A Bit of Optimism - The Cure for Nihilism with professor Suzy Welch
Episode Date: May 6, 2025Sometimes in life, we choose the wrong path. When we feel like we're living a lie, it's hard to know what to do next.That’s where Suzy Welch comes in. She’s obsessed with helping people create liv...es worth living. A professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business, Suzy teaches a popular class called “Becoming You,” where she takes students down a brutal, but liberating, journey to live as their authentic selves. According to Suzy’s research, purpose is the key to unlocking the real you, but finding that purpose is often trickier than we imagine.I had a blast talking, and debating, with Suzy about what it means to craft a purpose-driven life. In this conversation, she shares with me the difference between passion and aptitude, the reason luck is overrated, and why so many people struggle to know their own values.To learn more about Suzy and her work, check out:her book, Becoming Youand The Becoming You Podcast with Suzy Welch
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Discussion (0)
I had a student, he was in banking, he was living his parents' values, not his own, just
as he had long suspected he was an artist in banking.
Well his interests really were beautiful women in fashion.
And he said, my purpose, my area of transcendence is to dress Kim Kardashian.
When he first said it, the class like burst into laughter, they thought he was joking.
And he said, no, I'm not kidding.
I'm going to make the clothing that make women impossible not to look at.
I've been living a lie. So I said to him, what are your parents going to make the clothing that make women impossible not to look at. I've been living a lie.
So I said to him, what are your parents going to say?
And he said, they're probably going to say at last because I've been miserable for 10
years.
Here's a story.
A smart, hardworking person spends years of their life chasing an ambitious goal.
They structure their life, career, and identity around this one particular outcome,
only to realize it was never what they wanted. How do we admit to ourselves that we might be on the
wrong path? That's where Suzy Welch comes in. Suzy has lived many lives. Broadcast journalist,
bestselling author, consultant, and now professor of the class, Becoming You at NYU's Stern School of Business.
Her students learn what it means to become their most authentic selves. Becoming You
is also the name of Suzy's podcast and new book.
I had a blast talking with Suzy about what it takes to create a purpose-driven life and
why sometimes it takes a mid-life or even a quarter-life crisis for people to find the
path they want and need to be on.
This is a bit of optimism.
Susie, I have heard so much about you.
I've heard so much about you.
How long have you been teaching?
Four years.
So what made you wake up in the morning and say,
you know what, I think I'd like to teach?
Well, it would have been beautiful
if that's how it had gone.
What had happened was I had a long and many would say successful
career in broadcast journalism.
And then I had run a tech startup and then my husband got very sick.
And I had to pull back on my work to take care of him.
And then he died.
And I actually went to the woods of upstate New York with my children. It was
during the pandemic. And in fact, I thought I'd never work again. And my actual thought
was I will never actually return to the world again. I was going to stay up in the woods
and walk my dogs for the rest of my life. And that felt like logic at the time. I mean,
I now can look back. It was five years ago and I could think, oh, that was grief. And so in the middle of this, I was lost. And then thanks to the goodness of Hoda
Kotebi, I had sort of an intervention where they called and asked me to come back on the Today Show.
And I went back on and I had this realization, I'm thinking, oh my God, I must return to the world.
So being back at work was this incredible gift. And I was like, I'm, I've
got to be back at work. I actually, I actually can't stay
in the woods. I had this idea for this class, the class that
eventually did become Becoming You about how to think about
your life more intentionally. And right in that moment, in
this act of incredible, I don't know what it was, I happen to
believe in God. So I'm going know what it was. I happen to believe in God, so I'm gonna say it was that,
but I understand that others might not,
but this incredible thing happened where a friend wrote me
and he said, hey, I'm just checking in on you.
By the way, I'm teaching at NYU Stern right now
and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And I stared at it.
I stared at that email and my, I had a physical reaction.
My body was like, ah, that is it.
That is the purpose I was waiting for. So I jotted some notes down about what this class might be.
Now, I had gone to business school myself. I understood what a business school curriculum was.
