.
I remember thinking, that's a very unique style of leadership, right? And it was kind of like leading
from the sidelines, but not getting angry about people. Anyway, the third time I was meant to go
there. I'd made a reservation. It was like a Monday night. This is many years later now. It was 2018,
I think it was. And I remember getting a text from a friend. He said, what are you doing tonight?
I said, I actually going down to La Talia. And he said, oh, didn't you hear? Rubbergeon died today.
And I was just like, oh, my stomach dropped and I was just like, fuck. Should I cancel my reservation?
I'm like, no, no, no. That's ridiculous. Like, go down there or whatever. So I went down there
that night and all of the staff were wearing black armband.
Like they love this guy so much
And I remember sitting at the bar again
And I was talking to them
And one of them said to me
He's taught me everything that I know
And all I want to do now is become
The best version of myself that I could ever be
Wow
Robichon is I mean for anyone listening to this
He doesn't know who he is arguably the best chef of all time
I think he's got like over 30 Michelin stars
And he's widely regarded as like a kingmaker
in the culinary industry.
You know, Gordon Ramsey
and many others who have come up
or influenced by him,
Eric Repair, stuff like that.
That was his thing.
He would harbor people
and teach them to be
the best that they could be.
And, you know, at the ripe age that he was,
I forget, it was in his 80s or 90s
or something like that.
He didn't become this like culinary despot
at any point.
Like he was just loved by literally
everybody who came close to him.
And it was this leading from the sidelines
where he would show someone
how to do something
and then hand the knife back.
and when I was thinking about it
just reminded me so much
about some of the leadership stuff
that you talk about
and taking care of people
and at the end of the day
they end up loving you
and wanting to give you their best
and it goes right back to everything you said
which is you want to make them proud
which is they saw something in the debt of honor
and also agency as well
agency and patience and all of these things
it's really a beautiful thing
it's such a again
you're really really
rubbing off on me with your dark sense of humor. I was going to say, you know, the extremity of your
experience. Yeah. I've got to hand it to you. Yeah, thanks. Yeah, but the experience is so extreme that
the lessons are just so enjoyable to highlight. You know, I love your framework. I love this
idea of agency. I love this idea of debts of honor, you know, which is just another way of saying,
I'm just so grateful. I don't want to let you down. I want to prove. I want to prove. I'm
to you that believing in me was the right choice.
Yes.
You know?
And all of these things, I think, when you do them, you recognize that we can't do any
of these things alone.
All of these things are interpersonal.
All of them.
Even with your lens, it's like your lens goes in and your lens goes out.
What you end up seeing is more people.
Of course.
You know?
And to recognize that in every adversity, there is something wonderful to be gained from it.
And if you can't prove it, fuck man, nobody can.
There's a lot of responsibility now that you've said that.
I threw a fuck in there.
This is the debt of honor.
I threw a fuck in there because I know as an Australian,
you wouldn't have understood me without it.
Yeah, I could accuse you of cultural appropriation.
Fair point.
You're magic.
I have a couple questions to ask you.
You host the last meal with Tom Nash.
Oh, yeah.
Where you ask your guests if the world ended tomorrow and you could have one last meal,
what would it be?
And then you cook it for them.
What have you found a person's last male choice reveals about them?
Obviously, it's different for everybody.
But when I ask a person to choose a meal for their last meal,
I'm usually trying to get them to trigger something about themselves.
It could be like a moment in time that they remember fondly,
or it could be something about, you know,
it could be their childhood or something that their mother made them
or something like that.
And a lot of people in the beginning,
will just, the knee-jerk reaction is that something that they really like eating.
And I usually push back on that.
And I'm like, just stop thinking in that way.
Like, let's pick something that means something to you.
And this is where it gets interesting.
Because what they'll choose is usually correlated with the time in their life where they felt they had more freedom.
Oh, interesting.
Say more.
Well, give an example.
Tim Urban.
He picked Pad Thai.
and it was because it reminded him of a time that he was traveling a lot.
It's not that he doesn't travel now,
but he would like to travel more than he did.
But when he was traveling when he was 19 years old,
he was traveling around Asia for the first time.
And the Pad Thai just reminded him of that period.
Masi Alinajad, the Iranian journalist,
chose Korma Sabzi, which is a Persian dish, beef stew
that she hadn't had since when she was back in.
Iran now it would be foolish to think that she was free when she was there but she was
certainly connected to her family when she was and I think that's something that she longs for
and so I was another question that I asked people actually in some of these interviews is if
you could repeat a year of your life you don't get to change anything but you just go back and
press play on it again what would that be and invariably people choose a time of their life where
they felt they were the most free now that changes for some people yeah for some people it's
It's like, well, last year, I find that people with a high sense of agency pick more recent times.
And then some people, they remember their college years or something like that as feeling more liberated and tend to anchor towards that.
I'm so interested how they chose a meal to reclaim something.