I understood what you learn and you don't learn. So I found my way into the office of the dean of
NYU Stern
Business School because we had mutual connections and because I've been swimming in this world for
40 years. And I described the class to him and he said, you know, we don't have that class. I said,
I know, I looked at the curriculum and he said, well, do you think you could create that class?
And I said, I could try. And I did. And we thought we tried as an experiment. And the next thing you
know, it was very popular and it took off.
They came to me and said, look, we'd like you to teach this many more times this semester.
And we're wondering if you'll join the faculty.
And I did.
And that's why I teach both management and that class.
So what I'm so curious about is, is what are the misperceptions that people have about what it means to live a life with purpose on purpose becoming their full selves?
Like, I'm just so curious what the big misperceptions are of the journey that you take them on.
Two gigantic misperceptions.
One is they think the journey is going to be easy.
They just need somebody to sort of tell them what to do.
It's a very hard journey.
The second is that it's woo woo, that it's woo-woo, that it's
new agey, that it's kind of soft and fuzzy, and you're going to sort of float to your
purpose. Whereas in fact, this is the hardest work of our lives, is painting our self-portrait.
Well guess what? As the great philosopher since the beginning of time tells, knowing
yourself is the hardest thing to know. And so I take them on this journey that's brutal,
frankly. The nickname for my class, it's not me, the nickname for my class is the class where everyone
cries.
Okay?
And you know, look, the biggest crybaby is me because they're up there telling their
stories.
The last capstone of the class is they get up and they tell the story of their lives,
the narrative of their lives for the next 40 years.
They tell the story of what their lives will be.
You know, there's not a dry eye in the house.
I mean, people are sobbing.
And I am sobbing in the back row trying to keep it together
because when people are invited to figure out
what their purpose is, and then they discover it,
which happens in my class every semester,
they're liberated, free to go right in the right direction.
Is there anything more emotional?
Yeah, when did you learn yours?
About age 60, about age 60.
I've always been in the neighborhood of it,
but then the day I stepped into the classroom
to teach Becoming You,
and I saw what was happening in front of my eyes,
and I saw all of my values, all of my aptitudes,
and all of my interests in the same moment,
all converging in teaching students,
I could have levitated.
And sometimes when I'm teaching, I think I am levitating.
I'm so happy.
I feel exquisitely alive.
And people sometimes say to me,
how will I know if I'm living my purpose?
It's like, that's sort of like asking
if you know when you're in love.
You know when you're in love,
because your body tells you.
Practically speaking, what specific things
changed in these people's lives?
Yes.
Very practical, very specific after your class.
Oh my god.
Do we have 17 hours? So look, I do this excavation process. It's a 13-step process. I do seven
exercises to uncover their values. I mean, no one knows their values. I've conducted
research. I long suspected that people didn't know their values. And so once I finally got
onto the faculty at NYU and I had the NYU research apparatus at my hands,
I conducted research.
Guess, Simon, how many people actually can identify
with any kind of specificity their values?
I would venture a guess to say 10%.
7%, very good.
That's the best guess I've ever gotten.
Usually people are sort of all over the place.
7%, and we did a large study, double blind, blah, blah, blah.
Seven percent people, usually people sort of name virtues, they name skills. They don't even know
what values are. Why? We are never taught values. We're taught the volume of a cylinder in high
school, but we're not taught what a value is or how important it is. So I think that there's 15
human values. That's part of my own research, the Welsh Bristol Values Inventory. If you'd like to
read my PhD thesis, I'll send it right to you. But I do believe that there's 15 human values. Please read it.
I mean, then there'd be two people who read it, you and me and my thesis advisors. And we have
different levels of these 15 values. And you can come out of this process with a list of your own
ranked. I would say 50% of the students take TNT to their lives
and completely change their careers.
I had a student, he was in banking.
I mean, I can tell you a million stories.
Let's take him.
He was brought up to be a banker.
He came from a family of bankers.
He went to London.
He worked in banking for five years.
He went through the process.
He found out he was living his parents' values,
not his own, nothing like his own.
Figured out what his values were.
We did a lot of testing.
He found out his aptitudes.
Oops, just as he had long suspected he was an artist in banking.
Then he found out his interests.
Well, his interests really were beautiful women in fashion, and he was in banking.
He stood up in front of class to tell the story of his life going forward, and he said,
my purpose, my area of transcendence, as we call it, is to dress Kim
Kardashian. When he first said it, the class like burst into laughter. They thought he was joking
and he said, no, I'm not kidding. I'm going to make the clothing that make women impossible not
to look at. I've been living a lie. And he totally blew up everything. I was standing in the back of
the class like waiting for his parents to call the dean to say, you must fire this professor because
she just blew up my son's life. So I said to him, what are your parents going to say?
And he said, they're probably going to say at last,
because I've been miserable for 10 years.
I had a student who wasn't consulting,
miserable, miserable, miserable.
After she went through this entire process,
she decided to go into business in Denver with her sister.
Her parents had been immigrants from Jamaica.
They'd come over, they had cleaned office buildings at night.
Okay, there's a whole army of beautiful people who do this in New York City.
Her parents had been two of those people.
They saw how corrupt the business was, how many layers there were, how the people who
were doing the cleaning were constantly getting ripped off.
And after she went through this process, she left management consulting.
And she and her sister started a company that actually, right now, they're trying to transform
the entire office building cleaning.
It's called Sisters Cleaning Service.
And they're trying to reinvent this business so that more of the money falls down to the
people actually cleaning the toilets.
Okay?
Love.
Love her, love her sister.
And they want to have a very small...
So basically, what you're doing is amplifying passion.
I think I am identifying it.
Okay?
Because a lot of people don't know their passion. Yeah, they don't. They're
in search of it. Now, a lot of times people have passion, and I
don't want them to do it and they shouldn't do because they
don't have the aptitudes. That's why I talk about purpose because
I think that your values are part of your passion. That's
what you really believe in your interests are part of your
passion. We do this middle work, which is what you could actually
do.
You may want to be a singer, but if you don't have Mariah Carey's voice, forget it. Yeah, a passion for something and a talent for something are not the same thing.
No, but you've got to have the overlap. And it's got to match your values also.
I've always believed that there's sort of this zero-sum formula for success, which is talent plus hard work plus luck.
Winning the lottery is all luck, no hard work, no talent, and it works.
You see people who they work so, so hard and they're talented, but they just can't get
a break.
You know?
Can I give you a different construct?
Please.
I'm going to give you another theory and see what you think about it.
I've been testing it for many, many years and I've tested it on every successful person I've ever talked to and I like my theory.
So here it is. I call it the Pi theory of long-term success. Okay, we're talking about
sustained success because frankly, luck is a wash. You'll have good luck and you'll have
bad luck. Okay?
Sure.
All right. So here's my theory. Let's take luck out of it because luck cancels itself
out over time. All right. The chances of your long-term sustained success or function of three things, PIE, the quality
of your relationships with people, how good you are to people, how well you listen, how
trustworthy you are, how deep you are with people, how authentic.
So P, the quality of your relationships with people.
That's number one.
Then there's I, ideas, the quality of your ideas,
how original your ideas are, or how much you champion other people's ideas. I, ideas, okay?
So how smart you are or how much you can relate to a customer that you can feel their pain and
come up with an idea. And then the third is E, and that's execution. And it's whether or not you get
shit done. Okay? Do you do what you say
you're going to do? Do you finish what you start? It's really a matter of integrity in many ways,
that E, because the world is just suffers with these people who say they're going to do things
who don't walk the talk. Okay? So at the end of the day, your long-term success as a human being,
as a leader, as a business person, as a friend, as a mother,
as a lover, as everything is a function of the quality of your relationships with people,
the quality of your ideas, and the quality of your execution.
Luck has nothing to do with it because luck cancels itself out.
I want to go back to that luck idea.
Luck has definitely been a part of my journey.
I gave my first TEDx talk, the one that went viral at a time when there weren't that
many TEDx talks. Right. So if I were to do it today when there's
literally 10s of 1000s of year, you know, there's no way that
that that talk would have that that talk would have popped and
went viral like it did. I just no way I disagree. Was it done in
a time where there was a lot less competition? No. Okay, that's very humble of you.