You know, that the meal reminded them of something that they either lost or a part of their personality that they like, you know, to highlight.
what would did you I mean obviously you've thought about this what would yours be
it changes all the time my current choice of last meal is an English roast
cooked by specifically by my aunt who is British lives in England and it has to be in
winter okay very specific yeah my my aunt lives in England
My dad's British, although they both sort of were born and raised in Bahrain,
but she lives there now.
And I used to go over my grandparents when they were alive.
I used to visit them when I was young.
And obviously I would go in when it was Australian holidays.
And Australian holidays for summer, it's hot over there, but then it's freezing in England.
So I'd go over quite often when it was really cold.
And I would have this really warm English roast dinner with the turkey and the roast vegetables.
And it's freezing outside, but it's warm inside and the fireplaces on.
So it's a nostalgia thing.
It's a nostalgia thing, but I would always,
I would have my grandparents there as well.
It's so funny because immediately when I asked the question,
of course, I thought about my own meal.
And mine was immediately nostalgia as well.
My paternal grandmother was an amazing cook
and came from Czechoslovakia and a lot of Eastern European food.
And so I sort of grew up on that.
Because we traveled so much as kids,
grandparents were people we saw, you know,
once or twice a year.
Yeah.
And my maternal.
grandmother. There's a few things that she made that she made for me as a kid that I loved.
And so I would put all of those that I would get like these meals with one set of grandparents.
Yeah. And this meal and I would put it all in one dish. I can tell you exactly what it is,
which is I'd have schnitzel. Yeah. Viennishnitzel. But the way my grandmother made it was once the
schnitzel was cooked, she put a layer of ketchup and the layer of cheese and put it in the grill and it all
sort of like. So it's kind of like a parmesan. Yeah, but with ketchup. With ketchup and
cheese on top of the schnitzel, but I just love schnitzel in general.
What kind of cheese was it just a chnitzel or something like that?
Don't remember.
Don't remember.
But just plain schnitzel I love.
Then schpetzel.
Yeah.
That's a dumpling.
That's a dumpling.
That's a dumpling, a little dumpling thing, which is great.
Cream spinach, very Eastern European meal.
I love cream spinach, right?
So that would be from one.
And then from the other side, the thing that just, I love, love Yorkshire pudding.
Oh, yeah.
I've tried making it.
I've tried Jamie Oliver's trick with the oil.
I can't get my.
my Yorkshire puddings to pop and be fluffy.
Mine are not.
And my grandmother would serve them any which way.
So you would have them savory with a roast or whatever with gravy.
But she would also put like yogurt and berries on top.
And I was a dessert.
So like Yorkshire pudding was very much in there.
I made them once for a dinner party.
We did a degastation thing at my house called A Great Taste of Britain,
which was supposed to be all British dishes.
And so we did Yorkshire pudding
And you weren't being ironic
No, I was
Of course it was
But I paired it with
Chicken Ticket masala
Which is a British
Which is a British invention right
Yeah
But curry
So is butter chicken
Yeah yeah
Currie with Yorkshire pudding
Is it works perfectly as well
Got to remember that one
Yeah
Yeah
I met this guy
A couple months ago
We were in Austin, Texas
Okay so
We went to
have lunch with these two ladies
that we became friends with from last year
I think they're in the 60s or something
and we went to have lunch with them and one of them
texts me and she said, do you mind if I bring
my dad, he's 93 years old?
I said, yeah, I love old people. They've always
got the best stories and like let's sit down and
they don't care what you think about them. Yeah, that's true.
Going to meet them at this steakhouse in Austin and I remember
as I'm walking in there's like the
handicap spot and I
noticed there's a car in the handicapped spot
and it says the license
plate has like the
injured in battle.
I didn't know they did that.
And the front license plate said Korean War.
And I was like, wow.
For starters, like, that was
1953 from memory, right?
So you'd have to be pretty old
to be in the Korean War.
So we'd walk in there and we sit down with him
and I meet Bob.
Bob's the 93 year old and he's got a walking stick.
And I'm just like, okay, I sit right down with Bob.
I'm like locked in with Bob.
I'm like, Bob, tell me everything.
You look like the most interesting.
I've ever met in my life
and I had a great time with them
and Bob's telling me about how he was in the
Korean War and he got injured in the Korean
War and his plane got shot from
underneath and he heard his leg and then there was
a convoy that took him down and he
was in like a MASH-style
army tent hospital for like
three weeks and then they sent him back up
because they didn't have that many pilots
you know what I mean? I'm thinking about the maths as well
and I'm like hang on a second you would have been the right age for
Vietnam as well right and he's like yeah I did
three tours Vietnam over two years.
I'm like, I'm sitting with this decorated walker.
Incredible stories, right?
So we're chatting and he's talking about how he was even a pilot home
and he had a Cessna 3, whatever it was.
And he and his wife used to fly around the world.
And just fascinating guy, great stories.
And we're leaving the restaurant and he was saying goodbye.
And he's like, oh, we should still have my plane and take you guys up.
And I was like, I don't know if I'd be getting into a night three.
I appreciate the sentiment.
I mean, yeah.
We're getting back in the car.
And I noticed that Bob doesn't get into the car
that I noticed in the handicapped spot.