Okay?
Humble.
But you know what?
It was a freaking great idea.
That's why it went viral.
I mean, yes, it's a great idea.
Thank you.
But given the quantity of TEDx talks that are out now, there are other great ideas that
people are talking about around the world, and they just don't go viral like they did when I did
mine, which was just a matter of timing. Okay, I'm just going to push back more,
okay? Because I don't, when my students come to me and say it's all luck, I want to give up.
I didn't say it was all luck. I didn't say it was all luck. I said luck was a component.
It was. You captured the long tail of it though, okay? Because then what happened was it kind of
went viral and people went to go find out more about you. And when they went to go find out more
about you, you were saying smart, interesting things and they stuck around viral and people went to go find out more about you and when they went to go out find out more about you, you were saying smart interesting things and they
stuck around. So they went to go watch it another time and they told a friend about
it. Of course luck plays a role and any successful business person will say I got some really
lucky breaks. I get it. But I think that when you start believing that luck is everything,
you lose how much intentionality and how much agency we actually have.
I do not for one minute believe luck is everything.
I know.
But I do believe luck is a thing.
So let me ask a somewhat leading question.
What's the value of living a purpose-driven life?
I mean, taking the woo-woo out of it, right?
If I'm really cynical, like who cares?
That's right.
And look, I bump into nihilists all the time.
I had an AMA in class, asked me anything, I sort of opened it up
to the floor. And a student raised his hand and he said, can I ask you a question? Sure. He said,
do you ever get tired of teaching this purpose stuff when you know in the end we're all going to
die? And I basically said to him, look, I think we have a moral choice. We can be nihilists or we can
be optimists. I think it's a moral choice to believe in the future and to believe in ourselves and to try
to build a life where we're alive, because how we act is
contagious. And I don't want to give anybody the disease that
kills your soul. And so we have an actual moral obligation to
have the behaviors and attitude that spread joy. Otherwise, I
think you're actually morally wrong. I'd go so far as
just to be if I put my cynical hat on, doesn't that verge on woo-woo that we have a moral obligation
to spread joy? I mean, to a lot of people, that literally sounds like we should wear
tie-dye and...
I would say that actually, I think when you start talking about moral imperatives, it's
no longer woo-woo. Okay? It's like everything is not okay. That's woo-woo. Go put on your
tie-dye and do all your woo-woo stuff. Everything is beautiful. Everything's okay. That's woo-woo. Go put on your tie-dye and, you know,
do all your woo-woo stuff. Everything is beautiful. Everything's okay. That's woo-woo.
I'm actually drawing a very stark line here. Like, it's wrong and it's right. And it's actually
morally right to find your purpose. Because then you will feel the joy of having your purpose and
living your purpose. When we don't live by our purpose,
we don't just kill our own soul.
We kill the souls of everyone around us.
You're kind of a murderer, all right?
So let me be very unwill.
I think it's like, you're like a killer.
You're like a murderer of other people
when you choose nihilism.
That's how strongly I feel about it.
Well, I mean, the science backs you up, by the way.
When people lead without a sense of purpose or cause, it creates stress in the system. It creates stress in the people around them. The feeling of stress is cortisol. And when we have a lot of cortisol and stress in our bodies, it actually weakens our immune systems and actually does make us more susceptible to things like cancer and other illnesses. And so yes, the science would back you up that being short termtermist and selfish and a lack of purpose can actually
kill people around you.
Yes.
I've heard the science argument.
It's 100% correct.
You can see it with your own eyes.
I want to say one other thing about it, which is further reasoning.
You can love business and you can hate business.
I happen to love business and I know there's good people in business and bad people in
business, but I believe that business is a force and should be and can be a force for
good. So if you're living your purpose and you create an organization where people are
empowered to do that, then business grows and it thrives and it creates more opportunity for people.
So you're actually doing something for the economy, okay, and for culture and society,
because growing, thriving economies are good for everybody, okay? So I also believe that there's
this capitalistic argument
and economic argument for it.
There's no downside to it.
Of your students, you gave some specific examples
about how people's lives changed
after they learned their purpose.
What were their lives like before it?
The first thing I want to say is that some people go through the process,
and all they do is tweak their lives because they've been quite close to their purpose
and just one thing needs to get tweaked.
So not everybody goes through the becoming new process and like blows up their life.
I don't want to misrepresent that.
Okay.
I had a student come in and I thought she was in utter despair because she told me she
was.
She was like, I got to change my life.
I'm in agony when I'm with when I'm being a CEO.
I'm a terrible mother.
When I'm with my daughter, I'm a terrible CEO.
You got to save me here.
And we went through the whole process.
And when she came out the end of it, she thought, oh, actually, I just need to tweak this one
small thing involving how much time I have.
And she just did a tweak and it was sort of a mindset change.
Okay.
It was a clarity inducing experience.
Yeah.
You said you didn't find your purpose until 60.
So what was life like before that?
It was great.
I mean, in many ways, but I mean, I had, there were a lot of shareholders in Susie Inc.
Okay.
I had four children and I had a husband who had a gigantic career.
The terms of our marriage, which was an extremely happy marriage, were just that his career
came first.
And so I was doing a huge amount of accommodating to my children, which I chose to have, and
my husband's career I honored.
And so there were a lot of times where my career could have taken off in ways that I
really wanted that I had to say no.
But I was always closely approaching. I mean, look, I worked for Oprah. I was on the Today Show.
I mean, I'm not going to say I had a crappy career. It was spectacular. Was I ever fully
free? No, because I made some choices about putting my family ahead of my career. But
look, there was a time I was very, very close to a career pinnacle, very, very close to
it. And my husband had a health setback.
He was sick for quite some time. We came home from the doctor and he said, I really need you
right now, Susie. And I just, the producer of the show I was on at the time had just said to me,
giving me indication that something kind of amazing was about to happen for me.
And he said, can you take a sabbatical for six months? And I said, of course I can. Of course
I can. I wanted to, I didn't want him to be sick but I knew when you're when they put the port in you know that
the you got to be there and I remember he then went to go lay down and I went
to the kitchen sink and I was washing dishes and I was sobbing and I was
mourning the life that I wasn't gonna have would I do it again in a heartbeat
but it was, there were
compromises. What impact did you have on Jack's life as a leader? When you came into his life,
who was he and what did he become because of you? Well, look, he had just retired from GE when we
met. We met the day after he retired. Jack was the greatest in my opinion, Garcia, whoever lived. And
I think that I could never have done his job and of his era, his legendary status, I think was very well earned and, you know, GE went
south afterwards. So that was a great tragedy, very sad, it hadn't happened. But I think
that as a human being, he changed. But I think one of the things I taught Jack, and I want
to make it clear that Jack taught me more than I taught him. Okay, so I don't want
to misstate this. Jack taught me an enormous amount about business
and about life and taught me golf,
which is thank goodness for that.
But I think the one thing I taught Jack,
which he probably himself, if he was sitting here,
would say is that I taught him that life
can be very hard for people.
Everything came very easily to Jack Welch, right?
He was incredibly talented, incredibly athletic,
incredibly likable, incredibly quick.
And he surrounded himself with people just like himself. was incredibly talented, incredibly athletic, incredibly likable, incredibly quick.
And he surrounded himself with people just like himself.
And he had a bit of trouble wrapping his arms
around the fact that for some people,
just making it through the day was brutally hard.
Like he didn't understand anxiety, for instance.
He just couldn't understand how anyone could be anxious.
He didn't understand depression.
He didn't understand that life was hard.
And I think that very early on, I said to him,
there are beautiful, brilliant, fantastic people
who are 100% broken.
Are you aware of that?
And he said, what are you talking about?
And he had not been in the world of the arts.
So I had been managing at that point writers.
And I said, let me tell you about my best writers.
And I would describe like the mental state
and the sort of personalities of like the best writers
working for me.
He would say to me, you're making this up.
You employ these people, they're broken.
And I said, yes, beautifully broken.
And so I think that the place that Jack grew
and he grew very quickly.
It wasn't like it took him very long to get it.
He got it instantly.