And I was like, wait, what are the odds
that there are two Vietnam War vets in this?
Because we're like 15 people in this restaurant.
This is not like a highly popular thing, right?
Yeah.
But I'm like, okay, we're leaving.
It doesn't matter what he gets in the car.
He goes, we get in the car.
And I turned to Lauren and she's like, did you have a great lunch?
I was like, that was amazing.
Yeah, I really loved, like, talking to Bob.
And she said,
hear something really funny and I said yeah she goes he was never in the Korean war and I'm like
what do you mean like he is getting on a bit and he believes oh no that he was in the Korean and
the Vietnam War and he has all these stories oh no he's my new favorite person I didn't give a
shit that he's not that he has I want to be his best friend right like because it didn't really
bother me like she found out halfway through the lunch and you know daughter said oh should we save
Tom because you know he's talking to dad about the Korean war that didn't happen yeah and she's like
no just let him he's having fun you know and and I was that was the thing like I was having fun
talking to this guy it made me realize how overrated reality was I'm like I just had a great
time chatting to it doesn't matter that it doesn't ruin it all for you no it didn't at all
there was no no no I'm not angry at him yeah yeah yeah but it doesn't
raise the question, like what is the difference between an inspiring fiction story and an inspiring
nonfiction story? Yes, it does. Because there is a difference. There is, but what is it? What is like,
wow, great film. And the other one's like, holy cow. Yeah. And that makes you sort of go through
they're like, could I have done that? Like, I have a friend whose dad was in, he was in Chosen in the
Korean War, which did not go well. Yeah. And he was also at Iwo Jima in the Second World War.
Wow.
So he did the Second World War first, obviously.
And then he did Korea.
That's the chronology.
He was in Chosin.
He shouldn't have survived either of those.
Like the death rates at both of those battles was astronomical.
He wouldn't still be alive now, though.
I can't remember.
If he is, he's in his 90s.
And he was a Marine, or he is a Marine,
and celebrates the Marine Corps birthday every year
and he cuts the cake with his sword.
Seriously?
Yeah, yeah.
That's amazing.
He's an amazing guy, Eugene.
He shouldn't have survived one,
and then he shouldn't have survived.
the other.
Yeah.
And to have survived both is,
he's like a miracle human,
you know?
I wonder whether people like that think there,
or see that,
because I even sometimes think
I'm living on borrowed time.
I think it's healthy to think that.
Yeah.
You know,
I mean,
this is,
look,
how many fridge magnets do we have
is like,
live,
every day like it's your last.
None in my house.
Dance like no one's word.
I get rid of that shit.
I'm fucking.
No,
you don't have any posters
of little kittens
hang in there.
I'm allergic to shit like that.
it's either for people
and I'm going to offend
an entire population here
here goes
those posters those magnets
those affirmations
are either
they were either given to you as a gift
of course
yeah that's right
or well well intended
or
or allow people to be nice about that one
or or there are for people
who
You talk about anti-fragile where there's, they need the constant reminder.
Hang in there.
Life's okay.
Live every day like it's your last.
And they're all good sentiments.
Don't get me wrong.
I don't reject the sentiments.
And I don't mind one or two of those things around you.
But to have an excess of them around you speaks to, I think, a refusal to take life on.
I'm thinking of a real story.
So the person I know calls me up, how are you?
She goes, it's been a very difficult week, but the universe is trying to teach me a lesson.
And I went, how are you feeling?
She goes, I'm having a hard time, but I know this is what the universe wants for me.
And I'm starting to get impatient, you know?
And I was like, no, no, I'm asking you, how are you feeling?
She goes, you know, I'm hanging in there, but, you know, I know this is meant for some higher purpose.
And I'm getting angry now, right?
I'm like, stop with all the faux spiritual nonsense.
How are you?
Tell me how you're feeling.
And she goes, I'm not good.
And she started to cry.
And that is what I mean,
which is sometimes those affirmations
are a way for us to avoid
feeling the feelings we're supposed to feel.
Those affirmations are a way
for us to push away
the people who want to pull us close to say,
cry and I will cry with you.
But none of this false,
it's meant for some higher purpose.
Yes, that'll come.
That'll come.
I mean, your story proves it.
That will come.
But right now, be in pain, be angry, be sad,
be frustrated, be those things.
Give yourself some grace and feel the feels.
Because if you never feel the fields,
they will show up at a time not of your choosing.
That's right. And I mean, I think the thing that always annoys me about people saying that things happen for a reason is that that robs you of any ability to imbue meaning on things yourself.
And what a perfect way to summarize what you and I have just talked about, which is just as sometimes we can't make sense of why things happen to us. Not everything is for some predestined reason why they happen to us because then it robs us of the agency that we get to choose why things are happening.
to us. We get to choose what we get to do with those things and we get to choose the lessons
that are meant to be learned. Perfect. I mean, exactly as I expected, you said what I thought,
but way better. I'm like, can you be a bit more Simon Seneck about that? You're like, yeah,
watch this. Well, thanks for the setup.
Thanks for having me. Tom, what a joy. It's been awesome. What an absolute joy.
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