And he was like, oh my God, I just never saw it.
And I had a kind of a tunnel vision
about the emotional lives of people.
And so I think after that he got softer.
He was always warm, but he had more tenderness in him.
Imagine never having really heard music and then at age, he was 65 when we met, and then
suddenly at age 65, somebody playing Stevie Wonder for you.
He said to me, what is this?
I said, this my somebody playing Stevie Wonder for you, he said to me, what is this?
I said, this my dear is Stevie Wonder.
And he was like, why have people been keeping Stevie Wonder from me?
And I was like, well, no longer.
So one of the things that I have to touch on, when you saw that email that said, I'm
teaching a class at NYU Stern, something came over you, that you had to go pursue this.
And then that when you walked into class, you started buzzing. And now this was my purpose.
And what you had discovered was service, that your purpose comes alive when you have the
opportunity to serve others.
I have a theory about this, which is that we are living our purpose when
we are doing two things at the same time and one piece of it is service and the other piece of it
is self-actualizing. So Maslow had the hierarchy of needs and when he first created it in 1948,
he had the tippy top being self-actualization. That's kind of, you know, that is like living
your best life. That's actually living your values and your aptitudes in your interests Okay, so that's it then he came back 13 years later right before he died and he said I missed something
I've done more research and there's this thing on top of it called transcendence and that's when you're self-actualizing and giving back
Service and so that's why I call purpose. That's why I use the term for purpose area of transcendence referring to Maslow
Self-actualization plus
giving back. So I had done a lot of things that I was very good at. Okay. I had been
on TV, I had been writing all this stuff, but it was when I got back in the classroom
that I was able to do what I call non-sitting, not for oneself, that I was able to add on
top of that, this layer of service. So I don't think service alone necessarily equals purpose,
although it's a gigantic help.
I really do think it's two things at once.
I mean, I really do.
I think it's self-actualizing
plus this feeling of giving back.
That's bam, that's it.
I think about your two examples of the banker.
And by the way, any parents that push their kids
to go into banking, I think that's a form of child abuse.
My thing. But the one who went from banking to fashion and the one who started
the business with her sister, both of them changed from living a life where they were
in a, what about you? What are you going to do? What are you going to advance? And then
they turned into, no, I'm going to do this for other people. And the passion came from
the desire to take whatever the thing they had was desire, passion,
love, purpose, whatever it is, and they did it for someone else.
And then that sense of, I found my thing came when it was a giving, a pushing, not just
a pulling or a taking.
Now I want to say that you can be a banker or a consultant and you can be giving back
because the way you can do it is you can be a mentor to somebody else, You can be helping the people that you work with. You can really be helping customers. I mean, I don't think that those professions necessarily don't allow service. You can do that work and say you have say you're caring for an elderly parent, you need money and so forth. And you go into banking for financial reasons. You can commit your life on the weekends to acts of service. I just don't think they're mutually exclusive. I don't think everybody can have a job.
But hold on, hold on, hold on.
Let me push you a little bit here.
Please.
Your whole thing is that this idea of the true you,
the purpose you is beautifully integrated
into all that you do.
So to bifurcate your life that I do banking during the week
and I do this life of service on the weekends, is inherently not a purpose-driven life.
I think I'm a realist, and that is that some people simply have to work for money.
You know, they go to a factory and they put their foot down on a lever over and over again all day long because that's what they do.
And it's very hard to find purpose in those jobs, but some people have to have those jobs. That's the only skill they have.
Oh, I got to take you on a tour.
OK.
I've got to take you to see Barry Waymiller, which is an American manufacturing company.
I 100% know that there are companies that can do it.
The job itself is not purpose driven, right?
As you said, putting your foot on the lever and making the machine go is not unto itself
purpose driven.
But they show up to work with the desire to take care of the person to the left of them,
to the right of them. And the job is incidental. The job is the place in which they get to show up to work with the desire to take care of the person to the left of them, to the right of them.
And the job is incidental.
The job is the place in which they get to show up
and live a life of service.
I guess we are in agreement.
In that there are companies
that you can create that work in a company.
And you know what?
It's the job of the leader to make meaning of it.
The leader needs to say,
this is how your work contributes to the greater good.
You are not just putting your foot down
on the lever and over and over again.
When you do that, you are part of this work.
But man, that takes a leader.
That takes a great leader explaining the purpose of it.
Or someone who has a terrible leader, but someone has made the choice to live a purpose-driven life
and come to work every day saying, I'm going to look after the person to the left and to the right of me,
despite the fact that I work in a place with a terrible leader.
I know. It's hard in those environments.
I mean, the perfect time is when the work has been integrated with purpose. But I have to be real. There are some jobs, you know, if
you're working at Cumberland Farms, and you're working at the cash register, that's what
you can do. You have from nine to four every day when your children are at school. And
you've got that job. That's the only job because you've got to be able to walk to it. Okay,
let's just be real here. Some people do not have a lot of optionality. All right. How
do you get purpose out of that job? Well, then you think, you know what?
What I'm doing every time somebody comes to this store,
I can make their day better.
I can smile.
I can ask how they're doing and that's on them.
But imagine how much better it would be
if your manager of that store just said,
look, you know, we're in the service business here
and we can, you know, this is not just mercenary.
We can make lives better for our customers.
100% the scale and efficiency
when you have a well led organization organization or a well-led team,
100%. You and I are in lockstep there. The only point I'm making is that to choose to live a
purpose-driven life is the choice of the individual. And though it is more efficient and though the
environment will be way better if my leader is that way inclined also, but I don't have
to be the victim of a leader who isn't.
Yeah, that's true. It's hard. It's better when leaders are doing much more difficult
without a doubt. You know, I agree with you about the duality of the Maslow thing. And
I think he had it slightly wrong when he articulated the first model, because he said the lowest
level is food and shelter. And the third level up is
relationships and community. The mistake Maslov made is human beings, we live in paradox,
which is every moment of every day, we are both individuals and members of groups.
When you look at the hierarchy of needs, food and shelter, Maslov was only thinking about us
as individuals. As an individual, yes, food and shelter absolutely comes first.
But as a member of a group, social relationships are more important.
I've never heard of anybody dying by suicide because they were hungry,
but I have heard of people dying by suicide because they were lonely.
Right? And stories of people who want to be in community before they die.
Those two models, it's what he articulated that hierarchy of needs, I would argue is for an
individual and for a member of a group. It's in a different
order. And at the top, this idea of self actualization, even
unto that self, like I am self actualized at the top of a
pyramid, looking down upon all you unactualized people. You
know, what about shared actualization? The genius of your
class is not that you're helping someone
find their purpose, is that they're going through it
as a class, that they have shared actualization
and they support each other and they cry with each other
and they hold each other and they celebrate each other.
And I would argue that success of finding your purpose
isn't just going through the process,
but it's going through the process with others
and being in service to others
as they look to find their own.
And you make a perfect point. And I'll tell you why. I a while ago stopped taking private clients
because I intuitively knew in my bones it was something that had to happen in group.
Yeah.
And there's something that happens in that room. Like I teach it in groups. I teach it outside of
NYU as part of NYU. It's an open enrollment course and we do 60 people at a time. And they come in
as strangers. Okay. We do the whole course in three days. They come into strangers and they go out as incredibly
close friends. They stay in touch with each other. Something happens in the discovery process
together. It forges relationships and friendships like you cannot believe. That makes sense. To go
through an individual experience with a group, I mean that's kind of what group therapy is, right?
Yeah, it is.
If you go to Alcoholics Anonymous, you're going through something for yourself in community.
And it goes right back to where we started, which is the amplification.
I as an individual will help amplify the benefit to the group, and the group will help amplify
the benefit to me.
I have a cowbell that rings like crazy, and I had to get it because when I put the students
into groups, it was impossible to get them out of group.
I'd say, OK, let's do this activity.
You do it on your own.
Now go with a group of three people.
Talk about your findings.
And the group would set fire as they were going
through the process in community.
And finally, I would say, I'd have my microphone,
class, class, and no one would stop talking with each other.
So finally I had to get a freaking cowbell
and stand up there ringing it like a mad woman
to shut them down.
But that is to your point,
is that it is one plus one equals 12.
Because of this process of finding purpose in community,
and people wanna find it on their own,
it's not really as rich an experience.
We have to hear ourselves think and talk.
We have to process other people's journeys to amplify our own journey.
And I think the magic of life is learning that my journey is our journey and our journey
is my journey.
And how do I support the collective and the collective support and accept the support
from the collective?
When I do a Y discovery with someone, the thing that they're always
surprised to learn is that a why fundamentally, it is something
uniquely yours that you give to the world. Like my why is to
inspire people to do the things that inspire them. It is who I
am. It is core to my being. It is what lights me up. It's what
excites me and inspires me. But fundamentally, it is something I am, I wake up every day to give away. Yeah. And that's why they call
what we have gifts. Yes. Because gifts are forgiving. It's not something you received.
It's something you're supposed to give away. Your gifts are forgiving away. I think our
whys are similar. My I would say my purpose is to help you find your purpose. And it's
the same kind of feeling.
It's like, this is why I levitate.
And you know exactly what I'm talking about.
That's something you must have when somebody finds their why.
It's like a drug. You gotta have more of it.
You gotta have more of it. It's like, oh my God.
You know, it's just, ugh, I gotta...
To see somebody have that discovery,
if everybody knew what that felt like,
they'd want more, they'd want it too.
But we've all had that experience, right?
For actors who stand on a stage to feel the energy of an audience. Everybody knew what that felt like. They'd want more. They'd want it too. But we've all had that experience, right?
For actors who stand on a stage to feel the energy of an audience, for someone to a parent
to teach their kids how to ride a bicycle.
And the first time you let go of the seat without training wheels, the elation you get
to see someone accomplish something by themselves, for themselves, with your help.
Like we've all had that feeling of elation and
levitating when we get to be there to support and see
someone else thrive. It's sustainable. Whereas, you know,
any great accomplishment, whether you made a lot of money
or hit a goal or got a bonus, like those things feel amazing
and the feeling dissipates in about a week. But to live a
life of service to the people closest to us,
even if it's just our families, like that stuff is sustainable. That stuff is called
love.
Yeah, it is love. I remember one time I was teaching in my management class, not in my
becoming you class. And I had a longtime manager who was my guest that day. And we were talking
and doing a Q&A with the students. And at one point I turned to her and I said, well, you know, ultimately management, you know, being
a manager is an act of love. And she said, yes, it's totally an act of love, blah, blah,
blah. And we were talking about how management, managing people well, was an act of love.
And then we both turned to the class at the same time and they were sitting there with
their mouths hanging open. I said, what is the problem? And like every hand went up,
every hand in the room went up and they were like,
what about boundaries?
And you can't have your work family be your home family.
This is very dated.
Maybe it was when you were young,
but the management is not love
and you can't get in people's lives.
And I was like, you don't know what you're missing.
If you think you're gonna go out and do work without love,
if you think you're gonna go to work
and not love the people sitting there.
But also being in love with your friends
and being in love with your family and being in love with your employees are not the same love. And it's not a love. If you think you're going to go to work and not love the people sitting there. But also being in love with your friends and being in love with your family, being
in love with your employees are not the same love. But it is still a love. I mean, like
you're right. It's a love of service. To conflate the love you have for a sibling with an employee
is ridiculous. We're sophisticated adults. We can understand the difference between these
different types of clubs. But if I go to work and I'm managing my people and there's not
some element of generosity in my heart about it, ugh, it's just technical.
Suzy, it's such a pleasure to meet you.
Thank you so much for being so open and so lovely.
And I'd love to come and visit your class sometime.
Oh, don't ask twice.
I will come and get you.
I would love to.
It would be a joy for me.
Okay, well, it's happening.
If you enjoyed this podcast and would like to hear more, please subscribe wherever you happening. take care of each other. A Bit of Optimism is a production of the Optimism Company.
It's produced and edited by Lindsay Garbenius, David Jha, and Devin Johnson.
Our executive producers are Henrietta Conrad and Greg Rudershan.